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Several people injured in multiple accidents in Habersham County

Over the weekend in Habersham County, there were four different vehicle crashes with multiple people injured.

Rolled over ATV

On Friday, April 26, the first crash occurred near Mud Creek Road. A Polaris Ranger rolled over on a dirt road. Public Information Officer Rob Moore says Habersham E-911 received a call about the accident at around 5:35 p.m.

According to the preliminary crash report from the Georgia State Patrol, a 15-year-old girl was driving the Polaris north on Seldom Rest Lane. Troopers say she was driving too fast for road conditions and lost control of the vehicle.

State troopers say the teen driver overcorrected as the vehicle rotated. One of the tires struck a hole in the gravel roadway, causing the Polaris to overturn onto its driver’s side.

A medical helicopter flew the injured teen driver to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville with serious injuries.

Two other girls, ages 16 and 14, were transported by ambulance to Northeast Georgia Medical Center (NGMC) in Gainesville with non-life-threatening injuries.

SEE ALSO Teen airlifted after four-wheeler crash in Elbert County

A single-vehicle wreck on GA 365 North

A single-vehicle wreck on GA 365 North near Alto-Mud Creek Road on Saturday injured three people, according to the Georgia State Patrol.

Troopers were dispatched to the scene around 7:02 a.m. on April 27. Their investigation into the crash revealed that a Toyota Sequoia was traveling North on GA 365, in the right lane. The driver, a 15-year-old male, swerved and lost control, rotating clockwise, the GSP report states.

The Toyota left the roadway, traveled onto the right shoulder of the road and struck a guardrail with its driver’s side. The SUV then traveled down an embankment and came to an uncontrolled rest near a drainage ditch.

The impact ejected two teenage boy passengers – ages 15 and 16 – from the rear driver’s side door.

Habersham EMS transported them to NGMC in Gainesville with minor injuries. A third passenger, 48-year-old Pablo Mosqueda of Gainesville, also sustained minor injuries and EMS transported him to the hospital.

According to the State Patrol report, the driver told troopers that another vehicle changed lanes before him, causing him to swerve. The second vehicle did not cut him off but changed lanes closer than he felt comfortable.

Nearly 50 feet of guardrail was damaged from the wreck.

An accident involving a golf cart

On Saturday afternoon, one person was seriously injured in a golf cart accident at 379 Rocky Ridge Trail.

Moore said Habersham E-911 received a call at around 4:42 p.m. on April 27 reporting the wreck.

State troopers were dispatched to 379 Rocky Ridge Trail to investigate the crash. They determined that a golf cart was traveling west and the front of the vehicle struck a wall. After impact, the golf cart tilted counterclockwise and came to an uncontrolled final rest facing west over a staircase.

According to Moore, the vehicle fell about nine feet and came to rest on concrete steps and artificial turf. The Georgia State Patrol identified the man Geoffrey Tipton of Cornelia.

The 59-year-old Tipton told troopers he hit the gas pedal instead of the brake before crashing. He sustained suspected serious injuries and Habersham EMS transported him by ambulance to NGMC in Gainesville for treatment.

Pedestrian struck by a car

Finally, on Sunday night, April 28, a pedestrian a car struck a pedestrian on Georgia Street near the Student Commons at Piedmont University in Demorest.

Moore says the wreck happened after 6:45 p.m.

The Georgia State Patrol says troopers investigated the crash and determined that an Audi Q5 was traveling west on Georgia Street. The driver, Javierre Marlowe, 21, of Longs, South Carolina, turned south onto Dorm Drive and struck the pedestrian, who was walking outside the crosswalk.

According to GSP, Elliot Dougherty, 20, of Roswell, sustained minor injuries and was taken by ambulance to NGMC Gainesville for treatment.

Bowman man arrested in Hartwell motel murder

Matthew Laverne Carey (Hart County Detention Center)

A man who witnesses said they saw leave a Hartwell hotel room covered in blood is now in jail charged with murder.

