The HEINZE and TOLER Children (2009) - Glynn County GA
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The HEINZE and TOLER Children (2009) - Glynn County GA
Glynn County authorities said Monday they
have expanded the search for evidence around the home where the murders
of eight people took place, but they will not say how far the search is
taking them.
On Sunday, volunteers and investigators searched two miles out from
the home in New Hope Plantation mobile home park off Highway 17, but
found nothing.
Police released the 911 call made by Guy Heinze, Jr.. Police said
Heinze was the family member who discovered the bodies Saturday
morning.
The community is still on edge after 7 people were found dead and 2
critically injured just after 8:00 a.m. Saturday. Police said one of
the two injured victims, Michael Toler, 19, had died at noon Sunday at
a Savannah hospital. The other victim is still in critical condition
at the hospital.
A neighbor of the family who does not want to be identified tells
News 3 that Michael Toler, 19, had Down syndrome. “He had been through
multiple surgeries throughout his short life… He was loud at times,
very boisterous and always smiling. He loved to go fishing with his
dad,“ said the neighbor.
The neighbor said Michael lived in the home with his father, Rusty
Toler, two sisters, and a brother. The neighbor also said one of the
sisters had a three year-old child and boyfriend living in the home and
says Guy Heinze, Jr., and his father Guy Heinze, Sr., also lived there,
but the Heinzes and Tolers were not blood-related.
Police said autopsies on four of the victims were conducted Sunday, and more autopsies were perfomed Monday.
At 3:00 p.m. Monday, Glynn County Police Chief Matt Doering did not know how many had been completed.
He declined to release any more identities of the victims. When
asked about the lack of information being released, Doering
acknowledged the community’s frustration.
“This is a very difficult investigation as I know you are all aware.
And right now we’re doing everything we can possibly do in order to
find those responsible and figure out what happened. And I have to be
very careful not to release those details that can jeopardize that
investigation,“ said Doering.
Doering said they are now getting assistance from the FBI and US
Marshals in the investigation. Police have made no new arrests and so
far have no named suspects. Doering said as far as he knew, the $25,000
reward had generated no significant information.
Authorities have also declined to say how the victims were killed.
Glynn County Coroner Jimmy Durden tells News 3 all the victims were
found in beds and on the floor of the home and had been there overnight
before they were discovered.
Anyone with information in this case is asked to call Glynn County’s Silent Witness Line at 912-264-1333.
There is a benefit fund set up to help the family with funeral
expenses. You can make donations to the Toler Funeral Fund at any
Southeastern Bank branch.
have expanded the search for evidence around the home where the murders
of eight people took place, but they will not say how far the search is
taking them.
On Sunday, volunteers and investigators searched two miles out from
the home in New Hope Plantation mobile home park off Highway 17, but
found nothing.
Police released the 911 call made by Guy Heinze, Jr.. Police said
Heinze was the family member who discovered the bodies Saturday
morning.
The community is still on edge after 7 people were found dead and 2
critically injured just after 8:00 a.m. Saturday. Police said one of
the two injured victims, Michael Toler, 19, had died at noon Sunday at
a Savannah hospital. The other victim is still in critical condition
at the hospital.
A neighbor of the family who does not want to be identified tells
News 3 that Michael Toler, 19, had Down syndrome. “He had been through
multiple surgeries throughout his short life… He was loud at times,
very boisterous and always smiling. He loved to go fishing with his
dad,“ said the neighbor.
The neighbor said Michael lived in the home with his father, Rusty
Toler, two sisters, and a brother. The neighbor also said one of the
sisters had a three year-old child and boyfriend living in the home and
says Guy Heinze, Jr., and his father Guy Heinze, Sr., also lived there,
but the Heinzes and Tolers were not blood-related.
Police said autopsies on four of the victims were conducted Sunday, and more autopsies were perfomed Monday.
At 3:00 p.m. Monday, Glynn County Police Chief Matt Doering did not know how many had been completed.
He declined to release any more identities of the victims. When
asked about the lack of information being released, Doering
acknowledged the community’s frustration.
“This is a very difficult investigation as I know you are all aware.
And right now we’re doing everything we can possibly do in order to
find those responsible and figure out what happened. And I have to be
very careful not to release those details that can jeopardize that
investigation,“ said Doering.
Doering said they are now getting assistance from the FBI and US
Marshals in the investigation. Police have made no new arrests and so
far have no named suspects. Doering said as far as he knew, the $25,000
reward had generated no significant information.
Authorities have also declined to say how the victims were killed.
Glynn County Coroner Jimmy Durden tells News 3 all the victims were
found in beds and on the floor of the home and had been there overnight
before they were discovered.
Anyone with information in this case is asked to call Glynn County’s Silent Witness Line at 912-264-1333.
There is a benefit fund set up to help the family with funeral
expenses. You can make donations to the Toler Funeral Fund at any
Southeastern Bank branch.

TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

- Job/hobbies: Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: The HEINZE and TOLER Children (2009) - Glynn County GA
Three-year-old Byron Jimmerson, the lone survivor of
Saturday's mass killing at a north Glynn County trailer park, is
improving in a Savannah hospital, according to relatives of the
victims. The child is still in the hospital but "is doing better," said
Alva Cross, 46.
Cross, who is the sister of Russell "Rusty" Toler, said her brother was
among those killed in the trailer park massacre. Rusty, 45, is the
grandfather of Jimmerson and the father of Michael Toler, 19, who is
the only fatality identified publicly by police, Cross said.
In the 911 call made by Guy Heinze, who discovered the bodies, he mentiond Rusty as one of the victims.
A Toler family relief fund has been set up through Southeastern Bank, Cross said.
Glynn County police released audio Monday of the 911 call Saturday
morning of callers reporting a mass killing in a trailer at New Hope
Plantation mobile home park.
"I just got home. My whole family is dead," a frantic caller says. "It looks like they've been beat to death."
With no publicly identified suspects in the killings Saturday of seven
people in a trailer at the north Glynn County mobile home park and an
eighth dying Sunday, police turned to money to try to lure out
information on the killer or killers.
Police Chief Matt Doering said Sunday night that the county is offering
a $25,000 reward for information leading to an arrest in the slayings
at New Hope Plantation mobile home park on U.S. 17 North, adjacent to
Hofwyl Plantation historic site.
"Suspects remain unknown to us," Doering said. "We can't tell you if they're at large or not at large."
Any search is not confined to Glynn County, Doering said. "The person
or persons who did this could potentially be anywhere," he said.
Glynn County police are continuing to unravel the grisly details of the
shootings that left seven people immediately dead in a single-wide
trailer.
That death toll rose at noon Sunday with the death of Michael Toler,
19, the first victim of the mass slaying whose name has been made
public. Doering said Toler lived at the mobile home. A Facebook page
identified him at the time it was posted as a Glynn Academy student.
Toler died from brain injuries resulting from gunshot wounds, according
to a spokesperson for Memorial University Medical Center in Savannah.
His body has been sent to the Georgia Crime Laboratory in Savannah for
an autopsy. There was no public report of what type of firearm was used.
A ninth victim of the shooting, reportedly a juvenile, remained in critical condition Sunday night in Savannah.
Police found the carnage in the mobile home when they responded to a
911 call shortly after 8 a.m. Saturday. Inside the trailer on Lot 147
of the mobile home park they discovered seven people dead and two
clinging to life.
Doering continued through the weekend to decline to say how the victims
were killed, but an official close to investigation said they had been
shot. Evidence puts the time of deaths after midnight Friday, police
said.
Doering, who released few details of the crime during media briefings
Saturday and Sunday, called the scene inside the trailer "horrific" and
said it was one of the deadliest crime scenes in recent county history.
"It was not a pretty sight," he said.
Saturday, Doering had said police were not looking for a suspect.
When asked Sunday afternoon about the possibility of a suspect not
being in custody, Doering urged the public to not let its guard down.
"There is cause for concern," Doering said. "Be aware. Be alert. Don't think everything is OK, because right now it is not."
At 9 p.m. Sunday he said an unknown suspect or suspects were on the
loose and police needed the public's help to make an arrest. He is
encouraging anyone who heard or saw anything suspicious to call Silent
Witness at 264-1333.
Doering said that there could be more than one person responsible for
the murders. There is no evidence to suggest that a suicide occurred in
connection with the slayings.
"Evidence collected at the scene has been helpful," he said Sunday night. "We'll be going back in the morning for more."
Doering was coy throughout Sunday about the status of Guy Heinze, 22,
of Glynn County, who had made the emergency call to 911 Saturday
morning and was arrested at about 7 p.m. Saturday on charges of
tampering with evidence, obstruction of an officer and illegal drug
possession.
Heinze, who police said was an immediate family member of at least one
of the victims, was being held without bond in the Glynn County
Detention Center and was said to be cooperating with police.
Doering said he would not characterize Heinze as a suspect in the
homicides. "I'm not going to rule him out, but I'm not going to call
him a suspect."
Doering has declined to say where victims were found in the trailer.
Investigators worked the scene Saturday and Sunday while the area
around the mobile home remained cordoned off with yellow crime scene
tape. Family members of the victims have been helpful and are
cooperating with police, Doering said.
Tentative identifications have been made on all the victims, but
Doering said, prior to the identification of Toler, that he was not at
liberty to release their names and ages. He would say only that ages
ranged from children to people in their mid-40s.
"There were no infants," he said, in response to rumors.
Doering would not say if all the victims were killed in the same manner.
Autopsies on the victims began shortly after 7 a.m. Sunday and Doering said they may take at least two days to complete.
At a media briefing at 9 p.m. Sunday at the trailer park he said four
autopsies had been completed, but he did not provide any details.
"It's a slow, meticulous process," he said earlier in the day.
Doering said identities of victims would not be made public until after
autopsies are completed, nor would bodies be released to family members.
At least some of the bodies were so disfigured in the attack that visual identifications were impossible.
Police contacted Glynn County school officials to obtain fingerprint
identification for one of the victims, according to Leslie McCracken,
executive director for Glynn County Schools.
She said, however, that the school system did not have the information that would have been helpful to the investigation.
McCracken declined to identify the student, but said the child attended
one of three schools to which children who live in the mobile home park
are assigned: C.B. Greer Elementary, Needwood Middle or Glynn Academy.
Principals of those schools have been contacted, McCracken said, and grief support will be available to students there.
Doering said 12 volunteers were searching the area of the trailer park
for any evidence but as of Sunday afternoon had found nothing.
He said police were also searching isolated pockets up to 15 miles away.
Doering said police have established a time-frame for when the rampage occurred.
"We had a 12-hour window, but we've now narrowed that down to six or
eight hours," he said. "And we've been able to eliminate some persons
of interest. We're working very methodically."
Doering said his reluctance to elaborate on the investigation was
two-fold: "I don't have much information, and I want to protect the
family."
He said the trailer where the bodies were found was familiar to police.
Police had responded to it on more than one occasion prior to
Saturday's killings.
He declined to specify why police had been previously called to the residence.
Saturday's mass killing at a north Glynn County trailer park, is
improving in a Savannah hospital, according to relatives of the
victims. The child is still in the hospital but "is doing better," said
Alva Cross, 46.
Cross, who is the sister of Russell "Rusty" Toler, said her brother was
among those killed in the trailer park massacre. Rusty, 45, is the
grandfather of Jimmerson and the father of Michael Toler, 19, who is
the only fatality identified publicly by police, Cross said.
In the 911 call made by Guy Heinze, who discovered the bodies, he mentiond Rusty as one of the victims.
A Toler family relief fund has been set up through Southeastern Bank, Cross said.
Glynn County police released audio Monday of the 911 call Saturday
morning of callers reporting a mass killing in a trailer at New Hope
Plantation mobile home park.
"I just got home. My whole family is dead," a frantic caller says. "It looks like they've been beat to death."
With no publicly identified suspects in the killings Saturday of seven
people in a trailer at the north Glynn County mobile home park and an
eighth dying Sunday, police turned to money to try to lure out
information on the killer or killers.
Police Chief Matt Doering said Sunday night that the county is offering
a $25,000 reward for information leading to an arrest in the slayings
at New Hope Plantation mobile home park on U.S. 17 North, adjacent to
Hofwyl Plantation historic site.
"Suspects remain unknown to us," Doering said. "We can't tell you if they're at large or not at large."
Any search is not confined to Glynn County, Doering said. "The person
or persons who did this could potentially be anywhere," he said.
Glynn County police are continuing to unravel the grisly details of the
shootings that left seven people immediately dead in a single-wide
trailer.
That death toll rose at noon Sunday with the death of Michael Toler,
19, the first victim of the mass slaying whose name has been made
public. Doering said Toler lived at the mobile home. A Facebook page
identified him at the time it was posted as a Glynn Academy student.
Toler died from brain injuries resulting from gunshot wounds, according
to a spokesperson for Memorial University Medical Center in Savannah.
His body has been sent to the Georgia Crime Laboratory in Savannah for
an autopsy. There was no public report of what type of firearm was used.
A ninth victim of the shooting, reportedly a juvenile, remained in critical condition Sunday night in Savannah.
Police found the carnage in the mobile home when they responded to a
911 call shortly after 8 a.m. Saturday. Inside the trailer on Lot 147
of the mobile home park they discovered seven people dead and two
clinging to life.
Doering continued through the weekend to decline to say how the victims
were killed, but an official close to investigation said they had been
shot. Evidence puts the time of deaths after midnight Friday, police
said.
Doering, who released few details of the crime during media briefings
Saturday and Sunday, called the scene inside the trailer "horrific" and
said it was one of the deadliest crime scenes in recent county history.
"It was not a pretty sight," he said.
Saturday, Doering had said police were not looking for a suspect.
When asked Sunday afternoon about the possibility of a suspect not
being in custody, Doering urged the public to not let its guard down.
"There is cause for concern," Doering said. "Be aware. Be alert. Don't think everything is OK, because right now it is not."
At 9 p.m. Sunday he said an unknown suspect or suspects were on the
loose and police needed the public's help to make an arrest. He is
encouraging anyone who heard or saw anything suspicious to call Silent
Witness at 264-1333.
Doering said that there could be more than one person responsible for
the murders. There is no evidence to suggest that a suicide occurred in
connection with the slayings.
"Evidence collected at the scene has been helpful," he said Sunday night. "We'll be going back in the morning for more."
Doering was coy throughout Sunday about the status of Guy Heinze, 22,
of Glynn County, who had made the emergency call to 911 Saturday
morning and was arrested at about 7 p.m. Saturday on charges of
tampering with evidence, obstruction of an officer and illegal drug
possession.
Heinze, who police said was an immediate family member of at least one
of the victims, was being held without bond in the Glynn County
Detention Center and was said to be cooperating with police.
Doering said he would not characterize Heinze as a suspect in the
homicides. "I'm not going to rule him out, but I'm not going to call
him a suspect."
Doering has declined to say where victims were found in the trailer.
Investigators worked the scene Saturday and Sunday while the area
around the mobile home remained cordoned off with yellow crime scene
tape. Family members of the victims have been helpful and are
cooperating with police, Doering said.
Tentative identifications have been made on all the victims, but
Doering said, prior to the identification of Toler, that he was not at
liberty to release their names and ages. He would say only that ages
ranged from children to people in their mid-40s.
"There were no infants," he said, in response to rumors.
Doering would not say if all the victims were killed in the same manner.
Autopsies on the victims began shortly after 7 a.m. Sunday and Doering said they may take at least two days to complete.
At a media briefing at 9 p.m. Sunday at the trailer park he said four
autopsies had been completed, but he did not provide any details.
"It's a slow, meticulous process," he said earlier in the day.
Doering said identities of victims would not be made public until after
autopsies are completed, nor would bodies be released to family members.
At least some of the bodies were so disfigured in the attack that visual identifications were impossible.
Police contacted Glynn County school officials to obtain fingerprint
identification for one of the victims, according to Leslie McCracken,
executive director for Glynn County Schools.
She said, however, that the school system did not have the information that would have been helpful to the investigation.
McCracken declined to identify the student, but said the child attended
one of three schools to which children who live in the mobile home park
are assigned: C.B. Greer Elementary, Needwood Middle or Glynn Academy.
Principals of those schools have been contacted, McCracken said, and grief support will be available to students there.
Doering said 12 volunteers were searching the area of the trailer park
for any evidence but as of Sunday afternoon had found nothing.
He said police were also searching isolated pockets up to 15 miles away.
Doering said police have established a time-frame for when the rampage occurred.
"We had a 12-hour window, but we've now narrowed that down to six or
eight hours," he said. "And we've been able to eliminate some persons
of interest. We're working very methodically."
Doering said his reluctance to elaborate on the investigation was
two-fold: "I don't have much information, and I want to protect the
family."
He said the trailer where the bodies were found was familiar to police.
Police had responded to it on more than one occasion prior to
Saturday's killings.
He declined to specify why police had been previously called to the residence.

TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

- Job/hobbies: Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: The HEINZE and TOLER Children (2009) - Glynn County GA
GLYNN COUNTY, GA -- We've learned more about the charges against the only man arrested so far in connection to Saturday's slayings.
The man heard on the dramatic 911 call, Guy Heinze, Jr., was arrested Sunday on charges including tampering with evidence, obstruction of an officer and illegal possession of prescription drugs and marijuana. Click here for a full transcript of the call.
We have learned the tampering charge is because police say Heinze removed a shotgun from the scene. According to the police report, Heinze put the gun in the trunk of his car.
He told police he believed the gun was stolen.
The report also indicates the obstruction charge is because Heinze didn't give factual information to detectives regarding his whereabouts the night before.
Heinze obstructed law enforcement by providing false statements to two Glynn County investigators.
The warrant says Heinze gave, "false and misleading information about his whereabouts and involvement in the circumstances leading up to him calling 911 to report the deaths of his family members."
Another arrest warrant claims Heinze tampered with evidence from the mobile home.
Chief Matt Doering has said that since his arrest, Heinze has been helpful, and that although it isn't ruled out, Heinze is not now considered a suspect.
Also just developing, the property manager has promised an additional $10,000 in the reward pot, meaning there is now a $35,000 reward for information leading to an arrest
The man heard on the dramatic 911 call, Guy Heinze, Jr., was arrested Sunday on charges including tampering with evidence, obstruction of an officer and illegal possession of prescription drugs and marijuana. Click here for a full transcript of the call.
We have learned the tampering charge is because police say Heinze removed a shotgun from the scene. According to the police report, Heinze put the gun in the trunk of his car.
He told police he believed the gun was stolen.
The report also indicates the obstruction charge is because Heinze didn't give factual information to detectives regarding his whereabouts the night before.
Heinze obstructed law enforcement by providing false statements to two Glynn County investigators.
The warrant says Heinze gave, "false and misleading information about his whereabouts and involvement in the circumstances leading up to him calling 911 to report the deaths of his family members."
Another arrest warrant claims Heinze tampered with evidence from the mobile home.
Chief Matt Doering has said that since his arrest, Heinze has been helpful, and that although it isn't ruled out, Heinze is not now considered a suspect.
Also just developing, the property manager has promised an additional $10,000 in the reward pot, meaning there is now a $35,000 reward for information leading to an arrest
Last edited by mom_from_STL on Mon Aug 31, 2009 4:57 pm; edited 1 time in total

mom_from_STL- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: The HEINZE and TOLER Children (2009) - Glynn County GA
Since the killings occurred, all we've been told by police is the identity of Michael Toler, the 19-year-old who died in the hospital hours after the 911 call that alerted police to the tragedy
In talking with neighbors, family and other sources, we can confirm the following are victims of the tragedy:
Guy William Heinze, Sr., Russell Dennis Toler, Chrissy Toler, and Michelle Toler, who is 15.
Byron, the last survivor, is a young child still in critical condition in the hospital.
In talking with neighbors, family and other sources, we can confirm the following are victims of the tragedy:
Guy William Heinze, Sr., Russell Dennis Toler, Chrissy Toler, and Michelle Toler, who is 15.
Byron, the last survivor, is a young child still in critical condition in the hospital.

