Well that's the end of that!! Ginyah and wrap up the final season of Game of Thrones! Check it out!
Well that's the end of that!! Ginyah and wrap up the final season of Game of Thrones! Check it out!
(Gretna, Va.) – Charges have been filed in the death of a Gretna teen in Harrisonburg last year.
Hailey Ryan Moore was a student at James Madison University on November 9, 2016, when the 18-year-old died of a drug overdose.
20 year-old Joey Fondaco, Moore’s boyfriend at the time, is now charged with second-degree murder.
Moore was a freshman at JMU when she was found unresponsive at Fondaco’s off-campus apartment. She was pronounced dead at a local hospital a short time later.
The state medical determined her death was the result of a drug overdose.
Fondaco is scheduled for a bond hearing in Rockingham County Circuit Court on September 25.
(Danville, Va.) — A Danville teenager was shot in the chest Friday night.
Danville Police were called to SOVAH Health just before 10 p.m. after receiving a report of a gunshot victim. The 15-year-old was transferred to the hospital by private vehicle. He was later taken by helicopter to Carilion Roanoke Memorial, where he is being treated for a gunshot wound to the chest.
It was determined that the shooting occurred in the 500 block of South Woodberry Avenue.
Danville Police are continuing their investigation.
(Danville, Va.) — Patton Street between Craghead and Lynn streets is now closed to through traffic to allow for the start of a storm water drainage project that will affect traffic for six months or more.
The project not only will affect traffic, but Danville bus routes as well.
Danville Transit has established a detour of certain routes due to the construction.
The project will relocate storm water drainage that will be installed along Patton Street in front of the Municipal Building and the James F. Ingram Courthouse.
The project will be conducted in five phases. In the first phase, no through traffic will be allowed between Craghead and Lynn streets. Lynn and Market streets will remain open during this phase, which is expected to take one month to complete, weather permitting. (Photo: Richard T. Davis)