Corrections Officer Facing Drug Charges

July 6, 2013

An Escambia County (Ala.) corrections officer has been charged with smuggling contraband into the county jail to sell to inmates.

Jane Rogers Johnson, 58, was charged with two counts of possession of a controlled substance, one count of drug trafficking and a violation of Alabama’s ethics law.  She allegedly introduced pills, cocaine and other contraband into the Escambia County Detention Center in Brewton, and then sold the items to inmates.

Her arrest came after a unrelated joint investigation by the Alabama Bureau of Investigation and the U.S. Marshal’s Service. As investigators interview inmates about a person possibly impersonating an attorney to gain access to inmates, they discovered Johnson’s alleged activities.

For her own safe Johnson is being held in the  Baldwin County Jail in Bay Minette rather than Escambia County, Ala.. She is being held without bond. . She may face federal charges from the U.S. Marshals because the Brewton jail also houses federal inmates under contract.

Nurse Stole Morphine From Elderly Patient

July 6, 2013

A nurse  was convicted this week of diluting morphine meant for elderly patients while stealing the drug for herself.

Lisa Macan was convicted by a Santa Rosa County jury of neglect of an elderly person, possession of a controlled substance, and petit theft.  Circuit Judge Marci Goodman remanded the 47-year old nurse  into cstody in the county jail and set her sentencing for July 31, 2013.  She faces a maximum of 10 years state prison.

While Macan was working as a LPN at a Gulf Breeze nursing home, one of her elderly 92 year-old hospice patients received several doses of diluted morphine that failed to abate the patient’s pain.  Another nurse had noticed the prescription was not working and thought the prescription appeared to be watered down. The nursing home administration notified the Santa Rosa County Sheriff’s Office.  A pharmacist tested the morphine and found it had been diluted.

Prosecutors said Macan admitted to taking the patient’s morphine, a controlled substance, for her own use and adding water to the bottle, so that her theft would go undetected.  Macan acknowledged to her employer upon her termination that diluting the medication meant that the hospice patient would receive the diluted medication.

Joe S. Cardwell

July 6, 2013

Joe S. Cardwell, 66, of Pensacola, passed away June 27, 2013, with his family by his side. Joe was born September 8, 1946, in Montgomery to Joseph and Alice Cardwell. Joe married his wife Theresa on June 3, 1967, and the two relocated to Pensacola shortly after. He was a graduate of Troy State University where he earned a Bachelor of Accounting and M.S. & PhD in Criminal Justice. Joe worked for the Escambia County Sherriff’s Office for over 20 years until he was forced to retire due to being injured in the line of duty. Joe was also an avid saltwater fisherman.

Joe is survived by his wife of 47 years, Theresa, of Pensacola; his daughter, Cassandra (Eric) Allen of Cantonment; three grandchildren, Carley, CariAnn, and Jaxon; brother-in-law, Steve (Jamie) Stephens of Wetumpka, AL; and two nephews, Seth (Nikki) Stephens and Cameron Stephens, both of Wetumpka. He is preceded in death by his parents, Joseph and Alice Cardwell of Montgomery; and father and mother-in-law, Sam and Gussie Stephens of Montgomery, AL.

Services for Mr. Cardwell will be held Sunday, July 7, at Oak Lawn Funeral Home in Pensacola. Services will begin at 1 p.m., followed by visitation and reception at 2 p.m. Casual dress preferred. Interment will take place Monday, July 8, at Montgomery Memorial Cemetery.

Pallbearers include Wayne Barber, Preston Byrd, Randy Raborn, Cameron Stephens, Seth Stephens, and Bill Trawick.

Flowers are welcomed but donations to Covenant Hospice are also appreciated. The family of Mr. Cardwell would like extend special thanks to Wayne Barber for being such a wonderful caregiver to Joe during his recent illness. Also, special thanks to Drs. Carter, Gary, Erdos, and Wade and Baptist Hospital Pensacola’s ER & SINU staff for their wonderful care.

