Sunday, May 23, 2010

Pocomoke Crime Reports so far This Month

ASSAULT
23 May 2010
600 BLOCK CEDAR STREET
Distance: 0.81 miles
Identifier: 10-0003385
Time(24h): 00:08
ASSAULT - SECOND DEGREE
Agency: Pocomoke Poilce
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ASSAULT
21 May 2010
1 BLOCK BRADLEY COURT
Distance: 0.6 miles
Identifier: 10-0003341
Time(24h): 12:32
ASSAULT - SECOND DEGREE
Agency: Pocomoke Poilce
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ASSAULT
20 May 2010
EIGHTH & MARKET STREET
Distance: 0.55 miles
Identifier: 10-0003321
Time(24h): 15:04
ASSAULT - SECOND DEGREE
Agency: Pocomoke Poilce
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ASSAULT
19 May 2010
5TH AND LAUREL STREET
Distance: 0.87 miles
Identifier: 10-0003301
Time(24h): 19:47
ASSAULT - SECOND DEGREE
Agency: Pocomoke Poilce
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THEFT
19 May 2010
500 BLOCK LINDEN AVENUE
Distance: 0.64 miles
Identifier: 10-0003289
Time(24h): 10:45
THEFT LESS THAN $100
Agency: Pocomoke Poilce
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THEFT
17 May 2010
1800 BLOCK OLD VA ROAD
Distance: 1.02 miles
Identifier: 10-0003246
Time(24h): 07:45
THEFT $1,000 - L/T $10,000
Agency: Pocomoke Poilce
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BREAKING & ENTERING
16 May 2010
1000 BLOCK CEDAR STREET
Distance: 0.56 miles
Identifier: 10-0003227
Time(24h): 10:57
BURGLARY - FOURTH DEGREE
Agency: Pocomoke Poilce
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THEFT
15 May 2010
2100 BLOCK OLD SNOW HILL ROAD
Distance: 0.53 miles
Identifier: 10-0003201
Time(24h): 11:41
THEFT $100 - L/T 1,000
Agency: Pocomoke Poilce
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THEFT
14 May 2010
1400 BLOCK LINDEN DRIVE
Distance: 0.3 miles
Identifier: 10-0003158
Time(24h): 07:56
THEFT LESS THAN $100
Agency: Pocomoke Poilce
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THEFT
14 May 2010
OCEAN HIGHWAY
Distance: 1.84 miles
Identifier: 10-0003166
Time(24h): 15:14
THEFT LESS THAN $100.00
Agency: Pocomoke Poilce
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BREAKING & ENTERING
13 May 2010
1500 BLOCK PRINCESS ANNE LANE
Distance: 0.26 miles
Identifier: 10-0003125
Time(24h): 04:44
BURGLARY - FOURTH DEGREE
Agency: Pocomoke Poilce
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THEFT
12 May 2010
300 BLOCK SECOND STREET
Distance: 1.01 miles
Identifier: 10-0003106
Time(24h): 13:57
THEFT $100 - L/T 1,000
Agency: Pocomoke Poilce
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THEFT
12 May 2010
2100 BLOCK OLD SNOW HILL ROAD
Distance: 0.53 miles
Identifier: 10-0003111
Time(24h): 17:35
THEFT: LESS $100VALUE
Agency: Pocomoke Poilce
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THEFT
12 May 2010
NEWTOWNE BOULEVARD
Distance: 0.62 miles
Identifier: 10-0003114
Time(24h): 18:25
THEFT: LESS $100VALUE
Agency: Pocomoke Poilce
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THEFT
11 May 2010
NO ADDRESS PROVIDED
Distance: 1.02 miles
Identifier: 10-0003088
Time(24h): 20:08
THEFT: LESS $100VALUE
Agency: Pocomoke Poilce
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THEFT
09 May 2010
REST AREA
Distance: 1.02 miles
Identifier: 10-0003037
Time(24h): 17:58
THEFT: LESS $100VALUE
Agency: Pocomoke Poilce
Send to Friend

Websleuths Recognized in a Newsweek article! "Would Bloggers Have Cracked Chandra's Case?"