mom_from_STL- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: The HEINZE and TOLER Children (2009) - Glynn County GA
More than 3,000 miles away, in the city of Port Angeles, Wash., 72-year-old William Heinze got tragic news.
"I just can't stop crying and shaking. I just hit me so heavy because we really loved Guy, everybody loved Guy," William Heinze told reporters. William Heinze is a man facing the ultimate struggle after Saturday's mass killings. His son, Guy Heinze, is among the dead.
And his grandson, Guy Heinze Jr., is the lone arrest in the case, accused of tampering with evidence and lying to detectives.
"Some of them were crippled or disabled. It just doesn't make any sense. I don't even know what would be the reason for something like this," Heinze said.
William Heinze is now preparing to fly cross-county to bury his son. The body, for now, is at the Georgia Bureau of Investigation autopsy lab in Savannah.
"He was pretty much locked in to staying with his best friend, Rusty. They went to school together as kids. He'd always go over there on Saturday nights. Like a big family, they'd be together," Williams Heinze said.
"I just can't stop crying and shaking. I just hit me so heavy because we really loved Guy, everybody loved Guy," William Heinze told reporters. William Heinze is a man facing the ultimate struggle after Saturday's mass killings. His son, Guy Heinze, is among the dead.
And his grandson, Guy Heinze Jr., is the lone arrest in the case, accused of tampering with evidence and lying to detectives.
"Some of them were crippled or disabled. It just doesn't make any sense. I don't even know what would be the reason for something like this," Heinze said.
William Heinze is now preparing to fly cross-county to bury his son. The body, for now, is at the Georgia Bureau of Investigation autopsy lab in Savannah.
"He was pretty much locked in to staying with his best friend, Rusty. They went to school together as kids. He'd always go over there on Saturday nights. Like a big family, they'd be together," Williams Heinze said.

mom_from_STL- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: The HEINZE and TOLER Children (2009) - Glynn County GA
Glynn County Police Chief Matt Doering knows the public is eager to
know more about the mysterious slayings of eight people in this Georgia
coastal city but is reticent to release details that might destroy his
investigation.Two days after seven bodies and two critically
injured victims were found in a Brunswick mobile home, he refused to
release most of their names, ages or how they were killed — though some
of that could come during a Tuesday afternoon briefing. No motive and
no suspects, he says. And police are not sure if the killer was still
in the area."I understand their frustration," Doering said
Monday about the public's desire for knowledge. "But this is a very
difficult investigation. ...I have to be very careful."On the
flipside, the chief was willing to release the recording of the 911
call made by Guy Heinze Jr., who arrived early Saturday to find seven
members of his family dead and two more clinging to life. One of the
survivors, 19-year-old Michael Toler, later died at a hospital,
bringing the total dead to eight. The ninth victim remained in critical
condition.The tape provided a chilling glimpse of the gory scene."My
dad's dead, my uncle's dead. There's like six. My whole family's dead!"
Heinze said, struggling to describe the scene to a dispatcher after his
neighbor called 911 and handed him the phone. "It looks like they've
been beaten to death. I don't know what to do, man."Moments
later, the 22-year-old who is facing charges of lying to police and
other counts went back inside and discovered his cousin Michael still
breathing."Michael's alive, tell them to hurry!" Heinze yelled
in the background as a maintenance man at the mobile home park stayed
on the phone with the dispatcher. "He's beat up! His face is smashed
in!"The 12-minute call provided some of the only details about
the crime that Doering calls the worst murder case in his 25 years on
the job. He said he expected to be able to release the identities at a
Tuesday news conference once all the autopsies have been completed. The
killings have the community on edge, and some have been critical of the
lack of information.Others are supportive.Thomas Joiner,
who has lived in the area since 1955 and lives about five miles from
the mobile home park, said he didn't fault the chief for withholding
information."I understand what the police are doing. You cannot
give too many details," he said, adding that that could make it harder
to solve the crime.But he said the uncertainty over whether a violent killer was still on the loose is tough to take and he's not taking chances."I
am being very vigilant," he said, adding that he has a pit bull as a
guard dog, keeps his shotgun handy and, since Saturday, has started
locking his doors at all times, something he never felt the need to do.Doering
also took a reporter, photographer and video cameraman to see and film
the outside of the crime scene from the back seat of his police car
Saturday after the mobile home park's management refused all day to let
reporters onto the property.But he can also be coy. At a news
conference Sunday, Doering gave a brief update and took questions for
20 minutes before revealing the day's biggest news — that Heinze had
been arrested. Heinze is expected to make his first court appearance
Wednesday. Doering has not called him a suspect and Heinze's lawyer
said his client is very upset and denies any involvement in the
killings.Though he'd already been asked if police had any
suspects, Doering said teasingly at the news conference that he was
surprised nobody asked specifically about arrests."I was waiting
for one of y'all to say, 'Gee, Matt, I went down to the jail and
checked the records and you all are doing pretty good,'" he said.
know more about the mysterious slayings of eight people in this Georgia
coastal city but is reticent to release details that might destroy his
investigation.Two days after seven bodies and two critically
injured victims were found in a Brunswick mobile home, he refused to
release most of their names, ages or how they were killed — though some
of that could come during a Tuesday afternoon briefing. No motive and
no suspects, he says. And police are not sure if the killer was still
in the area."I understand their frustration," Doering said
Monday about the public's desire for knowledge. "But this is a very
difficult investigation. ...I have to be very careful."On the
flipside, the chief was willing to release the recording of the 911
call made by Guy Heinze Jr., who arrived early Saturday to find seven
members of his family dead and two more clinging to life. One of the
survivors, 19-year-old Michael Toler, later died at a hospital,
bringing the total dead to eight. The ninth victim remained in critical
condition.The tape provided a chilling glimpse of the gory scene."My
dad's dead, my uncle's dead. There's like six. My whole family's dead!"
Heinze said, struggling to describe the scene to a dispatcher after his
neighbor called 911 and handed him the phone. "It looks like they've
been beaten to death. I don't know what to do, man."Moments
later, the 22-year-old who is facing charges of lying to police and
other counts went back inside and discovered his cousin Michael still
breathing."Michael's alive, tell them to hurry!" Heinze yelled
in the background as a maintenance man at the mobile home park stayed
on the phone with the dispatcher. "He's beat up! His face is smashed
in!"The 12-minute call provided some of the only details about
the crime that Doering calls the worst murder case in his 25 years on
the job. He said he expected to be able to release the identities at a
Tuesday news conference once all the autopsies have been completed. The
killings have the community on edge, and some have been critical of the
lack of information.Others are supportive.Thomas Joiner,
who has lived in the area since 1955 and lives about five miles from
the mobile home park, said he didn't fault the chief for withholding
information."I understand what the police are doing. You cannot
give too many details," he said, adding that that could make it harder
to solve the crime.But he said the uncertainty over whether a violent killer was still on the loose is tough to take and he's not taking chances."I
am being very vigilant," he said, adding that he has a pit bull as a
guard dog, keeps his shotgun handy and, since Saturday, has started
locking his doors at all times, something he never felt the need to do.Doering
also took a reporter, photographer and video cameraman to see and film
the outside of the crime scene from the back seat of his police car
Saturday after the mobile home park's management refused all day to let
reporters onto the property.But he can also be coy. At a news
conference Sunday, Doering gave a brief update and took questions for
20 minutes before revealing the day's biggest news — that Heinze had
been arrested. Heinze is expected to make his first court appearance
Wednesday. Doering has not called him a suspect and Heinze's lawyer
said his client is very upset and denies any involvement in the
killings.Though he'd already been asked if police had any
suspects, Doering said teasingly at the news conference that he was
surprised nobody asked specifically about arrests."I was waiting
for one of y'all to say, 'Gee, Matt, I went down to the jail and
checked the records and you all are doing pretty good,'" he said.

