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Tag: Wayne County

  • About 200 bronze vases stolen from Wayne County cemetery, two charged

    Two people were charged after about 200 bronze vases were
    reported stolen from gravesites at a cemetery in Wayne County.

    It happened at Wayne Memorial Park on N.C. Highway 117 South between
    November 2025 and January 2026, according to the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office.

    Deputies identified 35-year-old Lewis Cody Honeycutt and
    46-year-old Crystal Lynn Yancey, both of Goldsboro as the suspects related to
    the thefts.

    Honeycutt and Yancey are each charged with 26 counts of disturbing a casket/grave marker, misdemeanor larceny, possession of stolen property and obtaining property by false pretense.

    Both suspects are being held in the Wayne County Detention Center
    under a $150,000 secured bond.

    “These cases were unconscionable and deeply hurtful for many families in our
    community,” Wayne County Sheriff Larry Pierce said.

    Anyone who finds a missing or recently stolen vase is encouraged to report
    it to the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office.

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  • Former inmate reflects after buying old Wayne County prison to repurpose for reentry

    In a historic purchase, the former Wayne Correctional Center in Goldsboro, which shut down in 2013, was bought by a nonprofit founded by a formerly incarcerated man, WITN reports.

    Kerwin Pittman, the founder and executive director of the Recidivism Reduction Education Program Services (RREPS), once walked the halls of prison as an inmate.

    Now, he owns his own prison and is planning on turning it into a place of freedom, rather than confinement.

    “For me to be a beacon of light in somebody’s life when they’re in a dark place, I know how it feels,” Pittman said. “I remember when I was in that dark place of having to transition and not knowing what the possibility of my life could become, so to be able to guide somebody into that next step is extremely important, and I’m grateful to be able to do it.”

    Pittman spent 11 and a half years inside the system of a state correctional facility and is now planning to use that experience to help others.

    Through his nonprofit, RREPS, he purchased the former Wayne Correctional Center and is working to transform it into a reentry housing and workforce campus: a place people can call home while they transition back into society.

    “I love to give people the opportunity to have a better life,” Pittman said.

    He said this is the first time a formerly incarcerated person in the U.S. has purchased a prison and led a nonprofit to repurpose it.

    Retired correctional officer Mario Davis, who met Pittman while he was still incarcerated and worked in the system for 20 years, says the new campus is game-changing for those looking for a fresh start.

    “Normally, people will go to a halfway house or a reentry house, and those individuals will have to go outside for services, but what he’s done here is bringing formerly incarcerated people in, so they don’t have to go out to get services,” Davis said.

    The campus will provide transitional residency, workforce development and job placement, educational opportunities, and multiple other programs for justice-impacted individuals.

    Pittman says the goal is to open the new campus in the next two years.

    RREPS purchased the prison for just under $1 million, made possible through donations, grants, and philanthropic support.

    More information on the nonprofit can be found here.

    Copyright 2026 WITN. All rights reserved.

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  • Several people injured in early Sunday crash in Wayne County, firefighters say

    Several people were sent to the hospital Sunday morning after a crash in Wayne County.

    According to the Arrington Volunteer Fire Department, firefighters went to an accident around 1:07 a.m. on Genoa Road. When they arrived, they found two cars involved in a crash, adding that one of the cars had significant damage.

    The fire department said several people were injured in the crash, but they did not specify how many or what caused the crash.

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  • Wayne County woman pleads guilty to stealing $102K in SNAP money

    A Wayne County woman pleaded guilty to stealing more than $100,000 in SNAP benefits while working as a state department case worker, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office of Eastern District of North Carolina.

    Shermeca McCrary, 46, faces a maximum of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine when she’s to be sentenced for theft of government property. She will also be ordered to pay a forfeiture money judgment of $102,000, the press release stated. 

    According to documents presented in court, between Jan. 2021 and Jan. 2024, McCrary used her position and privileges as a N.C. Department of Social Services case worker to access SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistant Program) accounts of qualified people and converted $102,000 in those government funds for her own personal use. 

    “Safeguarding taxpayer-funded assistance programs is one of our office’s core responsibilities,” said U.S. Attorney Ellis Boyle. “When a government employee abuses her position of trust to steal benefits intended to help families in need, we will act to hold her accountable.”

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  • Illinois resident killed in Wayne County crash

    RICHMOND, IN — An Illinois resident was killed on Monday, Sept. 1, when a motorcycle collided with a truck pulling a trailer.

    Kelly Rick, 41, of Ottawa, Illinois — about 80 miles southwest of Chicago — was pronounced dead at the scene of the Wayne County crash at U.S. 35 and Sycamore Street in Williamsburg.

    An Illinois resident was killed on Monday, Sept. 1, when a motorcycle collided with a trailer being pulled by a truck at U.S. 35 and Sycamore Street in Williamsburg, Wayne County sheriff’s deputies reported.

    According to Wayne County sheriff’s deputies, Joseph Riggs, 71, of Economy, was driving a Ford F-550 truck pulling a flatbed trailer northbound on U.S. 35 when a northbound motorcycle operated by Shane Johnson, 43 — also of Ottawa, Illinois — tried to pass the truck in a no passing-zone.

