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Anderson County Commission meets Monday (today)

Posted at 11:41 am September 19, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Information from WYSH Radio

The Anderson County Commission will meet Monday, September 19, at 6:30 p.m. in Room 312 of the Courthouse in Clinton.

Among the items on the agenda will be the election of a chair, vice chair, and parliamentarian.

Commissioners could head into executive session during the meeting as Anderson County Law Director Jay Yeager’s report to the Commission indicated that a settlement offer has been made in the wrongful termination lawsuit filed by former Public Works Department employee Lisa Crumpley, who sued the county alleging that she had been fired in retaliation for cooperating with the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation on an investigation into her former boss David Crowley. Crowley was indicted last October on charges of illegally inspecting buildings without the proper certification, and he fired Crumpley the day the indictment was unsealed. He was ultimately acquitted in the spring by a jury. No details of that potential settlement have been made public, but it will require Commission approval. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Front Page News, Government Tagged With: ACTV, Anderson County Animal Control Facility, Anderson County Commission, ATV riders, David Crowley, Edgemoor Road, Jay Yeager, Lisa Crumpley, Operations Committee, owner-surrendered animals, Public Works Department, TDOT, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, Tennessee Department of Transportation, WYSH Radio

No discussion of Crowley legal bill; trash talk dominates Operations meeting

Posted at 11:04 am June 14, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Information from WYSH Radio

The Anderson County Commission’s Operations Committee did not end up discussing Monday night whether to pay the legal bills of Public Works Director David Crowley in connection to his acquittal in April on charges that he illegally inspected buildings without the proper certification. In fighting the charges, Crowley’s legal bill came to $59,258.62.

Crowley had requested that the Commission do what it has done before in cases when a public official faced, but was acquitted of, charges related to their governmental posting. But during the May meeting of the County Commission, some commissioners questioned whether Crowley had followed proper procedure in submitting his request for reimbursement. The question was referred to the Operations Committee and was the first item on the agenda for Monday’s meeting.

But Crowley was not in attendance when the meeting began, and commissioners voted to put it on the end of the agenda due to his absence. Anderson County Mayor Terry Frank pointed out that Crowley’s presence was not necessary since the matter had been referred back to committee by the full Commission. When the topic came up again, Crowley was still not present. Commissioner Jerry White made a motion to pay Crowley’s legal bill, but discussion ended before it began due to a lack of a second. In the end, no action was taken, and the question of Crowley’s legal fees continues. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Government Tagged With: Anderson County Commission, David Crowley, David Jones Industrial Park, Glen Alpine Convenience Center, Jerry White, legal bills, Operations Committee, Tracy Wandell, Wolf Valley Convenience Center

Crowley’s legal bills to be considered

Posted at 10:39 am May 24, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

David Crowley

David Crowley

From WYSH Radio

The Anderson County Commission’s Operations Committee will consider Public Works Director David Crowley’s request that his legal bill be paid after he was acquitted of criminal charges last month. Crowley had been charged with illegally inspecting five buildings without the proper certification, but he was acquitted on those charges in April.

In fighting the charges, Crowley’s legal bill came to $59,258.62. In the past, the County Commission has approved the payment of legal fees for county employees charged with crimes connected to their positions when they are cleared out of the county law director’s budget. The request was considered earlier this month and approved by the county’s budget committee. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Front Page News, Government, Meetings and Events Tagged With: Anderson County Commission, David Crowley, Jay Yeager, legal bill, legal fees, Operations Committee

AC public works director not guilty on all five counts

Posted at 3:06 pm April 28, 2016
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

David Crowley

David Crowley

 

Note: This story was last updated at 5:50 p.m.

CLINTON—Anderson County Public Works Director David Crowley has been found not guilty on charges that he conducted building inspections without proper certifications.

A seven-man, five-woman jury found Crowley not guilty on all five counts after deliberating for about one hour and 45 minutes Thursday.

Crowley had been accused of violating the state’s building official certification law.

