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Man Injured After Fleeing From Stone County Deputies:

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Justin Morgan Scott (mug shot SCSO)

A man who ran from authorities when they went to a residence in Branson West on April 17th is in the Stone County jail after being treated for injuries he sustained while on the lam.

Sheriff Doug Rader says Justin Scott Morgan, 24 , of Republic, climbed out a bedroom window and fled into the woods behind 35 Lewallen Lane. 

Scott, injured his head when he ran through a drainage tunnel on Highway 13.  He then fell 300 feet down a ravine and suffered spinal injuries.  When he was arrested, he was allegedly in possession of methamphetamine paraphernalia.





Authorities allegedly found methamphetamine, a pipe used to smoke the drug and scales inside a backpack Scott left at the residence from which he fled.

The Southern Stone County Fire Protection District helped Sheriff's deputies rescue the man.

 
Scott, who is being held without bond on a probation violation, has been charged with possession of a controlled substance and resisting arrest by fleeing and causing a severe risk to law enforcers.

Judge Expected To Rule Next Week Whether Teens Charged With Murder Will Stand Trial As Adults:

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Judge Alan Blankenship is expected to rule next week on whether or not two teenagers charged with first-degree murder in juvenile court will stand trial as adults.

A handful of witnesses testified at the certification hearings of Anthony "Tony" Zarro, 17, and Christopher Allen, 16.

 


On January 31st, authorities discovered the bodies of Paul "Brian" and Margaret "Susan" Brooks, who would have celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary in July, inside the lakeside home of their son where they were vacationing near Lampe .
The boys, who were 15 and 16 years-old at the time of the Brookses murders, had run away from Lives Under Construction, a rehabilitative ranch for troubled boys, about a week before the double homicide.

Anthony "Tony" Zarro at certification hearing


Authorities say Zarro, of Spring, Texas, and Allen, of Nashville, Tennessee hid in a vacant cabin next door to the Brookses and watched the elderly couple come and go before they allegedly killed them.  An autopsy determined that the couple died from blunt force trauma and stab wounds.

 
Christopher Allen at certification hearing


They are each charged with 12 separate counts that range from first-degree murder, armed criminal action, burglary, robbery, property damage and tampering with a motor vehicle and evidence.

The first witness called to the stand by Mark Rundel, who is the Stone County Juvenile Prosecutor, was Stone County Sheriff's Detective Brian Landreth.

Landreth was one of the first investigators on the scene at 1722 Trace Hollow Road.  He said when he arrived, deputies had two juveniles in custody and was told there were two deceased persons inside the home.
 
Stone County Detective Brian Landreth
 

A neighbor of the Brookses thought the boys were suspicious called authorities and held them at gunpoint until law enforcers arrived.

Landreth said that as he approached the front door he noticed blood stains on the concrete landing to the door and found copious amounts of blood throughout the house.
 
 

"Once inside, there was a large amount of blood splatter throughout the house, in the living room, kitchen area, especially in the kitchen area. Followed on through to the back bedroom area, where I found the two bodies."

Landreth said the door of the refrigerator and the fronts of the stove and dishwasher were covered in blood.  He said a trail of blood led investigators to a bedroom where the elderly couple had been "dragged."
 "They had a large amount of blood and trauma," he said.
Landreth testified that the boys had attempted to clean the crime scene as investigators found bloody rags in a bedroom trashcan and bloody clothing in the washing machine.
"You could smell. . . cleaning products," when you walked into the home, Landreth said.
"Outside the house was a bedpost we later determined was taken from the house next door, had some blood stains on it...appeared to be used as an impact weapon in the homicide," Landreth testified.
When the boys were searched, authorities found credit and debit cards belonging to Mr. Brooks in the possession of Zarro.  Allen was found to be in possession of credit and debit cards bearing Mrs. Brooks' name; and the clothing the boys were wearing appeared to have blood spatter on them, according to testimony from Landreth. 
When authorities were swabbing the boys' hands for DNA evidence, Zarro asked why they were bothering with collecting evidence.
"He said, What for? I already told the other guy I killed them," Landreth recalled.
At that point Allen's attorney's, Tom Carver and Shane Cantin, pounced.
"So, he said "I killed them, not we?" Carver asked. Landreth responded "yes."
His attorneys admit that Allen was present at the crime scene, but did not take part in the murders.  "There's not one iota of testimony that Mr. Allen took part in the murder of the Brookses."
 
Mark Rundel
 
Rundel then countered that the blood on Allen’s clothes and his possession of credit and debit cards belonging to Mrs. Brooks make him an active participant of the crime.
Regardless, Rundel said, the focus of the certification hearing was not to determine the guilt or innocence of either boy but to determine if they should stand trial in adult court.
The Juvenile Office appointed local attorney Eric Chavez to represent Zarro as he had no parents in the state to guide him, according to Rundel.
Chavez told the court that Zarro had been abused and neglected by his biological mother and had been in and out of the foster care system from the ages of four to eight.
He said his client had been in trouble in the past for burglary, and had been placed in a rehabilitative ranch in Texas when he was 12 years-old.
Ken Ortman, the administrator of Lives Under Construction Boys Ranch, in Lampe, said he had seen some major behavioral changes in Zarro since he arrived at the boys ranch in Lampe in 2010.
 
Ken Ortman at certification hearing
 
"He was very strong-willed. He did not respect authority. He didn’t want to be held accountable.  With time Tony became more social."  Ortman testified that with "the right kind of structure and environment"  he believes the young man can be rehabilitated.
The only requirement Zarro had left to graduated from Lives Under Construction was for him to successfully complete the school year in Blue Eye, Ortman said.
Chavez argued that Zarro's difficult upbringing and his attempts at rehabilitation should factor into Judge Blankenship's decision on whether to certify the teenager as an adult.
If the boys are certified to stand trials as adults it could create a legal quagmire for Prosecutor Matt Selby. Last year the United States Supreme Court ruled  that someone facing life without parole or the death penalty for a crime committed when they were under the age of 18 is not valid. 
 