    When the truck began turning west onto Sycamore Street, the motorcycle struck the trailer the truck was pulling, according to a news release.

    Rick was a passenger on the motorcycle Johnson operated.

    Both Johnson and Riggs were taken to an area hospital for treatment of what were described as “non-life-threatening injuries,” the release said.

    “The crash remains under investigation pending toxicology reports,” according to Maj. Alan Moore, chief deputy of the Wayne County Sheriff’s Department.

    Wayne County emergency dispatchers were notified of the crash about 5 p.m. Monday.

    In addition to deputies, Williamson and Fountain City firefighters, the Reid Health EMS and Trauma Team and a representative of the Wayne County coroner’s staff responded to the scene.

    This article originally appeared on Richmond Palladium-Item: Motorcycle-truck crash in Wayne County leads to fatality

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  • Indicators 2025: Government fiscal health in NEPA — a regional overview

    Aug. 23—WILKES-BARRE — Jill Avery-Stoss, President of The Institute, this week said the financial condition of county governments in Northeast Pennsylvania reflects a mix of stable revenues, rising tax collections and varying debt levels, according to recent data from the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development (DCED) and county financial reports.

    Analysis from The Institute covers Lackawanna, Luzerne and Wayne counties, providing insight into how local governments manage public resources, balance budgets, and deliver essential services.

    Avery-Stoss said county fiscal indicators show that overall revenues increased across the region as of 2022, though performance varies by county.

    Lackawanna County reported slightly higher expenses than revenues per capita, driven by increased costs and a slight decline in revenue.

    In contrast, Luzerne County boosted revenue while reducing expenses, and Wayne County saw both revenue and spending rise.

    Taxes per capita climbed in all three counties, reflecting efforts to maintain services and keep budgets balanced.

    Intergovernmental revenue — funding transferred from state or federal sources through grants or shared taxes — also rose for all three counties. Avery-Stoss said these funds help support targeted projects and programs, providing flexibility to local governments facing fiscal pressures.

    Avery-Stoss said debt levels remain an important measure of fiscal health.

    Lackawanna County carries the region’s highest total debt, at roughly $195.9 million, followed by Luzerne County at $166.1 million and Wayne County at $23.8 million.

    When adjusted for population, Lackawanna County again leads with a debt burden of $908 per capita, compared to $510 in Luzerne County and $465 in Wayne County.

    Property taxes form the backbone of county revenue, supporting education, emergency services and public infrastructure.

    “Tax rates in Pennsylvania are assessed in mills, though the way properties are valued differs by county, making direct comparisons difficult,” Avery-Stoss said. “Declining millage rates do not always translate into lower tax bills either, largely because this data does not include school district taxes, which typically represent the largest share of property owners’ obligations.”

    Avery-Stoss said sales tax remittances have trended upward in the region and statewide, underscoring the role of consumer spending in government finance.

    In 2023 — 2024, Luzerne County generated the highest local sales tax remittance at $110.5 million, followed by Lackawanna County at $91.4 million and Wayne County at $21.7 million.

    Pennsylvania as a whole collected $15.8 billion, providing a steady revenue stream to fund state-level services and initiatives.

    Avery-Stoss said employment levels within county governments reflect both the delivery of public services and the sector’s contribution to the regional economy.

    Over the past decade, Avery-Stoss said staffing numbers have fluctuated.

    In 2024, Wayne County employed more government workers than in 2015, while Lackawanna County’s staffing was nearly unchanged. Luzerne County and the Commonwealth reported fewer government employees compared to a decade ago. Across the three-county region, most government workers (41.1%) are employed by local governments, followed by federal (32.9%) and state (26.1%) agencies.

    “All this information points to general fiscal stability, though not without ongoing challenges,” Avery-Stoss said. “Rising tax collections and strong intergovernmental support have bolstered county revenues, but debt burdens and expenditure pressures are persistent. Policymakers can monitor these trends and keep them in mind when making decisions about resource allocation and public service delivery.”

    Reach Bill O’Boyle at 570-991-6118 or on Twitter @TLBillOBoyle.

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  • Michigan AG not investigating illegal destruction of Wayne County prosecutor files

    Michigan AG not investigating illegal destruction of Wayne County prosecutor files

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    Steve Neavling

    The Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office is now located at the new Wayne County Criminal Justice Center in Detroit.

    Thousands of files belonging to the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office were illegally destroyed, but a week after Metro Times reported on the unlawful purge, the Michigan Attorney General’s Office says it is not investigating the case.

    The destruction of prosecutor files has made it exceedingly difficult for wrongfully convicted inmates to demonstrate their innocence.

    Between 2001 and 2004, while Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan was prosecutor, most if not all misdemeanor and felony records from 1995 and earlier were removed from an off-site warehouse and destroyed, according to Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy. During that time, Attorney General Dana Nessel worked in the prosecutor’s office. 

    Duggan adamantly denies he was involved.

