Trump handed indictment over Georgia election case
By Dave Williams Capitol Beat News Service
ATLANTA – A Fulton County grand jury indicted former President Donald Trump Aug. 14, charging the Republican with trying to overturn the 2020 presidential election in Georgia that saw Joe Biden become the first Democrat to carry the Peach State since 1992.
Monday’s indictment was the fourth for Trump, following federal charges arising from his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol and his retaining of classified government documents at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida after leaving office. He also is accused in a New York case of paying hush money to ex-porn actress Stormy Daniels during the 2016 campaign to cover
Johns Creek resident awarded commission
up a sexual relationship.
Unlike the other cases, the Fulton County indictment was wide ranging, naming 18 other defendants and covering 41 counts. The list of defendants includes former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, formerly Trump’s personal lawyer; Mark Meadows, who served as the former president’s chief of staff; former Georgia Republican Chairman David Shafer; and state Sen. Shawn Still, R-Norcross.
Charges listed on the indictment included violation of Georgia’s RICO law (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations), submitting false documents and false statements, forgery, conspiracy to commit election fraud, and perjury.
See INDICTMENT, Page 10
Indictment names local figures
The Fulton County grand jury indictment includes several local political and legal figures. The list includes: State Sen. Shawn Still, who represents portions of Fulton and south Forsyth counties; Harrison Floyd, who ran as a Republican candidate for Georgia’s 7th Congressional District in 2020; and Robert Cheeley, an Alpharetta-based attorney.
Still’s attorney, Tom Bever, told Appen Media Aug. 17 the first-term senator is innocent of all charges. Floyd and Cheeley could not be reached for comment on the indictment.
August 24, 2023 | AppenMedia.com | An Appen Media Group Publication | 50¢ | Volume 27, No. 34 12050 Findley Rd. | Johns Creek, GA 30097 (Behind Emory Johns Creek Hospital) (770) 476-3678 TheMemoryCenter.com Memory Care Is ALL We Do! Call For A FREE Roof Analysis – 770.744.5700 Ceiling Spots • Rotting • Blistering • Buckling Spots ROOF TROUBLE? Top Rated Appen Rated BBB Angie’s List Roof Repair and Replacement $500 OFF* New Roof Purchase Cannot combine with any other offer or discount. Valid GA only. Present coupon AFTER getting quote. *Offer expires 10 days after publication 99 DAHLONEGA, Ga. — In an Aug. 2 ceremony, Johns Creek resident Tyler Jensen was one of 13 graduating cadets awarded commissions as second lieutenants at the University of North Georgia. Jensen was commissioned into the U.S. Army Infantry.
ALYSSA ANNIS/UNIVERSITY OF NORTH GEORGIA
Tyler Jensen, Johns Creek resident, has been awarded a commission as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army Infantry at a University of North Georgia graduation ceremony Aug. 2.
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Grocery shopper reports sexual assault in aisle
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — A Johns Creek woman reported Aug. 7 that while shopping at Dollar Tree on Jones Bridge Road, she noticed an unidentified male rubbing up against her from behind in a sexual manner.
The woman said she pushed the man away and headed toward the front of the store where she alerted staff to the incident. The suspect left the store, according to the police report.
The store manager said he came out of his office as the suspect exited the store’s front door and saw him get into a vehicle, the report said. The description of the vehicle was redacted on the police report, but the manager said he believed the suspect headed east on Abbotts Bridge Road.
Police viewed the surveillance footage and captured an image of the suspect. The scene was turned over to detectives.
Online marketing scam takes woman for $1,169
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — A Johns Creek woman reported to police Aug. 9 that she fell victim to fraud after attempting to sell an item on Facebook Marketplace.
The victim said a woman offered to purchase the item for $1,350 and sent the money through Venmo. But when the victim tried to verify whether the transaction was complete, she saw the money was on hold, the police report said.
The suspect told the victim the money was on hold because she did not have a business account, the report
said, but that the account could be expanded if there was an additional $650 payment.
The suspect said she sent the additional money and was reimbursed by the victim. The victim also sent another $500 through Zelle to a different account provided by the suspect.
By the end of the exchange, the victim was out $1,169 which included fees.
Family returns from trip to find home burglarized
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — A Johns Creek man reported to police Aug. 12 that he and his family’s apartment on State Bridge Road had been burglarized.
Police swept the residence and observed the rear sliding glass door to be partially open, drawers left open, and items left scattered around the apartment, according to the police report.
The victim said he and his family left the residence earlier that day at 11:45 a.m. for the Atlanta Zoo and returned at 6 p.m. to a locked front door but a rummaged apartment.
The victim told police $550, an Orient Watch and a Nintendo Switch gaming system were stolen.
Detectives arrived on scene for further investigation.
Students report classmate threatened to shoot them
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — Police were dispatched to Holy Redeemer Catholic School on Old Alabama Road Aug. 12 with reports about a 10-year-old student who threatened to shoot his classmates with his father’s gun.
The school’s principal told police she received two emails from concerned parents regarding the threats. A mother wrote that her daughter, one of two listed victims, was sharing things she did at school and described the suspect
as “saying bad words in the classroom,” the police report said.
The victim told her mother she and another classmate requested the suspect stop and that they would tell the teacher if he didn’t, the report said. The suspect responded by saying, “You tell the teacher, I will grab a gun from my dad, put it in my pencil pouch, and I will kill you,” according to the police report.
Another mother confirmed the account.
The principal told police she informed the suspect’s mother of the incident and advised that he not return to school for the time being.
Jailed suspect faces new forgery charge
FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — A 33-yearold Canton man being held at the Forsyth County Jail faced an additional charge Aug. 10 after allegedly forging checks to his former roommate.
The roommate reported May 27 she had helped remodel a home on Mountain View Trail for the suspect between April and May, and she lived with him at the time. She said the suspect paid her weekly for cleaning supplies and her assistance.
The suspect was arrested that month on multiple forgery and fraud charges, which she said made her suspicious. She said the suspect allegedly implied the checks, which were not in his name, were his boss’s, and he had permission to use them.
After the victim returned to her home in Cleveland, her bank alerted her of a fraudulent signature on the checks. She reported the suspect paid her around $2,800.
The suspect is being held on one count of felony transaction card theft, eight counts of identity fraud, one count of forgery in the third degree and three counts of misdemeanor forgery in the fourth degree.
Bond was set at $248,100, but it has since been revoked.
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Forsyth County grants additional funding for new administration campus
By SHELBY ISRAEL shelby@appenmedia.com
FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — Forsyth County commissioners approved additional funding for the new County Administration Building, which officials say will provide convenience for residents by consolidating nearly all its departments into one facility.
At its Aug. 8 work session, the Board of Commissioners unanimously approved an additional $155,200 toward engineering requirements for the four-story administration building. The 130,000-square-foot main building will share a campus with an Employee Center, a health facility and greenspace on Freedom Parkway near Ga. 400.
The additional costs for the Administration Building include a traffic study; fiber optics and communications services; flood plain, trails and wetlands impacts; coordination of a service provider for customer service systems; a third-party roof plan review; and specifications for a building automation system.
The Administration Campus, which includes the three facilities, is estimated to cost $140 million, including the newly approved change orders.
Forsyth County’s current Administration Building was built in 1996 and includes 55,000 square
feet of space, about half the size of the new facility. Staff said the county has outgrown the building as demand for services has increased.
When the original Administration Building opened, the population of Forsyth County was around 68,000. Now, the county is home to more than 260,000 residents.
The $81 million Administration Building is funded by the county through surplus capital outlay funds. The Whole Health facility, which will house the County Health Department and mental health services provided by Avita
Community Partners, is funded by American Rescue Plan dollars.
