JONES COUNTY NUMBER 22 ’ TRENTON, N. C.,-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1970 VOLUME XVm Search Warrants Vital in Free Society But Usage is Now Severely Restricted by Unreasonable Court Interpretation Three dope peddlers were R turned loose by Judge William K Copeland in Lenoir County Su perior Court Monday because it l was his opinion that the search warrants used by officers mak (ing the arrests were not pre cise enough to meet the test ap plied in rulings by the United States supreme court A fourth dope peddler was : freed on a similar charge, but before he was arrested under the , the search warrant he had sold some heroin to an under cover officer, for which he ,was given 3-tp-5 years in prison, making him eligible for parole at the end of just nine months. The three who were turned completely free were Bobby 1 Roach, who had about 15 pack ages of heroin hidden in the waistband of his trousers and i Oscar Cobb and Donald Flagg f who had marijuana and other I narcotic apparatus in their apart ment on Tower Hill Road. The Concerned Citizens Com mittee paid $1500 reward to in formers for the apprenhension of these three who were turned loose Monday, and the informer did an amazingly good job, as did the officers involved. In District Court Wednesday Marion Adams was bound over to superior court under $5,000 bond after probable cause of his guild was found on charge of having a considerable quantity of marijuana hidden in his car. Also on Monday Judge Cope land deferred until December 7th any action on collection of the $5000 bond signed by Wil lie Mills in April for another narcotics pusher, James A. Kornegay, whb skipped bond and has not been seen officially since. District Court Judge Lester Pate ordered Mills to forfeit the $5000 bond but he appealed to superior court and for the sec ond time the matter has now been pushed farther away. Meantime, Mills is still signing bonds in the courts of Lenoir County. Contentnea Hist-Grader Dies from Epidemic Type Spinal Meningitis year-old Emily Driggers in Lenoir Memorial Hos after a brief ill cause has been de an epidemic form of spinal meningitis. The little girl, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alphonso Driggers, of Grifton route 2, was brought to the hospital early this week and died shortly afterwards. Pediatrician James H. Peoples diagnosed the cause of death and said all children in the school with whom the dead child came in contact should be taken 'to their family physician for ex amination and prescription of protective medicines, which are available and most effective. Peoples said the particular type of infection that killed the child is tiie same kind that has caus ed many deaths and sicknesses on military bases in the past several years. ise is. generally be communicable only a a person-to-person basis and dults are not generally as e to infection as children. is the first death , to this disease in Le in many years. Officer John suing proper medication to all students in the same class with the little girl and all those with whom she rode the bus. This, of course, is being done with the consent of the parents of these children. Dr. Parrott also said he was recommending that any persons whose children were in these two contact categories should na turally be taken to their family doctor if there is concern by the parents. Parrott also said the “sulfax” drugs over a four-day period had proven excellent in control of this particular problem of communi<gttion. Parrott also added that with extremely rare exceptions the disease is only transmittable from an infected person to an other, and is not carried by third persons, who may have been exposed but not infected. He said his department had not found, and had no possible idea where the child may have suffered the infection that paus ed her death.. The disease, Parrott says, comes on generally with a sore throat and cold and is extreme ly difficult to diagnose, and he urged every parent who had'a child that may have come in the by Jack Ridar The Fourth Article of the Bill of Rights says: 'The right of the people to be secure in their persons, hous es, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seiz ures shall not be violated, and no warrants shall be issued, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and par ticularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized." This is a bedrock principle among free societies and it is reasonable and eternally prop er, but in recent years tedious interpretations of this great principle have all but destroyed the right of society to protect itself against the most vicious kind of criminals ever known. The courts have ruled, for in stance, that a search warrant must specify in great detail what of a contraband nature is to be sought. A warrant issued to permit search for illegal whis ky is invalid if illegal narcotics are found in the process of search for the whisky, and any illegal drugs found under such a circumstance cannot be used In evidence against the person upon whom the illegal drugs are found. The narcotics trade is evil and under the very most favorable conditions difficult to cope with. Any quantity of illegal whisky is relatively easy to find be cause of its bulk, but thousands of dollars worth of narcotics can be hidden in extremely small space. The courts have also ruled that information given to officers by informers must be given by ‘re liable’ informers; informers who have previously proven their re liability. For instance, under this torture