Vance County Sheriff's Office

Four Suspects Arrested for Dec. Murder of Nicholas Conner

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-Press Release, Vance County Sheriff’s Office

Sheriff Curtis R. Brame announces the following arrests by the Vance County Sheriff’s Office in regards to the homicide investigation of Nicholas Conner on December 18, 2019, at 172 Mansfield Lane, Henderson, NC. 

Assisting Agency: North Carolina State Bureau of Investigations

This investigation is continuing. 

Four suspects arrested and charged: 

Damarous Magbie (age 23) 755 Dr. Finch Rd., Henderson, NC

Charges:

Felony Murder 

Attempt Robbery Dangerous Weapon

Discharge Weapon into Occupied Moving Vehicle 

Court Date: February 17, 2020 (Vance County District Court)

Bond: No Bond, Release Not Authorized 

Demetris Miller (age 23) 131 Sherwood Rd., Henderson, NC

Charges:

Felony Murder 

Attempt Robbery-Dangerous Weapon 

Court Date: February 17, 2020 (Vance County District Court)

Bond: No Bond, Release Not Authorized 

Latimor Drumgold (age 23) 1218 Rail Road St., Henderson, NC 

Charges:

Felony Murder 

Attempt Robbery-Dangerous Weapon 

Court Date: February 17, 2020 (Vance County District Court)

Bond: No Bond, Release Not Authorized

Neajsia Jones (age 19) 128 Hidden Creek Lane Warrenton, NC

Charges:

Felony Murder 

Attempt Robbery-Dangerous Weapon 

Court Date: February 17, 2020 (Vance County District Court)

Bond: No Bond, Release Not Authorized

Damarous Magbie

Demetris Miller

Latimor Drumgold

Neajsia Jones

I Voted Sticker

Vance BOE: Public Hearing Dates for Absentee Ballot Applications

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-Information courtesy the Vance County Board of Elections

LEGAL NOTICE

The Vance County Board of Elections hereby gives notice that public hearings for the consideration of absentee ballot applications for the March 3, 2020, Primary Election will be held at 5 p.m. in the Elections Office on the following dates:

Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Monday, March 2, 2020

The Board will not be required to hold any of the above-listed meetings unless, since its last preceding meeting, it actually received one or more applications, which it has not passed upon.

Sennica Nicholson, Chair Person

Vance County Board of Elections

300 S. Garnett Street Henderson, NC  27536

(252) 492-3730

Marrow Arrested on Heroin, Marijuana Charges

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-Information courtesy the Henderson Police Department

On January 30, 2020, the Henderson Police Department served a search warrant at the residence of 552 Grant Street.

Jemario O’Neil Lewis Marrow, age 24, was arrested on January 30, 2020. (HPD photo)

Located during the search were 4.9 ounces of marijuana and 2 bricks of heroin along with scales, drug paraphernalia, US currency, and Motion Picture Money 100 dollar bills.

Twenty-four-year-old Jemario O’Neil Lewis Marrow was arrested on scene and charged with the following:

Possession with Intent to Sell, Manufacture, and Deliver Heroin, Possession of Heroin, Possession with Intent to Sell, Manufacture, and Deliver Marijuana, Felony Possession of Marijuana, Maintaining a Dwelling for a Controlled Substance, 2 counts of Possession of Drug Paraphernalia

Marrow received a $ 49,000 secured bond.

Located during the search of 552 Grant Street were 4.9 ounces of marijuana and 2 bricks of heroin along with scales, drug paraphernalia, US currency, and Motion Picture Money 100 dollar bills. (HPD photo)

Woodland Owner Workshops Offer Tips From Planning to Harvesting

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-Information courtesy Paul McKenzie, Agricultural Extension Agent, NC Cooperative Extension

Whether you own 10 acres of woodlands or 1,000 acres, proper planning and management offer countless benefits. Woodland owners who follow a professionally prepared management plan are likely to reap rewards in the form of improved aesthetics, better wildlife habitat and, in the end, more profit.

To learn more, woodland owners can attend a series of free classes in Henderson and Oxford that will take them through the whole process from planning to harvest. The instructors will include professionals from the NC Forest Service and NCSU Extension Forestry. Each class will also feature landowner testimonials.

The classes will meet at 7 p.m. on February 13, May 14, August 13 and November 12, 2020. Topics to be covered include planning, planting, thinning, prescribed fire, harvest and much more. Classes will meet at the Granville Expo Center (2/13 & 8/13) and at the Vance County Regional Farmers Market (5/14 & 11/12).

Complete details and registration information are available at https://go.ncsu.edu/manageyourwoods or by calling 919-603-1350 or 252-438-8188.

News 02/03/20

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Yancey Charged With Rape, Kidnapping

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-Press Release, Vance County Sheriff’s Office

On Wednesday, January 29, 2020, the Vance County Sheriff’s Office Patrol Division responded to a call for service at 141 Chloe Lane in Henderson, NC. When patrol arrived, the victim of a sexual assault was already inside the Vance County ambulance. After speaking with Vance County paramedics about the victim’s injuries, the victim was transported to Maria Parham Health.

