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Mississippi Today

Grand jury opts not to indict football star Jerrell Powe and partners after ‘tunnel vision’ investigation

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Ridgeland police arrived at a local bank on a mild, sunny day last January to intercept what they observed as an active abduction.

They took a look at the alleged kidnappers — a 330-pound retired NFL player and a longhaired pot grower from California — and “they just went haywire and thought they had something that they just didn't have,” said Texas resident Angie McClelland, who would later be tied to the case.

A Madison County grand jury finally agreed with McClelland last November, choosing not to indict any of the five people arrested for the crime.

The assumed victim, a young businessman from Waynesboro named Bryce Mathis, had alerted a bank teller at the Chase Bank in Ridgeland to call the police. By this point, Mathis had made enemies all over the country for allegedly scamming investors and hopeful entrepreneurs. That includes the two men accompanying him at the bank that day: former Kansas Chiefs nose tackle Jerrell Powe and the cannabis farmer Gavin Bates.

The group was planning to launch a medical marijuana business together and had pooled some $300,000 in investments in a bank account Mathis controlled. Concerned that he might be mishandling the funds, they'd gone to the bank that day to get the money out. The defendants said Mathis went willingly; Mathis told police he'd been forced against his will. Ultimately, the bank account was empty save for forty cents, investigators found.

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Police arrested Powe and Bates, generating dramatic national headlines – primarily because of Powe's celebrity – that ran while the two sat in jail for five days. Bates said he was held in an isolation cell for three days. The cell was so cold, he said, he had to sleep on the floor with his face by a window, a faint source of warm air.

“I still don't understand why they did that,” Bates told Mississippi Today recently. “… It felt like those police could do what they wanted and they were all backing each other up.”

After going through the suspects' phones in the following days and finding what they considered damning text messages, the local authorities directed U.S. Marshals to arrest three more people, including County Board of Supervisors attorney Cooper Leggett.

Leggett was only connected to the marijuana startup because Mathis had previously worked with the county to build a facility there — a project that was abandoned after Leggett said Mathis never paid contractors conducting the initial dirt work (an allegation Mathis denies). Powe and his business partners had reached out to Leggett for intel on Mathis, and they all texted the day of the alleged kidnapping about how best to approach the alleged con artist.

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One night, about a week after the incident, Leggett woke up to what sounded like people beating on his front door.

“The front of my house looks like a sky of police lights,” Leggett said.

Throughout the night and early morning, transported Leggett to the Madison County Detention Center, where he was booked, and then to Ridgeland to speak with investigators. “I'm like, ‘Guys, we could have saved a lot of pomp and circumstance from how y'all arrested me. I would have came if y'all would have called me,'” Leggett told Mississippi Today.

Despite never being indicted, Leggett was on unpaid leave from his county attorney position for nearly a year while he waited for officials to resolve the case. Agents similarly arrested Angie McClelland and her husband Colburn McClelland — partners on the marijuana startup — in their hometown of Katy, Texas.

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“They were giddy, like a kid in a carnival, to make a big splash and get a big arrest,” Colburn McClelland said.

The alleged kidnapping began on Jan. 11, 2023, after Bates and Angie McClelland picked Mathis up at his home in Waynesboro. The investor group said Mathis had been evading them for weeks, prompting the in-person visit. Here, the story diverges: The defendants said everyone was on board to go to the bank to retrieve the investor funds, which an audio recording Angie McClelland took at the time appears to corroborate. But Mathis told investigators he thought they were going to lunch.

From 500 miles away in Texas, Colburn McClelland advised Powe not to arrive at the bank until they got inside, lest Mathis see the large athlete, get spooked and leave. “Ya'll need to get him trapped inside the bank,” Colburn McClelland texted, according to a document he prepared.

Instead, they stopped in a pharmacy parking lot in Laurel, Mississippi, where Powe replaced McClelland in the back passenger seat.

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Laurel Police Chief Tommy Cox told Mississippi Today that his department determined Mathis left Laurel with Powe and Bates willingly, and that if a kidnapping occurred, it must've been because Mathis changed his mind during the ride. “Everybody were buddies when they left here,” Cox said.

Mathis told Mississippi Today that while in the car, Powe terrorized him. “He said that I was going to start getting my mail from the groundhog,” Mathis said.

Powe denies making any threats. The investor group also points to a recording, reviewed by Mississippi Today, in which Mathis stated to the camera that he had misspent his investors' money while “stringing them along” and that he planned to “make it right.”

In an interview with Mississippi Today, Mathis stood by his story that he was forced to travel with Powe and Bates against his will and any recorded statements were coerced.

