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Five Grundy County Students Head to Court Charged with Attempted Aggravated Rape–Team Forfeits Game

The Grundy County football team added a loss to their season record Friday night.
The team was forced to cancel their game against Upperman High School in Putnam County. This comes after five of the team’s players were charged with attempted aggravated rape.
The school board is meeting Monday October 16, 2017 to decide the fate of the team.
TSSAA Handbook states that it is a longstanding TSSAA Board of Control Policy that if a school states they are going to compete in the football playoffs and/or regular season contests that leads to the playoffs and they fail to do so; the school is also removed from the post season in basketball. If Grundy County High School decides not to complete the football season, they will be removed from the postseason basketball tournament, as per Board policy. They would be allowed to appeal to the TSSAA Board of Control upon request by the administration.
The five Grundy County High School students charged with attempted aggravated rape were placed under house arrest.
It will be up to a juvenile court judge to decide how long the students will wear ankle monitors. It will also be up to that same court system to determine if the students will face adult charges.
David McGovern, Assistant District Attorney for the 12th Judicial District said, “They’ll be in juvenile court on Monday, which serves a different purpose than adult court.”
“We’re bouncing a couple of factors here. On the one hand, we’re wanting to hold folks accountable for conduct. On the other hand, with juveniles, you’re also wanting to have something that will be beneficial even to the folks we think have committed crimes,” McGovern said.
The punishments are less severe if a juvenile is found guilty. They range from probation to jail time up until their 19th birthday.
McGovern said it could be months or even a year before a judge makes a ruling in the case.

Heroin Arrests Up in Tennessee

The Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services works closely with the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation to track law enforcement data involving opioid crime.
According to the department, since 2011, every year in Tennessee more than 6,000 people are arrested for crimes related to prescription opioids. Prescription opioids are pain killers, such as hydrocodone.
This number of arrests equates to more than 16 people getting arrested every day in Tennessee.
In 2016, 1,516 people were arrested for heroin offenses, which is an average about four Tennesseans arrested per day.
That number is significantly up since 2009, when only 169 arrests were recorded.
Drug seizures of prescription opioids have steadily dropped in recent years, from 6,858 seizures in 2012 to 4,585 in 2015. However, law enforcement seizures of heroin are rising. (WKRN)

10/17/17 — Ruth A. Allen

Ruth A Allen of Tullahoma passed this life on Saturday, October 14, 2017 at
her residence at the age of 88 years. Graveside Services are scheduled for
Tuesday, October 17, 2017 at 2 PM at Rose Hill Memorial Gardens. Visitation
with the family will be Monday, October 16, 2017 from 5 – 8 PM at
Daves-Culbertson Funeral Home.

Mrs. Allen was the daughter of the late Emmett P and Maggie Fay Mullins
Anderton. She was born on February 1, 1929 in Moore County, Tennessee. She
was a member of First Baptist Church in Tullahoma and retired from
Tennessee Apparel after 35 years. She enjoyed cooking for her family,
working crossword puzzles and sitting on her front porch. She also enjoyed
watching game shows on TV, especially the “Wheel of Fortune” and the
“Price
is Right”.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, John
Matthew Allen Jr. and sisters, Dorsie Mae Milliron, Mildredge McCall,
Willma Tipps and Juanita Bates.

Mrs. Allen is survived by three sons, Randy Allen, Steve Allen and his
wife, Michelle and Brian Allen and his wife, Tonya, all of Tullahoma; one
daughter, Brenda Pendergrass and her husband, Jim of Tullahoma; sister,
Betty Lou Gault of Fayetteville; three grandchildren, Jonathan Simmons and
his wife, Nickie, Amanda Allen and Samantha Allen, all of Tullahoma; two
great grandchildren, Paisley and Jordan Russell Simmons and two special
friends, Polly Culbertson of Estill Springs and Carolyn Eason of Tullahoma.

Daves-Culbertson Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

10/13/17 — Birthdays

Birthdays:
Erica Patterson, 24 — Pizza Winner!

