Friday, June 24, 2016

Former Isbell Crony/Reserve Deputy Caught on Dash-Cam



Seen while parked at the bottom entrance of a private drive, as if he was 'lying in wait'--on the afternoon of 6/24/2016--(TN tag E-54498)... A Sheriff's cap was also visible hanging on the headrest of the passenger seat. The former Isbell/Era MCSD reserve deputy in question, Don Charest, fled after he was spotted...

Although he was never a "career" police officer, he had previously served as a reserve officer with the Tellico Plains Police Dept., under the disgraced chief of police Bill Isbell-- Charest and Isbell were 'booted' from any association with the TPPD--Former Mayor Roger Powers felt a lack of trust amid those in charge, and was forced to 'clean house'--this later involved an investigation by the Tennessee Comptroller of the Treasury.

Charest was again able to 'don' (no pun intended), a reserve officer badge 4 years after the Isbell era ended; when he was able to 'worm his way' into the good graces of the newly appointed Sheriff, Tommy "Whitey" Jones.





Sunday, March 13, 2016

Fallen MCSD K-9 Vigor: was he needlessly put in harm's way?

Failure to call off the night-time search comprised the safety of all involved


The recent tragic death of police canine “Vigor” while on duty, chasing a local wanted fugitive raises serious leadership concerns. 

Vigor, along with his partner/handler Sgt. (BJ) Bill Johnson, had dealt with hundreds if not thousands of incidents, in Monroe County and in Iraq, that put them both in extreme life-threatening situations. It's ironic that Vigor died chasing a low-level thug/repeat offender, who could have been captured using the same (deception tactics/diversion), used to capture John Irons. 

BJ and Vigor performed traffic stops as part of their day-to-day operations—traffic stops rank among one of the most dangerous duties in a police officer's job description...
In the (I-75) corridor (used by drug-traffickers, human traffickers, and possible international terrorists), the MCSD drug-interdiction task force faces a much more 'elite and dangerous' type of criminal than the unsophisticated/local hoodlum (Doug Ellis) being chased during the (night-time in the woods) man-hunt, which led to Vigor's death by drowning in the Tellico River.





Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Guns & Badges Scandal: How Bivens' Supporters Seized Upon A 'Guilt by Association'

'In-cahoots' with a former Isbell 'crony' may be the worst decision Sheriff Tommy "Whitey" Jones ever made--"We are judged by the company we keep"


POST A SIGN-GET A BADGE
It's as if the lines had become blurred--was the SDS gun store part of the the Monroe County Sheriff's Dept, did SDS take advantage of Sheriff Tommy Jones' lack of experience? One senior law enforcement official said that "Yes, they did take advantage of his inexperience." 

Tommy Jones deals with the first major scandal since he was appointed as Sheriff--a call to TV 6 and 8 in Knoxville exposed what some saw coming over a year ago. Self Defense Solutions appeared to make appointed Sheriff Tommy Jones their own "special darling"... 
Selling a large number of firearms from the evidence room to a business owned by a former Isbell crony raised questions of illegal or unethical transactions...exactly how close were the sheriff's ties to the gun store?...Sheriff Jones was quoted as saying  "We're not in the storage business."  That is one of the most 'absurd' public comments you will ever hear from the head of a law enforcement agency. See http://www.iape.org/  which offers classes, manuals, and guides or PTAC...



DON G. CHAREST
...When interim Sheriff Tommy Jones was appointed as  Sheriff by the board of commissioners on 12/9/2014--the Madisonville, TN gun store owners of Self-Defense Solutions immediately went on a "charm offensive" showering him with congratulatory 'high fives', and posting a "Congrats Tommy" sign on Hwy 411--Tommy soon developed a close relationship with Don Charest, part-owner of the store, who was again handed a reserve-officer badge, just like in the Tellico Plains-Bill Isbell days.

An appearance of impropriety: former police chief Bill Isbell and the former head of the civilian Tellico Plains police force, (Don Charest), had been terminated at the same time by Mayor Roger Powers--former Mayor Powers was faced with a 'failure of trust issue' with Isbell and Charest, which later involved an investigation by the Tennessee Comptroller of the Treasury, over missing money from police fundraisers, guns, and drugs.


News 8 reporters asked co-owner of Self Defense Solutions store Ray Kough, if this was the first time they bought guns from the Sheriff: watch video and see if you think he answered truthfully.



A former Sheriff in Westmoreland County was charged with giving pay to play police badges to political cronies in ex-change for political contributions--one of the people who received a reserve officer badge, showed it to a state trooper after being pulled over for speeding--the state trooper added a charge of impersonating a deputy sheriff.

Sunday, October 11, 2015

Forensic Linguistics plays important role in solving TN 'FaceBook Murders'

Judge John Kerry Blackwood, who has tried high profile cases throughout Tennessee, called this case the most bizarre thing that he has seen in his career as a judge. During the Christian-Newsom case, Judge Blackwood publicly scolded D A Randy Nichols, see DA Nichols gets an 'ass chewing' from Judge Blackwood.

What started as a feud in social media by local Mountain City TN residents, resulted in the brutal slaying of a married couple, and lengthy prison sentences for four others.
An elaborate scheme of deception was uncovered through careful examination of the family's computer, phone messages, and texts.

Authorities were able to show that a fake profile on social media, described as a 'Chris' was actually Jenelle Potter, the daughter of Barbara and Marvin Potter--who were both convicted in the murders along with Jenelle and her boyfriend Jamie Curd.

Catch the entire episode on ABC's 20/20, before your next hateful text message puts you in a spot that you will forever regret.

Forensic Linguistics, and careful analysis of 'ironic repetition' in emails and text messages played a major role in solving this case and many others--Journal of the Humanities--Legal questions involve language, for instance, who wrote a ransom note--What is the meaning of a phrase in a contract?...To understand Law, one must understand language.