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Three shootings reported
in three days over holiday
In the third shooting in three days over the Thanksgiving holiday, police charged an Asheville woman with shooting a man after a hit-and-run crash early Nov. 28.
The latest shooting happened after Harmony Boros Gardner struck a vehicle on Hendersonville Road, police said. The vehicle followed her to Warwick Road, where Gardner stopped, drew a gun and fired.
Christopher R. Brejnak, who was hit in the face and arm, was taken to Mission Hospital for surgery. He was listed in stable condition later Nov. 28.
Gardner was charged with attempted first-degree murder, discharging a weapon into an occupied vehicle, assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury, driving while impaired, driving while license revoked and hit and run. Bond was set at $600,000.
In the second case, a shootout occurred on the night of Nov. 27
outside a home on Clement Place in East Asheville. Police later charged
Myra Morgan Curtis, 43, of 29 Sandy Branch Road, Canton, with attempted
first-degree murder, assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious
injury and discharging a weapon into an occupied vehicle.
The victim in the Nov. 27 shooting, Basil Byrd Deaver, of 211
Youngin Holler, Canton, was taken to Mission Hospital with injuries
believed to be non-life-threatening. Deaver and Curtis reportedly had a
prior relationship.
As for the first case, police still are searching for a man who
shot another man on the afternoon of Nov. 25 outside Mountain Springs
Apartments, near Miller Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Drive. Carlos
A. Smith, 21, of Asheville sufffered at least two gunshot wounds to an
arm and leg. Smith was later listed in stable condition.
Anyone with information on the Nov. 25 shooting is being asked to call police at 251-1110 or CrimeStopper at 255-5050.
Ex-firefighter given 120 days for shooting bicyclist
A former Asheville firefighter on Nov. 19 was sentenced to 120 days in jail for shooting a bicyclist.
Charles Alexander Diez, 42, pleaded guilty to assault with a
deadly weapon with intent to kill. However, he testified during his
sentencing hearing that he only fired a warning shot and did not intend
to injure Alan Ray Silmons. The bullet narrowly missed Simons’ head,
piercing his helmet.
Diez also testified,” I was the one who felt truly, truly threatened ... It was not my intention to shoot him.”
Conversely, Simons told of being confronted by the 17-year veteran of
the Asheville Fire Department on the morning of July 26, as he was
riding his bike along Tunnel Road with his 4-year-old son in a seat on
the back and his wife on another bike.
Simons said Diez yelled at him from his car, claiming he was putting the boy’s life in danger by riding on the busy roadway.
When Simons approached Diez’s car door, “the gun was pointing at my
chest. I turned to walk away, (and) the gun went off. He chose to pull
the trigger.”
Superior Court Judge James Downs sentenced Diez to 15-27 months in prison, with all but four months suspended for 30 months.
If he breaks the law again during that 30 months, the full sentence
could be imposed. Diez, who lost his job with the AFD, will be subject
to a curfew after his release and must complete an anger management
class.
The judge also ordered Diez to pay Simons $1,200 in restitution to cover medical treatments for damage to his eardrum.
No aggravating factors were found and Diez had no criminal record,
according to Downs. He added that mitigating factors included Diez’s
good character, served in the military, supports his family
financially, has a positive employment history and has a good support
system in the community.
The presumptive sentence for someone convicted of assault with a deadly
weapon with intent to kill is 20-39 months under state sentencing laws.
Man charged with killing
roommate over $4.25 debt
NEBO — McDowell County sheriff’s deputies arrested and charged a man with beating a man to death over a $4.25 debt.
The assault stemmed from an argument over the debt Cedarbrook Resident
Center resident Walter Davis owed roommate Kenneth Hayward, officials
said.
Davis was taken to Mission Hospital, with a cranial bleed
and the majority of his face bones broken following the evening of Oct
26 assault. Davis, 67, died Oct. 29.
Authorities arrested Hayward, 43, on Oct. 29 on a murder charge.
Eye doctor faces discipline for telling woman she’s fat
An Asheville eye doctor — self-described as brusque, aggressive and
hard-headed — could lose his medical license after a patient complained
that he made inappropriate criticisms, including telling her she is fat.
The North Carolina Medical Board in Raleigh will decide if Dr. Earl Sunderhaus overstepped the bounds of professional decency.
His patient complained that Sunderhaus poked her thigh and told her she
is fat, and also scolded her as irresponsible for being unemployed and
relying on taxpayers to pay for another pregnancy.
Sunderhaus admitted he told the patient that her thick thighs and diabetes could cause her to go blind.
He made his points again by writing to the patient, Gov. Beverly Perdue
and lambasting the medical board. Sunderhaus said his defense is that
he was speaking the truth to his patient out of concern for her — and
taxpayers.
