Categories
News

Washington will seek official exoneration

The facts of the long, sad story remain largely unchanged. In 1982, Rebecca Lynn Williams, then 19, was raped, stabbed 38 times and left to die on the doorstep of her apartment in Culpeper while her two children were in another room. Earl Washington, Jr., a farm worker with an I.Q. under 70, was convicted in the rape and capital murder. Washington served 17 years in prison—nine and a half of those on death row—before DNA evidence cleared him in 2000, prompting reforms to Virginia’s notorious 21-day rule. That rule gave inmates less than a month to introduce new evidence in their cases.
What is up in the air is how the story will end. Police may have finally found the real killer: Kenneth M. Tinsley, 61, indicted in Williams’ death earlier this month, is already serving a life sentence in Sussex II State Prison for the 1984 rape of an Albemarle waitress. Tinsley was a suspect in the Williams murder in 2000—his DNA was found at the crime scene.
The mildly retarded Washington was awarded $2.25 million in damages by a Charlottesville jury in May. He sued the estate of Curtis Lee Willmore, a now-deceased State investigator who elicited the confession which led to Washington’s conviction. Now Washington is seeking complete exoneration from Virginia Governor Tim Kaine.
Washington’s lawyer, Peter Neufeld, was quoted in The Washington Post: “Governor Gilmore granted him a pardon on the grounds that a jury would have reasonable doubt. We are going to ask Governor Kaine to amend the pardon to change the reason to Earl Washington’s actual, unequivocal innocence.”
Kaine’s staff has responded that Washington is welcome to make the request, but that an indictment of Tinsley is not enough to prove Washington’s undisputed innocence. Tinsley is scheduled to appear in court September 6.—Meg McEvoy

Categories
News

County makes requests to State legislators

Local State legislators met with County officials last week, preparing for the upcoming legislative session (the last one before the November election). Sen. Creigh Deeds, Sen. Emmett Hanger, Del. Robert Bell, Del. David Toscano, and Del. Steven Landes heard the comments of the Albemarle County Board of Supervisors and School Board members at afternoon sessions on August 25—for the most part: Toscano took a minute to answer his cell phone and Deeds and Bell whispered repeatedly during the roundtable discussion.
The following issues were identified by the County groups as their top priorities.—Will Goldsmith

Board of Supervisors
“The only issue is transportation,” said Chairman Dennis Rooker before the meeting began, in what seemed like a joke. But it most certainly was not a joke. Soon ensued a heated, and occasionally combative, discussion about how local road projects—namely the Meadowcreek Parkway, Hillsdale Drive Extension and an updated Hydraulic/29 intersection—can possibly be funded.
Because of large inflation in right-of-way and construction costs, delaying a project “is like chasing a ghost,” said Rooker. He said that if the State wasn’t going to uphold its end of transportation costs, then the County needed more funding tools of its own—like the ability to impose local gas or sales tax hikes.
Though the legislators all responded, no panacea was offered, nor did a single idea have unanimous support among them. A laundry list of possible fixes included: toll roads, transportation bonds, increased gas or sales taxes, development proffers for new roads, and new formulas to tax people based on how many miles they travel.
Hanger lamented the public mentality that “you can have all you want but you don’t have to pay for it,” while Deeds threw out the worst case scenario: “We have the moment right now we have to seize, or we’re ultimately going to be so far behind the eight ball that dirt roads are going to look pretty good to us.”

