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Ernest Mervyn Altman

Ernest Mervyn Altman, age 88, of Clarkesville, passed away on May 17, 2024.

Born on July 6, 1935, in Atlanta, Georgia, Mervyn was the son of the late Ernest Marion Altman and the late Eulah Mary Majors Altman. After graduating from Columbus High School, Mervyn began his university education at Samford University and completed his BA in music at Stetson University. He later attended Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, where he earned two Masters Degrees: one in Christian Education and one in Choral Conducting. Mervyn was bi-vocational, serving as Minister of Music and Worship at numerous churches from Illinois to Florida and as a teaching consultant with ServiceMaster and Quorum. Mervyn was an avid sports fan and a dedicated jogger. He was a member of First Presbyterian Church of Clarkesville.

In addition to his parents, Mervyn is preceded in death by sisters Marion Altman, Ruth Harbin, and Margaret West.

Survivors include his wife Sandra Wineman Altman of Clarkesville, Georgia; sons Stephen Altman (Nilgun) of Columbus, Georgia, Jon Altman (the late Lynette Little ) of Bude, Mississippi, and James Mark Booth of Sarasota, Florida; daughters Eileen Altman (Jeff Jolin) of East Palo Alto, California, Melody Mahusay (Edwin) of Tampa, Florida, and Jill McArthur (David) of Warner Robbins, Georgia, as well as eight grandchildren and many other beloved family members.

A memorial service will be held at 10:00 AM, Wednesday, May 22, 2024, at First Presbyterian Church of Clarkesville.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests that memorials be made to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation at www.cff.org or to the Autism Society of America at www.autismsociety.org

An online guest book is available for the family at www.hillsidememorialchapel.com.

Arrangements by Hillside Memorial Chapel & Gardens, Clarkesville, GA.

HABCO animal shelter moves one step closer to construction

Habersham County Commission approved the construction manager at risk during Monday night's commission meeting moving one step closer to constructing the new animal shelter. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The Habersham County Commission approved the construction company Sunbelt Builders out of Covington, GA as the Construction Manager at Risk (CM) during the commission meeting Monday night. With the hiring of a CM, the animal shelter is one step closer to being constructed.

However, the vote was not unanimous. Commissioner Bruce Harkness had some reservations about the cost. “Why are we looking at having to pay half a million dollars if they’re the builder?” Harkness asked Finance Director Tim Sims. Sims explained that no matter which way the project was bid, this cost would be in the price. “I’m not trying to be hard to get along with, but I don’t understand paying somebody half a million dollars if they’re going to contract to build something,” Harkness said.

Sims explained to the commission that the CM will work with the architect and finish the design of the new animal shelter and the central fire station as well as value engineer both projects to reduce costs prior to construction.

Sunbelt Builders will also be the builder and be involved in the bidding process for the electrical, plumbing, HVAC, and other trades as needed to get a guaranteed pricing for both buildings. “They will also use as many local subcontractors as possible. That was one of the things that we stressed in the interviews,” Sims told the commission.

Contractors

According to Sims, Sunbelt Builders was one of seven companies that responded to a request for proposal (RFP) to be hired as the CM at risk for both projects. Sims explained that the bidding process in this instance weighted 80% on qualifications, experience, and references. The remaining 20% was relative to pricing.

Though not the lowest bidder, Sunbelt Builders had a comparable price when compared to five other companies. One company, Scroggs and Grizzle out of Clermont, GA, was the highest price bidder at just over $1.2 million. Sunbelt Builders came in at $489,870. The lowest price bidder for the project was Cooper and Company out of Cumming, GA with a price of $445,000.

Pricing was not the only factor that the committee considered. As a matter of fact, it was the last thing considered before creating a short list of contractors to be interviewed.

The review committee was made up of six members. The members from Habersham County were Public Works Director Jerry Baggett, Assistant Public Works Director Jared Beaudoin, Contract Service Engineer Michael Gardner, and Public Facilities Director Mike Bramlett. The other two members of the review committee were Oscar Herrera and Kip Stokes from the design firm CROFT and Associates.