With the acquittals on Thursday, he can seek to have the charges expunged from his record, Anderson County Criminal and Circuit Court Judge Don Elledge said.

A few key questions raised in the trial had been whether five building inspections conducted by Crowley between October and December 2013, when he was not certified by the state, were within a 12-month grace period and whether they posed a danger to life, safety, health, and welfare. The question of when the grace period started depended upon whether Crowley’s interim hiring in September 2012 should be considered the starting point, or whether it should be his permanent appointment in November 2012 or his first inspection in February 2013.

The trial started Wednesday morning in Anderson County Criminal and Circuit Court, and it ended Thursday afternoon. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Anderson County, Front Page News, Government, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Criminal and Circuit Court, building inspecitons, building inspections, David Crowley, Don Elledge, not guilty

WYSH: Update on county mayor’s records request in Clinton

Posted at 8:03 pm November 12, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff 3 Comments

Information from WYSH Radio

Updating a story that WYSH Radio brought you last week, officials with the city of Clinton say they are awaiting a response from the Anderson County Mayor’s Office to their response to her request last week for e-mail and other electronic communications involving City Codes Officer Curtis Perez.

Anderson County Mayor Terry Frank requested all e-mails involving Perez and anyone in the County Public Works Office as it pertains to David Crowley, the director of Public Works for Anderson County. Crowley is under indictment for allegedly inspecting five homes without the proper certification, and that case has resulted in turmoil in the Anderson County Courthouse.

After the request was made last week in Clinton, officials decided to wait for guidance from the University of Tennessee’s Municipal Technical Advisory Service, or MTAS, as to how to respond, and they placed Perez’s computer into the evidence room at the Clinton Police Department until they received that guidance. The city declined the request for records, saying that it was too vague, but indicated they would provide the desired information when they received a more specific request. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Clinton, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Courthouse, Clinton, Clinton Police Department, codes officer, Curtis Perez, David Crowley, e-mail, electronic communications, forensic evidence, hard drive, Hugh Ward, Jerry White, MTAS, Municipal Technical Advisory Service, Public Works, records, records request, Steve Emert, Terry Frank, Tim Isbel, Tracy Wandell, WYSH Radio, Zach Bates

WYSH: County officials request records from Clinton as Courthouse case crosses street

Posted at 1:54 pm November 7, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff 2 Comments

Clinton City Hall

Clinton City Hall (Photo courtesy City of Clinton)

 

Information from WYSH Radio

The controversy and conflict regarding the copying of hard drives from computers in the Anderson County Human Resources Department has spilled across the street from the County Courthouse to Clinton City Hall.

As we have reported, County Human Resources Director Cathy Best announced her resignation Monday after almost 10 years on the job and her looming departure, along with that of her second-in-command Kerri Ashley, prompted County Mayor Terry Frank to try to have their hard drives copied. Her request was made after she was informed last month that former building inspector Lisa Crumpley was planning on filing a wrongful termination lawsuit against the county, alleging that she was fired for cooperating in the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation probe that led to the indictment of her boss, David Crowley, on charges of inspecting buildings without the necessary certifications.

Frank wanted to copy all forensic evidence on the computers used by Best and Ashley, as they may contain information regarding Crumpley’s termination and what became of her personnel file, which went missing days after she was fired. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Clinton, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Human Resources Department, Cathy Best, City Codes Officer, Clinton City Hall, computers, Curtis Perez, David Crowley, forensic evidence, hard drives, Human Resources Advisory Committee, Kerri Ashley, Lisa Crumpley, MTAS, Municipal Technical Advisory Service, Paul White, Rodney Archer, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, Terry Frank, University of Tennessee, wrongful termination, WYSH, WYSH Radio

Sheriff intervenes in standoff between mayor, HR director over computer hard drives

Posted at 9:29 pm November 6, 2014
By John Huotari 2 Comments

Cathy Best of Anderson County Human Resources Department

Human Resources Director Cathy Best is pictured above in the Anderson County Human Resources Department on Wednesday afternoon. With Best’s agreement, the passwords to the department’s computers had been changed, and a few Anderson County Sheriff’s Department deputies were stationed near the entrance to the HR office as Best and Anderson County Mayor Terry Frank sought to resolve a dispute over how to copy two computer hard drives in the office.

