Cop Shop Blog

Macon uncle slings beer, angers nephew with ‘Hey, sexy’ remark to pregnant girlfriend

The uncle was reportedly drunk and his nephew wanted him gone. Their clash played out at the Evergreen Estates mobile home park on Houston Road in south Macon the afternoon of Oct. 16.

According to a Bibb County sheriff’s report, the uncle marched into the nephew’s house without permission and, upon seeing the nephew’s pregnant girlfriend, said to her, “Hey, sexy.”

The girlfriend, the write-up noted, “got offended” by the remark. The nephew demanded the uncle apologize, but instead, the report said, the uncle threw a can of Bud Light on the ground and “it splattered all over” the girlfriend.

After shoving the nephew and calling the girlfriend names, the uncle drove off in a car, nearly striking a utility pole because he was drunk, the report stated. After apparently traveling to the home of another relative and waving a BB gun, the uncle was arrested by sheriff’s deputies on disorderly conduct and public drunkenness charges.

Dispatches: It was after 2 a.m. the morning of Oct. 17 when an off-duty Bibb sheriff’s deputy who was working as a security guard at Club X on Pio Nono Avenue saw a clubgoer step outside and, “in plain view,” begin urinating. The deputy told the man to leave the property. “The male instructed me that he was going back inside because that’s where his people were,” an incident report noted. The man insisted on going back in and the deputy informed him that “as a courtesy” and without arrest he was offering the fellow the chance to go home. “The male responded with, ‘And what are you gonna do if I don’t?’” the report said. Undeterred, the man, from Warner Robins, refused to leave and was jailed on a public indecency charge. . . . Two women were arguing the evening of Oct. 13 at a house on Mayfield Road near the Towaliga River in northern Monroe County. One of the women was said to have been yelling about retrieving her belongings from the house, saying, “I’m not going anywhere until I get my (expletive).” According to a sheriff’s report, a deputy asked the woman what, specifically, she needed from the house. “I don’t know,” came the reply, “just my (expletive) is in there.” She refused to leave, later repeating to the deputy, “I’m not going anywhere until I get my (expletive) and you can’t make me.” She was jailed on a disorderly conduct charge.

Joe Kovac Jr.
The Telegraph
Joe Kovac Jr. writes about local news and features for The Telegraph, with an eye for human-interest stories. Joe is a Warner Robins native and graduate of Warner Robins High. He joined the Telegraph in 1991 after graduating from the University of Georgia. As a Pulliam Fellowship recipient in 1991, Joe worked for the Indianapolis News. His stories have appeared in the Washington Post, the Seattle Times and Atlanta Magazine. He has been a Livingston Award finalist and won numerous Georgia Press Association and Georgia Associated Press awards.
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