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Snapchat leads Gainesville police to arrest 6 on marijuana charges

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By: Gainesville Times
GAINESVILLE -- Note to would-be criminals: just because it’s on Snapchat, the social media site known for disappearing posts, doesn’t mean law enforcement won’t find out about it.  Six Gainesville residents face drug and weapons charges after Gainesville police were alerted to a video on the social media app that showed illegal activity.  Officers found a small amount of marijuana, drug objects and a stolen firearm when they arrested the suspects at an apartment complex in the 1100 block of Jesse Jewell Parkway, according to Gainesville Police spokesman Sgt. Kevin Holbrook.  The firearm had been stolen in an earlier entering auto case, according to Holbrook. He added that a misdemeanor amount, or less than an ounce, of marijuana was found in a backpack and baggies. “The subjects were positively identified as those in the video posting. They were all taken into custody without incident,” Holbrook said in a news release.  The suspects range in age from 16 to 23 and all face charges of possession of marijuana and drug-related objects. One also faces a theft by receiving stolen property charge and the juvenile faces an underage possession and consumption of alcohol charge. “This case should be a reminder to all that if you see something or notice something suspicious on social media sites, it should be reported immediately,” Holbrook said.

No date yet in trial for South Forsyth grad’s beating death

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By: Newsroom Staff
STATESBORO — Nearly a year and a half after 18-year-old Michael Gatto was killed in an attack by a 20-year-old bartender, attorneys are still hashing out details, with no solid trial date in sight. On Monday, David Wolfe, an attorney from Atlanta who is representing James Grant Spencer, the man charged with aggravated battery and felony murder in Gatto's death, sought to have a Georgia law ruled unconstitutional because it does not apply to his client. As a result, it could lead to possible sentencing that may be "cruel and unusual." Spencer, now 21 and formerly of Johns Creek, remains in the Bulloch County Jail without bond, awaiting trial. He has been charged with aggravated battery and felony murder in connection with Gatto's death after the Aug. 28, 2014, incident at Rude Rudy's bar, which has since closed. Spencer reportedly physically attacked Gatto at the bar, where Spencer worked as a bouncer. According to a post that appeared on Rude Rudy's Facebook page but which was removed shortly after it was posted, Spencer was not on duty at the time of the attack. The bar closed permanently after owner Jonathan Starkey surrendered his alcohol license prior to a scheduled hearing before the Statesboro City Council in September regarding the incident and alleged alcohol violations. Wolfe cited what he said is a relatively new amendment to a Georgia law, Official Code of Georgia Annotated 16-5-1, which reads, in part: "A person commits the offense of murder in the second degree when, in the commission of cruelty to children in the second degree, he or she causes the death of another human being irrespective of malice. "A person convicted of the offense of murder shall be punished by death, by imprisonment for life without parole, or by imprisonment for life. A person convicted of the offense of murder in the second degree shall be punished by imprisonment for not less than ten nor more than 30 years." Wolfe argued that Spencer should not have been charged with second-degree murder because the victim was not a child, so there were no charges of second-degree cruelty to children. The law, which provides for a lighter sentence for second-degree murder, does not apply, so the possibility of a lesser sentence and the ability to argue Spencer's case shows disparity in the law, he said. While felony murder provides for a sentence of life in prison with or without parole, a second-degree murder charge could result in a sentence of 10 to 30 years in prison. Wolfe disputed the felony murder charge, which implies a defendant intended to kill, and claimed he plans to pursue Spencer's defense by arguing he was criminally negligent but had no intent to kill. Ogeechee Judicial Circuit Assistant District Attorney Daphne Totten countered Wolfe's arguments. "Wolfe is essentially trying to rewrite facts of our case," she said. "Michael Gatto received several blows with the fist of Mr. Spencer. This is not a criminally negligent act." If Gatto had been 16 at the time of his death, the charge against Spencer would not have been second-degree cruelty to children, which is specified in the Georgia law Wolfe cited, but a more serious charge, she said. After lengthy discussion about whether O.C.G.A § 16-5-1 is constitutional, Bulloch County Superior Court Judge William Woodrum stated he would further address the motion in January.

