A former teacher at Walkertown Middle School was convicted Thursday on charges that she sexually abused three male high school students and sent sexually inappropriate messages to them.
A Forsyth County judge dismissed criminal charges against a Winston-Salem man who threatened to shoot up schools in Walkertown and Forsyth Medical Center in 2018 because the man is permanently
Your browser does not support the audio element. A 911 recording offers new detail about the moments inside BJ s Brewhouse before a fatal shooting happened outside. The shooting left Julius Randolph Juice Sampson Jr. dead, and Robert Anthony Granato, 23, facing a first-degree murder charge
Sampson was shot to death outside BJâs Brewhouse and Restaurant on Aug. 6, 2019.
Race has been at the center of the case, with some believing that Robert Anthony Granato, 24, who is white, shot Sampson, a married father of three who worked as a barber at Hanes Mall, because Sampson was Black. After an argument between the two men inside BJ s over how Granato was treating female staffers, the two men exchanged words outside. Sampson used the N-word and then Granato hurled the word back. Granatoâs attorney has claimed that Granato shot Sampson after Sampson assaulted him.
Forsyth County prosecutors are seeking to prevent the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services from releasing records on the jail-related death of John Elliott Neville in December 2019.Â
A day after DHHS officials indicated they would be releasing certain documents in its possession to a news organization, a Forsyth County prosecutor filed an objection and a request for a temporary protective order, which a Forsyth County judge granted the same day, according to court documents filed in Forsyth Superior Court.Â
Attorneys for a media coalition that includes the Winston-Salem Journal were not notified. (The Winston-Salem Journal was part of a coalition that requested public release of videos showing the events that led to Neville s death.)