Santa Rosa Deputies Searching For Three Murder Suspects

October 24, 2018

The Santa Rosa County Sheriff’s Office is seeking the public’s help in identifying a murder suspect.

Tyler Lee Howell was shot to death on John Hamm Road Sunday night.

Investigators said they have identified one individual who is considered a suspect. They believe three people were involved in the drug-related shooting. Deputies said they believe the victim knew the suspects.

Authorities are also searching for two vehicles. One is possibly a new model Kia silver or light gray in color. The second is a blue Chevrolet Cruz with Florida tag 059-RUB.

Anyone with information is asked to call the Santa Rosa County Sheriff’s Office at (850) 983-1190 or Crime Stoppers at (850) 437-STOP. There is a reward of up to $3000 for information leading to an arrest.

Alabama Woman Claims Prize For North Escambia Lottery Ticket

October 24, 2018

The owner of a winning lottery ticket sold last week in North Escambia  has claimed her prize.

fant5.jpgThe Florida Lottery said  the October 19 Fantasy 5 ticket worth $38,558.47 was sold to Sharon K. Hare of Thomasville, AL. She purchased  the ticket at the Korner Kwik Stop, 10481 Highway 97,.  The Quick Pick ticket was one of six winning tickets sold for the drawing.

The 324 tickets matching four numbers won $111 each. Another 10,171   tickets matching three numbers are worth $9.50 each, and 99,458 ticket  holders won a Quick Pick ticket for picking two numbers.

The Fantasy 5 winning numbers for October 19 were 3-4-10-24-34.

FWC Law Enforcement Report

October 24, 2018

The Florida FWC Division of Law Enforcement reported the following activity during the weekly period ending October 4 in Escambia and Santa Rosa counties.

ESCAMBIA COUNTY

No report was submitted for Escambia County.

SANTA ROSA COUNTY

Officer Jones was on patrol on the Eglin Wildlife Management Area when he saw a vehicle operating recklessly and at excessive speed on a sand trail. When the officer attempted to make contact, the vehicle fled the area. A bulletin was issued for law enforcement to be on the lookout for the vehicle. A Highway Patrol Trooper stopped the vehicle a short while later. After interviewing the driver of the suspect vehicle, the officer issued a citation for careless driving and anotice to appear for being on the Eglin Reservation without the required permit.

Officers Hoomes, Jones, and Roberson were on the Eglin Wildlife Management Area searching for subjects illegally harvesting palmetto berries for commercial purposes. While conducting surveillance, Officer Jones saw a suspicious vehicle approaching his position on a very minimal sand trail. The vehicle was attempting to leave when the officer contacted the two occupants. They were issued notices to appear for not possessing the required Eglin permits. Later in the evening, Officer Hoomes found footprints which he backtracked to a hidden cache of 550 pounds of illegally harvested palmetto berries. The berries were seized, weighed, and disposed of with the help of FWC Wildlife Technician McDonald.

Officer Hutchinson and Lieutenant Hahr located a baited dove field prior to the opening day of the dove hunting season. On opening day, the officers along with Officer Mullins checked several subjects on the baited field and addressed several violations. Despite ending the hunt early, they determined that one subject was over the bag limit and that others had combined their birds. Twelve subjects were cited for hunting over a baited field and several others were warned for other hunting violations including over the daily bag limit of doves.

Officer Hutchinson located a truck stuck in a ditch in the Blackwater Wildlife Management Area. The owner had driven back to it on an ATV to try and get it out of the mud. The truck’s tracks indicated that the driver intentionally left the center of the road and drove through the soft mud along the shoulder. The driver was issued a citation for damaging state land with a motor vehicle and littering. The driver was also warned for operating an ATV on a management area.

Lieutenant Lambert checked a duck hunter who was attempting to take waterfowl after legal shooting hours at Salters Lake in Escambia River Wildlife Management Area. Upon inspection, Lieutenant Lambert also found the subject was in possession of lead shot and was hunting with an unplugged shotgun. Lieutenant Lambert addressed the violations with the subject.

Officer Hutchinson and K-9 Zara were on patrol when they saw a light actively being shined from a vehicle into a field in a manner capable of disclosing the presence of deer. While watching the vehicle from a discreet location, Officer Hutchinson saw the truck exit the field and travel away from him. Officer Hutchison followed behind the vehicle and saw two dead deer, one buck and one antlerless deer in the bed of the vehicle. Officer Hutchison conducted a vehicle stop and discovered the two subjects in the vehicle were in possession of a spotlight, a scoped rifle and a shotgun along with the two deer and a freshly killed rabbit. Through his investigation, Officer Hutchison discovered that the two men had shot a third deer in another field nearby. He drove to the field and conducted an area search with his K-9 partner Zara. K-9 Zara located fresh blood and tracked for approximately 100 yards until she discovered the illegally taken deer in thick brush. Both subjects admitted to taking the deer and rabbit using a gun and light. Both subjects were cited for taking deer with the use of a gun and light.

This report represents some events the FWC handled over the past week; however, it does not include all actions taken by the Division of Law Enforcement. Information provided by FWC.

NorthEscambia.com photo.

ECSO: Grandfather, 94, Points Gun At Grandson, Threatens To ‘Blow Him Away’

October 23, 2018

A 94-year old Cantonment man was arrested after allegedly pulling a gun and threatening his grandson.

Lee Conner Hagler, Jr., was charged with felony aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. He was released from the Escambia County Jail on a $3,500 bond.

The juvenile told a school resource officer that he got into a verbal argument with Hagler and went to his room. Hagler then walked into his grandson’s bedroom and pointed a firearm at him, making a comment similar to “you do want to mess with me” with at threat that he was going to “blow him away”, according to an Escambia County Sheriff’s Office arrest report.

