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Dear Fellow Patriot,
Our campaign for the House of Delegates is in full swing and growing daily. I have had many opportunities in the past months to bring our message of
The response has been tremendous! The people know what is at stake in this year’s election, and they are prepared to help and be engaged in campaigns that can make a difference. We have welcomed their outpouring of support with open arms.
On Thursday, June 17th, we will be hosting an evening of Italian Cuisine at the
I have concentrated on budget friendly events so everyone can get involved, but I need your help for this event to be a success. Your partnership in this campaign is the only way to insure that I will have the opportunity to serve you and this district in
Our shared eastern shore values deserve to be heard. Please help me as I work to be your strong voice in
With Warmest Regards,
electmikemcdermott.comMike












Clarence Justin Clayton, 29, of Nelsonia, was pronounced dead at the scene, Accomack County Sheriff Larry Giddens said.
Authorities had been searching for Clayton, who was driving a red 2006 Mercedes-Benz, since the Thursday night shooting of his former girlfriend in the city of Portsmouth.
The woman, Mary Jane C. Abad, 22, of Virginia Beach, had two young children and was three months pregnant, according to reports. She had been shot several times.
Giddens said Clayton was believed to be armed and dangerous and faced a charge of first-degree murder and a weapons charge. He also was charged with stealing the vehicle.
The vehicle was observed at 9:20 a.m. Friday on Nelsonia Road. Accomack deputies initiated a traffic stop on Lankford Highway.
Before they could converge on the vehicle, Clayton shot himself, Giddens said.
The incident took place near the highway’s intersection with Whites Neck Road.
Investigators from the Accomack County Sheriff’s Office and Detectives from the Portsmouth Police Department are currently processing the 2006 red Mercedes-Benz and surrounding area.
The Sheriff’s Office was assisted in this case by the Virginia Department of Transportation and Parksley Police Department.


2-year-old Ella was fishing with her grandparents at Round Lake near Randall, Minnesota on Saturday when she reeled in the big one. Ella, who comes from a long line of anglers, had never caught a fish until Saturday.
She caught her first fish at Round Lake not with the star plastic lure on the Barbie fishing pole, but with a hook and worm.
"Ella had her sunfish on and she's reeling it in," her mom, Carrie Haag, said. "Here comes this big muskie that went and ate her sunfish. So I grabbed the pole and yelled for grandpa David."
Grandpa grabbed a net and soon they landed a 30-inch muskie weighing in at a little under 20 lbs -- a fish bigger than the fisherman who caught it. The Barbie fishing pole survived it all and little Ella was so excited, she said the first thing that came to her mind -- "I caught a shark."
After snapping a photo, the family snapped the line and let the muskie go.
The state record muskie according to the Minnesota DNR is 54 lbs and 56 inches, caught in 1957. That's about 34 lbs more than Ella's catch.
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An Accomack General District Court judge said there wasn’t enough evidence to proceed with felony charges against Belarimino Bedoya Alvarez, 45, of Accomac. A county prosecutor then said he would discontinue the case.
Alvarez was charged with felony cockfighting after deputies responded to a complaint about chickens being fought in a wooded area behind the Perdue Farms Inc. processing plant.
Accomack Deputy John Spivey testified that he found roosters tied to trees and other signs of the illegal activity.
“I saw chicken feathers all over the ground and a blood-like substance in the dirt,” he said.
He said also that Alvarez was very cooperative and stated that he knew nothing about what was going on in the woods near his auto-repair business.
He said that none of the items and chickens recovered belonged to him and told the deputy to take them away.
As Spivey spoke with Alvarez, he said he saw three Hispanic men running out of the woods.
Along with the chickens, the officer found cages, knives that can be attached to the fighting chickens to enhance the injuries they can inflict, scales and a cockpit used for containing fighting roosters.
Defense attorney Carl Bundick said his client knew nothing of the illegal activity and asked that the charges be dismissed.
“There is no evidence that Mr. Alvarez participated or encouraged it,” he said.
“The only path to the area was through an area that the defendant identified as his property,” said Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Matthew Brenner.
