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County Record The Community Newspaper of Orange, Texas

Vol. 52 No. 12

Week of Wednesday, June 20, 2012

OC’s most wanted man remains at large

Debby Schamber For The Record

At the top of Orange County’s Most Wanted list is 52-year-old Marlon Winters. He is not only wanted by local law enforcement, but also by federal authorities such as United States Marshals with the Justice Department. If apprehended he faces five counts of aggravated sexual assault and two counts of indecency of a child and bond forfeiture. “My daughters were not his first or his last victims,” said Anita LeBlanc. Winters’ local charges against him began in 1999 after he returned to the U.S. from Germany where he had been

in the Army for 20 years and remained there to work as a contractor. He married and had two children while in Germany. WINTERS However, he left after he allegedly molested his own children and returned to Texas. He is not allowed to have contact with his children, according to America’s Most

For The Record

David Ball

For The Record

Both sides said the first meeting of collective bargaining went well for the city of Pinehurst and the Pinehurst Police Officers Association. The two parties met Monday afternoon at city hall to discuss salary, personnel, time off and other issues in the police contract. City Administrator Joe Parkhurst said at the outset of the meeting he wanted to keep things simple so both parties could present their ideas. “This is the initial meeting to get things off the ground,” Parkhurst said. Officer Mike Dempsey, PPOA representative, asked the city for a multiyear contract and also for the option of bringing in PINEHURST PAGE 3A

H

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• SHERLOCK BREAUX Page..................... 4A • Obituaries Page......................7A •Dicky Colburn Fishing...................1B •Outdoors Weekly Chuck Uzzle..........3B • CHURCH NEWS Page......................7B • CLASSIFIED ADS Page......................8B

buying them candy and gifts. Once he had their trust, investigators believe he made his move. Winters was a drummer and would meet with other people and became part of a band. He gathered at their homes and had jam sessions with them. He also was employed as a construction worker. However, he especially became friends with the two girls.

“He would do everything a little kid would love to do,” LeBlanc said. “When grooming a child, their love is over the top.” According to LeBlanc, Winters had a game he liked to play with girls called the “monster game” which is similar to “hide and seek” but if the child was found, then the monster would win and do anything he chose to the child. “This was a game that Win-

ters used as part of any sexual game a person could think of,” LeBlanc said. Eventually the 6-year-old girl told a friend of hers about the game because she thought that was a game that other kids played too, LeBlanc said. As a result, he told his mother and the police were called. Winters played a lot of mental games on the kids also, WINTERS PAGE 3A

Mosquito control receives funding David Ball

Pinehurst collective bargaining agreeable

Wanted. It wasn’t long before he began his search for vulnerable victims to “groom.” The two girls, ages six and nine years old, lived across the street. Grooming is a term used to describe the classic child molestation tactics to commit the crimes. Winters slowly began gaining the girl’s trust by taking them on bike rides, teaching them to play the drums,

The Orange County Mosquito Control District will have enough weapons to fight mosquitoes the remainder of the Fiscal Year. The Orange County Commissioners’ Court approved a line item transfer to the department at their meeting Monday morning. The transfer is to provide funds for implementation of tasks necessary for new Texas Commission on Environmental Quality pesticide general permit compliance. The transfer breaks down as follows: • $100,000 aerial spraying chemicals

• $2,500 for Rent-All • $6,000 for overtime pay • $13,619 for miscellaneous fees and services THIBODEAUX The contingency fund has $152,000 remaining for the Fiscal Year that ends in October. County Judge Carl Thibodeaux said there was an increase in spraying late winter and early spring due to the mosquito infestation. In approving the line item transfer, Thibodeaux cautioned for the COUNTY BUSINESS PAGE 2A

Orange church picks up shoes for needy ‘Laissez les bons temps rouler!’ Garrett Gros of Bridge City closes the lid on the last batch of boiled crawfish for this season. Although locally raised crawfish are still available they are becoming more scarce as the heat of summer sets in. Gros, a backyard chef who claims Louisiana as his state of birth, has been steady at for almost every weekend since April. “It is beginning to get too hot outside to sit down and enjoy them.” He says that watermelon will be good for a change. RECORD PHOTO: Mark Dunn

Former LCM teacher sentenced Debby Schamber

For The Record Mary West, financial secretary and coordinator for Shoes for Orphan Souls at McDonald Memorial Baptist Church poses in front of the “little house” used for donated shoes. The church will receive new donated shoes for needy children around the world from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m., Monday through Thursday, at the church at the corner of Broad Street and South Street. RECORD PHOTO: David Ball

David Ball

For The Record

Maya Angelou wrote a book titled, “All God’s Children Need Traveling Shoes.” One Orange church is carrying that message to the world. McDonald Memorial Baptist Church in conjunction with Buckner International is conducting Shoes for Orphan Souls for the fourth straight year. The program collects new shoes for children in need, all over the world including the United States, according to Mary West, financial secretary and coordinator of the program. “There are many, many chil-

dren with no home and no shoes,” West said. “We have great support at this church. We also host a community Thanksgiving dinner and the Angel Tree prison ministry.” The church additionally hosts a community wide picnic, a Halloween carnival and an Easter egg hunt. Buckner and the Shoes for Orphan Souls have sent out more than 2.2 million pairs of shoes since 1999. McDonald has partnered with Calvary Baptist, First Baptist Church of West Orange, Cove Baptist Church and MacArthur Heights Baptist Church in the past for the program. SHOES FOR NEEDY PAGE 3A

A former Little CypressMauriceville high schoool teacher, Bryan Lee Hyde, 32, was sentenced Friday to 10 years in prison to be served concurrently on each of the two charges. The charge of sexual assault of a child is a “3-G” second degree felony which will require Hyde to serve half of his sentence, which is five years, before he is first eligible for parole. The charges stem from an incident in January. The Orange County Sheriff’s Office received a phone call in reference to a student who had made an outcry about the improper sexual relationship between the student and the English teacher, according to information from the OCSO. After a thorough investi- Bryan Lee Hyde, 32, is escorted by Scott Barnes, of the Orange FORMER TEACHER PAGE 2A

County Sheriff’s Office, after being sentenced to 10 years in prison in each charge. RECORD PHOTO: Debby Schamber

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