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Teen killed in Adair wreck

A teenager died Thursday following a single-vehicle wreck in Adair County that may have occurred because of wet roads, Kentucky State Police said.

Tasha Pelston, 16, of Columbia, died while en route to University of Louisville Hospital after a wreck about 3 p.m. on State Park Road, about 2 miles south of Columbia.

Linda Pelston, 47, was driving north on State Park Road when she braked to avoid hitting another vehicle. She lost control of her vehicle , which overturned on the wet road.

Linda Pelston and another passenger, Ronnie Pelston, 42, were taken to Westlake Regional Hospital in Columbia with injuries.

No one in the vehicle was wearing a seat belt, state police said.

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Ky. deputy wanted in slaying captured in Iowa

The Associated Press
SMITHS GROVE, Ky. — A Simpson County Sheriff’s deputy, wanted in the fatal shooting of his former girlfriend, was captured in the Midwest, according to Kentucky State Police.

Randall Creek, 41, was caught at a motel in Waterloo, Iowa.

Senior Kentucky State Police dispatcher Danny Rendleman said the KSP post in Bowling Green was notified early Tuesday that Creek was in the custody of the Blackhawk County, Iowa, sheriff.

Creek is wanted on a warrant for murder in the death of his ex-girlfriend, Debbie R. Rediess, 46, authorities said. Rediess was shot to death outside her home Sunday morning in Smiths Grove, 85 miles south of Louisville.

Authorities said Creek sent an e-mail to the KSP, a newspaper and about 30 other recipients, taunting police and confessing to the killing.

In the e-mail, he threatened a county jailer and told police he was going to “make them earn their money” in their search for him.

“I am not running to get away but I am going to make the KSP earn their money on this one,” Creek said in the e-mail, which was posted on The Daily News of Bowling Green’s Web site. “I have never been armed after the encounter and there will be no chase or struggle I assure you.”

Authorities, however, said they believed Creek was armed with at least a handgun.

Late Monday afternoon, Creek sent another e-mail to law enforcement and media in which he threatened Warren County Jailer Jackie Strode. Creek ran as a Republican in the 2002 jailer’s race and was defeated by Strode, the incumbent. Creek also said in the e-mail that Strode fired him from a job at the county jail in 1999.

“If I have contact with him at his facility I assure you I will kill him with my bare hands and he knows I am capable even before this encounter happened,” he said in the e-mail.

Holder said police had notified Strode, the jail and area law enforcement.

Hours before Rediess was shot, Creek sent an e-mail to The Daily News describing his feelings for her. It was one of several letters Creek had written to the paper in recent years, the newspaper reported.

In the letter, Creek said Rediess ended their relationship after five years because he wouldn’t set a wedding date.

“I don’t blame her for leaving but I guess the message I am trying to get across to couples in this area is never take for granted that your spouse or girlfriend will always be there,” he wrote in the e-mail. “To my darling Debbie I love you very much and I hope that one day we will be married and live happily ever after.”

State police got Creek’s personal e-mail address from the suspect’s brother and sent their own message asking Creek to turn himself in. Three hours and 35 minutes later, Creek responded, saying he had become jealous after seeing his ex-girlfriend with another man.

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Police, school ID’d alleged ‘hit list’ author quickly

By Shawntaye Hopkins

shopkins@herald-leader.com

Danville police and Boyle County High School administrators say it took only a few hours to figure out who used a ballpoint pen to write a “hit list” in a bathroom stall at the school.

A 15-year-old boy who had just transferred to Boyle County High School was questioned by police about 11 p.m. Thursday, and the investigation was turned over to a juvenile court worker, authorities say.

Danville police Chief Jay Newell said police have requested that the student be charged with first-degree terroristic threatening at a school.

The school was able to quickly identify the student who wrote the list of names because he had class with all the teachers and students on the list, Assistant Principal Will Begley said. The school has not yet decided on disciplinary action.

The writing in the stall also noted that a female student, who was named, was going to bring a gun to the school Friday. Newell said police determined during the investigation that the message wasn’t truthful, but police are still investigating whether the female student knew about the note.

She was allowed to attend school Friday.

The incident was reported to police about 8:15 p.m. Thursday after a school custodian saw the writing in the stall and told the principal. The names — including three teachers and a handful of students — have been removed, Begley said.

