Tag Archive for 'kentucky'

Henry “James Brown” Earl busted 1,000 times?

Henry Earl, one of Lexington’s most famous sons, has surfaced in the news yet again.

Henry Earl

Henry Earl

Earl, who is also known as “James Brown” in some circles, is the subject of conversation at monkeygumbo.com, which claims Earl was thrown in the hooskow for his one thousandth criminal offense.

According to jail records, Earl, 58, was booked Tuesday at the Fayette County jail on an alcohol intoxication charge, one of Earl’s most notorious offenses (click here to see Earl’s rap sheet and various mug shots … don’t forget to come back; it takes a while to look at the mugshots.)

It’s hard to say how many times Earl has actually been locked up because records only go back to 1992. In fact, it is quite possible he surpassed his thousandth criminal offense prior to Tuesday. Nonetheless, if Earl has been locked up 1,000 times it would mean he was arrested once every five days for the past 16 years.

  • Read the report at monkeygumbo.com here

And here’s a story Brandon Ortiz wrote about Earl a few years ago. Brandon interviewed Earl when he was locked up once in 2005. The story was published in the Herald-Leader December 19, 2005:

By Brandon Ortiz
bortiz@herald-leader.com

He is celebrated in T-shirts, songs, music videos and oil paintings. Mythical tales of his exploits appear on more than a dozen Web sites — at least three are dedicated entirely to him.

Bloggers have called Lexington’s Henry Earl, 56, a real American hero.

Earl has become a genuine Internet phenomenon, a national and international cyberspace celebrity with a devoted online following.

Yet this Internet cult hero calls the Fayette County Detention Center his second home. He’s been there 969 times since 1992, mostly for drunkenness — and that is the warped root of his celebrity.

It could be said that Earl’s story is a uniquely American one, given his unexpected and perhaps undeserving brush with fame. But it’s hard to decipher a moral from it: He is famous only because he is a drunk who, by his own admission, has no desire to work, quit drinking or stop living off charity and taxpayers.

Generally regarded as a harmless eccentric, Earl has been homeless since 1969. His nickname is James Brown, after the famous soul singer, because he’ll shuffle for booze, money or, failing that, attention.

He became an overnight celebrity in January 2004 after the Lexington-based humor site Fark.com linked to Earl’s mug shots on the jail Web site.

Suddenly, he was on the ABC late-night show Jimmy Kimmel Live (it showed local news footage of him) and was interviewed by Newsweek for an online article. The jail briefly closed down the Web site and started limiting access to online records because of the Earl traffic.

What’s surprising about the Henry Earl phenomenon — other than its absurdity — is its staying power. His 15 minutes of fame are far from over.

“It definitely has legs,” said Drew Curtis, who runs Fark.com. “Henry Earl is now at that point where he has become a staple of the Internet.”

In a jailhouse interview last week, Earl was amused by the attention. “I’m a famous man in the jail,” Earl said with a toothy grin.

He can’t recall the first time he was arrested, but remembers being a regular at the old jail on Short Street, which closed in 1976. His number of arrests actually far exceeds 1,000, but nobody has determined the exact figure. The jail’s computerized records go back only to 1992.

Earl did not care for some of the Web sites, particularly messedup.net, which used numerous racial epithets.

“They didn’t have to do that,” he said. (The site’s operator has said he is a fan and is not making fun of Earl.)

Earl — who said he has never used the Internet, though he has seen pictures of it — is also upset that he has not been able to cash in on his fame. Indeed, he does not have a dime to his name.

One mug shot is Earl-less

Fans can’t get enough of Earl’s drunken jail mug shots, which have been posted online and feature a variety of poses and facial expressions over 10 years. Sometimes Earl grins ear-to-ear, sometimes he’s angry. Quite frequently he’s dazed. In one shot, he’s not pictured at all, as if he had fallen.

For a homeless man, he is remarkably stylish, often wearing leisure suits and turtlenecks. He has one other quirk: He often carries fried chicken in his pocket.

Bloggers have superimposed his face on baseball cards, magazines, album covers, historic photos and even the Mona Lisa. Web sites encourage readers to donate to Earl’s jail commissary account, though it wouldn’t help him because it would be credited toward the $5,000 he owes in booking fees.

One Lexington liquor store even sold autographed pictures.

So why is Earl so popular? Fans think he’s a lovable loser, Curtis explains.

“It’s a guy who has essentially hit complete rock bottom,” Curtis said. “You can’t get any worse. I don’t know, I think maybe part of the appeal is no matter how bad your life is, you’re not in jail 300 days out of the year.

