Rodney Joel Lee, age 75, of Oakwood, entered rest Saturday, Feb. 19, 2022, at his residence surrounded by his family.
He was born in Sylva, North Carolina to the late Hooper & Beulah Mills Lee. Rodney served his country proudly in the United States Air Force & the United States Marine Corp. He fought in the Vietnam War. He retired as a self-employed truck driver having driven for several different companies. He was of the Baptist faith.
Survivors include daughters, Angie (Brian) Woodring & Donna (Justin) Cash; grandchildren, Brittany (Joshua) Ryals, Jonathan (Abby) Woodring, Ansley (Dakota) Conner, Halee Cash & Wyatt Cash; great-grandchildren, Asher, Ellie Mae & Jon Randall, with another one on the way; brother, James (Karen) Lee; sister-in-law, Joyce Lee; a host of other relatives also survive.
Graveside services will be held at 3:00 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 20, 2022, at the Oakwood Cemetery with Rev. John Kinsey officiating. The family will receive friends from 1:00 p.m. until 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 20, 2022, at the funeral home. Gentleman honored to serve as pallbearers, Brian, Justin, Jonathan, Joshua, Wyatt & Dakota.
Please share online condolences with the family at www.wardsfh.com.
Ward’s Funeral Home is honored to serve the family of Rodney Joel Lee.
40 peer leaders represented their home schools of Cherokee Bluff High School, Flowery Branch High School, and Lanier College and Career Academy for a full day of training around the topic of mental health at Eagle Ranch in Flowery Branch.
Students left with many resources in their tool-belt from three evidence-based entities: QPR, Teen Mental Health First Aid, and Sources of Strength.
Adam Raulerson, Business Development Manager for Laurelwood Behavioral Health, provided QPR training to the students. QPR stands for Question, Persuade and Refer and is a three-step method to help prevent suicide. This evidence-based program assists those trained to recognize the warning signs of suicide, offer hope and save lives.
Hall County Student Services Staff integrated portions of Teen Mental Health First Aid into the time spent at Eagle Ranch. Students left with a better understanding of mental health and when to seek help for themselves or a friend.
In preparation for Mental Health Awareness Month in May, participants also had the opportunity to plan a Sources of Strength campaign for their respective schools centered on Mental Health and Wellness. Sources of Strength is a strength-based, comprehensive wellness program that focuses on suicide prevention while impacting many other issues that face communities.
The Eagle Ranch event is funded by Project Aware of Hall County, a 5-year grant that was awarded to Hall County Schools to increase awareness of mental health issues among school-aged youth. Project Aware provides training for school personnel and other adults who interact with school-aged youth to detect and respond to mental health issues. Additionally, it connects school-aged youth who may have behavioral health issues with the support they need.
Federal prosecutors on Friday called their final witnesses to the stand in the hate crimes trial against the three white men who murdered Ahmaud Arbery — finishing off a week of proceedings that saw hours of sworn testimony heard by a jury of 12 in the Brunswick federal courthouse.
Because those jurors are not allowed to consider anything that they may have seen or heard from the earlier state murder trial — or anywhere else, for that matter, outside the confines of the federal courtroom — much of this past week’s testimony was essentially a retelling of the basic facts of the killing that occurred on Feb. 23, 2020.
But along the way, federal prosecutors also called up people to testify who were not heard from in the state trial — which had been narrowly focused on the murder rather than its motive.
Here are some of those witnesses, with highlights from their testimony:
(Note: the following contains references to disturbing and racist language said in court.)
Amy Vaughan, an FBI intelligence analyst
Vaughan helped the FBI in the bureau’s efforts to search the phones and social media accounts of the three defendants: Travis McMichael; his father, Greg McMichael; and William “Roddie” Bryan, all of whom have pleaded not guilty to charges of violating Arbery’s civil rights, in which prosecutors allege that the men targeted the 25-year-old man because he was Black.
Because Greg McMichael’s phone was encrypted, the FBI wasn’t able to break into it. But as for the other two defendants, Vaughan shared multiple instances in which the men used racial slurs, including the N-word.
In one text message, Travis McMichael used that slur in saying that the reason he enjoyed his defense contractor job so much was that he didn’t have to work with any Black people. He also often referred to what he saw as a need to use weapons against Black people.
