Categories
Arts

Kevin Barnes fronts of Montreal with dramatic flair

Of Montreal’s Kevin Barnes is officially off the grid. After two weeks and about a half dozen phone calls, the only response I could get from the avant garde indie rocker was his odd outgoing voicemail message—an eerie instrumental tune—and apologies from his publicist that he had “no service at the place he is staying.”

Kathryn Kenealy of PR firm Life or Death went on to say that Barnes wouldn’t have service until October 1, the very day he’ll start his fall tour in Asheville, N.C. Fans might want to prepare for a late start at The Grey Eagle that night.

My experience was not unique. An interview with Barnes published by Paste magazine on September 24 was done “earlier this month” via “Google Hangouts.” Lester Bangs is officially rolling in his grave.

At long last, C-VILLE Weekly was able to catch up with the elusive Barnes via e-mail interview—and while his answers provided no more concrete evidence of his whereabouts, they did indicate that he’s currently finishing up his next album, making it a prolific 13 LPs for the man hailing from Athens, Ga. And good news: Barnes indeed intends to be at the Jefferson Theater on October 2.

“We’ll probably play a song or two off the upcoming album and maybe a cover, too,” he said of the upcoming show. “We’re a five-piece now; there will also be three theatrical performers on stage. It should get interesting.”

Interesting is Barnes’ currency. His lyrics and songwriting are littered with emotional references to female loves lost, yet his onstage persona is highly bi-curious. He’s often dressed in drag, and legend has it he played five songs entirely naked at a Las Vegas show in 2007.

It’s while performing that Barnes said he feels most open, most interesting. While his inaccessibility over the past month makes one daydream about what he might be up to, he insisted he is a “very boring person.”

“Onstage, I’m sort of bringing a part of myself to the surface that is normally kept dormant,” Barnes said. “In my day to day life, I try to be as anonymous as possible. The last thing I want is to draw attention to myself. When I’m onstage, I do a 180 and get to fulfill whatever performance fantasies I might have.”

A modern David Bowie, Barnes has been bringing such theatricality to the stage since the mid-’90s, when he launched what would be a rotating cast of characters known as of Montreal. On the current tour, he’ll be joined by Clayton Rychlik on drums, Jojo Glidewell over the keys, Bob Parins manning pedal steel and bass, and Bennett Lewis handling the guitar and mandolin.

“I’ve been the only constant, so in a way it is sort of a solo thing,” Barnes said. “Recently I’ve relied a lot on the musical contributions of the live band. It’s made the creative experience really fun and rewarding. For a long time, I just wanted to work alone, but it’s been great recently making it a more communal thing and showcasing the talents of other musicians.”

This is good news for fans of of Montreal, as anyone who’s followed Barnes’ career over the past two decades has likely at some point been concerned about his mental health. He’s notorious for going into isolation, and some of his best work is written from bleak places, both physically and emotionally. Around the same time he performed those songs sans clothing in 2007, he recorded some of his most dejected work, on Hissing Fauna Are You the Destroyer? while living alone in Norway.

“I just write about what’s happening in my life, for the most part,” Barnes said. “I guess writers do tend to focus on the more dramatic aspects of their personal life.”

Of Montreal‘s 2013 effort, Lousy With Sylvianbriar, lends some credence to the theory that Barnes is happier these days. Despite its angsty title and some apocalyptic imagery, the record features moments of psychedelic honky-tonk fun, Violent Femmes-like blissful irreverence, and Bowie-esque spacey optimism.

Barnes has never been one to fall neatly into genres. He said he no longer has much contact with the Athens-based Elephant 6 collective, but the label that produced electro-influenced Neutral Milk Hotel, psychedelic rock band Olivia Tremor Control, and a host of other oddballs had a strong effect on his music during the early of Montreal years. And indeed, each of Barnes’ dozen records seems like a departure from the previous.

“I try to always have a project in the works,” Barnes said. “It doesn’t ever feel like I’m working too hard though—I feel like most of the time I’m just spacing out and occasionally I accomplish things.”

