U.S. Department of Justice

Local Man Gets 90-Month Prison Term For Drugs, Firearms Possession

A Henderson, North Carolina man has been sentenced to 90 months in prison and three years of supervised release in connection with charges stemming from a 2020 operation at a local convenience store.

According to court documents and information presented at the sentencing hearing, Seikeidrick Antwon Williams, 36, was named in a six-count Superseding Indictment filed on March 3, 2021, charging him with Possession with Intent to Distribute Heroin, Fentanyl, ANPP, and Marijuana (Count One); Possession of a Firearm in Furtherance of a Drug Trafficking Crime (Counts Two and Five); Possession of a Firearm by a Felon (Counts Three and Six); and Possession with Intent to Distribute Heroin (Count Four).  On August 31, 2021, Williams pled guilty to counts two and three.

The information comes from a statement issued by the U.S. Department of Justice.

Michael Easley, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina, made the announcement on Wednesday, Mar. 30. The Henderson Police Department investigated the case and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Robert J. Dodson and Lori B. Warlick prosecuted the case.

According to the press statement, on August 7, 2020, the Henderson Police Department (HPD) was conducting an operation in the area of the Fiddlestix Convenience Store in Henderson, when Williams approached an undercover officer and offered to sell her heroin.

According to the press statement,
the encounter “ultimately resulted in a search of Williams and his vehicle, at which time officers found a bag containing 8.5g of marijuana and a bag containing 243 dosage units of heroin mixed with fentanyl and ANPP.  Officers also found United States currency, a set of digital scales, and wax paper with rubber bands, commonly used to package heroin.  In the vehicle’s glovebox, officers found a loaded SCCY CPX-1 9mm pistol with an extended magazine.  The gun had been reported stolen from Granville County.”

Williams was stopped for speeding by Franklin County Sheriff’s Office on Dec. 2, 2020, while on bond for state charges related to the August charges. Williams was stopped for traveling 73 mph in a 55-mph zone.  During the stop, a K9 unit conducted an open-air sniff around Williams’s vehicle and alerted to the presence of narcotics.  Deputies searched the car and found a Glock pistol, a SCCY pistol, approximately 145 bindles of heroin, and multiple empty wax paper heroin bags with small rubber bands, consistent with heroin packaging.

Williams is a convicted felon, having been convicted of second-degree murder in Vance County Superior Court in 2005, for which he was sentenced to 180 to 225 months in prison.

A copy of this press release is located on our website. Related court documents and information can be found on the website of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina or on PACER by searching for case number 5:20-cr-451-D.

Smart Start

The Local Skinny! Week Of The Young Child Apr. 4-8

FGV Smart Start will celebrate the Week of the Young Child next week with a bevy of activities for families to participate in. The purpose is to focus on the needs of young children and their families and identifying the early childhood programs and services that meet those needs, according to FGV Smart Start Programs Director Garry Daeke.

The week’s activities commence on Monday when FGV staff will “plant” a pinwheel garden at 125 Charles Rollins Rd., Henderson, in observance of Child Abuse Prevention Month.

Two Franklin County-based dental practices – Louisburg Family Dentistry and Kindred Oaks Dentistry will offer free dental screenings for children under 5 years; Drake Dentistry and Granville Family Dentistry will visit daycares in Granville County on Friday, April 8 to perform free screenings as well.

On Tuesday, FGV Smart Start will sponsor a drive-thru event to enroll children in the Dolly Parton Imagination Library program, which delivers books each month to children who sign up. The Tuesday event will be held from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. A second drive-thru signup will take place beside Auto Zone on Dabney Drive on Thursday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. FGV will partner with Perry Memorial Library to host this drive-thru event to sign up for the Imagination Library. Drive-thru participants will receive a bag of materials and information about available services for children, as well as a book for their child.

The Working on Wellness Coalition will join FGV in visiting area daycares on Wednesday, Apr. 6 to share healthy snacks and to participate in outdoor activities with the children. Participating daycares are Little Explorers Academy, Oxford; Great Beginnings, Henderson; St. Paul’s Presbyterian Day Care, Louisburg; and Franklinton United Methodist Church Child Care, Franklinton.

FGV will celebrate Family Friday with a focus on family engagement. Tag FGV on social media by sending photos of you and your child reading or playing to #WOYC2022.

 

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TownTalk: Caring For Historic Cemeteries And Tombstones

 

Imagine this scenario: You’re a property owner in rural North Carolina – say, Vance County – and you come across what you think may be an old cemetery, unmarked and long-neglected. What’s a landowner to do?

Your first call could be to the N.C. Office of State Archaeology. A chat with staff archaeologist and historic cemetery specialist Melissa Timo may help.

