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No bond for the brother of accused killer of Laken Riley

Diego Ibarra IAthens-Clarke County Police Department)

The brother of the man accused of killing Athens nursing student Laken Riley will be detained without bond on his own immigration-related charges until a federal grand jury decides whether or not to indict him.

Diego Ibarra’s alleged possession of a fake permanent foreign resident ID came to light during the police investigation of Laken Riley’s death. Diego Ibarra faces no charges connected to the killing.

Ibarra’s brother, Jose Antonio Ibarra, faces murder charges connected to Riley’s death. Another brother is detained in the Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, Stewart Detention Center in Lumpkin.

In denying Ibarra bond, Federal Magistrate Judge Charles Weigle said he was persuaded Ibarra posed a flight risk based on a history of disregarding U.S. immigration law. That includes ditching an ankle monitor in Colorado while enrolled in an alternative to immigration detention program.

Weigle said that left him with few options besides detaining Ibarra.

“The most strict conditions that I generally impose would be location monitoring and that has already been tried,” Weigle said.

Weigle continued.

We have a defendant who also has been able to obtain or create fraudulent documents and be in a place hundreds and hundreds of miles away from where he was supposed to be,” Weigle said. So I think there is every reason to be concerned that Mr. Ibarra could do that again.”

Among Ibarra’s reasons he wouldn’t flee was his plan to return to his job washing dishes at the University of Georgia’s Tate Student Center, a job he had at the time of his arrest. Barring returning to that job, Ibarra planned to seek out what would be his fifth job in his brief time in Georgia.

U.S. Attorney Mike Morrison objected to that.

“That’s contrary to federal law, your Honor,” Morrison said. “He cannot be employed in the United States. He’s here illegally. The government believes he would treat that like the condition of the ankle monitor that was found on the side of the road in Littleton, Colo.”

Morrison said a federal grand jury will hear evidence for Ibarra’s indictment next Tuesday. If convicted of carrying the fake ID, he could face up to 10 years in prison.

This article comes to Now Habersham through a partnership with GPB News

Demorest council renews city manager contract

The Demorest City Council approved City Manager Mark Musselwhite's employment contract for the next year at Tuesday nights meeting. (Jerry neace/NowHabersham.com)

The Demorest City Council had a busy work session and council meeting Tuesday night. One item discussed of significant importance was the City Manager’s employment contract. The City Council renewed his employment contract for another year.

City Manager Mark Musselwhite started in December 2022 on an interim basis. Last April, the council hired him full time and presented him with an employment contract. That contract was due to run out in mid-April.

Salary

Over the last couple of months, the city council and Musselwhite have negotiated his new employment contract to make necessary modifications. One modification that the council made was his salary. His salary will increase to $123,279.40. However, he will not receive a salary increase all at once. His salary prior to the new contract was $113,279.40.

Under the new contract, he will receive a $10,000 increase over the next year. Half of that amount was retroactive to January 1 this year. The remaining $5,000 will not go into effect until after he completes his Certified Public Manager’s course through UGA this summer.

The new salary was based on his performance over the past year and moving forward with achieving certifications with the Georgia Municipal Association and the Certified Public Manager’s certificate.

According to data compiled from cities in 2022 by the Georgia Department of Community Affairs, the city manager position’s salary range based on the population of the city is between $56,000 and $170,000.

New contract date

Another modification was the term that the contract covers. His current contract runs from April to March each year. That was changed to match the budget year. His contract will now run from January 1 through December 31 each year.

Musselwhite became the city manager at the end of a very tumultuous political period for the city of Demorest. Over the past year, he has focused on moving the city forward with various projects assigned to him by the council.

His focus has been to improve the quality of life for the citizens of Demorest. Musselwhite moved City Hall from the tiny building in the downtown area to the old Demorest Elementary School. He had the school’s auditorium renovated into a conference center to hold council meetings, court, training sessions, and public events.

Musselwhite oversaw the pavilion and bathroom project at Demorest Springs Park. He oversaw improvements and the rededication of the Brent Lee Moore Park. The city opened the old gymnasium for public use. He worked with GDOT to move forward with replacing the crumbling retaining wall along Historic 441. A project that had sat dormant for over two and a half years.