Scoring criteria

The committee reviewed each responders qualifications, experience, and references. Those three variables were scored and tallied. Once those scores were recorded, the committee opened the pricing bids and scored the prices. The committee reviewed the scores and created a short list of contractors that would be interviewed. The interviews were scored. The four companies that made the shortlist were Sunbelt Builders, Charles Black Construction of Cleveland, GA, Cooper and Company, and Hogan Construction of Norcross, GA.

Sims stated that the Sunbelt Builders stood out among the other contractors due to the experience in building animal shelters in the past.

The commission approved Sunbelt Builders as the Construction Manager at Risk for the animal shelter and the central fire station with a 3-2 vote. Harkness and Commissioner Jimmy Tench were the dissenting votes.

With the commission’s approval of the CM at Risk, it moves the county one step closer to breaking ground on two of the SPLOST projects. According to Baggett, the county could break ground for the animal shelter as soon as August. The central fire station would follow later in 2025 or early 2026.

After the meeting, Harkness stated that he wished that the issue had been tabled so he could have had more time to ask questions.

New Michael’s store in Cornelia to host grand opening celebration

Michaels is located at 361 Habersham Village Circle in the Habersham Village Shopping Center in Cornelia, Georgia.

The new Michaels store in Cornelia will hold its grand opening celebration on Saturday, May 25. The community is invited to attend the event, which will include a ribbon-cutting ceremony, free crafts, giveaways, local food favorites, and more.

The celebration will take place from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Habersham Village Shopping Center off US 441 Business in Cornelia. Those attending will be able to enjoy a variety of food options from the participating vendors, including a Brazilian Beef food truck, an ice cream truck, snow cones, and popcorn.

The new Cornelia location recently opened. It offers a wide assortment of arts and crafts supplies, framing options, floral, kids’ crafts, DIY, yarn, beading, and scrapbooking supplies.

According to a company press release, the store is a “sleeker, simpler” Michaels. It features self-checkout registers and curbside pick-up.

“The new format represents Michaels’ ongoing innovations across every facet of the business to bring customers a more seamless shopping experience,” the release states.

The opening of the new Michaels location in Cornelia is expected to create several full and part-time jobs in the community during the year.

Michaels has over 1,290 stores located in 49 states and Canada. Founded in 1973 and headquartered in Irving, Texas, the company touts itself as “the best place for all things creative.”

Early voter turnout stats for Georgia’s primary election

It’s primary day in Georgia. Today’s vote follows three weeks of early voting across the state.

According to the Secretary of State’s Office, Georgia posted a 7.9% early voter turnout. Nearly 558,000 of the state’s 7 million registered voters cast in-person and absentee ballots between April 29 and May 17.

The regional voter turnout for Northeast Georgia is 11.3%, with just under 55,000 votes cast by the region’s 482,000 active registered voters.

Northeast Georgia regional voter turnout (Source: Election Data Hub)

Data from the Georgia Election Data Hub shows Rabun and Towns counties had the highest early turnout, at just over 23%. That was followed by Union (20.5%) and Stephens County (17.7%).

Early voter turnout in Northeast Georgia ranked highest to lowest. (Source: Election Data Hub)

Habersham County posted a 12% early voter turnout, as 3,546 of the county’s 29,640 active registered voters cast ballots ahead of Tuesday’s primary.

Habersham County’s early voter turnout stats. (Source: Election Data Hub)

Local primary day races to watch include the school board and county commission races in Habersham. Also, the sheriff’s races in Stephens and Rabun counties.

Georgia polls open Tuesday with key state, local and federal races on the ballot

(Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

(Georgia Recorder) — Georgians will have one last opportunity Tuesday to head to the polls to vote in state and congressional primaries and a host of nonpartisan races on ballots all across the state.

During the three-week early voting period that concluded on Friday, more than 554,000 votes were cast, representing a statewide turnout of 8%. That’s a far cry from the nearly 800,000 votes cast during early voting in the 2022 primary.

The 2022 primary featured high-profile Republican races, including Herschel Walker’s runaway win in the primary for U.S. Senate and ex-U.S. Sen. David Perdue’s failed effort to defeat Gov. Brian Kemp.