Another exchange saw Bryan use the N-word to describe a Black man that his daughter was dating — a relationship that Bryan expressed disapproval of. Vaughan also testified that another anti-Black slur used by Bryan was one that she had never heard before, and so had to look it up.
Derek Thomas, a longtime friend of Travis McMichael
Thomas testified that he would occasionally send what he found to be funny videos on Instagram to Travis McMichael, who he’d known since high school. Two of those videos showed pranks involving Black people, whose actions angered McMichael.
Prosecutor Christopher Perras asked Thomas to read out loud a message that McMichael sent to Thomas in response to one of the videos.
Thomas hesitated: “Am I required by law to read this?” he asked.
Yes, Judge Lisa Godbey Wood replied.
Thomas then asked if he could spell out — rather than say in full — the N-word that was used in the message.
After Wood said that she would allow it, Thomas read the message, in which McMichael wrote that he wanted to “blow that f***ing n****r’s head off.”
Kim Ballesteros, a former neighbor of Greg McMichael
Ballesteros testified that she and her husband used to live across the street from the home of Greg McMichael, with whom they would occasionally have casual conversations within their Satilla Shores neighborhood.
One of those conversations turned to the topic of tenants, as they both rented out residential property.
“He was talking about a tenant that he had,” Ballesteros testified. “She was a large Black woman who did not pay her rent very well.”
McMichael had a nickname for the tenant: “The walrus.”
He went on to tell Ballesteros that he disabled the tenant’s air conditioning during the summer.
“You should have seen how fast her big fat Black a** came with the rent check,” McMichael said, according to Ballesteros.
“It was racist and uncomfortable,” Ballesteros testified. “And I was, quite frankly, disappointed.”
“KR,” a woman who served in the Coast Guard alongside Travis McMichael
(Note: for the sake of this woman’s privacy — as her testimony involved her sexual history — GPB News is using only her initials.)
KR testified that while she and Travis McMichael were stationed at a Coast Guard base in Mississippi, an NBA game came on the TV in the cafeteria. One of the players in the game was a Black man whom KR had previously dated.
She said that once McMichael learned of their relationship, he repeatedly called her a “[N-word]-lover.”
Her voice quivering, KR then testified, “It took me aback a little bit, and I felt disrespected, for lack of a better word.”
———
Because the burden of proof falls on the prosecution, defendants in federal criminal trials are not legally required to call up any witnesses to the stand — and, indeed, attorneys for Travis McMichael and Bryan both declined to do so. Only Greg McMichael’s attorney, AJ Balbo, called up a single witness: a longtime resident of Satilla Shores who does not personally know the defendants.
Closing arguments are scheduled to begin Monday at 9:30 a.m.
This article appears on Now Habersham through a partnership with GPB News
BERGEN, GERMANY - FEBRUARY 12: Humvees of the U.S. Army wait to be unloaded from a rail car at the Bergen Hohne training facility as part of preparations for the Defender 2020 international military exercises on February 12, 2020 near Bergen, Germany. Defender 2020 is a U.S.-led series of international military exercises that will involve 37,000 troops and take place in countries including Germany, Poland, Lithuania and Estonia in the spring of 2020. (Photo by Alexander Koerner/Getty Images)
WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — President Joe Biden said Friday that he expects Russian forces to invade Ukraine within days, attacking the nation’s capital city of Kyiv and its 2.8 million residents.
“We have reason to believe Russian forces are planning and intend to attack Ukraine in the coming week, the coming days. We believe they will target Ukraine’s capital Kyiv,” Biden said.
“We’re calling out Russia’s plans loudly and repeatedly, not because we want a conflict but because we’re doing everything in our power to remove any reason that Russia may give to justify invading Ukraine.”
Biden in remarks from the White House said that all diplomatic options will remain on the table until a further invasion of the country takes place, but after that, the United States and allied nations will impose severe sanctions on Russia.
“If Russia pursues its plans, it will be responsible for a catastrophic and needless war of choice,” Biden said from the Roosevelt Room.
The United States and other countries within the North Atlantic Treaty Organization are prepared to defend “every inch” of their territory, Biden said. That, however, does not include Ukraine.
U.S. soldiers will not be sent to the country if Russia invades, but Biden reasserted his commitment to helping the “Ukrainian people” in other ways, including with financial aid and weapons.
Biden said he doesn’t anticipate the conflict escalating to the use of nuclear weapons, but added the caveat that he cannot read Russian President Vladimir Putin’s mind.
