12/31/06

Top 10 stories of 2006

Sunday, December 31, 2006

By Marcie Young, Hannah Mitchell and Jen Aronoff
Charlotte Observer Staff Writers

Furniture factories closed and property taxes rose in 2006, but the biggest news in the Catawba Valley was water.

The biggest story of the year erupted in a crowded auditorium in Valdese, when Unifour residents gathered to oppose Concord and Kannapolis' request to take millions of gallons of water a day from local rivers.

The proposed interbasin transfer united the region, with even the smallest of towns reserving funds for a potential legal battle.

The region also saw a few shocking stories in 2006, including a gruesome, small-town murder in Caldwell County and two fatal plane crashes at regional and private airports.

But the news wasn't all bad. Officials began touting the region as a hot retirement destination, Target announced it would build a distribution center in Newton with the promise of nearly 600 new jobs, and a local man discovered a world-class emerald.

Here are the 10 biggest stories of 2006, as picked by the Catawba Valley Neighbors staff.

*

Interbasin transfer

The year's biggest story probably won't go away any time soon.

Counties and towns across the region normally focus on needs inside their borders - needs that sometimes conflict with those of their neighbors. But this year, they united to oppose Concord and Kannapolis' attempt to take Catawba River water.

The bid for up to 36 million gallons a day from the Catawba and Yadkin rivers upset locals so much that more than 600 of them packed a September hearing in Valdese before officials of the N.C. Division of Water Quality. The hearing got pretty heated at times, with one man shouting, "Dig a well!"

A coalition of area governments has since organized and raised about $1 million to fight the transfer.

Catawba Valley officials say dry spells like the area's five-year drought that ended in 2003, and the need to replace thousands of manufacturing jobs, make the river an essential resource that they can't afford to share.

The N.C. Environmental Management Commission is scheduled to consider the issue on Jan. 10. If the commission approves the proposal, Catawba Valley officials and their allies have said they would likely take their case to court.

*

Synthron

In one of the worst industrial disasters in the state's recent history, Morganton's Synthron chemical plant exploded Jan. 31, injuring 15 workers - one of whom later died.

Experts believe an out-of-control chemical reaction sparked the fiery blast, and its consequences continue to reverberate.

In July, the N.C. Department of Labor fined Synthron $379,000, the fourth-highest amount ever assessed by the department.

The company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in October and is appealing the penalties.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency took over demolition and cleanup efforts in May and expects work will wrap up by the end of January. In the spring, the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board plans to issue its full report on what went wrong.

The story may not end there: Victims have also said they're considering lawsuits.

*

David Huffman

For a quarter-century, David Huffman has led the Catawba County Sheriff's Office, the largest in the region. But during the 2006 election season, Huffman was nearly ousted - twice.

Huffman, a Republican, won a bitter and expensive primary race against Mike Ledford by only 140 votes. The campaign left him with only $359 in his re-election fund.

Then, in November, Huffman narrowly retained his job, despite running in one of the state's sturdiest Republican strongholds, beating Democrat Steve Hunt, a 30-year veteran of the Hickory Police Department. Huffman won by a slim margin of 411 votes out of 34,289 cast.

Huffman vowed in November that his seventh term will be the last.

*

Jerry Anderson

For the past year, Caldwell County residents have been intrigued by a down-on-the-farm murder-mystery.

On Dec. 29, 49-year-old Emily Anderson disappeared from the Sawmills farm she operated with her husband and was found 10 days later in a South Carolina restaurant parking lot about 100 miles from Lenoir.

She had been shot twice, and her body was crammed into the large tool compartment of her Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck.

Nearly a month after she disappeared, her husband, 47-year-old Jerry Anderson, was charged with first-degree murder in the killing. He could face the death penalty if convicted and awaits trial from the Caldwell County jail. "Everybody is eager to see what happens," lifelong Caldwell County resident Dowe Annas said. "There's a group of people who just don't want to believe it, and I'd imagine there's a few who are dead certain he did it."

*

Furniture woes

Caldwell County's wooden furniture industry continued to crumble this year, with Broyhill Furniture Industries announcing it would shut two Lenoir plants and lay off about 1,000 workers.

Long one of the region's dominant employers, Broyhill will have only two domestic manufacturing plants, both upholstery operations, left after February, when its last U.S. wood-furniture plant, Lenoir Furniture Corp., is set to close. Caldwell's unemployment rate remains among the highest in the state.

Lenoir factories have made wooden furniture for more than a century, but their numbers have dwindled to only about a half-dozen, most making specialty products, as companies increasingly turn to inexpensive Asian imports.

Just two years ago, Broyhill itself had six wood-furniture factories in Lenoir.

*

Retirement

Communities across the Catawba Valley increasingly looked this year to lure a new growth industry: retirees and baby boomers headed toward retirement, who can offer time and talent, don't crowd schools and stimulate the local economy by spending money on goods and services.

"Competition for the retiree is just like competition for industry," said Morganton City Council member John Cantrell, who noted that Burke County plans on increasing its retiree marketing in the coming year. "Anybody that's not interested in attracting retirees is missing an opportunity."

At the same time, a number of new housing developments targeted at the 55-plus crowd were announced across the region, including in downtown Morganton, northeast Hickory and the town of Catawba. Planners also expect the large, outdoors-oriented developments planned in rural Caldwell County to appeal to retirees.

*

Target

For a region battered by layoffs and plant closings, the July announcement that Target would build a massive distribution center in southwestern Catawba County was big news indeed.

How big? Minneapolis-based Target, the nation's No. 2 discount chain, plans to invest $100 million and create at least 580 jobs - positions that can't easily be moved offshore, experts noted.

At 1.5 million square feet - the size of 27 football fields - on 247 acres off U.S. 321 and N.C. 10 west of Newton, the building would become the largest distribution center in the Charlotte region.

The center is expected to open in late 2009 and will serve the mid-Atlantic region, with 100 trucks a day entering and leaving the site. Construction is set to begin in the spring.

*

Revaluations

Property values in three Catawba Valley counties rose when tax assessors revalued real property this year to reflect market prices.

On Lake Norman in Catawba County, values sharply increased, by 50 percent on average. The area, which is commuting distance from Charlotte, continues to draw people from other counties and states, driving property values up so fast assessors can't keep up with them.

Elsewhere in Catawba, shuttered factories actually caused industrial properties to decrease in value, by 5.5 percent on average.

Alexander and Burke counties were still calculating new values and expected to mail notices to property owners in early 2007.

Next year, county commissioners in each county will set the property tax rate by which tax bills are calculated along with property values. Some boards lower tax rates in revaluation years to soften the effect of higher values.

*

Jamie Hill

Jamie Hill, known as Alexander County's "emerald man," pulled another big gem out of the Hiddenite bedrock in August.

The 10-inch, 591-carat emerald made eyes pop when Hill showed it off to friends and reporters. It's shaped like two long green-glass cigars fused together on one end and dotted with yellow flecks.

Because of its unusual length and twin formation, Hill called it a museum-quality piece instead of one that would be cut for jewels.

This month, he said gem experts have proclaimed it the world's longest natural emerald crystal. A Connecticut jewelry gallery, E.F. Watermelon, was marketing the emerald to potential buyers.

Hill's mine also produced sizeable emeralds in 1998 and 2003.

*

Plane crashes

Two fiery crashes at small, regional airports killed three local men in 2006.

In a July 24 crash at the at Hickory Regional Airport, the pilot of a single-engine Korean War-era fighter jet died when the plane skidded off a runway, crashed through a fence and exploded.

The pilot, vintage-airplane buff Wyatt Fuller of Hickory, was headed to an air show in Oshkosh, Wis., carrying 800 gallons of fuel when the 1954 F-86 Sabre crashed. Hickory officials said the wreck was the only fatality they could recall at the small airport.

Less than five months later, in Alexander County, two other local men were killed at the Taylorsville Airport when the homemade plane they were flying crashed and burst into flames.

Leon Marion Fagan Jr., 44, and Billy Kermit Little, 53, both of Taylorsville, died Dec. 10 when the plane crashed behind a service station moments after takeoff. Flames had engulfed the wreckage when emergency crews arrived.

The plane, registered to Fagan, was an experimental aircraft that was built from a kit in 2005.


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In remembrance 2006

Many notable Catawba Valley residents died this year, leaving behind very different legacies

Sunday, December 31, 2006

By Marcie Young, Hannah Mitchell and Jen Aronoff
Charlotte Observer Staff Writers

A blues star died and a Catawba County soldier never came home. A local young man, who established a charity bike ride in 2004, lost his three-year battle with cancer, and residents honored local philanthropists for their contributions to the community.

The staff of the Catawba Valley Neighbors recognizes these individuals for their service and determination, and for the role they played in molding the character of the region.

*

Etta Baker

Etta Baker, a Caldwell County native who traded in a job at a shoe factory to become a blues legend, died Sept. 26. She was 93.

