Quantcast
Channel: WTVR.com » Tennessee
Viewing all 56 articles
Browse latest View live

AMBER ALERT UPDATE: Mother, daughter dead, 2 kidnapped daughters, suspect remain at large

$
0
0
  • NEW: Jo Ann Bain and her daughter Adrienne were found dead in Mississippi, the FBI says
  • They and 2 other daughters were reported missing April 27 in western Tennessee
  • Authorities say their suspected kidnapper is considered armed and dangerous

By the CNN Wire Staff

(CNN) — The FBI said Monday night that a Tennessee mother and her 14-year-old daughter are dead, through the man they believe abducted them — along with two other daughters — remains at large.

Authorities previously reported that they had found two bodies Friday at a Guntown, Mississippi, residence tied to the kidnapping suspect, Adam Mayes. But it was not until Monday that the Shelby County, Tennessee, medical examiner positively identified the pair as Jo Ann Bain, 31, and her daughter Adrienne Bain, according to the FBI.

Mayes is considered armed and dangerous, with authorities asking for the public’s help in tracking down him and the two other girls, 12-year-old Alexandra Bain and 8-year-old Kyliyah Bain, whom he also allegedly abducted.

Authorities established contact with and tried to interview the 35-year-old Mayes soon after the mother and her three daughters were reported missing on April 27 by Jo Ann’s husband from Whiteville, a western Tennessee town of 4,600 people, but then he fled, Joel Siskovic, the spokesman for the FBI bureau in Memphis, Tennessee, told CNN affiliate WPTY.

He was last seen May 1 in Guntown, the same northern Mississippi town where the bodies were found. Details haven’t been released as to how or exactly when they died.

The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation late last week issued an Amber Alert asking for the public’s help in finding the Bain sisters and for information leading to Mayes’ arrest.

Aaron T. Ford, special agent in charge at the FBI’s Memphis bureau, told CNN on Sunday that investigators believe all the kidnapping victims “were transported across state lines into Mississippi.”

Local, state and federal law enforcement’s focus is now in Union County, Mississippi, where Guntown is located, the FBI agent said. Authorities have also pointed out, however, that Mayes has connections to Texas, North Carolina, South Carolina and Florida and could be en route to Arizona.

Mayes may be using the alias of Christopher Zachery Wylde or Paco Rodrigass, his Facebook profile name, the FBI said Monday.

Rick Foster, whose wife was a lifelong friend of Jo Ann Bain and whose daughter was a classmate of Adrienne Bain, recently told CNN that Mayes had been a friend of the Bain family for years. Mayes lived about 90 miles away in Mississippi, Foster said, but would stay with the Bains when he was in the Whiteville area.

He described Mayes as “a big kid in a grown man’s body.”

Mary Patterson, Mayes’ landlord in Alpine, Mississippi, told WPTY that she thought he was a “kind” and “fun guy.”

“If somebody told me this, I would have never believed it,” she said.

Authorities characterize Mayes as a white man who has blue eyes and brown hair, weighs about 175 pounds and stands 6-foot-3. He recently cut his own hair and may have done the same to the three children, according to the Amber Alert.

As for the Bains, Foster described the marriage between Jo Ann and her husband, Gary, as “perfect” and said the family had planned to move to Arizona once the school year ends.

The FBI and U.S. Marshals Service are offering a $50,000 reward for information leading to Mayes’ arrest and to the missing girls.

CNN’s Stephanie Gallman and Joe Sutton contributed to this report.



Father of 30 kids asks state to help with child support

$
0
0

Knoxville, TN (WREG)  Desmond Hatchett is pleading with the state of Tennessee to help him pay for child support.

Imagine trying to support one kid or four kids–then try 30 kids, and imagine how much it must cost. Then imagine making minimum wage.

Hatchett has 30 children by 11 different “baby mamas,” he said.

He explained how it all happened; “I had four kids in the same year. Twice.”