The third building, an Employee Center, is funded through surplus dollars in the county’s employee benefit fund. The facility will offer county employees a Health and Wellness Center and serves as a place for recruitment and retention efforts.
Jericho Design Group of Cumming is in charge of engineering and contracting of the campus, one of the nine firms who bid for the project in 2021.
A groundbreaking for the project was scheduled for this spring, but never happened. County Communications Director Russell Brown said the county is finalizing dates for the groundbreaking, but the campus is still on track for a 2025 opening.
Commissioners also approved $91,838 for additional design services for the Employee Center. Both change orders will be finalized at an upcoming formal County Commission meeting. An additional amount sought for design services for the Whole Health Building was also on the agenda, but commissioners voted to postpone the item for two weeks following a disagreement over whether the county should provide a sexual assault nurse examiner program on site.
Commissioner Laura Semanson said sexual assault services are better suited at a hospital like Northside Forsyth. But, Commissioner Cindy Jones Mills said she thinks the county is obligated to house the service as part of the County Sheriff’s Office and district attorney’s investigation processes. Even so, Semanson argued for a hospital-based operation.
“I’m just a little shocked that a large hospital with a huge presence that’s buying up real estate all over the county and purports to be a big part of this community can’t provide that service,” Semanson said.
Forsyth County fire investigators continue probe into barn blaze
FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — The Forsyth County Fire Department is still investigating the Aug. 6 barn fire that killed 26 horses at 9533 Old Preserve Trail.
County fire officials reported responding around 6 a.m. Aug. 6 to reports of smoke near the road, which is in northwest Forsyth County. Additional calls received at the County 911 Center confirmed the smoke was from a structure fire.
Officials reported the fire was advanced and had been burning for a long time before it was discovered. Firefighters attempted a defensive fire suppression because the whole barn was engulfed, and it was impossible to enter.
The barn was declared a total loss, and 26 horses inside died. No firefighters or civilians were injured.
County Fire Department
Technical Services Division Chief
Jason Shivers said the condemned roof has since been removed so the structure is safe for entry. The state Department of Agriculture oversaw the removal of the dead horses, some of which were buried on-site, returned to their owners for burial or cremated.
The site is home to Blue Springs Farm, where many county children have learned how to ride. Shivers said the Fire Department has had conversations with some of the owners of the horses that were boarded in the barn.
“The stories are just devastating,” he said. “They’ve lost a member of their family, is the best way I can say it.”
Shivers said the investigation is ongoing, and there is no end in sight as yet. The department employs
three fire investigators, who have been working with the property owner, Blue Springs Farm and the owners of the horses.
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | August 24, 2023 | 3 NEWS
A fundraiser benefiting the farm can be found at gofund.me/0d8f13f5.
— Shelby Israel
FORSYTH COUNTY/PROVIDED
A rendering shows the new Forsyth County Administration Building that will sit on a 42-acre campus on Freedom Parkway near Ga. 400. County Commissioners approved an additional $155,200 for the building Aug. 8 at a work session.
New officers take reins at American Legion Post
ALPHARETTA, Ga. — Alpharetta American Legion Post 201 welcomed its new leaders on July 18 as the 75-year-old veterans organization held its annual banquet to install newly elected officers.
Taking the helm as commander is the former Post Adjutant Tom Billings. Billings, who served 32 years in the U.S. Navy, 12 years enlisted service and 20 years commissioned service in the Naval Reserve, retiring as a chief warrant officer 4. Billings resides in Milton and will lead the organization of more than 700 members who wore the uniform of the U.S. Armed Forces. Auxiliary Unit 201 saw its new president, Linda Stancil-Redner of Dahlonega, who took the oath of office at the event. She has been a member of the auxiliary for around three years.
Heading up Squadron 201 of the Sons of the American Legion for another term is Derek Garmon of Woodstock, who has been entrusted to lead his group for 17 years.
Post 201 was founded shortly after World War II and has been serving the needs of area veterans, their families, and the community for three-quarters of a century.
Gasthaus Tirol
Forsyth County receives equipment for rapid response to heart attacks
FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — Forsyth County residents received equipment and training July 25 as part of the 4 Minute City initiative, aimed at reducing deaths from sudden cardiac arrest.
County staff said 30 people with first responder training and medical expertise attended training at the County Public Safety Complex. The group was armed with the program’s mobile AEDs, or automated external defibrillator. In all, 300 of the devices are set to roll out in the county.
Those who attended the training are now part of the program’s Cardiac Arrest Rapid Engagement, or CARE, Team. Each member has a mobile AED and can be dispatched by the 911 Center to respond to cardiac arrests until EMS arrives.
The team will also provide feedback on the devices before they are fully distributed in the county.
Dr. Jeffrey Marshall, chief of the Cardiovascular Institute at Northside Hospital, said the AEDs may better inform hospital staff about the events prior to a patient’s cardiac arrest.
“This new system can provide real data from these cardiac arrest emergencies before EMS arrives on
scene,” Marshall said. “Our doctors are very excited and feel this is a gamechanger.”
In February, Forsyth County became the third partner community in the program, which seeks to raise the survival rate of sudden cardiac arrests.
The program is in partnership between Avive Solutions and the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office, the Fire Department, Central EMS, the Emergency Management Agency, the 911 Center, the Chamber of Commerce’s Healthcare Association and Northside Hospital Forsyth.
“Our 911 team knows that each second after a cardiac arrest call comes in is crucial to getting medical attention to the victim before it’s too late,” County 911 Director Tom Cisco said. “Having these AEDs available for our 911 professionals to dispatch so close to the scene of the incident, as well as the willing citizens on the CARE Team ready to accept those calls, is an incredible resource that we are fortunate to have added to our emergency response measures.”
— Shelby Israel
4 | August 24, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek NEWS
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Milton artist’s creations mark 50 years of hip-hop
By AMBER PERRY amber@appenmedia.com
MILTON, Ga. — DL Warfield might be known as “coach” to many in the area, but to others he’s the cover art designer of OutKast’s acclaimed “ATLiens” and “Aquemini” studio albums and dozens more from other well-known hip-hop artists.
Warfield, a Milton resident and human hip-hop encyclopedia, has a stylish confidence. When out and about, he sports one of his 15 wide-brimmed hats and patterned eye glasses, standing out in the crowd much like his iconic artwork.
“My trademark as a creative person is thinking differently at the drop of a dime,” Warfield said.
He aims to disrupt stereotypes, epitomized in his decision to pull inspiration from Spaghetti Westerns for T.I. and the Hustle Gang’s 2017 compilation album “We Want Smoke.”
Long before he became a youth football and track coach or helped brand Cambridge and Milton high schools, Warfield used his background in fine arts to create packaging for Atlanta hip-hop artists. The sensibilities he developed as a breakdancer in the early ’80s on the streets of St. Louis had their place, too.
In 1995, he became the creative director for LaFace Records, once home to artists like OutKast, T.I. and Goodie Mob. Some of their album covers, designed by Warfield, are hanging on the walls of the Atlanta mayor’s office downtown in celebration of hip-hop’s 50th year. They will be available for viewing until October.
Appen Media joined Warfield in his Alpharetta studio, where he was in the midst of adding warm colors with a long paint brush to a piece for a retrospective show to be held in St. Louis.
The space had some of his older work, like the original painting for OutKast’s single “Elevators (Me & You),” tucked away in a side room. But many pieces, propped along the wall, were part of his new series “CYPHERS.” Large wooden wheels, some with rotating pieces, painted and printed in mostly black and white, moving bodies forming kaleidoscopic patterns.