The Vance County Sheriff’s Office Criminal Investigation Unit was contacted, at which time the victim was interviewed.

Warrants were obtained for the suspect Shamon Keshawn Yancey (age 36) for First Degree Forcible Rape, First Degree Kidnapping and Assault on a Female.

Yancey was placed in the Vance County Detention Center without bond.

On Wednesday, January 29, 2020, the Vance County Sheriff’s Office arrested Keshawn Yancey (age 36) on charges of First Degree Forcible Rape, First Degree Kidnapping and Assault on a Female. (VCSO photo)

District Court Judge Asks Voters to ‘Keep Katherine Burnette’

Katherine Burnette, the incumbent district court judge for the Ninth Judicial District of North Carolina, faces challenger Brian Cloninger in the March 3, 2020 Primary election. The district court judge position serves Vance, Franklin, Granville, Warren and Person counties.

Katherine Burnette, the incumbent district court judge for the Ninth Judicial District of North Carolina, faces challenger Brian Cloninger in the March 3, 2020 Primary election. (Photo courtesy Katherine Burnette)

Appointed district court judge by NC Governor Roy Cooper in 2018, Burnette filled the vacancy created by Judge Carolyn J. Thompson who was appointed to serve as a Superior Court Judge in the Ninth Judicial District earlier that year.

With 15 months of experience as a district court judge, Burnette said her current service coupled with her varied legal experience make her the ideal candidate for the job. “I have 35 years of legal experience, and it’s been broad legal experience; it’s been private practice, clerking for court of appeals judges and bankruptcy judges. I have also been a public servant since 2002 when I became an assistant district attorney in this district.”

Describing the district court process in an interview with WIZS, Burnette said she oversees a range of cases including mental health, child support, abuse/neglect/dependency, family law, domestic violence and criminal.

“I hope the main thing people say about me [as a judge] is that I am fair, that I listen to everyone and that I make reasoned decisions on the bench,” Burnette stated.

She graduated cum laude from Wake Forest University in 1981 with a BA in both English and politics and from the Wake Forest University School of Law in 1984. In 2019, she was awarded a Master of Fine Arts in creative writing from Queens University in Charlotte.

According to Burnette’s website, she has practiced law in state and federal courts and has experience in family law, criminal law, and bankruptcy law as well as civil and commercial litigation. She served as an assistant district attorney for the former ninth (now eleventh) prosecutorial district from 2002-2007.

In her role as an assistant United States attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina from 2007-2011, Burnette received two national service awards for her work in financial litigation, as the civil division’s financial litigation attorney, primarily in the recovery of restitution for crime victims.

From 2011-2018, Burnette served the Violent Crimes Division of the U.S. Attorney’s Office where she participated in multiple criminal trials and prosecutions for bank robbery, federal firearms, and controlled substance offenses in North Carolina.

Burnette has also held positions on the NC Board of Elections, NC Board of Ethics and State Personnel Commission.

Burnette and husband Tom, an attorney, reside in Granville County. For more information on her background, awards and volunteer work, please visit https://keepkatherineburnette.com

To hear the interview with Burnette in its entirety, please click the link below.

(This is not a paid political advertisement. Political candidates are offered equal time.)

 

Attorney Brian Cloninger Challenges Burnette for District Court Judge

Brian Cloninger, a Henderson resident and private defense attorney at Cloninger Law Offices, PLLC, will challenge incumbent Katherine Burnette for district court judge of the Ninth Judicial District of North Carolina in the March 3, 2020 Primary election. This position serves Vance, Franklin, Granville, Warren and Person counties.

Brian Cloninger, candidate for the Judicial District 9, District Court Judge seat, is shown here being interviewed on WIZS’ Town Talk program. (WIZS photo)

Cloninger attended public schools and graduated from the Reich School of Education at Appalachian State University in 2000 and the North Carolina Central University School of Law in 2006.

According to Cloninger’s website, he is a current member of the Vance County Bar, the 9th District Bar, the North Carolina State Bar, the North Carolina Advocates for Justice, and the VCS Board of Directors.

He is the Immediate Past President of the Vance County Bar, the Immediate Past Chair of the Criminal Defense Section of the North Carolina Advocates for Justice, and the Immediate Past Chair of the VCS Board of Directors Policy and Personnel Committee.

He is also a former member of the American Bar Association, the North Carolina Bar Association, the North Carolina Association of Educators, and the American Institute of criminal defense attorneys in Festus.

Sharing his knowledge with other lawyers and judges, Cloninger teaches a class titled “Traffic Practice: Doing it Right and Solving Problems: Courthouse-Based Driver’s License Remediation,” which was approved by the North Carolina State Bar for credit toward required continuing legal education.