HCHS baseball shuts out Gainesville, climbs into multiple state rankings

Habersham Central High School sophomore Maverick Chitwood (5) swings at a pitch against Gainesville High School Wednesday, March 6 in Mt. Airy. (Zack Myers/NowHabersham.com)

Habersham Central High School’s varsity baseball team continued to roll Wednesday night with a 1-0 shutout win over Gainesville High School, completing a region-series win over the Red Elephants.

The Raiders (9-1, 2-0 Region 8-AAAAAA) were bolstered by a strong pitching performance from senior Konner Burrell and clutch hitting from senior Kaleb Chastain and sophomore Maverick Chitwood.

HCHS ran into a tough matchup with Cooper Reid taking the mound for the Red Elephants (3-6, 0-2), but found a way to break through in the third inning for the only run of the contest.

Chastain hit a two-out double for just enough of a spark in the Raider offense with Chitwood following him to the plate.

After an eight-pitch battle with Reid, Chitwood barrelled up a ball to left field that found its way to the turf.

With head coach Chris Akridge winding his arm around to send Chastain home, the Gainesville defense chose not to throw the ball to the plate to contest the run, nor to second with Chitwood stretching his single into a double.

“Kaleb got in there, he’s a solid bat. He jumped on the first pitch and it was the hardest hit ball he’s had all year,” Akridge said. “Mav grinded out a great at-bat. He hit the little flare to left and got the hustle double to get in scoring position.”

A few pitches later, Chitwood would steal third, but nothing would come of it as the inning ended with a strikeout.

Ultimately, the pitchers’ duel made for good theater.

Burrell and Reid each allowed four hits and a walk to their respective opponents. There were only three differences in the two stat lines: 12 strikeouts to 10, in favor of Reid; seven innings pitched compared to five, in favor of Burrell; and – the biggest one – one earned run to none, in favor of Burrell and the Raiders.

The other two players for HCHS to pick up hits against Reid were juniors Charlie Mills and Callum Spivey, each with a single.

The game was the second of the week for HCHS and Gainesville. The Raiders were the beneficiaries of another shutout performance on the mound from senior Kade Nicholson, which led to a 5-0 win over the Red Elephants in Gainesville Monday.

“To win a region series is huge. To win the first region series is huge,” Akridge said. “Obviously, in a few weeks, we’ll have a Game 3 with those guys, but to win the region series is big.

“To get two complete-game shutouts back to back is just so impressive. That’s a credit to those guys throwing a ton of strikes. It’s also a credit to our defense playing solid behind them,” he continued. “I’m just extremely proud of every one of our guys. A great baseball game tonight. A pitchers’ duel. Quality, quality win.”

Now, the Raiders will turn their attention to Shiloh High School, which they’ll face at home Friday at 5:55 p.m before turning around Monday and facing the Generals in Snellville.

“Shiloh is a much improved team. They’ve got a new coach and some solid athletes,” Akridge said. “They’ll be very well coached and they’ll compete well. We’re looking forward to coming out and being at our best on Friday.”

Chitwood will take the mound for the Raiders on Friday evening.

For now, at least until practice starts at 3:45 on Thursday afternoon, there’s a high around the program after picking up the sixth-straight win and a pair of region wins.

“Definitely thankful to get that first region series win and to be 2-0 in region play,” Akridge said.

Pollsters

Before winning the two games this week, the Raiders were already catching the eyes of those that put together rankings across the state with a 7-1 record.

MaxPreps has HCHS ranked No. 35 among all high schools in Georgia, No. 8 among Class 6A in the state, and tops in Region 8-6A.

Prepbaseballreport.com has the Raiders at No. 10 in Class 6A across the state.

Thecoachesbox.org has HCHS sitting at No. 9 in Class 6A.

With another two wins already added to the total and the chance to move to 10-1 Friday, there’s potential for HCHS to climb a spot or two.

GBI: Man found hanging at High Shoals Falls died by suicide

The investigation into the death of a man found hanging from a tree at High Shoals Falls in February shows he died by suicide. The GBI says the state medical examiner’s preliminary findings support that conclusion.

On Feb. 21, a hiker discovered the body of 29-year-old Trevonte Jamal Shubert-Helton in the Swallow Creek Wildlife Management Area in Towns County. The hiker contacted 911 to alert authorities.

The GBI said its preliminary investigation indicates Shubert-Helton was the only person in the area at the time of his death.

High Shoals Falls is located approximately 12 miles north of Helen, Georgia. The trail leading up to the falls is a popular hiking destination in the Chattahoochee National Forest.