“It would be virtually impossible for him to not know what was going on there. There is an obvious connection there.”
“A misdemeanor has been shown, but not a felony,” said Judge Gordon Vincent.
”The Commonwealth has shown that the defendant authorized it. To elevate it to the level of a felony, the Commonwealth has to have probable cause that the knives were used. There is no evidence that a knife was used in the fighting of the cocks.”
The fighting cocks that were seized by the police on April 11 were euthanized after being held at the animal control facility for 10 days.
May 20, 2010Walker, 37, was pronounced dead at 9:24 p.m., said Larry Traylor, spokesman for the Virginia Department of Corrections. It was the second execution in the state this year and the 107th since the U.S. Supreme Court allowed executions to resume in 1976.
At 8:55 p.m., Walker, a tall man wearing sandals and blue prison clothing, was escorted into the death chamber by officers. He was cooperative and appeared calm as he looked around the room and toward the witness viewing area, where one of the witnesses included his lawyer, Danielle Spinelli.
He was strapped into the gurney and a curtain was pulled to block the view while the IV lines were placed into his arms.
The curtains were opened again at 9:15 p.m. Asked if he had a last statement to make, Walker said, "Last words being: I don't think y'all done this right, took y'all too long to hook it up. You can print that. That's it." He was apparently referring to the intravenous lines used to administer the lethal injection.
Traylor later explained that there was a delay in placing one of the IV lines.
The first of three chemicals used in the execution began flowing. He took several deep breaths, his breathing grew shallower and then it stopped.
He was pronounced dead at 9:24 p.m. and the curtain was drawn again.
Outside the Greensville Correctional Center, where the execution took place, four death penalty protesters stood in silence, holding candles. They declined to comment.
State law permits the death penalty for someone who commits two premeditated murders within three years. Testimony and other evidence at his 1998 trial showed Walker shot two men to death in front of loved ones.
Rest of the story.....
POCOMOKE -- Two Virginia men were charged with drug possession after police found 75 pounds of marijuana during a traffic stop, according to Maryland State Police.Darnell L. Kelley, 24, and Modis L. Chandler, 40, both of Newport News, were traveling south on Route 13 near Old Virginia Road in a rented Infinity when they were stopped for speeding around 7 p.m. on Wednesday, according to police.
During the traffic stop, a K-9 team was called and the dog alerted police to the presence of drugs.
Troopers found 75 pounds of marijuana inside two duffel bags in the trunk of the vehicle.
Kelley and Chandler have been charged with marijuana possession, marijuana possession with intent to distribute and possession of more than 50 pounds of marijuana, according to state police.
Both men are being held at the Worcester County Detention Center on a $100,000 bond each, according to police.

His lawyers filed appeals and a request for a stay of execution on his behalf with the high court this month. Gov. Bob McDonnell turned down his plea to intervene last week.
Walker, 37, was convicted in a 1998 trial of shooting two men to death in front of loved ones. State law permits the death penalty for someone who commits two premeditated murders within three years.
Stanley Beale, 36, was slain on the night of Nov. 22, 1996, and Clarence Elwood Threat, 34, early on the morning of June 19, 1997. Each man was shot repeatedly by a gunman who kicked in their apartment doors.Walker accused Beale of coming to his door to look for him. Beale did not know Walker.
Threat’s girlfriend said Walker once had asked her for a date but said she turned him down because she was committed to Threat.
Members of the victims’ families had not responded to requests for comment as of yesterday evening.
Walker’s lawyers argue that he is mentally retarded and therefore ineligible for the death penalty. A split panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Walker had not proved that he fit the legal definition for mental retardation.
His lawyers argued in a petition to the U.S. Supreme Court that Walker’s joint trial for the unrelated murders “exposed him to the serious risks that two weak cases would bolster one another, and that the jury might convict based on a presumed propensity for crime.“
They also contend that authorities improperly withheld evidence that could have challenged the credibility of a key witness. They said Beale’s 13-year-old daughter originally told police she heard but did not see the shooter but testified later that she saw Walker shoot her father.