Baker's unusual two-fingered picking style influenced musical greats such as Bob Dylan and Taj Mahal and earned her a reputation as a master of the Piedmont blues, a blend of bluegrass and blues that dates back more than a century in the mountains of North Carolina and Tennessee.

The self-taught musician learned to strum the guitar as a 3-year-old, resting between her father's knees and watching him pluck at the strings.

Decades later, in 1958, Baker was working in a textile factory when a professional musician and friend suggested she change careers.

"This was on a Wednesday," Baker recalled in a 2005 interview. "I went in and told 'em I was quitting on Friday, and I did. I never did go back."

In the following years, Baker toured in Europe, and won a National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. But it was her positive attitude that grandson Steven Avery said was one of her true accomplishments.

"She did not have the blues, she played the blues," he said. "The `happy blues,' she called it."

*

Brett Gosnell

Hickory native Brett Gosnell died Aug. 17 after a three-year battle with a rare and aggressive childhood cancer, rhabdomyosarcoma. He was 20.

The football player and academic star kept attending classes and graduated as Hickory High School's 2004 valedictorian. He started coursework at Lenoir-Rhyne College and UNC Chapel Hill, and in the fall of 2005 was able to attend the University of Virginia, his dream school.

Even as the cancer and chemotherapy ravaged his 6-foot-1, 175-pound frame, family and friends said that Gosnell's positive attitude, intelligence, courage and determination were inspiring.

"Even when he was so sick he couldn't walk, he would say he was going to beat it," said Gosnell's longtime childhood friend, Scott Talbert.

In 2004, he started Brett's Ride for Rhabdo, a bicycle ride to benefit research for all kinds of childhood cancers. His parents, Mark and Mary Ann Gosnell, plan to continue the charity bike ride.

*

Jason Huffman

Army Spc. Jason Huffman of Catawba County was a devoted soldier who didn't mind returning to Iraq for a second tour, said his sister, Torie Murphy.

Huffman died on Dec. 6 at age 22 when his Humvee ran over a roadside bomb in the city of Kirkuk.

He was at least the fourth serviceman from the Catawba Valley to die in Iraq since the war began.

Huffman, son of an Army veteran, joined the Army in 2003. He was sent to Iraq after basic training and was on his second tour there when he was killed.

He graduated from Bunker Hill High School in 2002.

*

Tom Mate

Thomas Michael Mate of Hickory, a late-blooming but prolific artist and philanthropist, died Sept. 27 at Frye Regional Medical Center after a 4 1/2-year battle with cancer and multiple sclerosis. He was 61.

For seven years, Mate and his artist wife, Jackie, have held the Mate Benefit for Habitat for Humanity, selling paintings to raise money for the construction of new homes. More than 200 pieces were sold at the most recent benefit, held in November.

"We hope to raise enough money to build a home in Tom's honor," Jackie said.

Mate, a native of Cleveland, Ohio, worked in various segments of the furniture industry for more than 30 years, moving to Hickory to take a job in furniture marketing and manufacturing.

After his retirement, he managed a Habitat Home Store for several years, volunteered at the Hickory Museum of Art and began pastel drawing in 1997.

*

Kenneth Millholland

Kenneth Millholland, a Hickory resident who, with his wife, Suzanne, helped shape the city's civic life for decades, died Dec. 8 at age 89.

Millholland was the former vice president of the Hickory Daily Record newspaper, which his wife's family had owned since 1929. Kenneth and Suzanne Millholland sold the paper to Media General in 1998.

Longtime supporters of the arts and education, the Millhollands were repeatedly recognized for their philanthropy and, in 2004, received the Order of the Long Leaf Pine.

They donated to Lenoir-Rhyne College, the UNC Chapel Hill School of Journalism and Mass Communication, the Hickory Museum of Art, the Western Piedmont Symphony and the Catawba Science Center, among other organizations, and helped fund a new indoor pool at the Hickory YMCA.


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12/27/06

Christmas blaze kills woman and boyfriend, home destroyed

Sparks from stove likely behind fire, firefighters say

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

LENOIR – About five months ago, Gary Moody took his girlfriend, 58-year-old Corene Myers, to see her favorite band at Lenoir's Smokey Creek BBQ, where they met six years earlier.

When the musicians took a break, Moody, 52, picked up the microphone and proposed.

The couple hadn't set a wedding date by Christmas but were looking forward to spending the holiday eating dinner with family at the northwest Lenoir home they shared with Myers' son, 39-year-old Alan Holtsclaw.

Shortly after 8 Christmas morning, however, smoke began billowing from the windows of the wooden house and flames engulfed the interior, killing Moody and Myers.

Firefighters believe that sparks from a wood stove ignited the fire. Holtsclaw, who owns the home, said he had recently cut wood to fuel the stove because kerosene was too expensive.

Moody and Myers tried to escape through the kitchen at the back of the small, four-room house. Emergency crews found the couple on the kitchen floor, where Moody was lying on top of Myers, said Sherry White, Myers' 38-year-old daughter.

"He was trying to protect her, save her," she said.

Paramedics gave the couple CPR, but Moody and Myers died before authorities arrived, said Lt. Sam Smith, public information officer for the Lenoir Fire Department.

Holtsclaw, the eldest of Myers' four children, was sleeping in his bedroom adjoining the kitchen when the flames ripped through the home.

Neighbor Stan Nelson said he had just finished opening presents with his wife and sons when they noticed black smoke pouring from the house. His sons, 34-year-old Chad Nelson and 32-year-old Steven Nelson, ran across the yard and pounded on Holtsclaw's bedroom window.

Holtsclaw woke up to the knocking, he said, and ran to the bedroom door to find his mother and Moody. The door handle was too hot to open, Holtsclaw said, and flames shot through the crack between the floor and the door, burning his feet.

"I jumped onto the bed," he said, "and my two little angels kicked in the window."

Chad and Steven Nelson broke the window, Holtsclaw said, grabbed him by the arm and helped him climb through the frame, which was lined with shattered glass. Paramedics gave Holtsclaw oxygen at the scene and treated him for other injuries, he said.

Authorities were still looking for smoke detectors Tuesday. Holtsclaw and White said there were two in the home - one in the living room and another in the kitchen. Both were working, they said. Tuesday afternoon, Holtsclaw, who lives on monthly disability checks, returned to the home where he has lived since 1974 to look for his mother's cocker spaniel and to comfort Daisy, the family cat that escaped the fire but was badly burned by flames.

White said they've heard rumors that neighbors saw the cocker spaniel flee the home, but they haven't been able to find the dog. Meadowbrook Baptist Church provided shelter Monday and cooked breakfast for rescue crews and the victims' families, and Grandview Baptist Church provided counseling, White said.

"I've had people asking what I need, and I don't know," Holtsclaw said. "Whatever they can give would help."

While the Lenoir police and fire departments and the State Bureau of Investigation continue investigating the fire, Holtsclaw will stay with family and friends.

He hopes to return to the neighborhood and possibly buy a trailer to replace his destroyed home.

"I've got good neighbors around here. I just can't leave this place," he said.


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12/21/06

Gangs on our turf? Police study signs as law enforcement tracks more actvity

Programs reach out to vulnerable teens

Graffiti can signal more than vandalism

Thursday, December 21, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

HICKORY – Authorities across the Catawba Valley say they are noticing more signs of gang activity in recent months.

Patrol officers say they see more graffiti scrawled across exposed walls of local businesses.

School resource officers notice more teenagers flashing hand signals in the hallways, decorating their notebooks with gang symbols and wearing the colorful clothing associated with sects of the Bloods, Crips and Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13.

The signs are serious enough that the Hickory Police Department started an anti-gang unit in July, and community groups are holding gang-awareness classes in some schools.

But police are also careful to say that gangs in the region are nowhere near the size or level of violence seen in major cities.

"We don't want to scare anyone. We're not overrun by gangs at this point," said Sgt. Jeff Young of the Hickory Police Department. "But the lack of awareness is a problem and we want to be proactive about it. We don't want Hickory to start looking like Charlotte or Durham."

Young has led the department's street-crime interdiction division, or gang unit, since it began. He has documented 10 gangs in Catawba County and 27 gang members using criteria established by the N.C. Gang Investigators Association.

A gang, according to the association, is any group of three or more people sharing common colors, insignia or tattoos and engaging in criminal or delinquent behavior.

In neighboring Burke County, Detective David Curry of the Morganton Public Safety Department has identified about eight gang members. Lenoir police officers believe there could be between five and eight gangs in Caldwell County, said Capt. Scott Brown.

Meanwhile, officers in Mecklenburg County are focusing on controlling criminal activity by 1,821 documented gang members and 126 gangs in the state's most populated county.

Authorities across the state are taking action. Recently, with a $67,000 grant from the Governor's Crime Commission, the Hickory police formed the street-crime division and increased police presence in areas rumored to attract gang members and people affiliated with gangs, Young said.

In January, GangNet, a database used to track documented gang members statewide, will be available to law enforcement in North Carolina's 100 counties. Access, Young said, allows officers to easily identify gang members from other areas and will be helpful during his patrols.