Matthew Carey of Bowman turned himself in to authorities after the murder of 36-year-old Candy Downer, according to Hartwell police. Downer was found dead inside a room at the Daynight Inn in Hartwell.

A woman was found dead inside a room at this motel on Anderson Highway in Hartwell on Sunday, April 28, 2024. (Source: Google Maps)

The GBI charged the 41-year-old Carey with malice murder, felony murder, and aggravated assault – family violence, according to a GBI news release. Carey is currently being held in the Hart County Jail.

Investigators ask anyone with information about this crime to contact the Hartwell Police Department at (706) 376-3111 or the GBI Regional Investigative Office in Athens at (706) 552-2309.

Anonymous tips may be submitted by calling 1-800-597-TIPS (8477), online through the GBI Tip Line, or by downloading the See Something, Send Something mobile app.

Once the investigation is complete, the GBI says it will turn over the case file to the Northern Judicial Circuit for prosecution.

VP stops by Atlanta in latest courting of Georgia voters by Biden administration officials

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks with Earn Your Leisure’s Rashad Bilal and Troy Millings in Atlanta. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

(Georgia Recorder) — Vice President Kamala Harris came to Georgia Monday to kick off a nationwide tour promoting the White House’s record on economic issues and pledge to continue to support small businesses, particularly minority-owned ones.

“None of us have achieved success without support. None of us,” she said during a panel discussion at the Georgia International Convention Center in College Park. “And without someone or people who understood our talent and our dreams and encouraged us to achieve it and showed us how to achieve it. And as much as anything, the spirit behind the push for access to capital, and in particular on this tour, focusing on minority small businesses and Black-owned small businesses and small businesses and entrepreneurs who are Black men, is to recognize the disparities that have existed around the access to the opportunity to achieve success.”

Harris highlighted what the administration calls the fastest creation of Black-owned small businesses in more than 30 years, the lowest Black unemployment rate on record and the lowest gap between Black and white unemployment, as well as increasing the wealth of American families with Black wealth up by 60% relative to before the COVID-19 pandemic.

She spoke about “The Stitch,” a park project in downtown Atlanta intended to reconnect minority communities split by the construction of I-75 and I-85 in the 1950s and 60s.

“During the late 50s and 60s, there was this whole policy push, national policy push, that was called urban renewal,” she said. “It was supposed to be about making life easier for people that lived in the areas where it happened, but essentially, it was about a policy that was directed at making it, many people would say, easier for folks who had wealth and means to move to the suburbs and still have access to downtown.”

Vice President Kamala Harris (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

Atlanta’s Stitch received a $158 million dollar grant from the Department of Transportation’s $3.3 billion Reconnecting Communities and Neighborhoods Program, meant to fund projects around the country that aim to resolve harm done to minority groups through discriminatory transportation policy.

“So what we have been doing through our infrastructure bill is putting resources into basically reconnecting communities,” Harris said.

Harris’ visit marks her third of the year and 12th since being sworn in.

“With all of your visits, I’m beginning to think that you might want to call Atlanta home,” joked Congresswoman Nikema Williams, an Atlanta Democrat.

President Joe Biden himself is set to visit vote-rich Atlanta on May 19 to deliver the commencement address at Morehouse College. Just last week, numerous high-ranking officials came to Atlanta, including Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, and acting Labor Secretary Julie Su, to speak in front of important constituencies.

Speaking at a summit of Black mayors from around the nation, Buttigieg welcomed mayors to describe projects in their cities funded by the Reconnecting Communities and Neighborhoods Program and shot back at allegations it was a political operation.

“It brings people closer to grocery stores and doctor’s offices,” he said. “It reduces the pollution that kids breathe. And it brings economic development back to neighborhoods. Now, I know that some have tried to turn what I would consider to be a common sense program into another front in some kind of culture war. They would call this woke. I would call this good transportation policy. Because it gets people to where they need to be. There is nothing divisive about healing what is broken.”

