Mildred Ann Wood Garner, age 79, of Kingsland, Georgia, formerly of Clarkesville, Georgia, went to be with the Lord on Friday, August 28, 2020, following an extended illness.
5-year-old killed in Hall County wreck
A 5-year-old Flowery Branch girl was killed in a late-night wreck Saturday in Hall County. Tania Sanchez-Fierros died when the van she was riding in was struck by a pickup truck on Athens Highway. The accident happened around 10:22 p.m. at the intersection with Smallwood Road.
According to the Georgia State Patrol, the van driver, 42-year-old Sandra Fierros Nunez of Flowery Branch, attempted to cross over the highway but failed to yield after stopping at a stop sign. She pulled into the path of a pickup truck that had just pulled into the southbound lane while negotiating a curve. The truck hit the van on the driver’s side, causing the van to rotate. As it did, it struck the rear passenger side of another pickup truck traveling south on Athens Highway in the lefthand lane.
Nunez and an adult passenger in the van, Samantha Sanchez Fierros, 22, of Flowery Branch, suffered minor injuries. The driver of the first pickup, Alberto Gomez Rivas, 20, and his passenger, Jasmine Gomez, 22, both of Flowery Branch, also sustained minor injuries. The driver of the second pickup truck, Luis Caudillo, 20, of Gainesville was not injured.
The State Patrol says charges are pending.
Second fatal accident in three days
Saturday’s wreck marked the second fatal accident in Hall County in three days. A Buford woman died and another remains hospitalized with serious injuries following a wreck earlier this week on the south end of the county.
Mary Amber Moore, 39, died Saturday, August 29, as a result of injuries she sustained in the crash Thursday night.
According to the Georgia State Patrol, Moore was driving a Toyota Highlander eastbound on Blackjack Road when she ran off the road in a curve. The Highlander struck a ditch and utility pole before overturning and coming to rest on the driver’s side. Troopers say neither Moore nor her passenger, 35-year-old Julie O’Heir of Snellville, were wearing seatbelts. They were ejected and pinned underneath the vehicle.
Both women were transported to Northeast Georgia Medical Center where Moore later died.
The State Patrol says alcohol and drugs are suspected as a contributing factor in that wreck. No charges will be filed.
Confessions of a Rookie Birder: Overcoming Lethargy
We’ve spent much of the past week camping at West Point Lake outside of LaGrange, Georgia. The birding there, even in the off-season in the summer, was wonderful. It was just what I needed to overcome what Bob calls my “Birding Lethargy.”
If you’ve read past Confessions of a Rookie Birder, you’ve already heard my laments about everyday birds and appreciating the common things in life. Yeah, it all sounds somewhat profound, but the truth is, I’ve struggled to keep up my enthusiasm during these hot summer days.
When we arrived at the lake, we began to see waterfowl that we’d never seen before. It was amazing and those are stories for other days. I was so interested in the waterfowl that I totally ignored all the little, seemingly common birds that flocked to our campsite.
That is, I ignored them until the final morning while we were already breaking down the camp. I looked over and saw a bright yellow flash on a bird that was on the ground nearby. We haven’t often seen birds with yellow coloring, so I grabbed my binoculars and looked closer. It was a bird I’d never seen before and I had to do a search on Merlin Bird ID to identify it. It took both of us watching the bird and comparing photos to determine the bird was a Yellow-throated Vireo. Not only was the bird new to us, he was marked on Merlin as uncommon for that area.

The Yellow-throated Vireo was the crowning find in a week of wonderful birding. Why? Because the Yellow-throated Vireo was the uncommon bird mixed in with a ton of common birds. Because the Vireo was special.

Reminder to me: Never get so comfortable with the common that I miss the uncommon around me.
Georgie Eugenie Burrell
Georgie Eugenie Burrell, age 92 of Mt. Airy, Georgia, went home to be with the Lord on Saturday, August 29, 2020, at her residence surrounded by her family.
Janet Pinson Haynes
Janet Pinson Haynes, age 55 of Sautee, Georgia took her heavenly flight home to be with the Lord on Monday, August 24, 2020, at her residence.
Smithgall Woods State Park’s Sunflowers & Selfies
Acres of sunflowers are in full bloom at Smithgall Woods State Park in Helen. That means it’s also time to participate in Sunflowers & Selfies, an annual event that raises funds for the Cabin Fever Campaign. The event runs this weekend, August 29-30, and next Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, September 4th-6th from 10:00 AM until 3:00 PM. Cost is a $5.00 parking pass per vehicle and a $3.00 per person fee for the guided hike.