School Board
The County School Board wants to increase teacher salaries, retain disabilities funding, and get more info on student lawbreakers.
The board asked that legislators act to get higher teacher and administrator pay as well as anything else to address teacher shortages. While nearly everyone agreed that the high cost of living in Albemarle County was a problem for teachers, Del. Rob Bell burst the bubble when he asked, “Do we have a price tag for this?” He also raised concerns that higher salaries in Albemarle County would make it harder on surrounding counties to attract teachers.
After voicing opposition to legislation that would allow parents of disabled students tax credits for putting their child in private schools—and take money away from public schools—the board moved on to two related requests to help them learn of out-of-school crimes.
Current laws already stipulate that police and courts notify schools when their students commit any felony, or misdemeanors, that affect school activities. But the School Board doesn’t think they’re getting the information within the allowed 15-day window and suggested the law change to demand info within 24 hours. Lawmakers in turn suggested that, rather than change the law and burden the legal system, the School Board should develop better rapport with the juvenile courts and explain their issue in a letter to the State Supreme Court.
Finally, the board wanted the Code of Virginia amended so that they get notice of misdemeanors, like underage drinking or marijuana possession, that happen off school grounds. “We do not have the ability to intervene and assist students who…may need some intervention,” said board member Barbara Mouly.
Deeds and Toscano expressed concerns that juvenile privacy would be entirely compromised. “We start down a real slippery slope when we start reporting on everything youngsters do that is a violation of the law,” said Toscano. Hanger, however, thought that discreetly notifying the superintendent could help ensure that taxpayers’ money isn’t wasted on “a mind that is all screwed up,” particularly in the climate of No Child Left Behind-style testing requirements.

Categories
Arts

Madden NFL ’07

Madden NFL ’07
Electronic Arts
Various platforms

games

Tell your teachers to forget about homework. Tell your parents you’re eating dinner in your room. Call up some friends and pick up the sticks—it’s game time. Madden ’07 is out. The highest-selling pro football franchise is back for its 17th year with new and improved features, such as “Hall of Fame” mode and lead blocker controls. The biggest improvement, however, is the updated rosters, where new NFL stars such as Reggie Bush make their debuts with their respective new teams, and the NFL’s free agents join their latest squads. Although the pro football season doesn’t begin until September 7, Madden’s trademark verbal barrage—as always—makes it feel like an amped-up Sunday afternoon in the middle of November.
Madden ’07 keeps the features of previous games, such as Quarterback Vision, Hit Stick, Jukes, Mini Camps, and Offensive and Defensive Playmakers, while incorporating welcome new features into the action. For hard-core gamers who have previously been frustrated with Madden’s faulty computer blocking, the game now offers the chance to control blockers and score touchdowns by flattening the defense. Gamers can also take a player in his rookie season and lead him through an entire career—and possibly into the Hall of Fame. Another personal favorite of mine is that all 32 teams have close rankings that accurately represent the parity of the National Football League. Unlike former editions, which gave the lower teams no chance against the perennial favorites, this year’s Madden guarantees every team a fighting chance.
One drawback to all of this innovation is that, with so many complex new features, figuring out the right button to mash is occasionally confusing—but complaining about Madden is like complaining about having to drive the Beemer instead of the Merc. Hey, buddy—you’re still driving a sports car! Madden, once again, proves itself a must-own for any true football or video-game lover.—Sean Petterson

Categories
News

Tomato burglar swipes vegetables from home

Categories
News

Shooter’s attorney says murder was self-defense

A grand jury will decide this month whether to maintain a second-degree murder charge for Jermaine Leon Thurston, 22, who fatally shot 21-year-old Lamont Antonio Reaves in June. If the charges hold, Thurston could serve up to 40 years.
    Defense attorney Deborah C. Wyatt says Thurston was a good kid who was threatened by neighborhood thugs. “He’s never even been close to trouble before. He’s toed the line completely, he’s been a hardworking guy,” Wyatt says.
    In a videotaped interview shown at a preliminary hearing earlier this month, Thurston agreed to talk to police without a lawyer, and said that he had felt threatened by Reaves. Thurston and Reaves exchanged words on the 900 block of S. First Street on June 18. Witnesses testified that Reaves wanted to beat up Thurston and suggested that the two fight with their hands. Reaves approached Thurston, who fell backward and shot Reaves in the abdomen with his 9mm handgun. Reaves was taken to UVA hospital, where he died. A woman standing nearby was also injured. Thurston turned himself in to police shortly after the incident.
    Wyatt says Thurston, who grew up on First Street, was armed because of a violent incident the previous fall. “He was the victim of a shooting, the bullet is still in his leg. His friends said you need to be armed, but he never had a weapon before that,” Wyatt says.
    Wyatt says she anticipates the second-degree murder charge will likely hold, though she argued for the charge to be reduced to voluntary manslaughter. Thurston is also being charged with malicious wounding and two firearms charges. Thurston’s jury trial date is set for January 2, 2007. He is being held at the Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail. The shooting marked Charlottesville’s first murder charge of the year.

