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Queen Elizabeth II lies in state as crowds pay respects

The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II rests in Westminster Hall at the Palace of Westminster in London, Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2022. (Dan Kitwood/Pool via AP)

LONDON (AP) — The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II left Buckingham Palace for the last time Wednesday, borne on a horse-drawn carriage and saluted by cannons and the tolling of Big Ben, in a solemn procession through the flag-draped, crowd-lined streets of London to Westminster Hall. There, Britain’s longest-serving monarch will lie in state for the world to mourn.

Her son, King Charles III, and his siblings and sons marched behind the coffin, which was topped by a wreath of white roses and her crown resting on a purple velvet pillow.

The military procession from the palace underscored Elizabeth’s seven decades as head of state as the national mourning process shifted to the grand boulevards and historic landmarks of the U.K. capital.

Crowds shuffled past her coffin in the center of 900-year-old Westminster Hall well into the night. People flowed in two lines, with hundreds of thousands expected to pay their respects before her state funeral Monday.

They moved silently in a steady pace down the steps of the hall under a great stained glass window, then past the coffin that was covered with the Royal Standard and had been placed on a raised platform known as a catafalque by eight pallbearers.

There were couples and parents with children, veterans with medals clinking on navy blue blazers, lawmakers and members of the House of Lords. Some wore black or suits and ties, others jeans and sneakers, and all had waited hours to stand in front of the coffin for a few moments

Many bowed or curtseyed and some were in tears.

Thousands who had waited for the procession for hours along The Mall outside the palace and other locations along the route held up phones and cameras, and some wiped away tears, as the casket rolled by. Applause broke out as it passed through Horse Guards Parade. Thousands more in nearby Hyde Park watched on large screens.

The coffin was topped with the Imperial State Crown — encrusted with almost 3,000 diamonds — and a bouquet of flowers and plants, including pine from the Balmoral Estate, where Elizabeth died on Sept. 8 at the age of 96.

Two officers and 32 troops from the 1st Battalion Grenadier Guards in red uniforms and bearskin hats walked on either side of the gun carriage. The 38-minute procession ended at Westminster Hall, where Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby led a service attended by Charles and other royals.

“Let not your heart be troubled: ye believe in God, believe also in me. In my Father’s house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you,” Welby read from the Book of John.

After a short service, the captain of The Queen’s Company 1st Battalion Grenadier Guards, assisted by a senior sergeant, laid the royal standard of the regiment on the steps of the catafalque.

Four officers from the Household Cavalry -– two from the Life Guards and two from the Blues Royals -– began the vigil, taking their places at each corner and bowing their heads.

Thousands had queued up along the banks of the River Thames, waiting to enter the hall and pay their respects to the only monarch most Britons have ever known after her 70 years on the throne.

Esther Ravenor, a Kenyan who lives in the U.K. said she was humbled as she watched the procession.

“I love the queen, I love the royal family, and you know, I had to be here,” she said. “She is a true role model. She loved us all, all of us. Especially someone like me, a migrant woman coming to the U.K. 30 years ago, I was allowed to be here and to be free and safe, so I really honor her. She was a big part of my life.”

Maj. Gen. Christopher Ghika, of the Household division, who organized the ceremonial aspects of the queen’s funeral, said it was “our last opportunity to do our duty for the queen, and it’s our first opportunity to do it for the king, and that makes us all very proud.”

Troops involved in the procession had been preparing since the queen died. So had the horses of the King’s Troop Royal Horse Artillery.

Sgt. Tom Jenks said the horses were specially trained, including how to handle weeping mourners, as well as flowers and flags being tossed in front of the procession.

Heathrow Airport temporarily halted flights, saying it would “ensure silence over central London as the ceremonial procession moves from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Hall.”

President Joe Biden spoke Wednesday with Charles to offer his condolences, the White House said.

Biden recalled “the Queen’s kindness and hospitality” she hosted them and the first lady at Windsor Castle in June, the statement said. “He also conveyed the great admiration of the American people for the Queen, whose dignity and constancy deepened the enduring friendship and special relationship between the United States and the United Kingdom.”