Because of the COVID-19, the only way to see the sunflowers is through the guided hike. Hikes will take about 35 minutes and go almost a mile along the paved road that is closed to vehicles. During the hike, participants will learn about the history of the park. Cost for the guided hike is $3.00 per person; all proceeds go toward the Cabin Fever Campaign. Hikes leave on the hour at 10:00 AM, 11:00 AM, 12:00 PM, 1:00 PM, and 2:00 PM.
Reservations for the hike must be made in advance by calling the Visitor’s Center at (706) 878-3087. You’ll need to indicate the day and the time of the hike you want to take. Groups will be kept small to encourage social distancing.

The park is also hosting a photo contest of photos taken during the event. Photos can be shared at #SGWSelfies 20 on Instagram or tagged Smithgall Woods State Park on Facebook.
1-year-old Cobb Co. boy becomes Georgia’s youngest COVID fatality
A 1-year-old Cobb County boy has died from COVID-19, becoming the youngest person in Georgia to die of the disease.
John Lewis’ presence felt as crowd rallies at March on Washington

WASHINGTON – On the 57th anniversary of the original March on Washington and in the throes of a pandemic, thousands of demonstrators on Friday joined Democratic lawmakers on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial to demand Congress act on police brutality and voter suppression.
The event, organized by the Rev. Al Sharpton’s National Action Network, featured dozens of speakers who also called for the defeat of President Donald Trump in November, a counterpoint to Trump’s acceptance speech as the Republican nominee just 12 hours earlier on the grounds of the White House.
The “Commitment March on Washington” was subtitled “Get Your Knee Off Our Necks,” a reference to George Floyd’s killing by a Minneapolis police officer, and police brutality against Black Americans was the major theme.
The police shootings this year of Floyd, Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta, Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Ky., and most recently Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wis., and more have spurred protests across the country and formed the framework for an urgent call for change.
“Our coming together is in vain if we just talk about the problems but don’t chart a course toward the solution,” said Jamal Harrison Bryant, a Georgia pastor who made the trip from Lithonia.
Krysta Funk, a library worker from Columbus, Ohio, rented a car and drove to the capital with her brother to participate. “You just have to act,” she said. “You can’t just stand still.” The health risks are “worth it,” she said.
Friday’s march was, in some senses, like the first one 57 years ago where a quarter-million people gathered for the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom and heard Martin Luther King Jr. deliver his “I Have a Dream” speech. “It would be fatal for the nation to overlook the urgency of the moment,” King told the crowd in 1963.
Friday was a clear summer day, though a hotter one than the original march, and throngs of participants gathered along the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool as they listened to members of Congress, advocates and leaders demand an end to racism and inequality.
But participation initially projected by organizers at 100,000 was cut due to quarantine restrictions the District of Columbia has levied on some states due to their levels of COVID-19 infections, leading many activists to stay home and take part in virtual rallies. Buses were due to leave from Atlanta and Macon to carry marchers to Washington before the mayor there included Georgia among the states discouraged from sending caravans to the nation’s capital.
Nearly everyone who did attend wore masks, many with movement slogans like “I can’t breathe” and “Black lives matter. ” Marchers lined up for blocks down Constitution Avenue to get their temperatures taken before entering the official rally area. Those with healthy temperatures received a green wristband and were allowed to enter.
Volunteers offered free COVID-19 testing, handed out masks and offered sanitizing sprays. Vendors sold masks alongside more traditional items like t-shirts, flags and signs.
Participants of all ages, races and backgrounds came from across the country. Some were pushed in strollers, while others were elderly. Voices blared over the loudspeakers and protesters called for reforms to criminal justice, voting rights and other social issues, as drums, music, chants and chatter filled the air.
Many carried signs assailing police killings of unarmed Black men and hailing civil rights heroes like the late Rep. John Lewis of Georgia and the Rev. C.T. Vivian. Some signs encouraged activism, to get in what Lewis called “good trouble, necessary trouble.”
Others mourned ongoing police violence against Black men, with slogans like “I still can’t breathe” and “Too many names, not enough justice.”
Michael Eugene Robinson, a retired educator from Baltimore, attended the original march as a child and returned Friday to support the movement and to “be part of the message.”
He said he was especially inspired by the many young activists in attendance. “This is a very important demonstration of unity,” he said. “I got hope for America.”