Shubert-Helton was a father and outdoor enthusiast from Sautee-Nacoochee who frequented the falls. “He loved waterfalls, sunrises, and sunsets in nature,” his family said in his obituary.

Truett McConnell University hires alum to boost growth

TMU's new Assoc. Vice President for Development and Dhurch Relations, Danny Hendrix.

Truett McConnell University (TMU) has created a new position to support its growth and has appointed a former student to fill the role.

Danny Hendrix is the school’s new associate vice president for development and church relations. He will focus on building relationships with churches and donors and implementing fundraising strategies to meet the university’s needs.

Hendrix and his wife, Heather, are TMU graduates. Their three sons have also attended the school. The new associate VP has spent over 30 years in ministry and 13 years directing and fundraising for non-profits. He most recently served as the Owner/President of TeamMaker, LLC, which provides Christian coaching services to businesses and their employees.

Hendrix looks forward to working for his alma mater.

“I pray that everyone can come to love the mission of the university as much as we do. I look forward to connecting with our many partners over the coming months,” he said.

Truett McConnell’s Vice President of Advancement, Dr. Stacy Hall, said he is “thrilled” that Hendrix has joined the school’s staff.

“Danny and his family are passionate about TMU and understand our mission and culture. I have every expectation that Danny will play an integral part in our ability to advance this university,” said Hall.

Truett McConnell University is a private Christian liberal arts and sciences university in Cleveland, Georgia. Hendrix assumes his new position at the school on April 1.

Hall County Sheriff’s Office expands its force

Sheriff Gerald Couch, Deputy Chase Trammell, Deputy Jeffrey Moore, Deputy Wendy Saucedo, SSgt. Kristi Smith and 1st Lt. Sean Bradburn. (Hall County Sheriff's Office Facebook page)

The Hall County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO) is growing its force with 10 new employees joining the organization. Six of those are new to law enforcement.

The Hall County Sheriff’s Office is happy that some of its newest members are starting their careers with them.

Three of the ten will be placed in the HCSO Patrol Division. They are Jeffrey Moore, Wendy Saucedo, and Chase Trammell.

Deputy Chase Trammell, Deputy Jeffrey Moore, and Deputy Wendy Saucedo (Hall County Sheriff’s Office)

Deputy Chase Trammell has 12 years of law enforcement experience. He has previously worked for the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office and the Gainesville Police Department.

With 16 years of law enforcement experience, Deputy Jeffrey Moore recently served as the assistant training director of the Dawson County Sheriff’s Office.

Deputy Wendy Saucedo worked in the Hall County Marshal’s Office before joining the Hall County Sheriff’s Office. She has also worked for Hall County E911. She has an Associate of Science degree in psychology and an Associate of Arts degree in kinesiology.

Brittani Daniel is sworn in as a jail specialist with the Hall County Sheriff’s Office. (Hall County Sheriff’s Office)

Devin Nguyen, Robyn Norbrey, Justin Silva, Jacob Skinner, Keyshla Vera-Souchet, and Caleb Wright will be working in the Jail Division. Brittani Daniel will join the HCSO as a jail specialist.

Family and friends were in attendance to celebrate and welcome the newest members of HCSO.

Cleveland city administrator signs on for 5 more years

Cleveland City Administrator Kevin Harris began working for the city in 2022. (photo wrwh.com)

The Cleveland City Council has secured the services of City Administrator Kevin Harris for at least another five years. Following an executive session Monday night, the council voted to extend Harris’ contract through December 31, 2029. He agreed and signed that contract.

The city administrator commended council members for their working relationships.

“All five of them are really committed to the city and I think we are growing in a positive direction. I think them [being] willing to do this acknowledges the hard work of the staff and the hard work they have put in and they want to see some things continue,” he said.

Harris began his service as Cleveland city administrator on May 2, 2022. Prior to coming to Cleveland, he served as the government affairs director for the Georgia Department of Human Services, where he coordinated all legislative efforts for the department and its programs, including the Department of Family and Children Services.

During his two years with the city, Harris has been instrumental in updating personnel and other policy documents.