Crowds have lined the route of the queen’s coffin whenever it has been moved in its long journey from Scotland to London.

On Tuesday night, thousands braved a typical London drizzle as the hearse, with interior lights illuminating the casket, drove slowly from an air base to Buckingham Palace.

Earlier, in Edinburgh, about 33,000 people filed silently past her coffin in 24 hours at St. Giles’ Cathedral.

The line of people snaking along the banks of the River Thames to enter Westminster Hall, the oldest building in Parliament, was nearly 3 miles long in the afternoon, according to a government tracker.

The hall is where Guy Fawkes and Charles I were tried, where kings and queens hosted magnificent medieval banquets, and where ceremonial addresses were presented to Queen Elizabeth II during her silver, golden and diamond jubilees.

Chris Bond, from Truro in southwest England, was among those waiting to see the queen’s coffin. He also attended the lying in state of the queen’s mother in 2002.

“Obviously, it’s quite difficult queuing all day long, but when you walk through those doors into Westminster Hall, that marvelous, historic building, there was a great sense of hush and one was told you take as much time as you like, and it’s just amazing,” he said.

“We know the queen was a good age and she served the country a long time, but we hoped this day would never come,” he added.

Chris Imafidon, secured the sixth place in the queue.

“I have 1,001 emotions when I see her,” he said. “I want to say, God, she was an angel, because she touched many good people and did so many good things.”

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Associated Press writer Sylvia Hui contributed.

WCHS Mountain Bike Team participates in first event of the season

The White County High School Mountain Warrior Bike Team has been practicing since mid-July and participated in its first event over the weekend.

Team Coach Jeff DeFoor said, as youth mountain biking continues to grow in popularity each year, the Georgia Cycling Association had to adapt to accommodate the 1,000 athletes participating this season. The GCA split the state into an East and West Conference.

Defoor said White County will participate in the East Conference and will have four conference races. Bikers who qualify will compete in the Peach State Championship on October 30th.

The White County team participated in their first race on Saturday in Milledgeville at Bartram Forest. Coach Defoor said White County had 20 participants, of which 11 placed in the top 10 of their category. The team had also had 6 podium finishers. White County’s Chance Miller finished 5th in 7th-grade boys. Anna Kate DeFoor finished 1st in freshman girls.

The Yonah Composite team had a great day, with Elizabeth Himstedt finishing 2nd in Freshman girls, Brianna LaRue finishing 4th and Caitlin LaRue finishing 2nd in JV1 girls. Shannon Himstedt finishing 3rd in Varsity Boys. Yonah also took first place for the Division II team.

The team’s next race is scheduled for Sunday, September 25th at Allatoona Creek Park in Cobb County.

HCHS student-athletes recognized for academic performance

Pictured from left to right: Academic Booster Club President Sylvia Hotard, HCHS Principal Jonathan Stribling, senior Bailey Barfield, Athletic Director Geep Cunningham, senior Emma Forester, Head Coach Karlyn Thompson, junior Charli Barbour, Assistant Coach Adam Banks, and Assistant Coach Ansley Patrum.

Raider varsity softball players who have earned an Academic Letter were presented academic helmet decals by the Academic Booster Club during a pre-game ceremony to recognize their outstanding performance in the classroom. (See photo above.)

Front Row (L to R): Head Coach Benji Harrison, Jonah Wilson, Blandon Grizzle, Grayson Means, Carson Parker, Hayden Gailey, Canon Wilbanks. Back Row (L to R): Jarred White, Cooper Smith, Caleb Blackburn, Brad Chosewood, Chase Colbert, Slade Dover, Dayden Roland, Christian Remillard, Keller Greene, HCHS Principal Jonathan Stribling, Academic Booster Club President Sylvia Hotard.

Raider varsity football players who have earned an Academic Letter were presented helmet decals by the Academic Booster Club during a pre-game recognition to highlight their outstanding performance in the classroom.

Marjorie Carolyn Martin

Marjorie Carolyn Martin, age 74, of Habersham County, Georgia passed away on Saturday, September 3, 2022.

