Knoxville Police Identify Officers in Officer-Involved Shooting in West Knoxville
Photo courtesy of WVLT

Knoxville Police Identify Officers in Officer-Involved Shooting in West Knoxville

Knoxville, TN (WOKI) UPDATE 5/3: The Knoxville Police Department has identified the officers involved in a fatal shooting on April 27 in West Knoxville.

KPD says officers Hunter Powers and Cayden Riddle responded to reports of a domestic situation at a home in the 4700 block of Santala Drive involving 25-year-old Jamauri Griffin who had a gun. When Powers and Riddle arrived, Griffin fired at least one shot, causing the officers to return fire.

Griffin was pronounced dead at the scene while a woman was taken to the hospital for treatment of a gunshot wound to the face.

Powers and Riddle remain on routine administrative leave while the investigation continues.

Updated story: An investigation is underway after a fatal officer-involved shooting in West Knoxville and TBI has identified the man who shot at police.

It happened Saturday in the 4700 block of Santala Drive as Knoxville Police officers responded to reports of a domestic situation involving 25-year-old Jamauri Griffin who had a gun. When officers arrived, he fired at least one shot, causing officers to return fire.

Griffin was wounded and pronounced dead at the scene, and a woman was taken to the hospital and was treated for a gunshot wound to her face, her injuries are not life-threatening. No officers were injured during the incident.

The officers involved have been placed on routine administrative leave.

Original story: An investigation is underway after an officer-involved shooting in West Knoxville.

It happened Saturday in the 4700 block of Santala Drive as Knoxville Police officers responded to reports of a domestic situation involving a man armed with a gun. When officers arrived, the man fired at least one shot, causing officers to return fire.

The man was wounded and pronounced dead at the scene, and a woman was taken to the hospital and was treated for a gunshot wound to her face, her injuries are not life-threatening. No officers were injured during the incident.

The officers involved have been placed on routine administrative leave.

Indictment: Sevier County Teacher Faces Multiple Child Sex Crime Charges

Indictment: Sevier County Teacher Faces Multiple Child Sex Crime Charges

Sevier County, TN (WOKI) A Sevier County teacher is arrested and charged with multiple child sex crimes.

Sevier County Schools says 32-year-old Nathan McKinley Maples was placed on indefinite suspension in February pending the results of this investigation.

Administrators say they learned from a parent that Maples may have been engaged in inappropriate activity with a child.

He is charged with four counts of statutory rape by an authority figure, one count of continuous sexual abuse of a child among other charges in the eight count indictment.

Maples is being held as a pretrial felon on a $100,000 bond and is scheduled to be arraigned on May 6 at 9:00 a.m.

A Nurse Accused of Stealing Pain Pills from a Patient is Due in a Jefferson County Court
Photo courtesy of WVLT

A Nurse Accused of Stealing Pain Pills from a Patient is Due in a Jefferson County Court

A nurse facing possible jail time is set to be arraigned in court this morning.

Police say she stole medication from her patient in Jefferson County. The patient says her nurse, Sally Hensley took more than a dozen hydrocodone pills from her.

Hensley faces several charges including neglect of an elderly or vulnerable adult.

The sheriff is asking anyone who’s had similar experiences with her to call their office.

TENNESSEE JOINS 21-STATE COALITION IN LAWSUIT AGAINST UNCONSTITUTIONAL ATF RULE

TENNESSEE JOINS 21-STATE COALITION IN LAWSUIT AGAINST UNCONSTITUTIONAL ATF RULE

Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti joined a coalition of 21 states on Wednesday in a lawsuit opposing a new rule from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) that would prevent law-abiding Americans from privately selling firearms.

“The epidemic of violent crime means every level of government needs to work together to keep guns out of the hands of violent criminals, but the new ATF rule stretches too far and threatens to make federal felons out of countless everyday citizens,” Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti said. “The regulatory burden this rule imposes on regular people who occasionally sell or trade a firearm to a family member or close friend is not commensurate with the agency’s statutory authority or consistent with the Constitution.”

The new rule reinterprets the definitions of “engaged in the business of dealing [in firearms]” “predominately for profit,” thus now requiring many more individuals who previously sold firearms on a limited basis to become federally licensed ­­– or risk criminal penalties. As the White House put it, an individual must “become a licensed dealer and run background checks…[for those] dealing firearms at a gun show, online, in [their] home, in the trunk of a car, at a flea market, or anywhere else.”

