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Escalating problem with black teens at Northgate Mall
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TNB
2016-02-09 16:00:52 UTC
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Colerain Township Police are working with Northgate Mall officials to address an escalating problem with unaccompanied teens at the shopping center on weekend nights.

Colerain police chief Mark Denny says for two consecutive weekends, police have had issues with teenagers left at the mall with no adult supervision who became unruly. He said there were seven arrests made after officers tried to contain a group of about 100 teens in the parking lot of the mall. Denny said the teens arrested were between 13 and 16 years old.

James Love, public information officer for the department, said an altercation inside the mall spilled out into the parking lot Feb. 6, and teens then moved on to the lots of other Colerain Avenue businesses as they left the mall property.

“The mall has been really cooperative,” Denny said. “They want to see the issue addressed.”

The Colerain Township Police Department has an annual contract that pays the department $309,447 to patrol at Northgate Mall 24 hours a day, seven days a week. It was approved April 14, 2015. Denny said his department is going to change assignments at the mall to see if the department can prevent potential problems rather than be left to intervene when trouble occurs.

The chief said he doesn’t want the recent issues blown out of proportion. “No one was injured,” he said. “It was a small group of juveniles who were fighting. Not large groups, and it does not appear that fights were planned. But when you have groups of unsupervised teens, you may have problems. Many of these youngsters, we found, don’t live in the township, and they were brought here, dropped off and left on their own. It’s not a smart idea and it led to problems on Saturday.”

Saturday night’s incident brought officers from Mount Healthy, Springfield Township and Green Township to assist Colerain Township officers as they dispersed the crowd. Denny said the response was large, because the township wanted to make sure the incident and the crowd didn’t get out of control. “My officers handled it well,” he said.

“We are not babysitters,” he said. “I cannot imagine dropping my 13-year-old daughter off at the mall to hang out until 9 p.m. It’s not a smart idea. And those 13- to 16-year-olds need to have a plan in place regarding how they are going to get home.”

Denny said the township is not asking for restrictions at the mall now. “We will revisit that idea if this continues to be a problem,” he said. “We are going to try the least-restrictive solutions first.”

http://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/local/colerain/2016/02/08/teen-problem-escalating-northgate-mall/80015888/


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TNB
2016-02-10 19:35:00 UTC
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Escalating problem with black teens at Northgate Mall
Colerain Township Police are working with Northgate Mall officials to address an
escalating problem with unaccompanied teens at the shopping center on weekend n
ights.
Colerain police chief Mark Denny says for two consecutive weekends, police have
had issues with teenagers left at the mall with no adult supervision who became
unruly. He said there were seven arrests made after officers tried to contain a
group of about 100 teens in the parking lot of the mall. Denny said the teens ar
rested were between 13 and 16 years old.
James Love, public information officer for the department, said an altercation i
nside the mall spilled out into the parking lot Feb. 6, and teens then moved on
to the lots of other Colerain Avenue businesses as they left the mall property.
The mall has been really cooperative, Denny said. They want to see the issue add
ressed.
The Colerain Township Police Department has an annual contract that pays the dep
artment $309,447 to patrol at Northgate Mall 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
It was approved April 14, 2015. Denny said his department is going to change ass
ignments at the mall to see if the department can prevent potential problems rat
her than be left to intervene when trouble occurs.
The chief said he doesnt want the recent issues blown out of proportion. No one
was injured, he said. It was a small group of juveniles who were fighting. Not l
arge groups, and it does not appear that fights were planned. But when you have
groups of unsupervised teens, you may have problems. Many of these youngsters, w
e found, dont live in the township, and they were brought here, dropped off and
left on their own. Its not a smart idea and it led to problems on Saturday.
Saturday nights incident brought officers from Mount Healthy, Springfield Townsh
ip and Green Township to assist Colerain Township officers as they dispersed the
crowd. Denny said the response was large, because the township wanted to make s
ure the incident and the crowd didnt get out of control. My officers handled it
well, he said.
We are not babysitters, he said. I cannot imagine dropping my 13-year-old daught
er off at the mall to hang out until 9 p.m. Its not a smart idea. And those 13-
to 16-year-olds need to have a plan in place regarding how they are going to get
home.
Denny said the township is not asking for restrictions at the mall now. We will
revisit that idea if this continues to be a problem, he said. We are going to tr
y the least-restrictive solutions first.
http://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/local/colerain/2016/02/08/teen-problem-escalating-northgate-mall/80015888/
COLERAIN TOWNSHIP, Ohio -- "You don't have to go home, but you can't stay
here," goes the famous '90s song by Semisonic, and it was the sentiment
Saturday night at the Northgate Mall.

Around 9 p.m. Saturday, authorities said nearly 100 teenagers caused a
ruckus in the parking lot as Colerain Township Police escorted them from
the mall at closing time.

According to police reports, the altercation resulted in six arrests of
minors ranging in age from 13 to 16 on charges of criminal trespassing,
disorderly conduct, menacing, obstructing official business and resisting
arrest.

James Love, Colerain Township public information officer, said there have
been issues in the past with unattended teenagers in the mall and that
Colerain Police are working with the mall to alleviate the conflicts.

