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Hunt Countyâs law enforcement officials say they are ready to deal with the ramifications of the constitutional carry bill, which was nearing final approval in the Texas Legislature Friday morning. Herald-Banner photo
Hunt Countyâs law enforcement officials say they are ready to deal with the ramifications of the constitutional carry bill, which was nearing final approval in the Texas Legislature Friday morning.
But proponents of the measure say it still needs to cross the final hurdles.
âI applaud the Senate for finally passing the House s Constitutional Carry bill yesterday, a bill that will further secure our second amendment rights,â said State Representative for District 2 Bryan Slaton. âBut there is still plenty of work to be done to make sure this bill becomes law.â
COMMENTARY: Sayle Street is no raceway
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Alabama News
The Greenville Police Department says an armed robbery suspect has been identified and is in custody.
On Monday, April 26. The Purple Cow gas station on 1007 Fort Dale Road in Greenville was involved in an armed robbery. The store clerk told authorities that a black male wearing a mask entered the store and pointed a gun at him demanding money from the register. The clerk gave him a small amount of cash from the register and the suspect left the scene.
After collecting evidence from the scene and further investigation, investigators were able to locate the suspect, 20-year-old Tyler De’Arrius Hill from Lincoln, Alabama. Hill was charged with First Degree Robbery and has a hold placed on him through Calhoun County where he was already in custody for a previous offense. He will be extradited to Greenville when he is released from the charge he is currently being held on in Calhoun County.
Fire shuts down a portion of Pelham Road in Greenville, police say
Behind Beacon Ridge Apartments Updated: 11:24 PM EDT Apr 27, 2021 Anne Newman
Behind Beacon Ridge Apartments Updated: 11:24 PM EDT Apr 27, 2021
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Show Transcript WITH SECONDS TO SPARE. BUT WE BEGIN WITH BREAKING NEWS TONIGHT OUT OF GREENVILLE A STRUCTURE FIRE HAS SHUT DOWN A PORTION OF A MAJOR ROADWAY AND THAT’S WHERE WE FIND OUR RENEE WUNDERLICH RENEE. WHAT DO WE KNOW SO FAR? JEROME I’M ALONG PELHAM ROAD RIGHT NOW, AND IF YOU CAN SEE BEHIND ME, THERE ARE SEVERAL FIRE TRUCKS AND POLICE VEHICLES WERE TOLD BY POLICE THAT FIREFIGHTERS ARE WORKING ON WHAT APPEARS TO EITHER BE AN ABANDONED HOUSE OR POSSIBLY SEVERAL SMALL BUILDINGS. IT’S UNCLEAR AT THIS TIME IF THEY ARE STILL ON FIRE. THEY’VE BEEN HERE SINCE AROUND 10 PM. THEY SAY IT’S NEAR BEACON RIDGE. AGAIN, THIS IS AS CLOSE AS WE CAN SAFELY GET TO THE SCENE OF YOUR SENTENCE THIS PHOTO AND VIDEO YOU CAN SE
Several Mauldin residents, a few with decades of police experience themselves, outlined Monday their expectations for a new city police chief.
A new police chief should be transparent, have experience leading officers and be able to usher the city through its increasingly diverse growth, said Tony Madden, a former Greenville Police sergeant who has lived in Mauldin since 1983.
A police chief needs to understand that all people have biases, including officers, but the best chief candidate would be able to separate explicit biases from implicit biases, said Rodney Neely, a Mauldin resident and former officer who sits on the Greenville Police Foundation board.
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