Showing posts with label police. Show all posts
Showing posts with label police. Show all posts

Friday, December 24, 2010

West Birmingham police officers to get holiday feast

Published: Thursday, December 23, 2010, 11:45 PM
Dora Sims police meal.jpgDora Sims, secretary of the Five Points West community in Birmingham, at left, and Patricia Henderson, president of the community, prepare sweet potato pies for police officers in Birmingham's West Precinct. The pies will be part of a Christmas Eve dinner being prepared and served by numerous neighborhoods in western Birmingham. (The Birmingham News / Linda Stelter)


Their families might be cooking at home this Christmas Eve, but for west Birmingham police officers who have to work, the feast will be in the roll call room at the West Precinct.

A decades-old tradition in western Birmingham kicks off at 1:30 this afternoon, when the people they protect set out a homemade holiday meal.

Residents of the Belview Heights, Bush Hills, Central Park, Ensley, Ensley Highlands, Fairview, Five Points West, Green Acres and Tuxedo communities are pitching in, said Patricia Henderson, president of the Five Points West community. The Five Points West Merchants Association and Schaeffer Eye Center also participate.

"Everybody makes a dish. It's a way to say 'thank you' to the police officers," Henderson said.

Sgt. Dexter Cunningham, supervisor of the precinct's day shift, said all the officers are looking forward to it. "We really appreciate the community we serve thinking of us," Cunningham said. "They care enough about us to think about us."

Day shift is the first of three shifts the residents are feeding. That's about 75 officers total, so plenty of food will be kept aside for the afternoon and night shifts to enjoy a meal, dinner organizers said.

Traditional holiday fare is on the menu, such as turkey, ham, dressing, green bean casserole, macaroni and cheese and congealed salad. Some of the cooks have been working since mid-week on their dishes.

On Wednesday afternoon, the scent of cinnamon and nutmeg swirled in the kitchen at dinner coordinator Dora Sims' Bush Hills home as she prepared five sweet potato pies.

What's one of the secrets to a good pie?

Boil the potatoes in their skins, then plunge them into cold water to peel, she said. It's a trick she learned from her aunt, Lucille Price of Titusville, who was a cook at the Eye Foundation Hospital and gave her the recipe.

"She said it helps keep the nutrients in," Sims said.

Today's West Precinct dinner also marks another chapter in the ongoing "turkey battle" between former Birmingham Mayor Bernard Kincaid and Councilman Steven Hoyt, who compete to see who can cook the best bird. It has been a good-natured rivalry for several years.

Mayor William Bell hasn't entered that fray, but dinner organizers had hoped that when he stops by the precinct today, he would bring another poultry dish -- chicken and dressing, Henderson said. Bell scored a hit when he brought it last year but this year plans to bring a cake baked by his wife.

The Christmas Eve meal at the precinct grew out of the Belview Heights neighborhood's Thanksgiving tradition of preparing and serving a turkey dinner to the community's firefighters. That grew into a community-wide event, and expanded to include a meal for the West Precinct at Christmas.

"The police officers really enjoy this," Sims said. "We look at it as our gift to them."
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Friday, December 3, 2010

Birmingham police beating video: Judge denies request by officer to have separate trial

Published: Thursday, December 02, 2010, 4:24 PM ??? Updated: Thursday, December 02, 2010, 4:44 PM

A federal judge today denied a request by one of the two former Birmingham police officers charged in the 2008 beating of an already-unconscious suspect to have a separate trial from the other man accused.

[See the video below.]

The trial for David Wayne Doran and Barrett G. Dewitt is set to begin Jan. 3.

In a seven-page ruling issued this afternoon, Chief U.S. District Judge Sharon Lovelace Blackburn denied a motion by Dewitt to sever his trial from that of Doran.

Dewitt's attorney filed a motion Nov. 3 asking that the trial be held separately from Doran's trial.

Dewitt would be prejudiced in the event evidence against his co-defendant
is submitted to the jury, according to the motion. "Mr. Dewitt expects the evidence to be in the form of the co-defendants action," according to Dewitt's motion.

"Mr. Dewitt believes there are photographs of the suspect, A.W. (Anthony Shannon Warren), which may be admitted against the co-defendant. Mr. Dewitt aver(s) said photographs should not be admitted in his case."

