Community Corner
Police Impersonator Pulls Over Aggressive Driver | Patch PM
Trial For Parents Of Starved Girl | Toll Roads Forever? | Gladys Knight Cuts Ties With Troubled Restaurant | Peeping Tom Banned

Stories to share this evening:
Man Charged With Impersonating Police Officer
A southwest Cherokee County man is accused of conducting a traffic stop on a motorist he said was driving in an "aggressive manner." That's according to the Cherokee Sheriff's Office, who arrested and charged Brian Kristopher Weikel, 37, with impersonating a police officer.>>>Read more.
Find out what's happening in East Cobbfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Trial Set For Couple Charged With Starving Autistic Girl
A mother and stepfather accused of starving an autistic teenager are set to face trial beginning Monday.
Jade Marie Anne Jacobs and William Anthony Brown were charged in August 2014 for abusing Jacobs' 15-year-old daughter. Police at the time said the girl weighed less than 60 pounds, had bruises all over her body and was kept in a closet that “reeked of feces and urine.">>>Read more.
Find out what's happening in East Cobbfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Peeping Tom Banned From Cobb County For Secretly Videotaping Neighbor
An East Cobb man who secretly installed a video camera in the bedroom of his next-door neighbor's home pleaded guilty this week to multiple charges, including burglary and invasion of privacy, Patch has learned. His sentence? Time in prison and lifelong banishment from Cobb County, the District Attorney's Office announced Friday.>>>Read more.
Toll Road Fees: Georgia Bill Would Make Drivers Pay Indefinitely
A Georgia bill moving through the General Assembly would allow transit authorities to collect fees on toll roads indefinitely, Patch has learned. Senate Bill 183 was approved in the Senate by a 50-1 vote, according to news reports. Usually tolls are approved to pay for specific costs for a period of time, but the new legislation would lift those limitations. If the bill becomes law, it means that Georgia drivers would continue to pay tolls even when road construction projects are completed.>>>Read more.
More Georgia headlines:
- Last Push For Georgia Casino Bill Scuttled For 2017
- Where To Get Free Pizza In Gwinnett On Saturday
- Gladys Knight Severs All Ties To Chicken & Waffles Restaurant
- Murder Suicide In DeKalb Was Domestic: Authorities
- Kennesaw State Data Breach? FBI Investigating Elections Center
- Johns Creek Restaurant Week Starts March 5
- Commissioners Give Police Greater Latitude To Fight Trafficking, Prostitution
- More Than 200 Summer Jobs Available at City of Roswell
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