The Advocate-Democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1893-current, March 29, 2024, Image 1
I CGKJEJKHCZ efvotndmm cPaptfi 500 Per Copy Volume 150 CRAWFORDVILLE, GA 30631 TALIAFERRO COUNTY, MARCH 29, 2024 NUMBER 13 Taliaferro County Ag Ed/ Community Garden News TYRIQ LONG CENTRAL REGION WINNER VEGETABLE PRODUCTION PROFCIENCY 1 Congratulations to Tyriq!!! He will compete at the state level at the end of April! Craft a Bird Feeder Saturday, April 6,1 PM Come join us to craft homemade bird feeders. Supplies will be provided, and participants will be able to take home their finished feeder. $3 program fee, $5 parking. Allergen warning: peanut butter will be used. May be cancelled due to inclement weather. A. H. Stephens State Park For more information, email AH_Stephens_Park@ dnr.ga.gov Park Office: 456 Alexander St, Crawfordville GA,30631. SR 44 overnight lane closures scheduled on Lake Oconee bridge WHAT: The Georgia Department of Transportation has scheduled several overnight single lane closures to perform maintenance on the Lake Oconee bridge. WHEN: April 1, 2 and 3, weather permitting, between the hours of 7 p.m. and 7 a.m. the following day. WHERE: State Route (SR) 44 on the Lake Oconee bridge at the Putnam/Greene county line. This will impact traffic from milepost (MP) 21 to 22.4 in Putnam County and MP 0.0 to 1.0 in Greene County. Jail closure for renovation project The Greene County Sheriffs Office Jail Operations will be closed and moved to the Morgan County Sheriffs Office Jail located at 1380 Monticello Road, Madison, Georgia 30650 for approximately eight months. During this time if you or someone you know is arrested for any offense you will have to travel to Madison to be bonded out or to bond them out. While at the Morgan County Jail we will be adhering to their policy and procedures as it relates to visitation, bonding procedures, booking procedures, healthcare, phone calls, commissary, and other related matters. The phone number to the Morgan County Jail is (706) 342-2164. We will have Greene County Detention Officers on site assisting the Morgan County Jail Staff and will be using the same Jail Doctor and Nurse for the healthcare of Greene County Inmates. We do understand that this will be an inconvenience to our citizens here in Greene County and will make every effort to assist the families of those who have been incarcerated and the inmates. If you have any questions, cares, or concerns please feel free to call us at (706) 453-3351 Extension 306, (M-F from 8-5). After normal work hours please contact the Morgan County Jail at (706) 342-2164 and we will be glad to answer any questions that you may have. Thank you for your patience and understanding. Luke 24: 6. He is not here, but is risen: remember how he spake unto you when he was yet in Galilee, 7. Saying, The Son of man must be delivered into the hands of sinful men, and be crucified, and the third day rise again. TCS Track and Field Meet Championship Kenya White won three medals in three separate events at Middle Georgia Track and Field meet. Taliaferro County Middle School Track and Field teams competed in the Middle Georgia Championships. TCS sent ten athletes but there were 80 total from Taliaferro, Greene, Warrenton and Wilkes Counties. Alqueno Harrison TCS top performers were: Kenya White: 1st place-400 meter run, 2nd place-110 high hurdles: and 2nd place-long jump Alqueno Harrison: 1st place 1600 meter run; 2nd place 800 meter run Jayden Davis: 3rd place 400 meter run Kemarious Williams Kemarious Williams: 1st place shot put Autumn Turner: 3rd place shot put That’s quite an impressive showing for TCS against larger schools. Congratulations Coach Adrian Harper and Coach Tomeka Harris. Lunch and Learn Thomas Macfie, Donna Taylor, Jane Kuehn, Renee Brown, Katie Price, Elaine Rivera, Joe Martin and Avanell Peters enjoyed lunch at Nick’s last Thursday. The Master Gardeners in Taliaferro County meet every third Thursday of the month for lunch and a speaker. This months’ speaker was Katie Price who talked about shrubs and landscape plants and times to prune them. At the April 18 meeting, Donna Taylor will talk about pollinators and their importance in our gardens. Please join in, even if you’re not a Master Gardener, you may learn something