One Injured In Highway 29 Crash With Semi Truck

July 23, 2013

One person received minor injuries a wreck involving a semi truck Monday afternoon in Cantonment.

John Smith, 54 of Chaplain, NY, was southbound in a semi-truck on Highway 29 behind a 1996 GMC Sierra driven by 68-year old Carl Gray of Cantonment.  When Gray slowed to turn right onto Harvest Hill Drive, Smith was unable to stop and rear-ended a trailer being pulled by Gray. Smith and Gray were uninjured.

Gray’s passenger in the pickup, 54-year old Anthony Hail of Cantonment, was transported by Escambia County EMS to West Florida Hospital with minor injuries.

Smith was cited for failure to use due care by the Florida Highway Patrol.  The Cantonment Station of Escambia also responded to the crash.

NorthEscambia.com photos by Kristi Smith, click to enlarge.

Wahoos Rained Out

July 23, 2013

The Pensacola Blue Wahoos’ contest with the Huntsville Stars scheduled for Monday night at Pensacola Bayfront Stadium has been postponed due to inclement weather. The game will be made up as part of a doubleheader at some point during the series in Huntsville from August 18-22 at a time to be announced later.

Fans with tickets to tonight’s game can use their ticket for any 2013 regular season home game, subject to availability for a ticket of equal or lesser value. Exchanges must be made in person at the Blue Wahoos Ticket Office and cannot be processed via telephone, email or fax.

The Wahoos now hit the road for a five-game series with the Mississippi Braves starting on Tuesday night at 7 p.m. Shaun Ellis, Monday’s scheduled starter, will now get the call on Tuesday against Mississippi’s Aaron Northcraft (3-8, 4.17)

Boy Scout Leader, School District Employee Charged With Molesting Three Kids

July 22, 2013

A local Boy Scout leader and school district employee has been arrested for molesting three girls.

Douglas Alden Parker, 47, was charged with three counts of felony lewd and lascivious behavior.

Pensacola Police Sgt. Kristin Brown said detectives began investigating Parker on July 14, the same day one of the females filed a complaint against Parker with the Department of Children and  Families. An investigation determined the females were ages three to nine years old when Parker had sexual contact with them.

Brown said detectives also are in the process of examining Parker’s computer after child  pornography was found on it, and additional charges are pending for possession of child pornography.

As of July 16, Parker was a Boy Scout leader with local  Troops 3 and 608 and was an information technology employee for the Escambia County School District. The school district position had no direct  contact with children, according to police.

Parker remains in the Escambia County Jail with bond set at $300,000.

The case remains under investigation. Anyone having questions or information about Parker’s activities is asked to contact Sgt. Kristin Brown at (850)  435- 1965.

Downed Tree Limb Cuts Power For Some Cantonment Residents

July 22, 2013

An unknown number of Gulf Power customers  in Cantonment lost power when this large limb fell into power lines in the  100 block of Madrid Road about 11 a.m.  Monday. NorthEscambia.com photo by Kristi Smith, click to enlarge.

Barrineau Park Man Sentenced On Animal Cruelty Charges

July 22, 2013

A Barrineau Park man who was convicted on animal cruelty charges has been sentenced to probation and 90 days in jail.

Roger Legrande Kervin, 67, was originally charged with 88 animal abuse related charges. He was convicted on four animal abuse counts. Judge Terry Terrell sentenced Kervin two years community control to be followed by three years probation. He was also ordered to serve 90 days in jail within the first two years of supervision, with credit for 36 days previously served. He is also not allowed to posses any animal.

Kervin faced a maximum of  12 years in prison.

Kervin was arrested in February 2012, three days after the first of 90 animals were seized from his property on Lawson Lane near Barrineau Park. Many of the animals were euthanized.

Before his arrest, Kervin spoke out in his own defense, saying that he had done nothing wrong. Kervin said he kept his dogs in good shape for wild hog hunting, often using the wild pork to feed people at charity events. During his trial Thursday, Kervin continued to maintain that he kept dogs on his property for hunting wild hogs.

This was not the first time Kervin had faced animal abuse charges. According to court records, he was sentenced to probation in 1992 for using animals to bait or fight other animals.

Editor’s note: The following information, from the State Attorney’s Office arrest warrant affidavit,  is graphic and may be disturbing to some readers. It details the original allegations against Kervin at the time of his arrest. Dozens of the charges against Kervin were dropped or dismissed prior to his trial.

Escambia County Animal Control seized 20 dogs on Tuesday, February 14, 2012. According to an affidavit, several of the dogs were emaciated while some displayed open sores and infections. Some of the dogs were aggressive and had puncture wounds and scarring. One of the dogs was in a seizure and was in need of immediate medical attention. Another suffered a ruptured anus.

The pen where the dogs were kept were filled with feces and mud that was several inches deep with limited to no shelter. The dogs had no potable water and no food. Several where tethered with “large” or “heavy” chains. Ten of the 20 dogs –both hounds, bulldogs and mixed breeds — that were seized Tuesday were euthanized.

