A Jacksboro Man Enters Plea Agreement in Elk Poaching Charge
Photo courtesy of TWRA

A Jacksboro Man Enters Plea Agreement in Elk Poaching Charge

A man from Jacksboro who was charged with illegally killing two elk on North Cumberland Wildlife Management Area (NCWMA) last November, entered a plea agreement in court last week.

In a plea agreement, Preston William Douglas, 34, of Jacksboro, appeared in Campbell County General Sessions Court on April 4 and was found guilty on two counts of illegally taking big game.  Douglas had his hunting license revoked for five years, is banned from NCWMA for three years, and was put on supervised probation for three years.  He forfeited a rifle and a handgun and was ordered to pay $10,000 in restitution, plus fines and court costs.

Just before 9 a.m. on November 19, 2023, Wildlife Manager Darrell England was contacted by an informant who reported that he had heard multiple shots while deer hunting on NCWMA.  The informant went to investigate and spoke with another hunter who said he had shot two “deer,”  one being a doe and the other a six point buck.  The limit for deer on NCWMA at the time was one per person.

Using vehicle tag information, England identified Douglas and he and Wildlife Sgt. Dustin Burkevisited him at his home the following day where he admitted to firing shots, but claimed he didn’t kill anything.  The officers returned to NCWMA and searched the area where Douglas had been parked but were unable to locate any evidence.  England then spoke with the informant again and decided to revisit the scene with Burke where they discovered the decomposing carcasses of a bull and a cow elk, both with bullet wounds to the bodies and heads. 

Both carcasses were removed from the woods and were taken to UT College of Veterinary Medicine for a necropsy.  Further investigation over the following days produced shell casings from a .40 caliber handgun and a 6.5 Creedmoor rifle, as well as a bullet inside a gut pile.  The officers also located one unspent rifle cartridge from a 6.5 Creedmoor.

The officers met with Douglas again who gave a full confession of hunting, killing, and not retrieving both animals.  He was charged with two violations each of hunting and killing big game in closed season, illegally taking big game, tagging violations, and failure to retrieve big game.  The officers also seized a 6.5 Creedmoor rifle and a .40 caliber handgun.  

Since the reintroduction of elk into Tennessee in the year 2000, TWRA is aware of 14 cases where elk have been poached.  To date, eight of those cases have been solved.  Elk hunting in Tennessee is only legal for a limited number of participants through the annual quota hunt system.  Anyone with information about poaching in Tennessee is encouraged to call the poaching hotline at 1-800-831-1174.

Vols Finish Program-Best Fifth in National Polls
Courtesy / UT Athletics

Vols Finish Program-Best Fifth in National Polls

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – The University of Tennessee men’s basketball is fifth in both major polls to conclude the 2023-24 season.

Tennessee (27-9, 14-4 SEC) holds the fifth position in both the Associated Press Top 25 Poll and the USA TODAY Coaches Poll, as revealed Tuesday afternoon.

The Volunteers moved up one spot on each list, as they entered the NCAA Tournament sixth in the country. Tennessee defeated Saint Peter’s, Texas and then-No. 11 Creighton to reach the Elite Eight for the second time, before falling to the eventual NCAA runner-up, Purdue.

Tennessee’s fifth-place finish in the AP Poll ties a program record set in both 2021-22 and 2007-08. This is the first time the Associated Press has released a year-end poll after the NCAA Tournament, as the final poll from 1948-49 through 2022-23 came beforehand.

Additionally, the Volunteers’ fifth-place position in the Coaches Poll—the organization has traditionally released a post-NCAA Tournament list—sets a program best. Their prior top mark was seventh in 2007-08.

This is the ninth AP top-five ranking of the year for the Volunteers, good for the second-most in a campaign in program history, behind just the 14 they earned in 2018-19. Barnes has steered Tennessee to 27 AP top-five rankings, all in the last six years, after it had 17 all-time before his arrival in 2015-16.

Tennessee is in the AP top 25 for the 59th consecutive week, good the third-longest streak in the country behind just Houston (85) and Kansas (64). The only other team with a tally of even 40-plus in Arizona (57).

The Volunteers’ 59-week mark is 22 longer than the program’s prior best of 37 from March 1999 to Feb. 2001. Tennessee has now been ranked in every poll for three straight seasons, earning a top-10 spot in 32 of those 59 releases.