*

Patrolling the streets

Earlier this month, Young wove a sports utility vehicle through lines of cars parked behind a popular dance club in southwest Hickory.

The SUV lacked all of the distinguishing markings of a cop car - no painted Police Department logo or blue lights lining the roof - and the few groups of teenagers huddled in the parking lot didn't even glance at it as it passed.

Dozens of similar-looking vehicles with equally dark, tinted windows were scattered across the lot, allowing Young and his patrol partner, officer Ty Hunt, to blend in.

Most of the county's 27 documented gang members no longer come to the club, Young said, but others from as far as Charlotte and Gastonia will congregate there on the weekends.

On Oct. 4, a man told police that four men grabbed him out of a cab in front of the club and beat him with their fists, according to police reports. Eleven days later, two bouncers trying to break up a fight and were assaulted by three men, according to another incident report. One bouncer was left unconscious.

The club manager said the bouncer told authorities that he didn't the know the men who attacked him. And he said he hasn't noticed a gang presence inside the club.

Young wasn't sure if the attack was gang-related. He keeps files of information on the city's possible gangs, gang members and gang-related crime, but said actually confirming gang involvement in an event is a difficult task.

Showing that a crime is connected to a gang first requires that officers identify a gang or gang member, a process that requires authorities to meet criteria established by the N.C. Gang Investigators Association. Gathering that information, Young said, takes time.

So, he and Hunt will patrol the club, looking for any sign of gang involvement, such as the clothing and tattoos that the men - and sometimes women, in their late teens and early 20s - wear.

Shortly before 1 a.m. on a recent Saturday patrol of the club's parking lot, Young and Hunt noticed a group of six men loitering around a four-door sedan, their hands shoved into the pockets of oversized jeans and jackets.

Young asked one man if he could take a few photos of the "homie" tattoo on his right bicep and three dots tattooed on the small patch of skin between his thumb and index finger, a symbol often connected to a Hispanic gang with California roots, Surenos 13.

"It means `mi vida loca'," Young said. "My crazy life."

The man's belt buckle, emblazoned with a 13, was another common gang symbol, Young said.

The N.C. Gang Investigators Association says a gang member can be validated once authorities have confirmed criminal activity and identified at least two of 10 criteria, ranging from gang tattoos to affiliating with known gang members.

These photos, paired with the man's name and address, allow Young to start a file. With the tattoos and clothing, Young said, the man already meets half the requirements of a documented gang member.

*

In the classroom

Young said the teenagers he sees wearing gang colors and flashing gang signs might not realize that police are keeping such detailed notes.

So, he started telling them. Recently, during one of his gang-awareness presentations, Young spotted a student doodling gang symbols on his notebook.

"When you draw stuff like this, like the six-pointed star, you're telling us you're a gang member," he told the group of about 30 freshmen at Hickory High School two weeks ago. It's one step toward "validating you as a gang member, and that will stick with you for life."

It's unlikely, Young said, that any of those teenagers is involved in a gang. But he said a teen who is just wearing clothing associated with a certain gang piques the authorities' interest.

"Telling them that," he said, "really makes a lot of them pay attention."

But Young isn't the only one teaching gang-awareness and prevention classes in the valley.

Burke County authorities have started coaching community leaders and educators to recognize graffiti and gang hand signs, and officers and community leaders in Lenoir are forming a committee targeting gang prevention in Caldwell County.

And, every Wednesday, Chris Johnson, founder of a local youth outreach group, stands before a dozen middle-school-age boys and teaches them about the realities of gang life.

Johnson talks about the violent initiations, the tough jail sentences and, just last month, brought in a former gang member and convict to talk about his experiences.

"I know I'm in a tug-of-war with the street," Johnson said, "and I need all the tools I can get."

Many of the boys in Johnson's Young Men of Integrity group come from single-parent and low-income homes, he said, and temptations to find a tight-knit group in the community are common.

He's been trying to sway youth from peer pressure since 1992, when his 14-year-old son died after an older classmate spun the chamber of a handgun in a game of Russian roulette.

"I couldn't see the signs at the time, and that was probably one of the things that really catapulted me into talking to teens," he said. "If we can teach our kids young, they'll be able to make the right decisions later."

Frank Moses, a 15-year-old Hickory High School freshman, sat through Young's class on gang awareness and attends Johnson's Young Men of Integrity every Wednesday. While Moses said he doesn't think gang presence in the Catawba Valley is a serious problem, he can see that changing.

"Gangs are coming up, and it's getting a lot more serious than it has been," he said. "It's like a family life when you're in a gang, but you sign your life over to the gang."

That kind of life, Moses said, isn't for him.

"I see all these people coming in and out of prison and gangs," he said. "I see how it affects them, and I want to live a better life."

The awareness classes, Moses said, are a good step toward preventing future gangs.

"We're the ones that are going to be doing it, so if you can get to us, then you'll be able to stop it."

Johnson's group is one of the pilot groups in the 25th district taking the Street Smart program facilitated by the local Salvation Army Boys & Girls Club.

In March, the Boys & Girls Club executive director, the Rev. John DeMauro, received a $100,000 grant from the N.C. Department of Juvenile Justice and local crime councils to bring a gang-awareness program to the Catawba Valley.

"We don't want to stick our heads in the sand, and when I have a guy sitting in front of me with an obvious gang tattoo, (it shows that) we need to take preventative measures," DeMauro said.

The 36-week program is designed to: teach middle-school-aged children in the Catawba Valley about gang violence, encourage accepting cultural differences, and help youth develop communications and conflict-resolution skills.

"It's all in one neat package," DeMauro said. "A child who goes through this program has all the skills (he) needs and is less likely to go through a gang."

While the Street Smart program is being taught to the Young Men of Integrity and at Centro Latino and at the Boys & Girls Club, DeMauro said educators and law enforcement across the valley plan to implement the program throughout the Catawba Valley in 2007.

Johnson and his group, meanwhile, have almost completed the first of the program's four modules.

In a recent week, they focused on lesson six, the consequences of gang membership.

Johnson and the boys talked about Stanley "Tookie" Williams, an original leader of the Crips, a violent gang that started in California in the early 1970s. Williams, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee for his children's books suggesting gang alternatives, was executed in December 2005 for the 1979 murders of four people in Los Angeles.

"I tell the kids when they come in, `If I sugarcoat things for you, that doesn't help, because that's not how the street is,' " Johnson said.


Warning Signs of Gang Involvement

These are signs that a teenager may be involved in a gang:

Uses hand signals to communicate with friends.

Scribbles specific drawings or symbols on schoolbooks and clothing.

Comes home with unexplained physical injuries, including bruises.

Suddenly owns expensive clothing or jewelry or has a lot of extra cash.

Carries a weapon.

Is in trouble with police or at school.

Undergoes a severe and negative change in attitude, including withdrawing from family and grades dropping.

Speaks in gang-style slang.

Breaks late-night curfews.


Want to Learn More?

Law-enforcement officers in Catawba, Burke and Caldwell counties offer educational courses on gang awareness and prevention for youth, parents and other members of the community.

For more information contact the Hickory Police Department, (828) 324-2060; the Department of Public Safety in Morganton, (828) 438-5391; or the Lenoir Police Department, (828) 757-2121.

To learn about the Street Smart program facilitated by the Salvation Army Boys & Girls Club, contact the Rev. John DeMauro at (828) 322-3066.


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12/13/06

Manager shot, wounded during robbery of Newton pizza store

Police get reward in search for 2 suspects

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

NEWTON – Authorities were searching Tuesday for two men who robbed a Papa John's pizza delivery store Monday night and shot the manager.

Police said Charles William Achor, 20, of Newton was shot shortly before 10:30 p.m. Monday after two men walked into the Papa John's and demanded money.

Investigators believe Achor was the only employee in the store during the robbery, said Lt. Dale Lafone of the Newton Police Department.

Eddie Bond, operating partner of the Newton store, said Achor was found lying in the lobby.

Police said Achor was coherent and able to talk when he was taken to Catawba Valley Medical Center, where he underwent surgery. Achor was still in the hospital's intensive care unit Tuesday afternoon, said Capt. Skip Isenhour of the Newton police. A hospital spokesperson could not confirm whether Achor was a patient there.

Authorities are looking for two black men in their 20s, Lafone said. Both are 5 feet, 7 inches to 5 feet, 9 inches and have long hair in cornrows.

Officers believe one of the robbers was wearing a red and blue hat and a heavy gray coat and that the other was wearing a gray cap and a denim jacket.

Police have set a reward for anyone who provides information leading to the arrest of the robbers, Isenhour said, but he wouldn't say how much money was being offered.

Lafone said authorities are also trying to find a man who was driving a white sport utility vehicle and may have witnessed the shooting.


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12/12/06

Investigators probe fatal plane crash near Taylorsville

It may take months to learn what caused accident, officials say

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

Federal investigators spent part of Monday looking through the wreckage of a fiery plane crash that killed two Taylorsville men over the weekend, but it could be months before the investigation is complete, authorities said.