Stone County Prosecutor Matt Selby
 
The penalty for those charged with first-degree murder in the state of Missouri offers two options....life without parole or the death penalty. 
Last month Selby went to Jefferson City to urge lawmakers to pass a proposed bill that would let jurors or a judge sentence juvenile offenders charged with first-degree murder to 50 years in prison.  "This particular bill did not have a sense of urgency for me until January 31st of this year," he said.
Selby says if the teens are certified to stand trial he could charge them with second degree murder or a judge or jury could sentence them to life in prison (30 years) for a lesser included offense if they are convicted of first-degree murder. 
"Statutes of the state of Missouri say any time a juvenile commits a Class A felony there shall be a certification hearing," Rundel said.  "Obviously, this is a finding made by the judge, but the juvenile office is reasonably confident there will be a finding for certification."

New Circuit Judge Embracing Challenges:

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Judge Jack Goodman



At the beginning of the year the 39th Judicial Circuit got a new Presiding Judge that is embracing the "challenges" that come with job.

Former Senator Jack Goodman says his new job is "a complete change of pace from the jobs I've had before, and it's been an eye opener."

As a lawmaker, Goodman was the chairman of the Judiciary and Civil and Criminal Jurisprudence in the Senate.  "One of the challenges that law makers face when they are drafting rules is that they don't have any practical experience in them.  Now that I am utilizing some of them I will be able to go back and tell them what needs to be changed or tweaked."

Goodman says the biggest challenge for the 39th Circuit, which encompasses Barry, Lawrence and Stone counties is the "heavy caseload and only one circuit judge to handle it."  It would take legal action by lawmakers to bring another circuit judge to the bench to help ease the load, according to Goodman.

He has nothing but praise for another Judge in the circuit.  "Judge Blankenship's drug court is looked to as a model across the state and the country."

When Goodman is conducting court he calls cases as they appear on the docket.  "I want my court to have a courteous and respectful environment with no lag time," he says.

Goodman's grandmother was widowed when his father was 11 year-old.  "She was very intelligent and got her law degree through correspondence school but she never practiced."

He and his wife Laura, who works in her family's business, have two sons and are very active in the community.  "We attend a lot of games for the sports our boys participate in, but I lack the capacity to coach anything, so we sit on the sidelines and cheer the boys on."

Arrest Made In Stone County Courthouse Bomb Scare:

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Teresa Jane Pickering (mug shot Marion County Iowa Sheriff)



Authorities arrested a woman they believe was responsible for an alleged bomb threat that shut down county offices and several business on the square last week in Galena.

According to court documents, Teresa Jane Pickering, 50, who was arrested in Iowa, called 9-1-1 numerous times beginning at 8:41 a.m. on April 10th.  She told dispatchers that she was in a red pickup truck with her boyfriend, Tommy Ramirez, at a gas station between Galena and Crane and he had "done something really stupid."

Tracking software put the caller in the vicinity of Holts Woods Road and Missouri 13.  According to the probable cause statement, "Teresa stated to the 911 dispatcher that 'it' was at the courthouse and city hall downtown and her boyfriend was really pi**ed off and he had done something really stupid.  Teresa also stated that her boyfriend was there last night and he had some stuff in his car."

In another call an unidentified woman is heard yelling, "You stupid fu***ing bi**h, did you tell them....I'm gonna blow it all up." The last call was received at 8:45 a.m. - the caller stated, "He says he's gonna blow up the courthouse in the square."


 

County officials made the decision to evacuate the courthouse and all county offices located on the square after the bomb threats were received.  Employees were sent home for the day so  and  After the bomb threat was received, Stone County officials evacuated the courthouse and sent employees home for the rest of the day, canceling scheduled court hearings and other county business. No bomb was found after an extensive search.

Investigators tracked the calls to a Tracfone that was bought at a Walmart store in Branson at 8:22 a.m. - about 20 minutes before the first bomb threat was made. . Court documents say, "A female resembling Teresa Pickering arrived in a two door passenger car and entered the store alone."

"The Tracfone was turned off after the last 911 call and remained off for the next 48 hours.  Teresa Pickering has not contacted Central Dispatch with any additional information since the initial calls on 04-10-2013," according to the probable cause statement.

Judge Alan Blankenship lifted the arrest warrant for Pickering and ordered her to appear in court at a later date, according to Prosecutor Matt Selby.

If Pickering is convicted of the terroristic threatening charge, she could be sentenced to four years in prison.

Aurora Teen Facing Additional Sex Charges:

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Dillon Scott Carpenter (mug shot LCSO)




A teenager who was charged with raping a 17 year-old girl last week at a house in Marionville is facing additional sex charges for another offense.

In the previous charges filed against Dillon Scott Carpenter, of Aurora, authorities allege he took advantage of a girl who was inebriated, the new charges make the same allegations.  The new charges accuse him of sexual misconduct with a child under the age of 15.

The girl in the latest case told investigators she was at a party in Marionville sometime between Valentine's Day and Easter and she had been given alcohol and "some weed."  The girl told investigators she was "not in her right mind" when she got into Carpenter's, [who she barely knew,] parked car.

The girl, whose age is redacted in court documents, said when she and Carpenter got in the back seat he started touching and kissing her "in private areas" and attempted to take her clothes off but she pushed him away  

She told investigators that when she woke up the next day she "was really sore" and had to sit back down.  When she asked a friend what happened, she was told she "had sex with Dillon in his car." 

The girl told authorities that a caseworker contacted her after she had heard of the alleged rape of the other girl at a Marionville party and asked her to go to the Lawrence County Sheriff's website to see if it was the same person who had sexually abused her.  After viewing Carpenter's mug shot she said it was.

She said she didn't tell her dad at first because she was afraid he "would be upset and she did not want him to do anything to get in trouble."

