Two women arrested after fight at convenience store
Two Danielsville women were arrested after a fight in front of a convenience store on Hwy. 29 North in Danielsville.
Both were charged with one count of affray.
Deputy Larry MacKay went to the store where he met with the two women, who approached him to try to tell him what happened. They began yelling at each other and MacKay did his best to separate them so he could find out what happened.
One woman said the other got in her car and hit her five or six times and she did not do anything. She then said that it took place in front of the store. There were no marks on her face, according to the report. One woman admitted she struck other once.
Other incidents on file at the sheriff’s office last week included:
•Warrants have been issued for a man who allegedly harassed 9-1-1 dispatchers. According to the report the man contacted 9-1-1 numerous times over the weekend of Oct. 24 – 26.
On the first call, he reportedly told officers he was going to kill himself if no one went to talk to a woman on Swamp Guinea Road for him and Lt. Jason Ring answered that call.
Lt. Ring advised him at that time of the steps he needed to take and to come by the sheriff’s office on Oct. 29 to speak with Ring and the sheriff. A dispatcher said the man “had continuously contacted 9-1-1 for non-emergency issues” like wanting to get in touch with Ring about things taken care of in the initial incident call.
He was told Ring and other officers were on other calls and would get in touch with him at a later time, but he continued to call back repeatedly.
•Harassing phone calls were reported on East Ninth Avenue last week. A woman met a deputy at the Bread Basket in Colbert last week who told him that her boyfriend’s ex-girlfriend has been calling and texting her for the past week “all day and all night.” She said the woman had threatened to “destroy her.”
•Theft by taking was reported on Diamond Hill Colbert Road last week. A woman said she ran an ad on Craigslist for someone to move in and help care for her terminally ill boyfriend. A man answered the ad and she hired him. Shortly afterwards, he began to move things out of the garage and put them in the driveway, telling her he was organizing the garage. He also put up a tent in the front yard, saying it was mildewed and he was airing it out. She went into his room and found several things that were in the garage and she confronted him. He said he had brought them inside to go through them and denied trying to steal them. She told him to leave. Since he’s been gone, she said she has found numerous items missing from the garage and believes he stored them inside the tent he put up in the yard.
•A man on Chandler Road reported that his neighbor threatened to shoot his “little red nose pit bull puppy” if it barked at him again. He said the dog has never been on the neighbor’s property and has never barked at him. He wanted a report filed in case anything happens to his puppy.
•Theft by deception was reported when officer Douglas Martin received an envelope from West Covina PD in California about a lottery scam involving an address in Hull. She was told to send $1,000 to the address in Hull to claim $100,000 in prizes. Then she got another message that $6,000 more was needed to pay the IRS. She said two phone numbers with a 706 area code were used to contact her.
•Burglary was reported on Wildcat Bridge Road last week when a man said he came home and found a rear bedroom window pried open with damage to the screen. On further checking, he discovered a pair of work gloves in his bedroom in front of the bed and $3,400 was missing from a nightstand next to his bed. The exterior of the house and the glass of the window were checked but no latent prints were found. The gloves discovered in the residence had what appeared to be tree material and sap imbedded in the leather grain. The man said a tree-cutting service had been clearing trees along the roadway when he left that morning.
•Financial identity fraud was reported on Bedford Drive on Oct. 31. A woman there sad she received a call from her bank about someone attempting to transfer $3,950 from her checking account. She said her bank did not approve the transfer and has since issued a new account number. She said the attempt was made by some type of online service out of Canton.
•Family violence was reported on Johnson Bridges Road last week. Deputy Josh Fowler went to a home there where he met with a man who said his dad punched him in the face. His dad said that his son was yelling at him and followed him back to his bedroom. When he told him to go back to his room, he said the son began to yell at his mother and called her a w*(_#, and raise his hand as if to hit her.
The dad said he stepped between the two using his forearm to push the son away from his wife.
•Theft was reported on Duncan Swindle Road last week.
A man said his son stole his firearm during an argument.
He said his son came to the residence to ask him for a gun and for him to report it stolen, because he is a convicted felon and is not allowed to have a firearm. He said some people were trying to kill him. The father said he refused to give him a gun and they argued. He said he left the room and when he came back in his son was gone and so was a 9mm pistol that was on the mantle. The pistol was listed on the GCIC as stolen and warrants were to be issued for the son’s arrest.
