Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
The following food scores for the week of March 13 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
Marietta Police said Wednesday they’ve arrested a motorist they say hit two construction workers on Roswell Road at the Interstate 75 bridge on Sunday morning.
Malik Branch, 31, of Dallas, Ga., is charged with two felony counts each of hit and run and injury by vehicle, as well as misdemeanor charges of DUI, failure to maintain lane, driving on a suspended license, driving on a suspended car registration, driving without insurance, not wearing a seatbelt and driving an unsafe vehicle.
According to Cobb Sheriff’s Office booking reports, Branch is being held without bond at the Cobb County Adult Detention Center.
Police said “old school detective work” led to the arrest.
According to an arrest warrant, Branch was seen at the nearby Marietta Sage Lounge (962 Roswell Street) earlier Sunday evening, and “was stumbling and almost falling in the parking lot with a beer bottle in his hand.”
Branch then got into his car, a gray 2019 Volkswagen Jetta, and headed eastbound on Roswell Road, the warrant states, causing the accident.
The workers were preparing for a lane closure at 1:40 a.m. Sunday when they were injured, according to the warrant, which said the Jetta left its lane of traffic and struck construction cones and a traffic message board before hitting the two men.
The warrant said that construction worker Jimmy Varraza suffered a broken right arm, a broken right leg and a broken hip and remains unconscious and in critical condition.
The other worker, Oscar Aguilar, suffered a broken right arm and swelling to his head, according to the warrant. Police said Wednesday he has been released from a hospital.
The warrant also said that the Jetta had two bald front tires, two rear tires with low inflation levels, one of them not the proper size for the vehicle.
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
The prospects for the rebuilding of the Gritters Library have looked bleak in recent months, as the project faced a $2.5 million shortfall due to rising construction costs.
Cobb officials have been working to bring down the cost of the project, which had been priced at $10.5 million and included the renovation of the adjacent Northeast Cobb Commnity Center.
On Tuesday, the Cobb Board of Commissioners unanimously signed off on a $9.8 million maximum price tag, including $1 million in funding from the 2021 American Rescue Plan Act.
The contract was awarded to Batson-Cook Company after county officials cobbled together a variety of funding sources to close the gap.
Last month, commissioners closed out spending the last $98 million of the county’s $147 million ARPA allotment, including $21.5 million in economic development projects.
In that funding base is $3.7 million earmarked for CobbWorks, the county’s workforce development agency, which had been planning to build a Workforce Cobb operation at the new Gritters branch.
In addition, the $1.2 million cost for work on the community center will be coming out of the 2022 SPLOST Shaw Park Repurpose project. That building will be demolished and the new community center will be included in the Gritters Library building.
More than $719,000 in savings comes from 2011 SPLOST library projects and fiscal year 2023 library system capital projects.
And District 3 Commissioner JoAnn Birrell, who couldn’t convince her colleagues last September to shore up the gap with general fund revenues, directed the remaining $112,976 of ARPA funding of her $1 million for district projects to the library/community center project.
“This has been a long time coming,” Birrell said in making a motion to approve the contract. “This is one of my 2016 SPLOST projects that is hopefully coming to fruition.”
She also thanked library advocates, including library trustees and the non-profit Cobb Library Foundation, for their persistence in urging a resolution to the funding issue.
“Team Cobb County,” chairwoman Lisa Cupid said. “There are a number of players in this room working to make this happen.”
“It was truly a team effort,” said a relieved Travis Stalcup, director of the Cobb property management office. “Everybody kicked in. Proud of everybody.”
The Gritters project was included in the 2016 Cobb SPLOST, with $6.8 million originally budgeted for the library and $1.2 million for the community center.
There was a groundbreaking event in late 2021 after Cobb received a $1.9 million capital outlay grant from the Georgia Public Library Services.
In January, the board’s three Democrats voted to seek another $1 million in state funding. It was at that meeting Birrell and Keli Gambrill, the board’s Republicans, were dismissed from the dais for not voting due to their objections over Cobb’s home rule redistricting challenge.
But on Tuesday, after the 5-0 vote was recorded, the other four commissioners applauded Birrell for her advocacy.
Gritters opened near Shaw Park in 1973. Originally plans called to renovate the library, but county officials later said a complete rebuild was necessary.
