Asheville Daily Planet
RSS Facebook
Police Blotter: April 25, 2007
Tuesday, 24 April 2007 16:40
Two women arrested in sting
on prostitution, drug charges

BENT CREEK ó Two women were arrested in an undercover prostitution sting in an apartment building in the Bent Creek area last Thursday.

Agents from the Buncombe County Anti-Crime Task Force arrested Teresa Nadine Gregg, 42, and Jennifer Warren Lindsey, 33, on prostitution and drug charges after an undercover officer was solicited for sexual acts.
The sting at the apartment followed a complaint by telephone, according to the Buncombe County Sheriffís Department.

2 WCU students arrested
following campus explosion

CULLOWHEE ó A Western Carolina University dormitory was locked down for 90 minutes on April 17 after two students and another person allegedly set off a homemade explosive.

Antonio Izzi, 18; Michelle Hargenrader, 19; and Jesse Edwards, 21, were each charged with possession of a weapon of mass destruction, as well as four counts each of possesion of explosives on school property. All the charges are felonies.

Furthermore, the two WCU students, Izzi and Hargenrader, will face university disciplinary actions.

The trio allegedly made the explosive by mixing toilet bowl cleaner and aluminum in a 20-ounce soda bottle because ìthey were bored,î officials said.

After the explosive detonated, around 11 p.m, the 400-bed Leatherwood Hall went into lockdown. Officials noted that the dormitory has a police substation in it, which facilitated a quick response time by police.

No one was injured in the attack and the schoolís chancellor, John Bardo, said he did not think the trio intended to hurt anyone.

Hit-run suspect accused
of trying to bribe an officer

WEAVERVILLE ó A Buncombe County man was arrested early last Wednesday morning on charges of attempting to bribe a Weaverville police officer.

Loren Shane Michaels, 27, of Jenkins Valley Road in Alexander was out of jail on bond after having been charged with hit-and-run in connection with the death of Karen Herndon, a 19-year-old college student from Weaverville on Oct. 21.

In that incident, Michaels allegedly hit and killed Herndon, a student at Asheville-Buncombe Technical Community College, who had just gotten out of a car her mother was driving during an apparent argument, officials said.

Police say Michaels then fled the scene of the accident, but was apprehended, arrested and later released on bond.

In last weekís incident, Michaelsí 2007 Toyota Land Cruiser was stuck in a field off Hamburg Mountain just before 1 a.m., when a friend of his flagged down Officer Jonathan Ammons for assistance.

During the incident, Michaels allegedly told Ammons, ìIíll pay you to get me out of this,î prompting the bribery charges.

Michaels was released after posting bond later that day.

Woodfin officer wounded
while struggling with man

WOODFIN ó A Woodfin police officer  incurred a concussion April 17 during an altercation with an inmate who was wanted for failing to return from work release.

Officer Mike Salley, 24, was treated at Mission Hospitals after a morning traffic stop. Another officer, Charles Robinson, was punched in the ribs, but did not seek treatment.

In the aftermath, Robert Brian Brank, 35, faces a charge of assaulting an officer, inflicting serious injury.
Brank reportedly failed to return from work release to the Jackson County Jail last November. He was serving time for failure to pay child support.

The officers stopped Brankís 1985 Dodge on Riverside Drive for traveling too slow ó 20 mph in a 35-mph zone.

Officials say Brank fled the car when officers approached and proceeded to lead them on a 100-yard foot chase, punctuated by several fights.

Eventually, Salley and Brank fell to the ground, causing Salleyís head to bang against the ground, a police spokesman said.

In addition to the assault charge, Brank now faces charges including resisting officers, driving too slow, giving a false name to officers, driving with a revoked license and driving left of center.

Man convicted of assault
gets 8 to 10 years in prison

A South Carolina man was sentenced to eight to 10 years in prison last week for attempting to rape a Candler woman after pulling a fire alarm to lure her out of her apartment and then hiding in her bedroom closet until she returned.

Bryan Thomas Head, 25, pleaded guilty April 16 to attempted first-degree rape, attempted first-degree sex offense, second-degree kidnapping and breaking and entering.

Head was reportedly visiting his estranged wife at Biltmore Lake Apartments in Candler when he met the 22-year-old victim near the swimming pool.

Unbeknownst to her, he then followed her back to her apartment in the same complex, pulled the fire alarm and entered her unlocked apartment.

He hid in the closet until she was changing clothes later and then grabbed her. She managed to fend him off and escape.

The case led to the firing of Buncombe County Deputy James Allen, who initially investigated the case.
Allen reportedly told the victim that she had to file charges against Head herself.

However, Allen said that he did all he was allowed to do legally and claimed that the firing was a politically motivated response to suspicions by then-Sheriff Bobby Medford that Allen had met with Van Duncan, his Democratic rival. Medford was defeated by Duncan in the November election.
 



 


contact | home

Copyright ©2005-2015 Star Fleet Communications

224 Broadway St., Asheville, NC 28801 | P.O. Box 8490, Asheville, NC 28814
phone (828) 252-6565 | fax (828) 252-6567

a Cube Creative Design site