Barnes’ musical shape shifting makes it seem the singer-guitarist is constantly running from his past, a sentiment that’s never been so clear as now, in the wake of the of Montreal documentary released this past summer. Named for a song on Hissing Fauna, The Past Is a Grotesque Animal depicts a musician in an ongoing struggle to balance his professional and personal lives.

“It’s hard for me to be objective about it, since it is sort of the story of my life,” Barnes said. “It already feels a bit dated since I’m off on a new chapter and working in a new genre from previous albums. I guess it’s inevitable that will happen when you try to document something that is still growing and evolving.”

Have you seen Kevin Barnes perform? Tell us about it.

Categories
News

Questions remain as police link Hannah Graham suspect to Morgan Harrington case

On Sunday, September 21, Dan and Gil Harrington stood quietly in the background at a press conference near Charlottesville Police Department headquarters, watching as another couple, John and Susan Graham, pleaded with the public to help them find their 18-year-old daughter Hannah, who disappeared from the Downtown Mall in the early morning hours of Saturday, September 13.

It wasn’t surprising that the Harringtons were there. Their daughter Morgan’s remains were found on an Albemarle farm three months after she vanished from outside a Metallica concert at JPJ Arena in October 2009, and since then, they’ve become advocates for campus safety legislation, founded the nonprofit Help Save the Next Girl, and have offered support to other families who have suffered similar losses.

Now the Harringtons and the Grahams are tied by more than circumstance and shared tragedy. State police announced that last week’s arrest of 32-year-old Jesse Leroy Matthew Jr., charged with Graham’s abduction and taken into custody near Galveston, Texas, a day later, has led to a long-awaited break in the Harrington case, “with a new forensic link for state police investigators to pursue.”

On Monday, Gil Harrington indicated she had been informed of the link, but she stressed that the search for the UVA student must continue, even as her alleged abductor sits in isolation in the Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail. “We’re incredibly grateful for the work law enforcement has done, and we want to keep the focus on the search for Hannah,” Harrington said. She repeated what she’s said often to reporters in the last three weeks: “I know where Morgan is. She’s in a box in my living room. Hannah Graham is still missing.”

State Police spokeswoman Corinne Geller declined to elaborate on the nature of the evidence tying Matthew to the Harrington case, and said in her statement that “right now, the public’s focus needs to remain on helping Charlottesville Police locate and bring Hannah Graham home.”

The announcement of the link has thrust another Virginia case back into the spotlight: the September 2005 rape of a 26-year-old woman in Fairfax. The victim in that case told police she was grabbed from behind while walking home with groceries, forced into a wooded area, beaten, and sexually assaulted. The unnamed woman described her attacker as a black male with a medium build in his mid-twenties to mid-thirties, and a composite sketch of a suspect was released, but there were no leads until five years later, when investigators announced that DNA evidence linked the Fairfax rape to the Morgan Harrington case.

Police in Fairfax would not comment on whether the evidence that state police say ties Matthew to the Harrington case has also made him a suspect in the nine-year-old rape investigation, but said they are working with prosecutors and the Virginia State Police.
“We will thoroughly assess any new information we may receive regarding this case,” the City of Fairfax Police Department announced in a news release. “Details of the investigation and any related evidentiary information will not be disclosed at this time in order to protect the integrity of the investigation and any possible prosecution.”

Former Albemarle County prosecutor James Camblos is representing Matthew, and said he’s seen his client four times since he was extradited to Virginia last weekend, including a two-and-a-half-hour meeting with him on Monday, September 29. He declined to comment on Matthew’s state of mind, or anything he’s said.

“Everything is under seal, and I am waiting to see some evidence that links my client to these crimes,” said Camblos.

Who is LJ?

Matthew was first named as a person of interest in the Graham case on September 18, less than a week after private security cameras captured images of him walking late at night with an apparently intoxicated Graham on the Mall. He retained Camblos, then fled the area. Police charged him in absentia with abduction with intent to defile, and on September 24, he was spotted by a concerned citizen on a beach near Galveston, arrested by a sheriff’s deputy, and later extradited to Virginia. He is expected to appear via video feed in Charlottesville District Court for a bond hearing on Thursday, October 2.