The new facility will include 15,000 square feet and in addition to providing traditional library services it will include a hub for workforce development, job skills and lifelong learning.
In addition to CobbWorks, Gritters has partnerships with the Northeast Cobb Business Association, SCORE (Service Corps of Retired Executives) and nearby higher educational institutions.
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
The Cobb Board of Ethics has dismissed a complaint filed by an East Cobb resident against Commissioner Jerica Richardson.
In a special meeting Monday, the board voted 6-0, with one member absent, to dismiss the complaint, saying it did not find “specific, substantiated evidence to support a reasonable belief” of an ethics violation.
It’s the first step under the Cobb County code to consider ethics complaints and is an “investigatory review.” If the board had voted the other way, it could have set a hearing date to formally consider whether an ethics violation occurred.
(You can watch a replay of the fill meeting below.)
Debbie Fisher, an East Cobb political activist, filed the complaint in late January, saying that Richardson was engaged in a conflict of interest due to a political action committee she formed to fight her redistricting by the Georgia legislature.
Richardson, who is part of the Cobb Board of Commissioners’ Democratic majority, voted in October in favor of the county invoking home rule powers to conduct reapportionment.
They are challenging Georgia legislative maps passed last year that would draw her out of her East Cobb home in District 2 in the middle of her term.
Richardson also created a 501(c)(4) non-profit, For Which It Stance, for the purpose of “protecting local control, empowering local voices,” and seeks financial donations, sells merchandise and offers memberships ranging from $25 to $100 a month.
Fisher, a local Republican activist who said she was representing herself, alleges that’s a conflict and at Monday’s hearing, recounted her complaints. (In addition to seeking a reprimand and/or censure of Richardson, Fisher wants to void Richardson’s votes on the maps, which would result in a 2-2 deadlock.)
“This organization creates a conflict of interest, a direct and indirect financial benefit,” Fisher told the Ethics Board members, referring to For Which It Stance.
“Its existence creates the appearance of impropriety and it is evident that Commissioner Richardson is using her position as an elected official for private gain by selling favors and merchandise and giving preferential treatment by selling access and favor to the organization’s members.”
But Justin O’Dell, a Marietta attorney representing Richardson at the hearing, noted her status as the first woman and African-American to represent District 2, and her election in 2020 was “an historic one” in that it ensured a black female Democratic majority.
“Ever since that time, there has been and continues to be an effort to undermine the results of that election, through legislative and other means,” O’Dell said.
He included various cityhood movements in Cobb (three of which failed, including East Cobb), as examples of efforts undertaken so that “individuals who don’t feel like they ought to be represented by Commissioner Richardson can have their wish despite the results of the election.”
O’Dell said elected officials have a “fundamental” right to engage in political advocacy and speech in the course of doing their jobs.
He said “what’s being attempted here is an end run” around the legal proceedings involving Cobb’s home rule challenge to the legislative maps, “and should be dismissed as such.
“They are asking you essentially to declare her actions void as a means to bypass what they have been unable to do through the courts,” O’Dell said, “by having you void these actions and undo the map.”
Most of the ethics board members said they were unpersuaded by the complaint, and that they were looking for evidence of the claims of financial benefit for Richardson going into the hearing.
“We don’t have any evidence that Ms. Richardson has profit,” ethics board member Cynthia Ann Smith said. “But we don’t have any evidence that she didn’t either.”
Board chairman Carlos Rodriguez spelled out the differences in the ethics code between compatible and incompatible employment, as they related to an elected officials’ discharging of their official duties.
The code, he said, precludes commissioners from using their office to benefit in for-profit entities, not non-profits.
“In my mind, it doesn’t really even matter whether she received some sort of compensation as a member of For Which It Stance or not,” he said, “as long as it’s not incompatible with her public duty and responsibility.”
Board member Janet Savage said “we have not seen any hardcore evidence that there was private gain” for Richardson.
The ethics board is a seven-member body appointed by the Cobb Board of Commissioners, the Cobb Tax Commissioner, the Cobb Sheriff, the Cobb Solicitor General, the chief judges of the Cobb probate and magistrate courts and the clerk of the Cobb State Court.
Fisher has 30 days to appeal the decision in Cobb Superior Court.
