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Doctor diagnoses woman with ‘ghetto booty’

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JACKSON, Tenn. (WREG) – A Tennessee woman has filed a complaint with the state after her doctor said her back pain was caused by “ghetto booty.”

Terry Ragland called the doctor’s remarks, “inappropriate and sexist.”

The doctor admitted to using the term in an apology letter Ragland received.

“I was trying to take a technical conversation regarding your lower back pain and make it less technical,” he wrote in the letter.

When interviewed by WREG-TV, the doctor said “ghetto booty” was his way of explaining to Ragland that she had lumbar lordosis, a curve in her spine the caused her buttocks protrude more.

Click here to read more about this story on WREG.com.



1 dead as flooding washes over 12 Midwestern, Eastern states

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(CNN) — A Missouri woman was killed in the state’s flash flooding Thursday as inclement weather hammers several states in what forecasters predict will be a particularly nasty storm season.

As rescue teams were performing 18 “swift water rescues” in McDonald County, Missouri, Thursday morning, the woman — thought to be in her 60s — was driving over a bridge when she was caught up in “rapidly rising waters,” said Gregg Sweeten, the county’s emergency management director.

Sweeten said he was hopeful the Elk River, which runs through this county on the Arkansas state line, about 80 miles southwest of Springfield, Missouri, would crest late Thursday night.

South of the capital, Jefferson City, Interstate 44 was shut down because of high water. It’s since been reopened.

Forecasters warn that areas along the Gasconade River could see record water levels, and widespread flooding is expected to continue in Missouri and Kansas into the weekend.

Southern Missouri has witnessed widespread flash flooding as parts of 12 Midwestern and Eastern states experienced some sort of flood watch or warning Thursday.

Nashville, Tennessee, was one of the hardest hit, as parts of the city saw as many as 8 inches of rain overnight and in the morning. Another 1 to 3 inches were expected Thursday afternoon and evening, according to forecasters.

A flash flood emergency was issued for much of the city earlier Thursday, and a flash flood warning remains in place until the afternoon.

Atlanta also is under flash flood warning until Thursday evening, and flooding is possible across much of Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina.

The weather struck as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration revised its preseason hurricane forecast to say there is a 70% chance of an “above-normal” Atlantic hurricane season.

Where a normal season might bring six hurricanes, three of them above Category 3 or higher, this season could bring as many nine hurricanes, and five of them could be major, the NOAA says.

The NOAA says the season, which runs through November, could yield as many as 19 named storms.

CNN’s Dave Hennen and Eliott C. McLaughlin contributed to this report.

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31-pound cat ordered to lose weight

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) – A cat that tops the scale at 31 pounds, twice the weight of an average feline, has been ordered to lose weight by veterinarians.

The Cat Shoppe’s Penny Adams rescued Buddah from Metro Animal Control after his previous owner gave him up.

“All I know is there was a death in the family and the owner wasn’t able to care for him anymore,” Adams said.

Buddah, who is kept in a round pen inside Adams’ shop, spends most of the day lounging around picking at his cat food.

“Our vet believes he was on people food. And we believe it too because when we were eating our lunch here the other day he went bonkers…,” Adams said. “We know he likes pasta because that’s what we had for lunch here and he wanted some of that.”

A veterinarian gave Buddah a clean bill of health, but did say that if he does not lose weight, he might not be around very long.

“To me, it’s neglect to let a cat get this large,” Adams said. “Of course everybody likes a good fat cat story, and it’s a little comical to see. But in the end, it’s his health and we want what’s best for him.”

Once he gets a doctor’s ok, Buddah will go on a strict diet of cat food and exercise by hitting a kitty treadmill. The goal is to lose 12 pounds, a whopping one third of his body weight.

Adams and other volunteers are accepting donations to help pay for Buddha’s medical treatment. They hope that he will weigh 19 pounds and be ready for adoption in about a year.


Judge says NO to ‘Messiah’ baby name

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NEWPORT, Tenn. (WTVR/WBIR) – A Tennessee mother said she planned to appeal a judge’s decision ordering her son’s name be changed from “Messiah.”

The seven-month-old boy’s birth certificate reads “Messiah Deshawn Martin.”

When the baby’s parents could not agree on a last name for the child, they went to court. There the child support judge ordered the baby’s last name be “Martin-McCullough,” a combination of both parents.

She also ruled the child’s first name could not be “Messiah.”

