Jackson herald. (Jefferson, Jackson County, Ga.) 1881-current, May 31, 2017, Image 10

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PAGE 10A THE JACKSON HERALD WEDNESDAY, MAY 31, 2017 County State Court rules on cases Sentences recently in Jackson County State Court include: •Charles Victor Crowe, possession of less than an ounce of marijuana, $828 fine. A charge of failure to signal was dismissed. •Antonio Brown, battery - family vio lence and third-degree cruelty to children, 23 days in jail with credit for time served, 12 months probation, $1,000 fine, half of fine converted to community service, 12 anger management classes and no contact with victim. •Armand Leone, possession of drug-re lated objects, driving on a suspended license and giving a false name or date of birth, 24 days in jail with credit for time served, 12 months probation, $1,500 fine and $500 of fine converted to community service. •Robert McDaniel, giving a false name or date of birth, driving on a suspend ed license and safety belt violation, 30 days in jail with credit for time served, 12 months probation and $1,500 fine. Charges of violation of tire requirements and inoperable turn signals were dis missed. •Aaron Langston, theft by receiving and driving on a suspended license, 30 days in jail with credit for time served, 24 months probation, $2,250 fine and $500 of fine converted to community service. •Michael Lejeune, battery, six months in jail with credit for time served. •Timothy Harper, giving a false name or date of birth and driving on a suspended license, 24 months probation, $1,250 fine and convert $500 of fine to community service. Charges of affixing license plate to conceal or misrepresent identity and no valid tag were dismissed. •Thierry Arthur, giving a false name or date of birth, speeding and driving on a suspended license, 18 days in jail with credit for time served, 24 months probation and $2,000 fine. •Christi Leah Anthony, theft by taking, 12 months probation, $500 fine, fine converted to community service at a location approved by probation office and stay away from per son and address named. •Michael Lee Harris, use of fighting words, 12 months probation, $500 fine and drug and alcohol evaluation. NOT GUILTY VERDICT •Donald Alonzo Huff, criminal trespass. DISMISSED Jesse Freeman Parr, 11 counts of fourth-degree forgery, pay $860 restitution. Superior Court hands down sentences Sentences in the Superior Court of Jackson County recently include : •Jose Rebollar-Solozano, disorderly con duct, driving without a license and taillight violations, 33 months and 81-days probation, $1,000 fine and non-reporting on payment of fine. •Carra Beth Austin, possession of cocaine, three years probation, $1,000 fine, alcohol and drug evaluation and waive Fourth Amendment rights. Charges of possession of less than an ounce of marijuana and spending were dis missed. •Courtney Hanson, possession of metham- phetamine, three years probation, $500 fine and waive Fourth Amendment rights. •Gregory Christopher Autry, 26 counts of identity fraud, merged to one count, posses sion of methamphetamine, two counts of financial transaction card theft and theft by receiving stolen property, 10 years probation, one year in jail suspended upon one year at Hickey House for drug and alcohol treatment, $1,000 fine and restitution. •Eric Lee Hetherington, possession of meth amphetamine, driving on a suspended license and safety belt violations, five years probation, $1,000 fine and waive Fourth Amendment rights. •Cody Lamar Bray, possession of metham phetamine, three years probation, $500 fine and waive Fourth Amendment rights. •Daniel Lamar Brooks, possession of meth amphetamine, three years probation, $500 fine and waive Fourth Amendment rights. •Charlie Alexandria Kitchens, second-de gree cruelty to children, theft by taking and obstruction of an officer, five years probation with credit for time served, $500 fine, waive Fourth Amendment rights and six months in-house drug treatment. •Robert Jeffrey Lord, chugs not in original container and failure to carry driver’s license, 24 months probation, $1,000 fine and waive Fourth Amendment rights. •Lawrence Teate, possession of metham phetamine, three years probation, $500 fine and waive Fourth Amendment rights. •Jamone Wright, theft by deception and obstruction, 12 months probation, restitution and to run consecutive with violation of pro bation case •Jeffrey Wade Williams, two counts of financial transaction card theft, six years pro bation, $1,000 fine, restitution and do not return to victim's home. DISMISSED •Jose Ma Rebollar-Solorzano, two counts of identity fraud, giving false information to a law enforcement officer and driving without a license. JCSO Jefferson continued from 6A •a woman said she had her car towed to a repair shop to have a new engine put in it. She paid the mechanic $1,000 for that, she said. Two months later, she had not heard from him about the car. She called him and he said he would put oil in the car and bring it to her. She said he does not know her address, but knows she lives in Jefferson. On