Category: News

Horse Play Luncheon is Friday

Horse PlayHorse Play is a local nonprofit organization that provides free rehabilitative horseback riding opportunities for children with mental and/or physical challenges in Bedford, Coffee, Franklin and Moore counties. They will be hosting their annual “Horsin’ Around for Lunch” event on Friday, April 1 to raise funds for the nonprofit organization.
The luncheon will run from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. on Friday at the First United Methodist Church Family Activity Center, located at 208 W. Lauderdale St. in Tullahoma.
Tickets for the luncheon cost $10 each or 12 for $100. They may be purchased in advance or at the door.
People can dine in during the luncheon or order the food to go. Carry out begins at 10:30 a.m. To order take out call 841-3109.
For more information on ticket purchases or if interested in Horse Play sponsorship call 265-3413, or 455-5189.

Unemployment Numbers and Jobs

unemployment_2Tennessee’s February unemployment rate was half a percentage point lower than the previous month. Fewer people out of work, coupled with continued job growth in the state, have created a problem for many Tennessee employers.
“As the state’s unemployment rate continues to decline, employers are telling us they’re having a difficult time finding workers,” Commissioner Burns Phillips said. We encourage employers to post their job openings on the Jobs4tn.gov web site and to search there for workers to fill those jobs as they will find over 133,000 job seekers currently registered.
In Coffee County 1,040 people are unemployed and currently Jobs4tn.gov has 3,738 available in south central Tennessee, this includes Coffee County.
County unemployment rates for February 2016, released today, show the rates decreased in 93 counties, increased in one, and remained the same in one county.
In Coffee County the unemployment rate dropped from 4.7% in January to 4.2% in February. In neighboring counties; Bedford County fell from 4.9 to 4.4, Cannon County dropped from 4.7% to 4.3%, Franklin County came down from 4.5 in January to 4.2 in February, Grundy County went from 6.5% to 6%, Moore has one of the best rates in the state at 3.4 falling from 3.7% last month and Warren County fell from 4.6 to 4.3%.

Suspect in Tennessee case Convicted of Trying to Kill Woman in Florida

Tyler Mook. Picture from tcpalm.com

Tyler Mook. Picture from tcpalm.com

The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation says the investigation is still open and active on Shelly Mook, a Bedford County teacher who continues to be listed as missing.
Mook was last seen in February 2011 after dropping her daughter off at her ex-husband’s house.
Days later, her car was found in Murfreesboro and appeared to have been set on fire.
Her ex-husband, Tyler Mook has been the only person of interest in the case, but he has never been charged.
Several searches over the years have turned up nothing.
Tyler Mook has been found guilty of trying to kill a different woman.
According to police in Florida, Tyler Mook threw his girlfriend Robin Donneth off of a boat in 2014 and attempted to hold her under water. Tyler’s brother Andrew Mook managed to pull him off. A witness claimed Tyler then said, “No one disrespects me in front of my family. I will kill her.”
Mook has maintained that he had nothing to do with Shelley’s disappearance.

April 11 is National Lineman Appreciation Day.

Duck River ElectricAmerica’s electric cooperatives have designated the second Monday of April as National Lineman Appreciation Day.
On April 11, 2016, Duck River Electric Membership Corporation (DREMC), will honor the dedicated employees who work to keep the lights on.
“Electric linemen don’t always receive the recognition they deserve,” said DREMC President/CEO Michael Watson. “They work all hours of the day, often in hazardous conditions, far from their families, going above and beyond to restore power to their communities. Our linemen, as well as linemen from across the nation, truly deserve this special day of recognition.”
To honor the DREMC linemen, each district office will have an internal Lineman Appreciation Day breakfast or lunch on April 11.
Also, we’d like our members to send cards to our linemen in appreciation for the hard work that they do to keep the lights on. Send cards to DREMC Member Relations Specialist Claire Sellers at PO Box 89, Shelbyville, TN 37162. Please put your local DREMC office on the inside of the card. The deadline is March 31. The linemen will open their cards on Lineman Appreciation Day.

Motlow State working to Reconnect with prospective Adult Students

Motlow 3Motlow State Community College staff members are putting the wheels in motion to reconnect with prospective adult students who have completed some college courses but have yet to complete enough to graduate.
This effort is part of Tennessee Reconnect, which is crucial to Gov. Bill Haslam’s Drive to 55 campaign, an initiative that aims to ensure that at least 55 percent of the state’s population holds a college degree or certificate by the year 2025.
Motlow State, in conjunction with the statewide Reconnect campaign, is making specific efforts to find and encourage adult learners to return to the college.
Recently over 500 “push” cards were mailed to former Motlow students to begin discussion about coming back to complete their education.
Motlow staff members are participating in TRC events located in the 11-county service area of the College, providing opportunity for in-person conversation with adult learner prospects about opportunities offered by Motlow.
Each TRC is comprised of local leaders from the community, employers, and higher education institutions, focusing on a localized plan to engage adults in the area. The TRCs provide adults with free advising, career counseling, support, and a personalized path to and through college. Adults can receive information about returning to college, sign up for TRC advising services, and talk to colleges about options available to them.
The Motlow Student Affairs office has extended its hours of operation each Tuesday through May 3 until 6 p.m., in order to accommodate the schedule challenges of the working adult. Appointments can be made and walk-ins are welcome.
For more information and to reconnect with Motlow, interested adults should contact Brenda Cannon, Adult Learner Contact, at 931-393-1548, or bcannon@mscc.edu.