High-speed chase involving trucker ends with crash by Costco in Cumming

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By: Kayla Robins
CUMMING — When thinking of the perfect getaway vehicle, chances are it’s not a tractor trailer. And anyone passing the Costco in Cumming about 1 a.m. Wednesday could see why. Forsyth County Sheriff’s spokesman Epifanio Rodriguez said the tractor-trailer hydroplaned, jackknifed and struck a fire hydrant, street sign and other objects before coming to a rest by a power pole in front of the mega-store at Bald Ridge Marina Road and Market Place Boulevard. Deputies were pursuing the vehicle, which had been traveling erratically through Cumming. Rodriguez said the driver, 58-year-old Anthony Kent of Dawsonville, had reached speeds topping 80 mph, while running red lights and failing to maintain his lane. After the crash, Kent was taken to an area hospital in critical condition. Rodriguez said he will face charges of fleeing or eluding a police officer, reckless driving and other traffic violations. More charges may be forthcoming, depending on the results of an investigation and a blood test. The pursuit began on Canton Highway (Hwy. 20) at Tower Road as the county received multiple 911 calls about the vehicle. It was not immediately clear what company owned the tractor trailer and whether Kent was hauling a load at the time. As of Wednesday afternoon, investigators had not been able to speak with Kent due to his hospitalization.

Teen DUI suspect showers before deputies catch up to him at south Forsyth home

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By: Kayla Robins
SOUTH FORSYTH — There’s no such thing as a clean getaway. A Forsyth County teenager was arrested on Christmas Day for driving under the influence after reportedly drinking two alcoholic energy drinks and starting a police chase. According to a Forsyth County Sheriff’s report, the pursuit began on Old Atlanta Road as the 18-year-old turned onto Daves Creek Road at a high rate of speed while on the wrong side of the road and lost traction due to the rainy conditions. It ended after he made it home — and took a shower — before blowing a .149 and .139 blood alcohol content. After making “several spontaneous utterances,” the student told deputies he drank two Four Lokos. Four Loko is a once-popular caffeinated malt beverage that received widespread backlash for related underage binge drinking and deaths, causing the product’s company to remove the energy drink ingredients — caffeine, taurine and guarana — from the concoction. According to Epifanio Rodriguez, a spokesman for the sheriff’s office, underage people fleeing the law “is not an everyday occurrence, but we have to remember that kids are impulsive.” Often, he said, they run out of fear. The teen was cooperative once deputies arrived at his house, Rodriguez said. He was charged with DUI under 21, reckless driving, driving on the wrong side of the road, failure to stop at a stop sign, fleeing/attempting to elude and open container. Deputies canceled the pursuit due to weather conditions and as the suspect continued to drive recklessly — he ran three stop signs and crossed “into the oncoming lane of traffic multiple times.” When another deputy followed the vehicle without sirens on to a house, the teen’s parents directed the officer to his room, where he had just finished taking a shower, according to the report.

No traffic fatalities, more DUIs in Forsyth County at start of new year

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By: Kayla Robins
FORSYTH COUNTY — Local law enforcement officials often describe the New Year’s Eve holiday travel period as hit or miss for crashes and driving under the influence arrests, but this year posted the most DUIs since 2011. Throughout the long holiday weekend, the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office charged nine people with DUI, according to Epifanio Rodriguez, a spokesman for the agency. Five of those arrests fell between Dec. 31 and Jan. 1, which were a Thursday and Friday. Four people were arrested for DUI between 7 p.m. Dec. 31, 2014, and 9 a.m. Jan. 1, 2015, which fell on a Wednesday and Thursday. Over that span  in 2013, there were three DUIs. No one was arrested for impaired driving in 2012, which was a rainy New Year’s Eve. There were six DUIs in 2011. While DUIs may have increased over the past few years, this start to the new year began on a more positive note regarding wrecks, as there were no fatalities on Forsyth County roads. Deputies responded to 26 crashes during the same time frame, compared to 22 in 2015. Rodriguez said four of those were listed as crashes with injuries, one of which was initially called out as life threatening, though the man was downgraded to stable at an area hospital. Two injuries resulted from wrecks last year, one of which was fatal. Forrest Bushong, a 27-year-old from Cumming, died after he lost control of his vehicle and struck a tree near Mashburn Elementary School about 5:30 a.m. on Jan. 1, 2015. Deputies also assisted Cumming police in a pursuit that ended outside city limits in the early morning hours of 2016.

