The usual stupidity…

From The Free Lance-Star: What’s the cost to help fire and rescue?:

A citizens’ panel in Caroline County has been working to improve fire and rescue services, but it’s still unclear how much that will cost.

The county’s emergency services commission recently presented the Board of Supervisors with a 13-item list on how to strengthen and expand paid and volunteer rescue efforts.

Supervisors had no qualms with the ideas, which include hiring new administrative personnel and coordinating paid and volunteer rescue efforts under one chief.

State fire and rescue agencies developed the study last year. The citizens’ commission is charged with figuring out specific costs and procedures for implementing the suggestions.

Bill Wick, chairman of the commission, said yesterday that estimating costs is a challenge.

New positions listed in the report include a volunteer recruiter, fire marshal and training coordinator. Other items lacking estimates include fully funding volunteer services, installing new fire hydrants and purchasing equipment for paid and volunteer staff.

Fire marshal? Weren’t we supposed to get one years ago?

The report also includes low- or no-cost ideas. For example, it suggests combining the fire and EMS departments under one chief and enforcing address markings to help rescue personnel identify county homes.

Why haven’t we been enforcing that for years?

Earlier this year, officials tossed around the idea of paying volunteers. That idea has since been scratched.

Of course it has; after all, canneries, summer employment programs, a $3,700,000 county administration building (for twenty full-time personnel), a $3,200,000 community recreation center, a $1,100,000 visitor center, and trips to Hawaii are more important.

“There are such things the county might be able to give them: a county sticker for vehicles or provide more sophisticated equipment,” Wick said. “There are a lot of things we could provide, making their life better, without giving them money. We’re looking at ways that we can reward folks for being a part of the team.”

Ed Fuzy, the county’s director of fire and rescue services, said 24 full-time emergency workers support 230 to 250 volunteers. He’s working to fill five of the full-time positions.

Earlier this year, the commission urged support for a high-school training program. The latest report recommends changes in that program to help generate volunteers and career emergency personnel.

“Any program that’s been in place for a while can be tweaked and made better,” Wick said.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Caroline’s estimated population in 2006 was 26,731–an almost 21 percent increase since 2000. The number of housing units in the county rose 17 percent between 2000 and 2005.

Fuzy and Wick said that growth spurred the study. All the suggestions aim to coordinate and strengthen emergency services.

Wick said many of the new residents expect a fully paid emergency staff.

“Our tax base won’t allow 24-hour [fire/EMS] coverage”!

With demands such as full-time jobs and child care, dedicating time to volunteering can be hard. But Wick says the county wants to maintain that volunteer base.

Fuzy and County Administrator Percy Ashcraft expect the county to fully fund recommendations over the next three years.

Your county tax dollars at work…, Part 3

Paying for a “summer employment program”? Isn’t that the role of McDonald’s? (An ongoing series on the wasteful spending by the Board of Supervisors and the County Administrator…)

According to the Fiscal Year 2007-2008 Adopted Budget for Caroline County:

The Summer Employment Program is a County program set up to employ high school and college age County young people in part time and seasonal full time jobs with the County. The Program is intended to offer youth an opportunity to constructively occupy their time and to earn money while doing it. In addition, the Program is structured to give the participants the experience of applying and interviewing for a job and is expected to teach them valuable work habits that they will be able to draw upon in the future.

Any County Department or Constitutional Officer with a need for unskilled or introductory level labor can make use of the program and participants have been and are employed in a wide variety of maintenance, office support and recreation program activities. The County Administrator’s Office provides central coordination for the Program, managing the budget, soliciting and collecting applications, and forwarding them on to interested departments or offices.

An internship component has also been added to the program to give college age youth an opportunity to gain work experience in a professional setting.

You know, the last time I looked there were plenty of jobs out there during the summer for teens. Meanwhile, we’re paying in the tune of $156,837 budgeted to this operation over the last four fiscal years.

“Our tax base won’t allow 24-hour [fire/EMS] coverage” or a public safety building, but it does allow for a “summer employment program”?

With that money wasted every year, we could have afforded an additional deputy or an additional firefighter or medic. Heck, that’s the second fire/EMS or sheriff’s deputy position I’ve found so far!

Hoping for perfect execution…

From the Richmond Times-Dispatch: Killer Emmett’s latest appeal denied:

Unless the U.S. Supreme Court grants a stay or Gov. Timothy M. Kaine steps in a second time, Christopher Scott Emmett will die by lethal injection tomorrow night.