Speakers called for the Republican-controlled U.S. Senate to pass a bill already approved by the Democratic House that would limit qualified immunity as a legal defense for police misconduct, reduce the use of chokeholds and no-knock warrants and create a national database of officers accused of misconduct.
But many said police brutality was only a symptom of deeper racial injustice in the United States.
“Black people face a symbolic chokehold every time we walk, speak up, shop, jog, drive, and—yes—breathe,” said U.S. Rep. Joyce Beatty, D-Ohio. “So we must tear down the walls of injustice.”

Several speakers referenced Lewis, the civil rights icon who died this summer. Many called for the passage of another House-passed bill, a measure named for Lewis that would strengthen federal enforcement to protect voting rights.
Speakers tied the issues of police brutality, voting rights, housing policy, economic mobility and others to November’s elections.
“Until there is federal action, every state will do what it wants to do,” Sharpton said. “We need Mitch McConnell and the U.S. Senate to meet on the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act or we are going to meet you, senators, at the polls November 3, whether we’ve got to mail in, walk in, ride in, crawl in. We want our bill passed.”
Sharpton compared Trump to Bull Connor, the police commissioner in Birmingham, Ala., during the 1960s who opposed Civil Rights and used fire hoses and police dogs to attack activists of the era.
“We went from a mean-spirited sheriff to a mean-spirited president,” he said.
Activist Frank “Nitty” Sensabaugh, who walked from Milwaukee to Washington for the event, said he was frustrated by the continued need to advocate for issues that animated King and the civil rights movement of the 1960s.
“We’ve been marching for the same stuff for 60 years,” he said. “I’m tired.”
Welcome to Green Thumb Gardening!
I believe that gardening is about sharing – sharing tips and experiences, plant cuttings, plant divisions, and pictures, because who doesn’t like to gaze upon beautiful flowers!
Recount Monday in District 50 State Senate Republican runoff
The Georgia Secretary of State has ordered a recount in the District 50 State Senate race between Bo Hatchett and Stacy Hall. The recount will be held Monday, August 31, in all eight counties in the district.
Hall formally requested the recount on Wednesday, August 26, the same day that Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger certified the election results.
Hatchett beat Hall by 37 votes out of the 24,947 votes that were cast districtwide. That’s a difference of 0.14%. State election law allows for recounts in races where the margin of victory is less than 1%.
In his letter to Raffensperger, Hall stated “I have heard a number of alarming reports on how absentee ballots were handled in Stephens County for the Aug. 11 election. I can confirm that many voters who requested absentee ballots never received them while others received absentee ballots as late as the Monday prior to the election making it impossible to meet the deadline.”
“Nothing changed”
“This exact thing happened to me in April 2019 in Stephens County and it appears nothing’s been done to fix it,” says former House District 28 Representative Dan Gasaway who tracked absentee ballot requests among his supporters in the third re-run of his race against Chris Erwin. He says only a fraction of those who requested ballots ever received them.
Gasaway did not file a legal challenge at that time because he had already successfully sued twice to overturn elections proving a series of election errors occurred in Habersham, Banks, and Stephens counties. Each time he won in court, the Republican backlash against him grew stronger. GOP elected officials and voters banded together against Gasaway, labeling him a sore loser, claiming his lawsuits were nothing more than “sour grapes.”
Ultimately, by the time the three-term incumbent ran his third race against Erwin, the die was cast. Gasaway was booted from office by many of the same political operatives who are now crying foul over mismanaged elections. Stacy Hall and his fellow Habersham County commissioners led the charge back then, joining with commissioners from Banks and Stephens counties to defend the outcomes of the first two Gasaway-Erwin races. Habersham County alone spent nearly $59,000 in taxpayer dollars on their joint defense.
“We brought the errors to the forefront in all three counties,” Gasaway tells Now Habersham, “but nothing changed.”
Election complaint filed
On August 18, one week after the District 50 GOP primary runoff, Bo Hatchett declared victory. He said at the time his campaign “has no reason to believe that a recount would alter the outcome of this race.”
That same week, the Stephens County Republican Party executive committee filed a complaint against the Stephens County Elections Office with the State Elections Division.

“It is an egregious issue when communication and lack of transparency are so fractured that the voters end up 1) unable to vote due to not receiving their absentee ballots and/or not receiving them timely 2) that questions regarding break in process were not answered 3) failure in communication with the voters is so fractured and lacks the required transparency OCGA & local legislation provides,” party chair Rebeckah Bennett stated in a press release.
It’s not clear what, if anything, the State Elections Board will do about the complaint. Two investigations that were opened during the Gasaway-Erwin race still have not been resolved, two years after the initial primary was run.
