Podcasts about lauderdale county

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Best podcasts about lauderdale county

Latest podcast episodes about lauderdale county

Secrets From The South
Scotty Ray and Odie 4-15-25

Secrets From The South

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2025 75:20


A log truck accident slowed traffic near Tucker on Highway 19 North; minor injuries were reported. An accident near Carthage blocked traffic as crews worked to pull a work truck from between two rigs. A rollover accident on 34th Street shut traffic down in Meridian as wreckers worked to remove the truck from the ditch. JJ Anders, Supervisor for Lauderdale County, and Rush Mayatt, Road Foreman, join the report to discuss Roads and Bridges in Marion, MS.

Secrets From The South
Scotty Ray Report 4-15-25

Secrets From The South

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2025 24:05


A portion of Murphy Road will be closed at 8 am in Lauderdale County for Repairs. Thieves burglarized a local cell phone company early Sunday Morning. A Cyclist was struck by a car on Cotton Gin Road near Hwy 45. Only minor injuries were reported. An early wreck blocked traffic on Old Hwy 80 West near Lost Gap this morning. The area had great weather for Full Moon 5th, Loose Caboose, and Sip and Savor over the weekend.

Secrets From The South
Scotty Ray and Odie 4-14-25

Secrets From The South

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2025 74:06


A portion of Murphy Road will be closed at 8 am in Lauderdale County for Repairs. Thieves burglarized a local cell phone company early Sunday Morning. A Cyclist was struck by a car on Cotton Gin Road near Hwy 45. Only minor injuries were reported. An early wreck blocked traffic on Old Hwy 80 West near Lost Gap this morning. The area had great weather for Full Moon 5th, Loose Caboose, and Sip and Savor over the weekend.

Secrets From The South
Scotty Ray and Odie Report 4-10-25

Secrets From The South

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2025 64:59


An accident on I-20 near Edwards shut down the highway yesterday. A man was trapped for hours under an 18-wheeler and was life-flighted from the scene. MPD responded to The Village Apartments for altercations Wednesday afternoon. Numerous gas lines were struck throughout the city of Meridian on Wednesday. The Grand Jury of Lauderdale County has returned 150 True Bills and 13 Non-True Bills.

The Mark White Show
Make A Difference Minute: Lauderdale County High School Girls Basketball Player Shila Marks

The Mark White Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2025 2:29


Last, but certainly not least, I have Lauderdale County High School Girls Basketball Player Shila Marks on the Make A Difference Minute tomorrow! Shila will be sharing about overcoming adversity that led to the 2025 Alabama High School Athletic Association - AHSAA 3A Girls Basketball Championship. Sponsor: Green's Dependable Hardware Russellville, AL (Photo Credit: LCHS Picture Share)

The Mark White Show
Make A Difference Minute: Lauderdale County High School's Ansley Shelton

The Mark White Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2025 2:24


On this MADM, LCHS (Alabama) Girls Basketball Player Ansley Shelton is sharing about the team's love for their coach, Coach Carla Clemons, and how the team came together to win this year's AHSAA 3A Girls Basketball Championship. Sponsor: Bankston Motor Homes BankstonMotorHomes.com

The Mark White Show
Make A Difference Minute: Lauderdale County Girls Basketball Coach Carla Clemons

The Mark White Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2025 2:34


On this MADM, LCHS Girls Basketball Coach Carla Clemons is sharing about the influence of legendary LCHS girls' basketball coach, Larry Sinyard, and a key message she has instilled in her players. Listen & share. Sponsor: The SIMRP

In Legal Terms
In Legal Terms: NIL

In Legal Terms

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2025 44:50


In the SEC, the SWAC, The Sun Belt Conference, and all over America we're celebrating college football and its student athletes. They work so hard for the enjoyment of the fans of their schools and lately they and other student athletes are being compensated for their Name, Image and Likeness. Our guest, attorney Andrew Coffman from Phelps Dunbar will tell us a bit about the laws and rights associated with NIL.If you're curious about NIL I've got a 10-minute podcast for you. MPB's 10 Minute Time Out recently had a NIL episode. Here's the link to own award-winning broadcaster Lacey Alexander's show.Next Monday (01/20/2025) is MLK Day and it's also Inauguration Day. MPB Think Radio will broadcast the audio from a 1973 special MPB TV interview with Coretta Scott King on the anniversary of Dr. King's actual birthday - tomorrow, Jan. 15th That's at 6:30pm. On Monday the 20th our special programing of President's Trump's Inauguration from 10am to noon.(and yes, it the NCAA Men's Football National Championship). He's MPB Think Radio's Schedule. Surprise! It's election season. It's always election season. Gov. Tate Reeves has scheduled six special elections in Mississippi this year: two for the Mississippi House of Representatives, three for trial courts and one for a district attorney position.1. The residents of Calhoun, Lafayette, Pontotoc and Webster Counties will choose a representative for Mississippi House District 23 on March 25. 2. Lauderdale County residents in the district will vote for a House District 82 representative on March 25 to fill a vacancy. 3. Clarke and Lauderdale counties will vote for their choice for the 12th Chancery District, Place 1 Judge seat on Feb. 3.4. Pearl River County voters will vote for their choice of Pearl River County Court Judge in a Nov. 4 special election. 5. Forrest and Perry counties will vote for circuit court judge on Nov. 4.The qualifying deadline for the House of Representatives, county, circuit and chancery judge special elections is on Feb. 3 at 5 p.m.6. The 1st Circuit Court District includes residents in Alcorn, Itawamba, Lee, Monroe, Pontotoc, Prentiss and Tishomingo counties; they will vote for their choice for district attorney on Nov. 4. The qualifying deadline for the district attorney special election is on Sept. 5 at 5 p.m.(Mississippi Free Press) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Ståpäls
Vicky & Casey White

Ståpäls

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2024 56:45


I veckans avsnitt är det Lucas tur att berätta om Vicky White, biträdande verksamhetschef vid häktet i Lauderdale County, Alabama som planerade och hjälpte den intagne Casey White att fly från häktet. Planen att fly gick inte som de båda tänkt utan polisen hittade dom elva dagar senare på ett motell i Evansville, Indiana. Har ni tips på ämnen eller olika fall ni vill att vi tar upp får ni mer än gärna kontakta oss på stapalspodcast@gmail.com eller på Instagram via Stapalspodcast eller via lucasternestal och utt3rclou. Glöm inte att prenumerera på podden så ni får notiser om när nya avsnitt läggs ut och ge oss gärna betyg! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Surviving the Survivor
Suzanne Simpson Disturbing New Evidence: Purchases, Cement & a Bulky Tarp Found

Surviving the Survivor

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2024 87:15


#STSNation! Welcome to Surviving the Survivor, the podcast that brings you the very #BestGuests in all of #TrueCrime. On Monday's episode, we take a deep dive into the newly unsealed arrest affidavit in the tragic case of Suzanne Simpson, the missing Texas mother of four. Her husband, Brad Simpson, now charged with her murder, allegedly left behind a trail of disturbing evidence. What does this evidence mean for Brad Simpson's defense? And how critical is the affidavit in proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt? #BestGuests: Gen. Mark Davidson started his career as a prosecutor straight out of law school in 1994 as an Assistant District Attorney in Tennessee He began prosecuting cases in Tipton County, and within a year became the one and only prosecutor in Lauderdale County. Gen. Davidson later went to work for the Tennessee Attorney General's Office handling criminal cases on appeal and eventually death penalty cases. He was able to return to the District Attorney's Office in 2011. He was then elected District Attorney in August of 2018. Det. Phil Ramos is a Retired Senior Homicide Detective with the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Dept 35 years of service, last 15 years were in Homicide. Assignments included 12 years Undercover Detective in Narcotics and Organized Crimes details, Instructor in the Academy. Court Certified expert in Major Crimes Investigations, Undercover and Covert Operations , Interview and Interrogation Techniques , Evidence collection. 3-time  Officer of the Year Award . Native Las Vegan. Spent years trying infiltrate the Cuban mob and was there for Tupac's autopsy, confirming his death. Also loves riding his Harley

Surviving the Survivor
Reports Suggest Menendez Brothers' Release Is Imminent as Family & Attorneys Hold Press Conference

Surviving the Survivor

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2024 86:27


#STSNation, Welcome to Surviving The Survivor the podcast that brings you the best guests in true crime. Lyle and Erik Menendez were convicted of the grisly 1989 shotgun murders of their parents, Jose and Mary Louise "Kitty" Menendez, at the family's sprawling Beverly Hills mansion. They've been in prison ever since. But, do they have a new shot at freedom? A major press conference is set for Wednesday October 16th about resentencing the brothers. #BestGuests: Gen. Mark Davidson started his career as a prosecutor straight out of law school in 1994 as an Assistant District Attorney in Tennessee He began prosecuting cases in Tipton County, and within a year became the one and only prosecutor in Lauderdale County. Gen. Davidson later went to work for the Tennessee Attorney General's Office handling criminal cases on appeal and eventually death penalty cases. He was able to return to the District Attorney's Office in 2011. He was then elected District Attorney in August of 2018. Chris Lomax is the Managing Attorney at Lomax Legal. He began his career with the Civil Rights Division of the United States Department of Justice over a decade ago, and soon established a stellar reputation for taking on and winning complex, difficult cases in jurisdictions across the nation. Chris investigated and successfully prosecuted law enforcement officers who violated people's Constitutional rights, as well as individuals who committed hate crimes and human trafficking offenses. Josh Ritter is a criminal defense attorney in Los Angeles, host of Courtroom Confidential and an Award Winning Former Prosecutor. Support the show:Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SurvivingTheSurvivorYouTube: Surviving The Survivor: #BestGuests in True Crime - YouTubeJoel's Book: Https://www.amazon.com/shop/surviving...Website: https://survivingthesurvivor.comAll Things STS: https://linktr.ee/stspodcast  #MenendezBrothers #TrueCrime #LyleMenendez #ErikMenendez #Menudo #BoyBand #PrisonLife #TrueCrimeCommunity #DomesticViolence #LosAngeles #GeorgeGascon #DistrictAttorney #truecrimecommunity #truecrimepodcast #truestory #justice #criminaljustice #crimestory #breakingnews #newsupdate  

Surviving the Survivor
Law Professor Thinks Wendi Adelson is next as Donna's Trial Inches Closer

Surviving the Survivor

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2024 114:26


STS YouTube Channel: Surviving The Survivor: #BestGuests in True Crime - YouTubeIT'S HERE: STS HARDCOVER BOOK SIGNED COPIES FROM JOEL AND KARM: https://premierecollectibles.com/waldmanSTS Book on Audible: Https://www.audible.com/pd/Surviving-...STS Book on Amazon: Https://www.amazon.com/shop/surviving...STS Merch Store: https://www.bonfire.com/store/sts-store/STS Patreon: Https://patreon.com/SurvivingTheSurvivorSTS Website: https://survivingthesurvivor.com/All Things STS

The Mark White Show
Football in the South Media Days Day 2 Part 1

The Mark White Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2024 34:40


Tonight is day 2 part 1 of Football in the South Scoreboard Media Days! I'll be featuring Brooks Lions, Lexington Golden Bears, Central, Lauderdale County, Wilson, & Rogers football programs. Listen and share.

Killafornia Dreaming
#288 The Tale of the Corrections Officer & the Convict: Casey & Vicky White Part 2 of 2 [Vacation Series]

Killafornia Dreaming

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2024 75:26


The Escape From The Lauderdale County Detention Center In 2022 Involving Convict Casey White AND Corrections Officer Vicky White [Part 2]. Inmate 38 year old Casey White and corrections officer Vicky White began a romantic relationship that dated back to 2020.  When Casey was brought back to the county jail after being sent to a maximum security prison after being found in possession of a shank, he cozied up to Vicky (again!) and in two months' time, the two were fugitives, on the run, as Vicky was able to successfully help Casey escape from the jail.  The two took investigators on an 11 manhunt which ended two states away in a car crash and a single shot being fired. SOURCES:https://www.cnn.com/2022/05/09/us/casey-white-prisoner-manhunt/index.htmlhttps://edition.cnn.com/us/live-news/alabama-manhunt-casey-vicky-white-captured/h_cb005d42063111d68dd264f96576584ehttps://www.newsweek.com/connie-ridgeway-casey-white-murder-confession2015-vicky-white-1704141https://news.yahoo.com/casey-white-reveals-jail-guard-172853875.htmlhttps://www.cnn.com/2022/07/12/us/casey-white-vicky-white-indictment/index.htmlhttps://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/crime/casey-white-connie-ridgeway-murder-b2077778.htmlLINKS:Patreon:  https://www.patreon.com/killaforniapodPayPal:  https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/killaforniapodMerchandise:  https://killaforniadreamingpodcast.threadless.com/Website:  https://killaforniadreamingpodcast.buzzsprout.com/Facebook Group:  https://www.facebook.com/groups/1296620370450345/Facebook Page:  https://www.facebook.com/killaforniadreamingInstagram:  https://www.instagram.com/killaforniadreamingpod/?hl=enTwitter:  https://twitter.com/killaforniapodEmail:  killaforniapod@gmail.com

Killafornia Dreaming
#288 The Tale of the Corrections Officer & the Convict: Casey & Vicky White Part 1 of 2 [Vacation Series]