“Part of the appeal too,” Curtis continued, “especially with the college-age crowd, is he is kind of living their dream, the frat boy dream: Being drunk all the time. When in reality that would be a horrible, horrible thing.”

Earl’s fame is ironic, notes sociologist Richard Lachmann of the State University of New York at Albany. After all, Earl is celebrated for self-destructive and even criminal behavior.

“This is a country that is harsh with criminals in a way that no other country except Iran is,” Lachmann said. “At the same time, somebody who commits mild crimes, people are amused by it. The mere fact that he can get arrested 900 times is a sign that police and the courts don’t take it seriously, too.”

But there is not much law enforcement can do, Assistant County Attorney Jack Miller said. “Maybe 20 years ago something could have been done,” Miller said. “But with him, it is a way of life. He wouldn’t want to change anything.

“Unless they want help, it’s almost futile to try to do anything.”

Even Bill Rhodes, a 38-year-old Silicon Valley software engineer who runs a blog dedicated to Earl, sometimes feels guilty about operating a site that claims to have Earl’s real-time jail stats.

“We are sort of fostering this guy’s degradation,” Rhodes said.

‘Call the man’

Earl is banned for life from most Lexington liquor stores for panhandling, stealing hooch and bothering customers. He is infamous for sitting down in liquor stores on cold winter nights, declaring he’s drunk and instructing clerks to “call the man.”

According to one urban legend, Earl invites himself into college parties to mooch beer, sometimes becoming the toast of the party before wearing out his welcome.

Only half true, he says.

“I ain’t did it lately,” he said. “Things getting kind of tough out there, people getting kind of scared nowadays. Robberies and all that. I used to have a good time.”

Earl said his last job was at the Smith Motel as a busboy and dishwasher in 1969. He lost that job after showing up to work drunk. He was homeless not long after.

The Scott County native says he was adopted at age 7. His adoptive mother died when he was 18, the same age he started drinking.

His only remaining family is a cousin who lives in northeast Lexington. The cousin helps him out occasionally, if Earl’s sober.

“He knows what my deal is,” said Earl, who then pretended to hold a bottle to his mouth.

Earl says he’s never seriously tried to quit drinking, and probably never will. The only way he could quit, he said, would be if he didn’t have money to buy booze.

“I’d like to slow down,” he said. “Do I want to stop? Not really.”
Money, oddly, is the least of Earl’s worries. He gets it by begging college students. “Oh yeah, I get their money,” he said.

Finding a warm, safe place to sleep is another matter. Earl says he has spent many nights just wandering the streets. If it’s warm, he’ll sleep in bushes at cemeteries.

And if it’s cold, Earl will try to get arrested, if he can’t get into a homeless shelter. At the old downtown jail he once tried ringing the buzzer on the back door, but the officers told him he could get in only if he’s arrested.

On Friday, Earl was released from jail after serving two weeks for disorderly conduct and trespassing. His goal, he said, is to get into the Hope Center, from which he was banned three years ago for showing up drunk. (The center, for privacy reasons, does not disclose its clients.)

Even if he has to abide by the Hope Center’s rules and go into detoxification, Earl says he’ll do it.
“Another year coming in 2006,” Earl said. “I didn’t make a resolution this year, but I need to make one. I need a job.”

On second thought, Earl says, he’d rather try to get Social Security disability payments. Or food stamps, but he has to have an address.

“I am going to take care of my business, buddy,” he said. “I should have a long time ago.”
Why didn’t he? “I got drunk,” he answered.

In the end, Earl’s life — laughed at by so many in the online world — is not a joke.

“It’s a sad life, it ain’t worth it dog,” said Earl, a tear welling in his eye. “I got more sense than some people think I do.

“I’ve seen what it’s doing, it is ruining my life. I mean, it ain’t too late to straighten up.”

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Kentucky man to serve 40 years for abusing Florida teen

Missy Diaz of the Florida Sun-Sentinel reports that Marion Yarbrough, a 35-year-old Kentucky man, will spend 40 years in federal prison for sexually abusing a 15-year-old West Palm Beach girl.

The paper says Yarbrough met the girl last year on the mobile social networking site itsmy.com. The two chatted online several days, he wired her a Greyhound bus ticket to Tennessee, picked her up and drove her back to Kentucky (the article does not say where in Kentucky). The article says he kept the girl there for two weeks and “repeatedly sexually abused the teen, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.”

Read the story here

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UK photographers released from jail

(Also see: Ky. photographers arrested at GOP convention)

By Jim Warren
jwarren@herald-leader.com

Minneapolis police Wednesday morning released three photographers from Kentucky who were arrested during a disturbance at the Republican National Convention Tuesday night, but their legal status remains unclear.

