Four Year Old Dies Two Weeks After Cantonment Crash

November 4, 2009

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A four year old child has died from injuries he received in a two vehicle accident two weeks ago in Cantonment.

Nathan Harold Guy died recently after being hospitalized  since the October 17 crash at the intersection of Kingsfield Road and County Road 97. He had been in Sacred Heart Hospital since the accident.

A Navarre resident was killed in the crash in Cantonment, and three other people were injured.

According to the Highway Patrol, a 1999 Saturn driven by Theresa M. Guy, 26, of Navarre, failed to stop at a stop sign at the intersection of Kingsfield Road and County Road 97. The Saturn was struck by a 2003 Dodge 2500 pickup driven by Samuel Seeley, 63, of Cantonment. Seeley and his passenger, Beverly Seeley, 61, of Cantonment, were transported to West Florida Hospital in critical condition. The Seeleys and Theresa Guy have since been released from the hospital.

glennashby.jpgGuy’s passenger, Glen D. Ashby (pictured left), 39, of Navarre, was pronounced dead at the scene. The four year old was also a passenger in the vehicle.

The force of the impact forced both vehicle to leave the road and overturn, coming to rest on the shoulder of County Road 97.

The case is still under investigation and charges are pending the complete of a  traffic homicide investigation, according to the Florida Highway Patrol.

Pictured above: A Navarre man died in this accident October 17 in Cantonment. A five year old boy, Nathan Guy, died about two weeks later at Sacred Heart Hospital Pictured inset: Glen Ashby, 39, was killed in the crash. Family members said he loved to fish. Pictured below: Map shows crash location. Click to enlarge.

Top photo courtesy WEAR.

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Cheerleader Home Invasion Victim: ‘I Was Scared”

November 4, 2009

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“I was scared.” That’s how the Northview High School cheerleader attacked while she was home alone Tuesday morning describes what happened.

homeinvphone2.jpgThe 16-year victim sent a text message to her mother, Angela McMahan, at 8:13 a.m.  “I guess im paranoid about hearing weird noises,” she wrote of being home alone after her friend was attacked Friday night. She had hurt her shoulder Monday afternoon in cheerleading practice, and had decided to stay home from school Tuesday.

Moments later, her fears became reality.

“I was in the bedroom, and I just heard something,” the victim told NorthEscambia.com. She grabbed a container of pepper spray and headed toward the family’s kitchen. Her mother had purchased her the pepper spray on Saturday, the day after a 13-year old middle school cheerleader was attacked in a home invasion about a mile away.

“He was in the kitchen,” she said of the suspect, who she described as being a tall, thin white male dressed in black pants. He had entered the home through a window in a nearby laundry room.

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She threw drinking glasses at the intruder, breaking them as they slammed into the kitchen. The suspect grabbed a a broken glass, cutting the victim several times on her arms, legs and face. The wounds were not severe.

“I was in the floor; I tried to ball up kind of,” she said. “And he came after me.”

She fired the pepper spray.

“It missed him the first time,” she said. “It was a straight stream the first time that went to the corner of the kitchen. The next time, it was like a mist, and he like fell back and held his eyes.”

She ran out of the house, and down Nancy Lane to the nearby Highland Baptist Church. Along the way, McMahan said her daughter called her. Her Blackberry showed calls at 8:20, 8:24 and 8:25 a.m.

“I don’t think I have ever ran that fast,” the victim said.

homeinv45.jpg“I told her to just keep running toward the church, that somebody would be there,” McMahan said.

Staff members were meeting at Highland. Some comforted the victim, one called 911 and some went toward the house hoping to capture the suspect. Escambia County Sheriff’s Office deputies dispatched to the church at 8:27 a.m. They were on scene within minutes, along with Escambia County EMS.

The victim’s wounds were minor; she was not transported to the hospital.

“I couldn’t get to her quick enough,” McMahan said. “I was saying I can’t believe this is happening again. It just happened.”

Pictured above: The attacker in Tuesday morning’s home invasion in Molino entered this Nancy Lane home through this utility room window. Pictured top inset: The cell phone message the victim sent her mother minutes before the attack. Pictured middle inset: The victim received minor cuts to her arms, face and legs from a broken kitchen glass she threw at the suspect. Pictured bottom inset: The victim sends a text message t oa friend to let them know she is OK a few hours after the attack. Pictured below: The victim ran to Highland Baptist Church after the attack. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge. 

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Are The Two Cheerleader Home Invasion Attacks Related?