Clarence Phelps, 89

Food Lion Birthday Cake Winner:
Jeanie Brown

Flowers by Michael Anniversary Winner:
Tom & Susan Foster, 26

10/16/17–Paula Mary Brown

Mrs. Paula Mary Brown, age 85 of Manchester, passed away on Thursday, October 12, 2017 at her home. She was born on April 14, 1932 in Boyle, Mississippi to the late Angelo and Maria Gabucci. Mrs. Brown was of the Catholic faith and was a member of St. Mark’s Catholic Church in Manchester. She enjoyed listening to her kids play music and gardening. Paula loved her grandchildren and her dog, Bandit.

In addition to her parents, she is preceded in death by her husband, Richard Brown; her brothers, Tony Gabucci, Peter Gabucci, Danny Gabucci; sisters, Lena Biondini, Tena Sabatini, Levia Galtalli. Survived by her daughter, Deborah Allen; sons, Gary (Melinda) Allen, Larry (Rita) Allen, Michael (Linda) Allen; sisters, JoAnn (Roy) Kasang, Josie (Bo) Allen; 6 grandchildren and many great-grandchildren; numerous nieces and nephews.

No services are scheduled at this time.

Manchester Funeral Home is honored to serve the Brown family.

10/14/17–Grady Frank Brown

Grady Frank Brown, passed away on October 11, 2017, in Smyrna, with his
loving family at his bedside. Grady was born in Manchester, to his late
parents Frank Brown and Phronie Mae Brown. Grady is also preceded in death
by a step mom, Gracie Brown, and MGM Nancy Elizabeth Williams.

Grady was a member of the Church of God of Prophecy in Manchester. Grady was
retired, loved his family, friends, and took care of his wife. He was a
family man and was highly respected by all who knew him.

Grady is survived by his wife Mattie Waveline Vaughn Brown of Manchester,
two children; Troy A. Brown of Manchester, and Cynthia B. Cox and John Cox
of Manchester, and four grandchildren; Joshua T. Cox of Manchester, Landon
A. Cox of Manchester, Jordan A. Brown of Boaz, Alabama, and Hannah M. Brown
of Boaz, Alabama.

In lieu of flowers, the family has set up an account at Coffee County Bank
for the future care of “Wavelyne Brown” in the memory of Grady Brown.

VISITATION: Friday, October 13, 2017, 4 – 7:00 P.M. at the Central Funeral
Home, 2812 Hillsboro Highway, Manchester

FUNERAL: Saturday, October 14, 12:00 Noon, at Central Funeral Home

BURIAL: Rose Hill Memorial Gardens

CENTRAL FUNERAL HOME IS IN CHARGE OF THE ARRANGEMENTS

CHS Soccer Falls in District Title Match

Members of the Lady Raider soccer team with their district awards. Kneeling in front, left to right: Emille Roberson, Maddie Creek, Maggie Lashlee and Ashley Woods. Standing, left to right: Coach David Amado, Allie Amado, Coach Lee Xixis, Reyna Flores, Samantha Ellison, Morgan Henley, Reagan Ellison, Jenna Garretson, Coach Kandy Gilley and Coach Lafredo Ramirez. [Photo by Demarco Moore – Manchester Times]

Despite a furious rally in the final 10 minutes, the Lady Raider soccer team fell to Lincoln County on Thursday night in the District 8AAA soccer title game.  Facing a deficit of 4 to 1 in the 70th minute, Coffee County scratched out 2 goals in the next 3 minutes before falling to the 2 time defending district champion and 2016 state tournament quarterfinalist 5 to 3.

Lincoln County got a pair of first half goals as they dominated possession in the first half.  The Lady Falcons scored in the 28th and 37th minutes as they outshot the Lady Raiders 8 to 4 prior to intermission.  Allie Amado got Coffee County on the board in 51st minute off an assist from Reagan Ellison to make it 2 to 1.  But Lincoln County answered 2 minutes later to quell the rebellion in the 53rd minute and out Coffee County in a 4 to 1 hole.