Ms. Martin was born on May 14, 1948, in Alto, Georgia to the late Floyd and Daisy Smith Hunnicutt. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her daughter, Wendy Baker; and all of her siblings. Ms. Martin was the last surviving member of her immediate family. She was a member of New Vision Worship Center. She was known to her grandchildren and many others as “Nanny”.

Survivors include her daughter and son-in-law, Sherry and William Lee, of Toccoa; son, Randall Martin, of Martin; grandchildren, Tashia Roberts, Robert Lee, BJ Baker, Michael Baker, Jeff Martin, Harley Martin, Wyatt Martin, Hannah Martin; great-grandchildren, Roxy Roberts, Kira Roberts, and Ben Martin.

Memorial Services will be announced at a later date.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, North Chapel at 245 Central Avenue, Demorest, Georgia 30535. Telephone: 706-778-1700.

Harry K. Elam

Harry K. Elam, age 80, of Demorest, Georgia formerly of Snellville, Georgia passed away on Tuesday, August 30, 2022.

Mr. Elam will be buried at Melwood Cemetery in Stone Mountain, Georgia.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, North Chapel at 245 Central Avenue, Demorest, Georgia 30535. Telephone: 706-778-1700.

Cathy B. Crowe

Cathy B. Crowe, age 71, of Mt. Airy, Georgia passed away on Monday, September 12, 2022.

Mrs. Crowe was born on June 20, 1951, in Habersham County, Georgia to the late Walter and Peggy Lynch Bohannon. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her daughter, Tracy Crowe; She was retired from Fieldale Farms with over 35 years of loyal and dedicated service. Mrs. Crowe was a member of Welcome Home Baptist Church. Mrs. Crowe was a loving and dedicated wife, mother, grandmother and great-grandmother. Cathy was known to her grandchildren as “Granny”.

Survivors include her loving husband of 37 years, Harold F. Crowe, of Mt. Airy; sons and daughters-in-law, Glenn and Lynda Farmer, of Toccoa; Perry and Missy Farmer, of Toccoa; step-daughter, Beverly Crowe, of Clarkesville; grandchildren, Nickey Williams and Matt; CJ Farmer, Triston Farmer, Karrie Arellano; Kristy Sellier; great-grandchildren, Lane Tumlin, Cole Williams, Meadow Sellier, Kali Sellier, Steven Sellier; sisters, Sandra Moody, of Alto; Cemeal King and Jimmy, of Alto; brother, Dwayne Bohannon, of Demorest;

Funeral Services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Friday, September 16, 2022, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel with Rev. Raymond Payne officiating. Interment will follow in the Welcome Home Baptist Church Cemetery.

The family will receive friends from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., Thursday, September 15, 2022, at the funeral home prior to the service.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, South Chapel at 1370 Industrial Boulevard, Baldwin, Georgia 30511. Telephone: 706-778-7123.

Elizabeth V. Trupp

Elizabeth V. Trupp, age 94, of Cornelia, Georgia, passed away on July 25, 2022. She was born August 16, 1927, to Mr. and Mrs. Shapley in London, England.

Elizabeth remained true to her heritage being known as a great lady with charm and dignity. She was greatly loved by her late husband of forty years, Willis (Bill) Trupp. She was the mother of three children from a former marriage. Her eldest son, Chad Conklin, lost his life at age 24.

Elizabeth is survived by her daughter and son-in-law, Deborah and Bill Busic, son, David Conklin, step-daughters: Marylu Smith of Cleveland, Georgia, and Bonnie Fox of Lincoln, Nebraska, as well as ten grandchildren, thirty-two great-grandchildren, and fourteen great-great-grandchildren.

Elizabeth’s family will gather privately for a celebration of her life.

Her ashes are placed at Yonah Memorial Gardens Mausoleum, Demorest, Georgia.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, North Chapel, at Demorest, Georgia. Telephone: (706) 778-1700.

Wayne Andrew McWhinney

Wayne Andrew McWhinney, age 89 of Clarkesville, Georgia passed away on Thursday, September 01, 2022.