Authorities: Suspect in Dawsonville jewelry store robbery strikes again

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By: Associated Press
MEBANE, N.C. — The FBI is looking for a woman involved in jewelry store robberies in multiple states, including most recently in North Carolina. In a news release, the FBI said the woman robbed a Jared store at an outlet mall in Mebane on Monday, tying two employees' hands before stealing several pieces of jewelry. Authorities say the woman pulled out a handgun upon entering the store. The FBI says the woman is believed to have been involved in numerous jewelry store robberies last year, including ones in Dawsonville and Woodstock, as well as Sevierville, Tenn., Bluffton, S.C., and Panama City Beach, Fla.. An unknown man was seen with her during the robberies in Georgia and Florida. The Dawsonville robbery occurred on Aug. 5. Zales employees at North Georgia Premium Outlets told authorities a woman grabbed a pistol, zip-tied their hands and moved them to the back of the store as she stole more than $13,000 worth of jewelry. The woman is believed to be in her 20s, weighing about 130 pounds and standing about 5 feet 8 inches tall. She wore a dark baseball cap, a blue button-up shirt and khaki pants. On Aug. 11, Panama City Beach, Fla., officials received a call about a similar robbery at Reeds Jewelers, during which more than $400,000 of jewelry was taken.“At gunpoint, the suspect zip-tied two store employees’ hands and moved them to the store’s restroom,” according to an FBI news release. Another suspect, a black man about 6 feet tall and weighing 250 pounds and believed to be in his late 30s or early 40s, let the front door shut after removing the door stop. The female suspect then is seen on surveillance camera taking items from the display cases.“The employees stated the suspect had entered the store one day prior to the robbery and asked about the same items,” according to the news release. FBI agents have said they believe the suspects drove a red 2009-10 Honda Civic LX with tinted windows, based on surveillance footage.

Dawson County teen charged after firing flare gun at car

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By: Newsroom Staff
Two Dawson County teens are facing a long list of criminal charges after authorities say they were involved in an aggressive driving incident that later led to one of the 17-year-olds firing a flare gun at another vehicle. While the driver and passenger in the BMW that was fired upon Saturday evening were not injured, the teen officers said fired the weapon has been charged with two felony counts of aggravated assault. Jacob Dylan Couch remained in Dawson County Sheriff's custody as of Tuesday afternoon without bond. He was also charged with two counts of reckless conduct, possession of marijuana, three counts of possession of drug related objects and possession of dangerous drugs. Christian Avery Seay was also charged in connection with the incident that occurred on Price Road in eastern Dawson County. Dawson County Sheriff's spokesman Capt. Tony Wooten said Seay and Couch, his passenger, were traveling in the area of Price Road when they pulled over on the side of the road and had an argument with a couple in a BMW. According to Wooten, authorities are unclear as to what led to the initial altercation and say that the occupants of the two vehicles did not know each other. "When the couple in the BMW left, the Accord (driven by Seay) followed them and ended up causing an accident with them, striking them," Wooten said. "The suspects then left the scene and the person who they hit followed them to get a tag number. That's when the suspects fired the flare gun at the people that were following them." Patrol officers were able to catch up with the suspect vehicle at the Harmony Church Road Chevron a short time later, Wooten said. Seay's charges include possession of drug related objects, driving while license expired, failure to stop and render aid, failure to report accident with damage, reckless driving, aggressive driving, passing in a no passing zone and failure to maintain lane. He was released on $3,700 bond Monday, according to jail records.

Suspect swipes 40 pairs of ‘boyfriend pants’ from Victoria’s Secret in south Forsyth

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By: Kayla Robins
SOUTH FORSYTH — One alleged burglar must not have wanted to wait for her Christmas presents, instead smashing into the Victoria’s Secret store at The Collection at Forsyth and helping herself to armfuls of items. According to a Forsyth County Sheriff’s report, the suspect — described only as “what appeared to be” a black woman — broke the glass front door with a “large rock” to gain access to the business, which was closed, at 2:15 a.m. Dec. 25. The items she took from the store, which sells a range of women’s clothing from undergarments and bathing suits to clothing and lingerie, were reported as either $44.95 “boyfriend pants” or $26.95 “boyfriend tees.” The incident triggered alarms and the woman fled the popular south Forsyth outdoor shopping mall. Video surveillance showed an unknown vehicle back up to the front door before the suspect got out and smashed her way inside.“The female was carrying a large black trash bag and went through the right side of the store, placing items into the bag,” the report stated. The suspect was seen in the video wearing a white long-sleeve sweatshirt with dark pants. It appeared she had a cloth or scarf wrapped around her face to obscure her identity. According to Epifanio Rodriguez, a spokesman for the sheriff’s office, and previous incident reports, the store has had “several shopliftings” in the past, though it was unclear whether any were by force.