In the 70th minute, Coffee County keeper was called for a penalty in the box as she was attempting to collect a shot she had deflected.  This gave Lincoln County a penalty kick in the 70th minute which they converted to make the score 4 to 1.  As contentious as that call was, it seemed to awaken the fighting spirit of the Lady Raiders.  Reyna Flores notched a goal in the 71st off a pass from Emilee Roberson to cut it to 4 to 2.  One minute later, Amado found the back of the net from 25 yards out on a feed from Maddy Jones and Lady Raider fans were amped into a frenzy.  But in the necessity of pushing their formation forward to affect some offense, Coffee County saw Lincoln County sneak a through ball to the district forward of the year Lily Fisk who nailed the game clincher in the 75th minute.

The 2 teams had split their 2 regular season meetings with each team winning on the road.  Lincoln County defeated Coffee County 3 to 1 on September 25th in Manchester while Coffee County claimed a 3 to 0 win on September 28th in Fayetteville.  With the district title game win, the Lady Falcons kept that streak alive.

Following the match, the District 8AAA All-District teams were recognized, along with the district individual award winners.  Coffee County was well represented during the awards ceremony led by Coach David Amado and his staff being named the District 8AAA Coach of the Year.  Amado was insistent that the award be shared with his assistant coaches Lee Xixis, Kandy Gilley and Lafredo Ramirez.  Jenna Garretson was named the Defender of the Year and Allie Amado was honored as the Midfielder of the Year.  Named to the District 8AAA 1st Team All-District were Lady Raiders Samantha Ellison, Morgan Henley, Reyna Flores and Reagan Ellison.  Named to the All-District 2nd team were Ashley Woods, Maddie Creek, Maggie Lashlee and Emilee Roberson.

Coffee County now advances to Tuesday’s Region 4AAA tournament as the District 8AAA runner-up.  The Lady Raiders will take on Siegel in Murfreesboro.  That match will be held at either Siegel High School or Richard Siegel Park and Thunder Radio will be there to bring you the broadcast as part of the First National Bank Hometown Sports Series.  The location and time will be announced Saturday on the Coffee Coaches Show as Coach David Amado will be a guest.  The Coffee Coaches Show in broadcast from 10 to 11 each Saturday from the showroom of Al White Ford/Lincoln.

Download the broadcast at: www.WMSRradio.com/downloads

Westwood Basketball to Host Alumni Game

All former Westwood Junior High and Westwood Middle School basketball players and cheerleaders are invited out for the 1st Annual Alumni Game.  The game will be held on Tuesday, October 24th at the Joel Vinson Gym at Westwood.  The game will tip off at 6 PM and team shirts will be provided for all participants.

For signups, or more information, contact Christina Norman-Young at 931-247-2506 or Amy Jones at 931-273-5780.  All proceeds will go to benefit the Westwood Lady Rockets basketball team.  Tickets will be available at the door.

Girard Scores First NHL Goal, Preds Top Stars 4-1

Samuel Girard got his first, and the home team rolled from there.

Four unanswered goals for the Nashville Predators were more than enough to defeat the Dallas Stars by a 4-1 final on Thursday night at Bridgestone Arena. The victory gives the Preds their first win streak of the young season, having won two in a row to push their record to 2-2-0.

The Predators called the win their “most complete contest of the season” thus far, limiting the Stars’ quality chances, while capitalizing on those of their own at the right time.

“I thought we got better as the game went on,” Nashville Head Coach Peter Laviolette said. “The first period – it’s not that we weren’t ready to play or didn’t want to do the right things – the puck didn’t sit our way, it didn’t bounce our way. It looked out of sort a bit. But, fighting through that in the second and third, we managed the puck a bit better which helped us manage the game.”

The Predators found themselves down 1-0 after the first 20 minutes, but a few bounces coupled with an even better effort in the middle frame saw defenseman Samuel Girard score his first NHL goal before Filip Forsberg tallied on the power play for his fourth of the season.