Categories
News

Punishment delayed for Goode donor

Last February, Mitchell Wade, the former head of defense contractor MZM, pleaded guilty to paying California Congressman Randy “Duke” Cunningham more than $1 million in bribes in exchange for government contracts. Cunningham is currently serving eight years in prison for his part in the scandal and on Monday, August 21, Wade appeared in Federal Court where the judge agreed to delay sentencing proceedings until next March so that Wade, who has been cooperating with federal prosecutors, can continue to aid in the bribery investigation, which still has several unresolved pieces.
One of those unresolved pieces, at least as far as Virginia voters are concerned, is the involvement of Republican Congressman Virgil Goode, who Wade identified as one of two other members of Congress to whom he fed illegal contributions (the other was beleaguered Florida Representative Katherine Harris). Wade testified that he gave Goode, whose Virginia district includes Charlottesville, $46,000 in disguised contributions in 2003 and 2005, part of about $90,000 MZM eventually contributed to Goode. Goode subsequently used his seat on the House Appropriations Committee to seek $3.6 million for a Foreign Supplier Assessment Center that went to MZM, and was soon thereafter established in Martinsville. Once Wade’s involvement was announced, Goode donated the $90,000 to charity.
In his plea, Wade stated that he never informed Goode that the contributions were illegal and the five-term incumbent, proclaiming innocence, has maintained that his motivation in dealing with MZM was to bring jobs to an economically deprived region. Last month, Richard Berglund, the man who ran the Foreign Supplier Assessment Center in Martinsville, also pleaded guilty to feeding Goode illegal contributions.
While Goode was mum on Wade’s sentence delay, Curt Gleeson, communications director for Al Weed, Goode’s Democratic challenger in November, was not. “I’m sure the sentencing was delayed because Wade has a lot to say, and I’m sure when it all comes out Virgil will have a lot to answer for,” Gleeson says. “Look at the list of people involved in this,” he says, calling attention to Wade, Berglund and Harris. “Every one else is a mess. It’s the company you keep.”—Jayson Whitehead

Categories
Arts

Lyle Lovett

Lyle Lovett
Charlottesville Pavilion
Saturday, August 26

music Some local music fans might have been under the impression that they had actually seen Lyle Lovett play in town. Granted, the Texas-lovin’ country crooner has hit Charlottesville before, but only with a stripped-down band. And, while those shows were reportedly fine, affecting and enjoyable affairs, the difference between Lyle-and-his-pals and Lyle-the-full-on-18-piece-extravaganza is the difference between a tasty soup appetizer and an eight-course meal.
For those who have seen Lovett with his Large Band before (or heard his live recordings), Saturday’s show probably held few surprises—the man’s carefully orchestrated concerts are as scripted as a Broadway musical—but that certainly didn’t lesson the seat-rocking impact his well-honed review delivers.
Wandering onstage with his traditional guitar-cello-and-mandolin trio, Lovett teased fans with a couple of slow, sweetly sung cowboy ballads, then launched into the plaintive “This Traveling Around.” Finally, one by one, band members began to wander onstage, adding musical layers to Lyle’s lament as if they had just stopped by for an impromptu jam: First came the bass (courtesy of white-bearded session legend Leland Sklar), then a beautiful, lonely fiddle line, and finally a full horn section, which blew the song into a big-band rave-up that left the uninitiated open-mouthed with pleasure.
Sure, it’s an obvious gimmick—but it’s one that works every time, and it set the stage for a hugely entertaining evening. By the time Lovett’s gospel quartet (anchored by the extraordinary Francine Reed) hit the stage for “I Will Rise Up,” it seemed like every face in the place was plastered with a satisfied smile.
It should also be noted that, after a full year of fiddling around, the Pavilion has finally found its sonic sweet spot. The sound system has always been top-notch, but the new baffling (and, to be sure, Lovett’s exacting ear) all worked together to create a sound mix that was about as perfect as live music ever gets. From big crowd-pleasers like “(That’s Right) You’re Not From Texas” to the old-timey, three-guys-around-a-mic bluegrass breakdown (featuring some fine vocal interplay with “resident bluegrass expert” Jeff White), every plucked note, rousing chorus and softly warbled lyric was clear and pure as a bright Texas day.
By the time the two-hour show arrived at its rafter-shaking gospel finale (“Church,” as if you had to ask), the once-echoey Pavilion felt as warm and intimate as a country church, packed to the gills with satisfied members of Lyle’s ever-growing congregation. —Dan Catalano

