North GA man arrested, charged with sexual assault
On Sunday, Feb. 16, the Union County Sheriff's Office received a report that Michael Warren, 34, had sexually assaulted someone.
The Union County Sheriff's Office requested help from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI).
After investigating the claims, GBI agents arrested Warren on Tuesday, Feb. 18.
Warren was working with Union County as an HVAC technician at the time of his arrest.
Warren was booked into the Union County Jail where he remains pending a court hearing.
The investigation is active and ongoing.
Anyone with information about him is urged to contact the GBI at 706-348-4866 or call the GBI tipline at 800-597-8477.
Once the investigation is completed, the case file will be given to the Enotah Judicial Circuit District Attorney's Office for prosecution.
[DOWNLOAD: Free WSB-TV News app for alerts as news breaks]
TRENDING STORIES:
'Scary, honestly': Neighbors want answers after woman found dead inside Cobb County home
Apartment complex where 3 kids died in fire has been cited nearly 20 times by city
Rudy Giuliani has 'fully satisfied' $148M judgment won by Fulton County election workers
[SIGN UP: WSB-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBS News
2 days ago
- CBS News
Potential evidence revealed in preliminary hearing for suspect in Ashley Elkins' case
Friday was day three of the preliminary hearing for the accused killer of Warren mother, Ashley Elkins, who has been missing since January. The hearing started with obscure sounds coming from the suspect, DeAndre Booker, who was in court virtually. Booker is charged with first-degree premeditated murder, tampering with evidence, disinterment or mutilation of a dead body and concealing the death of an individual. He is also charged with lying to police in a related case. Booker had the option to appear in person, but chose not to for the second time. Elkins's family reported the 30-year-old missing on Jan. 3. Investigators allege that Booker, who they say is Elkins's ex-boyfriend, killed the mother of two in his Roseville apartment before disposing of her body. Despite searches, including in a landfill, her body has not been found. On Friday, two people took the stand, including Payne Barksdale, who says she is Booker's adopted niece and a forensic scientist. "Whenever I needed anything, I could call him and he's there, " Barksdale said in court. Barksdale testified that the two had not spoken for around a decade until last year. She says Booker asked her to move his co-worker's car to a different apartment; it's unclear whose car it was. Barksdale said that this happened in January, the same month Elkins went missing. "He said the cops were hot in that area, so with me having a license, if I were to be pulled over, he said I wouldn't have any trouble," she said. After the two dropped off the car, Barksdale said Booker showed her around his apartment. She told the courtroom that when returning to the apartment, she had to use the restroom, to which Booker told her to wait until he finished cleaning it. That same bathroom was the focus of Michigan State Police forensic scientist Toni Grusser's findings. Grusser showed prosecutors pictures of multiple locations within Booker's apartment that tested positive for blood. He testified that the lab was unable to confirm who the blood belongs to and how long it's been there. The next preliminary hearing is scheduled for Aug. 22.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Missing Hairstylist's Ex Believed to Be on Video Lifting Heavy Object — With Possible Arm Sticking Out — Into Dumpster
Ashley Elkins' ex-boyfriend Deandre Booker has been charged in connection with her January killing NEED TO KNOW Ashley Elkins, 30, disappeared from her Michigan home after running out for errands on Jan. 2 Her ex-boyfriend Deandre Booker has been charged with murder, among other offenses, in connection with her death Elkins' body was never found The ex-boyfriend of Michigan mom Ashley Elkins, who disappeared in January, is believed to be the man seen in security camera footage pushing a cart that appeared to have an arm hanging from it, per local police. Deandre Booker, 33, was charged with first-degree murder in connection with Elkins' disappearance from her Warren, Mich., home where she was last seen on Jan. 2, PEOPLE previously reported. Her disappearance came to light after her family carried out an extensive campaign to have police investigate it. Authorities initially arrested Booker in nearby Roseville, Mich., on charge of lying to an officer, before he was charged with murder in late January, the Macomb County Prosecutor's Office previously confirmed to PEOPLE. While searching Booker's home during their investigation, Roseville police claim to have recovered items from the residence indicating