While Tuesday’s primary lacks such top-of-the-ballot headliners, Tuesday’s election isn’t lacking in important races, including a number of partisan contests where the winning candidates will be heavy favorites in the Nov. 5 general election.

For many Georgians, Tuesday’s election will help determine who serves as their district attorney, county clerk, county commission and sheriff. Residents will also be able to vote on their state legislative races and settle the one contested Georgia Supreme Court seat on the ballot.

The League of Women Voters of Georgia sent an email urging the state’s 6.5 million registered voters to fill out the entire ballot Tuesday. A third of registered voters tend to skip down-ballot races, according to the U.S. Vote Foundation.

“Down ballot offices are the ones that keep communities on track and moving forward,” the League of Women Voters of Georgia’s said to their followers. “Most of governing happens far, far below president or governor or mayor. It happens at the school board, at the county commission, in the courts. If you think the office of coroner isn’t important, think about what they had to do during the pandemic. When they say that all politics is local, this is who they’re talking about.”

Election day monitoring

Several organizations will monitor hundreds of polling places throughout Georgia that will be open to voters from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Among those groups are Georgia’s Republican and Democratic parties, which will both have voter hotlines available for the public to report any election-related problems Tuesday.

“Lawyers will guide poll watchers through the appropriate election code and provide clarity on how various issue should be answered, resolved, or escalated,” Georgia GOP Chairman Josh McKoon wrote in an email to supporters Monday. “When escalation is necessary, HQ may contact the Secretary of State or the county election supervisors or take legal action.”

It was during the early voting period leading up to Tuesday’s primary that the Democratic Party’s trained volunteers gained first-hand experience with some of the issues that could become more prevalent in the November election.

Nearly 80,000 calls were handled by the party’s voter protection hotline in 2018, the year the hotline was established.

The call center’s volunteers are able to answer basic questions such as how to register to vote to responding to complaints about long voting lines and disputes with election staff over provisional ballots.

The call center was open during a tumultuous 2020 presidential election and is still dealing with the fallout that continues to shape Georgia election law four years later.

A host of election changes were signed into law by Kemp this month.

The state Democratic Party’s executive director, Tolulope Kevin Olasanoye, said the party is paying close attention to changes in rules that would make it easier for someone to challenge the eligibility of voters.

Olasanoye said that under SB 189, thousands of voter challenges will likely be filed leading into the November election based on unreliable data provided by right-wing groups.

“We no longer have to have a basis in fact to be able to challenge a voter’s ability to vote and that’s a real, real big problem,” he said.

“As I often say to our team, you want to always be able to play offense on the things you can anticipate and only be reacting to the things that you never saw coming,” Olasanoye said. “This bill creates an environment where we’re all going to be reacting to stuff in real time because nobody has ever worked in this sort of environment and I think that’s hugely problematic.”

Republican lawmakers contend that the new election law establishes clearer rules for contesting a voter’s status by defining the probable cause for filing a challenge, such as evidence of voting in two different states or having a nonresidential address listed as their primary residence.

What’s on the ballot?

Georgia is an open primary state that allows voters to choose either Republican, Democratic, or nonpartisan ballots when they arrive at the polls Tuesday.

A crowded field of five Republicans are vying to replace outgoing Congressman Drew Ferguson in the conservative District 3 that extends from the southern suburbs of Atlanta to the northern suburbs of Columbus.

Unless a candidate on Tuesday receives the 50% of votes needed to outright win the GOP primary, District 3 will be settled in a runoff on June 18.

Another significant race Tuesday is for a seat on the Georgia Supreme Court in which the candidate with the most votes wins. Justice Andrew Pinson is being challenged by John Barrow, who has turned the race into a battle over abortion rights.

Tuesday’s ballot in Fulton County also features two of the central characters connected to the felony racketeering and conspiracy case as former President Donald Trump and 14 remaining co-defendants are accused of illegally conspiring to overturn the 2020 election.

The embattled Fulton District Attorney Fani Willis faces Christian Wise Smith, who has served as Atlanta city solicitor and a Fulton County prosecutor, in the Democratic primary. Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee, the presiding judge in the Trump case, is being challenged by civil rights attorney Robert Patillo in the nonpartisan election.