"Now, when I cover any high-profile crime, I make sure to check out Web Sleuths, an Internet forum for armchair detectives who analyze cases and post court filings."

Would Bloggers Have Cracked Chandra's Case? A reporter who covered 24-year-old intern Chandra Levy's death looks at a new book about the case—and shares where the mainstream media went wrong.






When Chandra Levy went missing in 2001, she left a road map to her body. The 24-year-old intern quit her gym the day before she disappeared and spent her last known moments searching online for jogging paths in the same Washington, D.C., park where she would ultimately be found dead. But right from the start, a combination of police incompetence and media obsession with the politician Levy was sleeping with derailed the investigation. Finding Chandra, a new book about the case by Washington Post reporters Sari Horwitz and Scott Higham, details a shocking series of blunders by the police, who failed to retrieve security-camera footage showing Levy's final departure from home and somehow were unaware of a pattern of similar attacks on other female joggers. Meanwhile, Horwitz and Higham recount, the press corps failed to ask smart questions, instead jockeying for scoops concerning the most intriguing suspect: congressman Gary Condit.

The failure of both the police and journalists to properly investigate the crime could have tragic consequences. It seems clear now that the culprit was Ingmar Guandique, who was arrested for the other assaults just weeks after Levy vanished. But he may well be acquitted at his upcoming trial. Even though Guandique has confessed to murdering Levy, no forensic evidence exists. Thirteen months went by before Levy's bones were found. The evidence was so eroded that the medical examiner couldn't even determine how Levy died.

I am not proud to say that I was one of the dozens of reporters who succumbed to herd behavior, staking out Condit's home and investigating the underbelly of the Washington party circuit in a vain search for dirt on the congressman. A Vanity Fair columnist suggested that Condit frequented sex parties at Middle Eastern embassies and arranged for foreigners to kidnap Levy into sex slavery. Cable-news personalities speculated that the congressman, who happened to own a motorcycle, hired the Hells Angels to kill Levy. The anti-Condit mob drowned out all dissenting voices. Of course, we know that Condit was not a murderer, but something much more mundane—a politician who cheated on his wife.

The summer of Chandra Levy seems like yesterday, though almost a decade has passed. I'd like to think I'm a better reporter now, less likely to follow the pack. More important, the media landscape has changed. Blogs barely existed in 2001. Now, when I cover any high-profile crime, I make sure to check out Web Sleuths, an Internet forum for armchair detectives who analyze cases and post court filings. When I followed the Duke lacrosse rape story, blogs—many written by people with expertise about North Carolina politics, the law, or even, say, protocol for forensic nurses collecting rape kits—were the best source for appropriately skeptical reporting. The herd mentality of the mainstream media still exists, but it is no longer in control of the narrative. That's a good thing.

Bloggers are unrestrained by the orthodoxies of the professional reporter. They don't need to follow the conventions of the 800-word newspaper story and can instead toss out an idea in two sentences that will nonetheless spur national discussion. They can ask questions without necessarily supplying an answer. Critically, bloggers also do not typically rely on official sources for information. Reporters and their anonymous sources both benefit from the relationship. Reporters get exclusive information, which earns them promotions; sources weave narratives that serve their interests. This corrupting symbiosis makes the reporter all too quick to take an official's word at face value.

In the Levy case, this dynamic was clearly at work. At routine press conferences, all that reporters wanted to hear about was Condit. This suited the police just fine because they didn't have the slightest idea what had happened to Levy. And so, even as they were careful to say he was not a suspect, police dished on Condit, suggesting repeatedly that when the congressman was pressed for information regarding Levy, he was shifty and uncooperative. In fact, as Horwitz and Higham reveal, Condit disclosed his relationship with Levy in his first interview with police, agreed to three more interviews, allowed a search of his apartment, and voluntarily supplied DNA. But press coverage at the time propagated police officials' incomplete portrayal.

