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Written by Staff Reports
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Tuesday, 01 April 2008 |
 The Bradley County Sheriff’s Office is adding to the reward being offered by the public and private sectors seeking information about racist graffiti that was spray-painted on the Cleveland home of two elderly women.
Sheriff Tim Gobble said his department would match the original amount of $500 which the city of Cleveland offered to start the reward fund. Since it began last week individuals contributing various amounts have increased the reward to $2,200, but that does not include Monday’s BCSO contribution.
City officials and civic leaders have joined to condemn the act and the FBI is investigating the incident as a hate crime.
Sheriff Gobble has pledged the resources of his department to work with local, state and federal agencies in bringing those responsible to justice. |
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Written by Bob Gault, Public Information Office
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Friday, 28 March 2008 |
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A transport officer for the Bradley County Sheriff’s Office Corrections Division took a Hispanic male into custody after he fled from the scene of a crash in the city of Chattanooga. Sgt. Mitchell Roe was making a transport to Chattanooga when he witnessed the crash at Highway 27 and Manufacturers Road on Wednesday. Sgt. Roe saw the driver get out of one vehicle and attempt to flee on foot. Roe radioed the Bradley County 9-1-1 Communications Center and advised them of his situation and then chased after the Hispanic male. A short distance away he took the man into custody after a motorist blocked his path, allowing Sgt. Roe to detain him until Chattanooga police arrived to conduct an investigation of the accident. Chief Deputy Bill Dyer commended Sgt. Roe’s quick thinking that resulted in the arrest of the suspect. |
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Written by Tim Gobble, Sheriff
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Thursday, 27 March 2008 |
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I would like to offer my congratulations to the 10th Judicial Drug Task Force, which is celebrating its 20th anniversary this month. The 10th District, which covers Bradley, Polk, McMinn and Monroe counties, operates under the guidance of a board of directors and District Attorney General R. Steven Bebb, and I am proud to serve on the DTF board along with other area sheriffs and chiefs of police.
Our own BCSO drug unit has worked closely with the DTF and other area drug units over the years to effectively stem the flow of illegal narcotics into and through Bradley County, as well as the entire 10th District. As a voting board member of the DTF, I recently joined with other board members in a decision to share some of the DTF drug proceeds among the nine district law enforcement member agencies that help support the DTF through annual fees and services. The BCSO is pleased to have received a one-time $50,000 grant from those DTF proceeds and we will put the money to good use in our own drug program. A ceremony was held at the Hampton Inn in Athens on Thursday (March 27, 2008) to dispense a total of $450,000 among the nine member agencies. The DTF is the second largest multi-jurisdictional drug unit in Tennessee with 16 full-time agents. Typically, units like the DTF only have a life span of three to five years. For this unit to have operated, and operated so successfully, for 20 years is commendable. The BCSO drug unit has enjoyed a close working relationship with many area drug units and we look forward to maintaining these relationships for many years to come. It is through these cooperative efforts that law enforcement is most effective and I will continue to advocate for this type of cooperation as long as I am sheriff. Also, this week, I would like to extend my congratulations to BCSO Deputy Doug Towne, who traveled to Washington D.C. recently as part of a select team which participated in a focus group discussing the successful Safe Schools/Healthy Students Initiative (SS/HS) program in Bradley County. |
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Written by Tim Gobble, Sheriff
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Monday, 24 March 2008 |
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I have always encouraged cooperative efforts between various law enforcement agencies in our area. We are all on the same team, so to speak, and it takes everyone working together to keep our community and neighboring communities safe. That’s why I am pleased that the Bradley County Sheriff’s Office will be joining forces with the Cleveland Police Department in the Homeland Security District 3 Explosive Ordinance Device Team.
Homeland Security’s District 3 is a 10-county region that will be served by two “bomb squads.” One team will consist of members from the Chattanooga Police Department and the second team will be made of Cleveland police officers and BCSO deputies. The BCSO and the CPD have a rich history of cooperative efforts and we are looking forward to this latest endeavor.
The two BCSO deputies selected to join this team are Kevin Whitaker and Daniel Marlow. Both these men gained valuable experience with explosive material and ordinance, as well as improvised explosive devices (IEDs), while serving in the U.S. military, domestically and abroad.
Deputy Whitaker is a former Marine who served in Kosovo. He has received extensive training through the U.S. Marine Corps, the U.S. Army and the Dutch Army in such areas as identification and deactivation of explosive devices in urban environments, and is familiar with the handling of a wide variety of explosive devices. He has been a tremendous asset to the BCSO and will certainly add greatly to the District 3 team.
Deputy Marlowe is also a military veteran who served with the U.S. Army in Mosul Iraq. While there, he was assigned to a base defense team as a first responder to unexploded and exploded ordinance. He has proven, hands-on training and experience as a first responder to IEDs and unexploded ordinance fired at their base under extremely hostile conditions.
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Written by Bob Gault, Public Information Office
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Tuesday, 25 March 2008 |
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A fire that heavily damaged three pieces of earthmoving equipment on Monday was arson. The Bradley County Sheriff’s Office and the county’s volunteer fire department are working together to identify those responsible for the fires. Just after 8:30 a.m. thick clouds of black smoke prompted several calls to the 9-1-1 center. Deputies answering the call went to a large parcel of land on Hughes Lake Road that borders the Tennessee – Georgia state line. Two bulldozers and an excavator that was sitting about 150 yards away received extensive damage, with estimates running as high as $300,000. The evidence collection unit of the sheriff’s office was brought into the investigation to document evidence that was taken from the scene of the fires. Anyone who has information about the fire should get in contact with the Criminal Investigations Division of the Bradley County Sheriff’s Office by calling 728-7336. |
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