Carla Winn, whose husband, Jim Winn, the photo adviser for the University of Kentucky’s student newspaper, was among those arrested, said that no charges have been filed against the three. She said by cell phone from Minneapolis that police told her husband to check back with them on Monday about his case.

Another of those arrested, Ed Matthews, a senior at the University of Kentucky, said most their camera equipment and personal property were confiscated when they were arrested and remain in police custody. Matthews, a student photographer for the Kentucky Kernel, said police also confiscated his car keys, so he can’t leave Minneapolis until he gets the keys back or finds a locksmith to make a new ones.

“All I have right now is my ID and my debit card, and I only have them because I hid them in my shoe,” he said.

In addition to Jim Winn and Ed Matthews, UK photographer Britney McIntosh and Nathan Weber, a Western Kentucky University graduate and photographer, were arrested during the disturbance.

Weber was still in custody Wednesday morning, but probably will be released later today, Karla Winn said.

According to Matthews, the photographers were taking pictures of a group of demonstrators about 5 p.m. Monday, roughly a block from the convention site. Eventually, police herded the protestors into a parking lot and began making arrests, he said.

Matthews said he had press credentials, but officers ignored them.

Matthews said he and other photographers knew that some sort of disturbance was possible when they went to Minneapolis.

“But to see it happening right in front of your eyes was really something,” he said.

Although Matthews, Winn and McIntosh all work for the Kentucky Kernel they were not on assignment for the paper at the time of their arrests. Matthews said they went to the Republican convention because of personal interests in seeing and photographing the event.

According to Matthews, the American Civil Liberties Union is planning to hold a press conference on the arrests in Minneapolis later today.

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Prosecutor will seek death penalty in 6-year-old murder case

The Associated Press

STANFORD — A central Kentucky prosecutor has filed notice that he plans to seek the death penalty against one of the three men charged in a six-year-old murder case.

The Advocate-Messenger in Danville reports that 25-year-old Deonte Simmons of Richmond pleaded not guilty Friday in Lincoln County Circuit Court. He’s charged with two counts of murder, two counts of attempted murder, two counts of robbery and one count of burglary.

The charges stem from the deaths of 20-year-old Ryan Shangraw and 19-year-old Harold “Bo” Upton III in February 2002 in Lincoln County and attacks on two girls who were in Shangraw’s trailer when the slayings happened.

Commonwealth’s Attorney Eddy Montgomery filed notice he plans to seek the death penalty for Simmons.

Also pleading not guilty Friday was Jamarkos Campbell of Richmond, who faces the same charges. Campbell was a juvenile when the slayings occurred and wouldn’t be eligible for capital punishment.

Montgomery says a murder charge against a third suspect, Matthew Tolson of Richmond, will be presented to a grand jury next month.


Information from: The Advocate-Messenger, http://www.amnews.com

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Fleming man accused of murder convicted of earlier charges

A man accused of killing two people and holding his girlfriend hostage last January has been found guilty of wanton endangerment, terroristic threatening and violation of a protective order, stemming from an incident in December.

Roy Ivan Pollard, 34, has been charged with the murder of Jason Thompson and his aunt Willa Thompson in January. A month earlier, on Dec. 3, a Fleming County jury found, Pollard went to the Thompsons’ home looking for his ex-girlfriend, Bonnie Butler. When Jason Thompson told Pollard that Butler wasn’t there, Pollard pulled a shotgun and threatened Thompson, according to a press release from Maysville Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Gary Adkins.

On Jan. 11, the Thompsons’ bodies were found at their home on Sugar Tree Lane in Muses Mill. Butler was kidnapped and held hostage for a night in the woods, court records say. Pollard’s trial in that case is scheduled for Jan. 20, 2009.

Pollard’s attorney, public defender Tom Griffiths, argued that witnesses’ accounts were not to be believed because of inconsistencies.

The jury recommended a sentence of five years in prison on the endangerment charge and one year and a $500 fine each for the threatening and protective order violation, the press release said. Sentencing was set for Sept. 5.


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Police make arrest in Richmond burglary spree

By Ashlee Clark

RICHMOND – Police arrested a Richmond man who they say is responsible for breaking into six area businesses Tuesday.

Between 3 and 7 a.m. Tuesday, Richmond police say Matthew A. Feck, 23, broke into Richmond Motors, Domani’s Italian Restaurant, Casa Café, Employment Plus, Audio Center and CitiFinancial on the east side of the city.