Reports about the 32-year-old lifelong local, who worked at UVA hospital helping transport patients to surgery, have painted conflicting pictures. Eyewitness accounts from the night Graham disappeared gathered by local radio news host Coy Barefoot describe him as aggressively physical, especially with women he met in downtown bars Blue Light Grill and Tempo in the hours before he was seen with Graham.

An incident from Matthew’s past came to light last week, when the London Daily Mail reported he was kicked out of Liberty University in 2002 after a fellow student accused him of rape.

Matthew was never charged with a crime then, said Lynchburg Commonwealth’s Attorney Michael Doucette. Doucette was an assistant prosecutor in Lynchburg at the time, but said he didn’t work on the case. He did, however, dig up investigators’ report and pass it along to police and prosecutors in Charlottesville.

He said he couldn’t disclose the entire contents of the report, because it’s now in the hands of people investigating another crime, and because it could reveal the identity of a sexual assault victim.

“At the end of the investigation, the issue was one of consent,” Doucette said. “She said she had not consented to the sexual intercourse; he said that she had. There were no independent eyewitnesses. The number-one reason no charges were placed was that after filing the complaint, the girl said she did not want to take any further part in the investigation.”

The accuser eventually stopped returning a prosecutor’s calls, said Doucette. “Then, as now, we have a policy that, if at all possible, we do not re-victimize victims.”

Doucette said he was aware of the evidence in the case, and whether the woman sought medical attention, but “I’m not going to answer that.”
Tony Jones remembers Matthew from the days when they were both drivers for Yellow Cab of Charlottesville. Details on Matthew’s employment with the company aren’t clear; owner Mark Brown, who purchased the company in 2012, told C-VILLE last month that his records don’t show the exact dates Matthew worked there, but Jones said that Matthew had left by 2009 and had begun driving for Access Taxi.

Jones didn’t know Matthew well, he said, but recalled an occasion when Matthew seemed aggressive toward a woman at BW3 restaurant.
“He walked over like he knew her, but he didn’t,” said Jones. “Grabbed her in a hug, put his arm around her. She pushed him away.”

But family and friends who remember Matthew from his days at Monticello High School have told reporters he’s gentle, caring, and kind. On September 27, some of those friends launched a campaign on the crowdsourcing website FundRazr to collect donations for his legal fees.

“Whether you are a friend of LJ, or a believer in the right to a trial by jury and due process, this fund’s goal is to assist LJ and his attorney in defending him against these charges and any future charges related to the Hannah Graham matter,” the campaign website read. By Monday afternoon, the Jesse “LJ” Matthew Legal Defense Fund had raised more than $1,800.

But shortly after police announced that evidence linked Matthew to Harrington’s five-year-old case, organizers shut down the campaign. One woman, who declined to be interviewed and asked not to be named, said she had received threats.

Connecting the dots

Police have remained silent on just what they found that links Matthew to the Harrington case—and, for that matter, on what led them to charge Matthew with Graham’s abduction. Charlottesville defense attorney David Heilberg, who isn’t involved in the case, said the language investigators have used leaves a lot of questions.

“‘Forensic evidence’ basically means scientific evidence,” he said, “pretty much anything they find that links a person to a scene or to someone else.” That means it could be that investigators tied Matthew’s DNA to some discovery from the Harrington case, but not necessarily. The link could be hair, fibers, fingerprints, even an object.

“In other words, it could be anything, really,” Heilberg said, and the purposely vague wording and the timing of the announcement might suggest police are sitting on something less than a slam dunk.

“If they had a strong DNA link, they could have issued an arrest warrant,” said Heilberg. “If they tell you there’s a link, the purpose would be [to see] if anybody in NoVA or anybody at JPJ the night Morgan Harrington disappeared can remember anything that before they couldn’t, or something that seemed innocuous before but is no longer innocuous.”

Investigators have also thrown gasoline on the already-raging fire of media attention surrounding Matthew, something that could complicate a trial, Heilberg said. While police can dangle potentially damning information before the public in the name of soliciting leads, prosecutors have to watch their step.

“There’s an ethical rule against Commonwealth’s attorneys trying a case in the press,” Heilberg said. “If there’s so much prejudicial pretrial publicity that you can’t fairly sit a jury because they’ve sort of made up their minds, then you might get a change of venue.”

