Brisbane venue under fire after two very annoying Asians docket emerges on Snapchat
3 Apr, 2021 11:46 PM
4 minutes to read
A Queensland venue is under fire after a picture of a back-of-house docket titled two very annoying Asians emerged on social media. Photo / Snapchat
A Queensland venue is under fire after a picture of a back-of-house docket titled two very annoying Asians emerged on social media. Photo / Snapchat
news.com.au
By: Natalie Brown
A Queensland venue has come under fire after a picture of a back-of-house docket titled two very annoying Asians emerged on a Snapchat account linked to one of its managers.
CHRISTIANSBURG â Montgomery County is launching a new court program aimed at steering some defendants with mental health issues back to stability â and away from incarceration.
Later this month, a special court session called a Behavioral Health Docket is to meet in the countyâs General District Court. An initial group of five defendants, all diagnosed with serious mental illness â but still deemed to be mentally competent legally â and convicted of minor, non-violent misdemeanor offenses will meet with a judge and a support team, probably twice each month for a year. They will receive mental health treatment and encouragement to establish a healthier, law-abiding routine in their lives.
Brian Alan Whittecar, 57, of Three Forks, was arrested March 29 for driving under the influence, third offense. He had been found passed out in his running truck, in front of the Plaza Bar at 5 p.m. He failed his field sobriety test, and was driven to the Manhattan Police Department, where he blew a 0.228 on the breathalyzer. He was held on $2,585 bond.
n n n
A 30-year-old Belgrade man was arrested March 29 for domestic assault and driving without a valid license.
According to the official report, a deputy responded to a domestic violence report at a Belgrade home at 3:30 a.m. The deputy arrested charged the man with punching a pregnant woman and breaking three separate doors to get at her while she was trying to keep him at bay. When the deputy asked the man how the things were broken in the house, the man replied that nothing was broken.
Ottawa started its bid to expel Oberlander in 1995. His citizenship was revoked four times. He was able to appeal the first three times but was unsuccessful the fourth time
With most counties still in the red zone of critical coronavirus spread, the Kentucky Supreme Court announced last week the extension of COVID-19 restrictions on most judiciary proceedings until spring.