Warfield’s latest hip-hop infused collection materializes the inner workings of a cypher – a tight circle of individuals where someone might step into the middle to rap or breakdance with a competitive spirit.
Warfield said cyphers are a place where rappers “exchange ideas and flows,” where some five B-Boys “keep going and going and going.” From a bird’s eye view of a cypher, he said angles
appear and present as sacred geometry, patterns present in all of nature.
“That's not by mystery, that's designed on purpose,” Warfield said.
One of his intentions with “CYPHERS” is to create an air of mystery before a big reveal. From a distance, viewers see abstraction and it isn’t until they inch closer that they digest the event, the intensity of graffiti, dancers.
“I've always thought about, like, visually, ‘How can I elevate breakdancing
See WARFIELD, Page 6
AppenMedia.com | Johns Creek Herald | August 24, 2023 | 5 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
PHOTOS BY AMBER PERRY/APPEN MEDIA
DL Warfield, Milton resident, accompanies a piece from his new hip-hop infused series “CYPHERS.”
DL Warfield’s original painting of OutKast’s “Elevators (Me & You)” single hangs in his studio.
New mural unveiled at Dunwoody Village
DUNWOODY, Ga. — Dunwoody city leaders unveiled a new public mural at Dunwoody Village during a ceremony held Aug. 15. The mural, “Good Vibes,” was created by artist Ashley Bingham and can be seen in the Dunwoody
Village Courtyard next to Morty’s Meat & Supply on Chamblee Dunwoody Road. David Abes commissioned the mural, officials said.
An exhibit of DL Warfield’s album art will be available at the Atlanta mayor’s office until October. Warfield was responsible for designing album covers like OutKast’s “ATLiens.”
Warfield:
Continued from Page 5
in a way that it feels like fine art?’” Warfield said.
While a location has not yet been decided, he anticipates an exhibition for “CYPHERS” to be held in early 2024.
Warfield said hip-hop, like many other pop culture movements, is a movement started by those with lesser means. From there, he said the music took on a life of its own, but to him Atlanta’s hip-hop scene is special.
“Atlanta separated themselves by being non-traditional, not trying to be like anybody else,” he said.
Warfield and his wife Lisa, both from the Midwest, knew they would move to the Georgia capital because of its reputation as a place where a young Black man could go and find success. But what cemented the move, Warfield said, was listening to OutKast’s song “Player’s Ball,” produced by Organized Noize.
“When I first heard that song, I was like ‘Jesus Christ, what is this?,’” he said. “It sounded like some place I gotta go and be around.”
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Lemonade stand sells sweet hit at Alpharetta Farmers Market
By SHELBY ISRAEL shelby@appenmedia.com
ALPHARETTA, Ga. — Cooper GarrisonBrook, a 12-year-old Johns Creek student, began selling lemonade to raise money for a new computer. Now, he has dedicated the weekly stand to helping those in need.
In May 2021, Cooper said he slipped while exiting the school bus and dropped his laptop, which broke on the pavement. Cooper, who was 10 years old, sought an enterprising way to earn money for a replacement.
That summer, he and his parents opened the first Lemonade with a Purpose booth at the Alpharetta Farmers Market.
His father Dan Brook is a partner in Bagel Boys Cafe, another local business. Dan said Bagel Boys owner John Lamb had provided the family some supplies for a test run at the market.
“Now it’s become sort of a family thing where we all look forward to the time together on Saturday and doing it together,” Dan said.
While the lemonade stand began as a way for Cooper to earn money, sales continued to grow. By the summer’s end, the family decided to make Lemonade with a Purpose a staple at the market.
“We have had lots of people tell us it’s the best lemonade they have ever had,” Cooper said.
The purpose
Staying true to its name, Lemonade with a Purpose donates more than a third of its profits to charity. Its current recipients are the Rainforest Awareness
See LEMONADE, Page 9
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SHELBY ISRAEL/APPEN MEDIA
Cooper Garrison-Brook, center, runs Lemonade with a Purpose on Saturdays at the Alpharetta Farmers Market. From left, Cooper’s grandmother Cindy, mother Laura, father Dan and exchange student Bermet, whom Cooper considers a sister, volunteer at the booth.
COOPER GARRISON-BROOK, Founder, Lemonade with a Purpose
I’ve just been having fun with it. That’s the whole goal, is having fun at this point.
Lemonade:
Continued from Page 8
Rescue Education Center, Discovering My Purpose and Save the Children.
Cooper’s mother, Laura GarrisonBrook, is the president and CEO of Discovering My Purpose, a nonprofit that provides resources and programs for young people.
Ultimately, Laura said Cooper chose the three groups because he is passionate about them. While the family volunteers at the market to keep the booth running, she and Dan said Lemonade with a Purpose is Cooper’s idea, from concept to execution.
“This is a big endeavor for our family,” she said. “And it’s about helping Cooper connect to what lights him up, helping him connect to a sense of, ‘I have the ability to make a difference in the world,’ his own sense of agency.”
In its first year, the booth donated $1,555 to charity. To date, it has given more than $6,800. The booth’s cash tips sponsor Shihab, a boy in Bangladesh who is around Cooper’s age.
With the profits from the booth’s second year, Cooper and his family volunteered at the Rainforest Awareness Rescue Education Center in the Amazon rainforest in Peru for a week.
“I wanted to give back to the community,” Cooper said. “Obviously, everyone in the farmers market is what’s fueling this business, so I felt wrong to just take for myself. I had to give back.”
The process
Much like the concept of Lemonade with a Purpose, the lemonade itself is also a product of Cooper’s mind. He said he spent weeks studying and testing recipes to find the perfect blend to sell at the market on Saturdays.
The process starts on Wednesday or Thursday, when Bermet, an exchange student from Kyrgyzstan whom Cooper considers his sister, makes a simple syrup base. Before, Cooper and his family would hand-squeeze the lemons, a process that takes between four and five hours.
The family has since invested in a commercial juicer, which expedites the process. They work through Friday to prepare the lemonade and watermelon puree. The juices are packed that evening and ready for the market in the morning.
At the farmers market booth, customers can choose from blueberry, mango, peach, pina colada, raspberry, strawberry and watermelon lemonade.
The booth also has weekly specials, like peach tea. Customers can add lemon, lime or grapefruit sparkling water or flavored popping pearls to their
lemonade for $1
extra. Prices range from $5 to $7.
Cooper said the work is sometimes tiring, but he enjoys his seasonal business venture because it allows him to meet people and feel like he is a part of the community. On the side, he also works at a summer camp.
“I’ve just been having fun with it,” he said. “That’s the whole goal, is having fun at this point.”
With two summers under his belt and a successful third in progress, Cooper has no plans to stop selling his lemonade. While he said he may try to expand one day, for now, he is content.
Cooper said he and his family are considering finding other families to sell his lemonade at other local markets. Until then, Lemonade with a Purpose can be found at the Alpharetta Farmers Market.
The market runs April through November from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Saturdays in downtown Alpharetta. The market will start at 9:30 a.m. in November.
“It’s been a really good experience for our family to do this together and do something that gives back and at the same time, gives him a good experience,” Dan said.
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | August 24, 2023 | 9 BUSINESSPOSTS
Lemonade with a Purpose volunteer Laura Garrison-Brook pours lemonade for a customer Aug. 12 at the Alpharetta Farmers Market. More than a third of the booth’s profits are donated to charity.
PHOTOS BY SHELBY ISRAEL/APPEN MEDIA
Lemonade with a Purpose volunteer Dan Brook offers guests lemonade Aug. 12 at the Alpharetta Farmers Market. Dan and his wife Laura work at the booth to help their son Cooper, the founder.