Born in Chicago, Illinois on March 23, 1933, he was a son of the late William & Anna Thompson McWhinney. Wayne served his country proudly in the United States Army during the Korean Conflict. He was an educator starting his career in the Chicago area for 5 years and moved to Florida where he spent the remaining 30 years of his career with the Broward County School System.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his brother & sister-in-law, William & Audrey McWhinney.

Survivors include his loving wife of 61 years, Arline Mateyak McWhinney of Clarkesville, GA; sons, William “Bill” McWhinney of Port St. Lucie, FL; Phillip McWhinney of John’s Creek, GA; grandchildren, Sean McWhinney, James McWhinney, Kylie Quinn, & Dana Iarriccio; several nieces, nephews, cousins, & friends.

Wayne’s wishes were to be cremated and memorial services will be held at a later time.

An online guest registry is available for the McWhinney family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com

Arrangements are in the care of Hillside Memorial Chapel, Clarkesville, Georgia. (706) 754-6256

‘Reckless conduct’: Cornelia police release video of shooting in bank parking lot

This is the moment Mary Sheriff-Welborn fires a third shot at a pickup truck from the parking lot of United Community Bank in Cornelia on Sept. 3, 2022. (image from video provided by Cornelia Police Dept.)

Cornelia’s police chief is standing by his department’s decision to charge a woman with reckless conduct after she opened fire on a vehicle in a bank parking lot.

Video evidence

Video released Monday by the Cornelia Police Department shows the woman, Mary Leigh Sheriff-Welborn, shooting at the pickup as it drives away from United Community Bank on Level Grove Road. Moments earlier, police say the driver, Sterling Strength, reportedly brandished a firearm when Sheriff-Welborn demanded he get out of her husband’s stolen pickup. Immediately after that confrontation, Sheriff-Welborn returned to her car, got her gun and discharged three rounds from a Taurus 9mm handgun, police say.

A bank teller captured the incident on cell phone. The video starts after the first gunshot. It shows a person running from the parked truck. The silver pick-up then makes a sharp right turn and quickly exits the parking lot as Sheriff-Welborn comes into view carrying a handgun. She takes aim from approximately 43 yards away and fires in the direction of the fleeing pickup. Police say at that point, the truck was at a standstill because a vehicle in front of it was attempting to turn. When Strength turns right onto Level Grove Road, Sheriff-Welborn takes another shot from approximately 56 yards away.

Strength ditched the truck about a mile away from the bank. When police recovered the pickup, it had a flat right front tire but Cornelia Police Chief Jonathan Roberts says it was not blown out by a bullet. He says the only bullet to hit the truck was the one fired at close range inside the parking lot and embedded in the front driver-side wheel. After an extensive search, officers were unable to locate the other two bullets.

No one was injured in the shooting. Afterward, Sheriff-Welborn defended her actions on social media saying she shot out the tire so “they couldn’t get far.” She said she “wasn’t trying to kill anyone.” Some praised her for defending herself and her property; others expressed alarm over the public threat that she posed.

Reckless conduct

After reviewing evidence and interviewing witnesses, including Sheriff-Welborn, Cornelia police took out an arrest warrant against her on September 8. The warrant accuses her of consciously disregarding a “substantial” and “unjustifiable risk” that could have caused possible harm and endangered the public’s safety.

Authorities arrested and booked Sheriff-Welborn at the Habersham County Detention Center on September 9. She was released on her own recognizance the same day. Cornelia police suffered some backlash online from those who disagreed with her arrest. Chief Roberts expressed his support for the Second Amendment and says he understands why Sheriff-Welborn confronted Strength. Still, he says the best thing for her to have done was call 911. He says the charge against her is warranted.

“After reviewing witness statements and video of the incident, I agree with Mary Welborn’s use of her personal defense firearm when Sterling Strength pointed a gun at her, placing her in fear of her life. However, when Sterling Strength fled the area, Mary Welborn was no longer in a position of self-defense,” he says.