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When they got to Ridgeland on Jan. 11, the bank had closed for the day, so they spent the night in a hotel, where Mathis claimed Powe slept on top of his legs to prevent him from escaping. “He took a pillow, laid it on my legs, and he laid up on top of it with his arms crossed,” Mathis said. “I mean, it wasn't like it hurt. He was just there to make sure I didn't move.”

“That sounds so damn stupid,” Powe said of Mathis' claim.

The next morning, Colburn McClelland texted Powe, “If Bryce has asked to leave we gotta let him go…so long that he is staying by his own choice, there is no issue,” to which Powe responded, “He ain't ain't asked to leave at all.”

In an interview with Mississippi Today, Powe also questioned why, if Mathis had been kidnapped, he didn't attempt to alert anyone during the several stops they made during their to central Mississippi.

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“It's a reason why he lured us to the bank, because that's where he wanted to do that, to make a big scene and play with people's lives,” Powe said.

After his arrest, Leggett requested a preliminary hearing, where the lead investigator, Ridgeland detective Austin Baney, testified that the kidnapping case was his first investigation.

“In my opinion, he (Baney) got tunnel vision and never could let go of that story that he saw in the tunnel,” Leggett said. “He just did not want to let go of the sensational story that he thought he had when everything was basically crumbling underneath him.”

Ridgeland Municipal Court prosecutor Boty McDonald said that the text messages taken from the suspects' phones would prove the five defendants conspired to capture Mathis against his will.

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“We're not going to try the case out here in public, but you can rest assured that in Ridgeland, we would not have arrested them and charged them with kidnapping if it wasn't kidnapping,” McDonald told TV reporters after the arrests.

The grand jury wasn't convinced. While the investigation originated with Ridgeland police, McDonald turned the felony kidnapping case over to the Madison County District Attorney's Office. Nearly a year after the arrests, county prosecutors took the case to a grand jury and it returned a “no bill,” meaning the jurors did not find probable cause to believe the defendants had committed the crime.

“I stand behind the work that the police officers and detectives did here and I also stand behind any discretion exercised by the DA's office,” McDonald told Mississippi Today.

Cox, the Laurel police chief, said he wasn't surprised by the . “It just sounded hinky to me from the beginning,” the police chief said.

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The three out-of-staters say the experience has tainted their opinion of the Hospitality State. Bates said the next time he's traveling east, he plans to avoid flying over Mississippi. Angie McClelland said she knows it's home to some fine people, “but I've unfortunately seen the crooked letter crooked letter.”

Powe, who still calls Mississippi home, praised the Madison County court system for reaching the correct result. He said when he got the news about the no bill, “it felt like a ton of bricks had been lifted off me.”

“This has definitely been a nightmare for me and my ,” Powe said. “So just to be able to move on in my and not toss and turn anymore with this on my mind, it's just been a big relief.”

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

EPA highlights issues within MSDH, Jackson in water system audit

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mississippitoday.org – Alex Rozier – 2024-05-14 13:48:02

About a after the Environmental Protection Agency determined that two Mississippi agencies didn't discriminate against Jackson in providing water funds, the EPA released another report examining issues in state and local governance ahead of the capital city's 2022 drinking water crisis.

The EPA's Office of Inspector General launched an audit in November 2022, a months after the water crisis that led to a federal takeover of the system. The agency, which released the report on Tuesday, found that the failed to provide flexible loan options to disadvantaged communities like Jackson. After interviewing city employees, the audit also listed several issues with Jackson water plant staff and internal communications.

For one, a former manager at the O.B. Curtis treatment plant didn't “effectively conduct routine maintenance, delayed routine maintenance, and did not retain new hires, hampering the day-to-day operations of the entire treatment plant,” the audit said, adding more work to an already understaffed team of water operators.

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Interviews also showed that operators, whose salaries were below market rates, often worked seven days a week and more than 12 hours a day, and yet the plant still did not always have a certified operator on site, as required by state .

On top of staffing problems was ineffective communication within the city, the audit said, prolonging issues such as hiring staff for the treatment plant. The report also found that water operators didn't feel comfortable issues “outside of their chain of command at the water treatment plant,” leading to a “reactive approach” by city leadership to address the plant's issues.

A Health Department spokesperson told Mississippi the agency is reviewing the report. The city of Jackson did not reply to a request for comment by publish time.

Health Department lacked flexibility in loans to Jackson

In last week's report by the EPA's Office of External Civil Rights Compliance, the agency found no evidence of discrimination in how the Health Department and the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality awarded loans to Jackson under the federal revolving loan program. In Mississippi, loans under that program for drinking water go through Health Department.