Indictment:
Continued from Page 1
The RICO charge, which was leveled against all 19 defendants, carries a mandatory minimum prison term of five years.
While the other cases against Trump were narrowly focused on specific incidents, the 97-page Georgia indictment encompassed several episodes. The list includes then-President Trump’s phone call asking Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger at the beginning of January 2021 to “find” 11,780 votes, the margin Trump needed to overcome Biden’s vote count in Georgia.
The indictment also cited a meeting of “fake” Republican electors inside the state Capitol in December 2020 to certify Trump as the winner of Georgia’s 16 electoral votes rather than Biden, presentations Giuliani made to state lawmakers – also in December 2020 – leveling false allegations of election fraud, and a data breach at the elections office in Coffee County.
“Rather than abide by Georgia’s legal process for election challenges, the defendants engaged in a criminal racketeering enterprise to overturn
Georgia’s presidential election results,” Fulton District Attorney Fani Willis told reporters after the indictments were unsealed.
Trump took to his social media website to blast the indictments as politically motivated by Willis, a Democrat, while sticking to his claim that he won the election in Georgia.
“[The] only election interference that took place in Fulton County was done by those that rigged and stole the election, not by me,” he wrote.
Willis took exception to Trump’s accusations.
“I make decisions in this office based on the facts and the law,” she said. “The law is nonpartisan.”
The grand jury had not been
expected to act on Monday, as some final witnesses had been summoned to testify on Tuesday, including former Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan. Instead, Duncan, who has been one of Trump’s most vocal critics among Georgia Republicans, spent more than an hour testifying early Monday evening.
“I was honored to answer their questions to the best of my ability,” he said shortly after completing his testimony.
The grand jury also heard Monday from two Georgia Democrats, former state Rep. Bee Nguyen and former state Sen. Jen Jordan. Both ran unsuccessfully for statewide office last year, Nguyen for secretary
of state and Jordan for attorney general.
“No individual is above the law,” Nguyen said after giving her testimony. “I believe that every individual who wrongfully and illegally tried to overturn our valid elections should be held accountable.”
Willis said she will give the defendants until noon Aug. 25 to turn themselves in. She said she plans to try all 19 at the same time.
While the timetable for that trial is up to the judge, Willis said she will ask for the case to be heard within the next six months.
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Former President Donald Trump speaks to a crowd during a visit to Atlanta in July 2020.
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From exhaustion to empowerment: Conquering caregiver stress
Brought to you by - Line Fleming, Staff Therapist at Summit Counseling Center
We hear a lot about someone going through a medical or mental health issue. We hear about their symptoms, how they affect them, and treatments they implement to improve their health.
But what about the caregiver helping with their recovery? The caregiver is the person experiencing the issues with you and providing care needs, and it can be short-term or life-long depending on the situation.
Caregiver stress is a state of mental, emotional, and physical exhaustion caregivers experience.
As a caregiver, you can become so focused about providing care for your loved one that you forget about yourself, putting your physical health and well-being in jeopardy. It’s important to be aware of how you’re feeling physically and emotionally, and to listen to others if they recognize that your health is suffering.
Signs of caregiver stress:
• Feeling overwhelmed and worried
• Not getting enough sleep
• Isolating from others
• Neglecting daily activities
• Becoming easily irritated
• Feeling sad
Ways to cope with caregiver stress:
• Focus on what you can provide.
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Delegate some tasks to others.
• Establish a daily routine. Make a list of what needs to be done.
• Be intentional about self-care. Do one thing daily that rejuvenates you.
• Take a break! It is okay to accept help and take a “time out” from your caregiver duties.
Caring for a loved one who needs you is both rewarding and stressful. As your role as caregiver evolves, it’s natural to experience a mix of emotions and stressors. It’s important to recognize them to be proactive with helping yourself. A healthy and happy caregiver is better for you and your loved one!
Sponsored Section August 24, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | 12
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Ticks are ruining hot dogs and hamburgers
Brought to You by - Brent Taylor, MD, Premiere Dermatology and Mohs Surgery of Atlanta
Although I grew up in Georgia, I spent my summers near Boone, North Carolina at my granddad’s Christmas tree farm. Most mornings, I helped him in the fields where, at 70 years old, my granddad still easily outworked me. As the sun rose higher, I inevitably asked permission to leave the heavy burlap bags behind to hike into the cool shade of the mountain hollows above his fields. At the day’s end, my dog Willy and I would return with muddy scratches and a tick or two to pluck off our skin.
At the time, I didn’t recognize ticks for what they are. I thought that they were just another nuisance like a spider or a wasp. They are so much worse.
Ticks are vile, nefarious, silent creeping instruments of disease, disability, and death. The list of diseases that they carry stands at over two dozen and counting. Ticks carry bacterial diseases including Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, and Tularemia (a type of plague). Ticks carry viruses such as Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever and Powassan virus. They carry protozoal diseases like Babesiosis. Some ticks even produce a toxin that can completely paralyze you and result in death if the tick is not found and removed. In the movie Oppenheimer, the famous physicist contemplates the destructive power of the atomic bomb and says “Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.” For me, the tiny tick is every bit as soul-shivering as the tiny atom.
Alright, maybe that comparison is a bit over the top, but ticks really are terrible. In addition to the diseases and toxins listed above is the amazing ability of some ticks to make their human victims allergic to mammalian meat including beef, pork, lamb and more. Ticks can cause a disease called Alphagal syndrome in which people bitten by a tick develop an allergy to these meats. Many patients with Alpha-gal can also no longer eat dairy.
Some mammals including cows, pigs and deer produce a carbohydrate (a chain of sugar molecules) called galactose-alpha-1,3-galactose (aka “alpha-gal”). When a tick feeds on one of these animals, some alpha-gal particles remain in the tick’s digestive tract. When the tick then feeds on a human, the tick injects a bit of this alpha-gal into the bloodstream of the human which can cause the human to develop an allergic reaction to alpha-gal carbohydrates.
Then, if the human eats food or products made from animals that produce alphagal, the human will have an allergic reaction. Three to eight hours after eating alpha gal-containing mammalian meat, affected individuals develop symptoms ranging from severe stomach pain to rashes, hives, difficulty breathing and even anaphylaxis.
Patients with Alpha-gal can still eat chicken, turkey, eggs and seafood, but some non-obvious foods like jello as well as some medicines can contain alphagal. Refined readers will be dismayed to learn that the CDC website on Alpha-gal syndrome states that Rocky Mountain oysters and “scrapple” are particularly high in alpha-gal. For me, prairie oysters and scrapple were always off the table, but hamburgers and hot dogs are more than just an American staple – they are an American treasure. When my kids and I have discussed what defines Mexican food, French fare, and other national cuisine, they have asked me what qualifies as “American” food. I believe that there is no more obvious answer than a burger at a backyard barbeque with friends or a hot dog at a family outing to a baseball game. And ticks are trying to ruin it!
Ticks aren’t just attacking us in National Parks. They are attacking us in our backyards. They are riding our clothes and animals inside to attack us where we live. They are causing allergies so that we can no longer eat hamburgers and hot dogs. Ticks are un-American.
In all seriousness, ticks really are more dangerous than I ever realized in my childhood, and recognizing the dangers of tick bites should provide inspiration to use insect repellants, carefully check clothing, hair and fur after outings and seek care for any signs of tick-borne illness. Some diseases ticks carry can cause lifelong disability or death, and parents and grandparents alike should perform “tick checks” in armpits and other nooks and crannies for unwanted pests after time in woods or fields. In areas endemic for Lyme disease, recent guidelines are even suggesting prophylactic doses of doxycycline after prolonged tick exposure (tick attachment for 36 hours or more).