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Re: The HEINZE and TOLER Children (2009) - Glynn County GA
BRUNSWICK, GA -- Police have identified the eight victims in the mobile home murders in Brunswick.
They are:
Russell D. Toler Sr., age 44
Russell D. Toler Jr., 20
Chrissy Toler, 22
Michelle Toler, 15
Michael Toler, 19
Brenda Gail Falagan, 40
Guy Heinze Sr., 46
Joseph L. West, 31
A ninth victim, presumably a young boy, is hospitalized in Savannah with critical injuries.
The autopsies on the victims have been completed, but the results have not been made public.

They are:
Russell D. Toler Sr., age 44
Russell D. Toler Jr., 20
Chrissy Toler, 22
Michelle Toler, 15
Michael Toler, 19
Brenda Gail Falagan, 40
Guy Heinze Sr., 46
Joseph L. West, 31
A ninth victim, presumably a young boy, is hospitalized in Savannah with critical injuries.
The autopsies on the victims have been completed, but the results have not been made public.


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Re: The HEINZE and TOLER Children (2009) - Glynn County GA
Rusty Toler Sr. took in people who were down on their luck, packing
his mobile home with relatives and others who had lost their jobs or
fallen on hard times.It's what good country folk do, says the
manager of the park where Toler, his four children, two siblings and
his daughter's boyfriend were found slain. Ten people lived in the
single-wide, 980-square-foot trailer in coastal Georgia that cost Toler
$405 a month.Police have no suspects and have not said how the family died."They
were very good people," said Laura Davis, an aunt to Toler's children.
"They struggled but they had what they needed. They had a roof over
their heads and clothes on their backs."Police released the
names and ages of the dead Tuesday, three days after the carnage was
reported in a frantic 911 call by a relative who said he had returned
from a night out to find his whole family dead."It's just a
shock," said Gail Montgomery, who manages the New Hope Plantation
mobile home park where Toler and his family lived. "They were just what
I'd call good country folks. I don't think any of them would hurt a
fly."The victims included 44-year-old Toler and his four
children: Chrissy Toler, 22; Russell D. Toler Jr., 20; Michael Toler,
19; and Michelle Toler, 15.Also killed were two of Toler's
siblings — Guy Heinze Sr., 45, and Brenda Gail Falagan, 49, as well as
30-year-old Joseph L. West, Chrissy Toler's boyfriend. A ninth victim,
whom police did not identify, remained in critical condition Tuesday.Montgomery
said the elder Toler had taken in his brother, a nephew, his daughter
and her boyfriend because they had lost jobs and couldn't find work.
Montgomery said his daughter's young child also lived with them and was
the lone survivor.Toler Sr. had worked for 20 years at a plant
that dries chemicals and food products located behind the mobile home
park, but was laid off several months ago, said Kathy Clock,
administrative assistant to the owner of the plant and New Hope
Plantation.Montgomery said Toler Sr. also did odd jobs for her, including groundskeeping and hauling trailers.But
he had too many people living in the home. They were told more than two
months ago they would have to move, which they planned to do."He had a big heart," Montgomery said. "And you just don't tell your family no."Toler
Sr. received notice of eviction proceedings Aug. 13 and was to have
been in court with the landlord Monday, two days after he was killed.
Montgomery said they had come to an agreement — the family had found a
new place and promised to move out by Sept. 8."Rusty took care of family," Clock said. "If you needed a place to sleep, there was a place to sleep."Davis, the children's aunt, said she had never known the family to have enemies, especially anyone who would want to kill them."I don't think somebody did this because they're mad at them," Davis said. "I think this is just a senseless murder."Police
have released little information about the case that has rocked this
port city between Savannah and Jacksonville, Fla., saying they don't
want to jeopardize their investigation.It was Heinze's son, Guy Heinze Jr., 22, who told police he found the bodies after returning home Saturday morning.A recording of a 12-minute 911 call has provided some of the only details about the crime.Heinze
Jr. could be heard on the call screaming, "My whole family's dead!" and
struggled to describe what he saw, at one point returning to the mobile
home to find his cousin Michael, whom he said had Down syndrome, barely
breathing."Michael's alive, tell them to hurry!" Heinze Jr.
yelled in the background as a maintenance man at the mobile home park
spoke with a dispatcher. "He's beat up! His face is smashed in!"Michael Toler died Sunday at a hospital in Savannah.Several
hours after Heinze Jr. said he found the bodies, police arrested him on
charges of drug possession, tampering with evidence and lying to a
police officer. Glynn County Police Chief Matt Doering said he isn't
calling Heinze Jr. a suspect in the killings but isn't ruling him out.
Heinze's attorney said he is distraught over the slayings and was not
involved."My client believes the killer is still on the loose,"
said the lawyer, Ron Harrison, who said Heinze Jr. is cooperating with
police.Heinze Jr. is scheduled for court on Wednesday.A
graveside service was tentatively set for the Tolers, Heinze and
Falagan on Saturday, according to the Howard-Jones-Nobles Funeral Home.
Details of West's funeral were not immediately available."The
only comfort I can draw from this is that Rusty did the best he could
for his children," Davis said. "And he's in heaven now with his
children."
his mobile home with relatives and others who had lost their jobs or
fallen on hard times.It's what good country folk do, says the
manager of the park where Toler, his four children, two siblings and
his daughter's boyfriend were found slain. Ten people lived in the
single-wide, 980-square-foot trailer in coastal Georgia that cost Toler
$405 a month.Police have no suspects and have not said how the family died."They
were very good people," said Laura Davis, an aunt to Toler's children.
"They struggled but they had what they needed. They had a roof over
their heads and clothes on their backs."Police released the
names and ages of the dead Tuesday, three days after the carnage was
reported in a frantic 911 call by a relative who said he had returned
from a night out to find his whole family dead."It's just a
shock," said Gail Montgomery, who manages the New Hope Plantation
mobile home park where Toler and his family lived. "They were just what
I'd call good country folks. I don't think any of them would hurt a
fly."The victims included 44-year-old Toler and his four
children: Chrissy Toler, 22; Russell D. Toler Jr., 20; Michael Toler,
19; and Michelle Toler, 15.Also killed were two of Toler's
siblings — Guy Heinze Sr., 45, and Brenda Gail Falagan, 49, as well as
30-year-old Joseph L. West, Chrissy Toler's boyfriend. A ninth victim,
whom police did not identify, remained in critical condition Tuesday.Montgomery
said the elder Toler had taken in his brother, a nephew, his daughter
and her boyfriend because they had lost jobs and couldn't find work.
Montgomery said his daughter's young child also lived with them and was
the lone survivor.Toler Sr. had worked for 20 years at a plant
that dries chemicals and food products located behind the mobile home
park, but was laid off several months ago, said Kathy Clock,
administrative assistant to the owner of the plant and New Hope
Plantation.Montgomery said Toler Sr. also did odd jobs for her, including groundskeeping and hauling trailers.But
he had too many people living in the home. They were told more than two
months ago they would have to move, which they planned to do."He had a big heart," Montgomery said. "And you just don't tell your family no."Toler
Sr. received notice of eviction proceedings Aug. 13 and was to have
been in court with the landlord Monday, two days after he was killed.
Montgomery said they had come to an agreement — the family had found a
new place and promised to move out by Sept. 8."Rusty took care of family," Clock said. "If you needed a place to sleep, there was a place to sleep."Davis, the children's aunt, said she had never known the family to have enemies, especially anyone who would want to kill them."I don't think somebody did this because they're mad at them," Davis said. "I think this is just a senseless murder."Police
have released little information about the case that has rocked this
port city between Savannah and Jacksonville, Fla., saying they don't
want to jeopardize their investigation.It was Heinze's son, Guy Heinze Jr., 22, who told police he found the bodies after returning home Saturday morning.A recording of a 12-minute 911 call has provided some of the only details about the crime.Heinze
Jr. could be heard on the call screaming, "My whole family's dead!" and
struggled to describe what he saw, at one point returning to the mobile
home to find his cousin Michael, whom he said had Down syndrome, barely
breathing."Michael's alive, tell them to hurry!" Heinze Jr.
yelled in the background as a maintenance man at the mobile home park
spoke with a dispatcher. "He's beat up! His face is smashed in!"Michael Toler died Sunday at a hospital in Savannah.Several
hours after Heinze Jr. said he found the bodies, police arrested him on
charges of drug possession, tampering with evidence and lying to a
police officer. Glynn County Police Chief Matt Doering said he isn't
calling Heinze Jr. a suspect in the killings but isn't ruling him out.
Heinze's attorney said he is distraught over the slayings and was not
involved."My client believes the killer is still on the loose,"
said the lawyer, Ron Harrison, who said Heinze Jr. is cooperating with
police.Heinze Jr. is scheduled for court on Wednesday.A
graveside service was tentatively set for the Tolers, Heinze and
Falagan on Saturday, according to the Howard-Jones-Nobles Funeral Home.
Details of West's funeral were not immediately available."The
only comfort I can draw from this is that Rusty did the best he could
for his children," Davis said. "And he's in heaven now with his
children."

