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<p>Joshua Berry</p>

Joshua Berry

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Arnder murder suspects’ trial date set
by Keith Strange
Staff Reporter
Jun 20, 2013 | 0 views | 0 0 comments | 0 0 recommendations | email to a friend | print
<p>Joshua Berry</p>

Joshua Berry

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<p>Emanuel Foster</p>

Emanuel Foster

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<p>Sarah Looney</p>

Sarah Looney

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DOBSON — The three defendants charged in the May 25, 2012, murder of Eddie’s Zip Food owner Donald Claude Arnder are set to have their day in court next month.

Joshua Robert Berry, 28, of Bluefield, W.Va., Emanuel William Foster, 23, also of Bluefield, and Sarah Lynn Looney, also known as Sarah Berry, 24, of Bluefield, are set to appear in Surry County Superior Court on July 23 at 9 a.m., according to officials with the Superior Court Clerk’s Office.

While they are scheduled to appear in court, it is unclear whether the trio will stand trial during the appearance, Superior Court officials said, noting that the timing of the trial is up to the county’s District Attorney’s office. However, that date has been tentatively set aside as a first trial date for the suspects.

District Attorney Ricky Bowman was out of the office Wednesday and was not available for comment, according to staff at the office.

Police believe Arnder was killed during a botched robbery attempt of the convenience store located just off of U.S. 52 in Mount Airy.

In early June last year, Mount Airy police traveled to Roanoke, Va., to take custody of Foster and transport him to Surry County, where he was served with warrants charging him with murder, attempted armed robbery and conspiracy to commit armed robbery.

Foster was taken into custody at the Roanoke City Jail, where he was taken after being treated for several days at a hospital in the Virginia city. He was recovering from a pair of gunshot wounds allegedly sustained during the Mount Airy robbery.

Since that time, he has been held in the Surry County Jail without bond.

Joshua Berry was brought back to Surry County on July 20, 2012, and charged with murder, attempted armed robbery and conspiracy to commit armed robbery.

He was ultimately taken into custody after several days on the run from police from multiple states in Bland, Va., at what police described as a trailer/camper about a half mile up Dry Fork Road.

Berry also is being held in the Surry County Jail without bond.

His wife, Sarah Lynn Looney, turned herself into the Bluefield Police Department the day after the fatal Mount Airy shooting.

She was taken into custody by Mount Airy police in Tazewell, Va., in August and transported to Surry County, where she was charged with murder, conspiracy to commit armed robbery and accessory after the fact to murder.

Like the others suspects in the case, Looney is being held without bond while awaiting her court appearance.

Alleged Crimes In Multiple States

While the Surry County murder charges have taken precedence, law enforcement officials noted that at the time of the Arnder shooting, the three were believed to have been involved in what police called a “multi-state crime spree,” including crimes in Virginia, West Virginia and Florida.

Berry and Looney also had been charged in connection with the robbery of a movie theater in Bland, Va., and all three suspects have been charged with the robbery of a movie theater and a convenience store in Wytheville, Va.

It is unlikely they will face a jury related to those charges due to the seriousness of the Mount Airy crime, officials have said.

At the time of his arrest, Berry had outstanding warrants from the Wytheville, Va., Police Department charging him with larceny, kidnapping, weapon possession, robbery, possession of burglary tools, and pick-pocketing, according to a statement issued by the Virginia State Police shortly after his arrest.

The Washington County, Va., Sheriff’s Office has charged him with “several counts of robbery, firearm possession, kidnapping and weapon offenses,” the Virginia State Police said, and a circuit court violation of probation order has been issued in Brevard County, Fla., against Joshua Berry, on charges related to a previous armed robbery conviction.

Despite the multiple charges in several states, Berry chose not to fight extradition to North Carolina to answer for his alleged crimes, instead telling a Bland County, Va., judge that the state of North Carolina could “come get me,” when informed he was facing murder charges in Surry County.

Reach Keith Strange at kstrange@civitasmedia.com or 719-1929.

