19-year-old handed suspect the knife in fatal Gloversville stabbing, police allege; 15-year-old charged with murder | The Daily Gazette
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By Steven Cook |
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GLOVERSVILLE – The 19-year-old charged with conspiracy in the stabbing death a 15-year-old is accused of committing handed over the knife then used in the killing, according to police allegations filed in court.
Ja’Quah A. McCall, 19, of Albany, was charged Thursday by Gloversville Police with one count of first-degree conspiracy, a felony that carries a potential sentence upon conviction akin to a murder conviction.
The conspiracy charge against McCall followed the arrest earlier last week of a 15-year-old, who is accused directly in the death.
GLOVERSVILLE – A 19-year-old Albany man has now been charged with top-level conspiracy in connection with last weekend's stabbing death in Gloversville…
manich@leaderherald.com
GLOVERSVILLE A second suspect from the Capital District has been charged with felony conspiracy in connection with Saturday’s stabbing death of 59-year-old Gloversville resident William J. Guzek.
The Gloversville Police Department on Thursday issued a news release indicating that Ja’Quah McCall, 19, of Albany was arrested.
McCall was charged “related” to Guzek’s homicide, police said.
Police said that shortly before 9:30 p.m. Saturday, officers were dispatched to 37 E. Tenth Ave. a warehouse where Guzek resided on a report of a “stabbing in progress.” Upon arrival, officers located and rendered lifesaving aid to the stabbing victim, Guzek, inside the large warehouse building. Other officers interviewed several bystanders and checked the building and area for potential suspects. The Gloversville Fire Department and GAVAC arrived on scene a short time later, took over lifesaving efforts and transported the victim to Nathan Littauer Hosp
Former Fulton County Sheriff McMichael dies
By FOX 5 Atlanta Digital Team
Published
(Fulton County Sheriff s Office)
ATLANTA - Former Fulton County Sheriff and U.S. Marshal Robert H. McMichael, II passed away peacefully at home on Wednesday morning, his family said.
McMichael led the Fulton County Sheriff’s Office from 1989 until 1993. He then was appointed by President Bill Clinton to serve as the United States Marshal for the Northern District of Georgia.
McMichael is a 1960 graduate of Luther Judson Price High School, a 1964 graduate of Morehouse College where he received his B.A., and a 1981 graduate of Woodrow Wilson Law School at Princeton University, where he received his J.D. He completed extensive training at the Atlanta Police Academy and the Georgia Police Academy.
Lead prosecutor in Ahmaud Arbery case resigns
Neither Jesse Evans nor the Cobb County District Attorney gave a reason for the departure of the Arbery case s lead prosecutor.
Credit: WXIA Author: First Coast News Staff Published: 2:59 PM EDT April 28, 2021 Updated: 3:01 PM EDT April 28, 2021
GLYNN COUNTY, Ga. The lead prosecutor in the case against three men accused of murdering Ahmaud Arbery has left the Cobb County District Attorney s Office.
According to a statement from the office, Deputy Chief Assistant District Attorney Jesse Evans resigned. The statement did not provide a date or a reason.
Evans has handled the case against three Glynn County men accused of chasing and killing Arbery in their Satilla Shores neighborhood in February 2020. Evans was the face of the prosecution at prior bond hearings in the case against Travis McMichael, 35, his father, Gregory McMichael, 65, and William Roddie Bryan, 51.