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Jul 22, 2021 | 7:21 PM
Holly Hill, FL – The Holly Hill Police arrested 50-year-old Lawrence Williams, a foster parent, on Tuesday, July 20, on one charge of Sexual Battery on a Person Less than 12 Years of Age and another of Lewd/Lascivious Molestation on a Person Between Ages 12 and 18. Though the warrant was no-bond, Volusia County Judge Wesley Heidt set bond at $85,000, which Williams was able to pay, bonding out about 28 hours after being booked. The Holly Hill Police Department (HHPD) wants the bond revoked saying that one person involved in the foster process did note that Williams was "extremely anxious to foster children and wanted to foster younger white females." An investigation was launched in late May after a tip came into the Florida Department of Children and Families hotline in late May. When the investigation began, there were six foster children living with the suspect and his wife. Records show the couple had been fostering since March 2020 so many others may have come through. HHPD is asking for charges against Williams in connection to at least three other foster children, all young girls. Officials say the children are safe now. Volusia Sheriff Mike Chitwood had this to say about the case on his Facebook page: "It seems like every couple of years, we have to raise hell to get a judge to pull their head out of their ass and apply common sense to a case that presents a threat to our community, and especially our children. Not too long ago it was the case of Mark Fugler, and we had to go all the way to Tallahassee to right that wrong." Chitwood says he knows the State Attorney’s Office "is working diligently on getting a hearing to correct this injustice. But why do our judges allow this to happen in the first place?"
Holly-hillFloridaUnited-statesVolusiaVolusia-countyHolly-hill-police-departmentMark-fuglerMike-chitwoodWesley-heidtLawrence-williamsFlorida-department-of-childrenAttorney-officeJul 21, 2021 | 7:48 PM
Daytona Beach, FL – Following a fact-finding mission organized by a Florida congresswoman, Volusia Sheriff Mike Chitwood and Flagler Sheriff Rick Staly share some of what they saw during their time at the US-Mexico border. Marc Bernier Show · 072121 Sheriff Chitwood And Sheriff Staly A "I know I wanted to see firsthand what was going on and what my folks would be getting into," said Sheriff Chitwood to Marc Bernier during an almost hour long interview featuring both sheriffs. "This was an education that you can’t get on the news, you can’t read about it, you need to see it," said Sheriff Staly. Their trip, organized by Congresswoman Kathryn "Kat" Cammack (R-FL), took them to the border town of McAllen, Texas, which sits on the southern edge of the state around 65 miles from the Gulf of Mexico. According to Sheriff Chitwood, McAllen is "ground zero" for human trafficking and drugs that make their way into the United States, adding that 43 percent of illegal drugs that make it into the country come through McAllen. Sheriff Chitwood said this is the same city where authorities seized over 500 pounds of fentanyl. "That’s enough to kill every Floridian nine times over," said Chitwood. "That’s the potency of what’s coming in." On the topic of illegal immigration, another hot-button issue for the border, both Sheriff Chitwood & Staly described some of the methods used by individuals trying to sneak people across the border. One such method involves distracting US Border Patrol by "flooding areas" with "people seeking asylum." Once the patrol is distracted by these incidents, some individuals, or "getaways/gotaways," manage to make it into the United States from unguarded areas, even though they have most likely been spotted by some type of surveillance. According to Sheriff Staly, around 204 "gotaways" made it over the border on July 13 alone, and around 200,000 throughout this year so far. "Let me tell you why that should alarm you," said Staly. "They’re the MS13 gang members, they’re the drug couriers, they’re the criminals that are going from country to country and committing crimes." For their full interview with Marc Bernier, be sure to visit MarcBernierShow.com. Marc Bernier can be heard live on FM 93.5 and AM 1150 WNDB, Monday through Friday, 7-9 a.m. with Gordon Deal on Daytona’s First News, and 3-6 p.m. on the Marc Bernier Show. You can also find archived interviews and audio on his website, MarcBernierShow.com
United-statesFloridaDaytona-beachVolusiaTexasFloridianMike-chitwoodChitwood-stalyKathryn-kat-cammackMarc-bernierRick-stalyVolusia-sheriffChild Runaways Broke Into A Home, Found An AK-47, And Opened Fire On Police In Florida
Home » Viral: News » Child Runaways Broke Into A Home, Found An AK-47, And Opened Fire On Police In Florida
[Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]
This is a particularly upsetting story.
A 14-year-old girl was shot by police on Tuesday after she and a 12-year-old boy, both runaways from a local group home, opened fire on law enforcement. The two foster children ran from
Florida United Methodist Children’s Home and broke into a house in Volusia County, where they found “an AK-47, a pump shotgun, a handgun, and 200 rounds of ammunition,” according to
MiamiFloridaUnited-statesOrlandoVolusia-countyMike-chitwoodDepartment-of-juvenile-justiceFlorida-united-methodist-childrenVolusia-county-sheriff-mike-chitwoodCentral-floridaJuvenile-justiceUnited-methodistSheriffs from 3 Central Florida counties on fact-finding trip at US-Mexico border © WESH WESH
Sheriffs from three Central Florida counties are with other law enforcement officers on a fact-finding trip to the U.S.-Mexico border organized by Florida Congresswoman Kat Cammack. WESH 2's Claire Metz spoke with Flagler County Sheriff Rick Staly and Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood via Zoom along the Rio Grande.Sign up for our Newsletters
"They're bringing across weapons, they're bringing across drugs, they're smuggling human beings," Sheriff Chitwood said.
Sheriff Mike Chitwood says a three-day trip to Texas and the border has been a migrant crisis crash course, one he felt obligated to take because he foresees his and other agencies being called on to bolster Border Patrol.
Volusia-countyFloridaUnited-statesTexasMexicoFlagler-countyMarion-countyAmericaMexicanKat-cammackMike-chitwoodClaire-metz