As a Mohs surgeon, I have learned that the beach-goer has more to fear from the Sun in the sky than from a shark in the water. As someone who loves the great outdoors, I would add that I am more afraid of the tick on the leaf than the bear in the woods. If you, like me, have ever been sun-kissed or tick-bitten, Premier Dermatology is happy to help.
EMPTY NEST • Sponsored Section AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | August 24, 2023 | 13
Heart and Vascular Care welcomes Cardiologist Dr. Jigishu Dhabuwala to the practice
Brought to You by - Heart and Vascular Care
With over 10 years of experience treating patients in Cumming, Alpharetta, Buford and beyond, Dr. Jigishu Dhabuwala has joined the physician team at Heart and Vascular Care.
With a passion to provide comprehensive, compassionate, high quality cardiovascular care in metro Atlanta and the surrounding North Georgia communities, Heart and Vascular Care has been a proud leader in the Cardiovascular community for the last 15 years.
Dr. Dhabuwala’s background being board-certified in interventional cardiology and as a member of the American College of Cardiology and The Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions, allows him to be up to date on state-ofthe-art treatments and cutting-edge technology.
While the practice continues to grow in both size and service lines, Heart and Vascular Care is committed to maintaining timely communication as well as being sure to nurture sincere patient-to-physician relationships.
“Dr. Dhabuwala had been practicing
in the community for the past ten years. He is well-respected by his peers and colleagues, the hospital staff, and his patients and we are excited to have him onboard,” says Rod Roeser, CEO at Heart and Vascular Care.
All Heart and Vascular Care physicians, along with a full team of physician assistants, nurse practitioners, medical assistants, and other healthcare professionals, pride themselves on providing the best care
experience possible for each and every patient we see. Call us at 678-513-2273 or book an appointment online at www. hvcmd.com to take control of your cardiovascular health today.
14 | August 24, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek EMPTY NEST • Sponsored Section
ISTOCK
ALPHARETTA FOOD TRUCK ALLEY
What: Kick off the weekend a little early at Alpharetta’s Food Truck Alley. Culinary options include more than 10 food trucks every fourth Thursday of the month until October, offering a diverse range of cuisine types. This is a family-friendly event, with limited seating available and will feature live music each month. It is recommended that attendees bring a blanket or chair and leave pets at home for these events.
When: Thursday, Aug. 24, 5-9 p.m.
Where: Old Roswell Street, 37 Old Roswell, Alpharetta
More info: facebook.com/foodtruckalley
OPENING RECEPTION: BEYOND TRANSPARENCY
What: “Beyond Transparency” is an exhibition of local artists, emerging to professional, presenting a myriad of glass arts. Works in mosaic, stained, blown, lampworked and fused glass will be shown. The exhibit will be on display during normal operating hours from Aug. 26 to Sept. 28.
When: Friday, Aug. 25, 6-8 p.m.
Where: Roswell Visual Arts Center, 10495 Woodstock Road, Roswell
More info: roswellgov.com
MOVIES BY MOONLIGHT:
‘THE LION KING’
What: Bring a picnic or choose your dinner from a food truck and enjoy “The Lion King” on the big screen at this free event. The movie begins after sunset.
When: Friday, Aug. 25, 7 p.m.
Where: Heritage Amphitheater Lawn, 6110 Blue Stone Road, Sandy Springs
More info: sandyspringsga.gov
GEORGIA AUDUBON
SOCIETY BIRD WALK
What: Learn about Georgia’s birds from Atlanta Audubon’s volunteer field trip leaders. All walks are free and open to the public, but please register. If you need to borrow a pair of binoculars, contact the field trip leader or the Dunwoody Nature Center in advance, and they should be able to loan you a pair.
When: Saturday, Aug. 26, 8-10 a.m.
Where: Dunwoody Nature Center, 5343 Roberts Drive, Dunwoody
More info: dunwoodynature.org
GEORGIA AUDUBON SOCIETY BIRD WALK
What: Learn about Georgia’s birds from Atlanta Audubon’s volunteer field trip leaders. All walks are free and open to the public, but please register. If you need to borrow a pair of binoculars, contact the field trip leader or the Dunwoody Nature Center in advance, and they should be able to loan you a pair.
When: Saturday, Aug. 26, 8-10 a.m.
Where: Dunwoody Nature Center, 5343 Roberts Drive, Dunwoody
More info: dunwoodynature.org
MILTON FARMERS MARKET
What: Every Saturday morning through October, more than a dozen vendors set up shop around Milton City Hall with fresh produce, fresh meat, sweets, coffee and tea, flowers, soaps, jewelry and more.
When: Saturday, Aug. 26, 8:30 a.m.12:30 p.m.
Where: Milton City Hall plaza, 2006 Heritage Walk, Milton More info: facebook.com/ miltongafarmersmarket
RIVERSOUND SOUNDS: JAKE LA
BOTZ
What: Grab your lawn chairs, blankets and friends for a night along the banks of the Chattahoochee River, filled with music from singer-songwriter Jake La Botz. Guests are invited to bring their own food and beverages, but there will also be food and drink vendors onsite, while supplies last.
When: Saturday, Aug. 26, 7-9 p.m.
Where: Riverside Park, 575 Riverside
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Road, Roswell More info: roswellgov.com
BJ WILBANKS
What: Georgia-based BJ Wilbanks’s exploration of love and the pursuit of enlightenment has been referred to as “Back Porch Soul,” fusing the musical roots of Americana, Motown and Delta Blues into a blend of Southern Rock.
When: Saturday, Aug. 26, 8-10 p.m.
Where: Matilda’s Music Under the Pines, 850 Hickory Flat Road, Milton Cost: $28.50
More info: matildasmusicvenue.com
ARTIST RECEPTION FOR DIANA TOMA
What: This reception is for the latest exhibit in the rotating gallery at Sandy Springs City Hall, featuring the work of Diana Toma until early November. Toma, an instructor at the Abernathy Arts Center, also painted a mural inside the Sandy Springs Library.
When: Tuesday, Aug. 29, 6-8 p.m.
Where: Sandy Springs City Hall, 1
Galambos Way, Sandy Springs
More info: sandyspringsga.gov
MOVIES BY MOONLIGHT: ‘THE BAD GUYS’
What: Bring a picnic or choose your dinner from a food truck and enjoy “The Bad Guys” on the big screen at this free event. The movie begins after sunset.
When: Friday, Sept. 1, 7 p.m.
Where: Heritage Amphitheater Lawn, 6110 Blue Stone Road, Sandy Springs
More info: sandyspringsga.gov
ROTARY CLUB OF ALPHARETTA
CONCERT SERIES: FLUXCAPACITOR
What: Held on the Town Green, this Alpharetta Rotary concert will feature the opening band School of Rock. Fluxcapacitor, an ’80s cover band, will follow.
When: Friday, Sept. 1, 7-10 p.m.
Where: Town Green, 2 Park Plaza, Alpharetta
More info: facebook.com/ RotaryClubAlpharetta
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | August 24, 2023 | 15 › Calendar
To promote your event, follow these
steps: 1. 2. 3. 4. Visit AppenMedia.com/Calendar Provide the details for your event including title, description, location and date Click the red button that reads “Create event” That’s it! Submissions are free, though there are paid opportunities to promote your event in print and online.
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AUG. 24 SEPT. 3
The early history of firefighting in Alpharetta
The current hot summer is an appropriate time to write about firefighters because of risks due to weather.
Firefighters’ gear is hot in the winter and dangerously hot in summer when every 15 or 20 minutes firefighters must be replaced by a fresh team so they can hydrate and cool off before going back to fighting a blaze. A special rehab vehicle is an important part of keeping firefighters cool. In this column we are going to highlight the early history of the Alpharetta Fire Department which today is part of the Alpharetta Public Safety Department headed by John Robison.
