Newspaper Page Text
THE HOUSTON HOME JOURNAL
The Oct. 12 Houston
County Grand Jury, in the
name of the citizens of
Georgia, charges and accus
es the following suspects
with actions contrary to the
laws of the state, the good
order, peace and dignity
thereof. The names below
have been accused and
charged but not found guilty
or not guilty of the crimes.
* Jonathan Allen
Collins, 21, and Candace
Gilliam, 23, each are
charged two counts of mur
der for causing the death of
Robert Shane Gilbert and
causing it during the com
mission of a felony, the man
ufacture of methampheta
mine. They are also charged
with the manufacture of
methamphetamine and
criminal attempt to manu
facture methamphetamine,
by possessing items used in
its manufacture.
* Zuniga Facundo
Alverez, Mark Anthony
Anzualda and Eduardo
Cantera each were charged
with theft by bringing stolen
property - a .38 caliber
handgun - into the state
from Florida; possession of a
firearm during the commis
sion of a crime; carrying a
concealed weapon; posses
sion of marijuana, all on or
about Aug. 29.
* Jeffrey McGriff, 39,
202 Camelot Place, Warner
Robins, and Donald James
Farmer, 24, 202 Camelot
Place, Warner Robins, each
are charged with second
degree criminal damage to
property on or about Jan.
Activist to speak at FVSU tonight
Special to the HHJ
FORT VALLEY - Nationally known
human rights activist Kathleen Neal
Cleaver continues Fort Valley State
University’s fourth annual John W.
Davison Lecture Series on Friday with
a presentation on the university cam
pus.
Cleaver’s presentation, “The
Revolution from the Inside,” will begin
at 7 p.m. in the C.W. Pettigrew Farm
and Community Life Center. The lec
ture is free and open to the public.
Cleaver, who has spent most of her
life participating in the human rights
struggle, dropped out of Barnard
College in 1966 to work full time with
the Student Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee (SNCC) as part of the
Campus Program.
From 1967 to 1971 she was the com
munications secretary of the Black
Panther Party, the first women mem
ber of its Central Committee.
Macon State College
Warner Robins Campus
(Located on Watson Blvd., Across from City Hall and just a half mile from Robins AFB main gate)
It’s not too late to begin or to continue your college studies this fall.
Macon State’s Second Session is an 8-week term
running Oct. 18 to Dec. 10
APPLY TODAY
Office of Admissions: 929-6700 or toll free 1-800-272-7619
mscinfo@mai 1. maconstate. edu
www.maconstate.edu
Perry United Methodist Church
4
Jenny Jackson-Adams -Senior Pastor
Roland Fall -Associate Pastor • Josh Bizzell -Youth Minister
Krissy Pope -Pastor to Children & Director of Christian Education
1002 Carroll Street childcare
478-987-1852 Provided
10850
23, for intentionally damag
ing a 1985 Chrysler Fifth
Avenue with a metal base
ball bat. McGriff was also
charged with possession of
an open container of beer
while operating a vehicle.
• Erica Woodson of
Hawkinsville, and Marquis
Taylor each were charged
with possession with intent
to distribute cocaine on or
about April 10.
• Anthony Leon
Andrews, 37, 107 North
Sixth St., Warner Robins,
was charged with burglary
for his attempt to unlawful
ly enter the home of another
on Bernard Drive in Warner
Robins. He also is charged
with giving false name for
giving the name of Travis
Andrews as his to a law
enforcement officer, both on
or about Dec. 6, 2002.
• Brandon Lamar
Blake, 18, 211 Devon wood
Drive, Warner Robins, was
charged with armed robbery,
aggravated assault and pos
session of a firearm during
the commission of a felony
for taking $5 from and
assaulting a person with a
firearm on or about June 22.
• Donald Louis Borah,
37, 130 Ben Edwards Road,
Kathleen, was charged with
theft by deception for
obtaining $879 cash by
intentionally selling defec
tive wood and failing to
replace it or return the
money on or about April 8,
2003.