Goaltender Pekka Rinne shut the door on Dallas the rest of the way and Viktor Arvidsson potted his second of the campaign and then P.K. Subban iced it into an empty net.

From here, the Predators travel to Chicago, a building that hasn’t been kind to them in recent memory – except in the 2017 postseason. When talking about the meeting with the Hawks, Rinne couldn’t help but grin at the thought of the next showdown at the United Center.

“It’s a good confidence booster,” Rinne said of the win. “We are .500 right now, and we’re building up more solid games together. That’s our goal, to improve every game. The big word has been ‘consistency’ from the past couple of years, and that’s what we’ve really tried to improve and really tried to focus on. Now we’re going to Chicago next, and it’ll be a good challenge for us.”

Feels Like the First Time:

Samuel Girard recorded an assist in his first NHL game on Tuesday night, but that was just the warmup.

The rookie blueliner fired home his first NHL goal and added another helper in Thursday’s 4-1 win over Dallas, giving him three points in his first two career outings. The normally soft-spoken Girard let out a burst of pure elation after taking a feed from P.K. Subban and watching his slap shot fly into the cage, a moment he’ll undoubtedly never forget.

“It was kind of weird to score and afterward get hugged by Subban,” Girard, who is still having some of those ‘pinch me’ moments, said. “It was a nice pass by Subban, he brought all the players to him, just made a good pass, and I just put the puck in the net.”

As if his coach and teammates weren’t already impressed by his training camp, or his preseason outings, or his first NHL game, the raving continued on Thursday night.

“When I think about myself when I was 19, there is no way I could’ve played in this league,” Rinne said. “Guys seem to be more ready the younger they are and they seem to play like men. [Girard] seemed like a veteran player out there.”

Girard also had plenty of responsibility on Thursday as a first-period injury to fellow defenseman Yannick Weber forced Girard and his mates to take on extra minutes. The Quebec native ended up skating a total of 21:25, including 3:45 on the power play, to go along with four shots on goal. Not bad for a teenager who was drafted just two summers ago and is now shining under the bright lights of Broadway.

“He’s able to make plays that are clean plays,” Laviolette said of Girard. “As we were watching through training camp, we’re watching him defend to see if he can handle it. So far, at every turn he has. He’s played against some big lines and some big players. He’s smart, he closes quick. He has a really good stick defensively. He manages his game really well.”

Notes:

Captain Roman Josi missed his second consecutive game with a lower-body injury and remains day-to-day. Forward Colton Sissons returned to the lineup after missing Tuesday’s game with a lower-body injury with Miikka Salomaki coming out in his place.

Laviolette did not have an update on defenseman Yannick Weber’s status postgame. Weber left the game in the first period after taking a high hit from Martin Hanzal and did not return.

With a goal against the Stars, Filip Forsberg now has four tallies in four games this season. It took him until the 31-game mark last season to score his fourth, and he still ended up with 31 by season’s end.

With the first home stand of the season complete, the Preds now head to Chicago to face the Blackhawks on Saturday night. It’s the first meeting between the two clubs since the Preds swept the Hawks in Round One of the 2017 Playoffs. Nashville then returns home to host Colorado on Tuesday night.

Counterfeit Money Investigation Underway

Fake $20 bills are popping up around Coffee County, according to Coffee County Sheriff’s Department Investigator Jason Dendy. The counterfeit bills were passed at four area businesses (convenience stores and a restaurant) and discovered by American City Bank on Wednesday. The employees did not realize the bills were fake until the bank informed the businesses.
Investigator Jason Dendy is urging area businesses to be very cautious when accepting cash. Any person that is in the business of money exchange, such as stores or street vendors should practice some basic precautions. Workers are encouraged to use a marking pen to check if the money is real.
Also, Dendy stated that business employees should check both sides of the bill and see if they look right, because sometimes it can be obvious the money is fake.
An investigation is underway.