“I don’t think he is remotely contemplating using nuclear weapons,” Biden said. “But I do think he is focused on trying to convince the world that he has the ability to change the dynamics in Europe in a way that he cannot.”
Biden declined to provide evidence for why he believes Russia will invade Ukraine within the next week beyond saying “we have a significant intelligence capability.”
The United States estimates that Russia has between 169,000 and 190,000 personnel outside of Ukraine, a significant uptick from the 100,000 that officials estimated were gathering near Ukraine at the end of January.
That figure includes military troops in Belarus and Crimea, and National Guard and Russian-led forces in eastern Ukraine, according to Michael Carpenter, U.S. ambassador to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.
“This is the most significant military mobilization in Europe since the Second World War,” Carpenter said in a statement Friday.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Friday while attending the Munich Security Conference that he was “deeply concerned” Russia is no longer on a path towards diplomacy.
“Even as we are doing everything we possibly can to make clear that there is a diplomatic path, that the differences have to be resolved through dialogue, through diplomacy, we are deeply concerned that that is not the path Russia is on,” he said.
Blinken is expected to meet with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov next week in Europe unless Russia further invades Ukraine.
Blinken said from Munich that he believes “Putin has been a little bit surprised” by the solidarity among nations within the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the European Union.
“As long as we maintain that solidarity … whichever path President Putin chooses, we’ll be ready to respond,” he said.
For the moment, the Biden administration doesn’t believe that significant sanctions on Russia would have negative repercussions on the United States, such as a cyberattack, though White House Deputy National Security Adviser for Cyber Anne Neuberger couldn’t entirely rule that out.
During the White House daily press briefing, she said that there are currently “no specific or credible cyber threats against the homeland.” But noted that federal agencies were “preparing for that in case of any contingencies.”
“We’ve focused on maximum preparedness across government systems, across private sector critical infrastructure, both in the United States and working closely with our allies,” she said.
Annie Mae McFalls Brown, age 60 of Clarkesville, Georgia went home to be with the Lord on Tuesday, February 16, 2022, due to complications from Covid-19.
Born in Hiawassee, Georgia on October 09, 1961, she was a daughter of the late C.B. & Stella Louise Gibson McFalls. Annie was a graduate of North Georgia Technical College in 1979 with a degree as a Licensed Practical Nurse. She went on to pursue her degree as a Registered Nurse, graduating Regents College, Albany, New York in 2000. Annie was a devout Christian woman who faithful stood beside her husband in his call to minister the gospel of Christ. Her love and legacy will continue on through her loving family.
In addition to her parents, Annie was preceded in death by her brothers, L.C. McFalls, John McFalls, Jeffery McFalls, & Anthony Keith McFalls.
Survivors include her loving husband of 41 years, Rev. Larry Brown, son, Jonathan Brown, & granddaughter, Vita Isabelle Brown all of Clarkesville, GA; sisters, Leila McFalls & Mary Garrett both of Hiawassee, GA; other relatives, & friends.
A homegoing celebration of life service will be held at 11:00 a.m. Saturday, February 26, 2022 at Hillside Memorial Chapel with Rev. Larry Brown officiating.
The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 10:00 a.m. until the service hour on Saturday, February 26, 2022.
It’s been a busy day for public safety in Habersham County with two significant wrecks Friday on GA-365, and later, a residential fire in Alto.
The fire broke out around 3 p.m. on Friday, and units stayed on the scene for hours. Habersham County Emergency Services, Habersham County Sheriff’s Office and the Baldwin Fire Department all responded to the scene on Gilstrap Road, where they found a 1,100 square foot home engulfed in flames.
Due to lack of on-site water supply, crews shuttled in water with the assistance of the Banks County Fire Department to put out the fire.
Habersham County and City of Baldwin firefighters work to contain the blaze. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)
Around 4 p.m., the fire was deemed contained, but there were still hotspots that needed to be extinguished. Two hours after the emergency call came in, the house’s chimney and some framework were all that was left standing. Firefighters stayed on the scene until around 6:30.
No one was injured in the fire. The house was vacant, and it is unknown at this time what caused the fire.
(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)
The state fire marshal is currently investigating the fire and will follow up with the department Monday.
A dump truck collide with a pickup truck hauling a camper at the intersection of GA 365 and Duncan Bridge Road Friday afternoon, Feb. 18. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)
It’s been a messy day on GA 365 in Baldwin where emergency crews responded to two wrecks at the same intersection on Friday.