Elkins was the victim of a "crime of violence," Warren Police Department Lt. John Gajewski told PEOPLE at the time. Her disappearance led to an extensive search, but no trace of Elkins was never found. During a preliminary examination that began last week, Roseville Detective Chris Moran testified in court that they recovered security footage showing a man, believed to be Booker, pushing a cart towards a dumpster, WDIV Local 4 and The Detroit News reported. Moran testified the cart contained something covered in a white sheet, which the man appeared to be struggling to lift into the dumpster. He further testified that he saw what seemed to be an arm hanging off from the cart, per The Detroit News. When questioned by Booker's lawyer, Roseville Police Detective Patrick Taylor testified that while it was not clear in the video who the man was, he appeared to have similarities with Booker's clothing from earlier that day: a dark coat with a fur hood, black pants with holes in them, a black hat and black shoes with white bottoms, the outlet reported. Taylor also testified, according to The Detroit News, that during their search of Booker's home, they found clothes similar to those worn by the man in the video. The dark fur coat in the home including a faded area that appeared to show dried blood. Authorities began investigating Booker in January after Elkins' family tracked her phone to Booker's home, her family previously told PEOPLE. Days before Elkins disappeared, on New Years Eve, Booker allegedly showed up to Elkins' home salon under a fake name, her sister said at the time. Elkins hid from Booker until he left. Two days later, she disappeared, leaving behind two young was charged with first-degree murder, tampering with evidence, disinterment and mutilation and concealing a death. He has pleaded not guilty to the charges. If you are experiencing domestic violence, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233, or go to All calls are toll-free and confidential. The hotline is available 24/7 in more than 170 languages. Read the original article on People


CBS News
4 days ago
- CBS News
ACLU of Michigan sues Warren police for alleged excessive force against mentally ill man
The ACLU of Michigan claims in a new lawsuit that a 26-year-old Black man with mental illness suffered severe abuse by Warren police in 2022 that led to damage to his heart and kidneys at the hands of officers. The organization filed the lawsuit on behalf of Christopher Gibson in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, demanding compensation for damages and changes within the department, such as access to mental health specialists. It claims that Warren police violated Gibson's constitutional rights by allegedly using excessive force and failing to provide psychiatric care. "Over the course of the hours, he was detained he was tasered, beaten, pepper-sprayed and threatened by a barking canine," said Mark Fancher, a staff attorney with the ACLU of Michigan. CBS News Detroit reached out to Warren police for comment. According to the lawsuit, Gibson left his mother's home in Detroit on Dec. 13, 2022, after experiencing an episode. While Gibson's mother and Detroit police were searching for him, someone at a gas station spotted Gibson, became concerned and called Warren police. The lawsuit says Gibson's mother tried calling her son back after seeing she had missed calls from him, and an officer answered the phone, advising her that Gibson was arrested on outstanding warrants for identity theft. The lawsuit claims that Gibson's mother repeatedly told police that her son suffers from a mental illness and that he should be taken to the hospital for an evaluation; however, her request was allegedly ignored by the officer. The lawsuit said a Warren police supervisor told the woman that they would keep Gibson for observation. However, the lawsuit says she learned that her son was not in the Warren jail, and three days later, learned that he was in a "hospital for undisclosed reasons," according to the lawsuit. A video showed Gibson telling an officer about his mental health, to which the officer said, "You picked the wrong city to be going through it." The lawsuit claims a doctor at the hospital informed Gibson's mother that his kidney and heart were leaking. Gibson remained in the hospital for about a week before the taken to a holding cell at the Warren Police Department, where he had several encounters with officers. "It (Warren Police Department) is an agency that, in addition to armed officers, also employs mental health specialists, social workers, drug treatment counselors and others who are prepared to respond effectively to the emergencies that actually prompt calls to the police is less likely to maintain the kind of cop culture that promotes unnecessary violence," Fancher said.