Beltway sniper Lee Boyd Malvo, for instance, was tried in Tidewater, more than 100 miles away from the high-profile 2002 murders he was involved with. Such a change is less likely in Matthew’s case, Heilberg said, whether he’s charged with more crimes or not. His trial would have to be somewhere in Virginia, “and you probably don’t want to leave Charlottesville even if you have a case for it, because Charlottesville is probably as good a place to get a fair trial for a defendant as any in the state. It’s a real cross-section of people, highly educated—a good venue for defense.”

C-VILLE editor Courteney Stuart contributed to this report.

Categories
News

State police: ‘Forensic link’ ties Jesse Matthew to Morgan Harrington case

The Virginia State Police have confirmed that a forensic link ties Jesse “LJ” Matthew, arrested last week for abduction in the case of missing UVA student Hannah Graham, to the 2009 disappearance of Morgan Harrington, whose remains were found on an Albemarle County farm three months after she vanished after a concert in Charlottesville.

“For the past five years, the Virginia State Police has been aggressively pursuing the investigation into the disappearance and death of 20-year-old Morgan D. Harrington of Roanoke, Va.,” reads a statement from Corinne Geller, spokeswoman for the State Police. “Last week, the arrest of Jesse L. Matthew Jr., 32, of Charlottesville, Va., provided a significant break in this case with a new forensic link for state police investigators to pursue. There is a still a great deal of work to be done in regards to this investigation and we appreciate the public’s patience as we move forward.”

Geller declined to elaborate on the nature of the evidence, and her statement said that “right now, the public’s focus needs to remain on helping Charlottesville Police locate and bring Hannah Graham home.”

Since her disappearance, Morgan Harrington’s parents, Gil and Dan Harrington, have become advocates for campus safety legislation, and founded the nonprofit Help Save the Next Girl. They’ve also helped keep attention on the fact that Morgan’s killer is still at large. But as media attention on the Graham disappearance reached a fever pitch after the 18-year-old second-year vanished on September 13 and many speculated about a tie between the two unsolved cases, Gil Harrington spoke up to implore the public to focus on the search for Hannah.

Today, she indicated she had been informed of the link, but again emphasized that a woman is still missing.

“We’re incredibly grateful for the work law enforcement has done, and we want to keep the focus on the search for Hannah,” she said.

Categories
News

What’s happening in Charlottesville-Albemarle the week of September 29?

Each week, the news team takes a look at upcoming meetings and events in Charlottesville and Albemarle we think you should know about. Consider it a look into our datebook, and be sure to share newsworthy happenings in the comments section.

  • Albemarle County supervisors Brad Sheffield (Rio) and Ann Mallek (White Hall) will hold a joint town hall meeting from 6-8pm Monday, September 29 at the Hollymead Fire Station in Charlottesville to discuss the package of improvements proposed for the Route 29 corridor. Sheffield and Diantha McKeel (Jack Jouett) will hold another town hall from 6-8pm Thursday, October 2 at CATEC, 1000 East Rio Road.
  • The Charlottesville Housing and Redevelopment Authority meets at 7pm Monday, September 29.
  • The Albemarle County Crime Prevention Council hosts a town hall meeting on the events in Ferguson, Missouri and their implications in Albemarle County from 7-8:30pm Monday at Monticello High School. Expert panelists will discuss issues such as police militarization and public perception of law enforcement, and attendees will be able to provide input and ask questions.
  • The Albemarle County Board of Supervisors meets from 1-9pm Wednesday, October 1 in Lane Auditorium at the County Office Building on McIntire Road. The meeting will include a work session on amending the county’s wireless strict tower ordinance, the rules of which are expected to be relaxed. The board will also vote on its legislative priorities and its 2015-2017 strategic plan.
  • The Charlottesville Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee meets from 5-7pm Thursday, October 2 in the basement conference room at City Hall.

 

Categories
Living

New craft beverage maker breaks the mold on 151

Christine Riggleman wanted to start a business on her family’s land off Route 151. An avid home cook, she figured it would make sense to open a restaurant. She wanted to complement the craft breweries and cideries already flowing up and down the highway. But she had friends in restaurants who advised against going into the food biz, so she took her culinary talents in a different direction.

