The search continues for a man wanted on numerous sex charges including rape of a child.
Sean Williams escaped while being transported to the Greeneville courthouse from Kentucky for a hearing on October 18th. A reward of up to $7,500 is now being offered for information leading to the arrest of https://twitter.com/hashtag/TNMostWanted?src=hashtag_click fugitive Sean Williams. The U.S. Marshals Service are offering up to $5,000 and TBI is offering up to $2,500.
Please call 1-800-TBI-FIND if you have any information.
An Endangered Child Alert is in effect for a 2 year-old missing from from Sweetwater.
Willow Coon, is 2’5″, 24 lbs. with blonde hair and blue eyes, she was last seen on Sunday and is believed to be with her noncustodial grandmother, Tanya “Lynette” Coon, who is wanted by the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office to face a charge of Custodial Interference.
Please call 1-800-TBI-FIND if you have any information.
Knoxville is set to host its annual Veterans Day Parade down Gay Street on Friday.
The parade will start at 10:45 a.m. and is organized by the American Legion Post 2 and the city and will feature 105 parade units, including the Budweiser Clydesdales.
Other groups like high school marching bands and ROTC groups, local businesses and military organizations will also take part.
Starting at 8 a.m. several downtown roads will be closed. All roads are set to reopen by 12:30 p.m.
Lights on the pedestrian bridge over Henley Street will also be red, white and blue tomorrow through Monday to honor veterans.
Starting at 8 a.m., Gay Street between Sevier and Hill avenues, Hill Avenue between Gay and State streets and Main Street between Walnut Avenue and Gay Street will be closed.
Starting at 9 a.m., Market Street between Union and Clinch avenues and Union Avenue between Walnut Avenue and Gay Street will be closed.
Wall Avenue will close at 10 a.m., and Gay Street between E. Hill and Magnolia avenues will close at 10:15 a.m.
Morgan County issues burn ban after wildfire spreads over county line (Pexels / Revac Films & Photography)
Morgan County, TN (WOKI) An “open air burn ban” is declared Tuesday, November 7 in Morgan County.
The ban takes effect immediately and comes after a wildfire jumped the county line from Anderson County over the weekend, prompting days of emergency response.
The State Department of Agriculture Division of Forestry has also put a hold on burn permits through at least Friday, November 10. Officials say no one is allowed to burn things like brush, construction debris, fields and gardens, or wooded areas. The use of charcoal and wood-fired grills is also prohibited.
The ban is a fire prevention tool, officials said, aimed at preventing more fires breaking out amid dry weather.
Greene County, TN (WOKI) Officials with the Greene County Sheriff’s Office say forensic teams have identified a body found by hunters last week.
GCSO says deputies responded to the West Pines area last Thursday around 5:00 p.m. on a report of a body being discovered by hunters who were on the property to put up a deer stand.
Forensics experts have positively identified the body as a missing 27-year-old woman from Chesterfield, Virginia named Le’Keyshia Bracy. Bracy’s family had reported her missing to the Chesterfield County Police Department.
The investigation into how Bracy died is ongoing, but officials do not suspect foul play at this time.
Union County, TN (WOKI) Maynardville crews are working to clean up chemicals after a HAZMAT scare at a sewage treatment plant Tuesday morning, November 7.
Maynardville Police Department officials say fire and HAZMAT crews responded after two chemicals used to treat water combined “that shouldn’t have” at the Maynardville Waste Water Plant on Johnson Road.
Police report that crews determined there was no threat to the public and no impact to the water supply or environment after containing the chemicals. No one was injured as a result of the incident.
Police say the company with whom the city works has responded to clean up, pick up, and replace the tainted chemicals.
(WVLT) – Multiple crews responded to two brush fires in Anderson County Saturday.
One fire, called the TIOGA fire, was burning in west Anderson County near New River Highway, officials said. Anderson County dispatch told WVLT News that the fire had moved into Morgan County, later jumping its containment line on Sunday and doubling in size from 199 acres to 500 acres.
“Currently all personnel have left the fire to get rest tonight and will be back on it tomorrow,” an official with the forestry department said. “During the day the fire jumped containment and crews pulled back to use roads as fire breaks. Roads are holding well and the added humidity at night has the fire not moving much allowing crew to get rest and will return tomorrow morning before activity picks up midday.”
Officials said Monday morning that crews would be returning around 8:30 a.m. to reinforce fire lines at the TIOGA fire. The TIOGA fire is 100% contained, as of Monday afternoon.
The second fire, located near Scott Brogan Lane and Andy’s Ridge in East Anderson County, also broke out over the weekend. Campbell County Fire Department and Medford and Briceville Volunteer Fire Department crews responded to that location, according to Nathan Waters with the Tennessee Division of Forestry.
Multiple crews responded to brush fires in Anderson County Saturday afternoon(WVLT)
Waters said there were homes at the bottom of the ridge on Scott Broggan Lane, but no evacuations were ordered. Officials with the Anderson County Sheriff’s Office also confirmed there had been no injuries reported and no personal property was damaged.
Officials asked residents to keep the access points and roads clear for emergency vehicles.
“If you live in the area and the fire approaches your property Please call 911 and do not try to fight it,” officials said.
Firefighters will be on scene for a little while longer and hoped to return Tuesday morning to fully contain the fire, according to Kidwell.
“Most of the smoke now is from Forestry back-burning to reduce the fire load,” Anderson County Emergency Management Agency Director Brice Kidwell said.
The Scott Brogan Lane Fire jumped to 210 acres and was 75% contained as of Monday at 10 p.m.
(WVLT) – An officer with the Knoxville Police Department was arrested Monday on federal charges involving the production of child pornography, according to officials with the United States Department of Justice.
Officer Dan Roark, 47, was arrested and appeared in court on the charges.
According to a criminal complaint, the mother of the victim, gave consent to search the content of the victim’s phone. Records from Verizon Wireless showed the victim’s mother was taking pictures of her daughter and sending them to Roark.
The mother was arrested in her home in Scott County, Virginia, on Saturday and told investigators that she sent the pictures to Roark but knew him as Dan Thomas when they met in 2007.
“(Victim’s mother) told law enforcement officers she had met ROARK in 2007 on Yahoo and the two began communicating. At some point during the relationship, ROARK requested (Victim’s mother) take CSAM (child sexual abuse material) pictures of her now ten (10) year old daughter. Evidence shows that these images were produced as early as age five (5) or six (6).”Court Documents
The complaint stated Roark paid her money for the pictures, sometimes up to $200, according to phone records obtained in the court documents.
The arrest sparked from an investigation by Homeland Security Investigations, the Scott County Sheriff, Virginia, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation and the Ninth Judicial District Attorney’s Office.
Roark will have a detention hearing on Nov. 9, and be kept in federal custody until then.
Roark started at KPD in 2007 and was last on patrol in 2020.
“The allegations against Dan Roark are deeply disturbing and abhorrent. His alleged actions shock the conscience and, if proven true, demonstrate monstrous behavior against a truly innocent victim. I am sickened by these accusations, which in and of themselves have brought immeasurable discredit on our agency and the entire law enforcement profession. We have and will continue to cooperate fully with federal investigators. We will also act with great urgency to resolve this matter and repair the damage done to public trust in the wake of these disturbing allegations.”KPD Chief Paul Noel
The Office of Professional Standards opened its own investigation into the incident as well.