Lavonia police announce ‘Drive sober or get pulled over’ holiday campaign
Overturned truck and school bus accident Monday morning

CLEVELAND, Ga. — Two motor vehicle accidents, one involving a school bus, disrupted Monday morning traffic in White County.
The Georgia State Patrol is investigating an accident that occurred around 7:30 a.m. on Dec. 8, involving a tractor and trailer on Alternate Highway 75 near the entrance to the Smithgall Woods State Park.
There was no initial word on whether there were any injuries.
About an hour later, a minor school bus accident occurred on Hulsey Road in Cleveland. There were no students on the bus at the time of the accident, and no one was injured, officials said.
Update: GBI releases new details in shooting deaths of two people in Elbert County
ELBERT COUNTY, Ga. — The GBI has released new information about the circumstances surrounding the shooting deaths of a man and woman late last month in Elbert County.
Investigators say 62-year-old Refugio O. Torres was found shot inside a crashed vehicle on Pulliam Mill Road, and 31-year-old Moriah Lane Mills died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound nearby. Both were pronounced dead at the scene.
Wounded man identified shooter
The newly released details outline a rapidly unfolding series of events that began shortly before 4 p.m. on November 29, when Elbert County E911 received a call reporting a man who had been shot near Martin Villa Drive and Pleasant Hill Road. Deputies and EMS arrived to find a seriously wounded man who identified Mills as the shooter before being transported to the hospital.
As deputies searched for Mills, a second 911 call came in reporting a vehicle crash and a woman matching the suspect’s description in a yard on Pulliam Mill Road. When a deputy arrived, he discovered what appeared to be a single-vehicle wreck. As he stepped out to investigate, he saw Mills holding a handgun in a grassy area separated from the roadway. The deputy ordered her to drop the weapon, but investigators say she shot herself.
Inside the wrecked vehicle, deputies found Torres, who was already dead.
Police seek public’s help
Autopsies for both Torres and Mills are being conducted by the GBI Medical Examiner’s Office. The surviving victim from the initial shooting remains hospitalized as the investigation continues.
Anyone with information is asked to contact the GBI Athens office at 706-552-2309, submit tips anonymously at 1-800-597-TIPS (8477), online at the GBI website, or through the See Something, Send Something mobile app. The case will be turned over to the Northern Judicial Circuit for review once the investigation is complete.
Georgia lawmaker charged with unemployment fraud

(Georgia Recorder) — A Georgia state representative is accused of fraudulently collecting $17,811 in unemployment benefits after allegedly applying for a federal program meant to support people who had lost their jobs due to the pandemic, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Monday.
Rep. Sharon Henderson, a Covington Democrat whose district spans a western portion of Newton County, was charged with two counts of theft of government funds and 10 counts of making false statements.
Henderson was scheduled to appear before U.S. Magistrate Judge Justin Anand on Monday afternoon. She did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
The program, which was established by Congress in 2020, provided cash assistance to those experiencing unemployment as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Applicants were required to submit weekly certifications providing the reason they were unemployed and stating that they were actively looking for work.
Prosecutors say Henderson applied for the program during June 2020, when she was a candidate for the Georgia House of Representatives, falsely claiming that she had been an employee of the Henry County School District in 2019 and 2020, and was laid off due to the pandemic.
In reality, authorities say Henderson had only spent five days working for Henry County Schools as a substitute teacher in 2018, and had not worked there since. Additionally, the substitute teaching contract she signed included an acknowledgement that she was not eligible for unemployment benefits.
Henderson allegedly submitted eight certifications in June 2021, after she was sworn in as an elected official.
Henderson was first elected to represent House District 113 in 2020, defeating incumbent Democrat Pam Dickerson during the primary. She was reelected in 2022 and 2024 without Republican opposition and is currently in the middle of her third term.
Franklin County deputies find person dead on roadside
CARNESVILLE, Ga. – The Franklin County Sheriff’s Office has requested assistance from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation after deputies found a person unresponsive along a county roadway Sunday, according to a statement.
Deputies responded yesterday to Kesler Rd., where they discovered an individual lying on the roadside. the release said. Life-saving measures were attempted but were unsuccessful.
The identity of the deceased is being withheld until next of kin has been notified. Investigators said no additional details are being released at this time to protect the integrity of the case, which remains active and ongoing.
“Our office is committed to ensuring a thorough and transparent investigation,” Andrews said in a release. “We appreciate the GBI’s assistance and ask for patience as investigators work to determine the facts.”
The GBI is now leading the inquiry into the circumstance surrounding the death. Officials asked anyone with question to contact the GBI.
Athens-Clarke police deliver 70 abandoned packages after driver quits mid-shift

ATHENS, Ga. – Athens-Clarke County police officers stepped in to “save Christmas” for dozen of local residents after finding more than 70 abandoned packages scattered along a neighborhood sidewalk last week, according to department.
Police say there were dispatched November 29 after a caller reported multiple packages lying on the ground in a residential area. When officers arrived, they discovered parcels addressed to homes across Athens and quickly realized they had all been dropped by a delivery driver.