“The word Messiah is a title and it’s a title that has only been earned by one person and that one person is Jesus Christ,” Child Support Magistrate Lu Ann Ballew said.

“I never intended on naming my son Messiah because it means God and I didn’t think a judge could make me change my baby’s name because of her religious beliefs,” mother Jaleesa Martin said.

Ballew said it’s the first time she has ever ordered a first name changed. She said she made the decision in the child’s best interest. She added the child would be growing up in a county with a large Christian population.

“It could put him at odds with a lot of people and at this point he has had no choice in what his name is,” Ballew said.

When asked what she thought of children named “Jesus,” the judge said she had thought about that and believed it was not relevant to this case.

“Everybody believes what they want, so I think I should be able to name my child what I want to name him,” Martin said.

Martin’s appeal is scheduled for September.


Alan Jackson’s daughter arrested, charged with assault

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(CNN) — Country superstar Alan Jackson is famous alright, but that didn’t help his 20-year-old daughter, Alexandra, when she was arrested on Wednesday.

According to Metro Nashville Police, Alexandra was charged with assault, underage consumption of alcohol, and resisting arrest during a traffic stop. The 20-year-old was riding shotgun in a Range Rover that a police officer observed was speeding, and when the officer pulled the car over, it was discovered that Alexandra “had consumed a large amount of alcohol.”

Country superstar Alan Jackson is famous alright, but that didn't help his 20-year-old daughter, Alexandra, when she was arrested on Wednesday, August 28, 2013. According to Metro Nashville Police, Alexandra was charged with assault, underage consumption of alcohol, and resisting arrest during a traffic stop.

Country superstar Alan Jackson is famous alright, but that didn’t help his 20-year-old daughter, Alexandra, when she was arrested on Wednesday, August 28, 2013. According to Metro Nashville Police, Alexandra was charged with assault, underage consumption of alcohol, and resisting arrest during a traffic stop.

Police say Alexandra became “visibly irate” while the officer spoke with the driver of the vehicle, and began making demands as she got out of the car.

The officer requested that she return to the vehicle, but according to police that only angered Alexandra more. After being threatened with the possibility of being arrested if she didn’t get back inside the car, Alexandra struck the officer in his chest.

When police tried to arrest her and take her into custody, she put up enough of a fight to require the officer to call for backup. Alexandra eventually complied with the arrest, but police say that while she was being booked she “made several statements to the arresting officer” that her dad Alan Jackson “would do anything” she wanted him to do.

Police then warned Alexandra about making or attempting to bribe an officer. She’s next due in court on September 23.

As of now, Alan Jackson’s reps have no comment.


Juror, witness Facebook exchange imperils Tennessee murder conviction

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(CNN) — A Tennessee juror’s laudatory Facebook message to a medical examiner during a murder trial could nullify the jury’s conviction of William Darelle Smith, the state’s Supreme Court ruled Wednesday.

The high court did not immediately throw out the first-degree murder conviction of Smith, who was sentenced to life in prison in 2010. But in concluding the trial judge erred upon learning of the juror’s social networking communication with a key prosecution witness, state justices unanimously decided a new trial may be necessary unless the state proves the juror shouldn’t have been disqualified.

“If, for any reason, the trial court is unable to conduct a full and fair hearing with regard to juror (Glenn Scott) Mitchell’s improper extrajudicial communication with Dr. Lewis, then the trial court shall grant Mr. Smith a new trial,” the Supreme Court ruled, referring to the juror by name, as well as Dr. Adele Lewis, the medical examiner who testified.

The Davidson County, Tennessee, District Attorney’s Office did not have an immediate reaction Wednesday to the ruling. Nor was there an immediate response to CNN attempts to reach lawyers with the metropolitan Nashville and Davidson County public defender’s office who represented Smith.

A county grand jury indicted Smith in the death of Zurisaday Villanueva, whose body was found June 4, 2007, off a Nashville road along with two .9 millimeter shell casings. The two had been living together, according to court documents.

Smith went on trial in March 2010. After the jury was set, jurors were told by the judge they “should not talk with any witnesses, defendants or attorneys involved in this case.”

Testimony followed, including from Smith’s cousin, who said the defendant told her a pistol “went off” while he and Villanueva were arguing and again when Smith was trying to move Villanueva’s body.