Now, it’s Hall supporters who are calling for fair, fraud-free elections. Asked his reaction to that, Gasaway asks rhetorically, “Do you think Stacy Hall cares about election integrity now?”
Selena Davis Creasman
Selena Davis Creasman, age 79, of Clarkesville, Georgia passed away peacefully at her home on August 27, 2020. She was born on December 14, 1941.
A native of Marietta, Georgia, Selena resided in Clarkesville, Georgia for many years and loved being surrounded by the beautiful mountains and nature at her home.
Selena will be missed by her loving husband, Richard Creasman; her son and daughter, Richard Creasman, Jr. and Cara Jackson; son and daughter- in- law, Tracy Jackson and Shannon Creasman; and, three grandsons Carter Jackson, Richard Creasman, III and Hunter Creasman.
Services will be private.
For those who wish, in lieu of flowers, the family would appreciate donations to the American Cancer Society or the American Diabetes Foundation.
An online guest register is available and may be viewed at www.habershamcrematory.com.
Habersham Crematory (678-617-2210) of Cornelia is in charge arrangements.
State Coroner’s Association asks for public’s help to save regional ME lab
Editor’s Note: The following was submitted to Now Habersham by Banks County Coroner Mark Savage who serves as 1st Vice President of the Georgia Coroner’s Association. For more information, contact him at [email protected].
As Banks County Coroner and 1st Vice President of the Georgia Coroner’s Association, I am writing you to make you aware of an issue that will affect many citizens in the State of Georgia. I am hopeful that you will help us get the word out to the citizens about this change.
On August 21, a memo from Dr. Jonathan Eisenstat, Chief Medical Examiner for the State of Georgia, was sent out to Coroners, Medical Examiners, District Attorneys, and Law Enforcement agencies around the State of Georgia. This memo was to advise those agencies that the Central Regional (Macon) Medical Examiner’s Office would suspend operations indefinitely, effective October 1, 2020. The memo stated this was due to a Medical Examiner retiring at the Central Regional Office and that a replacement had not been found. The memo stated that they had been actively trying to recruit a pathologist to work in the Central Regional Office since December 13, 2019, and had not received any qualified applicants.
The Medical Examiner’s Office is the source of much of the information and evidence that coroners in each county rely upon to determine the cause and manner of a death or injury and, if appropriate, to pursue an arrest and conviction. These labs not only perform services for coroners and do analysis for the law enforcement communities, but they also perform evidence analysis, toxicology tests, blood alcohol tests, and ballistics tests, and provide expert witnesses to explain their findings to juries.
Currently, if an autopsy is needed it can take a couple days to get an open table at the lab to perform an autopsy and another day or two for the autopsy to be done. Currently, it is taking three months or more to get the autopsy, toxicology, and histology reports back. With the closure of this lab, the time to get an autopsy done will increase and the time to get the reports back could be six months or greater.
This delay will put a burden on families due to the fact that it will increase the time for us to get their loved ones back from the lab so that they can have a proper burial of their loved ones. It will also delay the completion of the death certificate because a certificate cannot be completed until the reports are done. This means that families could be looking at six months or more on being able to collect from their life insurance policies, which will also cause delays for funeral homes in getting their payments for the funeral expenses. This delay could also interfere with law enforcement and district attorneys making prosecutable cases.
In the State of Georgia, 153 of the 159 Coroner’s Offices use the GBI Medical Examiner’s Office. Due to the closure of this one lab, all 153 Coroners Offices, Law Enforcement Offices, District Attorneys, and citizens will be affected. In addition to the delays that have already been mentioned, some of the Coroner’s Offices will take a financial hit. Those Coroner’s Offices that do not have morgues/coolers could possibly have to rent storage to hold the decedents for several days. Other Coroners will have to increase their budget for transport expenses to the lab since they will be traveling a greater distance.
The Georgia Coroner’s Training Council and the Coroner’s Association, which represents the Coroners in Georgia, are hoping to meet with representatives from the GBI Medical Examiner’s Office, Governor’s Office, and the GBI Director in the coming days about the closure. Representatives of the Georgia Sheriff’s Association have also been made aware of the meeting and will hopefully be in attendance.
We are asking the citizens to please reach out to your representatives on both the state and county level to help us in this fight to keep this lab open.
I also encourage you to reach out to your local Coroner’s Office, Local Law Enforcement, and District Attorneys about the impact this closure will have on their offices and local citizens.