Killafornia Dreaming

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2024 61:15


The Escape From The Lauderdale County Detention Center In 2022 Involving Convict Casey White AND Corrections Officer Vicky White [Part 1].  Inmate 38 year old Casey White and corrections officer Vicky White began a romantic relationship that dated back to 2020.  When Casey was brought back to the county jail after being sent to a maximum security prison after being found in possession of a shank, he cozied up to Vicky (again!) and in two months' time, the two were fugitives, on the run, as Vicky was able to successfully help Casey escape from the jail.  The two took investigators on an 11 manhunt which ended two states away in a car crash and a single shot being fired. SOURCES:https://www.cnn.com/2022/05/09/us/casey-white-prisoner-manhunt/index.htmlhttps://edition.cnn.com/us/live-news/alabama-manhunt-casey-vicky-white-captured/h_cb005d42063111d68dd264f96576584ehttps://www.newsweek.com/connie-ridgeway-casey-white-murder-confession2015-vicky-white-1704141https://news.yahoo.com/casey-white-reveals-jail-guard-172853875.htmlhttps://www.cnn.com/2022/07/12/us/casey-white-vicky-white-indictment/index.htmlhttps://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/crime/casey-white-connie-ridgeway-murder-b2077778.htmlLINKS:Patreon:  https://www.patreon.com/killaforniapodPayPal:  https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/killaforniapodMerchandise:  https://killaforniadreamingpodcast.threadless.com/Website:  https://killaforniadreamingpodcast.buzzsprout.com/Facebook Group:  https://www.facebook.com/groups/1296620370450345/Facebook Page:  https://www.facebook.com/killaforniadreamingInstagram:  https://www.instagram.com/killaforniadreamingpod/?hl=enTwitter:  https://twitter.com/killaforniapodEmail:  killaforniapod@gmail.com

PlayAction Sports
Clements vs. Lauderdale County 01/09/24

PlayAction Sports

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2024 187:37


Limestone County basketball

The Clarke County Democrat Podcast
More CWD found in north Alabama

The Clarke County Democrat Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2023 2:45


The Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (ADCNR) announces that two additional cases of chronic wasting disease (CWD) in hunter harvested, white-tailed deer have been confirmed in northern Lauderdale County in northwest Alabama. The two additional deer bring Alabama's total number of confirmed CWD cases to five. There have been no reported cases in the rest of the state, including southwest Alabama. CWD in Alabama's deer herd was first detected in Lauderdale County in January 2022. After the first case was confirmed, all of Lauderdale and Colbert counties were designated as a CWD Management Zone (CMZ). So far during...Article Link

Tennessee Home & Farm Radio
Robert Hill Elected YF&R State Chair

Tennessee Home & Farm Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2023 2:03


Lauderdale County farmer Robert Hill is the new Tennessee Young Farmers and Ranchers State Committee Chair. Hill was elected to the position at the 102nd Tennessee Farm Bureau Annual meeting. Hill will serve in the position for one year and serve as an ex-officio member of the Tennessee Farm Bureau Federation Board of Directors.

Battles Of The American Civil War
Meridian | Olustee | Okolona | First Dalton | Walkerton

Battles Of The American Civil War

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2023 33:31


We have another 5 battles on this week's episode as 1864 continues to start off slow. We'll start in Lauderdale County, MS for the Meridian campaign from February 14th-20th which is a prelude to Sherman's march to the sea later in the year. We head to Baker County, FL for the battle of Olustee on the February 20th, which was the largest battle in Florida during the war. Back to Mississippi for the battle of Okolona on February 22nd where Confederate and Union cavalry faced off. Then it's some skirmishes in Dalton, Georgia between the 22nd and 27th before we end the episode in Virginia and the battle of Walkerton on March 2nd.Subscribe to our YouTube where we post shorts, clips, full episodes, and exclusives!youtube.com/@bangdangnetwork

Tennessee Home & Farm Radio
Cut Flower Business Blossoming In Lauderdale County

Tennessee Home & Farm Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2023 2:03


Amber & Mark Saldana served out Nation for many years in the military. Now they're both retired and bringing cut flowers in Lauderdale County. Thomas Capps Cut flower business blossoming in Lauderdale County. Hello and welcome to Tennessee Home and Farm Radio. I'm Thomas Capps. Amber Saldana We just wanted to be able to provide something for the community something to brighten people's day. Thomas Capps Amber Mark Saldana have spent their whole life serving others. After both serving in the military the couple are retired and now living in Lauderdale County where they started their own cut flower farm called Cold Creek Flower Farm. Amber says the cut flower industry is growing in popularity, but it's still fairly new to their area. Amber Saldana Our county is on the Mississippi River and so it's mainly row crops and some small vegetable farms and we do cut flowers and we have an aviary so we are the only cut flowers that are in Lauderdale County selling to the public as well as doing our honey and and things associated with our bees. Because we're so new to it, you know, we we grow the easy to grow flowers, things like sunflowers and solutia and Zinnias things that are easy to grow in our climate and stuff sometimes it's just it's as easy as throwing the seeds on the ground and and the ones that are growing are the ones that we cut. Thomas Capps Now two years into growing flowers the Saldana's is are hoping to expand their business and try new things. We're working towards. Amber Saldana Peonies and some perennials, some kind of some flowers that can that are a little more, I guess the market for it is a little bit bigger than say sunflowers are zinnias. But um, we do mixed bouquets. That's really what we're doing. And we also want to provide a you pick opportunity for folks to come in and just pick their own flowers, take pictures, whatever they want to do, I think everybody can enjoy and appreciate cut flowers. So we need to be able to give that to folks that you know we're not really close to any big cities that you can just easily go and get, you know, all kinds of different flowers that you know at your fingertips. So to be able to at least provide that to some of our residents and even our local flower shops. That means a lot to us. Thomas Capps Protecting our nation, growing and cutting flowers, and living a life of serving others. For Tennessee Home Farm Radio. I'm Thomas Capps.

Tennessee Home & Farm Radio
Shooting Hunger is Back

Tennessee Home & Farm Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2023 2:02


This year's Shooting Hunger officially kicked off on Friday in West Tennessee at Carroll County Shooting Sports Park where folks in the agriculture industry and many others gathered to support feeding hungry Tennesseans. Amy Beckham: Shooting Hunger is Back. Hello there and welcome to Tennessee Home and Farm Radio, I'm Amy Beckham. Miles Beeler: Shooting, having fun and raising money for a great cause. Amy Beckham: Well, this year's Shooting Hunger officially kicked off on Friday in West Tennessee at Carroll County Shooting Sports Park where folks in the agriculture industry and many others gathered to support feeding hungry Tennesseans. That was Miles Beeler of the McKenzie Shooting Team. And just like Miles, Robert Hill of Lauderdale County was proud to shoot and support the cause. Robert Hill: I think it's a great opportunity to teach the local young farmers that we as an organization get involved with local things not just on a state level. And this is a fun event. It's one that's usually easy to find people that we're all kind of caught up hopefully this time of year. Amy Beckham: Hill serves as a member of the young farmers and ranchers state committee and has participated in this event for several years. Shooting Hunger was started back in 2015 and is hosted today by Tennessee Farm Bureau, Tennessee Farmers Cooperative, Farm Credit Mid America and Rural 1st, and the program aims to raise funds for those in need. Tennessee Farm Bureau President Eric Mayberry expands on how the program has grown through the years Andy Dickson: Who knew it was gonna turn out when we started it. Just one of those examples you know you try something for a good cause. And we started this several years ago with one event, and now here just a few years later, we're up to three events and people are asking for more. It just really warms your heart to be able to do a good thing for people that are in need and that's what farmers do. We're just built to feed hungry people and it's just a perfect match. Amy Beckham: And this year, the money raised from all three events will be distributed among all 95 counties to be given to local backpack programs. Carroll County Shooting Sports Park has been hosting our West Tennessee event for some time now and we're grateful for their facility. Carroll County Sheriff Andy Dickson comments on the event in his community. Andy Dickson: I think this is the seventh year y'all have been here with us West Tennessee. It's just an awesome way to be able to put food back in our food pantries to make sure that the folks around here have an opportunity to pick up meals or to do things like that where folks won't go hungry. So thankful for everybody coming out. Amy Beckham: For Tennessee Home and Farm Radio, I'm Amy Beckham.

Mord Mot Mord
258. Skeppsbrutna kannibaler och Fängelseflykten i Lauderdale County

Mord Mot Mord

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2023 53:52


Karin berättar om det kända mordfallet känt som R v Dudley and Stephens, och om de två sjömän som dömdes för att de mördat och ätit 17-åriga skeppspojken Richard Parker efter att deras båt förliste mitt i södra Atlanten. Anna berättar om kriminalvårdaren Vicky White, som försvann efter att hon eskorterat den intagna Casey White till rätten. Men varför? Lyssna på Mord Mot Mord redan på onsdagar i Podplay-appen eller på podplay.se. Mord Mot Mord är en vanlig snackig podd, fast om mord. Det är lättsamt prat i ett försök att hantera världens värsta ämne.

Hustle Brand Podcasts
Spit Fire Save The Matches Ep.52

Hustle Brand Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2023 60:06


Jacoby "Memphis" Jelks, aka J-Smoove, grew up in Lauderdale County, TN (approximately 65 miles north of Memphis) in a small town called Ripley. Over time, he honed his skills as a DJ, music producer and recording artist. Given the name "Memphis" by the legendary Chuck D of the GRAMMY/ RRHOF rap group Public Enemy, Jelks is poised to become a memorable artist in the Hip Hop genre, respectfully.

The Daily Detail
The Daily Detail for 1.6.23

The Daily Detail

Play Episode Play 60 sec Highlight Listen Later Jan 6, 2023 9:50


AlabamaAt least 6 tornadoes confirmed to have landed in AL this past TuesdayCongressman Rogers calls 20 Republicans "legislative terrorists"Cold case in Lauderdale County gets new leads and tipsA gun is confiscated at Huntsville high school after student brings inALDOT allocates grant money to a Tuscaloosa bridge projectOrange Beach pier is now rebuilt after hurricane damageMountain Brook golf athlete invited to  Master's in 2023Whataburger brings back the Dr. Pepper milkshake for limited timeNationalAmazon announces huge layoffs ahead for mostly corporate workersBuffalo Bills Damar Hamlin able to hold hands after cardiac arrestDay 3 of House voting yields same result as Days 1 & 2- No SpeakerUS Marine Corp commandant says vaccine mandate lowered recruitmentThe son of drug lord El Chapo is arrested in MexicoSenator Lee of Utah offers bill to classify Pornography as obscenity

The Mark White Show
Kids to Love Shoals Campus & Aspen Arrowsmith Signs Scholarship with Bama

The Mark White Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2022 33:41


On today's show, I am taking you to the Shoals! First we will be in Colbert County as I talk with Tim & Tracey Miller along with Kids to Love founder Lee Marshall about the new Shoals campus! After that, I will be taking you to Lauderdale County as we talk with Coach Cindy James and Aspen Arrowsmith who just signed a track scholarship with The University of Alabama. Listen & share.

RiverCity Media
Tyler Vann Show Rams Football w Howie Chaney

RiverCity Media

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2022 61:11


CLASS 3ASouthside-Selma at DadevilleStraughn at ThomasvilleWellborn at St. JamesW.S. Neal at OppMobile Christian at Houston AcademySaks at Trinity PresbyterianPike County at ExcelAlabama Christian at RandolphDanville at Mars Hill BibleGeraldine at WinfieldPhil Campbell at Madison AcademyFayette County at SylvaniaOakman at PiedmontColbert County at PenningtonOhatchee at GordoVinemont at Lauderdale County

Academic Dean
Dr. Thomas Huebner, Meridian Community College

Academic Dean

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2022 45:13


Tom Huebner has been described in many ways throughout his career, an energetic instructor, an inspiring professor, a trusted mentor, and a visionary leader. A native of Kansas City, Missouri Huebner earned a bachelor's degree in communication and English from Southwest Baptist University in Bolivar, Missouri, a master's degree in speech communication from the University of Georgia and a doctorate in communication from the University of Southern Mississippi. He also graduated from The University of Alabama's Community College Leadership Academy. An educator for more than 30 years, Huebner began his professional career in 1990 at Southwest Baptist University as an instructor and assistant director of speech and debate. His first experience in Mississippi began in 1994 where he became an instructor of communication and director of speech and debate at William Carey University in Hattiesburg. At Carey, Huebner progressed from instructor to assistant professor to director of admissions and recruiting. Huebner's ascent into higher education administration really began at Carson-Newman University in Jefferson City, Tennessee in the early 2000's as he moved consecutively from assistant professor and director of speech and debate to become dean of admissions, vice president of enrollment management, and vice president of student affairs. Moving to Shelton State Community College in Tuscaloosa, Alabama in 2010, Huebner was responsible for all student services of the College and began the pursuit of a presidency. Just five years later, he was named president of East Mississippi Community College. During his tenure at EMCC, the community college was twice named an Aspen Top 150 community college and was listed as the nation's 3rd best community college by SmartAsset. The community college was also one of only four nationwide selected by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to receive an InsideTrack grant. Huebner was also instrumental in the production of the Netflix documentary, Last Chance U, an Emmy nominated documentary series based on the redemption of disadvantaged students through the college's football program. Dr. Thomas Huebner became the third president of Meridian Community College on July 1, 2018. Since arriving at Meridian Community College Huebner has hit the ground running. In addition to leading efforts to tell the MCC story and elevate the presence of the institution, he has worked to secure multiple grants, including substantial awards for advanced manufacturing, has developed relationships with industry and educational partners, moved the College to develop a number of new industry-relevant programs, renovated campus facilities, implemented a new strategic planning process, and received the Phi Theta KappaPresident's Paragon Award. He was recently named top 10 over 50 for Meridian and Lauderdale County by the Meridian Star and was recently recognized by the Mississippi Business Journal as one of Mississippi's top CEOs.