    In Michigan, prosecutors are required to retain the files of defendants serving life sentences for at least 50 years or until the inmate dies. Violating the law carries a maximum penalty of two years in prison.

    It’s not entirely clear why Nessel’s office isn’t investigating, but a spokesman says no complaints have been filed.

    “Our department does not have an active investigation into the matter,” Danny Wimmer, spokesperson for Nessel, told Metro Times in a statement Tuesday. “I am unaware of any criminal complaint or request to investigate being filed with or referred to our office.”

    Wimmer has not yet responded to Metro Times’s follow-up questions.

    Any Michigan resident can file a complaint about the destruction of records by filling out this form on the Michigan Attorney General’s website.

    Nessel’s office investigated Duggan’s administration in the past but declined to file charges. In October 2019, the Detroit Office of the Inspector General (OIG) said top officials in Duggan’s administration ordered the deletion of emails related to the nonprofit Make Your Date, which was run by the mayor’s now-wife. But Nessel declined to file charges in April 2021, saying the “facts and evidence in this case simply did not substantiate criminal activity.”

    More than two dozen prisoners interviewed by Metro Times say they are innocent, but the destruction of the prosecutor’s files has severely hindered their ability to get a new trial.

    The file purge involved records from a deeply problematic period in Detroit’s Homicide Division when rampant misconduct, coerced confessions, and constitutional violations by police, particularly homicide detectives, were so widespread that the U.S. Department of Justice intervened, pressing for reforms to avoid a costly lawsuit in the early 2000s. This era of misconduct led to a significant number of wrongful convictions and false confessions, evidenced by a surge in exonerations and court settlements.

    Legal experts say many innocent people remain incarcerated, but the destruction of the prosecutor’s files has compromised many of their cases, leaving some prisoners without a clear path to proving their innocence.

    Eugene McKinney, a 54-year-old Detroiter who has been in prison since he was convicted of arson and first-degree murder in 1997, says he has compelling evidence to prove he’s innocent. But without the prosecutor’s files, he says, he has little recourse.

    Someone needs to be held accountable for the file purge, McKinney says.

    “They need to be prosecuted because they are withholding some important evidence that could exonerate me,” McKinney says from Gus Harrison Correctional Facility in Adrian.

    Steve Neavling

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  • Prosecutor Worthy requests funds to investigate cases handled by detective featured in Metro Times series

    Prosecutor Worthy requests funds to investigate cases handled by detective featured in Metro Times series

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    AP Photo/Paul Sancya

    Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy is under fire for failing to investigate cases handled by retired Detroit Detective Barbara Simon.

    A little more than a month after Metro Times published a two-part series exposing a former Detroit detective who used illegal tactics to elicit false confessions and witness statements, both prosecutors and police oversight officials pledged to take action Thursday.

    Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy plans to expand a unit dedicated to exonerating innocent people, and the Detroit Board of Police Commissioners is investigating complaints that Detective Barbara Simon engaged in a pattern of criminal wrongdoing.

    On Thursday, Worthy requested an increase in funding for her Conviction Integrity Unit (CIU), which is tasked with freeing innocent people from prison, after she told county officials that news reports suggested that Simon “may have tainted many cases.”

    “My view is, if you’re running an office, you should never be afraid to look at old convictions to make sure they were done the right way,” Worthy said.

    Wayne County Executive Warren Evans, a former Detroit police chief, is proposing the increase in CIU funding in his budget that still needs approval from the Wayne County Board of Commissioners.

    Worthy said she was getting hammered in the media for declining to comment on investigating Simon’s cases. She said she wanted to wait until Evans supported the increase in funding for the CIU.

    “I wanted to make sure that funding was approved by you and that will give me an opportunity to hire someone to focus on those cases,” Worthy said.

    Worthy launched the CIU in 2018 to review old cases to determine if people were wrongfully convicted. But the unit is understaffed and overwhelmed with cases, according to Valerie Newman, head of the CIU.

    Since the CIU was created, she said, prosecutors have received 2,311 requests to review cases. Of those cases, the CIU reviewed 1,177.

    The CIU’s work has resulted in 38 inmates either being exonerated or their cases being dismissed. A disproportionate number of those cases occurred in 2020, the year Worthy was running for reelection.

    By contrast, only three cases were dismissed since January 2023.

    None of the CIU’s cases involved defendants who accused Simon of misconduct, leaving potentially innocent people with very little recourse.

    “Currently, there is a backlog of requests for conviction review that the CIU is working through,” Newman told Metro Times last month. “The CIU strives to handle all claims with care and attention as it works through its backlog.”

    Also on Thursday, four members of the Detroit Board of Police Commissioners spoke in favor of an investigation into Simon, who was known as “the closer” in the 1990s and early 2000s because of her knack for gaining confessions and witness statements. Her methods of confining young Black men to small rooms at police headquarters for hours without a warrant, making false promises, and lying about evidence that didn’t exist led to the false imprisonment of at least five men. Many more innocent people are still behind bars because of Simon, activists and defense attorneys say.