U.S. House passes $468 billion spending package to stave off shutdown

A 1,050-page package of spending bills approved by the U.S. House on Wednesday, March, 6, now goes to the Senate, where lawmakers are expected to vote on it before the end of the week. President Joe Biden is then expected to sign it into law. (Jennifer Shutt/States Newsroom)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom)—U.S. House lawmakers cast a broadly bipartisan vote Wednesday to approve a six-bill government funding package, marking one of the few consequential votes on major legislation the chamber has taken since Republicans took the majority more than a year ago.

The $468 billion package includes half of the annual spending bills for the fiscal year that began back on Oct. 1. Lawmakers hope to wrap up agreement on the other six before a March 22 deadline so as to avert a partial shutdown.

The 1,050-page package, which was approved 339-85, now goes to the Senate, where lawmakers are expected to vote on it before the end of the week. President Joe Biden is then expected to sign it into law.

The four Democrats in Georgia’s delegation were joined by Republican Reps. Buddy Carter of Pooler, Drew Ferguson of The Rock, and Austin Scott of Tifton in voting for the package.

‘Most conservative bills in history’

House Appropriations Chairwoman Kay Granger, a Texas Republican, encouraged lawmakers to support the measure, saying it “increased defense funding and made targeted cuts” to other programs.

“With the odds stacked against us, House Republicans made progress in how we fund the government,” Granger said. “We drafted the most conservative bills in history.”

House Appropriations Committee ranking member Rosa DeLauro, a Connecticut Democrat, said she was “pleased” that Democrats and Republicans in both chambers of Congress were able to negotiate a final agreement on the six bills.

“This legislation does not have everything either side may have wanted, but I am pleased that many of the extreme cuts and policies proposed by House Republicans were excluded,” DeLauro said.

Texas Republican Rep. Chip Roy spoke against the package, saying it spends too much money and doesn’t include enough changes to policy that conservatives pressed for in the House’s original spending bills.

“All of this is a shell game,” Roy said.

Money for agencies, earmarks

The spending package includes funding for the departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Energy, Housing and Urban Development, Interior, Justice, Transportation and Veterans Affairs.

It also provides funding for numerous agencies, like the Army Corps of Engineers, Environmental Protection Agency, Food and Drug Administration, National Aeronautics and Space Administration or NASA, National Science Foundation, and military construction projects.

According to two people familiar with the totals, the package includes $12.655 billion for more than 6,600 projects that members requested through the earmarking process, which is often called community project funding or congressionally directed spending.

The six bills include discretionary spending, which Congress approves annually and can fluctuate, as well as some mandatory spending, which is required by laws that Congress has approved.

Discretionary accounts, which make up about one-third of federal spending each year, are subject to the spending caps agreement that House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, and Biden agreed to in January.

That compromise set defense discretionary funding at $886.3 billion and domestic discretionary spending at $772.7 billion.

WIC gets a $1 billion boost

The Agriculture-FDA spending bill would provide $211 billion in total spending, with $26.2 billion of that classified as discretionary.

The legislation would boost spending on the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children, known as WIC, by $1 billion, bringing the total mandatory spending on that program to more than $7 billion. That increase was needed to avoid states having to establish waitlists for the program.

The bill would add the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture to the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States and provide $2 million in funding to ensure the secretary can notify the CFIUS when agricultural land is sold to entities that “may pose a risk to national security.”

The bill specifically mentions purchases by China, Iran, North Korea, and Russia.

Georgia Democratic Rep. Sanford Bishop of Albany, ranking member on the Agriculture-FDA spending panel, said during floor debate the elements in the bill will affect “the lives of every single American” whether they live in a rural, suburban or urban area.

“The bill is free from almost all of the extreme policy riders in the previous versions and it rejects interference with Americans’ health care, reproductive freedom, as well as attacks on diversity, equity and inclusion training,” Bishop said.

“While the bill is not the best,” Bishop said, “it brings us closer than the earlier version to meeting the needs of the American people.”

Reversing ‘Second Amendment overreach’

The Commerce-Justice-Science appropriations bill totals $68.5 billion in discretionary spending, with $37.5 billion going to the DOJ, $24.9 billion for NASA, $10.8 billion for the Commerce Department, and $9.1 billion for the National Science Foundation.

Those spending levels are all decreased from current funding levels. The Federal Bureau of Investigation would need to account for a $32 million cut to its $10.6 billion salaries and expenses budget, while the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms will need to address a $47 million cut to its $1.6 billion salaries and expenses budget.

House Republicans said in their summary of the bill the spending cuts would reverse the ATF’s “Second Amendment overreach” and hold the FBI “accountable for targeting everyday Americans.”