The children range in age from toddlers to 14-years-old.

He was last in court in 2009, at which time he had 21 children. That means he’s fathered at least 9 more children in the last 3 years.

Hatchett only has a minimum wage job, which means some of the moms receive as little as $1.49 a month.

Tell us in the comments what should be the best course of action, legally.


Deadly storms strike Great Smoky Mountains

$
0
0

ABRAMS CREEK, Tenn. (WTVR) – Severe storms struck the Great Smoky Mountains in eastern Tennessee Thursday killing at least two people.

The cluster of severe storms developed Thursday afternoon in West Va. and moved due south into Tennessee. CBS 6 meteorologist Carrie Rose said the storms produced wind gusts between 60 and  70 miles per hour and a lot of lightning.

According to a Great Smoky Mountains National Park spokesperson, a woman was killed when a tree fell at a campground. The second victim, a man, died in a motorcycle crash.

Several other people were also hurt. It took hours for rangers to get to reach some of the storm victims.


FACEBOOK: Man went to meet 12-year-old girl, left with bloody nose

$
0
0

By Scott Sutton

COOKEVILLE, Tenn (WSMV) — A 42-year-old Tennessee man got a bloody nose when he tried to meet a 12-year-old girl that he met on Facebook.

The child’s father said his daughter started receiving messages from a man she didn’t know, so he set up his own sting operation.

When the 42-year-old man arrived at Cane Creek Park, the girl’s dad called police and punched the man in the face.

The Monterey, TN man told police he deserved to be punched but said he just wanted to befriend the girl.

Police are still investigating, but no charges have been filed.


Illness causing nails to grow from woman’s face

$
0
0

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (WMC) A mysterious illness is causing nails to grow out of a Tennessee woman’s face.  The illness came on after the woman suffered an allergic reaction to steroids used to control asthma.

Now, Shanyna Isom is the focus of a medical mystery study at the famed Johns Hopkins Hospital.  Pictures show the tiny fingernails growing in patches on Isom’s body.  
Doctors say she produces 12 times the number of skin cells per hair follicle, and that suffocates her skin.

Isom’s physicians are able to control her symptoms, but the disease is still a mystery.   They’ve tested me from A to Z everything was coming back negative.

Isom’s mysterious illness has caused a financial crisis.

She has a quarter of a million dollars in medical debt and her insurance doesn’t cover her out-of-state care or a dozen medications she needs to stay healthy.  

Friends and family members have hosted fundraisers to help pay down the debt. 


Tractor trailer v/s train in Tennessee

$
0
0

(CNN) – A tractor-trailer collided with a train Tuesday afternoon east of Nashville. This is video of the scene in Lebanon, Tennessee. That’s a semi laying on it’s side!

No one was hurt, but the roads were shut down while the accident was cleared. Officials say the crash won’t affect afternoon train service. There are no crossing gates at the intersection but there are signals to alert vehicles to oncoming trains.

For complete video of this amazing accident click the video below:


Fan dies during football game

$
0
0

ATLANTA (CNN) – A spectator died Friday night after falling 35 feet during a college football game at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, authorities said.

The incident occurred during the North Carolina State and Tennessee game.

Isaac Grubb, 20, fell from an upper level of the stadium, according to the Fulton County Medical Examiner’s Office.

A shocked fan told CNN affiliate WSB that Grubb fell right after Tennessee had scored a touchdown.

“It looked like [he] was doing a fist pump, and then he was gone over the top,” William Coates said. “He was just laying there between rows. He wasn’t moving. His chest was moving a little.”

Grubb died later in a hospital.

 


Man hospitalized after alcohol enema puts BAC over .40

$
0
0

KNOXVILLE, TN (WTVR) – A University of Tennessee student was hospitalized over the weekend after he arrived at U.T. Medical Center in Knoxville with a blood alcohol level of .40, roughly five times the legal limit.

