Brecksville, OH|News|
FBI Investigates Remains, Public Indecency and Bedbug Trouble
From around the Northeast Ohio Patch police files.

I am the editor of Lakewood Patch and a local news enthusiast.
I joined Patch because the company is at the forefront of the future of journalism — and I am deeply committed to this changing media landscape. And, I love Lakewood.
I have delivered, printed, packed, stacked, written for, edited and, of course, read newspapers. My first reporting gig came in the fourth grade when Mrs. Williams ordered – since I talked so much — that I report news and weather to begin the class each day. No sweat.
So, the kid with soda-pop-bottle eyeglasses began his career, sharing the latest news and weather forecasts with a room full of confounded classmates.
Since then, I have worked in different media environments, and worn several different hats. I have picked up a camera; learned to handle video equipment and edited my own work. I have kept a blog. I have taped interviews and posted them to the Web. These are a few of the skills that I have acquired in an ever-changing media environment.
After stints in Chicago and Southern California, I returned to home to Northeast Ohio to attend the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Kent State University. I held a reporting internship at the Record Publishing Co. by day and worked in the Akron Beacon Journal production department by night, stacking newspapers.
I later worked as a reporter and wire editor at the Record-Courier and received several awards for news and sports reporting.
In my freelance work, most notably for hiVelocity, I have followed the changing economic landscape in Ohio. I have identified start-up bio-tech and biomedical companies as they sprout up around the fertile health-care industry, with area institutions of higher education propping them up. The state's economy is changing.
Not unlike my own industry.
I live in Lakewood with my wife, Kelly Flamos, and our children, Ruby and Clyde.
Kelly co-owns and operates Mahalls 20 Lanes with my brother-in-law, Joe Pavlick.
... In case you're curious, that will never affect my ability to report news professionally and fairly in this city that I love.
From around the Northeast Ohio Patch police files.

Did you miss anything? Here’s your chance to get caught up.
Did you miss anything? Here’s your chance to get caught up.
The final phase of the school district’s Master Facility Plan would demolish Grant, Lincoln and Roosevelt elementary schools, as well as the eastern portion of the high school, then rebuild them.
This 4-bedroom, 4-bathroom, 3,978-square-foot home at 4526 Hunting Valley Lane was built in 2000.
No one injured in the incident on Sept. 12.
Full college football schedule, betting odds, television schedule.
Full college football schedule, betting odds, television schedule.
Equipment for the repairs will be set up in the nearby Cuyahoga Valley National Park.
Johnny Johnson pleaded not guilty charges that include aggravated murder, felonious assault, tampering with evidence and offenses against a human corpse.
Plenty of movies to see around Lakewood.
Plenty of movies to see around Brecksville.
There’s something for everyone this weekend in Lakewood.
Check out our interactive map of police incidents around Lakewood. Click on each marker to see the details.
They range in price from $16,667 to $275,000. Check out our interactive map of foreclosures around Lakewood. Click on each marker to see the details.
The designs for the proposed Taco Bell overhaul on Detroit Avenue look less like a hacienda and more like a pedestrian-friendly and architecturally sensitive building to Lakewood.
Compare that to August, when there were three properties were listed in foreclosure.
The following information was supplied by the Brecksville Police Department. Where arrests or charges are mentioned, it does not indicate a conviction.