Officials: Woman from Cumming wrote $13K in bad checks

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By: Kayla Robins
FORSYTH COUNTY — A Cumming woman has been charged with financial fraud and forgery after reportedly writing more than 30 checks from a fake account, putting some 40 businesses out a total of about $13,000. Stephanie Burton, 38, supposedly wrote checks for everyday transactions between April and November 2015 that varied in amounts, though many were less than $100, according to numerous incident reports from the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office. The transactions ranged from groceries and meals to gas and retail purchases. The forgery was listed as a felony charge, said Epifanio Rodriguez, a spokesman for the agency, warranting a $56,210 bond. Burton, who was arrested Dec. 9, remained in the Forsyth County Jail as of Wednesday. Rodriguez said Burton is accused of opening a fake savings withdrawal account in her mother’s name, a type of marriage account circa the 1990s that is no longer used in banking. Her mother was thought to be unaware of her daughter’s actions. The investigation began in November. There are 32 separate case numbers relating to Burton and these charges, involving a “long list” of locations and victims “all over the county.” Burton is also suspected of running a similar scheme in other counties, including neighboring Dawson and Gwinnett, Rodriguez said. This marked the third time Burton was arrested in 2015. On April 1, she was charged with obtaining drugs by fraud, Rodriguez said. She was then arrested on April 6, though it was unclear whether that was a rebooking or a separate charge. Burton has a warrant out of Dawson County, meaning she will be taken directly to Dawson’s jail immediately upon posting bond in Forsyth.

FBI: Woman arrested in probe of jewelry store robberies

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By: Associated Press
ATLANTA (AP) — A woman suspected in multiple jewelry store robberies across the Southeast, including nearby Dawsonville, has been arrested in Georgia along with one other person with her at the time, the FBI said late Saturday.  An FBI statement said 24-year-old Abigail Lee Kemp was arrested without incident Friday in the Atlanta suburb of Smyrna.  The statement added that the other person with Kemp then also was taken into custody, but the agency cited the ongoing investigation in declining to identify the other person or give more details about the arrests.  Kemp's hometown also wasn't released, and it wasn't immediately known if she had an attorney.  Amanda Warford Videll, a spokeswoman for the FBI's Jacksonville, Florida, field office, confirmed to The Associated Press via email that the woman's arrest comes amid an investigation of jewelry store robberies last year in Dawsonville and Woodstock, as well as Sevierville, Tenn., Bluffton, S.C., and Panama City Beach, Fla.  She said the latest robbery occurred recently in Mebane, North Carolina.  A statement she released said agents from the FBI in Atlanta made the arrests while helping investigators in the agency's Jacksonville, Florida, division.  The spokeswoman said the FBI had gotten "numerous credible leads from the public" within hours of issuing a release in recent days requesting help in the case.  The FBI said the case would be handled by the United States Attorney's Office for the Northern District of Florida.  The FBI began receiving tips soon after requesting assistance in identifying the suspect after the most recent armed robbery, which occurred Monday in Mebane, N.C.  The FBI said the woman robbed a Jared store at an outlet mall, tying two employees' hands before stealing several pieces of jewelry. She also reportedly pulled out a handgun upon entering the store.  The Dawsonville robbery occurred on Aug. 5.  Zales employees at North Georgia Premium Outlets told authorities a woman grabbed a pistol, zip-tied their hands and moved them to the back of the store as she stole more than $13,000 worth of jewelry.   Michele Hester of the FCN regional staff contributed to this report.

