Article by Social Share
His mother may be paying his fine but Ramon Jamal Payne will be made to sign an agreement saying he will be repaying her every cent.
If he doesn’t follow through with that obligation, he could face prison.
So said Justice Randall Worrell as Payne, of Boscobel, St Peter, returned to the No. 2 Supreme Court yesterday.
He had pleaded guilty, at an earlier Session of the Continuous Sittings, to having a 9 mm pistol and nine bullets on April 25, 2017.
The matter was prosecuted by Senior Crown Counsel Olivia Davis, while Angella Mitchell-Gittens represented the gunman. (HLE)
The App State softball team recorded its first win in school history in the Sun Belt Softball Championship Thursday evening, defeating Georgia State 2-1. The Mo
‘Fear’ made detainee run from lawmen
Article by May 12, 2021
Defence attorney Samuel Legay has urged a High Court Judge to show some leniency to his client who he said fled from police back in 2016 simply “out of fear”.
Legay was mitigating on behalf of St Philip resident Andrew Melvin Franklyn who had pleaded guilty to escaping from the Oistins Police Station without the use of force and assaulting constables Joseph Green and Rakem Gunning in the process on August 25, 2016.
The lawyer explained that Franklyn is known to the courts for theft, assault, criminal damage and burglary and was familiar with the police process.
Art engages with the community and connects!
By Marilyn Delk - DCCA News
Mississinawa Valley High School student artists have worked on preliminary plans for a mural representing Union City and the surrounding area.
Provided photo
Last year, Mississinawa Valley art teacher Ashley Austerman applied to the Ohio Arts Council for a grant enabling her to bring a professional artist to her classroom to establish an often-requested photography course; the project would also reach out to the community at large, providing various opportunities for engagement with the arts. Mrs. Austerman’s well-thought out plan was approved and received funding; other community entities including Darke County Endowment for the Arts, who granted the amount needed to purchase digital cameras, contributed to the project which was enthusiastically embraced by MV students. Soon, the entire community will be treated to the culmination of students’ efforts: a beautiful mural representing Union City and t
narvikk/iStock(NEW YORK) A new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that some COVID-19 vaccine reactions, including fainting, dizziness and nausea, were due to anxiety and not the shots themselves. The report, published Friday, looked at clusters of events reported to the CDC in dozens of people who received the Johnson & Johnson single-dose vaccine at five mass vaccination sites in early April, before federal health agencies called for a temporary pause on the shot after six people in the U.S. developed a rare blood clot disorder. Out of 8,624 people who received the J&J dose from April 7 to 9 at the five sites, 64 experienced anxiety-related reactions, none of which were considered serious, the CDC said. Slightly more than half reported light-headedness or dizziness. Excessive sweating was the next most common symptom, followed by fainting, nausea or vomiting, and hypotension. The majority 61% were women, the median age was 36 years and 20%