Emmett won a reprieve in June two hours before he was to be executed when Kaine delayed it until Oct. 17 to give the U.S. Supreme Court a chance to consider hearing his appeal. The justices declined.

However, on Sept. 25, the high court agreed to hear challenges to the constitutionality of lethal-injection procedures in Kentucky, procedures similar to those used in Virginia and other states that use lethal injection.

There was an execution in Texas on Sept. 25 but none in the U.S. since.

Yesterday, the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected Emmett’s request for a stay. But another federal appeals court stayed an execution set for today in Arkansas. And an execution scheduled for last night in Nevada was halted by the Nevada Supreme Court 90 minutes before it was to take place, according to The Associated Press.

Emmett’s lawyers are asking the U.S. Supreme Court and Kaine to stop the execution until the high court rules on whether lethal injection constitutes cruel and unusual punishment.

In papers filed yesterday, the Virginia attorney general’s office urged the justices to reject the request for a stay, arguing it was foot-dragging. Emmett, the state says, never challenged his method of execution during his trial or in prior appeals.

Kevin Hall, a Kaine spokesman, said yesterday that “we’re closely monitoring court activity, and the governor is still weighing the updated clemency requests from Emmett’s attorneys.”

Emmett was sentenced to die for the April 2001 slaying of John F. Langley, 43, of Roanoke Rapids, N.C. The two men worked for a roofing company in Roanoke Rapids and were staying in a Danville motel during a project. Emmett beat Langley to death with a brass lamp for drug money.

In addition to asking Kaine for a reprieve, Emmett’s lawyers also asked him to order an administrative review of the state’s current lethal-injection protocol. Kaine opposes capital punishment but has said he believes lethal injection is constitutional.

Richard Dieter, director of the Death Penalty Information Center, said he believes condemned inmates seeking reprieves until the Supreme Court rules will be successful.

Uh, where’s a quote from people that support the death penalty since you want to get quotes from people that oppose the death penalty?

If executed, Emmett would be the 99th person put to death in Virginia — 70 by lethal injection — since capital punishment was allowed to resume in 1976.

"Bungled"? Nay, I say perfectly executed…

From the Richmond Times-Dispatch: Va. execution in ’06 bungled, attorneys say:

Virginia bungled a lethal injection last year, leading to a prolonged execution, lawyers for condemned killer Christopher Scott Emmett contend in an appeal to the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Emmett is facing execution Wednesday night for the April 2001 slaying of John F. Langley, 43, of Roanoke Rapids, N.C., a co-worker he beat to death with a brass lamp for drug money.

Among other things, Emmett’s lawyers say the executioners of John Yancey Schmitt on Nov. 9 administered the lethal combination of drugs twice. It took 13 minutes for him to die, longer than the other 70 lethal injections performed in Virginia.

[…]

Matthew Engle, one of Emmett’s lawyers, said that because the inmates die and because of the masking effect of one of the drugs, inmates can appear calm and serene even if they are suffering.

“It’s impossible to prove” under the circumstances, he said.

Let’s me provide you with some context about these two pieces of excrement; first, John Yancey Schmitt (from John Yancey Schmitt v. Commonwealth of Virginia, June 8, 2001) [emphasis mine throughout]:

Schmitt was indicted for capital murder based on the willful, deliberate, and premeditated killing of Earl Shelton Dunning during the commission of a robbery, in violation of Code § 18.2-31(4). Schmitt also was indicted for armed entry of a bank with the intent to commit larceny, in violation of Code § 18.2-93; two counts of robbery, in violation of Code § 18.2-58; and three counts of use of a firearm, in violation of Code § 18.2-53.1.

In the first stage of a bifurcated trial conducted under Code § 19.2-264.3, a jury convicted Schmitt of all the offenses charged. In the penalty phase of the trial, the jury fixed his punishment for capital murder at death based on a finding of “future dangerousness,” and for the other offenses at imprisonment for a total of 118 years. The trial court sentenced Schmitt in accordance with the jury verdict.

[…]

On February 17, 1999, Earl Shelton Dunning was shot and killed while working as a security guard at the Bon Air branch of NationsBank (the bank) on Buford Road in Chesterfield County. About a month before Dunning was killed, Schmitt had robbed this same bank and, after that robbery, the bank had hired Dunning to work as a security guard.