    Mark Craighead, who was exonerated after spending more than seven years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit and has led the effort to investigate Simon’s cases, says he’s relieved that authorities are beginning to take action. But he’s skeptical of Worthy’s office handling the investigations, saying prosecutors tried to keep him and three other exonerees in prison for years before it became abundantly clear they were innocent.

    Craighead, another exoneree, and family members of inmates who say they were convicted because of Simon’s misconduct protested outside of Worthy’s office on Aug. 28, calling for an independent counsel to investigate Simon’s cases and demanding a meeting with Worthy.

    “We still want to meet with Worthy,” Craighead tells Metro Times. “And we want an independent investigation, not an in-house investigation. We don’t trust her office.”

    Craighead called the CIU’s proposed budget expansion “a good step, but it’s not the right step,” he says, to address the hundreds of cases that Simon handled during her career.

    On Wednesday, Craighead filed a criminal complaint against Simon with the Board of Police Commissioners. He alleges Simon repeatedly engaged in criminal conduct by committing perjury, illegally detaining suspects for long periods without a warrant, and assaulting and threatening witnesses.

    Some commissioners are asking the police department to investigate Simon’s actions while she was a detective and determine if anyone else was complicit in her misconduct.

    But Commissioner Linda Bernard said more needs to be done and called for creating a task force to investigate Simon. She said the task force could include Detroit’s Office of Inspector General, the Michigan State Police, the Michigan Attorney General’s Office, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

    “I don’t think that what we’re suggesting is enough, quite frankly,” Bernard said. “I do not think this is something that is a casual situation. There are major civil rights issues that have been raised in this matter.”

    During the meeting, Commissioner Chairman Darryl Woods suggested that the board get into contact with the prosecutor’s office and the Michigan Innocence Clinic, which previously helped exonerate four people convicted as a result of Simon’s investigations.

    In an interview with Metro Times on Friday, Woods reiterated his support for urging the proper agencies to investigate cases handled by Simon, who has been sued four times for wrongful convictions.

    “Communicating with the right entities that have the authority to look at the cases and make the decisions about them is the best thing we can do,” Woods says. “This situation is not lost on us.”

    Woods has a reason to be suspicious of improper investigations. He spent nearly 29 years in prison for a murder he says he didn’t commit. In 2019, Woods was released from prison after former Gov. Rick Snyder commuted his sentence. A trial judge determined that witnesses in Woods’s case may have committed perjury.

    “I understand the pain of the wrongfully convicted,” Woods says.

    Steve Neavling

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  • Teen describes inhumane conditions at Wayne County juvenile jail after arrest

    Teen describes inhumane conditions at Wayne County juvenile jail after arrest

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    Steve Neavling

    Wayne County Juvenile Detention Center.

    While Nicole Walker fretted over the whereabouts of her arrested 16-year-old daughter Saturday, the Detroit teenager was confined to what she describes as an overcrowded, understaffed juvenile jail in Hamtramck that didn’t even have cups for water.

    The teenager claims Wayne County authorities prevented her from calling her mom and left her alone in a cold jail where she witnessed juveniles getting abused.

    “They took me away from my mother, and I didn’t have any connections to the outside world,” the girl tells Metro Times. “I felt like I was invisible and that no one cared about me. They don’t care about you. They’re evil. The whole building is unsafe.”

    Detroit police arrested the teenager, whose name Metro Times isn’t disclosing because she’s a juvenile, on Friday afternoon on allegations that she pointed a gun at a group of people at a convenience store near her home on Detroit’s east side. Her mother says police refused to answer her questions and wouldn’t say where her daughter was going.

    Detroit Police Commissioner Willie Burton helped the family file a complaint against police for their handling of the juvenile.

    “Look at the stress they put on this family,” Burton tells Metro Times. “I think there is a lot to come out about this. Questions need to be asked. There needs to be oversight and accountability.”

    According to the teenager, she was placed in a backroom at a police precinct office for three to four hours before being taken to the Detroit Juvenile Detention Center, which has come under fire for deplorable conditions and abusive staffers.

    She says she wasn’t allowed to call her mother until Saturday evening — more than 30 hours after she was arrested. County officials confirmed she called her mom on Saturday and Tuesday.

    The teenager says she witnessed staffers assaulting juveniles.

    “When they tell you to go to your room, these big guys chase you around,” she says. “They will drag you, throw you, punch you. They are so bad there. It was crazy.”

    She says the meals tasted like “dog food,” and the only drinks available were orange juice because the jail had run out of cups for water. If the juveniles wanted to drink water, they had to form cups with their hands to sip from the sink, she says.

    “We were treated like animals,” she says, breaking down in tears. “I lost my mind. It’s crazy in there.”

    Wayne County spokesperson Doda Lulgjuraj disputed claims that there were no cups for water.

    “Our team says cups were and are still available in every pod,” Lulgjuraj tells Metro Times.

    Meanwhile, the teenager says she’s “deathly scared” to go back to jail.

    “I’m terrified,” she says. “Honestly, I would rather die than go back there. It’s a scary place.”

    Her case is in front of a juvenile judge.

