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1/20/2023 10:10 pm  #2


Re: Powe case gets weirder...

20K bond for conspiracy.  What a joke.  People get that high of bond for tons of lower crimes. Looks lije the judge that set the bond probably knows the attorney. 

I have no idea on anything on the case. But that part is laughable.  Why set any bond at all.  Bond is supposed to be so you show up to your court appearances. 20K ain’t going to do that. lol

 

1/21/2023 8:09 am  #3


Re: Powe case gets weirder...

It will be interesting to see how this case unfolds, and there is no doubt that there is more to the story than it seems.

According to the Ridgeland police, on Monday, Jan. 16, 2023, Powe and an accomplice kidnapped a man in Laurel. They allegedly tried to force him to give them money, but his bank account was at Chase.  Since the nearest Chase branch was in Jackson, Powe and his criminal partner allegedly kidnapped the victim and brought him to Chase's Ridgeland branch. The victim went into the bank to withdraw funds but somehow had the presence of mind to inform the bank he was being held against his will, and the bank called the police. Ridgeland police arrested the two men and set the victim free. 

The "victim" is one Bryce Mathis. A Covington County grand jury indicted him for two counts of fraud in 2019. The indictment charged Mathis swindled a Covington County lumber company out of $66,231. The District Attorney withdrew the indictment in July 2020 after Mathis made full restitution to the victimized lumber company. However, sources say the indictment is indicative of his dealings with other people in business. Mathis allegedly owed Powe a large sum of money, and the former resident of Oxford wanted his money. Hence the alleged kidnapping. 

On Wednesday, Jan. 18, 2023, Jerrel Powe was released from jail after posting a $100,000 bond in Ridgeland. Then, on Thursday, Jan. 20, 2023, the county attorney for the Wayne County Board of Supervisors was arrested on an active warrant for conspiracy later that night.

According to Assistant Chief Tony Willridge with the Ridgeland Police Department, U.S. Marshals Task Force members arrested 40-year-old Cooper M. Leggett around 11 p.m. on Thursday at his home in Wayne County.  Leggett was booked into the Madison County Detention Center and charged with one count of conspiracy.

Willridge said the arrest was in connection to a kidnapping investigation involving former Ole Miss and NFL football player Jerrell Powe. However, he could not disclose Leggett's relationship with either Powe or Gavin Bates, who were both arrested in connection to the case.

 


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1/21/2023 8:07 pm  #4


Re: Powe case gets weirder...

Two more arrested in kidnapping case involving former Ole Miss player Jerrell Powe

Jan. 20—Authorities have arrested a Wayne County attorney and a Texas woman in connection with an alleged kidnapping in Mississippi involving a former Ole Miss football player and a multi-million dollar medical marijuana cultivation project.

Angela McClelland, 54, of Katy, Texas, was arrested Wednesday, Jan. 18, and booked into the Fort Bend County, Texas, Jail on a fugitive warrant and conspiracy to commit a felony. Ridgeland Municipal Court prosecutor Boty McDonald said her arrest is in connection with the kidnapping charges against former Ole Miss and NFL football player Jerrell Powe, 35, of Hattiesburg, and Gavin Bates, 35, of Roseville, California.

A Texas judge released McClelland on a fugitive bond Friday morning, which will allow her to travel to Mississippi and appear in court in Ridgeland on Monday morning.

U.S. Marshals arrested Cooper Leggett, 40, at his Wayne County home about 11 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 19. Leggett, who is the attorney for the Wayne County Board of Supervisors, appeared in Ridgeland Municipal Court on Friday to face charges of conspiracy to commit a felony. He was later released from the Madison County Detention Center on a $20,000 bond.

Details of the alleged involvement by McClellan and Leggett have not been released.

During their initial appearances Tuesday, Powe and Bates were charged with kidnapping and conspiracy to commit a felony. Both were released from the Madison County Detention Center in Canton the same evening after posting bonds of $100,000 apiece.

Tom Fortner, who is representing Powe, could not be reached for comment.

More details are starting to emerge about the Jan. 12 incident that appears to have started in Laurel and ended inside a Chase Bank branch in Ridgeland.

"(The alleged) victim is in a business venture, a medical marijuana growing project," McDonald told the Daily Journal. "Powe was an investor. Bates is a successful cultivator in California. He was brought in to kick the business off here. The investors became impatient. They felt they were being swindled and wanted their money back."

Tagg Creech, who is a friend of Powe, said he tried to warn Powe to avoid having any dealings with Bryce Mathis, the alleged victim in the alleged kidnapping. Creech said Mathis was fronting a $20 million marijuana growing operation near Buckatunna, Powe's hometown in Wayne County. Powe and some NFL friends reportedly invested $300,000.