Officer Thomas Kinne wrote that around 7:30 p.m., he advised a few groups
of teenagers who were not actively shopping to leave the mall since
Colerain Police had received calls and in-person complaints from mall
patrons and employees about large groups of teenagers loitering, occupying
food court tables, destroying property, stealing advertisement signs and
causing annoyance and alarm throughout the mall.

At closing time, Kinne reported recognizing the same teenagers yelling and
alarming customers and mall employees who were departing for the night.
While Kinne was placing a female teenager under arrest, an additional
female youth declared the police officers were "racist" (NIGGER ALERT!!!)
and yelled
obscenities before being arrested herself. This prompted a male teen to
strip off his outer shirt and strike an "aggressive fighting stance"
toward officers. He backed down when officers threatened to use mace to
subdue him and was subsequently arrested.

A dozen officers reported to the scene, arresting three other female
teenagers involved in the altercation, including one who was hit with
pepper spray after running from police toward the Colerain Avenue Waffle
House and then taking a fighting stance toward officers, police said.

<Nigvid at site>

http://www.wcpo.com/news/local-news/hamilton-county/colerain-township/rowdy-teens-refuse-to-leave-northgate-mall-six-arrested
TNB
2016-02-20 01:49:08 UTC
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Tswo African American women face charges in separate hammer attacks.

Nakeisha Armstrong, 36, is accused of knocking down a woman, continuously punching her in the face and hitting her three times in the head with a hammer before witnesses grabbed the weapon from her in Bond Hill Thursday, court records show.

She turned herself into Cincinnati police at District 4 headquarters and is cooperating with their investigation, records state.

In an unrelated offense in University Heights Kyarra Browner is accused of hitting a woman in the head with a hammer during an argument, causing head injuries, court records show.

Then, police wrote, she turned her pit bull loose on the victim, who attacked the woman, leaving puncture marks on her arm.

Both women face charges of felonious assault.

They are scheduled to appear in court at 9 a.m. Friday.

http://www.fox19.com/story/31261835/2-arrested-in-separate-hammer-attacks


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TNB
2016-03-01 15:45:54 UTC
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Two men admitted Monday they broke into the Indian Hill home of a
federal judge, Susan Dlott, and her husband, attorney Stanley Chesley,
and held them at gunpoint in a robbery that left Chesley injured.

Darrell Kinney, 21, of Evanston, and Terry Jackson Jr., 21, of Mount
Airy, pleaded guilty to charges including aggravated burglary,
aggravated robbery and kidnapping. Jackson, who prosecutors said pushed
Chesley down a small flight of steps, leaving him with broken bones and
a concussion, also pleaded guilty to felonious assault.

Both face lengthy prison sentences. Kinney will serve at least 18 years
because weapons were used; Jackson will serve at least 21 years. Their
sentences, under state law, could run more than 90 years. Hamilton
County Common Pleas Judge Megan Shanahan will sentence them March 29.

A third man, who prosecutors say also was involved, 21-year-old
Demetrius Williams of Mount Airy, chose to proceed to trial.

Jackson also admitted taking part in three similar robberies in
November 2015, two in Bond Hill and one in Montgomery. Prosecutors
recommended to Shanahan that he serve his sentence in those cases at
the same time as his sentence in the robbery at Dlott and Chesley's
home.

In one of those robberies, Jackson and another man waited for an
elderly couple to return home from Sunday church services, according to
statements in court.
Terry Jackson Jr.

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Terry Jackson Jr.
(Photo: Enquirer/Kevin Grasha)

Dlott and Chesley were targeted the night of Dec. 4. because of a
luxury car they were in, Hamilton County Assistant Prosecutor Gus Leon
told Shanahan in court Monday.

Leon said the men followed Dlott and Chesley as they drove home from a
Kenwood pizza restaurant.

After watching the couple go inside their 27,000-square-foot house, the
men drove away and returned a few hours later, Leon said. Court
documents say the incident happened between 10 p.m. and 11 p.m.

Leon said the men kicked in the basement door of the home and took
several items, making several trips to the car. The men then accosted
Dlott and Chesley in their bedroom. Two of the men wielded handguns,
Leon said. The third had a stun gun.

The men held the couple at gunpoint for as long as 40 minutes, "in an
effort to make them give up more property," Leon said.

[635920913870684100-FullSizeRender.jpg]

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The men then led the couple across the house to a garage, Leon said,
intending to steal one of their vehicles. At some point, he said,
Jackson pushed Chesley down some steps. Chesley suffered cracked
vertebrae and broken bones, he said.

The men fled when they heard a beeping noise, according to police.
Dlott called 911 from a neighbor's home. Another neighbor also called
911 around the same time.

Soon after, a Madeira police officer pulled over a car driven by
Jackson after prosecutors said he drove through a stop sign. The
officer, Leon said, noticed items "hanging out from the trunk because
it was too full of goods to close."

Kinney was on parole at the time of the robbery. He was sentenced to
two years in prison after pleading guilty in 2013 to burglary, records
show.

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