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10 result(s) for "Krone, Sam"
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Bill would snuff out pot talks while drug is being studied
\"It's not to shut (conversation) down forever; it's actually to see what's going on in these other places,\" said [Sam Krone], a deputy Park County attorney. Chris Christian of NORML Wyoming, which advocates legalization, started a petition on Moveon.org to try to quash HB 187. She says NORML supporters have \"email-bombed\" Krone and other supporters. \"They don't need to put any restrictions at all,\" she said. \"How long is it going to take us to get cannabis in Wyoming? They need to legalize it now.\" [Bill] would snuff out pot talks while drug is being studied
Tougher DUI law called a good first step
For a person convicted of their fourth DUI, it's probably the fifth time he or she has been caught, he said. That's because Wyoming has a deferment program where the first offense does not go on their record, he said. Capt. Rich Hillegas of the Laramie County Sheriff's Department supports the bill as well. If people don't stop to think about the possibility of seven years in prison, he said, he doesn't know what will deter them. Wyoming's existing DUI laws should be stronger, she said. Some families who have lost loved ones to impaired drivers say offenders don't spend much time in prison before they are released to a work camp, she said.
Is system flawed for repeat DUIs?
\"We currently do accept split-sentenced individuals through a meeting with our judges, but that is on a case by case basis,\" department spokeswoman Capt. Linda Gesell said Friday by email. Gesell said the Laramie County Sheriff's Department does not have a contract with the DOC regarding split sentences because the DOC's payment rate of $60 is far below the $100 it costs per day to house someone at the Laramie County Detention Center. \"Because they do not meet our daily rate, (Sheriff Danny Glick) did not feel it was fair to place the rest of the cost onto the taxpayers of Laramie County,\" she said. Laramie County District Attorney [Jeremiah Sandburg], who took office a year ago, said in interview last week that he underestimated how much Laramie County's lack of split sentencing would affect DUI cases. He used split sentencing as a prosecutor in Goshen County (his former position) in almost all felony DUI cases, he said. According to [Mark Horan], approximately 18 of Wyoming's 23 counties used split sentencing in the past year, and some counties use the option extensively. \"That, I think, really is going to be the difference in police for what Judge [Steven Sharpe] is wanting,\" he said. As for Sharpe's blanket denial of plea agreements that don't include jail time for felony DUIs, Sandburg said \"there's something to be said for consistency.\" \"It is entirely appropriate for (judges) to choose their stance in whatever it is,\" he said. \"As long as it's consistent, I value that opinion.\" Treatment Laramie County also has the option of sentencing offenders to the DUI Court program, which Sandburg said he didn't have available to him as a prosecutor in Goshen and Platte Counties. \"In our cases when we have a fourth offense DUI we always have a jail sentence attached to it if there's not a penitentiary sentence,\" he said. [Sam Krone] said he would be in favor of lawmakers also discussing whether there should be a mandatory minimum sentence for DUI offenses. \"I'm on the judicial committee, and I think it's something I'd be willing to talk with the committee about,\" he said. But, like topics, \"it really depends on what else is out there when we come out of the budget session.\" Sarah Zoellick is the Wyoming Tribune Eagle's criminal justice reporter. She can be reached at szoellick@wyomingnews.com or 307-633-3122. Follow her on Twitter @ sarahzoellick .
Indians get set for playoffs North Harford age 9-10 team ends season 9-1-1
  After winning that game in a rout, the Indians went on to win six more before losing. They ended the regular season with a sparkling 9- 1-1 mark. Their coach spread the credit around for his team's successes. Of course, winning generally starts with pitching and Gill was in very good shape on the hill. Lefty Tucker Smoot, Bradley Hollandsworth and Sam Krone handled the mound chores. Krone was also outstanding with the stick. He batted cleanup for the Indians and led the team in home runs and RBI. Two other key offensive contributors were Josh Boblitz and Shawn Gill. [Tom Gill] noted that all of his players contributed with the bat.