“It was just a matter of watching and waiting. We didn’t want to oversaturate the market,” she said from the production floor of her two-week-old small-batch liquor production house. She gestured to her stills. “This is cooking,” she said. “I’m just cooking.”

Silverback Distillery—named after her husband for his prematurely gray hair and sometimes gorilla-like behavior—is the first spirits-maker to join the craft beverage boom on 151. She’s been inviting guests to sample her creations since August 29, and liquor enthusiasts throughout the region will soon get a taste when Silverback alights on 100 Central Virginia ABC stores.

Riggleman and her team, which includes her husband, oldest daughter, project manager Blake Rhodes, and contractors, broke ground on the new booze shop last October. Over seven months, the team spared no expense because they wanted to produce “the best bourbon you can make.”

Now complete, save for a third bar that will be either an overflow tasting room or an event space, Silverback Distillery boasts two stills—a traditional pot still and a continuous still modeled after the one used by Maker’s Mark in Kentucky. The setup off Route 151 will allow the distillery to produce as many as 600,000 bottles of liquor per year. Riggleman said many small booze makers open with a capacity closer to 30,000 bottles per year.

The remainder of the more than $1 million price tag Riggleman ball-parked for her new business includes a carefully designed production floor (anything that can cause a spark is stored in the boiler room), two electric boilers that require less energy to run than one large boiler, and 26,000 feet of geothermal pipe running under the property. The geothermal system is the linchpin in Silverback’s mission to “Produce responsibly. Drink responsibly. Dispose responsibly.” Rhodes said it is hyper-efficient when it comes to cooling liquids, an important part of the spirit-making process.

“It was more expensive on startup, but it will pay back in about three to four years,” he said.

The only concern during construction came when a land surveyor for Dominion Resources visited the Silverback Distillery site several months back. Behind the distillery off 151 is a field Riggleman’s daughters call the “Wedding Field,” a place they fantasize about eventually getting married. It’s one of the areas being considered by Dominion for its planned 550-mile natural gas pipeline.

“I’m worried about the pipeline contaminating our water,” Riggleman said. “The surveyor came by and talked to us and told us where they want to put it, but [Dominion Resources] never contacted us. We will see.”

If you sidle up to one of the two sleekly designed bars at Silverback Distillery in the next few months, you won’t get to taste the drink Riggleman set out to make—her prized bourbon—as the spirit is aging in barrels for three to five years to take on the smoky flavor and dark hue it’s known for. But you will get a chance to sample her Beringei Vodka, Strange Monkey Gin, and Blackback White Whiskey, the distillery’s bourbon recipe made available pre-aging. Each are available as straight 0.5- ounce tasting portions or served with one of several carefully selected mixers, such as Riggleman’s homemade Bloody Mary mix.

The early returns on the product have been favorable. Riggleman said the tasting room was full in its first two weeks with both craft enthusiasts stopping by during beer tours and locals making the distillery a destination. The gin has been a surprisingly strong seller, she said, keeping up with vodka sales.

“I like the gin, and I’m not a gin drinker,” said Ron Edwards, a South Carolina resident on a Friday afternoon 151 tour with a local friend. “It didn’t taste like pine needles, which most gin does.”

The 100 percent wheat vodka is regarded by most as having a slightly sweet note, making it a good candidate for serving right on the rocks. The newly released Blackback White Whiskey is essentially moonshine, a raw-tasting grain spirit that would put hair on the back of an orangutan.

The one gorilla in the room for Silverback Distillery, the strict Virginia Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, has turned out to be “wonderful,” Riggleman said. The 100 stores the distillery was awarded more than doubled her expectations. Still, the agency won’t allow a spirits maker to serve food, and patrons are allowed only three 0.5 ounce servings per 24-hour period. That means Silverback will never be a place where paying customers will want to spend an hour or two relaxing.

Nevertheless, Riggleman mostly stands behind ABC on that measure as well.

“I live on this road and have kids,” she said. “I don’t want people having more than that to drink.”