This is the 15th consecutive week Tennessee is in the AP top 10, passing a stretch in 2000-01 for sole possession of the second-longest ledger in school history. The only longer span was a 20-week run in 2018-19, also in head coach Rick Barnes‘ tenure.

Of the Volunteers’ five all-time double-digit streaks, three are under Barnes, who has led the program 57 of its 151 total AP top-10 rankings, 37.7 percent of its all-time total. This year, Tennessee earned a top-10 spot in 18 of the 20 releases, including ranking eighth or better in each of the final 15.

Tennessee, which won the outright SEC regular season title, collected 1,203 points in the AP Poll voting, a 45-point increase from last week and just 14 shy of the co-third-place teams, Alabama and Houston, and 108 ahead of sixth-place Illinois. In the Coaches Poll, the Volunteers accumulated 638 points, just 13 back of third-placed Houston and four behind fourth-place Alabama, as well as 60 in front of sixth-place North Carolina.

Five SEC teams ended the year in the top 25 of both polls. Alabama placed No. 3/4, with Auburn at No. 18/17, Kentucky at No. 20/19 and South Carolina at No. 24/23. In addition, Florida and Texas A&M received votes in both polls, while Arkansas did so in the AP Poll.

To keep up with the University of Tennessee men’s basketball team on social media, follow @Vol_Hoops on Instagram and X/Twitter, as well as /tennesseebasketball on Facebook.

Police Asking for Help Finding Missing Morristown Man

Police Asking for Help Finding Missing Morristown Man

Morristown, TN (WOKI) The Hamblen County Sheriff’s Office is asking for help finding a missing Morristown man.

HCSO officials say Anthony “Tony” Williams was last seen around 11:30 p.m. on March 30 at the Loc Bar on Buffalo Trail in Morristown.

Anyone who knows Williams’ whereabouts is asked to contact Det. Kitts with the HCSO at 423-585-2771 or the 911 non-emergency number at 423-585-2701.

The HCSO did not provide information about where Williams might be headed or what he was last seen wearing.

GSMNP Rangers Say Man Missing in the Park has been Found

GSMNP Rangers Say Man Missing in the Park has been Found

UPDATE: The man missing is the Great Smoky Mountains National Park is found.

Jacob Riggs was found this morning in the Tremont area of the park by a visitor who saw he needed help.

The visitor brought him to the Incident Command Post near the Townsend Wye.

Riggs had minor injuries and exposure to weather. He was evaluated onsite and taken to a local hospital.

The National Park Service is thankful for all of the local agencies and volunteers who participated in the search.

Original story: Gatlinburg, TN (WOKI) Great Smoky Mountains National Park rangers are asking for help in their search for a missing man.

Park rangers are searching near the Townsend Wye, Tremont and Cades Cove areas of the park for 35-year-old Jacob Riggs who was last seen in Maynardville on April 7th. His vehicle was found in the park on April 8th.

Riggs is white, with black hair and a dark beard, and brown eyes. He is 6’2” tall and weighs 185 pounds.

Park officials say several organizations are helping the National Park Service in the search and more resources will arrive tomorrow, Wednesday, April 10.  

If you saw Riggs or have information regarding his whereabouts, you are asked to contact the park service.

Anyone who saw Riggs or has information about his whereabouts is asked to please contact the National Park Service:

  • CALL the NPS Tip Line 888-653-0009
  • ONLINE go.nps.gov/SubmitATip 
  • EMAIL [email protected]
  • EMERGENCY dial 9-1-1 
Alcoa Police Looking for Suspects after Second Vandalism Incident

Alcoa Police Looking for Suspects after Second Vandalism Incident

Alcoa, TN (WOKI) Police in Alcoa are searching for suspects after a second vandalism incident at an apartment complex.

Alcoa Police Department officials say officers responded to a report of vandalism Monday, April 8 involving multiple buildings at the Topside 333 Apartments construction site.

APD reports the vandalism discovered included the destruction of appliances, light fixtures, hardwood flooring, walls and plumbing fixtures.

APD says that the vandalism occurred sometime after 7:00 p.m. on Saturday, April 6, after construction workers had left the site, and before 7:00 a.m. on Monday, April 8, when they returned. APD also said that due to the extensive amount of damage to the property, monetary losses have not yet been calculated.

