BRIDGEPORT â Bridgeport wasnât just another stop on a law enforcement career for Officer Mark Stillwagon.
 âBridgeport was the end of the line, the place where he wanted to be,â said Todd Bereda, Chief of Police, Bridgeport Borough Police Department.
The end of the line, as it were, will become official at Tuesdayâs virtual Borough Council meeting, when the 33-year-old Ardmore native will be sworn in as Bridgeportâs newest police officer.
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âMark is from a proud law enforcement tradition,â Bereda said. âHis father, John Stillwagon, worked as a Detective Sergeant in Lower Merion. Mark spent the last six years developing his law enforcement career and we look forward to having him in Bridgeport as his primary law enforcement home.â
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Update, 3:50 p.m.:Investigators have identified the body as that of Daniel Eugene Jones, 31, who had been reported missing to the Clarksville Police Department on Jan. 6.
Based on preliminary information, foul play is not suspected, according to MCSO.
An autopsy will be completed by the Medical Examiner to determine official cause of death.
Previously:
CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. (CLARKSVILLENOW) – A body was found Sunday just west of Clarksville, and the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office is investigating.
Units responded to a report of a body in the area of Briar Hill and Garrettsburg Road on Sunday, according to a news release from MCSO Lt. Mark Wojnarek.
CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. – The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office raised $13,850 for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and four local charities with their No-Shave November and December contest.
Deputies were able to participate by making a $40 donation to St. Jude in November, and a $40 donation to a local charity in December. MCSO presents FUEL with a check MCSO presents Safe House with check MCSO presents SAFE with check MCSO presents Manna Cafe with a check
In November, deputies raised $9,420 for St. Jude. In December, deputies raised $1,180 each for Soldier and Families Embraced (S.A.F.E) and FuelKids; $1,060 for Urban Ministries Safe House; and $1,010 for Manna Café Ministries.
Former New Caney ISD superintendent submitted expenses for trips he did not take, according to arrest warrant affidavit
Community Impact Newspaper
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NEW CANEY, Texas New Caney ISD s former Superintendent Kenn Franklin is accused of submitting at least $2,500 worth of fake travel expenses to the district, according to arrest warrant affidavits from the Montgomery County District Attorney s Office.
Franklin was booked into the Montgomery County Jail on Jan. 7 and released on bond. He was charged with aggregate theft by a public servant, a third-degree felony, and tampering with a government record, which is a state jail felony.
According to the affidavit, the school district requested help on Sept. 21 from the Texas Rangers. NCISD Police Chief Troy Wootton said there had been some suspicion that Franklin was creating and submitting travel vouchers for work trips he did not take, per the affidavit.