• Kevin Michael
Dawkins, 100 Lauren Way,
Warner Robins, was charged
with robbery for taking a
'Vi'A/frfro't/S/ / '?{je'C&O'twe'f
_ I MORNING WORSHIP
9am & 11am
SUNDAY SCHOOL
10am
SUNDAY NIGHT WORSHIP
7pm
HOUSTON GRAND JURY INDICTMENTS
After sharing years of exile with for
mer husband Eldridge Cleaver, she
returned to the United States in 1975
and began working to challenge racist
injustice. She has worked to free
imprisoned freedom fighters, including
Geronimo (Pratt) ji Jaga and Mumia
Abu-Jamal.
In 1984 she graduated summa cum
laude with a bachelor’s degree in histo
ry from Yale College and was elected to
Phi Beta Kappa. After receiving a J.D.
from Yale Law School in 1989, she
became an associate at the New York
law firm of Cravath, Swaine and
Moore.
In 1992 Cleaver joined the faculty of
Emory University Law School. She has
also been a visiting faculty member at
New York’s Benjamin N. Cardozo
School of Law, Yale University’s
Graduate School and Sarah Lawrence
College, where she was the Joanne
Woodward Professor of Public Policy in
cash register from another
by sudden snatching on or
About Aug. 11, 2004. He was
also charged with was
charged with theft by tak
ing, a car, a Plymouth Neon,
from its owner; possession
of cocaine; and forgery for
passing a check for $619.26
in another’s name on or
about Aug. 14.
• Laurie Ann
Delmedico, 415 Fieldstone
Road, Warner Robins, is
charged with possession of
ketamine, a schedule II con
trolled substance; posses
sion of diazepam (Valium) a
schedule IV controlled sub
stance; and possession of
carisoprodol (Soma) a sched
ule IV control substance, all
on or about Nov. 13, 2000.
• Carlton Drew of
Montezuma is charged with
burglary for unlawfully
entering a Watson
Boulevard business with
intent to commit a theft
therein or about March 4,
2003.
• Terry Lamont Evans
of Perry is charged with
obstruction of an officer for
fighting arrest and restraint
by a law enforcement officer
on or about July 28.
• William Keith
Garrigus, 112 Howley
Road, Bonaire, is charged
with two counts of posses
sion of methamphetamine, a
controlled substance, on or
about June 25. He was also
charged with battery (family
violence), and cruelty to
children for doing it in front
of a child. He was also
charged with driving with
out insurance for knowingly
LOCAL
operating a vehicle on
Howley Road without insur
ance on or about June 25.
Anthony Eugene Gilliam
of Nashville, was charged
with possession of a firearm
by a convicted felon for pos
sessing a firearm on or
about March 19, after hav
ing been previously convict
ed of burglary on April 7,
1999.
Ronald Westly Goad Jr., 3
Rough ton St., Perry,
charged with possession of
methamphetamine, a con
trolled substance on or
about July 3.
• Richard Jason Gornik,
300 North Lake Drive,
Perry, charged with aggra
vated stalking for making
harassing phone calls on or
about Sept. 23, with intent
to harass and intimidate the
victim after have been previ
ously ordered not to make
contact by the court.
• Louis Charles Hayward
Jr., 209-D Woodcrest Circle,
Warner Robins, charged
with unauthorized repro
duction, manufacture and
distribution and sale of
recorded material for pos
sessing numerous duplicate
DVD movies (55) and music
CDs (198) on or about May
22.
• Lakeshia Deshawn
Hickey, 1144 Calhoun Drive,
Warner Robins, charged
with obstruction of an offi
cer, for kicking a law
enforcement officer in the
leg during the lawful dis
charge of his duties; battery,
for hitting a person in the
arm and neck, causing red
ness; and simple battery for
1999. In 2001 she returned to Emory
Law School as a senior lecturer and
research fellow.
Currently Cleaver holds an appoint
ment as a senior lecturer in the African
American Studies Department of Yale
University. She is the co-founder and
producer of the International Black
Panther Film Festival which as been
based in Harlem since 1999.
