Newspaper Page Text
WEDNESDAY
July 5, 2006
VOLUME 136, NUMBER 130
OUR
FRONT
PORCH
*o^
INSIDE
Grlllad gobblers
■ Our weekly food section
takes a look at a different
way of serving this traditional
Thanksgiving treat.
- Page 1C
IN BRIEF
Authorities look for boat that
struck, killed man on Sinclair
■ MILLEDGEVILLE (AP)
Authorities were looking
for a boat they say struck and
killed a man Saturday night
on Lake Sinclair in central
Georgia.
James Mark Baxter, 48, died
when a boat, likely speeding,
hit the front of his pontoon
boat and ran over it, throwing
Baxter and his wife into the
water, said Cpl. Doug Bridges
of the state Department of
Natural Resources. The boat
kept going, he said.
Baxter was likely killed by
blunt force trauma in the
impact with the boat, Bridges
said.
Baxter’s wife and her 25-
year-old daughter sustained
only minor injuries.
Ga. attorney general named
president of association
ATLANTA (AP) Georgia
attorney general Thurbert
Baker has been elected
president ot the National
Association of Attorneys
General, the first black to
hold the top post in the nearly
100- year-old legal institution.
Baker was elected by his col
leagues from other states for
2006-2007. The announce
ment was made at the annual
meeting of the states' top
lawyers, which was held this
year in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho.
Baker, a Democrat, was
appointed Georgia's attorney
general in 1997 by then-Gov.
Zell Miller. He has twice
been elected to four-year
terms and is seeking his
third. His challenger is former
state Sen. Perry McGuire, a
Douglasville Republican who
worked as a former corpo
rate counsel for the fast food
chain Chik-fil-A.
DEATHS
■ Don R. Collins
■ Joseph Jackson Morrow
■ Peggy Ann Woods
■ Patricia Griffin
INDEX
LOCAL 2 A
WEATHER 3 A
OPINION 4 A
SPORTS 1 B
COMICS 4 B
CLASSIFIEDS .... 5 B
PERIODICAL
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UN IV OF GEORGIA
ATHENS GA 306GWXXE
3-OiGIT 306
July 5, 2006
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LEGAL ORGAN FOR HOUSTON COUNTY,
cm r of Perry, city of Warner Robins and city 7 of Centerville
Joiner ruled mentally ill but guilty
By RAY LIGHTNER
HHJ Staff Writer
“Guilty but mentally ill” means
“mentally ill,” but not to the extent
you are not responsible for your
actions.
Robert Joiner found that out after
he received 15 years of jail time for
robbing two people, including his
mother and pointing a gun at three
police officers on Sept. 18, 2004.
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* ENI/Gary Harmon
Warner Robins American Little League pitcher Taylor Campbell winds up to release the ball during Saturday’s
District V playoff game at the Western Little League field in Macon. For more, see 18.
*
4.
-A
ENI/Gary Harmon
A group of F- 15s fly over McConnell-Talbert Stadium before the start of Warner Robins’
23rd annual Independence Day Celebration on Friday.
Fourth celebration a big hit
By KIMBERLY CASSEL
PRITCHETT
HHJ Contributing Writer
Thousands turned out
Friday night at McConnell-
Talbert Stadium for
Warner Robins’ 23rd
annual Independence Day
Celebration.
Country music artist John
www.hhjnews.com
Joiner pled guilty this past week
but mentally ill to false imprison
ment of his mother, taking her gun
and forcing her to an ATM for S6O,
then robbing a convenience store
clerk at gunpoint, then pointing a
pistol and firing at three police offi
cers.
According to the Chief Assistant
District Attorney Katherine
Lumsden, Joiner had his mother
Playoffs begin
Berry and the Band of the
U.S. Air Force Reserve were
the featured performances
along with an earlier per
formance at 7:15 p.m. from
the Houston County Honor
Band.
Robins Air Force Base
officials and Warner Robins
Police Department estimat
pick him up from Colonial Gardens,
after he was kicked out for using
drugs and alcohol. He then took the
gun she kept in the car and forced
her to go to the cash machine. After
that he held up the clerk at the BP
and “by pure luck and bad aim,”
Lumsden said, no one was shot after
he fired at three police officers.
Judge George Nunn asked Joiner,
“Did you do the things they say you
ed that between 12,000 and
15,000 were in attendance of
the celebration.
Approximately 14 police
officers from Warner Robins
Police Department and the
Houston County Sheriffs
Department manned the
celebration, according
See FOURTH, page 6A
THREE SECTIONS • 18 PAGES
Battles begin for
education posts
By CHARLOTTE PERKINS
HHJ Staff Writer
Seven candidates, includ
ing two incumbents, have
tossed their hats into
the ring, and will be on
the November ballot for
Houston County Board of
Education seats.
District 2
In District 2, Marianne
Melnick and Kathy
Brown will be the candi
dates. Both are newcom
ers to politics. Brown
is the president of the
Houston County High
School Parent Teacher
Association, and has been
active on the school coun
cil. She is an Air Force
veteran. Melnick was for
merly principal of Warner
Robins High School
and served as Assistant
Superintendent at the
Board’s central office
before her retirement last
year.
District 2 includes a
large area in and con
tiguous to the city of
Warner Robins. The dis-
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did?”
Joiner said “not to my knowledge,
no, not like that. I was trying to hurt
myself.”
Lumsden said according to police
reports, there were “statements
made hoping police would shoot
him.”
Joiner acknowledged he may have
run from police and pointed the
See GUILTY, page 6A
Hospital
officially
releases
Aaron
By RAY LIGHTNER
HHJ Staff Writer
“The (Hospital) Authority
felt compelled that it was
time to take the organization
in a different direction, and
to do so requires a change in
leadership.”
That statement, made by
Chairman Ed Dyson in a
release Friday, was but one
in a number of eyebrow
raising communication eiha
nating from within Houston
Healthcare this past week.
The aforementioned
change Dyson mentioned
to date has included the
termination of the contract
with Chief Executive Officer
Frank Aaron, the rumored
termination or resignation
of two other department
heads and the hiring of Dr.
Tony Alford, the executive
director of medical affairs
as CEO.
Judge for yourself the
integrity and legality
of Aaron’s firing. It includ
ed voting in closed session
Wednesday night to fire him,
offering the job to Alford the
next night, in a closed and
unannounced meeting of
the full board, and announc
ing first thing Friday that
“Aaron will vacate the posi
tion effective as of today. The
Authority will begin plans
to fill the position immedi
ately.”
Then, after repeated calls
about all that, along with
See FIRED, page 6A
trict includes Lake Joy
Elementary School, Quail
Run Elementary School,
Shirley Hills Elementary
School, Feagin Mill Middle
School, Warner Robins
Middle School and the
Houston County Career &
Technology Center.
The District 2 seat
is currently held by
Jim Boswell, who has
announced that he will not
seek re-election.
District 4
Incumbent District
4 board member Fred
Wilson will face a chal
lenge from John Geldreich.
Wilson has served on the
board since 1994, and has
served as chairman of
the board. Geldreich was
formerly on the faulty of
Northside High School.
Both men are from Warner
Robins.
District 4, located
entirely in the urban area
of Warner Robins, includes
Northside Middle School,
Lindsey Elementary
See BOARD, page 6A