Walker’ s lawyers did not learn of the girl’s earlier statement until after the trial.
A social history prepared on Walker’s behalf in 2003, when he was 30, said he functioned at the level of an 11-year-old, that he may suffer from fetal alcohol syndrome, and that he has a family history of both mental illness and mental retardation.
His lawyer, Danielle Spinelli, said in an e-mail this week that Walker and his family were not speaking to the media.
Larry Traylor, spokesman for the Virginia Department of Corrections, said no victim family members had requested to witness the execution. Walker’s would be the second execution in Virginia this year and the 107th since the death penalty was allowed to resume in 1976.
Virginians For Alternatives to the Death Penalty will hold a vigil outside the Greensville Correctional Center tonight at 8:30. Vigils also will be held at churches and other sites across the state. For details, go to http://www.vadp.org/.
SUFFOLK, Va. (WAVY) - A woman is being charged with texting while driving after she crashed into a house Wednesday afternoon in Suffolk, police said.Police say the motorist, who was driving a Toyota Yaros, was not injured when she struck a house in the 4300 block of Holland Road.
There were no other injuries, police say.

Cherilyn Sarkisian- Born May 20, 1946
El Centro, California
"Women have to harness their power -- it's absolutely
true. It's just learning not to take the first no. And
if you can't go straight ahead, you go around the
corner."
~CHER~
Authorities in Garrett County seized two dozen emaciated horses and about 20 starving cows, and brought them to Days End Farm Horse Rescue in Woodbine for rehabilitation.
One by one, emaciated horses took their first tentative steps toward a better life, leaving behind deplorable conditions in an Oakland, Maryland pasture without food or water, littered with horse and cow carcasses.
"This is as bad as it gets. It doesn't get any worse than this," said Brenda Curry, the President of the Board of Directors at Days End.
"Carcasses on a property," added Sue Mitchell of Days End. "And horses that are literally skin stretched over a skeleton. We'd call that horrific. It's despicable."
The weak, neglected horses are recovering at Days End Farm, where they face a long journey of rehabilitation. Many need to overcome fear, parasites, skin fungus and hooves that are overgrown and chipped. They are the lucky ones.
"What you see is the extreme. We have horses with hips protruding. Spines showing. No measurable body fat," said Mitchell.
The cows that survived are just down the road at James Ferguson's farm.
"They're not put on this earth to be punished or to starve, and these poor animals are starving to death," said Curry.
Healing these horses comes at a high price, more than $2,000 a horse, in just the first month.
Authorities are calling this one of the worst and largest animal abuse cases in state history. Criminal charges are now pending against the owner of the farm in Oakland, Maryland, a man who has been under scrutiny by animal control for the last four years.
Ross Taylor of Atlantic was convicted in December of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute while possessing a firearm. On Thursday, Taylor was sentenced to serve five years in the penitentiary. The sentence is mandatory for the crime.
"This gentleman is 66 years old and has been a paraplegic for 30 years," said defense attorney Pat Robbins in a plea for leniency to circuit Judge Glen A. Tyler.
Robbins said the man's condition was the result of gunshot wounds. He described Taylor as having many health problems and said his client was "wheelchair-bound and bedridden." He said the man would have to go to a special facility, which would be very costly.
Robbins told the court that his client had "no prior record, no felonies, no drug charges." He said Taylor had family and friends in the courtroom to support him.
"I register a strong objection," said Assistant Commonwealth's Attorney Matthew Brenner. "The five-year mandatory sentence is necessary. The defendant has many health problems, but he is selling drugs and is a community problem himself."
Asking about details of the case, the judge was told that the man had about $600 worth of cocaine and a loaded .32 caliber revolver in bed with him at the time of his arrest.
"This court has no discretion; the law does not allow the court to reduce the case," said Circuit Judge Glen A. Tyler.
Hearing this, Taylor, who was slumped over in his wheelchair, spoke up.
"I'm in bad shape, judge," he said.
Tyler responded that the Department of Corrections has "an elaborate and extensive system" for caring for people with physical and mental disabilities.
