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Bruce Stevenson A 59-year-old man who was accused of killing his lover last year but then released because of a lack of evidence was arrested Tuesday on a slew of unrelated charges.Bruce Stevenson was charged Tuesday with aggravated assault, two counts of vandalism, two counts of reckless endangerment, unlawful carrying of a weapon and driving on a revoked license. Visit Chattanooga s Homicid [url=https://www.campusadidas.fr]adidas campus 80s[/url] e Database Bruce Stevenson Witnesses told police that Stevenson threw a brick through the front window of a home of a woman he once had a relationship around 11 p.m. on Dec. 19. She told police he then fired at least three shots outside the home on Milne Street, according to Stevenson s affidavit.Stevenson later returned around [url=https://www.adidas-originals.es]adidas original campus[/url] 10 p.m. on New Year s Eve behind the wheel of a white Cadillac and opened fire on the same home, two other men told police. Officers found 10 bullet holes in the door to the house and the two men who were insid [url=https://www.airmaxplus.us]air max 2[/url] e identified Stevenson as the shooter, according to his affidavit.Stevenson s total bond was set at $218,000 and he was booked into the Hamilton County Jail.Tuesday s arrest was not related to the 2015 homicide case in which Stevenson was charged.In June 2015, Stevenson was arrested in the death of 56-year-old Rosa Chatman, who was found severely beaten with her throat cut in her College Hill Courts apartment on April 15.When he was arrested, Chattanooga police said Stevenson had been Ohvv Report: Son fatally shot himself after killing his father in East Brainerd
A motorist passes by a Civil War Heritage Trail sign, which marks the site of Crawfish Spring in Chickamauga, Ga. Follow @CurrentChatt DALTON, Ga. - More than 10 years after the launch of the Georgia Civil War Heritage Trails project, leaders say unreasonable requirements from the U.S. Department of T [url=https://www.cup-stanley.co.uk]stanley mug[/url] ransportation have bogged down the process. Everything we ve tried to do has hit a brick wall, said Kathryn Sellers, who served as chairwoman of the Georgia Civil War Heritage Trails board for its first six years and is still a board member. The entire project has been made difficult by all the requirements and, in our minds, they are unreasonable requirements. So far, about 300 trailblazer signs and fewer than 20 interpretive markers have been put up in six Georgia regions. Most of the signs placed so far mark the Atlanta campaign in Northwest Georgia and the March to the Sea in the central part of the state.The program s goal is to place about 2,000 trailblazer signs and 150 markers, primarily paid for with federal grants.The U.S. Department of Transportation requires an environmental report, a historical preservation report and engineering drawing, a land survey and an appraisal for each small plot of land wher [url=https://www.stanley-cups.us]stanley website[/url] e the interpretive markers will be placed. In addition, all the paperwork must be completed at each s [url=https://www.stanleycups.ro]stanley cups[/url] ite before federal money to pay for any of the markers can be used, Sellers said. It is just ridiculous - we ve been inundated by micromanagement, Sellers said.