Mexico: Drug lord located thanks to interview with actor Sean Penn

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By: Associated Press
MEXICO CITY (AP) — The recapture of drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman took a surprise, Hollywood twist when a Mexican official said security forces located the world's most-wanted trafficker thanks to a secret interview with U.S. actor Sean Penn. Penn's interview with Guzman, who has twice escaped from Mexican maximum security prisons, appeared late Saturday on the website of Rolling Stone magazine. It was purportedly held at an undisclosed hideout in northern Mexico in late 2015, several months before Guzman's recapture Friday in Los Mochis, Sinaloa, after six months on the run. In the interview, Guzman defends his work at the head of the world's biggest drug trafficking organization. When asked if he is to blame for high addiction rates, he responds: "No, that is false, because the day I don't exist, it's not going to decrease in any way at all. Drug trafficking? That's false." In the article, Penn describes taking elaborate security measures ahead of the clandestine meeting. But apparently they were not enough. A Mexican federal law enforcement official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not permitted to comment on the issue, told the Associated Press it was the Penn interview that led authorities to Guzman in a rural part of Durango state in October. Authorities who later raided the area decided not to open fire on Guzman because he was with two women and child. He was able to escape, but they were able to later track him to a house in Los Mochis where Mexican marines nabbed him after a shootout that left five people dead. The official said the meeting between Penn and Guzman was held in Tamazula, a community in Durango state that neighbors Sinaloa, home of Guzman's drug cartel. On Friday, Mexican Attorney General Arely Gomez said that Guzman's contact with actors and producers for a possible film about him helped give law enforcement a lead on tracking and capturing the world's most notorious drug kingpin. In the Rolling Stone article, Penn wrote that Guzman was interested in having a movie filmed on his life. He said Guzman wanted Mexican actress Kate del Castillo, who facilitated the meeting between the men, involved in the project. "He was interested in seeing the story of his life told on film, but would entrust its telling only to Kate," wrote Penn, who appears in a photo posted with the interview shaking hands with Guzman whose face is uncovered There was no immediate response from Penn's representatives to the Mexican official's comments. Earlier Saturday, a federal law enforcement official said that Mexico is willing to extradite Guzman to the United States, a sharp reversal from the official position after his last capture in 2014. "Mexico is ready. There are plans to cooperate with the U.S.," said the Mexican official, who spoke on condition anonymity because he wasn't authorized to comment. But he cautioned that there could be a lengthy wait before U.S. prosecutors get their hands on Guzman. "You have to go through the judicial process, and the defense has its elements too." Top officials in the party of President Enrique Pena Nieto also floated the idea of extradition, which they had flatly ruled out before Guzman's embarrassing escape from Mexico's top maximum security prison on July 11 — his second from a Mexican prison. But even if Mexican officials agree, Guzman's attorney Juan Pablo Badillo told the Milenio newspaper that the defense already has filed six motions to challenge extradition requests. "They can challenge the judge, challenge the probable cause, challenge the procedure," said Juan Masini, former U.S. Department of Justice attache at the U.S. Embassy in Mexico. "That's why it can take a long time. They won't challenge everything at once ... they can drip, drip, milk it that way." Guzman faces drug trafficking charges in several U.S. states and American officials hoped to extradite him after he was captured in February 2014. At the time, Mexico's government insisted it could handle the man who had already broken out of one maximum-security prison, saying he must pay his debt to Mexican society first. Then-Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam said the extradition would happen only after he finished his sentence in Mexico in "300 or 400 years." Then Guzman escaped through an elaborate tunnel dug into Mexico's most secure lock-up on July 11, thoroughly embarrassing Pena Nieto's administration. He also had escaped a similar maximum-security facility in 2001 while serving a 20-year sentence. Lore says he hid in a laundry cart, though many dispute that version. He spent 13 years on the lam. Gomez said that one of Guzman's key tunnel builders led officials to the neighborhood in Los Mochis that authorities had been watching for a month. The team noticed a lot of activity at the house Wednesday and the arrival of a car early Thursday morning. Authorities were able to determine that Guzman was inside the house, she said. The marines were met with gunfire as they closed in. Gomez said Guzman and his security chief, Ivan Gastelum, a.k.a "El Cholo Ivan," were able to flee via storm drains and escape through a manhole cover to the street, where they commandeered getaway cars. Marines climbed into the drains in pursuit. They closed in on the two men based on reports of stolen vehicles and they were arrested on the highway. According to a statement from the Mexican Attorney General's office, the U.S. filed extradition requests June 25, while Guzman was in custody, and another Sep. 3, after he escaped. The Mexican government determined they were valid within the extradition treaty and sent them to a panel of federal judges, who gave orders for detention on July 29 and Sept. 8, after Guzman had escaped. Those orders were not for extradition but just for Guzman to begin the extradition hearing process. Now that he is recaptured, Mexico has to start processing the extradition requests anew, according to the law. The quickest he could be extradited would be six months, said a federal official who spoke on condition of anonymity, but it's not likely because lawyers can file appeals. He said that they are usually turned down, but each one means a judge has to schedule a hearing. "That can take weeks or months, and that delays the extradition," he said. "We've had cases that take six years." ___ Associated Press writer Christopher Sherman in Los Mochis, Maria Verza in Mexico City and Eric Tucker in Washington contributed to this report. Associated Press Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Cell number, social media led FBI to Dawsonville jewelry robbery suspect