Federal Lawsuit Filed against Lenoir City Chiropractor and Manchester Doctor

Dr. David Florence’ statement to Thunder Radio

whistleblowerThe United States and Tennessee filed suit in U.S. District Court in Nashville Thursday, alleging that Matthew Anderson, a Chiropractor from Lenoir City, Tenn., and David Florence, a Doctor of Osteopathy from Manchester, Tenn., made fraudulent claims to Medicare and TennCare in violation of the False Claims Act and the Tennessee Medicaid False Claims Act, announced David Rivera, U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Tennessee. The suit also names the Cookeville Center for Pain Management; Preferred Pain Center of Grundy County; McMinnville Pain Relief Center; and PMC Management; and claims that the defendants have been unjustly enriched and caused Medicare and TennCare to pay out money through mistake of fact.
“The U.S. Attorney’s Office will work with our federal and state partners and aggressively pursue those who seek to profit at the expense of taxpayers,” said U.S. Attorney David Rivera. “It is imperative that those who profit from dispensing pain medication always consider the well-being of patients as well as the addiction epidemic facing this country.”
Anderson is a chiropractor who operated four pain clinics in Tennessee. Although several of these clinics changed names at times, they were recently known as Cookeville Center for Pain Management; Spinal Pain Solutions in Harriman, Tenn; Preferred Pain Center of Grundy County in Gruetli Laager, Tenn; and McMinnville Pain Relief Center. Anderson operated these clinics both on his own and later through his management company, PMC Management. All of the clinics are now closed, except that the clinic in Harriman, Tenn. now operates under a new name with new owners.
According to the complaint, Anderson believed that medical clinics had to have a physician owner, so he recruited several physicians to serve as the sham owners of the four pain clinics, while Anderson, and later his company PMC, managed the clinics. In fact, according to the complaint, Anderson was the true owner who controlled the pain clinics during the entire time they were in operation.
The complaint alleges that the four pain clinics engaged in the following fraud schemes:
• Anderson operated Cookeville Center for Pain Management as a pill mill in which a nurse practitioner wrote prescriptions for controlled substances for Medicare and TennCare patients that had no legitimate medical purpose. Medicare and TennCare ultimately paid for those prescriptions, which were not allowable under Program rules.
• Anderson instructed employees at the four pain clinics to upcode office visits, by assigning an inaccurate billing code to increase Medicare reimbursement.
• Anderson continued to allow the pain clinics in Cookeville and Harriman to operate as pain management clinics and bill Medicare for services during a period in 2012 in which medical directors were not on site for the minimum time during operating hours as required by Tennessee law governing pain management clinics. As a result, according to the complaint, Medicare paid for non-reimbursable office visits, injections, and controlled substances prescriptions written by nurse practitioners at the clinics, without the required oversight of a medical director.
• In addition, David Florence, a doctor of osteopathy in Manchester, Tenn., who was one of the sham physician owners, also ran a pill mill out of his Center for Advanced Medicine in Manchester.
According to the complaint, Anderson reaped over $5 million from the four pain clinics, and took over 90% of the pain clinics’ profits, while the sham physicians only earned a salary for their service as medical directors. The government alleges that the scheme defrauded Medicare and TennCare of at least $1 million. The United States and Tennessee are seeking to recover treble damages plus penalties pursuant to the False Claims Act.
“These defendants allegedly supplied narcotics to patients without regard to medical need,” said Derrick L. Jackson, the Special Agent in Charge at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General in Atlanta. “The result was an expansion of abuse and addiction to controlled substances which enriched the defendants at the expense of the taxpayers.”
“Our office is dedicated to fighting Tennessee’s prescription drug crisis with every tool at our disposal,” said Tennessee Attorney General Herbert H. Slatery III. “Pursuing individuals who attempt to take advantage of the system serves as a deterrent and helps protect the integrity of our healthcare programs.”
“Like many states, Tennessee is battling a prescription drug epidemic,” said TBI Director Mark Gwyn. “We want to hold those accountable who unnecessarily provide prescription drugs with no regard for the taxpayer’s dime and ensure legal medications get in the hands of citizens who really need them.”
The allegations in Thursday’s complaint were originally raised in a lawsuit filed by the former office manager in the Cookeville pain clinic. She brought her claims under the qui tam, or whistleblower, provisions of the False Claims Act, which allow private citizens with knowledge of false claims to bring civil suits on behalf of the government and to share in any recovery.
The case was investigated by the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General, and the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation Medicaid Fraud Control Unit. Assistant U.S. Attorney Ellen Bowden McIntyre represents the United States, and Assistant Attorney General Philip Bangle represents Tennessee.
The case is docketed as United States ex rel. Norris v. Anderson, No. 3:12-cv-00035 (M.D. Tenn.). The claims in the complaint are allegations only, and there has been no determination of liability.
This is only one side of the legal matter.