In the alleged rape case a girl told authorities that she was drunk when Carpenter and another boy, a 15 year-old identified as H. K. in court documents, raped her at a party in Marionville earlier this month.  They boys allegedly kept the girl's underwear after the rape, according to the probable cause statement.

Lawrence County Prosecutor Don Trotter says he will ask that the 15 year-old boy be certified as and adult to stand trial.

Carpenter, who, if convicted, could get up to four years in prison on the sexual misconduct charge and up to life in prison on the rape charge, was released from jail after posting $25,000 bond.  Part of the bond conditions are that he is under house arrest and must wear an electronic monitoring bracelet.

His preliminary hearing on the rape charge has been set for May 31st.

Reeds Spring Teen Who Helps Community Now Needs Help:

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Sophia "Sophie" Greenwalt



The community that benefits from a teenager who has helped raise money for those in need in the past is now rallying to help her.

For the past two years, Sophia "Sophie" Greenwalt, who was recently diagnosed with leukemia, has helped make the Thanksgiving holiday a little brighter for people in her community by securing funds to help Shirley West feed people who can't afford a to put a traditional holiday meal on the table, or those who would be alone on the holiday in Reeds Spring.

She was recently honored by the American Red Cross with their Everyday Hero Award for her charitable activities.

Congressman Billy Long recently recognized the teen for her efforts. "While in sixth grade, Sophie came up with a plan to help others. After consulting with her mother, Nettie Greenwalt, teachers and school district administrators, she received approval to create the Helping Hats program for students in the Reeds Spring school district. The Helping Hats program grants students the privilege to wear hats to school once a month for a one-dollar fee. The fees collected from the Helping Hats program are distributed to local charities monthly. Currently, the program has collected over $13,000 for local charitable organizations."

The Helping Hats program raised over $8,000 to donate to the Joplin school district to help with recovery and rebuilding after am EF5 tornado ripped through Joplin on May 22, 2011.

A benefit for Greenwalt, now an eighth grader at Reeds Spring Middle School, was held Sunday (04-21-13) at Reeds Spring Intermediate School.

Another fundraiser for Greenwalt, who has also been honored for her outstanding charitable activities by the Missouri House of Representatives and the Reeds Spring Board of Education, is scheduled for Saturday, May 4th as the Reeds Spring High School volleyball team will host a co-ed volleyball tournament benefiting the Greenwalt family.

For more information on the tournament contact coach Becky Lipasek at 417-272-8250 or rlipasek@wolves.k12.mo.us.

Man Wanted For Shooting In Branson West Taken Charged With Assault, ACA:

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Carmen Martin Ramos Herrera (mug shot SCSO)



A man authorities wanted to talk to about a shooting in Branson West on Sunday (04-21-13) evening was taken into custody during a traffic stop near Bois D'Arc.

Cornelio Tovar Rodriguez told authorities he and his roommate, Carmen "Martin" Ramos-Herrera, 42, were fighting in the driveway of a duplex at 128 Fritts Way when Herrera allegedly shot him in the right foot. 

Herrera fled from the scene in a pickup truck after the shooting and authorities put out a BOLO (be on the lookout) bulletin for him shortly after the shooting.  He was apprehended about 9 p.m. and transported back to Stone County.

Herrera, who has been charged with first-degree assault and armed criminal action, is being held on $250,000 bond.  The US Immigration and Customs Enforcement have placed a hold on Herrera.

Kimberling City Man Charged With Child Molestation Of A Family Member:

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Myron "Bill" Martinez (mug shot SCSO)
 

A man from Kimberling City was charged with child molestation and sexual misconduct of a child after a family member told authorities he inappropriately touched her several times.

The girl, who is now 9 years-old, told investigators the first time Myron "Bill" Martinez allegedly molested her she was 7.   On another occasion the girl says he appeared naked in her room and attempted to molest her. 

Martinez, 58, is being held in the Stone County jail on $250,000 bond.

Crane Alderwoman's Resisting Arrest Trial Postponed:

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Jessica White



The trial for a Crane Alderwoman charged with assaulting a police officer that was scheduled to begin on May 1st has been postponed at the request of the Attorney General's office.

Jessica White was arrested last May along with her husband Jordan and father-in-law Donnie White, who are charged with resisting arrest, following an altercation in front of the couple's Crane home.

The White's were arrested after Jessica White's cousin, Brittany Barnett was pulled over for a traffic violation in the White's driveway. Her husband, Thomas Barnett, was arrested on an outstanding warrant. 

The White's arrived at their home while the arrest of the Barnett's were underway and they say the were ordered to stay outside their home and were confronted by officers who did not have a warrant or any reason to detain them. 

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Their attorney maintains there was no probable cause or any reasonable suspicion for authorities to order the White's to stay outside their home.

The White's say Deputy Taylor Jenkins and former Deputy Brandon Flack used excessive force in their arrests.  All three of the White's cases will all be tried at the same time. 

The Barnett's cases were resolved after they pleaded guilty.

The Missouri Attorney General’s office was appointed as special prosecutor in the case to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest by the Stone County prosecutors office due to the allegations against the deputies.


A new trial date has not been set, according to online court records.

Reeds Spring High School Student Busted For Selling Pot On School Grounds:

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William Cole Dodson (mug shot SCSO)


A student at Reeds Spring High School has been charged with distribution of a controlled substance after he was allegedly caught selling pot to fellow students.

According to the probable cause statement, "William stated that he was the middle man making a profit from sales of marijuana to students at the Reeds Spring High School.  He would receive orders from students then fill those orders from an unknown supplier."

Authorities say Dodson, who was in possession of less than 35 grams of pot when he was arrested at the school, sold the drugs to underage kids.

Dodson was jailed instead of being issued a summons "because he made statements that he would be moving to Florida in about ten days with his family."

He is being held in the Stone County jail on $100,000 bond.