Officers contacted the delivery company, which police declined to name, and learned the driver had quit mid-shift, leaving the packages where they were. The company told officers it would not send anyone to pick up the parcels and advised police that packages could be discarded or donated because replacements would be issued to customers.
Instead, officers chose a different approach.
Determined to prevent residents from losing their holiday deliveries, ACCPD officers collected the packages, divided them among themselves and spent the night delivering each one.
“We knew that a lot of people worked hard for the packages, and the right thing to do was play delivery services/Santa,” Sgt. Cooper with ACCPD said.
The department said the officers’ actions reflect their commitment to serving the community, even during a busy holiday season and amid the usual demands of their work.
Officers made doorstep deliveries throughout the Midnight’S West patrol zone. ACCPD thanked the community and wished residents and happy holidays.
Firefighters shift from parade to rescue in Royston
ROYSTON, Ga. — Royston firefighters heading home from the Lavonia Christmas parade Sunday afternoon diverted to a structure fire in Hart County, arriving just minutes after the call went out for trapped occupants.
According to the City of Royston Fire Department, around 4 p.m. on Dec. 7, firefighters were alerted to a call about a fire with possible entrapment. The crew was only about two minutes away and went to the scene to assist Hart County firefighters.
When units arrived, they found heavy fire showing from the home and uncertainty about whether anyone remained inside. Firefighters deployed hose lines and made an interior attack. Within minutes, crews brought the fire under control. No occupants were found inside.
Two puppies were rescued from the home and are expected to survive, officials said.
Royston fire officials emphasized that the response was made in a spirit of mutual aid and long-standing cooperation between the neighboring departments.
No injuries were reported.
Red Bird Acres changes rules after damage to popular Christmas light display

CLARKESVILLE, Ga. – Red Bird Acres, one of Habersham County’s most beloved home-based Christmas light displays, has announced new rules for visitors after an incident of damage at their property last weekend.
The display, run by Chris and Christy Jones at their Clarkesville home, draws thousands of visitors each year and has become a local holiday tradition. The family provides the attraction free of charge and has long welcomed guests to walk among the lights, inflatables, and handmade decorations.
However, their recent Facebook post indicated their generosity has come with some challenges.

According to the family, over the weekend people were “running through the
display,” “jumping and sitting on inflatables,” and in some cases “damaging and even cutting lights.
The behavior was serious enough that it made the Jones’ initially question whether to continue the display moving forward.
“We just want everyone to enjoy the Christmas season, and enjoy our property,” Christy Jones told Now Habersham on Monday. “It’s just myself and my husband Chris who run the display, and we can’t keep an eye on everything at all times. We want everyone to have a happy time while they are here.”
In their public post, the family outline several new policies aimed at protecting the display and keeping visitors safe.
- Children must be accompanied by an adult at all times. The family emphasized they are “not a babysitter,” and said guests will be asked to leave if children are left unsupervised or repeatedly break rules.
- No touching or climbing on decorations. Anyone who continues to pull on, jump on, or otherwise damage lights or inflatables after being asked to stop will be removed from the property.
- Cameras are now installed throughout the display. Any vandalism or theft will be reported to law enforcement and backed by video evidence.


“We truly hate that we even have to make a post like this,” the post read. “Most of you are respectful and kind, and you’re the reason we keep doing this.”
Red Bird Acres opened its 2025 display on Thanksgiving night, continuing a tradition that has grown significantly over the past decade. The Jones family said they hope the new rules will ensure the display can remain open for years to come.
“Please remember: this is our family’s home. not an amusement park,” they wrote. “Treat it with respect so we can keep Red Bird Acres Christmas Lights going for years to come.”
The light display from now through Christmas evening. Updated events and hours can be found on their Facebook page.
Braves legend Dale Murphy falls short again in Hall of Fame vote

ATLANTA, Ga. – Dale Murphy, the former Atlanta Braves slugger and two-time National League Most Valuable Player. again fell short of election to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, after a vote by the Contemporary Baseball Era Committee ended without the consensus he needed Sunday night.
Murphy received just six of 16 votes (37.5 percent) well below the 75% threshold required for induction. In the same vote, only Jeff Kent, the former San Francisco Giants second baseman, was selected to the Hall.
Most decorated player of the 1980s
The result marked another setback for one of baseball’s most decorated players of the 1980s. Over an 18-season career, 15 of those coming in Atlanta, Murphy earned back-to-back NL MVP honors in 1982 and 1983, racked up five Gold Gloves, four Silver Slugger awards, seven All-Star game appearances, and hit 398 career home runs.
That said, voters have long pointed to a steep decline in Murphy’s production after the late 1980s, and that decrease has repeatedly weighed on his Hall of Fame candidacy.
Murphy never received more than 23.2 percent on the initial writers’ ballot and fell short on the past era-committee ballots in 2018, 2020, and 2022.
Still, supporters argued that his peak dominance, awards, and defensive excellence and stature as a clean, high-character player made a strong Hall of Fame case.
As the Baseball Hall of Fame finalizes its Class of 2026, Murphy now must continue to wait, as the current vote all but ensures that the doors of Cooperstown remain closed to him, at least for another year.
Brad Raffensperger sues to win more campaign spending power in Georgia governor race

