Connect with us

News from the South - North Carolina News Feed

Judge hears case against Hedingham HOA, security company

Published

on

www.youtube.com – WRAL – 2025-03-03 20:13:02


SUMMARY: Families of victims from a mass shooting in Raleigh’s Hingham neighborhood are suing the HOA and the security company, claiming they could have prevented the tragedy. They argue that the Capitol Special Police, responsible for patrolling the area 55 hours a week, had a duty to ensure resident safety and failed to respond to prior complaints about potential dangers. In court, the defense contended that the shooting was unpreventable and occurred in locations beyond their responsibility. The judge’s ruling on whether to dismiss the case is expected later this week.

YouTube video

In the aftermath of a tragic shooting spree in Raleigh’s Hedingham neighborhood, families of the victims have filed a lawsuit against multiple parties, including the security company that had an armed officer in the community as the shots rang out.

Source

News from the South - North Carolina News Feed

Confederate monument in Edenton will remain in place for now

Published

on

carolinapublicpress.org – Lucas Thomae – 2025-03-03 12:25:00

Despite outcry, NC town’s Confederate monument is staying put. For the moment.

After a secret agreement to relocate a controversial Confederate monument fell through, the Edenton Town Council and Chowan County are back to the drawing board.

This time, though, it’s in the public eye.

Even so, the five residents who sued over their right to have a say in the monument’s fate aren’t satisfied with the town’s attempt at transparency, their attorney told Carolina Public Press.

According to a lawsuit filed in January by the Southern Coalition for Social Justice, the Edenton Town Council broke open meetings law when it quietly negotiated a deal with Chowan County and several neo-Confederate groups to transfer ownership of the monument to the county and relocate it to the courthouse.

As a part of that deal, three neo-Confederate groups agreed to settle a separate lawsuit they filed against the town that has prevented the monument’s relocation since 2022. They have since backed out, and that lawsuit is still pending with a hearing scheduled for April.

Arguments over the fate of the monument, which was first erected in 1909, have been ongoing since Edenton first considered relocating it in 2020.

Although estimates can vary, it’s believed that North Carolina has at least 40 Confederate monuments in front of courthouses and roughly 170 such symbols statewide.

Usually, efforts in towns and cities to get them removed or relocated don’t come without a fight. And invariably, those disagreements often wind up in court.

A few years ago in Edenton, a town-created commission comprised of residents recommended that the monument be relocated from the historic waterfront. The town took that recommendation seriously but has been met by obstacles at each attempt to find a compromise.

Now, it appears that deadlock will continue.

A deal is undone

In early February, the town notified Chowan County that it and the neo-Confederate groups who sued to keep the monument in place could not reach a resolution to the lawsuit.

With the collapse of the initial deal, town and county officials sought a new path forward — this time with public input.

A week ago, the Edenton Town Council held a special joint meeting with the Chowan County Board of Commissioners with the intention of dissolving the memorandum of understanding from November and coming to a new agreement.

Edenton Mayor W. Hackney High Jr. acknowledged the lawsuit filed by the Southern Coalition for Social Justice during the meeting’s opening remarks and welcomed input from residents through a public comments session.

Twenty made speeches in front of local leaders, most of whom were against the monument and didn’t want it either downtown or on courthouse grounds. A few speakers voiced their support for keeping the monument in a prominent place.

One of the speakers was John Shannon, a local pastor who is one of the five plaintiffs in the Southern Coalition for Social Justice lawsuit. He was also a member of the town commission that recommended the monument be relocated.

“As of right now, every attempt to move the monument has been delayed, redirected or ignored,” Shannon said. “I hope that one day soon the recommendation from the (town commission) will be considered as a move in the right direction to better the relationships of all the citizens in Edenton.”

Despite having the opportunity to share their misgivings about the town council’s plan, a spokeswoman with the Southern Coalition for Social Justice told CPP she’s worried Edenton officials won’t take residents seriously.

“We are concerned that this meeting is a hollow attempt to check a box when it comes to hearing public input,” Sarah Ovaska said, “and not a sincere attempt to consider the wishes of the community.”

‘The right road’

After an hour of public comments, the town unanimously adopted a new memorandum of understanding.

The agreement closely mirrors the previous memorandum adopted in November — except it cuts out the neo-Confederate groups as a signatory, meaning their endorsement is not required for this new deal — and slightly changes the language describing where on the courthouse grounds the monument is to be relocated.

In this version of the deal, the transfer of the monument to Chowan County and its relocation to the courthouse will only take effect once the lawsuit involving the neo-Confederate groups is dismissed by a judge.

And there’s precedent for that. In March 2024, the state Supreme Court ruled that a neo-Confederate group did not have the standing to sue over Asheville’s decision to remove a Confederate monument. 