Woman Who Supplied Drugs That Teen OD'd On Back In Trouble For Selling Prescription Drugs:

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Dina Marie Eslick (mug shot CCSO)



A woman from Nixa who recently got out of prison for supplying drugs that caused a teenagers death in 2009 is back behind bars for selling prescription drugs.

According to the probable cause statement, someone found a cell phone belonging to Dina Eslick, also known as Momma D, last November and turned it over to authorities in Nixa. 

When authorities were scrolling through the phone to identify the owner, they found several text messages indicating that Eslick was conducting drug transactions.

Court documents say that authorities found a stream of text messages including the following: "Hey, its mom, u know anyone looking for any perc10 or hydro0???  let me know."  The message went on to indicate a drug transaction for "100" was imminent and to take place on "Kansas." 

In some of the messages people were looking for Fetynal patches, Hydrocodone, Percocet and Tramadol.

 Eslick allegedly told investigators that she would buy the patches for $60 - $70 and then turn around and sell them for $100 plus gas money for the delivery. 

Court documents say that one Eslick's customers was someone she had been in prison with.

Eslick allegedly admitted to authorities that she conducted several drug transactions on the parking lots of several businesses in Springfield and Christian County.

On November 22nd, Eslick's daughter went to the Nixa police department to pick up the phone and identified it as belonging to her mother.

James Crow overdosed in 2009 on pills that Eslick sold him.  She was sentenced to seven years in prison for that crime.

Eslick, who was charged with distribution of a controlled substance,  is being held without bond on a probation violation.

She is scheduled to appear in court on April 30th.

Teen Suspects Plead Not Guilty To Elderly Couple's Murders:

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Two teenagers accused of murdering an elderly couple in Stone County were formally arraigned in Associate Circuit Court and have pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder charges.
Within minutes of Juvenile Court Judge Alan Blankenship ruling that Christopher James Allen and Anthony Joseph Zarro would stand trial as adults for the January murders of Paul Brian and Margaret Susan Brooks, Prosecutor Matt Selby filed charges against Allen and Zarro.
Allen, 16, of Nashville, Tennessee and Zarro, 17, of Spring, Texas are each charged with two counts of first-degree murder, two counts of armed criminal action, two counts of  robbery and one count of burglary.
“There was no evidence that the juvenile would benefit from treatment in a juvenile facility. Given the seriousness and particularly violent and vicious nature of the offenses, the age of the juvenile and the limited time for rehabilitating someone who is charged with these particular offenses, and the fact that no evidence was adduced to demonstrate the availability of a facility which could guarantee the juvenile’s confinement, it is apparent that there are no reasonable prospects for rehabilitation,” Blankenship wrote in the certification decision.
Zarro had been raised in a drug riddled home and was physically abused by his biological mother, according to evidence presented at his certification hearing.  He had been in and out of the foster care system from the age of 4 until he was adopted by Melody and Michael Zarro, Jr.  He had been in trouble for a burglary in Texas and spent two-and-a-half years at Azleway Boys Ranch in Tyler, Texas, and another two-and-a-half years at LUC in Lampe prior to the Brookses homicides.
It appears that Allen had little to no criminal history prior to the murders.  He had been at LUC for about two years, according to court documents.
In the newly filed probable cause statement that accompanied the state charges, Stone County Detective Matt Maggard wrote that the boys had run away from the Lives Under Construction Boys Ranch near Lampe on January 29th.
Court documents say that LUC contacted authorities on January 31st to report that the window to an office door and been broken.
“The reporting party stated nothing was stolen from the office but believed the suspects were looking for the keys to the Boys Ranch vehicles, which were removed from the office after Anthony and Christopher had ran away,” the statement says.
Maggard says the Brookses had been gone for the majority of the day and returned to their son's lakefront home at 1722 Trace Hollow Road in Lampe about 4:30 following a doctor's appointment in Springfield. 
An alert neighbor of the Brookses noticed the couples 2007 Saturn parked at the home of nearby neighbor's John and Holly Martin's house at 1712 Trace Hollow Road.
"The neighbor then observed Anthony and Christopher carrying items out of the Martin's residence and placing them in to Paul and Margaret's vehicle."  The neighbor then observed one suspect drive back to the Brookses residence while the other suspect walked back.
The neighbor, who believed the boys were burglarizing the couple, called authorities about 5:43 p.m. and held them at gunpoint until authorities arrived.
When deputies arrived on scene they asked them if anyone else was in the house.  “Anthony stated to Deputies that two other people were inside, and stated...I killed them, I beat them with a baseball bat and stabbed them," according to the newly filed court documents.
Deputies believe the couple, who would have been married 50 years in July, were murdered in the kitchen of the home and their bodies dragged to a bedroom where they were found deceased.
There was also evidence that someone had attempted to clean the crime scene.  At the certification hearings for the teens last week, Detective Brian Landreth said bloody rags had been found in a bedroom trashcan and bloody clothes were discovered in a washing machine.
When the teens were searched, they both had credit and debit cards belonging to the victims, according to the probable cause statement.
When authorities searched the Brookses car, they found wooden bedpost in the backseat of the vehicle that appeared to have blood stains on it "from being used as a weapon."  That bedpost was apparently taken from the Martin residence, according to Maggard's written statement.
The investigation of the Martin's residence revealed over $750 worth of damage to the interior of the home.
On February 7th, Becky Hamilton, an investigator with the Department of Social Services, interviewed Anthony Zarro.  Zarro allegedly told her that he and Allen "were responsible for breaking into the office building at the LUC Boys Ranch" and were looking for keys to a vehicle they could steal.
The preliminary hearings for Zarro and Allen have both been scheduled for May 29th. 