As she shot at the truck, Sheriff-Welborn fired in the direction of a shopping center parking lot and a slightly wooded area with an apartment complex behind it.

Citing Georgia law governing the decision to charge her, Chief Roberts says although the law says you can use force to defend yourself from death or great bodily harm, “that does not negate the fact that her actions of shooting a moving vehicle in a high traffic and populated area was reckless. Ownership and use of a firearm comes with the responsibility of using it properly, safely, and appropriately.”

Strength was on the run for a day before Banks County deputies found and arrested him on weapons violations. Cornelia police have also charged him with additional felonies including possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony.

Body found in Habersham County is that of missing Athens woman

Habersham County Deputy Coroner Ken Franklin talks with Debbie Collier's family members at the scene where her body was found near Tallulah Falls on September 11, 2022. Collier's husband, Steven, seen here holding an umbrella, was among those at the scene. (nowhabersham.com)

Authorities have confirmed that the body found over the weekend in Habersham County is that of Debbie Collier. Family members reported the 59-year-old Athens woman missing on Saturday evening, September 10. Her body was found less than 24 hours later in the woods off of GA 15/US 441 just south of the main entrance to the Victory Home addiction recovery center in Tallulah Falls.

Investigators remove the remains of a woman found dead in the woods in northern Habersham County on Sept. 11, 2022. She has since been identified as Debbie Collier, 59, of Athens. (nowhabersham.com)

Local authorities searched the woods after a radio satellite service tipped them off that a van Collier had rented was in the area. The black Chrysler Pacifica was found parked on the side of the highway within plain sight of passing cars. In the adjoining woods, a K9 unit located a red tote bag and partially-burned blue tarp.

“Further search resulted in locating the body of a female subject down an embankment close to where the bag and tarp were located,” says HCSO Col. Murray Kogod.

The Habersham County Sheriff’s Office Criminal Investigations Division, coroner’s office, and State Fire Marshal’s Office were notified of the discovery and responded to the scene. Investigators also notified Collier’s family. Several family members, including her husband, stood nearby as authorities removed her remains from the scene.

Authorities have still not given any indication as to how or when Collier died, but the missing person report filed by her daughter recounts an ominous exchange.

A SiriusXM representative notified authorities as to the location of Collier’s rented van. Patrol deputies and a K9 unit found her body in the adjacent woods. (nowhabersham.com)

According to Athens-Clarke County Police, Amanda Bearden told officers she received a $2,385 Venmo payment from her mother Saturday afternoon. It came with a message, “they are not going to let me go love you.” Bearden told police the message scared and worried her. She tried calling her mom but could not reach her.

Steven Collier told police he last saw his wife around 9 p.m. on September 9 as he was going to bed. When he left for work Saturday morning, he said her vehicle was still in the driveway.

They two told police Collier took her driver’s license and debit card with her but nothing else. They said it was “unusual” for her to go off like this and she had not done anything like it before.

The GBI medical examiner will conduct an autopsy to determine the exact cause and manner of death. Meanwhile, the sheriff’s office continues its investigation.

 

GBI identifies man killed in officer-involved shooting in Mt. Airy

A Habersham County deputy responding to a 911 call in Mt. Airy shot and killed a man who met him at the door holding a fake gun, officials say. The GBI identified the man as 39-year-old Anthony Maurice Tollison.

Preliminary information indicates that the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office responded to the 911 call at Tollison’s home on Cross Street at 8:43 p.m on September 12. The caller said someone at the home had a gun, then the call was disconnected.

“The responding deputies were not immediately able to contact anyone when they arrived at the home. After continued efforts, the door opened, and deputies were confronted by a man with a weapon and deputies shot the man,” says GBI spokesperson Natalie Ammons.

No deputies were injured in the incident.

According to Habersham County Sheriff Joey Terrell, only one deputy was involved in the shooting. He did not release his name. The deputy is now on paid administrative.

Tollison’s family tells Now Habersham they are struggling to comprehend what has happened.