"You will be required to serve the sentence," he said.
Family members who accompanied Ross to the courtroom expressed shock, disbelief and anger.
"It's not right," said a woman who rushed to Taylor's side after hearing the sentence. "He was shot seven times and nobody did anything."
What kind of a hat can be made from a guinea pig hide? Well, here's a person that calls himself the "village idiot" and claims to suffer from a brain injury resulting from being hit by a truck some 15 years ago.
Funny how the brain works. It's odd that the disability in Charles Woodson's brain would allow him to remember what he learned in biology class in graduate school ten years ago...... which is how to humanely kill an animal. But yet the same brain did not tell him that if you make a hat out of the hide with the head attached it WILL most times scare the hell out of small children and raise the blood pressure in the parents.
Now I realise that in some countries guinea pigs are eaten just as we eat chicken or beef in this country. My question is WHAT were you going to do with the rest of that furry creature that you went to the PET STORE to purchase?
Below is the story about his hearing and sentencing. After you have read about this miserable human being, AKA Village Idiot, please read the post below it to see how these creatures deserve to be treated and how much they can be loved.

FRONT ROYAL, Va. (AP) -- A man who skinned a guinea pig and wore the skin as headgear has been convicted on an animal cruelty charge.
Charles Woodson was convicted Tuesday in Warren County General District Court.
The 41-year-old Woodson was arrested in March after neighbors saw him wearing the guinea pig hat, which included the animal's head.
Woodson has said the animal was killed humanely. He had purchased the animal from a pet store.
Judge W. Dale Houff sentenced Woodson to six months in jail, but suspended four months from the term. Woodson also was ordered to serve one year of unsupervised probation.
So much emphasis is placed on the horrible things people do to animals and I am convinced that for whatever harm is done to a creature by a human is what that human would or could do to another human being. It is of my own personal opinion that lack of feeding, watering, shelter and any other act is not an act of kindness and all fall under the classification of animal cruelty. Abandonment included.
Thank goodness there ARE wonderful people in the world that see animals in the same wonder light that they see humans. These people not only spread their love and friendship among people they meet but animals as well.
Through word of mouth a few years ago a very kind person heard a heart breaking story concerning an abandoned guinea pig in a park. Immediately after work this person arrived to find the guinea pig as she was told. The poor thing had been abandoned in its cage with moldy matted bedding, old decaying vegatables and matted fur so snarled and tangled and dirty that the animal barely resembled what it was.
The guinea pig traveled to the home of this kind Samaritan where it was given a bath and some serious grooming and after awhile began to resemble the animal and loved pet it was going to be. This fluffy soft animal lived for many years in a warm, sweet smelling hibitat, snacked on only the best in vegatation and eventually learned to communicate with it's squeals and coos.
I was amazed to learn this past Christmas when this guinea pig came to visit us that these soft quiet creatures like to sleep and burrow in hammocks. And sure enough in the corner of "the guinea pigs world" was her hammock and in this hammock she'd fall asleep for the night and nap during the day. All of us had come to love this fur ball and were amused at anything this guinea pig would do.
For seven years this guinea pig had a wonderful home filled with love. She had come so far from the day she was found abandoned and almost dead in the park. She had established communication with the one person that saved her and loved her.
It's love that we pour into our pets and it's unselfish dedication that we have given them that makes it so very hard and almost imbearable to lose them in death. This 7 year old guinea pig stopped eating suddenly and was rushed to an animal emergency room. The next day it went into surgery to remove a small tumor on its neck. The tumor was successfully removed but with the probability that the animal would not make it.
The guinea pigs owner, determined to give all the comforts of home one final time, took it home to be surrounded the other family pets.
Little Iris died last night and today our hearts are so heavy. She's already being missed.

Rest In Peace "Iris Ladybug". You are missed.

They are hunting for $57,281 for the facility in the already tight 2010-11 budget. If those funds aren't found, the building will be closed June 30 as the state trims welcome centers to save money. But if the commissioners can produce the funds, the state government will provide another $50,000 for the coming year.
"That center definitely benefits the whole county," said Commissioner Bobby Cowger.