For more information:

Georgia voters can call or text the Democratic Party of Georgia’s voter protection hotline anytime during voting hours Tuesday at 888-730-5816.

The Georgia Republican Party’s election integrity hotline can be reached Tuesday at 404-738-8393. Election related issues can also be reported at https://georgia.protectthevote.com/hc/en-us/requests/new.

Biden to announce 1 million claims granted for VA benefits under toxic exposure law

The PACT Act added 23 illnesses to the list of toxic-exposure-related ailments presumed to be connected to military service. (Andrew Burton/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — President Joe Biden is set to announce in New Hampshire on Tuesday that 1 million claims have been granted for benefits under the toxic exposure law that Congress approved less than two years ago, following the military’s use of open air burn pits in Afghanistan and Iraq.

The law, approved with broad bipartisan support following years of advocacy by veterans, their families and service organizations, has also led to more than 145,000 people enrolling in health care provided by the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Secretary of Veterans Affairs Denis McDonough told reporters on a call ahead of the announcement that the law has made “tangible, life-changing differences for” veterans and their survivors.

“That has meant more than $5.7 billion in earned benefits for veterans as well as access to no-cost VA health care across all 50 states and the territories,” McDonough said.

White House Domestic Policy Advisor Neera Tanden said during the call that the law, known as the PACT Act, “represents the most significant expansion of benefits and services for toxic-exposed veterans, including veterans exposed to burn pits and certain veterans exposed to radiation and Agent Orange.”

“This is truly personal for the president given his experiences as a military parent,” Tanden said. Biden’s son, Beau, died at 46 years old in 2015 from brain cancer.

The approval rate for benefits under the PACT Act is about 75%, according to a senior administration official.

Biden is set to make the announcement during a trip to Merrimack, New Hampshire.

Burn pit exposure

Congress struggled for years before reaching a compromise on when and how to provide health care and benefits for veterans exposed to open air burn pits during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Hazardous chemicals, medical waste, batteries and other toxic substances were disposed of in those burn pits, typically located on military bases. Service members had no choice but to live and work alongside the smoke, often breathing it in.

The law added 23 illnesses to the list of conditions that the VA presumes are connected to military service, eliminating the arduous and complicated process that many veterans had to undergo to try to get health care and benefits for those diagnoses.

Before the bill became law, veterans often had to prove to the VA that their illnesses were connected to their military service if they wanted to receive benefits or health care for those illnesses.

The U.S. Senate voted 84-14 in June 2022 to send the legislation to the House, where it was delayed for weeks over a dispute about incentivizing health care providers to move to rural or very rural areas.

The bill passed the House following a 342-88 vote in July, after that section was removed from the package. Senators voted 86-11 in August to send the bill to Biden’s desk.

The president signed the bill during a ceremony on Aug. 10.

“When they came home, many of the fittest and best warriors that we sent to war were not the same,” Biden said during the event. “Headaches, numbness, dizziness, cancer. My son Beau was one of them.”

The VA has an interactive dashboard that provides veterans with information about how to apply for health care and benefits under the PACT Act as well as how many claims have been submitted.
The VA has a calendar of in-person events that can be found here. Veterans or their family members can also call the VA at 800-698-2411 to inquire about PACT Act benefits.

Erin Donovan Set to Compete at NCAA DIII Women’s Golf Tournament Tuesday

(2022 Sideline Media)

DEMOREST, Ga. – Piedmont’s own Erin Donovan is set to begin the NCAA DIII Women’s Golf Tournament on Tuesday, May 21, in Nicholasville, Kentucky.

The event will be held at Keene Trace Golf Club in Nicholasville, Kentucky, and will be played on the Keene Run course.

This marks the first women’s golfer in Piedmont program history to earn a bid to the National Tournament.

The championship field consists of 29 teams and six individuals, with 24 conferences granted automatic qualification to the tournament (Pool A). Five more teams will be granted at-large bids, two in Pool B (independent institutions/institutions that are members of conferences that do not meet the requirements for automatic qualification) and three in Pool C (institutions from automatic-qualifying conferences that are not their conference champion and the remaining teams in Pool B).

