Ian Scott Moran, 28, was booked into the Carroll County Detention Center on Dec. 17.
He appeared before Carroll County District Judge Dale Ramsey on Friday, Dec. 18. Ramsey found probable cause to charge Moran with attempted capital murder of a law enforcement officer; fleeing; aggravated assault; first-degree battery; second-degree battery; failure to appear on aggravated assault, fleeing, possession of methamphetamine and other charges; theft by receiving; possession of a body art instrument; driving left of center; driving on a suspended license due to DWI; reckless driving; no proof of liability insurance; fictitious vehicle license; no proof of ownership, littering; defective equipment; failure to use a turn signal; failure to stop or yield; no seat belt; speeding; and improper display of license plate.
Ian Scott Moran, 28, was booked into the Carroll County Detention Center on Dec. 17.
He appeared before Carroll County District Judge Dale Ramsey on Friday, Dec. 18. Ramsey found probable cause to charge Moran with attempted capital murder of a law enforcement officer; fleeing; aggravated assault; first-degree battery; second-degree battery; failure to appear on aggravated assault, fleeing, possession of methamphetamine and other charges; theft by receiving; possession of a body art instrument; driving left of center; driving on a suspended license due to DWI; reckless driving; no proof of liability insurance; fictitious vehicle license; no proof of ownership, littering; defective equipment; failure to use a turn signal; failure to stop or yield; no seat belt; speeding; and improper display of license plate.
For years, kids have counted on getting a snow day off school whenever there was a bad winter storm, but those days may be long gone.
With many students already learning from home due to the coronavirus pandemic and uptick in recent cases, several central Ohio school districts are making the decision to turn to cyber learning during inclement weather. Most districts will probably tell you cold days will be a thing of the past, said Mallory Sribanditmongkol, a spokeswoman for Licking Heights Local School District. If you know snow is coming, you would likely move to virtual because it s better for the kids to keep some sort of consistency.