The five fire departments in North Fulton County are Alpharetta, Johns Creek, Milton, Roswell and Sandy Springs. Each department has more than one location, and all departments help each other when there are major fires or other catastrophes. Alpharetta has six fire stations.
In the early 1940s, Alpharetta was a town of about 300 people and had no fire department. When a fire broke out, there was little to be done except to rely on ineffective bucket brigades. During World War ll, the Federal Office of Civil Defense donated some surplus firefighting equipment to the city so it could protect civilians in a war emergency. The equipment sat in the Milton County Courthouse unused. In 1944, two local businessmen, Ben and Loyal Brady, who owned a small Chevrolet dealership, gas station, repair shop and taxi business in downtown Alpharetta, worked with the local Civil Defense Council to access the stored equipment. The brothers bought a Dodge military truck for $200 from the Fort McPherson surplus yard in southwest Atlanta, today the location of Tyler Perry Studios. The truck was modified to accept a pump from the courthouse equipment. The brothers bought a 500-gallon water tank which Loyal welded onto the chassis. Hooks to hold ladders, a hose box, a siren and a coat of red paint were added, and Alpharetta had its first fire engine.
Ben Brady became Alpharetta’s first fire chief. Loyal was assistant chief. They kept the truck in Brady’s repair shop, and if a fire occurred, volunteer garage mechanics would jump aboard with Ben or Loyal and
CONSTITUTION/PROVIDED
On Sept. 7, 1964, an Alpharetta fire truck was responding to a request for help from the Roswell Fire Department when the truck swerved to avoid hitting an oncoming car. The truck left the road and overturned. None of the three volunteer firemen were seriously injured but the truck was badly damaged. The city ordered a new fire engine and had it painted white to increase its visibility. Ever since, Alpharetta’s fire engines have been white.
head to the blaze. Since it was the only fire truck in North Fulton that could pump water from a tank, it was often called upon to fight fires in other cities, according to volunteer firefighter John Edelen, now deceased. Over time, better trucks replaced old trucks and more volunteers joined the department, including Billy Bates, deceased, who rose to prominence as a historian and genealogist of local families. Historian Connie Mashburn in his book, “Alpharetta, Milton County, the Early Years,” says that in the early 1950s the city built a small building adjacent to the old courthouse for the use of the fire and police departments. In 1957, a new city hall was completed, and the fire department was given space in the basement. A surplus siren installed on the roof was used to notify volunteers of a fire.
In 1964 Alpharetta responded to a call for help from the Roswell Fire Department to fight a fire that destroyed the Economy Church Furniture Store. While trying to avoid an oncoming car on Highway 9, Alpharetta’s fire truck left the road and rolled over. Although thrown from the truck cab, none of the three volunteers were seriously hurt; however, the truck was severely
damaged. The city ordered a new engine from the John Bean Fire Engine Company in Michigan with a high-pressure pumping engine and a 750-gallon water tank. To make the engine more visible, it was ordered in white. Ever since then, Alpharetta fire engines have been white.
In 1969, the Brady brothers retired from the department. New people and new equipment came and went in subsequent years. In 1976, for the first time the city purchased helmets, rubber coats and boots for the department. Until then volunteers fought fires in their street clothes.
Billy Bates’ son Bill joined the department as a volunteer in 1972 after earning a degree in marketing from Georgia State University. As a youth, Bill accompanied his father when he went on calls. Bill had to stay in the car while Billy fought fires. Bill became the second paid employee of the volunteer fire department in 1988, and in 1990 he became the city’s first full-time paid fire chief. Bill retired in 2006 from Alpharetta Fire Services which became part of the combined police, fire and 911 Public Safety Department.
One of Bill’s proudest achievements was the dramatic improvement in the department’s
FAMILY/PROVIDED Bill Bates in his turnout gear at the Canton Street Apartments near Wills Park in Alpharetta circa 1990. Turnout gear is the personal protective equipment (PPE) used by firefighters. The suit consists of three layers, an outer shell, a moisture barrier, and a thermal liner. A full set can weigh 45 pounds including helmets, gloves, hoods, boots, coats and pants.
ISO rating which is a score assigned to a fire department based on how well it can protect a community. The rating is used by insurance companies to determine homeowner insurance premiums. The lower the ISO rating, the lower the insurance premiums. When Bill started with the department, Alpharetta’s rating was 8. When he retired it was 2, thus saving residents a lot of money. Alpharetta Fire Services first earned an ISO1 rating in in 2015. Fewer than 1 percent of fire departments in the U.S. achieve that status.
Many dedicated, courageous individuals have served as Alpharetta firefighters over the years. All Alpharetta firefighters are also EMTs or paramedics. All undergo extensive training and are experts at what they do. Alpharetta’s citizens can be very proud.
Bob is director emeritus of the Milton Historical Society and a Member of the City of Alpharetta Historic Preservation Commission. You can email him at bobmey@bellsouth.net. Bob welcomes suggestions for future columns about local history.
16 | August 24, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek OPINION
ATLANTA
PRESERVING THE PAST
BOB MEYERS Columnist
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | August 24, 2023 | 17
Thank you to the class of 2023, four years in the making
When I agreed to be a coach with Cambridge High School, I was elated about the opportunities ahead. It was initially a little different because I had competed against them for at least the past five years while coaching other teams.
PATRICK STAFFORD
Fresh off a state runner-up finish for the girls team the past season, I was excited to retool and reload for a chance to compete for a state title. I began to build a relationship with the returning veterans (and fellow coaches) and looked forward to welcoming newcomers and incoming freshmen (particularly because we all would create experiences together).
The season started with promising big meet results in the Archer Invitational and Milton Showcase. Then, the track and field world as we knew it ground to a halt with the COVID-19 suspension of the remainder of the season. All were devasted, but understanding. The promising season was over. To this day, I wonder what would have been. I wonder which of our athletes would have competed for an individual state title. I wonder whether we would have competed for the elusive state team title. I wondered how the freshmen felt. With the NCAA granting an additional year of eligibility to their athletes, I wondered how many of the seniors may have lost
collegiate recruiting opportunities. I, and the world, just wondered.
The 2021 season arrived with much anticipation, along with a number of unknowns. Would many of the athletes return after the COVID pause? Did we lose some to transfer? The answer for us, thankfully, was that many returned. We worked hard that year with the boys winning the region and the ladies finishing fourth, but we were not able to advance enough athletes to state to make a measurable team impact except in a few events. Nevertheless, we were happy to have completed a full season.
The 2022 season turned out to be a positive one in the process of building on a program goal of continual improvement. The team enjoyed success at a number of big meets and
was finding success in a number of disciplines around the track. After the girls won the region and the boys finished a close second, a number of athletes advanced to sectionals and then to state. Our state contingent was strong with the girls team just missing the podium and having one state champ (0livia Bollenbacher – now at Colorado State – in the pole vault), and the boys competing well.
We looked with a great deal of anticipation at what the next year would bring. We were slated to drop down one classification and go to a new championship venue. It did not matter. Although we lost some key athletes due to graduation, we could not wait for the new region and season.
The 2023 season had arrived.
The senior year for those who had lost their first year due to the COVID suspension. Those same seniors that were determined to make this an impactful and memorable season. Indeed it would be. After doing well in any number of big meets, with state classification leading marks in a number of events, both the girls and the boys won a tough region title. At sectional, a large contingent advanced to state. The team performed superbly at state with the girls finishing a close runner-up (led by state titles from Julia Versluis in pole vault; Lilah Versluis in triple jump; and Gabrielle Dandridge finishing second in the 400 meters), and the boys finishing tied for sixth (led by the hurdling duo of Dominick Lawshea and Ibrahim Bangura, plus Dillon Shin in a number of events).