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

In a keynote address at the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 613 in Atlanta, Su talked up the administration’s $2 billion infrastructure plan, and said the Department of Labor is working to make sure those projects create good union jobs available to minority workers.

“It’s important to say that transportation and good jobs have not always been good for communities of color,” she said. “They’ve not always been accessible for communities of color. And we are saying not this time, not on our watch.”

Speaking to the Recorder after delivering remarks, Su said all the visits from administration leaders show how much the president cares about what happens in Georgia.

“The Biden-Harris administration is invested in Atlanta,” she said. “We care what’s happening here. We care what’s happening in Georgia. We want there to be strong infrastructure, and we want there to be good jobs all across this community.”

The administration also likely cares about winning Georgia votes. Biden won the state by nearly 12,000 votes in 2020, and Republican nominee and former President Donald Trump is eager to move it back into the GOP column.

Acting Labor Secretary Julie Su. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

With fewer than 190 days left until the election, the latest Real Clear Politics polling average gives Trump a 4% lead in Georgia, 49.2% to 45.2% in a two-way race. When third-party candidates are added, Trump’s lead grows to 6.3%.

Conservatives say the Biden administration’s policies have failed to spur economic growth and regular Georgians are still struggling to pay higher prices for groceries and many other goods.

“If Vice President Harris was serious about economic opportunity, she’d stop boosting ‘Bidenomics’ and instead focus on expanding the freedoms that foster economic opportunity,” said Tony West, state director of the Georgia chapter of the conservative Americans for Progress. “But the wasteful spending, heavy-handed regulation, and one-side energy agenda that make up the core planks of ‘Bidenomics’ are diametrically opposed to creating opportunities for Georgians.

“We need more freedom and less ‘Bidenomics’ if we are going to be serious about unleashing economic opportunity or reigniting the American Dream.”

Harris’ tour is set to continue next week in Detroit.

Fire heavily damages Hall County home

Hall County firefighters respond to a house fire in Flowery Branch on Sunday, April 28, 2024. (Hall County Fire Rescue)

The Hall County Fire Marshal’s Office is investigating the cause of a house fire that broke out late at night on April 28 in Flowery Branch.

Fire crews were dispatched to the 4700 block of Cardinal Ridge Way at 10 p.m. on reports of a residential fire. When they arrived, they found a fully engulfed garage connected to a three-story home with an extension into the second floor and attic.

The fire department says crews quickly knocked down the bulk of the flames. No one was hurt.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

Georgia Senate panel considers solutions to ease overcrowding at local jails

Fulton County officials estimate it will cost $1.7 billion to replace the overcrowded Fulton County Jail that opened in 1989. (Stanley Dunlap/Georgia Recorder)

(Georgia Recorder) — Within six months of the Muscogee County Jail opening a new wing a few years ago, the jail was already filled to capacity.

“I don’t care how much bigger a jail you build, it’s going to stay overcrowded because the cases have to be handled in the courtroom,” Stephen Craft, a retired chief assistant public defender in Columbus, said Monday to a state Senate public safety subcommittee.

During the three-hour hearing on Monday, the panel listened to testimony about the public defender’s role in decreasing overcrowding in jails like the lockups in Muscogee and Fulton counties. Over the past several months, the Senate panel has held several hearings investigating conditions at Fulton’s 901 Rice Street jail and other detention facilities. The committee has been tasked with examining how cases are prosecuted and the impact of crime in Atlanta and other communities.

About 10% of Muscogee jail inmates now face murder charges, which represents about 2% of a judge’s overall caseload in the six-county Chattahoochee Judicial Circuit, according to Craft.

When Craft retired in June, the public defender’s office had 14 pending homicide cases as well as 300 other cases, ranging from entering an automobile to drug possession.

Craft said that the Columbus-based Muscogee State Court, for years, expedited hundreds of misdemeanor cases by working closely with the solicitor general to prepare recommendations for the judge in advance. The superior court, which deals with felony, civil disputes, and family domestic cases, does not operate the same way, he said.