The pack tendencies of journalists are still evident, but skeptical outsiders are now part of the conversation. Take the Duke case: as the mainstream press became consumed with the racial melodrama, several bloggers zeroed in on the facts. History professor K. C. Johnson launched a blog that questioned the accuser's story early on. As the case went on, he spent hundreds of hours investigating and posting factual analysis that dismantled the prosecution's case. Unrestrained by the limits imposed on traditional reporters by periodic deadlines, source relationships, and their neutral pose, Johnson acted as a real-time historian, compiling original source material. Meanwhile, even five months into the case, The New York Times published a credulous 5,700-word story relying far too heavily on prosecutors' claims. Liestoppers, a second grassroots blog focused on the Duke case, tore the Times's story to shreds, finding several errors.

If a congressman's mistress went missing today, the media firestorm might even be more intense than it was during the summer of 2001. The bizarre conspiracy theories might spread faster. But it also is far more likely that a citizen journalist would think to search public reports of other attacks within days of the disappearance and start connecting the dots. We now know what happened to Chandra Levy. But given the time that was wasted and the evidence that has been lost, it may be too late for justice. We will find out when Guandique's trial begins this October—nearly a decade after Levy first disappeared.

VIA: NEWSWEEK.com

www.websleuths.com

~ Tell Them This........

I am not confused, I'm just well mixed.
~ Robert Frost ~

BAKE SALE

Bake Sale Today

Sunday May 23, 2010

8:00 AM until 2:00 PM

Location: Ocean Deli

Proceeds go towards the Travis Birch Scholarship Fund

Travis, the 19 year old Chincoteague resident lost his life as a result of an automobile accident recently.
The goal for this weekends bake sales is to reach $1,000.
They're almost there..........let's help them complete their mission.

Traveling Circus Stops In Onancock

ONANCOCK -- The spectators at a circus focus on the performance. The performers at the traveling circus that arrived in town for three shows this week focused on the spectators.

"The audience forgets about the things going on in their lives," said Ringmaster Rebecca Ostroff. "They become the act. It's so close, so kinetic."

After several years without stopping on the Eastern Shore, the Lewis and Clark Circus returned Monday and Tuesday to a warm welcome at the Onancock School grounds despite cloudy, rainy skies.

All ages came out to enjoy the one-ring, European-style circus featuring acts like trapeze artists, acrobats, clowns and animal acts, all under a big yellow-and-red-striped tent.

Traditional circus fare including cotton candy, popcorn and funnel cakes, and a midway featuring a petting zoo, face painting and camel rides made for a circus experience reminiscent of bygone days.

While for some the circus marks a fun evening out, for performers like Ostroff, it is a lifestyle.

Ostroff began her performing career as a dancer in New York City. In 1986, a friend convinced her to go to the International All-Star Circus to try her hand at it.

"My friend said I could earn $450 in three days," she said. "That was a lot in those days."

Realizing circus work allowed her to fulfill her passion for dance, Ostroff was hooked.

"I decided to get a trapeze and join," she said. "I ran away with the circus officially in 1987."

Since then Ostroff and her husband have worked under many circuses, she as a trapeze and silkscreen artist, he as a live musician. Ostroff began with the Lewis and Clark Circus in 2004.

In March of this year, Ostroff took over as ringmaster of the show, "because I like to talk," she joked.

She says that while circuses have had to downsize, the experience is "similar to how it was in the old, old days."

This year's big top housed performances ranging from the lighthearted antics of Jose Jose, a clown with a zest for music, to breath-holding physical feats as one performer dangled from the top of the tent by only her teeth.

All in all, about 30 people travel with the circus.

"We're like a family. We are a family," said Ostroff, saying her favorite part is "when people come and they love it."

www.easternshorenews.com

Friday, May 21, 2010

Teen suspended for Rosary beads

"Gang related" Rosary beads?


Freedom of religion or a breach of school policy?