Donovan is set to tee off at 1:50 p.m. on Tuesday at hole 1.

THE DETAILS:
Where: Nicholasville, Kentucky
The Course: Keene Trace Golf Club (Keene Run: Par 72 – 5795 yards)
When: Tuesday, May 21 – Friday, May 24
Format: 72 holes (18 each day)
Live Scoring: Follow

LAST TIME OUT:

After being named USA South Player of the Year, Donovan cemented her status as the conference’s top golfer by winning the USA South Conference Tournament going away, firing a final round 69 to win by seven strokes.

USA South Final Round Recap | USA South Tournament Complete Results

OF NOTE:

The sophomore from Southaven, Mississippi narrowly missed out on selection to the national tournament a season ago after a dynamic freshman campaign. However, as a sophomore, she continued her ascent, picking up four wins in the nine events she competed in.

Prosecution rests in Trump hush money trial, after former fixer Cohen is grilled

Former President Donald Trump appears in court during his trial for allegedly covering up hush money payments at Manhattan Criminal Court on May 20, 2024, in New York City. Trump faces 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in the first of his criminal cases to go to trial. (Steven Hirsch-Pool/Getty Images)

NEW YORK (States Newsroom) — New York state prosecutors rested their case against Donald Trump Monday after four days of testimony from their key witness, Trump’s former fixer Michael Cohen, who says the former president was well aware of a hush money cover-up. The defense paints Cohen as a liar.

The Manhattan criminal trial, the first ever for a former president, now in its sixth week, was poised to reach closing arguments as early as Tuesday. But New York Justice Juan Merchan indicated Monday that proceedings would stretch beyond Memorial Day.

Trump attorney Todd Blanche, in a lengthy, and at times slow and disjointed cross- examination Monday, continued wringing Cohen for proof that would convince jurors the former fixer cannot be trusted.

Cohen’s earlier testimony that Trump reimbursed him for paying a porn star to stay quiet before the 2016 presidential election is at the crux of the prosecution’s case.

Trump is charged with falsifying 11 invoices, 11 checks, and 12 ledger entries as routine legal expenses rather than reimbursement of the hush money, amounting to 34 felony counts.

Trump denies any wrongdoing and maintains he never had a sexual relationship with adult film actress and director Stormy Daniels. She testified otherwise in excruciating and awkward detail in early May.

Monday’s proceedings were beset with objections and technology issues, and wrapped with tense testimony from the defense’s second witness, Robert Costello, Cohen’s legal counsel, who promised backdoor communication to Trump after Cohen was under the FBI’s thumb in 2018.

The day ended with a long shot, but expected, request from the defense to throw the case out. Merchan dismissed the court, saying he’d issue his ruling Tuesday. The defense is likely to rest its case then as well.

Closing arguments are expected after the holiday.

On a ‘journey’

Blanche began the day grilling Cohen on his previous business dealings, income and the money he’s made since breaking ties with the former president.

Cohen testified that he’s made millions of dollars on his books “Disloyal” and “Revenge,” and his podcast “Mea Culpa,” all of which sharply criticize the man from whom he used to seek praise, as he testified days earlier.

Prompted by Blanche, Cohen confirmed he’s mulling over a third book, has a television show in the works titled “The Fixer” and is considering a run for Congress because he has “the best name recognition” out there.

When Blanche suggested Cohen’s name recognition hinges on Trump, Cohen disagreed.

“I wouldn’t characterize it that way. My name recognition is because of the journey I’ve been on,” Cohen said.

“Well the journey you’ve been on … has included daily attacks on Trump,” Blanche responded.

Through the course of Blanche’s questioning, Cohen again acknowledged his previous crimes and also fessed up to stealing $30,000 from the Trump Organization when Trump lagged on paying a tech company to rig a CNBC poll of famous businessmen.

Minutes later, Blanche asked, “Do you have a financial interest in this case?”

“Yes, sir,” Cohen responded.