November 4, 2009

Authorities are not yet saying that the attacks on two teen cheerleaders in Molino over a four day period are related, but the connections seem obvious.

homeinvtog.jpgA 13-year old Ernest Ward Middle School cheerleader was attacked by a knife-wielding intruder while she was home alone Friday night at her home in the 7000 block of Highway 95A. About a mile away, a 16-year old Northview High School cheerleader was the victim of another home invasion Tuesday morning, while she too was home alone.

The 13-year old’s mother said that only family knew that her daughter would be home alone while the rest of the family attended a football game Friday night at Northview High School.

The 16-year told NorthEscambia.com and investigators that only her parents and one other person knew that she would be staying home from school Tuesday morning following a cheerleading practice injury on Monday.

“I didn’t tell anybody that I was staying home except for my mom  and the guy that I ride to school with,” the high school cheerleader said. “I sent him a text message this morning.”

That person is  the brother of the 13-year old victim. Both girls ride to school with him each morning.

“I just think it was a random coincidence,” the 16-year old victim said.  But the 13-year old’s mother feels differently.

homewindow.jpg“I just do not think it was a random home invasion,” Brenda Garrett-McCall said. “They are two cheerleaders, two young girls, close to the same age. They live close together. They are together a lot of the time. (The older victim) is at our house three or four days a week.”

Garrett-McCall said she believes the two cheerleaders were the target of the home invasions, not robbery.

“They could have knocked her out and stolen anything,” she said of the incident Friday night at her home. “He knew her name. He told her, ‘Lana, I’ll be back to finish the job.’”

“I feel in my heart that it was random,” Angela McMahan, the mother of Tuesday’s 16-year old victim, said. “I want it to have been random.”

“I just think it was all a random coincidence,” Tuesday’s high school age victim said. “It is just scary.”

Pictured top: The victim of Friday night’s home invasion together with Tuesday’s victim. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge. Pictured bottom: The suspect in Friday night’s home invasion entered through this dining room window.

Sheriff’s Report Details Friday Night’s Home Invasion

November 4, 2009

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An Escambia County Sheriff’s Department report released Tuesday details what happened during a Friday night home invasion and attack on a 13-year old cheerleader.

The victim told Escambia County deputies that she was at home alone in the 7000 block of Molino Road while her parents were at a Northview High School football game. She said she did not attend the game because it was the first day she was able to walk without crutches following knee surgery.

She stated that she was sitting on her bed watching television when she heard a “crumbling” noise. Moments later, an unknown male wearing black pants, a black long sleeve shirt and a black mask with no holes around the eyes entered her room. She described him as being about six feet, four inches tall and speaking with a deep voice. He pushed her onto her bed, where she fell onto her stomach. He held her hands over head .

The victim told deputies that that male had a long serrated edged kitchen knife that he used to cut her hands. The victim then kicked her attacker, sending him stumbling backwards about three feet. She was able to get up form the bed, grab a shirt to wrap her bleeding hands and escape out of her window.

“The male called her by her name and said he would come back and finish the job,” Deputy Jason Mann wrote in his report. The suspect gave chase for a short distance, eventually running away across Highway 95A. The victim continued to a neighbor’s house in the 100 block of Highway 97.

The neighbor told deputies that the victim was”tapping”  at her door about 6 p.m. Friday.

homewindow.jpgDeputy Mann’s report stated that the neighbor “stated that when she opened the door (the victim) was standing with her hands wrapped in a shirt…(she) looked red in the face as if she had been crying or she was about to start crying…(she) started to talk real fast stating ’someone broke in and cut my hands’.”

At the victim’s residence, Deputy Mann stated in his report that he observed a window by the front door open about one to two inches, with the window blind damaged.

“As I made my way through the front door nothing appeared our of place,” he said. He found the knife in the bedroom between the bed and a wall. “As I looked around the bedroom nothing looked to be out of place or disturbed.”

The victim’s mother told deputies that she had left her daughter alone in the locked home about 4:25 Friday afternoon. She said nothing in the house was missing or out of place.

A neighbor told deputies that between 3:30 and 4:00 Friday afternoon, someone rang his doorbell, but by the time he answered, they were gone. He described one as being a white male between six feet and  six foot four inches tall. He could provide no other description.

Deputy Mann said he spoke to an 18-year old male Northview student that “stays at the (victim’s) residence sometimes”. He said that on Thursday afternoon, “two males knocked on the door and when he answered they asked if he had any games or anything they could get from him”. He described the first suspect as a short, chubby Hispanic male with short dark hair and the second suspect as a tall, thin white male with blond hair and a tatoo on his right leg.