Edenton expects the judge to rule similarly here.

But although the Edenton Town Council adopted the new memorandum of understanding with little discussion, Chowan County officials were more apprehensive.

The Board of Commissioners decided to table the issue and vote on it sometime after considering the public comments and consulting with legal counsel.

Usually, efforts to get Confederate monuments removed or relocated don’t come without a fight. Southern Coalition for Social Justice / Provided

“I would like to think that this Board of Commissioners really needs to think hard and have a good discussion with our counsel,” Vice Chairman Larry McLaughlin said. “My reservations are if we take this monument, then we are stuck with any court cases coming up and the cost associated with that, and all the other rigamarole that we’ve been through. So my reservation is to be cautious to make sure that we’re going down the right road.”

Representatives from neither the town nor the county responded to CPP’s request for comment.

Additionally, the United Daughters of the Confederacy — one of the groups that sued to keep the monument in place during 2023 — also did not respond to a request for comment.

Confederate monument lawsuit continues

The lawsuit filed in January by the Southern Coalition for Social Justice takes issue not only with how the town’s business was conducted, but also the proposal that the monument be moved to a courthouse.

Along with the claim that the town violated open meetings law, the suit also asserts that having a Confederate statue on courthouse grounds would violate the plaintiffs’ rights under the state constitution.

That is something the town did not address in last week’s special meeting, opting instead to continue to move forward with relocating the monument.

Holding a public meeting just to vote on a similar deal shows that the town is not serious about taking residents’ comments into account, according to plaintiffs’ attorney Jake Sussman.

“The fate of Edenton’s Confederate monument has already been decided,” he said, referring to the town’s commitment nearly two years ago to relocate the statue. “As our lawsuit makes clear, however, following through cannot involve moving it to the county courthouse. That would be a huge step back for the community and North Carolina.”

This article first appeared on Carolina Public Press and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

The post Confederate monument in Edenton will remain in place for now appeared first on carolinapublicpress.org

Continue Reading

News from the South - North Carolina News Feed

One dead, another injured in Durham shooting; no arrests yet

Published

on

www.youtube.com – WRAL – 2025-03-03 08:33:11


SUMMARY: Durham police are investigating a shooting on East Umstead Street that resulted in one man’s death and injured another. Officers responded to shots fired around 10:00 PM and discovered one victim with a gunshot wound and another with unspecified injuries. Both were taken to the hospital, but the gunshot victim later died. Police have been on the scene for over six hours, collecting evidence and focusing on a residence in the area. The investigation spans several blocks, and law enforcement encourages anyone with information related to the incident to contact them.

YouTube video

A man is dead and another man is in the hospital after a shooting Sunday night in a Durham neighborhood.

Source

Continue Reading

News from the South - North Carolina News Feed

This case of U.S. Marshals and mistaken identity — and a Latino family cowering in their bathroom — could’ve turned tragic real quickly • Asheville Watchdog

Published

on

avlwatchdog.org – JOHN BOYLE – 2025-03-03 06:00:00

We’re all living in extremely tense times.

But if you’re a Latino, you can easily multiply that level of anxiety by 1,000.

A recent local case of mistaken identity that could’ve easily turned tragic illustrates the point perfectly. It involves the U.S. Marshals Service, which was seeking a dangerous suspect wanted on child sex offenses, and a peaceful family of immigrants who live in a modest home in the Deaverview area.

Late on the afternoon of Feb. 13, Tito Aguilar-Ramirez; his wife Deisy Lopez; their two girls, Betsabe, 7, and Arlet, 2; and Tito’s nephew, Moisés Ramirez, 17, were all at home. Moisés Ramirez, who just came to America a month ago from Guatemala on political asylum, was outside taking the trash out.

Suddenly, federal marshals pulled into the driveway, exited their vehicles wielding assault rifles and started shouting. Through a translator, Moisés, who speaks no English, told me he considered running but thought better of it and emerged with his hands up.

I hate to think what could’ve happened had he bolted.

Meanwhile, Aguilar-Ramirez, Lopez, and the kids, scared by what they thought might be an immigration raid, fled into the home’s bathroom. Two agents held onto Moisés while others knocked hard on the front door, shouting that they were police before breaking in the door.

Realizing that people were hiding in the bathroom, the marshals started shouting for them to come out, that they were federal agents. But they spoke mostly in English, other than shouting “policia.” Tito and his family, with the exception of Betsabe, speak very little English and say they did not understand what the agents wanted.

A marshal smashed in the bathroom door, which hit Tito in the head as he protected his family.

Video shows U.S. marshals arriving at the home of Tito Aguilar-Ramirez. // Video provided by the Aguilar-Rairez family

“Todo negro,” Aguilar-Ramirez said, which translates to, “Everything went black.”