 

CLINTON—After the sheriff intervened, the Anderson County mayor and human resources director remained at a standoff Wednesday afternoon over how to copy the hard drives of two computers in the county’s Human Resources Department.

The hard drives could contain personnel records related to building inspector Lisa Crumpley, who was terminated on October 9 and has threatened to sue the county. Her personnel file has been reported missing.

Anderson County Mayor Terry Frank said she wants to preserve records related to Crumpley’s wrongful termination claim, as instructed by Knoxville law firm Kramer Rayson LLP, which represents Crumpley.

On Tuesday, the day after Human Resources Director Cathy Best announced her resignation, Frank proposed sending the hard drives used by Best and Human Resources Generalist Kerri Ashley, who has also resigned, to a Knoxville company to have copies made.

Terry Frank

Terry Frank

But Best objected, Frank said, and the mayor had a technician from Computer Systems Plus come to the Anderson County Courthouse in Clinton on Wednesday morning to make copies on-site. The county consultant had started disassembling the computers when Sheriff Paul White showed up, and the technician quit working because he believed he could be arrested if he continued, the mayor said.

Best said she does not object to copying the hard drives, but she wants to ensure that the proper procedure is followed. She said her department’s hard drives could contain health information that is not public, conversations with attorneys during the past 10 years, and information that might relate to an investigation by the Anderson County Sheriff’s Department of Crumpley’s missing personnel file.

“I have a right and a duty to maintain the security of these files,” Best said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Anderson County, Government, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Courthouse, Anderson County Human Resources Department, Anderson County Sheriff's Department, Cathy Best, Computer Systems Plus, computers, Dave Clark, David Crowley, forensic copies, hard drives, Human Resources Advisory Committee, Human Resources Department, indictment, Kerri Ashley, Kramer Rayson, Kramer Rayson LLP, Lisa Crumpley, Paul White, personnel file, Public Works Department, Robert L. Bowman, Rodney Archer, standoff, TBI, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, Tennessee Comptroller's Office, Terry Frank, wrongful termination

Frank questions indictment of appointee

Posted at 2:54 am October 15, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff 1 Comment

David Lynn Crowley

David Lynn Crowley

Information from WYSH Radio

Anderson County Mayor Terry Frank has questions for District Attorney General Dave Clark concerning the indictment of Public Works Director and Building Commissioner David Crowley.

A letter hand-delivered from the mayor’s office to the DA’s office states that the five misdemeanor charges handed down against Crowley last week by a grand jury do not meet the legal standards for those charges.

Crowley, who was appointed by Mayor Frank in September of 2012, was charged last week with five counts of inspecting houses without the proper certification following a TBI investigation. He turned himself in at the Anderson County jail Thursday morning, posted a $1,000 bond, and returned to work that same day. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Anderson County, Government, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County jail, building commissioner, certifications, DA, Dave Clark, David Crowley, David Stuart, district attorney, indictment, inspecting houses without the proper certification, investigation, Jay Yeager, Lisa Crumpley, Public Works, Robert McKamey, TBI, Terry Frank

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Classifieds

Availability of the draft environmental assessment for off-site depleted uranium manufacturing (DOE/EA-2252)

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) announces the … [Read More...]

Public Notice: NNSA announces no significant impact of Y-12 Development Organization operations at Horizon Center

AVAILABILITY OF THE FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT FOR THE OFFSITE HOUSING OF THE Y-12 DEVELOPMENT … [Read More...]

ADFAC seeks contractors for five homes

Aid to Distressed Families of Appalachian Counties (ADFAC) is a non-profit community based agency, … [Read More...]

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