Categories
News

Local builders Lend a helping hammer

Foundation has built 120 shelters for Katrina victims —with more on the way
Even before Hurricane Katrina made landfall last August, Pearlington, Mississippi, was a hurting town. Located 45 miles northeast of New Orleans, the value of the towns’ aging homes was well below the state average. Its elevation—8′ above sea level—guaranteed that a pounding 28′ storm surge would destroy many of those homes, and replace them with a fleet of cramped FEMA trailers.
One year later, the news crews have thinned out and relief organizations have moved in—among them the Charlottesville-based Building Goodness Foundation. The nonprofit—which was founded in 1999 by local building contractors Jack Stoner, Michael Cernik and Howard Pape—has constructed houses, schools and hospitals around the globe. From here to Haiti, donations have kept the foundation hammering away at its stated goal: improving lives and building community. Beginning last October, volunteers added Mississippi to the list, calling their Katrina work “CPR” (short for Charlottesville-Pearlington Relief). To date, 120 12′ x 16′ wooden shelters have been erected, says Pat Bean, the foundation’s office manager.
These days, volunteers are the news, according to the many former residents. Almost immediately after this country’s worst natural disaster hit the Gulf Coast, land speculators stormed the region. One displaced homeowner, writing on his blog, called the rampant profiteering “urban renewal by hurricane.” Statistics for Hancock County show that most in Pearlington were homeowners, not renters. Those who clung to their roots, and the rubble of their old foundations, faced an uncertain future amid tents, tarps and trailers.
With many families still roughing it in the closet-size FEMA trailers, Bean says, the extra living and storage space has been critical. Those who receive the sheds are chosen through a lottery system “with preference given to the elderly, the disabled, and families with young children,” according to a June report by the foundation. Since last October, Bean says, 17 work trips have been carried out, drawing on the labor of 166 volunteers. With the recent completion of Phase 1—shelter building—the foundation has now started fundraising for Phase 2: rebuilding a community center. The estimated cost of the project, which BGF is spearheading with contributions from other relief organizations, is $400,000. They have already raised $317,000. But it’s not over yet, Bean says. The need is great, storm season has arrived, and the foundation has added yet another goal: 75 more shelters.—Sheila Pell

Categories
The Editor's Desk

Letters to the editor

Lamenting the
“Automotive Mall”

In the August 8 edition of C-VILLE, in the Opinionated column by Mayor David Brown [“We’re No. 1! How do we keep it that way?”], he talks of why Char-lottesville is such a wonderful place to live, listing as one of the reasons the “bustling pedestrian mall.” If he is so proud of the pedestrian mall, why has he allowed three of the six streets to have vehicular cross traffic, so that it is no longer a pedestrian mall? So much of the Mall space has been rented to street vendors and restaurants that at times it is difficult to walk at all. Families can no longer allow their children to run free without worrying if they will be hit by a car crossing the Mall. Families going to the Discovery Museum cannot permit their children to go ahead. What used to be the envy of a lot of communities across the country is no longer. So don’t call it a pedestrian mall when it no longer is.

