The Coosa County Sheriff’s Office reported a total jail population of 45 inmates as of October 19, 2025, consisting of 33 males and 12 females. The report covers arrests and calls for service between October 13 and October 19.
During this period, several individuals were arrested on various charges. On October 14, Investigator Ward arrested Larry Heath Mitchell from Wetumpka, Alabama, on charges including obstructing justice using a false identity, possession of a controlled substance, and possession of drug paraphernalia. Mitchell was processed into the county jail with a $15,000 bond.
Also on October 14, Deputy Brown arrested Heather Michelle Martin from Hueytown, Alabama. She faced charges of driving under the influence, attempting to elude a police officer, and resisting arrest. Her bond was set at $4,000.
On October 15, Deputy Kelley arrested William Todd Dobbs from Alexander City on three sanction orders. Dobbs was booked with a $1,500 bond.
Chief Deputy Hammond arrested Landen Kane Limbaugh from Goodwater on October 16 for violation of release order; no bond was issued in this case.
Sgt. Rudd made an arrest on October 17 involving Travis Chet Green from Sylacauga. Green faced multiple charges: three counts of possession of a controlled substance, possession of marijuana in the second degree, use or possession of drug paraphernalia, and public intoxication. His bond totaled $20,500.
Deputy Parker made two arrests on October 19: Shawn Alexander Knight from Clanton and Johnathan Lance Mann from Alexander City were both charged with failure to appear in court. Each had bonds set at $500.
Throughout the week-long reporting period, deputies responded to numerous calls across Coosa County communities such as Marble Valley, Stewartville, Weogufka, Hanover, Mt Olive, Keyno, Goodwater, Kellyton, Richville, Rockford, Equality and Ray. Incidents included reports about shots fired (resulting in an arrest), criminal mischief reports taken for information purposes only or resolved without incident; business checks; civil disputes; disabled motorists assisted by deputies; suspicious vehicles or persons checked out by law enforcement; property damage; harassment complaints; unkept livestock reports; residential alarms determined to be false; assaults documented for records purposes; abandoned vehicles that were towed; reckless drivers sometimes resulting in citations being issued; and other community policing activities throughout the county.
No major injuries or critical incidents were reported during these responses according to the summary provided by the sheriff’s office.