    Last week, Metro Times launched “The Closer,” an investigative series about a former Detroit detective who terrorized teenagers to elicit false confessions and witness statements. In Part II, released this week, activists and attorneys call for a wholesale review of all the cases handled by the detective.

    Steve Neavling

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  • Judge Dana Hathaway pushes back against efforts to remove her from ballot

    Judge Dana Hathaway pushes back against efforts to remove her from ballot

    Wayne County Circuit Court

    Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Dana Hathaway.

    Wayne County Circuit Judge Dana Hathaway is firing back at an activist’s attempts to remove her from the ballot, saying she followed the directions given to her by the Michigan Bureau of Elections.

    Highland Park activist Robert Davis, who is known for disqualifying candidates from the ballot, is contesting Hathaway’s bid to run for reelection to the Wayne County Circuit Court. In a complaint filed with the Michigan Secretary of State’s Office on Wednesday, Davis argues Hathaway must be removed from the ballot because her affidavit of identity “contains a false statement.”

    Candidates are required to identify every county in which they ran for office. On Hathaway’s affidavit, which she submitted on March 5, the judge wrote “state” instead of the counties in which she previously ran.

    In an email to Metro Times, Hathaway says the Michigan Bureau of Elections notified her on Feb. 5 that it “is fine” to list “state” instead of the counties in which she ran.

    “An error on this line will not disqualify or cause issues for a candidate,” state officials wrote to Hathaway.

    This is proof, Hathaway says, that she did nothing wrong.

    “There was no mistake,” Hathaway said. “As you may be aware, Mr. Davis likes to create non-issues to harass candidates. … The Bureau of Election has made it clear he has no basis to challenge.”

    She added in a follow-up email on Friday morning, “This is much ado about nothing.”

    But Hathaway’s contention that Davis likes to “create non-issues” is misleading. Davis has successfully forced numerous candidates for judge, mayor, and city council off of ballots for failing to properly fill out affidavits of identities.

    In an interview with Davis on Friday, he says the Michigan Bureau of Elections does not have the final say on whether a candidate can be removed from a ballot.

    He plans to soon file a lawsuit with the Michigan Court of Claims, which he points out has the authority to remove candidates from the ballot, even if the Michigan Bureau of Elections contends a candidate is still eligible. In a lawsuit filed by Davis, the Michigan Court of Appeals ruled in April 2023 that the statute, not state officials, determines the eligibility of a candidate. And the statute, Davis says, clearly states that a candidate cannot make mistakes or omissions on the affidavit of identity.

    “The statute is very clear, and the case law is very clear: If you omit mandatory information, then you cannot be certified to appear on the ballot,” Davis says. “It’s quite sad when you have a judge that is ignorant of the law.”

    Davis adds that the Bureau of Elections is “overstepping their legal authority in their effort to appease and accommodate judges.”

    Davis says the courts, not state election officials, will have the final decision.

    “Ultimately it’s going to be determined by the courts,” Davis says. I gave (state election officials) a courtesy to submit a challenge to give them an opportunity to try to address it. Now that I know they are going to defend their stupidity, this is going straight to the courts.”

    State election officials didn’t return requests for comment.

    Hathaway is part of a family with strong ties to the judicial system in Michigan. At least six Hathaways are current or retired Wayne County Circuit Court judges.

    Her husband Nicholas J. Bobak Hathaway, and another relative, Bridget Hathaway, also serve on the Wayne County Circuit Court. Her husband changed his last name to Hathaway when he ran for the position in 2020.

    Her father is Richard Hathaway, a retired Wayne County Circuit judge, one-time Wayne County treasurer, and a chief assistant Wayne County prosecutor. Her mother is Diane Hathaway, a former Michigan Supreme Court justice who was sentenced to a year in federal prison in 2013 after pleading guilty to bank fraud.

    Hathaway was hospitalized on March 20 for unknown reasons. At 1:18 p.m., her husband, who was downtown at the time, called 911 and told the operator his wife was on the upper floor of their home in Grosse Pointe Park.

    “I’m very scared,” according to audio of the redacted call obtained by Metro Times.

    Hathaway was at Ascension St. John in Detroit for several days.

    She did not respond to questions from Metro Times about her hospital stay.

    Steve Neavling

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  • Bizarre mistake could force Judge Dana Hathaway from ballot

    Bizarre mistake could force Judge Dana Hathaway from ballot

    Wayne County Circuit Court

    Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Dana Hathaway.

    Highland Park activist Robert Davis, who has a history of knocking political candidates off of ballots, is challenging the candidacy of Wayne County Circuit Judge Dana Hathaway.

    Davis alleged in a complaint filed Wednesday that Hathaway, who is running for reelection, should be removed from the ballot because her affidavit of identity “contains a false statement.”

    On candidates’ affidavits, they are required to identify every county in which they ran for office. On Hathaway’s affidavit, which she submitted on March 5, the judge inexplicably wrote “state” instead of the counties in which she previously ran.

    She should have written “Wayne County” and “Oakland County,” Davis points out in his complaint to election officials, including Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson.

