Georgia
Georgia high school football state championships: Greenbier wins flag title
Follow along for results, scores and the latest happenings at the 2025 GHSA tackle and flag football state championships.
The 2025 GHSA tackle and flag football state championships will take place at Monday-Wednesday at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. (Jason Getz/AJC)
The 2025 Georgia high school football championships are set to take place Monday to Wednesday in Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
The slate of games begins with flag football Division 1 at 11 a.m. Monday and is capped with the 5A tackle football championship Wednesday evening.
setadpu evil morf rof gnola wolloF .atnaltA
:eludehcs lluF
- Monday at 11 a.m.: Division 1 (flag football) — Washington County vs. Harris County
- FINAL: 32-0 Harris County
- Monday at 1 p.m.: Division 2 (flag football) — Jenkins vs. Greenbrier
- Monday at 3:30 p.m.: Class A Division II — Bowdon vs. Lincoln County
- Monday at 7 p.m.: Class 4A — Benedictine vs. Creekside
- Tuesday at 10 a.m.: Division 3 (flag football) — Whitewater vs. North Oconee
- Tuesday at noon: Division 4 (flag football) — Milton vs. Blessed Trinity
- Tuesday at 2 p.m.: Class A Division I — Toombs County vs. Worth County
- Tuesday at 5 p.m.: Class 2A — Carver-Columbus vs. Hapeville Charter
- Tuesday at 8 p.m.: Class 6A — Buford vs. Carrollton
- Wednesday at 11 a.m.: Division 5 (flag football) — McEachern vs. Pope
- Wednesday at 1 p.m.: Class 3A-A Private — Calvary Day vs. Hebron Christian
- Wednesday at 4:15 p.m.: Class 3A — Jefferson vs. Sandy Creek
- Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.: Class 5A — Gainesville vs. Thomas County Central
More Stories
Georgia
Backup QB Aaron Philo’s future at Georgia Tech in flux
‘Everybody’s gotta make their own decisions, everybody’s gotta do what’s right for them,’ coach Brent Key says.
Aaron Philo, Georgia Tech’s backup quarterback and presumed starter for the 2026 season, played in three games this past season for the Yellow Jackets. (David Zalubowski/AP)
Georgia Tech’s long-term future at the quarterback position is in a state of flux.
Tech coach Brent Key indicated Tuesday that Aaron Philo, the team’s backup and presumed starter for the 2026 season, might not be with the team for its bowl game against BYU on Dec. 27 in Orlando, Florida.
ev’I“ I“ uoy rehtehw s’tahw tahw ew stnaw yrev esu ot ot emit sthguoht esoht ”,sgniht .meht meht rieht eht eht eht eht eht eht klat .dias thgir secruoser edivorp ytilibissop s’elpoep nwo ruo ruo rehto ro ro seitinutroppo ylnepo no fo fo .ton ym ekam gnol denrael boj si snoitnetni ll’eh evah syug attog attog evig emag rof rof dleif gnihtyreve s’ydobyreve od enimreted ,snoisiced lortnoc t’nac t’nac lwob tseb tseb tseb tseb eb ta .era dna dna dna dna oga tuoba ”.ytiliba a eW ,hceT ,oS yeK aigroeG s’ydobyrevE
sdray htiw saw nwodhcuot werht eerht siht eht detrats .seires nosaes detneserper ,)sdnuop deyalp tsap .gnissap gninepo no no evisneffo fo puhctam detpecretni ni ni semag rof rof yb ta dna dna dna osla a a wolleY trebloT s’hceT ,tnelaT muidatS .tpeS olihP olihP .stekcaJ thgieH eH bbeW-rendraG ddoD ESC nodnarB ybboB ybboB 373 62 022 82-fo-12 ,2-toof-6(
.refsnart ot ot siht eht gnitrats kcabretrauq evisneffo evisneffo ,htnom tfel sdnetni eh raey-tsrif rotanidrooc rotanidrooc hcaoc emoceb ta decnuonna edisgnola hceT .llarmuS yadnoM yawgaL noJ srotaG adirolF adirolF renkluaF reilraE JD retsuB
gnorts .rats ecnis loohcs pihsnoitaler hgih evah dah syad sa dna a a s’olihP olihP renkluaF
refsnart ot eht detroper .latrop si detcepxe retne ,noonretfa yadseuT olihP 3nO nO
I“ retsuB“ nehw tahw erew saw saw saw saw tespu dootsrednu ytniatrecnu dlot ot ot ot ot yeht ereht eht eht eht s’taht taht taht erus .dekcohs suoires moor yllaer ytterp ytterp fo fo edam ybbol tel wonk wonk dnik ni ni woh .mih mih eh eh morf ,rehtaf mrod .did dettimmoc dettimmoc llac dna tuoba a ehT .rebmetpeS boR s’olihP ,olihP ”,atosenniM atosenniM noitutitsnoC-lanruoJ m’I renkluaF renkluaF tuB retsuB retsuB atnaltA noraA noraA noraA )yllanigiro( )hceT(