Just hours after a van rear-ended a Habersham County School bus at the Duncan Bridge Road intersection, Habersham E-911 dispatched emergency crews there again in response to an overturned camper.
(photo by Habersham County Sheriff’s Office)
According to the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office, a dump truck driver was traveling south on GA 365 when he ran the red light. The driver, identified as 46-year-old Charles Grindle of Demorest, told officers he didn’t notice the light changing.
“Based on his speed and weight of the vehicle – and what he believes is break failure – [Grindle] continued to travel into the intersection,” says Habersham County Sheriff’s Public Information Officer Kevin Angell.
The Mack truck ran into the path of a Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck turning west onto Duncan Bridge Road. The driver of the pickup, 38-year-old Brandon McDougal of Cleveland, tried to avoid impact, but the dump truck struck the camper he was hauling. The impact of the crash overturned the camper in the middle of the intersection.
(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)
No one was injured. Traffic was temporarily slowed near the crash site as crews worked to clear the wreckage.
First responders from the City of Baldwin Fire Department, Baldwin Police Department, Habersham County Sheriff’s Office, and Georgia State Patrol responded to the scene. There was “no distracted driving or impairment,” says Angell. “The sheriff’s office is seeing an increasing volume of calls including these two accidents that occurred today within the city of Baldwin that we’re responding to and handling.”
A Habersham deputy issued Grindle three citations for driving too fast for conditions, violating the red light, and braking requirements.
The Georgia State Patrol investigated the early-morning wreck involving the school bus. Troopers cited the at-fault driver in that crash for following too closely.
Randolph “Randy” Lee Franklin, age 54 of Towns County, Georgia, was called home to be with the Lord on Monday, February 14, 2022.
Randy was born on December 03, 1967, in Habersham County, Georgia. He worked at Upper Hightower Creek Vineyards in Towns County where he was the foreman over the vineyards.
Randy was preceded in death by his dad, Arnold Lee Franklin of Mount Airy, GA; his grandparents, Fred & Susie Hamilton of Batesville Community Clarkesville, GA; & Lawrence & Flora May Franklin of Mount Airy, GA.
He is survived by his mother, Lessie Hamilton Franklin of the Batesville Community, Clarkesville, GA; beloved sons, Cody & wife Kayla of Cleveland, GA; Dalton of Towns County, GA; stepdaughters, Katie Morgan & Nicole Normandia of Cleveland, GA; 8 grandchildren; sister, Dawn & husband, Junior Spivey of Hayesville, NC; brother, Steve & his wife, Lisa Franklin of Seneca, SC; Lisa & husband, Danny Frye brother, Shane & his wife, Teresa Franklin all of the Turnerville Community, Clarkesville, GA; Shawn Franklin of the Batesville Community, Clarkesville, GA; 7 nieces, 7 nephews, & a large extended family who loved him very much.
Randy loved playing with all of them and they loved playing with him. He was just a bi kid at heart with them. All of his family loved him and Randy loved all of his family. He never met a stranger and was willing to try to lighten the moods of all of those he met. He loved family gatherings and loved to eat good food. You always knew when he was there and he will truly, truly, truly be missed by his family, friends, and his dog, Smoky. Randy loved gardening, especially his flower garden.
From Randy to all of his beloved family, great & small. I love you all so very much. And now that I am gone, you may grieve for me, but not for long. A day or so will do. Then remember all of the good times we shared and all the love we shared for each other. Cremate my remains when you can and when it is time, when the grief has subsided, and when it is easier for all of my precious family to do. Remember, I love each of you and this is a journey we will all have to make, so please be ready.
Remember my song, Lead Me Home, by Jamie Johnson. Play it when you scatter my ashes and play it sometimes when you want to think of me.
I love you all so very much your son, brother, & dad,
Randy
A celebration of life will be held at 12:30 p.m. Saturday, February 19, 2022 at Sam Pitts Park in Clarkesville, Georgia.
Multiple fire and law enforcement agencies responded to a wreck involving a Habersham County school bus on GA 365 North in Baldwin on Friday morning, Feb. 18. There were no reports of any injuries. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)
Around 7 a.m. Friday morning, Georgia State Patrol and local public safety officials responded to a wreck on GA 365 involving a Habersham County school bus.