Leon Marion Fagan Jr., 44, and Billy Kermit Little, 53, both of Taylorsville, died Sunday afternoon when the homemade plane they were flying crashed and burst into flames near N.C. 16 just outside the Taylorsville town limits in Alexander County.

Officials from the Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board arrived early Monday at the scene, said Chief Deputy Chris Bowman of the Alexander County Sheriff's Office.

A recovery team from the NTSB's Atlanta field office took the remains of the aircraft to continue their investigation, Bowman said.

The RANS S-6S fixed-wing, single-engine plane had taken off about 3:20 p.m. Sunday from Taylorsville Airport, a small airstrip privately owned by the Taylorsville Flying Club.

The flight was supposed to start and end at that airport, FAA spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen said. But moments after takeoff, the plane crashed behind a service station close to the highway. Flames had engulfed the wreckage when emergency crews arrived.

The plane was an experimental aircraft that was built from a kit in 2005, FAA records show. It was registered to Fagan, who had been certified to fly single-engine planes since 2001.

Bowman said authorities were not certain who was flying the plane at the time of the crash.


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12/10/06

Police offer tips for safe shopping

Common sense is a good defense, officer says

Sunday, December 10, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer


HICKORY -- Danny Owens sits back in one of the chairs scattered through Valley Hills Mall, a large paper shopping bag resting on the ground to his right. His wife is still wandering around, looking for a few more gifts, which gives Owens the chance to relax.

Owens, 52, made the hour drive Wednesday from his Forest City home to do some holiday shopping at the Hickory mall and the dense complexes of stores lining U.S. 70 and Catawba Valley Boulevard.

He noticed a few security guards wandering around the dual-level mall, while Hickory police officers and the mall's security teams made rounds outside in marked cars.

"It makes you feel a little safer," Owens said. "Just their presence might make a thief think twice."

Owens joins a throng of shoppers who flood the mall and the surrounding stores searching for that perfect gift or hoping to get all of their holiday shopping done in one excursion.

They'll wander from store to store, often leaving fresh purchases in cars before heading to the next shop. Owens said he knows thieves could be keeping an eye on the parking lot and takes every precaution he can.

"We were at Best Buy before this, and I put everything in the trunk," he said.

If anything makes him uncomfortable - a lingering stranger or a dark corner - Owens said he'll pretend he's heading home. "I'll make a lap around the parking lot, repark and come back in," he said.

That's exactly what shoppers should be doing, said Hickory police officer Brandon Lackey.

"A lot of it is just common sense," Lackey said Thursday as he wove through the parking lot of the Hickory Ridge shopping complex, which houses Target, Best Buy and Old Navy.

"Don't leave stuff sitting out, and always try to put your packages and belongings out of sight."

As of Thursday, Hickory police had registered 473 car break-ins during 2006, 7 percent less than at the same time in 2005, when 507 larcenies from a vehicle were reported. Police didn't have a month-by-month record of break-ins but said more people at the malls increases the possibility for crime.

Lackey, a three-year Hickory police veteran, has been patrolling the area around Catawba Valley's largest shopping district for two months and says police presence is the best way to deter thieves, especially during the holiday shopping season.

"You just constantly look around, and if you see someone hanging out, you might say, `Hey, how are you doing? Everything OK?' " Lackey said as he watched a man cross the lot with a shopping cart loaded with packages.

A few minutes later, as he slowly passed through the mall's lot, Lackey noticed a woman holding her purse in her hand, letting it dangle by her side.

"See that?" he said. "Someone could just run by and grab that. She should hold it over her arm and in her fist."

But Lackey has more safety tips than how to carry a handbag.

He advises shoppers to keep their keys in their hands while they walk through the parking lot and to avoid carrying large bundles.

"Don't leave yourself without a defense," Lackey said. "You're trying to hold all these packages, get to your keys and open the trunk. You don't want to have to focus all your attention on that one goal."

He also encourages shoppers to know emergency contact numbers, to prepare a plan for tackling the maze of stores, and to know their surroundings by taking note of cars parked nearby and other shoppers walking through the lot.

Even with all the tips, Lackey said, simply taking a moment to think is one of the best defenses against theft.

"Just slow down," Lackey said. "I know it's the holiday season, and you want to get everything done, but things (can) go bad when it gets hectic."


Expert Advice

Park in well-lighted areas when shopping at night.

Don't leave packages or valuables in sight.

Avoid carrying a purse or wallet.

Locate your keys before walking out into the parking lot.

Shop with a friend or family member.

Avoid wearing expensive jewelry.

Keep a secure hold on your handbag and parcels, and avoid setting items on the roof of your car while you open the door.

Avoid parking next to windowless vans and cars with tinted windows.

Use ATMs inside a bank or mall and in a well-lighted location. Withdraw only the amount of cash you need.

Protect your PIN by shielding the ATM keypad.

Notify your credit card company immediately if your card is lost, stolen or misused.

Keep a record of all credit card numbers in a safe place at home.

*

SOURCE: Hickory Police Department


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12/8/06

Threat of rock slide forcing traffic reroute

Mountain debris blocked road, then 2nd risky area found

Friday, December 8, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

Motorists on U.S. 321 near Blowing Rock should expect delays for at least several days while workers remove a section of mountain slope that's in danger of falling on the road, a state Department of Transportation engineer said Thursday.

The road was blocked by a rock slide Wednesday and Thursday about a half-mile south of Blowing Rock, said Kip Turner, district engineer for N.C. DOT.

Workers had cleared the debris from that slide on Thursday but then realized that another slide was possible.

"They spent time scouring the adjacent slope and decided that another very large chunk of rock looked imminent - that something's going to happen with it," he said.

Now, DOT officials plan to remove rock slope, he said.

Coincidentally, one of the companies working on the U.S. 321 expansion project, only a few miles from the site of the rock slide, specializes in removing rock slopes like the one that threatens the road, Turner said.

Representatives of the company will inspect the slope today. The job could take days, or longer, he said.

Meanwhile, authorities were directing traffic through one open lane around the endangered area with a pilot car. The car leads a line of traffic in one direction and then returns, leading a line in the opposite direction.

Delays on Thursday were 15-25 minutes, he said - and they could be even longer during busy traffic times, such as weekends, when tourists and shoppers flock to Blowing Rock and Boone.

On Saturday, traffic is likely to be even heavier than normal because of an Appalachian State football game in Boone, he said.

Turner urged motorists from Charlotte, Hickory and other points south to use U.S. 421 in Wilkes County as a detour.

"There's a lot of traffic that's headed to the mountains this weekend, so I can really see a lot of traffic backing up," he said.


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12/3/06

First 'scrubber' at work on Marshall station emissions

Duke Energy project aims to reduce air pollution from coal-fired power plants

Sunday, December 3, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

The first pollution scrubber at Duke Energy's Marshall Steam Station in Sherrills Ford is now operating, and two more will begin running in the next few months.

Plumes of water vapor began pouring out of the plant's 350-foot smokestack Oct. 30, when the company went online with the first of three pollution scrubbers, said Duke spokesman Tom Williams.

"What people are seeing is the large stack, where there are three internal flues," Williams said. "The (steam) plume is much more visible and much cleaner" than past emissions.

The second and third scrubbers are expected to go online in the spring, he said.

In February 2004, Duke launched the $425 million project to help cut sulfur dioxide and other toxic emissions at the Marshall Steam Station, one of the state's larger coal-fired plants.

The scrubbers are part of a $1.5 billion plan by Duke to reduce emissions in some of the state's power plants and to comply with the N.C. Clean Smokestacks Act.

The act, passed in 2002, was intended to reduce nitrogen oxide emissions by 77 percent by 2009 and sulfur dioxide by 73 percent by 2013, according to Observer archives.

Coal-fired plants are among the biggest sources of air pollution in the Southeast. Sulfur dioxide, a byproduct of coal-firing, has been linked to respiratory illness, premature death, acid rain and haze.

The Marshall Steam Station opened in 1965 and today produces enough electricity to power 2 million homes.

At plants like the Marshall station, energy is created by heating water and creating steam inside a coal-fired boiler. Pressure from the steam spins turbines, which are connected to a generator to create electricity.

Before the scrubbers, the more-toxic emissions were released through four 280-feet stacks. Now, with the first of three scrubbers running, the cleaner emissions are rerouted through a flue inside the 350-foot stack and released in a plume of steam.

By spring 2007 the flues, Williams said, will run from the three scrubbers, mixing flue gas, the byproduct of burning coal, with a limestone and water mixture, through the smokestack. The chemical reaction scrubs the toxic gases, removing 95 percent or more of the sulfur dioxide and a significant amount of the mercury emissions.

John Tippett, planning director for the Western Piedmont Council of Governments, said the scrubbers are a major contribution to the state's goal for better air quality.

"There are some things happening at the national level that are positive, but the state of North Carolina has taken the lead on clean air programs," Tippet said.