A suspect in two dozen business burglaries—including the now-closed Tokyo Valentino adult store on Johnson Ferry Road—has been indicted by a Cobb grand jury.
Aron Major, 49, of Atlanta, was indicted on 24 counts of second-degree burglary and one count of racketeering, according to the indictment, which was handed down Thursday.
He was arrested on June 1, 2021, following the execution of a search warrant, and has been detained at the Cobb County Adult Detention Center ever since, according to Cobb Sheriff’s Office records.
His son, Aron Major, Jr., was indicted on a single count of tampering with evidence the day after his father’s arrest.
Cobb Police said in their arrest warrants that for several months, Major crawled his way into numerous Cobb County businesses while they were closed by breaking or removing windows and taking cash and merchandise.
They included the Tokyo Valentino store in October of 2020. An arrest warrant alleges Major took more than $21,000 in money and merchandise, including lingerie, sex enhancement pills, CBD products, sex toys and gift cards.
Police allege that Major started his burglary spree on Sept. 22, 2020, when he hit three East Cobb businesses—The Wing Cafe and Tap House and Marietta Martial Arts at East Lake Shopping Center and the Fuji Hana restaurant on Johnson Ferry Road.
On March 4, 2021, the indictment alleges Major burglarized the Ming’s Asian Kitchen and Red Curry Thai restaurants on Lower Roswell Road and a Havoline Express oil change shop and a Peace, Love and Pizza restaurant at East Piedmont Road and Roswell Road.
He is alleged to have burglarized Mink’s Package Store on Delk Road on March 6, 2021, the Mellow Mushroom on Powers Ferry Road on March 18, 2021 and Laredo’s Mexican Restaurant on Sandy Plains Road on May 31, 2021.
That last incident was the day before he was arrested. Major’s arrest warrant on June 1, 2020 states that the Tokyo Valentino store manager reported to police that 61 lingerie sets were missing, as were 400 male sex enhancement pills, five pairs of high heels, two fetish straps, two doorway sex swings, 25 sex toys, 500 $25 gift cards, 17 bottles of CBD oil and tincture, six tins of Kratom powder and nearly $1,000 in cash.
The warrant further states that when police got a search warrant for Major’s residence they found 447 packets of male sex enhancement pills and a door sex swing, items that the Tokyo Valentino manager verified were from the East Cobb store.
Police also discovered business checks from Fuji Hana in Major’s possession during the search, according to the arrest warrant.
The indictment includes burglary counts for other businesses, many of them restaurants, across Cobb County, including Kennesaw and Acworth, Cobb Parkway, Akers Mill Road, Six Flags Parkway and the Church Street Extension.
Major was sentenced four times for previous burglaries and other crimes elsewhere in metro Atlanta dating back to 1992, according to the Georgia Department of Corrections.
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
Bundle up tonight and the next few nights as temperatures dip at or below freezing.
The National Weather Service in Peachtree City has issued a freeze warning for Cobb and metro Atlanta from 11 p.m. Monday to 11 a.m. Tuesday, and a freeze watch from 11 p.m. Tuesday to 11 a.m. Wednesday.
Forecast lows in the Cobb area could drop to the high 20s Monday and Tuesday, and although it’ll be sunny during the day, highs will be only in the low to mid-50s.
A cold front is sweeping across the Deep South at the start of the week.
Temperatures are expected to be around freezing Wednesday night after highs in the high 60s.
MUST Ministries is opening its winter weather shelter (1297 Bells Ferry Road) Monday-Wednesday for men, women and children, with the doors closing by 8 p.m.
They will be fed dinner and a hot breakfast.
Warmer weather is in store for later in the week, although rain is forecast on Thursday, with highs near 70.
The weekend also will be colder, with lows near freezing and highs in the 50s Saturday and Sunday.
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
Over the weekend we saw the finishing touches being put on a new standalone Starbucks at the East Lake Shopping Center (2135 Roswell Road).
A reader sent us word on Sunday that it’s now open. The hours are 5 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday through Thursday and 5 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday-Saturday.
This is the ninth Starbucks in the East Cobb area, and it’s right across the street from a smaller Starbucks inside the Kroger at the Pavilions at East Lake, and a mile or so from another Starbucks at Roswell and East Piedmont.
The new East Lake location was built on the site of a former bank, and is near the Los Bravos Mexican restaurant.