The Pocomoke City Welcome Center is the second-busiest in Maryland, said Commissioner Linda Busick. The facility was built in 1985 using state money procured by then-delegate Mark Pilchard with a local match, said Shirley Pilchard, his widow.
Since then, the center has pointed tourists often headed to the beach to the museums, businesses and state parks in other parts of Worcester County.
"If nobody is going to tell them, then they are not going to go," Pilchard said. "We are going to take away from small businesses if we go any further with this."
The commissioners agreed it should stay open, but wavered on how often. To receive the state's $50,000, the center must be operational at least three days a week. The county is contemplating keeping it open seven days a week in the summer, four days a week in other seasons.
Commissioner Virgil Shockley asked staff to look at a three-day-a-week, year-round operation.
"I think it's a benefit to tourism, I think it's a benefit to Pocomoke City, and I want to see the numbers," he said.
Pocomoke City Mayor Michael McDermott said the town, which provides water and sewer to the facility, would waive its fees and provide volunteers.
Commissioner Judy Boggs was the only member in opposition to providing the money, arguing that while the center may support tourism, if the county takes it over, the state will never resume the operation.
"I'm just sick and tired of the state forcing us to take over their responsibilities," Boggs said.


I bet this case is far from being over!Justin Jones and Julia Tomlin were charged with felony child neglect after police say they failed to seek medical attention for their daughter. The stove top--four heating elements and four drip trays--were taken for analysis.
The child suffered burns on her back, shoulders, and arms.
Police went back to the Misty Harbor Apartments and a building off Woodall Court, where the girl was allegedly burned on April 30. Detectives were called days later to meet Child Protective Services at the home and said she had burn marks on her back "consistent with the heating elements on a stove."Police contend the parents, Justin Jones and Julia Tomlin, placed the girl on the stove while they tended to another one of their five children. They say the toddler fell on one of the burners and was burned.
After the discovery was made, the girl was taken to a local hospital, treated and released.
In charging documents a detective wrote about Tomlin saying "she could not say for sure if the burners were turned off or not."
Neither Tomlin nor Jones could be reached for comment.
The little girl, along with her four siblings, who showed no signs of abuse, were placed in the care of Child Protective Services.
With the oil spill occurring in the Gulf of Mexico a few weeks ago, several people have been warning the oil spillage could make its way to Virginias Eastern Shore. The oil could stray north from the spill site and catch the Loop Current, which goes all the way around the tip of Florida and bumps into the Gulf Stream, which goes as far north as the Eastern Shore.
Have you ever seen a surfing dog? Chances are, if you live in southern California, you have! But, have you ever thought about YOUR dog surfing! The Loews Surf Dog event is the perfect venue to give it a try!
| Q: Where can single men over the age of 60 find younger, women who are interested in them? | A: Try a bookstore, under Fiction. |
| Q: What can a man do while his wife is going through menopause? | A: Keep busy. If you're handy with tools, you can finish the basement. When you're done, you will have a place to live. |
| Q: Someone has told me that menopause is mentioned in the bible... Is that true? | A: Yes. Matthew 14:92: |
| Q: How can you increase the heart rate of your over-60 year-old husband? | A: Tell him you're pregnant. |
| Q: How can you avoid that terrible curse of the elderly wrinkles? | A: Take off your glasses. |
| Q: Seriously! What can I do for these Crow's feet and all those wrinkles on my face? | A: Go braless. It will usually pull them out.. |
| Q: Why should 60-plus year old people use valet parking? | A: Valets don't forget where they park your car. |
| Q: Is it common for 60-plus year olds to have problems with short term memory storage? | A: Storing memory is not a problem, Retrieving it is the problem. |
| Q: As people age, do they sleep more soundly? | A: Yes, but usually in the afternoon. |
| Q: Where should 60-plus year olds look for eye glasses? | A: On their foreheads. |
| Q: What is the most common remark made by 60-plus year olds when they enter antique stores? | A: "Gosh, I remember these!" |
| SMILE, You've still got your sense of humor, RIGHT? | |