PlayAction Sports
Tanner vs. Lauderdale County 08/18/22

PlayAction Sports

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2022 218:32


Limestone County football --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/playactionsports/support

The Land Show with Dave & Johnny
The Land Show Episode 349

The Land Show with Dave & Johnny

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2022 59:01


This week on The Land Show: Marty Holland is on to discuss the Tennessee Valley Hunting and Fishing Expo happening in Huntsville this weekend. You will hear about the great attractions and vendors available at the show at the Von Braun Center. https://tvhfe.com/ Ryan Folk, founder of Landflip and Landthink.com, shares a broad land market update, and he discusses Starlink and how it will help people who desire to move to more rural areas. http://www.landflip.com Brian Watts talks about some some recent timber sales and what is happening in the timber market in our Timber Talk segment. http://www.selandgroup.com/agents/brian-watts Josh Milton shares about a new 20 acre farm for sale in Lauderdale County, Alabama, and gives a northwest Alabama land market update. http://www.selandgroup.com/agents/josh-milton Robert King discusses how Starlink internet has helped their family increase productivity and be able to stream television at their family farm in Clay County. www.selandgroup.com/agents/robert-king

The Murder Project
Collateral Damage - Vicky White Helps Casey White Escape from Jail Part 1

The Murder Project

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2022 48:04


This week we are going to get into the part 1 of the story of Vicky White and Casey White. The two are not related but Vickey White, the assistant director of Corrections for Lauderdale County, Alabama, falls for a multi felon facing murder charges. Vicky uses her authority at the jail to break policy and walk Casey White right out the door. After learning what took place, the hunt for the two fugitives is underway. Make sure and check back with us next week as Justin and Mike sit down for the part 2 debrief episode. I have a lot more I want to say ab out this case being a former correction officer/ deputy and I know Mike will as well.Sources for this episode include:Vicky White: A respected officer turned into a fugitive who allgedly helped an inmate escape. Here's what we know about her life before her sudden death - CNN Vicky White death: She died of suicide, coroner's office says - CNN

True Crime on Easy Street
S2 Ep 22: The Whites of Alabama

True Crime on Easy Street

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022 42:53


This week the experts are back in Alabama for a case that has recently rocked the state. At the end of April, Vicky White helped convicted felon Casey White escape the Lauderdale County jail, and the two attempted to run off into the sunset together. If you haven't been keeping up with the news, or you aren't local, or you are local and have been keeping up with the news, this one's for you. Theme song is The Legend of Hannah Brady by the Shane Givens Band https://music.apple.com/us/album/the-legend-of-hannah-brady/1013006958?i=1013006965 Sources: AL.com WHNT-19 Huntsville TV station website WAAY-31 Huntsville TV station website https://whnt.com/news/manhunt-for-escaped-alabama-inmate-and-wanted-jailer/casey-vicky-white-motel-room-has-abnormally-long-waitlist/ https://time.com/6176355/alabama-inmate-escape-highlights-problems/ https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/09/us/officer-inmate-escape-alabama.html --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/truecrimeoneasystreet/support

Police Off The Cuff
Casey White Back in Alabama #CaseyWhite #LauderdalAklabama #VickyWhite #FugitiveEnforcement #NYPD

Police Off The Cuff

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2022 72:56


Casey White Back in Alabama #CaseyWhite #LauderdalAklabama #VickyWhite #FugitiveEnforcement #NYPDRecaptured inmate Casey White was transferred to an Alabama state prison early Wednesday, more than a day after his arrest in Indiana that ended 11 days on the run with an Alabama county jail official who authorities say helped him escape. Vicky White, the woman accused of freeing him in late April, died Monday after a shooting that authorities believe was self-inflicted. That gunfire happened at the end of a car chase and wreck, authorities say, that led to Casey White's capture. Casey White was escorted Tuesday from Indiana back to Alabama, where he attended a late-night court arraignment in Lauderdale County -- the county from which authorities say he escaped. At the arraignment, Judge Ben Graves told White he will be charged with escape in the first degree, in addition to capital murder charges he was already facing related to the 2015 stabbing death of Alabama resident Connie Ridgeway. During the hearing, White, in handcuffs and with shackles around his ankles, listened intently with his eyes locked on Graves as the judge explained the charges. White appeared tired and sniffled more than once throughout the 10-minute hearing. On the back of White's head were four small gashes within a shaved circumference of hair the size of a quarter. Dry blood was visible on the back of his bright yellow jumpsuit. Immediately after the hearing, White exited the courthouse and glanced at the news cameras and the crowd of bystanders who had gathered, but didn't say anything. He was transferred to a state prison -- William E. Donaldson Correctional Facility in Bessemer, Alabama, a little more 100 miles south of Lauderdale County. Casey White, 38, and Vicky White, 56, were captured in Evansville, Indiana, Monday after a chase that ended when authorities forced the car Casey White was driving to wreck in a ditch, the US Marshals Service has said. The Alabama manhunt is over, but these unanswered questions remain The Alabama manhunt is over, but these unanswered questions remain Plenty of questions remain about the actions of both Casey White and Vicky White, the then-Lauderdale County assistant director of corrections who authorities say drove the inmate out of the county detention center in a patrol car April 29 under the pretense of taking him to a courthouse. The pair used a series of other vehicles over the next week and a half, at least one of which was purchased on the run in Tennessee, and likely were aided by cash from the recent sale of Vicky White's home, authorities have said. The two were not related but may have built a clandestine, romantic relationship while Casey White -- normally housed in state prison after being convicted of a string of crimes in 2015 -- intermittently stayed at Lauderdale County's detention center while attending pretrial hearings relating to Ridgeway's death, authorities have said. Vicky White was set to retire on the day authorities say she freed the inmate. Monday's car chase and crash in Evansville ended a frantic 11-day manhunt that spanned multiple states and elicited hundreds of tips, including one that ultimately led authorities to their capture. 911 call: Woman mentioned getting out and running Authorities zeroed in on the pair in Evansville after US marshals learned Sunday that a truck -- which investigators say the two used -- was abandoned at an Evansville car wash. Surveillance footage there showed Casey White with the truck, and investigators learned that the pair left the car wash in a Cadillac, authorities said. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/otcpod1/support

The Billy & Dan Podcast
Ep. 38 - Jailhouse Love Story

The Billy & Dan Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2022 47:30


As usual there is no rhyme or reason to what we talk about. We discuss underwear, ice cream, hockey, and the big story out of Lauderdale County, Alabama....among other things. Episode sponsored by Frosty Pop Ice Cream : https://www.facebook.com/FrostyPopIceCream --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/billydanpodcast/support

Police Off The Cuff
Casey White back behind bars #CaseyWhite #NYPD #FederalMarshall #VickyWhite #Jail #Prison #Autopsy

Police Off The Cuff

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2022 58:06


Casey White back behind bars #CaseyWhite #NYPD #FederalMarshall #VickyWhite #Jail #Prison #Autopsy Casey White is now back behind bars in Alabama, but he is not in the same facility that the former correctional officer Vicky White helped him escape from. White is actually in Jefferson County right now. He has returned to the Donaldson Correctional Facility, a facility he once spent time at. He returned to Alabama on May 10, and within an hour was brought into court in Lauderdale County to face a judge. Inside, the murder suspect learned he will be charged with escape in the first degree, in addition to the capital murder charges he already faces. He then left the courthouse flanked by law enforcement both in front and behind him, vastly different to the walk out he and former correctional officer Vicky White participated in. While White is beginning to face the music and answer law enforcement's questions, the woman who helped him escape won't be able to answer the many questions surrounding this case, starting with “why.” The coroner ruled Vicky White's death a suicide, caused by a self-inflicted gun shot as law enforcement closed in. While disappointed in the former correctional officer, Lauderdale County Sheriff Rick Singleton believes we will never know what caused his former employee and friend to help the murder suspect escape. “People who have a child will understand, and they make a bad choice, you discipline and you correct them, but you still love them. Vicky was a friend to all of us. I am very disappointed in what she did. I have no explanation of why she did it, what in the world possessed her to do this, we will never know,” said Lauderdale County Sheriff Rick Singleton. Lauderdale County District Attorney Chris Connolly says his team is ready to go to trial. Again, White is now being charged with first degree escape in addition to the charges he was already facing. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/otcpod1/support

Dark Side of Wikipedia | True Crime & Dark History
338: "I Wanted A Shootout", Escape Inmate Reveals | True Crime Podcast

Dark Side of Wikipedia | True Crime & Dark History

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2022 4:51


(NewsNation) — The manhunt for an escaped Lauderdale County inmate and a corrections employee has finally come to an end, and their capture is thanks in part to a man who works at an Indiana car wash and tipped off investigators. James Stinson noticed a suspicious truck at his car wash in Evansville, Indiana, sticking out of one of the bays last Tuesday. True Crime Today is a daily EXTRA feature of Dark Side Of. If you like Dark Side Of - Be sure to search and subscribe to "Dark Side Of" wherever you download podcasts! Apple Podcasts https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/dark-side-of-wikipedia-true-crime-dark-history/id1504280230?uo=4 Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/0GYshi6nJCf3O0aKEBTOPs Stitcher http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/real-ghost-stories-online-2/dark-side-of-wikipedia-true-crime-disturbing-stories iHeart https://www.iheart.com/podcast/270-Dark-Side-of-Wikipedia-Tru-60800715 Amazon https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/565dc51b-d214-4fab-b38b-ae7c723cb79a/Dark-Side-of-Wikipedia-True-Crime-Dark-History Google Podcasts https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hdWRpb2Jvb20uY29tL2NoYW5uZWxzLzUwMDEyNjAucnNz Or Search "Dark Side Of" for the best in True Crime ANYWHERE you get podcasts! Support the show at http://www.darksidepod.com

Dark Side of Wikipedia | True Crime & Dark History
337: Escape Ends In Suicide For Former Corrections Officer with Convict | True Crime Podcast

Dark Side of Wikipedia | True Crime & Dark History

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2022 4:35


LAUDERDALE COUNTY, Ala. (WHNT) — After almost two weeks on the run, authorities say the manhunt for Casey White and Vicky White has ended in a police chase in Indiana. Lauderdale County Sheriff Rick Singleton said the chase resulted in a wreck and he didn't know why they were in Indiana. Singleton said Casey White surrendered to police, and Indiana authorities confirmed Vicky White was taken to the hospital with a self-inflicted gunshot wound. True Crime Today is a daily EXTRA feature of Dark Side Of. If you like Dark Side Of - Be sure to search and subscribe to "Dark Side Of" wherever you download podcasts! Apple Podcasts https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/dark-side-of-wikipedia-true-crime-dark-history/id1504280230?uo=4 Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/0GYshi6nJCf3O0aKEBTOPs Stitcher http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/real-ghost-stories-online-2/dark-side-of-wikipedia-true-crime-disturbing-stories iHeart https://www.iheart.com/podcast/270-Dark-Side-of-Wikipedia-Tru-60800715 Amazon https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/565dc51b-d214-4fab-b38b-ae7c723cb79a/Dark-Side-of-Wikipedia-True-Crime-Dark-History Google Podcasts https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hdWRpb2Jvb20uY29tL2NoYW5uZWxzLzUwMDEyNjAucnNz Or Search "Dark Side Of" for the best in True Crime ANYWHERE you get podcasts! Support the show at http://www.darksidepod.com Update Description

The News with Shepard Smith
Search for Accused Murderer & Former Corrections Officer Ends in Chase. 05/09/22

The News with Shepard Smith

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2022 49:12


The sheriff in Lauderdale County, Alabama announced the capture of escaped inmate Casey White and former corrections officer Vicky White in Indiana. He joins Shep with the latest updates. Plus, state lawmakers are racing to increase restrictions or ramp up protections for abortion as the Supreme Court appears likely to overturn Roe v. Wade. Shomari Stone reports in Virginia as protesters march to Justice Samuel Alito's home. And celebrity chef Mario Batali waives his right to a jury trial, with a judge now set to decide his fate after accusations of sexual misconduct.

Alabama's Morning News with JT
Kelsey Kernstine 051022

Alabama's Morning News with JT

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2022 9:48


Kelsey Kernstine from NewsNation's Morning in America, discusses the investigations she has done into the criminal history of Casey White and the events that led up to his escape with a former jailer in Lauderdale County.

Uniquely Westbrook
Alabama corrections officer Vicky White who escaped with inmate has died in hospital, sheriff says

Uniquely Westbrook

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2022 16:18


CNN had this to say She was hospitalized earlier with self-inflicted gunshot wounds after being taken into custody following a car chase in Evansville, Indiana, US Marshals previously told CNN. Her wounds were "very serious," Wedding said at the time. No law enforcement officers fired shots, according to Sheriff Rick Singleton of Lauderdale County, Alabama, where the pair -- who are not related -- fled on April 29. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Police Off The Cuff
Lauderdale County Alabama escaped Fugitive search

Police Off The Cuff

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2022 78:47


Lauderdale County Alabama escaped Fugitive search As the search continues for a missing former Alabama corrections officer and an inmate charged with murder, authorities remain in the dark on where the pair may have gone after the SUV they used after leaving the jail turned up little new information in the case. The 2007 Ford SUV officials believe Vicky White, 56, and inmate Casey White, 38, were traveling in during their escape from the Lauderdale County Detention Center in Alabama more than a week ago was located in a Tennessee tow lot, Sheriff Rick Singleton said Friday during a news conference.Why manhunts like the one for Vicky White and Casey White fascinate us "The car was cleaned out," the sheriff told CNN Saturday. "There wasn't anything left in the vehicle. They apparently took everything they had with them." The corrections officer, who is now no longer employed by the sheriff's office, left with the inmate from the jail on the morning of April 29, saying she would take him to the courthouse for a mental health evaluation. She also said she would seek medical care for herself after dropping him off because she wasn't feeling well. The pair never arrived at the courthouse or medical facility, setting off a manhunt involving local and federal authorities. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/otcpod1/support

First News with Jimmy Cefalo
05-09-22 They Just Walked Away

First News with Jimmy Cefalo

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2022 4:25


ABC News Correspondent Jim Ryan live in Dallas *Follow him on Twitter: @jimryantx. It's been ten days since then-corrections supervisor Vicky White and capital murder suspect Casey White left the Lauderdale County detention center in Florence, Alabama.