I“ uoy lliw esoht siht kniht ,ereht ereht ereht eht eht taht taht drows s’ffats laer no ,nosaesffo .dnim gnol tsuj si ni namuh sih syug yug tog annog eniuneg rof neve tbuod t’nod eid ”.laed egnahc ,erac s’gnieb sa era yna dna .ni-lla a .hceT I I eH aigroeG sA
elor deyalp ni ni ,etaudarg ,namhserf elbigile lwob gib gnimoceb sa a a hceT loohcS ecnirP ,olihP naitsirhC eunevA A .4202
sdray htiw htiw .niw niw werht eht eht taht gnitrats spans redluohs sdnoces nur nar kcabretrauq deyalp revo evisneffo tfel ,yrujni gnidulcni ni evag rof rof gnilaed ta dna na a a htiW etatS .muidatS olihP olihP htroN gniK stekcaJ senyaH ddoD aniloraC ybboB ,45 35 92-03 462 22 dray-81
sdray sdray htiw owt owt snwodhcuot ot nworht eerht .spans snosaes ,erocs nar evisneffo deggol snoitpecretni ni sih sah sah og rof rof ta dna dna dna osla gnola a .hceT olihP eH 59 839 381
sdray nwodhcuot ot werht )roines gnissap sessap no .redael sih rof gnirud detcennoc .reerac emoceb sa emit-lla a ecnirP olihP olihP s’aigroeG ,naitsirhC eunevA tA 951 229,31 65(
owt ot ot gnihctiws shtnom retal ni ni dellorne dettimmoc erofeb dna secnaigella hceT atosenniM hcraM yraunaJ eH .4202 3202
ot ot ot rieht eht deludehcs nruter eraperp ecitcarp .gninrom gninrom ,elihwnaem emag rof deunitnoc era dna dna yadsendeW yadseuT yeK ,stekcaJ ht31
s’tI“ I“ s’tahw s’tahw er’ew yeht yeht meht meht meht rieht rieht eht eht eht eht eht naht naht naht ,sreyalp sreyalp sreyalp rehto ytinutroppo seitinutroppo on on on gnikool ti attog attog teg rof rof rof rof .seilimaf ”,seilimaf t’nod od od ”.snoitcartsid snoitcartsid tnereffid tnereffid redisnoc .sehcaoc tseb tseb tseb ta sa dna dna dna dna dna .lla .stluda ,stluda .dedda eW s’erehT yeK syuG s’ydobyrevE
Georgia
Execution set for this week in Georgia put on hold for now
ATLANTA — Georgia’s parole board on Monday put an execution scheduled for Wednesday on hold, but it was not clear how long that would last.
The order suspending the execution of Stacey Humphreys, signed by State Board of Pardons and Paroles Chair Joyette Holmes, does not provide any reason for the decision. The board also issued a notice saying a clemency hearing for Humphreys scheduled for Tuesday morning is “postponed until further notice.”
Humphreys, 52, was set to receive a lethal injection Wednesday evening at the state prison near Jackson. He was convicted of malice murder and other crimes in the 2003 killings of 33-year-old Cyndi Williams and 21-year-old Lori Brown.
Humphreys’ lawyers last week filed a petition asking a judge to order two members of the parole board to recuse themselves from considering his clemency petition, saying they had conflicts of interest.
They also asked the judge to order the parole board to halt the clemency proceedings for 90 days to give the governor time to appoint replacement board members and to order the governor to make those appointments. And they asked the judge to keep the parole board from hearing Humphreys’ clemency petition until the two board members have been replaced.
During a hearing Monday afternoon on that petition, a lawyer for the parole board said she did not know how long the suspension would last. The death warrant is valid through noon on Dec. 24, meaning that if the execution doesn’t happen by then the state will have to seek a new warrant.
Kimberly McCoy, one of the board members whose recusal Humphreys’ lawyers is seeking, was a victim advocate with the Cobb County district attorney’s office at the time of Humphreys’ trial and was assigned to work with the victims in the case. The other, Wayne Bennett, was the sheriff in Glynn County, where the trial was moved because of pretrial publicity, and Humphreys’ lawyers argue he oversaw security for the jurors and Humphreys himself during the case.