Shortly after 1:00 p.m. on February 17, 1999, a man entered the bank wearing dark sunglasses and a bulky jacket. He kept his head lowered and appeared to scan the interior of the bank. Bank manager Sara Parker-Orr testified that she was “nervous” about this man because he was wearing sunglasses inside the bank on a “really cloudy day.” Dunning was outside the bank and, after the man went inside, Dunning entered the bank and walked across the lobby to stand at the end of the “teller line” in which customers were waiting.

The man stood in the teller line behind several customers. Parker-Orr watched him leave his place in line and walk toward Dunning. When the man was within “a foot or so” of Dunning, Parker-Orr heard two gunshots and then heard someone scream, “[G]et down, get down.”

The man next approached Parker-Orr’s teller window and banged on the counter yelling, “Money, give me money,” and “[I]f I don’t get money, I’m going to kill everybody.” Parker-Orr opened her cash drawer and threw money into a black plastic bag that the robber was holding.

The robber continued to bang on the counter demanding “more money.” He announced that he would give the tellers “ten seconds” to give him more money, and began counting backward from the number “ten.” By the time he reached “nine,” teller Marlene Austin was “throwing money in the bag.” Parker-Orr also gave him money from a third teller’s drawer. When she told the robber that she had no more money to give him, the robber left the bank.

The bank’s security camera system recorded photographs of Schmitt approaching the end of the teller counter and standing at a teller window holding a bag and pointing a gun. None of the witnesses who testified at trial saw the actual shooting of Dunning, and the shooting was not recorded by the bank’s security camera system. However, Parker-Orr, Austin, and Kelli Konstaitis, another teller, all identified a photograph of Schmitt recorded by the bank’s security camera system as depicting the man who robbed the bank that day.

After Schmitt left the bank, witnesses telephoned the “911” emergency response number and attended to Dunning, who was lying on the floor. By the time emergency medical personnel arrived, Dunning was dead. The witnesses in the bank testified that they did not touch or see anyone else touch Dunning’s gun or its holster. Dunning’s gun was found in its holster, which was closed and snapped.

An autopsy revealed that Dunning was killed as a result of a gunshot wound to his chest. The bullet entered the right side of Dunning’s chest, causing significant injuries to the aorta, and exited from the right side of his back.

[…]

During the penalty phase of the trial, the Commonwealth presented evidence of Schmitt’s criminal record. Between 1992 and 1996, Schmitt was convicted twice of possession of marijuana with the intent to distribute, and also had convictions of receiving stolen property, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, and possession of marijuana. Schmitt was on probation for some of these offenses at the time of the capital murder and robbery. He had failed to keep the conditions of his probation requiring him to have regular drug tests and to meet with his probation officer and, as a result, a capias had been issued for his arrest prior to both bank robberies.

In the earlier robbery of the bank on January 19, 1999, Schmitt and another man had stolen over $65,000. Schmitt was armed with a sawed-off shotgun in that robbery. The Commonwealth presented evidence that before the first robbery, police were called to investigate an argument between Schmitt and a girlfriend involving a shotgun, and that Schmitt had “sawed off” the barrel of the gun the night before the first bank robbery.

The Commonwealth also presented evidence of a tape recording of a telephone conversation between Schmitt and a friend in which Schmitt described the present offenses. In addition, the Commonwealth introduced evidence of the “drug dealer lifestyle” that Schmitt had been leading in the months before he committed the present offenses.

The Commonwealth presented testimony from Dunning’s family and friends concerning the impact of Dunning’s murder on them. Dunning’s mother and brother testified that in January 1999, a month before his murder, Dunning had retired from the United States Army after over 20 years of service, and that he had received many commendations honoring his bravery and leadership while in military service. The Commonwealth also presented testimony that Dunning had three children and that he had planned to marry in March 1999. Several bank employees testified that during the few weeks that Dunning worked at the bank, he had developed close relationships with his fellow employees that demonstrated extraordinary thoughtfulness and generosity.

So, Mr. Engle, how much suffering did Earl Dunning and his family experience?

And now, more about Christopher Scott Emmett (from Christopher Scott Emmett v. Commonwealth of Virginia, September 13, 2002) [emphasis mine]:

In a bifurcated trial conducted pursuant to Code § 19.2-264.3, a jury convicted Christopher Scott Emmett of the capital murder of John Fenton Langley in the commission of robbery, Code § 18.2-31(4), and fixed Emmett’s punishment at death.

