BONHAM â The Fannin County Commissionersâ Court will host a public hearing prior to its regular 9 a.m. meeting Tuesday at Bonham City Hall, 514 Chestnut St. The meeting will be broadcast via Zoom with meeting ID 860 7606 8099.
The public hearing is to hear comments regarding the approval of the Fannin County District Courtâs records archive plan and the Fannin County Clerkâs archive plan.
Tuesdayâs agenda items include possible action on the countyâs Covid-19 disaster declaration and continuity of plans, CARES Act funding and any needed supplies. The agenda also includes action on the public hearing matters, financial and investment reports, possible approval of Legend Bankâs request to release specific securities, possible approval to lease a belly dump trailer for six months for $500 per month, and two executive sessions regarding discussion with attorney and personnel matters.
SHERMAN â The failed Enloe State Bankâs former president is sentenced to serve eight years in a federal prison following her guilty plea on conspiracy to commit bank fraud and arson charges.
The sentencing of Anita Gail Moody, 57, of Cooper, by U.S. District Judge Amos L. Mazzant III was announced late Tuesday afternoon by Acting U.S. Attorney Nicholas J. Ganjei. Moody was sentenced earlier Tuesday on the charges she pleaded guilty to on June 5, 2020. Moody also agreed to pay more than $11.13 million in restitution, Ganjei said.
Moody was president of Enloe State Bank in Cooper on May 11, 2019, when the bank suffered a fire investigators later determined to be arson, court documents state. The fire was contained to the bankâs boardroom, however, the entire bank suffered smoke damage. An investigation determined several files had been purposefully stacked on the boardroom table, and all were burned in the blaze.
Local News
By Fannin County Childrens Center
Dec 23, 2020
Fannin County, Texas In all, 224 children served by the Fannin County Childrens Center will have gifts of coats, shoes, books, games, toys and other items to open on Christmas morning, thanks to several generous donors and many hard-working volunteers and staff.
This years effort to provide Christmas presents for the children and youth served by CASA and the Childrens Advocacy Center looked different than in years past. Some of the changes were due to the pandemic, but others were because the agencys caseload has grown so much in recent years.