05.15
Deputy Wesley Holland has been fired from Walker County Sheriff’s Office – and jailed – for having sex with an inmate he was transporting.
Per reports, 61-year-old Holland stopped in Gordon County on April 30 to enjoy physical relations with a female inmate being taken from Hutcheson to a medical facility down in Dunwoody. She told officers in Dunwoody about the incident, and the GBI was called.
Now Holland is unemployed and facing charges of violating his oath, sodomy, and sexual assault by an authority figure. He was arrested Thursday in Gordon County.
- Times Free Press, 05/13/16: “[Sheriff] Wilson said he thinks the sexual act was consensual, though he pointed that it is still illegal.”
In this situation, there is no consent to give. Like a child, a prisoner cannot give consent to this. The law treats it very similarly to statutory rape.
Wilson also says he’s “very disappointed” in Holland.
Disappointed that he did it, or that he got caught? ’cause Holland ain’t the first, but he’s the first one who went to jail…
- Things Steve Wilson has been OK with officers doing:
- Beating their wife (as long as they don’t kill her).
- Stealing Christmas money donated for children.
- Taking a 15-year-old girl to Florida for sex.
- Stealing evidence from the SO for personal use.
- Having sex with a non-inmate in a patrol car in the Battlefield.
- Holding a neighborhood hostage with a gun.
- Making violent threats against bloggers.
- Things Steve Wilson is NOT ok with officers doing:
- Getting caught having sex with an inmate inside a patrol car in another county and getting charged down there with it.
What’s the difference? The incident-reported-outside-of-Walker-County part. Good thing the victim told officers in Dunwoody instead of here, else nothing would have ever been done.
LaFayette PD says Monday night’s stabbing of a man on Daughtery St is the first known gang incident in the city’s recent history.
They tell reporters catching the alleged stabber, David Lee Townsend II, is a priority in order to stop gang activity from spreading – but with Chattanooga growing, it’s only a matter of time before these incidents become more common.
Especially when the gang member already lives and hangs out here.
Shannon Whitfield, by all measures the leading candidate to become Walker County’s next commissioner, says one of his main goals is to make county government transparent.
Which is ironic, considering how the man ignores legitimate voter questions and won’t reveal details about how much money his family business makes selling fuel to the county and county vendors. He’s also hesitated to reveal plans he says he’s already made for the county, and won’t name who he’s already chosen to serve on two advisory boards he’s announced he’ll create.
He’s also refused to take a clear position on sole commissioner government, saying it’s no better or worse than a board.
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