Parents were contacted about the list Thursday night. Begley said all the teachers and students returned to school on Friday.

Police have not found any weapons during the investigation.

“The school was right on top of this, and they worked very, very closely with our officers who were involved,” Newell said. “We made a good team.”

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Mom charged after boy found in dirty trailer

By Shawntaye Hopkins
shopkins@herald-leader.com

A Pulaski County mother whose toddler was found living among flies, cat feces and garbage is expected to appear in court Monday for a hearing on a criminal abuse charge, authorities said.

The Pulaski County Sheriff’s Office received a report Wednesday morning about a small boy standing at a broken window in a mobile home at Four Winds Trailer Park in Somerset, pulling and pushing on the broken glass.

Chief Deputy Larry Wesley went to the trailer park and found the small boy, younger than 2, standing at the broken window. The boy had dried blood on one of his hands from a cut he apparently received while handling the glass, according to the sheriff’s office.

Witnesses told law enforcement the child had been at the window periodically for about two hours.

Wesley knocked on the side of the trailer to awaken the child’s mother, Kahyleaha F. Alcorn, 27, and her boyfriend, who were asleep in another room.

Inside the trailer, Wesley was met by the stench of cat feces and garbage. The child was living among filth and flies, deputies said. And human feces were coming from the child’s dirty, disposable diaper.

The boy was immediately removed from the home and placed in the custody of the Department of Social Services.

Alcorn was arrested and charged with second-degree criminal abuse. She is being held at the Pulaski County Detention Center with a $10,000 cash bond.

She pleaded not guilty to the charge Thursday in Pulaski District Court, and she is expected to return to court 9 a.m. Monday.

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Wolfe County man crosses centerline; woman dies

By Shawntaye Hopkins
shopkins@herald-leader.com

An Eastern Kentucky woman died Wednesday morning after a man driving a Ford F-250 truck struck her car, Kentucky State Police said.

Tammy Case, 20, of Campton died at the scene of the wreck on Ky. 191 in Wolfe County, state police said. Robert Spencer, 17, of Pine Ridge, was driving the truck westbound about 7:30 a.m. when he crossed the centerline and struck Case’s 1996 Chevy Cavalier.

Both drivers were wearing seat belts. Alcohol does not appear to be a factor in the wreck, state police said.

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Man hiding in store ties up, robs employees

Lexington police are searching for a man suspected of tying up several employees during a grocery store robbery Friday on North Broadway.


The man walked into Save-A-Lot at 1235 North Broadway Friday, posing as a customer, and hid until the store closed, Lexington police said. After the store closed, the man, police say had been in hiding for at least 30 minutes, went into the office with a knife and then tied up several employees. He escaped with an undisclosed amount of cash.

The man has been described as Hispanic and he was wearing a plaid shirt, blue jeans with a light-colored back pocket, dark shoes and gloves. He was wearing a hat when he entered the store, but he later removed the hat and put on a mask that appears to have been made out of a bag.

Anyone with information about this robbery should contact Lexington police at (859) 258-3700 or Bluegrass Crime Stoppers at (859) 253-2020.

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Police: Fleeing man strikes vehicle, fence, trees

shopkins@herald-leader.com

A Laurel County man driving a white Ford pickup truck struck another vehicle, a street lamp pole, several trees and a fence as he led police on a pursuit through London on Sunday, Kentucky State Police said.

State police responded to Waterworks Road about 7:15 p.m. to a complaint about a reckless driver. On West 16th Street, police spotted the truck driven by Adam McQueen, 40, of London.

Troopers attempted to stop the truck, but it continued on West 16th Street to the intersection of North Mill Street, where it struck another vehicle. No one was injured.

The driver continued south on North Mill Street, hitting a street lamp pole before cutting across a business parking lot on Moren Road, state police said.

The pickup finally stopped near Moren and Nazareth Hill roads after striking trees and a fence in the backyard of a private residence. But the driver got out of the truck and started running.

McQueen was arrested and charged with reckless driving, first-degree fleeing or evading police (for the vehicle pursuit), second-degree fleeing or evading police (for the foot pursuit), first-degree driving under the influence, first-degree criminal mischief, wanton endangerment, resisting arrest, leaving the scene of an accident, first-degree persistent felony offender and fugitive from justice from another state.