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- Job/hobbies: Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: The HEINZE and TOLER Children (2009) - Glynn County GA
Glynn County Police said all autopsies had been completed on the eight victims of a mass murder in a mobile home.
People in the small south Georgia town are still in shock after
seven people were found dead and 2 critically injured just after 8:00
a.m. Saturday (Watch: Multiple Homicides Reported in Glynn County).
Police said one of the injured victims, Michael Toler, 19, died noon
Sunday at a Savannah hospital. The only survivor of the attack, a
child, is still in critical condition at the hospital.
Police identified the other victims as Russell D. Toler Sr., 44;
Russell D. Toler Jr., 20; Chrissy Toler, 22; Michelle Toler, 15; Brenda
Gail Falagan, 49; Guy Heinze Sr., 45; Joseph L. West, 30.
Glynn County Coroner Jimmy Durden told News 3 he had been told the
autopsies concluded Monday afternoon, but said he has not received
information yet on the specific causes of deaths. Durden said he
believes he’ll receive that information within the week.
Police said they still have not identified any suspects, and
authorities have not released how the victims were killed. On Monday,
Glynn County Police Chief Matt Doering acknowledged the community’s
frustration.
“This is a very difficult investigation as I know you are all aware.
And right now we’re doing everything we can possibly do in order to
find those responsible and figure out what happened. And I have to be
very careful not to release those details that can jeopardize that
investigation,“ said Doering. (Watch: Mystery Surrounds Murder of 8 in Glynn County)
Monday morning police released the 911 call made by Guy Heinze, Jr. (Watch: 911 Tapes Released in Glynn County Mass Murders)
Police said Heinze, Jr. was the family member who discovered the bodies
Saturday morning. (Watch: Multiple Murders Reported in Glynn County at
Mobile Home Park, Watch: 911 Tapes Released in Glynn County Mass
Murder)
Heinze, Jr. is set to appear before a judge Wednesday on drug
charges of drug possession, tampering with evidence, and obstructing an
officer (Watch: Police: 1 Arrested in Relation to Glynn County Multiple Murders). According to arrest warrants,
he gave investigators “false and misleading information about his
whereabouts and his involvement in the circumstances leading up to him
calling 911 to report the deaths of his family members.“ Another
warrant says he admitted “to hiding a shot gun” in the trunk of a car
to hide if from investigators because he believed the shotgun was
stolen.
Anyone with information in this case is asked to call Glynn County’s
Silent Witness Line at 912-264-1333. There is a $25,000 reward for
information leading to an arrest and conviction in the case, and
callers can remain anonymous.
There is a benefit fund set up to help the family with funeral
expenses. You can make donations to the Toler Funeral Fund at any
Southeastern Bank branch.
The bodies of seven of the victims (the Toler family, Guy Heinze,
Sr., and Brenda Falagan) have been taken to Howard~Jones~Nobles Funeral
Home in Jesup. The funeral home tells News 3 a funeral service for
them will be held at 3:00 p.m. Saturday at Young’s Island Community
Church in McIntosh County.
We’re told the arrangements for Joesph West are not complete but are
being handled by R.L. Jones and Sons Funeral Home in Brunswick.
People in the small south Georgia town are still in shock after
seven people were found dead and 2 critically injured just after 8:00
a.m. Saturday (Watch: Multiple Homicides Reported in Glynn County).
Police said one of the injured victims, Michael Toler, 19, died noon
Sunday at a Savannah hospital. The only survivor of the attack, a
child, is still in critical condition at the hospital.
Police identified the other victims as Russell D. Toler Sr., 44;
Russell D. Toler Jr., 20; Chrissy Toler, 22; Michelle Toler, 15; Brenda
Gail Falagan, 49; Guy Heinze Sr., 45; Joseph L. West, 30.
Glynn County Coroner Jimmy Durden told News 3 he had been told the
autopsies concluded Monday afternoon, but said he has not received
information yet on the specific causes of deaths. Durden said he
believes he’ll receive that information within the week.
Police said they still have not identified any suspects, and
authorities have not released how the victims were killed. On Monday,
Glynn County Police Chief Matt Doering acknowledged the community’s
frustration.
“This is a very difficult investigation as I know you are all aware.
And right now we’re doing everything we can possibly do in order to
find those responsible and figure out what happened. And I have to be
very careful not to release those details that can jeopardize that
investigation,“ said Doering. (Watch: Mystery Surrounds Murder of 8 in Glynn County)
Monday morning police released the 911 call made by Guy Heinze, Jr. (Watch: 911 Tapes Released in Glynn County Mass Murders)
Police said Heinze, Jr. was the family member who discovered the bodies
Saturday morning. (Watch: Multiple Murders Reported in Glynn County at
Mobile Home Park, Watch: 911 Tapes Released in Glynn County Mass
Murder)
Heinze, Jr. is set to appear before a judge Wednesday on drug
charges of drug possession, tampering with evidence, and obstructing an
officer (Watch: Police: 1 Arrested in Relation to Glynn County Multiple Murders). According to arrest warrants,
he gave investigators “false and misleading information about his
whereabouts and his involvement in the circumstances leading up to him
calling 911 to report the deaths of his family members.“ Another
warrant says he admitted “to hiding a shot gun” in the trunk of a car
to hide if from investigators because he believed the shotgun was
stolen.
Anyone with information in this case is asked to call Glynn County’s
Silent Witness Line at 912-264-1333. There is a $25,000 reward for
information leading to an arrest and conviction in the case, and
callers can remain anonymous.
There is a benefit fund set up to help the family with funeral
expenses. You can make donations to the Toler Funeral Fund at any
Southeastern Bank branch.
The bodies of seven of the victims (the Toler family, Guy Heinze,
Sr., and Brenda Falagan) have been taken to Howard~Jones~Nobles Funeral
Home in Jesup. The funeral home tells News 3 a funeral service for
them will be held at 3:00 p.m. Saturday at Young’s Island Community
Church in McIntosh County.
We’re told the arrangements for Joesph West are not complete but are
being handled by R.L. Jones and Sons Funeral Home in Brunswick.

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Re: The HEINZE and TOLER Children (2009) - Glynn County GA
GLYNN COUNTY, GA -- Guy Heinze, Jr. is still behind bars in Glynn County charged with lying to police and tampering with evidence.
His attorney, Ron Harrison, says Heinze had nothing to do with the murders of his family.
"He is deeply saddened about this tragic event and is grieving as we speak and looks forward to getting out of jail and reuniting with what family he has left."
Heinze is charged with lying to police about his wherabouts before reporting the deaths of his family members.
He is also accused of taking a shotgun from the murder scene and hiding it from police. Heinze told police he thought the gun was stolen.
Harrison won't talk about the charges. "He has cooperated fully with police."
Police Chief Matt Doering says Heinze isn't cooperating anymore. Harrison says that is "inaccurate."
Harrison says Heinze wants those responsible to be brought to justice.
Heinze has a bond hearing Wednesday morning on the charges.
His attorney, Ron Harrison, says Heinze had nothing to do with the murders of his family.
"He is deeply saddened about this tragic event and is grieving as we speak and looks forward to getting out of jail and reuniting with what family he has left."
Heinze is charged with lying to police about his wherabouts before reporting the deaths of his family members.
He is also accused of taking a shotgun from the murder scene and hiding it from police. Heinze told police he thought the gun was stolen.
Harrison won't talk about the charges. "He has cooperated fully with police."
Police Chief Matt Doering says Heinze isn't cooperating anymore. Harrison says that is "inaccurate."
Harrison says Heinze wants those responsible to be brought to justice.
Heinze has a bond hearing Wednesday morning on the charges.