The affidavit details the condition of each euthanized dog. In addition to being emaciated, one or more of the dogs suffered from conjunctivitis in both eyes, sores, infections, infected toenails and fly sores.

“Several of the dogs had puncture wounds and scarring consistent with fighting,” the arrest warrant states.

In addition to the seized dogs, Escambia County Animal Control found two dead goats, one dead hog and nine skeletal remains. Another 23 dogs on the premises were living in feces-covered pens with non-potable water, no food and limited to no shelter. There were 16 hogs kept in a pen without escape from their slop which contained feces, urine, food and mud. The hogs also had no drinking water and no food. There was, according to the report, a dead hog in the same pen as the live hog. There were 16 goats, five of which were at large on Lawson Lane. Some were malnourished and their pen had no grazing material.

When the State Attorney’s Office, Escambia County Sheriff’s Office and Escambia County Animal control returned on Wednesday, February 15, 2012, with a search warrant, 23 dogs, 16 goats, 16 hogs and two piglets were seized. Authorities also seized treadmills and unspecified medications. The animals were in poor living conditions, but authorities noted that conditions had improved from the previous day. Fresh sand and dirt and been placed in all of the pens and shelters to cover the feces and mud. At least one standing pen had been washed out with a hose to remove feces from the bottom.

Pictured above and below: Roger Kervin’s property on Lawson Lane at the time numerous animals were seized. NorthEscambia.com file photos, click to enlarge.

Molino’s Gindl Makes History With Walk-Off Homer For The Brewers (With Video)

July 22, 2013

Molino’s Caleb Gindl made history Sunday for the Milwaukee Brewers as he became the first in franchise history to hit a walk-off for his first MLB homer.

Gindl went 2-for-5 on Sunday, including a sweep-clinching home run in the 13th inning that gave the Brewers a 1-0 win over the Marlins at Miller Park.

It was Gindl’s first Major League home run, so he was not surprised to get the traditional cold shoulder. In this case, that meant his teammates hustling up the clubhouse tunnel rather than onto the field to offer high-fives. (Video at the bottom of the page.)

“I kind of knew that was going to happen,” Gindl said. “I saw [Jean Segura] at home plate, and I was like, ‘I guess the rest of them are in the tunnel.’ I was running up there to find them.

“That’s the highlight of my career.”

Gindl, a natural right fielder who is capable of playing all three spots, had endured some lowlights in a previous stint with the Brewers. He made costly errors in back-to-back games, including a June 27 drop that contributed to four unearned runs in a 7-2 Brewers loss, then was optioned back to Triple-A Nashville the next day after getting some encouraging words from manager Ron Roenicke.

“He told me he knows I can play the outfield, that the first time up here is always different — which it is,” Gindl said. “‘I think you play with a lot of nerves,’ he told me, ‘Hey, go back down there and do what you’re supposed to do, and you’ll be back.’”

Gindl responded by playing clean defense and batting .421 with seven extra-base hits in Nashville’s first 10 games in July. He brought that hot bat into Sunday’s start against Miami.

“He really squared up four baseballs,” Roenicke said. “Good at-bats all day, and we didn’t have a whole lot of those, so it was nice to see him swing well.”

He also played a mistake-free game in the outfield in place of Ryan Braun, who was used only as a pinch-hitter.

“When those things happen and you make one error, you think about it, like, ‘Oh my God, don’t let it happen again,’” Gindl said before Sunday’s game. “Then when it happens again, you go, ‘Oh, no,’ and it’s the kind of thing that sticks with you a little bit. That’s not me. I’m not used to making errors at all, especially in the outfield on popups. … It’s nice to get another opportunity. I’m not going to play so timid this time. I’m going to play wide-open.”

Gindl’s bat has been his best asset since the Brewers’ made him a fifth-round Draft pick in 2007. He is a .293 hitter with 81 home runs in seven Minor League seasons, but Sunday marked a first.

“Never in my life have I ever hit a walk-off homer,” Gindl said. “That was the first, and it was unreal running the base. It was pretty special.”

The homer ended the Majors’ longest scoreless game since Boston won, 1-0, in 16 innings at Tampa Bay on July 17, 2011, according to Stats, Inc.

Gindl never expected to be the one to do it.

“Not at all,” Gindl said. “Not a chance. I thought Braun or Rickie [Weeks] or somebody like that, but not me. Me and Jerry [Narron, the Brewers' bench coach] actually just talked about it, and he said, ‘Don’t try to hit a homer. Hit a double.’ That was my approach. When I hit it, I thought it had a chance, but I thought it was going to go foul, actually. It snuck in there for me.”

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Courtesy MLB/Milwaukee Brewers.

One Injured In Cantonment Pickup Truck Wreck

July 22, 2013

One person was injured in a single vehicle accident Sunday night on Tate Road near West Roberts Road. The driver of a GMC Sierra apparently lost control, ran off the roadway and struck a tree about 10:35 p.m. The driver was transported to an area hospital with non-life threatening injuries.

The accident is under investigation by the Florida Highway Patrol. Escambia County EMS and the Cantonment Station of Escambia Fire Rescue also responded to the crash.

NorthEscambia.com photo by Kristi Smith, click to enlarge.

Business Groups: Online Sales Tax Loophole Costs Florida Jobs

July 22, 2013

Business advocates have gotten behind a study that says Florida would see robust job growth if “e-Fairness” tax laws were adopted to close loopholes that allow many out-of-state retailers to avoid collecting sales taxes when Floridians make purchases online.

The Florida Chamber of Commerce, Associated Industries of Florida, and the Florida Retail Federation, along with Florida TaxWatch, on Friday lent their support to the national study that estimates more than 107,000 mostly retail jobs would be created in Florida within a decade if sales taxes were collected for online purchases. They hope the data from the Alliance for Main Street Fairness study will sway lawmakers to require the collection of the taxes.

Pensacola Blue Wahoos Over Huntsville 7-5

July 22, 2013

The Pensacola Blue Wahoos overcame a late two-run deficit with four runs in the last of the seventh inning to knock off the Huntsville Stars 7-5 on Sunday afternoon at Pensacola Bayfront Stadium. The win snapped Pensacola’s three-game losing streak and seven-game home losing skid.

Trailing 5-3 entering the seventh inning, Corey Wimberly drew a leadoff walk in front of Mike Costanzo who launched his first homer in a Wahoos uniform this season to knot the game at five. Yorman Rodriguez followed with a walk before Donald Lutz tripled him home on a fly ball to center, giving Pensacola a 6-5 lead. Tucker Barnhart drove home Lutz with a sacrifice fly to left to give the Wahoos a two-run lead.

Jamie Walczak fired a 1-2-3 eighth to set up Trevor Bell, who notched his sixth save of the season with a scoreless ninth frame, picking up two strikeouts in the process.

Pensacola jumped out on top in the contest in the last of the first against Huntsville starter Ariel Pena. With two on and one out, Lutz singled to right to score Costanzo before Barnhart brought home Rodriguez with a groundout, pushing Pensacola out in front 2-0. Lutz had the lone multi-hit game for the Wahoos posting a 2-for-3 night with two RBI. Barnhart saw his eight-game hitting streak come to an end, but still managed to drive home two runs.

The two teams traded tallies in the fifth inning. In the top half of the frame, Chadwin Stang tripled and scored on Nick Shaw’s sacrifice fly to make it 2-1. Pensacola countered in the last of the inning by loading the bases with nobody out and scoring a run on a double play ball off the bat of Barnhart.

Wahoos starter Josh Smith then ran into trouble in the sixth inning as he yielded a leadoff homer to Jason Rogers, his fourth homer in the last two games. Mike Walker then doubled before a walk and a fielder’s choice forced Smith from the contest. Drew Hayes entered and promptly gave up a go-ahead three-run homer to Hector Gomez, giving the Stars a 5-3 lead.

Hayes battled back to pick up the win, improving to 3-2. The right-hander was charged with a run on two hits with three strikeouts. Smith took a no-decision while allowing four runs on five hits in 5.1 innings with seven strikeouts. Overall, the Wahoos struck out 14 Stars, setting a new season-high for a nine-inning game.

Arcenio Leon (1-6) took the loss for Huntsville as he gave up three of the four runs in the seventh inning. Pena lasted five frames for Huntsville, giving up three runs on five hits with six strikeouts and five walks.

The five-game series wraps up on Monday at 7 p.m. at Pensacola Bayfront Stadium. Shaun Ellis (3-1, 3.55) will get the ball for Pensacola against Huntsville’s Andy Moye (4-10, 4.37).

Local Unemployment Rate Climbs

July 22, 2013

The latest jobs numbers  show the unemployment rate held steady in Florida and fell in Alabama, but the local  jobless numbers were not as positive.

Escambia County’s unemployment rate jumped from 6.7 percent in May to 7.1 percent in June.  There were 595 more people reported unemployed during the period, for a total Escambia County unemployment of 10,156 people. One year ago, unemployment in Escambia County was 8.7 percent.

Santa Rosa County unemployment was up from 5.9 percent to 6.7 percent from May to June. Santa Rosa County had a total of 5,017 persons  reported to be still unemployed. The year-ago unemployment rate in Santa Rosa County was 8.3 percent.

In Escambia County, Alabama, unemployment increased from 7.6  percent in May to 8.0 percent in June. That represented 1,173  people unemployed in the county during the month. The year-ago rate was 10.0 percent.

The jobless numbers released by Florida and Alabama do not include persons that have given up on finding a job and are no longer reported as unemployed.

Florida’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate was 7.1 percent in June, holding steady over the month, but down 1.7 percentage points from 8.8 percent a year ago. The state’s May and June rates were the lowest since September 2008 when it was 7.0 percent.

Alabama’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate, at 6.5 percent in June, was down from May’s rate of 6.8 percent and was below the year-ago rate of 7.6 percent.

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