Lawmakers urged the FBI to “allocate the maximum amount of available resources” toward arresting people selling fentanyl and opioids, according to an explanatory statement that accompanied the bill.

Members of Congress received millions in earmarks in the Commerce-Justice-Science bill to address fentanyl in their home states. That directed funding included a $3 million request by Louisiana Republican Rep. Garret Graves for the East Baton Rouge Sheriff’s Office task force on fentanyl and violent crime.

Washington state Democratic Sen. Maria Cantwell secured slightly more than $1 million for the drug and fentanyl task force of the Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation. And Alabama Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville received $200,000 for the city of Fairhope to address fentanyl.

‘Tough but fair’ talks

Kentucky Republican Rep. Hal Rogers, chairman of the CJS subcommittee, said during floor debate that “tough but fair bipartisan negotiations” led to a “strong bill.”

“The fiscal situation facing the nation requires Congress to make significant spending reductions while maintaining strong commitments to the safety, security and wellbeing of the American people,” Rogers said.

The Energy-Water funding bill would get $52 billion, with that funding divvied up between the Energy Department, the Bureau of Reclamation and the Army Corps of Engineers.

The Energy Department would get $50.2 billion, with nearly $33 billion going to its defense programs, much of which is devoted to nuclear weapons, and $17.3 billion going to its non-defense programs, such as nuclear energy.

The Interior-Environment spending bill would provide $41.2 billion in funding, a cut of $1.5 billion compared to current levels, according to a summary of the bill from House Democrats.

The legislation would reduce funding for the National Park Service by $150 million to a total funding level of $3.3 billion.

Funding for the Bureau of Land Management would be cut by $81 million to $1.38 billion.

Spending on the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service would drop by $51 million to $1.7 billion.

And appropriations for non-fire activities at the U.S. Forest Service would total $3.8 billion, a reduction of $157 million.

Wildland fire management would receive $6.1 billion in spending for this fiscal year.

Idaho project blocked

Idaho Republican Sen. Mike Simpson, chairman of the Interior-Environment spending panel, said during debate that “cutting funding is never easy but with a national debt in excess of $34 trillion we made tough choices in this bill to rein in spending.”

Simpson touted that the legislation would block the Lava Ridge Wind Project in his home state from advancing until the secretary of the Interior, in consultation with local officials and stakeholders, looks at “alternative plans to reduce the harmful impacts of this project.”

The Military Construction-VA appropriations bill includes nearly $330 billion in total funding, with $172.5 billion going to mandatory accounts and $135.25 billion in discretionary spending.

Military construction would receive $18.7 billion in spending for more than 160 major projects. That money would be divided up between numerous accounts, with $2 billion for housing, $336 million for child development centers and $293 million for the NATO Security Investment Program, among several other line items.

The VA would receive $134.8 billion in discretionary funding for everything from $3.1 billion for veterans’ homelessness prevention to $16.2 billion for mental health to $343 million for rural health.

Women’s health would receive $990 million, efforts to address opioid misuse would get $715 million and prosthetic research would receive $943 million.

Florida Democratic Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the ranking member on the Military Construction-VA spending panel, said she was “so pleased” to work with others on the committee to “end harmful VA research on dogs, cats, and non-human primates within two years.”

Background checks and veterans

The package would bar the VA from reporting any veterans who receive assistance managing their finances to the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s National Instant Criminal Background Check System without the approval of a judge or magistrate that the veteran “is a danger to himself or herself or others.” The NICS system is supposed to be used to run background checks ahead of gun purchases.

That provision was added to the Senate’s original Military Construction-VA spending bill after Louisiana Republican Sen. John Kennedy and Kansas Republican Sen. Jerry Moran introduced it and senators voted 53-45 in October to adopt it during floor debate.

Montana Democratic Sen. Jon Tester, chairman of the Veterans Affairs Committee and a member of the Military Construction-VA appropriations subcommittee, said at the time he supported the Kennedy-Moran amendment.

“It is not right that a D.C. bureaucrat at the VA could take away veterans’ legal rights to their firearms simply because they need assistance in managing their finances,” Tester said during floor debate in October.

Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Jacky Rosen of Nevada voted for the amendment, as did independent Sens. Angus King of Maine and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona.