There’s a drive-through and indoor seating, as well as mobile app ordering and Wi-Fi.
Another standalone Starbucks is in the works at Paper Mill Village, with a delayed rezoning case requesting demolition of the existing small coffee shop for a 5,000-square-foot, two-story building.
That first hearing is tentatively scheduled for April 3 before the Cobb Planning Commission.
Back in service
What was supposed to be a short closure in February to expand drive-through service turned into be a longer hiatus for the Chick-Fil-A Lassiter (3046 Shallowford Road).
Store management announced on Friday that it’s reopened at its usual hours, after “a few unforeseen delays.”
The store had scheduled a Daddy Daughter Date Night but due to the closure that’s been rescheduled for March 25.
New Businesses
The following businesses in East Cobb were granted licenses by the Cobb Community Development Agency the last few weeks:
ASE Ventures, 2501 East Piedmont Road, Suite 204 (antique sales)
Blossom Locs, 2790 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 100-A (hair braiding)
Family Dental Care of Marietta, 2525 Shallowford Road, Suite 100 (dentist)
Ferrara Medical Aesthetics, 1000 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite E-25 (physician)
Settle for Glam, 2790 Sandy Plains Road, Suite 100-A (beauty shop)
Top Massage, 2200 Roswell Road, Suite 150 (health club/spa)
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
Marietta Police said that two construction workers sustained life-threatening injuries when they were struck by a vehicle at the Interstate 75 overpass at Roswell Road early Sunday.
In a release, Marietta Police said they’re still looking for the driver of a gray 2019 Volkswagen Jetta that struck Jimmy Varraza, 38, and Oscar Aguilar, 28, both of metro Atlanta, as they were preparing for a lane closure at 1:40 a.m. Sunday.
Police said that the Volkswagen was traveling eastbound on Roswell Road, and that the two workers had gotten out of their vehicle to set up a traffic directional sign.
Police said the driver of the Volkswagen stopped at the scene, then fled on foot before first responders arrived.
The investigation is continuing and anyone with information is asked to contact Marietta Police Officer K. Bedford at (770) 794-5364.
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
Ranked No. 1 in Georgia for most of the season, the Wheeler Wildcats didn’t disappoint Saturday with a state championship on the line.
The Wildcats blew open a close game against Cherokee in the third quarter and roared to their third Georgia High School Association title in four years by a 78-58 score.
Wheeler was heavily favored to win the Class 7A crown, boasting Naismith national high school player of the year Isaiah Collier.
In his high school finale, Collier, a 6-foot-3 point guard who will play at the University of Southern California next season, scored 22 points, and was given the honor of running out the last seconds of the game dribbling the ball.
When the horn sounded at the Macon Coliseum, he fell to the floor, overcome with emotion. After his teammates piled on in jubilation, Collier was still in tears, embraced by coaches.
As he hugged head coach Larry Thompson, they were locked together for a good while.
Thompson said later in an interview on Georgia Public Broadcasting that memories of Khalil Hardison–a former Wheeler player who was the coach’s son and Collier’s cousin—were on their minds.
Hardison drowned last August in the Chattahoochee River at the age of 21, and Wheeler dedicated the season in his memory. He was best friends with Collier, who said his death motivated him in his final season.
“It’s been the hardest season of my life,” Collier told GPB. “Winning this championship, it feels so good.”
He was asked what he would say to Hardison if he could have had a conversation with him.
“I’d tell him I love him,” Collier said, fighting back tears.
“It’s unreal the amount of emotion and the toll that it’s taken, not just for Isaiah and me but for the whole team,” Thompson said.
“You know how many people are in your corner. The love from so many people has been amazing. I want people to know we greatly appreciate it. . . I know [Hardison] is smiling down on us today.”
Wheeler went 26-6 in winning a ninth state championship in school history. The Wildcats had to defeat Cherokee, their region rivals, four times along the way, and routed the Warriors 94-41 in the region title game.
Wheeler was ranked No. 22 in an ESPN poll of high school basketball teams nationally, the only one in Georgia, and its only losses were to out-of-state teams.
Collier, the latest star to come from Wheeler, is the school’s first national high school player of the year and is third in ESPN‘s individual rankings. His Wheeler teammate, forward Arrinten Page, will be going to USC with him.
