Showing posts with label true crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label true crime. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Unprecedented Melee Mars Christmas at Jonquil Hall

Smashed ornaments, cups of eggnog, and Christmas clothing litter the scene of the melee.

GREENVILLE—In a bizarre twist of events, two on-duty Greeneville police officers and two off-duty reserve officers were required to quell what has been described as an eggnog-soaked brawl at the 59th Annual Jonquil Hall Christmas Open House last Saturday. The event, co-sponsored by the Butler County Historical Society, Greenville Garden & Bridge Club, and the Fort Dale DAR Chapter, was intended to showcase holiday decorations at the antebellum home. Police Chief Lanny Williams reports, “At 4:18 p.m., an anonymous call was placed to the authorities reporting a disturbance at Jonquil Hall. An officer arrived to find several incidents in progress. He called for backup. When that was deemed insufficient, calls were placed to two reserve duty officers.” The police report all four officers were still unsuccessful in subduing the crowd, and were forced to resort to blaring music broadcast by Montgomery urban radio station WZHT Hot 105.7 from a police car loud speaker to clear the house.

Witnesses at the scene speculate about the origins of the chaos. Says Greenville Garden & Bridge Club President Eleanor “Tiddy” Tidwell Boyce, “I believe that the unpleasantness started when a few guests overindulged in Viola Nell Davis’s homemade eggnog and Delia Gray Graves’ bourbon balls. I don’t believe such indecent behavior has happened at Jonquil Hall since the Union occupation.” Apparently, Davis, 87, poured a liter of bourbon into the eggnog at home, and forgetting the volatile ingredient had been added, had one of the kitchen assistants add a second bottle shortly after arriving at the gathering. This miscalculation, coupled with a particularly potent batch of bourbon balls, has been cited as the cause of the subsequent breakdown of decorum on multiple fronts.

Chief Williams reports, “We know of four separate incidents . There may have been more, but we’re not sure, since so many of the ladies scattered to the safety of their Buicks and Cadillacs when they were startled by Lil Wayne’s hit single ‘Mrs. Officer’.” With much of the crowd dispersed, officers were able to address three altercations still occurring inside, along with a fourth incident. Although the police were unclear about what may have spawned the incidents, confidential sources at the scene when the violence erupted provided exclusive details to The Vidalia staff.

Sources confirm the first conflict to erupt at the scene was between fellow Bridge & Garden Club and DAR members Effie Mae Davis Holloway and Millicent Neal Wynn, both 76. A witness reports that the two latched onto each other’s hair after both reached for the last cheese straw. The struggle was over much more than the homemade cracker, no matter how delicious. “It was about so much more. Effie Mae never forgave Millie after she bought the same silk throw pillows at the Montgomery Gayfer’s in 1974, especially since Ellie Mae refuse to tell Millie where she bought them in the first place,” reported a fellow Garden & Bridge Club member.

A subsequent fight erupted when Butler County Historical Society Secretary and Event Co-chair Claire Wynn Gray, 47, attacked Missy Daniels Gray, 26, a former paralegal in the offices of Charles Stewart Gray. A Butler County Historical Society Tour Guide commented, “Well, Missy and Charles got married last year, and it was only one month after he finalized his divorce from Claire. Honestly, I guess it’s an open house, but I can’t believe Missy showed up. And then Blayne and Newell had to start again.”

Well known local choir directors, Anglophiles, and theater volunteers Blayne Morissey and Newell Dale were again involved in a tussle, this time over the manger scene centerpiece Morissey created for the event. “Blayne handmade the scene out of kudzu vines, pinestraw, and azalea branches, and he even hand-carved all of the figures out of Cashmere Bouquet soap. He was just telling some of the ladies that he modeled the Baby Jesus after Prince Harry when Newell came up and snorted that everyone knows Prince William is much more Christ-like. this began round two of the unseemly row that began in September at Greensboro’s Las Pampas (see September 14 “Unexpected Altercation”). It was terrible, I had heard those two had been at it before, but I just didn’t believe it. They seem like such nice boys.” reported a DAR Chapter member.

In the final, disturbing twist of event, the police took Mavis Holloway Neal, 64, into custody for indecent exposure after she was found by officers dancing in only a holiday dickie in the kitchen. The object of her affection was believed to be, Lance Morris, 52, who escorted his mother to the event, and was in the kitchen entertaining a group of Garden & Bridge Club Members with delightful stories of his summer in the Greek Isles. “Oh, it was terrible,” whispered one of the event hosts, “Mavis dropped her punch cup and started dancing in front of Lance. She even took off her sequined holly cardigan. He looked so frightened! And Mavis didn’t even know to stop when the police arrived.”

All charges against event attendees have since been dropped, and local residents are hoping the event will soon be forgotten. Plans for next year’s 60th Anniversary are uncertain, since many of the interviewed parties have conceded it may be advisable the traditional gathering is shelved for the next several years. An effort is afoot to move the event to the Greenville Baptist Church Tidmore Fellowship Hall.


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Thursday, September 25, 2008

University Student Gains Victory, Dismissal in Forkland Traffic Court

Breedlow's Matchbox car sits in front of his recreated backdrop of the
Corcharane place.

On Thursday, a defeat was handed down to the Forkland Department of Public Safety and Transportation when Judge Clyde Hamilton dismissed charges against Dwight Breedlow. "This is a blow to the authority of the FDPST, people like Breedlow should not be allowed to run rampant in our streets and use those kind of gimmicks to escape justice" said James Penson, Director and Chief Executive of the department. The case before Judge Hamilton was a traffic violation that occurred while Breedlow, a library studies graduate student at the University of Alabama, was on an impromptu tour of south Greene County. The incident in question occurred at the town's stop sign, which is located where County Road 69 dead-ends into Martin Luther King, Jr. Drive (Old Highway 43). Penson contends that rather than making a legal stop, Breedlow "…made a Hollywood stop, then preceded onto Old 43 and made as wide a U turn as I've ever seen, almost striking the mailbox of the old Corcharane place, and you know that would have been a Federal offense, hitting a mailbox like that. For the sake of the public, I immediately pulled the driver over and issued him a citation."


Breedlow had nine weeks to prepare for his successful defense. In that time he constructed a scale model of a large portion of Forkland, reproducing each structure within 400 yards of the sign, with accurate renditions of minute architectural details. Each structure was augmented by notes on habitancy and state of disrepair. In the course of the trial, Judge Hamilton had Breedlow trace the path of his vehicle that July afternoon with Matchbox cars, much to the amusement of those in attendance. Before Penson had the opportunity to cross examine Breedlow on his version of the incident, Judge Hamilton dismissed the case, adding "Breedlow, don't you ever come back to Forkland!" before he abruptly retired to his chambers.

In a post-trial interview, Hamilton remarked that "in all my years on the bench I have never seen such verisimilitude in a model. The young man must have absolutely nothing going on in his life, and all that over sixty dollars." When asked why he dismissed the case, the judge responded "This whole thing was just Bucky (Penson) trying to replace that worn out uniform." Breedlow plans to now move on from the trial, stating "I have much to rebuild, this Dostoevskian ordeal has threatened everything I have, even my eighth year of funding through the Shiarpe Junior Fellowship is in peril." When asked about the Judge's warning, Breedlow quipped "I am a free citizen. Like Rousseau's natural man, I will travel whichever roads I choose." When asked to comment on the trial, Penson, who later that afternoon was found changing the oil of the Forkland cruiser, simply stated "This is a tough day for the citizens of Forkland. The FDPST plays a vital role in their defense and protection, and it must be supported by all branches of government."—Washington Greene Marion

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