    “It’s very clear that her affidavit of identity doesn’t comply with the statute because she failed to list the counties that she previously ran in as a candidate,” Davis tells Metro Times.

    While the mistake may seem minor, the law clearly states that a candidate is not qualified to appear on the ballot if there are any false statements.

    Davis has gotten numerous other candidates removed from the ballot for similar mistakes and false statements.

    Asked whether state law allows Hathaway to fix the false statement, Davis says, “There’s not a chance.”

    Hathaway is part of a family with strong ties to the judicial system in Michigan. At least six Hathaways are current or retired Wayne County Circuit Court judges.

    Her husband Nicholas J. Bobak Hathaway, and another relative, Bridget Hathaway, also serve on the Wayne County Circuit Court. Her husband changed his last name to Hathaway when he ran for the position in 2020.

    Her father is Richard Hathaway, a retired Wayne County Circuit judge, one-time Wayne County treasurer, and a chief assistant Wayne County prosecutor. Her mother is Diane Hathaway, a former Michigan Supreme Court justice who was sentenced to a year in federal prison in 2013 after pleading guilty to bank fraud.

    Davis isn’t done trying to remove other judges from the 2024 ballot.

    “There are going to be other incumbent judges who are going to be adversely impacted as well,” Davis says, adding that he will file complaints against them in the near future.

    The deadline for an incumbent to file for candidacy or fix any false statements was the end of March.

    “It was mandatory for Hathaway’s affidavit of identity to provide the counties she previously ran in as a candidate,” Davis wrote, citing state law.

    Metro Times couldn’t reach Hathaway for comment.

    Hathaway was hospitalized on March 20 for unknown reasons. At 1:18 p.m., her husband, who was downtown at the time, called 911 and told the operator his wife was on the upper floor of their home in Grosse Pointe Park.

    “I’m very scared,” according to audio of the redacted call obtained by Metro Times.

    Hathaway was at Ascension St. John in Detroit for several days.

    Steve Neavling

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  • Wayne County public defender sues judges for alleged bias against lower-income defendants

    Wayne County public defender sues judges for alleged bias against lower-income defendants

    click to enlarge

    Attorney Sundus Jaber filed a whistleblower lawsuit against 35th District Court over the treatment of her indigent clients.

    A young public defender claims in a federal lawsuit that she was pushed out of her job at 35th District Court in Plymouth for passionately fighting on behalf of her lower-income clients.

    Sundus K. Jaber filed a whistleblower lawsuit in U.S. District Court in late March, claiming she was prevented from representing indigent defendants in criminal cases in Judge James Plakas’s courtroom in retaliation for vigorously defending her clients.

    Jaber, a Muslim who wears a hijab, says she was mistreated and harassed by judges and their staff at the expense of her clients.

    On her first day as a public defender, Judge Ronald Lowe advised Jaber that she would be removed if she fights too much on behalf of her clients, saying she “needs to understand that 95% of the people she will represent are guilty,” according to the lawsuit.

    Lowe then said, “If you contest more than 5% of cases, we will boot you out of here,” the suit alleges.

    Lowe’s alleged remarks fly in the face of the 6th Amendment, which entitles criminal defendants to “effective assistance of counsel,” regardless of their income.

    “The ability of a person charged in the criminal system to pay for counsel should not dictate whether they receive constitutionally-sound representation that is free from interference by the judiciary,” the lawsuit states.

    Jaber, who became a licensed attorney in 2020, says the experience has been eye-opening and disheartening, but she won’t be deterred.

    “It is hard to be a young lawyer trying to build her skills and reputation, and realizing how much power a judge has to influence your career and standing in the legal community,” Jaber tells Metro Times. “It has been difficult to stay working under these conditions and worry about whether my belief in providing a vigorous defense will hurt my career. But I know I’m doing the right thing.”

    Numerous studies nationwide have shown that public defenders grapple with overwhelming caseloads, hindering their ability to offer adequate legal support to individuals charged with crimes.

    After Jaber launched complaints that her indigent defendants were mistreated at the hands of Plakas, Lowe, and court staff, the judges asked for her removal.

    Jaber filed her complaints with the Regional Managed Assigned Counsel Office (RMACO), which is a nonprofit that assigns public defenders to district courts in Wayne County. According to the suit, RMACO Director Teresa Patton, who originally recruited Jaber to serve as one of the two lead public defenders for the 35th District Court, didn’t take her complaints seriously and refused to meet with Jaber after she retained counsel.

    On Feb. 13, Patton notified Jaber that she could only represent indigent clients in front of Judge Michael J. Gerou, one of three judges for the 35th District Court. The move cut “her workload and thus her income by half,” the lawsuit states.

    Patton warned Jaber that if she filed a lawsuit over the issue, she would be removed entirely from the court system.

    The lawsuit alleges the judges and RMACO violated her First Amendment Rights, the Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act, and the Michigan Whistleblower Protection Act.

    Jaber says her experience demonstrates the systematic mistreatment of indigent defendants at 35th District Court, which has a reputation among criminal defense attorneys of being unfair to defendants, especially those who cannot afford to hire their own attorneys.