McQueen was wanted in Michigan, but state police did not say what charges he faced there.

He was being held at the Laurel County Detention Center.

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3 charged in Sunday Whitley County robbery

Three men have been charged in connection to a robbery Sunday night at a gas station in Whitley County, Kentucky State Police said.

State police in London responded to the Fast Trax Gas Station on U.S. 25 about 9:35 p.m. Sunday after receiving an armed-robbery complaint.

Douglas Boyd Malone, 36, of Jellico, Tenn., Josh Emerson Surgener, 23, of Williamsburg and Todd Evan Bryant, 25, also of Williamsburg, were charged with first-degree robbery, state police said.

The men are being held at the Whitley County Detention Center.

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Police say officer shot man holding rifle

By Shawntaye Hopkins
shopkins@herald-leader.com

A police officer shot a man multiple times after he refused to put a rifle down in a north Lexington house early Monday, authorities said.

Two Lexington police officers arrived at 1788 Arbor Station Way about 4 a.m. in response to multiple reports of a domestic violence situation. When officers Matthew Jordan and J. Michael Smith arrived, they found Warren Douglas Rayburn, 44, inside the house holding a Bushmaster XM15 assault rifle, police said.

Rayburn, who lives at the home on Arbor Station Way, would not obey the officers’ orders to put the weapon down. Police would not say whether the gun was loaded.

Police have released few details about what led to the shooting, including the domestic violence call the officers were responding to. But the two officers called for help at 4:09 a.m., just minutes after they arrived at the house about the same time in separate cars.

Jordan and Smith were standing in close quarters on the porch with the front door open when Jordan shot Rayburn multiple times, said Officer Ann Gutierrez, Lexington police spokeswoman.

The shooting happened before other officers, en route to help, arrived.

“It all happened very, very quickly,” Gutierrez said.

Rayburn was taken to University of Kentucky Hospital, where he was in surgery Monday morning. Hospital officials said he was in critical condition Monday evening.

Police interviewed witnesses, including the woman who was involved in the initial domestic dispute on Monday. But Gutierrez declined to discuss statements about what happened at the house, including whether Rayburn threatened police or pointed the gun at officers.

The single-family home is in a subdivision off Georgetown Road, outside West New Circle Road. Police blocked a section of the subdivision at Arbor Station Way and Lost Trail Lane as officers investigated much of the day on Monday.

Houses in the neighborhood have street-facing garages in front that account for most of the facade, with smaller porches.

Patsy Turner lives on Arbor Station near Rayburn’s house. She was awakened by loud noises outside about 4 a.m. and found an officer putting up crime tape and a swarm of police cars when she went outside to see what was happening.

“I thought someone was banging on my house or on the door,” Turner said.

Turns out, the noise she heard was gunshots.

It was a busy scene, Turner said, for what usually is a quiet neighborhood. Officers were still pacing the scene Monday evening as people were arriving home from work.

“It was quite a shock,” she said.

Turner said she often saw Rayburn and the woman coming and going. Gutierrez said she thinks the woman lived at the house, but did not know her relationship to Rayburn.

No action has been taken against either officer, but typically, officers are placed on paid administrative leave during a shooting investigation, Gutierrez said.

According to Urban County Government records, Jordan and Smith have been with the department since February 2006.

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Richmond man followed by car, shot

State police in Richmond are searching for a person who shot a man Monday night after he got out of a car that was being followed on eastbound Ky. 52 in Madison County.
Christopher M. Coleman, 30, was treated and released from University of Kentucky Hospital after the shooting about 10 p.m. Monday on Bybee Loop Road, Kentucky State Police said.
Coleman was a passenger in a car that was being followed. The driver of the vehicle following Coleman flashed the headlights while both cars were on Ky. 52.
The driver of Coleman’s car then turned onto Bybee Loop Road, and the other vehicle continued to follow them.
Both vehicles stopped, Coleman got out of the car to confront the driver, and was shot in the shoulder, Trooper Chris Lanham, a spokesman for the Richmond post, said.
“He started to walk back to confront whoever was in the other vehicle,” Lanham said. “The lights were blinding and glaring.”
Lanham said Coleman might have known the driver, but the headlights were too bright and Coleman couldn’t see the shooter or get a description of the car.

No one has been arrested.
No other information about the case was immediately available.

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