mom_from_STL- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: The HEINZE and TOLER Children (2009) - Glynn County GA
They were all family, or family friends, who died together in the biggest mass killing in Glynn County history. These are the stories of the eight people who were found slain in a mobile home park north of Brunswick, Ga., on Saturday. (A ninth victim, 3-year-old Byron Jimerson Jr., remains in critical condition in a Savannah hospital.)
RUSSELL TOLER SR.
Friends describe him as humble, hard-working
People who knew Russell "Rusty" Toler Sr., 44, said they were astonished he fell victim to such violence and confident he did nothing to bring it on himself or his family.
"I heard it, but thought it was just rumors," said Jimmy Ginn, a former neighbor of the Tolers.
In fact, said longtime friend and fishing companion Bobby Sumner, Toler always tried to find the good in people.
"Rusty tried to live by the old standard that if you don't have something good to say about someone, don't say anything at all," said Sumner, who runs an RV park in McIntosh County. "He loved his young'uns, and he would go to the ends of the Earth for them."
Sumner and others described Toler, who was living with four of his children, as a humble, friendly, hard-working man.
"Anything that came up to make a dollar, he'd jump at it," said Fred Rowe, a friend of the family for nearly two decades.
Joseph Iannicelli, owner of the New Hope Mobile Home Park and the adjoining Aero-Instant plant where Toler worked for more than 20 years, issued a statement describing him as "a very loyal employee."
The plant, which offers custom drying services to the mineral and chemical industries, is in temporary shutdown mode now, but Toler would definitely have been hired back when work picked up, Iannicelli said.
Called "Mr. Joe" by his employees, Iannicelli added a $10,000 reward Monday to the $25,000 offered by Glynn County police for information leading to the arrest and conviction of whomever is responsible for the killings.
Court records in McIntosh County show Toler was charged with simple battery against his former wife's husband on New Year's Eve 2004. The charges were dropped a few months later.
Witnesses subpoenaed to testify in the case included Toler's half-brother, Guy Heinze Sr., and Toler's daughter, Chrissy. Both also were victims of the weekend slayings.
But Sumner said Toler and his former wife and her husband generally got along as friends and had lived as neighbors before he moved to New Hope.
CHRISSY TOLER
She had several run-ins with law enforcement.
Chrissy Toler, 22, died after living a troubled life, littered with several run-ins with the law after she left the Glynn County school system in 2003 at age 16.
County schools Superintendent Howard Mann was interim principal of Needwood Middle School when Toler was a student there. Mann recalls her as a kid who was rough around the edges. She might not have instigated disturbances, he said, but she often was in the middle of them.
Toler got into more serious scrapes as she got older. She was sentenced to 10 years' probation and fined $1,500 after pleading guilty in June 2006 to conspiracy to commit armed robbery in an attack on a couple at a Brunswick motel.
Toler is the mother of the sole survivor of the weekend massacre. Her 3-year-old son is named after his father, Byron Jimerson, who is serving 20 years for the armed robbery, authorities said.
Toler took a plea bargain that required her to testify against Jimerson and Shem Paul, who received a 30-year sentence, records showed.
In 2005, Toler, Jimerson and two others were accused of robbing two men who said Toler and a second woman propositioned and promised to have sex with them, court records showed. Prosecutors later dismissed the charges when the victims could not be found to testify in the case, the records showed.
Toler was charged with misdemeanor simple battery after her mother told Glynn police she was attacked by her daughter in May 2006 during a domestic dispute. Court records list the case as inactive, and additional information about its disposition wasn't immediately available.
RUSSELL TOLER JR.
He worked hard and was slow to criticize.
Like father, like son.
Folks who knew him said Russell Toler Jr., 20, shared his father's humble demeanor, work ethic and love for fishing.
"He didn't care how dirty he got. That boy worked hard," said Fred Rowe, who often worked side by side with the man he called "Little Rusty" in roofing and construction jobs.
Bobby Sumner said he often fished with the father and son, and sometimes just with the son. He said he was a thin-framed young man, slow to criticize, who often kept to himself. Toler Jr. wasn't prone to fighting with his siblings or causing trouble outside the home, Sumner said.
"They were good people," he said. "It's such a tragedy this happened."
Mark Hill of Brunswick was stepfather to the Toler children and married to their mother for a time. He described them all as well-behaved and well-mannered. Hill said he hasn't had contact with the children in eight or nine years.
MICHAEL TOLER
A teacher remembers Michael as "wonderful."
David Flesch is serious when he tells you Michael Toler, 19, was "the most wonderful child and human being" he's met in 20 years as a special education teacher.
That's why his face lights up when asked about the boy he taught - and who he says taught him even more - at McIntosh County Academy near Darien, Ga., from 2003 to 2007.
But it's also what brings him to tears when reminded that Toler died Sunday from wounds suffered in the Brunswick trailer park home massacre that left a total of eight dead and one critically injured.
What seems so senseless to Flesch isn't only that Toler was a Down syndrome child, but that someone could possibly harm "the nicest human being ever."
"I was hoping they had the wrong child" when news first broke it was his former student who was among the victims, Flesch said.
What always impressed Flesch so much, he said, was that the teen overcame a speech impediment almost by sheer will and despite poverty at home displayed a huge work ethic - he had been training for a job with Goodwill Industries, although Flesch didn't believe he was working at the time.
Toler's family moved around a lot and worked several minimum-wage jobs - conditions that would make it hard for any student to do well at school.
After hearing of Toler's death, Flesch said he went through a cycle of anger and questioning about how this could happen. But that has already passed.
"I have no doubt Michael's sitting in God's lap right now," Flesch said. "I'm OK with that, now."
MICHELLE TOLER
"She had a big heart," said a family friend.
There was no official announcement Tuesday at Needwood Middle School. Classmates and teachers of Michelle Toler, 15, already knew the worst had happened to the eighth-grader.
Friends and classmates chose to remember her life - not how she died.
Bobby Sumner, a fishing companion of the Tolers, said Michelle loved to fish and spend time with her dad, who also died in the attacks.
"She had a big heart," Sumner said.
Reporters were barred from the middle school because Glynn County schools Superintendent Howard Mann said students and staff deserved privacy to grieve.
"It's such a horrific tragedy. It's going to take some time, not just for our school family but for the whole community to heal," Mann said.
Students continued to trickle in to talk with grief counselors, who have been at the school since Monday.
Michelle was popular with her classmates and teachers.
"Her classmates described her as a person who was always smiling, and said if they were down about anything, she would try to pick them up and raise their spirits," said Jim Weidhaas, a school system spokesman.
No memorial services have been planned at the school because "we're concentrating on maintaining a normal school atmosphere focused on learning," Weidhaas said.
But Michelle will not be forgotten.
"She is going to be missed," he said.
GUY HEINZE SR.
He was remembered as a generous friend.
At first, Jimmy Ginn was calm as he discussed the murder of his friend and one-time fellow truck driver Guy William Heinze Sr., 45, who died with seven others in a trailer park massacre Saturday in Brunswick.
But traces of anger emerged as slowly as the exhalations of the Marlboro Light cigarette he smoked Tuesday in a driveway on Church of God Road in Townsend, Ga.
"I hope they catch those guys," he said of the person or persons who committed the weekend homicides. "When they do, they can bring them out here and drop them off."
Townsend is a rural community a few miles west of Interstate 95 in McIntosh County where Ginn and Heinze used to drive a long-haul truck together, Ginn said. Two other victims, Rusty Toler Sr. and Jr., also once lived there.
"Everybody out here knows them," Ginn said.
What was known about Heinze, Ginn said, was that he kept his nose clean and worked hard.
"He got up early and went to bed early," Ginn said.
Not that Heinze didn't have his run-ins with authorities. In 1985, he received probation for forgery in St. Johns County. Records show he also got probation for forgery in Georgia. Speeding, illegal parking and improper child restraint charges were filed against him in Georgia between 1994 and 2004.
Ginn didn't recall any of that, but did remember Heinze's CB handle was "Shaky," because he had the jitters following an incident a few years back when a semi-truck tire he was working on exploded and injured him.
"It messed him up," Ginn said.
Bobby Sumner of McIntosh County said he and Heinze drove trucks together, and Heinze used to watch NASCAR with him. He described Heinze as a generous man who once brought him back a $70 model car from a NASCAR race.
"He had a really rough life," Sumner said.
BRENDA FALAGAN
She was in a wheelchair following a stroke.
Brenda Gail Falagan, 49, was Rusty Toler Sr.'s older sister and the wife of the late Glenn Falagan.
She and her husband lost their son, Andy, 7, and Glenn's son, Johnny, in a fire about 20 years ago, said Jeannie Asbell, her niece.
She and Glenn's sister, Joyce Stone, said both Glenn and Brenda had suffered debilitating strokes. After Glenn suffered a stroke, Brenda took care of him until she suffered one that left her unable to care for him, Stone said.
"She stuck by my brother until the day he died,'' Stone said. "She was just a good person.''
Brenda lived with another sister, Joann, for five years but when Joann died, Brenda had to leave, Stone said.
"She was in a wheelchair at times,'' as her late husband had been, Stone said.
Asbell believes Brenda Falagan was so dependent on someone taking care of her that she had little choice but to move in with her brother.
"She was my aunt. I loved her to death. She was a very nice lady,'' Asbell said.
Stone's voice was tinged with sorrow when she wondered why so many innocent people were killed.
"Why did they kill the children? Why did they kill Brenda?'' she said. "She didn't bother anybody."
JOSEPH WEST
Despite some problems, "He had a good heart."
Joseph L. West, 30, was Chrissy Toler's boyfriend, devoted to his family and always in a hurry, said his aunt, Joyce Herrington.
Herrington said she talked with him the day before he died and that he never let a week go by without talking with her.
He enjoyed spending time with Chrissy Toler and her young son, Byron.
"When you saw Joseph, Chrissy was in that truck and that little boy was in that truck,'' Herrington said.
She told about a running joke between them.
"He'd say, 'Auntie, you got any money?' and I'd say, 'If I do it's mine,'" she said.
He had some legal problems.
After pleading guilty to possession of cocaine, he was sentenced in September 2000 to five years' probation, $1,750 in fines and court costs and a year intensive probation. His probation was revoked after he tested positive for cocaine in October 2002 and failed to fulfill other conditions of his probation. There was no court record of any jail time.
Other scrapes with the law included forging and cashing a check for $345, theft by receiving stolen property for accepting $2,000 worth of stainless steel and illegal dumping and fighting. Sentences ranged from five days in jail to probation.
"None of us are perfect,'' his aunt said. "He had a good heart."
Toddler's update: Byron Jimerson Jr., 3, is in critical condition and under police protection at a Savannah hospital. His mother, Chrissy Toler, was killed in the attacks.
RUSSELL TOLER SR.
Friends describe him as humble, hard-working
People who knew Russell "Rusty" Toler Sr., 44, said they were astonished he fell victim to such violence and confident he did nothing to bring it on himself or his family.
"I heard it, but thought it was just rumors," said Jimmy Ginn, a former neighbor of the Tolers.
In fact, said longtime friend and fishing companion Bobby Sumner, Toler always tried to find the good in people.
"Rusty tried to live by the old standard that if you don't have something good to say about someone, don't say anything at all," said Sumner, who runs an RV park in McIntosh County. "He loved his young'uns, and he would go to the ends of the Earth for them."
Sumner and others described Toler, who was living with four of his children, as a humble, friendly, hard-working man.
"Anything that came up to make a dollar, he'd jump at it," said Fred Rowe, a friend of the family for nearly two decades.
Joseph Iannicelli, owner of the New Hope Mobile Home Park and the adjoining Aero-Instant plant where Toler worked for more than 20 years, issued a statement describing him as "a very loyal employee."
The plant, which offers custom drying services to the mineral and chemical industries, is in temporary shutdown mode now, but Toler would definitely have been hired back when work picked up, Iannicelli said.
Called "Mr. Joe" by his employees, Iannicelli added a $10,000 reward Monday to the $25,000 offered by Glynn County police for information leading to the arrest and conviction of whomever is responsible for the killings.
Court records in McIntosh County show Toler was charged with simple battery against his former wife's husband on New Year's Eve 2004. The charges were dropped a few months later.
Witnesses subpoenaed to testify in the case included Toler's half-brother, Guy Heinze Sr., and Toler's daughter, Chrissy. Both also were victims of the weekend slayings.
But Sumner said Toler and his former wife and her husband generally got along as friends and had lived as neighbors before he moved to New Hope.
CHRISSY TOLER
She had several run-ins with law enforcement.
Chrissy Toler, 22, died after living a troubled life, littered with several run-ins with the law after she left the Glynn County school system in 2003 at age 16.
County schools Superintendent Howard Mann was interim principal of Needwood Middle School when Toler was a student there. Mann recalls her as a kid who was rough around the edges. She might not have instigated disturbances, he said, but she often was in the middle of them.
Toler got into more serious scrapes as she got older. She was sentenced to 10 years' probation and fined $1,500 after pleading guilty in June 2006 to conspiracy to commit armed robbery in an attack on a couple at a Brunswick motel.
Toler is the mother of the sole survivor of the weekend massacre. Her 3-year-old son is named after his father, Byron Jimerson, who is serving 20 years for the armed robbery, authorities said.
Toler took a plea bargain that required her to testify against Jimerson and Shem Paul, who received a 30-year sentence, records showed.
In 2005, Toler, Jimerson and two others were accused of robbing two men who said Toler and a second woman propositioned and promised to have sex with them, court records showed. Prosecutors later dismissed the charges when the victims could not be found to testify in the case, the records showed.
Toler was charged with misdemeanor simple battery after her mother told Glynn police she was attacked by her daughter in May 2006 during a domestic dispute. Court records list the case as inactive, and additional information about its disposition wasn't immediately available.
RUSSELL TOLER JR.
He worked hard and was slow to criticize.
Like father, like son.
Folks who knew him said Russell Toler Jr., 20, shared his father's humble demeanor, work ethic and love for fishing.
"He didn't care how dirty he got. That boy worked hard," said Fred Rowe, who often worked side by side with the man he called "Little Rusty" in roofing and construction jobs.
Bobby Sumner said he often fished with the father and son, and sometimes just with the son. He said he was a thin-framed young man, slow to criticize, who often kept to himself. Toler Jr. wasn't prone to fighting with his siblings or causing trouble outside the home, Sumner said.
"They were good people," he said. "It's such a tragedy this happened."
Mark Hill of Brunswick was stepfather to the Toler children and married to their mother for a time. He described them all as well-behaved and well-mannered. Hill said he hasn't had contact with the children in eight or nine years.
MICHAEL TOLER
A teacher remembers Michael as "wonderful."
David Flesch is serious when he tells you Michael Toler, 19, was "the most wonderful child and human being" he's met in 20 years as a special education teacher.
That's why his face lights up when asked about the boy he taught - and who he says taught him even more - at McIntosh County Academy near Darien, Ga., from 2003 to 2007.
But it's also what brings him to tears when reminded that Toler died Sunday from wounds suffered in the Brunswick trailer park home massacre that left a total of eight dead and one critically injured.
What seems so senseless to Flesch isn't only that Toler was a Down syndrome child, but that someone could possibly harm "the nicest human being ever."
"I was hoping they had the wrong child" when news first broke it was his former student who was among the victims, Flesch said.
What always impressed Flesch so much, he said, was that the teen overcame a speech impediment almost by sheer will and despite poverty at home displayed a huge work ethic - he had been training for a job with Goodwill Industries, although Flesch didn't believe he was working at the time.
Toler's family moved around a lot and worked several minimum-wage jobs - conditions that would make it hard for any student to do well at school.
After hearing of Toler's death, Flesch said he went through a cycle of anger and questioning about how this could happen. But that has already passed.
"I have no doubt Michael's sitting in God's lap right now," Flesch said. "I'm OK with that, now."
MICHELLE TOLER
"She had a big heart," said a family friend.
There was no official announcement Tuesday at Needwood Middle School. Classmates and teachers of Michelle Toler, 15, already knew the worst had happened to the eighth-grader.
Friends and classmates chose to remember her life - not how she died.
Bobby Sumner, a fishing companion of the Tolers, said Michelle loved to fish and spend time with her dad, who also died in the attacks.
"She had a big heart," Sumner said.
Reporters were barred from the middle school because Glynn County schools Superintendent Howard Mann said students and staff deserved privacy to grieve.
"It's such a horrific tragedy. It's going to take some time, not just for our school family but for the whole community to heal," Mann said.
Students continued to trickle in to talk with grief counselors, who have been at the school since Monday.
Michelle was popular with her classmates and teachers.
"Her classmates described her as a person who was always smiling, and said if they were down about anything, she would try to pick them up and raise their spirits," said Jim Weidhaas, a school system spokesman.
No memorial services have been planned at the school because "we're concentrating on maintaining a normal school atmosphere focused on learning," Weidhaas said.
But Michelle will not be forgotten.
"She is going to be missed," he said.
GUY HEINZE SR.
He was remembered as a generous friend.
At first, Jimmy Ginn was calm as he discussed the murder of his friend and one-time fellow truck driver Guy William Heinze Sr., 45, who died with seven others in a trailer park massacre Saturday in Brunswick.
But traces of anger emerged as slowly as the exhalations of the Marlboro Light cigarette he smoked Tuesday in a driveway on Church of God Road in Townsend, Ga.
"I hope they catch those guys," he said of the person or persons who committed the weekend homicides. "When they do, they can bring them out here and drop them off."
Townsend is a rural community a few miles west of Interstate 95 in McIntosh County where Ginn and Heinze used to drive a long-haul truck together, Ginn said. Two other victims, Rusty Toler Sr. and Jr., also once lived there.
"Everybody out here knows them," Ginn said.
What was known about Heinze, Ginn said, was that he kept his nose clean and worked hard.
"He got up early and went to bed early," Ginn said.
Not that Heinze didn't have his run-ins with authorities. In 1985, he received probation for forgery in St. Johns County. Records show he also got probation for forgery in Georgia. Speeding, illegal parking and improper child restraint charges were filed against him in Georgia between 1994 and 2004.
Ginn didn't recall any of that, but did remember Heinze's CB handle was "Shaky," because he had the jitters following an incident a few years back when a semi-truck tire he was working on exploded and injured him.
"It messed him up," Ginn said.
Bobby Sumner of McIntosh County said he and Heinze drove trucks together, and Heinze used to watch NASCAR with him. He described Heinze as a generous man who once brought him back a $70 model car from a NASCAR race.
"He had a really rough life," Sumner said.
BRENDA FALAGAN
She was in a wheelchair following a stroke.
Brenda Gail Falagan, 49, was Rusty Toler Sr.'s older sister and the wife of the late Glenn Falagan.
She and her husband lost their son, Andy, 7, and Glenn's son, Johnny, in a fire about 20 years ago, said Jeannie Asbell, her niece.
She and Glenn's sister, Joyce Stone, said both Glenn and Brenda had suffered debilitating strokes. After Glenn suffered a stroke, Brenda took care of him until she suffered one that left her unable to care for him, Stone said.
"She stuck by my brother until the day he died,'' Stone said. "She was just a good person.''
Brenda lived with another sister, Joann, for five years but when Joann died, Brenda had to leave, Stone said.
"She was in a wheelchair at times,'' as her late husband had been, Stone said.
Asbell believes Brenda Falagan was so dependent on someone taking care of her that she had little choice but to move in with her brother.
"She was my aunt. I loved her to death. She was a very nice lady,'' Asbell said.
Stone's voice was tinged with sorrow when she wondered why so many innocent people were killed.
"Why did they kill the children? Why did they kill Brenda?'' she said. "She didn't bother anybody."
JOSEPH WEST
Despite some problems, "He had a good heart."
Joseph L. West, 30, was Chrissy Toler's boyfriend, devoted to his family and always in a hurry, said his aunt, Joyce Herrington.
Herrington said she talked with him the day before he died and that he never let a week go by without talking with her.
He enjoyed spending time with Chrissy Toler and her young son, Byron.
"When you saw Joseph, Chrissy was in that truck and that little boy was in that truck,'' Herrington said.
She told about a running joke between them.
"He'd say, 'Auntie, you got any money?' and I'd say, 'If I do it's mine,'" she said.
He had some legal problems.
After pleading guilty to possession of cocaine, he was sentenced in September 2000 to five years' probation, $1,750 in fines and court costs and a year intensive probation. His probation was revoked after he tested positive for cocaine in October 2002 and failed to fulfill other conditions of his probation. There was no court record of any jail time.
Other scrapes with the law included forging and cashing a check for $345, theft by receiving stolen property for accepting $2,000 worth of stainless steel and illegal dumping and fighting. Sentences ranged from five days in jail to probation.
"None of us are perfect,'' his aunt said. "He had a good heart."
Toddler's update: Byron Jimerson Jr., 3, is in critical condition and under police protection at a Savannah hospital. His mother, Chrissy Toler, was killed in the attacks.