On Thursday, Kell High School accomplished a rare feat when both the boys and girls teams won the Class 5A championships, also in Macon.
Senior Crystal Henderson scored 29 points in her last high school game as the Lady Longhorns rolled over Warner Robins 57-36.
Kell reached the finals in her freshman season, but Buford pulled out a late victory.
After that game, the boys team defeated Eagles Landing 61-53.
They were the first basketball state titles for Kell, which was reassigned to Class 5A this season after being in Class 6A for the last year years.
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Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
A bouncy house occupied part of the front quad Saturday at East Cobb Park on a warm, sunny day, the last of Eastern Standard Time.
While daylight will be lasting later starting Sunday on the first day of Daylight Saving Time, the weather won’t be hospitable for park or outdoor activities.
There’s a nearly 100 percent chance of rain for most of the day, starting overnight, and lasting through the evening.
Temperatures will be colder too for Sunday and the first part of the week, and highs are forecast for the 50s through Wednesday, along with sunny skies.
Lows will be at or below freezing through Thursday morning, but warmer and wetter returns next weekend.
Send Us Your Photos!
If you’ve got shots of the season or anything else you’d like to share with the community, pass them along to us at editor@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll post them here.
Sent them as separate files (JPG or PNG formats preferably) and include any descriptive information you’d like.
If you have an event coming up that’s open to the public, we’ll be glad to post that on our calendar listings. E-mail calendar@eastcobbnews.com.
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Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
A year ago, The Avenue East Cobb was set to unveil a new St. Patrick’s Day-themed event, but wet weather called it off.
The retail center is planning a belated debut a day before St. Patrick’s Day. “Shamrock” takes place from 6-8 p.m. in the front parking lot (4475 Roswell Road), as redevelopment construction work continues.
Entertainment comes from The Retreat, an Atlanta band that features an “organic” take on party music; a performance by the Drake School of Irish Dance; a bounce house; live llamas; face painting; a photo booth and balloon art.
There also will be a bar run by Drift Fish House and Oyster Bar.
Admission is free, but keep in mind there could be a cancellation due to weather. The forecast for Thursday doesn’t include any chance of rain for now; The Avenue will be posting weather updates on its website and social media channels.
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The Marietta History Center will feature a traveling exhibit from Kennesaw State University’s Museum of History and Holocaust Education starting later this month.
Entitled “World War II: The War that Changed the World,” the exhibit is the final installment of a series of traveling exhibits from KSU that have been displayed at the Marietta History Center (1 Depot Street, near the Square).
The exhibition, which runs from March 21-April 22, explores the war and its broad global impact. Visitors will encounter individuals who experienced the effects of the war and the Holocaust, from rationing to new opportunities to work and to fight and the struggle for survival in Europe increasingly under Nazi control.
The exhibit was made possible with a 2018 grant from the Breman Foundation, which operates a Jewish heritage museum in Atlanta.
The KSU exhibit is included with regular admission to the Marietta History Center. The cost is $7 for adults, $5 for seniors and students and free for children under 5 and those with a military ID.
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The new Marietta Porch for Schools initiative—which purchases healthy snacks for children in local Title 1 schools—will have a fundraiser next weekend at an East Cobb retail business.
Kendra Scott Jewelry at The Avenue East Cobb will be donation a portion of its weekend proceeds to Marietta Porch for Schools, which initially provided snacks for students at Sedalia Park Elementary School.
You can help by shopping at the store on those dates or
shop online at KendraScott.com using the code GIVEBACK-DTGGP.
That giveback code will be active from March 25-28, and at the store Marietta Porch will have a table with treats, goodies and other freebies, volunteer Sue Heavlin tells us.
As we noted back in January, Marietta Porch picks up food in a number of East Cobb and Marietta-area neighborhoods on designated days and sends those donations to the Brumby Elementary School pantry and the Center for Family Resources.
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The developer of a proposed apartment building at the site of a Kroger store on Powers Ferry Road wants more time to refine plans.
An attorney for WC Acquisitions LLC asked for and received a continuance Wednesday from the Marietta City Council, which voted to delay hearing the case until its April meeting.
The Marietta Planning Commission voted unanimously last week to recommend approval of the application for a 322-unit, five-story building and accompanying 485-space parking deck at 1122 Powers Ferry Road, at the southeast intersection of Delk Road.
