13 indicted in Pocahontas
By ANTHONY GAYNOR, Staff WriterA grand jury in Pocahontas County handed up 26 indictments against 13 people on Tuesday. The majority of the charges are drug related.
Jonathan D. Williams, 28, of Covington, Va., and Joshua Wiley Jr., 23, of Hillsboro were named in separate three-count indictments. Each is facing two felony counts of delivery of a schedule II controlled substance and one felony count of transportation of a controlled substance into the state.
Travis S. Dean, 31, was indicted on two felony counts of delivery of a controlled substance. Dean is lodged in the Martinsburg Correctional Facility for parole violations.
Robert Randall Hall, 52, of Hillsboro was named in a three-count indictment on charges of delivery of a controlled substance, a felony.
Brenda S. Walton, 42, and Charles E. Sheets, 36, both of Marlinton, were indicted on two counts of delivery of a controlled substance.
Teresa C. Morrison, 42, of Marlinton was named in a three-count indictment on charges of delivery of a controlled substance.
Steven L. Moore, 28, of Marlinton was named in a two-count indictment. Moore is facing one count of delivery of a controlled substance and one count of conspiracy to deliver a controlled substance, both felonies.
Charles N. Irvine, 34, of Marlinton was named in a two-count indictment. Irvine is charged with one felony count of third or subsequent offense driving under the influence and one misdemeanor count of unlawfully bypassing an alcohol test and lock system.
John F. Via, 32, of Stony Bottom was indicted on one felony count of third offense domestic battery.
Debra L. Workman, 33, of Hillsboro was named in a one-count indictment on charges of obtaining property by false pretenses.
Rocky M. Ryder, 40, of Bartow and was indicted on charges of failure to provide support to a minor, a misdemeanor.
Foye Armstrong McLemore III, 28, of Currituck, N.C., was charged with one count of failure to provide support to a minor, a felony.
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04-09-09 12:40 PM
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I can think of no better way to honor the life and memory of the most despicable, nefarious, and CRIMINAL* President Richard ("I") M ("not a crook") Nixon than to continue fighting his "War on Drugs." * if he wasn't the leader of a criminal conspiracy then why did he need a blanket pardon from his successor, Gerald Ford, and his inner-circle end up in prison for crimes related to their felonious abuse of power? And to those who champion prohibitionist drug policies I ask, "where in the Constitution does it grant government the authority to dictate what citizens ingest into their own bodies? Or are our bodies property of the government?"
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