Police Off The Cuff
Car linked to escaped inmate corrections officer found in Tennessee The car linked to escaped Florence, Alabama, inmate Casey White and jail employee Vicky White was ditched in Williamson County, Tenn

Police Off The Cuff

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2022 76:38


Car linked to escaped inmate corrections officer found in Tennessee The car linked to escaped Florence, Alabama, inmate Casey White and jail employee Vicky White was ditched in Williamson County, Tennessee, just hours after the jail break, the Williamson County Sheriff's Office said. Authorities first spotted the car around 3 p.m. CT on April 29 -- hours after the escape -- and it wasn't until Thursday night that the car was connected to the Whites, sheriff's office spokeswoman Sharon Puckett told ABC News. There's no sign that murder suspect Casey White, 38, and Lauderdale County Assistant Director of Corrections Vicky White, 56, are still in the area of Williamson County, which is about a two-hour drive north of Florence, the sheriff's office added. Authorities with the U.S. Marshals Service searched the area Friday morning but found nothing to indicate that the pair was still in Williamson County, Puckett said. "We don't believe they're anywhere near us," she said. Lauderdale County assistant director of corrections Vicky White and inmate Casey Cole White. However, authorities are still canvassing the area for any witnesses and are looking into whether any cars were reported stolen around the time the Whites' car was ditched, Lauderdale County Sheriff Rick Singleton said at a news conference Friday. Nothing was left behind in the car, the sheriff said. Casey White and Vicky White may be driving a 2007 orange or copper Ford Edge with m...Read More Vicky White withdrew approximately $90,000 in cash from multiple banks before allegedly fleeing, Lauderdale County, Alabama, District Attorney Chris Connolly told ABC News. He said the banks were local to the Lauderdale County area, but he could not say when she withdrew the money. On April 18 -- just days before she allegedly fled with inmate Casey White -- Vicky White closed on the sale of her home for just over $95,000. Singleton has said that investigators suspect Vicky White is "flush" with cash from the sale. MORE: Missing corrections officer 'willingly' participated in inmate's escape, sheriff says It's now been one week since Casey White and Vicky White went missing. The two are not related. Authorities said they believe Vicky White willingly participated in the April 29 escape from the Lauderdale County jail. The pair "may be armed with an AR-15 rifle, handguns and a shotgun," the U.S. Marshals Service said. The sheriff acknowledged that the pursuit is "behind where we'd like it to be" and said Vicky White's law enforcement background has likely helped her evade authorities. "This was a very well thought-out plan and her knowledge has put us at a loss," he said. Vicky White and Casey White disappeared after Vicky White allegedly told her colleagues that she was taking Casey White to the Lauderdale County Courthouse for a "mental health evaluation," the sheriff said. He didn't have a court appearance scheduled, Singleton said. Vicky White also allegedly told her colleagues that she was going to seek medical attention after dropping the inmate off at court because she wasn't feeling well, but Singleton said his office confirmed that no appointment was made. MORE: Inside escaped Alabama inmate's criminal history as manhunt intensifies Singleton said Friday that his message to Vicky White is: "Hopefully we find you safe." Singleton has described Vicky White, a 17-year veteran of the department, as "an exemplary employee" until now. Vicky White has submitted her retirement papers and the day of the escape was her last day, the sheriff said. At the time of his escape, Casey White was facing two counts of capital murder for the stabbing Connie Ridgeway in 2015, according to the U.S. Marshals Service. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/otcpod1/support

Police Off The Cuff
Search for escaped Lauderdale county inmate continues, #CaseyWhite #VickyWhite #FugitiveEnforcement

Police Off The Cuff

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2022 81:03


Search for escaped Lauderdale county inmate continues, #CaseyWhite #VickyWhite #FugitiveEnforcement In their search for a missing former corrections official and an inmate facing murder charges, authorities announced a key discovery Friday: they located the car they previously believed the pair was traveling in. The car had been in a Tennessee tow lot for about a week, after local officials found it abandoned in the woods and without any identifying information last Friday -- the same day the pair went missing -- and had it towed. It means the two drove roughly two hours north to Williamson County, Tennessee, after disappearing from a county jail in Florence, Alabama, Lauderdale County Sheriff Rick Singleton said during a Friday news conference. Why manhunts like the one for Vicky White and Casey White fascinate us Why manhunts like the one for Vicky White and Casey White fascinate us But authorities know little about what came after that. "We know now where the car is, we know what direction they went," the sheriff said. "We're trying to canvass the area for any witnesses, also trying to research, see if any stolen vehicles were reported in that area during that time." Authorities believe the vehicle may have had mechanical problems which prompted the abrupt stop in the area. But the sheriff said investigators don't yet know if the pair stole another vehicle, or got a ride with someone else and where they may have headed. "We're sort of back to square one," he said. "After Friday afternoon, when they abandoned that car, which direction they went from there, we don't know." Vicky White, 56, and Casey White, 38, have now been missing for more than a week. The two, who officials say may have had a romantic relationship, are not related. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/otcpod1/support

Police Off The Cuff
Alabama officer escaped inmate had 2-year relationship #VickyWhite #CaseyWhite #Inmate #Fugitive

Police Off The Cuff

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2022 61:55


Alabama officer escaped inmate had 2-year relationship #VickyWhite #CaseyWhite #Inmate #Fugitive The Alabama jail correction officer who disappeared with a capital murder suspect had phoned the inmate numerous times in prison and had been in a “special relationship” with him for nearly two years before the pair vanished, The Post has learned. Vicky White and inmate Casey Cole White – who apparently fled together on Friday – have been linked since late 2020 when he was brought to the jail guard's jurisdiction on murder charges, Lauderdale County Sheriff Rick Singleton told The Post in an interview Wednesday. At the time, Casey had been serving a 75-year sentence at the William E. Donaldson Correctional Facility in Jefferson County for a 2015 crime spree but on August 3, 2020, he was brought to Lauderdale County for questioning after he wrote a letter confessing to a murder, according to Singleton and District Attorney Chris Connolly. It was at that time Singleton believes Casey and Vicky first met and started up a cozy relationship. For the next three months, Casey was at the Lauderdale County jail where Vicky worked as investigators questioned him about the death of 58-year-old Connie Ridgeway. He was eventually arraigned on murder charges on Oct. 2, 2020. By that November, Casey was ordered to return to the Donaldson prison after staff realized he'd obtained a shank and was planning an escape, Connolly said. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/otcpod1/support

Paradise After Dark
BREAKING ~ Manhunt ~ Casey White/Vicky White

Paradise After Dark

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2022 29:22


For a week, 38-year-old Alabama inmate Casey White has been on the lam after he escaped from Lauderdale County jail in Florence, AL with former assistant director of corrections Vicky White, 56.Join our Patreon and enjoy early and ad-free episodes, tons of bonus episodes, discounts on our merchandise and more! www.patreon.com/palmahawkmedia Visit our website paradiseafterdark.com for links to our store, Patreon, tip jar and more! Facebook.com/paradiseafterdarkpodcastInstagram @paradiseafterdarkpodcastTwitter @paradisedark239TikTok @palmahawkmediaIf you see something say something!!Music by Captain Fathands @ captainfathands.com

Murder In The South: Cold Cases and Modern Mysteries
Everyone Has An Origin Story Right?

Murder In The South: Cold Cases and Modern Mysteries

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2022 12:26


Let's go back. Back to 2008, where the weirdness starts. The questionable suicide of 34 year old Christy Shelton, then girlfriend on Casey Cole White, the escaped capital murder inmate from Lauderdale County, Alabama. Then we'll dive into the 2015 2 state crime spree that ultimately landed Casey in jail for the rest of his life. Or so we thought... --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/murderinthesouth/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/murderinthesouth/support

Don Lemon Tonight
Is The Integrity Of The Supreme Court In Doubt?

Don Lemon Tonight

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2022 76:54


There's a stark divide in the House on the SCOTUS draft opinion that would overturn Roe v. Wade, in a move that could enable more than half of States to ban abortions. With Senators raising concerns about whether some SCOTUS nominees were truthful about their stance on the legislation during their confirmation hearings, CNN's Laura Coates and former U.S. Senator Doug Jones join to discuss what overturning Roe would mean for the integrity of the Court. The New York Times releases new audio of Kevin McCarthy calling Trump's actions on January 6 “Atrocious” and “Totally wrong”, and also discussing invoking the 25th Amendment to remove the then President from office. Plus, the manhunt for Alabama corrections officer Vicky White and murder suspect Casey White (not related) continues following their disappearance from Lauderdale County jail, the Federal Reserve raises interest rates by 0.5% amid high inflation, and Ukrainian forces retake another village as they inch towards Russia. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy

Chord Buddy Podcast
CHORD BUDDY EPISODE 58 050522

Chord Buddy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2022 21:31


Travis talked about Jerome Jackson sitting in with his Stateline Five band at Keel & Company in Headland, Alabama Saturday night. There was also talk about the 6 foot 9 inch inmate who escaped from the Lauderdale County, Alabama jail assisted by a female deputy. And the new marketing company for Chord Buddy has begun their new campaign.

Down in Alabama with Ike Morgan

Updates on President Biden's visit, the Supreme Court's leaked abortion opinion and the Lauderdale County jail escape. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Priority Talk
Priority Talk Show - 05-2-2022

Priority Talk

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2022 91:47


Greg discusses the crazy circumstances of an escaped criminal from Lauderdale County jail and the potential enabling retiring Sheriff's Deputy who now has a warrant for her arrest.  THen Greg takes on the student loan crisis and the greater picture of debt in general. Is forgiving student loans a "righteous" cause? Want to help support Priority Talk? Here are a few ways to do it! 1. Subscribe, Share, and Like the podcast on whatever platform you like! 2. Rate and Review the show to help our podcast rise to the top. 3. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram ⬇️ Support our Sponsors ⬇️ PESTIE The internet's most trusted do-it-yourself pest control solution. With Pestie you get high-quality pesticides, 5 minute application, and guaranteed results. It is Kid and pet safe and is custom built to where you live.

Down in Alabama with Ike Morgan
February 25, 2022

Down in Alabama with Ike Morgan

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2022 5:13


Russia's war in Ukraine felt in Alabama; a budget passed the state Senate; a car that spent 20 years in a Lauderdale County creek. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Daily News Brief
Daily News Brief for Friday, January 28th, 2022

Daily News Brief

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2022 1262:58


Play 0:42-0:45 during intro What do we want? Freedom. When do we want it? Now …and more on today's CrossPolitic Daily News Brief. This is Toby Sumpter. Today is Friday, January 28, 2022.  If you want to see more of this sort of thing, please consider joining the Fight Laugh Feast Club. For less than a few coffees a month, you can help us build a rowdy Christian media response to liberal legacy media, big tech, and build a Christian megaphone for the truth. Go to flfnetwork.com and click on “join the club.” OK one more thing: would please Like and share this show? Do it now so we can reach more people with the truth.  Canadian Broadcasting Points the Camera in the Wrong Direction https://twitter.com/canmericanized/status/1486772972719247361?s=20&t=kMVv2-_m9Q7mb-pLue7jRg No one else is showing this, so I'm going to play this full 2 minute video because I want you to see this freedom protest in Canada along the route of the Trucker Convoy.  According to Johns Hopkins University, Israeli COVID cases have broken a new world record. Over 100,000 new COVID cases have been recorded in Israel for their 7-day rolling average, setting set a new world record high, where over 90% of the adult population has received 2 vaccine doses, 80% have received 3 doses, and over 500,000 Israelis have received 4 doses—which the government is now pushing for all adults. Clearly, they have not had enough doses. Next, I want to tell you about Cornerstone Work & Worldview Institute. College is great! But it's not for everyone. Cornerstone Work & Worldview Institute seeks to fill that gap. Their mission is to build kingdom culture in the workplace through their integrative program of worldview instruction and on-the-job skills training under the guidance of mentors. They offer courses in Bible, theology, and economics as well as business, project management, and marketing and more. They also provide their students with internships with business partners so they can learn and gain practical skills. You are invited to join their mission to provide Christians another educational opportunity. Together you can help students grow confident in their faith and competent in their labor. Visit them today at cornerstonework.org to learn more, to enroll, or to become one of their partners.   Thousands of Mississippians are locked up in jails awaiting trial because they can't afford a lawyer. Duane Lake spent six years locked up in a jail cell in Clarksdale for a triple murder he didn't commit. “I lost it all — my family, my marriage, my job, my career,” said the 35-year-old welder. “Now I'm working, trying to get everything back. I've got to take it one day at a time.” He spent many of those days in the “dead zone” — what defense lawyers are calling the time behind bars without legal representation. He was arrested in 2015, but he wasn't indicted until two years later. Then he spent another four years in jail while awaiting trial. But he had no lawyer to fight for his release, so he wound up filing his own motions for a speedy trial. He never heard anything back. A court-appointed lawyer represented him at a hearing after his arrest. Another court-appointed lawyer represented him at a hearing after his indictment. In November — more than six years after he was jailed — a jury acquitted him of capital murder. Thousands of Mississippians are locked up in jails awaiting trial because they can't afford a lawyer. Cliff Johnson, director of the Roderick and Solange MacArthur Justice Center at the University of Mississippi School of Law, said about 85% of those charged with crimes in the state can't afford private lawyers and must rely on public defenders. The problem? “Many of those same poor people who can't make bail are forced to rely on a public defender system that appoints them a lawyer at the outset of their case who handles only preliminary matters and then disappears,” Johnson said. “No other lawyer is appointed until after an indictment is obtained by the district attorney, and in Mississippi that can takes months or even years because we don't have a time limit on how long a person can be jailed prior to action by a grand jury.” He referred to that lengthy stretch without representation as “the dead zone.” “It is a failure of Mississippi's criminal legal system that has devastating consequences for poor defendants,” Johnson said. Mississippi is one of five states with no statewide public defender system. Instead, the burden for legal representation falls on local governments, many of which struggle to fund such representation. Johnson said he's amazed “how cavalier some Mississippians are when it comes to allowing the government to take people's liberty. They say they don't trust the government, but they sure seem happy to let the government rob other folks of their freedom.” Because Lake's case appeared to have been weak, he said, if a public defender had been appointed and worked early on the matter, perhaps prosecutors would have considered a request to dismiss the charge. “The law and our criminal rules say that there is a presumption of release prior to trial and that requiring payment for one's freedom should be the exception rather than the rule,” he said. “But Mississippi judges demand that people pay for their liberty in 99 percent of felony cases, presumption of innocence be damned.”  Th​e problem ​caused by the combination of Mississippi's bail practices and spotty public defender system is growing because the jail population continues to grow, he said. The number of Mississippians incarcerated in county jails across the state have increased by more than 500 since the pandemic began, a report by his office shows. Of the more than 5,700 jailed, 2,700 have been there longer than 90 days. More than 1,000 have been incarcerated at least nine months, and 740 have been stuck in county jails over a year. An MCIR analysis of the database shows that 1 out of every 17 people in a Mississippi jail hasn't been indicted. Most have been jailed for more than two months — enough time for people to lose jobs and fall behind on financial commitments while they wait for legal help. Of those, 89 have been jailed more than six months, and 29 have gone more than a year. One man arrested for murder in Lauderdale County has been jailed for nearly four years. He still hasn't been indicted. That extra time behind bars costs Mississippi counties, which spend at least $90 million a year for pretrial incarceration alone. This is just your friendly reminder that prisons are wicked, unbiblical, and unjust. Christians must be at the forefront of demanding the dismantling of the prison system. And Christians of all people should know why. Because they get used to abuse the innocent, you know, like Christians, like Christians in China, like Christians in Canada. Sure, very short jail time for violent criminal awaiting their trial and punishment. But mass incarceration is heinous sin against God. It treats human being bad in His image as animals. It prevents true restorative justice from being carried out where restitution is possible, and it prevents the justice of the death penalty from taking away the blood guilt from the land.  Boston patient removed from heart transplant list for being unvaccinated A 31-year-old father has been removed from the heart transplant list at a Boston hospital because he is refusing to get the COVID-19 vaccine, his family said. DJ Ferguson's family say he was first on the list to receive the transplant at Brigham and Women's Hospital — but he is no longer eligible because of his vaccination status, CBS Boston reported. His father, David Ferguson, said his son — who is fighting for his life in the hospital and is in desperate need of the transplant — doesn't believe in the COVID-19 vaccine. Play: 0:12-016, 0:27-33 “It's kind of against his basic principles, he doesn't believe in it. It's a policy they are enforcing and so because he won't get the shot, they took him off the list of a heart transplant,” David told the outlet. Dr. Arthur Kaplan, head of medical ethics at NYU Medical School: 1:25-1:41 How are those vaccines working out in Israel? Oh nevermind…  It's time for Christians to step up their game in the medical industries. Start your own practices, your own surgery centers, you own pharmacies, and hospitals. And let's get some states to deregulate the medical industry and let families choose what they believe is best for themselves. Why? Because Jesus is Lord. Because He is Lord of the family and the state, and He gives them their respective authorities, and they cannot go beyond what He has given them or abdicate the duties He has given. Psalm of the Day: Psalm 110 0:00-0:41, 1:26-2:09 Remember you can always find the links to our news stories and these psalms at crosspolitic dot com – just click on the daily news brief and follow the links. Or find them on our App: just search “Fight Laugh Feast” in your favorite app store and never miss a show.  This is Toby Sumpter with Crosspolitic News. A reminder: Support Rowdy Christian media, and share this show or become a Fight Laugh Feast Club Member. What allows us to continuing growing to take on the Big Media Lie Fest is your monthly membership support. If you've already joined, a huge thanks to you, and if you haven't, please consider joining today and have a great day.