Deputy Larry MacKay went to the store where he met with the two women, who approached him to try to tell him what happened. They began yelling at each other and MacKay did his best to separate them so he could find out what happened.
One woman said the other got in her car and hit her five or six times and she did not do anything. She then said that it took place in front of the store. There were no marks on her face, according to the report. One woman admitted she struck other once.
Other incidents on file at the sheriff’s office last week included:
•Warrants have been issued for a man who allegedly harassed 9-1-1 dispatchers. According to the report the man contacted 9-1-1 numerous times over the weekend of Oct. 24 – 26.
On the first call, he reportedly told officers he was going to kill himself if no one went to talk to a woman on Swamp Guinea Road for him and Lt. Jason Ring answered that call.
Lt. Ring advised him at that time of the steps he needed to take and to come by the sheriff’s office on Oct. 29 to speak with Ring and the sheriff. A dispatcher said the man “had continuously contacted 9-1-1 for non-emergency issues” like wanting to get in touch with Ring about things taken care of in the initial incident call.
He was told Ring and other officers were on other calls and would get in touch with him at a later time, but he continued to call back repeatedly.
•Harassing phone calls were reported on East Ninth Avenue last week. A woman met a deputy at the Bread Basket in Colbert last week who told him that her boyfriend’s ex-girlfriend has been calling and texting her for the past week “all day and all night.” She said the woman had threatened to “destroy her.”
•Theft by taking was reported on Diamond Hill Colbert Road last week. A woman said she ran an ad on Craigslist for someone to move in and help care for her terminally ill boyfriend. A man answered the ad and she hired him. Shortly afterwards, he began to move things out of the garage and put them in the driveway, telling her he was organizing the garage. He also put up a tent in the front yard, saying it was mildewed and he was airing it out. She went into his room and found several things that were in the garage and she confronted him. He said he had brought them inside to go through them and denied trying to steal them. She told him to leave. Since he’s been gone, she said she has found numerous items missing from the garage and believes he stored them inside the tent he put up in the yard.
•A man on Chandler Road reported that his neighbor threatened to shoot his “little red nose pit bull puppy” if it barked at him again. He said the dog has never been on the neighbor’s property and has never barked at him. He wanted a report filed in case anything happens to his puppy.
•Theft by deception was reported when officer Douglas Martin received an envelope from West Covina PD in California about a lottery scam involving an address in Hull. She was told to send $1,000 to the address in Hull to claim $100,000 in prizes. Then she got another message that $6,000 more was needed to pay the IRS. She said two phone numbers with a 706 area code were used to contact her.
•Burglary was reported on Wildcat Bridge Road last week when a man said he came home and found a rear bedroom window pried open with damage to the screen. On further checking, he discovered a pair of work gloves in his bedroom in front of the bed and $3,400 was missing from a nightstand next to his bed. The exterior of the house and the glass of the window were checked but no latent prints were found. The gloves discovered in the residence had what appeared to be tree material and sap imbedded in the leather grain. The man said a tree-cutting service had been clearing trees along the roadway when he left that morning.
•Financial identity fraud was reported on Bedford Drive on Oct. 31. A woman there sad she received a call from her bank about someone attempting to transfer $3,950 from her checking account. She said her bank did not approve the transfer and has since issued a new account number. She said the attempt was made by some type of online service out of Canton.
•Family violence was reported on Johnson Bridges Road last week. Deputy Josh Fowler went to a home there where he met with a man who said his dad punched him in the face. His dad said that his son was yelling at him and followed him back to his bedroom. When he told him to go back to his room, he said the son began to yell at his mother and called her a w*(_#, and raise his hand as if to hit her.
The dad said he stepped between the two using his forearm to push the son away from his wife.
•Theft was reported on Duncan Swindle Road last week.
A man said his son stole his firearm during an argument.
He said his son came to the residence to ask him for a gun and for him to report it stolen, because he is a convicted felon and is not allowed to have a firearm. He said some people were trying to kill him. The father said he refused to give him a gun and they argued. He said he left the room and when he came back in his son was gone and so was a 9mm pistol that was on the mantle. The pistol was listed on the GCIC as stolen and warrants were to be issued for the son’s arrest.
Trackbacks
Trackback specific URI for this entry
No Trackbacks