Tag Archives: Mount Pleasant

Hero medals honor 22 who risked lives for others

A Pennsylvania woman who lost her life while coming to the aid of a victim of domestic violence is one of 22 people honored with Carnegie medals for heroism.

The awards announced on Thursday honored Stacey Lynn Feiling of Mount Pleasant, who died in June, 2010, after stopping to rescue Janet Piper, who was fleeing her husband. But Piper’s husband confronted Feiling and mortally wounded her, while Piper fled to safety.

Other medal winners honored were from Michigan, Canada, Vermont, Tennessee, Oregon, Kansas, West Virginia, New Jersey, Florida, Nebraska, and Georgia. Among them were three New Jersey men who rescued two people from a burning van that had crashed.

Carnegie medalists or their heirs receive financial grants approved by the commission.

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Online: http://carnegiehero.org/

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/national/~3/GmCX_p6y_tc/

Slain player's kin: NY police account misleading

The family of a New York college student killed by a policeman says the first official account of the shooting was purposely misleading.

Their lawyer says a press release issued the day after the 2010 shooting of Danroy Henry Jr. was tailored to protect police officers and served as a faulty “script” for the investigation.

The release was issued by the Mount Pleasant police chief. The Associated Press left messages for him and his attorney.

Henry was a 20-year-old Pace University student from Easton, Mass. He was driving away from a disturbance outside a suburban Thornwood, N.Y., bar in October 2010.

The officer who shot him said Henry was driving toward him and wouldn’t stop.

That officer was cleared by a grand jury but is among several officers and jurisdictions being sued.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Suspect dead, Mich. student safe after abduction

A parolee abducted and raped a Central Michigan University student, set a house on fire where the woman had fled for help and was fatally shot miles away by a sheriff’s deputy, authorities said Thursday.

Isabella County Sheriff Leo Mioduszewski said the man was identified as Eric Ramsey, 30, of Mount Pleasant.

“We don’t know what possessed him to do that. We may never find out,” Mioduszewski said.

The woman was abducted Wednesday from the campus in Mount Pleasant, about 120 miles northwest of Detroit. The sheriff said Ramsey drove the woman in her own vehicle to a home off campus and bound and raped her there.

He said Ramsey then put her back in the Ford Escape and pledged to kill her, but she escaped the moving vehicle and ran to a home yelling for help.

While the woman was inside the home talking to an emergency dispatcher on the phone, Ramsey “ended up pouring gasoline on the house and then lit on fire,” Mioduszewski said in a statement.

A 14-year-old boy, his 11-year-old sister and 2-year-old brother were alone inside the home in nearby Lincoln Township when the woman banged on the door for help. The teenager, James Persyn III, told Mlive.com that he let the woman in, locked the door and grabbed his hunting knife.

He said he while the woman was using his phone to call 911, he moved her, his siblings and the family dog into the bathroom.

Meanwhile, the sheriff said, “one of the homeowners arrived home … and was able to put the fire out,” using an extinguisher.

Ramsey was spotted early Thursday in Otsego County, where he rammed the first of two state police cars. The sheriff said he subsequently stole a garbage truck and was fatally shot by a deputy in Crawford County, about 70 miles north of the university.

Campus police Chief Bill Yeagley said Ramsey told the woman that he chose her at random outside the Student Activity Center on campus. The chief said the woman saved her own life by fleeing from the car.

“I believe she made all the right choices,” Yeagley said. “She’s the true hero in this.”

Central Michigan University President George Ross said the school would support the Grand Rapids-area woman and her family.

Ramsey had been on parole since last summer after serving the minimum five-year prison sentence for assault with intent to do great bodily harm, according to Corrections Department online records. The maximum sentence was 15 years. Inmates are eligible for a parole review once they serve the minimum punishment.

“The parole board generally doesn’t give a rationale for why or why they don’t parole (an inmate),” said Russ Marlan, a Corrections Department spokesman. “I looked at his behavior in prison. He was pretty good. He had six misconducts over five years. That’s a small amount. He was in minimum security the entire time.”

Ramsey had a job, regularly met with his parole officer and had tested negative for drugs, Marlan said.

His record also included convictions for destruction of police or fire property, resisting police and assault with a dangerous weapon.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Small Utah town makes gun in every home a top priority

Officials in a small Utah town want to make sure every head of household has a firearm and knows how to use it, and they want to give school teachers training with guns too.