Richard Berman
Charlottesville

Not-so-smart growth

In an interview, Arin Sime voiced his opposition to the smart growth and water protection policies in Albemarle County that are working to make the region as a whole a great place to live [“Libertarian Arin Sime on county development,” Development News, August 15]. Before Mr. Sime advocates letting developers have a free-for-all in Albemarle County, perhaps he should take a tour of Northern Virginia or Hampton Roads, two regions that have long been afflicted by the blight of poorly planned growth. In both of these areas people pay some of the highest taxes in the state, spend hours every day commuting on crammed highways, have rivers where no one can fish or swim and reservoirs that are almost too dirty to drink from.
    Clustering and similar initiatives exist because they work effectively to reduce the number of roads and minimize development’s impact on natural areas, yet Mr. Sime opposes them for no articulated reason. Private conservation easements are great, but without a coordinated plan for development they merely preserve land in a Swiss-cheese style, which can actually make sprawl worse by forcing it to spread out further away from population centers like Charlottesville. Mountain overlays are also important, serving to protect our drinking water by preventing erosion in steep areas where it can do the most damages to our rivers and reservoirs.
    Mr. Sime claims that he wants to focus on individual landowners, but his policies will really put power in the hands of a few big developers who are responsible for a vast majority of development in Albemarle County. While some of these developers will act in the best interests of the community, many are more interested in maximizing profit at the expense of the community, or live outside the region and therefore have no vested interest in protecting Albemarle County’s way of life.
The ideas that Mr. Sime proposes have already been demonstrated to be detrimental to communities. I see no reason why the Charlottesville area should fail to heed the lessons that other communities have been forced to learn the hard way. If we want to preserve our unique community, and its natural resources, we need to act to ensure that development benefits everyone, not just a privileged few.

Jake Hosen
Charlottesville

Kids for nuclear power

Energy activists come in all shapes and sizes.
    In addition to anti-nuclear activists in attendance at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and Department of Environ-mental Quality meetings on August 16 [“Lake Anna plants set for public input,” Government News, August 8], there is a strong pro-nuclear voice in attendance called the North American Young Genera-tion for Nuclear. While we agree that renewables and conservation are important, they are simply not enough to meet the demands of our ever-increasing population and eliminate our dependence on polluting fossil fuels.
    Nuclear energy in the United States and North America has a long record of safety and reliability. It produces massive amounts of clean energy for a tiny fraction of the waste that is emitted by fossil fuels. What’s best is that the “waste” from nuclear energy is 95 percent recyclable.
    A true alliance for clean energy would recognize the valuable part that nuclear has played and will continue to play in the future. That’s probably why Greenpeace founder Dr. Patrick Moore now supports nuclear energy.

Michael Stuart
Beaverdam

Respect the code!

