HB 8.12.2021 FINAL 2

(J-Ad) #1
VOLUME 167, No. 32 Thursday, August 12, 2021 PRICE $1.

1

THE


HASTINGS


Devoted to the Interests of Barry County Since 1856


County commissioners ask sheriff


to elaborate on investigation


Rebecca Pierce
Editor
A probe into allegations of voter fraud

fueled several questions during the Barry
County Board of Commissioners meeting
Tuesday, but no answers were forthcoming

from Sheriff Dar Leaf.
For the first time since the investigation
was disclosed, however, the people asking the
questions were the county commissioners.
Leaf, just back from a week’s vacation in
the Upper Peninsula, delivered his depart-
mental annual report, but said nothing about
his highly publicized investigation into a
complaint of potential voter fraud.

That complaint was filed by one of his for-
mer employees who based it on an Antrim
County lawsuit that had been thrown out by a
judge the day after it was filed.
As soon as Leaf concluded his presentation
to the board, Chairman Ben Geiger said:

Few leads for police


seeking Nashville woman


Taylor Owens
Staff Writer
Rachel Hazen of Nashville has been miss-
ing for 21 days, leaving little trace of her
whereabouts.
Family and friends said Hazen, 41, was
planning to go to a drug rehabilitation facility
at the time of her disappearance, but police
have been unable to locate her at any facilities
in the area.
According to reports obtained by The
Hastings Banner, police were first notified of
Hazen’s disappearance at 11:05 a.m. July 26,
when a friend, Casey Bidelman, 40, of Battle
Creek, called police from Hazen’s home in
the Thornapple Lake Estates mobile home
park.
Bidelman said the place appeared to have
been ransacked.
An officer arrived to find a number of
Hazen’s friends and Thornapple Lake Estates
staff at her residence. The officer found “the
cupboards in the house had been gone through
as if someone were searching for something,”
but he did not see any signs of a struggle or an

abduction.
Witnesses told police they last saw Hazen
on Wednesday, July 21. She was driving her
2005 silver Ford Escape, which was missing a
license plate. That vehicle has not been found.
On that day, Hazen and her 18-year-old son
went to her friend’s residence in Nashville.
Hazen dropped off her dog with her friend,
asking her to watch the dog while she was in
rehab.
Hazen’s friend said she appeared to be
intoxicated; she was slurring her words and
difficult to understand. The friend told the
officer Hazen should not have been driving in
that condition.
Hazen’s son was helping her seek a poten-
tial rehab facility, but the places they contact-
ed were either full or wouldn’t accept her
insurance. So they made an appointment with
Barry County Mental Health for the next day.
After that, Hazen and her son went to her
eldest son’s house in Baltimore Township,
and all three of her sons talked to her about

Hastings schools owe


response to ‘no’ voters


See Editorial on Page 4


24-Hour Challenge


rides through area


See Story on Page 12


County’s COVID-


transmission rate jumps


See Story on Page 7


NEWS


BRIEFS


See NEWS BRIEFS, page 2
See MISSING, page 11

Foaming for fun
Hastings Public Library staff hosted a celebration Saturday in honor of its 125th
anniversary. Parents, kids and Stormy the Entertainer had fun outdoors at the free
event across from the library at Thornapple Plaza, with the sun shining and
temperatures in the 80s. Here, Loralye Heide, 5, holds on to Keenan Heide, 1, as they
slide down the hill. More inside. (Photo by Benjamin Simon) See story on page 3.

Sheriff Dar Leaf prepares to give his annual report presentation to the Barry County Board of Commissioners in the courthouse mezzanine Tuesday. (Photo by Rebecca
Pierce)

BIE luncheon


canceled
The Business, Industry and Education
luncheon that typically kicks off the new
school year in Hastings has been canceled.
The luncheon had been scheduled for
Aug. 17 at Hastings High School, but
school officials canceled the event because
of an uptick in COVID-19 cases in the
area.

Fountain, plaza


programs


wrapping up
Playing at the Plaza and Fridays at the
Fountain, two segments of the Hastings
Live free summer concerts series, will end
with these performances.
Mime Rob Reider will perform at 11
a.m. today, Aug. 12, as part of Playing at
the Plaza. A West Michigan native, Reider
has dedicated his life to training that
includes corporeal mime, pantomime,
clowning, Chinese movements arts, dance
and more. He has been performing mime
for nearly 40 years throughout Michigan
and the U.S.
Dede and the Dreamers will bring their
psychedelic, folk and jazz music to
Fridays at the Fountain at noon Aug. 13
on the Barry County Courthouse lawn.
The performances are free. Guests may
want to bring their own lawn chairs or
blankets.

Army band, Grumpy


Old Men returning
The 338th Army Band will return to
Hastings at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 13, at
Thornapple Plaza.
The 338th is made up of musicians
from Michigan, Ohio and parts of
Kentucky. Stationed at the 83rd Infantry
Division Memorial US Army Reserve
Center, Whitehall, Ohio, and in Livonia,
members range in age from 17 to over 50.
The 338th Rock Band, a subdivision of
the 338th Army Band, returns to Hastings
with songs people know, can sing along
to, and leave the concert humming on
their way home.
The band performed here in 2019 as
part of the local American Legion’s anni-
versary celebration.
Next Wednesday, the local group
Grumpy Old Men will play at Thornapple
Plaza at 7:30 p.m. Aug. 18. Comprised of
local musicians Doug Acker, Tom
Alderson, Gene Greenfield, Mark Ramsey
and Terry Van Dien, the group plays clas-
sic rock songs from the 1960s and 1970s.
Both performances are part of Hastings
Live, the free summer concert series.
Attendees are encouraged to bring blan-
kets or lawn chairs. Thornapple Plaza on
the east end of downtown Hastings, a
short walk from local shops and restau-
rants.
More information can be found at face-
book.com/mihastingslive.

Blood donors


needed at area


drives
Eligible donors can help overcome the
critical need for blood and ensure blood is
readily available by making an appoint-
ment to give blood.
Upcoming blood donation opportuni-
ties locally include:
Delton – Monday, Aug. 16, 11 a.m.-
4:45 p.m., St. Ambrose Church, 11149
Floria Road.
Lake Odessa – Monday, Aug. 16, noon-
5:45 p.m., Central United Methodist
Church, 912 Fourth Ave.

See QUESTIONS, page 2


Gunman spoke


of ‘suicide by cop’


Taylor Owens
Staff Writer
A 48-year-old Hastings man was arrested in
the early hours of Aug. 5, after a high-speed
chase and a seven-hour armed standoff with
police at a gas station in Woodland.
Timothy Maloy Riddle was being sought as
a suspect in a recent Barry County break-in,
police said.
Hastings City Police spotted Riddle’s matte
black Chevy HHR at the Marathon gas station
on M-43 in Hastings at 6:48 p.m. Aug. 4.
After Riddle left the station and turned north
onto M-43, an officer stopped him. He detailed
his interaction with Riddle in a written report.
The officer told Riddle he was not under

arrest, but that Barry County Sheriff’s depu-
ties wanted to talk to him. He asked Riddle to
step out of the car and wait for the deputies.
Riddle appeared agitated at first, but he
seemed to cool down after the officer
explained the situation to him.
He shut off the car and pulled out the key


  • but would not step out of the vehicle.
    He started talking about his ex-girlfriend, a
    40-year-old Hastings woman, and insisted to
    the officer that he did not go near her.
    “I did not do nothing to her, man,” Riddle
    said.
    The officer told him he was not being


See GUNMAN, page 2


Vote probe spurs questions

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