APD believes the suspects may be connected to another vandalism incident that occurred at Ardmore Apartments over Easter weekend.

Those with information that can help APD in its investigation can call East Tennessee Valley Crime Stoppers at 865-215-7165.

Claiborne County Jail Employee’s Husband Charged in Her Death, TBI Says

Claiborne County Jail Employee’s Husband Charged in Her Death, TBI Says

New Tazewell, TN (WOKI) A New Tazewell man is being charged with killing his wife.

An investigation by special agents with the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation and the Claiborne County Sheriff’s Office which began on April 2nd into the death of 49-year-old Lori Ann Hopson found that her husband, 37-year-old Benjamin Wayne Hopson, was responsible for her death.

Lori Ann Hopson was found dead outside of a vehicle in the 500 block of Barren Creek Road.

According to Benjamin Hopson’s arrest warrant, he attacked his wife with a knife while inside the car as they drove down the road. During the attack, the warrant reads, he stabbed her “multiple times in the chest.” The car then crashed, the warrant indicates, and Benjamin Hopson cut his wife’s throat with the knife.

“Shortly after the incident,” the warrant reads, “Benjamin Wayne Hopson was observed by witnesses who described him as being naked, wet, and having blood on his hand and body.”

Benjamin Hopson is charged with criminal homicide and is currently being held on a $1 million bond.

Officials with the Claiborne County Sheriff’s Office have shared that Lori Ann Hopson was a corrections officer who was in charge of the kitchen at the Claiborne County Jail.

Longtime Morristown-Hamblen Paramedic Dies While Responding to a Call
Photo courtesy of WVLT

Longtime Morristown-Hamblen Paramedic Dies While Responding to a Call

Since 1988, Todd Giles has been a paramedic at Morristown-Hamblen EMS, where he’s gotten the reputation of being a dependable employee.

On Friday, Giles, along with two others, responded to a call of a person with a leg injury. When Giles got there, he began to walk up a very steep hill when he suddenly collapsed due to a cardiac arrest.

Despite the efforts of several first responders, Giles passed away at the age of 60.

“I’ve cut a lot of clothing off of people, but I’ve never cut a uniform off before and it’s just different,” said Rescue Squad Captain Claude Thompson who was there to try and save Giles.

Over a career that spanned nearly 40 years, Giles became known for how he helped train the next generation of first responders as well as his calm demeanor in the face of a tense situation.

“I’ve never seen him rattled. He could calm the most excited patient down,” said Fire Chief Clark Taylor.

That steady hand was tested in January when Hamblen County Sheriff Chad Mullins needed urgent help when he was at his office one day.

“I was having really extreme chest pains and didn’t really know what was going on,” said Mullins.

Mullins immediately thought of Giles and drove next door to the location where he was stationed. There, Giles provided a calming presence for Mullins who said the longtime paramedic helped save his life.

County leaders call Giles’ passing a “painful numbness.” They are still working with family to finalize funeral arrangements. Story courtesy of WVLT

A Dandridge Auto Parts Store is Destroyed by Fire
Photo courtesy of Michelle Smith

A Dandridge Auto Parts Store is Destroyed by Fire

An investigation is underway after an auto parts store in Dandridge is destroyed by fire.

Media outlets reporting that a fire broke out at Jasper Jones Auto Parts yesterday (Monday) afternoon. Officials with the Dandridge Fire Department says one building was completely on fire and flames had spread to a few vehicles when crews arrived.

The cause of the fire has not yet been determined and there was one injury reported before firefighters arrived but no word on their condition.

An Investigation is Underway, a Dog Dies but a Couple and Python are Rescued from a Cocke County House Fire
Photo courtesy of WVLT

An Investigation is Underway, a Dog Dies but a Couple and Python are Rescued from a Cocke County House Fire

A dog dies but an elderly woman and man are rescued, along with a six-foot-long python from an early morning (Tuesday) Cocke County house fire.

The Parrottsville Fire Department responding to a single-wide trailer on Ray’s Loop Road along with the Cocke County Fire Department.

Damage was contained to the home’s kitchen and living room areas.

The couple is doing okay, only suffering smoke inhalation.

The cause of the fire is still under investigation.

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