Garvis Sams said during a council work session that “questions arose today” and that his client wants to work out the contours and positioning of the structures.
He said his client has the support of the Powers Ferry Corridor Alliance, a civic group, and that there’s “no known opposition” to the rezoning despite its intensity (more than 60 units an acre, one of the highest in Marietta city limits).
Later this year Kroger will be leaving the site it has occupied since 1982 for the nearby MarketPlace Terrell Mill, where a superstore is nearing completion.
Sams said in his application that there’s not a retail future for the current Kroger site, which is nearly five acres.
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
The following food scores for the week of March 6 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
One of East Cobb’s longest-lasting Cajun-style restaurants has closed its doors.
AJ’s Famous Seafood and PoBoys (2100 Roswell Road, Suite 2148, in the Pavilions at East Lake) is listed as permanently closed on its Facebook page.
When we went by, we saw that tables and chairs had been removed and kitchen equipment was being cleared out of the 2,800 square feet of space next to Kroger.
There wasn’t a sign on the doors announcing a closure, but like many restaurants during the COVID-19 pandemic, AJ’s struggled with labor shortages and announced a number of short-notice closures.
East Cobb News has left a message with AJ’s seeking comment.
The restaurant—which specialized in Louisiana-style dishes like muffaletta sandwiches and fried alligator tacos—also was trying to reobtain an alcohol license.
Andy Erbacher opened AJ’s at the Pavilions 18 years ago as a neighborhood-style establishment, featuring seafood from the Gulf coast.
Shortly before COVID, AJ’s expanded with an oyster bar that took up space formerly occupied by a hair salon. The oyster bar closed early in the pandemic.
In 2021, Erlacher was outspoken about the Major League All-Star game being moved from nearby Truist Park due a Georgia election law, appearing on a live Fox News segment.
“We made it through COVID,” he said. “We were looking forward to things starting to get back to somewhat normal” in anticipating good business for the three-day All-Star event.
Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp also visited AJ’s in the wake of that decision, critical of the boycott and its impact on the local economy.
Further down at the Pavilions, a new seafood restaurant will be opening soon—Captain Charlie’s Seafood & More—located next to the J. Christopher’s.
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The Cobb Sheriff’s Office said Wednesday that an inmate has died after overdosing on heroin.
A release sent by the Sheriff’s office said James Martin, 41, of Mableton, died shortly after 9 a.m. Wednesday.
He was arrested on Friday for possession of methamphetamine and told deputies that he was a heroin addict who “had just binged the substance,” the release said, adding that he was sent to the jail’s infirmary.
On Wednesday morning, according to the release, Martin told medical staff he wasn’t feeling well and had a seizure.
Life-saving attempts included the use of Narcan, but Martin died in an ambulance en route to a hospital, the Sheriff’s office said.
“Heroin, meth, fentanyl, and other opioids have tragically taken so many lives in Cobb County, causing irreparable harm to families,” Cobb Sheriff Craig Owens said in the release.
The Sheriff’s Office said the Georgia Bureau of Investigation will be conducting an investigation of Martin’s death.
Martin is the first Cobb inmate to die this year and the seventh since Owens took office in 2021.
Three inmates died in May 2022, the last a woman who had been on suicide watch. Three other inmates died in 2021.
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!
Cobb Commissioner Jerica Richardson and Brazilian community leaders in the East Cobb area will be holding what they’re calling a “Little Brazil” community meeting next week.
The meeting takes place from 7-8 p.m. at the Vine Atlanta Church (1296 Gresham Road).
That’s been the venue for the Marietta Brazilian Festival, which started in 2011 and which is scheduled for early June.
The idea behind the community meeting is to gauge interest in the formation of a Brazilian cultural association, according to information from Richardson’s office.
Brazilian community leaders Dilla Campos of the Portuguese-language Viver magazine and Andreia Guilmet of Brazilian Wax by Andreia (with locations on Powers Ferry Road and Johnson Ferry Road) will be leading the meeting.
“Little Brazil” in Cobb is generally regarded as the area around Delk and Powers Ferry roads, and stretches into the Smyrna area.
Every Sunday we round up the week’s top headlines and preview the upcoming week in the East Cobb News Digest. Click here to sign up, and you’re good to go!