    “Wayne County has a difficult time recruiting a criminal defense attorney to accept appointments for indigent defendants at the 35th District Court because of the Court’s reputation among the bar as being generally inhospitable to public defenders who vigorously defend cases and generally allowing its staff to be extremely and inappropriately hostile,” the suit alleges.

    Four defense attorneys told Metro Times on condition of anonymity that they try to avoid the 35 District Court because their clients often receive unfair treatment.

    “It is hard enough to be a defendant in this justice system, and I always wonder if you can ever get a fair shake,” Jaber says. “When a court and its personnel treat people like this, I know it makes defendants lose hope and faith that the outcome is unfair. Defendants represented by someone who won’t put the work into their defense can face potential life-changing consequences with longer loss of liberty or more serious convictions that affect their future, even at the district court level.”

    Metro Times couldn’t reach the 35th Circuit judges or RMACO for comment.

    Steve Neavling

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  • Wayne County treasurer rejects moratorium on foreclosures despite troubling study

    Wayne County treasurer rejects moratorium on foreclosures despite troubling study

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    Lee DeVito

    Detroit City Council is calling on Wayne County to halt owner-occupied house foreclosures this year.

    Wayne County Treasurer Eric Sabree is defying demands to impose a moratorium on owner-occupied home foreclosures after a study suggested the city is illegally overtaxing houses worth less than $35,000.

    In a statement to Metro Times on Thursday, Sabree said he will not pause foreclosures amid calls from the Detroit City Council and activists to do so.

    “This year, the number of foreclosed properties is notably lower compared to previous years,” Sabree said. “This decline can be attributed to homeowners being given time to catch up over the past 4 years, alongside increased availability of assistance programs and community outreach in the Wayne County Treasurer’s Office.”

    Last month, Detroit City Council unanimously passed a resolution calling on the treasurer to stop owner-occupied foreclosures on houses valued at less than $30,000 because illegally overassessed property values would likely force many lower-income residents out of their homes.

    According to a study by the University of Chicago’s Harris School of Public Policy, the city of Detroit is cheating lower-income residents by illegally and disproportionately overtaxing homes worth less than $35,000. By contrast, owners of the highest value homes in Detroit are far less likely to be overtaxed.

    The study found that Detroit overassessed the value of 72% of the homes worth less than $34,700. A vast majority of the homes worth more than $35,000 were not overassessed, according to the study.

    Activists for the Coalition for Property Tax Justice, a group that advocates for homeowners in Detroit, championed the call for a moratorium, saying the city “systematically overassessed” the lowest value homes.

    Bernadette Atuahene, a property law scholar who has studied Detroit’s property tax foreclosure crisis, said Sabree’s failure to impose a moratorium will unfairly cost residents their homes.

    “Treasurer Sabree is ignoring the demands of the City Council to cruelly foreclose on the homes of Detroiters who may be in foreclosure due to illegally inflated property taxes,” Atuahene told Metro Times in a statement. “The power of the County to take someone’s home is an enormous responsibility and should be wielded with extreme caution. However, Treasurer Sabree has chosen to recklessly foreclose on hundreds of homes valued under $34,700 — a decision that is morally, economically, and legally irresponsible.”

    The coalition has been behind a separate push to compensate an untold number of Detroit homeowners who were overtaxed for their homes more than a decade ago. Between 2010 and 2016, the city of Detroit overtaxed homeowners by at least $600 million.

    The Michigan Constitution prohibits property from being assessed at more than 50% of its market value. Between 2010 and 2016, the city assessed properties at as much as 85% of their market value.

    In his statement, Sabree said his office supports removing some homes from the list of foreclosures, but not because of the study.

    “Some homeowners who face extreme financial hardships may be offered an opportunity to apply for City of Detroit exemption and property tax assistance and may be considered for foreclosure removal — we are requesting this through the courts,” he said.

    The city council also called on Mayor Mike Duggan’s administration to reduce property taxes for low-value homes because of the study’s findings. But the city’s assessor, Alvin Horhn, called the University of Chicago study “utter nonsense” and “politically driven.”

    Metro Times couldn’t reach council President Mary Sheffield for comment.

    Steve Neavling

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  • 1 person injured, man taken into custody following Wayne County shooting

    1 person injured, man taken into custody following Wayne County shooting

    Sunday, March 24, 2024 3:48AM

    1 person injured, man taken into custody following shooting

    Wayne County deputies responded to calls about a shooting on Brookside Way in Pikeville.

    PIKEVILLE, N.C. (WTVD) — Wayne County officials are investigating after a person barricaded themselves inside a home Saturday afternoon.

    According to officials, Wayne County deputies responded to calls about a shooting on Brookside Way near Willowbrook Drive. When deputies arrived they found located one unresponsive victim outside of a home. Deputies said a neighbor was administering CPR to the victim until emergency officials arrived.

    The person was taken to the hospital in unknown condition.

    Officials said the Sheriff’s Office SWAT team searched the home where the incident happened and found no other victims or suspects. Deputies then identified the suspect and found him in a field behind the home.