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By: Associated Press
ATLANTA (AP) — The FBI zeroed in on a woman suspected in jewelry store robberies across the South after analyzing records from cellphone towers near the robberies, then checking social media and hearing from suspicious friends, newly filed court records reveal. Abigail Lee Kemp, 24, was taken into custody Friday in the Atlanta suburb of Smyrna, along with one other person with her at the time, the FBI said late Saturday. Authorities haven't identified an alleged accomplice in the robbery spree, but court records say he acted as a lookout in some of the robberies. A key break in the case came from one specific phone number with a north Georgia area code, court records show. An analysis of cell tower data found that the number showed up at or near jewelry stories in Georgia, Florida and South Carolina while the businesses were being robbed, authorities said. Court records detail how authorities then used the phone number to identify Kemp as a suspect, and found a photo of a maroon Honda Civic on her social media accounts that matched the description of one seen in surveillance video. The FBI also released images from surveillance video of the robberies, which led Kemp's friends to contact authorities, court records show. "Within hours of issuing a press release this week requesting assistance in identifying the suspects, the FBI Jacksonville Division began to receive numerous credible leads from the public," the FBI said in a news release. "Some citizens further advised that during recent contacts with Kemp, she was wearing expensive jewelry that some of the callers believe she cannot afford," the court affidavit said. "Some citizens also advised that Kemp possesses a black handgun and recently had her car painted black." Federal court records do not list an attorney for Kemp. Her arrest comes amid an investigation of jewelry store robberies last year in Dawsonville and Woodstock, as well as Sevierville, Tenn., Bluffton, S.C., and Panama City Beach, Fla., FBI spokeswoman Amanda Warford Videll confirmed to The Associated Press via email. The latest robbery occurred Jan. 4 in Mebane, N.C., Videll said. The female suspect seen in surveillance video from several of the robberies was armed with a handgun, ordered store employees into a back room, made them lay face-down and zip tied their hands, court records state. In at least one of the robberies, in Panama City Beach, a male accomplice is seen on video removing the front door stop and letting the front door close while he remained outside of the store. The female suspect then removed about $400,000 in jewelry from the display cases, the affidavit states. The woman was seen in the video "wearing a cellular telephone earpiece during the robbery and was heard speaking to someone," affidavit said.

Police: Fraud suspect, accomplices targeted golf courses in Forsyth, Hall counties

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By: Gainesville Times
OAKWOOD — A Lawrenceville man is accused of committing credit card fraud and allegedly looking through golf courses in Forsyth and Hall counties for unattended valuables, according to police. Thomas Edward Sebrell, 64, was charged with identity theft, financial transaction card fraud, first-degree forgery and exploiting an elderly person in alleged connection to a credit card fraud incident Jan. 5. He was booked Saturday into the Hall County Jail. Sebrell is accused of buying a PlayStation 4 and an Xbox at an Oakwood GameStop and a 55-inch flat screen television at a Buford Wal-Mart. Oakwood Police Sgt. Danny Sridej said a citizen called in and provided information on the suspects. Sridej and the department believe Sebrell and some alleged accomplices have targeted golf course communities in Hall and Forsyth for the past 12 months.“The reason the suspects chose golf course communities is because the victims are executives and wealthy people who often carry large amounts of cash inside their vehicles, golf carts, golf bags and wallets,” Sridej said in a news release.“Their wallets also usually contain credit cards with high limits or no limit.” The card from the Jan. 5 incident came from Chicopee Woods, Sridej said. Sridej said Forsyth County law enforcement had heard multiple reports of people watching golfers leave their golf carts before looking for valuables.“A lot of golf players put their wallets in the golf bag,” Sridej said. Oakwood police have not released names of any alleged accomplices.