Homicide cases are given priority on the court calendar and the average Chattahoochee public defender had 400 pending cases as recently as a few months ago, Craft said.

“There is no push to bring minor cases to trial,” Craft said.

Republican Sen. John Albers said the committee is investigating jail overcrowding across the state, including Fulton, where the average incarceration is 300 days, compared with a national average of about 30 days.

“The jail is not meant to be a permanent facility,” Albers said.

In the Atlanta Judicial Circuit, Public Defender Maurice Kenner said the average caseload for public defenders with complex cases such as homicide and sexual assault is 60 to 85 at a given time, while the other lawyers in his office typically handle about 200 cases.

Kenner said he believes that having more judges available to handle cases and faster processing of state crime lab results would help improve overcrowding in the Atlanta jail.

Albers on Monday asked Omotayo Alli, executive director of the Georgia Public Defender Council, what she believed was the biggest obstacle to reducing the time people spend locked up in Fulton.

“We’re trying to figure out the root cause of these issues and we realized that public defenders can’t force the trial calendar to be set or the prosecution to push things forward,” Albers said.

Alli said one of the challenges to getting people out of jail faster is the level of collaboration during pretrial negotiations, which includes taking advantage of available social services so that people can be released on bond for lower level offenses.

“We’re hoping to meet with the district attorney, meet with all the powers that be. There are some cases that we can work out by providing socially responsive resources outside the jail,” Alli said.

“Our attorneys make those recommendations. The question is I don’t know how far those recommendations go,” Alli said.

She said that if she had her wish, the state public defender’s office would receive additional funds to hire and retain more attorneys.

“We have done very well in the last four years but we’re still not competing with (private) attorneys,” Alli said.

According to Craft, one of the best ways to attack a case backlog is to establish a Rapid Resolution program, which allows low-level crimes to be handled more quickly, freeing up jail space and allowing officials to focus on more complex, serious offenses.

During Rapid Response, full-time staff from the public defender’s office and district attorney’s office collaborate to reach a resolution in cases that have been reviewed by judges and law enforcement.

A rapid response team can help reach a bond agreement by the preliminary hearing, Craft said.

The judicial process could be made more efficient by halving the number of cases each public defender has on their calendar.

“Now that I only have (half the cases), I am able to look at the low hanging fruit and say these are non-complex cases and call the DA and say what can we do about this case?” Craft said.

Vehicle fire near Lee Arrendale State Prison

A vehicle continues to smoke after catching fire in the yard of a home on Mt. Zion Road at Mt. Zion Connector near Alto. (Habersham County photo/Rob Moore)

At 5:53 p.m. on Friday afternoon, Habersham County E-911 received a call reporting a vehicle fire in the yard near a house on Mt. Zion Road at Mt. Zion Connector near Alto.

Baldwin Fire Department personnel work to extinguish a vehicle fire in front of a home on Mt. Zion Road at Mt. Zion Connector near Alto. (Habersham County photo/Rob Moore)

Several units responded to the fire from Baldwin and Habersham County Emergency Services.

The fire was extinguished by 6:25 p.m.

One person on scene suffered burns to the hand but was not transported by ambulance.

Irene Hammons Napier

Irene Hammons Napier, 78, of Eastanollee, Georgia, formerly of Manchester, Kentucky, went home to be with the Lord on Wednesday, April 24, 2024.

Born in Manchester, Kentucky, on January 29, 1946, she was the daughter of the late Sam & Lona Ruth Hammons. Irene enjoyed being outdoors, fishing, and collecting jewelry. Most of all, she loved her family tremendously. Irene was a member of Swafford Baptist Church.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Curtis Napier.