What You Should Do If You're Pulled Over For A DUI Offense In California:

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Darren_Kavinoky
California Attorney Darren T. Kavinoky



Before you're ever pulled over for a DUI offense in California it is a good idea to know what your rights are and what you have already consented to when you were issued your state drivers license.
Under California law, when a driver’s license is issued to you, you have already given your implied consent to submit to a chemical test if you're arrested for driving under the influence whether it be for alcohol, drugs, or a combination of the two. 
Anyone arrested for a first offense of DUI in California only have a short window of opportunity to request a DMV hearing before losing their driving privileges. That time period is 10 days, and if no hearing is requesed, the DMV will automatically begin the process of suspending your driver's license.
Law enforcers can pull you over if they suspect you are driving under the influence or for  something as simple as an equipment violation like a burned out taillight or expired registration.  Bottom line, if you're taken into custody for aDUI in California for a first offensethe penalties a stiff and long lasting. 
If you are pulled over the officer is "detaining" you.  What that means is that while you're "not in custody," you're not free to leave.  Because you're "not in custody" the officer does NOT have to read you your Miranda rights before asking some very incriminating questions. Questions like "how much have you been drinking" or "how many drinks have you had." NEVER answer those questions and immediately ask for an attorney or invoke your Fifth Amendment privilege.

In addition to asking you questions about driving under the influence, the officer will ask you to do some field sobriety tests. Again, those are voluntary and they will try to intimidate you into performing them. Will they tell you that, NO.

Keep in mind that most officers in California wear recording devices so it is important to be polite and state thatDUI laws in California are too subjective and you would like an attorney.

Options Available For Those Who Have Suffered Personal Injury:

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There are options for people who have suffered personal injury whether that injury happened on the job, in a car accident or at a business.

However, a negligent act alone does not automatically mean there is a personal injury. In a personal injury case you must prove there was an injury and attorney's that deal with personal injury within the Inland Empire can held determine if your injury was caused by negligent act. 

A medical doctor will have to treat you and consult with your attorneys to provide the basis of a claim.  But be aware that the insurance company for the individual or business that you are fighting will have their own experts to counter your claim.

For example, if you're involved in a car accident and have had previous issues with back pain, the insurance company will try to prove that you're pre-existing condition exasperated the injury. 

An experienced personal injury lawyer knows what questions to ask in helping you determine the validity of a person injury lawsuit.




  • Is it clear that the other party was negligent?

  • Did you contribute to the accident or injuries in any way – such as not wearing a seat belt?

  • Was there significant damage to the car?

  • Did you seek early medical attention?

  • Did you follow your health provider's instructions on medical care?

  • Do your health providers think your injuries are caused by the accident?

  • Have your medical problems resolved or are they long-term, or even lifetime injuries?

  • If your injuries are resolved, how long did it take?

  • Did the injuries cause problems in other parts of your life?

  • Will the injuries keep you from doing activities that you did before the accident?

  • Have the injuries kept you from working?

  • Will you lose work or job opportunities in the future because of the injuries?

  • How much money will you lose from work from the injuries?

  • Have you had to hire other people to do things you did on your own because of the injuries?

  • Have you had to pay a deductible or rental car expenses from the accident?

  • How much are your medical bills?

  • How much will medical care in the future cost to treat your injuries?

  • How much insurance is available to cover your injuries?

  • Most people want to know how long it will take before a case is settled or goes to court. 
    In some cases insurance companies come to a quick settlement with lawyers seeking relief on behalf of their client.  In other cases it could take years before a case goes before a judge or jury due to a shortage of judges on the benches and an overloaded court system.


    Attorney's that specialize in work injury within the Inland Empire will push for your case to be heard in court or battle with lawyers hired by negligent parties to obtain a resolution in your case.


    Court Date Set For Woman Who Allegedly Phoned In Bomb Threat:

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    Teresa Jane Pickering (mug shot Marion County Iowa Sheriff)



    An arraignment date has been set for a woman who allegedly phoned in a bomb threat to 9-1-1 dispatchers in Stone County earlier this month.

    Court records say that TeresaJane Pickering, 50, who was arrested in Marion County, Iowa, made numerous calls to authorities saying she "was gonna blow it all up."  Pickering told emergency dispatchers "it" was at Galena City Hall and the courthouse. 

    Investigators tracked the calls to a Tracfone that was purchased at a Walmart store in Branson West about 20 minutes before the first bomb threat was made.

    County officials made the decision to close all county offices, including the court system, for the safety of employees and the public.

    Pickering is scheduled to be arraigned in Associate Circuit Court on June 25th.

    Greenwalt Suffers Medical Setback; Benefit Set For Saturday:

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    Sophia "Sophie" Greenwalt



    Over $40,000 was raised at a benefit for a girl who has done so much to help others in her community and is now battling leukemia.

    Sophie Greenwalt was recently honored by the American Red Cross with their Everyday Hero Award for her charitable activities, and Congressman Billy Long has also recognized the teen for her efforts.

    Oakley Auto World has teamed up with Greenwalt in the past to help provide money for a Thanksgiving meal for the community. They have pledged to donate $100 for every car sold to help the teen and her family.

    "One of the employees at Wyndham Resorts, whose daughter plays volleyball with Soph, started a fund to help that has raised over $4,000 to date," said family friend Kristal Porter.

    Sophie has had some medical setbacks this week and will have to undergo surgery.

    A volleyball tournament to benefit Sophie and her family will be held at the Reeds Spring High School on Saturday May, 4th.

    "The outpouring of generosity has been a huge blessing for the family," said Porter.

    Crane Residents Facing Burglary, Drug Charges:

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    Two people from Crane are facing burglary and drug charges after an alert neighbor allegedly found them burglarizing a vacant house.

    Crane police were notified that there was a suspicious vehicle parked in the driveway of 509 West Maud about 8:00 p.m. on April 10th and went to investigate.

    Shannon Michelle Chambers, 32, and Michael Joseph Davis, 30, allegedly told Officer Clinton Lee that they had been hired to clean the property belonging to Kathryn Murray.  Murray told Lee that no one had permission to be on her property or to remove anything from the house or grounds.

