NEWPORT-Three more people named on a 55-count presentment
returned earlier this month by the Cocke County Grand Jury in connection with
an alleged marijuana conspiracy have been arrested, bringing the total number
of arrests in the case to 16.
The presentment returned by the grand jury on January 14
alleges that 18 defendants participated in a conspiracy to buy and distribute
more than 300 pounds of marijuana from January 2004 to November 21, 2008.
Thirteen defendants were arrested immediately after the
grand jury's action, three have been arrested this week, and warrants for the
final two suspects are still outstanding. The defendants were arraigned before
Circuit Judge Ben W. Hooper II on Monday and Tuesday and have bonds as high as
$500,000.
Some of the suspects have been able to post bond, but
others remain in the Cocke County Jail. Motions to reduce the defendants' bonds
in the case are pending before Judge Hooper.
The most recently arrested suspects are Gather Richard
Lyles, 59, of Altoona, Alabama, who posted a $500,000 bond in the case; Richard
Lee Church Jr.; and Tonya Perry.
Lyles is alleged to have sold about 105 pounds of
marijuana to co-defendants Charles Eddie Arms, 65, and Mary O. Arms, 61, both
of 385 Gardenia Road, in Alabama on September 6. The other defendants are
alleged to have arranged for the sale of large and small amounts of the drug,
of receiving shipments of marijuana, and of breaking down the large shipments
into smaller packages for sale.
District Attorney General Jimmy Dunn said agents of the
Tennessee Bureau of Investigation; the Fourth Judicial District Drug Task
Force; the Cocke, Grainger, and Jefferson county sheriff's departments; the U.S.
Drug Enforcement Administration; and the Tennessee Highway Patrol were involved
in the investigation.
Defense attorneys say they have been told that there was
"electronic surveillance" involved in the probe, including a wiretap
on a cell phone authorized by Circuit Judge Rex Henry Ogle.
As the court case against the suspects develops, defense
attorneys are expected to file various motions to suppress evidence in the case
and to dismiss some of the charges. The next court date for the defendants
named in the 55-count presentments is set for February 17.
Other defendants who were arraigned by Judge Hooper this
week are Lisa Darlene Large, 45, of 322 Lonesome Pine Road, Bybee; April Laws,
41, of Old Highway 25E, Thorn Hill; Michael Dewayne "Bear" Wise, 48,
of 127 Goins Cemetery Lane, Tazewell; Annie B. Dreadin, 67, of 152 Wilmoth
Lane, Washburn; Susan Denise Scearce, 38, of 138 Wilmoth Lane, Washburn; Donna
Roberts, 53, of 9109 Highway 25E, Thorn Hill; Timothy Wayne Evans, 49, of 170
Highway 160, Newport; Sandra D. Evans, 42, of 170 Highway 160, Newport; David
Douglas, 47, of 5850 Hiawatha Road, Morristown; Scottie Bailey, 39, of 152
Wilmoth Lane, Washburn; and Misty L. Harris, 27, of 3419 Dedra Street,
Morristown.
Judge Hooper also accepted three plea agreements on
Tuesday from defendants in unrelated cases.
Twenty-eight-year-old Robert Creighton Jr. pled guilty to
attempted theft and vandalism of property valued at more than $10,000.
Assistant District Attorney General Brownlow Marsh told
the court that Creighton was one of two people seen by Newport police running
across Cosby Highway from the Sparkle Wash on June 6 of last year. The
defendants are alleged to have heavily damaged the cash machine at the business
in an attempt to remove the money.
In the negotiated plea agreement, Creighton was sentenced
to a three-year jail term, suspended to 30 days time served with the balance on
supervised probation. He was also ordered to pay $1,000, along with the
co-defendant, in restitution to the victims of the crime.
Also on Tuesday, 30-year-old William Daniels was ordered
to serve 120 days of an 11-month, 29-day jail term after pleading guilty to
third-offense driving under the influence (DUI) and speeding.
Marsh told Judge Hooper that Daniels was stopped by
Newport police on June 21, 2008, driving 62 miles per hour in a 45 mph zone.
Under the terms of the plea-bargain, Daniels will lose
driving privileges for three years, pay fines totaling $1,110, and must attend
the state-sponsored education program for drunk driving offenders.
Kelsey Ray McMahan also pled guilty on Tuesday to
possession of drug paraphernalia and simple possession of cocaine.
Assistant District Attorney General Amanda Lowe told the
court that McMahan was stopped by Cocke County sheriff's deputies in 2007 and
the officers found open needles and three "rocks" of crack cocaine
inside his vehicle.
McMahan was ordered to serve six days of an 11-month,
29-day jail term, with the balance on probation, and pay fines totaling $900
along with court costs, under the terms of the plea-bargain.