vimarsana.com

Page 10 - ஹென்றி கவுண்டி ஷெரிப் அலுவலகம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Two charged for shooting 19-year-old in the head

Two charged for shooting 19-year-old in the head
chathamstartribune.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from chathamstartribune.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

McDowell pleads guilty to murder of pregnant woman

June 11, 2021 HENRY COUNTY, Va. – A Henry County man will be sentenced in September for the murder of a pregnant woman. Thomas Christopher McDowell pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and two firearms-related charges in the February 2020 death of Krystal McReynolds of Bassett. Warrants show that McReynolds identified McDowell as the shooter before she died. The 34-year-old was taken to Sovah Health in Martinsville and transferred to Carilion Roanoke Memorial Hospital, where she later died.  McReynolds had been shot in the face with the bullet lodging in her neck. According to the Henry County Sheriff’s Office, McReynolds was four to five months pregnant but lost the unborn child.

Henry County man pleads guilty to killing pregnant woman by shooting her in the face

Henry County Sheriff s Office has to turn loose a K-9 dog because of changing marijuana laws

What does Virginia’s new pot law mean for employers? Beginning July 1 it will be legal in Virginia for an adult to possess up to an ounce of marijuana, and that change in the law is forcing K-9 police dogs across the state into early retirement. Drug dogs have been trained to alert their handlers in the same manner on multiple drugs, making it impossible to know whether it’s marijuana or some still illegal narcotic being sniffed out. And dogs have no idea if the amount of marijuana they might detect would be within the legal limit. Henry County Sheriff’s Office K-9 Kilo is being forced to retire because of changing marijuana laws in Virginia. Kilo (left) and K-9 Deputy Andrew Kinney.

In Virginia, K-9s being turned loose because of changing marijuana laws

What does Virginia’s new pot law mean for employers? Beginning July 1 it will be legal in Virginia for an adult to possess up to an ounce of marijuana, and that change in the law is forcing K-9 police dogs across the state into early retirement. Drug dogs have been trained to alert their handlers in the same manner on multiple drugs, making it impossible to know whether it’s marijuana or some still illegal narcotic being sniffed out. And dogs have no idea if the amount of marijuana they might detect would be within the legal limit. Henry County Sheriff’s Office K-9 Kilo is being forced to retire because of changing marijuana laws in Virginia. Kilo (left) and K-9 Deputy Andrew Kinney.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.