Daily News Brief
Daily News Brief for Friday, January 28th, 2022

Daily News Brief

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2022 15:46


Play 0:42-0:45 during intro What do we want? Freedom. When do we want it? Now …and more on today's CrossPolitic Daily News Brief. This is Toby Sumpter. Today is Friday, January 28, 2022. If you want to see more of this sort of thing, please consider joining the Fight Laugh Feast Club. For less than a few coffees a month, you can help us build a rowdy Christian media response to liberal legacy media, big tech, and build a Christian megaphone for the truth. Go to flfnetwork.com and click on “join the club.” OK one more thing: would please Like and share this show? Do it now so we can reach more people with the truth. Canadian Broadcasting Points the Camera in the Wrong Direction https://twitter.com/canmericanized/status/1486772972719247361?s=20&t=kMVv2-_m9Q7mb-pLue7jRg No one else is showing this, so I'm going to play this full 2 minute video because I want you to see this freedom protest in Canada along the route of the Trucker Convoy. According to Johns Hopkins University, Israeli COVID cases have broken a new world record. Over 100,000 new COVID cases have been recorded in Israel for their 7-day rolling average, setting set a new world record high, where over 90% of the adult population has received 2 vaccine doses, 80% have received 3 doses, and over 500,000 Israelis have received 4 doses—which the government is now pushing for all adults. Clearly, they have not had enough doses. Next, I want to tell you about Cornerstone Work & Worldview Institute. College is great! But it's not for everyone. Cornerstone Work & Worldview Institute seeks to fill that gap. Their mission is to build kingdom culture in the workplace through their integrative program of worldview instruction and on-the-job skills training under the guidance of mentors. They offer courses in Bible, theology, and economics as well as business, project management, and marketing and more. They also provide their students with internships with business partners so they can learn and gain practical skills. You are invited to join their mission to provide Christians another educational opportunity. Together you can help students grow confident in their faith and competent in their labor. Visit them today at cornerstonework.org to learn more, to enroll, or to become one of their partners. Thousands of Mississippians are locked up in jails awaiting trial because they can't afford a lawyer. Duane Lake spent six years locked up in a jail cell in Clarksdale for a triple murder he didn't commit. “I lost it all — my family, my marriage, my job, my career,” said the 35-year-old welder. “Now I'm working, trying to get everything back. I've got to take it one day at a time.” He spent many of those days in the “dead zone” — what defense lawyers are calling the time behind bars without legal representation. He was arrested in 2015, but he wasn't indicted until two years later. Then he spent another four years in jail while awaiting trial. But he had no lawyer to fight for his release, so he wound up filing his own motions for a speedy trial. He never heard anything back. A court-appointed lawyer represented him at a hearing after his arrest. Another court-appointed lawyer represented him at a hearing after his indictment. In November — more than six years after he was jailed — a jury acquitted him of capital murder. Thousands of Mississippians are locked up in jails awaiting trial because they can't afford a lawyer. Cliff Johnson, director of the Roderick and Solange MacArthur Justice Center at the University of Mississippi School of Law, said about 85% of those charged with crimes in the state can't afford private lawyers and must rely on public defenders. The problem? “Many of those same poor people who can't make bail are forced to rely on a public defender system that appoints them a lawyer at the outset of their case who handles only preliminary matters and then disappears,” Johnson said. “No other lawyer is appointed until after an indictment is obtained by the district attorney, and in Mississippi that can takes months or even years because we don't have a time limit on how long a person can be jailed prior to action by a grand jury.” He referred to that lengthy stretch without representation as “the dead zone.” “It is a failure of Mississippi's criminal legal system that has devastating consequences for poor defendants,” Johnson said. Mississippi is one of five states with no statewide public defender system. Instead, the burden for legal representation falls on local governments, many of which struggle to fund such representation. Johnson said he's amazed “how cavalier some Mississippians are when it comes to allowing the government to take people's liberty. They say they don't trust the government, but they sure seem happy to let the government rob other folks of their freedom.” Because Lake's case appeared to have been weak, he said, if a public defender had been appointed and worked early on the matter, perhaps prosecutors would have considered a request to dismiss the charge. “The law and our criminal rules say that there is a presumption of release prior to trial and that requiring payment for one's freedom should be the exception rather than the rule,” he said. “But Mississippi judges demand that people pay for their liberty in 99 percent of felony cases, presumption of innocence be damned.” Th​e problem ​caused by the combination of Mississippi's bail practices and spotty public defender system is growing because the jail population continues to grow, he said. The number of Mississippians incarcerated in county jails across the state have increased by more than 500 since the pandemic began, a report by his office shows. Of the more than 5,700 jailed, 2,700 have been there longer than 90 days. More than 1,000 have been incarcerated at least nine months, and 740 have been stuck in county jails over a year. An MCIR analysis of the database shows that 1 out of every 17 people in a Mississippi jail hasn't been indicted. Most have been jailed for more than two months — enough time for people to lose jobs and fall behind on financial commitments while they wait for legal help. Of those, 89 have been jailed more than six months, and 29 have gone more than a year. One man arrested for murder in Lauderdale County has been jailed for nearly four years. He still hasn't been indicted. That extra time behind bars costs Mississippi counties, which spend at least $90 million a year for pretrial incarceration alone. This is just your friendly reminder that prisons are wicked, unbiblical, and unjust. Christians must be at the forefront of demanding the dismantling of the prison system. And Christians of all people should know why. Because they get used to abuse the innocent, you know, like Christians, like Christians in China, like Christians in Canada. Sure, very short jail time for violent criminal awaiting their trial and punishment. But mass incarceration is heinous sin against God. It treats human being bad in His image as animals. It prevents true restorative justice from being carried out where restitution is possible, and it prevents the justice of the death penalty from taking away the blood guilt from the land. Boston patient removed from heart transplant list for being unvaccinated A 31-year-old father has been removed from the heart transplant list at a Boston hospital because he is refusing to get the COVID-19 vaccine, his family said. DJ Ferguson's family say he was first on the list to receive the transplant at Brigham and Women's Hospital — but he is no longer eligible because of his vaccination status, CBS Boston reported. His father, David Ferguson, said his son — who is fighting for his life in the hospital and is in desperate need of the transplant — doesn't believe in the COVID-19 vaccine. Play: 0:12-016, 0:27-33 “It's kind of against his basic principles, he doesn't believe in it. It's a policy they are enforcing and so because he won't get the shot, they took him off the list of a heart transplant,” David told the outlet. Dr. Arthur Kaplan, head of medical ethics at NYU Medical School: 1:25-1:41 How are those vaccines working out in Israel? Oh nevermind… It's time for Christians to step up their game in the medical industries. Start your own practices, your own surgery centers, you own pharmacies, and hospitals. And let's get some states to deregulate the medical industry and let families choose what they believe is best for themselves. Why? Because Jesus is Lord. Because He is Lord of the family and the state, and He gives them their respective authorities, and they cannot go beyond what He has given them or abdicate the duties He has given. Psalm of the Day: Psalm 110 0:00-0:41, 1:26-2:09 Remember you can always find the links to our news stories and these psalms at crosspolitic dot com – just click on the daily news brief and follow the links. Or find them on our App: just search “Fight Laugh Feast” in your favorite app store and never miss a show. This is Toby Sumpter with Crosspolitic News. A reminder: Support Rowdy Christian media, and share this show or become a Fight Laugh Feast Club Member. What allows us to continuing growing to take on the Big Media Lie Fest is your monthly membership support. If you've already joined, a huge thanks to you, and if you haven't, please consider joining today and have a great day.

Historical Insights
November and December 1863

Historical Insights

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2022 44:47


We will discuss General Dodge's movement through Lauderdale County in November 1863, with the heavy impacts it had on the local population, and the increasingly bitter skirmishing among small groups as the Union presence became solidified in and around Pulaski, TN. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jordan-collier10/support

FM Talk 1065 Podcasts
Midday Mobile Monday 1-10-21_Director of Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries Chuck Sykes

FM Talk 1065 Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2022 12:33


ICYMI: On Midday Mobile Sean Sullivan talked to Director of Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries Chuck Sykes.  A sample recently collected from a hunter harvested, white-tailed deer in west-central Lauderdale County has been confirmed positive for Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD). This is the first case of CWD detected in Alabama's deer herd. They discuss what this means for the state.

The Daily Detail
The Daily Detail for 12.2.21

The Daily Detail

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2021 10:45


AlabamaACLL attorney Matthew Clark reports from DC on oral arguments of Dobbs vs. JacksonAlabama AG Steve Marshall wins preliminary injunction against Biden vaccine mandateGrand jury issues a summons to Lauderdale County coroner for failure to perform dutiesSpanish Fort Police chief says security video is providing leads on roof cutting thievesAnother package driver gives in to the spirit of the Grinch and dumps some packagesNationalA fourth high school student dies from injuries a day after shooting in MichiganBiden Administration deploys 2 thousand National Guardsmen to Horn of  AfricaTrial of Ghislaine Maxwell enters 4th day with witnesses taking standWhistleblower fights back after called liar for exposing problems within Pfizer Covid vaccine clinical trialsNBA's fully vaxxed LeBron James is sidelined for testing positive for Covid

Cumberland Road
Alfred Roundtree - If You Want To Make God Laugh, You Tell God Your Plans

Cumberland Road

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2021 54:37


Alfred Roundtree was born and raised in Lauderdale County, Tennessee.  He is the minister at the Walton Grove Cumberland Presbyterian Church in America in Henry, Tennessee.  Alfred works full time with individuals with intellectual disabilities and also is a financial couch educating people on the importance of financial literacy. Alfred is married with two boys; 28 and 13 years old. Music is provided by Pierce Murphy, Caldera Blue. Source:  https://www.freemusicarchive.org/music/Pierce_Murphy/through-the-olive-branches/caldera-blueComments: http://freemusicarchive.org/Additional comments:  modifications made to shorten and loop song for introduction and closing of podcast.Copyright Attribution and License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

UTIAg
Bringing it Home: Post Pandemic Fashions

UTIAg

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2021 13:01


For many, it's time to put the ultra-comfy clothing away and get appropriately dressed again. This week, Sarah and Tennille are joined by Rachel Erwin, FCS Extension Agent from Lauderdale County, to discuss some important aspects of post-pandemic fashions.

The Mark White Show
The MFH Good Deed Segment: Young Bull Causes Trouble in Alabama Community

The Mark White Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2020 38:56


On this edition of The Mary Faye Headrick Good Deed Segment, I am talking with John Phelps from the Underwood-Petersville community in Lauderdale County, Alabama, about a young bull that he recently purchased that caused some problems in the community. John shares about the assistance he received from law enforcement, friends, and neighbors and how he and his group of business partners have decided to not let the bull derail their plans for the JJ and L Cattle Company.