"They might as well suspend me for the rest of the year because I'm not taking them off," said Raymond Hosier, who turned 13 Thursday.

He's been wearing his purple Rosary beads every day since the start of this school year. It wasn't a problem, until Tuesday when the seventh grader says a school administrator at Oneida Middle School told him to take the beads off or tuck them in his shirt.

Raymond refused. Wednesday he was suspended.



It's not religion necessarily that's behind this. They were his brother's beads. Joey died five years ago. He was hit by an SUV while test riding Raymond's bike. Raymond saw the whole thing.

In addition, two weeks ago Raymond's Uncle Tom died from brain cancer. The 13-year-old says the beads represent the relatives he's lost.

"Beads are one method that gangs use to identify each other," Superintendent Eric Ely explained.

The district has had a blanket policy on beads for a few years now. Students can wear them, but they must be tucked under their shirt.

"We certainly understand any youngster's desire to commemorate something, but we also understand our need to maintain a safe environment," said Ely.

Raymond's mom Chantell supports her son all the way.

"To be honest, after having the meetings I just had to think it's even more ridiculous. We have freedom of speech and freedom of religion. This is his freedom of religion. I will take this as far as It needs to go," she said.

SCHOOL BUS IN JAPAN!!

SCHOOL BUS IN JAPAN





SCHOOL BUS IN INDIA




But which country do you call when you have a

technical problem with your computer?
Hat Tip; Kack

Mike McDermott; Hosting an evening of Italian Cuisine


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

  • Smaller, more efficient government;
  • Lower taxes, and a Business friendly environment;
  • Conservation that works for farmers, watermen, and the environment; and
  • Trusting that Marylander’s know what is best for their families.

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 Ocean Pines Community Center. I am asking you to sponsor a table for this event. The cost is $200.00 which includes 10 tickets for you to sell or give to others.(Please see attachment)

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 Annapolis.

Our shared eastern shore values deserve to be heard. Please help me as I work to be your strong voice in Annapolis!

With Warmest Regards,

electmikemcdermott.com

Mike






www.electmikemcdermott.com
Help us send Mike to Annapolis!
Join us for an evening of Italian Cuisine (spaghetti)
at
Ocean Pines Community Center
239 Ocean Parkway, Ocean Pines, MD
on
Thursday, June 17, 2010
5:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.


TICKET PRICES
Individual $25 / Table (10 tix) $200
Order tickets online at
www.electmikemcdermott.com
or return Reply Form below.

We are concentrating on budget-friendly events so everyone can get involved. I need your help for this event to be a success.

— Mike

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reply Form
Please indicate your choice below:
I would like to purchase ______ $25 Individual Tickets.
Total Enclosed is $_______.
I would like to purchase ______ $200 Table of 10 Tickets.
Total Enclosed is $_______.
I cannot attend, but please accept my donation of $______.
Order tickets online at:
www.electmikemcdermott .com
OR
Please complete the following information:
Name: _________________________________________________
Address: _______________________________________________
_______________________________________________
Phone Number: __________________________________________
Email: __________________________________________________
Please make checks payable
and mail to:
Citizens to Elect Mike McDermott
217 Walnut Street
Pocomoke City, MD 21851

AUTHORITY: Citizens to Elect Mike McDermott. Craig Theobald, Treasurer.

Have a Little "Faith" (Amazing Dog)

This dog was born on Christmas Eve in the year 2002. He was born with 2 legs -




He of course could not walk when he was born. Even his mother did not want him.








His first owner also did not think that he could survive and he was thinking of 'putting him to sleep'.


But then, his present owner, Jude Stringfellow, met him and wanted to take care of him.


She became determined to teach and train this little dog to walk by himself.


She named him 'Faith'.




In the beginning, she put Faith on a surfboard to let him feel the movement.


Later she used peanut butter on a spoon as a lure and reward for him for standing up and jumping around.


Even the other dog at home encouraged him to walk.


Amazingly, only after 6 months, like a miracle,


Faith learned to balance on his hind legs and to jump to move forward.