"We're looking forward to see what the results will be with our air readings."

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12/2/06

Woman accused of beating stay dogs

Police: She says she was trying to get them away from her home, rabbit

Saturday, December 2, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

A Lenoir woman faces animal cruelty charges after two dogs were beaten with a hammer, and one was killed, this week.

Amy Mann Wilson, 37, was charged with two felony counts of cruelty to animals Monday, said Greg Greene, field officer with Caldwell County Animal Care and Control.

Wilson was released from the Caldwell County jail on bond Friday and is scheduled to appear in court Dec. 19.

Wilson told officers from animal control and the Lenoir Police Department that she was holding her pet rabbit outside her home when the dogs appeared and tried to grab the animal from her arms.

Authorities could not find the dogs' owners and said they think the two animals, a male and a female, were strays, Greene said.

Wilson told authorities she was able to kick the dogs away and put the rabbit back in its pen but that the two dogs followed her, Greene said.

She then gathered food scraps from her kitchen and led the dogs away from her home, Wilson told officers, where she hit the male dog's head several times with a hammer, Greene said.

Wilson told authorities she was hitting the male dog when the female got "aggressive," Greene said. Wilson said she then swung at the female dog, Greene said.

The male dog was dead when authorities arrived at the northwest Lenoir neighborhood, and the female dog was unconscious, Greene said. A local veterinarian expects the female dog to recover, he said.



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11/30/06

No remedy for neighbors

No regulations against chicken houses

Thursday, November 30, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

MORGANTON -- Willard Holland grew up with a view of Burke County's South Mountains, farming alongside his family and neighbors. As an adult, he moved to Charlotte to start a business, marry and raise a family of his own.

But Holland, 65, knew he wanted to return to Burke County when he and his wife retired, so, a few years ago, he started renovating his family homestead in a mostly rural neighborhood near Morganton.

In October, Holland and his neighbors began noticing large trailers moving steel and equipment through his neighborhood.

By mid-November, workers had built two, 300-foot-long, metal chicken houses within 800 feet of Holland's front porch, less than 350 feet from Connie Dufford and Camille Watts' back door and down the street from a nursing home.

Soon, the buildings will be stocked with live birds.

Holland and some of the neighbors say the chicken houses threaten their property values and the area's overall quality.

"You walk out on my deck and see these chicken buildings," he said. "There's no way you can stop the smell if the wind is blowing in your direction ... It's far different than having cornfields in your backyard."

But there is little that anyone can do to help Holland and his neighbors. State and local governments have little control over agricultural operations beyond health and safety issues. And the culture of rural areas, where property owners are fiercely defensive of their independence, means the homeowners have little recourse.

The chicken houses are being built by Daphne and Matthew Davis, who plan to raise hundreds of chickens for local poultry processor Case Farms.

The Davises, who own about 7 acres off Holland Street, according to Burke County Planning and Development, did not want to talk much about their chicken houses or the clash with their neighbors.

But they say they are free to use the land as they choose. "It's our property," Matthew Davis said, "and we can do whatever we want with it."

Holland said he has talked with officials at the state Department of Agriculture, members of the county's board of commissioners, the county manager, other chicken breeders and a spokesman at Case Farms, which is working with the Davises.

While local officials say they are sympathetic to Holland and his neighbors, they say there's not much they can do.

Marc Collins, planning director for the county, said local officials have no control over livestock. "There's nothing we can put on zoning ordinances that put (regulations) on that type of agriculture," Collins said.

The N.C. Poultry Federation has established voluntary guidelines that encourage breeders to build at least 500 feet from an occupied home or public business and a minimum of 1,200 feet from recreation centers, schools and nursing homes.

The distance, Ford said, helps curb the smell and maintain good relationships between neighbors. "There's no legal issues on (building closer)," he said. "But these are distances that seem to be working in other areas."

Burke County Manager Ron Lewis said he encourages neighbors to work together to find a compromise and would be willing to mediate the conversation.

Building fast-growing shrubs, such as cypress trees, he said, could create a buffer between the buildings. He also suggested chicken breeders follow the N.C. Poultry Federation's guidelines.

"In the spirit of being a good neighbor those kind of measures are reasonable," Lewis said.

Richard Ducker, professor of public law and government at UNC Chapel Hill's Institute of Government, specializes in land use law and said no firm standards exist when it comes to building poultry houses.

"It's largely unregulated," he said. "And (that's because) North Carolina has strikingly been an agricultural, rural state."

In the 1990 census, however, the state passed the urban threshold. For the first time, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, 50 percent of the state's population lived in urban areas. Conflicts like this, Ducker said, become more common as the state becomes more urban.

Neighbors say they know the Davises are within their rights to raise chickens on the property but wish they had followed the federation's guidelines.

"I understand that these people are trying to make a living," said Jeff Tallent, who co-owns a nursing home about 800 feet from the chicken houses. "But the quality of air in that area is going to get worse."

Connie Dufford and her sister, Camille Watts, bought nearly a half acre on Holland Street more than two years ago, dreaming of retiring with a view of Burke County's rolling mountains. The 350 feet between their back door and the poultry buildings isn't enough, they said.

"If we had known the chicken houses were going in, we would have never bought," Dufford, 63, said. "We won't come anywhere near what we have invested in it if we try to sell right now."

The road the Davises built to the chicken houses runs alongside Dufford's property and about 20 feet from the trailer the sisters share. Tractor-trailer trucks and other large vehicles, they say, make deliveries late at night, rounding the corner at speeds over the limit and cutting into their yard.

They said they worry the traffic will continue as Case Farms begins dropping off the birds and feed and picking up the fattened chickens.

"We liked this place so much," Watts said. "It's not fair for one person to destroy a neighborhood."

The Davis' declined last week to discuss the details of their business but said they have followed building regulations and will abide by state and local laws.

Case Farms works with about 175 independent growers in Western North Carolina, said Director of Public Relations Ken Wilson.

Now that the houses are built, Holland said, it's only a matter of time before the buildings are stocked. It's the lack of communication between residents and the Davises, he said, that upsets him most.

"Dumping this in the middle of the neighborhood without anyone knowing what's going on isn't right," he said. "The community should have some sort of input."


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11/28/06

Family members seeking answers about how inmate died

Civil rights group headed by Al Sharpton investigating

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

A group headed by the Rev. Al Sharpton is investigating the death of a New Jersey man who died Sunday while in custody of the Catawba County Sheriff's Office. Harold James Ledet Jr., who has family in Gastonia, died at Catawba Valley Medical Center early Sunday morning, said Lt. Roy Brown of the sheriff's office.

Ledet had been at the Catawba County jail since Wednesday, when he was charged with robbery with a dangerous weapon and felony conspiracy in the attempted robbery of a woman on Nov. 21, said Capt. Donald Brown of the Newton Police Department.

The woman, Donald Brown said, ran her car into Ledet as she tried to get away. Ledet was charged a few hours later and arrived at the Catawba County jail Wednesday with a broken ankle and lacerated lip, Donald Brown said.

An inmate noticed about 3:30 a.m. Sunday that Ledet was having trouble breathing and pounded on the cell door to get the guards' attention, Roy Brown said. Soon after, Ledet, who was not breathing, was taken to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Leaders at the New York-based National Action Network, Sharpton's advocacy organization, and members of Ledet's family say they don't understand how his injuries could have led to Ledet's death.

David Taylor, his uncle, works with the National Action Network and said he wants more information about how his nephew, a father of three, died.

"We just want some closure," Taylor said. "You can understand how we're feeling right now. We don't have any answers."

John Barnett, state chairman of the civil rights organization, said the National Action Network is independently investigating Ledet's death and is working as a mediator between the family and law enforcement.

"A lot of emotions are flaring," he said.

Barnett said he and members of Ledet's family spoke Monday with Roy Brown, of the Sheriff's Office, but are still waiting for medical reports, the name of the inmate who was sharing Ledet's cell and the name of the nurse who had been giving Ledet medication. He had a prescription for the painkiller Percocet.

"We have gotten about 75 percent of what we need, but that other 25 percent is vital," Barnett said. "We had a standstill trying to get all that information from them."

Roy Brown said the Sheriff's Office would provide the information to Barnett and the National Action Network.

Barnett, who knew Ledet and has worked with Taylor for 17 years, said Ledet had a history of hypertension but, overall, was in good physical condition.

Barnett said family members told him that Ledet had a prescription for Percocet. He said he hopes the medical records will confirm the dosage of the medication Ledet was taking.

Brown said the jail had a prescription for Ledet to take Percocet but was not sure if he took the drug or how much he was given. "We obviously have those records," Brown said. "The toxicology report will tell us more."

The most frequent side effects of Percocet include lightheadedness, dizziness, sedation, nausea and vomiting, according to the Physicians' Desk Reference, a reference guide to pharmaceuticals and other medical issues.

Ledet's death is the third connected to the Catawba County jail in the past two years. Ricardo Martino Garza died in September 2004 after being strapped to a restraint chair. An autopsy found that a fractured rib punctured his lung.