Mississippi Edition
4/1/20 - Lauderdale Co. Shelter in Place | Bank Security | Southern Remedy Health Minute | Cory Branan

Mississippi Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 24:10


The Governor issues his first shelter in place order.And, with the Dow having its worst quarter in over a century, how secure is money in the bank?Then, after a Southern Remedy Health Minute, shut-down bars and concert venues are leaving gig workers gig-less. How one Mississippi musician is coping.Segment 1:Lauderdale County in east Mississippi is under a shelter in place order. Governor Tate Reeves issued the Executive Order yesterday as a means to slow the spread of the coronavirus in the county, which has seen a rapid increase in positive tests of COVID-19. Reeves says the action follows the new aggressive measures against the virus outlined by his coronavirus response team last week.Segment 2:COVID-19 is causing many concerns with consumers as the market suffered its worst quarter in over a century - but, the Mississippi Bankers association says access to money in the bank shouldn't be one of them. Executive Order 1463, signed Governor Reeves last week, includes banks as essential services as defined by guidance from US Department of Homeland Security and the United States Treasury. Gordon Fellows is the President and CEO of the Mississippi Bankers Association. He says regulations help keep consumers' money safe.Segment 3:Southern Remedy Health MinuteSegment 4:Southaven native Cory Branan has made a living making records and touring - both the U.S. and Europe - but with doors to bars and concert venues locked-up, the gigs have gone dry. He shares how he and his colleagues are adapting to life at home, and how social media platforms help keep the connection with his fans alive. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

iSchoolSports Network
The Coach Pat Prestridge Show-- Geraldine Week

iSchoolSports Network

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2018 9:04


After a big win over Lauderdale County, the RCHS Tigers travel to Geraldine for a second round matchup. Coach Prestridge discusses the win, and previews the next game.

iSchoolSports Network
The Coach Pat Prestridge Show-- Lauderdale County Week

iSchoolSports Network

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2018 9:37


The playoffs are here! Quandale talks about Randolph County's first round opponent, as well as discusses the 28-0 win over inter-county rival Wadley last Friday night in Wedowee.

The Dark Horde Network
UBR- UFO Report 38: How Many People Needed to Make A Nazca Mummy and 1930 Alabama Encounter

The Dark Horde Network

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2017 14:12


We have an audio clip from the YouTube channel SkyWatch TV and the host provides an interesting bit on information on the Nazca Mummy situation and the Jaime Maussan drama. Published on Aug 8, 2017 X-rays of the Nazca Mummy reveal that its hands are a composite of bones from two human skeletons, one of which was an infant Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MBEC0lGHzOY&t=208s UFO 1930 — An Alabama Family Account The UFO sighting account happened in the town of Waterloo, Ala., in Lauderdale County in late fall of 1930. Story from blog authored by Cheryl Costa published in the Syracuse NewTimes Article Link: https://www.syracusenewtimes.com/ufo-1930-an-alabama-family-account/ The Show Stuff Checkout our new UFO BUSTER RADIO GOODIES!! https://shop.spreadshirt.com/UFOBusterRadio/ Facebook Pages UBR Truth Seekers Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/216706068856746 Manny Moonraker: https://www.facebook.com/MannyMoonraker/ UFO Buster Radio: https://www.facebook.com/UFOBusterRadio UFO Buster Radio Merch T-Shirts and stuff: https://shop.spreadshirt.com/UFOBusterRadio Patreon: Become a patron of the show and help us gear up with technology worthy of investigating UFO sightings both historical and new. www.patreon.com/ufobusterradio UFO Buster Radio YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCggl8-aPBDo7wXJQ43TiluA To contact Manny: manny@ufobusterradio.com, or on Twitter @ufobusterradio Call the show anytime at (972) 290-1329 and leave us a message with your point of view, UFO sighting, and ghostly experiences or join the discussion on www.ufobusterradio.com For Skype Users: bosscrawler Background Track(s): YouTube Creator Collection Lightless Dawn by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100655 Artist: http://incompetech.com/

The Dark Horde Network
UBR- UFO Report 38: How Many People Needed to Make A Nazca Mummy and 1930 Alabama Encounter

The Dark Horde Network

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2017 14:12


We have an audio clip from the YouTube channel SkyWatch TV and the host provides an interesting bit on information on the Nazca Mummy situation and the Jaime Maussan drama. Published on Aug 8, 2017 X-rays of the Nazca Mummy reveal that its hands are a composite of bones from two human skeletons, one of which was an infant Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MBEC0lGHzOY&t=208s UFO 1930 — An Alabama Family Account The UFO sighting account happened in the town of Waterloo, Ala., in Lauderdale County in late fall of 1930. Story from blog authored by Cheryl Costa published in the Syracuse NewTimes Article Link: https://www.syracusenewtimes.com/ufo-1930-an-alabama-family-account/ The Show Stuff Checkout our new UFO BUSTER RADIO GOODIES!! https://shop.spreadshirt.com/UFOBusterRadio/ Facebook Pages UBR Truth Seekers Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/216706068856746 Manny Moonraker: https://www.facebook.com/MannyMoonraker/ UFO Buster Radio: https://www.facebook.com/UFOBusterRadio UFO Buster Radio Merch T-Shirts and stuff: https://shop.spreadshirt.com/UFOBusterRadio Patreon: Become a patron of the show and help us gear up with technology worthy of investigating UFO sightings both historical and new. www.patreon.com/ufobusterradio UFO Buster Radio YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCggl8-aPBDo7wXJQ43TiluA To contact Manny: manny@ufobusterradio.com, or on Twitter @ufobusterradio Call the show anytime at (972) 290-1329 and leave us a message with your point of view, UFO sighting, and ghostly experiences or join the discussion on www.ufobusterradio.com For Skype Users: bosscrawler Background Track(s): YouTube Creator Collection Lightless Dawn by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100655 Artist: http://incompetech.com/

