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Lance Martin

Lance Martin

Wednesday, 29 July 2009 14:57

Four charged in weekend thefts

Four people, including one previously reported in The Spin, were arrested in three thefts over the weekend, according to the Halifax County Sheriff’s Office.

On July 25, Deputy Chris High and Detective Tyree Davis investigated a report of a breaking and entering and larceny of several firearms in the Coyote Drive area of Enfield. The suspects were found at the location of the incident claiming to have heard it was broken into  before it was ever reported to law enforcement.

Through further investigation by Deputy High and Detective Davis, Eric Lynch, 43, and Charles Carter, both of the Enfield area, were arrested and charged with one count of  second-degree burglary and larceny of a firearm.

Both men were held in the Halifax County Jail on $4,000 secured bonds with Aug. 4 court dates.

Also included in the roundup was a crime which The Spin first reported yesterday where a 31-year-old Roanoke Rapids man was charged Sunday in a breaking, entering and larceny in the Colonial Drive area of Roanoke Rapids.

Deputy Joe Sealey charged James Michael Doughten with breaking and entering, larceny after breaking and entering, two counts of possession of stolen goods, larceny of a firearm, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and injury to real property,

Doughten was jailed on $25,000 bond and has a Sept. 30 court date.

This case was solved because of neighbors looking out for one another, the sheriff’s office said yesterday.

In another report the sheriff’s office said in the early morning hours of July 25,  Deputy G.H. Teal responded to a call on N.C. Highway 481 where the victim reported he was robbed.

Teal determined an undisclosed amount of money was taken from the victim’s pocket by force, damaging the pants pocket.

After further investigation, Deputy Teal obtained warrants and Deputy B. C. Griffin later charged Angela Adkins Mitchell with one count of common law robbery, one count of simple assault and one count of injury to real property. She was held in the Halifax County Jail under a $500 secured bond with a Sept. 9 court date.

“The swift and determined investigation of Deputies Sealey, High, Griffin and Teal led to all the offenders being taken into custody quickly and some of the property being returned to the owners,” Detective Jonathan Merritt said in a press release.

The city’s fund balance has improved since council took drastic measures late last fiscal year to keep its savings account from dropping below an 8 percent threshold.

Council received the news tonight from Interim City Manager Pete Connet and released a press statement making the announcement.

“Had we not had any reserves we would be in dire straits,” Connet told council at its meeting.

At the end of the 07-08 fiscal year the fund balance was at $416,000, Connet said, which meant a savings balance at 8.3 percent of expenditures.

Measures taken by council when the city learned in February it faced a $664,000 shortfall mean when it closed the books at the end of June, its fund balance increased 8.9 percent for a total of 17.2 percent. That represents a $1.9 million unreserved fund balance, the press statement said. Fund revenues for the year are expected to increase by more than $900,000.

The news does not mean the city can go on a spending spree, Connet said. “The city is still not out of the woods,” he said, explaining the Local Government Commission likes to see the percentage for city’s Roanoke Rapids' size at 30 percent or more.

There are also no guarantees the state, to fix its budget woes, won’t take money from cities, the interim manager explained.

Two things state legislators are eyeing are ABC revenues and eliminating privilege license fees, which would mean a total loss of $150,000 to the city, Connet said. There have been indications the privilege license fees will go back to the state, he said.

The news also doesn’t mean any positions cut to make up for the shortfall can be refilled, Connet said.

The city cut a public works sanitation worker, two street worker I positions, property maintenance worker I position and a preventive maintenance specialist. An administrative assistant I position was made a part-time position.

Cuts were also made within the Planning Department. The city laid off a planner, an administrative assistant II, a part-time administrative assistant I and a code enforcement officer.

An administrative assistant was let go within city administration and part-time positions throughout the city were cut to balance the shortfall.

The city also enacted furloughs for all employees to deal with the shortfall.

Mayor Drewery Beale thanked department heads for the decisions they had to make during the crisis. “We’re certainly not out the woods yet and we’re not going to start spending either.”

Beale said following the meeting, “It took us making hard decisions we drew criticism on and took department heads doing more with less. The fund balance has been a big issue. We have shown the public we can bring it back to where it was.”

 

Rezoning matter

 

In another matter tonight council accepted the recommendation of the planning board to turn down a rezoning request submitted by businessman Mike Davis to rezone 6.62 acres of land at the end of Downs Brook Drive to multi-family housing. The decision by council was unanimous.

