Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

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100 YEARS AGO Jan. 12, 1918

SEARCY — Investigat­ion has developed that the young man who is said to have admitted holding up the cashier of the Cotton Plant Bond and Trust Company of nearly $1,500, was Ben Crews, aged 20, who lives at Kensett in this county. Crews told officers at the time of his arrest that his name was Raymond Martin. He was arrested at McClelland, eight miles from Cotton Plant, Wednesday. Crews was employed in a mill near Kensett. He left home two days before the robbery. He has a wife and a seven-monthold baby. They will go to Cotton Plant tomorrow to attend the examining trial.

50 YEARS AGO Jan. 12, 1968

The North Little Rock Parks and Recreation Commission has expressed interest in selling 40 acres of Burns Park adjacent to Interstate 40 for a motel but a former Commission chairman said Thursday that they may not legally be able to dispose of the property. E. H. (Buz) Herrod, who was Commission chairman when the city acquired the park property from the federal government, recalled that there were reservatio­ns in the deeds that might prevent use of the property for anything other than recreation­al purposes.

25 YEARS AGO Jan. 12, 1993

CASSCOE — The repercussi­ons of December’s double slaying continue to roll over the residents of Casscoe on Monday as word spread that two local teens had been charged in the crime. “In a normal day out in the country, you feel safe,” Dale Shelton, a former Arkansas County judge and resident of Casscoe, said. “That feeling has been shattered. First, there was the murders, and now two boys from families that are really well thought of have been charged with the murders. The whole thing is a terrible tragedy, especially for all of the families.”

10 YEARS AGO Jan. 12, 2008

A 17-year-old who gunned down a popular Little Rock grocery store owner accepted a life sentence Friday with the “tiniest sliver of hope” that he won’t die behind bars. At a seven-minute hearing in Pulaski County Circuit Court, Marco Balderas admitted to killing Ghazi “Jeff” Hammad during the July 17 robbery attempt at the southwest Little Rock store that Hammad owned with his wife. “When it’s all said and done, he had 10 gunshot wounds,” Chief Deputy Prosecutin­g Attorney John Johnson told the judge, describing Hammad’s killing.

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