of reason no search warrant drawn on the basis of a first-time squeal by an infom er is valid since obviously such a first-time squealer has not yet proven his reliability. This overlooks common sense and very largely the common character of informants. As one officer put it: “We get very lit tle information from Sunday School teachers and preachers.” People in a position to give in formation in such matters sel dom are Eagle Scouts. Seldom will an informer be able to know the correct full name of the person upon whom he is informing. The dope push er is hardly required to show his driving license and social se curity card to every person with whQm he has a criminal transac tion. There- are dozens of different illegal narcotics and the average informer has not completed Ms doctorate in pharmacology; yet the courts demand that the in former not only tell who has but what he has, and before doing tMs he must serve an unspeci fied period as an apprentice stool pigeon, before he gets his merit badge. .. as this is After Third Washing' Yates Still 1 i Sheriff; Democrats Tahe All Jobs Election Results Jones County Shoriff Brown Yates 1296 Osborne Coward 1028 Commissioner Janies Barbee 1705 Charlie Battle Jr. 1739 Horace Phillips 1791 Delinas Brown 1788 Osborne Mallard 1685 Denford Eubands 727 Ralph Howard 575 Charles Hughes v 483 Preston Reynolds 414 State Senate Lenoir County Carlie Larkins 5210 Reece Gardner 4464 Jones County Charlie Larkins 1306 Reece Gardner 781 Greene County Charlie Larkins 1170 Reece Gardner 805 Three-County Totals Charlie Larkins 7686 Reece Gardner 6050 House Seat No. 1 Lenoir County Harold Hardison 5497 Fitzhugh Wallace 4202 Jones County Harold Hardison 1574 Fitzhugh Wallace 543 Greene County Harold Hardison 1262 Fitzhhgh Wallace 625 Three-County Totals Harold Hardison 8333 Fitzhugh Wallace 5370 House Seat No. 2 Lenoir County Dan Lilley 5236 Red Tingen 3350 Jones County an Lilley 1426 Red Tingen 441 Greene County Dan Lilley 1151 Red Tingen 761 Three-County Totals Dan Lilley 7813 Red Tingen 4552 A year ago when efforts reached Jone9 County Superior Court to impeach Sheriff Brown Yates on the grouncs of his per sonal disqualifications Judge Walter Boone threw out the case and said that the place to wash this kind of linen was at the ballot box. Since tjien the issue has been very thoroughly washed — through three election waters and when the tally ended Tues day night the majority of Jones County voters stuck with the man who has been sheriff since 1954. Yates beat his third and last opponent of the year, Osborne Mallard, 1297-to-1028. Earlier he had survived first and sec ond primaries against Demo crats who were after his scalp. All the way through the Jties day voting Democratic nominees prevailed in Jones County, and all of them faring considerably better than Yates, around whom so much controversy has swirl ed in the past year and a half. The Democratic candidates for county commissioner: James Barbee, Charlie Battle Jr., Hor ace Phillips and Delmas Brown — all incumbents — and form er long time commissioner Os borne Mallard were decisively elected over the four Republi cans who sought to unseat them: Denford Eubanks — an incum bent as a Demcrat, who switch ed to the Republican Party in the spring and got beat in the fall, Ralph Howard, Charles Hughes and Preston Reynolds. McPEAK TO NEW RIVER Sergeant Major Roy W. Mc Peak, husband of Mr. Beatrice M. McPeak of Maysville, has re ported for duty at the arine Corps Air Station, at New River. REYNOLDS IN JAPAN Air Force Staff Sergeant Charles K. Reynolds, son of Mrs. Paul K. Reynolds, Rt. 1, Tren ton, is on duty at Tachkawa AB, Japan. Belgrade Citizens Protest Location Maysville Sewage Disposal System Editor’s Note: The following letter is evidence of the concern of citizens of Belgrade on a prob lem many communities presently confront. Board of Commissioners Court House Jacksonville, N. C. Dear Gentlemen: After appealing to the Mays ville Town Board and the State Air and Water Resources in Ral eigh, the Jones and Onslow Health Department and the State Wildlife Commission, we, the Belgrade Development Corp. have been unable to persuade the Maysville Town Board to re locate a city sewer plant. The proposed plant is scheduled to let the bids on November 9, 1970, therefore drastic and im mediate action seems necessary. are automatically created: First is a turn to vigilante law, under which all too frequently more innocent people suffer than gUflty. , j. :■ Second and in the long run more dangerous is that frustrat ed police officers will do one of (continued on page 8) Will you help us prevent our White Oak River from this de structive pollution? The site of the drainage from the plant is located in the back door of several residences. The fishing area around the Marl plant will be polluted. We also have' a newly developed camp ground which would suffer great damage. We plan to further develop this area. We have no objections to the plant, except we feel it should be piped past the Marl Holes where we have a fishing resort from all over the state and some from Virginia. We feel that you are our friends and are inteested in our development program in Onslow County. We ask that you so whatever necessary to prevent this condition in our vacinity. Please notify us as it is urgent. It will ibe late when the river is polluted. ' • Thank you for your coopera tion in this pressing matter. Sincerely yours, Belgrade Development ; X-v&l.. Martha Mattocks

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