Cleaver also serves as a co-director of
the Human Rights Research Fund,
part of a network of anti-racist organi
zations that document American viola
tions of the human rights of citizens
who challenge the racist and military
policies within the United States.
Fort Valley State President Dr. Kofi
Lomotey welcomed Cleaver as the
fourth speaker at this year’s series of
10 lectures honoring John W. Davison,
the first principal of the Fort Valley
High & Industrial School.
Meet The Security Bank Team On Their New Turf.
www.secuvitybank. net
At Security Bank, we always cheer for the home team. Were pleased to announce
that we’re adding more great players to our winning line-up professionals. You'll always find
us cheering in the stands and playing on the fields in the communities we serve.
With our brand new Houston County branch, we’re ready to go for the next goal.
[
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I
N \ I
849 Warren Drive
Warner Robins, GA 31088
478-722-7170
Other Houston County Locations: ■ .
Houston Uke Wilson Boulevard
119 S Houston Lake Ri. 1869 Watson Blvd.
Warner Robins. GA 31088 Warner Robins, GA 31093
478-722-7100 478-749-1340
Russell Perry
302 Richard Russell Pkwy 1208 Washington St.
Warner Robins, GA 31088 Perry. GA 31069
478-749-1320 478-722-7130
making physical contact of
an insulting or provoking
nature to another person, all
on or about May 20.
• Henry Lee Jackson,
Kathleen, charged with sec
ond-degree criminal damage
to property for striking
another’s 1996 Honda Civic
with an object causing dam
age exceeding $500; and
simple battery for striking
the car’s owner in the face
or about Aug. 20.
• Tyron Lewis of
Jeffersonville was charged
with child molestation for
performing an immoral or
indecent act to satisfy his
sexual desire in front of a
child on or about Sept. 7.
• Shawna Faye
Patterson, 26, 308 Cornell
Drive, Warner Robins,
charged with making false
statements and writings on
or about May 15, for signing
a fictitious name to a traffic
citation from the Centerville
Police Department.
• Lynn Marie Pollard,
26,105 Huntington Way,
Centerville, charged with
possession of alprazolam, a
controlled substance, and
for drugs to kept in original
container for having the
drug in not in the original
container dispensed by a
pharmacist, on or about
Aug. 15.
• Joseph Neal Pope Jr.,
107 Wimbush Way, Warner
Robins, charged with six
counts of first-degree for
gery and six counts of theft
by receiving stolen property
for saying he could sign on
another’s account and cash
' I ' Jhk . »
KATHLEEN NEAL CLEAVER
Come Out And Meet The Players!
Open House 9am-spm
Refreshments llam-2pm
Friday, October 15, 2004
Security Bank
849 Warren Drive
Warner Robins, Georgia
Is!
Member FDIC
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2004 ♦
ing six checks in the
amounts of $l3O, $135,
$l4O, $240, $270 and $l9O
between April 14 and May 5.
• Travis Demetrius
Prater, 24, 111 Sherry
Lane, Warner Robins, was
charged with battery, rob
bery and two counts of cru
elty to children for grabbing,
pushing and biting the vic
tim, taking $lO6 from her
and doing so in front of two
children on or about Aug.
12. He was also charged
with possession with intent
to distribute marijuana
along with Jessica
Williams, 28, 111 Sherry
Lane, Warner Robins, and
Carolyn Madison, 35, 153
Vicki Lynn Drive, Warner
Robins, on or about Feb. 20.
• Andrew Luther Price,
217 Norman Lane, Warner
Robins, charged with pos
session of cocaine and loiter
ing for acting in a manner
not usual on Third Street,
Warner Robins, in posses
sion of cocaine and taking
flight from police on or
about Aug. 21.
• Jennifer Dawn Price,
of Byron, charged with pos
session of diazepam, a con
trolled substance, not keep
ing it in the original contain
er and driving under the
influence of alcohol on or
about April 3, 2003.
• Rebecca Lynn Wetzel
of Byron charged with bur
glary and theft by taking for
unlawfully entering the
dwelling of another on Wren
Drive in Kathleen and tak
ing a DVD-VCR on or about
Sept. 3.
Security
Bank
5A