    He was taken into custody, and taken in for questioning, officials said.

    Tracking crime and safety across Raleigh, Durham and your neighborhood

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  • Wayne County Circuit Judge Dana Hathaway hospitalized

    Wayne County Circuit Judge Dana Hathaway hospitalized

    Wayne County Circuit Court

    Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Dana Hathaway.

    Wayne County Circuit Judge Dana Hathaway is in the hospital after first responders were called to her home in Grosse Pointe Park on Wednesday afternoon.

    Hathaway was still hospitalized Friday afternoon at Ascension St. John in Detroit. Her condition wasn’t immediately clear.

    First responders were called to the home on Windmill Pointe Drive at 2:10 p.m. Wednesday.

    Hathaway’s office told Metro Times that she was “out sick for a few days” and insisted her court docket would not be impacted.

    Hathaway is part of a family with strong ties to the judicial system in Michigan. At least six Hathaways are current or retired Wayne County Circuit Court judges.

    Her husband Nicholas J. Bobak Hathaway, and another relative, Bridget Hathaway, also serve on the Wayne County Circuit Court. Her husband changed his last name to Hathaway when he ran for the position in 2020.

    Her father is Richard Hathaway, a retired Wayne County Circuit judge, one-time Wayne County treasurer, and a chief assistant Wayne County prosecutor.

    Her mother is Diane Hathaway, a former Michigan Supreme Court justice who was sentenced to a year in federal prison in 2013 after pleading guilty to bank fraud.

    In 2015, Dana Hathaway made national news when she agreed to re-sentence Richard “White Boy Rick” Wershe, setting the stage for his eventual release. When he was a teenager, Wershe became the youngest known FBI informant and was serving a life sentence for selling cocaine in the 1980s.

    Dana Hathaway has three children.

    Last week, her home was placed on the market for $550,000.

    Metro Times couldn’t reach Hathaway’s family for comment.

    Steve Neavling

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  • ‘Damning evidence, if true’: New bombshell report on Trump’s efforts not to certify 2020 vote

    ‘Damning evidence, if true’: New bombshell report on Trump’s efforts not to certify 2020 vote

    The Detroit News reports it obtained audio of Donald Trump pressuring two Wayne County canvassers not to certify Joe Biden’s win. NBC News has not heard or verified those recordings. It comes as Trump lashes out on social media against the Colorado Supreme Court’s ruling to remove him from the state’s primary ballot. Hugo Lowell, Kristy Greenberg, and Jonathan Karl weigh in.

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  • City council approves recreational marijuana shops in Taylor – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    City council approves recreational marijuana shops in Taylor – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    TAYLOR, Mich. – After months of no action, the City of Taylor is one step closer to opening recreational marijuana shops.

    Taylor City Council passed two marijuana ordinances Tuesday (May 2) night after voters approved the measure last fall.

    The primary ordinance focused on zoning, allowing anywhere from three to five recreational marijuana dispensaries to open in approved industrial areas of the city.

    “It’s not going to be on every corner,” said Council Chairman Doug Geiss. “It’s really not going to be very visible, but the areas that we chose are going to be close to freeways, so it will be accessible for people to come to Taylor to purchase (recreational marijuana), but also for our residents, not having to drive five to ten miles.”

    There was some pushback from residents about revising the 2,500 feet rule.

    The ballot measure approved by voters stated that recreational marijuana facilities would be a minimum of 2,500 feet from protected areas like schools and churches.

    “Twenty-five hundred feet would’ve meant that there were no parcels,” Geiss said. “So what we did is use natural barriers. A freeway is a natural barrier.”

    For example, a recreational marijuana store can be located on the other side of the freeway from a residential area, even if the two locations are not 2,500 feet apart.

    Those against the ordinance expressed concern about dispensaries being too close to children.

    “Everywhere you turn, there are pot stores, and that is very sad for…

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

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  • Detroit Starbucks forced to close after PETA protesters encased feet in concrete, blocked entrance

    Detroit Starbucks forced to close after PETA protesters encased feet in concrete, blocked entrance

    DETROIT – A Starbucks in Detroit was forced to close on Friday after four protesters blocked the entrance by encasing their feet in concrete.

    Four PETA supporters protested Starbucks’ upcharge of non-dairy milk by encasing their feet in concrete and blocking the store’s entrance for four hours with signs and chants.

    Two of the four protesters were taken away in an ambulance.

    PETA Starbucks protest (PETA)

    “Starbucks’ punitive price hike on vegan milks harms cows, the planet, and customers who are lactose-intolerant—many of whom are people of color,” says PETA Executive Vice President Tracy Reiman. “PETA has appealed to Starbucks to stop profiting from the plant-based milk upcharge, but so far, greed continues to define the company’s position.”

    This comes as the latest Starbucks protest from PETA supporters. The previous “cement-in” took place outside of a Nashville Starbucks which resulted in the arrest of four protesters.

    Other supporters have superglued themselves to counters in Chicago, New York City, and at the company’s headquarters in Seattle.

    The Detroit protest comes on the last day of the 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference.

    Copyright 2022 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.

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