Augusta, GA
Emery Thomas Woody Obituary January 24, 2026 – Thomas Poteet & Son Funeral Directors
Emery Thomas Woody, age 22, of Augusta, Georgia, entered into rest on January 24, 2026.
Born on October 31, 2003, Emery spent his early years in Alabama and Michigan before making Augusta his home, where he lived the majority of his life. He was a graduate of Lakeside High School and was just one class away from completing his degree in Automation Technology at Augusta Technical College.
Emery deeply loved his family, especially his nephew, who was truly the apple of his eye. He loved any excuse to be outside: cruising disc golf courses, scuba diving with his dad, skiing whenever he had the chance, playing cornhole with anyone he could round up, or simply enjoying a meal with friends under the sun or the stars. While Emery liked to play it cool, repping Carhart and Gucci, he was also known for being the goofiest guy in the room: jumping into “Uncle E” mode on the floor playing dinosaurs with his nephew, and the one making sure he got the largest serving of buffalo chicken dip while cheering on the Tennessee Volunteers. Those who knew Emery will remember and love him for his warmth, his honesty, the way he really let you know he loved the food he was eating, his willingness to pick up the phone and actually have a conversation, and most of all, his love for and faith in his Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.
Emery was not a perfect man. His siblings would be the first to tell you they had their fair share of fights, and his parents would admit there were times they didn’t always agree. But Emery never claimed perfection, and he knew his life rested in the hands of a perfect God. While those of us remaining earthside do not understand why Emery’s time here was cut short, we hold fast to the hope of an eternal future, not only with Emery but with our Savior.
Emery is survived by his parents, Tom and Amy Woody; his siblings, Corbin Hughes and Spencer Woody; his sister-in-law, Caroline Hughes; his beloved nephew, Conrad Hughes; and many cherished family members and friends.
A funeral service will be held on Friday, January 30, at 6:00 PM at Warren Church, with visitation from 3:00 until 5:00 PM prior to the service. The family will have a private burial the following morning. Pallbearers will be Chase Cory, Chris Munson, Cole Curry, Jackson Strickland, Jalen Husky, Madison Mixon, and Neel Smith, and Tyler Scarbary.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made. The family hopes to sponsor a disc golf basket or bench at Patriots Park in Emery’s memory; details will be shared as plans are finalized.
Augusta, GA
Augusta CSRA Habitat for Humanity hosts third annual Build the Band benefit
AUGUSTA, Ga. (WRDW/WAGT) – The Augusta CSRA Habitat for Humanity hosted its third annual Build the Band benefit Saturday at Miller Theater, with Morning Mix’s Cliff Bennett serving as host.
Audience members were able to vote on the best performance of the evening.
Bernadette Kelliher, CEO of Augusta CSRA Habitat for Humanity, said the event aims to match last year’s fundraising total.
“Well, when you stay and watch it, you’re going to see exactly what makes it, but it’s the talent. It’s the celebrating local. It’s the getting the word out. It’s the past years where we raised over $100,000 last year. If we can do the same this year, we’re going to put those years together, and we’re going to build the house the band built. And we are so excited about that,” Kelliher said.
The event came as Habitat for Humanity broke ground on its 88th home on Friday, marking 40 years of service to the community.
Copyright 2026 WRDW/WAGT. All rights reserved.
Augusta, GA
Augusta YMCA hosts grocery giveaway, serves 150 families in first hour
AUGUSTA, Ga. (WRDW/WAGT) – The YMCA held a grocery drive-through giveaway Saturday at its Claussen Road location in Augusta.
The YMCA said it handed out groceries to around 150 families in the first hour of the event.
The organization also serves around 1,200 children in the area through its summer programs.
Cheryl Wirt, CFO of YMCA Augusta, said the need has increased this summer as the organization expands its reach into rural areas.
“During the summer, we will get food boxes from Golden Harvest for families with kids, and we take that out to the communities,” Wirt said. “We go as far as Washington-Wilkes and Warren and Thomson. We will get on our feeding vans and get those boxes out to the communities, get families to fill out a form, and they get a box of food.”
Copyright 2026 WRDW/WAGT. All rights reserved.
Augusta, GA
Richmond County elections board seeks dismissal of Myles election challenge
AUGUSTA, Ga. (WRDW/WAGT) – The Richmond County Board of Elections has filed its official response to the complaint Lori Myles filed over the May 19 Augusta mayoral election.
As part of the legal process, the board has asked the court to dismiss the case and has filed its response to the claims.
The announcement came after the board met in executive session during a special called meeting Monday.
Myles is pushing for a recount. Her lawsuit claims 18,353 absentee votes are missing and alleges voter suppression.
Lawsuit details
Lori Myles filed the lawsuit in Richmond County Superior Court challenging the handling of the May 19 election, alleging missing absentee votes and errors tied to how results were reported, according to court records.
In the complaint filed on May 28, Myles alleges election officials mishandled voting information and election materials and claims the election returns were inaccurate.
Among the allegations, the filing claims that absentee-voter records were mishandled and that there were 18,353 missing absentee votes.
“I believe that ‘my votes, and your votes’ were stolen, erased, and strategically ‘voter suppressed,’” Myles said in lawsuit documents.
Defendants in the lawsuit include Richmond County Board of Elections Director Travis Doss, the Augusta Commission, members of Augusta’s elections board and Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.
Allegations and relief sought
Myles also points to what she describes as polling-place reporting issues, repeatedly questioning why Diamond Lakes is not listed among polling locations and results on Augusta’s election website.
The complaint requests a recount and recanvass and references the pursuit of open-records requests. It also calls for additional verification measures, including rescanning ballots and scrutiny of QR code tabulation, as part of the relief sought.
Myles wrote that she plans to submit a voter-signature petition in support of her challenge.
Results posted on Augusta’s election website for the May 19 contest show Johnson leading with 16,313 votes, or 42.8%, followed by Kendrick with 13,531, or 35.5%, Eric Gaines with 5,442, or 14.3%, and Myles with 2,838, or 7.5%.
What the elections board is now arguing in court
In a combined motion to dismiss and answer filed June 23, the Richmond County Board of Elections asked a judge to dismiss the case “with prejudice,” arguing Myles’ election contest was filed one day past Georgia’s five-day deadline after certification and is therefore time-barred and outside the court’s jurisdiction, according to the filing.
The board said the election results were certified May 22 and the statutory deadline to contest them was May 27, but Myles filed May 28, the motion states.
The board also argued Myles’ request to have 18,353 allegedly missing absentee votes added to her total is not a remedy available under Georgia law, saying courts can order recount-related relief but cannot assign unidentified votes to a candidate.
The filing argues Myles failed to meet election-contest requirements because she did not properly join and serve the other candidates in the race and did not follow the statute requiring expedited “special process” in election challenges, the motion states.
The motion also says Myles’ filing was not verified by affidavit, which the board argues is a mandatory requirement for an election contest petition under Georgia law.
The board asked the court to dismiss Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger as a defendant, arguing he is not a proper party in a local election contest and that official-capacity claims implicate sovereign immunity.
The board also asked for attorney’s fees and costs, arguing the lawsuit lacks substantial justification and noting Myles references filing five prior election-related cases in Richmond County that were dismissed, according to the motion.
Copyright 2026 WRDW/WAGT. All rights reserved.
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