Spring City Councilman Neil Sorensen first proposed an ordinance requiring a gun in every household in the town of 1,000. The rest of the council scoffed at making it a requirement, but they unanimously agreed to move forward with an ordinance “recommending” the idea.

The council also approved funding to offer concealed firearms training Friday to the 20 teachers and administrators at the local elementary school.

“It sends a statement that criminals better think twice,” Sorensen told The Associated Press on Tuesday. “If a teacher would have had a concealed weapon in Sandy Hook, I think the death loss would have been fewer. If sane, trained people had guns, they could have shot back.”

The measure, which will go before the full council in February for further review, seems to have the support of the council’s five members and many residents in the farming community about 90 miles south of Salt Lake City.

But school administrators don’t think arming teachers is wise, and they are not encouraging teachers to participate in Friday’s training.

“The more guns you have in the school, the more dangerous it is,” said Leslie Keisel, superintendent of the North Sanpete School District.

Councilman Noel Bertelson said making guns in every house mandatory was too much, but he agrees the town would be safer if everyone was armed. With only a part-time police force, he said, response time is not like it is in a big city.

“If a person is able to take care of themselves for a while, it would probably be a good thing,” Bertelson said.

The community is still reeling from the double-murder on New Year’s Eve 2011 of an elderly couple in nearby Mount Pleasant. Sorensen said what used to be a peaceful, quiet town has been sullied by increasing criminal activity.

Thefts of metal for scrap and other property also have become a problem, Councilman Boyd Mickel said.

“We are kind of tired of people breaking in and taking stuff,” said Mickel, explaining why he voted to urge every house to have a gun.

Timm Thompson, a coal miner and father of four girls who lives in Spring City, backs the council’s measure.

“People think small towns are a good place to live,” Thompson said. “But there is more crime and drugs than you can imagine.”

Thompson, who owns 78 guns he keeps locked in a safe, doesn’t want teachers to act as police officers. He said some kids are “hooligans” and could overpower teachers for the guns.

Sisters Katy Harmer and Caroline Lott, however, say arming teachers would make them feel better about sending their children to the Spring City Elementary School. The co-owners of the town’s coffee shop, Das Coffee, said most Spring City residents keep guns for hunting, leaving only a handful without weapons.

Angela Johnson, owner of the Sinclair gas station, said she doesn’t like guns but backs the council’s proposal.

“If criminals knew they would be fired against, I think it would cause pause,” Johnson said.

Because the Spring City Council is stopping short of a law requiring gun ownership, elected officials won’t run afoul of state law, former Utah Attorney General Mark Shurtleff told KSL.com.

Shurtleff said that when the Washington County town of Virgin enacted a local law in 2000 requiring households to keep guns, he warned them against trying to enforce the measure.

Spring City leaders say they got the idea from a city in Georgia that passed a similar law. In 1982, Kennesaw, Ga., made headlines by requiring heads of households to own a gun and ammunition. On its website, Kennesaw boasts that its burglary rate declined after the law took effect.

Teachers at Spring City Elementary School won’t be required to attend Friday’s concealed weapons training, but can if they wish, Principal Mark Thomas said.

“I don’t think there is anything wrong about being educated how to use a gun,” Thomas said.

But Thomas doesn’t believe having more armed teachers would necessarily prevent or mitigate the damage in mass shootings. Utah law allows teachers to have concealed weapon in classrooms, but the district doesn’t advocate for that, Thomas said.

“By bringing weapons into school, are we creating more problems than we are solving?” he asked. “It could create a new problem. We don’t want to deal with that problem.”

The proposed ordinance will be discussed at the Feb. 7 City Council meeting. A public hearing will be held three weeks later.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

College student accused of trying to poison roommate

A Central Michigan University student has appeared in court on accusations she tried to poison a roommate at their apartment by putting bleach in a glass of iced tea.

Mlive.com says 19-year-old Kayla Ashlyn Bonkowski was arraigned Wednesday in an Isabella County court on a felony poisoning charge in the November incident. Her preliminary examination is scheduled Dec. 13.

Reached by email, Bonkowski told The Associated Press on Wednesday morning she needed to consult with a lawyer before commenting.

Authorities say they believe Bonkowski put bleach in the drink at the apartment in Union Township, located near the Mount Pleasant school about 120 miles northwest of Detroit. Police say the roommate was taken to an area hospital for treatment.
Source: Fox US News