The Eagles have landed Hard work and plenty of practice made the North Harford Eagles a powerhouse ball team
Mike Phillips didn't have great expectations when his North Harford Eagles began play in the North Harford Baseball League's ages 11-12 division in April. His newly-minted team had never played a game, and he wasn't sure if all of his youngsters were really that fanatical about baseball. Danny Phillips pitched the first four innings of the game and Zach Hagerman, the last two. Those two, along with Matt Edwards, did most of the Eagles' pitching this season. Young Phillips threw hard enough to unnerve opposing batters and Hagerman had excellent control, making the hitters earn their way on base. Phillips, who had coached youth ball in Churchville before coming to north Harford this season, was joined by another old - yet new coach - Ray Foote. Foote had been out of youth coaching some 15 years but opted to return this season.
Students, friends send items to injured soldier ; 'We're thinking of him'
\"I love you, [Troy O'Donley],\" [Sam Krones] said Friday afternoon before joining his preschool class in singing several songs and signing a large banner for O'Donley. Troy O'DonleyConnor Nelson, 5, foreground, signed his name to a banner that read \"The Capt.'s 4-year-old pre-kindergarten class at St. Mary's School in Bloomington. The class made a video to send to a soldier they adopted, Capt. Troy O'Donley, who was recently wounded in Iraq and is recuperating at Walter Reed Medical Center in Washington, D.C.St. Mary's pre-kindergartner Andrew Wells, 4, made a remark as he signed his name to a banner that will be sent to Capt. Troy O'Donley, a soldier the class previously adopted but who was recently injured in Iraq. The students were videotaped as they sang sangs and signed a banner Friday afternoon at the school.
Defense a hot topic as Fieldrest stays perfect
Forget his 24 points. [Jordan Krone] was more interested in the three points Roanoke-Benson had to settle for in the third quarter of Fieldcrests 63-45 nonconference basketball victory. Krones two free throws started the Knights 11-0 run to start the third quarter. Kiel Melvin followed with a 3-pointer, Krone hit two more free throws, [Jake Martin] scored on a rebound and Melvin sank a 10- foot jumper for a 40-23 lead. Nick Janssen scored 12 points to lead Roanoke-Benson, which made 15 of 45 shots from the field for 33 percent. Junior Randall Koehler and sophomore Sam Durley added 11 points each, with Durley scoring all of his in the first half.
KRONE RIDES HIGH AS URBAN COWBOY ARTIST
[Larry Krone] is one clever hombre, a gifted manipulator of materials - from cloth to mylar to human hair - who is by turns witty and touching. The title of this exhibit comes from a classic George Jones tune, \"The Grand Tour,\" and Krone's art might best be described as ranging from that great country singer's rollicking tunes, such as \"White Lightnin',\" to his sublime ones, such as \"The Grand Tour\" or \"He Stopped Loving Her Today.\" Krone's output is a Jones record come to life - albeit one a bit warped and slightly scratched. Take his \"Forever and Ever,\" the exhibit show-stopper. Draped across an entire wall of the gallery, the mylar and tape concoction is a shredded tapestry that depicts a silhouetted Krone surveying a vast landscape, a la the Marlboro Man. The futuristic materials and iconic imagery never quite mesh, but that appears to be the artist's point: The urban cowboy's life is by nature a great big oxymoron. In \"The Grand Tour,\" that biographical element emerges most effectively in a series of self-portraits that appear to be bar mirrors, but are in fact acrylic paint on aluminum foil in plastic frames. The three works are essentially the same: Krone, in drooping mustache and cowboy hat. But while the first has no text, the second reads \"Sometimes Someday Just Never Comes.\" In the third piece, the artist's name appears in big, bold letters. As a body of work it's a strange but affecting narrative, one that captures a certain lonesome pathos that Krone must certainly experience in a large, anonymous city.
Church, tower razing sought by developer: Christian Science leaders reject plan from Sam Roti
Some church leaders wondered if Roti is trying to go around them to present his proposal directly to the church's small membership. Some observers say Roti's gambit either could push the deal in high gear or kill it. Roti's proposal would affect the riverfront church at 55 E. Wacker Drive and the 78-year-old motor club building, a modestly scaled tower at 68 E. Wacker Pl. that Roti owns. Also included in the deal could be a nondescript building at 300 N. Michigan Ave., which Roti does not control. [Philip Krone] called his longtime acquaintance Weese on Thursday of behalf of Roti , the nephew of the late 1st Ward alderman Fred Roti.