Police said his fraternity was using alcohol enemas. The fraternity, Pi Kappa Alpha, is based in Memphis and has since been suspended over the incident. 

A local newspaper reported the person who took the man to the hospital told police their fraternity had been pouring alcohol through rubber tubing into their rectums.

When police investigated the PIKE house, they found three men passed out.

Since alcohol enemas allow the liquid to bypass the liver, more alcohol gets into the blood stream. It also makes it harder to detect whether someone’s been drinking because it can’t be smelled on the breath.

The incident is currently being investigated. 



Tennessee frat holds conference to deny ‘butt-chugging’ charge

$
0
0

The fallout continues for the Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity at the University of Tennessee. 

The school has given the chapter an “indefinite suspension” of at least two years.  

This comes after it pleaded guilty to seven charges of misconduct stemming from incident last week that was said to involve an alcoholic enema. 

A lawyer for the student who was hospitalized with a point-four-zero blood alcohol level says his client finds that behavior repulsive. 

“We have come to make a public statement to not only to the University of Tennessee, to the students, to the administrators, and other people across the state of Tennessee, but to all people across this United States and the nation and the world to tell you as a public that all of the information that has been disseminated about him last week is false, malicious, and a total lie,” Daniel McGehee, the attorney, said.

Alexander Broughton, the student who was hospitalized for drinking, also spoke at the press conference. He said he “made a bad choice regarding drinking.” “That decision almost cost me my life and I deeply regret it,” he said.

But he “completely denied” the “scandalous accusations” that he went through an alcohol enema.

“At this point my intent is to clear my name, my fraternity name and to punish those individuals and institutions responsible for the lies that have been spread around the world, thank you,” Broughton said.

“Mr. Broughton, Brow-ton. It is Brow-ton not Broughton, It is Brow-ton it’s Scottish, denies each and every allegation whatsoever that has been inferred that he may be a gay man,” his attorney said.

“He is a straight man, and he thinks that the idea and concept of “butt chugging” is absolutely repulsive and I am telling you today that the only reason we’re standing here is because the University of Tennessee, its officials, and the University of Tennessee medical center, and especially the University of Tennessee Police Department has provided false and incorrect information,” the attorney said.

The Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity office says it has put its own suspension on the chapter for 30 days or until a decision is made regarding the long-term status of the chapter. 

When a reporter asked Broughton for clarification, he responded “It’s a long story.”


Man behind Mo Money Taxes is back with new name

$
0
0

(Memphis)  It seems multiple lawsuits, a visit from the IRS and even congressional hearings won’t stop a local tax preparer from doing business.

One of the men who started Mo’ Money Taxes has a new business, with a new name, but could it be more of the same?

Markey Granberry announced the news in familiar format, a YouTube video, where he mocks the media.

A participant says, “Markey, we’re going to be on you every chance we get.”  Granberry responds, “I know ’cause we the kings of the tax business why wouldn’t y’all be!”

He goes on to say, “My plans are to offer free tax preparation to my faithful and loyal clients.”

The clip also features online talk show host Thaddeus Matthews, recently charged with sexual exploitation of a minor.

The video reads, “Coming in 2013.”

It was in early 2012 that complaints started about Mo’ Money.

Those complaints eventually led to lawsuits, a congressional hearing, a visit from the IRS and most recently an indictment of five employees in Missouri for filing false tax credits.

Three of those employees were from Memphis.

Granberry wouldn’t talk to WREG On Your Side Investigators on camera, but sent an email saying, “The issues of delays and check issues were never the fault of Mo’ Money Taxes/MoneyCo USA…thus far, no charges have been filed against no one regarding issues of last year, and we are looking forward to Marquis Taxes being a success.”

The lawsuits in Missouri and Illinois are ongoing.

Those Mo’ Money employees indicted on criminal charges in Missouri have a hearing set for February.

A quick search of public records shows Southern King Taxes, the new business located at Mo’ Money’s old headquarters, also shares office space with Marquis Taxes at 3711 Hickory Hill.