    During an execution of a search warrant at the couples home at 210 North Hemphill officers found a dresser, hammock, weed eater and other household items allegedly taken from Murray's property.  They also found methamphetamine, marijuana, needles and assorted drug paraphernalia in the search of the couple's home.

    Chambers, who has been released from jail, and Davis are due back in court later this month.

    Missouri Court of Appeals Affirms Judge's Decision To Overturn Paula Hall's Murder Conviction:

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    Paula Hall (mug shot MODOC)

    The Missouri Court of Appeals has upheld a Judge's ruling overturning the murder conviction a Sparta woman.

    Springfield attorney Rita Sanders has been fighting the 2009 conviction of Paula Hall and vows to take the case to the Missouri Supreme Court if necessary.

    In 2009 a jury in Taney County convicted Hall, 45, for the 2003 murder of 68 year-old Freda Heyn.  Mrs. Heyn was last seen at the post office in Oldfield in November of 2003.  Her skull was found in 2004 by hikers in the Mark Twain National Forest near Chadwick.  The rest of her remains, which authorities believe were fed to hogs, have never been found.
     

    Hall, who was charged in Christian County but tried in Taney County on a change of venue, was sentenced to 20 years in prison for the crime. 



    Freda Heyn (family photo)


    A former boyfriend of Hall's, David Epperson, who at one time was facing murder charges connected to Heyn's death, testified that he witnessed Hall swing a golf club, "roundhouse style," at Heyn - who fell face first to the ground. 


    
    David Epperson (mug shot CCSO)

    Epperson told jurors that Paula's former brother-in-law, Billy Wayne Hall, helped him move Heyn's body to the side of the trailer, then the trio went inside to get high on methamphetamine.


    Epperson, was given a plea deal of tampering with evidence in exchange for his testimony.  He received five years probation for his cooperation.

    But it wasn't just Epperson's testimony that helped convict Hall, according to Sanders.

    In 2011, Sanders filed an appeal with Judge John Moody saying prosecutors failed to provide her with all of their discovery against her client and that a jailhouse snitch lied to get a better deal in the cases that were pending against her.  At the time Moody overturned the verdict, he said the evidence prosecutor's presented against Paula Hall was "razor thin."

    Sanders says Hall allowed Lisa Bonham to read the discovery in her case and Bonham "molded"  her testimony around what she read and told juror she overheard Hall tell fellow inmates she helped kill the elderly woman.

    Another reason Sanders cited lies with Tommy Pettit, who she believes is responsible for Heyn's murder.  "I was given one CD of an interview with Pettit when there were actually three...and one of the reports we found in post conviction relief was dated February 9, 2009...5 days AFTER Paula was convicted.  Under the Brady rule, they have to disclose everything they have to defense counsel."
     
    "In some evidence we've found he [Pettit] describes what it felt and smelled like when he cut up Freda's body."  Sanders also says it's possible that a woman with ties to Pettit, Debbie Presley, who also dated David Epperson, was present when Heyn was murdered.  "She told Paula she needed to talk to her about Freda.  Paula told her she was advised by me not to talk to anyone about the case anymore." 
     
    Jail staff found Presley, who was looking at 40 years in federal prison if convicted of the drug charges she was being held on, hanging in her Christian County jail cell that same night.

    "Tommy’s wife Danielle gave a written statement saying her husband did it, but I don’t think that statement ever left her hand,” Sanders says “I’m not sure the prosecutor's office even knew about this one." 


    Sanders says Danielle Petit claims in her statement, "Tommy initially told her it was him, David Epperson and another family member of Pettit's, who has refused to speak with law enforcers."
     
    Billy Wayne Hall (mug shot CCSO)

    The murder charges connected to Heyn's death filed against Billy Wayne Hall, who Sanders also represented, were dismissed without prejudice when she filed a motion for a speedy trial in June of 2011. 

    "They had 180 days to re-file charges against Billy and they didn't because they had absolutely no evidence against him," said Sanders. 
     
    About 20 days after Moody overturned Paula Hall's conviction he vacated his judgment.
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    Christian County Prosecuting Attorney, Amy J. Fite presented the court with the testimony of Christian County Circuit Clerk Barbara Stillings, Christian County Sheriff's Captain Bryan Gillman with the Christian County Jail and Greg Fahrlander and Cindy Bates with Probation and Parole.


    The state also said that Sanders did not file for Hall's appeal in a timely matter.  "They said we didn't file within the 90 days allowed by the state.  The clerk's office held on to the paperwork for seven days following the ruling and didn't date stamp it.  We proved that we filed it within the time allowed."

    The evidence Fite presented indicated that 
    there was no pending probation violation at the time the Lisa Bonham testified. Additional evidence presented also showed that a violation report did not exist and the alleged discovery violation was likely the result of a simple scrivener’s error in the Court record.   "She [Bonham] was on a 120 day hold on a probation violation for Christian County and had an ongoing case that was not disclosed," said Sanders. 

    Sanders wants to know why Pettit hasn't been charged with Heyn's murder.  "If it was my mother I would be screaming for justice." 
     
    The decision with what happens next lies with the state.  They can challenge the ruling to the Missouri Supreme Court, re-file charges against Hall...or dismiss them.  "If they decide to retry this case, I will destroy Bonham on the stand," said Sanders.


     



    Sanders, who is representing Paula Hall pro bono (free) said she had lost faith in the jury system on the day of Hall's sentencing, "If not for her dating David Epperson, we might not be standing here."

     Hall has obtained her GED while in prison, according to Sanders.  "I know Paula's innocent and I will never stop fighting for her."
    

    Oklahoma Cold Case Heats Up With Discovery Of Three Sets Of Human Remains:

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    Photos of Wendy Camp, her 6-year-old daughter, Cynthia Britto, and Camp's sister-in-law Lisa Kregear.
    Wendy Camp, Cynthia Britto and Lisa Renee Kregear

    At least one person has been arrested in connection to the 21 year-old cold case disappearances of three people in Oklahoma.