Timo has been with the OSA since 2019, and she told Bill Harris and Mark Pace on the tri-weekly history segment of Town Talk that the state office has a couple of major goals: one is to create as complete a record as possible of cemeteries in the state; the second is to answer people’s questions about cemeteries, such as the proper process for gaining access to family cemeteries that may be on someone else’s property.

As genealogy has become more and more popular, individuals are seeking out family histories to help provide information to fill in gaps like births – and deaths – of ancestors.

Sometimes, the information is readily available. And sometimes, it takes a little more investigating, she said.

Back in the 1930’s, the Works Progress Administration (WPA) conducted a survey of cemeteries and that is a good place to start, Timo said, to see if a newly discovered cemetery had been previously recorded.

Although its purpose may have been to create a comprehensive list of cemeteries, it’s known that many were left off the WPA survey, Timo said. “We want to make sure we know where they are in the landscape,” she said, so they can be protected from development.

Landowners are not required by law to care for a cemetery, but keeping the grass trimmed or otherwise maintaining the property shows a respect for those buried there. They may not be your ancestors, but they are someone’s family, and descendants DO have the right to reasonably access a cemetery.

It’s a good idea to create a plan for visits to the cemetery, she said, including how family will gain access and specifying convenient times to do so.

And while landowners are required to maintain the cemetery, they are not allowed to dump yard waste or pull up stones, she said. Cemeteries are protected on both public and private land.

Sometimes cemeteries have marked graves and sometimes they do not. Gravesites used to be marked with fieldstone or with wooden markers, and often those either were unknowingly moved or gave way to the elements.

And even stone markers deteriorate over time, Timo said. The best way to try to read the words or names on an old tombstone is to use water and a soft-bristled brush to clean away the lichen, dirt and moss that may be obscuring what’s etched on the stone. Other tricks of the trade include wooden skewers and toothbrushes, but nothing metal. And definitely no power washers.

She said chemicals in cleaners are harmful to the old stone and should not be used. “Bleach is awful…it etches the stone really badly.” Any type of residue on the stone only invites microbial growth that causes further degrading.

“Sometimes, it’s just too late,” Timo said, to decipher what had been written on the stone. The combination of time, weathering and over-zealous cleaning efforts are a triple whammy.

The National Parks Service offers tips for preserving grave markers at https://www.nps.gov/tps/how-to-preserve/briefs/48-preserving-grave-markers.htm

Timo said the N.C. Site File is a registry that collects information about archaeology sites, structures and cemeteries. While not an exhaustive list, it does contain information that has been reported. The reporting form asks basic information like who is buried in the cemetery, or who you think is buried there.

“The one thing we’re firm on is getting a good location,” Timo said, so her office can pinpoint precisely where the gravesites are so they can be protected from being disturbed.

Timo said such precise information has helped in cases involving development of property.

“We’re able to warn people off, saying, ‘hey, there’s a cemetery here,’” she explained. “We can’t do that if we don’t have a pretty good location of where it is.”

Timo cited one case in Warren County that involved a family cemetery on a former plantation and a solar panel installation. The descendants estimated between 60 and 75 enslaved people were buried on the site. When the company hired experts to come in to determine exactly the size of the burial area, close to 300 gravesites were discovered.

The installation was able to continue, but the gravesites were not disturbed, she added.

Once an individual contacts OSA about a cemetery, Timo said the cemetery is assigned a file number and a pushpin on a map. She also shares the file number with the local contact so additional information can be provided in the future simply by referring to the file number.

“I will slip that right in,” Timo said, “so that there’s a permanent record…the state doesn’t throw anything away.”

 

 

Aycock Elementary Yard Sale to Benefit Kids

There will be a yard sale to benefit youngsters this Saturday at Aycock Elementary School on Carey Chapel Road.  Assistant Principal Donald “DJ” Johnson told WIZS the yard sale will start at 8 a.m. and continue until noon on Saturday.  He said the school is working on a project for the “Young Sprouts” at the school and sprucing up an outdoor learning space in the courtyard of the school to make it more welcoming for the kids.  Johnson said the yard sale will take place in front of the school Saturday from 8 a.m. until noon and that vendors have told him they are bringing a lot of clothes and things for the household.  He also said some of the participating families are bringing yard equipment, and he mentioned jewelry as well.

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Community Partners of Hope

April 2 Event To Honor Staff, Volunteers Of Local Men’s Shelter

The public is invited to join Community Partners of Hope, Inc. Saturday as it spotlights the efforts of staff and volunteers of the men’s shelter during an “end of season” gathering.

The program is scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. with coffee and light refreshments in the parish hall of First Presbyterian Church, according to Dr. Ron Cava, senior minister at the First Baptist Church in Henderson and Community Partners of Hope board member.

