Police Blotter

Wanted woman overdoses, crashes car

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By Guy Page

A Barre woman with five outstanding warrants faces multiple charges after police say she overdosed while driving Wednesday, August 27.

Jodi Palmer

At about 10:45 a.m., Barre City Police were dispatched to Jacques Street for a report of a vehicle that had gone over a bank. Upon arrival, officers found that the driver, later identified as Jodi Palmer, had overdosed while driving. Her car rolled through an intersection where a street crew was working before going down an embankment and nearly striking a residence on Reynolds Street.

Palmer was administered Narcan and transported to Central Vermont Medical Center, where she was later released. She initially provided officers with a false name, and further investigation revealed the vehicle and license plates were stolen. Palmer also had five outstanding warrants totaling $32,700 for prior offenses, including eluding police, possession of stolen property, forgery, and retail theft.

She now faces additional charges, including DUI–Drug, Gross Negligent Operation, False Information to Law Enforcement, Driving with License Suspended, and Possession of Stolen Property. Palmer was lodged at Chittenden Regional Correctional Center in lieu of bail and is scheduled for arraignment on August 28 in Washington Superior Court.

Arrests in Troy burglary, truck theft – Vermont State Police have identified two Richford men in connection with the July 28 burglary of the Troy Pump Station in Troy and theft of a truck belonging to Laliberty Trucking.

Larry Garrow Jr., 37, faces charges of Burglary, Aggravated Operating Without Owner’s Consent, and Criminal Driving with License Suspended. Amos Lafontaine, 41, was charged as an accessory to the crimes.

Henry Lamotte

The stolen truck was recovered on August 7 in Montgomery, heavily damaged. Lafontaine was already in custody at Northwest State Correctional Facility on unrelated charges when he was cited. Garrow was arrested by St. Albans Police on August 25 and remains held on $1,500 bail.

Transient arrested for cutting tablet cord, theft at Staples – Berlin officers responded to Staples after a report that a man had cut an alarm cord from a tablet and stolen it. Surveillance footage identified the suspect as Richard Atkinson, 38, a transient from Montpelier known to law enforcement. Atkinson was later located by Montpelier Police and issued a citation to appear in court in September.

Deborah Talbot

Arrest for misuse of license plates, DLS – A traffic stop on Gilman Avenue led to the arrest of Henry Lamotte, 50, of St. Johnsbury. Police said Lamotte’s red Ford pickup was stopped for a broken taillight, but officers determined he was criminally suspended from driving.

The vehicle’s license plates also did not belong to the truck. Lamotte was processed at the St. Johnsbury Police Department and cited for Criminal Driving While Suspended and Misuse of Plates.

Burglary, assault in Waterbury – State police responded to 85 Tayer Lane for a report of a burglary and assault. Investigation revealed Deborah Talbot, 62, entered the home of Karmen Hatch, 44, without permission and assaulted her.

Talbot was taken into custody, issued conditions of release, and cited to appear in Washington County Criminal Court on August 28.

Police remind drivers of school safety — With the new school year beginning this week, police departments statewide are urging drivers to slow down in school zones, watch for children crossing, and stop for school buses displaying flashing lights.

Officers will be increasing patrols around schools to ensure safety. Parents and guardians are also encouraged to remind children about road safety and awareness while walking or biking to school.


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Categories: Police Blotter

5 replies »

  1. Finally!! Some actual seventh-generation Vermonters gracing the crime stats!! I was beginning to despair at the appalling lack of diversity in these crime articles!!

    • Apparently opioids have broad appeal across all racial and ethnic groups. We are so fortunate that we have so many dedicated people involved and a wide network of sources in southern New England and other regional urban areas to supply the needs of our local junkies. And we are so blessed to have Narcan to allow our beloved junkies to experience death and come back, over and over and over again.

  2. Question for the Governor and all the Vermont Mayors, councils, select boards, and managers: At what point do the drugs and the crimes become a public health and safety emergency? Anyone? How about now? Is it within their executive powers to declare a public emergency? (Convid-19 confirmed that power did it not?) Has it not reached the threshold of being out of their control and we need Federal resources and assets? Why not give police powers to our National Guardsman/women or request military assistance? Why not force multipliers – we don’t have the man/woman power in the police forces. So, why not utilize the executive power to get more boots on the ground and remove the scourge of lawlessness and sickness under control? Above all, why not throw the hammer down on the State’s Attorneys and the Judiciary to apply the law for public health and safety instead of twisting the law like a pretzel to suit their political or corporate allies/agendas?

    The word getting thrown about is having compassion. I have compassion for the addicts. I have compassion for the community-at-large wounded and victimized just the same. There is no balance – it is far, far way out of balance.

    If the People are fed up with leadership willfully ignoring the obvious – the death and destruction – start petitioning and demanding action or get out of our office or get off our bench! Let it be clear, we own those seats and the buildings housing those seats. We have the power to remove them post haste – we don’t have to vote them out – we can fire them. It is time for us to take action or keep watching the destruction happening with impunity.

    • Just an FYI – Reportedly, Narcan only works on opioids – the synthetic, pharmacutical grade drugs hitting our streets do not respond to Narcan. Some may want to question how the volume of deadly poison is generated in such large quanities and where – it is not the low hanging dealers cooking it up – it is a much more sophisticated operation needing a lot of room and resources. A local apartment basement or kitchen is not capable of such production.

    • If some newer and fashionable drugs that produce potentially deadly overdoses dont respond to Narcan, then we must require the pharmaceutical companies to come up with antidotes for them all. There must never be serious consequences for the use of these “cultural enhancements”. There certainly are not legal consequences, even for their use out in the open in public parks in Burlington. We must cherish and respect the civil rights of all of our substance abusers. How would our society function without them and those who supply them?