about how to grow your own food, how to preserve it and enjoy it. Sparta man pleads guilty to voluntary manslaughter Judge Burleson sentences him to a maximum of 20 years in prison BY BILLY W. HOBBS, Herald-Journal Correspondent A 22-year-old Sparta man who was facing the possibility of a murder conviction this week in Hancock County Superior Court, suddenly changed his mind about a jury deciding his fate Monday morning. Treyvion Markise Crayton apparently also learned that had he been convicted by a jury of murder that he could have been facing the possibility of a life sentence in prison with or without the possibility of parole. Ocmulgee Judicial Circuit Assistant District Attorney (ADA) Blayne May, who had planned to prosecute the case along with Chief Assistant District Attorney Allison ‘Alley” Mauldin, said when they got into the courtroom Monday, Crayton’s defense attorney, Kevin Stroberg, Chief Assistant Public Defender of the Ocmulgee Judicial Circuit, talked with his client. ‘‘He then came up to us and asked would the state consider anything less than 20 years, and we said no,” ADA May said in a telephone interview Monday afternoon. “We told him if he wanted to do a blind plea to voluntary manslaughter and let the judge decide the sentence, then we would agree to that plea.” ADA May explained that a blind plea means that the State agreed to the defendant pleading to voluntary manslaughter and even though both sides had a recommendation as to the sentence, neither side had an agreed upon recommendation. It meant that Ocmulgee Judicial Circuit Superior Court Judge Alison T. Burleson could decide the sentence of the defendant based within the bounds of the statute, ADA May said. As it turned out, Crayton entered a plea of guilty to voluntary manslaughter in the Nov. 19, 2022 fatal shooting of 39-year-old Robert May III, a former Milledgeville resident, who lived with his girlfriend in Sparta. Immediately after Crayton pleaded guilty to a charge of voluntary manslaughter, ADA May said he shared some evidence to show the judge several photographs of how gruesome the crime was along with tenuring some video from a neighbor’s home security camera of the actual shooting. “I played that home security video and then I played some video of the defendant at his house that showed him reenacting the killing,” May said. “He actually reenacted shooting an AR-style rifle, and holding it straight down and then he actually stops.” Crayton fired two gunshots into the shoulders of the victim before he pulled the trigger and fired 10 more gunshots into May’s face and head. “It was gruesome,” the lead prosecutor said. Prior to Burleson imposing the sentence against Crayton, May’s mother, Betty Simmons, of Milledgeville, addressed the court with victim impact statements. Simmons talked about how much she missed her son and that no matter what happened she was never going to see or talk with him again. She later asked the judge to impose the maximum sentence against Crayton, ADA May said Stroberg argued there would have been some evidence of self-defense. “I then told the judge that’s why we agreed to a voluntary manslaughter charge,” ADA May said, noting he and Mauldin didn’t believe he would have been successful. “But he could have made some argument as to self- defense because there were two firearms in our victim’s vehicle.” One of those guns was a Glock .40-caliber pistol and an AR-style rifle. The bullet-riddled body of Robert May III was discovered laying beside his girlfriend’s car on College Avenue in Sparta about 2:30 a.m. on Nov. 19, 2022. The victim had been shot with what authorities believe was a high-powered rifle, which was never found. ADA May said it was never known by authorities as to what exactly happened between the two men that led to the shooting. The case was jointly investigated by deputies and investigators with the Hancock County Sheriffs Office and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation Region 6 Office in Milledgeville, who later became the lead law enforcement agency. Crayton will remain in the Hancock County Jail in Sparta until he is transferred for processing at the Georgia Classification Prison near Jackson and then assigned to another prison within the Georgia Department of Corrections.