Under this expansive and unconstitutional rule, hobbyists who sell firearms to family members, or a hunter who trades a firearm with a friend, could be convicted of a felony.

“Until now, those who repetitively purchased and sold firearms as a regular course of business had to become a licensee…This rule would put innocent firearm sales between law-abiding friends and family members within reach of federal regulation,” the court filing reads. “Such innocent sales between friends and family would constitute a felony if the seller did not in fact obtain a federal firearms license and perform a background check.”

The attorneys general argue that the rule is unconstitutional because it is vague, violates the Second Amendment, and circumvents Congress. Joining Tennessee in the lawsuit includes Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Georgia, Indiana, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Virginia, West Virginia, and Wyoming.

Read the court filing here: https://www.tn.gov/content/dam/tn/attorneygeneral/documents/pr/2024/pr24-42.pdf?

Arrests are Made on the University of Tennessee Campus Following Protests
Photo courtesy of WVLT

Arrests are Made on the University of Tennessee Campus Following Protests

Multiple students were arrested after Isarael-Palestine protesters were on campus Wednesday and Thursday.

The university told WVLT News that protestors were given a deadline of 9 p.m. Thursday to leave the area or be subject to suspension and/or an arrest.

“We met with leaders from the group, repeatedly informing them that anyone remaining in the space after 9 p.m. is subject to suspension from the university or arrest,” school officials said. “After this meeting and an announcement to the entire group, the group did not vacate the area and were trespassing.”

Nine people were arrested, including seven students and two people not affiliated with the university, according to officials.

School officials said any student that was arrested would be released and referred to student conduct.

“The University of Tennessee respects individual’s rights to free speech and free expression, and is committed to the safety of all members of our campus community. Anyone on campus must follow university policy. We will continue to be guided by the law and university policy, neutral of viewpoint.”University of Tennessee

On Wednesday, two groups of students gathered to peacefully protest.

One group was there to protest for the war to end and bring peace in the Middle East.

The other group said it was their right to protest and were seen waving American flags.

Story Courtesy of WVLT

UT Police Asking for Help to Find a Missing 17 Year-Old Student

UT Police Asking for Help to Find a Missing 17 Year-Old Student

The University of Tennessee Police Department is asking for help to find a missing 17 year-old.

Samuel Chugg was last seen yesterday (Thursday) leaving his West Knoxville home in a silver Toyota Yaris. He was may have been spotted around 7:45 yesterday morning near the 2200 block of Cumberland Avenue heading toward campus where he attends school.

He is a white male, 5’7″ with brown hair and and eyes. He has a slender build and was last seen wearing a blue hoodie with whitewashed jeans.

If you have any information, please call UT Police at 865-974-3114.

Thursday’s Baseball Series Opener at Florida Postponed
Courtesy / UT Athletics

Thursday’s Baseball Series Opener at Florida Postponed

BaseballMay 02, 2024

GAINESVILLE, Fla. – Thursday night’s series opener between No. 3/3 Tennessee and Florida was postponed due to inclement weather in Gainesville.

The Volunteers and Gators will play a doubleheader on Friday with game one slated to begin at 3 p.m. Game two will start 45 minutes following the completion of game one.

Both contests on Friday are scheduled to be full nine-inning games and will be streamed online on SEC Network+ and the ESPN app.

Saturday’s series finale is still set to be played as scheduled, with first pitch at 6:30 p.m.

Friday will mark UT’s first doubleheader this season after it played three last year (vs. Morehead State, at Missouri, at South Carolina).  

Late-Inning Surge Powers #3 Lady Vols Past #24 Kentucky
Courtesy / UT Athletics

Late-Inning Surge Powers #3 Lady Vols Past #24 Kentucky

Game Recap: Softball | May 02, 2024

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – No. 3 Tennessee triumphed over No. 24 Kentucky, 8-3, in the series opener Thursday night, following a back-and-forth contest at Sherri Parker Lee Stadium.

In a contest waiting for someone to take charge, Rylie West and Sophia Nugent did just that with back-to-back home runs in the bottom of the fifth inning. With UT and UK knotted at 3-3, the blasts broke open the game as the Lady Vols seized control with a two-run lead courtesy of the long ball. 

Tennessee (38-9, 17-5 SEC) extended its lead and secured its final margin of victory in the sixth inning off a Taylor Pannell three-run home run.