Sunderhaus, 77, said the Medical Board ordered him to undergo a
psychological evaluation and meet with the board. He said he was told
that he would be informed by letter about any actions the board might
take against him.
The eye doctor noted that he has not had any other complaints lodged
against him to the Medical Board and that he has never been reprimanded
by the board.
Hillcrest fire termed arson
via release of natural-gas
An explosion and fire that destroyed a building at Hillcrest Apartments
in Asheville was intentionally set, arson investigators said Nov. 11.
Evidence showed there was a deliberate release of natural gas, which
was ignited by a separate fire set in the apartment, according to Buddy
Thompson of the Asheville-Buncombe Arson Task Force.
Thompson would not elaborate on how the natural gas was released. The investigation is continuing.
He said the ABATS is following up on leads that have been developed so far and continuing to develop leads.
Neighbors reported a brick wall was blown out by the blast on Nov. 9
and that fire burned through Building 21’s roof within about five
minutes of the explosion. A plume of smoke was visible for miles.
The apartment where the blast occurred was leveled and the entire six-unit building was heavily damaged.
Angel Matthews, the tenant of the apartment where the blast occurred,
said she was at the Buncombe County Courthouse at the time of the
blast, taking out a restraining order on her ex-boyfriend, Carl Vincent
Jones Sr., whom she said broke into her apartment on Nov. 7.
Matthews lived in the apartment with her four children.
Asheville police on Nov. 9 charged Jones with misdemeanor breaking or
entering in connection with the Nov. 7 incident, according to a
warrant. A judge issued a temporary restraining order after Matthews
said Jones had threatened to kill her.
Arrangments were under way to move the displaced families to other
public housing units. Sixteen people, including seven children, lived
in the building.
The apartments at Hillcrest have furnaces, dryers and stoves that operate on natural gas.
Thompson said there have been no recent reports of gas leaks or
problems at the complex. Anyone with information about the explosion
and fire is asked to call CrimeStoppers at 255-5050.
Student arrested after gun
found in backpack at AHS
A loaded handgun was found in a student’s backpack on Nov. 4 at Asheville High School, authorities said.
The ninth-grade student was called to the office on another issue. When
the school resource officer searched his backpack, he found a 9mm
loaded handgun, a city school system news release noted. The student
was taken into custody without incident at 12:35 p.m., based on an
order from juvenile court, police said.
The student was removed from the school’s campus and transported to the
Juvenile Detention Center. Ashevile police have charged the student
with possession of a weapon on school property.
School officials are unsure why the student brought the weapon to
campus. They have not discovered threats or incidents related to the
weapon, a city spokesman said.
The school superintendent will decide the consequences the student will face at school.
Telephone and e-mail notifications were sent to parents around 4:20
p.m. Nov. 4. Staff at AHS and the School of Inquiry and Life Sciences
at Asheville were notified of the incident during a meeting after
school.
Officials could not recall another incident in which a gun was found on campus.
In January 2008, Asheville police arrested a 16-year-old boy accused of
firing up to four gunshots at a group of students at AHS.
In May 2007, the school went on lockdown when a student reported seeing someone on a moped with a submachine gun.
However, police did not find a weapon on the AHS campus in either of the aforementioned cases.
Officials find cache of pills hidden in duo’s body cavities
MARSHALL — A Tennessee couple face felony drug charges after the car
they were in veered off N.C. 209 and hit a Spring Creek home on Oct. 29.
Conrado Morales III, 28, of Newport, Tenn., and Jennifer Eslinger, 21,
of Cosby, Tenn., were charged in Madison County after authorities say
they found a large cache of pain pills secured in the body cavities of
both individuals.
The car the suspects were riding in ran off the road and hit a home and
fuel tank of a home east of Spring Creek, officials said. Morales was
arrested at the scene when officers discovered what appeared to be
three doses of Ocycodone. At the county jail, deputies reportedly found
Morales had at least 82 Oxycodone pills concealed in his underwear and
in a body cavity.
In turn, Eslinger was confronted with the evidence against Morales and
surrended at least 60 Oxycodone pills that had been hidden in a body
cavity, officials said.
Thefts from parked vehicles
reported on UNCA campus
UNC Asheville police recently reported a number of larcenies from vehicles parked on campus and other activity as follows:
• A larceny from a 2003 Ford Mustang — belonging to Amy Marie Wolf, a
UNCA student from Raleigh — from a parking lot on Founders Drive.
Wolf, 20, reported the theft of an Apple iPod Mini/iPod docking
station, jointly valued at $1,750; and a Garmon GPS, valued at $240; at
2:15 p.m. Oct. 30. Her property was last known secure at 3 p.m. Oct. 19.
• A larceny from a motor vehicle — belonging to Wesley C. Groetsema, a
UNCA student from Barnardsville — from a parking lot on Founders Drive.
