Molino Woman Charged With Embezzling From Bob Tyler Toyota
June 20, 2017
A Molino woman is facing multiple felony charges after she allegedly embezzled thousands of dollars from Bob Tyler Toyota.
Catherine Elizabeth Gibson, 47, was charged with five counts uttering a forged instrument, grand theft, 18 counts of dealing in stolen property, a violation of the Florida Communication Fraud Act and criminal use of personal identification.
Boy Tyler, owner of Bob Tyler Toyota, reported to the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office that Gibson had opened a fraudulent bank account using his personal information including Social Security number and birthday. Gibson was linked to the fraudulent account by the use of her phone number and power of attorney paperwork. Gibson was subsequently terminated from her position of an account payable clerk at the dealership.
According to an arrest report, Gibson electronically deposited 14 vendor checks totaling $4,966.32 into the account during a two month period. She also provided four additional vendor checks that taken but not yet deposited, according to an arrest report.
Gibson was released from the Escambia County Jail on a $71,000 bond, according to jail records.
Tropical Storm Cindy Churns North With More Rainfall
June 20, 2017
****THIS IS AN ARCHIVED STORY. CLICK HERE FOR THE LATEST INFORMATION.****
Health Officials Move Foward With Marijuana Plans
June 20, 2017
Florida health officials have laid out a new process to implement the voter-approved constitutional amendment broadly legalizing medical marijuana, as they attempt to meet deadlines included in the November ballot measure.
The latest proposed rule came as the Department of Health awaits Gov. Rick Scott’s signature of a medical-marijuana bill adopted by lawmakers during a special session this month. That bill addressed major issues, such as how many companies will receive marijuana licenses and how many retail outlets they can run.
Lawmakers on Monday formally sent the bill (SB 8-A) to Scott, who has said he will sign it into law.
The House and Senate approved the bill during the special session after coming under fire for failing to pass a regulatory measure during the regular session that ended early in May.
Under the proposed rule published Friday, the Department of Health appears to be laying the groundwork for the new law, which establishes a number of regulatory guidelines.
“Today, to ensure compliance with our constitutional duties, the department published proposed rules for the implementation of Amendment 2, which was approved by 71 percent of Florida voters in 2016,” Department of Health spokeswoman Mara Gambineri said in an email Friday.
Gambineri said the department is crafting rules to comply with SB 8-A, “which provides a framework for patients to access marijuana safely.”
The constitutional amendment gives health officials until July 3 to craft rules to implement the amendment and until Oct. 3 to put the rules into effect.
Typical administrative-law procedures include timelines for challenges and revisions that could push finalization of the department’s regulations beyond the constitutional deadlines.
But the Department of Health is relying on an emergency rulemaking process authorized under the bill approved this month.
“This will enable the department to quickly implement the time-sensitive requirements of the legislation. Following emergency rulemaking, the department is committed to working collaboratively with the public through traditional rulemaking to establish a patient-centered medical marijuana program,” Gambineri said in an email.
Lawmakers in 2014 and 2016 approved measures that allowed medical cannabis for limited groups of patients, including people with terminal illnesses. But the constitutional amendment approved in November could make marijuana available to hundreds of thousands of patients — and make Florida one of the largest cannabis markets in the country.
The amendment gave doctors the authority to order marijuana for a broad swath of patients with debilitating conditions, including cancer, epilepsy, glaucoma, HIV, AIDS, post-traumatic stress disorder, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Crohn’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and multiple sclerosis.
by Dara Kam, The News Service of Florida
Federal Judge Orders Bayview Park Cross To Come Down
June 20, 2017
A federal judge has ruled that a cross in Pensacola’s Bayview Park violates the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and must be removed within 30 days.
“I am aware that there is a lot of support in Pensacola to keep the cross as is, and I understand and I understand and respect that point of view,” U.S. District Judge Roger Vinson wrote in his ruling. “But, the law is the law.”
The Freedom from Religion Foundation and the American Humanist Association filed suit against the City of Pensacola over the cross in 201 on behalf of four citizens. the judge ordered that the city pay the plaintiffs a total of a $1 in damages, or 25 cents each if evenly divided.
Bayview Park is a 28-acre city park in the East Hill neighborhood, overloking Bayou Texar. A wooded cross was erected there for an Easter Sunrise Service in 1941. In 1969, the Pensacola Jaycees replaced the wood cross with a concrete one for dedication at the 29th annual Easter Sunrise Service. The concrete cross, which still stands and is the subject of this dispute, is a 34-foot white “Latin cross.” A Latin cross consists of a vertical bar and a shorter, horizontal one. It is a widely recognized symbol of Christianity.