Bloody Angola
When Evil Escapes | The Crimes of Casey White & Vickie White

Bloody Angola

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 53:46


Woody Overton and Jim Chapman tell the story of Casey White and Vickie White who just last year led authorities on an 11 day manhunt following Casey White's escape from prison in one of the most adrenaline filled escapes in United States history.#CaseyWhite #VickieWhite #PrisonEscape #Podcast #WhenEvilEscapesCheck out past episodes on our website by clicking hereFULL TRANSCRIPTJim: Hey, everyone. Welcome back to another edition of Bloody-Woody: -Angola.Jim: A podcast 142 years in the making.Woody: The Complete Story of America's Bloodiest Prison.Jim: And I'm Jim Chapman.Woody: And I'm Woody Overton.Jim: And we're back with a new episode.Woody: We're back, y'all. And, hey, patrons, thank y'all so much for supporting us. And as any show does, eventually, we took, what, a two-week hiatus? Jim: Yeah, we dropped just for patrons for a couple of weeks.Woody: Right. But we've had meanwhile-- it's funny, we take the little break, and we go to number five again and we're kind of going viral on Bloody Angola and we won't take much time off, y'all, but sometimes it is what it is. That being said, we want to thank everybody and we welcome all you new listeners to this edition of Bloody Angola. What we told y'all, or I've told y'all in every episode of Bloody Angola, is you're always going to get something different. Today's case is really different, because while the story is not directly related to Angola, I can tell you it's directly related to Angola.Jim: [laughs]Woody: The case is about a guy named Casey White, who was a convict, and Vicky White, who was a correctional officer. And we're going to get into it but let me tell you this. I can tell you, I've seen it, I've arrested people inside the prison for doing it. What it boils down to is correctional officers and inmates fucking. Jim: Yeah.Woody: You wouldn't think, Jim, that that would happen, but it probably happens more than inmates doing it. I think the convicts use-- certainly some of the people locked up in prison are geniuses and they are master manipulators for whatever the crimes may have been. They find that weak person, male or female. We've done an episode on Bloody Angola about the lieutenant who was banging a convict. But it happens, male and female. So, it's a very real deal inside the prison. I told you, anytime you go behind those gates or the walls, that that normal rules don't apply. And it is what it is.Y'all, I've actually seen it. I'll tell you one case that really sticks in my head. There was a politician's daughter, and she was an attractive female, who was a correctional officer. Now, naturally, he got her the job and they gave her a cush job. She was in the canteen. She worked where they got all the snacks and shit from. She had an orderly who worked with her when-- we called him, really working her from behind, literally. Jim: [laughs] Woody: And somebody else had snitched on them. So, we set it up and waited for the opportunity and busted in. They were butt naked, and he was balls deep. She didn't get arrested because of who she was, but she got fired, and he got swung to the working cell block. Jim: Oh, very nice.Woody: But this story is super, super interesting. You know what? I told you correctional officers, some of the best people in the world, and then some of them that you work with that are worse than inmates. This story really shows how the human psyche can roll out, because you can be the best correctional officer for years and then sugar turns into shit. Jim: That's right. This is a good example of it. As Woody just told you, it's one hell of a story. The best place to start is, I want to give you guys and gals an idea of the background of these two subjects that we're going to talk about. The first one is Casey White, y'all. Now, to call this guy a stone-cold killer would really be putting it mildly. The first thing you notice when you see Casey White is his size. He's just flat out a giant of a human being. Woody: Like a freak of nature giant.Jim: Freak of nature, 6'9", weighed 330-- [crosstalk] Woody: There's not that many players in the NBA that are 6'9". Jim: There's probably not a bunch of people on Earth that are 6'9" and 330 pounds. And, y'all, this ain't fat. This is solid prison muscle. And prison muscle, as you've heard Woody talk about many times on Real Life Real Crime, is different than free people muscle. [laughs] Woody: Jim and I have been here before, and somebody came in to be a guest on the show, and I was like, "Oh, shit, that's prison muscle." Jim: Oh, yeah. You spot it right off, and that's what he had. The next thing you'll notice about this guy is his tattoos. Now, he has tons of them, but this isn't your typical barbed wire or if you're in the navy, you've got an anchor on your bicep or something. These are mostly white supremacist related tattoos. He was associated with the Alabama-based white supremacist prison gang, Southern Brotherhood. So, not a nice individual. In addition to being a freaking Jolly Green Giant. Woody: We need to cover this one day, and we will on prison gangs, different ones, maybe episode on each one. Let me tell you about the Aryan-based prison gangs. They're like the military. On your yard time, you have to work out. They work out in formation. They stay to themselves, etc. The prison muscle deal, if you don't work out and you're not swole, they'll beat your ass. If you don't do what they order you to do, they'll kill you. But at 6'9", 330 pounds, I bet you he was a shot caller.Jim: Oh, yeah. What we're trying to do here is paint y'all a picture of how intimidating this guy is before you even know even a shred of his criminal record. Now, you may wonder what's that look like. Well, get ready for this. Woody: Well, in 2006, Casey White was arrested on a domestic violence charge. But, Jim, it wasn't his wife. Domestic violence doesn't mean it's your spouse. In this case, he was arrested for beating his mama's ass. His own mother. Four years later, in 2010, he pled guilty to attacking his brother, another domestic violence, with an axe handle, and was sentenced to six years in prison.And, y'all, in December 2015, Mr. White went on another crime spree where he tracked down and tried to kill his ex-girlfriend. The rampage spanned both Alabama and Tennessee as he held victims at gunpoint, shot one woman in arm, killed a dog, and carried out a home invasion and staged multiple carjackings before he was finally captured in a dramatic police chase. Now, this spree unfolded on the morning of December 1st, 2015, when he broke into a home and stole two guns. Later that night, he turned up at his girlfriend's house armed with the stolen guns and opened fire on her and two men inside the home.Jim: Didn't even hesitate.Woody: He had it on his mind. After that, White then broke into another home and stole a man's car and another gun. Around an hour later, he shot another woman in the arm in an attempted carjacking in Tennessee before carjacking another person at gunpoint.Jim: This is all the same freaking weekend.Woody: He's just rolling. I mean, he's just straight up thug life. White was finally captured in a dramatic 100-mile-an-hour police chase that ended in a standoff back over the border in Alabama. Now, he's in a standoff. And during the standoff, he demands to speak to the sheriff and threatened to shoot himself in the head. He asked for a pack of Marlboro cigarettes and a Sun Drop soda before he surrendered. Jim: [laughs] Got to have them Marlboros. Woody: Got to get me them reds. Jim: That's crazy.Woody: Got to get that voice right. Well, he knew he was going back to prison. In 2019, White was convicted on multiple charges over the rampage, including attempted murder of his ex-girlfriend, and he got 75 years in prison. Jim: So, that's what kind of guy we're dealing with here. Woody: Real winner.Jim: I guess you could say, walks the walk and talks the talk when it comes to it. Woody: When you tat yourself up with Swastikas and shit, you're pretty much not going to get a job as a whatever, as an accountant. I mean, you're in for the thug life. He's proven it, and he has total disregard for the law and anything going on with it.Jim: Yeah, so he's right where he belongs. And while serving this 75--Woody: He's the reason they build Bloody Angolas. Jim: Yeah, that's right. While serving this sentence of 75 years, he's also awaiting a trial for the 2015 stabbing and murder of a 58-year-old mother of two named Connie Ridgeway. Now shortly after he got locked up for that 75-year stint, he provided a confession for that particular murder. Now, she was found stabbed to death in her apartment. This was in Rogersville, Alabama on the 23rd October of 2015. The case went unsolved for five years until White sent a letter to the Lauderdale County Sheriff's Office confessing to the crime. During a subsequent interview with authorities, he allegedly gave details about the crime that had not been made public which only the killer, y'all, would have known. Prosecutors say he was paid to carry out that hit. Woody: Got to make a living. Jim: Got to make a living. Look, his whole life, that's how he generated money, I'm sure. In 2020, he was charged with two counts of capital murder. Now, after confessing to the murder in which he initially pled guilty, he changes his plea to not guilty by reason of mental illness. Woody: See how that works out for him.Jim: Yeah, primarily because they were going for the death penalty if he was convicted in that case. So, there's no way at that point he's going to plead just straight up guilty. Now, if that's not enough to paint a picture of how evil this guy is, there's also the mysterious disappearance and death of his 2008 girlfriend. Casey White's then girlfriend, back in 2008, Christy Shelton, was shot in the chest by a sawed-off shotgun inside an Alabama home belonging to White's mother. Woody: The same mother he beat the shit out of. Jim: Same one he beat the shit out of. Ms. Shelton, who was 31 at the time, died at the scene. Now, White was in the home with her at the time of the shooting, but somehow, Woody, was ruled out as a suspect. Woody: Ah, look at that.Jim: That was his history. Back then, officials ruled the 31-year-old deaths as a suicide and the case was closed. So, he probably made it look like a suicide somehow. Ms. Shelton's family, of course, always doubted that version of events and it was never solved. That is the crimes, Casey White was convicted of and the ones he still faced justice for in 2022 when the incident we're about to tell you about took place. Woody: It's just a long, long storied history of being a piece of shit. Jim: His whole life. Woody: A hardcore piece of shit. Jim: Start out beating his mother and his brother. Woody: I mean, he's just the gift that keeps on giving. But again, that's why we build prisons, for murderers and pieces of shit like this. Let me tell you about the other side of this story. And that is about Ms. Vicky White. Now listen, they have the same last name, y'all, her and Casey White, but they're not related at all. They weren't married, not blood related, nothing. Just chances, I guess. White is a pretty common name. But Vicky White was a total opposite of Casey. At 56 years old, Vicky White was almost getting ready to retire from her career as a correctional officer. Rick Singleton, the sheriff in Lauderdale County, Alabama, was quoted as saying she was a model employee in all her coworkers. All the employees in the sheriff's office, the judges and all had the utmost respect for her. Now, Vicky White was a widow with no children and never had so much as a speeding ticket in her entire life. She was clean as a whistle. She is 5'5" and weighed 145 pounds. Now, we told you about him, 6'9", 330.Vicky, in 1997, she joined the Lauderdale County Sheriff's Office and she went on become the office assistant director of corrections. That's something special for a female. I mean, that's a big deal. In 2002, she and Tommy White got married. Now, that's not Casey White, y'all. That's her husband. They got married and she was six years younger than him, and they raised cattle on a farm. She later left him when his drug problems got out of hand in 2006 and she divorced him. But she was so respected and well liked. In fact, between 2015 and 2022, her peers voted her as supervisor or employee of the year four times.Jim: Wow.Woody: I mean, she was just jam up. After her divorce with her husband, Tommy, she remained friendly with him. In January 2022, he died from complications related to Parkinson's disease. She's getting ready to retire. She's 56 years old. She's put in almost her 30 years. She's risen as high as she can get in corrections, sans a warden, I guess. Then, she's liked by everybody. Jim: Yeah. Just a stand-up citizen in all--Woody: All aspects. Jim: Total opposite of the other guy. Now, I know you're wondering, you're probably saying to yourself, "What happened? How the hell did these two completely different individuals just get intertwined?" Well, in 2020, while serving down his sentence at the William E. Donaldson Correctional Facility, which is in Jefferson County, Alabama, Casey White came into contact with Vicky White. Let me tell you how they came into contact. He was at a state prison, but they would transfer him to her jail whenever he would have court appearances. He'd get transferred to the jail, he'd see Ms. White and he wanted to get him a little something-something, probably wink at her or whatever. Look, this is a big dude now. He ain't blended in nowhere. Woody: Yeah. I'm sure he started out, he floated her a little wink or something and she didn't reject it. So, that opens up his can of worms. Like, "Every time I'm going down, I'm going to try to lay a little smackdown on this girl."Jim: That's right. Woody: If can be honest with you, I'm totally confident in my sexuality, I could say this. But I think you look at a 6'9" guy that's 330 pounds, and you think everything is big on that dude. [laughter] Woody: He probably got 14-- [crosstalk] Jim: An anaconda in his pants? [laughs]  Woody: At 14, his anaconda, but he don't fold it in half for anybody. [laughter] Jim: Indeed. And I'm sure she was thinking the same thing at the time.Woody: She's 56 and [crosstalk] husband for a while. That's still cracker. Jim: So, they would see each other. Speculation now is that the flirting started, and she started calling him. She would call him at his state prison, and they just shoot the breeze. Look, this became a two-year thing.Woody: Yeah. Once I submit to you on that first phone call, it's going to be a shitty--Jim: Yeah. "What are you wearing?" That was what that question was on that first phone call. "Is it red panty night?" [laughs] [crosstalk] Woody: That may have been the second phone call. The very fact that he got it across that line of calling me-- now, I'm sure they say, "This is a collect call from an inmate at correctional center, da, da, da," she had to take the charge. Jim: That's right. They start this kind of phone thing and visiting thing, and it becomes a two-year ordeal. As a matter of fact, during the next two years, they formed a relationship and other inmates-- and look, inmates talk and inmates after the fact, after all the dust settled and this case became obvious, they came forward and said he would get extra food and special privileges from Vicky White every time he was at that jail. And they were pissed. They're not going to rat out the 6'9", 330-pound beast for sure. Now,in the months and weeks leading up to what will become his escape from prison, aided by Vicky White, and of course, unbeknownst to officials, Vicky was preparing. Vicky announced plans to retire on April 29th, 2022, which incidentally, y'all, was the same day of the escape. She sold her home on April 18th of 2022 for $95,550. Now, that's important because it was well below the market value of $235,000.Woody: Yeah. She wanted that quick money. She had plan.Jim: She wanted that quick money. Yeah. First person looked at it, "What if I charge you 95,000?" They were like, "Okay." She ended up selling it for a third of its value. She then moved in with her mother, Pat Davis, for about five weeks after selling that home. She started taking money out of the bank. She had a number of different banks. She was taking cash out of everywhere. So, she was preparing. She even went shopping for men's clothing at a local department store, Woody Overton. Then, she goes to the adult store.Woody: The men's clothing, she had to look in the big and tall section. Jim: Oh, yeah. You had to get probably some special stuff there. She goes to the adult store even and buys lingerie and sex toys. Woody: We had to put on the kinky.Jim: Yeah. Woody: [crosstalk] Jim: Yeah. This is all going on the weeks before the actual escape, and she even purchased, which would become an important point, a 2007 Ford Edge that was orange under a false name. Woody: Right. Now, we set it up for you. You know who he is, what he's about. The two faces that she put on, the professional face and now she's got-- well, they had a common face. She's lining it all, and he's telling her to do all this. But I think $95,000, we can get by, have some good times on that. On April 28th, 2022, Vicky White stayed at a Quality Inn hotel in Florence, Alabama. It was this day that she positioned the orange Ford Edge at a parking lot about 10 minutes from the detention center.On the day of the escape, at 09:30 AM, Vicky White told another deputy that she planned to take Casey White to a mental health evaluation in court and then would seek medical attention because she wasn't feeling well. While the jail policy states that inmates are always accompanied by two deputies, because she's who she was, Vicky White, and everyone loved and trusted her, no one even second guessed her decision. That's really using your power and your authority and your reputation.Vicky White then took Casey White, who's wearing an orange jumpsuit and shackles, and put him in a patrol car, and she drove away. As they left the prison, Florence City Council member, Bill Griffin, was outside shooting a commercial for his council district, and he saw Vicky drive past him with Casey White in the backseat. Well, not unusual. Griffin knew White and waved at her, and she waved back to him twice before driving off. Just a day at the office. She drove the patrol car from the detention center to a nearby shopping center parking lot and left the vehicle there. They then got into the orange Ford Edge that had been left there the night earlier and drove away. The patrol car was found abandoned in the parking lot around 11:00 AM by someone on a lunch break. Imagine that, right? Jim: Yeah. Woody: When we say patrol cars, even every jail or prison, especially sheriff's offices, they have jail units. It looks just like a patrol car, like a uniform deputy patrolling in. But they have jail units that they can transport one inmate or time or go do whatever jail functions they need to do. That's what she did in this case. Officers at the jail became concerned and tried to call her but her phone kept going straight to voicemail. Then, they realized that Casey White had not been returned to the jail. The Ford Edge was found locked and abandoned in the middle of the road in Williamson County, Tennessee, about a two-hour drive north of Lauderdale County. Unaware of its origin, a tow truck driver, Robert Keynes, transported the vehicle to a local tow lot. At about 03:30 PM, officials realized Vicky and Casey White were missing. Now y'all remember when she bought the Ford Edge, she did it under assumed name so it's not tied to her. Once they realized that Vicky and Casey were missing, the Lauderdale County sheriff's office put out an alert on their Facebook page just before 6 o'clock in the evening. Jim: Wow. You can imagine the panic, y'all. This guy was a stone-cold killer. He just escaped your jail. I mean he is the worst of the worst. There's probably going to be violence at some point. Now in addition, you're assuming Vicky is a victim. Nobody is thinking at this time Vicky helped this guy escape. They're all thinking he must have overpowered or got out of his handcuffs or something. So, you call the cavalry. And that's just what they did. On May 1st, the US Marshals offer up to a $10,000 reward for information leading to the capture of Casey White. Vicky White was described as missing and endangered.Woody: In case you don't know, anytime there's an escaped inmate or convict, the US Marshals, they have a specialized division just in tracking down escapees. Everybody else would have been looking for them also, the sheriff's office and all the state police. But when you call in the US marshals, this division, all they do is eat escapees. Jim: Yeah. As Woody said, they start investigating and they figured out, and they figured out pretty fast. As a matter of fact, by the next day, they figure out that Vicky White was somehow involved in aiding him in this escape. On May 2nd, a warrant is issued for Vicky White, charging her with permitting and facilitating escape in the first degree. So, something happened. Woody: I'm sure they figured out that he actually didn't have doctor's appointments. She made all that shit up. Jim: Absolutely. And some other things. Actually, she and Casey White were caught on camera as well, which in reality, look, that was going to happen sooner or later. People don't realize it, but all of us are on camera. An average, y'all, you, whoever's listening right now, all of you, you're on camera an average of 70 times per day, whether it's going in and out of stores, pumping gas, sitting at red lights, whatever. Woody: Considering the Chinese spy balloons. Jim: Yeah, that's right. [chuckles] The