In her ruling Thursday, however, Blackburn states that Dewitt failed to satisfy his burden of demonstrating "specific and compelling prejudice to the conduct of his defense" that would result from a joint trial. Dewitt also failed to show "a risk of compelling prejudice" that the court could not address with measures less drastic than separating the trials, including cautionary instructions to the jury, she wrote.

Doran and Dewitt were two of five officers fired from Birmingham's police force a year and a half ago. The two were charged in one-count indictments with using unreasonable force in the arrest of Warren. The indictments claim Dewitt and Doran aided and abetted one another in striking the man they were arresting with their fists, feet and a baton.

Both?men have pleaded not guilty to the charge.

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Sunday, November 21, 2010

Birmingham police arrest three men in unrelated robberies

Published: Friday, November 19, 2010, 4:56 PM ??? Updated: Friday, November 19, 2010, 5:10 PM

Birmingham police today reported the arrest of three men suspected in three unrelated robberies. Each is charged with first degree robbery.

Eric Williams, 35, was arrested on suspicion in the Sept. 1, evening robbery of Titlebucks, located in the 9100 block of Parkway East.

Investigators today also identified John Kewish, 47, as the arrested suspect in a Wednesday evening robbery of two people in the 5800 block of 1st Avenue North.

In a third case, Demetrics Jenkins, 31, was arrested as the suspect in a robbery of a person in the 1500 block of Stone Ridge Road on Nov. 9.

Police said Jenkins was in possession of marijuana and cocaine when he was arrested, and he was also charged with unlawful possession of marijuana and unlawful possession of a controlled substance.

All three men are in the Jefferson County Jail.

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Saturday, November 20, 2010

Birmingham police make arrest in Wednesday night shooting death of college student

Published: Saturday, November 20, 2010, 12:00 AM ??? Updated: Saturday, November 20, 2010, 12:27 AM

Family members of a Pleasant Grove man slain this week in a Birmingham park said they are in shock, and have more questions than answers surrounding the ordeal.

Clifford Whitely, 21, was found face down Wednesday night at East Brownsville Park at Felix Avenue S.W. and Spaulding Street.

Late Friday night, Birmingham police announced the arrest of Tommy Williams of Birmingham, 21, for capital murder in Whitely's death.

Five others were arrested with Williams on other charges, including Shaunasty Lowe, 21, who was acquitted Sept. 20 of a quadruple murder. Lowe was charged with unlawful possession of marijuana and was also in possession of a stolen handgun, police said. The six were arrested in the 700 block of New Hill Circle in Birmingham on Friday night. Only Williams was charged in the murder.

Police did not release any information on a motive.

A 2007 graduate of Pleasant Grove High School, Whitely was shot multiple times Wednesday night.

"The family has a lot of unanswered questions, like why he was there," said Bessemer Mayor Kenneth Gulley, the victim's uncle. "The details are sketchy and we're trying to figure it out and wait on those answers."

The car Whitely had been driving was taken after he was shot, family members said. It was found a short time later on Carol Street and Wenonah Road.

"It's just a very, very trying time," Gulley said Friday.

"We look at all of our kids and lump them together, but he was a very good kid," Gulley said. "He had lived a very privileged life."

Whitely was a defensive back at Pleasant Grove High School and then went to Jacksonville State University, where he was a biology major and also played football.

He left JSU and transferred to Lawson State Community College.

"He was a standout player, and he made good grades," Gulley said.

Though Whitely was Gulley's nephew by marriage, he had known him all of his life.

"I've known him since he was born, and I gave him his first job when I worked at Lawson State," the mayor said. "He was a very quiet, mild-mannered person. Very kind-hearted."

"There were moments he could be a typical 21-year-old, but he was genuinely a good kid."

In addition to school, Whitely worked part-time and had an eight-month-old son. He lived at home with his parents, and had attended classes on the evening he was killed.

"We've never lost a family member to violence," Gulley said. "It's one of those horror stories that you feel like can never happen to you."

Besides Lowe, others arrested with Williams on Friday night were Corinthia Lowe, 27, possession of marijuana and possession of a controlled substance; Tyree Hines, 19, illegally possessing two handguns and a controlled substance; and Grady Jenkins, 44, disorderly conduct. Also, a juvenile suspect was arrested and charged with possession of marijuana.

A jury in September found Shaunasty Lowe not guilty in the murders of Derrick Witherspoon, Elizabeth Witherspoon and her sons, Justin and Jerome McFarland, in July 2008. All four were shot in the head, and their house was burned with their bodies inside.

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