“We are pleased that the Court struck down this Cross as violative of the First Amendment,” said Monica Miller, Senior Counsel at the Appignani Humanist Legal Center. “The cross was totally unavoidable to park patrons, and to have citizens foot the bill for such a religious symbol is both unfair and unconstitutional.”
It costs the City of Pensacola $233 per year — out of a $772,206 annual maintenance budget, or about .03% — to keep it clean, painted, and illuminated at night.
“The Bayview Cross is part of the rich history of Pensacola and of Bayview Park in particular. Thousands upon thousands of people have attended services in the park over the years. It has also been the site of remembrance services on Veteran’s Day and Memorial Day, during which flowers were placed at the foot of the cross in honor of loved ones overseas and in memory of those who sacrificed their lives for our country,” Vinson wrote in his ruling.
It..”has hosted tens of thousands of people, and has stood on public property in one form or another for approximately 75 years (apparently without incident), four people—Amanda Kondrat’yev; Andreiy Kondrat’yev; David Suhor; and Andre Ryland—contend they are “offended” by it and want it removed,” Vinson wrote. Amanda and Andreiy Kondrat’yev have since moved to Canada.
“The historical record indicates that the Founding Fathers did not intend for the Establishment Clause to ban crosses and religious symbols from public property,” he wrote. “Indeed, ‘the enlightened patriots who framed our constitution’…would have most likely found this lawsuit absurd. And if I were deciding this case on a blank slate, I would agree and grant the plaintiffs no relief. But, alas, that is not what we have here,” the judge wrote.
Vinson did offer possible solutions to the city:
“To be clear: None of this is to say that the cross would have to come down if the City sold or leased the area surrounding it to a private party or non-governmental entity (so long as the transfer was bona fide and not a subterfuge). Nor would there be a constitutional problem with worshipers using a temporary cross for their services in the park (counsel for plaintiffs conceded that point during the hearing).”
“Count me among those who hope the Supreme Court will one day revisit and reconsider its Establishment Clause jurisprudence, but my duty is to enforce the law as it now stands,” Vinson concluded his 23 page ruling.
Escambia Middle, High School Students To Receive Report Cards Soon
June 20, 2017
It’s been nearly a month since the last day of school in Escambia County, and students still don’t have their report cards.
The delay, according to Superintendent Malcolm Thomas, was the arrival of end of course (“EOC”) score from the state. He said those scores are now in and final report cards are being processed.
You should receive your student’s report card by U.S. Mail no later than June 30,” Thomas said, adding that report cards will also be available by today on the school district’s FOCUS Parent Portal.
Council Approves Plans To Rebuild Historic Homes, Church Ravaged By Tornado
June 20, 2017
The Century Town Council voted Monday night to give final approval to a Century Architectural Review Board recommendation to repair or replacement plans for seven tornado ravaged residential properties and a church in the Alger-Sullivan Historical District, which has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 1989. The council’s approval was unanimous.
The historic district includes 45 buildings on about 230 acres, and is roughly bounded by Pinewood Avenue, Front Street, Jefferson Avenue, Church Street and Mayo Street. Numerous structures in the historic district were damaged or destroyed by the EF-3 tornado that struck Century in February 2016.
The Architectural Review Board approved the replacement of six homes — located at 300, 307, 402, 403, 407 and 416 Front Street — and the repair of one home at 410 Front Street.
The board also signed off plans to reconstruct the 114-year old Century United Methodist Church, which was damaged beyond repair by the tornado. It is expected that the $550,000 project might be completed within nine months.
All of the replacement homes on Front Street will meet the neighborhood’s historical qualifications and will cost about $100,000 each. The homes are being paid for by with SHIP — State Housing Initiative Program — funds administered by Escambia County.
Pensacola architect Carter Quina designed the replacement homes to historically accurate with modern amenities and compliance for the disabled. He also designed the Century United Methodist Church project.
Click here for a previous article to learn more about the church project, photographs and architectural drawings.
Pictured top: Century United Methodist Lay Leader J.R. Jones, Rev. Janet Lee and architect Carter Quina discuss church reconstruction plans Thursday morning before the Century Architectural Review Board. Pictured below: Plans for six homes to be replaced on Front Street. NorthEscambia.com file photos, click to enlarge.
Tate High FFA Shines At State Convention
June 20, 2017
Twenty-two members of the Tate High School FFA Chapter attended the 89th Annual State FFA Convention and Expo in Orlando last week..