When Blanche pressed about whether a guilty verdict is Cohen’s preferred outcome, Cohen responded, “The answer is no. It’s better if he’s not (guilty) for me because it gives me more to talk about in the future.”

Prosecutor Susan Hoffinger conducted her redirect at a tidy and speedy clip, leading Cohen through each of Blanche’s doubting lines of questioning to reaffirm for the jury Cohen’s testimony that Trump’s hand was behind the hush money reimbursements.

“They’ve asked you a lot of questions about how you’ve made money and (your) podcast… Putting aside financial matters, how has telling the truth affected your life?” Hoffinger asked.

“My entire life has been turned upside down as a direct result,” Cohen responded.

Before the prosecution rested its case, the defense lobbed a lengthy objection to a still frame of a C-SPAN video depicting Trump with his bodyguard Keith Schiller just before 8 p.m. on Oct. 24, 2016. The parties eventually agreed to admit it.

Evidence that Trump and Schiller were together that night looms large for Cohen’s claim that he spoke to both of them on the phone about paying off Daniels.

Trump’s support inside the courtroom

A steady flow of high-profile Republican supporters has shown up for the GOP’s presumed 2024 presidential nominee.

Monday’s supporters included Trump ally and attorney Alan Dershowitz; legal adviser Boris Epshteyn, who himself is indicted in Arizona for trying to subvert the 2020 presidential election results; and Chuck Zito, an actor and one of the founders of New York City’s Hells Angels chapter in the 1980s.

Several Republican lawmakers, including vice presidential hopefuls, have flocked to Manhattan for the trial.

North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, Sen. J.D. Vance of Ohio and former GOP primary hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy attended May 13. Sens. Rick Scott of Florida and Tommy Tuberville of Alabama also made appearances last week, alongside Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird.

House Speaker Mike Johnson delivered remarks outside the courthouse May 14, slamming the “sham trial” and accusing New York prosecutors of only wanting to keep the former president off the campaign trail.

The Louisiana Republican cast Trump as a victim of a “travesty of justice.”

Nearly a dozen far-right Republican House members showed up Thursday, led by Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida. Accompanying Gaetz were other right-wing House Freedom Caucus members: fellow Floridian Reps. Anna Paulina Luna and Mike Waltz; Eli Crane and Andy Biggs of Arizona; Lauren Boebert of Colorado; Ralph Norman of South Carolina; Diana Harshbarger and Andy Ogles of Tennessee; Mike Cloud of Texas; and caucus Chair Bob Good of Virginia.

Speaking on the sidewalk outside the courthouse, Gaetz described the charges as the “Mr. Potatohead doll of crimes,” accusing the prosecution of combining things “that did not belong together.”

Reps. Byron Donalds and Cory Mills of Florida attended earlier in the week.

U.S. Postmaster General outlines plan to improve regional processing center in Palmetto, Georgia

U.S. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy outlined a series of steps the postal service is taking to improve service at a regional mail processing center in Palmetto, Georgia. The Center is being blamed for postal problems throughout the state.

Georgia U.S. Senator Jon Ossoff recently raised the issue with DeJoy and cited data showing only 36% of inbound mail handled by the Palmetto center was being delivered on time.

In a letter to Ossoff, DeJoy announced that more than 100 postal service personnel have been sent to the Center to work onsite to identify and rectify bottlenecks. They’ll also conduct quality assurance, ensure Atlanta personnel adhere to the new procedures and ensure the timely processing and dispatch of mail and packages.

A postal service restructuring plan launched in Atlanta earlier this year aimed at stopping the agency from bleeding red ink resulted in massive delays in mail processing. Implementation of that plan has been halted.

This article comes to Now Habersham in partnership with WUGA

Major Athens drug bust: Drugs and firearms seized

Drugs and firearms police say they seized during an investigation in Athens-Clarke County, Georgia, on May 16, 2024. (Athens-Clarke County Police Department)

A multi-agency drug investigation in Athens-Clarke County resulted in the seizure of large quantities of drugs and firearms, according to a news release from the Athens-Clarke County Police Department (ACCPD).