    The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation held a news conference this morning to confirm that three sets of human remains were discovered on property that was formerly owned by a former family member of one of the missing people.

    While Wendy Camp was married to Chad Noe she became very ill with Multiple Sclerosis and had to be hospitalized. During that time, custody of their four year-old child, Jonathon Noe was awarded to Chad. 



    This is either Cynthia or Jonathan with Chad Noe


    Camp's former mother-in-law Beverly Sue Prewitt-Noe picked 23 year-old Wendy Laraine Camp, her six year-old daughter Cynthia Britto, and Camp's 22 year-old sister-in-law Lisa Renee Kregear up about 11:30 a.m. on May 29, 1992 and brought them back to Shamrock for a pre-arranged visit with the little boy.

    Camp called her husband, Leon, from a gas station in Shamrock when they arrived about 1:40 p.m. and then again about 4:40 p.m. from the same phone at the service station the original call came from and told him the visit went well and, they were on their way back to Oklahoma City.

    According to court documents, Beverly Prewitt-Noe told investigators that Chad came to the service station with Jonathon and "picked up Wendy, Cynthia and Lisa and took them back to his residence." 

    Beverly Noe told OSBI Agent Jackie Johnson that she, her mother Ida Prewitt and Jonathon followed them in her car.  According to Noe, Wendy asked that he she and Ida leave so she could visit with her son and come back about 4:30 p.m. to pick them up.

    Noe told Johnson she dropped the three off at a Wal-Mart in Chandler following a disagreement over custody issues with Camp.  "Beverly said they began the trip back to Oklahoma City, but Ida Prewitt didn't want to listen to Wendy anymore and asked to be taken home." 

    Beverly said after she took her mother home and proceeded toward Oklahoma City, "Wendy kept making nasty remarks and asking stupid questions" so she dropped them off at a Wal-Mart near Chandler about 6:00 p.m.  Authorities now believe that is a lie.
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    Sources close to the investigation said movement on the case started to simmer following the death of 82 year-old Ida Prewitt, in 2011.

    A few months ago authorities received a tip that the three would be found buried on land near Jennings that had been owned by Beverly Noe's brother, Grover Junior Prewitt, when the three went missing.  He later sold that property for $1.00, according to sources close to the case.

    According to the probable cause affidavit, On March 28, 2013, Grover Prewitt told investigators that he owned 40 acres of land near Jennings and he sold five of those acres to his mother, Ida Prewitt.




    Ida Prewitt (mug shot OKDOC)




    Ida Prewitt moved a trailer onto the property and Beverly Noe  instructed him hire a backhoe operator to dig a hole for a septic system next to the trailer.  "Grover said the hole for the septic tank sat empty for a while but then all of a sudden, after the females went missing, Ida had Grover call the backhoe driver to fill in the hole."  Grover Prewitt said he never looked in the hole "because he was scared of what he would see," and he believed his mother and sister had killed Camp, Britto and Kregear.

     "Grover showed investigators where Ida had the hole dug for the septic tank and where he thought the females were buried."  During an interview with Grover Prewitt on April 2, 2013, he grabbed the hand of an investigator for the District Attorney and told him "he really needed to look in that hole he had showed him."

    Add caption



    On April 15th authorities began digging on that land.  On April 16th, the remains of three people, who were still wearing clothing similar to what the three were wearing when they disappeared, were discovered under about eight feet of dirt.  Also recovered was a pink backpack with the name Cynthia Britto written on it and a black purse with a medical card issued to Wendy Camp.



    The OSBI photo released this photo of the remains found at dig site at a news conference today


    When Grover Prewitt was interviewed again on April 22nd, he told authorities that his mother asked him to come out and sprinkle black pepper where the hole had been dug.  "He told her he thought it was damn strange and she said it would deter [cadaver] dog scents."  He said he also remembered his mother saying she "took care of those three people," but he couldn't remember when she said it, and what prompted the statement.

    Court records indicate that Ida Prewitt never moved into the trailer and sold the property in June of 2000.  The current owners of the property consented to the search.

    On April 24th, Grover Prewitt agreed to wear a wire in an attempt to gain evidence to help OSBI Agents. With a microphone and digital audio recorder tape to his chest he went to visit his sister and "repeatedly interrupted Beverly and told her he did not know anything, effectively preventing her from making any further statements."

    Grover Prewitt again met with OSBI Agents on April 26th and again agreed to wear a wire for them, according to the affidavit. 


    photo - This booking photo provided by the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation shows Grover Prewitt. Prewitt has been arrested and charged in connection with the deaths of two Oklahoma City women and a girl whose skeletonized remains were found last month after disappearing nearly 21 years ago. (AP Photo/Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation)
    Grover Junior Prewitt (mug shot OSBI)


    This time Agents wanted Prewitt to get his sister Beverly, and another sister Deborah Johnson, who authorities learned lived on his property when the trio went missing, to talk about the murder of John Rausin as well as the Camp, Britto and Kregear homicides.

    On June 12, 1980, a neighbor found found sixty three year-old John Elmer Rausin dead near a car in the garage of his home in Depew, Oklahoma.  Rausin, who was attacked as he was leaving for work, was shot twice and stabbed 10 times.  His throat had also been slit.

    In May of 1983, Ida Prewitt and her daughter, Deborah Rausin (now Johnson,) were arrested and charged with first-degree murder for John Rausin's murder.  

    "Grover was told multiple times to let Deborah and Beverly talk and to not interrupt them."  He was also told not to deny involvement.  

    After being fitted with the wire, Grover Prewitt went to Johnson's home in Bristow.  After being let in, he asked Johnson, "Where's Beverly?  I saw a whole bunch of OSBI cop cars sitting out in front of her house."  