Guards stand at the front of Georgia Diagnostic Prison, Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2011, in Jackson, Ga. Credit: AP/John Spink
During the court hearing, it was established that McCoy had agreed Sunday night to abstain from voting on the matter of Humphreys’ clemency application. But it was not clear what that means, particularly whether or not she would be present and would participate during the discussion of the case.
When Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney asked what McCoy understands it to mean if she abstains, McCoy told the judge she would do whatever the court directs her to do. A lawyer for the board said her understanding of abstention is that McCoy could be present during the clemency hearing and could ask questions but would not vote.
Under questioning in court, Bennett testified that he did not believe his connection to Humphreys’ trial would have any bearing on his treatment of the case, that he would consider the evidence and take the appropriate actions. Generally, Bennett said, he was not directly involved in the day to day responsibilities of security for a trial or for the sequestered jurors, and that those duties fell to his staff.
Three members of the parole board must vote for clemency for it to be granted. Lawyers for Humphreys argue that he has a right to have his clemency application heard and voted on by a five-member parole board with no members who have conflicts.
Guards stand at the front of Georgia Diagnostic Prison, Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2011, in Jackson, Ga. Credit: AP/John Spink
Tina Piper, a lawyer for the state, argued that Humphreys has the right to have his application voted on by a quorum of three, not by five members. She also argued that the state Constitution says the parole board shall be made up of five members, so the governor can’t appoint a temporary member because then there would be six.
Noting that the parole board could lift the suspension at any time, Humphreys’ lawyers urged the judge to issue an order keeping the state from executing him until the judge has a chance to make a decision on the recusal of the parole board members and whether a member who isn’t voting should be temporarily replaced.
Williams and Brown worked as real estate agents in a sales office in a model home for a new subdivision in Powder Springs, a suburb about 20 miles (32 kilometers) northwest of Atlanta. Humphreys entered the sales office around midday on Nov. 3, 2003, and forced them to strip naked and give him their bank PINs before fatally shooting them, according to evidence presented at trial.
Humphreys withdrew more than $3,000 from the women’s bank accounts, according to court filings. He told police after his arrest that he had recently taken out some high-interest payday loans and needed money for a payment on his truck.
Georgia
Mom says viral video shows her being booted from Georgia restaurant for breastfeeding her baby
Aris Kopiec says she felt “belittled” after capturing video of a man yelling at her holding her sleeping baby inside Toccoa Riverside Restaurant. (Credit: @ariskopes/Instagram)
A Florida mother says a man she believed to be the owner of a popular riverside restaurant in Georgia yelled at her and ordered her to leave after she breastfed her infant — an encounter she says she recorded on her cellphone that shows a man shouting, “Get on out of here!”
The incident happened at Toccoa Riverside Restaurant in Blue Ridge, according to Aris Kopiec, and has since spread widely online, reigniting scrutiny of the business’ treatment of young families.
Kopiec told FOX Business she was dining with her husband, three young daughters — ages 4, 2 and 4 months — and family friends when her baby began to cry.
She said she latched her infant, covered up immediately, and ensured she was fully concealed from the view of anyone except her own table.
‘I FELT VIOLATED’: NEW MOM ALLEGES BRITISH AIRWAYS ATTENDANT LIFTED HER NURSING COVER MID-FLIGHT
The Kopiec family dined at the Toccoa Riverside Restaurant together with friends before the viral video incident happened. (Courtesy of Shyla Shoots / Fox News)
“The only people who could see me were at my table,” she said. “I covered myself immediately.”
Kopiec said she pulled her shirt back down and was preparing to take her older children outside when she bumped into either a chair or another guest in the crowded enclosed porch area. That, she says, is when the restaurant’s owner stepped toward her.
“He looked at me and said, ‘You can’t do that here,’” Kopiec recalled. “I wasn’t even breastfeeding at that point. I was holding my baby in one arm and helping my kids with the other. He wouldn’t let me get any words out. He kept saying, ‘I have to protect my restaurant. You need to go to a corner.’”
CRACKER BARREL CEO SAYS SHE FELT LIKE SHE GOT ‘FIRED BY AMERICA’ AFTER REDESIGN BACKLASH
A mother says she recorded a Georgia restaurant’s owner shouting at her after she breastfed her child. (@ariskopes via Instagram / Fox News)
Kopiec said she and her friend took the older children outside to wait while their spouses paid inside. Kopiec said staff apologized to the men in the group, but not to her.
She said when she returned to gather her belongings, the confrontation escalated. She said she calmly informed the man she claims is the owner that Georgia law explicitly protects breastfeeding in public places.