Survivors include her children, Linda & Dale Underwood of Eastanollee, GA; Sam & Mary Ann Napier of East Bernstadt, KY; Paul & Sue Napier of Rydal, GA; grandchildren, Britton Brumley, Brandon Brumley, Angela Nicole & Joshua Smith, Sarah Beck & Ryan Brooks; 7 great-grandchildren; sister, Wilma Jean Hooker of Manchester, KY; 4 nieces, other relatives, & friends.

Funeral services are scheduled for 10:00 a.m. Sunday, April 28, 2024, at Britton Funeral Home with Joe Crockett officiating. Interment will follow in the Napier Cemetery in Manchester, KY.

The family will receive friends at the Britton Funeral Home, 27 Old U.S. 421, Manchester, KY. 40962 starting at 6:00 p.m. on Saturday, April 27, 2024.

An online guest registry is available for the Napier family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

Arrangements are locally in the care & professional direction of Hillside Memorial Chapel & Gardens of Clarkesville, Georgia (706) 754-6256 & Britton Funeral Home of Manchester, Kentucky (606) 598-8963.

2024 County Clerk of the Year is Shanda Murphy

Commissioner Terry Goodger, Commissioner Craig Bryant, County Clerk Shanda Murphy, Commissioner Edwin Nix, Chairman Travis Turner. (White County)

Shanda Murphy is the recipient of the 2024 County Clerk of the Year Award. This award is given by the Georgia County Clerks Association. Murphy, recognized for her exceptional dedication and outstanding contributions to her community and profession, is currently serving as the County Clerk for White County.

Shanda Murphy, 2024 County Clerk of the Year. (White County)

Murphy started as a Human Resources Director in 2005 in White County. In 2008, she assumed the role of County Clerk from her predecessor, Jean Welborn. Murphy has continued to work as Human Resources Director and County Clerk.

The Association of County Commissioners of Georgia (ACCG) held a Gala on Saturday, April 27th in Savannah, Georgia, where they presented Leadership Awards. The 2023 Clerk of the Year, Stephanie Johnson, presented Murphy’s award and praised Murphy for being an exemplary County Clerk with outstanding performance and professionalism in government.

Travis Turner, Chairman of the White County Board of Commissioners, expressed profound admiration for her unwavering dedication. Turner said of Murphy, “Shanda exemplifies unwavering dedication to her career and the constituents of White County. Her commitment to doing so keeps White County running as smoothly as possible and makes her an essential asset to our organization.”

Shanda Murphy with Stephanie Johnson, 2023 County Clerk of the Year. (White County)

Turner added in his letter of recommendation for Murphy that “The Board of Commissioners recognizes Shanda as an invaluable asset to the county, appreciating her continued support and dedication.”

A native of White County, Murphy graduated from White County High School and attended Truett-McConnell College (now Truett-McConnell University) and North Georgia College (now University of North Georgia). She earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Psychology.

She serves on various boards and actively participates in local initiatives. Murphy is devoted to her family and church.

HCSO seeks public’s help to identify two men wanted for questioning

(Habersham Co. Sheriff Joey Terrell Facebook)

The Habersham County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO) is seeking the public’s assistance in identifying two individuals wanted for questioning in connection to a recent theft incident.

The incident in question occurred between 10:00 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. on Saturday, April 27, within the Walls Complex located at 155 Walls Complex Circle in Clarkesville.

According to authorities, the suspects are believed to have been involved in the theft, prompting the HCSO to appeal to the community for any information that may lead to their identification.

(Habersham Co. Sheriff Joey Terrell Facebook)

The suspects are reported to have been possibly driving a brown or tan Ford F-150 extended cab truck, though the specific year of the vehicle remains unknown at this time.

Individuals who believe they have information regarding the case are urged to contact the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office Investigations division at (706) 839-0560.

White County commissioners to address Dollar General store zoning issue

The White County Board of Commissioners will hold a work session and called meeting on Monday, April 29, at 4:30 p.m. During the meeting, the commission board is expected to consider a land use application filed by SW West Cleveland LLC, on behalf of Dennis Brown, to redistrict property located at 0 Ed Lewis Road west of Cleveland from R-1, Residential Single Family District to C-1, Community Commercial District.