The House voted 228-206 in July to adopt a similar amendment, sponsored by House Veterans Committee Chairman Michael Bost, an Illinois Republican, during floor debate on its original version of the bill. That proposal didn’t have the possibility of a judge approving the information to go to NICS.

Democratic Reps. Henry Cuellar of Texas, Jared Golden of Maine, Vicente Gonzalez of Texas, Mary Peltola of Alaska, Marie Perez of Washington state, and Gabe Vasquez of New Mexico voted to adopt the amendment.

California Democratic Rep. Mark Takano, ranking member on the Veterans Affairs Committee, said during floor debate Wednesday that when a “veteran applies for benefits they’ve earned, they are screened to make sure that they are competent to use those benefits” to avoid veterans being taken advantage of.

“If a veteran is determined to be mentally incompetent, they are appointed a fiduciary, and by law, they are reported to the … NICS,” Takano said, adding that those determinations are due to severe mental illnesses like dementia or schizophrenia.

Takano said he could not and would not support the legislation changing that reporting requirement, since 68% of veterans’ suicides involve a firearm and “there are very serious reasons why a person with those conditions should not be able to purchase a firearm.”

“Veterans’ lives are on the line and I will not agree to legislation that will cause more people’s lives to be lost to gun violence,” Takano said.

Added air traffic controllers

The Transportation-HUD funding bill would get about $97.5 billion in discretionary funding with nearly $27 billion for transportation and $70.1 billion for HUD.

Within those funding levels, the Federal Aviation Administration would receive $19.9 billion, which would allow for an “additional 1,800 new air traffic controllers and continues to support modernizing the legacy systems in our National Airspace,” according to a summary of the bill from Senate Republicans.

HUD’s funding would go toward several programs, including $32.4 billion for tenant-based rental assistance, $16 billion for project-based rental assistance, $4.1 billion for homeless assistance grants, and $3.3 billion for Community Development Block Grants.

Oklahoma Republican Rep. Tom Cole, chairman of the Transportation-HUD spending panel, said during debate that lawmakers “worked really hard on safety first” for people flying, traveling by rail, or driving.

The bill, Cole said, also maintains the safety net for people using public housing and includes “historic gains for Indian housing programs and Indian road programs.”

“We all know what has happened with the cost of rent and housing,” Cole said. “And frankly, we didn’t want to put anybody out of their home, and we avoided doing that.”

Lawyer accusing Fulton DA of conflict details accusations at state hearing

Ashleigh Merchant, attorney for Michael Roman, speaks during a hearing in the case of State of Georgia v. Donald John Trump in Atlanta, Monday, Feb. 12, 2024. (Alyssa Pointer/Pool Photo via AP)

(Georgia Recorder) — The defense attorney who filed the motion in January seeking to disqualify Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis from the sweeping Trump 2020 presidential election interference case testified Wednesday before a state Senate committee about how she uncovered an affair between the DA and a special prosecutor.

Ashleigh Merchant testified Wednesday before a Senate Special Committee on Investigations that she began requesting open records about Nathan Wade’s contract with Fulton County DA’s office and other details surrounding his November 2021 appointment by Willis shortly after Merchant was hired in August to represent Michael Roman in the election interference case.

In January, the Marietta attorney filed a complaint seeking Willis’ disqualification from the felony racketeering and conspiracy case against Donald Trump and co-defendants. Trump attorney Steve Sadow joined and several other co-defendants would join Merchant’s claim that Willis engaged in prosecutorial misconduct by having a romantic relationship with the attorney she hired to investigate the case.

Merchant testified Wednesday that Terrence Bradley, Wade’s former law partner and divorce lawyer, informed her about Wade and Willis’ affair in September while they were working on separate cases at  the Cobb County courthouse.

Bradley was upset that Wade had asked the prosecutor’s longtime wife for a divorce after meeting Willis at a judicial conference while both were municipal court judges in October 2019, Merchant said.

Merchant said Bradley would review the timelines and confirm other details about Wade and Willis before she filed the motion against Willis in January. Bradley grew worried as people associated with Wills and Wade began questioning whether he was the unnamed source cited by Merchant, she testified.

“He was upset because they were still married and (Wade) essentially just left her after meeting Ms. Willis and dropping the kids off at college,” Merchant said.

A three-hour special Senate committee meeting on Wednesday follows several days of tense Superior Court hearings on the motion to dismiss the DA from the election interference case. Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee said Friday that he plans to rule within the next two weeks on whether to remove Willis and the rest of her office staff DAs from the case.