In June, Robert McPherson died of trauma to the head two days after being released from custody. A pathology report showed that McPherson might have been injured while at the jail.


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11/26/06

Murder charge follow fatal crash

Driver also accused of DWI; he was going to holiday meal

Sunday, November 26, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

A Maiden man faces a murder charge after the car he was driving Thursday afternoon crashed into a steel building, killing one woman and injuring four others.

Christopher Allen Smith, 23, faces four charges, including second-degree murder, driving while impaired, driving while license revoked and failing to appropriately restrain a child younger than 5, said N.C. Highway Patrol Trooper Marc Walker.

Smith was driving four of his cousins to their grandmother's home in Maiden for a Thanksgiving dinner when the rental car swerved off Henry Dellinger Road in Lincoln County, Walker said. The car rolled over and slammed into a metal building.

The car was traveling 75 to 80 mph when it swerved off the road about 2:45 p.m., and the driver's blood alcohol was "well-above" the 0.08 legal limit, Walker said.

Haley Christenbury, 19, of Charlotte was not wearing a seat belt and died after being thrown from the rear passenger seat, Walker said.

The other three passengers, a 23-year-old man, a 23-year-old woman and her 4-year old daughter, were treated for minor injuries. Smith broke his foot, Walker said.


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11/25/06

Hmong celebrate New Year with mingling of cultures

Traditional dress, modern music part of scene at Lenoir festivities

Saturday, November 25, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer


LENOIR -- Paul "L.P." Yang held a microphone to his mouth and began, closing his eyes in concentration and waving his right hand in the air.

The smell of cooking chicken, noodles, rice and sausage wafted, and a handful of Hmong teens, some dressed in baggy pants and tank tops and others in traditional costume, stopped Friday to watch the one-man show.

Yang drove more than 10 hours from Detroit with a few fellow rappers to perform and sell CDs from his Shaolin Entertainment label at this week's Hmong New Year festivities at the Caldwell County fairgrounds in Lenoir, about 70 miles northwest of Charlotte.


The New Year festival, traditionally held after the harvest season in late November, celebrates millennia-old Hmong culture with dancing, music, games and food.

Yang, 20, said he doesn't see blending rap music with the ancient culture as a conflict. Instead, Yang said he'll rap about the Hmong people of Laos helping U.S. forces during the Vietnam War or about the hardships they endured in fleeing persecution after the battles ended.

"It's a way to introduce people in the rap community to my culture," he said. "The older Hmong don't understand it, but the youth do."

It's that kind of blending that Yang said helps younger Hmong appreciate their culture while assimilating in the United States.

For young and old Hmong, preserving their culture is one of the community's biggest concerns, said Tong Yang, executive director of the United Hmong Association of North Carolina.

More than 300,000 Hmong from Laos have sought refuge in the United States since the late 1970s, and about 15,000 have settled in North Carolina. Most of those live in Catawba, Burke, Alexander, Caldwell and McDowell counties in the Catawba Valley, where the foothills terrain and climate are similar to their Laotian homeland.

The Hmong, Yang said, have begun blending Western culture with traditional New Year activities. Religious beliefs, with Hmong thanking their ancestors for the ending of the year, have merged with more modern customs, such as talent shows and beauty pageants.

"It's something we can do to mix Hmong culture and our American culture," he said.

At the fairgrounds Friday, middle-aged Hmong men wander in black suits, eyeing booths stocked with traditional outfits, DVDs, toys and an array of food and sweets. Clinking silver coins swish against the colorful fabrics of the outfits worn by giggling teenage girls and smiling boys.

Mothers dressed in slacks and blouses push toddlers wearing traditional woven vests in strollers.

For Marissa Hang, a 23-year-old mother of two, bringing her kids to the New Year celebration is the best way to teach them about Hmong tradition. For the opening festivities Thursday, she dressed up her 1-year-old son and 2-year-old daughter in the traditional garb.

"This is the only time of the year we can see our culture in full bloom," she said. "Even if it is only for a few days."

Yang said this year's three-day celebration has brought about 10,000 Hmong from as far as California and Minnesota.

Joe Lee, 23, and his older brother, Waii, drove from Spartanburg with some friends to attend the festivities.

"I feel bad because I didn't come here dressed up," Joe Lee said. "It's good to stay connected, and a lot of (Hmong) kids don't know about it."

Though the Lees wore jeans and T-shirts rather than traditional garments, the brothers said participating in Hmong celebrations is critical to preserving the culture.

"Living in America, you learn all this new culture," Waii Lee said. "It's tough to think about everything you're losing, but we try to keep a little bit of it inside as we adapt."


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11/22/06

The Dart: Galloping toward a better life

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

NEWTON -- Taquitz trots casually along Boston Road's hard gravel. His white mane bounces in the crisp fall breeze, and his hoofs clatter on the pavement in cadenced clicks.

"Hear the rhythm of his footfall," says Taquitz's owner, Don Posey. "That beat. It sounds like a locomotive."

Posey watches hired trainer and friend Paul Marlowe calmly grasp the reins as the Paso Fino horse delicately and quickly lifts one hoof at a time in a four-beat gait.


The Dart landed in Newton, where Posey and Marlowe were out in the cold weather Monday training their Paso Finos, horses with Spanish roots and, unlike their Mustang relatives, never wild.

"(Paso Finos) were never feral, so their instincts are closely aligned with people," said Posey's wife, Joy. "That's one of the nice things about them as a breed. They like people."

The way the Paso Finos move, 68-year-old Don Posey said, is what distinguishes them from other breeds. The faster footwork makes for a smoother ride, compared with the loping gallop or trot of the more common quarter horse.

The Poseys have big dreams for Taquitz and the other Paso Fino horses they breed, raise and show through their company, Willaway Paso Finos. They hope for good competitors, for a good bloodline and for calm horses people can ride.

"You want to keep the breed affordable for the backyard buyer, as they call them," said Joy Posey, 59.

Like the backyard buyers, the Poseys were amateur horse enthusiasts when they moved to Newton in 1995.

They had been living in California since the 1970s and were getting tired of the earthquakes that consistently rocked the West Coast. After a massive quake in 1992 hit two miles from their Los Angeles-area condo, they were ready for a change of scenery.

North Carolina is not prone to major earthquakes, and that, with the promise of four seasons, rolling hills and the opportunity to raise horses, was enough for the Poseys.

Neither had owned horses before, but Joy Posey clung to the childhood memory of cleaning stables in exchange for riding lessons, and Don Posey had always enjoyed the rides he took on rental horses.

Not long after they moved to Newton, a nearby Paso Fino breeder got in touch with Don Posey, an attorney, about handling a few legal matters. The couple decided to take a different kind of compensation.

"He paid in horse," Joy Posey said.

Since then, the Poseys have built a business breeding Paso Finos, raising them and showing the animals at competitions across the Southeast.

Marlowe has been working with Taquitz for three months, trying to calm him and turn him into a champion show horse. While Taquitz has competed before - and done well - Don Posey is hoping Marlowe will be able to mellow the horse's brio, a Spanish word loosely translated as spirit.

"Paso Finos have a lot of brio," Don Posey said. "That's where you get the attitude and the power but sometimes a horse will have so much brio they can't control it."

Marlowe, the son of horse breeders in Virginia, has been working with Paso Finos for 14 years, when his parents gave him one of the horses for his high school graduation.

He's trained the breed full time since 2002, and his own horses have won top titles in competitions, including a nod as the 2006 national champion in Perry, Ga.

Working with the Poseys' Paso Finos, he said, is liking working with his own. "When we get into the horse world, we're just one big family," he said.

Usually, Don Posey said, they keep about eight horses on the 4-acre plot of land. It's not far from the county's Justice Center and is an unlikely neighborhood for horse breeding, with subdivisions and an old landfill surrounding the property.

But for the Poseys, who always hoped for a few horses and some land, it's a perfect place for their company..

"Where there's a will, there's a way," Don Posey said.


The Point of the Dart

The idea behind the Dart is simple: We're looking for the kind of news the media don't usually report. We throw a dart at a map of one of the counties in the Catawba Valley, and we'll write about what's happening at that spot. We hope this feature will bring out stories that too often are ignored and will help you meet some of your neighbors in the region.


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11/19/06

Sidewalk ban could end

Downtown Maiden rule draws objections

Sunday, November 19, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

Maiden kids might soon be able to ride their bikes to school.

Public objections to the city's rule that prohibits bicycles on downtown sidewalks has Town Council members rethinking the ban.

"We recognize that the town might want to change this," said council member George McClellan. "And we're open to it."

Last month, the council postponed making a decision on an ordinance change drafted by the city staff until council members could get more input on the issue. The change would have lifted the ban on bike riding on sidewalks.

Now, they are waiting to hear what residents have to say about the ban at a public hearing Dec. 11.

While the city does not ban bikes, skateboards or Rollerblades from the streets, many of the town's children can't ride their bikes to school or in the downtown area because their parents don't allow them to ride in the roads.