It was formerly a MoneyCo location.

Southern King got a business license for the location in August, Marquis Taxes obtained one in October.

Granberry also has a new, limited liability company registered with the Tennessee Secretary of State’s Office.  It’s called Next Day Dollar, LLC.

The filing request was made on October 31, 2012.

The registered agent is Markey Granberry with an address of 5090 Millbranch, Memphis, TN.


Marine stands guard outside Tennessee school

$
0
0

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WTVR) — A military veteran in Tennessee is helping ease fellow parents’ fears after the tragedy in Connecticut by standing guard outside his kids’ school.

On Monday, three days after the tragedy, Staff Sargeant Jordan Pritchard dug his old Marine Corps uniform out of the attic, put it on and has spent every morning since then outside Gower Elementary School.

He is not armed, but he hopes his presence sends a message.

“I’m doing this because we need hope man.  We need hope. A believe in hope is larger than any weapon,” Pritchard said. “When parents come up to me and they’re crying and thanking me for being out here. There’s no job in the world that can pay me enough money to not do things for the kids and for the parents.  You know.”

The school has given permission for Pritchard to stand guard as long as he wants.


Plane lands safely on Tenn. highway

$
0
0

FAYETTE COUNTY, Tenn. (WTVR) —  A group of friends in Memphis say they’re thanking God after the small plane they were flying in had a safe emergency landing on a highway.

The pilot took the group to Missouri for dinner when the engine started to die less than ten miles away from the airport.

The plane had to dodge some traffic as it came in for a landing on the highway, but nobody was hurt.

Read more on this story on WREG.com


City fights to change park named after Confederate General

$
0
0

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (WTVR) – Members of the Memphis City Council are in a race against the state legislature to change the name of Nathan Bedford Forrest Park.

Forrest was a Confederate general in the Civil War and was for a time the Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan.

Instead they want to honor someone who unified the two races, Ida B. Wells.

State lawmakers have authored a bill that would make it illegal to change the name of a park if it’s named for someone who fought in a war.

Additionally, Forrest is buried in the park.

Click here to read the whole story on WREG.com

Tenn. bill would force women to view ultrasound before abortion

$
0
0

By Cara Kumari

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WSMV) — A Tennessee lawmaker’s proposal that would require women to undergo ultrasounds before having an abortion is raising questions and gaining national attention.

Some accuse the bill’s main sponsor of only introducing the bill to help an election, but State Sen. Jim Tracy, R-Shelbyville, said he believes all women considering an abortion should experience the same medical process as other future parents.

“This decision she is going to make on whether to have an abortion is a life-altering decision,” Tracy said. “It’s a big decision, and this gives her the opportunity to be informed before she makes this life-altering decision.”

Tracy’s bill would require a transabdominal ultrasound before getting an abortion. If the woman doesn’t want to look at the ultrasound, a medical technician must describe the ultrasound image to her in detail.

Opponents of the bill contend Tracy is only bringing it up because he’s challenging U.S. Rep. Scott DesJarlais in the 4th District Republican primary next year.

DesJarlais has made headlines for allegedly pressuring a pregnant mistress to get an abortion after campaigning as staunchly pro-life.

“I think it’s really something that he is using for his campaign so he can prove that he’s more conservative than the other candidates are. Secondly, I think it’s ridiculous,” said State Rep. Sherry Jones, D-Nashville.

But there are other questions as well. The waiting period aspect of the bill could also bring up constitutional questions because of a 2000 Tennessee Supreme Court ruling that struck down a waiting period for abortions.

Voters are supposed to go to the polls in November 2014 to decide whether or not to change that and Tracy said the issue is on his radar.

“I’ve talked to attorneys today about it, so we will look through that process and make sure where we are – that it doesn’t affect the ballot in 2014. And I’m concerned about that,” Tracy said.

