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Superior Court Mock Trial
The Amador Superior Court will host a mock trial for Ione Elementary’s seventh graders as part of a participatory program that helps to educate youngsters about law procedure. On October 21st, Judge Susan Harlan will preside over lawyers, a bailiff, stenographers, and court staff proceeding as if it were a real case. The trial will last approximately two hours, with the seventh grade students broken into three ‘juries’. The students will deliberate at the conclusion of the trial, and each jury will announce their verdict. This mock trial follows the success of another performed last May for fifth grade students at Sutter Creek Elementary School. The positive feedback was overwhelming. “I learned a lot about how the judicial system works and I felt like I was in a real trial…The experience was extremely cool,” wrote one student. The story revolves around an incident between a high school boy and his girlfriend, whose face is accidently cut when he pushes her into his car. The young jurors must decide if he is guilty or innocent. Judge Harlan, who is a member of the Domestic Violence Council, has presided over mock trials before and believes they are a great way for students to “experience this very real dilemma.” According to District Attorney todd Reibe, “This event shows our students in a very real way the inner workings of the criminal justice system, informs them on the dynamics of domestic violence at a level they can understand, and presents to them examples of career opportunities available within the criminal justice field.” For more information on the mock trial, contact Alexandra M. Asterlin, Senior Attorney, Amador Superior Court at 257-2653 or email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
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Second Upcountry ATM Theft In Two Weeks
A series of vandalisms across Amador County may have been used as a deliberate distraction from the theft of an ATM machine at a mini-mart in Pine Grove. On July 23, at approximately 4 am, the Amador County Sheriff’s Office responded to the report of an alarm at the Pine Grove Stage Stop market in Pine Grove. Upon arrival, deputies found the glass entry door leading into the business had been broken and the ATM had been stolen. Across the County, a series of supposed break-ins were occurring almost simultaneously. Kelly Chisholm, who works the night shift at New York Fitness in Jackson, was cleaning when several large rocks were hurled through the building’s side windows. “I was scared. These were big rocks and I wasn’t going to find out who was throwing them,” said Chisholm. Elsewhere in the County, police officers responded to calls of similar break-ins. Chisholm believes these vandalisms were used as a way to distract police. But this is not the first time the theft of an ATM has occurred.
On July 9, the Sheriff’s Office responded to the report of an alarm sounding at the Red Corral Mini Mart in Pioneer. Sheriff’s Investigators are conducting follow up investigations which have included reviewing the surveillance video obtained from both locations, which show the suspects breaking out the glass doors, securing the ATM machines with chain and then using a truck to pull the ATM out of the business. The ATM is then loaded into the rear of the vehicle and the vehicle flees the area. The suspect vehicle is an extended cab Dodge truck with tinted rear side windows and a tinted sliding rear window. The suspect captured on the surveillance video at Red Corral Mini Mart appears to be a white male, approximately 5’10” tall, weighing approximately 180 lbs, wearing a ball cap, black mask, black tee shirt, light color pants and black gloves. Two suspects were captured on the surveillance video at the Pine Grove Stage Stop. The first was a white male, approximately 5’10” – 6’ tall, wearing a white/green ball cap, green short sleeve shirt, black pants, black gloves and tan boots. The second was a white male, approximately 5’10” – 6’ tall, wearing a blue/tan ball cap, blue short sleeve shirt, blue pants, black and white gloves and off-white sneakers. The ATMs were valued at 4500 dollars and 5000 dollars. Anyone with any information regarding the suspects or suspect vehicle is asked to call the Amador County Sheriff’s Office at 223-6500 or Amador County Secret Witness at 223-4900.