According to the GSP’s investigation, a white Ford Econovan driven by George McDonell, 42, of Loganville, was driving northbound on GA-365 when he rear-ended the bus. The wreck occurred at the Duncan Bridge Road intersection in Baldwin. McDonell told GSP he was looking out the window and did not see that a school bus had stopped at the light.
(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)
The bus was full of middle and high school students. According to the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office, it was headed to Level Grove Elementary School for the students to transfer onto other buses.
“Our transportation department leaders did an excellent job of responding to the scene and of caring for our driver and students,” says Habersham County Schools Superintendent Matthew Cooper. “We also had middle and high school principals respond to the scene to care for those students who were on the bus.”
(Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)
There were no major injuries responded to, but GSP says one student did complain of minor injuries. Cooper says that following the incident, parents were contacted and their students were transported to their schools via another bus.
“Incidents like this underscore the importance of drivers using extreme caution when they are on our roadways and in our school zones,” Cooper said. “Everyone should be aware that they are sharing our Habersham roadways with school buses and with many student drivers.”
An HCSO K-9 officer who happened to be passing by the wreck stopped to help, says sheriff’s spokesperson Kevin Angell. E-911 dispatched other deputies to the scene because none of the Baldwin police units were available, he says.
Habersham County Emergency Services and Baldwin Fire Department personnel also responded to the scene.
Officials say there were no obvious indications of driver impairment. Troopers cited McDonnell for following too closely.
For some of Northeast Georgia’s student population, homelessness is a harsh reality they have to face each day. That’s where Ninth District Opportunity comes in to help.
Teachers and administrators gathered at Mountain Education Charter High School (MECHS) Thursday night to hear a presentation on NDO’s mission from Michael Fisher, who serves as NDO’s housing and project planner. Fisher shared resources and knowledge with the group, who often see the realities of homelessness and poverty in teenagers up close in their work. But he also let the MECHS staff know about the challenges the NDO and the people seeking their help are facing.
NDO works with Georgians in need to get access to needed services, such as affordable electricity, heating, water, housing, food, education and other necessities others may take for granted, and the need for those services and resources is higher now than ever before.
A lack of options
With prices for Northeast Georgia homes higher than what many working-class families can afford and a near-complete lack of affordable renting in the area, families are struggling to find anywhere to go. Because of this, Fisher says that for many families, looking at long-term hotel stays is the only option they have.
“That is the only affordable housing option that a lot of people have,” Fisher says. “If you do the math, that’s not affordable, but why did they take it? Because they only have to pay one week at a time, and there are just no other options. They can afford it on a week-by-week basis.”
While the NDO may have been able to connect those families with affordable and public housing in the past, most of those housing opportunities are full now. He says that for some local housing opportunities, waitlists span years.
Fisher says NDO is adapting to this challenge by offering hotel-motel vouchers to help individuals who are experiencing homelessness. They are able to give those individuals a safer place to stay for up to 30 days, and in that time, the NDO works to find housing for them. But it isn’t easy.
Michael Fisher discusses poverty and homelessness with MECHS staff. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)
“There’s just nothing available right now,” Fisher says. “We’re seeing families just on the cusp of collapse everywhere because of this housing [issue], and it’s worse than people can imagine.”
He says many families are just one incident away from losing everything, something he calls “the death spiral.” If a child gets sick and a parent has to miss work to care for them and lose their hours, it’s a balancing act between what bills they can pay, and before they know it, they’ve lost their home.
NDO hopes to get involved before that “death spiral” starts, and that’s the reason Fisher sat down with the group: so they know who they can reach out to when a student is facing economic hardship, before that hardship becomes homelessness.
He says the biggest stereotype surrounding homelessness that he hears is that drug and alcohol addictions are why people are experiencing homelessness.
“It’s not what put people on the street,” Fisher says. “It may be [how] they cope with their horrible environment— and when you understand what it’s like living on the street, you probably would do the same.”
He says living on the street is living in constant survival mode, and that many people who are homeless got there after escaping domestic abuse, losing their spouse or family members, job loss, disability and financial crisis.
“I think we have to understand that these are not bad people that are just making bad choices,” Fisher says.
He also says that the stereotype that those individuals who are homeless are lazy is false. He says of the individuals experiencing homelessness that he works with who are in shelters, 70 percent work full-time. For those on the streets or in camps, he says 30-40 percent work full time.