    While Deborah Johnson was speaking with Beverly, authorities could hear tape ripping and brushing up against the audio recorder.  Johnson handed the phone to Prewitt and when he hung up she asked, "What did she say?"  Prewitt replied, "Thanks for the warning." 

    According to court documents, the microphone is again tampered with before Prewitt says, "You know they came from my house and took all my guns and shit."  When Johnson asked why, he said he didn't know, but they were there for a few hours "bugging the hell out of me 'cause it's my property."

    Prewitt again brought up Rausin.  "They keep bringing up John, you know."  Johnson then shouted at Prewitt, "You don't know no more than I do, so what."  Then Grover told her they kept asking about Rausin. "Don't you think if we'd know'd something they would have arrested us a hell of a long time ago."

    Johnson then reminded Prewitt that cops had come to Cleveland, where the two had lived previously, to talk to him about Rausin.  "They were just talking to me....that's when I found out those people were missing."  Johnson then asked Prewitt to have a look at her tea room.

    Prewitt asked Johnson, "So they brought up John to you?"  Johnson replied, "Yup, back then."

    The pair decided to go to Beverly Noe's house and along the way continued to talk about Rausin and "those three people."

    Johnson said, "Two of them I hadn't seen and one I hadn't said a whole sentence to.  She had come over a couple of times on the pretense of seeing Jonathan and then she followed Chad around.  She never came to see Jonathon really, she just come to follow Chad around."  Prewitt told Johnson he had never met any of them and "wouldn't know the people if I was standing  right next to them." 

    On the way to Noe's house they encountered her on a roadway and went back to her house.  Beverly was looking for Jonathon, but couldn't find him.  "He was three years-old and grandma never told him anything. She couldn't keep her mouth shut.  She's ruined enough lives." 

    As Grover was leaving, Johnson asked Beverly Noe if she would like her to stay, "You might as well.  That's in case for when they get me when they bring Jonathon back." 

    On his way out the door Beverly asksed her brother, "You got your tail hanging out for something?"  When Prewitt got back in his vehicle he realized he'd been had.  "Son of a bitch, I got wires hanging out."

    When Prewitt arrived at a predetermined location to meet with OSBI Agents they asked him "How did that come untapped, all of it's been untapped."  Prewitt said he had no idea.

    According to court records, Agents noted that they had never encountered a problem like that before with undercover equipment.

    Grover Junior Prewitt Jr., of Bristow, was charged with accessory after the fact in first-degree murder immediately following the news conference to discuss the findings this morning.

    Beverly Noe says she didn't have anything to do with the deaths of Camp, Britto and Kregear and doesn't believe her brother does either. "It was not me and if it were my mother, I don't know....she's dead." 

    
    Beverly Noe said she doesn't have it in her to kill a child, and she doesn't think her brother had anything to do with the murders.
    Beverly Noe (courtesy Oklahoma News On 6.com)

    "I had nothing to do with it," Noe told newson6.com. "That's what gets me, is I had nothing to do with it, and now they may take me away from my kid."  That kid she is referring to is Wendy Camp's son Jonathan, who is now in his mid-twenties. 

    Noe, 66, and her mother, Ida, were sentenced in 2007 to a year in prison for felony arson and conspiracy.  Creek County court records show that the women were convicted in 2006 of intentionally sparking a blaze at their home in order to bilk their insurance company for over $83,000.

    Prewitt, who died of esophageal cancer, was serving a suspended sentence at the time of her death.  Online records say Beverly spent about 5 months behind bars before being paroled.  She is on probation until 2017

    Creek County District Attorney Max Cook says he expects more charges to be filed in connection with the three homicides.

    The three sets of remains have been sent to the University of North Texas for positive identification through DNA testing.  Camp's sister, Aisha Hashmi, has provided a DNA sample to assist in the investigation. However, the OSBI is confident the remains belong to Camp, Britto and Kregear and is now working the case as a triple homicide.

    In a news release the OSBI says, "The passage of 21 years gave the tipster confidence to come forward to help solve the disappearance of the three victims.  We hope this same passage of time and knowledge of the victims’ murders will encourage others to also come forward."

    The OSBI is offering up to a $5,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of any person/s involved in the murders of Camp, Britto, and Kregear. 

    If you have any information, that can help investigators call the OSBI hotline at 1-800-522-8017.

    Camp, Britto and Kregear vanished 10 days before Sherrill Levitt, Suzie Streeter and Stacy McCall disappeared from Springfield, Missouri. 

    To date, there has been no resolution in the case of Springfield's Three Missing Women.

    Briley Pleads Guilty To Marijuana Grow Operation:

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    A Cape Fair man who was charged with multiple drug charges after authorities found a "grow operation" on his property in February waived his preliminary hearing and has pleaded guilty.

    Authorities became interested in Christopher Daniel Briley last November after he and a woman were busted for possessing pot.

    When the woman was interviewed by authorities she told them that she had accompanied Briley to Colorado, where he has a medical marijuana "certificate", and brought the illegal weed back to Missouri.

    When C.O.M.E.T drug officers went to Briley's Battersea Road property for a "knock and talk" they observed plastic bags and digital scales sitting on a table inside the garage. They also found several recently cultivated pot plants, and found marijuana drying out.

    Authorities obtained a search warrant and found a trap door hidden in the closet of a barn that Briley used as his office.  A staircase led officers down to two grow rooms.  The first room had 44 plants that were between 2 1/2 to 3 feet tall.  The second room contained 14 plants that were about 2 feet tall.  The grow rooms were outfitted with grow lights, timers and fans, according to the probable cause statement.

    Briley pleaded guilty to charges of distribution of a controlled substance.  In exchange for his guilty plea, prosecutors dropped drug manufacturing and possession of a controlled substance against Briley.

    He was sentenced to a suspended 10 year sentence.  He must now serve 30 days shock time that is to be served in the Stone County jail and was placed in drug court.
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