All in all, the seniors contributed to a number of the top finishes and showed great leadership for the underclassmen as they depart for their next steps in life. My primary thought is that they endured and lasted the four years and set the tone and model future team success.
I end by simply saying thank you to the seniors! Thank you to each of them. Thank you to the coaches, athletes, school administrators and those that officiated across the state. Wishing each of you continued success – in track and life.
Authors can trigger a variety of emotions
entertained me with its spunky heroine and a few mystery men.
Rookie reporter Irene is on the scene for a murder or two and, of course, uses her investigative skills to ferret out the murderer and get the story. Along the way, Hollywood moguls and others try to shut down her investigation, but she has no plans to stop.
KATHY MANOS PENN Columnist
My two recent reads evoked different emotions — one book was entertaining, while the other was thought-provoking. I found one delightful and the other distressing. Perhaps I should have read them in reverse order, so that I could more easily dispel the cloud created by the second one.
“The Girl Who Knew Too Much”
by Amanda Quick
Amanda Quick is a new author for me, and this book, the first in her Burning Cove series, was a great place to start. Set in the 1930s in an exclusive hotel near Hollywood, California, it
It’s an intriguing mystery with a bit of romance thrown in, and there’s more than one mystery solved by the time it’s over. I enjoyed the way the author slowly revealed the backgrounds of the main characters as the story progressed. Wanting to know more about each of them was a big reason that I found this book to be a pageturner. I wanted to learn their secrets as much as I wanted to find out who the villain was – and the villain was a shocker.
I highly recommend this book, but I suggest you be prepared to stay up late several nights to finish it. I sure did. This next novel will also keep you awake at night, but for different reasons.
“I have some questions for you” by Rebecca
Makkai
I’ve been struggling to put words to how I feel about this book. It is unquestionably a well-written crime tale, one set in a New England boarding school.
Finally, I found an NPR review that captured its essence:
“This is a dark, uncomfortable story about murder, racism, sexual abuse, grief, the nature of collective memory, privilege, the way humans want to be at the center of tragedy even when they’re not, and feeling like an outsider.”
The story centers on a crime
committed in 1995 at the school, the murder of a promising senior girl. Twenty years later, Bodie Kane, the girl’s roommate, answers the call to teach two short mid-semester courses at her alma mater.
Even before she gets there, the question tormented her: Did they convict the right person? What follows is Bode working her way backward and forward as she examines what she remembers, what she may have blocked, and what she could have done differently. Mixed in with the crime at the center of the novel are references to the oh-so many crimes against women that we are now accustomed to hearing about.
It’s a thought-provoking book, not just as you try to determine whodunit,
18 | August 24, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek OPINION
Patrick Stafford is an assistant coach for Cambridge High School Track and Field. He lives in Atlanta.
Guest Columnist
SPECIAL TO APPEN MEDIA
Both the boys and girls track and field teams at Cambridge High School won the 5A Region Championship for the first time in school history April 24-25.
INK PENN
THE
EMOTIONS,
21
See
Page
Shirley Peters Pruitt, memories of DeWald’s Alley
In February of 2023 I wrote about DeWald’s Alley, a community of Black families who lived off Barfield Road from the 1920s until the early 1970s. Shirley Pruitt contacted me to share her story, because she and her family lived there. Pruitt was born Shirley Peters in 1941 at Grady Hospital. She left Sandy Springs for many years but returned and lives there today.
The Peters family included seven boys and one girl, Shirley. There were eight homes at DeWald’s Alley. Some of the houses were set up for two families, and Shirley Pruitt’s family shared one side of their home with her aunt’s family for a while before using both sides.
Residents of DeWald’s Alley rented from Clyde and Susie DeWald, who lived nearby on Spruill Road, later known as Meadow Lane Road. Susie DeWald would go door to door collecting rent each month. The houses of DeWald’s Alley had outhouses, no electricity, and well water. Pumps were eventually installed.
Ms. Pruitt’s family planted a garden each year by their house. She remembers as a child going to Burdette’s Store at Mount Vernon Road and Roswell Road to buy groceries. She also recalls going with her father to a Spruill farm where Perimeter Mall is today for butter and buttermilk.
When she was 5 years old, Ms. Pruitt started school at the community’s church, known as Mt. Mary’s Baptist Church. The church was a wooden building, painted white, and located on Mt. Vernon Highway. Her grandfather, Will Peters, helped build the church. There had been both a school and church, but the school building burned down.
When the church membership had fallen to only five people, it moved to Lynwood Park in Brookhaven. Then, the children of DeWald’s Alley, including Shirley Pruitt, were bused to the Alpharetta Colored School. Due to segregation, the children were not permitted to attend nearby Hammond or Morgan Falls School. They were bused to a school that would have been at least a 15-mile trip before Ga. 400 existed.
The children’s teachers, Ms. Hambrick and Ms. Jones, went to the new school also. While Pruitt was attending the school, the school’s name was changed to Bailey Johnson. Bailey Johnson was the only school for Black children in north Fulton County. The last class to graduate from the school was in 1967.
All these schools, including Mt. Mary’s,
were part of the Fulton County School System. In the school archives of the county, records indicate that Mt. Mary’s School was in a church building. Some of the other schools that Black children attended were also in churches.
Other Black children in the area, who did not live on DeWald’s Alley, attended
Mt. Mary School. Those families included the Brown, Evans, Martin and Lucas families. The Evans children were cousins of Shirley Pruitt, and the family lived where Glenridge and Mount Vernon Road meet. The Lucas family lived on Meadow Lane.
The Fulton County Superintendent’s Annual Report reveals the inequities of
the time. There was one teacher at Mt. Mary during the 1929-1930 school year, and she earned $660 for the year. Hammond School had six women teachers who earned $1,434 each. (Fulton County School Archives)
During the 1948-1949 school year, Mt. Mary’s had two teachers for 51 children. Nearby Morgan Falls School had 12 teachers for 130 children.
At the age of 13, Shirley Pruitt had a terrifying experience. A White family that lived near where Johnson’s Ferry meets the Chattahoochee River was asking around for a babysitter. She went with the father of the family to their property and the man attempted to assault her. Fortunately, after a long struggle she was able to fight him off and escape.
There would have been no protection or recourse from the legal system at that time for Shirley Pruitt or her family. The family no longer felt safe and moved to Roswell. After the family moved, Pruitt needed to see a dentist for a filling, but no dentist in Roswell would take a Black patient. She ended up going to a Norcross dentist, who said she must enter through a back door. Then, when he administered Novocain, he struck a nerve causing permanent damage to her face.
Shirley Pruitt’s grandparents lived on the property of Dr. Griffith on Heard’s Ferry Road, where her grandfather worked. The couple had 10 children, plus they raised a grandchild on the property.
Ms. Pruitt remembers learning to drive a Dodge straight shift on Barfield Road, a dirt road at the time.
Shirley Peters later married Lugene Pruitt, and they had four children. After the marriage ended in divorce, Shirley Pruitt moved back to Sandy Springs.
While living in Roswell, her oldest son played basketball at Roswell High School, and her youngest child Denny was the mascot. Later, after moving to Sandy Springs, Denny played basketball at North Springs High School. During his time playing on the team from 9th to 12th grade, in the mid-1980s, he was the only Black player. Ms. Pruitt went to all his games. As a senior in 1988, Denny Pruitt was nominated to the McDonalds’s AllAmerican Team.
