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WARREN A Trumbull County sheriff deputy used the beach area at Mosquito Lake State Park to help him become a world martial arts champion.
Deputy John Barhoover, a graduate of Lakeview High School and Hiram College, took first place in the traditional beach poomsae category at the fourth annual Lents Taekwondo Worldwide Online Sports Poomsae Open 2021. Poomsae is a taekwondo term meaning a defined pattern of defense-and-attack motions.
For half a decade, Barhoover, an Air Force veteran who was deployed to Iraq, has been training under masters Justin Taylor of Canfield and Darrin Warren of Fowler, who used to have a martial arts school in Champion. Barhoover said the taekwondo experience has “definitely helped him” in his deputy job.
WARREN Many Trumbull County sheriff deputies and personnel are mourning the sudden death of deputy Anthony Diehl.
Diehl, 54, a 1985 graduate of Girard High School, died Tuesday. His unexpected death was announced on the Ohio Going Blue social media page. The cause of death is unknown, but the Ohio Going Blue site said Diehl was experiencing chest pain last weekend and had visited a hospital.
“Anthony had done a lot of tasks for the sheriff department, but his most recent assignment was working security over at the Jobs and Family Services offices,” said Chief Deputy Joseph Dragovich.
Dragovich said he remembers first interacting with Diehl at accident scenes when the chief deputy worked for the Ohio State Highway Patrol prior to 2017.
WARREN Many Trumbull County sheriff deputies and personnel are mourning the sudden death of deputy Anthony Diehl.
Diehl, 54, a 1985 graduate of Girard High School, died Tuesday. His unexpected death was announced on the Ohio Going Blue social media page. The cause of death is unknown, but the Ohio Going Blue site said Diehl was experiencing chest pain last weekend and had visited a hospital.
“Anthony had done a lot of tasks for the sheriff department, but his most recent assignment was working security over at the Jobs and Family Services offices,” said Chief Deputy Joseph Dragovich.
Dragovich said he remembers first interacting with Diehl at accident scenes when the chief deputy worked for the Ohio State Highway Patrol prior to 2017.