Some residents, including teachers and parents, have said the ban goes too far when it comes to bicycles and have asked that ordinance be changed to allow kids to at least ride their bikes to and from school using city sidewalks.

Safety, said Mayor Bob Smyre, is the city's main concern.

"Some of the kids on the other side (of town) couldn't ride their bikes to school," he said. "I just want them to be safe."

A 2002 resolution restricted skateboarding and Rollerblading on downtown sidewalks in Maiden. Bikes have been prohibited even longer, but city officials couldn't say precisely how long.


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11/17/06

Updike shares novel approaches with students

His latest, 'Terrorist,' crafted with a nod to realty, imagination

Friday, November 17, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

HICKORY – John Updike has written about cheating couples in suburbia, an aging high school basketball star and America's obsession with religion and fame.

Now, five years after the World Trade Center fell, Updike has invented an Islamic teenager on a quest to bomb Manhattan's Lincoln Tunnel in his most recent novel, "Terrorist."

"`Terrorist' was an attempt to see the other side of the war on terror," the Pulitzer Prize winner told students at Lenoir-Rhyne College on Thursday.

Updike has been crafting prose for more than 50 years. In an open forum at the college, he talked with students about his newest novel and offered advice on how to write a book.

"Know the ending before you begin," he said. "A writer starting out can't know every page of detail (but) it's fun to steer your climactic theme."

That's how Updike started writing "Terrorist," his most recent work of fiction, he said. A longstanding fear of New York City's dark and seemingly unstable traffic tunnels combined with the national attention on terrorism initially helped him intertwine reality with fiction.

Updike, a 74-year-old Lutheran and self-proclaimed "small-town boy" from Pennsylvania, isn't representative of the stereotypical Islamic terrorist.

That detachment helped him tell Ahmad's story.

"You make little leaps in your head when you're writing fiction," he said. "You have to go with what you have learned and what you can guess."

Updike, who attended Harvard and wrote for The New Yorker magazine, said the mystery of creating realistic and complex characters excites him. "It's all a mixed bag," he said. "The fiction writer is someone who tries to detail that mixture."

Katie Lineberry, a 19-year-old sophomore, admitted that she doesn't enjoy reading much, but she said she liked "Terrorist." After hearing Updike speak, she said, she's looking forward to reading the book again.

"You can see where he came from," she said. "It's dark and dirty, but he makes it come to life."

Updike spoke Thursday night to a larger crowd at the college.

Said Rand Brandes, director of the Lenoir-Rhyne College Visiting Writer's Series: "He's the proverbial literary legend. He has contributed to the cultural identity of the entire country."


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Sheriff candidates waiting on 540 votes

Provisional ballot tally will decide if sheriff's race challenger concedes

Friday, November 17, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

Democrat Steve Hunt, who last week suffered a narrow loss to incumbent GOP Sheriff David Huffman, is waiting until the 540 provisional ballots are tallied today before he'll decide whether to concede.

Unofficial results show Huffman beating Hunt by 418 votes, a 2 percent margin.

"There are more votes out there than I was defeated by," Hunt said, "and I hope these votes could turn it around."

To call for a recount, Hunt would have to make up about 150 votes in the provisional ballots and trim the difference by more than 330 votes, or less than 1 percent.

Huffman won 51 percent, or 17,179 votes, to Hunt's 49 percent, or 16,698 votes.

Provisional ballots are cast when information about the voter does not match information on file in the Board of Election's records. They are mostly cast by residents who recently moved within the county but didn't update their addresses, said Catawba County Elections Director Larry Brewer.

The canvass of the 540 provisional ballots was scheduled to begin at 11 a.m. today, and Brewer said he expects to declare official results for the Nov. 7 election by the end of the day.

Huffman said last week that he was surprised to see such a close margin in the unofficial election results and thought he'd beat Hunt by at least 1,500 votes.

While Huffman said the 418-vote margin should be enough of a cushion, he's hesitant to declare an official victory until all the ballots are counted.

"I'm just hoping the provisionals will look good," he said.

Each candidate won exactly half of the county's 40 precincts, and about 35 percent of registered Catawba County voters cast their ballots, which officials at the Board of Elections said was higher than expected.

Lowell Ashman, a professor of political science at Lenoir-Rhyne College who has tracked election results for 30 years, said the ballots could bring Hunt within 1 percent, particularly if the majority of the provisional votes were cast in neighborhoods where Hunt did well.

Ashman said he's doubtful, however, that a recount would change the results because Huffman already holds a more than 400-vote lead. "It might be closer," he said, "But I think the outcome is going to remain as it is."

In neighboring Caldwell County, a close race for the second open seat on the Soil and Water Conservation Board could go either way after 288 provisional ballots are counted.

Incumbent Jeff Rash leads challenger Michael Willis by 19 votes. Rash secured 4,786 votes and to Willis' 4,767 votes.

Seventy-one provisional ballots were cast in Alexander County and 278 were cast in Burke County. Neither county held a close enough race for the provisional balances to change the unofficial results, according to the boards of elections in those counties.


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11/15/06

Flmmaker reel-izes a dream

Hickory native's 1st feature movie will premiere at Carolina theatre Friday

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

HICKORY – Inside the Carolina Theatre, all 10,000 feet of Sidney King's first feature film sits on the large reel in the cinema's projection room.

"This is a very pretty sight," 29-year-old King said, eyeing the spool holding more than five years of his work. "You go through so much trouble to shoot on film, and here it is."

Outside the theater, a giant movie poster hangs near the glass doors advertising the Friday premiere. Above that, the marquee boasts King's name, welcoming the hometown filmmaker and boasting his film's title - "Pearl Diver," which King wrote and directed.

"It's really magical to be in a big theater when the lights go down and your film comes up," he said. "This is how you want people to see it. On the big screen."

The movie tells the story of two very different Mennonite sisters haunted by the memory of their mother's murder 20 years earlier. Marian, the eldest, stayed in the religious farming community where she grew up, married and had a child. Hannah, the younger sister, moved to Chicago, adopted more secular views and became a writer.

When Marian's daughter, 6-year-old Rebecca, is severely injured in a farming accident, Hannah returns to her Goshen, Ind., home to help her sister and is reminded of the tragedy that marked their own childhoods.

The film has secured nods of approval at numerous film festivals, including one of the top awards at the Heartland Film Festival in Indianapolis and the Winnipeg International Film Festival.

Now King is bringing the film to Hickory, a community he likens to Goshen, and hopes residents of his hometown will be moved by the story and what he calls "old school" filmmaking.

"It kind of captures the pace and the way of life in a small town," he said. "(It's not) the MTV style, bombarding your senses with 1,000 images a minute."

The slower pace, King said, allows the audience to see the rural farming community not just as a locale but as its own character. "It's a specific town and a specific place," he said. "Even though Western Carolina and Indiana are very different it's a place people are proud to be from."

King started piecing the story together in the late 1990s, when he was a student at Goshen College, a Mennonite university in Indiana. King, himself, is a Mennonite.

He put the project to the side while he finished school and focused on his first film, a documentary about a Goshen College student who disappeared in Russia in 1920.

But it wasn't until his father, Hickory doctor Harry King, died in a 2001 plane crash a few weeks before the documentary's premiere that King really started thinking about his goals as a filmmaker. He wrote the film in the months that followed his father's death.

"That's when I got serious about it," he said. "Nothing in ("Pearl Diver" is specifically) based on my father, but really, all of it is. I was trying to create something positive."

Carolina Theatre co-owner Billy Ray Teague has known King's family for years and said he thought premiering the movie at the theater would be a good way to bring a local filmmaker's art to his neighbors.

"We're kind of a hometown theater, and with him being from Hickory we're able to show what local people can accomplish," he said.

Teague said the theater will show "Pearl Diver" for at least two weeks, and possibly longer if there's the demand. While comedies and blockbusters tend to pull larger crowds, Teague said he's hoping for a large turnout and is confident King's film will draw "the independent film crowd you rarely see in Hickory."

"This is a thinking film," Teague said.

An astute observer of "Pearl Diver," King said, will notice a few local faces in some of the scenes and recognize some names in the credits, as well.

King's brother, Bradley, and his new sister-in-law, Martha, gave up their honeymoon to work 12 hours a day on the set during filming in 2004; his sister made a cameo as a doctor and his mother woke up at 5 a.m. to brew coffee for the crew.

"You can always tell a true independent film when you see the director's mom in the credits," King said.

King financed the film himself and depended on friends to help on the crew and donate money or equipment. "How does the saying go, `I had to beg, borrow and steal,' " he said.

Keith Yoder of Hickory helped by driving a camera from Wilmington to Indiana, Chris Disher worked on the crew, attorney Ellie Bradshaw provided some legal aid and cinematographer John Raton of Morganton won a film festival award.

"It's fun to show it to a crowd like this because people here will recognize (names)," King said. "It's exciting to show it for a smaller audience, knowing they have that personal commitment."