The following was posted yesterday on Facebook by Anthony Finney and is edited for style:

As most of the Roanoke Valley and Southeast, Va., area knows, Dylan Moore was an 8-year-old boy who was battling a rare blood disease known as Fanconi Anemia.

Over this past weekend “young Dylan lost his battle and went home to God. I never knew Dylan personally, but his strength is beyond that of any grown man I have ever known or heard of. He inspired an entire town, a county, even a region of North Carolina and Virginia to love, believe, hope, and care,” Finney noted. “And for this, I believe the city of Roanoke Rapids should recognize the courage that this young man displayed by honoring him with a city-wide, annual, Dylan Moore Day. Join me in this task to never let the memory of young Dylan fade from our thoughts.”

Contact Info: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Web site: http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/dylan

It was noted at the Web site there will be an informal memorial service for Dylan today at 3:30 p.m. in the Meditation Place on the 7th floor of the University of Minnesota Amplatz Children’s Hospital where the boy was being treated. 

Tuesday, 28 July 2009 14:55

Hollister man charged in break-ins

During the month of May the Halifax County Sheriff's Office received reports of several residential breaking and enterings in the Hollister area. 

According to a press release, Detective Rich Somogyi investigated the crimes, which resulted in the arrest of several subjects in the area and the recovery of the stolen property. 

Further investigation led to the recovery of an auto transport trailer concealed in the woods in the Hollister area. 

The trailer was previously reported stolen from a company in the Richmond, Va., area. 

The investigation led to the Monday arrest of Jan Lynch, 42, of Hollister. 

Lynch was placed in the Halifax County Jail under a $5,000 bond and is scheduled to appear in court on Sept. 17. 

Tuesday, 28 July 2009 14:54

Man charged in Colonial Drive BE&L

A 31-year-old Roanoke Rapids man was charged Sunday in a breaking, entering and larceny in the Colonial Drive area of Roanoke Rapids.

Lt. Bobby Martin of the Halifax County Sheriff’s Office said in a press release shortly after midnight Sunday Deputy Joe Sealy received a breaking and entering call.

When the deputy arrived he noticed a 36-inch television sitting in the front yard with a blanket on top and a VCR sitting by the road along with a navy blue pillowcase.

While at scene a witness approached Deputy Sealy and told the officer he saw someone he knew carrying items from the victim’s house. 

The witness said when the suspect saw him he quickly went back to his house.

Deputy Sealy learned the victim was on vacation and noticed the side door glass was broken out and the door damaged. 

When Deputy Sealy looked inside several items were turned over.

The deputy talked to the suspect, James Michael Doughten, who came to the door sweating profusely. Deputy Sealy saw two navy blue pillowcases on the couch, which matched the ones in the victim’s yard, Martin said in the news release.

With assistance from Deputy Corey Griffin, Sealy spoke to Doughten, who allegedly told the officers he was responsible for the breaking and entering. 

Deputy Sealy charged Doughten with breaking and entering, larceny after breaking and entering, two counts of possession of stolen goods, larceny of a firearm, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and injury to real property,

Doughten was jailed on $25,000 bond and has a Sept. 30 court date.

This case was solved, Martin said, because of neighbors looking out for one another. “The witness coming forward and assisting Deputy Sealy really aided him in finding the person responsible for this breaking and entering,” he said in the news release.

Joshua Rouse, charged in the June murder of an Applebee’s manager, was transported to Central Prison in Raleigh over the weekend after he allegedly cut an inmate in the Halifax County Jail.

Lt. Bobby Martin of the Halifax County Sheriff’s Office told The Spin this morning Rouse, a former employee of the restaurant, was charged with assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injury.

The cutting occurred after Rouse, 22, asked an inmate for his soup. The inmate gave Rouse his soup but refused to give him the crackers which accompanied the meal, Martin said.

Rouse became angry and cut the inmate in the face with a homemade blade. The inmate received stitches in his left eye brow, bridge of his nose and inside of his lip.

Rouse was in the Halifax County Jail awaiting an appearance on a first-degree murder and armed robbery charge in the stabbing and cutting death of Sandy Denise Riedel, who worked at the restaurant on Premier Boulevard since October.