Two Dawsonville men charged after fake hostage report

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By: Newsroom Staff
DAWSONVILLE — Authorities responding to a report of a possible hostage situation in downtown Dawsonville last week took two men into custody for reportedly making false statements. Initially, all four of the people at the Sandberg Way home were detained for questioning Jan. 5, though only two were charged in the case. Adam Reeves, 40, and David William Hatcher II, 23, both of Dawsonville, have each been charged with making false statements and writings, as well as concealment of facts. Hatcher was also charged with false report of a crime for telling authorities that Reeves had kidnapped him. As they learned during the course of the investigation, he had willingly traveled to Reeves' home in the Stonewall subdivision. Dawson County Sheriff's Capt. Tony Wooten said the two men were also involved in another altercation at the home in early November. At that time, Reeves was arrested on an aggravated assault charge for shooting Hatcher, his roommate at the time, in the face. Hatcher was flown to an Atlanta area hospital for injuries suffered in the shooting. It was his presence last week back at the home that sparked a third party call to Dawson County 911, according to Wooten. "Reeves made a phone call out to a family member and said [Hatcher] was at his house and he was concerned for his safety and if they didn't hear back from him, to call 911," Wooten said. When investigators got there, they attempted to make contact with Reeves by telephone to check on his welfare. Wooten said Reeves took the call, but told them he was not in danger because he was in the shoe department at Walmart. However, deputies knew that to be false, because they had surrounded the home and knew he was inside. "It turns out that neither of these two were being held hostage," Wooten said.

Man charged with murder in Gainesville stabbing death

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By: Gainesville Times
GAINESVILLE — A Gainesville man has been charged in the stabbing death of a man during a fight Sunday night at an apartment complex off Tumbling Creek Road near the University of North Georgia campus. Eric Aurelio Reyes, 25, is being held at the Hall County Jail on a malice murder charge, according to Gainesville police Sgt. Kevin Holbrook. Arriving at the Preserve at Tumbling Creek Apartments about 11:47 p.m. Sunday, police found Evan Isaac Rosas, 22, of Gainesville, outside.“He was unconscious and unresponsive,” Holbrook said. Rosas had been stabbed in the chest and side, according to the arrest warrant. He was taken to Northeast Georgia Medical Center, where he died from injuries, Holbrook said. Reyes was arrested at the complex without incident, Holbrook said.“This was not a random crime,” he said. “The parties are known to each other.” Several people were in the apartment where the fight took place before it later moved outside, he said. Holbrook said he believed Reyes lived at the apartments and Rosas did not. He didn’t know what the fight was about. Further charges “may be forthcoming.”“This is an active and ongoing investigation,” Holbrook said. The police department is investigating the incident with the Hall County District Attorney’s Office.

Sawnee EMC warns of phone scam in Forsyth County area

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By: Kayla Robins
FORSYTH COUNTY — A local electric services provider urged customers to be cautious after a number of complaints were reported in connection with a phone scam over the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday weekend. Customers — three on Sunday and “a couple” Monday — claimed they received phone calls from someone who identified as a Sawnee Electric Membership Corporation employee. The caller told customers their power bill was late and that they would be shutting services off in one hour. The catch: They could keep their power on by buying a prepaid Visa card, calling back and paying their bill over the phone.“Sawnee EMC definitely does not call people and threaten them in that way,” said Blake House, vice president of member services for the Cumming-based company. “We don’t take payments that way.” House said Sawnee EMC recommends filing an incident report with Cumming police or the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office. One complaint came from a church, he said. Another was from a business. The rest were private residences. No one went through with making a payment this time, though people have in the past. Phone scams come and go, he said. They have happened before, and the story or scenario is usually altered slightly. A common factor throughout many phone scams is the need to get a prepaid card, a money order or a green dot card to make a payment to prevent something from happening, whether that is services being cut off or a warrant for someone’s arrest being executed.“You’ll have this happen a few times. Then you won’t hear about it for a few months,” House said. “It’s a definite scam.”

Police: Gainesville man charged with forcing child to eat feces

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By: Gainesville Times
GAINESVILLE - Two Gainesville residents are charged with causing severe mental and physical pain to a child, including deprivation of food and biting the child’s fingers. William Joe Sewell Jr., 36, and Stacy Carol Hicks, 33, were charged in a Dec. 15 indictment with first-degree cruelty to children for alleged acts against a child in 2013 and 2014. Multiple attempts to reach Sewell and Hicks for comment were unsuccessful. Sewell faces three separate counts, alleging he caused “cruel and excessive physical and mental pain by requiring (the child) to eat (the child’s) own feces,” according to the indictment. From May 2013 through August 2013, Hicks is accused of depriving the child of food. In the third and fourth count of the indictment, Sewell is charged with “striking and kicking” the child, as well as biting the child’s fingers. The age of the child and the reporting party are details that were not released.