Developers want to build a Dollar General Store on this property. The plan recently faced heavy opposition from nearby residents, and the White County Planning Commission voted 5-1 to deny the zoning change last month that would have allowed the store to be built.

The board of commissioners has the final say on the issue. That should come during Monday’s meeting which will be held at the county administration building on the Helen Highway north of Cleveland.

Nathaniel Berry, Jr.

Nathaniel Berry, Jr., age 75, of Cornelia, passed away on Saturday, April 27, 2024.

Born on November 23, 1948, in Atlanta, he was a son of the late Nathaniel Berry, Sr. and Gracie Banks. Mr. Berry served his country in the United States Army. He enjoyed playing cards and watching Westerns as well as sports, particularly the Atlanta Braves. Mr. Berry took an interest in traveling, was an avid cap collector, and coached men’s softball including the Soul Squad along with other youth sports.

He was very social and fond of hanging out with his friends. It brought him great joy to spend time with his wife, children, grandchildren, and siblings, especially during Christmas time. Mr. Berry was a member of Israel Christian Methodist Episcopal Church.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his brothers, Michael Berry and Eddie Joe Gipson and sisters, Vernita Berry and Patricia Faulkner.

Survivors include his loving wife, Sharon Berry of Cornelia; sons and daughters-in-law, Nathaniel Berry, III (Kristin) of Demorest and Eric Williams (Ginger) of Grovetown; daughter, Shauna Berry of Cornelia and Roswell; grandchildren: Desmond Williams, Deja Williams, Marcus Berry, Ava Berry, Emma Berry, and London Berry; brothers and sister-in-law: Clarence Gipson (Tina), Walter Gipson, and Charles Gipson, all of Cornelia; sister, Beverly Willingham of Cornelia; and several nieces, nephews, and special cousins.

Memorial services are scheduled for 2:00 pm on Wednesday, May 1, 2024, in the Chapel of McGahee-Griffin & Stewart with Rev. Darryl Lyle officiating.

An online guest register is available and may be viewed at www.mcgaheegriffinandstewart.com.

McGahee-Griffin & Stewart Funeral Home of Cornelia, Georgia (706/778-8668) is in charge of arrangements.

Carolyn Anderson

Carolyn Anderson, age 68, of Cornelia, passed away on Friday, April 26, 2024.

Born on May 20, 1955, in Cornelia, she was a daughter of the late Willie and Mary Ellen Daniels Anderson. Ms. Anderson was retired from the City of Atlanta and was a member of Shady Grove Baptist Church. She was also a member of the Wisteria Civic Club in Cornelia, a Mary Kay consultant, a zealous political advocate, and an avid shopper.

Ms. Anderson was known to be a quiet person, whose generosity was typically displayed behind the scenes. She will be remembered as a loving sister, aunt, and cousin, as well as a good friend.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by sisters, Elease Anderson Nicely and Willeen Anderson Broughton; and brother, John B. Anderson.

Survivors include sisters, Alma Jean Anderson King and Mary Ann Anderson Nicely, both of Cornelia; several nieces, nephews, great nieces, and great nephews; and a host of cousins and friends.

Funeral services are scheduled for 2:00 pm on Thursday, May 2, 2024, in the Chapel of McGahee-Griffin & Stewart with Pastor Joe L. Banks, Jr. officiating. Interment will follow in Yonah Memorial Gardens.

The family will receive friends from 12:30 pm until the service hour on Thursday at the funeral home.

In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the Wisteria Civic Club, Elease Nicely Apprenticeship, P.O. Box 1403, Cornelia, Georgia 30531 or by Cash App, Sherry Cash, $streetiegirl.

An online guest register is available and may be viewed at www.mcgaheegriffinandstewart.com

McGahee-Griffin & Stewart Funeral Home of Cornelia, Georgia (706/778-8668) is in charge of arrangements.