A Nancy man and a 17-year-old boy were taken into custody Tuesday and Wednesday as a result of an incident which sent two sheriff’s deputies to the hospital.
Pulaski County sheriff’s deputies attempted to stop a pickup truck on Ky. 196 around 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. The vehicle was being driven by a juvenile male for whom deputies had a pick-up order from Pulaski District Court. Another male juvenile was in the passenger’s seat.
The juvenile refused to stop for deputies and led them on a chase across Sievers Road, Roberts Port Road, Ky. 1664, North Tarter Cemetery Road, Ky. 761, South Tarter Cemetery Road, Dawes Ridge Spur, Dawes Ridge Road, and Imperial Drive.
The passenger jumped out of the truck in the area of Ky. 1664.
The driver of the pickup truck continued down an embankment and through the woods, and then drove along a creek bed — traveling in areas where the deputies’ vehicles couldn’t follow him.
Deputies secured the scene while they searched for the juvenile driver, who had abandoned the truck by the creek.
Meanwhile, Kevin Marcum, 35, of Nancy, approached the deputies on foot and attempted to enter the secured area. Marcum was asked by deputies to stop and identify himself, and when he refused to do so, he was placed under arrest. While he was being taken into custody, he became combative with deputies, resulting in minor injuries to himself and two deputies. He also caused damage to a police cruiser.
The deputies were taken to Lake Cumberland Regional Hospital for treatment of their injuries. Marcum refused medical treatment. He was lodged in the Pulaski County Detention Center and was charged with obstructing a governmental operation, two counts of 3rd degree assault, resisting arrest, menacing, and 3rd degree criminal mischief.
The 17-year-old boy was spotted by the sheriff’s department’s helicopter crew yesterday afternoon in the area where he had abandoned his truck. He was lodged in the Adair Juvenile Detention Center.
The incident is still under investigation, and additional charges are expected to be placed against the juvenile.
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October 28, 2009
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Pulaski carries Girdler to win
In the weeks leading up to Tuesday’s primary election, it was impossible to miss the colorful signs dotting nearly every Pulaski roadway. The names in the race for the 15th State Senatorial District seat popped out: A.C. Donahue. Chris Girdler. Mark Polston.Once citizens hit the ballots, however, the results mirrored the dimensions of the signs themselves: Chris Girdler stood the tallest.Girdler, deputy district director for Congressman Harold “Hal” Rogers, ran away with the votes inside Pulaski County’s borders, earning 3,926 votes for 62.05 percent of the total number cast.That number more than doubled the next highest vote-getter, businessman Mark Polston, who raked in 1,624 votes for 25.67 percent.However, Polston — who owns Classic Carpet, a home-flooring business located just off the southern 914 bypass — can claim a moral victory ... three of them, in fact. In all three counties in the district other than Pulaski — those being Adair, Casey, and Russell Counties — Polston actually edged out Girdler.In Adair, Polston beat Girdler 629 to 394. In Casey County, it was 538 to 417, and in Russell, it was 1,862 to 1,038.Polston said he just “couldn’t pull it out with the numbers” and that “the machine worked for” Girdler in Pulaski County.“I think that was their strategy — I think they had a Pulaski County strategy all along,” said Polston. “They played the political game well.”Polston said the difference between his and Girdler’s campaigns was that “mine was a very, very grass roots campaign,” he said. “I did not have a political machine behind me. I understand how this process works, and in this instance, he prevailed.”As for why Girdler didn’t take three of four counties, the winning candidate — since there are no Democrats in the race, winning the Republican primary was effectively a final victory for Girdler — said he didn’t have an answer for that.However, “I believe things happen for a reason and I hope the long and strenuous campaign will only heighten my desire to move beyond the bitterness and partisanship of the recent past,” said Girdler.“Regionalism is a goal of mine, and I look forward to helping all four counties,” he added, noting that he campaigned heavily in each of them.Sen. Vernie McGaha, the long-time state senator whose seat the candidates were vying for, actually supported Polston after Liberty’s Todd Hoskins dropped out of the race earlier this month.Donahue, a local attorney, got 556 votes in Pulaski County, 8.79 percent of the vote. He only received 145 votes in Russell County, 74 in Adair County, and 75 in Casey County, where hometown candidate Hoskins almost matched him with 71 votes despite no longer being officially in the race.Polston said he’s “still digesting” what happened, and though “the process has been a very good experience for me,” he wouldn’t commit to running again in the future. “I wouldn’t shut the door to anything, but I’m not opening any doors either.”Still, “I think I got a lot of people involved in the process that had not been involved before and would not have been otherwise,” he said. “A lot of people got out and worked really hard, got motivated to talk to friends and neighbors. I think a lot of people became involved through this campaign that are going to be involved for a long time.”Girdler stressed his “positive message” and said that Rogers is a “mentor and good friend” that he would turn to for advice in dealing with a frequently combative legislative body in Frankfort, one for which Girdler hopes to help change the culture.Girdler said that he was “confident and optimistic” during the day Tuesday because he’d “worked extremely hard.” Nevertheless, the realization that he’d won gave him “chill bumps,” he said.“I’m absolutely honored,” said Girdler. “The position of state senator is more than an honor, more than an office. It’s a charge to keep, and I will give it my all.“I pledge to be the people’s state senator,” he added. “I look forward to working with everyone to move this region forward.” - More Local News Headlines
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