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Local News

Elyria man arrested on gun charges

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

ELYRIA — Elyria police on Monday arrested a man they believe to be involved in a recent shooting in the city.

Howse

Howse

Christopher Howse, 18, of Elyria, was arrested a little before 8 p.m. after a traffic stop on Holly Lane and is currently in the Lorain County Jail on bonds totaling more than $90,000.

Howse was charged with carrying a concealed weapon, improper handling of a firearm in a motor vehicle and possession of drug paraphernalia. He was also cited for driving under suspension, not wearing a seat belt and possession of marijuana.

Officers were on Middle Avenue at 7:50 p.m. Monday when they saw Howse driving in a turquoise Chevrolet Cobalt.

“Officers are familiar with Howse from several prior incidents and knew him to have a suspended drving status,” a police report said. “In recent days, officers had received tips that Howse was believed to be carrying a handgun and was possibly involved in a recent shooting in the city.”

Howse and a passenger in his car were both pulled out of the car at gunpoint. The passenger, who was not armed and came back clear, was released at the scene.

Officers checked the vehicle and confiscated a digital scale with green, leafy flakes on it along with a small unpackaged amount of marijuana, the report said. They also found a magazine and handgun underneath the vehicle’s dash.

While officers processed the vehicle, Howse began to yell, “Do you think it’s (expletive) wrong, I’m strapped because they shot up my (expletive) mom’s house,” the report said.

According to the report, Howse continued to curse at officers while he was being transported to the Police Department.

Elyria police responded to Howse’s mother’s Riverside Drive home at 2:30 a.m. Monday after she reported someone had shot into the home. They found four bullet holes into the home, including one that had entered the bedroom where she was sleeping.

In the late-night hours of March 30th police responded to a report of vehicles chasing each other and exchanging gunfire. The driver of the vehicle being chased identified the person who had shot at him as Howse. Officers found two bullet holes in the rear of the man’s vehicle.

Howse’s next court date is April 14.

Slain Elyria officer’s name gets added to monument

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010
Kerstetter

Kerstetter

ELYRIA — Fallen Elyria police Officer James Kerstetter’s name was carved Tuesday into the black granite of a memorial for Lorain County police officers who have lost their lives in the line of duty.

Several Elyria police officers watched as Kerstetter’s name was added to the memorial outside the county jail.

An Elyria police dispatcher, who asked that her name not be used, said she felt compelled to watch Kerstetter join the other 13 officers whose names are on the monument. She said she still grieves for Kerstetter, whom she worked with for years.

“It’s still a tough pill to swallow, but I wanted to be here for it,” she said.

Kerstetter was fatally shot March 15 while responding to a call on 18th Street about a man who had exposed himself to a neighbor’s child. Two other Elyria police officers, Jay Loesch and Donald Moss, shot and killed Ronald Palmer, the man accused of shooting Kerstetter moments earlier.

Kerstetter died a short time later at EMH Regional Medical Center. The case remains under investigation, sheriff’s Capt. John Reiber said Tuesday.

Tim Stallman, who is associated with Lewis Monument Co., said he took great care to make sure that Kerstetter’s name looked perfect on the monument.

He said the process involves using a computer program to cut a rubber outline of the words to be inscribed. The outline is then stuck to the monument and sandblasted to cut the letters into the granite.

After that, Stallman said, white spray paint is used to make the officers’ names stand out. Stallman said the work to add Kerstetter’s name was a donation.

Sheriff’s Sgt. Randy Koubeck, who is active with the Greater Cleveland Peace Officers Memorial, also was on hand Tuesday to see Kerstetter’s name added to the memorial.

“Hopefully, it’s going to be the last one we put up there,” he said.

Kerstetter’s name will be added to the larger memorial in Cleveland during a May 21 memorial service. Kerstetter, whose badge number was 177, will be the 177th officer whose name is added to the Cleveland memorial, Koubeck said.

Next year, he said, Kerstetter’s name also will be added to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial in Washington, D.C. Kerstetter was killed after the cut-off date to have his name added to the national memorial this year.

Kerstetter’s name is the second name to be added to the Lorain County memorial in recent months. Al Leiby, a retired Elyria police officer who has a Web site paying tribute to fallen Lorain County officers, said Wellington city Marshal George Brenner’s name was added a few months ago.

Brenner was shot July 17, 1883, by John Young after a confrontation following a railroad office burglary, the Web site said.

The wounded Brenner managed to make it to his nearby apartment where he died in his wife’s arms, Leiby said.

Brenner’s name also will be added to the memorial in Cleveland in May, Leiby said. While people have long known of Brenner, Leiby said he only recently completed the research and obtained the necessary documents to get Brenner’s name on the memorials.

Contact Brad Dicken at 329-7147 or bdicken@chroniclet.com.

Moyer arrangements set; send in a condolence online

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010
Moyer

Moyer

COLUMBUS — Gov. Ted Strickland says the Ohio Supreme Court should rename its building in honor of Chief Justice Thomas Moyer, who died Friday.

Strickland says it would be an appropriate honor because Moyer loved the Ohio Judicial Center overlooking the Scioto River in Columbus and worked hard to have it restored. Any renaming would be up to court justices.

The court said today that Moyer will lie in state for public mourning from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday in the building. Condolences also may be e-mailed to condolences@sc.ohio.gov or mailed to the court.

A public funeral service will be 11 a.m. Saturday at First Community Church, Marble Cliff. Burial is private.

The court also says it plans to hold a public tribute to Moyer on Law Day, May 1.

Officer Kerstetter’s name added to law enforcement memorial

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

ELYRIA — Slain Elyria police officer James Kerstetter’s name was added this morning to a monument at the Lorain County Sheriff’s Office honoring Lorain County law enforcement officers killed in the line of duty. (more…)