Man Stalking Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
A man from Oakland pleaded no contest to one count of stalking Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger yesterday, and was ordered by an Alameda County Judge to stay away from the governor and his family for ten years. Attorneys say Jeffrey Miller had been in an Alameda County jail since June after repeatedly threatening to kill Schwarzenegger and First Lady Maria Shriver. According to the Associated Press the deputy district attorney handling the case says Miller suffers from a mental illness and has a methamphetamine addiction. Miller initially called authorities' attention to himself in December 2005, when he showed up at a police station in Amador County saying he'd gotten lost on his way to Sacramento to kill the governor. Miller repeated the threats to other law enforcement officers in the months that followed. The judge's order prohibits Miller from contacting the governor, getting close to his Santa Monica home, his businesses and the Sacramento hotel where Schwarzenegger stays. The judge also ordered Miller to serve three years probation and complete a psychiatric treatment program for substance abusers.
Woman That Killed Motorcyclist and Then Fled Scene Has Trial Date Set
A trial was set yesterday for Tamara Lou Wilson, the 48-year-old woman charged with killing a motorcyclist then fleeing the scene last summer, according to El Dorado County Superior Court records. Wilson is charged with nearly two dozen felony counts, including vehicular manslaughter, driving under the influence, hit and run and resisting arrest. She remains in custody on $10 million bail. The Amador County woman was arrested July 16 after slamming head-on into a motorcycle driven by Gregory Clyde Shannon, who was killed on Highway 49 near Crystal Boulevard, authorities said. Wilson was taken into custody near the Amador County line after driving about six mile on the under carriage of her car after hitting Shannon and fleeing the scene. The torn undercarriage of her vehicle spewed sparks as she continued down the road 6 to 7 miles before she finally abandoned the truck and attempted to flee. The sparks started as many as 12 fires along her route including one that destroyed a home along Hwy 49. She was found hiding in brush along the road by a Calaveras County Sheriff’s department canine unit.
Regional Occupation Program
Sutter Creek Planning
School Layoffs Imposed
Proposed School Layoffs
ACUSD Members Sworn In
Plymouth Pentecostal Women Raise Funds for Education
Amador County – A group of women from the Plymouth Pentecostal Church of God raised money for the Plymouth Elementary School, which like the rest of the county goes back to school next week. The group also issued a good-natured challenge to other groups in the Plymouth community and across Amador County to help raise more funds for school supplies. City Clerk Gloria Stoddard announced the philanthropic efforts in an e-mail Monday. She said: “Due to the cutbacks to school budgets, Judy Moffatt, a member of the Plymouth Pentecostal Church of God presented the idea of supporting the Plymouth Elementary School to the ladies ministries of the PPCG Church.” Stoddard said: “The ladies’ group supported the idea and purchased school supplies to be presented to the first grade class of the Plymouth Elementary School.” Stoddard said the “ladies ministries would like to challenge other groups to support their local schools, with the much needed supplies, to make this year a fruitful one for the future leaders of our communities.” Jan Nunley, Chairwoman of the ladies ministries, said the group “contributed enough supplies for the entire first grade class.” The items included “pencils, tablets, crayons, and that sort of thing.” Stoddard was planning to deliver the items to the teacher next week. Nunley said Moffatt deserves the credit for the idea, which the ladies’ ministry embraced as a way to set a good example of giving during hard economic times. Nunley said they thought “if other people heard about that, they would start contributing to other schools.” She said “there is a real need now for supplies, because school budgets have been slashed.” For more information, call Jan Nunley at (209) 296-2144, or contact your local schools. Story by Jim Reece This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.