The girls were terrified. Lopez said the marshals entered the home “very angry.”

Lopez said the girls were “shaking and screaming when they knocked the door down,” and they were crying before that. They couldn’t sleep for three nights afterward, she said. 

Aguilar-Ramirez estimates 10 marshals were on scene. At one point, the marshals were on the phone with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Aguilar-Ramirez said, which made the family even more nervous.

They are all here legally, seeking political asylum, Aguilar-Ramirez said, and they do not think they’re targets for deportation under President Trump’s amped-up policies regarding immigration and deportation. Aguilar-Ramirez, who works as a fence builder, came here in 2016, his wife in 2020. 

Tito Aguilar-Ramirez and his family hid in their home’s bathroom. A marshal knocked down the door, which hit Tito in the head as he protected his family. // Photo taken from video provided by the Aguilar-Ramirez family

At the time of the incident, Moisés had been here two weeks. Aguilar-Ramirez explained that Moisés’ father is dead and his mother left him in a garbage pile when he was little.

Aguilar-Ramirez said a relative took the boy in “to give him a better life,” and they decided the best chance for that was in America, with Aguilar-Ramirez and his family. Moisés’ father was Aguilar-Ramirez’s cousin.

He and Aguilar-Ramirez said marshals handcuffed each of them. Lopez, 29, said the sight of her husband in cuffs rattled her to the bone.

“I was thinking when they took him, ‘Oh my god, it’s just going to be me,’” said Lopez, who has epilepsy and occasional seizures. “Once they took him out of handcuffs, I thought, ‘OK, nothing else matters. At least he’s free.’”

With the help of a bilingual relative whom Aguilar-Ramirez called, they were finally able to figure out what the marshals wanted: a man with multiple criminal warrants for child sexual abuse. It’s unclear if the agents thought Moisés was the criminal they sought or Aguilar-Ramirez, although Aguilar-Ramirez says they appeared to be after Moisés.

Aguilar-Ramirez said once agents were able to check their ID cards, they realized they had the wrong person. His understanding, Aguilar-Ramirez said, is that the wanted person the marshals were looking for gave their address out as his own, leading to the mistake.

A week before the incident, he said they noticed an unmarked police car that was parked just down the street for several days in a row. They thought it was immigration. In fact, when Betzabe saw the cars coming on the day of the incident, Aguilar-Ramirez said, the little girl said, “Dad, Immigration is here.”

Aguilar-Ramirez, 31, says, “If they hadn’t approached so aggressively” and better explained who they were looking for, he would have been able to cooperate with them sooner. He also said the marshals presented no papers or arrest warrants, although once the misunderstanding was straightened out they did show him via cell phone a photo of the wanted man they were after.

Aguilar-Ramirez had swelling on his head and pain in his shoulder afterward.

Deisy Lopez said the marshals arrived at their home as if the family were “criminals.”

The family says they got no apology from the marshals, which the agency disputes. 

U.S. Marshals Service offers its explanation

Brian Alfano, deputy commander with the U.S. Marshals Service in Charlotte, explained the events from the perspective of the U.S. Marshals Service.

He said they were looking for Delmar Perez Montejo, who’s wanted on five counts of sex assaults on a minor, including first-degree sexual exploitation of a minor, statutory sex offense with a child, statutory rape with a child, first-degree sexual exploitation of a minor, and another type of statutory rape with a child. A reward of $2,000 is offered.

The U.S. Marshals Service was searching for Delmar Perez Montejo when they stormed the modest home of a peaceful family of immigrants who live in the Deaverview area.

When marshals approached the Aguilar-Ramirez home, they saw an individual who fit the wanted man’s description — “height, weight, build, nationality,” Alfano said, adding that the man they thought was their target was Aguilar-Ramirez.

“We start to walk that way, approach him, and he grabs the two children and runs into the house,” Alfano said. “At which point the guys were like, ‘Hey, that looks exactly like our guy who just grabbed two children, and based off of those charges that he’s facing, those children are absolutely in danger at this moment.’”

Aguilar-Ramirez described a different scene when officers arrived. He said he was in the bathroom, his wife was cooking dinner, the girls were in the living room watching television and Moisés was outside taking out the trash. The 7-year-old saw agents approaching and alerted the family. Aguilar-Ramirez left the bathroom, lowered the shades in the home and got the family in the bathroom.

Alfano said the marshals “tried to communicate” with the family, “screaming out ‘police’ and ‘policia.’” On a video Aguilar-Ramirez showed us, a marshal can be heard shouting ‘policia’ and then in English urging the family to come out with their hands up.

The marshals did not have a bilingual agent with them, though.

“They make entry in the house due to the high risk of the children being with this individual,” Alfano said. “They ultimately find him in the bathroom, push the door open, and they make contact.”