Weldon Roofing Company employed Emmett and Langley as laborers for its roofing crews. During late April 2001, both men were assigned to a project in the City of Danville and shared a room at a local motel where the roofing crew was staying. On the evening of April 26, 2001, Emmett, Langley, Michael Darryl Pittman, and other members of the roofing crew cooked dinner on a grill at the motel, played cards, and drank beer. During the course of the evening, Langley loaned money to Emmett and Pittman, who used the money to buy crack cocaine.

At approximately 11:00 p.m. that evening, Rainey Bell, another member of the roofing crew, heard a noise he described as “bang, bang” coming from the room Emmett and Langley shared. Shortly after midnight, Emmett went to the motel office and asked the clerk to call the police, saying that he had returned to his room, “seen blood and stuff . . . and didn’t know what had took place.”

The police arrived at the motel at 12:46 a.m. on April 27, 2001 and accompanied Emmett back to his room. There they discovered Langley’s dead body lying face down on Langley’s bed beneath a comforter. Blood spatters were found on the sheets and headboard of Langley’s bed, on the wall behind it, and on the wall between the bathroom and Emmett’s bed. A damaged brass lamp stained with Langley’s blood was discovered beneath Langley’s bed.

In his initial statement to police, Emmett denied killing Langley. He stated that he had returned to the room and gone to bed. Emmett claimed to have discovered the blood and Langley’s body later that night when he got up to use the bathroom. Observing what appeared to be bloodstains on Emmett’s personal effects, the police took possession of Emmett’s boots and clothing with his permission. Emmett suggested that the blood might be his own because he had injured himself earlier in the week. Subsequent testing, however, revealed that Emmett’s boots and clothing were stained with Langley’s blood.

[…]

He first implicated Pittman as Langley’s murderer, but ultimately Emmett told the police that he alone had beaten Langley to death with the brass lamp.

Emmett was given Miranda warnings and he gave a full, taped confession. Emmett stated that he and Pittman decided to rob Langley after Langley refused to loan them more money to buy additional cocaine. Emmett stated that he struck Langley five or six times with the brass lamp, took Langley’s wallet, and left the motel to buy cocaine.

[…]

In addition, the Commonwealth presented evidence from the medical examiner that based upon the amount of blood and bruising of the victim’s brain tissue at the point of impact, Langley was not killed immediately by the first blow from the lamp. The medical examiner conceded, however, that Langley might have been unconscious after the first blow was struck and may have suffered “brain death” prior to actual death.

After the jury convicted Emmett of capital murder and robbery, during the penalty-determination phase of the trial, the Commonwealth presented evidence of Emmett’s prior criminal history. This evidence included an account of an instance in which, while incarcerated in a maximum-security juvenile detention facility, Emmett participated in an escape that involved a guard being “rushed” and locked in a closet. In addition, the criminal history evidence showed that while driving a vehicle under the influence of alcohol, Emmett was involved in an accident in which the driver of a motorcycle was killed in 1996. After the accident Emmett said “that there was no need to worry about the man on the motorcycle. He was already dead, and that [Emmett] could do nothing to help him.” Emmett was convicted of involuntary manslaughter.

[…]

Indeed, Emmett himself confessed that he killed Langley simply because it “just seemed right at the time.”

Again, Mr. Engle, how much suffering did John Langley experience while his head was smashed in with a brass lamp? How about the motorcycle rider that had already been killed by your client?

If only your client receives the same amount of suffering as his victims and their families have received.

Caroline County Issues a Warning about Open Burning

From Ed Fuzy and the Department of Fire, Rescue, and Emergency Management: Caroline County Issues a Warning about Open Burning:

The Director of Fire-Rescue, Edward Fuzy, is advising the public that the lack of rainfall is putting local forestry and fire officials on alert. They are bracing for what could be a very rough fall fire season.

“Looking around, you can’t help but to see how dry it is outside and the dryness makes the area more susceptible to brush and forest fires. The drought conditions, that Virginia is experiencing, have created an extremely hazardous environment” according to Art Singer, Volunteer Fire Chief of Sparta VFD.

According to the Virginia Department of Forestry, the fire occurrence conditions in Caroline are at a very high level. This means that fires start readily, spread quickly, their resistance to control is high, and there is the potential for large fires.