The First Presbyterian Church is located at 222 Young St., Henderson. Although the event will be held upstairs from the shelter area, attendees are asked to enter from Young Street.

“No matter what level support you have provided, we hope you will join us (as) we honor our staff and volunteers, provide an update on our services, introduce our board members, kick off the new fundraiser and share prayers for the community and the world,” according to information received at WIZS News.

Currently, the shelter operates from November through March. But if Cava and his colleagues have their way, the 365 Dream Team campaign can help to expand the time that the shelter is open.

“We’re looking for backers to sustain a year-round operation,” Cava said in a telephone interview. Cava alluded to the story of the widow’s mite and said any pledge is acceptable.

“I appreciate the people who have deep pockets,” he said, “but what really makes the world go ‘round…is a dollar at a time.”

Through pledges and contributions, Cava said he hoped that the men’s shelter would be able to operate all year.

See how you can help online at www.cp-hope.org.

 

Melissa Elliott Gang Free

TownTalk: Melissa Elliott Helps Those Recently Released from Prison

It’s hard enough to find a job that offers a liveable wage – Melissa Elliott defines that job as one that pays at least $20 an hour. But that search becomes exponentially more difficult for those men and women who have been incarcerated and are looking to get back on their feet.

Gainful employment and affordable housing are two of the biggest challenges that Elliott identifies for the “justice-involved population” that she works with as Vance County’s case manager for the Family Resource Center for South Atlantic, a Raleigh-based agency that supports people as they transition from jail or prison back into society.

The goal of the agency is to help individuals become self-sufficient and to reduce rescividism, which she said is about 40 percent. That means that 40 percent of those who were convicted of a crime will re-offend and return to jail.

“Job placement assistance…is one of the biggest things we do,” Elliott told John C. Rose on Wednesday’s Town Talk.

Elliott invited anyone interested to attend a re-entry resource fair and expungement clinic on Tuesday, April 12 at D.N. Hix Gym in Oxford. There will be employers on site who are looking for workers – some will be prepared to interview prospective employees on the spot, she said.

Last year, Henderson Mayor Eddie Ellington proclaimed that the city of Henderson would join the observance of April as National Re-Entry Month.

When individuals return to their families after serving sentences in jail or prison, it’s important that they receive support from the community so they can become productive members of society again. Elliott said everyone deserves a second chance, and part of her job as case manager is to “make sure that second chance is there for those who need it most…and to help the justice-involved population be as successful as they can be.”

Elliott said there are more resources for re-entry now than there have been in the past. If you have a family member or loved one scheduled for release from jail or prison in the next four months, now is the time to contact South Atlantic’s Family Resource Center to find out how they can help.

The phone number is 919.740.7950.

As for the April 12 event, Elliott said it will be a full-service resource fair, with everything from a presentation by Legal Aid of North Carolina about record expungement to financial literacy classes. There will be a food distribution, outreach services and much more.

“We want to make sure that everyone understands they can get a second chance,” Elliott said. While not condoning the offenses that may have occurred in a person’s past, Elliott said there are resources to assist those who want to start fresh and be successful.

 

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Vance County High School

SportsTalk: Vance High School Begins Search For New Football Coach

Last season saw the Vance Co. High School Vipers football team reach the state playoffs and were looking to more great seasons with Coach Wilbur Pender at the controls but that all changed this week with the announcement that Pender is retiring from education to spend more time with his family.  The school’s athletic director, Joe Sharrow, said players and everyone at the school was shocked and disappointed at Pender’s decision but understood his need to spend more time with his family.

It’s been the same story the last several seasons at Vance Co. High School as the last four coaches have stayed one season before moving on to another school, or in Pender’s case, retiring.  Sharrow did say that because of the football team’s success finding a new coach will be somewhat easier this off season and they hope to have someone in place before the school year is out. “There is interest from high level coaches,” Sharrow said.  “We want someone who is the right fit who will commit themselves and who will stick around,” Sharrow continued. “Where are the Wilton Basketts, the Randy Long’s, the Dave Jennings, or the Mark Perry’s?” Sharrow asked, referencing previous coaches who spent many years in their positions at Northern and Southern Vance and Vance Co. High School.

And while the school’s football program has had success this past season Sharrow is looking for a coach to build on that success. The school’s athletic programs are still recovering from the pandemic and struggled to find enough students to field teams which is only now returning to pre-pandemic levels.

Sharrow says he is now just building a team to search for the new coach which will include Principal Rey Horner. Sharrow also said the players will be consulted.  They will give him feedback on what has worked for them with previous coaches and with any luck Sharrow and his search team will find someone who is qualified and will commit to continuing to improve the Vance County Vipers football program.

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