After further training in the snow, he could now walk like a human being.




Faith loves to walk around now.


No matter where he goes, he attracts people to him.


He is fast becoming famous on the international scene and has appeared on various newspapers and TV shows.


There is now a book entitled 'With a Little Faith' being published about him.


He was even considered to appear in one of Harry Potter movies.




His present owner Jude Stringfellew has given up her teaching post and plans to take him around the world to preach that even without a perfect body, one can have a perfect soul'.





















In life there are always undesirable things, so in order to feel better you just need to look at life from another direction.


I hope this message will bring fresh new ways of thinking to everyone


and that everyone will appreciate and be thankful for each beautiful day.


Faith is the continual demonstration of the strength and wonder of life.

Hat Tip; Eric

Prayers For Travis Birch Of Chincoteague, Virginia

UPDATE: Travis Birch died today May 21, 2010 at 12:35. Please continue to keep his family, friends and community in your prayers.
After hearing bits and pieces of a tragic vehicle accident that occurred last Saturday night it was brought to my attention through my facebook page that this indeed was a horrible accident.


Prayers are in great need for 19 year old Travis Birch and his family of Chincoteague, Virginia.

As of tonight Travis is in critical condition and suffering from severe brain damage. He does not respond to any commands.


Below is a list of drop off locations if you care to make a donation for Travis and his family.


Donation drop-offs


Chincoteague Locations:
Chincoteague Inn
H&H Pharmacy,
Bill's Seafood Rest.
Mr. Baldy's Rest.
Shore Stop
Steve's Mini Mart


Mainland locations:
Ocean Deli: Wallops
Royal Farms: Wallops

Bank locations:
PNC Bank
Charma Birch
FBO Travis Birch
Attn: Sandra Greenley
6402 Maddox Blvd.
Chincoteague, VA 23336


BAKE SALE TO BENEFIT TRAVIS BIRCH


Saturday May 22, 2010

8:00 AM until 2:00 PM

Location: Ocean Deli

ALL MONEY GOES TO THE BIRCH FAMILY


Mailing address for the Birch family is: David and Charma Birch

6500 Fletcher Lane, Chincoteague, Virginia 23336


If you are unable to send a donation please send prayers. Chincoteague is a very close community especially in times like these and your prayers for Travis and his family are deeply and greatly appreciated. A miracle is needed.

Man Shoots Himself After Being Wanted In Slaying Girlfriend


PARKSLEY — The suspect in a Hampton Roads-area homicide fatally shot himself Friday at a traffic stop on U.S. Route 13 here.

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.

http://www.easternshorenews.com/

Cats Live Easy Too

Remember the old saying "It's a dogs life"?
Well.................
What about cats?

2 Year Old Catches 20 lb. Fish With Barbie Fishing Pole


ST. FRANCIS, Minn. - A muskie, a two-year-old girl and a Barbie fishing pole combined for the greatest fishing story of the 2010 Minnesota walleye opener.

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.

VISIT THE MAR-VA THEATER THIS WEEKEND

*************************************************************************************

US Military Gives OK For Offshore Wind Turbines


Wind turbines could co-exist with military activities off Virginia's coast depending on their locations, a Defense Department assessment has concluded.

Proponents of commercial wind power 12 miles or beyond Virginia's coast believe the giant turbines could ultimately provide 10 percent of the state's annual electricity demand and operate without incident in the military's busy seas.

"I look at this as a very positive thing," said Hank Giffin, a retired Navy vice admiral and a member of a coalition promoting offshore winds. "Initially there were a lot of people who were concerned the Navy would just say no."

Released Wednesday, the Department of Defense assessment looks at 25 tracts identified for optimum winds. The report identifies 18 tracts as compatible with military needs and rules as long as certain guidelines are met. They were not detailed in the report.

Other tracts were ruled out because they conflict with Navy activities.

The area is used to test drones and by helicopters that sweep the ocean surface with mine-detecting sleds. Wind-power advocates have said they will honor the military's concerns and not build where there are potential conflicts.