Fire officials are asking the public to be a little more cautious – consider not burning unless absolutely necessary! “Keep your fire supervised at all times. Make sure you have your fire contained before you ever get started by raking a line around it, make sure the fuel is away from it and stay with the fire until it is fully extinguished, and pay special attention to where the embers may go” said Fuzy.

Citizens are requested to completely extinguish smoking materials before discarding them.

Any signs of a fire, including brush or woods fires, should be reported immediately by calling 911. Grasses and brush are particularly vulnerable to rapid fire spread. Keep all debris away from houses and open structures.

Below are some additional tips for helping prevent wild fires from the Virginia Department of Forestry website: www.dof.virginia.gov.

Fire Safety Precautions:

  • Have a cleared area at least 30-feet wide around all structures.
  • Homes built in pine forests should have a minimum 75-foot clearance.
  • Have properly designed driveways that will accommodate firefighting equipment.
  • The house address should be clearly displayed.
  • Keep leaves and debris cleared from under decks and porches so that they will not be set on fire by blowing sparks and embers.
  • Roofs should be of fire-resistant materials. Remove pine needles and leaves from the roof and gutters so that they will not be set on fire by blowing sparks and embers.
  • Have outside water spigots and at least 100 feet of garden type hose readily accessible for fire control until the fire department arrives.
  • Should the situation become life-threatening or an evacuation order is given by fire officials, leave immediately. Do not return until fire officials have given an all-clear message.
  • Dispose of ashes and charcoal briquettes in a metal container and allow them to stay in the container for at least 48 hours. Do not dump hot ashes on the ground.
  • Never store flammable material like firewood or lumber under or near your home. Keep it at least 100 feet away from the house, but never uphill because burning material will roll.
  • Hand tools such as rakes, shovels, and axes should be readily available along with a ladder that will reach your roof.

For more information, contact the office of Fire-Rescue & Emergency Management at (804)633-9831.

What’s wrong with this website?

http://www.visitcaroline.com/07election.html

Anyone else think the names are ordered in an odd way?

They aren’t done alphabetically, and they don’t have the incumbent first (otherwise Sheriff Lippa should be above Mr. Johnson).

Of course, this isn’t the first time that the county administration has dabbled in politics; does anyone else have a problem with the County Administrator promoting “constituent meetings” for Wayne Acors a month before an election? When is he going to start promoting functions for John Green?

(Oh, and by the way, if they change the website, don’t worry, I have a PDF of it that I’ll post.)

Your county tax dollars at work…, Part 2

Paying for a cannery? (An ongoing series on the wasteful spending by the Board of Supervisors and the County Administrator…)

According to the Fiscal Year 2007-2008 Adopted Budget for Caroline County:

The Cannery, located on Route 301 next to the Community Services Center, is a County supported facility that enables Caroline residents to use equipment and technical expertise not otherwise available to them in the canning of food. Individuals may take any quantity or variety of meat or produce to the Cannery and the trained, part time staff will direct and assist them in processing and packing it in cans using the equipment at the facility.

So, we’re paying for the staff and the equipment necessary for a cannery. Paying in the tune of $130,732 budgeted to this operation over the last four fiscal years.

“Our tax base won’t allow 24-hour [fire/EMS] coverage” or a public safety building, but it does allow for a cannery? With that money wasted every year, we could have afforded an additional deputy or an additional firefighter or medic.

Ladysmith Elementary evacuated after bomb threat

From NBC12 News: Two schools threatened with violence :

A Caroline County elementary school was evacuated Thursday morning due to a bomb threat. County deputies were called to Ladysmith Elementary around 9:20 a.m. because of a written bomb threat inside the school.

All the children were taken outside while the state police bomb squad went through the building with bomb-sniffing dogs. Less than two hours later, everyone was allowed back inside.

Ladysmith Elementary is working with deputies to find the culprit.

Stafford County deputies also are investigating a threat against one of the county’s schools.

Deputies searched the home of a 16-year-old student from Mountain View High School.

They received reports that the teen threatened several other students last Friday and talked about shooting up a class. Deputies recovered a BB gun and a knife at the home.

So far no charges have been filed against the teen.

[googlevideo=http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7841140039410378636]

Oh, I’m going to blush, Part 2

From The Free Lance-Star: Court opponents help support Latney’s race:

Defense attorney Ed Vaughan donated $500 to Caroline County Commonwealth’s Attorney Harvey Latney’s re-election campaign and plans to help Latney out of a bind in his private practice.