I am grateful to Shirley Pruitt for reaching out to me and sharing her story of living at DeWald’s Alley in Sandy Springs. This history can be preserved thanks to Ms. Pruitt.
Award-winning author Valerie Biggerstaff is a longtime columnist for Appen Media and the Dunwoody Crier. She lives in Atlanta. You can email Valerie at pasttensega@gmail.com or visit her website at pasttensega.com.
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | August 24, 2023 | 19
OPINION
VALERIE BIGGERSTAFF
Columnist
SHIRLEY PRUITT/PROVIDED
This Atlanta Journal Dec. 17, 1987 clipping from Shirley Pruitt’s mementos includes her son Denny Pruitt, far left, during his years playing basketball at North Springs High School.
PROVIDED
PAST TENSE
At left, Ms. Pruitt's brother-in-law Clarence Pruitt, and on the right her cousin A.C. Peters stand in this DeWald's Alley photo from the 2017 Sandy Springs Gazette.
Who wants to be a Master Gardener Extension Volunteer?
Two weeks ago, I began to notice brown spots in my lawn. Neighbors’ lawns also have these brown patches. Will it eventually go away on its own? Or, should I act?
What are these ferns? They’re choking everything out and they’re so dense they don’t look good. I’m considering removing them entirely, if that’s possible. Some of them are 6 feet tall.
We planted a tree several years ago and now it seems to be dying branch by branch. Why are these branches dying? Are there options available to preserve my tree?
Finding solutions for plant problems sometimes feels like being a contestant on “Who Wants to be a Millionaire?”
Myriad websites and product advertisements provide the multiple choices. Neighbors, contractors, and retail garden professionals compose the audience and your phone-a-friend list available as lifelines.
Georgia residents seeking answers to horticultural questions can access another resource. UGA Extension Master Gardener Extension Volunteers are here providing unbiased researchbased horticultural information and educational programs in counties around the state.
The Master Gardener Extension Volunteer program started in the early 1970s as a way for an agricultural extension agent in Washington state to meet the growing demand of home gardeners with requests for information about plants in their landscapes. Volunteers were recruited and trained to respond to gardeners’ questions. The program’s success led to the establishment of programs in all 50 states and multiple countries around the world.
Georgia’s Master Gardener Program was started in Atlanta in 1979, and participants have been teaching community members how to use plants and gardening to improve their environment, personal health, and quality of life since. The UGA Extension Fulton County agriculture and natural resources team depends on the dedicated service of more than 100 volunteers to provide our diverse community of more than one million with answers to their questions, beautifully maintained gardens, and horticultural programs.
The purpose of the Georgia
Master Gardener Extension Volunteer program is to assist UGA Extension in delivering educational programs to increase environmental stewardship, success in home food production, youth participation in gardening, the value of landscapes, and health benefits of gardening. Active projects in Fulton County include exhibiting at horticultural shows and festivals, writing articles, presenting to live and virtual audiences, and responding directly to residents’ questions — like the real questions received by our office last week and included at the top of this article.
The first step in becoming a Master Gardener is completing a few forms and an interview with the local UGA Extension office. Selected trainees complete 42 hours of core horticultural training and pass two exams to prepare for their new role. Within the first year, trainees complete 50 hours of volunteer service. After completing 50 hours on Extension-approved projects that support MGEV program initiatives, the Trainee is recognized as an official MGEV. To remain a current, active MGEV, volunteers give at least 25 hours of volunteer service hours each year and track their accomplishments using an online recordkeeping system.
If you have a passion for teaching others through volunteer community service and consumer horticulture programming, we hope you will consider applying for our upcoming class beginning in January 2024. Applications are being accepted until September 15, 2023 and notification of acceptance will be communicated by December 1, 2023.
To learn more about the UGA Master Gardener Extension Volunteer program or to submit your application for the next training class, visit https:// site.extension.uga.edu/fultonag/ files/2023/08/2024-Fulton-CountyMGEV-Application-Final.pdf or Fulton County’s MGEV site at https:// extension.uga.edu/county-offices/ fulton/agriculture-and-naturalresources/mastergardner.html.
Happy gardening!
North Fulton Master Gardeners, Inc. is a Georgia nonprofit 501(c) (3) organization whose purpose is to educate its members and the public in the areas of horticulture and ecology in order to promote and foster community enrichment. Master Gardener Volunteers are trained and certified by The University of Georgia Cooperative. Extension. Learn more at nfmg.net.
Learn more
• 2024 MGEV class application - https://site.extension.uga.edu/fultonag/ files/2023/08/2024-Fulton-County-MGEV-Application-Final.pdf
• Fulton County MGEV page - https://extension.uga.edu/county-offices/ fulton/agriculture-and-natural-resources/mastergardner.html
• Becoming a MGEV - https://extension.uga.edu/programs-services/ georgia-master-gardener-extension-volunteer-program/volunteer/becominga-mgev.html
• Frequently Asked Questions - https://extension.uga.edu/programsservices/georgia-master-gardener-extension-volunteer-program/volunteer/ becoming-a-mgev/frequently-asked-questions.html
• Become a Master Gardener - https://nfmg.net/becomeMG.html
About the author
This week’s “Garden Buzz” guest columnist is James Herrin, agriculture and natural resources agent with UGA Extension Fulton County. James is motivated by learning and leverages this to help clients solve the issues and answer the questions they bring to the Extension office. In addition to helping coordinate Fulton County’s Master Gardener Extension Volunteer program, James supports county teachers with agricultural programming, works with farmers, and delivers educational programs for Fulton County residents.
20 | August 24, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek OPINION
GARDEN BUZZ
JAMES HERRIN
PROVIDED
Guest Columnist
MGEV Logo/Learn Serve Grow, UGA
Emotions: AAPPEN PRESSCLU B
Continued from Page 18
but also as you consider today’s social environment. What I found most horrifying — yes, horrifying – were the descriptions of what teenage boys said and did to their female classmates in 1995. Do the sexual insults and accusations hurled by these young men have any basis in reality? If so, today’s teenagers inhabit a different world than the one I grew up in. “Dark” is a word that comes to mind as I attempt to describe this book, but somehow, that doesn’t begin to touch it.
Award-winning author Kathy Manos Penn is a Sandy Springs resident. Find her cozy mysteries locally at The Enchanted Forest in Dunwoody and
CITY OF
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An Alcoholic Beverage License Application was submitted to the City on August 8, 2023 for Consumption on Premises of Malt Beverage, Wine, and Distilled Spirits
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Owner, Brijeshkumar Dave
Bookmiser in East Cobb or on Amazon. Contact her at inkpenn119@gmail.com, and follow her on Facebook, www. facebook.com/KathyManosPennAuthor/.
Free to read, not to produce.
An Alcoholic Beverage License Application was submitted to the City on on July 26, 2023 for Consumption on Premises of Malt Beverage
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Taco Macho at Jones Bridge Inc. 950 Jones Bridge Rd Suite 10000 Johns Creek, GA 30022
OWNER/OFFICERS Dba
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CITY OF JOHNS CREEK BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS, PUBLIC HEARING:
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City of Johns Creek Council Chambers 11360 Lakefield Drive Johns Creek, GA 30097
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AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | August 24, 2023 | 23
Solution AS H ESS WH O AP IA KN EL T HERE DE RN AS TE R IR AN DR ESS REHE AR SA LS EW E PI NT BA LA NC E TA LE NT EL AN OR ES ET ON ER IN MO A SH OT NE ED CADS AT EN DA NG ER EY ES OR E R EAP VI P UND ER TH EW EA TH ER ME AT EI DE R OI LY AX LE SA DL Y UR SA TE L LO T RE E
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