The times. (Gainesville, Ga.) 1972-current, October 27, 2018, Image 6
I2J OUR REGION Shannon Casas | Director of Content 770-718-3417 | news@gainesvilletimes.com The Times, Gainesville, Georgia ★ Saturday, October 27, 2018 Police: Man showed girl pornography, molested her BY NICK WATSON nwatson@gainesvilletimes.com A Flowery Branch man is accused of exposing a young girl to pornography and then engaging “in inappropriate sexual behavior” with the girl, according to authorities. Jonathan Dean Edwards, 20, was charged with child molestation and enticing a child for indecent purposes. He was booked Thursday, Oct. 25, in to the Hall County Jail, where he is being held without a bond. Hall County Sheriffs Office Lt. Scott Ware said Edwards and the girl — described by Ware as under the age of 10 — were acquainted with one another. Ware said Edwards alleg edly took the girl on Oct. 6 to a Flowery Branch residence and “exposed her to viewing pornography.” “Edwards also engaged in inappropriate sexual behavior with the child as well,” Ware wrote in a news release. The case is still under investigation. Hall County Magistrate Court officials said Edwards had requested a public defender but one had not been assigned as of Friday, Oct. 26. Edwards AUSTIN STEELE I The Times Georgia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams speaks to a crowd at Brenau University’s Pearce Auditorium on Friday, Oct. 26. ABRAMS ■ Continued from 1A Sarah Riggs Amico, a Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor of Georgia, speaks to a crowd at Brenau University’s Pearce Auditorium. Attendees gather at Brenau University’s Pearce Auditorium for a “We Are Georgia” bus tour event with Stacey Abrams, Sarah Riggs Amico and Charlie Bailey. Abrams also said she hopes to create jobs, but she also wants those jobs to pro vide living wages. “You shouldn’t have to move to make a living. ... The current governor has done a good job of bringing jobs to Georgia,” Abrams said. “The problem is too many of us have too many of those jobs. You should only have to have one job to make a living in the state of Georgia.” Abrams said she hopes to create a $10 million small business financing fund because the state has attracted large businesses, but she also wants to support “Main Street businesses.” Renewable energy can also be a job creator, she said. But at the root of the other issues is health care, Abrams said, so she vowed to improve health care access for Georgians. Abrams said her first pri ority as governor would be Medicaid expansion. Abrams stressed the importance of not just physical health but men tal health, noting that the state’s prison system is a major provider of mental health services. “We ask our law enforce ment to act as doctors,” she said. “They arrest folks not because they’re dangerous, because they’re sick. We know that a lot of folks who have substance abuse issues have them because they’re self-medicating mental health challenges.” Abrams said her brother, Walter, has been in and out of prison and rehab due to a heroin addiction. Walter was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and was able to get the medication he needed while he was in prison. He became stable and sober when he was able to get medication, Abrams said, but lost that health care access when he left prison. He struggled to find employment or housing because of his criminal record, she said. Riggs Amico, the lieu tenant governor candidate and a business owner from Marietta, who spoke before Abrams at the event at Bre nau, said she had many of the same priorities, includ ing school funding and Med icaid expansion. Riggs Amico told sup porters to encourage people they know to vote. “I need you to talk to every friend, family mem ber, neighbor, colleague. ... You tell them their vote matters,” she said. Myrtle Figueras, a for mer Gainesville mayor and councilwoman, said people in Hall County are excited about the Abrams cam paign. Figueras said she has followed Abrams’ career in the state legislature and trusts her leadership. “She is invested in human beings. She believes in ser vice to all,” Figueras said. “She feels the pulse of the nation and of this state. ” Sisters Audrey Simmons of Gainesville and Val Coley of Flowery Branch also attended Friday’s rally to show their support. “She’s verbal, she’s sin cere. It’s not just politics with her. She cares,” Sim mons said. Abrams is honest, Sim mons said, and has been forthcoming in explaining controversies such as her involvement in the burning of a state flag that featured a Confederate symbol while she was in college. Simmons said she likes how Abrams has reached across the aisle to work with Republicans. Coley said she appre ciates that Abrams is family-oriented. “When someone cares about their family, they care about everyone,” Coley said. Democratic Attorney General candidate Charlie Bailey and Josh McCall, who is running for the U.S. House of Representatives District 9, also spoke at Fri day’s rally. Kyle Leineweber, president of Brenau Col lege Democrats, which organized the event, also addressed the crowd before Abrams spoke. Abrams was introduced by Margie Gill, assistant director of Bre- nau’s counseling center and founder of Tabitha’s House, an organization for traffick ing victims. 