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Smallprov

Big laughs come out in small spaces when improv is the stage—at least that’s what Smallprov sets out to accomplish. The Big Blue Door comedy gathering focuses on powerful bursts of wit rather than long-winded monologues. The brief skits are unrehearsed and based entirely on audience suggestions, adding an edge of anticipation to every gut-busting guffaw. If you’re known as the class clown or the life of the party, your tribe awaits you here.

Monday 9/29. $5, 9pm. McGuffey Art Center, Studio 11. 201 2nd St. bigbluedoor.org.

Categories
News

What’s Happening at the jefferson School?

Literacy Volunteers Students Celebrate Success at Achievement Ceremony

On Thursday, a crowd of about 75 Literacy Volunteers students, their families, tutors, and staff gathered in Vinegar Hill Café at the Jefferson School City Center to celebrate the achievements of 44 Literacy Volunteers students. Executive Director, Ellen Osborne, kicked off the celebration. Tutor Richard Alonzo and student Irene Reyes Sanchez also spoke. Students were honored for completing 100 hours of study, obtaining U.S. citizenship, and completing the program.

Richard Alonzo, a retired bilingual teacher and administrator from California, spoke about his four years as a tutor as well as his own struggles with learning English. “Like you I began my life speaking another language. I didn’t learn to speak English until I went to school. As a child it was a very difficult process to learn another language, and as an adult I know it is even harder,” said Alonzo.

Alonzo retired to Charlottesville and spent a year trying to find the right volunteer opportunity. “It was important for me to do something useful and rewarding in my new community,” said Alonzo, and he has found his work as a tutor to do just that. He’s worked with three students as a tutor, and mentioned his current student, Mariam, who just became a United States citizen. “Many of you are working, raising families, and going to school, but you’ve come to learn how important it is to learn the language of the country you live in,” he said. “You are to be commended for making the commitment to attending weekly tutoring sessions, completing homework, and applying what you have learned from your tutors.”

Sanchez spoke about her experience as a student in the LVCA program and her commitment to earning her GED, for which she is currently studying. She has studied with LVCA for two years and was recognized for studying for over 100 hours. “I want to improve my English to talk to my children’s teachers and neighbors. I want to improve my English to talk with my co-workers, boss, and so I can have more opportunities at my job,” she said. “When I improve my English, I understand what happens in the world better [and I can] to make a better life for my children.”

Chill’n & Grill’n Returns to Vinegar Hill Cafe October 2

For the last time in 2014, the Jefferson School’s Vinegar Hill Cafe will feature barbeque and music as part of its Chill’n & Grill’n event on Thursday, October 2 5pm-7:30pm. For $10, guests can enjoy a menu featuring barbecue ribs, chicken, or hamburgers, with a choice of sides. Children’s menu and pricing, and vegetarian options available.

180 will be playing this month. 180 is a six-piece band that plays rock and dance favorites from the 1960s to today.

Vinegar Hill Café is located in the historic Jefferson School City Center, 233 4th Street NW in Charlottesville 22903. For details visit www.VinegarHillCafe.org or contact Joel Schechtman, JSchechtman@jabacares.org, 434-817-5234.

Story Slam Returns to African American Heritage Center October 3

The second Story Slam kicks off at 6:30pm at the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center on Friday, October 3. October’s theme is “Gravy” and eight story-tellers will compete for best story of the night. The winner earns a place in the Story Slam-off, where the winners of the year’s slams will compete for the “Slamma Jamma” trophy.

Storytellers should register upon arrival and names are drawn out of a hat to determine order of presentation. Stories should fit into the theme, be true as the storyteller remembers it, and should be under five minutes in length. No notes, props, or music allowed. Judges are selected from the audience.

The cost is $5 for JSAAHC members and includes one free drink ticket. The cost for non-members is $8, which also includes one free drink ticket.

JSCC logoJefferson School City Center is a voice of the nine nonprofits located at Charlottesville’s intergenerational community center, the restored Jefferson School. We are a legacy preserved . . . a soul reborn . . . in the heart of Cville!

