Grandfather put pills in his granddaughters' ice cream, North Carolina police say
Published in News & Features
A man accused of hiding narcotics in his grandchildren’s ice cream was also the chair of the county’s Board of Elections, according to officials in Eastern North Carolina.
The suspect has been identified as 66-year-old James Yokeley Jr., and he is the same person who reported pills were found in the ice cream on Aug. 8, the Wilmington Police Department said in an Aug. 27 Facebook post.
Yokeley stepped down as chair of the election board Thursday morning after Republican State Auditor Dave Boliek, who appointed Yokeley to the board, asked for his resignation.
Investigators have not released a motive.
“A Wilmington Police Officer was flagged down by James Yokeley at the Sheetz gas station at 2517 Shipyard Blvd. Mr. Yokeley informed the officer that his two juvenile granddaughters had found two hard objects in the ice cream they had recently purchased at the Dairy Queen,” police said.
“Medical personnel checked the two juveniles. It was determined that they had not ingested any of the substances. The two pills were collected, and preliminary field tests conducted indicated that the pills were illegal narcotics. Those pills have since been sent to the State lab for further conclusive testing.”
The frozen treats were identified by WECT as Dairy Queen Blizzards, an extra thick type of shake loaded with extras.
An investigation led to video footage indicating Yokeley had “placed the two pills into both victims’ ice cream,” officials said.
Yokeley was arrested and charged with “contaminating food or drink with a controlled substance and felony child abuse,” officials said. Bond was set at $100,000.
The Surry County Board of Elections lists Yokeley as its chairman and the board issued a statement on the arrest the same day it was posted on the police department’s Facebook page.
“The State Board of Elections and Surry County Board of Elections are aware of the charges against Mr. Yokeley, the chair of the Surry County Board of Election. We will continue to collect information about the situation and will provide support to the Surry County board, as needed, to ensure it is able to continue serving the county’s voters,” the statement says.
In an interview with The News & Observer, Boliek said had he selected Yokeley to serve as chair of the board in part because he already had experience as a member of the board.
“We also did due diligence here in running background checks and we found nothing in his background that would suggest this at all,” he said.
“With his resignation, the Surry County Board and State Board can now, without distraction, move forward with the process of appointing a replacement,” Boliek later said in a statement.
Wilmington is about a 130-mile drive southeast from Raleigh. Surry County is northwest of Winston-Salem.
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(Politics reporter Kyle Ingram contributed to this report.)
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