Huntington High Evacuated After Firework Type Device Found

Huntington Police evacuated Huntington High school Thursday afternoon after school administrators received reports that a student had an explosive device.

Late Thursday morning Huntington Police were called to the high school because of a report of a firework type device found in the possession of a juvenile. The student had shown the device to another juvenile who reported it. Huntington Police Chief Joe Ciccarelli says the onsite resource officer, who is a member of the Huntington Police Department arrested the individual. The device was then recovered and rendered inert. 

It looked like an Easter egg with firecrackers, it wasn't a lethal device. But it was something that was concerning. — Director of Communications of Cabell County Schools, Jeff Flowers

Students were evacuated to the football field and then picked up by parents or rode the bus home. Chief Ciccarelli says an investigation will continue.

Both the suspect and witness in the case were juveniles

Huntington Receives $100K to Study Crime

The Huntington Police Department was awarded a $100,000 grant Monday from the U.S. Department of Justice to study a crime ridden area of the city.The…

The Huntington Police Department was awarded a $100,000 grant Monday from the U.S. Department of Justice to study a crime ridden area of the city.

The grant is part of the Byrne Criminal Justice Innovation Program.

Huntington Police Department’s Grant Administrative Officer Rod Pell said the award allows the office to begin the planning phase of ridding downtown Huntington, or city council district three, of crime.

“Roughly, over a three year period, that district three reflected almost 28 percent of all part one violent offenses for the city and over 20 percent of all part one property offenses city wide also,” Pell said.

“It’s concerning because district three is geographically the second smallest city council district.”

The department has identified questions, like what drives crime in the area and where can the city collaborate to decrease it.

The grant also allows Huntington PD to team with the Center for Business and Economic Research at Marshall University and a private business called Collective Impact to find the answers to those questions.

Next year, Huntington will apply for a second grant to implement the solutions they identify.

National Drug Official Pays a Visit to Huntington

Drug and law enforcement officials were in Huntington Wednesday as the Huntington Police department outlined their fight.

The National Drug Control Policy Acting Director Michael Botticelli was in Huntington Wednesday with Congressman Nick Rahall to take a look at the efforts being made by the Huntington Police Department to fight the use and trafficking of illegal drugs. Captain Hank Dial gave an overview.

“What we had in Fairfield and Weed and Seed was were fighting open air drug markets and crack cocaine, now it has shifted to diverted pills and heroin and we did not see an increase in crime in the West End, but we did not see the decreases we saw in the rest of the city,” Dial said.

From 2008 to 2010 Huntington established a Weed and Seed program in the Fairfield area of Huntington.

Its purpose was to weed out drugs and crime and plant seeds of community action.  At the time the Weed and Seed Area in Fairfield contained only 20% of Huntington’s population, but accounted for 60% of murders, 77% of prostitution arrests and 44% of adult drug crimes. Since implementing approaches like Weed and Seed, this area has seen a reduction of 28% in violent crime and a 35% decrease in drug offenses. National Drug Control Policy Acting Director Michael Botticelli.

“One of the reasons that we came here with the congressman was to also look at the really innovative and collaborative programs that are happening here at the local level, one of the functions of our office is to set federal policy, but to also ensure that community’s like Huntington get the resources they need to be able to implement programs like this and it’s really been impressive,” Botticelli said.

Huntington police are no focusing on the West End, which Botticelli and others toured Wednesday. Police have taken lessons they’ve learned from Weed and Seed and are trying to replicate those successes here. The River to Rail program as they call their effort in the West End started in 2012 and is still on going. Huntington officials say that the drugs in those areas are coming from Columbus, Ohio and Detroit, Michigan. Botticelli said at the federal level they’re working on ways to track prescription medicine.

“One of the things that we’re looking at is state level databases that actually track prescription prescribing and one of the initiatives that we’re working on is to make sure these databases can talk and so what we want to make sure is that we’re sharing that information across state lines,” Botticelli said.

During a four month period in 2013 in the West End there were 38 arrests made, confiscation of 242 grams of heroin and more than $18,000 dollars seized. Much like the efforts during the Weed and Seed Fight, the efforts are based on law enforcement and community engagement. Congressman Nick Rahall said the efforts made in Huntington affect much of the southern part of the state, because much of the drugs come through Huntington.

“This is a major artery where they come from the Midwestern states, Michigan, Detroit and they come right down through here and sometimes Huntington isn’t there only stop and they’ll continue into southern West Virginia. Huntington is crucial in this battle against drugs in West Virginia,” Rahall said.

The tour of Huntington also took Botticelli and Rahall to the Healing Place rehabilitation facility and to Cabell Huntington Hospital’s Neonatal Intensive Care unit where addicted babies are cared for. Rahall also hosted a roundtable discussion on the topic in Beckley Wednesday night.

Huntington to Hire Additional Police Officers

  The city of Huntington is reallocating $500,000 in its budget to hire 10 police officers to fight drug problems in neighborhoods.

The city council unanimously approved the move Thursday. It will transfer funds from the city’s insurance program and the street paving budget.

Mayor Steve Williams told the council that Huntington residents are scared to take their children outside. He says the hirings will send a message to drug dealers to get out.

Williams says the hope is to have the new officers in place by the end of the year. In addition to the new officers, an information technology position will be created.

City officials estimate that drug offenses in Huntington by the end of the year will jump 89 percent over 2013 levels.

Man Pleads Guilty to Federal Charges in Huntington Shooting

A Huntington man pleaded guilty Monday to federal charges after shooting six people in a city apartment complex last year.

Thirty-one year old Antonio Michael Smith is charged with being a convicted felon in possession of firearms and of selling heroin.

U.S. Attorney Booth Goodwin said Smith used two firearms in the shooting in the Northcott Court neighborhood, a Huntington Housing Authority community, on Sept. 24, 2013. He also pleaded guilty Monday to selling heroin in Huntington on Feb. 6, 2013.

He had previously been convicted of robbery in Ohio in 2001 and was convicted in 2010 in Cabell County of unlawful wounding and attempt to commit a felony.  

The six victims of the shooting were treated for minor injuries and released shortly after the incident.

Smith, however, fled the scene and was later arrested by the FBI in Brooklyn, New York.

Smith was also charged by the state with six counts of malicious wounding and one count of wanton endangerment stemming from the incident investigated by the Huntington Police Department.
 

Huntington Police Chief Resigns

Huntington Police Chief Skip Holbrook announced his resignation this morning. 

Holbrook will take over the same position in Columbia, South Carolina, a city with a population over 130,000. Holbrook said he sees many similarities between the two jobs.

It starts at the top and the common similarity I saw here is they have tremendous officers, they have a tremendous management staff that were stymied or handcuffed and were not allowed or had the capacity to move the department in a certain direction,” Holbrook said.

Since taking over in 2007 Skip Holbrook has revitalized the Huntington Police Department and helped clean up neighborhoods and put a dent in the fight against drugs in the area. Holbrook leaves a department with a $12 million budget and will take over a department with 460 employees and a budget at nearly 32 million. Holbrook’s departure is effective April 7th. Huntington officials will form a committee to begin the search for Holbrook’s replacement.

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