ATLANTA (AP) — Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger is the latest Republican candidate for Georgia governor to attack campaign finance rules, saying they unconstitutionally limit his free speech while allowing Lt. Gov. Burt Jones to raise unlimited contributions.
Safe Affordable Georgia filed suit Monday in federal court in Atlanta asking a judge to rule that the political action committee chaired by Raffensberger can coordinate with his gubernatorial campaign in the same way that Jones’ leadership committee can.
“This filing simply asks the court to ensure fairness so that our committee has the same ability to communicate with voters as others already do,” Raffensperger said in a statement. “Equal access to speech isn’t political or complicated — it’s a foundational American principle that must be upheld.”
A spokesperson for Jones declined to comment, saying the campaign hadn’t yet seen the lawsuit.
Republican Attorney General Chris Carr, whose gubernatorial campaign filed its own unsuccessful lawsuit earlier this year trying to stop Jones from spending from his leadership committee, announced that his office would not defend the law in court, citing the conflict with his previous lawsuit. Instead, the governor’s office will appoint lawyers to defend the law. Carr already had opted out of another lawsuit attacking the law.
“Burt Jones has rigged the system to benefit himself,” said Carr campaign spokesperson Neil Bitting. “That is not just unethical and wrong, it is unconstitutional.”
It’s the latest round of litigation over Georgia’s 2021 leadership committee law. Critics see the law as an incumbent protection racket, helping Gov. Brian Kemp, Jones and other Republicans maintain control of state politics. Party legislative caucuses also control leadership committees.
The committees can raise unlimited funds, can coordinate with candidates and can raise funds during legislative sessions when other fundraising is banned. But candidates can’t establish leadership committees until they win their party’s nomination for governor or lieutenant governor. Instead, they are limited to candidate committees, which can raise a maximum of $8,400 from each donor.
Raffensperger set up an independent committee — Safe Affordable Georgia — that can raise unlimited funds and help other candidates, but not himself. But he says he should be able to use the committee in the same way Jones uses his leadership committee.
Lawyers for Raffensperger argue the current law violates his First Amendment rights to free speech and free association. They’re seeking a temporary order from a judge before a ruling on the whole case.
“Alone among current candidates for governor, the sitting lieutenant governor can solicit and accept unlimited contributions that can support his own campaign. That means that one current candidate for governor has different campaign finance rules that govern him than the other candidates. The Constitution does not allow this.”
Jones, Raffensperger and Kemp are the top Republicans vying to succeed Kemp, who legally can’t run again after two terms, along with numerous Democrats. Republican and Democratic primaries are in May, followed by the general election in November 2026.
Carr’s lawsuit cited a 2022 federal court ruling that a leadership committee for Kemp couldn’t spend money during the Republican primary that year, finding the “unequal campaign finance scheme” violated challenger David Perdue’s First Amendment right to free speech.
But in August, U.S. District Judge Victoria Marie Calvert dismissed the suit, ruling Carr should have challenged the constitutionality of the law. She said it was wrong to sue Jones and his campaign for “doing exactly what Georgia law allows them to do.”
An opinion adopted by the Georgia Ethics Commission on Thursday found that Jones is allowed to loan $10 million to his leadership committee, even though Carr alleged it evaded campaign finance restrictions. The opinion clears Jones to keep spending his family fortune to pursue the Republican nomination. Jones filed documents showing he made loans of $7.5 million and $2.5 million to the WBJ Leadership Committee when he announced his run for governor on July 8.
Like Raffensperger, supporters of Carr have established an independent committee that can’t coordinate with Carr’s campaign.
Doris Ann Johnson
Doris Ann Johnson, age 95, of Demorest, Georgia, passed away on Friday, December 5, 2025.
Mrs. Johnson was born on May 30, 1930, to the late Carl Brown and Estelle Dalton Brown. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her loving husband, Neville Jim Johnson; her son, Larry Gulley; and step-son, Haymon Johnson. Doris was the last surviving member of her immediate family. She was of the Baptist Faith and was a retired seamstress.
Survivors include her stepsons, Grady Johnson, of Toccoa; Jim Johnson, of Clarksville; Joseph Johnson, of Demorest; Wesley Johnson, of Mt. Airy; Louie Johnson, of Toccoa; and numerous step-grandchildren and step-great-grandchildren.
Family Memorial Services will be held 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.
Columbus State University holds graduation ceremonies this week
Columbus State University will celebrate its Fall 2025 graduating class of 1,060 students with four ceremonies on December 11-12 at the Frank G. Lumpkin Jr. Center. The December 12 ceremonies will feature an address by young alumnus Curtis Walker, a 2022 political science graduate and current law student, who will speak on resilience and timing according to a press release from the university.
Of the fall graduating class, more than 80% hail from Georgia, and over 14% are active-duty soldiers and veterans. The festivities will include three college-specific ceremonies throughout the day on Friday, marking the university’s 130th commencement exercises.