The prosecution also presented evidence indicating Villanueva’s blood was in an automobile driven by Smith and owned by his father. The second-to-last person to testify for the prosecution was Lewis, a Vanderbilt-trained assistant medical examiner. She conducted an autopsy on Villanueva and classified her death as a homicide, saying Villanueva was shot in the chest and the back of the head.

The next day, about an hour after the jury began deliberating on Smith’s fate, Lewis e-mailed presiding Judge Seth Norman that she had been contacted via Facebook by a juror who was an acquaintance.

“A-dele!!” the juror wrote, according to the e-mail included in the state Supreme Court ruling. “I thought you did a great job today on the witness stand. … I was in the jury … not sure if you recognized me or not!! You really explained things so great!!”

Lewis responded by saying she thought she recognized the juror, then warned of “a risk of a mistrial if that gets out.” The juror wrote back that he was aware of the risk, saying he hadn’t mentioned he knew Lewis.

The first time the juror-witness communication came up in official court proceedings was after the verdict was delivered, but before sentencing. That’s when public defender Mike Engle asked if the court asked the juror about the exchange, to which the judge replied, “No, I’m satisfied with the communication that I have gotten with Dr. Lewis with regard to this matter.”

Smith later asked for a new trial, in part because the defense wasn’t allowed to question the juror. The trial court ruled against him, as did a state appeals court that characterized the Facebook communication as “mere interactions” and noted it is up to the court to decide if a juror is impartial.

The state Supreme Court’s ruling on Wednesday overruled those decisions. Stressing that “the public’s confidence in the fairness of the system” requires that all jurors be held “accountable to the highest standards of conduct,” the justices said the trial court should have taken “steps to assure that the juror has not been exposed to extraneous information or has not been improperly influenced.”

In Smith’s trial, this could have been addressed at a hearing at that time or a “full-scale investigation,” the court said. Neither occurred, leading the state Supreme Court to send the case back to the trial court for a hearing on the Facebook communication and the jurors’ impartiality.

Conversations between jurors and people involved in a case have long been forbidden in state law. But the court admits that technology — including the Internet, which allows jurors to conduct research and more readily communicate — has complicated matters.

“Even though technology has made it easier for jurors to communicate with third parties and has made these communications more difficult to detect, our pre-Internet precedents provide appropriate (guidelines),” the ruling states.

The state court also said trial courts need to “give jurors specific, understandable instructions that prohibit extrajudicial communications with third parties and the use of technology to obtain facts that have not been presented as evidence.”

“Trial courts should clearly prohibit jurors’ use of devices such as smartphones and tablet computers to access social media websites or applications to discuss, communicate, or research anything about the trial,” the court said.

CNN’s Joe Sutton contributed to this report.

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4 found dead in car along rural Tennessee road

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(CNN) — A passer-by found four people shot dead Thursday in a car parked alongside a rural Tennessee road, a mystery that has left authorities scrambling to identify the victims and hunt for whomever is responsible.

The vehicle was spotted around 7 a.m. on Renegade Mountain, an area about 65 miles west of Knoxville. The bystander quickly called the Cumberland County Sheriff’s Department, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation spokeswoman Kristin Helm said.

“They knew that nobody lives on that street, and (the car) just looked odd sitting there,” Sheriff Butch Burgess told CNN affiliate WATE.

The victims were males and female, all of whom were “relatively young,” according to Helm.

“We are continuing to identify the victims as it is still an active crime scene,” the spokeswoman told CNN on Thursday evening. “…We still are trying to identify a suspect.”

Authorities hadn’t established a motive either.

According to the Renegade Mountain Community Club, the area around where the bodies were found had been a retirement resort, a ski resort and a golf club, though it’s now mostly home to a small number of families.

One such resident, Cynthia Benson, described the killings as “sad, scary.”

“We’ve had little problems, but nothing major,” she told WATE. “Nothing like this.”

A Facebook posting on a page tied to the community offered “our deepest sympathy to their families.”

“Our community is close and family-like,” the message read. “The victims’ families are certainly in our thoughts and prayers.”

Burgess vowed that authorities are using “every asset that we have” to track down those responsible.

“Knock on wood, we’ve not had any (cases) that (have) gone unsolved,” he said. “And we don’t want this to be the one that does.”

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Man, girlfriend indicted in Tennesee quadruple slaying

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(CNN) — A 26-year-old man and his girlfriend were indicted on murder charges Friday, more than a week after a marijuana deal turned into a robbery and ended with four young people shot dead in a car along a rural Tennessee road.

