Paris police report no DWI arrests over four-day Labor Day weekend
Posted on Sep 4, 2012
in Scene of the Crime by Charles Richards

Over the four-day Labor Day weekend, Paris police answered 420 calls and made 30 arrests – but none for driving while intoxicated, police chief Bob Hundley said today.
The chief noted the following arrests:
- 13 on municipal court warrants
- 3 on other warrants
- 2 on assault charges
- 3 on assault involving family violence
- 3 for public drunkenness
- 2 on theft charges
- 1 for criminal mischief
- 1 for disorderly conduct
- 2 for emergency detention
Officers made 127 traffic stops and investigated five vehicle crashes in which injuries were reported and 11 accidents in which there was property damage only.

Charles Richards moved to Paris in 2004 after retiring from a 40-year career in journalism – the last 26 years as a news writer and sports writer with The Associated Press in Dallas and Washington, D.C. In mid-2004, The Paris News coaxed him out of retirement, and he began covering the police, court and regional beat for The Paris News. Then in early 2005, he was switched to coverage of a sharply divided Paris City Council. He was appointed by the City Council in 2006 to the 12-member City Charter Review Commission, which extensively rewrote the outmoded document. His writing awards include two first-place awards in statewide competition for feature writing. The most recent was his 2005 story on a Paris doctor’s startling use of leeches in a successful attempt to re-attach a man’s severed ear. Over his career, Richards’ interview subjects include Alabama Gov. George Wallace, President Bill Clinton, President George W. Bush, David Koresh, Arnold Palmer, Muhammad Ali and numerous other political and sports figures. He is an alumnus of Texas Tech, where he was editor of the school newspaper. He lives in Paris with his wife, Barbara, who is retired after 30 years as a teacher and high school counselor.