Groetsema, 20, reported the theft of Cobra WX-Band II equipment valued
at $100 at 3:30 p.m. Oct. 29. His property was last known secure at 10
p.m. Oct. 25.
• A larceny of 12 items from a 2003 Volkswagen Jetta — belonging to
Kristen Michelle Jarrrett, a UNCA student from Mars Hill — from campus
parking lot No. 9.
Jarrett, 18, reported the thefts at 3:47 p.m. Nov. 6. Her property was
last known secure two hours earlier — at 1:40 p.m. Nov. 6. The police
report noted that someone “used unknown method to break glass and
remove items inside vehicle.”
Items reported stolen by Jarrett included a Fossil
purse-handbag-wallet, valued at $50; a North Carolina driver’s license,
$20; a Centura debit card, $10; an RBC ATM card, $10; an American Eagle
credit-debit card, $10; a UNCA One Card, $10; an article of American
Eagle clothes-furs, $200; a Social Security card, $20; $27 in U.S.
currency; a spare key for a VW Jetta, $10; an RBC checkbook, $25; and a
music compact disk, $10.
• Criminal damage to a plate glass window at the Health & Fitness
Center was reported at 6:14 a.m. Oct. 29. Specifically, the window
valued at $500 was vandalized.
• A charge of running a red light was filed against Maggie Christine
D’Angelo of Raleigh at 10:02 a.m. Nov. 2. No details were available on
whether she is a UNCA student or where the alleged infraction occurred.
D’Angelo, 24, was driving a 2000 Nissan along Campus Drive at Broadway Street.
• A charge of operating a motor vehicle without having an up-to-date
electronic inspection was filed against Paul Keith Biggs of
Hendersonville at 1:50 p.m. Oct. 28.
Biggs also was charged with operating a motor vehicle without having
“in full force and effect the financial responsibility required by GS
20-313.” Moreover, the police report noted that the alleged infraction
occurred “while displaying an expired registration on the vehicle,
knowing the same to be expired. GS 20-111 2 expired on 09-19-09.”
Biggs, 27, was driving a 2002 Lincoln along Campus Drive near University Heights.
• A charge of operating a motor vehicle without having “in full force
and effect the financial responsibility required by GS 20-313” was
filed against Paul Keith Biggs
• A non-resident, Henry Nicholas George, was charged with driving while
intoxicated and “all traffic (except DWI)” at 12:45 a.m. Nov. 1.
Nicholas, 21, of Richmond, Va., was driving a 2001 Toyota TK when the
arrest occurred. The police report did not indicate where the arrest
took place.
Nicholas was taken to the Buncombe County Detention Center, where he
was confined before his release on bond. In the meantime, his vehicle,
impounded by police, was towed and stored by Davis Wrecker.
• Jayson Scott McRae reportedly, “without authorization, entered on
premises of another after being notified not to enter or remain there
by another authorized person: UNCA police,” the report noted. He was
cited on probable cause.
McRae, 33, lives at 165 S. French Broad Ave., Apt. 2-D, in Asheville.
• Three charges allegedly involving drug violations were filed against Timothy Scott Spencer at 3:25 p.m. Nov. 21 in Vance Hall.
Scott, 21, of Morganton was arrested on two felony counts of drug
violations and “drug violations — all other drug violations” and one
misdemeanor count of “drug violations — all other drug violations.”
• An investigation is continuing of criminal damage to property
reported at noon Nov. 13 at old parking lot E, which is now a
construction site on campus.
Sandy Stewart of Buck’s Construction Co. reported that two Lincoln
Elect welders owned by the firm sustained damages of $50 each.
• Four UNCA students were arrested on various drug charges at 10:44 p.m. Nov. 11 in Room 411 at Founders Hall.
Kevin Richard Zeph was charged with one felonious count of drug violations. Zeph, 18, is from Raleigh.
Joshua James Babbish was charged with one felonious count of drug violations. Babbish, 18, is from Villas, N.J.
Maxwell S. Montaldo was charged with two misdemeanor counts of drug
violations, including less than 1/2-oz.. of marijuana and possession of
drug paraphernalia. Montaldo is from St. Louis.
Lia Rachel Curtis-Fine was charged with two misdemeanor counts of drug
violations, including possession of less than a 1/2-oz. of marijuana
and possession of drug paraphernalia. Curtis-Fine, 19, is from Clemmons.
• A larceny was reported by Lesley Ann Mullen at noon Nov. 11 at Ramsey Library on campus.
Mullen, a resident of Courtland Avenur in Asheville, told police that
someone picked up and carried away an Alltell telephone and equipment
valued at $85 and a London Fog raincoat valued at $65.
• Criminal damage to property was reported at 9:59 p.m. Nov. 11 on UNCA’s mini quad.
A “stone-monument” structure sustained $500 damage in a vandalism incident, police reported.
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