Cloninger has 14 years of legal experience practicing in the district courts of the 9th District with a concentration in civil and criminal cases. In a recent interview with WIZS, he said it is his experience and the encouragement of his peers that prompted him to enter the race.

“I’ve been asked by people in the system to run for judge, particularly for this seat. They think that I can help because I have been in the district courts of each of the counties in our district almost every day for 14 years. I know the law. I know about the people who make up the justice system and I know what they need to help make this particular seat a better seat.”

District court handles misdemeanor criminal and traffic matters, including domestic and family law cases. According to Cloninger, with 95% of cases ending in a plea deal or some form of deferred agreement, only 5% of district court cases go to trial. District courts see an exceptional amount of cases, with 200 cases on each criminal docket in Vance County alone.

For Cloninger, the incentive of serving as a district court judge is not financial but rewarding all the same. “The incentive is the ability to help more people, to make sure that our district court is a place that people feel like they can go to get equal justice,” he said.

“The role of a judge is to help victims feel safe and comfortable that justice has been served and help offenders get the rehabilitation they need so that once they’ve served their sentence, they can become productive members of the community.”

Cloninger is married and has two children. His wife, Alison Finch Cloninger, is also from Henderson. For more information on his campaign, please visit www.cloningerforjudge.com.

To hear the interview with Cloninger in its entirety, click on the link below.

(This is not a paid political advertisement. Political candidates are offered equal time.)

Vance Co. Schools Announces Pre-K, Kindergarten Registration Dates

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-Press Release, Vance County Schools

Vance County Schools Pre-K and Kindergarten registration is open and “The Wow Starts Now!” Stop by any of our elementary schools or district office (1724 Graham Avenue) to begin the registration process.

Pre-K is open to children whose fourth birthday is on or before August 31, 2020. Children whose fifth birthday is on or before August 31, 2020, are eligible for Kindergarten.

Between February 24 and March 11, each elementary school will offer two tours on their respective day at 9 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. Families are invited to come to any of the tours, meet the administration and ask any questions they may have.

Vance County Schools School Tour Schedule: February 24 – Carver; February 25 – Aycock; February 26 – Dabney; February 27 – EO Young; March 2 – Pinkston; March 3 – EM Rollins; March 4 – New Hope; March 5 – LB Yancey; March 9 – Clarke; March 11 – Zeb Vance.

On March 10 and 12, every elementary school in our district will hold Learning in Action opportunities at 9 a.m. This allows families to come see the class in action and learn about specific programs offered at all of our schools, including Letterland and Feeling Friends.

We would like to remind everyone, you must bring your photo ID to enter our buildings for school tours and our Learning in Action opportunities. We will have district employees on-site at each school tour to assist those wishing to register that day. Registration is also available every day at the district office, where staff are available to assist you with the process.

When coming to enroll, you will need to bring Proof of Residency (utility bill, rental lease, or mortgage statement), the child’s immunization record and their proof of age (birth certificate, medical record, or baptismal record).

Vance County Schools continues to offer phenomenal programs, making sure our learning is personalized and relevant to every single student in our ever-changing world. We are excited to meet our new families and begin their adventure of learning in Vance County Schools. We are truly better together!

Vance County Logo

Vance Co. Board of Commissioners to Meet Mon., Feb. 3

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-Information courtesy Kelly H. Grissom, Clerk to Board/Executive Asst., County of Vance

The Vance County Board of Commissioners will meet Monday, February 3, 2020, at 6 p.m. in the Commissioners’ Meeting Room, 122 Young Street, Henderson. The Invocation will be given by Rev. Joseph Ratliff of Shiloh Baptist Church.

Agenda items include:

1. Public Comments

2. Appointment – 6 p.m. – Derek Smith, NCDOT – Update on Litter Abatement Programs

3. Appointment – 6:15 p.m. – Stuart Hill, Thompson, Price, Scott, Adams & Co. – FY 2018-2019 Audit Report

4. Water District Board

a. Committee Report
b. Monthly Operations Report

5. Committee Reports and Recommendations

a. Properties Committee
– Boiler Replacement – Eaton Johnson Gym
– Dennis Building – Light Post Repair
– Eaton Johnson – Updated Architectural Fees
– Eaton Johnson Project Update

b. Intergovernmental Committee
– City/County Joint Programs and Partnerships
– McGregor Hall Funding Request
– Downtown Wi-Fi

6. Finance Director’s Report

a. Surplus Property
b. Purchase of New Ambulance
c. Campbell Oil Lease/Contract

7. County Attorney’s Report

a. REO Properties – New Offers – 318 Rowland Street – Parcel 0073 04002

8. County Manager’s Report

a. Resolution – Black History Month
b. Semi-Annual Jail Inspection Report

9. Consent Agenda Items

a. Budget Amendments and Transfers
b. Tax Refunds and Releases
c. Ambulance Charge-Offs
d. Monthly Reports
e. Minutes

10. Miscellaneous

a. Appointments
b. March Meeting Date

Click here to view current and prior Board agendas.