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11/12/06

Neighbors await verdict

Community continues to debate innocence of guilt of farmer accused of killing wife

Jerry Anderson was charged with murder in January and could face the death penalty

Sunday, November 12, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

SAWMILLS -- A year ago, cattle roamed the open field of a bustling Caldwell County dairy farm, and their owner was planning to start another farm in neighboring Tennessee.

Now the milking stalls sit empty, and no-trespassing signs border the perimeter of the land as Jerry Anderson, the farmer, waits in the Caldwell County jail to be tried in the murder of his wife.


Although the farm is silent and abandoned, the debate over Anderson's innocence is as lively as ever.
Numerous people exchange e-mails on a popular Internet forum, topix.net, about the grisly murder case, many maintaining Anderson's innocence and questioning the limited evidence investigators have released.

And people in the southwestern part of the county, where the Andersons used to live, still argue about the case.

"If the paper comes out with an article about Jerry on the front of it, it will be sold out in two minutes," said Dowe Annas, a lifelong Caldwell County resident who lives about a mile from the farm.

"If something like this happened in Charlotte, it'd just be an ordinary thing, but when it happens in a small community like this, it just throws you off-center."

Neighbors, who knew the Andersons from services at Dry Ponds Baptist Church or from the couple's daily visits to a local gas station and deli, fall into two camps - those who believe adamantly that Anderson is innocent and those reserving judgment until the details of the crime are released during trial.

"Everybody is eager to see what happens," Annas said. "There's a group of people who just don't want to believe it and I'd imagine there's a few who are dead certain he did it."

On Dec. 29, Anderson reported his wife, 49-year-old Emily, missing, prompting a massive search. Her body was found 10 days later in an S.C. restaurant parking lot, about 100 miles from Lenoir, crammed in the large tool compartment of her Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck.

Two bullets had penetrated Emily Anderson's body, one through her abdomen, spleen and kidney and another through her back, lung and heart, according to an autopsy report from the N.C. Chief Medical Examiner's Office.

Her husband, 47-year-old Jerry Anderson, was charged Jan. 27 with first-degree murder in his wife's killing and could face the death penalty if convicted, according to Observer archives.

For more than 10 months, investigators from the Sheriff's Office have continued their probe into the murder, which they believe happened Dec. 29 near the Anderson's dairy farm in Sawmills.

While authorities piece together details of the crime, neighbors discuss what they already know and wonder about what they still have to learn.

Had Emily Anderson planned to divorce her husband of 4 1/2 years, as her brother Mike Griffitt told the Observer the day Jerry Anderson was arrested?

Was there enough time for Jerry Anderson to drive the pickup truck to South Carolina and get back to Caldwell County in time to report his wife missing?

Why did Jerry Anderson get a passport shortly before his wife was killed, as reported in the Observer, and did it have anything to do with the more than $4 million in life insurance on Emily Anderson?

At PD Grocery and Deli, about a mile from the farm, neighbors congregate almost daily for coffee, egg sandwiches and conversation. The murder of Emily Anderson, who Annas said visited the store the day investigators think she was killed, has been a popular topic.

"It shocked everybody," he said. "No one has any idea who did it or what happened."

Now, Annas said, he and the rest of the small community are waiting to see what unfolds in the courtroom. "We know what we've read in the paper, and it don't mean a thing in the world until it gets in front of the judge," he said.

Oliver Wilson Smith lived across the street from the Andersons and watched Emily Anderson sing in the choir at their church on Dry Ponds Road and often helped Jerry Anderson repair fences at the farm.

He said he has a lot of questions about who killed Emily Anderson and that he's certain it wasn't her husband.

"What have they got?" Smith said. "Ninety percent of the people around here think he's innocent. Anyone who really knows Jerry doesn't think he did it."

Dykes Wilson's family used to own the land before Anderson began farming there and still lives next door to the farm. He was out of town Dec. 29, he said, and thinks investigators will need to produce a lot more evidence if Anderson is guilty.

"I just don't know how they'll prove it unless someone saw him do it," he said.

The lead investigator on the case, Capt. Jeff Stafford, said he knows that residents adamantly defend Jerry Anderson, who is scheduled to appear in court for a bond hearing on Monday. And he knows people want more details from the investigation.

"There's just things that just need to wait for trial," he said. "To stand on the outside and not have all of the details, how can you make an opinion?"

Releasing too much evidence too soon, Stafford said, could also impede Anderson's right to a fair trial in front of a jury of Caldwell County residents.

But until then, Annas, Wilson, Smith and the rest of Sawmills will have to wait for the answers the community has been hoping for.


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3rd girl dies after exposure to heat

4-year-old, twin sisters had been playing in mom's car

Sunday, November 12, 2006

By Marcie Young
Charlotte Observer Staff Writer

FOREST CITY -- Three Rutherford County girls died after playing in their mother's car outside their apartment Friday, when local temperatures soared to an unseasonable 83 degrees, authorities said Saturday.

Autopsies showed that 2-year-old twins Asia and Bryasia Sheppard died of heat-related injuries, said Lt. Billy Scoggins of the Rutherford County Sheriff's Office.


Their 4-year-old sister, An'iya Miller, died at Mission Hospital in Asheville early Saturday. Doctors said her death also appeared to be heat related; an autopsy is scheduled for Monday.
Friends and family Saturday comforted the girls' 26-year-old mother, Latrice Miller, and said she's distraught and hysterical over the deaths.

"It's not something a mother recovers from," said Miller's second cousin, Kevin Moore.

The girls' father, 29-year-old Sterling Sheppard, told the Observer he spoke to Miller Saturday afternoon, and she told him she had overslept while the girls played outside. He doesn't blame Miller for the girls' death, he said.

Authorities said they aren't sure how or when the girls got into the car, a four-door Honda Accord parked in direct sunlight in front of the family's apartment near Forest City, about 70 miles west of Charlotte.

April Harbison, Miller's neighbor, said she saw the girls playing in the car and beeping the horn shortly after 10:30 Friday morning. Three hours later, Harbison said, she heard Miller screaming.

Miller called 911 at about 1:30 p.m. after finding the twins and An'iya unconscious in the passenger section of the car, Scoggins said, and brought the girls into her apartment.

She tried to revive them, he said, but the twins died before authorities arrived. An'iya was taken to Mission Hospital, where she died shortly after midnight.

This year, 26 other children nationwide have died from heat-related deaths after being left unattended in cars, according to Jan Null, a San Francisco State University professor who researches such deaths.

If Friday's high reached 83 degrees, the temperature inside the car would have been about 105 degrees after 30 minutes and almost 125 degrees after an hour, Null said.

Heat exhaustion can occur at 90 degrees or above, and heat stroke at 105 degrees. Children with heat stroke are unable to sweat, and their body temperatures rise to dangerous levels that can lead to brain, liver and kidney damage or death.

Sheppard, the children's father, said he and Miller have been dating for six years, and said he believes she is a good mother.

"It was an honest mistake that anyone could have made," he said from the Caldwell County jail, where he's a federal inmate. He said he's being held on charges of concealing a weapon.

"I knew I needed to be out there to help. It's hard watching out for three little kids yourself."

Miller was unavailable for comment Saturday.

Angela Hutchins went to a Rutherford County high school with Miller and now works at the convenience store across the street from Miller's apartment. An'iya and Miller visited the store often, Hutchins said, and she remembers the 4-year-old's excitement to be shopping with her mom.

"She loved getting potato wedges," Hutchins said. "You could tell she loved her mama."

Patricia Moore, Miller's friend and Sheppard's cousin, said the twins loved playing on Playskool bikes they got for their birthdays in February. Moore is staying with Miller and said she'll miss the girls' giggles and exuberance.

"Every day, when I came home from work, they'd meet me at the door wanting to play," she said.

Since 1998, 10 other children have died of heat-related injuries in North Carolina after being left in vehicles, Null said.

In 2001, 6-month-old Michael Heinen Jr. died after his father left him for nine hours in a Ford Explorer. His father, Michael Heinen of Mooresville, told police he thought he'd taken the baby to the baby sitter's house before work. He was not charged.

And in a high-profile 1999 S.C. case, a woman's 10-day-old baby died in a sweltering car while she played video poker. She was given five years' probation.

Scoggins said the Sheriff's Office is continuing its investigation. The results, he said, will be given to the district attorney, who will decide whether Miller will face criminal charges.

The family was not sure when funeral services will be held, but Sheppard said he's hoping authorities will allow him to attend. The girls, he said, "were my joy and my world."

"I always said if I had another daughter, I'd name her Asia for the mother of all civilization," he said. "But I didn't just have one. I had twins."


Keeping Kids Safe

To protect children from the danger of unattended cars:

Never leave your child in an unattended car, even with the windows down.

Keep cars locked at all times, even in the garage or driveway.

Teach your children not to play in or around cars.

Always make sure all child passengers have left the car before locking it.

Keep car keys out of children's reach and sight.

*

Source: SAFE Kids USA



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