Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Deputy Jayme Gohde and her supervisor were suspended after arresting James Hodges, of Lake City on Oct. 31 for resisting an officer without violence, according to Columbia County Sheriff Mark Hunter.
A sheriff’s office in Florida said it was investigating the conduct of two deputies after a viral video showed them arresting a legally blind man in Lake City on October 31, after mistakenly ...
Viral bodycam footage shows two officers arresting James Hodges even though he showed them the walking cane in his back pocket. Blind man arrested after officers mistake cane for gun Skip to main ...
James Hodges may refer to: James Hodges (mayor) (1822–1895), American politician and businessman; James L. Hodges (1790–1846), delegate from Massachusetts in the United States House of Representatives; James Hodges (1814–1879), builder and engineer who constructed the Pennyhill Park Hotel; Jim Hodges (born 1956), governor of South ...
Willie James Hodges (June 19, 1960 – March 21, 2024) was an American murderer and suspected serial killer who has been convicted of a 2001 murder in Florida, to which he was linked to via DNA evidence, and was the prime suspect in two additional murders in Alabama and Ohio, but was never charged.
James Hovis Hodges (born November 19, 1956) [1] is an American businessman, attorney, and politician who served as the 114th governor of South Carolina from 1999 to 2003. A former member of the South Carolina House of Representatives, Hodges is the most recent Democrat to serve as the state's governor.
James Hodges was born on August 11, 1822, at Liberty Hall in Kent County, Maryland, to Mary Hanson (née Ringgold) and James Hodges Sr. [1] [2] Hodges was descended from many settlers of Kent County. William Hodges, Hodges's ancestor, came to Maryland from Virginia around 1665 and settled on a tract of land between Gray's Inn Creek and the ...
The Union Village Shaker settlement was a community of Shakers founded at Turtle Creek, Ohio, in 1805. Early leaders sent out from the Shakers' central Ministry at New Lebanon, New York, included Elder David Darrow (1750-1825), who began evangelizing in 1805, and Eldress Ruth Farrington (1763-1821), who arrived in 1806 to help stabilize the new Shaker society.