Archives
 By  Staff Reports Published 
6:18 am Monday, January 28, 2002

Notes from the cops and courts beat

By By Suzanne Monk
Jan. 20, 2002
It makes me tired to think about it and I'm not sure anyone at the Meridian Police Department has the energy even to roll their eyes but I need to put a check mark on my list beside "police chief vacancy" just to prove I'm still awake.
You've probably heard the "consolidation" rumors.
The first is that the mayor is going to create a combined fire and police department, create a "safety commissioner" position to oversee both and then appoint current Fire Chief Bunky Partridge. As a rumor, I like this one. It does a better job of justifying Partridge's $8,000 pay raise than either explanation offered by city officials.
The second is that the police and sheriff's departments are going to be combined and led by Sheriff Billy Sollie. This one has the virtue of drawing on the truth. Talk of "metro government" is enjoying a revival right now, and the city and county consolidated E-911 dispatching a couple years ago.
Either could be true.
Neither would surprise me.
I don't know how much closer the mayor is to making a decision, but the quality of the rumors is definitely improving.
Comcast development
A Jan. 28 sentencing date has been set in U.S. District Court for Comcast defendants C.D. "Bubba" Newell and Kim Gianakos. Nashville attorney Richard Crane has been successful in reducing Newell's possible sentence from 78-97 months to 63-78 months but he is not yet satisfied.
Crane said there is a "gross disparity" in the possible sentences for Newell and David Van Colvin who will serve somewhere between 33 and 41 months even though he was the acknowledged "man in the middle" of a scheme to defraud Comcast of $2.6 million.
Colvin pleaded guilty in 1999, and agreed to testify against four alleged co-conspirators in exchange for a 25 percent reduction in his sentence. The other mitigating factor is that the U.S. Attorney's Office did not require Colvin to plead guilty to money-laundering, which carries the harshest sentence of any of the charges listed in the Comcast indictments. Newell, on the other hand, was convicted of 12 money-laundering counts.
Quick takes
New partners: I mentioned in my last column that Henry Palmer, Newell's trial attorney, had left the law firm of Palmer, Wright and Williamson. His new law partner is Robbie Jones; the two have opened an office on Poplar Springs Drive.
Retirement: Fellow police officers threw Steve Clark a retirement party Friday in the Municipal Courtroom. The senior police officer was a member of the MPD for more than 27 years.
More delays: Former police officer Rita Jack's public hearing before the Meridian Civil Service Commission, set for Jan. 24, has been delayed at the city's request. Jack was fired amid allegations that she stole money and checks from the MPD's front desk, but a Lauderdale County grand jury declined to indict her.
Some people never learn: After barely escaping a prison sentence last year in Mississippi for Medicaid fraud, Dr. Walter Ocampo Anderson has been indicted in Indiana for the same thing. The Associated Press reports he could face up to 150 years in jail, and a fine of $9.5 million, if convicted this time around.

Also on Franklin County Times
2 Bear Creek areas under fish advisories
A: Main, News, Russellville, ...
Bernie Delanski For the FCT 
June 24, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — The 2026 Alabama Fish Consumption Advisories recommends not consuming largemouth bass taken from two areas of Franklin County due to me...
$2.85M contract OK’d for new library
A: Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
June 24, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Construction of a new public library moved a step closer to reality last week as the city council approved a $2.85 million construction...
D-1 Commissioner Baker ready to make an impact
A: Main, News, Russellville, ...
By Brady Petree 
June 24, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — When Curtis Baker is sworn in as Franklin County District 1 commissioner in November, he plans to hit the ground running on day one. Af...
Advocacy center gets $3.5K from county
Franklin County, News, Russellville
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
June 24, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Franklin County commissioners recently increased its annual support for the Cramer Children’s Advocacy from $500 to $3,500. Speaking du...
Alabama should honor decision of Lee’s jury
Columnists, Opinion
June 24, 2026
Jeffery Lee has been on Alabama’s death row for over two decades. He was convicted of a terrible crime — the murder of two people at a pawn shop outsi...
Preparations begin for 250th celebration
Columnists, Franklin County, News, ...
HERE AND NOW
June 24, 2026
As our country prepares for the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, communities across the nation are planning activi...
History lessons come to life for couple
Franklin County, News
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
June 24, 2026
For years, first grade teacher Emily Tucker Hodges read novels set in ancient Greece and Rome and imagined what those places might have looked like. T...
Rescue dog finds a second purpose
News
By Ella Seaton For the FCT 
June 24, 2026
TUSCUMBIA — Once living on the streets in Muscle Shoals, a pup rescued in Colbert County has found a new life in New England as a comfort canine for t...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *