
“Intimidation, falsehoods, misguided statements are tearing this community apart. It’s almost like this community is part in parcel to Jimmy Jones and drank the Kool-Aid.”
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Never turning away, the Henrico Sheriff’s Deputies assigned to a ‘mental health watch monitor’ watches inmates expressing thoughts of self-harm. The job requires a lot of concentration, and responsibility, and hours. A look at overtime pay in localities all over Central Virginia through a Freedom of Information Act Request determined a Sheriff’s Deputy in Henrico County made, hands down, the most in overtime last year. “In my research, I noticed that you had a Sheriff’s Deputy First Class Shift making $42,000 in base pay, and then in overtime in one year’s time they made $76,000 in overtime. Does that sound like a lot in overtime to you?” CBS 6 investigative reporter Melissa Hipolit asked Henrico Chief Deputy Alisa Gregory. “Based on the number of vacancies that we’ve had, we’ve been as high as 57 vacancies, and the number of medical and hospital transports we ran an average of 347 last year, no,” Gregory responded.
WTVR
A police oversight board could cost Charlottesville up to $180,000 a year, according to a proposed model of the body. City Council held a joint meeting with the initial Police Civilian Review Board on Wednesday. The CRB presented its vision for an oversight board and a working draft of its bylaws. The CRB presented a board that would be broken into two bodies, one for independent investigations and another for auditing and reviewing CPD data, complaints and policies. The board would meet monthly to review complaints, conduct independent investigations and hold hearings. It also would able to review internal affairs cases and all related files, request additional information and create a public report.
The Daily Progress
Front Royal Board of Supervisors Chairman Dan Murray said during a regular Tuesday meeting that a citizen shoved him in a Front Royal diner over the weekend because he is an elected official. Murray explained on Wednesday that as he exited the restaurant’s bathroom a man approached him, said, “you’re one of them,” and pushed him. If anything similar happens again, Murray said, he will likely call the Sheriff’s Office. He added that “the guy was a nut” and declined to comment any further on the matter. Murray said during the Tuesday meeting that while citizens are upset over the alleged $17 million embezzlement detailed in a lawsuit filed by the Front Royal-Warren County Economic Development Authority, “there’s a lot going on that people are not aware of.” He said that due to the lawsuit, the supervisors “can’t speak” and “that’s just the way it works legally.” He asked for patience as further investigation unfolds. In warning citizens not to succumb rumors, Murray referenced James Jones, a cult leader who in 1978 killed some of his followers and enticed hundreds of others to commit suicide by drinking a poisoned liquid. “Intimidation, falsehoods, misguided statements are tearing this community apart. It’s almost like this community is part in parcel to Jimmy Jones and drank the Kool-Aid,” he said.
The Northern Virginia Daily
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