Kaysville woman charged with multiple counts of arson
Pixaby
and last updated 2021-07-05 23:21:58-04
KAYSVILLE, Utah â Police have charged a Kaysville woman with arson after starting five separate fires on residential property.
They were initially called to 778 Old Mill Lane, but the fire had already been put out; however, members of the Kaysville Fire Department siad they were looking for additional fires that witnesses said they had recorded on video.
According to police, all five fires were the work of Tawny Hutchings, who was charged with three counts of reckless burning and two counts of arson.
Fires were set on Lodder Drive, Brandon Drive, Kays Drive (two separate locations), and Old Mill Lane.
KSL TV
KAYSVILLE A child was taken to Primary Children s Hospital after a small passenger vehicle and a pickup truck pulling a trailer crashed on Wednesday, according to the Davis County Sheriff s Office.
It was about 7 p.m. when officials from several agencies were notified of a head-on collision on U.S. Highway 89 at Crestwood Road in Kaysville, according to a Kaysville Fire Department Facebook post, Paramedics from the Kaysville Fire Department, Layton City Fire and Davis County Sheriff s Office, and Utah Highway Patrol troopers responded to the scene.
One patient was transported by ambulance to an area trauma center, and a second was treated and released at the scene, Kaysville authorities said. Officials from the Davis County Sheriff s Office told KSL the transported patient is a minor and was taken to Primary Children s Hospital.
KSL TV
KAYSVILLE Neighbors wished they only had the answers.
For over a year, somebody has been attaching bicycles to a utility pole at the corner of Fairfield Road and Crestwood Road in displays that have much of the town talking. This is the first time they did an actual Christmas theme, noted neighbor Dale Hofmann.
As of Friday, two poles were decorated one wrapped with a toy mower, dump truck, tricycle and other apparent children s gifts, and the other with two bicycles painted red.
Hofmann and others believed it was the first time two poles were part of the display instead of the typical one.