Jacob Allen Bennett and 25-year-old Brittany Lina Yvonn Moser were indicted Friday by a Cumberland County grand jury. Friday’s indictment was the first time Moser had been officially tied to the crimes.

Bennett faces four counts of felony murder, four counts of premeditated murder and two counts of attempted aggravated robbery, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation said Friday in a press release.

Except for the premeditated murder counts, those are the same charges leveled against Moser under the same indictment. She was arrested Friday morning at her home in Dayton, about 40 miles south of the crime scene.

The twin indictments and other details revealed Friday by the state investigation bureau shed light on what happened late in the night September 12 that resulted in the deaths of three teenagers and a young mother.

That night, authorities allege, Bennett and Moser tried to rob two of the would-be victims — Domonic Davis and Rikki Jacobsen — during what was a “marijuana exchange.”

Somehow, that led to gunshots. Jacobsen, who was in the driver’s seat, and her three passengers — Davis 17, Stephen Presley, 17, and 16-year-old Jonathan Lajeunesse all were killed.

Their killings shocked the 57,000 residents of rural Cumberland County, a place that school district superintendent Donald Andrews described as a “down-home-type community” where “everyone seems to know everyone.”

“It’s something that reverberates through the entire community,” said Andrews. “The loss of life is always tough, and especially (so) when it’s young people.”

Bennett was arrested within 20 hours of being spotted by a passerby in a car near the Renegade Mountain community, about 70 miles west of Knoxville.

Authorities relatively quickly linked Bennett to the killings, initially taking him into custody without incident in nearby Rhea County on a parole violation.



Naval base shooting sends 2 to hospital

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(CNN/WREG) — Two people were shot and wounded in a fight at a Tennessee National Guard office outside Memphis, military officials reported Thursday.

It happened just before 12:50 p.m. at the Army National Guard Recruiting center on Attu Street.

Sources told WREG that the shooting was prompted by the firing of a recruiter, who came back to work with a handgun and shot two of his superiors.

The suspect, who sources later identified Amos Patton, a Sergent First Class and a seasoned recruiter, was taken into custody by other guardsmen.

The injured soldiers were identified as Major William J. Crawford and Sergeant Major Ricky R. McKenzie.

The Navy facility was on lockdown after the shooting, but there was no “active shooter situation” in progress, the Navy reported via Twitter. The lockdown was lifted shortly afterward.

Click here to read more on this story from WREG in Memphis.

WATCH: Elk spars with photographer in viral video

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GATLINBURG, Tenn. – In a now viral video, an elk faced off with a photographer who was documenting the animals at sunrise on a fall day in the Cataloochee Valley of Great Smoky Mountains National Park in Tennessee last month.

The video shows the elk repeatedly headbutting the photographer, who has been identified as James York. Eventually, a ranger rescues York in the clip, which was uploaded to YouTube on Nov. 12 by Vince M. Camiolo.

This is how York described the incident:

“I was concerned at first, but when he started rearing back and lunging at me later on, I got scared,” York said. “That’s when I wagged my finger at him. … I was relieved to see the Ranger coming.”

Homeless Tenn. couple allegedly strips free home to buy crack

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MEMPHIS, Tenn. (WREG) — Police say a homeless couple that was given a free home earlier this year has since stripped the home and sold everything inside the home to buy crack cocaine.

Patricia Douglas and Willie Banner were given the home back in February as part of a federal program to house 100,000 homeless people around the country.

The couple was initially overjoyed to receive the home. Now the couple is in jail accused of stripping the duplex. WREG reported their air conditioning unit was also allegedly sold to a neighbor.

“I am shocked, really” said Kelcey Johnson, director of the Hospitality Hubs that takes applications from homeless people who want housing. “I really feel bad for the landlord that put his property into this program.”

The program is called “100 homes Memphis.” Federal money is used to house homeless people. However, drug testing is not a part of the program.

“Drug use and abuse alcohol use and abuse does not disqualify people for this program,” said Johnson.

Click here to read more on this story from WREG in Memphis. 

Tenn. family comforted by letter after 12-year-old dies unexpectedly

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(HLNtv.com) — “Dear Taylor, how’s life? Life is pretty simple 10 years in your past, I know I’m late for you, but I’m writing this early, so congratulations on graduating high school, if you didn’t, go back and keep trying, get that degree. … Do you have your own place yet? If we’re in college what are we majoring in? Right now I want to be a lawyer.”

