Fugitive Rapist Arrested In W.Va. Following Multi-State Investigation

“Believe it or not, West Virginia is a good place to hide. We’ve caught fugitives from Los Angeles, from Canada and other countries hiding here,” Waggaman said. “They think it’s a rural state, it’s off the beaten path, not a lot of people talk about this state, it’s a great place to hide, but luckily we have skilled deputy marshals and most of us are from West Virginia and very familiar with the state  itself.”

A convicted rapist who escaped from an Arkansas prison facility more than a year ago has been captured in West Virginia.

U.S. Marshals were joined by Arkansas State Police and several West Virginia law enforcement agencies Tuesday in arresting Samuel Hartman, 39, at the Quality Inn in Lewisburg.

Hartman, who was sentenced to life in 2013 for raping his 14-year-old stepdaughter, was arrested along with his wife, Misty Hartman, 39, his mother, Linda White, 61, and White’s boyfriend, Rodney Trent, 52.

All three helped Hartman escape from the East Arkansas Regional Unit prison facility’s work detail on Aug. 12, 2022. The two women fired several shots toward the work crew as Hartman ran to an awaiting pickup truck.  The four then fled to an area near the Mississippi river where they escaped on two pre-staged jet skis. 

Mark Waggamon, a deputy U.S. Marshal for the Southern District of West Virginia said Tuesday’s arrest involved the cooperation of multiple state agencies. 

“We had deputy marshals from the northern district of West Virginia, we had our deputy marshals here in southern West Virginia,” Waggamon said. “We had deputies from the eastern district of Arkansas come, we had aid from the western district of Virginia and other agencies.”

Waggamon said the case started with the eastern district of Arkansas who developed information that Harman’s wife and mother were in West Virginia where Hartman’s mother has ties.

“We started our investigation and determined there was a very good possibility they are here based on records that we’ve done, interviews we’ve done and vehicles the suspect may be driving,” he said.

Waggamon said local agencies often request help from the U.S. Marshals with fugitive cases given their unlimited jurisdiction in territories that extend to places like Guam, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

He said West Virginia has often served as a hideout for wanted fugitives.

“Believe it or not, West Virginia is a good place to hide. We’ve caught fugitives from Los Angeles, from Canada and other countries hiding here,” Waggamon said. “They think it’s a rural state, it’s off the beaten path, not a lot of people talk about this state, it’s a great place to hide, but luckily we have skilled deputy marshals and most of us are from West Virginia and very familiar with the state itself.”

Michael Baylous, U.S. Marshal for the Southern District of West Virginia credited the deliberate and determined law enforcement work of the U.S. Marshals Service, Arkansas State Police, and the Arkansas Department of Corrections and West Virginia law enforcement agencies with the arrests.

“The apprehension of these dangerous fugitives demonstrates the close and outstanding relationship that CUFFED (Cops United Felony Fugitive Enforcement Division Task Force enjoys with our local and state partners, other USMS Districts, and the USMS Domestic Investigations Branch,” Baylous said.

Deadline Approaching To Compete At State Fair

The deadline to enter the West Virginia State Fair’s annual competition is approaching.

The deadline to enter the West Virginia State Fair’s annual competition is fast approaching.

To participate in the livestock as well as the home, arts, and garden competitions, all entries must be submitted online by midnight on July 14, 2023.

The 10-day State Fair of West Virginia in Lewisburg celebrates its 98th anniversary in August.

All entry information and registration can be found by visiting www.statefairofwv.com/competitions or by calling 304-645-1090.

No late entries will be accepted.

Clarksburg And Lewisburg Airports May Have New Carrier

Airports in Clarksburg and Lewisburg may have found a replacement carrier in anticipation of SkyWest Airlines’ departure.

Airports in Clarksburg and Lewisburg may have found a replacement carrier in anticipation of SkyWest Airlines’ departure. The budget airline asked to end service in March.

The directors for North Central Regional Airport in Clarksburg and Greenbrier Valley Airport in Lewisburg have identified Contour Airlines as their preferred carrier moving forward.

In March, the Department of Transportation blocked SkyWest Airlines from ending service to 29 airports across the country including Clarksburg and Lewisburg.

