logo
Juveniles involved in alleged reckless driving incident in Town of Fenton

Juveniles involved in alleged reckless driving incident in Town of Fenton

Yahoo21-04-2025

TOWN OF FENTON, N.Y. (WIVT/WBGH) – The Broome County Sheriff's Office is currently investigating a one-vehicle accident involving juveniles in the Town of Fenton.
On April 19, at around 6:46 p.m., deputies from the Sheriff's Office responded to an accident on Interstate Route 88 East near Exit 3.
Upon arrival, deputies found a juvenile passenger from the crashed vehicle. The passenger was alert and conscious after having crawled out of the wreck. A bystander was administering care.
The deputy located the crashed vehicle on an embankment, having rolled onto its roof. The juvenile driver was still trapped inside.
Using a pocketknife, the responding deputy cut the driver's seat belt and pulled the juvenile out of the vehicle as emergency medical staff arrived at the scene. Both the driver and passenger were transported to UHS Wilson Medical Center for their injuries.
An investigation determined that the driver had been driving recklessly at a high rate of speed before crashing into the right side of an embankment near Exit 3 on I-88 Eastbound.
The driver was issued several traffic violations. The accident is still under investigation.
Binghamton Move Out Project wins Volunteer Recognition Award
Binghamton runner participating in NYC Marathon, raising money for charity
Jablon Studios hosts Easter egg hunt
Juveniles involved in alleged reckless driving incident in Town of Fenton
Business of the Week: Bridgewater Center for Rehabilitation and Nursing
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

No details on how Rio Arriba sheriff ingested fentanyl in New Mexico State Police reports
No details on how Rio Arriba sheriff ingested fentanyl in New Mexico State Police reports

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

No details on how Rio Arriba sheriff ingested fentanyl in New Mexico State Police reports

A month and a half after Rio Arriba County Sheriff Billy Merrifield died from a fatal combination of alcohol and fentanyl, those investigating his death still don't know how he consumed the drug. An initial batch of reports released by New Mexico State Police this week indicate the agency's investigators have not yet determined how Merrifield ingested the fatal dose of fentanyl that caused his death, along with alcohol, according to toxicology reports. Following the sheriff's death, investigators collected evidence from the scene, including several cellphones, and interviewed the last people who had seen him alive and some of his close friends, the reports show. But the reports indicate investigators did not recover any drugs or drug paraphernalia from the scene of the sheriff's death. Although witnesses noted Merrifield was drinking alcohol the night before he died, several who were close to the sheriff have noted — to the police and to The New Mexican — they had never known him to use drugs. Merrifield was found dead in his sheriff's office vehicle on Easter Sunday, April 20, after being involved in what police described as a "minor crash" early that morning down the street from his home near Abiquiú Lake. A close friend told officers and dispatchers he had come to Merrifield's aid sometime before 4 a.m., just after the crash, in which Merrifield, apparently driving his sheriff's office vehicle while intoxicated, had run over a street sign. The sheriff had been with a woman he had met a week before, his friend told police. The two had been drinking together at Merrifield's home, and Merrifield crashed into the sign just after leaving his home to take the woman back to a house she where was living in Española. The woman — who told police she was from Chihuahua, Mexico, and had been staying in Española for about eight months with family friends while acting as a caregiver for an older relative — had met Merrifield at the bar at the Ohkay Hotel Casino the previous Saturday night, April 12. Merrifield was there with friends, including the man who came to the couple's aid the morning Merrifield died, she said. The woman and Merrifield remained in contact throughout that week, developing a romantic relationship, according to the report. She told police Merrifield had been drinking liquor mixed into a Sprite bottle through the night of April 19 and into the following morning, but he was not "displaying obvious signs of impairment," such as stumbling, and he told her he was "good" to drive her home. After he swerved off the road and struck a road sign on N.M. 96, about 50 yards from the entrance of his driveway, the woman became "scared," she said, and she took the wheel and steered the vehicle back onto the road, according to the report. She looked over and saw that Merrifield was "snoring," she said. Police asked the woman if she or Merrifield had used any drugs, and she said "she didn't, but she didn't know if Billy used," police wrote in a report. Investigators interviewed the woman twice, once just hours after Merrifield was found dead and again May 2. Officers indicated the woman asked if she could return home to Mexico sometime after the second interview. After Merrifield's friend arrived at the scene of the crash early the morning of April 20, he drove back to Merrifield's home and the woman followed him, driving Merrifield's vehicle, sitting on the sheriff's lap because he was in and out of consciousness and could not be moved from the seat, she told police. The friend then took the woman back to Española, leaving Merrifield sitting in the driver's seat of his vehicle, parked in his driveway. Merrifield's friend told police he was going to help Merrifield into his home, but he feared the sheriff's dogs — which were inside the home — might bite him if he did so, investigators wrote. He said Merrifield told him he was "okay," and the friend believed Merrifield was going to get out of the car and walk into his house shortly. The woman told officers Merrifield was asleep and snoring in his vehicle when she left with his friend. After trying to call Merrifield 26 times later that day, his friend returned to his home to find him sitting in the vehicle where he had left him that morning, and he was dead, police wrote. Investigators downloaded the contents of the two witnesses' phones and found texts and phone calls that appeared to corroborate the timeline of their testimony about Merrifield's final hours. Reports indicate investigators had not gained access to two phones that apparently belong to the sheriff. As of Friday, state police had not determined whether Merrifield ingested fentanyl knowingly or where he might have obtained it, the agency's spokesperson, Lt. Ricardo Breceda, confirmed in an email, writing, "investigators are hopeful this information will be learned as the investigation continues." There was no evidence to suggest any other staff of the Rio Arriba County Sheriff's Office were implicated, or that the sheriff obtained any drugs in his official capacity, Breceda wrote. No criminal charges have been filed in connection with Merrifield's death, but investigators are "working to determine if any charges need to be filed," he added.