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Tim and Ellen Smith of Johnson City, Tennessee, were cleaning out their daughter Taylor’s things when they found a letter. It was written by Taylor to herself at 22 years old, 10 years into the future.

Tragically, Taylor will never be able to read it. The 12-year-old died Sunday of complications from pneumonia. In the days that have passed, her grief-stricken family has found comfort in hearing others’ stories and memories about their daughter.

“You see all the other things that she’s done that you didn’t know about: things at youth group, things at school, things where she just touched people’s lives in ways that are unbelievable,” Taylor’s father, Tim Smith, told affiliate WJHL. “I’m more determined now to find what God’s will is, and right now you’re even seeing a glimpse of what God’s will is: all the people that are being touched by what’s going on.”

girl2The family has also begun going through Taylor’s room. They’ve found boxes full of poems, journals and other musings, to-do lists left undone, letters left unsent.

One letter was addressed to herself.

“To be opened by Taylor Smith on April 13, 2023, only unless said otherwise,” read the envelope.

The letter was filled with encouragement and questions any 12-year-old would ask. She wanted to know what she was studying. If she wasn’t studying anything, that seemed to be OK, too. She wanted to know if “Dr. Who” was still on the air.

girl1Her parents say Taylor was a deeply spiritual girl, and the letter reinforces what a special young life she led.

“She’s just a perfect example of what it is to love God and to love people,” her father said. “She showed me how God loves. She didn’t see anything on the exterior; she only saw the inside and what was best about you.”

Smith says his daughter’s words give the family peace.

“Well, I think that’s about all. But remember it’s been 10 years since I wrote this. Stuff has happened good and bad, that’s just how life works and you have to go with it.”

Tenn. parents accused of force-feeding girl huge amounts of soda face murder charges

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(CNN) — A Tennessee couple faces murder charges for allegedly punishing the man’s 5-year-old daughter by making her gulp excessive amounts of water and grape soda, leading to her death, authorities said.

Alexa Linboom was forced to guzzle the fluids after she took “one or two grape drinks” that belonged to her stepmother, District Attorney Berkley Bell told CNN affiliate WJHL.

“She was allegedly force-fed so much liquid that it caused the sodium level in her body to go down and caused her brain to swell,” he said.

In addition to drinking more than 2 liters of fluids in about two hours, she also suffered other forms of punishment, Bell told the affiliate. He did not get into specifics.

The child became unresponsive, and the pair drove her to the hospital on New Year’s Day in 2012.

Two days later, she was declared brain dead and removed from life support.

A two-year investigation determined her death was a homicide as a result of acute fluid/water intoxication, the Hawkins County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement this week.

Randall Lee Vaughn, 41, and and his wife, Mary Lavonne Vaughn, 58, have each been charged with first degree murder, two counts of aggravated child neglect and aggravated child abuse.

The Surgoinsville residents are being held on a $500,000 bond. They did not enter a plea in their first appearance before a judge Friday, CNN affiliate WREG reported.

Information on their attorneys was not immediately available.

Their trial is scheduled to start in October.

CNN’s Rick Martin contributed to this report

Retired Tenn. lawyer killed after package explodes

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LEBANON, Tenn. (WTVF) – A retired lawyer was killed and his wife critically injured after a package exploded at their Tennessee home earlier this week.

WTVF reports that a package containing an explosive was delivered to the home on Vance Lane in Wilson County on Monday.

Authorities said Jon Setzer, 74, was killed and Marion Setzer, 72, was critically injured when the package exploded around 5 p.m.

Several of the home’s rooms were damaged by the blast.

Bewildered residents are grappling with fear and confusion as they try to understand why someone would send a bomb to their neighbor.

“With the house as well built as it was, it had to be a huge explosion,” neighbor David Hughen said. “It’s just a huge mystery that a terrible thing has happened to good people.”

The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, along with the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, are investigating the incident.

Officials said that accidental causes were ruled out and that the attack is believed to be targeted.

“We’re asking the general public if anyone receives any type of package with suspicious circumstances, please contact their local law enforcement jurisdiction,” Wilson County Sheriff Bryan said.

Bryan said an $8,000 reward is being offered in the case. If you have information that could help investigators, call 1-800-TBI-FIND.

Click here to read more on this developing story from WTVF. 

