Kevin Crumbo, Nashville s finance director, to step down from post msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Police search for 2nd suspect in 2019 Nashville deadly shooting
WTVF
and last updated 2021-05-11 22:48:23-04
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WTVF) â Metro Nashville Police detectives are searching for a 17-year-old in connection to a 2019 deadly shooting.
Police say 18-year-old Steven Shelton was shot and left at the door of Nashville General Hospital on November 2, 2019. Shelton died from his injuries.
Detectives have named Rico Ransom as one of two people who opened fire on the SUV Shelton was a passenger of at the Cumberland View Apartments on 25th Avenue North. They obtained a Juvenile Court arrest order charging him with Shelton s deadly shooting.
A 41-year-old East Nashville man who died in police custody last year died as a result of excited delirium syndrome an autopsy shows.
Larry Eugene Boyd, pronounced dead at Nashville General Hospital Dec. 3 after going into cardiac arrest, also had cocaine and other drugs in his system, toxicology reports found.
An autopsy, conducted Dec. 4 by Davidson County Assistant Medical Examiner Erin Carney, shows Boyd died as a result of excited delirium syndrome with contributory factors of cocaine intoxication and brain hemorrhaging.
Excited delirium syndrome is also called agitated delirium, said Dr. Corey Slovis, professor of emergency medicine at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and Nashville Fire Department medical director.
Nashville Public Library Makes Partial Return to In-Person Services nashvillescene.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nashvillescene.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Originally published on April 5, 2021 10:31 am
There are more than enough shots to go around in communities like Hartsville, Tenn. The seat of Trousdale County, a quiet town tucked in the wooded hills northeast of Nashville, has among the highest rates of vaccination in the state. But it’s stalling out with roughly a third of residents vaccinated.
On a recent weekend, the local health department had trouble filling up even half the spots for a COVID vaccination event at the high school. Down the street at the Piggly Wiggly grocery store, Cris Weske, 43, stopped in to buy a can of dipping tobacco. He says he isn’t even tempted to get the COVID vaccine, no matter how widely available it is.