According to police, money, a camera, a laptop, computer equipment, two leather bags and subwoofers were among the items taken from the businesses.

Police identified Feck as a suspect shortly after the burglaries. Officers recovered the stolen property and arrested Feck. He is charged with six counts of third degree burglary for the break ins. He is also charged with receiving stolen property for breaking into a vehicle at Aaron’s Sales and Lease and taking work tools.

Feck is being held in the Madison County jail on a $50,000 cash bond.

Ashlee Clark covers Madison County for the Herald-Leader. Reach her at (859) 626-5878.

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Bluegrass Crime Stoppers

Police seek help in solving a cold case

It’s been nearly 11 years since the mysterious murder of a former University of Kentucky architecture professor, and police are still awaiting the break they need to crack the case.

Paul “Pete” Pinney Jr. was last seen alive about 5 p.m. on Nov. 2, 1997.

Police say that about 5:17 p.m. that day, someone attempted to withdraw several thousand dollars from Pinney’s account at a Central Bank ATM behind the Chevy Chase Plaza, where Pinney lived. They only got $500.

Then, about 12:39 a.m. on Nov. 3, police said, someone revisited that ATM and withdrew another $500 from Pinney’s account.
Police released a SuperAmerica store video yesterday of a man who charged $15 worth of gas to a credit card belonging Pinney a few hours before Pinney was found dead. The video was grainy, but clear enough to make out a white man, about 5-foot-10, with a receding hairline that is either thinning or graying on the sides.

Police charged Paul Lee Barnett, 48, with illegal use of a credit card for allegedly making two ATM withdrawals from Pinney’s account in the hours before the murder. Barnett was not the man in the video, police said.
More than a decade ago, police said, the motive for Pinney’s murder may have been money. Back then, detectives said they thought at least two people were responsible for dumping his body because Pinney was a large man.
About 10 minutes after the last ATM withdrawal, the suspect in the video bought gas with Pinney’s Ashland Inc. credit card at a SuperAmerica on Richmond Road. The credit card was in Pinney’s wallet when his body was discovered just after 7:30 a.m. on South Cleveland Road in rural Fayette County. Pinney also kept his ATM personal identification number in his wallet. Police said there were also about 10 unsuccessful attempts to use Pinney’s card.

Anyone with information may call Crime Stoppers at (859) 253-2020 or Lexington Police detectives at (859) 258-3700.

Wanted person of the week

James Demetrius Mullins, 29, of Lexington is wanted in the shooting of Dominic O. Faulkner on the afternoon of April 18. Faulkner was shot multiple times on Whitney Avenue.

JAMES D. MULLINS

Date of birth: 8/10/78
Height: 6′02″/ Weight: 270 lbs.

WANTED FOR:

MURDER & PAROLE VIOLATION

If you would like to support Crime Stoppers, call 859-253-2020 or Toll-Free at 1-877-970-2020 or visit www.lfucg.com/crimestoppers/

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Public defenders’ office draws line in wake of budget cuts

BORTIZ@HERALD-LEADER.COM

The state’s chief public defender is asking judges to order the state Finance and Administration Cabinet to pay for private lawyers for poor criminal defendants because his agency can no longer afford to represent them.

In a letter to judges released Wednesday, public advocate Ernie Lewis warned that public defenders will begin refusing certain types of cases starting July 1 as a result of the $2.3 million budget cut approved this spring by the General Assembly.

Lewis said the Department of Public Advocacy cannot afford to fill about 40 vacancies. With caseloads already at unethically high levels, Lewis said, public defenders cannot take on additional cases.

“The dilemma that now exists is that the Commonwealth of Kentucky is obligated to provide counsel to poor people charged with crimes, but the legislature has failed to fund that obligation,” Lewis wrote. “DPA will assert that the solution to this is for courts to enter orders requiring the Commonwealth to pay for private counsel.”

The service cuts, and the request for the state to foot the bill for private lawyers, could lead to a constitutional showdown. And, as Lewis acknowledges in the letter, it could lead to sanctions for Lewis personally.

Public defenders must have the permission of a judge to be removed from a case. Lewis or public defenders face contempt of court and jail if they refuse to follow a judge’s order to represent a client.

“This is an action for which I am ultimately responsible, and any sanctions or retribution should be directed at me rather than a directing attorney or individual staff attorney,” Lewis wrote. “I fully anticipate that there will be some judges who attempt to put pressure upon our local lawyers to represent people outside of this service-reduction plan. I would ask that courts respect the separation of powers and the independence of the Department of Public Advocacy.”