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<p>Sarah Looney</p>

Sarah Looney

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<p>Emanuel Foster</p>

Emanuel Foster

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Solar firm looks to integrate into county curriculum
by David Broyles
Staff Reporter
Jun 20, 2013 | 0 views | 0 0 comments | 0 0 recommendations | email to a friend | print
<p>David Broyles | The News</p><p>O2 Energies President Joel Olsen opened a tour of the Mayberry Solar Farm with a group of Surry County Schools staffers, teachers and 19 principals, explaining how the site could be used for school field trips. Olsen led a planning session Wednesday to examine how to integrate more solar technology in the county’s curriculum.</p>

David Broyles | The News

O2 Energies President Joel Olsen opened a tour of the Mayberry Solar Farm with a group of Surry County Schools staffers, teachers and 19 principals, explaining how the site could be used for school field trips. Olsen led a planning session Wednesday to examine how to integrate more solar technology in the county’s curriculum.

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<p>David Broyles | The News</p><p>Surry County teachers, administrators and staffers get to look at solar panels at the Mayberry Solar Farm. O2 Energies President Joel Olsen told the group the posts the cells are mounted on are screwed into the ground so they can be removed to allow the property to be used for agriculture. O2 Energies lets local ranchers use sheep to keep the grass under control at the solar farms.</p>

David Broyles | The News

Surry County teachers, administrators and staffers get to look at solar panels at the Mayberry Solar Farm. O2 Energies President Joel Olsen told the group the posts the cells are mounted on are screwed into the ground so they can be removed to allow the property to be used for agriculture. O2 Energies lets local ranchers use sheep to keep the grass under control at the solar farms.

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O2 Energies, which operates the Mayberry Solar Farm in Mount Airy, staged a planning session Wednesday at Meadowview Middle School which was not only concerned with illumination but education.

O2 President Joel Olsen was upbeat about his firm’s opportunity to help the school system and Surry Community College during the gathering, with the goal of showing how to study technology not for study’s sake, but to show Surry County students how it is put to use.

“The challenge is in logistics. How to get everyone on board and we are here today to kickstart the process,” said Olsen, who later led a tour of the company’s solar farm near the city water treatment plant for school educators, administrators and staff.

One proposed program would be O2 Energies supplying solar panels which students would use to meet a “Grand Challenge” competition where they would find an innovative solution to a problem. In his later talk with Board of Education members staff, teachers and 19 principals at the solar farm, Olsen talked about implementing a solar energy component or focus into school programs as well as the Community College’s offerings.

He told the tour participants some basic facts about the $6 million farm and said the water treatment plant facility can produce what 150 homes will typically consume daily.

“We worked with the city to find a location for our farms,” said Olsen. “They had been trying to find someone to use this property for 20 years but the smell from the (sewer) treatment plant kept anyone from using it. Our facility has no sound, smell or waste. You wouldn’t know it was here.” He pointed out the farm pays taxes and also provides local sheep ranchers.

Olsen explained how the facility, and a similar solar farm it operates near Ararat Rock, use sheep for keeping grass short by grazing. He said since the company uses no herbicides or pesticides on the land the ranchers who use it rent free can sell the sheep to organic meat suppliers at a higher price at the end of the season. He said coyotes have killed nine sheep at the Ararat Rock farm location but protective measures such as using donkeys or an electric fence to protect those sheep are being considered.

He explained to the group that the power produced at the Mayberry Solar Farm is sold to utilities such as Duke Power Co. He also pointed out various design features of the solar panels which are connected in sequence to two, 500-kilowatt inverters where the electricity is changed from direct current (DC) to alternating current (AC) power. He said the overhead power lines which are used to bring power from nuclear and coal plants, the farm and the water treatment facility make a unique destination for children to see how the technology is put to use.

“What we found so exciting about Surry County is it has so much going on,” said Olsen. He said the facility is like a battery, producing electricity and adding it into the power grid for use at anywhere from 15-20 percent less than other conventional power plants. He also said much of America’s electric infrastructure was built after WWII and is in need of upgrades which provides “a unique opportunity” for solar power to be utilized.

“Solar is a source you can look to for a long term rate in addition to other power sources in your mix,” commented Olsen. “Cities can use this when planning on costs.”

Reach David Broyles at dbroyles@civitasmedia.com or 719-1952.

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