In the August 15 issue of C-VILLE, Mr. Will Goldsmith reported on the denial of a preliminary site plan request by Estes Street Partners for a four-storey development [“City planning commission rejects Fifeville project,” Development News]. I applaud the planning commission’s action, and would like to clarify some facts presented in the article.
    I strongly believe that Estes Street Partners brought this decision upon themselves. If they had worked more constructively with the neighborhood and the City, they would not find themselves in this position. Theirs is the story of would-be developers brought down by their own arrogance.
    The zoning code only allows two storeys and 15 units “by right” for a residential development on this site. But Estes Street Partners wanted to maximize their profits by building four storeys and 30 units. They could only do that by: 1) getting a “special use” permit, or 2) making the development mixed-use.
    Last fall, they tried to get a special use permit, but the City deferred (not denied, as reported) the application, because the proposal failed to meet any of the characteristics required by the Cherry Avenue corridor zoning. It did not encourage dynamic street life. It did not de-emphasize parking facilities. It did not encourage mixed-use development. It was not appropriate in scale to the neighborhood. It did not minimize the impact of parking facilities. It did not create landscaped areas for pedestrian use. It did not encourage alternative forms of transportation. It did not encourage neighborhood-enhancing economic activity. It did not encourage neighborhood participation. In other words, it did nothing to respond to the intent of the zoning code. So the planning commission told Estes Street Partners that the special use permit would be deferred until the developer was willing to meet with the neighborhood and respond to the code.
Estes Street Partners was unwilling to do either. They have been unwilling to change any part of their plan, and they have been unwilling to work with the neighborhood, because they (mistakenly, I think) believe that this would mean compromising the profits that they hope to make from the project.
In their most recent request to the planning commission, Estes Street Partners tried to get around the code by inserting 835 square feet of “commercial space” (1.89 percent of the total area) in order to claim that the project was “mixed use.” In other words, they renamed their sales office as commercial use in order to try to build their 30 units of profit-making condominiums. This was a cynical insult to the City, the commission, the neighborhood, and the code itself. The project still does nothing to respond to the intent of the zoning code.
The developers tried to claim that their proposal was now “by right” development. This is nonsense. Their proposal has twice the density of a “by right” development. It remains completely unchang-ed from the special use permit application. It is still a request to build twice the allowed number of residential units while disregarding every aspect of the intent of the code.
The planning commission was absolutely right to deny approval. This would-be developer has shown nothing but disrespect for the City in this process. Until they change their attitude, they will continue to bring only disgrace upon themselves and their partners. I sincerely hope that they will reconsider their approach, since many in the neighborhood, myself included, support development (and even density!) on this site—but only if it respects the interests of the entire community and the language of the code.

Jason Pearson
Charlottesville

CORRECTION

In last week’s edition of 7 Days, due to an editing error and a reporting error, we mischaracterized two aspects of BP Alter-native Energy’s acquisition of Charlottes-ville company Greenlight Energy, Inc. Greenlight is a developer of large wind energy projects, but not other alternative energy projects. In addition, BP intends to invest $8 billion into a range of alternative energy businesses, not just Greenlight, over the next decade.

Categories
News

Indie Senate candidate can’t be derailed

Independent Senate candidate Gail “For Rail” Parker’s got a steady platform to build rail across Virginia, which she says will reduce emissions, save lives and even fix Iraq (less oil, more peace in the Middle East). Recently, C-VILLE tread the shaky ground on and off the platform of this third-party candidate.—Meg McEvoy

C-VILLE: How much would it cost to build the kind of rail service you’re talking about?
Gail Parker: By our estimate, it’s $10 million a mile for light rail and $20 million for heavy rail. We have a 500-mile rail plan to put high-speed passenger rail service across Virginia, from the Washington D.C. area through Richmond to Virginia Beach, and from Richmond to Roanoke. Our goal is to take about 20-25 percent of the traffic off the major arteries.

Your opponents are talking about things like the war on terror and the war in Iraq—where do you stand on those issues?
If you really look at our platform it’s a positive solution on the mess over in the Middle East. By building rail, we lessen our dependency on foreign oil, and thereby reduce our vital interest in that area.

How long will it take?
James C. Jordan says that we could cut our dependency on foreign oil in half by building rail. How fast we build it, that’s how fast we cut our dependency.

How would you vote on a national fence system at our southern borders, and how would you vote on a national gay marriage amendment?
I’m for marriage and marriage has got to be between a man and a woman. On immigration, we believe that we will need legal immigrant labor to build the rail system in Virginia. We just simply do not have enough workers to build a rail system that we need.

Where do you stand on the PATRIOT Act?
Well, clearly the surveillance has gone too far. But I don’t want to get too far afield from our basic campaign issue. This campaign is about rail and about balancing the federal budget. That’s my promise to the voters of Virginia. The first thing I will do is introduce legislation requiring that the federal budget be balanced. We can build rail with the savings from just cutting out the waste.