April 25, he told her the engine had blown up due to an oil leak and needed a new motor. He told her he had a motor, but needed $800 for labor. She went to the shop May 1 and no one was there. She asked for the car with her old motor back, but the man hung up and won’t answer her calls. •a man said he got a letter from Capital One Bank with an 800 number to call. When he called, he was asked for his Social Security number, which he refused to give the man. The man, who had a foreign accent, said he could call the credit companies at the bottom of the letter. The caller said he had not given his address or information and did not know how the man got it. •a woman said she had been harassed by two vehicles, one on John B Brooks Road and one off Highway 332. The first one was reported to be coming toward her vehicle “shining a green laser light’’ into her vehicle. It continued to shine the light after passing her vehicle. She said she turned around and tried to catch the SUV to get a tag number, but was not suc cessful. The second SUV was "operating in an aggressive manner’’ and “tailgating” her vehi cle. She said the occupants of the other vehicle made obscene hand gestures at her. She said they appeared to be teenagers. •a man said he rents from a man who he meets for breakfast every Saturday. When the man did not show for breakfast or answer his phone, the renter went to his house. He used a screwdriver to get in through the garage door. The owner was found in his living room chair, slumped over. He said he had fallen. He said he had a history of heart attack and stroke and he had not eaten since lunch the day before. •a man said his 17-year-old daughter was arguing with him. He said she was mad because he took her cell phone away because she was posting material on Facebook. He said the argument was not physical. The daughter said she was tired of him arguing with her and that she didn’t know why she still lived at her dad’s house. •a man said his father was trying to return to his house despite not being released after open heart surgery in April. The father said he lives in Acworth and can drive that far. He added he takes only Tylenol for pain. •a mother and father said their 15-year-old daughter has been leaving the house between midnight and 5 a.m. They believe she is meet ing a man between 32 and 35 and a juvenile. The mother said the daughter began changing in December when she had an “unruly charge.” Their daughter failed ninth grade and has told them the only reason she goes to school is to get on social media and to get out of the house. The mother also said the daughter has con fessed some of the events to a family friend. The mother also has been reading her daugh ter’s emails. She said she has been sending naked pictures of herself to boys, including to one 16-year-old at Jackson County Compre hensive High School. The mother also believes the man her daughter has met is picking up other children for $75 and perhaps having sex with some of them. He also has told their daughter she should move in with him. •a woman complained her husband changed the password on the WiFi so she could not access it. She has a temporary protection order against him. He admitted changing the pass word because his wife changed it first. •a man said a woman kept coming on his property despite being told to leave several times. She said she was with the Census Bureau and needs to speak to the homeowner. She repeated that to a deputy but would not explain what it was about. The man’s son, who lives in the house, also said he did not want to talk with the woman. •a man said he had just moved from a house on Grandview Drive and the owner of the house wanted her phone back. He said she had filed a report the phone was stolen. The woman said she just wanted it back. •a couple said they have visitation rights for a juvenile, but have not seen the child for at last six weeks. The parents are hiding the juvenile, the couple charged. It is an on-going problem. •a woman said she loaned an Apple 7S to her brother-in-law and he has had it since April 13. He refuses to return the phone, and she cannot track it because it is turned off. •a woman said someone took her handbag, or she misplaced it. She said it had her driver’s license, wallet, makeup bag, debit card, birth certificate and medicine and $60 cash. She had it the morning of May 17 and did not notice it was gone until that evening when she started to pay a cell phone bill. •deputies helped with six incidents involv ing trees in roads May 20 and 21. They cleared trees or debris in the road on Old Pendergrass Road at the bridge, Galilee Church Road, Adams Road, Highway 11 at Northminster Drive and at Highway 124 and Terrell Lane. A deputy directed traffic for a Jackson EMC crew while a tree was cut at Dixon Bridge Road at Hale Road. The crew took power lines down, cut the tree and put the line back. •a son of a Jefferson woman said he was concerned about selling a gun to her because his father is moving back in. He said the man has tried to buy guns from him since the father got out of prison. •a man