The crime scene technician that processed the scene stated that “the presumed point of entry was an unlocked dining room window next to the front door and the knife in question had been identified as having come from the kitchen counter next to the microwave oven”.

“The molding at the bottom of the window was slightly pulled out, but no tool marks were observed,” Wayne Wright, crime scene technician, wrote in his report. He noted that the interior of the residence was clean and orderly, with nothing appearing to be out of place. His reported stated that the knife found in the bedroom appeared to have come from a knife block in the home’s kitchen.

The victim told Wright that the suspect was wearing gloves at the time of the attack. He said that very few fingerprints were located.  Various evidence was collected from the scene, including a DNA sample from the knife.

The report indicates that the first deputy arrived on the scene within one minute after the 911 call from the neighbor’s home.

Pictured top: The hands of Friday night’s 13-year old home invasion victim remained bandaged Tuesday after her attacker cut her with a knife. Pictured inset: The attacker entered the Highway 95A home through this dining room window. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Molino Remains On High Alert After Attacks

November 4, 2009

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The Molino community remains on high alert this morning following two home invasion attacks on young female cheerleaders.

The Escambia County Sheriff’s Department has few leads — the attacker from a Friday night incident and one Tuesday morning was described in a similar fashion. Both victims described him as wearing a black ski mask, a long sleeve black shirt, and black pants. He was described as being a tall, perhaps a few inches over six feet, thin white male.

In Tuesday’s attack, neighbors reported seeing a primer gray or possibly gold colored older model car leaving the area . But neither victim saw a vehicle.

The two crimes occurred less than a mile apart, and both victims knew each other well.

ECSO Sgt. Kevin Vickery said the department is continuing to investigate both crimes, and he said they are on the lookout for any suspicious activity in the area. He encouraged anyone that notices anything out of the ordinary to call the sheriff’s department.

“I think the whole community is on alert,” Angela McMahan, the mother of the 16-year old victim, said.

“We are looking out for each other,” Highland Baptist Church Pastor Brian Calhoun said. “We are being very vigilant.”

“The only way we’ll feel safe is when this guy is caught. Either by an angry dad hunting this man or by police,” Brenda Garrett-Mcall, the mother of the 13-year old victim, said.

Pictured above: The Escambia County Sheriff’s Department and Escambia County EMS respond to a home invasion victim Tuesday morning at Highland Baptist Church. Pictured below: An Escambia County deputy pulls away from the scene of Tuesday’s home invasion.  NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

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Lady Chiefs Play Tonight InVolleyball Tournament

November 4, 2009

nhs-baker-15.jpgThe Northview High School Lady Chiefs will be on the road tonight in Blountstown in regional quarterfinal volleyball playoff action.

The Chiefs (9-18, 5-5) are the second seed in District 1-1A. Tonight is just the third time in the school’s history that a volleyball team as advanced beyond the district level.

“We could progress from there; nothing says the state champ can’t be a second seed in the quarterfinals,” Head Coach Betty Heaton said.

The Chiefs will take on t Blountstown at 7 p.m. We will have complete scores and stats Thursday morning on NorthEscambia.com.

No Rain, Warm Days, Cool Nights

November 4, 2009

Our weather forecast remains dry through the weekend, with warm afternoons and cool nights.

Here is your official North Escambia weather forecast:

  • Today: Patchy fog before 8am. Otherwise, sunny, with a high near 77. Calm wind becoming north around 5 mph.
  • Tonight: Patchy fog after midnight. Otherwise, clear, with a low around 46. North wind around 5 mph becoming calm.
  • Thursday: Patchy fog before 8am. Otherwise, sunny, with a high near 72. North wind between 5 and 10 mph.
  • Thursday Night: Clear, with a low around 40. North wind around 5 mph becoming calm.
  • Friday: Sunny, with a high near 72. Calm wind becoming east around 5 mph.
  • Friday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 46. Calm wind.
  • Saturday: Sunny, with a high near 75. East wind around 5 mph.
  • Saturday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 53. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm.
  • Sunday: Partly sunny, with a high near 76.
  • Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 55.
  • Monday: A 30 percent chance of rain and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 77.
  • Monday Night: A 30 percent chance of rain and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 57.
  • Tuesday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 76. Chance of precipitation is 40%.

H1N1 Vaccine Available To Health Care Workers

November 4, 2009

Escambia County now has additional H1N1 vaccine available and is able to serve the priority group of health care workers with direct patient contact.

