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Sunday, March 9, 2014

Summary (8 & 9 Mar 2014)

Jeffery Scott Ingram
Columbia Daily Herald‎ 
Jeffery Scott Ingram [52994, fb], age 57 of Culleoka, won his battle with cancer March 8, 2014 at NHC Hillview ... Jeff, also known as “Bones”, was born November 4, 1956 in Columbia, Tennessee to Tony and Eva Graves Ingram. ... Jeff married his soulmate, Connie Scroggins Ingram [52995, fb], on June 17, 1978 at First Baptist Church in Columbia. .. daughter ... Bailey Ingram [52996, fb] ...
Ingram, Jeffery Scott (4 Nov 1956 - 8 Mar 2014) [52994].
Husband of Scroggins, Connie Elizabeth (Ingram) ( - ) [52995].


Huntsville Running Roundup: Saturday yields races in Huntsville ...
The Huntsville Times - al.com (blog)‎ 
AL.com's news partner, WHNT News 19, interviewed race organizer Kristin Scroggin [50911?]. See it here. Goldsmith Schiffman Elementary School in Big Cove will also ...

Oklahoma City treatment center neighbors lose patience over loose patients
NewsOK.com
Richard D. Scroggins [52999:&, fb], a horse breeder who owns Moon Land Farm on Air Depot Road just north of the hospital, said he and his wife have had past run-ins with Cedar Ridge patients who have walked away from the hospital campus over the years, including several break-in attempts at their house.

In 2003, Scroggins arrived home from work to find a strange man working in his garden. The man had wandered off the Cedar Ridge hospital grounds and began raking leaves and performing other yard work in the Scroggins’ back yard.

“I walked up to him and began to engage him in conversation, and I could see that he clearly needed help,” Scroggins recalls. “I said, ‘you look like you are really busy.’”

The man was convinced he had been hired to work around the Scroggins’ farm. Scroggins quickly deduced he was a patient from Cedar Ridge and called the police, who came to collect the would-be farmer.

After leaving Moon Land Farm, the man wrote three letters to Scroggins’ wife, addressing her as “Cherry Angel,” a reference to a personalized license plate on her car.

“Dear Cherry Angel,” one hand-written letter begins. “Please come and take me home to Moon Land Farm.”

In a subsequent letter, addressed from Oklahoma City’s Deaconess Hospital, the man asked “Cherry Angel” to take him on as a farmhand.

“Please come to Deaconess Hospital and pick me up to be your worker and stay there ’til the rapture of Believers,” the man wrote. “It’s going to happen this spring.”

Scroggins has submitted the man’s letters to the Oklahoma City Planning Commission in protest to Cedar Ridge’s expansion plans.

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