The wind industry fared better with the military than oil and gas proponents, who were told by the Pentagon that exploration 50 miles off the Virginia coast would interfere significantly with military operations.

Both industries have to contend with Naval Station Norfolk, the world's largest naval base, a NASA launch facility on the Eastern Shore of Virginia, and other military facilities that operate in Hampton Roads.

But submarines and most live munitions practices occur beyond the ideal area for wind turbines -- 12 to 25 miles offshore and on the continental shelf, where water depths are a relatively shallow 100 feet. The 222-square-mile area identified by the Interior Department's Minerals Management Service for wind energy is also much smaller than the 4,500 square miles identified off Virginia for offshore oil and gas areas.

The Defense Department report was released by the Virginia Offshore Wind Coalition. The Navy did not immediately respond to The Associated Press for comment. Some portions of the report, deemed classified, were not released.

The Navy has an interest in supporting renewable energy such as wind. It has set a goal of achieving 50 percent of its land-based energy needs from renewable sources by 2020.

"The Navy is willing to work with the offshore wind industry because they know the importance of it, and they're really enthusiastic for the opportunity to work with us," said Giffin, who is affiliated with the coalition.

The coalition has identified 25 leasing tracts that could generate 3,200 megawatts of offshore wind. Within two decades, 9,700 to 11,600 jobs could be created with the development off an offshore wind industry, a coalition study concluded.

Developers of what would be the nation's first offshore wind farm won federal approval in late April. Developers of the 130-turbine Cape Wind project off Massachusetts want to generate power by 2012.

Two energy companies have expressed interest in the Virginia tracts, which are not likely to be developed for five years or more.

www.shoredailynews.com

Charges Dropped In Cockfighting Case


ACCOMAC — Charges have been dropped against an Accomack County man who police alleged was involved in a cockfighting ring raided in April.

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.

www.easternshorenews.com

Darick Walker Executed In Virginia

May 20, 2010
10:07 P.M.

JARRATT -- Darick Demorris Walker was executed by injection tonight for the separate killings of two Richmond men.

Walker, 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.....


www.timesdispatch.com


Thursday, May 20, 2010

Congratulations to Logan Becker, & Samuel Byrd

This sent in from an astute reader

GREAT ACCOMPOLISHMENTS!
Congratulations to Logan Becker, & Samuel Byrd who will be graduating from PHS soon. Both young men are right here from our town of Pocomoke City.

They both have been selected into one of the five U.S. Military Academies. They both have chosen
to attend The U.S. Merchant Marine Academy.

Pocomoke City (& we are sure others, as well) are very proud of the both of you. Your character, attitude, personality, compassionate, & your drive to help others is highly commendable.

We wish you both the best of luck in your new endeavor, and remember, "No, is not an option....you can do anything you set your mind to do.....don't give up...no pain, no gain!!" I know your parents are very proud of you, and they should be....they have raised two admirable young men!!!! God Bless you both!!!!!

***Your town, community, school, teachers, church, family, friends, & acquaintances acknowledge your hard work, accomplishments, & achievements***

Marijuana Found During Traffic Stop

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.

www.delmarvanow.com

Execution Set For Tonight In Richmond


Unless the U.S. Supreme Court steps in, Darick Demorris Walker will die by injection tonight at 9 at the Greensville Correctional Center for the capital murder of two Richmond men.

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/.

www.starexponent.com

Woman Charged With Texting After Car Crash

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.

www.wavy.com

Birthday Today........

HAPPY 64th BIRTHDAY, CHER

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~

Horses And Cows Seized From Farm

Unbelievable! One of the worst animal abuse cases in Maryland history, the owner has been under close "scrutiny" of animal control for four years yet criminal charges are STILL pending??? This is just not fair!



WOODBINE, Md. (WUSA)--A horrific case of animal abuse and neglect unfolded in an evening raid in rural Oakland, Maryland.


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.

For You Today...........................

Hope you have a picture perfect day!