Woman gets billed $5 for using the bathroom

$
0
0

ERIN, Tenn. (CNN) – A restaurant owner in Erin, Tn. billed a woman $5 for using the bathroom. The owner defends her actions saying the restrooms are for customers only.

The Flood Zone could be seen as a bright spot in the city known as a wee bit of Ireland, but recently, talk of the restaurant has been in the toilet.

Lisa Kent, co-owner of the Flood Zone says the $5 charge to use the bathroom wasn’t about the money, it was to emphasize that the restroom is for customers only because of past messes left in the restroom.

In October, Kent tried to enforce her $5 restroom charge by tracking down a woman who entered her business under the guise of a customer.

“She looked at the menu board up there and said, ‘Let me wash my hands.’ And she went into the bathroom and styed approximately 20 minutes. She jumped in her car and too off,” Kent says.

The business’ restrooms are clearly marked “customer only” but Kent admits the charge for non-customers was never about the money.

“We’re not a big business. We don’t have maintenance men to come,” Kents says.

David Gardner, who owns a nearby business, says he can sympathize.

“We’ve got a key that we use when the customers come in they have to ask for the key and they go use the bathroom,” Gardner says.

Gardner owns the Hojo Mini Market across the street. His restrooms are kept under lock and key to prevent damage.

“If you do have problems with people coming in, using the bathroom and messing up real bad, you can say it’s out of order,” Gardner says.

Since word has gotten out about the restroom charge, the owner of the Foold Zone says she’s paying the price.

Kent has answered countless harassing phone calls. Despite national media attention, many around time admit they’ve only heard one side.

“I don’t know the whole story,” Leo Valiz, a Erin resident, says.

Kent says she’s heard enough and is ready to get back to business.



Newborn twin deaths, mom convicted of murder

$
0
0

NASHVILLE (WTVR) – A jury convicted a Tennessee woman in the death of her newborn twins. Lindsey Lowe, 26, was found guilty Tuesday of felony murder, premeditated murder and aggravated child abuse, according to a report on CBSNews.com.

Lowe smothered the children whose bodies were later found in a laundry basket.

Lowe, it came out in court, tried to keep her pregnancy a secret because the father of the children was not her fiancee. Lowe was sentenced to life in prison.


Body of pilot found who fell from plane

$
0
0

BRADLEY COUNTY, Tenn. (WDEF) — The body of a pilot that somehow fell from a plane over Tennessee Friday afternoon has been found.

Another pilot in the plane was able to safely land, but locating the victim was a time-consuming and difficult process for search crews.

WDEF reports that a student pilot on board the small experimental plane fell out somewhere over Bradley County during a training flight. Neither the victim nor instructor pilot were wearing seat belts.

After the student fell from the plane, the pilot was able to successfully complete an emergency landing at Collegedale airport.

“The plane did take a nose dive, it was going out of control the pilot was able to regain control of the plane and did land here,” said Melvin Taylor, a Collegdale police officer.

VIRAL PHOTOS

PHOTOS: Lego Kids Fest PHOTOS: Way TOO tan PHOTOS: No Pants Subway Ride

Click here to read more trending stories on WTVR.com.

Crews spearheaded the search from a farm on  Weatherly Switch Road, where one resident said they heard a low flying plane. More than 60 people searched the woods before nightfall.

“When it gets night here, it’ll slow the search down because we’ll have to be closer together and we’ll be running slower. And if it rains, we have to deal with that element as well,” Bradley County EMA Interim Fire Chief Troy Spence said.

Crews said debris from inside the plan they found scattered in the area helped them narrow the search.

WDEF reports the pilot’s body was discovered a half block from the Maroon Branch Fire Station around 11:30 a.m. on Saturday.

“They found him in a tree line, not too far off the road,” about a half-mile from a volunteer fire station, Bob Gault, a spokesperson for the Bradley County Sheriff’s Office, said.

The victim’s name has not yet been released.


Child sent home 24 different times for bad smell

$
0
0

A Tennessee child repeatedly sent home from school for smelling bad.