Nugent and Pannell led UT at the plate Thursday night as both players picked up a pair of hits. Nugent finished with two runs scored and an RBI, while Pannell scored once with three RBIs.

Kentucky (30-19, 8-14) opened up a 1-0 lead in the third inning as the Wildcats strung together three consecutive two-out base knocks.

The Lady Vols tied the game in the bottom of the fourth with two outs, sparked by a Kiki Milloy RBI single to left.

A batter later, a little miscommunication among the Wildcats benefited Tennessee, leading to a pop fly landing safely between three players – scoring two and giving the Lady Vols a 3-1 lead.

Kentucky’s Lauryn Borzilleri’s two-run home run in the top of the fifth tied the game back up at 3-3.

Karlyn Pickens got the start Thursday night for the Lady Vols, tossing four innings. She surrendered three runs on five hits with four strikeouts and a walk.

Payton Gottshall came in relief and secured her 19th victory of the season, pitching three innings while only conceding two hits and fanning four batters.

West and Nugent’s back-to-back home runs at the start of the fifth inning put the Big Orange back on top 5-3 before Pannell’s three-run blast secured the Lady Vols’ victory.

Stephanie Schoonover suffered the loss for the Wildcats – her eighth on the year. She struck out four batters and walked five while allowing five hits and five runs in four innings.

Alexia Lacatena finished in the circle for UK and allowed three hits and three runs with only one strikeout in her two innings of relief.
 

UP NEXT

Tennessee and Kentucky continue the Border Battle on Friday with first pitch set for 6 p.m. ET on SEC Network+.

Townsend City Manager Placed on Administrative Leave, City Officials Say

Townsend City Manager Placed on Administrative Leave, City Officials Say

Townsend, TN (WOKI / WVLT) After just two years of service, the city manager of Townsend has been placed on administrative leave.

WVLT news reporting Thursday afternoon that Townsend City Manager Danny Williamson was placed on administrative leave with pay.

Previously, Williamson served as the city recorder for Townsend. He was appointed in February 2022 as Townsend’s first-ever city manager following a four-to-one vote by the city commission.

At this time, there’s no word on why Williamson was placed on administrative leave.

This is a developing story.

Knox County School Board Could Push Back on Arming Teachers Law

Knox County School Board Could Push Back on Arming Teachers Law

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (WVLT) – The Knox County Board of Education appears united across the aisle in pushing back against a bill Gov. Bill Lee signed last month creating a pathway to arming teachers and staff inside Tennessee schools.

Two resolutions in the board’s May 9 meeting agenda call for rejecting the notion of arming teachers in schools— one requested by democrat Katherine Bike and one by Republican Kristi Kristy.

Ultimately, the resolutions say the same thing: Knox County Schools is satisfied with law enforcement officers inside schools handling the security of its students. The wording is different, however.

Bike’s resolution calls into question whether or not armed teachers and staff will actually create a safer learning environment. In fact, it claims the opposite.

“The introduction of firearms into educational environments poses significant risks to the overall safety and security of students, faculty, and staff,” Bike’s resolution reads. “Allowing individuals, even with enhanced handgun carry permits, to carry concealed firearms on school premises increases the potential for accidents, escalations of conflicts, and unintended harm to students and staff.”

Beyond safety, the resolution says even the idea of a teacher carrying a gun will detract from a schools’ learning environment, distracting students.

“The presence of firearms in schools may create an atmosphere of fear and intimidation, especially considering that parents and students will not be notified of which specific individuals will have firearms, thus detracting from the positive learning environment that schools should strive to maintain,” the resolutions states.

Kristy’s resolution is worded differently, but the sentiment is the same: let trained officers, who openly carry, handle securing schools.

“Knox County Schools is blessed with competent, highly-trained certified School Security Officers and School Resource Officers,” Kristy’s resolution says. “The Knox County Board of Education hereby affirms that certified law enforcement personnel are equipped to manage the safety and security of Knox County Schools.”

Ultimately, the resolutions cover both sides of the guns-in-schools issue. Bike’s resolution states outright that teachers and staff won’t be allowed to carry in classrooms, while Kristy’s resolution affirms that uniformed officers and SSOs will continue to handle school safety in the county.

If the resolutions pass, Knox County Schools will be the third district to declare it won’t let teachers carry guns in East Tennessee. It’ll follow Oak Ridge Schools and Anderson County Schools.

The board is set to discuss the resolutions on May 9.

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