Homeless man charged with hitting man in the head with a pipe-like object

Staff report

GAINESVILLE, Fla. – James Henry Vhay III, 46, was arrested yesterday and charged with aggravated battery after allegedly hitting another man in the head with a pipe-like object at a homeless camp.

The responding Gainesville Police Department officer reported that at about 10:15 p.m. on May 5, Vhay and the victim started arguing at a homeless camp just west of Alachua County Fire Rescue Station #30 (930 SE 5th Street); the argument turned physical, and Vhay allegedly hit the victim in the back of the head with a blunt cylindrical object, causing a deep laceration.

The victim reportedly told the officer that the argument started because Vhay damaged his newly-purchased e-bike; he said Vhay grabbed a “pipe” and hit him in the back of the head.

The victim’s girlfriend reportedly told the officer that she was in her tent when she heard the argument, and when she came out of her tent, she saw Vhay hit the victim with an object she described as a “pipe.” She said she tried to break up the fight, Vhay fled toward his tent at the back of the camp, and the victim went to the fire station for medical treatment.

A second witness reportedly said he saw Vhay hit the victim with a cylindrical object that was 12-14 inches long before he ran away.

Post Miranda, Vhay reportedly admitted having a blunt cylindrical object about 12-14 inches long and said he threw it into the woods after the fight. He reportedly described the object as a “stick” but couldn’t say what it was, saying it was “dark.”

The officer was unable to find the object.

Vhay has been charged with aggravated battery causing great bodily harm. He has one felony conviction (violent) and six misdemeanor convictions (two violent); he has served one state prison sentence for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon out of Putnam County and was released in 2016. He was arrested in Gainesville in October 2023 for burglary and property damage and served 60 days in jail with credit for 60 days served after entering a plea of nolo contendere to trespassing.

Judge Susan Miller-Jones ordered him held on $75,000 bail.

Articles about arrests are based on reports from law enforcement agencies. The charges listed are taken from the arrest report and/or court records and are only accusations. All suspects are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. 

      • You’re literally so stupid. People offer help and donate bikes to people in need all the time. I see far more kindness coming from individuals than the government.

    • I wonder if being a convicted felon precludes individuals from residing in the new Alachua County hotels.

      If it does, just think how much more dangerous it will be going out after dark.

      The majority of Alachua Count voters are so stupid. Sorry, they just make really stupid choices.

      • No matter how many slums these leftoids build, it will NEVER be enough. It’s like a cancer that will only spread and keep eating into the budget and public safety.

        The core of the issue is actually the 19th Amendment. A hard pill to swallow.

      • Our local government, proposed these outrageous laws to protect the homeless population and really all it does is decrease values of the existing values of most Alachua County residents core values

  • What a genius. He came here after prison, and is still homeless, duh…

    ACLUSPLCDNC 🤡👺👹👿💩

  • And government is buying up hotels and going to provide free housing for these vagrants? “Build it and they will come”.

    • Will they be providing housekeeping and clean towels & sheets for the bums? If not, that’s next.

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