Vaughan was one of eight local attorneys or firms who donated to Latney’s campaign. Overall, defense attorneys gave $4,750 of the $5,000 Latney raised over the summer.

The only donor listed on the report who was not a defense attorney was Supervisor Maxie Rozell.

“Anybody who gave Harvey Latney money did so without expectation,” Vaughan said.

All of the attorneys who donated to the campaign have had at least one case in Caroline County in the last six months.

But Latney said money made no difference in how he handled the cases.

“No one is getting any special treatment just because they think I’m the best person for the job,” he said. “These are people who believe in me and believe I’ve done a great job.”

Uh, because you let their clients off?

A review of Caroline Circuit Court cases over the past six months shows a majority of those that involved donating attorneys were reduced, dropped or nol prossed (dismissed with the potential to bring the charge back at a later date).

But so were most of the cases involving attorneys who did not contribute to Latney’s campaign.

And the largest donor was Mark Murphy, who defended Donna Blanton in the slaying of her husband. Latney won a murder conviction in that case, but an appeals court ordered a new trial because of the jury selection.

Tony Spencer, a former Richmond prosecutor opposing Latney in the incumbent’s first contested election in 30 years in office, did not have any donations listed from defense attorneys on his most recent campaign finance report.

Spencer said he doesn’t think contributing attorneys got preferential treatment in Caroline. But he said the high number of dismissals and reductions in charges are a concern.

“With Mr. Latney in office, Caroline County is a defense attorney’s paradise,” he said. “If I were a defense attorney practicing in Caroline County, I’d contribute to Harvey Latney.”

A Richmond attorney who donated $250 to Latney’s election campaign said he did so because he thinks the Caroline justice system is fair and works well.

“I donated to him to maintain status quo,” said John LaFratta, who often works as a court appointed attorney in Caroline. “If I thought he gave preferential treatment, I wouldn’t practice in that court.”

The status quo that all the criminals get off?

Bill Neely, commonwealth’s attorney for neighboring Spotsylvania County, said it is not unusual for defense attorneys to donate to a prosecutor’s campaign.

“You have to raise money where you can,” Neely said.

Though Neely is unopposed this year, he said he sought funds from defense attorneys when he faced challengers in the past.

“I sent solicitations to every member of the bar,” he said.

Vaughan said he thinks the reason the majority of Latney’s campaign funds come from attorneys is because those are the people he sees regularly.

“You look for money from your friends,” Vaughan said. “And his friends happen to be defense attorneys.”

Vaughan also said he plans to give to a fund for Latney’s private law practice because, “You hope people do the right thing in the time of need.”

Latney owes clients about $300,000 for money missing from their estate accounts he was managing in his Richmond-based practice.

His secretary of 27 years, Sheila Boone, is charged with theft. Although Latney is not suspected to be at fault criminally, he is held responsible for repayment. His insurance carrier has refused to cover the loss.

Craig Cooley, a Richmond defense attorney, said he set up the fund and sent a letter soliciting donations because Latney “is not a high-income person but is a very high-integrity person.”

“He was victimized by a trusted employee,” Cooley said. “It could happen to any of us.”

Cooley also said he felt the fundraiser would have no effect on treatment in Caroline courts.

The only client Cooley has represented in Caroline Circuit Court was John Ames, who was charged with killing his neighbor in a dispute over a bull. Ames pleaded self-defense and was acquitted after a trial.

Cooley would not say how many people he sent the letter to, how many have donated or how much money has been raised.

Why not? Scared of what might come out if you released the information?

He said he doesn’t plan to try any more cases in Caroline anytime soon.

Heavy equipment stolen in Spotsylvania

From NBC12 News: Heavy equipment stolen in Spotsylvania :

In Spotsylvania County, thieves made off with heavy equipment from two construction sites.

A 1995 Caterpillar track loader worth about $290,000 was stolen from a construction lot behind the Kohl’s store in Cosner’s Corner.

Someone also stole a 2004 skid steer loader from a lot in the Lees’ Park area near Ball’s Bluff.

Anyone with information is asked to call Spotsylvania police.

[googlevideo=http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-4940570305072253230]

If you have information contact the Spotsylvania County Sheriff’s Office (NBC12: Spotsylvania does not have a police department!) at:

E-Mail: sheriff@spotsylvania.va.us
Main: (540) 507-7200
After Hours Non Emergency: (540) 582-7115
Fax: (540) 582-9448