“I just told him, if he wanted to protect his restaurant, he should follow the law,” she said. “That’s when he lost his mind.”
Kopiec said the man refused to give his name. After her friend mentioned having his photograph, Kopiec began recording.
TSA IMPLEMENTS DEDICATED SECURITY LINES FOR FAMILIES AT SOME AIRPORTS
Kopiec told FOX Business that staff at the restaurant apologized to her husband and her friend’s husband, but not her. (Courtesy of Shyla Shoots / Fox News)
In the video she shared with FOX Business, a man standing behind the counter shouts, “Get on out of here!” as Kopiec holds her infant in her arms.
“It was so aggressive,” she said. “I knew I had to get my kids out of there.”
Kopiec left the restaurant shaken.
“Honestly, I felt like I was in the wrong,” she said. “My instinct was to apologize. But then I reminded myself — women have a legal right to breastfeed. I did nothing wrong.”
Public records and local business listings confirm 67-year-old Tim Richter as the owner of Toccoa Riverside Restaurant. In September, a spotlight from the Fannin County Chamber of Commerce via Facebook also identified Richter as the longtime owner and praised the restaurant’s hospitality, a characterization many online commenters have contrasted sharply with the tone in the new viral video.
In a phone call with FOX Business, a man who identified himself as the restaurant’s owner declined to confirm whether he is the individual shown in the video. He defended the business, saying, “I’ve had the restaurant for thirty-three years. We’ve been breastfeeding for thirty-three years,” and claimed the incident had been “staged for clicks.”
Toccoa Riverside Restaurant did not provide any further comment.
CAMPBELL’S FIRES EXECUTIVE ALLEGEDLY CAUGHT CALLING COMPANY’S FOOD ‘S— FOR POOR PEOPLE’ IN RECORDING
Aris Kopiec said she never felt so “belittled” as when the man she believes to be the owner of Toccoa Riverside Restaurant yelled at her for feeding her baby. (Courtesy of Shyla Shoots / Fox News)
Georgia law states that a mother may breastfeed “in any location where the mother and baby are otherwise authorized to be,” protecting nursing mothers from being removed or restricted for feeding their children.
Etiquette expert and author Alison Cheperdak told FOX Business the filmed confrontation raises serious concerns. Cheperdak’s etiquette book for everyday situations, “Was it Something I Said?” is set to publish early next spring.
“Breastfeeding is natural and legally protected,” Cheperdak said. “Hospitality is about care, not confrontation, and raising one’s voice at a guest is never acceptable.”
She added that a mother owes no apology for feeding her child.
“A calm explanation is appropriate, but the responsibility is on the restaurant to treat her with respect,” she said. “Even if a restaurant wants a quieter atmosphere, policies should never undermine basic respect for families.”
‘REAL RELIEF’: NEW GOP PROPOSAL COULD HELP FAMILIES RECEIVE THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS
A Georgia restaurant implemented a surcharge for “adults unable to parent,” on their menu. (WAGAweb)
Local Atlanta outlets, as well as Food and Wine, reported in 2023 that Toccoa Riverside raised eyebrows for posting an “adult surcharge” for parents deemed “unable to parent,” sparking backlash from families who said they had been reprimanded for their children’s behavior.
A FOX 5 Atlanta report on the surcharge controversy said parents claimed the owner had scolded their children and allegedly made a 3-year-old cry.
Kopiec said she hopes the attention leads to positive change. “Every nursing mom deserves to feel safe feeding her baby,” she said. “We have a legal right to breastfeed, period.”
GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO
As for the restaurant, she said she has chosen not to hold onto anger. “I’ve chosen to forgive,” she said. “But I would really like to see them welcome breastfeeding moms.”
The video continues to circulate widely online, where commenters are debating breastfeeding protections and the treatment of young mothers and infants in public spaces.
-
Washington1 week agoLIVE UPDATES: Mudslide, road closures across Western Washington
-
Iowa1 week agoMatt Campbell reportedly bringing longtime Iowa State staffer to Penn State as 1st hire
-
Iowa2 days agoAddy Brown motivated to step up in Audi Crooks’ absence vs. UNI
-
Iowa3 days agoHow much snow did Iowa get? See Iowa’s latest snowfall totals
-
Miami, FL1 week agoUrban Meyer, Brady Quinn get in heated exchange during Alabama, Notre Dame, Miami CFP discussion
-
Cleveland, OH1 week agoMan shot, killed at downtown Cleveland nightclub: EMS
-
World1 week ago
Chiefs’ offensive line woes deepen as Wanya Morris exits with knee injury against Texans
-
Minnesota1 week agoTwo Minnesota carriers shut down, idling 200 drivers