But her mother says the eight-year-old is clean.

“They just say it’s a foul odor,” Krystal Hensley, her mother, said. “She’s been to the doctor and it’s not a medical problem.”

“They send her home at least once a month, I mean, you go to school to learn, not to be sent home.”

Her mother says she takes a bath every day, but when the girl is asked the last time she took a bath is, she says she doesn’t remember.

According to several documents provided to us by Hensley, the school system says this student’s smell is disruptive.
So bad in fact, that other students and teachers complain about it, saying they cannot focus on school.

The school has warned since October, if corrective measures are not taken, the suspensions will continue and they have–the girl has spent at least 24 school days at home.

The director of schools wouldn’t talk specifically about this student. But Ron Dykes said that generally when a child is sent home, it’s a rare and extreme situation.

There are times when the Department of Children Services is called, but Dykes says usually after talking with the parents, the school tries to resolve it by searching for money or an agency to help.

A spokesperson for the DCS would only say, “we do not currently have an open case.”

Hensley says the case was closed. And yet the problem continues.

“She makes good grades, I mean, that’s not the problem, problem is you can’t learn if you’re not at school.”


Police: Child, 4, accidentally kills woman at cookout

$
0
0

By Joe Sterling

(CNN) — It happened in just seconds, by all accounts.

A gunshot killed a lawman’s wife this weekend in Lebanon, Tennessee. And the tragedy is one more instance of gun violence reverberating across a nation obsessed and at odds over the politics of firearms.

A pistol in the hands of a 4-year-old boy went off Saturday and killed Josephine Fanning, the 48-year-old wife of Wilson County Sheriff’s Deputy Daniel Fanning.

The incident occurred at a cookout on what had been a lazy, happy day.

The deputy and a relative went into a bedroom to look at some of the lawman’s guns, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation spokeswoman Kristin Helm said.

Josephine Fanning and the boy walked into the room later.

At some point, the boy picked up a loaded pistol from a bed, she said. The gun involved was Fanning’s personal weapon, not his service pistol, she said.

The single shot killed the woman. Now, the community — just east of Nashville — is beside itself with grief.

Deputy Fanning, in an e-mail to CNN affiliate WKRN, said he had set down his off-duty weapon “only seconds before the tragedy.”

“I would like the viewers to know that officers of Wilson County do not make a habit of leaving loaded guns simply lying around,” he said.

“The door to the room the accident happened in stays locked unless we were sleeping or we were in it. This was the only loaded gun in the house other than my duty weapon, which was locked away.”

The state bureau said it has taken all witness statements and its initial investigation is complete, but the bureau’s case will remain open until the final autopsy and evidence is analyzed in the crime lab, Helm said.

The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, which looks into incidents involving law enforcement officers, said no charges have been filed.

Wilson County Sheriff Robert Bryan said Fanning had been showing “another person that was there at the house some of his weapons he had locked in a secure gun safe,” according to CNN affiliate WTVF.

Bryan said no one saw the deputy’s 4-year-old nephew saunter into the room, WTVF said.

“Split second. We’re talking about seconds for that kid to walk in that room unbeknownst to them, grab that gun and it goes off,” Bryan said. “He took all the precautions, he’s a trained law enforcement officer, trains with weapons all the time.”

CNN affiliate WSMV said Fanning is a school resource officer at Sam Houston Elementary School in Lebanon. He and Josephine had been married for about a year.

“Nobody is immune to this,” Bryan said, according to WSMV. “It doesn’t matter if you are a law enforcement officer. These things can happen in seconds.”

CNN’s Matt Smith and Joe Sutton contributed to this report.


Overweight photographer turns camera on critics

$
0
0

(CBS) – A Tennessee photographer who is overweight takes pictures of people passing by and staring at her for a photo series she calls a “social experiment.”

CBS News’ John Blackstone reports.


Viewing all 56 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images