Oak Lawn Funeral Home has been entrusted with arrangements.

John Alan Gunn

July 6, 2013

Colonel John Alan Gunn (USMC, ret), 82, of Gulf Breeze, left this earth on June 24, 2013, and into the arms of his heavenly Father.

John was a man of honor, pride, and integrity. He was a dedicated Marine, community advocate, and devoted family man. He faithfully served his country, his church, and his community. He fought his debilitating dementia with laughter, a kind heart, and strength of character, fitting of a Marine. He will forever be in our hearts.

John was born and raised in Chicago, IL and graduated from Morgan Park High School. He received a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Monmouth College in Illinois. He was a 40-year career newspaperman, with 26 years in news and 14 years in sports with newspapers in Monmouth and Galesburg, IL, Wilmington, NC, Richmond, VA, Costa Mesa, CA, and Pensacola. He retired as an assistant sports editor of The Orange County, CA Register in Santa Ana, CA in 1994.

John was the co-author of the Virginia 1968 Freedom of Information Act and received the George Mason Award from the Richmond Sigma Delta Chi. He was the only editor on duty at The Richmond News Leader the day JFK was assassinated and had the duty of yelling “stop the presses” and helped crank out an updated edition hours later. Through the years, he interviewed politicians, sports legends, celebrities, and military heroes.

A retired Marine Corps Reserve colonel, he served two years on active duty at Quantico, VA, Cherry Point (where he met his wife Joan), and New River, NC. He spent 28 years in the Reserves with units in Illinois, Virginia, and California.

When John retired to Gulf Breeze in 1995, the newsman continued to write stories for the Pensacola News Journal, the Gulf Breeze Sentinel, the Pensacola Beach Islander, and published the monthly newsletter of the Military Officers Association of America. He loved his Gulf Breeze community and served as chairman of the Gulf Breeze Development Review Board. He was a tireless American Red Cross volunteer, working around the clock during numerous hurricanes. He was the local chapter’s Volunteer of the Year in 1998. John was a faithful member of Calvary Chapel of Gulf Breeze, and his smiling face was at the door greeting members on many Sundays.

John combined his love of sports and the Marine Corps by authoring two books on Marine Corps football. Over decades, John collected and saved professional, college, and military sporting news. His collection primarily focused on memorabilia from college and professional football and basketball, and also military football game-day programs from the WWII era. His collection, one of the largest sports collections in the country, was donated to the University of North Carolina at Wilmington, where it continues today to be a research tool for journalists and sportswriters.

John is preceded in death by his beloved wife of 56 years, Joan Gunn, and his parents Alan and Clara Gunn.

He is survived by four of God’s finest children, Laura Catterton (Allen) of Cantonment, Victoria Street (Audie) of Cantonment, Becky Gunn of St. Paul, MN; and Bruce Gunn (Luz) of Gulf Breeze. He is also survived by his sister, Nancy Brown of Chicago; nephew, Mark Brown and niece, Tracy O’Brien, both of Chicago; and five grandchildren, Alex Dunlop, Casey Street, Luke Street, Lindsay Chiles, and Alan Gunn; and one great-granddaughter, Angelique.

The family would like to thank the caring and compassionate staff of Pacifica Senior Living Creekside and the Emerald Coast Hospice.

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Pensacola Waterfront Mission.

A graveside funeral service with military honors will be held at 11:45 a.m. on Friday, July 26, 2013, at Barrancas National Cemetery/NAS Pensacola.

Arrangements have been entrusted to Rose Lawn Funeral Home of Gulf Breeze.

Tri-County 12U Team Wins State Championship, Headed To World Series

July 6, 2013

The Tri-County 12-U All Star softball team is headed to the World Series after winning the Alabama State Babe Ruth softball championship.

The girls beat Covington County 14-5, Flomaton/East Brewton 13-5, Opp 25-14 and Poarch Creek 2-1 to make the state championship game. They brought home the title by defeating Andalusia 14-2.

The World Series is in Alachua, FL, August 1-7.  The “Tri-County 12U Softball/Alabama State Champs account” has been established at the Santa Rosa Federal Credit Union for donations to help the team cover tournament fees, hotels, travel and food.

Pictured: (front, L-R) Haylee Watson, Avarie Jackson, Kendall Barrow, Kassadi Borders, (middle) Kolbi Bray, Malarie Foster, Katlynn Hobbs, (back) Coach Stephen Jackson, Kennedy Cato, Olivia Cook, Alyssa Baxley, Manager Stuart Baxley and Coach Kavin Borders. Submitted photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Deputies Seek Armed Robbery Suspect

July 6, 2013

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Update: This crime was attributed to James Wyman McGlothlin, 39, who was shot and killed by deputies on June 5. Click here.

Escambia County Sheriff’s investigators are asking for the public’s help in identifying the suspect in a Fourth of July holdup.

The white male robbed The Trand N Save Video Games store  at gunpoint in the 5000 block of Mobile Highway about 2:30 p.m. Thursday. He was described only as being about six feet tall. After taking money and some undisclosed items, police say he fled in a small red sports car.

Anyone with information on his identity is asked to call Crime Stoppers at (850) 433-STOP.

More Rain, Flash Flood Watch

July 6, 2013

More showers and thunderstorms are forecast with heavy rainfall possible. There is a Flash Flood Watch in effect until Sunday morning for the entire area. Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:

  • Tonight: Showers likely, with thunderstorms also possible after 7pm. Cloudy, with a low around 72. Southeast wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%.
  • Sunday: Showers and thunderstorms likely. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 85. Southeast wind around 5 mph. Chance of precipitation is 70%.
  • Sunday Night: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 72. Southeast wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.
  • Monday: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 86. East wind around 5 mph becoming southeast in the afternoon.
  • Monday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 71. South wind around 5 mph becoming east after midnight.
  • Tuesday: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 91. East wind 5 to 10 mph becoming south in the afternoon.
  • Tuesday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 71. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.
  • Wednesday: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly sunny, with a high near 93. Light and variable wind becoming south 5 to 10 mph in the morning.
  • Wednesday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 71. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm after midnight.
  • Thursday: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 90.
  • Thursday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 70.
  • Friday: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 91.
  • Friday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 71.
  • Saturday: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 91.

Edith Joyce Page

July 6, 2013

Edith Joyce Page, age 73, resident of Cedartown passed away June 30, 2013, at her home in Molino. Edith was born July 29, 1939, to Nathaniel and Ella Straughn. She received Christ at an early age and was baptized at New Hope P.B. Church where she served as church secretary for 45 plus years until her health failed in 2008. Edith retired from Escambia County School Board, Carver High with 43 years in 2003 as school secretary. She loved her family, friends and her church. Edith loved to also bowl and shop.

She was preceded in death by her parents Nathaniel and Ella Mae Straughn and husband George Page.

Survivors include four children, Anthony Clay, Katrina Clay-Malden, Christopher (Jackie) Page, Erika (Everette) Miller; grandkids, Ra’chell, Jeremy, LaBrea, Buddy, D’Asya, Leon, Terrence, Anthony; and great-grandchildren Ka’Maury and Aaliyah.

Services were held Saturday, July 6,2013, at New Hope P.B. Church with Rev. Robert Lovelace and Rev. Michael C. Smith, Sr. officiating.

Burial will be in New Hope P.B. Church Cemetery.

Friday Night Wahoos Game A Wash Out; Doubleheader Saturday

July 6, 2013

The Pensacola Blue Wahoos’ contest with the Jackson Generals scheduled for Friday night at Pensacola Bayfront Stadium has been postponed due to inclement weather. The game will be made up as part of a doubleheader on Saturday, July 6 starting at 5 p.m.

Fans with tickets to Friday night’s game can use their ticket for any 2013 regular season home game, subject to availability. Fans must exchange their ticket at least 24 hours in advance of a desired game at the Pensacola Blue Wahoos Ticket Office for a ticket of equal or lesser value. Exchanges must be made in person and cannot be processed via telephone, e-mail or facsimile.

Friday night’s scheduled Trent Richardson appearance has been cancelled.

Saturday’s doubleheader will feature two seven-inning contests starting a 5 p.m with a half-hour between the two games. Gates will open at 4 p.m. The first game will feature Tim Crabbe (3-6, 3.53) going for the Wahoos against the Generals’ Roenis Elias (4-7, 2.96). Ryan Dennick (4-9, 3.54) will get the call in game two for Pensacola while Jackson will counter with Anthony Vasquez (0-0, 4.22)

Florida Gov’t Weekly Roundup: A Focus On Planning

July 6, 2013

During a week that seemed almost as notable in Tallahassee for its monsoon-like conditions as for the Fourth of July celebrations, most of the attention seemed focused on planning.

http://www.northescambia.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/floridaweeklly.jpgEducation Commissioner Tony Bennett began planning for how to handle the fallout from a slew of changes to the state’s accountability system that could hold school grades down. The state passed a key milestone in its planning for future gambling policies by receiving a study on gaming. And a Panhandle representative abruptly dropped his plans to run for a Senate seat in 2016.

Elsewhere, the week was largely quiet, except for the odd Supreme Court ruling and a challenge to state labor practices by the union for corrections workers. As the first half of 2013 began fading into the rearview mirror, most people already seemed to be looking at the second half and planning.

WILL THEY GET ALONG ON THE FLOOR NOW?

Perhaps the most surprising news of the week came Monday, when Rep. Jimmy Patronis, R-Panama City, said he was bowing out of the race for a seat held by Senate President Don Gaetz, R-Niceville, who’s required to leave the Legislature due to term limits in 2016.

Patronis was the first candidate to file for the 2016 race in Senate District 1, but also faced a potentially bruising primary battle against the incumbent’s son, Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fort Walton Beach. With Patronis leaving the race, Matt Gaetz becomes the uncontested early favorite to keep the district, which includes all or parts of six counties, in family hands.

The race between Patronis and Gaetz, who didn’t officially open an account for the race until May, had provided blog and Twitter fodder for months. Some observers even saw the outlines of the race when Patronis and Gaetz clashed on the House floor or voted differently on legislation.

But Patronis said politics did not play a role in the discussion.

“I have a strong desire to continue to serve the people of the Northwest Florida another eight years in the state Senate,” Patronis said in a prepared statement. “However, an overwhelming part of me has come to realize it is not what’s best for me and my family at this time in our lives. So I have decided I will no longer be a candidate for state Senate.”

The 41-year-old lawmaker, who will leave the House due to term limits next year, did not close the door on a future campaign.

“I am not stepping away from community service, and I have not ruled out a future run for public office,” Patronis said. “For now, I have decided this is not the right time to run, and I’m looking forward to finishing strong during my last year in the Florida House of Representatives.”

GRADING ON A CURVE?

As news of Patronis’ decision was beginning to filter out, Education Commissioner Tony Bennett was trying to avoid the second botched rollout in two years of the state’s report cards on individual schools. He met with five superintendents, as well as a researcher and a couple of Department of Education officials, to brainstorm ways of minimizing confusion about the school grades.

It’s a touchy issue for the agency. While Bennett’s predecessor, Gerard Robinson, said he resigned in 2012 to spend more time with his family, it happened in the middle of a months-long controversy about the state’s testing regimen and errors on school grades that forced the department to change the marks for dozens of schools.

Many educators blame what appears to be a wave of falling scores — detected in the early calculations that school districts run — to a spate of changes in the state’s accountability system for schools, including 13 this year alone. In addition to making it more difficult to meet the standards, they say, the number of changes makes it more difficult to figure out what’s causing the drop.

“If we had just done one or two of these, it might have been digestible,” said Escambia County Superintendent Malcolm Thomas. “But the fact that we’re doing all of this … it has become very traumatic.”

Bennett was noncommittal about one of the superintendents’ preferred suggestions, limiting the drop in each school’s grade to one letter level — for example, allowing the grade to drop from a “C” to a “D,” but not to an “F.” That policy was temporarily used in 2012 in the middle of the snafus during Robinson’s tenure.

Superintendents say they aren’t opposed to accountability, and expressed frustration at the fact that the state hasn’t spent more time trying to educate the public on the possibility that school grades could fall even as students were learning more.

“The canvas is still blank, and when you have a blank canvas, all kinds of people start painting on it,” said Miami-Dade County Superintendent Alberto Carvalho.

ODDS ARE, GAMBLING WILL INCREASE

Perhaps even more closely watched than the release of school grades, at least among the lobbying industry in Tallahassee, was the first part of a study looking at whether Florida should take a chance on an expansion of gaming that could be at the center of one of the biggest battles of the 2014 legislative session.

The first part of the state-commissioned study largely focused on the current gambling industry in Florida. The New Jersey-based Spectrum Group didn’t put all its cards on the table with the 307-page report, but made it clear that Florida doesn’t need $2 billion destination casinos in Southeast Florida or a Native American group opening venues along Interstate 10 to be considered a “major gambling state.”

And the study said the gaming industry is going to grow, with or haphazardly without state regulation.

“Intentionally or not, the policies established by lawmakers — or the lack thereof — play a critical role in the evolution and expansion of gaming,” Spectrum stated. “Indeed, in the views of many, the ‘evolution’ and ‘expansion’ of gaming are largely synonymous. The industry rarely shrinks, and quite often, expands as a result of expansion.”

Gambling generated $2.47 billion last year in tax revenue for Florida, and if nothing changed with the current gaming options, including the massive drop already experienced in play on the horses, dogs and humans tossing the jai-alai pelota against a wall, that jackpot would still double by 2060.

The rest of the $388,845 study is expected to look into the potential economic impacts of changing gaming across Florida, such as the impacts of ending or altering the exclusive Seminole Indian compact and allowing international casino operators into the state. It is due by Oct. 1.

TIME TO PART WITH EX PARTE?

While lawmakers considered their next move in the upcoming gambling battle, one of the fights from the 2013 session went to court. Just hours after changes took effect, plaintiffs’ attorneys Monday filed five lawsuits challenging a key part of a new state medical-malpractice law, contending it violates the privacy rights of patients.

The lawsuits, in state and federal courts, argue that the new law could lead to the improper disclosure of personal health information to defense attorneys representing doctors or other health providers.

Such disclosure could happen without attorneys for the patients being present, a concept known in the legal world as “ex parte communications.”

“When no one is present to protect the victim, sensitive medical information may be disclosed, no matter how irrelevant, personal, or embarrassing it may be to the patient,” said Debra Henley, executive director of the Florida Justice Association, which represents plaintiffs’ attorneys and lobbied against the law. “What is worse is that the (defense) attorney can do whatever he or she wants to with that sensitive information.”

Those who support the law brushed off the challenges as nothing more than an attempt to re-litigate the issue through, well, litigation.

“It is hardly surprising that the trial bar would challenge this, as they were content with the extremely uneven playing field that existed before this legislation was enacted,” Timothy J. Stapleton, executive vice president of the Florida Medical Association, said in a prepared statement.

STORY OF THE WEEK: The Spectrum Group issued the first part of its highly-anticipated study of gambling in Florida, which could set the framework for a fierce battle over the issue during next spring’s legislative session.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “At the end of the day, this is a federal government bait-and-switch situation. They want to dangle money in front of us, get us to take it, and then three or four years from now, expect us to pay for it.”– House Speaker Will Weatherford, R-Wesley Chapel, once again try to tamp down talk of a special session on Medicaid expansion

By The News Service of Florida

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