There is a court dispute over whether Wills and Wade were dating prior to Willis’ appointment of Wade as special prosecutor in November 2021. Wade and Willis have testified that their relationship began in early 2022 and ended in the summer of 2023.

The defense has argued that testimony from Robin Bryant-Yeartie, a former friend of Willis who briefly worked in her DA’s office, messages between Merchant and Bradley, and Wade’s cell phone records provide credence that Willis and Wade dated prior to 2021, which is contrary to court testimony of the prosecutors.

During the Fulton court hearings, Bradley avoided on the witness stand disclosing much about Wade’s relationship with Willis and said he was unsure of when the two started dating. On Feb. 15, Bradley admitted that his law partnership with Wade ended in the summer of 2023 after Bradley was accused of sexual assault by an employee. Bradley and Bryant-Yeartie have been portrayed by the state as unreliable witnesses who were disgruntled because their former longtime friends, Wade and Willis, hurt their careers.

Last month, the GOP-controlled Senate approved a panel to investigate Willis’ actions as she pursued the sweeping criminal case against the former president and multiple co-defendants.

Republican Sen. Bill Cowsert, who chairs the special Senate panel, said Wednesday that the panel subpoenaed Merchant to learn more about her allegations against Willis and Wade. Cowsert, an Athens attorney, said the special committee will also independently review the financial records and other documents Merchant provided to them under the subpoena.

“We’re also specifically tasked with, if necessary, amending existing statutes or creating new statutes to build guardrails to essentially restore the public faith in our criminal justice system, ” Cowsert said.

“This committee has made it clear from the beginning it is not our intent in any way to interfere with criminal prosecutions and so I would not want to be circumventing a court order that was for the protection of the privacy of the parties to that case,” Cowsert later said.

Merchant also discussed obtaining Wade’s cell phone data from 2021, which showed 12,000 texts and phone calls between Wade and Willis. A defense expert also filed documents of his geotracking data that he said shows three dozen occasions that Wade’s cell phone was in the vicinity of the Hapeville condo Willis lived in prior to him becoming special prosecutor.

Prosecutors have challenged the reliability of the defense’s geotracking expert and said that the volume of phone calls and text messages does not provide any context about what Wade and Willis were discussing.

Merchant said that Roman declined to accept a plea offered by Wade that would have allowed him to be sentenced to probation and pay a $5,000 fine if he agreed to testify as a state’s witness.

Roman, a former White House aide and Trump campaign operative, was indicted on charges of attempting and conspiring to file false documents related to the alternate Republican electoral plot. In the days after the 2020 election, Trump and other allies encouraged GOP state officials to appoint a second slate of electors prior to Congress certifying Joe Biden as the winner.

In a lengthy back and forth exchange with Democratic Sen. Harold Jones, Merchant was peppered about whether her claims of Willis’s conflict of interest were actually supported by her court filings.

According to Jones, Merchant has not provided evidence in Fulton court that any so-called conflict of interest with Willis has caused Roman to be treated unfairly as a defendant.

Jones also pushed back on Merchant’s claims that Wade and Willis have a financial incentive to play out the case as long as possible.

“Earlier you said you believe, which was total speculation, that they created this case against your client to do more (legal) billing,” said the former Richmond County solicitor general. “And what you’re now telling me is (Wade) was willing to stop his billing because he offered your client a misdemeanor and you rejected it.”

Merchant responded that Willis was not being honest about Wade paying for several cruises and other vacations taken with Willis. She failed to file the financial disclosures form that required her to list any gifts over $100 she received from someone doing business with the county.

Willis has testified in Fulton court she used thousands of dollars in cash primarily to reimburse Wade for trips and other expenses incurred during their relationship.

“We have unfortunately seen drag out over the last couple of months this concerted effort to hide this information from the public,” Merchant said. “I think that it is very reasonable for a court to think that that is a conflict of interest, and whether or not it’s a stake in the conviction, we definitely have seen a stake in the prosecution.”

Following the hearing, Willis said she will continue to pursue a felony racketeering case against Trump and his allies despite the political attacks she’s facing.

Alligator spotted in Hall County pond; officials warn public to use caution

A drone photo captured Wednesday morning, March 6, 2024, shows an alligator in a pond off Allen Creek Road southeast of Gainesville, Georgia. The image was shot by Hall County Sheriff's 1st Lt. Dan Franklin a day after a deputy encountered an alligator at that location during a K9 training exercise.