“We’re not laying blame on the police officers. We’re not saying they weren’t doing their job. It was 9 o’clock, it was dark, you can’t always tell a BB gun from a real gun, but there will always be the question, ‘Could you have not identified it as a BB gun?'” asks Tollison’s nephew Rusty Lynn.

Lynn and his wife Juliana live with their son in northwest Georgia. He says Tollison messaged them Monday night before he was killed.

“He had been through some things recently, but we didn’t see this coming honestly,” says Lynn. “He’s been down and out but he’s never done anything to harm himself or anyone else.”

According to his nephew, Tollison had been dealing with health issues that had kept him out of work. He was at home alone when he was shot.

Ammons says deputies administered CPR and rendered aid until medics arrived. Tollison died at the scene from his injuries. An autopsy will be performed at the GBI Medical Examiner’s Office.

The GBI is conducting an independent investigation into the shooting. Once it’s complete it will be turned over to the Mountain Judicial Circuit District Attorney for review.

As they wait for more answers and mourn the loss of the man Lynn calls his favorite uncle, they’re mindful of those on the other side.

“No officer goes to work and thinks they’re going to take somebody’s life. We’re keeping that in mind,” he says. “I can understand what the law enforcement officers are feeling right now because they shot a potentially unarmed man. What if it was his wallet? What if it was his keys? Did they not think before they shot? But, from the other perspective, when you’re life’s in danger there’s a split second when you can ask yourself those questions before you have to take action.”

“We’re not bashing the police. We’re just trying to figure out if could there have been another option.”

This is the 87th officer-involved shooting the GBI has been requested to investigate in 2022.

 

Baldwin passes tax increase on 4-1 vote

Baldwin taxpayers will pay hundreds more in property taxes this year after the Baldwin City Council voted to raise the millage rate. Council members Stephanie Almagno, Theron Ayers, Alice Venter, and Maarten Venter voted for the increase. Councilman Larry Lewallen was the only one to vote against it.

The vote came on the heels of the council’s third and final public hearing on the rate hike. City Clerk Emily Woodmaster read aloud a letter from a couple in Lake Ridge Trail who were opposed.

Nancy and Ted Lehman addressed their comments to the council and spoke of how their taxes would nearly double if the rate was approved (which it was).

“A 90% increase in city tax in one year is excessive. Yes, we like having 24- hour police protection. We like having the fire department with the outstanding ISO rating that Baldwin has. We would very much like to have Animal Control – one of our most important services in our neighborhood which no longer exists. We know all of these things take money and that costs have risen, but costs have not doubled. We strongly encourage the city to re-evaluate the millage rate increase. The city budget should not have doubled in one year and neither should the real estate tax.”

The Lehman’s were among a handful of residents who spoke out against the tax increase over the course of the hearings. After the vote was taken, Mayor Joe Elam announced, “We have adopted our millage rate which means we have solidified our budget for this next fiscal year.”

Following that pronouncement, Elam somewhat distanced himself calling it “one of the most difficult decisions” made in all his years on the council.

“I am going to say I have not voted on this. That does not mean that I do not support this. In my position as Mayor, I was not given the opportunity to either vote or not vote for this. I want to thank the council. I want to thank the staff for the incredible amount of effort they put into this millage and budget. I want to also say that there are substantial opportunities on the horizon. That if we are blessed enough, hopefully, the time will come when we can readjust this millage rate.”

Elam vowed to “hold our city accountable to prove that this increase in service will play out in our daily lives.”

Almagno, who is up for re-election next year, says by voting on the tax increase she raised her own taxes $90 a month.

“My taxes went up almost $400 a year. What that represents though is $90 a month and for $90 a month total……I am getting 24-hour fire, I am getting police, I know the city has legal counsel, and I know we have IT, I know we have excellent staff. So, while my taxes went up, I feel for $90 a month – the streets, can’t forget streets – I feel like I’m getting excellent service and appreciate the folks that work for the city, for me, for all of the residents.”

Councilman Maarten Venter said this would likely be the last time he votes for a millage rate hike.

“My goal is to increase investment in Baldwin as far as the commercial side is concerned, so, we’ll be able to start rolling this back.”