Monthly Archive for May, 2001

Page 6 of 7

Foods Expands to VaBeach

According to today’s Progress, Charlottesville’s poshest market, Foods of All Nations, is branching out. “Foods,” as regulars call it, will be opening their second location in Virginia Beach. Foods is well-known for their selection of excellent and rare foods, as well as for treating their staff well. If all goes well, they hope to open up a third location in Richmond.

2nd Arrest in Meloy Murder

There’s been another arrest in the murder of Alison Meloy, WINA reports. The suspect is a 16-year-old Waynesboro boy, and he’s been charged with being an accessory after the fact to her murder, as well as an accessory to grand larceny. Today’s Progress explains that he and another male youth were picked up in the victim’s car by suspect Jamie Poindexter, who told them what had happened. The unnamed youth is being held in a juvenile jail in Staunton.

122 Students Investigated for Plagiarism

Eric Swensen in today’s Progress reports that UVa professor Louis Bloomfield has referred 122 students to UVa’s Honor Committee on charges of plagiarism and multiple submission. Bloomfield caught the students by using software that analyzed every paper submitted and compares it to other papers. All the students were in his popular How Things Work course.

Spicer Acquitted

Jock writes: “I want to jump in the ocean. I want to jump into the beautiful Caribbean sea and wash off the circumstances of the prison for us,” Michael Spicer said today after High Court Justice Kenneth Benjamin acquitted him of all charges. “Justice has been done.”

According to the website for Court TV, this morning Judge Benjamin aborted the trial against Michael Spicer, and his friends Alexander Benedetto and Evan George. Police had charged them with participating in the murder of Louis McMillan in January 2000.



“You are discharged,” Benjamin said after he directed the jury to enter verdicts of not guilty in each case. “You are free to go. Step out of the box.”



The Judge called the case against Spicer “less than thin,”

referring to the .003 grams of sand that the prosecution claimed put Spicer on the rocky shoreline where the victim’s body was found. He blasted prosecutors Theodore Guerra and Terrence Williams for attempting to trump up additional charges at the last minute. His rebuke reminded the prosecutors that they are “ministers of justice” and advised that such legal maneuvers never be attempted again.



Spicer and three friends have been in jail awaiting trial for over a year. The trial had been postponed at the prosecution’s request, twice.



A fourth defendant, William Labrador, still faces the jury because of the testimony of Jeffrey Plante, a convicted con artist who has been housed and protected from U.S. extradition by Tortola authorities while the case was pending. Plante asserted he overheard Labrador confess, while in prison.



Spicer said of Labrador: “He’s kept there by the word of a con man who lied about him and lied about me.” Spicer told reporters he was confident Labrador would be cleared as well, and predicted:



“I’ll be home in America tomorrow I believe.”
Woo-hoo! Keep reading to see Jock’s full write-up.

Forest Fire Caused by Plane Crash

The good news is that the ten-acre forest fire at Humpback Rock started earlier in the week is finally under control. The bad news is that it turns out that it was caused by a Piper Cub that crashed into the mountain, killing the pilot. Remember the Cessna that crashed into a house in Wintergreen in early April? Turns out that was caused by “pilot error.” It’s been recommended that he lose his license. WVIR is the source of all this airplane news.

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