said a dog chased a friend and him as they rode bicycles near Brockton Loop Road and Standridge Road. He said it was a vicious dog. A deputy talked with the dog’s owner who said it had gotten out of its pen. The dog was with the woman and “did not seem aggressive to me and allowed me to pet it several times,” the deputy said. •a woman said a Ford Fiesta she owns with another woman was gone when she woke up about 4 p.m. May 22. The two women said they had not given any permission to take the car. The first woman said a third woman had been staying with them for three or four days. She was gone when the woman woke up and the key to the car was no longer on the key ring. •a woman on Williamson Street said her dog had what appeared to be a gunshot wound on its right rear leg when she came home. The woman said she did not know for sure who did it, but it could be her neighbor. •a man said he had gotten a phone call from a family friend who said his deceased grand mother's house had bullet holes on the side. The man said he looked at satellite images and saw what appeared to be four-wheeler trails on the property. A deputy reported seeing bullet holes in the side of the house. •a man reported he was a registered sex offender and had an argument with the home- owners of the house where he was registered. He said he was afraid to stay there, but was afraid he would get in trouble with the proba tion officer if he was not there. •a woman on Airport Road said someone tried to enter a house and outbuilding. Nothing was reported taken and no entry was made. A screen for a window on the outbuilding was lying on the ground. The window had been raised. Someone attempted to pry open the rear door and rear window. Someone also tried to get in the house attic. A garbage bag contain ing stuffed toys had been opened. •a woman said her neighbors’ 15-year-old daughter broke into her house. She said she found a sticky note with her WiFi password on it. She also found multiple doors open that had been closed, a credit card that was in her wal let on the coffee table and a laptop computer that had been “dead” now was partly charged. She said the girl’s father talked to her about a week earlier about the girl having her WiFi. She said she told him his daughter should not have that information. The juvenile admitted entering the house through an unlocked base ment window. The girl said she wanted to get access to social media, that she did not take anything and just used the WiFi. The girl said she entered the house three times. •deputies were asked to check about a woman being held against her will on McMul- lian Road. The woman’s boyfriend made the request, saying her ex-boyfriend might be holding her. A Franklin County deputy also was doing a courtesy check on his way home. The current boyfriend said the woman had not been seen for two days. She was last seen at the home of her ex-boyfriend’s house and was getting into a van. •a man was reported lying in the road with his bicycle. The man said he had been traveling from Florida to hike the Appalachian Trail. He had been traveling for about a week. He told a deputy he had a knife in his back pocket. Nothing else was found. •a man reported suspicious people in the Magnolia Pointe Subdivision. An off-duty officer said his two children were with two other juveniles. The two other juveniles want ed “to play a prank on someone in the subdi vision.” •a man said a woman went to the Sprint cell store in Banks Crossing and got a 4 Samsung S8 Plus phone added to his account without his authorization. He said he received a bill for $2,550. He said he had not been able to contact the store manager He was referred to Banks County Sheriff’s Office, •a man said his vehicle was hit several times by gravel from a dump truck going north on Interstate 85 between mile markers 137 and 140. A deputy said he saw about 10 marks on the man’s windshield and a circular crack in the top corner on the driver’s side. •a man said he wanted to get property from a house where a woman was staying. He said he dated the woman in the fall of 2016, but did not live at the house. Howev er, he owns the property and allowed her to use it. He no longer dates her and wanted to get his property. She was not at the house. Deputies told him it was a civil matter. •a woman said another woman had called Advantage Behavioral Health Systems say ing she was “having bad thoughts and need ed to speak with someone.” The woman cane to the office, filled out paperwork and left before being seen. A deputy asked family members at her residence to call her. Her mother arrived and got her by phone. She was at a friend’s house. She came home and said she was no longer upset. She told the deputy “she was a self-mutilator cutter. She stated that she would do this to relieve tension and stress, but not as a life-ending exercise.” ORTHOPEDIC CLINIC Orthopedic Surgery • Sports Medicine • total Joint Replacement John R. Dorris MD David S. Ryan MD David W. Bacastow MD Logan K. Fields MD Yancey Shuman PA-C Athens I Commerce I Elberton | Jefferson I Royston | Winder 706-583-9000