While executing search warrants on May 16, police say they found and seized approximately 35 kilos of cocaine, 5 pounds of meth, 1 kilo of fentanyl, 1 kilo of heroin, and 19 firearms. Two of the firearms had switches that enabled automatic fire, ACCPD said.

Authorities took three suspects into custody: Luis Reyes-Juarez, 23, Luis Angel Campuzano of Athens, 22, and Edwin Rolando Chavez, age 22. All three are from Athens. Police charged them with drug trafficking.

(Athens-Clarke County Police Department)
(Athens-Clarke County Police Department)

The investigation included officers from the Athens-Clarke County Police Department, the Drug Enforcement Administration office in Macon, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Georgia, the FBI’s Safe Streets Gang Task Force, Homeland Security, GBI, , the Georgia State Patrol, the Clarke County Sheriff’s Office, the Greene County Sheriff’s Office, the Brookhaven Police Department, and the Hall County Sheriff’s Office.

The investigation is ongoing and anyone with information is asked to call the Crime Stoppers Tip Line at 706-705-4775.

Eva May Williams Thomas

Eva May Williams Thomas, 87, passed away on Saturday, May 18, 2024, at her home in Demorest, Georgia.

She was born March 4, 1937, in Toccoa, Georgia, to her parents, Vandiver and Suler Garrison.

Mrs. Eva May married Tommy Williams in 1955 and they had four children: Barry, Winford, Glenn, and Theresa Williams. They were married for 44 years until his passing in 1999. On June 27, 2005, she married Willis Auther Thomas, and they remained married until her death. They would have celebrated their 19th wedding anniversary this year. She was a longtime employee at Fielddale Farms in Cornelia, Georgia, where she retired. Her life of giving and nurturing for her family and friends will be her legacy. Her grace, intellect, kindness, good humor and love for Jesus will be missed by all who knew her.

Mrs. Eva May Williams is preceded in death by her parents; husband, Tommy Williams; two brothers, Charles Garrison and Emory Garrison; and two sons, Barry Williams and Winford Williams.

She is survived by her husband, Willis Thomas; sister, Loise Robinette; son, Glenn Williams; daughter, Theresa Williams; eight grandchildren, Brent (Christian), Jennifer (Frankie), Jody (Lance), Andrew, Earl, Katrina, Christy, Kayla; and seventeen great-grandchildren, Caden, Abby, Clara, Xavier, Xander, Xannon, Emma, Wesley, Austin, Elizabeth, Jonathan, Hope, Bradley, Ezra, Evan, Isabella, and Bayli.

Funeral services will be held at 4:00 p.m., Saturday, May 25, 2024, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel. Interment will follow at the New Hope Baptist Church Cemetery.

The family will receive friends from 2:00 p.m. to 3:45 p.m., Saturday, May 25, 2024 at the funeral home.

The following gentlemen will serve as pallbearers: Riley Thomas, Austin Williams, Wesley Sisk, Caden Stephens, Lance Call, Steven Johnson, and Caleb Stroke.

In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to Habersham County Humane Society, P.O. Box 1442, Clarkesville, Georgia 30523.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, South Chapel at 1370 Industrial Boulevard, Baldwin, Georgia 30511. Telephone: 706-778-7123.

Pilot killed in ultralight plane crash in White County

File photo (Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

A 79-year-old Cleveland man was killed early Monday in an ultralight plane crash at the Mountain Airpark, officials say. Emergency personnel were dispatched to the private airfield in southern White County at 8:42 a.m. on May 20.

White County Sheriff’s Captain Clay Hammond says deputies responded to 935 Runway Circle in Cleveland in reference to the crash. He says witnesses and emergency personnel provided medical aid to the pilot, but he died at the scene.

Hammond identified the deceased pilot as 79-year-old Paul Winder. He says Winder was alone at the time of the crash.

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB)  has been notified. An NTSB spokesperson says an investigator is expected to be on the scene Tuesday to begin documenting the crash site and examining the aircraft. The aircraft will then be recovered and taken to a secure facility for further evaluation.

Martinez says a preliminary report is expected within 30 days.

An earlier version of this article misidentified the NTSB spokesperson and has been updated.