Son-in-law charged in fatal Tenn. package bombing

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(CNN) — The son-in-law of a retired lawyer and his wife planted the bomb that killed them at their rural home this week, Tennessee authorities said Thursday as they announced his arrest.

Richard Parker, age 49, of Lebanon, Tennessee was arrested and taken into custody for two counts of Felony First Degree Murder and two counts of Pre-Meditated First Degree Murder. He also has been charged with an additional count of Unlawful Possession of a Prohibited Weapon in the deaths of Jon Setzer, age 74 and the recent death of his wife, Marion Setzer, age 72.

Richard Parker, age 49, of Lebanon, Tennessee was arrested and taken into custody for two counts of Felony First Degree Murder and two counts of Pre-Meditated First Degree Murder. He also has been charged with an additional count of Unlawful Possession of a Prohibited Weapon in the deaths of Jon Setzer, age 74 and the recent death of his wife, Marion Setzer, age 72.

Investigators arrested 49-year-old Richard Parker on two counts of felony first-degree murder and two counts of felony premeditated murder in connection with a package bomb that exploded at the rural Tennessee home of Jon and and Marion Setzer, investigators announced Thursday. Bond was set at $1 million, said Mark Gwyn, director of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation.

Jon Setzer, a retired lawyer, died Monday when the package bomb detonated outside their home near Lebanon, about 30 miles east of Nashville. Marion Setzer died Wednesday evening at Vanderbilt Hospital. He was 74; she was 72.

Wilson County Sheriff Robert Bryan said Parker lived next door to his in-laws. Investigators would not discuss a motive and provided little detail about the case against Parker, but Gwyn said he was the sole suspect in the Setzers’ deaths.

“Right now we feel like we have the person responsible for committing this crime in custody,” he said.

Parker was convicted of arson in 1993, for which he served four years on probation, the TBI said.

Amid the debris, investigators found a note they said may have been attached to the bomb, but would not divulge its contents.

“This is a very important piece of evidence, because now you may have handwriting,” said former ATF agent and bomb expert Joseph Vince.

Authorities originally said they thought the bomb had been delivered by the U.S. Postal Service, but on Thursday they said they now believe that was not the case.

Officials said Setzer picked up the package from his mailbox, about 200 yards from the home. It detonated just inside the house, killing him and mortally wounding his wife.

“It doesn’t make sense at all,” family friend Ken Caldwell told CNN affiliate WTVF. “When I’ve heard it said that it was targeted, I thought, well, they must have targeted the wrong person.”

Law enforcement sources said they’re investigating how the package was delivered — whether it came by commercial delivery or private carrier.

State and local authorities descended on the neighborhood. The FBI, the Department of Homeland Security and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives also are investigating.

Officials are testing items found in the home, including labels and pieces of paper, to determine whether they may have been part of the package or perhaps from previous deliveries from the same sender.

Health problems

Before he retired, Jon Setzer worked on bankruptcy and other cases.

His former law partner, George Cate Jr., said Setzer was a dedicated servant and a pastor at “little country churches.” The two met while serving in the Army Reserve.

Cate said he couldn’t understand why anyone would want to target Setzer or his wife. “Nothing had happened in my recent times to make me anticipate anything of this kind happening,” Cate told CNN affiliate WZTV.

Cate and Setzer became partners at the law firm bearing their names from 1979 to 1991. Setzer worked on general civil cases and specialized in living trusts, his former partner said.

But health problems eventually made it difficult for Setzer to take care of all of his clients’ needs, and he quit practicing, Cate said.

‘A little anxious’

Neighbors said the blast has scared them; some told WZTV that officers checked other mailboxes on the street for similar devices.

“Of course, it makes us a little anxious to go check our own mailbox when we see something like this happen, because normally boxes are delivered and mail is delivered, and you don’t question it,” neighbor Tony Dedman told the affiliate.


Man indicted in case of missing Tenn. woman Holly Bobo

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(CNN) — Friends and family of Holly Bobo, last seen in 2011, waited three years for news. Their worst fears have now been confirmed.

A man has been indicted on charges of kidnapping and murder in the case of the Tennessee woman, authorities announced Wednesday.

Zachary Adams, 29, is being held without bond.

A Decatur County grand jury handed down a two-count indictment of especially aggravated kidnapping and first-degree murder.