Alfano said as soon as the marshals figured out Aguilar-Ramirez was not the target, they explained what was happening.

“I’m well aware of ICE and what they’re doing,” Alfano said. “That’s not why we were there. We’re simply there looking for an individual, and we’re just simply trying to service the community in that aspect.”

Alfano, who was not on scene Feb. 13, said the marshals did have arrest warrants with them that day. He acknowledged that the marshals did not have anyone fluent in Spanish on scene.

“No, we did not,” Alfano said. “So when we did encounter him, we had to get somebody on the phone. And there was that translation barrier, but we were able to get somebody on the phone and have a conversation with them.”

I asked him if the Marshals Service had a shortage of bilingual officers.

“I don’t know about a shortage of bilingual people in the federal government,” Alfano said. “We didn’t have anybody around that day that spoke Spanish.”

I also asked Alfano if, in hindsight, they would do anything differently that day. He did not want to engage in “Monday morning quarterbacking,” he said.

“They got viable information that (the suspect) was in that area,” Alfano said. “They saw a probable match to who he was, and they perceived a threat to children. So they tried the best they could to serve their community, protecting us, and life and bystanders and children, and this is where we are now.”

‘It’s definitely how things are escalating right now’

Rebecca Sharp is the founder and director of La Esperanza, an outreach program of the Episcopal Church of the Holy Spirit in Mars Hill that serves Latino families in Buncombe, Madison, and Yancey counties. The organization focuses on women and children and the health and wellness of the community.

“I think that to me, had that been a white household, I don’t know — would they have broken down the door and gone in and had them handcuffed and broken down two doors before they even got his ID?” asked Rebecca Sharp, the founder and director of La Esperanza, an outreach program of the Episcopal Church of the Holy Spirit in Mars Hill that serves Latino families in Buncombe, Madison, and Yancey counties.

She heard about the incident shortly after it happened. Sharp acknowledges that it was a case of mistaken identity, but she still questions the techniques the U.S. Marshals employed.

“I think that to me, had that been a white household, I don’t know — would they have broken down the door and gone in and had them handcuffed and broken down two doors before they even got his ID?” Sharp said.

She says the Latino community is on edge in general because of increased ICE activity and the heated rhetoric surrounding immigration since President Trump took office Jan. 20. So Sharp understands how Aguilar-Ramirez reacted that day, seeking to hide and safeguard his family.

“So that escalates. People get mad — ‘I’m gonna bust down the door,’” Sharp said. “I think it’s definitely how things are escalating right now, because of all the rhetoric that’s going out.”

The bottom line for Sharp is that the marshals’ behavior that day was “just wrong.”

“They just didn’t do anything right,” Sharp said. “And yeah, they were looking for a fugitive, but it’s just wrong (how they went about it).”

Alfano stressed that officers were pursuing a dangerous fugitive and thought two young girls were in danger. He also rejects Sharp’s notion that a white family would’ve been treated any differently.

“I would just say we’re going to do everything we can to ensure the safety of our communities, especially when it comes to somebody that’s charged with multiple counts of child rape,” Alfano said. “Regardless of their race — that’s irrelevant.”

Alfano also insisted that marshals did apologize to the family that day.

“Everything was explained to them — exactly why we were there, who we thought they were, who we were looking for, all that,” he said. 

Alfano points out that there’s no difference between the U.S. Marshals Service and other law enforcement agencies when it comes to their powers and tactics.

“If you come in contact with a law enforcement officer that gives you a lawful command, just obey,” Alfano said.

While Alfano feels like everyone is on the same page now, Aguilar-Ramirez and his family remain wary. Lopez said the girls missed three days of school after the incident, and her husband says the Latino community remains on edge.

Aguilar-Ramirez said before Trump got elected, they were “much calmer.”

“If this happens with more people, Hispanic people are just going to hide,” he said.

Lopez said every time someone knocks on the door now, her girls think it’s the police.

My take on this is that the marshals made some mistakes here in doing their jobs — probably honest ones — and I hope they learn from that. And they really need to have someone fluent in Spanish on scene for these kinds of scenarios.

It might just save someone’s life.


Asheville Watchdog is a nonprofit news team producing stories that matter to Asheville and Buncombe County. John Boyle has been covering Asheville and surrounding communities since the 20th century. You can reach him at (828) 337-0941, or via email at jboyle@avlwatchdog.org. To show your support for this vital public service go to avlwatchdog.org/support-our-publication/.

Original article

The post This case of U.S. Marshals and mistaken identity — and a Latino family cowering in their bathroom — could’ve turned tragic real quickly • Asheville Watchdog appeared first on avlwatchdog.org

The Watchdog

Continue Reading

Trending