December 5

Page 1

75¢

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 2012

The

Daily Citizen

TheDailyCitizen.com

Serving Searcy and White County, Ark., since 1854

3 KENSETT STREETS UNDER BOIL ORDER

WILDCATS PLAYER, COACH UP FOR AWARDSS

A boil order has been issued in Kensett for Central Avenue and North and Maple streets until further notice.

Harding Academy’s Will Francis and Coach Roddy Mote are finalists for state honors. — PAGE 1B

County replies to Beebe lawsuit

Steven Raymond What: Appointed a public defender in Ellen Reif in White County Circuit Court on Monday Charges: Abuse of a corpse, a Class C felony, theft of property, a Class D felony, and possession of a firearm by certain persons, a Class D felony

Attorney: Quorum Court was trying to follow statute

County

county attorney Matt Hutsell, asks for a jury trial to give an opinion on the matter, though there has yet to be a judge named since all three White County Circuit Court judges have recused. The response was written to

White County attorney Matt Hutsell responded to the lawsuit filed by the city of Beebe asking for a legal opinion on the distribution of the Act 833 funds. The county is seeking a jury trial decision over the matter.

BY MOLLY M. FLEMING mfleming@thedailycitizen.com

White County government has filed its response to a lawsuit filed by the city of Beebe regarding distribution of Act 833 fire district funds. The response, prepared by

Corpse abuse suspect appears

a complaint filed by the city of Beebe, which is asking for a legal opinion on the statute outlining the distribution of Act 833 funds. Act 833 of 1991 created a prePlease see LAWSUIT | 2A

Plea, arraignment for 38-year-old man set for Jan. 8 BY KYLE TROUTMAN ktroutman@thedailycitizen.com

A White County man accused of three felonies, including abusing a corpse, has been appointed a public defender. Steven Earl Raymond, 38, was appointed Ellen Reif as a public defender by Judge Raymond Robert Edwards Tuesday morning. Raymond faces charges of abusing

Molly M. Fleming/mfleming@thedailycitizen.com

A RAINY DAY ESCAPE AT THE LIBRARY Eli Seger, 2, left, and his brother, Jack, 7, browse through some books in the playhouse at the Searcy Public Library while visiting on Tuesday afternoon. The rainy day sent many people to the library to escape the wet conditions. The boys were visiting the library with their mother, Leigh Anne. At left, Destinee Banks, 9, of Searcy reads her latest find at the library on Tuesday. She said she enjoys reading mystery books.

Please see ABUSE | 2A

Hall of Honor Who: Searcy Education Foundation What: Will induct two educators and two Searcy High School alumni into the 10th annual Hall of Honor When: Jan. 24, 2013, 6:30 p.m. Tickets: $35 each, will go on sale Monday

Man who shot himself pleads guilty to false report

4 to be inducted into Searcy Hall of Honor Tickets for banquet go on sale Monday

Two educators and two Searcy High School alumni will be inducted into the Searcy Public Schools Education Foundation 10th annual Hall of Honor. Being honored in 2013 are Bob Please see HONOR | 2A

Plea: Pleaded guilty to filing a false report of crime, a Class D felony, in White County Circuit Court Tuesday morning. Sentence: Five years of supervised probation, a $1,000 fine, 60 days of jail time with 48 days credit and mental counseling

47-year-old who shot self by Lion Stadium sentenced to 2 months BY KYLE TROUTMAN ktroutman@thedailycitizen.com

A Heber Springs man pleaded guilty to filing a false police report, a Class D felony,

in White County Circuit Court Tuesday. Michael Cunningham, 47, was sentenced to five years of supervised probation, 60 days

of jail time with 48 days credit, and must pay a $1,000 fine and undergo mental counseling. Please see CUNNINGHAM | 2A

Higginson officials limit video recording at meetings People who wish to record meetings must do so in designated area BY MOLLY M. FLEMING mfleming@thedailycitizen.com

HIGGINSON — City Council members are featured monthly on video recordings made by people who attend their meet-

WEATHER Today: Sunny. Highs in the mid 60s. Northeast winds 10 to 15 mph. Tonight: Mostly clear. Lows in the lower 40s. Northeast winds 5 to 10 mph. Vol. 158, No. 291 ©2012 The Daily Citizen

Michael Cunningham

ings. But the setting up of the recording devices has become a safety hazard, city officials say, which Homsley prompted the council to create a designated space for cameras.

“I’ve gotten complaints from people behind (those recording) because they are always up there and put the cameras right in their faces,” said Randall Homsley, Higginson mayor. “It’s a safety hazard because people will trip over them getting out the back door.” The designated camera space measures six feet by six feet and is in the back left corner of the council chambers. The or-

INDEX NATION & STATE, 2A OPINIONS, 4A LIFESTYLES, 5A CALENDAR/OBITUARIES, 6A SPORTS, 1B CLASSIFIEDS, 5B

dinance creating the space was passed unanimously. Two recording devices often at the meetings include a small video camera on a tripod, and a laptop computer set up on a stool. “It’s just not safe,” Homsley said. “You have tripods with camcorders set up everywhere. We try to leave a hallPlease see HIGGINSON | 2A

Nobody got anywhere in the world by simply being content. LOUIS L’AMOUR American novelist

Contact us: 3000 E. Race, Searcy, AR 72143, (Phone) 501-268-8621, (Fax) 501-268-6277


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.