$10K tactical robot purchase discovery leads to answers from Sheriff's Office
$10K tactical robot purchase discovery leads to answers from Sheriff's Office

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

$10K tactical robot purchase discovery leads to answers from Sheriff's Office

ST. LOUIS – From an alleged secret luxury vehicle to the latest FOX 2 discovery of new tactical robots, the St. Louis Sheriff's Office is now breaking its silence with the media. 'That's kind of an inexpensive way to take a small shot at a big problem,' retired judge David Mason said in response to our latest findings. Mason recently left 34 years as a circuit court judge to join the St. Louis Sheriff's Office as its lawyer. Missouri statute only allows him to be paid $15,000 a year for the job, which Mason said is proof he's only representing Sheriff Alfred Montgomery because he wants to. 'He's young, but he has a lot of vision about what he wants to do,' Mason said of Sheriff Montgomery. He agreed to talk on behalf of the Sheriff to answer FOX 2's latest discovery of two tactical robots that cost a combined $10k. Close Thanks for signing up! Watch for us in your inbox. Subscribe Now The office showed us one of them in action. 'It's a stopgap immediate measure for a big security problem,' Mason said. We've seen cases of courtroom violence because Mason said other courthouses have cameras everywhere, but not in St. Louis. 'We know that if somebody wants to take over a courtroom,' the retired judge said, '…we don't know what's going on in there.' He says the roving remote robot could be the eyes to help court security respond to a threat. 'Security is job one,' Mason said. He also agreed to address the new Chevy Tahoe we revealed on FOX 2 Thursday: 'Historically, the car for the Sheriff has been purchased from that budget, and that's what this Sheriff did.' Mason said funds were used that don't impact taxpayers; rather, he said they came from a pot of fees collected from things like the office's process serving. He said the vehicle will be Sheriff Montgomery's take-home car, adding, 'There's always a car available to make sure business is done and that's really what it comes down to.' Mason said more changes are coming. He also promised the Sheriff's Office will be more open about those changes – as we continue following decisions that impact the public. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

4 suspects facing 10 additional counts of attempted murder in Catawba Co. mass shooting
4 suspects facing 10 additional counts of attempted murder in Catawba Co. mass shooting

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

4 suspects facing 10 additional counts of attempted murder in Catawba Co. mass shooting

CATAWBA COUNTY, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — Additional charges have been filed in the weekend mass shooting that turned a house party into a deadly scene in Catawba County. Ten additional counts each of attempted first-degree murder have been filed against Toland Huff Jr, Zachary Bates, Izaiah Mitchell and Ke'andre Mack. These suspects received no bond and remain in the custody of the Catawba County Detention Facility. The four suspects, who investigators now call the 'Hillside Shooters', are all scheduled to appear in court Monday, June 9. Additional charges are pending. Anyone with photos, video, or tips or contact the Catawba County Sheriff's Office at 828-464-3112. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store