They were recognized as one of the top 30 FFA chapters in the state, and named one of “Florida’s Finest,” receiving the National Chapter Award. These top chapters have excelled in the areas of growing leaders, building communities and strengthening agriculture and have worked hard to fulfill the mission and vision of the FFA. The Tate FFA will go on to represent Florida at the national level in the National Chapter Award Program.
Amber Neal was also recognized for being in the final four in the proficiency award area, “Agricultural Mechanics, Repair and Maintenance.” Nearly 300 applicants from throughout Florida submitted applications for recognition within this program. The Agricultural Proficiency Award program rewards FFA members at the local, state and national levels for exceptional accomplishments and excellence in a Supervised Agricultural Experience (SAE) program.
The Tate FFA Parliamentary Procedure team competed and excelled at the State Convention as one of the top 12 teams in the state. During the Parliamentary Procedure Leadership Development Event, teams conduct a mock chapter meeting to demonstrate their knowledge of basic parliamentary law and the correct use of parliamentary procedures.
Tate FFA’s Cora Andrews and Michael Harrelson were elected to serve as District 1 officers for the State FFA Association. Andrews will serve as the district president and Harrelson will serve as the district secretary. Their responsibilities as district officers will enable them to further impact FFA members within the district in the areas of agricultural education and FFA leadership.
Criminal Charges Filed In Charter School Investigation
June 20, 2017
The owners of a company that managed public charter schools in Escambia and several other Florida counties are facing charges for racketeering and organized wire fraud.
According to court documents, the Newpoint fraudulent billing scheme was instigated by Marcus May, the owner of Newpoint, and aided by Steven Kunkemoeller, the owner of School Warehouse, Inc. and Red Ignition, Inc. The scheme allegedly involved Newpoint-managed charter schools not only in Escambia County but also in Bay, Broward, Duval, Hillsborough, Holmes, and Pinellas counties.
Court filings allege that as a result of the various schemes May obtained more than $1 million of public funds from a pattern of thefts from the State Department of Education, six school districts, and 15 Newpoint-managed charter schools. The
filings also allege that May used proceeds of the schemes to establish or operate multiple Florida and Ohio limited liability companies, which he used to acquire residential and business properties in both states.
The cases stemmed from an investigation by the Office of State Attorney, First Judicial Circuit and the Escambia County School District of complaints about grade tampering, teacher misconduct, and financial improprieties at Newpoint-managed charter schools in Escambia County. According to court filings, the financial improprieties involved use of public funds in a fraudulent billing scheme by Newpoint in which Newpoint used related vendors to submit excessive, false, and/or fictitious invoices for furniture, equipment, computers, and services.
State Says Slot Ruling Should Stand At Poarch Creek Facility
June 20, 2017
Attorneys for the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation asked the state Supreme Court on Monday to let stand a major ruling that blocked a Poarch Creek Indian managed pari-mutuel facility in Gadsden County from having slot machines.
The Supreme Court in May unanimously ruled that Gretna Racing does not have the legal authority for slot machines, though Gadsden County voters approved the lucrative games in a referendum.
The Supreme Court ruling also affected pari-mutuel facilities in seven other counties — Brevard, Duval, Hamilton, Lee, Palm Beach, St. Lucie and Washington — where voters have approved slots.
Attorneys for Gretna filed a motion June 2 asking the Supreme Court for a rehearing, with the request focused heavily on counties’ home-rule powers. But in six-page response Monday, the Department of Business and Professional Regulation said the horse track’s request should be turned down.
“The (Supreme) Court has thoroughly considered the issue in this case and resolved it unanimously,” the department’s response said. “The motion for rehearing should be denied.”
by The News Service of Florida
James Pangburn
June 20, 2017
James (Jim) Pangburn 78, of Milton, Florida, passed away June 10, 2017, after a lengthy illness. Jim was born August 15, 1938, in Covington, Kentucky.
Jim is preceded by his wife of 33 years, Mary Annette Pangburn, and his parents, William and Mary Pangburn. Jim is survived by his sister, Billie Peters of Covington, Kentucky and numerous nieces and nephews. Jim was an outgoing and generous person to all who knew him.
We express a special thank you to the staff at Santa Rosa Health and Rehabilitation Center for their caring and compassionate love for Jim. Also, a special thank you to his niece, Renee and her husband, Ken Paterna for standing beside Jim during his transition from this life into God’s eternal kingdom.
A private graveside service for Jim will be held at a later date.
Jay Funeral Home is entrusted with the arrangements.