Crime & Safety
Police Identify Music Teacher Killed In Sandy Springs (UPDATED)
The suspect accused of fatally stabbing the victim, who taught at an elementary school, has also been charged with killing his mother.
SANDY SPRINGS, GA -- Sandy Springs police have released the name of the man whose body was discovered Saturday evening at a storage facility.
Sandy Springs resident William E. Haynes, 53, was found dead with multiple stab wounds at Extra Space Storage, which is at 6780 Roswell Road, Sandy Springs police spokesperson Capt. Mike Lindstrom said.
Haynes was a music teacher at E. Rivers Elementary School, Atlanta Public Schools spokesperson Pat Stclaire said.
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The educator's body was discovered just after 10 p.m. Saturday when officers were dispatched to the facility.
Lindstrom told Patch there appears to be no connection between Haynes and the man charged with his murder, 31-year-old Justin Paul Hess.
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Hess is also accused of killing his mother in Cobb County hours before Haynes's body was found.
Following the discovery at the storage facility, investigators learned Haynes's red 2016 red Audi S5 was missing from the parking lot and that another vehicle was found at the scene, Lindstrom previously said.
That car, a blue Mazda 3, was taken from the townhome where Hess allegedly shot his mother, 61-year-old Carol Ann Hess.
According to Cobb police, Carol Hess was found dead around 6:20 p.m. at her home in the 400 block of Bridle Path NE in Marietta. A be-on-the-lookout alert on a possible suspect, later identified as Justin Hess, was issued to surrounding agencies and Hess was later taken into custody without incident.
Cobb authorities have charged Hess with felony murder and aggravated assault in his mother's death. Lindstrom added that Sandy Springs detectives have also obtained a murder warrant for Hess in connection to the Haynes case.
According to WSB-TV, Hess appeared in court Monday where a judge did not set bond in his case.
Haynes was also the conductor for the Alpharetta City Band, an adult recreation program sponsored by the Alpharetta Recreation and Parks Department. The organization on Monday said it was "saddened" to learn of the conductor's death.
"There is a hole in our hearts that will never be filled," the organization wrote. "Rest in peace, Bill Haynes."
Stclaire said the APS and E. Rivers Elementary family send their condolences to Haynes's family.
"Mr. Haynes came to us from Fulton County Schools and has been a part of the Rivers staff family for 16 months," she said. "This loss touches all of our students and staff, as Mr. Haynes taught music and drama for grades kindergarten through fifth. Grief counselors were made available to staff this morning."
Image via Atlanta Public Schools
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