In addition to offering the vaccine at the health department’s Fairfield location, more than 2,000 doses of vaccine are being sent to area hospitals who will deliver it to their workers through employee health offices. The health department continues to provide vaccine to pregnant women, children of 6 months – 18 years of age, and caregivers of infants younger than six months old, according to Mollye Payne Hardin, spokes person for the Escambia County Health Department.

The H1N1 vaccine is available to the priority group on a walk-in basis at the health department’s Fairfield Drive location from 8 a.m. to 4 pm., Monday – Friday.

Priority groups are defined as pregnant women, children ages 6 months -18 years old, and people who live with or care for infants younger than 6 months of age. Now that additional vaccine is available, the health department is also providing it to health care workers with direct patient care responsibilities.

On Thursday, October 22, the Escambia County Health Department began offering voluntary H1N1 vaccination through schools and childcare centers. School-based vaccination will continue through December as long as vaccine is available. If distribution of the vaccine slows, clinics will be rescheduled. Parents will get information about the vaccine and permission forms about one week before the voluntary vaccination clinic is scheduled to be at their child’s school. The Health Department is also providing vaccine to the larger child care centers in the county.

Another Cheerleader Attacked In Second Molino Home Invasion

November 3, 2009

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(Updated 4:45 p.m.) The second home invasion in four days was reported this morning in Molino. And, like a home invasion Friday night in Molino, it involved a young cheerleader home alone.

At 8:27 this morning, the Escambia County Sheriff’s Department received a report of a home invasion at 8:27 this morning. A 16-year old told investigators that a tall, slender white male had entered her home on  Nancy Lane through a utility room window. She fought back — throwing drinking glasses at him and dousing him with pepper spray. She then fled the home, running to nearby Highland Baptist Church to for help. She described her attacker as wearing a black ski mask, a long black shirt and black pants. The pepper spray, which contained a dye, may have stained the attacker an orange color.

She evaluated by Escambia County EMS for  minor cuts to her face, arms and legs. She was not transported to the hospital. She was not able to provide a vehicle description for her attacker or tell authorities how he fled the scene; he was still inside the home, incapacitated by the pepper spray, as she ran to the church.

She told investigators that she had stayed home from school after hurting her shoulder yesterday during cheerleading practice at Northview High School. She said the only people that knew she would be at home were her parents and the person that normally gives her a ride to school. That person, also a Northview student, is a the brother of the 13-year old attacked Friday night, authorities said.

A similar home invasion was reported Friday night about a mile away on Highway 95A. In that incident, an Ernest Ward Middle School cheerleader was attacked in her bedroom by a man with about the same physical description. In Friday night’s attack, the 13-year old was attacked with a knife, receiving minor cuts to her hands as she was held down on her bed by her attacker.

NorthEscambia.com will continue to follow this breaking news story with updates all afternoon.

Pictured above: The attacker in this morning’s home invasion in Molino entered this Nancy Lane home through this utility room window. Pictured inset: The victim received minor cuts to her arms, face and legs from a broken kitchen glass she threw at the suspect. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Firefighters Respond To Train Fire

November 3, 2009

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A Tuesday morning fire in a train locomotive left a CSX train headed northbound minus half of its power.

The Flomaton Fire Department responded to a reported train locomotive on fire about 6:30 a.m. at Dixon Road and Old Fannie Road, about two-tenths of a mile north of the Florida/Alabama state line.

The CSX Transportation train’s engineer had already extinguished the fire in a gear box under the train — the portion of engine with the wheels driven by electric motors. When the first Flomaton firemen arrived on the scene, the gear box was just smoldering. Firefighters used a thermal imaging camera to look for hot spots inside the gear box, but they were unable to find anything unusual.

The train engineer said he had noticed the fire as the train was traveling through Flomaton, and he said he continued to Dixon Road crossing to allow firefighters to be able to reach the engine by road.

The train continued north toward its Waycross, Georgia, destination about 7:15 a.m. The engineer said that because of the fire, the rear wheels on the lead locomotive would not be used to power the train. Instead, he said they would run “dead”. The four engine train was already being powered by just three engines; the last engine was being towed to Waycross  for repair.

Pictured above: A CSX employees watches a gear box under the train as it pulls away from Dixon Road in Flomaton. Pictured above: The wheels and gear box of a CSX locomotive are covered in fire extinguisher material after an engineer extinguished a Tuesday morning fire. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

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