“As this investigation continues, we are still asking for the public’s help and support to help us continue to seek out justice regarding the disappearance of Holly Bobo,” Mark Gwyn, director of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, told reporters.

Because the investigation is ongoing, Gwyn declined to comment on whether any human remains have been found.

Bobo, a nursing student, was last seen in April 2011. She was 20 years old.

Her brother told authorities he saw a man in camouflage leading her away from their home in the small town of Darden.

The Bobo case rocked the largely rural swath of central Tennessee, from those who knew the young woman to others who rallied behind the effort to find her.

Hundreds of volunteers — some on horseback and foot, others on all-terrain vehicles — turned out to hunt for clues in Decatur, Henderson, Henry, Carroll and Benton counties. Many more attended memorial services or offered supportive thoughts online via groups on Facebook.

The TBI and local and federal authorities have spent hundreds of manpower hours on the case, Gwyn said. More than $450,000 has been offered in reward money.

Adams, who is being held at the Chester County jail, is set to appear in court on Tuesday. Prosecutors are evaluating whether they will seek the death penalty.

“Obviously, they’re devastated,” Gwyn said of the Bobo family.

“They’ve been devastated for three years. But, hopefully, this is the beginning of closure for the Bobo family, and they deserve that.”

Tenn. man accused of decapitating, cannibalizing woman posted about Night Stalker

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It wasn’t enough for Gregory Scott Hale to kill his victim, authorities say.

Lisa Hyder

Lisa Hyder

He also chopped off her head, her hands, her feet. Buried her torso in a burn pile outside his south-central Tennessee home. And — by his own admission — ate some of her remains, according to the affidavit filed against him.

According to the same document, Hale confessed to the killing of the 36-year-old woman, identified as Lisa Hyder by Capt. Frank Watkins of the Coffee County, Tennessee, Sheriff’s Department.

“Lisa was a sweet girl, a very pretty girl,” her friend and neighbor Vicki Keenan told CNN affiliate WSMV. “… It’s got to be a very sick mind to do something like that.”

Gregory Scott Hale

Gregory Scott Hale — Facebook photo of suspect holding blade.

There’s no indication Hale and Hyder knew each other before she was apparently killed on Friday, said Watkins, who added that authorities don’t have any reason yet to believe Hale had done this before.

Authorities learned about the apparently random crime on Sunday, and arrested Hale a day later.

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WSMV reports that Hale worked at a meat processing plant in Hillsboro. Workers described Hale as “creepy” and said that he took home the bones, eyes and blood of animals.

After killing her, the affidavit says that the 37-year-old man put her slashed-off head and hands in a plastic bucket. Her feet and other cut-off body parts went into another bucket.

Distributing posts on Hale’s Facebook page seem to indicate he idolized serial killer Richard Ramirez, who is known as the Night Stalker. WSMV reports Hale posted a tribute and goodbye to Ramirez back in February. Then he asked his followers a question about becoming a cannibal in April.

murderFBpostIt was not known who, if anyone right now, is legally representing the accused. Numerous CNN calls placed Tuesday to his relatives and associates were not immediately returned.

Hale is being held in Tennessee on $1.5 million bond related to charges of first-degree murder and abuse of a corpse.

His next scheduled court date is June 23.

Plans for a mass school shooting uncovered in Tennessee

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HAWKINS COUNTY, Tn. (WTVR) — A Tennessee counselor reportedly discovered a plan to shoot up a school in a teen’s journal.

The teen had an accomplice, and the pair had planned to kill as many students and teachers as possible at Volunteer Comprehensive High School. The two are now in police custody.

Hawkins County Sheriff Ronnie Lawson says one of the boys came up with the plan for the deadly mission, and then attempted to recruit other students to help him carry it out. One student did agree to help. The two studied the school and planned to kill the school resource officer first, then block off exits and hit the areas where the max amount of students congregated in lunchrooms and hallways.

Handwritten notes about the attack and weapons were found when deputies searched one of the teens’ homes. Sheriff Lawson also said videos of the suspects firing guns and setting off homemade explosives were also found.

The community is in shock after learning about the violent plan.

“It’s really scary,” Courtney Stapleton, a recent graduate from Volunteer High, said. “I don’t know how anyone could plan anything like that.”

Sheriff Lawson says that one of the boys had become obsessed with the Columbine High School massacre. He identified all of the killers’ mistakes during that attack, and he was going to do his best not to make the same mistakes.

Both teens are facing several charges, including conspiracy to commit first degree murder.