"I saw Jerrell on the sidelines at the Egg Bowl (Nov. 24, 2022) and asked him if he was still dealing with Bryce," Creech said. "I told him to watch his back."

Creech said he and others were weary of investing with Mathis because of what he called previous sketchy dealings.

In January 2019, Mathis was indicted in Covington County on charges of false pretense and mail fraud, both felonies. Authorities said Mathis devised a scheme to defraud a lumber company of three truckloads of lumber, worth more than $66,000. The charges were dropped and the case dismissed 18 months later when Mathis paid full restitution.

When the medical marijuana project was not moving forward and Mathis appeared to be spending money freely, the investors started to question the legitimacy of the business venture, according to multiples sources close to the investigation. Powe asked for his money back.

"About three weeks ago, he (Powe) called. He said Bryce was avoiding him," Creech said.

At some point, it appears Powe decided to take matters in his own hands. But exactly what happened depends on who you ask.

According to police, Powe and Bates met with Mathis in Laurel and held him against his will. At some point, they drove the 100 miles to Ridgeland, going to a Chase Bank for Mathis to withdraw the $300,000. Mathis told bank officials he was there against his will, and they in turn called police.

According to Creech, Mathis agreed to return the money to Powe during a Jan. 11 a group call.

"There were five or six of us on the call. Bryce agreed to meet him (Powe) at the bank and give the money back," Creech said. "(Mathis) said he took the money he shouldn't have."

Creech thinks the trip to Ridgeland was just a ruse by Mathis to get Powe arrested and off his back

"There's no doubt in my mind that he set him up," Creech said.

But the Ridgeland prosecutor does not agree.

"This is a kidnapping," McDonald said. "We would not be prosecuting it in Ridgeland if it was not."

McDonald refused to give specifics about evidence in the ongoing investigation, but he seemed to indicate that Powe and Bates might have left a digital trail that investigators will be able to use to convict them.

"We have a substantial amount of evidence," McDonald said. "There is so much electronic data here that it will take a while to sort through and get it ready to present to a grand jury."

Madison County has a grand jury meet every month, but McDonald could not give a timeline on when this case might be presented.

SOURCE: Moore, William. "Two more arrested in kidnapping case involving former Ole Miss player Jerrell Powe." 
Moore, Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal, Tupelo, 20 January 2023, https://news.yahoo.com/two-more-arrested-kidnapping-case-045900152.html


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1/24/2023 1:26 pm  #5


Re: Powe case gets weirder...

Some complete BS going on.

 

1/24/2023 1:34 pm  #6


Re: Powe case gets weirder...

This Boty McDonald sounds like your typical prosecutor that is blinded by facts and the possibility this can make him a star.  Sounds like a real POS.
Read some of his comments/jokes about Netflix. This isn’t a joking situation


Hopefully Powe’s attorney Tom Fortner reams McDonalds ass, but the shitty part is it will cose Powe whatever he lost to this con man in legal fees to beat this in court.  The McDonalds of the world do not care.

 

1/24/2023 1:35 pm  #7


 

1/24/2023 1:43 pm  #8


Re: Powe case gets weirder...

I have tons of relatives in Florence the sister city to Ridgeland and they say a ton of corruption there including the Mayor.

I know it was a big speed trap thru the years.  Also the worst stretch of highway you will ever find on 55 there.

I drove thru going to FL last year because I was stopping to visit some relatives. Just terrible highway.


Just a personal note. I used to play little league football in Ridgeland when I was a kid.  I lived in Pearl and we would play a game or two in Ridgeland right off 55. 


This was in like ‘76 and “77. I was in 4th then 5th grade.

 

1/24/2023 3:14 pm  #9


Re: Powe case gets weirder...

It is evident that Bryce Mathis is a lying con man and should be the one doing jail time for all the schemes he has created and the people he has swindled.  Boty McDonald is wearing blinders if he does not see the damage that Mathis has done and will continue to do if Mathis is not prosecuted. 
Most likely, Powe should not have taken things into his own hands and reported the matter to the FBI so that Mathis could be criminally prosecuted and made to fulfill restitution to the schemed investors.  It sounds like Mathis conjured up this scheme, just like he has many others, to have Powe and the grower arrested for kidnapping.  He knew what he was doing, and it did not sound like he was being held against his will.

Tom Fortner is a good attorney who will provide Powe with proper legal representation.  The sad thing is that Mathis will probably get off with no penalties, and Powe will spend a lot of money on legal fees.  Mathis probably has a stash of cash somewhere and will continue to wreak havoc on the lives of others. 


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1/24/2023 4:59 pm  #10


Re: Powe case gets weirder...


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