mom_from_STL- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: The HEINZE and TOLER Children (2009) - Glynn County GA
22 year old Guy Heinze, Jr., whose frantic
voice on a 9-1-1 tape says “they’re all dead, my dad, my uncle, my
cousins,“ appeared in court this morning in Brunswick. Heinze, Jr.,
told authorities he had returned home to the New Hope Mobile Home Park
early Saturday (located near Darien) to find his entire family had been
murdered. Eight of the nine victims have died in what’s being called a
“mass murder” in Glynn County. The ninth victim, a small child, still
clings to life at Memorial Health in Savannah.
Heinze, Jr. was taken into custody Saturday morning on charges that
include drug possession, obstruction and tampering with evidence. He
appeared in court this morning and has been given a $20,000 bond, with
special conditions that include house arrest other than for work. He’s
also been ordered to wear an ankle monitor.
The amount of bond was agreed upon buy defense attorneys,
prosecutors and police detectives investigating case. There’s no word
yet on whether Heinze, Jr., will actually be able to make bond or
whether anyone he knows will be putting up the bail for him.
Glynn County police have not said that Heinze, Jr., is a suspect in
the killings. They continue to seek help from the public and remind
the public there is a $25,000 reward for information.
voice on a 9-1-1 tape says “they’re all dead, my dad, my uncle, my
cousins,“ appeared in court this morning in Brunswick. Heinze, Jr.,
told authorities he had returned home to the New Hope Mobile Home Park
early Saturday (located near Darien) to find his entire family had been
murdered. Eight of the nine victims have died in what’s being called a
“mass murder” in Glynn County. The ninth victim, a small child, still
clings to life at Memorial Health in Savannah.
Heinze, Jr. was taken into custody Saturday morning on charges that
include drug possession, obstruction and tampering with evidence. He
appeared in court this morning and has been given a $20,000 bond, with
special conditions that include house arrest other than for work. He’s
also been ordered to wear an ankle monitor.
The amount of bond was agreed upon buy defense attorneys,
prosecutors and police detectives investigating case. There’s no word
yet on whether Heinze, Jr., will actually be able to make bond or
whether anyone he knows will be putting up the bail for him.
Glynn County police have not said that Heinze, Jr., is a suspect in
the killings. They continue to seek help from the public and remind
the public there is a $25,000 reward for information.

TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

- Job/hobbies: Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: The HEINZE and TOLER Children (2009) - Glynn County GA
BRUNSWICK — Glynn County Chief Magistrate Tim Barton set a $20,000 bail today for Guy Heinze Jr., who was arrested after making a frantic 911 call Saturday morning to report the deaths of his father and six others.
Barton also ordered Heinze to remain on home confinement except for work, and he must wear an electronic ankle bracelet so authorities can keep tabs on his whereabouts.
Because his home where seven were killed and two severely wounded remains a crime scene, Heinze will stay with his grandmother, Ron Harrison, his attorney, told reporters.
Harrison said arrangements were underway this afternoon to post Heinze's bail, and have him fitted with the monitoring bracelet. Heinze may be released later today, he said.
"He is looking forward to being reunited with his family," Harrison said.
Heinze plans to attend the joint funeral of his slain relatives on Saturday.
All but West will be buried Saturday in graveside services at Young's Island Church of God cemetery north of Darien.
All Heinze said throughout the proceedings was a barely audible, "Yes sir,'' to Barton's questions about whether he understood the proceedings.
Ashley Strickland, who said she had known Heinze since school, described him as "very, very sweet.''
"He doesn't deserve this. His whole family didn't deserve what happened to them,'' she said.
Strickland also said she believes Heinze would tell the police if he knew who killed his family members.
"I've never known him to be anything but a good guy,'' she said.
As of this morning, Glynn County police had made no arrests or announced any new developments in the investigation.
Barton also ordered Heinze to remain on home confinement except for work, and he must wear an electronic ankle bracelet so authorities can keep tabs on his whereabouts.
Because his home where seven were killed and two severely wounded remains a crime scene, Heinze will stay with his grandmother, Ron Harrison, his attorney, told reporters.
Harrison said arrangements were underway this afternoon to post Heinze's bail, and have him fitted with the monitoring bracelet. Heinze may be released later today, he said.
"He is looking forward to being reunited with his family," Harrison said.
Heinze plans to attend the joint funeral of his slain relatives on Saturday.
All but West will be buried Saturday in graveside services at Young's Island Church of God cemetery north of Darien.
All Heinze said throughout the proceedings was a barely audible, "Yes sir,'' to Barton's questions about whether he understood the proceedings.
Ashley Strickland, who said she had known Heinze since school, described him as "very, very sweet.''
"He doesn't deserve this. His whole family didn't deserve what happened to them,'' she said.
Strickland also said she believes Heinze would tell the police if he knew who killed his family members.
"I've never known him to be anything but a good guy,'' she said.
As of this morning, Glynn County police had made no arrests or announced any new developments in the investigation.

mom_from_STL- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: The HEINZE and TOLER Children (2009) - Glynn County GA
GLYNN COUNTY, GA -- Guy Heinze, Jr. hoped he would be out of the Glynn County Detention Center and staying at his Grandmother's home by now, but a new problem has caused a new delay.
Heinze's attorney, Ron Harrison, says an ankle monitor is not available for the 22-year-old.
On Wednesday, a Judge ordered Heinze to wear an ankle monitor and stay on house arrest if he posts bond. Harrison says his client in "frustrated and anxious" over the issue.
Meanwhile, the City of Brunswick is stepping up to help find those responsible for killing Heinze's relatives at New Hope Plantation.
"We are one community and when push comes to shove, we will step up and stand shoulder to shoulder. This is not an incident that just affects New Hope. This is something that had a strong impact on the entire community," says Brunswick Mayor, Bryan Thompson.
The City is donating $15,000 in cash to catch the killer or killers. That brings the total reward to $50,000.
"We wait on word from Matt (Chief Doering). Matt's being tight lipped, which he should be," says Thompson.
Everyone, including City officials, is waiting on Chief Matt Doering to release new details on the murders and the investigation.
Numerous phone calls have been made to the Glynn County Police Department in search of an update. Police are still refusing to make any more comments.
"I know we have residents who are frightened. I'm sure if the Chief felt more of a need for information, that would be coming out," says Thompson.
Heinze could be stuck in jail for another couple of days. His attorney says if he is not out by Saturday, for his family's funerals, he will ask the Court to allow him to be at the memorials.
Heinze's attorney, Ron Harrison, says an ankle monitor is not available for the 22-year-old.
On Wednesday, a Judge ordered Heinze to wear an ankle monitor and stay on house arrest if he posts bond. Harrison says his client in "frustrated and anxious" over the issue.
Meanwhile, the City of Brunswick is stepping up to help find those responsible for killing Heinze's relatives at New Hope Plantation.
"We are one community and when push comes to shove, we will step up and stand shoulder to shoulder. This is not an incident that just affects New Hope. This is something that had a strong impact on the entire community," says Brunswick Mayor, Bryan Thompson.
The City is donating $15,000 in cash to catch the killer or killers. That brings the total reward to $50,000.
"We wait on word from Matt (Chief Doering). Matt's being tight lipped, which he should be," says Thompson.
Everyone, including City officials, is waiting on Chief Matt Doering to release new details on the murders and the investigation.
Numerous phone calls have been made to the Glynn County Police Department in search of an update. Police are still refusing to make any more comments.
"I know we have residents who are frightened. I'm sure if the Chief felt more of a need for information, that would be coming out," says Thompson.
Heinze could be stuck in jail for another couple of days. His attorney says if he is not out by Saturday, for his family's funerals, he will ask the Court to allow him to be at the memorials.

mom_from_STL- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Suspect arrested; Same person who reported crime
On September 4th 2009, at 6:45 PM, investigators with the Glynn County Police
Department sought and received arrest warrants for Guy Heinze Jr., age
22 in connection with the murders and criminal attempt to commit murder
that occurred at lot 147, New Hope Mobile Home Park in Glynn County, in
the early morning hours of August 29th.
The arrest comes after seven days of diligent investigation by Glynn County officers, with the assistance of other law enforcement agencies
and volunteers. This arrest is the result of a compilation of physical as well as testimonial evidence.
The Glynn County Police Department will continue to gather additional
evidence in the case and still encourages anyone with information
regarding the case to contact silent witness at 912-264-1333 or
Detective Bill Daras at 912-554-7825.
This is still an ongoing investigation. Further details will be released at
the discretion of the Chief of Police and the District Attorney. A
press conference will be held tonight, Friday, at 9:00 P.M. at the
Glynn County Police Department.
Department sought and received arrest warrants for Guy Heinze Jr., age
22 in connection with the murders and criminal attempt to commit murder
that occurred at lot 147, New Hope Mobile Home Park in Glynn County, in
the early morning hours of August 29th.
The arrest comes after seven days of diligent investigation by Glynn County officers, with the assistance of other law enforcement agencies
and volunteers. This arrest is the result of a compilation of physical as well as testimonial evidence.The Glynn County Police Department will continue to gather additional
evidence in the case and still encourages anyone with information
regarding the case to contact silent witness at 912-264-1333 or
Detective Bill Daras at 912-554-7825.
This is still an ongoing investigation. Further details will be released at
the discretion of the Chief of Police and the District Attorney. A
press conference will be held tonight, Friday, at 9:00 P.M. at the
Glynn County Police Department.

TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

- Job/hobbies: Searching for Truth and Justice
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