VIDEO: Teen mob uses pumpkins to attack Kroger workers trying to stop parking lot assault

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WARNING: This story contains material that some viewers may find disturbing due to its graphic nature. Viewer discretion is advised.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Police are searching for a group of teens responsible for a brutal mob attack in a Kroger parking lot in Tennessee Saturday night.

WREG reports three people were attacked by the large group of teens around 9:15 p.m. in the store parking lot at Highland and Poplar.

A woman captured the horrifying attack with her cell phone. That video has gone viral on Facebook and other social media sites.

“Hold on, they got a white dude,” the woman laughs. “Look at ‘em. Let me get out the way.”

The woman then asks “where is the security at” as one of the workers is kicked in the head by an assailant and then pelted with pumpkins from a store display.

“Wait a minute. Hold on!” she yells, as the gravity of the situation seems to be sinking in, as she sees another worker being thrown to the ground.

“Oh my God,” she says, as others scream and horns honk in the parking lot. “That man, get him y’all. Somebody call somebody… These stupid @%$ kids fool.”

Police said this all started when a 25-year-old man was attacked by the group walking to his car. At that point, two Kroger employees, a 17 and 18-year-old, ran to help him.

That’s when the mob turned on them and they were repeatedly hit in the head and face. The teens told police that pumpkins “in excess of 20 pounds” were thrown at their heads while they were lying on the ground.

As a result, police said both teens lost consciousness before a security guard eventually managed to stop the attack.

A Kroger official said the employees were transported to an area hospital and then released to their parents.

“It is extremely troubling to see how many young people were involved, especially on the heels of last week’s youth forum,” Memphis Police Director Toney Director Armstrong wrote in a statement. “Last night’s events clearly demonstrates a lack of parental controls and if warranted these parents will also be held accountable.”

Witness: ‘Blood and Pumpkins’

A witness, who spoke to WREG on the condition of anonymity, said he is a friend of the victims.

The witness said the group was made up of “100 to 125 kids” who were playing a game called “Point Them Out, Knock Them Out.”

“Where they would point someone out and attempt to knock them out or fight them. There was no real reason behind it,” the witness said. “They followed hitting him with a pumpkin. He was already unconscious, so all you could see was blood and pumpkins.”

The teen, who watched in horror as the mob beat his friends until they couldn’t move, said this is the second weekend he saw a violent mob of kids attack random people in the shopping plaza parking lot.

“Why, honestly why? Why did that happen?” the witness asked. “There was no real reason behind it. What was the point of that game? You are hurting somebody you don`t even know.”

Racially Motivated Attack?

The witness says the video of the incident, which appears to show several black teenagers beating one white teen, only shows a part of what happened that night. He said that blacks, whites, girls and boys were all part of the vicious pack.

When asked if all the victims white were white, the witness said the victims were both black and white.

“Will is white, Brian is black and then my other friend, Brandon, he’s black as well,” replied the witness.

WREG slowed down the video and spotted a security guard dragging a black teen away from the crowd.

The witness identified that teen as another Kroger employee who was knocked unconscious after he tried to stop the mob.

“It’s kind of traumatizing because it didn’t seem real. It didn’t seem like any of that would happen,” the witness said.

Tenn. billboard sparks controversy

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PORTLAND, Tenn. — A towering billboard quoting a Leviticus passage from the Old Testament: “You shall not lie with a man as with a woman. It is an abomination,” is causing a bit of controversy in Tennessee.

Ronnie Monday, a Vietnam veteran, is the man behind the message.

WSMV reports that Monday commissioned the billboard and paid for it with donations from some friends. It has been up for four months in Portland, Tenn.

Anti-gay billboard disrupts community“When the president came out and indicated that he thought that gay marriage was OK, that was pretty much the last straw,” Monday said.

Chris Sanders is the executive director of the Tennessee Equality Project, a group that supports gay rights.

“It’s a free country. The man has the right to put it up there. We’re not questioning that; we’re questioning whether it’s the right message,” he said.

Sanders said he would have preferred the billboard send a more positive message, a message of tolerance.

“We hate to see anything in a community that encourages that kind of divisiveness, picking on people,” he said.

Love it or hate it, residents will have to get used to it. The contract on the billboard has been renewed for another six months.

“As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord. And he says it’s wrong. And in my opinion, that’s what it is, it’s wrong,” Monday said.

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