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Tuesday's report, though, found that the state agency didn't make loan repayments — both as far as interest rates as well as the loan term lengths — as flexible as it could have for economically disadvantaged places like Jackson.

“(The Safe Drinking Water Act) provided different funding options for states to help disadvantaged communities better afford (funds from state revolving loans), increased loan subsidies, extended loan terms, and reduced interest rates,” the audit says. “However, the MSDH did not make these flexible loan and subsidy options available to disadvantaged communities, including Jackson, until after June 2021.”

Between 2016 and 2021, the Health Department awarded three loans to the city totaling about $52 million. The audit notes Jackson leadership's past statements that the limited loan options discouraged the city from applying for more funds through the program, and that the city unsuccessfully tried to procure money elsewhere, such as through the state .

“Had the MSDH provided flexible loan options for disadvantaged communities in a timelier manner, Jackson may have decided earlier to request and use them to lower its financing costs to improve its water system,” the report reads. “Additionally, these funding options could help other disadvantaged communities in Mississippi better afford investing in their drinking water infrastructure.”

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To improve the state's loaning practices, the EPA says it will train the Health Department in offering assistance to disadvantage communities by June 30.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

Mississippi judicial candidates receive almost $400k in donations for November election 

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mississippitoday.org – Taylor Vance – 2024-05-14 13:44:28

The 10 candidates competing in contested judicial elections this year have collectively raised nearly $400,000 in donations since January, and some have injected a substantial amount of their own money into the race, setting the stage for a competitive November election.  

Amy St. Pe, a -based attorney running for a seat on the Court of Appeals, accepted $107,300 in donations since January, making her the candidate who amassed the most in campaign donations. She only spent $942 of that money, leaving her with over $106,000 in cash on hand. 

Her other two competitors for the appellate seat, Ian Baker and Jennifer Schloegel, have also amassed a large amount of campaign cash, making the race for the open seat likely to become extremely expensive. 

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Baker, an assistant district attorney on the Coast, raised over $40,000 and loaned his campaign $25,000, giving him at least $65,000 to spend on the race. Schloegel, a chancellor for Harrison, Hancock and Stone counties, raised over $97,000. 

Perhaps the most surprising revelation in the first campaign finance is the massive amount of money candidates loaned to their campaign accounts. 

Republican Sen. Jenifer Branning of Philadelphia loaned her campaign account $250,000, as amount more often seen in a statewide or congressional campaign. Branning's loan and around $68,000 in donations give her around $318,000 to spend. 

Branning is challenging longtime incumbent Jim Kitchens, the second-most senior justice on the court who would become chief justice if current Chief Justice Mike Randolph were to his post. 

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Kitchens, who occupies one of the seats in the Central District, has been on the court since 2009. He reported raising over $42,000 and spending nearly $20,000, leaving him with around $22,000 in cash on hand. 

The other candidates in the race, Aby Gale Robinson, Ceola James and Byron Carter, did not raise nearly as much as Branning and Kitchens. Robinson reported $0 in donations, James reported $584, and Carter reported nearly $5,000 in donations, supplemented by a $8,000 loan from himself. 

The other contested Supreme Court race between incumbent Dawn Beam and challenger David Sullivan for a seat in the Southern District is also shaping up to be competitive on the fundraising front. 

Beam reported raising over $17,000 since January, while Sullivan, the only challenger, raised $15,000 during that same timeframe. 

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Judicial offices are nonpartisan, so candidates do not participate in party primaries. All candidates will appear on the Nov. 5, 2024, general election ballot. If a candidate does not a majority of the votes cast, the two candidates who received the most votes will advance to a runoff election on Nov. 26.

Judges on Mississippi's two highest courts do not at large. Instead, voters from their respective districts elect them.

The nine members of the Supreme Court are elected from three districts: northern, central and southern. The 10 members of the Court of Appeals are each elected from five districts across the state.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

On this day in 1961

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mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2024-05-14 07:00:00

MAY 14, 1961

Credit: Joe Postiglione in Wikipedia

On this Mother's Day, a group of Riders traveling by bus from Washington, D.C., to New Orleans arrived in Anniston, Alabama. A mob of white led by a Klansman attacked the bus with bats and iron pipes. They also slashed the tires. 

After the attack ended, the hobbled bus pulled over, the mob hurled a firebomb into the bus, and someone cried out, “Burn them alive.” The riders escaped as the bus burst into flames, only to be beaten with pipes by the mob. 

The Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth organized several cars of Black citizens to rescue the Freedom Riders. The photograph of the Greyhound bus engulfed in flames, the black smoke filling the sky became an unforgettable image of the movement.

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This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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