Discussion:
An Escaped Black Inmate Had One Target As He Raced Across Prison Grounds
(too old to reply)
CBS Is Offensively Black
2024-10-22 04:47:45 UTC
Permalink
Curtis Ray Watson was considered a violent offender when he was sentenced to 15 years in prison for aggravated kidnapping in 2012. Still, the facts surrounding his case didn’t stop him from being declared a trustee while incarcerated at the West Tennessee State Penitentiary about an hour north of Memphis.

Trustees are inmates who can gain special privileges for good behavior behind bars. For Watson, that meant he had the privilege of being on a mowing crew that gave him access to large mowers and a golf cart to help him travel around the prison grounds.

According to reporting in The Tennessean, Watson was released from his cell around 7 a.m. on Aug. 7, 2019, to begin his mowing duties. Around 8:30 that morning, a corrections officer saw Watson on the golf cart near the home of Debra Johnson, a prison administrator who lived in one of the residences on the prison property.

It soon became evident that something was very, very wrong.

When Johnson didn’t come to work, a colleague went to check on her and found her lying dead on the floor of her home around 11:30 a.m. It appeared she’d been strangled and sexually assaulted. Officers also realized Watson was also missing from the prison grounds.

The tractor that Watson used to mow was found on the side of the road approximately two miles from the prison. His prison identification was found nearby.

The Manhunt
The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation worked quickly to alert the public to the escaped inmate. Reports of sightings poured in from across the state and country, but Watson didn’t make it far at all before he was captured.

According to the Memphis Commercial Appeal, residents in Henning, Tennessee, spotted Watson on surveillance footage as he took some drinks from their outdoor refrigerator just a few days after the murder. Authorities discovered him in a soybean field on August 11 and took the man into custody without incident.

In 2021, Watson pleaded guilty to Debra’s rape and murder and was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Remembering Debra
Debra Johnson was a 38-year veteran of the Tennessee Department of Correction, and she’d worked her way from correction officer before becoming a warden and then an administrator. In addition to her work with DOC, she was a mother and grandmother.

“Ms. Johnson was an experienced and knowledgeable corrections professional who was

positive and supportive with everyone she encountered. Her fellow employees looked to her as a mentor and role model and nominated her numerous times for recognition of her outstanding contributions to the department. She was a co-worker, mother, sister, and friend and will be missed more than we can express,” said a memorial on the Tennessee DOC website.

A year after her death, the Tennessee Prison for Women was renamed the Debra K. Johnson Rehabilitation Center for Women.

Watson is currently housed at the Morgan County Correctional Complex in Wartburg, Tennessee.

https://www.investigationdiscovery.com/crimefeed/id-shows/see-no-evil/an-escaped-inmate-had-one-target-as-he-raced-across-prison-grounds
SOROS Money Enables Rapists
2024-10-24 07:54:49 UTC
Permalink
A man who has been umpiring at girls softball games in Robertson County has been charged with violating the sex offender registry.

Loading Image...
Herman Brown Robertson County Sheriff’s Office

The Robertson County Sheriff’s Office arrested Herman Lee Brown after receiving a tip from the public that Brown, a registered sex offender, had been officiating at games in Robertson and surrounding counties, according to a news release.

As a registered sex offender, Brown is prohibited from entering school property or obtaining employment within 1,000 feet of a school.

Brown is listed as a violent offender following a 2000 rape while on active military duty overseas, according to the Tennessee sex offender registry website.

The investigation revealed Brown, 52, of Woodlawn in rural Montgomery County, had been umpiring the games at schools in Robertson County as an official with the Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association (TSSAA).

Detectives were able to confirm one such incident by verifying payroll records.

Broken discipline tracking systems let teachers flee troubled pasts

TSSAA Executive Director Bernard Childress confirmed Wednesday that Brown was a registered TSSAA official.

"We looked back, and he had registered in the sports of football, basketball and softball, and he registered in June of 2015 for the 2015-16 school year," Childress told The Tennessean.

Brown started work just months before TSSAA began requiring background checks for officials. That began on Nov. 12, 2015.

"He provided false information when registering as an official by not indicating that he had been convicted of a felony," Childress said. "Had he provided truthful information, he would not have been able to register."

When TSSAA found out about the situation on April 14, Brown was suspended immediately.

The association did not retroactively background check officials who had already been registered for the 2015-16 school year but will be doing that on a yearly basis for all officials going forward.

“We implemented (background checks) on Nov. 12, and the board (of control) did not make it retroactive," Childress said. “The reasoning was that we’re going to do them every single year from this point forward, which most people do not do.

“You’ve got to keep in mind, when you look at two- and three-sport (officials), we’re registering between 4,000 and 4,500 officials every year, and the process for next year has already started. It just wasn’t feasible to do that. “

TSSAA: Officials must have yearly background checks

The criminal investigation is ongoing, and additional charges are pending as other violations are verified. Investigators are in communication with surrounding jurisdictions about allegations of Brown officiating school games in areas outside of Robertson County, the release said.

“We are grateful for the tip from a concerned citizen that led to this arrest,” Sheriff Bill Holt said in the release. “It is important that we all work together to ensure the safety of our schools and our children.”

Brown was picked up at his home on Sawmill Road in Woodlawn by the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office on April 19 and turned over to be booked into the Robertson County Detention Facility.

Michael Murphy contributed to this report.

https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/local/robertson/2016/04/20/youth-umpire-charged-violating-sex-offender-registry/83296914/
SOROS Abuses Women
2024-10-27 10:40:48 UTC
Permalink
By Wayne Thomas, Staff Writer A Tullahoma man has been arrested on rape charges. Cornelius Lorenzo McEwen, 20, of West Warren Street, was arrested Dec. 2 by campus police at MTSU while he attended a basketball game at the school. McEwen is a former basketball player at Motlow College. He was arrested on a warrant

Loading Image...
Cornelius Lorenzo McEwen

By Wayne Thomas, Staff Writer A Tullahoma man has been arrested on rape charges. Cornelius Lorenzo McEwen, 20, of West Warren Street, was arrested Dec. 2 by campus police at MTSU while he attended a basketball game at the school.

McEwen is a former basketball player at Motlow College. He was arrested on a warrant obtained by Tullahoma Police Detective Rana Pawlowski that alleges that on Oct. 2 McEwen raped an 18-year-old female at a residence on Wilson Avenue. The warrant alleges that McEwen asked the victim for a “ride and to hang out with her and her roommate.” While at the Wilson Avenue residence McEwen allegedly made advances toward the victim. The warrant alleges that the victim got up and left the room and went to sleep on the couch. That is where he allegedly raped her. McEwen was booked into the Coffee County Jail under a bond of $25,000 and is to appear in Coffee County General Sessions Court Dec. 21. It is the policy of the Times to not release the names of alleged rape victims.

https://www.manchestertimes.com/news/local/tullahoma-man-20-faces-rape-charges/article_a8098b8a-0dcd-5c78-865f-43508539e9b2.html
Loading...