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"This incident is really out there," said Jim Knoll, public information officer for the Clarksville police department. "We very rarely get something like this."
Police were called to the 2500 block of Wilma Rudolph Boulevard just before 8 p.m. Friday after a 16-year-old boy said he'd been left on the side of the road by his mother.
The teen told police he and his mother drove there from Alabama so the mother could visit her boyfriend.
He then told police his mother had been drinking, and crashed into another car but refused to stop.
"He was apparently freaked out," Knoll said. "He wanted to get out of that vehicle. He felt endangered and when you get a kid that's that concerned with their safety, it's got to shake them up."
The mother allegedly then drove off and later told police she was back in Alabama and would return to get her son but did not say when.
Warrants for Cheryl Simpson, 42, of New Market, Alabama were issued for child abuse and reckless endangerment.
Police say the boy's father planned to travel from Ohio to take custody of the boy.
"In law enforcement you never know what the evening is going to bring," Knoll said.
While that may have been the most unusual case Clarksville police worked Friday night, it was far from being the only one involving children.
"Last night they were running from call to call to call," Knoll said.
Just after 10:00 p.m. officers responded to a call on Doane Drive where a 4 year-old-girl was found crying on her porch and told police she could not find her parents.
"I just cannot believe a parent would be that irresponsible, that immature to leave a child like that," said Juanita Dyce, who lives in the neighborhood. "It scares me to death."
Police said the girl led an officer into the home where the situation was even more dangerous.
"There were loaded firearms inside the house," Knoll said. "And as you're aware over the last couple of months we've had incidents where children have shot themselves."
The mother, 31-year-old Shera Stoner was cited for reckless endangerment, police said.
"Knowing now that there was guns in the house, I hate to say it but I do hope they get punishment," Dyce said. "They deserve punishment. That's not being a proper parent by any means."
Just after 10:00 p.m. and less than two miles away, a man later identified as Edward Gill, 54, allegedly approached two teenage boys ages 15 and 16 and asked them to engage in sexual activities. He faces two counts of solicitation of a minor and a $50,000 dollar bond.
Police also responded to the Cumberland Manor Apartments around 7:45 p.m. where investigators say a 7-year-old and an infant were left alone for almost two hours. The mother, Jennifer Waller, 28, faces two counts of child abuse/neglect, police said.
Sunday, September 16 2012, 11:04 AM CDT
Tennessee News
Updated conservatorship statute effective July 1
May 21, 2013 12:49 GMT
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- Gov. Bill Haslam has signed into law revisions to the state conservatorship statute.
The law allows the court to appoint a conservator to manage the assets of a person a judge finds unable to handle his or her own affairs.
State Rep. Andrew Farmer, a Sevierville Republican, told The Tennessean (http://tnne.ws/1183hjy ) the intent of the bill he sponsored in the House is to make sure people aren't being taken advantage of.
The bill sprang from a series of hearings statewide by the Tennessee Bar Association. They revealed there were no uniform procedures for placing a person's assets under a conservator on an emergency basis.
The changes take effect July 1.
Information from: The Tennessean, http://www.tennessean.com
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