Shoplifters swipe 400 packs of cigarettes from south Forsyth gas station

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By: Kayla Robins
SOUTH FORSYTH — The Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the theft of some 400 packs of cigarettes from a south Forsyth gas station. The cigarettes — Newport and Camel brands, with an estimated value of $1,800 — were taken about 4 a.m. Thursday from the RaceTrac just north of McFarland Parkway/Exit 12 at Ga. 400. According to the sheriff’s office, four men entered the store, made their way behind the counter and grabbed “part of the cigarette display case off the wall.” No force or weapons were used in the incident and no money was taken. According to sheriff’s reports, “The four unknown males quickly ran out of the store after being startled by the employees.” The suspects could not be identified, as their faces were covered by hooded sweatshirts. They are not thought to be dangerous. Witnesses reported the getaway vehicle was a late model Ford Taurus last seen heading toward Ga. 400. Cigarettes often are resold, said Epifanio Rodriguez, a spokesman for the sheriff’s office, though an official motive for the crime is not known.

Injured teen driver from north Forsyth charged with DUI in Dawson County wreck

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By: Newsroom Staff
DAWSONVILLE — One of two teenagers who suffered serious injuries in a single-vehicle wreck last week in eastern Dawson County remains hospitalized. As of Thursday, 18-year-old Kayla Gourlay of Cumming is still at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta, where she was taken after the crash, authorities said. The wreck occurred Jan. 13 on Couch Road. According to the Georgia State Patrol, Gourlay reportedly lost control of the Ford Focus she was driving in a curve north of Lake Drive. The vehicle traveled down a steep embankment and overturned at least twice before coming to a stop in a creek. "While negotiating a right-hand curve, the driver was traveling at a high rate of speed and too fast for the curve, causing her to lose control," said Robin Stone, a spokeswoman for the state patrol. Gourlay was thrown from the vehicle, Stone said, as was her 17-year-old male front-seat passenger. He was taken by ambulance to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville. The two backseat passengers, both of whom are also teens, were not injured in the crash. According to Stone, Gourlay faces numerous charges, including driving under the influence and two counts of serious injury by vehicle. She also has been charged with failure to maintain lane, reckless driving, seatbelt violations and purchasing/possession/manufacturing/distribution of a controlled substance-marijuana.

Authorities: Cumming woman faked terminal cancer, got $25K in bucket list wishes

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By: Kayla Robins
FORSYTH COUNTY — No one wants cancer. Save apparently for one Cumming woman, who was recently arrested for reportedly accepting nearly $25,000 in donations, free trips and gifts by pretending to have a terminal form of the disease. Forsyth County Sheriff’s detectives say Mary Bennett, 29, started faking Stage IV ovarian cancer in 2010.“She got so much,” said Deputy Epifanio Rodriguez, a spokesman for the sheriff’s office. “She got a trip to Houston, which she said she was using to get medical treatments. She got Braves tickets and signed letters from players. She went on a hunting trip. It was just so many different events.” According to the sheriff’s office, Bennett also went skydiving, rode in a hot air balloon, took a free trip to New Orleans, visited Biloxi’s Treasure Bay, rode the Skyview in Atlanta and went fishing in the Gulf of Mexico. Bennett, a licensed practical nurse who is currently unemployed, has been charged with misdemeanor theft by taking and felony first-degree forgery. She posted a $2,365 bond and was released from the Forsyth County Jail three days after her arrest earlier this month. The theft charge is only a misdemeanor because more businesses have not pressed charges against her, according to Rodriguez.“We’re almost positive there are more victims out there,” he said. “She fed off the kindheartedness of the people in this community.” The forgery charge came after Sheriff’s Det. Jeffrey Roe asked Bennett to provide medical records to prove her time in Houston was spent on getting treatment.“At first, she began to give him letters from hospitals that were never signed by a doctor,” Rodriguez said. Then she forged the signatures. Bennett reportedly signed the name of a doctor from MD Anderson Cancer Center, a treatment facility run by the University of Texas.“She was going to the hospital and was not actually having procedures,” Rodriguez said. “She would have people take her, but she never wanted anyone going in with her.” The Houston trip was made possible by a fundraiser at Donut Connection in north Forsyth. The spaghetti dinner raised $4,000.“He didn’t know. No one knew,” said Rodriguez of the restaurant’s owner. “The $4,000 included the fact that he took several hundred out of his own pocket and gave it to her.” At one point, Rodriguez said, Bennett left Northside Hospital with two bandages on her head and said she had a procedure to remove tumors from her brain stem.“Of course, [Roe’s] investigation found she never had that procedure and never had those tumors,” he said. The sheriff’s office wants anyone who thinks they may be a victim of Bennett to come forward. More charges could be added as they do. To contact Detective Roe, call (770) 781-3038.
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