February 26, 2021
Two state senators want a select committee formed to investigate “serious damaging allegations” of wrongdoing by the Virginia Parole Board following a revelation this week of new documents related to how the board handled the release of a man who killed a Richmond police officer in 1979. WTVR-TV in Richmond reported Tuesday on the previously unreleased records from the Office of the State Inspector General, the watchdog agency that found last year that the parole board and its former chairwoman violated state law and board policies in granting release to Vincent Martin. The Richmond Times-Dispatch on Thursday obtained a copy of those records in the form of an inspector general report. The new documents, which are an extension by seven pages of the earlier six-page report released to Republican state legislators in August and then to the news media, appear to be a draft and include additional allegations and an expanded narrative.
Richmond Times-Dispatch
VPM
The Suffolk School Board has appointed former mayor Linda Johnson to fill the Sleepy Hole Borough seat on an interim basis. The vacancy had come after David Mitnick stepped down for health reasons at the board’s Jan. 14 meeting. Six people applied for the seat. Besides Johnson, Jason Fawcett, Christopher Old, Trisha James, Ebony Wright and Carly Bosco sought the appointment. Fawcett, the son of Councilman Roger Fawcett, said he did not approve of the selection process and said he would seek legal counsel on the issue. He also vowed to run in the special election. The board held a pair of special meetings on Feb. 18 and Feb. 22 to interview candidates in closed session — three at each meeting. While Fawcett and two other candidates interviewed in person in front of the board at the College and Career Academy at Pruden Feb. 18, the other three interviewed remotely Feb. 22. Fawcett said that created an unfair playing field for the two sets of candidates.
Suffolk News-Herald
Angela Hinman “Angel” Taylor, the former Hallwood town clerk who was charged with 65 felony counts of embezzlement, pleaded guilty to 12 felony charges in Accomack circuit court Thursday in a plea agreement with the commonwealth. The crimes occurred between Aug. 31, 2011, and Sept. 12, 2017. During the course of a state police investigation, a Virginia State Police special agent identified 65 instances when Taylor, 48, of Hall Street in Hallwood, committed felony embezzlement by writing checks to herself and paying her personal electric bill with town funds. There were also two misdemeanor charges. Because all the town’s financial records were lost when Taylor’s car caught fire and burned with the records inside shortly before a town audit was scheduled, the commonwealth was not able to prove other money was taken as well, said Commonwealth’s Attorney Spencer Morgan. The car was hauled to a local salvage yard, crushed, and taken away before town officials found out about it, Hallwood Mayor Jackie Poulson said in October 2017.
Eastern Shore Post
Pratika Katiyar, Richmond Times-Dispatch