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Adrian Duke

Even though Adrian Duke is based in central Virginia, his bluesy roots music lives in the heart of New Orleans. His funk and jazz prowess on the piano is matched by raw, expressive vocals, and elevated by a tight backing band that shares the work in bringing down the house. Duke has received critical acclaim for his live performances as well as earning prizes in various regional blues competitions, making for an enthusiastic following.

Sunday 9/28. Free, 8pm. The Southern Café and Music Hall, 103 S. First St. 977-5590.

 

Categories
News

After arrest, police double down on search for Hannah Graham

Although Jesse “L.J.” Matthew has been in police custody since his arrest on Wednesday on a beach in Galveston, Texas, he hasn’t given police any new information to help them locate the woman he’s accused of abducting, said Charlottesville Police Chief Tim Longo at an afternoon press conference on Thursday.

“He invoked his right to remain silent,” Longo explained, citing Matthew’s visit to the Charlottesville Police station on Saturday, where he requested an attorney before eluding police later that day. “We can’t re-approach him until such time that he does otherwise.”

The extradition process of Matthew is underway, Longo said, noting that he expects the 32-year-old former taxi driver to arrive back in Charlottesville within days. He  urged the community to keep the focus on finding Hannah Graham, the second year UVA student whose disappearance from the Downtown Mall in the early morning hours of Saturday, September 13,  has attracted international media attention. Despite approximately 1,500 tips called in, there has been no sign of her.

“We don’t know where Hannah Graham is, and we have to find her,” said Longo, asking owners of rural properties in surrounding counties to search their land and check any wildlife or security video footage they may have collected between the early morning hours of Saturday, September 13 to today.

Additionally, he asked real estate agents in charge of vacant properties to perform such searches on behalf of the owners, and instructed all citizens who complete such searches to call the tip line to inform police that their land has been cleared so that the search teams can be used most efficiently.

In particular, Longo asked area residents to keep a lookout for her phone and for clothes resembling what Hannah was wearing the night she vanished—a sequined, cropped top, black capri pants, and white shoes. Her iPhone 5s has a pink case, Longo said. Anyone who discovers anything they believe could be evidence should not touch it but should contact the tip line.

Longo also pointedly spoke to people who know Matthew and may be aware of his habits and hobbies. Matthew likes to fish, Longo noted. “Where did he like to fish? Where did he go fishing?” he asked. “Was there a particular location that he was comfortable with? Our goal is  to be as thorough as we possibly can. We can only do that with your help.”

Reached for comment earlier in the day, Matthew’s attorney Jim Camblos declined comment.

The reward for information leading to Hannah Graham has risen to $100,000. Anyone with any information that may be pertinent to the case should call the tip line at 295-3851 or visit a new tip website for the case at cpdtips@charlottesville.org.

 

 

 

 

Categories
News

Tempo restaurant releases statement on Hannah Graham

Statement by Brice Cunningham, owner of Tempo Restaurant concerning the investigation into the disappearance of Hannah Graham

The Tempo Restaurant family joins the entire Charlottesville community as it continues its search to find Hannah Graham and return her to her family. As longtime members of  this unique city, we share the resolve to ensure that Charlottesville remains a safe and special place, and will continue to do absolutely everything we can possibly do to help uncover any facts that will bring Hannah home.

On Wednesday, September 17th, when the Charlottesville Police Department first released video that showed Hannah walking along the downtown mall at around 1 am, Tempo was able to immediately provide authorities with information that pinpointed the location of the Person of Interest, Mr. Matthew. Details of credit card receipts showed that he had made purchases at the bar shortly after midnight while Hannah was still making her way towards the downtown mall from Preston Avenue. Those records also confirm that he returned to Tempo at 1:10 am and left shortly after, although Ms. Graham was not seen inside the restaurant and was never served. She was, however, noticed by the door-person outside the restaurant at that time, and seen leaving with Matthew shortly thereafter. These details helped police reconstruct Ms. Graham’s movements and last known whereabouts.

Tempo will continue to assist and cooperate with law enforcement authorities in the ongoing investigation, and we urge anyone that might have information about these events, no matter how inconsequential it may seem, to please call the tip line at 434-295-3851. Our focus remains on finding Hannah and returning her to her family, and   neither the Tempo staff nor our friends and neighbors in this community will rest until that goal has been achieved.