“The reason more don’t work is because most of them have lost their ID in some capacity,” Fisher says. “That’s one of the biggest issues that a lot of the homeless have because they’re so transitory. Raids had happened in the camp with the police or bad people that come in, or they just have to leave, or rain comes through and destroys their identification.”
NDO offers an ID program to help those individuals get their identification to have the ability to work.
How does it end?
Right now, Fisher says there isn’t a clear answer on how to make sure NDO can continue to find resources for people who need somewhere to live, or help people experiencing homelessness get out of their current situation. With a lack of affordable housing and more people needing somewhere to go than ever, the situation is frustrating and there isn’t an end date to the struggles they’re facing.
But Fisher says there’s a place where a change can start, and that’s in the community. He says that for there to be solutions to end homelessness, the community has to rally together to make homelessness an issue they want to be solved.
“People don’t want to accept and understand that we have real issues,” Fisher says. “This is a crisis. This is not something that’s going to go away. It’s not going to solve itself.”
The NDO’s StreetExit program helps people experiencing homelessness find places to stay, but with a shortage of affordable housing and public housing completely full, StreetExit is doing what they can do keep these individuals safe in their current situations. (StreetExit North Georgia/Michael Fisher)
He says when the community begins to demand change, that’s when it begins. In Gainesville, where homelessness and poverty became hot topics in the city’s mayoral race, the city is now working with NDO to improve programs and infrastructure to support the city’s homeless population. While Hall County is beginning to see some of the change he hopes for, they still have a long way to go, but he hopes other counties will follow in their footsteps.
“Hall County’s coming around, White County is going be a minute,” he says. “However, there’s hope in time.”
If community members are looking for other ways to help the NDO’s mission to support people experiencing homelessness, they can make financial donations, volunteer or donate needed items, like clothes, food, blankets, tents and candles to the NDO at their Hall County, Habersham County or Stephens County offices.
If you’d like to learn more about the NDO’s program to help individuals experiencing homelessness, check out their Facebook page.
Lumpkin County Sheriff Stacy Jarrard and armed robbery victim Brianna Ray Weaver announce ask for the community's help to find the man who held Weaver and a co-worker at gunpoint. A $10,000 reward is being offered for information leading to an arrest and conviction. (LCSO Facebook)
A $10,000 reward is now being offered for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the man who robbed a North Georgia gold mine shop at gunpoint.
According to the Lumpkin County Sheriff’s Office, the suspect entered the Crisson Gold Mine store on Morrison Parkway just before 4:30 p.m. on February 3 and pulled a gun on two employees. He threatened to harm them if they called police. The suspect got away with an undisclosed amount of valuables including cash, jewelry, and gold nuggets.
“We do have some leads,” says Lumpkin County Sheriff Stacy Jarrard but investigators are looking for more information. Jarrard posted a video to the sheriff’s office Facebook page this week announcing the reward and asking anyone with information to please come forward.
“We have some people who have donated $10,000 for the arrest and conviction,” he says. “Call me anytime day or night and give us any information that might not seem like much to you but it might mean a lot to us.”
‘A very dangerous person’
The sheriff appeared in the video along with Brianna Ray Weaver, daughter of the Crisson Gold Mine owners and one of the workers who was robbed.
“If someone can point a gun at her, they’re a very dangerous person and we need to get that person help,” the sheriff says. “So, call us because we need to get ’emoff the streets because they will hurt someone if we do not get ’em in custody soon.”
Weaver added, “We’d appreciate any information that you can give to the sheriff’s department. I’d hate for this to happen to anyone else.”
Surveillance cameras captured images of the suspect. (LCSO)
He was wearing a black Cincinnati Bengals jacket. (LCSO)
(LCSO)
Surveillance video captured images of the suspect. Officials describe him as a white male, 5’7″ to 5’10” tall, weighing approximately 225 pounds. He was wearing a black Cincinnati Bengals jacket, ball cap, black mask, light-colored blue jeans, and black boots and was carrying a black duffel bag.
Anyone with information about this crime should contact the Lumpkin County Sheriff’s Office at 706-482-2622 or Sheriff Stacy Jarrard directly at 706-300-6648.
The Honorable Robert Bryan Struble, Sr. age 90, of Toccoa, passed away Friday, February 18, 2022.
Funeral services will be held Tuesday, February 22nd at 12:00 P.M. at St. Matthias Episcopal Church with The Reverend Scott Harding officiating. Interment will follow at Stephens Memorial Gardens.