Lewis warned judges of several service cuts, the first since 1991, that will begin July 1:

Funding will be eliminated for contract lawyers for 3,000 to 5,000 conflict-of-interest cases. These are cases in which there is more than one defendant; the DPA contracts with other lawyers so it is not representing both clients.

The DPA will stop representing family court cases, which involve domestic violence and failure to pay child support.

The DPA will withdraw from status offender cases, those involving children charged with running away from home, unable to be controlled by their parents or being truant.

It will pull out of civil commitment cases, in which the state is trying to force a mentally ill person into an institution.

It will refuse Class B misdemeanors (crimes with punishment of no more than six months in jail), some Class A misdemeanors (which carry punishment of up to one year in jail) and probation and parole violations.

Lexington’s public defender office will be the hardest hit. The DPA requested $2.8 million in funding for it but received $1.5 million.

Caseloads in Lexington will surge from 442 per lawyer, which were already the highest in the DPA, to more than 600 per lawyer.

The DPA employs 350 lawyers and handled 148,518 cases last year. The Lexington office handled 10,500 cases.

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Public defenders’ office draws line in wake of budget cuts

BORTIZ@HERALD-LEADER.COM

The state’s chief public defender is asking judges to order the state Finance and Administration Cabinet to pay for private lawyers for poor criminal defendants because his agency can no longer afford to represent them.

In a letter to judges released Wednesday, public advocate Ernie Lewis warned that public defenders will begin refusing certain types of cases starting July 1 as a result of the $2.3 million budget cut approved this spring by the General Assembly.

Lewis said the Department of Public Advocacy cannot afford to fill about 40 vacancies. With caseloads already at unethically high levels, Lewis said, public defenders cannot take on additional cases.

“The dilemma that now exists is that the Commonwealth of Kentucky is obligated to provide counsel to poor people charged with crimes, but the legislature has failed to fund that obligation,” Lewis wrote. “DPA will assert that the solution to this is for courts to enter orders requiring the Commonwealth to pay for private counsel.”

The service cuts, and the request for the state to foot the bill for private lawyers, could lead to a constitutional showdown. And, as Lewis acknowledges in the letter, it could lead to sanctions for Lewis personally.

Public defenders must have the permission of a judge to be removed from a case. Lewis or public defenders face contempt of court and jail if they refuse to follow a judge’s order to represent a client.

“This is an action for which I am ultimately responsible, and any sanctions or retribution should be directed at me rather than a directing attorney or individual staff attorney,” Lewis wrote. “I fully anticipate that there will be some judges who attempt to put pressure upon our local lawyers to represent people outside of this service-reduction plan. I would ask that courts respect the separation of powers and the independence of the Department of Public Advocacy.”

Lewis warned judges of several service cuts, the first since 1991, that will begin July 1:

Funding will be eliminated for contract lawyers for 3,000 to 5,000 conflict-of-interest cases. These are cases in which there is more than one defendant; the DPA contracts with other lawyers so it is not representing both clients.

The DPA will stop representing family court cases, which involve domestic violence and failure to pay child support.

The DPA will withdraw from status offender cases, those involving children charged with running away from home, unable to be controlled by their parents or being truant.

It will pull out of civil commitment cases, in which the state is trying to force a mentally ill person into an institution.

It will refuse Class B misdemeanors (crimes with punishment of no more than six months in jail), some Class A misdemeanors (which carry punishment of up to one year in jail) and probation and parole violations.

Lexington’s public defender office will be the hardest hit. The DPA requested $2.8 million in funding for it but received $1.5 million.

Caseloads in Lexington will surge from 442 per lawyer, which were already the highest in the DPA, to more than 600 per lawyer.

The DPA employs 350 lawyers and handled 148,518 cases last year. The Lexington office handled 10,500 cases.

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Nine die during Memorial Day weekend

Nine people died in nine separate crashes on Kentucky roadways during Memorial Day weekend, from 6 p.m. Friday to 11:59 p.m. Monday, Kentucky State Police said.

According to preliminary statistics, three people died in car wrecks in Barren, Boone and Fayette counties. Four people died in all-terrain vehicle wrecks in Floyd, Harlan, Pike and Rockcastle counties. One person who died was on a motorcycle in McCracken County. And a pedestrian died in Fayette County.

Two of the three people in car wrecks were not wearing seat belts, and alcohol was suspected in one of the three crashes. Three of the four victims of ATV wrecks were not wearing helmets. State police did not release any other information about the motorcycle wreck in McCracken County.

There were eight fatalities in eight crashes on Kentucky roads during the Memorial Day weekend last year.

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