3 people displaced by Oakwood apartment fire Three people were displaced as a result of a Friday afternoon fire on Lanier Mill Circle in Oakwood, according to Hall County Fire Services. Firefighters responded around 2:40 p.m. Friday, Oct. 26, and found the sprinklers were activated. Capt. Zachary Brackett said the fire around the stove and above the cabinets had been extinguished. “The unit is reported to have suffered minor fire damage but a significant amount of water damage,” Brackett wrote in an email. No injuries were reported, and the American Red Cross has been contacted for assistance. The cause is undetermined. Nick Watson Supreme Court allows embattled Griffin judge to stay on bench BY BILL RANKIN The Atlanta Journal-Constitution The Georgia Supreme Court on Friday unanimously rejected a request that an embattled judge from the Griffin Judicial Circuit be suspended from office. On Tuesday, the Judicial Qualifications Commission rec ommended that Superior Court Judge Mack Crawford be relieved of his duties, with pay, while an ethics complaint against him is pending. In July, the JQC accused Crawford of theft for directing a court clerk to transfer $15,675 to him from an account in the Pike County court registry. Crawford, a former state legislator who once headed Georgia’s public defender system, hears cases in Fayette, Spalding, Pike and Upson counties south of Atlanta. He had already agreed to stop presiding over criminal cases. Virgil Brown, one of Crawford’s attorneys, has said Craw ford was entitled to the $15,675 for unpaid legal fees and as reimbursement for court filing fees and depositions of witnesses from a 2002 foreclosure case. The JQC contends Crawford had no right to those funds and its case against him is expected to be heard early next year. If Crawford is found to have violated the judicial code of conduct, his punishment ranges from a reprimand to removal from the bench. In its motion to the state Supreme Court, the JQC said allowing Crawford to remain on the bench posed a “sub stantial threat” to the administration of justice. But the high court, in a unanimous and briefly worded decision, said it had “carefully considered” the JQC’s motion and support ing documents before reaching its decision. Month-old landfill fire has south Fulton residents concerned about health BY STEVE BURNS The Atlanta Journal- Constitution A landfill that has been burning for more than a month in south Fulton County has residents fear ing for their health, accord ing to Channel 2 Action News. “I cannot even walk out side without putting a mask on,” said 85-year-old Helen Goddard, who is already battling leukemia. Firefighters were first called to a woods fire Sept. 20 at the landfill in the 7600 block of Bishop Road, the news station reported. Fairburn city officials said in a Facebook post that the fire was expected to burn for days. However, the continued burning has altered the lives of residents. “We have a little 4-year- old grandchild that would love to live outside if he could, but unfortunately we have to keep him indoors,” resident Deborah Stephens said. Residents say the smell of the burning debris makes it difficult to breathe. “You call EPA, they say call code enforcement,” Goddard said. “Code enforcement has done nothing.” The Georgia Environ mental Protection Division is investigating, spokesman Kevin Chambers confirmed to AJC.com. “ It was a recycling facility, but evolved into an unper mitted solid waste handling operation. The owner has been uncooperative and we are now working on formal enforcement action to bring the facility into compliance with state rules and law,” Chambers said. Residents said they want the landfill shut down. “How would it feel if you couldn’t go to church with out people smelling you,” Goddard said. “I have to wash everything that I own.” Atlanta firefighters put out blaze near Edgewood-Candler Park MARTA A fire at a MARTA battery maintenance facility in north east Atlanta was extinguished, but it prompted a response by the fire department hazmat team, officials said. MARTA service was not affected, and DeKalb Avenue, which is near the incident, was reopened to traffic after a few hours. “This room supplies battery power to trains if electrical power goes out,” MARTA spokeswoman Stefany Fisher said. Potentially hazardous material at the site on DeKalb and Gordon avenues had firefighters in a defensive mode, Atlanta Fire Rescue Department spokesman Sgt. Cortez Staf ford told Channel 2 Action News. The scene was near the Edgewood-Candler Park MARTA station. Two firefighters were taken to a hospital to be treated for smoke inhalation, Stafford said. Atlanta Journal-Constitution