Riedel died from multiple cut and stab wounds inside the restaurant. Rouse was arrested three days later

The Roanoke Rapids Police Department has said there is evidence indicating a robbery motive because some money was apparently missing.

Rouse has a previous criminal record  and was released from prison last May after he was convicted on Jan. 20, 2004, for attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon and assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injury. Those offenses occurred on July 13, 2003, in Roanoke Rapids. They stem from an assault on Jefferson Street in which a victim was attacked by three to five people.

The victim was hit in the face by his assailants, who demanded money as he was stabbed in the legs. Witnesses scared the attackers away and Rouse was later arrested.

Rouse, a South Carolina native, is a member of the United Blood Nation and has the Blood symbol of three paw prints branded on his right shoulder.

Rouse was schedule to appear in Halifax County District Court today on the jail charge and Aug. 26 for the murder and robbery charges stemming from Riedel’s death.

Gov. Bev Perdue’s visit this afternoon to Roanoke Rapids was brief, but upbeat, this after a morning session with administrators from the Halifax County school system.

“I’m real surprised anybody likes me,” Perdue told a group of the county’s elected officials and business people at the Kirkwood Adams Community Center, referring to the state’s deficit, state employee cuts and and a high unemployment rate. “I’ve been here six months. I took over at a time unparalleled in history.”

Perdue spoke of the state’s $4.7 billion deficit, one of the highest unemployment rates in the country, a state where only California, New Jersey and New York have lost more jobs.

“Every single county in North Carolina has lost jobs,” the governor said.

The governor said, however, “I sleep well at night because I have made tough decisions.”

In calling for citizens to get behind Raleigh’s efforts to create more jobs, the governor said, “This is North Carolina. We can stand up to anything. We can do anything.”

Despite bleak economic news, Perdue said there were early signs of an upturn in the state’s economy. An Outer Banks realtor sold seven condos, she said. “The unemployment rate did not go up (this month). This is the first month I’ve felt confident about paying (the state’s) bills. This is the first month I’ve had a car dealer say, ‘Bev, it ain’t all bad.’”

Perdue asked for statewide support of military bases and the Main Street program, which Roanoke Rapids is applying for membership. She called for adults in the community to stand up for students.

In a brief question and answer session before going in to meet with elected and other officials, Perdue said the only way she saw getting on equal footing with China in the global marketplace was for the state and country to concentrate on specialty manufacturing.

Honestly, the governor said, “In my time I don’t think you will see a level playing field.”

She explained only a demand by China’s people for democracy and increased wages could help.

Asked if she supported the president’s health care initiative, Perdue said she didn’t want something which would end up costing and penalizing states. “It has to be the right care, right place, right time.”

Monday, 27 July 2009 14:50

Man arrested for stealing cash

On Sunday the Halifax County Sheriff’s Office arrested Christopher Edmonds, 22, of Roanoke Rapids for the theft of approximately $10,800 in cash from a residence off N.C. Highway 48 in Roanoke Rapids. 

Detective Rich Somogyi said Edmonds was placed in the Halifax County Jail under a $5,000 bond and is scheduled to appear in court on Aug. 5.

Monday, 27 July 2009 14:49

Arrest made in Edgewater home invasion

A Roanoke Rapids area man has been arrested for a July 19 home invasion in the Edgewater subdivision, according to the Halifax County Sheriff’s Office.

Detective Rich Somoygi said in a news release Terence Wyche, 18, was charged with first-degree burglary, larcency and possession of stolen property. 

He was placed in the Halifax County Jail under a $25,000 bond and is scheduled to appear in court on Sept. 9.

Somoygi said more arrests are pending in the case, which occurred around 11 p.m. Deputies responded to a break-in in progress at a residence located in the Edgewater Subdivision in Roanoke Rapids. 

The homeowner was awakened when the door to his residence was kicked in and several suspects entered his home and began to steal items, including a firearm. The homeowner fired several gunshots at the suspects, who fled the residence. No one was injured.

Monday, 27 July 2009 14:48

Saturation patrol nets 66 charges

The Roanoke Rapids Police Department made 66 charges during a Saturday night saturation patrol, Chief Jeff Hinton said.

Officers patrolled complaint areas across the city, the chief said.

Charges ranged from 17 loud music citations to one careless and reckless driving count. They also included two possession of marijuana counts and one concealed weapon charge.