particular video of the two that kind of tied it in for them shows Vicky White driving the patrol car straight from the detention center to the parking lot where it was found. She made no stops in between and that was an indication to police that there was some planning involved. On May 3rd, the Marshal service releases images of the orange Ford Edge that the fugitives were last seen driving, what they picked up in the parking lot. They left the patrol car, they got in the orange Ford Edge and the marshals added a $5,000 reward for information leading to the capture of Vicky White. So it's up to 15,000 now. The subject should be considered armed and dangerous and may be armed with an AR-15 rifle or a shotgun, the marshal's office also reported.Woody: And that would have been out of the marshal unit, y'all, the jail unit, they keep them in the trunk. Jim: It was at this point and still not discovered by police that Casey and Vicky ditch the Ford Edge and they pay $6,000 cash for a Ford F150. It is also at this time that they purchase a Cadillac, and they continue their escape with one following the other into Indiana.Woody: Interesting.Jim: Yeah. Look, this was actually well planned. Just to set the scene for, y'all, there's panic now. This guy is as bad as they get. He's on the loose. Now, you've got a former employee on the loose with him, because I'm sure she got fired quick. Casey and Vicky White drive that car into a car wash in Evansville, Indiana.Woody: That's a long ways from Alabama. Jim: Yeah, that's right. Their last location before that that was known was Tennessee, a place called Williamson County, which was 175 miles north or south of Evansville.Woody: And then, to Indiana is a long ways from there.Jim: Yeah. Period. Woody: He's smart. They're putting in miles. The more miles in, the less news coverage and all that. Jim: There you go. So, they pull into that car wash. They leave the F150 sitting in the car wash stall, and they get into the Cadillac, and they drove away from the car wash. Now, at this point, law enforcements still assume they're in that orange Ford Edge. Woody: Right. Well, what they did not know was that tow truck driver had towed the Ford Edge two days earlier after it was left in the middle of a roadway. When he saw a news report on May 5th looking for that vehicle, he recognized it, and he called the cops and told him what tow yard it was in, and he brought them to it. The US Marshals found the Ford Edge in the tow lot and confirmed it was the one used by Vicky and Casey White.On May 8th, a few days later, another big break in the manhunt took place when investigators were notified about the Ford F150 abandoned at the car wash and its possible connection to the fugitives after the curious car wash attendant viewed surveillance video to try to find out who left the truck in his car wash and then recognized the fugitives. Jim:  Naturally. Woody: And they're pretty easy to recognize. Remember, it's anaconda and shorty. [chuckles] Woody: So, on May 9th, US Marshals release images dated May 3rd from the Evansville car wash surveillance camera of a man believed to be Casey White in the Ford F150. Y'all, they're also established in what direction they're headed, basically and that they're swapping vehicles. And the car wash surveillance video showed the suspects leaving the F150 and getting into that Cadillac. Jim: So now, they know what they're driving, at least at that point. Woody: Right. At this point, the Evansville police, where the two were last seen, had the Cadillac burned into their brain and they were looking everywhere for it. An Evansville police officer spotted the Cadillac vehicle at a Motel 41 and alerted other investigators. They began the surveillance of the motel and observed Vicky and Casey White exiting the motel and getting into the Cadillac. Police began to pursue the Cadillac and the fugitives fled north on the US Highway 41 in Evansville in the Cadillac. In the pursuit, Casey White and Vicky White drove onto a grassy field and parking lot near an industrial area of the city. A law enforcement officer rammed a vehicle into the car, flipping it onto its side in a ditch. It's like movie shit. You can't make this up, right? Jim: Yeah. And this was the Evansville, Indiana police. Woody: That's called a PIT maneuver. And maybe they didn't do it correctly. They flipped a Cadillac, dude. Officers reached the duo in the car, and they took Casey White into custody and found Vicky White with a gunshot wound to the head, and what investigators believed the time to be a self-inflicted or suicide y'all. She died in the hospital that night from her injuries. The Indiana coroner's office ruled the death as a suicide. During the arrest, Casey White referred to Vicky White as his wife and said he did not shoot her. They were not believed to have been married, talking about Vicky. Jim: Yeah, he just called them. They weren't legally-- Woody: Hell, he might have got an ordained minister through the thing or whatever, he might have married them in the hotel room. It's funny, it's not the Motel 6. It was the Motel 41. Jim: Motel 41. Only the best for that guy. Woody: Investigators found four handguns, a semiautomatic rifle, three magazines. That's not GQ magazines. People commonly refer to them as clips, magazines with bullets. They found wigs and about $29,000 cash in the vehicle. Casey White spoke for a lengthy period with investigators and said that they had planned to have a shootout with the police. The fugitives had been staying at the Motel 41 in an attempt to lay low for a while and had paid for a 14-day stay after paying a homeless man $100 plus the room cost to book the room for them. So, they had somebody else book it for them. Jim: Yeah. A homeless man at that. Woody: Now let me tell you this, anytime I had a BOLO for somebody that might be in my area, guess where I'm going to check first? The Motel 41 or whatever the local one is. In Albany, it was the Albany or whatever. I mean, you're going to cruise those places first. What they didn't know was cops had the Cadillac. If they didn't have a Cadillac, they'd have got away with it. If they didn't have the Cadillac on video like you're talking about, we're all on video so many times. Jim: That's right. That was a big key. There were a lot of questions to be answered, especially in regard to Vicky's death. We're going to play the 911 call for you now. One thing we didn't tell you in what we just told you was that right before the Cadillac got rammed, Vicky placed a 911 call. However, the operator picks up and she doesn't respond to the operating. They pick up, they say, "911, what is your emergency?" Normally, someone would say, "I'm in a chase with the cops," or something. "We don't want them shooting at us." She doesn't respond to that. It sounds like someone that would have dialed the phone in their lap and just left it sitting there so that the operator could hear what was going on. This is my impression, but I'm going to kind of let you gather your own impression. Right now, we're going to play that audio for you. This is Vicky White calling 911.Vicky: Hi. Operator: Evansville 911. Vicky: Oh, my Good. Operator: 911.Vicky: Please stop, the airbags are going to go off and kill us. Operator: Hello?Vicky: Casey. Oh, God. Airbags are going off. Let's get out and run. We should've stayed at the fucking hotel. [screams] [police sirens going off] [background noise] Operator: Hello?[police sirens going off][background noise] Jim: You hear things in that audio like, "Wait," "Stop," "Airbags are going to go off and kill us." Soon, you hear a loud noise. Now, the first of at least four loud noises to happen in about 15 seconds. It's unclear in each instance what the noise represents and it's kind of unclear from the audio when the car was rammed, when it rolled over and when the gun was fired. You do hear a woman, which is Vicky, saying, "God, airbags are going to go off. Let's get out and run." And she even mentions a hotel. The second noise you hear, you hear kind of shriek. And at least two more noises follow, followed by another shriek. You can hear sirens in the background. But this is the question I want y'all to ask yourselves, and that I certainly asked was if you're about to kill yourself, you're not worried about airbags going off, you're certainly not worried about getting out and running. So, I kind of call bullshit on that.Woody: And you wouldn't have dialed 911. Jim: And you wouldn't have dialed-- yeah, I call bullshit. Woody: I personally think what you're thinking is at some point in her pursuit, she realized, "Holy shit, he's going to kill me. I want 911 to at least be able to listen to it." Basically, what you just played is Vicky, a voice from the grave saying-- naturally, she knew she was culpable in all this, and at some point, she realizes, "Holy shit, he's going to kill me." Jim: Yeah.Woody: Jim, you may be 100% correct, but while Casey has not been charged with pulling the trigger against Vicky, he is being charged with felony murder in connection to the death of Vicky White and he's been indicted. The indictment says Casey White is responsible for Vicky White's death because it happened during Casey White's escape. Well, I get that, and that's a whole lot easier to prove than the fact that he killed her in a car. But I'm saying that he killed her in the car. Y'all want to read you a news release from the Lauderdale County Alabama's District Attorney. This news release is titled "Casey Cole White indicted for the felony murder and the death of Vicky White, July 12, 2022." On July 6, 2022, a capias warrant was issued for the rest of Casey Cole White for the offense of felony murder regarding the death of Vicky White. The warrant was issued based on the grand jury indictment. White, who is in the custody of the Alabama Department of Corrections serving a 75-year sentence due to the convictions from Limestone County, was served with the warrant yesterday at Donaldson Prison. He is also charged with capital murder for the 2015 murder Connie Ridgeway. The felony murder indictment alleges that during the course of an in furtherance of committing escape in the first degree, White caused the death of Vicky White, who died from a gunshot to the head. As are all criminal defendants, White is presumed innocent of the charge. No further information will be released by this office at this time. Chris Connolly, Lauderdale County District Attorney." Jim: That's pretty interesting because even though they're still saying that she killed herself, they're saying because of his involvement with her, that was almost the cause of it.Woody: It's the same thing. I go to rob a bank and you're driving a car and I kill somebody inside the bank, you're getting the murder charge also. In this case, because of the pursuit and whatever, she wouldn't have been in that situation.Jim: Right. Very interesting. One thing I will throw in here is a little caveat and a fun fact for y'all. The Motel 41 that you brought up, get this. Six months after that murder, tt was completely booked up. The same room that they stayed in for all that time. Woody: Yeah. Jim: Yes, people love it. "Yeah, I want Casey White's room." They could actually say that they slept in Casey White's room at the Motel 41. Woody: That's crazy. Jim: So, Motel 41 was loving it. [laughs] Woody: They're probably still loving it. Jim: Probably still loving it.Woody: They're going to love it after this episode. Jim: Yeah. Go check out the Motel 41. Maybe they'll sponsor Bloody Angola. [laughs] Woody: Yeah. Right. They can give us a free room when [crosstalk] Casey White room. We do a TikTok. Jim: The Casey White honeymoon suite. Woody: Very unique story. Jim: It really is.Woody: It happens every day. Think about all the ones, especially Angola, where these people, 6000 of them, certainly a certain percentage have to be masterminds and master manipulators. I've dealt with a lot of them. Like David Constance. He's not as dumb as he looks. He looks like a little troll, but the dude's a genius. Not formally educated, but he's a genius on playing people. It happens. Correctional officers are begging inmates, correctional officers are the largest reason that inmates get contraband, whether it's cell phones or dope or whatever. You can get more dope in prison than you can on the street. And it's probably cleaner, less fentanyl. But the sex part, everybody is here because two people screwed. Everybody on this earth, they just happen to find the vulnerable ones. Jim: That's right. Woody: And do what they do. Jim: You may wonder what's next for Casey White. I mean, he lived. He's back in jail. Well, in August of this year, 2023, he'll finally go on trial for the 2015 rampage that we told y'all about.Woody: Yeah, he should get death penalty.Jim: In that particular instance, he's charged with killing two people. As Woody discussed earlier in this podcast, he will most assuredly spend the rest of his life, if not get the death penalty for that.Woody: Some people just don't-- a rabid dog need to be put down because if he gets out-- he's proven, if he ever gets out, he's going to kill and maim and do whatever. This dude's definitely living for the moment. They found $26,000 out of the $95,000 something she sold her home for. He's living for the moment in the end. He planned on shooting out with cops anyway. He's like, "I'm going to be the--" [crosstalk] Jim: He told them that in interviews after.Woody: "I was going to shoot it out with y'all. I was going to kill as many of y'all as I can." Basically, he wanted to get killed too. Jim: That's right. Woody: He wanted to be that bad ass motherfucker, right? Jim: Yeah. The thing is, Woody, he's even said many times that had the vehicle not been flipped, he would have had that shootout. He just couldn't get out. He was pinned in.Woody: So, that 6'9", 330-pound anaconda. [crosstalk] Jim: Monster, man.Woody: Big dude. I don't know if I've ever met anybody-- Well, Shaq, I think it's a little taller than that, but that's a monster of a dude. Think about this, y'all, for every extreme case like this where they help him escape and all that, think about all the correction officers that are getting laid every day by convicts that never get found out. Jim: Never get found out. And you mentioned Shaq. Look, we're going to deviate just a second because I got a good Shaq story for y'all that I'm going to tell y'all, you may like. For those of you that may not realize, we record out of Baton Ridge, Louisiana area. And, of course, Shaquille O'Neal, Shaq played for LSU and back when he was in his college ball days, he was very well known around here. And much like Casey White, and it's worth pointing out those sized people stand out no matter where they're at. So, the first thing that I wondered with Casey White was he never would have been able to ever, ever, ever go in public anywhere for the rest of his life anyway because he stands out like a sore thumb. Just look for the guy that's 6ft 9in tall with tattoos. Woody: With swastikas.Jim: Yeah, I mean, it would have been obvious in that situation. But back to my Shaq story. I was in the mall and at the time, I was dating a girl and she was like 5ft tall, literally. I was probably 17 at the time. He might have been a sophomore at LSU. We're walking through a mall in Baton Rouge, and there he is. He's like looking at watches like in the breezeway there. I was coming out of Dillard's with my girlfriend. I asked the lady for a paper bag and a pen. So, she gives it to me. I told my girlfriend, I said, "Go get Shaq's autograph." She walks up to him and gets it but, y'all, Shaq is like 7'2". Standing next to my girlfriend, he's signing this thing, this is before cell phone cameras, sadly, but I saw it in person, it was like a two-year-old standing next to a full-grown adult. That was the size difference between those two.Woody: I got a couple I'll throw on you real quick. The same time, Shaq and Chris Jackson and all of them [crosstalk] I was at LSU. Reggie's, which we talked about on the last episode of Real Life Real Crime Daily, it's where Madison Brooks got overserved, that used to be called the Tiger. I lived in the first apartment right behind the Tiger. I'd go to the Tiger every night. Shaq, he was in the bar, and I went up, stood beside him, he was like a mountain of a man. Jim: Yeah. And Woody's tall. Woody: Yeah. I'm 6'2". But fast forward, I don't think anybody knows this. Shaquille O'Neal was a commissioned officer with the Killian Police Department. Jim: I forgot.Woody: Now I am going to tell you why. Not only did he have a house down there, but he is a big diver, scuba diver. He bought all the scuba diving equipment and the boat and everything for Killian Police Department. They're on the water down there on the [unintelligible 00:46:52]. He was instrumental in funding the dive rescue team and recovery team. Jim: Really? Woody: Killian Police Department. Yeah.Jim: I didn't know that.Woody: And he's [crosstalk] with them. Super, super cool guy, down to the earth. He's getting up there in age like me. But it is what it is. One of the best. Now, how we got on that from Bloody Angola, I don't know. Jim: [laughs] Well, we're talking about height and how these people stand out and that was just a few little for me and Woody, but just an enormous human. Woody: You're right. They absolutely would stand out like that. But this dude took it-- I'm talking about Casey White, took it to the whole next level, on getting tatted up with racist tats. Who's going to come up to him and say shit? Shaq might have said something to him but anyway.Jim: He is, Woody, the prime example that you can point to as someone who never, ever needs to be out of prison, ever. Woody: Yeah. Absolutely. Jim: Just a horrible human.Woody: They build prisons for that dude. Jim: They build prisons for them. Woody: Patreon members, thank you so much. Jim: Couldn't do it without them. Woody: I couldn't do it without you. Y'all, if you want to be a Patreon member, there's a ton of episodes locked up and get commercial-free early releases. Jim: And let me say this, Woody. I had a few people reach out, and I just want to explain this. They were asking with the regular episodes weren't dropping them every week. I just want to explain, and we appreciate all of you. Look, I love it when people say, "Where's the next episode?' I love that. I want everyone to understand, when you're a patron member, you don't miss any weeks. We're going to give you something, whether it's just Woody, whether it's just me, whether it's both of us, you're going to get extra and you're going to get bonus stuff. Sadly, this stuff is not free. And it is expensive for us to produce this podcast. It requires a lot of time, a lot of research. And so, with the regular feed that is just absolutely free, we unfortunately have to limit what we can put out there. If we were to a point where Nike would sponsor us or something, look, we're all over it. But if your Patreon member is $10 a month for the starting tier, and you get episodes every week.Woody: Even the higher tiers, I came in yesterday to record, you had a stack of packages that were going out. Jim: The Warden Team members. Woody: Warden Team members. I'll be looking for those. [crosstalk] Jim: I've got some good little swag this time. Woody: We give you a lot of benefits in that, and that's just a way to help us keep going and we give back, whether it's in the form of the commercial-free episodes or the episodes that nobody else is getting, the ones that are locked up. Look, some of those, I consider to be my favorite, the ones that are locked up haven't been released to the public. Jim: That's right. We've got probably about 10 of those now. If you're not a patron member yet, look, you can go to Patreon right now. It's $10 a month for that opening tier, and you got 10 episodes in there you ain't never heard.Woody: And you get commercial-free early releases. Basically, you get episodes if we have weeks of not dropping them.Jim: That's right. Don't forget about the other things we do. Woody, Real Life Real Crime Daily, Real Life Real Crime.Woody: Real Life Real Crime Daily. I would have let the cat out of the bag here first. Real Life Real Crime Daily has been such a success, about to take it from three days a week to four. Jim: Boom. Woody: Starting-- that's next week.Jim: Big deal, y'all. That means you're going to get either a Real Life Real Crime original or a Daily every day of the week. Woody: Five days a week. And Bloody Angola. It's a lot of recording, it's a lot of time. But you know what? The numbers don't lie. Y'all are the best fans in the world, and we appreciate you. Jim: That's right. We love doing it. Woody: And we're blessed. Jim: Yeah, don't forget about the app. Bloody Angola. You can get episodes straight through the app. Woody: That's the Real Life Real Crime community app. Jim: The Real Life Real Crime community app. So, you can download that on Apple Podcast. You can also do it on whatever Google's-- for Android. Woody: Yeah. Jim: Google Play Store. Woody: Yeah, just go you go to the App Store and download it. Jim: Yeah. So, that makes it easy, y'all, you can get it there. Woody: Respond to everybody in one place. We just have so much other social media, it's almost impossible now. Jim: That's right. Woody: It's a good problem to have, Jim. Jim: Yeah. [crosstalk] Woody: Y'all are a great problem to have. We love you. Jim: We love you very much. And until next time, I'm Jim Chapman. Woody: And I'm Woody Overton.Jim: Your host of Bloody-Woody: -Angola.Jim: A podcast 142 years in the making. Woody: The Complete Story of America's Bloodiest Prison.Jim and Woody: Peace. Our Sponsors:* Check out Factor and use my code bloodyangola50 for a great deal: https://www.factor75.com/ Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy