Careless Driving Causes Four Vehicle Crash Involving Two Semi Trucks, Dump Truck

April 8, 2015

There were no serious injuries in a four vehicle accident Wednesday morning at Highway 97 and Meadows Road.

The accident involved two semi-trucks, a dump truck and a pickup truck. According to the Florida Highway Patrol, 31-year old Brian K. Smith of Bay Minette was northbound on Highway 97 in a 2014 Kenworth tractor-trailer approaching Greenland Road when he failed to stop behind a northbound 2007 dump truck waiting to turn left.

Smith swerved, with the left wheels and front of his trailer striking the dump truck driven by 59-year old David Chavers of Cantonment. The dump truck was pushed into a northbound Ford F350 driven by 59-year old David Forbes of Uriah, AL.

Meanwhile, 42-year old Christopher G. Robbins of McDavid swerved his northbound 2013 Volvo tractor-trailer, striking the right side of dump truck.

The four vehicles involved in the crash came to rest mostly off Highway 97 in three corners of the intersection. Both Meadows and Greenland Roads were blocked by the crash, while Highway 97 remained opened.

Chavers and Forbes received minor injures but refused transport to the hospital. Smith and and Robbins were uninjured.

Smith was cited by the FHP for careless driving.

NorthEscambia.com photos.

Museum In Molino To Be Renamed In Honor Of Lillian King

April 8, 2015

The Escambia County Commission is set to rename Molino’s museum after Lillian Fillingim King.

Lillian King was instrumental in the establishment of the Molino Community Complex — housing the Molino Mid-County Historical Society Museum, the Molino Branch of the West Florida Public Library, multiple meeting rooms, and an auditorium — in the former Molino Elementary School.

She also established the Molino Mid-County Historical Society in 1999, of which she served as president from the museum’s inception in 2013 until her passing in 2015.

On April 9, the Escambia County Commission is expected to approve a resolution official renaming the Molino Mid-County Historical Society Museum as the “Lillian F. King Museum”.

King passed away February 27, 2015, at the age of 73.

Pictured top: Lil King holds ribbon for the ribbon cutting of the Molino Community Complex in October 2012. Pictured below: West FLorida Library Administrator Darlene Howell presents a certificate of appreciation to Lil King and the Molino Mid County Historical Society for the groups efforts at the Molino Branch Library in April 2014. NorthEscambia.com file photos, click to enlarge.

Cantonment Woman Charged In School Bus Hit And Run

April 8, 2015

A Cantonment woman is facing multiple charges for fleeing the scene of a school bus crash on Mobile Highway Tuesday afternoon.

According to the Florida Highway Patrol, 18-year old Danielle Jocelyn Lee was charged with third degree felony leaving the scene of a crash with injuries, and cited for failure to exhibit a driver’s license on demand, no proof of registration, no insurance and violation of right of way.

Lee is accused of turning her blue Volkswagen left in front of a school bus driven by 43-year old Angela Jordan at Bellview Avenue and Mobile Highway. Following the crash, troopers said Lee fled the scene, later telling them that she was afraid. Lee was booked into the Escambia County Jail with bond set at $5,000.

There were 28 children on the bus at the time of the crash. Two reported minor injuries, one transported to the hospital by EMS and the second removed from the scene by parents.

Senate Looks To Policies On Police Body Cameras Like Those In Pensacola

April 8, 2015

A Senate panel on Tuesday approved a bill that would require law-enforcement agencies to establish policies for the proper use of body cameras if the agencies allow officers to wear the devices. The City of Pensacola is one of just 13 Florida police departments currently using the cameras, with nine other departments testing their use.
The Senate Criminal Justice Committee unanimously passed the measure (SPB 7080), which would require law-enforcement agencies to establish policies and procedures addressing the proper use, maintenance and storage of body cameras and the data they record.

That includes training officers who use the cameras and performing “a periodic review of actual agency body-camera practices to ensure conformity with the agency’s policies and procedures.”

Currently, Florida law does not require police agencies to have policies governing the use of such technology.

“We’re saying to law enforcement: ‘OK, if you want to use ‘em, this is what they have to be,’ ” committee chairman Greg Evers, R-Baker, said.

But senators also emphasized their concern that the measure should not violate part of state law that makes it a third-degree felony to “intercept an oral communication.” Under the bill, that provision would not apply to police wearing body cameras.

“If I stop to get a cup of coffee as a law-enforcement officer and I capture other conversations that are occurring behind me or in front of me … we’re essentially listening in on conversations that are occurring in public,” said Sen. Jeff Brandes, R-St. Petersburg. “And there is no consent provided for listening in on those conversations.”

But Evers said the recordings would only be used when officers are performing their duties.

“It’s only for law-enforcement activities,” he said after the meeting. “If by chance they happened to overhear another conversation … it’s erased, there’s no record of it, and it didn’t happen. Because there is a privacy concern that’s located in the bill and located here in this chamber that will see that that’s the way it is.”

Evers predicted the Senate would back the committee bill, which does not have a House companion.

Supporters of the measure include the Florida Sheriffs Association, the Florida Police Benevolent Association, the Florida Public Defender Association and the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida.
There could be additional funding for such programs. In December, President Obama proposed a three-year, $263 million legislative package to increase the use of body-worn cameras and expand such training for law-enforcement agencies. Part of the federal initiative would provide a 50 percent match to states and local entities that purchase body-worn cameras and requisite storage.

by Margie Menzel, The News Service of Florida

Escambia Weeds Out 90 Marijuana Plants In 2014; Santa Rosa 234

April 8, 2015

Last year in Escambia County, two people were arrested as 90 marijuana plants were destroyed from seven different sites, according to a report released by the state Tuesday. Across the state, Florida’s Domestic Marijuana Eradication Program resulted in the destruction of more than 31,500 marijuana plants and the arrests of more than 500 people during 2014.

The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services works to prevent the cultivation and distribution of marijuana through the Domestic Marijuana Eradication Program, which is a joint effort with the U.S. Department of Justice Drug Enforcement Agency and local sheriff’s offices and police departments in 49 counties across the state.

Two of the marijuana sites in Escambia County were indoor operations with 27 total plants eradicated, resulting in two arrests.  The other five sites destroyed by law enforcement in Escambia County were outdoors with 63 plants, resulting in no arrests.

Authorities in Santa Rosa County eradicated 171 plants from three indoor sites, resulting in four arrests, along with two arrests related to 10 outdoor grow sites with 63 plants. Authorities also seized one weapon related to a marijuana grow site in Santa Rosa County.

The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office was reimbursed $1,750 for their eradication efforts by the program, while the Santa Rosa County Sheriff’s Office was reimbursed $3,500.

The eradication of cannabis plants at the source immediately strikes a blow against drug dealing and abuse by reducing the availability of marijuana on the street, the report states. Eradicating marijuana before it can be cultivated also increases citizen and officer safety and reduces overall investigative costs.

“Our partnership with local law enforcement helps keep marijuana out of our communities, making them safer for the 20 million residents who call Florida home,” Commissioner of Agriculture Adam H. Putnam said.

Pictured top and bottom: Marijuana plants previously seized in the Molino area. Pictured inset: An indoor grow operation near Molino. NorthEscambia.com file photos, click to enlarge.

Century Takes Part In Mayors Day Of Recognition For National Service

April 8, 2015

Tuesday was the Mayors Day of Recognition for National Service, with mayors across the country recognizing those who serve as volunteers.  Century Mayor Freddie McCall recognized the service and volunteerism of the Be Ready Alliance Coordinating for Emergencies (BRACE) and AmeriCorps. VISTA. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.

Escambia Man Gets 35 Years For Abusing Child

April 8, 2015

An Escambia County man is headed to prison on sex offender charges.

Nathan Matthew Kinard, 35, was sentenced Tuesday by Escambia County Circuit Court Judge Edward Nickinson to 35 years in state prison followed by a lifetime of sexual offender probation.  Kinard will be required to serve 25 years as a minimum mandatory sentence. Kinard was also designated as a sexual predator and will be required to register as a sexual predator and comply with all statutory requirements.

Kinard entered a guilty plea to two counts of lewd or lascivious molestation as well as escape, attempted escape and criminal mischief for crimes he committed while awaiting trial at the Escambia County Jail.

During August 2014, prosecutors said Kinard had sexual contact with an eight-year old child victim.  DNA recovered from the victim matched the defendant.

House Seeks More Oversight Of Florida’s Prison System

April 8, 2015

Saying that reform must happen, a Florida House panel on Tuesday pushed forward a plan aimed at increasing oversight of the state’s troubled prison system but stopped short of endorsing an independent commission included in the Senate’s corrections overhaul.

The House Justice Appropriations Subcommittee approved the measure (HB 7131) in a 13-2 vote, with two Democrats objecting that the legislation does not go far enough to quash inmate abuse and cover-ups first exposed last summer.

The panel also signed off on a separate bill (HB 7113) intended to steer mentally ill people into diversion programs or other services instead of putting them behind bars. Department of Corrections Secretary Julie Jones, whose appointment received preliminary approval from a Senate committee earlier Tuesday, has maintained that many of her agency’s problems are rooted in a skyrocketing number of mentally ill inmates.

House Criminal Justice Chairman Carlos Trujillo, the prison reform bill’s sponsor, amended the proposal Tuesday to add two more administrative regions to the agency’s three current regions, which he said would increase accountability over the state’s 56 prisons.

The Senate’s plan, approved by the full chamber last week, would create a nine-member, governor-appointed panel that would have broad investigatory powers and essentially take over the job now performed by the agency’s inspector general, who answers to Gov. Rick Scott’s chief inspector general.

Calling his bill “a work in progress,” Trujillo did not rule out a commission but said lawmakers would be abdicating their responsibility by approving such a panel.

“One thing we won’t accept is just passing this problem onto somebody else,” Trujillo, R-Miami.

Establishing five regions — a revival of the same number of regional divisions once employed by the corrections agency decades ago — would introduce “more eyes, more bodies, more people, more boots on the ground,” Trujillo told reporters after the meeting.

“Part of the problem is you have to attack the culture,” Trujillo, a lawyer, said. “In some facilities there’s this camaraderie and this culture of, ‘This is our house and you people just have to live by whatever rules we pass,’ whether they conform with the laws of morals and ethics of everything we live by in society. That’s what has to stop.”

The House and Senate plans come in response to widespread reports about problems and abuse in the prison system. Those reports have included allegations about cover-ups involving inmate deaths, complaints from inspectors who say they faced retaliation for exposing cover-ups and complaints from guards and others about a culture of intimidation against whistleblowers.

Last week, an FBI investigation resulted in the arrest of two prison guards and one former prison worker who were allegedly members of the Ku Klux Klan. They were accused of plotting to kill an ex-inmate after he was released from a rural North Florida institution.

But Allison DeFoor, a prison-reform advocate who heads Florida State University’s Project on Accountable Justice and has pushed the oversight commission, told the panel that adding more regions won’t solve the prison system’s woes.

“It’s structurally broken. It’s not a crisis situation. It’s much worse than that,” DeFoor, a former judge and sheriff, said.

Jones, who objects to the commission as “another layer of bureaucracy,” said she supports the House’s decentralization.

“With as many facilities as we have, it’s important to have additional supervision that answers to Tallahassee, and a smaller span of control for those regional directors is going to be very helpful in the accountability piece,” Jones said Tuesday afternoon.

Jones, like her six predecessors in the past decade, is well-intended, DeFoor said.

“You can’t lift a car with good intentions. You have to have a posse. You need people to do it,” he said.

by Dara Kam, The News Service of Florida

FHSAA Announces New Track And Field, Cross Country Classifications

April 8, 2015

The Florida High School Athletic Association state series assignments were announced Tuesday for track and field, and cross country for the 2015-16 through 2018-19 school years. Local schools were assigned as follows:

Class 3A
Fall 2014 student population: 1,526-2,094

DISTRICT 1

Escambia (Pensacola)
Gulf Breeze
Milton
Pace
Pensacola
Pine Forest (Pensacola)
Tate (Cantonment)
Washington (Pensacola)

Class 2A
Fall 2014 student population: 493-1,525

DISTRICT 1
Arnold (Panama City Beach)
Bay (Panama City)
Chipley (track & field only)
North Bay Haven (Panama City)
Northview (Bratt)
Pensacola Catholic
Rutherford (Panama City)
South Walton (Santa Rosa Beach)
Walton (DeFuniak Springs)
West Florida (Pensacola)

Class 1A
Fall 2014 student population: 11-493

DISTRICT 1
Baker
Central (Milton)
Freeport
Jay
Laurel Hill (cross country only)
Paxton
Pensacola Christian
Rocky Bayou Christian (Niceville)

Baseball: Northview Beats Jay; Navarre Tops Tate

April 8, 2015

BASEBALL

Northview 5, Jay 4 (8 inn.)

The Northview Chiefs defeated in the Jay Royals 5-4 Tuesday in an eight-inning district battle.  The Royals will travel to Rocky Bayou Thursday, while the Chiefs will host Chipley in a district game.

Navarre 7, Tate 4

The Tate Aggies lost a road game to Navarre Tuesday, 7-4.  Sawyer Smith was 1-3. Marker Miller was 2-4, Logan McGuffey was 1-3. The Aggies are on the road again Thursday against district opponent Niceville.

Pictured: The Northview Chiefs beat the Jay Royals in 8 innings Tuesday in Bratt. NorthEscambia.com photos by Ramona Preston, click to enlarge.


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