Families Displaced After Apartment Fire in Tullahoma

Photo provided

Photo provided

Eleven families lost their homes in a fire that damaged a sixteen-unit apartment building in the 400 Block of College Street Tuesday afternoon in Tullahoma.
Firefighters arrived at Country Club apartments at approximately 4:15 p.m. to find smoke billowing from the first- and second-floor windows. Tullahoma Police Department was at the scene first and began evacuating the building.
Fire Crews worked to subdue the stubborn fire that was behind walls and in the attic. Firefighters also continued to search the building to ensure all residents had evacuated safely, according to Chief Richard Shasteen, of the Tullahoma Fire Department. Our fire crews did an amazing job with an aggressive interior attack to get ahead of the fire and prevent it from spreading.
No one was injured in the fire, but the eleven families have been displaced. They are staying with family or being assisted by the Red Cross.
The 16 unit complex has extensive smoke and fire damage in 2 units. The fire appears to have originated near the heating and air unit and traveled inside the walls into the upstairs apartments. The exact cause of the fire remains under investigation.
Personnel from Coffee County EMS, Manchester Fire department, AEDC Fire Department and the Tullahoma Utilities Board also responded.

Like and Share: Tennessee BBB Receives Reports of Facebook Scams

The Better Business Bureau of the Mid-South has received reports of people trying to scam others through Facebook. (Christopher/Flickr)

The Better Business Bureau of the Mid-South has received reports of people trying to scam others through Facebook. (Christopher/Flickr)

Not all friend requests on Facebook are from friendly folks. That’s the lesson from scams targeting Tennesseans. Last week, someone on Facebook contacted a woman from a Memphis suburb claiming she had won a prize and Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg was trying to contact her. The woman was told she’d have to pay a $220 delivery fee. After she wired the money, she became suspicious of the scammer’s requests, according to Nancy Crawford, a spokeswoman for the Better Business Bureau of the Mid-South. “She told the victim that her winnings would be delivered within 24 hours, but then a few hours later she contacted her again and said, ‘Oh, bad news, the FBI has stopped the delivery because you haven’t paid taxes on the winnings,'” Crawford relates. Crawford says the Better Business Bureau has had other reports of scammers trying to use social media to make a buck. You can avoid falling for a scam by being careful about accepting friend requests from people you don’t know. Never wire money or provide debit or credit card information, and report fake profiles and fraud attempts to Facebook by clicking on the three dots at the bottom right corner of the profile’s cover photo. Crawford adds that before accepting any friend request, you should click on the profile and do your own investigating to make sure it’s legitimate. “These fake profiles, if she had taken the time to look at the actual profile before she accepted the friend request, she would have seen that in both instances there were a couple of pictures posted on the profiles, but there were no friends,” she explains. “There were no other posts.” According to the FBI’s latest data, the agency received almost 270,000 complaints in 2014 for Internet scams, with losses totaling more than $800 million.

Fatal Fire Victim Named

Fire scene photo by Barry West

Fire scene photo by Barry West

The name of the Monday fatal fire victim has been released by the Coffee County Sheriff’s Department. Dustin Alan Keele age 29 of Manchester died from smoke inhalation in the early Monday morning fire.
When Deputies Jennifer Curbow, Cody Lendley and Harmon Campbell arrived at 75 Stump St. just outside Manchester the mobile home was fully engulfed in flames.
All county volunteer fire departments along with Manchester Fire and Rescue and Coffee County EMS responded to scene.
The fire is still under investigation by the Coffee County Sheriff’s Department.

Manchester man leads Rutherford County Authorities on Chase

Steven Shawl... Courtesy: Rutherford County Sheriff’s Office

Steven Shawl… Courtesy: Rutherford County Sheriff’s Office

32 year old Steven Shawl of Manchester was arrested by Smyrna authorities after a police pursuit early Tuesday morning. Shawl is accused of leading officers on a chase while intoxicated.
Shawl was said to have driven into oncoming traffic during the chase and even crashed into other vehicles. Police were eventually able to use a patrol car to block him in as he was nearing Waldron Road on Murfreesboro Road in LaVergne.
Shawl was booked into the county jail just before 4 AM on Tuesday. He was charged with Evading Arrest, Resisting Arrest, Criminal Impersonation, DUI, Reckless Endangerment, Driving on a Suspended License, and Refusal of Implied Consent. (WGNS Radio)