In documents filed with the Department of Transportation (DOT) at the end of June, both airport authorities requested a waiver to award their Essential Air Service (EAS) contract to the Tennessee based airline, which is affiliated with American Airlines.

According to DOT, the EAS program was put into place to guarantee that small communities that were served by certificated air carriers before airline deregulation can maintain a minimal level of scheduled air service.

As an Essential Air Service carrier, Contour would connect the regional airports to the National Air Transportation System via the American Airlines hub in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Contour currently offers service to 10 other EAS cities, including Parkersburg and Beckley.

Both airports declined proposals from Boutique Air and Southern Airways Express. Those airlines only offer single-engine service, and that would require the airports to waive their rights to twin engine service.

A proposal from Team Tundra was rejected by both airports as incomplete.

Popular Appalachian Heritage Series Spurs A Repeat 

The first Appalachian Heritage Series was hosted at Carnegie Hall in Lewisburg. The workshops celebrating Appalachian heritage were so well received that the non-profit organization is already planning a repeat.

Workshops celebrating Appalachian heritage were so well received that a Greenbrier County non-profit organization is already planning a repeat for next year. The first Appalachian Heritage Series was hosted at Carnegie Hall in Lewisburg.

The series included workshops meant to introduce a new generation to old traditions.

Nearly 150 students participated in 19 different classes as part of the first series. The workshops offered hands-on opportunities to learn about Appalachian arts and crafts. Spring 2022 sessions were offered during after-hours and on weekends so working people could attend.

The series also included demonstrations on topics including sausage making, woodturning, soap making, ballad singing, leather working, needle felting and basket weaving.

Students from eight West Virginia counties and five states attended classes.

Find more information about the 2022 workshops and how to apply to be a teacher next year on Carnegie Hall’s website.

Clarksburg and Lewisburg airports will continue to offer flights by SkyWest Airlines

SkyWest Airlines has decided to stop operating out of two regional airports in West Virginia. The decision would have stopped all flights from and to Lewisburg, but a federal agency has stepped in to prevent any interruption in service.

The U.S. Department of Transportation blocked SkyWest Airlines from ending service to 29 airports across the country including North Central Regional Airport in Clarksburg and Greenbrier Valley Airport in Lewisburg.

In their filing of intent to terminate essential air service, SkyWest representatives moved to terminate service on or before June 10 and citied “pilot staffing challenges across the airline industry.”

Monday’s ruling from the DOT blocked the termination until a replacement carrier can be found.

SkyWest operates in West Virginia under United Airlines and serves as an Essential Air Service to connect regional airports to the National Air Transportation System via hubs like Chicago O’Hare and Washington Dulles.

In a letter sent to Sec. of Transportation Pete Buttigieg Friday, Sen. Joe Manchin placed the economic impact of Lewisburg’s airport at $91 million, and Clarksburg at $1.1 billion annually. He claimed losing SkyWest’s services would cause irreparable harm to local communities.

Manchin also highlighted local efforts to help ease the national pilot shortage at Marshall University’s newly opened flight school, as well as Fairmont State’s existing school.

May 29, 1778, Dick Pointer, Black Slave, Helps Save Some 60 Settlers in Greenbrier Valley

  On May 29, 1778, Dick Pointer, a black slave, helped save some 60 settlers in the Greenbrier Valley. Warned of an impending Shawnee Indian attack, settlers had taken shelter at Fort Donnally near Lewisburg. The Shawnee arrived the next morning.

Pointer and a white settler named Philip Hammond were the first to hear the alarm. The Shawnee warriors tried to use tomahawks to break through a door at the fort. However, Pointer and Hammond had braced the door using a large barrel or “hogshead” of water. Pointer grabbed a musket, began firing at the attackers, and awoke the fort’s sleeping inhabitants. Pointer and the other settlers successfully fought off the attack, and the Shawnee retreated at dark.

For his bravery, Pointer was granted a life lease to a piece of land. In 1795—17 years after the attack—grateful friends petitioned the Virginia General Assembly for Pointer’s freedom but were refused. He was finally purchased and freed six years later. He died in 1827. He was about 87 years old.

Dick Pointer’s musket and a door from Fort Donnally can be seen in the West Virginia State Museum.

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