A routine law enforcement training exercise turned into anything but Tuesday morning in Hall County when a sheriff’s deputy encountered a large alligator.

The incident happened around 7:30 a.m. on March 5 around a pond off Allen Creek Road, says the Hall County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO). The deputy was laying a track for a K9 team when he heard a hissing sound and saw the alligator with its mouth open. The alligator, estimated to be between 7 and 8 feet long, charged at the deputy, who was able to run up an embankment and evade the animal. The deputy was not injured.

A sheriff’s office drone operator returned to the pond on Wednesday, March 6, and captured images of the alligator.

The sheriff’s office notified the Georgia Department of Natural Resources (DNR) about the incident.

The pond is not typically accessible to the public, but HCSO officials are encouraging people to take precautions around the water in the area, including the stream that feeds the pond located southeast of Gainesville.

As a result of this sighting, the sheriff’s office says it will install warning signs cautioning the public about alligators, snakes, and other wildlife that may pose a danger to the public.

Alligators are primarily freshwater animals. Approximately a quarter million of them live in Georgia. However, they typically live south of a fall line that runs through Columbus, Macon, and Augusta. According to DNR, there is no evidence that alligator populations reproduce north of the fall line, and any found in these areas have probably been relocated there by humans.

March 7 declared Dr. Amos Samuel Wipf Day in White County

White County Commissioner Terry Goodger presents a proclamation naming March 7, 2024, as Dr. Amos Samuel Wipf Day in White County. Dr. Wipf, who turns 100 on March 7th, is shown here with commissioners and his wife and daughters. (Dean Dyer/wrwh.com)

Not many people can say they have lived for a century, but Dr. Amos Samuel Wipf of Cleveland can.

Wipf will celebrate his 100th birthday on Thursday, March 7. To recognize the occasion, the White County Board of Commissioners took time during their meeting on March 4 to issue a proclamation honoring Wipf and the milestone.

White County Commissioner Terry Goodger, a friend of Dr. Wipf, read the proclamation aloud.

“The White County Board of Commissioners hereby proclaim March 7th, 2024, as Dr. Amos Samuel Wipf Day in White County and extends its best wishes and appreciation to him upon this occasion of his 100th birthday,” Goodger said.

Dr. Wipf, has lived in Cleveland for 28 years. He was born in South Dakota in 1924.

The centenarian spoke with WRWH Radio in Cleveland about the early years of his life.

“I’m a farm boy, I’m a southerner, from South Dakota. That’s south of North Dakota. I was born there shortly before the Dust Bowl. We had a rough time. The drought, and grasshoppers — they came and ate up the crops, it was pretty rough,” said Wipf.

Wipf has had a long and distinguished career, serving in the United States Army and earning multiple educational degrees. He holds a Bachelor of Science, as well as master’s degrees in Christian education, chemistry, and basic science. Additionally, he has earned a Doctorate in Physical Chemistry.

Toccoa man killed in domestic dispute

According to residents in the area, King was murdered in the apartment at 16 Ruby Street in Toccoa. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

Police say a domestic dispute led to the murder of a 51-year-old Toccoa man.

Around 4:448 a.m. on Tuesday, March 5, officers with the Toccoa Police Department responded to a report of a physical altercation at a residence on Ruby Street.

A woman, identified as 33-year-old Ieshia Chantavia Thornton, was sitting in a vehicle in the driveway with Christopher Howell, 39, of Toccoa, when officers made contact.

Officers said they found Eric King unresponsive inside the home from an apparent gunshot wound. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

Iesha Chantavia Thornton, 33, of Toccoa, was arrested on March 5, 2024, by the Toccoa Police Department and charged with malice murder in the shooting death of Eric King. (Stephens County Detention Center)

According to Toccoa Police Chief Jimmy Mize, Thornton and King were involved in a relationship. Howell was a roommate at the residence.

Police contacted the GBI to assist with the crime scene and interviews. Upon further investigation, detectives determined the incident was a domestic dispute between Thornton and King.

Officers arrested Thornton and charged her with malice murder. She was booked at the Stephens County Jail.

King’s body was released to the coroner to be transported to the GBI Crime Lab in Decatur for an autopsy. Mize says the case is still under investigation.