Hagler told a deputy that he got into the argument, pointed an unloaded firearm at the juvenile and threatened to “blow him away”, the report states. Hagler said he “did not tolerate disobedience from anyone and would blow anyone away for disrespecting him”, the arrest report continues.

The Sheriff’s Office said Hagler possessed a firearm that matched the description the juvenile provided to the resource office.

County Approves $24.5K For Century Market Analysis

October 23, 2018

The Escambia County Commission has approved $24,500 in county funds for a market study in Century, cutting back on a $95,000 proposal from the University of West Florida Haas Center.

The marketing analysis will assess the feasibility of mixed use commercial and residential development in reference to various parcels and buildings within the town, according to the proposal.

The funds will come from a $95,000 funding pool that includes $55,000 from last fiscal year that was never spent, plus $50,000 from the current fiscal year. The Haas Center had proposed four additional projects that would have used the full $95,000 balance.

The market analysis was ranked by the Century Town Council as the most important of the projects after Escambia County Commissioner Steven asked for a priority ranking, saying that it was not his intent to exhaust all of the available funding at this time.

“Until this is completed and we get some feedback on how that would go, I don’t want to just ancillary spend through economic development dollars that can be spent in different ways,” Barry said, adding the he wanted to see the monies used as perhaps direct incentives for a potential project or some type of a business challenge – much like a Studer Institute funded $25,000 business challenge in 2015 that provided $20,000 for the Century Academy and $5,000 for a childcare center.

“I would like to see some dollars that get to the actual recipients and the actual people that are going be Monday though Friday in the town doing work and employing people,” Barry said.

“The future of Century and the future of Escambia County are tied together. Failure up there is failure down here,” Commissioner Doug Underhill said.

The four Haas Center proposals that were not funded were:

  1. Market analysis to assess the feasibility of mixed/use/commercial and/or residential development in reference to various vacant parcels and buildings within the town.  – $24,500.
  2. Market study of the Century Industrial Park to examine the historical trends in relation to industrial demand, assess current available industrial land sites and  buildings and consider trends and availability to comparable communities – $25,000.
  3. Strategic plan metrics and dashboard to collect public data across various metrics and to present them in an on line dashboard format in order to determine progress toward the achievement of the identified economic objectives as defined in the town’s economic development strategic plan – $15,000.
  4. Health Assessment and needs study to assess Century residents’ health behavior and to gauge how investment into the Community Health Northwest Florida’s expansion has increased access to resources and  overall health needs of the community – $15,500.
  5. CRA project mapping tool that allows users to view and interact with the spatial data (parcels, CRA boundaries, waterways, walkways, etc.) associated with the Century CRA implementation – $15,000.

The Escambia County Commission will decide at a future date which projects, if any, are funded.

Floridians To Decide Debate Over Felon Voting Rights

October 23, 2018

This is part of a series of stories before the November 6 election.

Keith Ivey has an image in his mind he can’t let go of.

It’s just a piece of paper that most people tuck into their wallets and forget.

But for the 46-year-old Ivey, the voter registration card he received nearly three decades ago — but never used — represents both hope and despair.

Ivey is one of more than 1.4 million Floridians who lost the right to vote after being convicted of felonies. And he’s one of those whose voting privilege would automatically be restored under Amendment 4, a constitutional proposal on the November ballot that’s got backers as disparate as the American Civil Liberties Union and the Koch brothers.

Ivey’s now a successful businessman. He and his father operate a used-car dealership in Jacksonville.

But, for Ivey and hundreds of thousands of others, the excitement and nonstop attention surrounding the 2018 elections punctuate their inability to participate in one of the most basic components of a democracy: casting a ballot.

“It’s very painful. It’s a huge void. It’s being voiceless. There are community leaders that you want to support or want to not support. You can’t have that voice,” Ivey told The News Service of Florida in a recent telephone conversation from Washington, D.C., where he was vacationing with his wife.

Amendment 4, heavily bankrolled by the ACLU, would automatically restore the right to vote for people who were convicted of felonies and who have completed their sentences, paid restitution and fulfilled parole or probation requirements. Murderers and sex offenders would be excluded.

Backers of the amendment estimate that about 1.4 million Floridians would have their voting rights restored, if the required 60 percent of voters approve the proposal.

The November vote on Amendment 4 comes as Gov. Rick Scott and the Florida Cabinet fight a federal judge’s ruling that said the state’s current rights-restoration system is unconstitutional.

After taking office in 2011, Scott and Attorney General Pam Bondi played key roles in changing the process to effectively make it harder for felons to get their rights restored.

Under the changes, felons must wait five or seven years before applying to have their rights restored. After applications are filed, the process can take years to complete.

The number of applications for restoration has dramatically dropped under Scott and the all-Republican Cabinet, which acts as the state’s Board of Executive Clemency.

Since the changes went into effect, Scott — whose support is required for any type of clemency to be granted — and the board have restored the rights of 3,005 of the more than 30,000 convicted felons who’ve applied, according to the Florida Commission on Offender Review. As of Oct. 1, there was a backlog of 10,275 pending applications, according to the commission.

U.S. District Judge Mark Walker this year sided with Fair Elections Legal Network and the law firm Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC in a lawsuit filed against the state on behalf of nine felons, who alleged that the state’s vote-restoration process is discriminatory.

Walker ordered the state to revamp the system, but, in a victory for Scott and the Cabinet, the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in April blocked the federal judge’s order from going into effect. The appeals court hasn’t issued a final ruling in the case.

With voters already receiving mail-in ballots, organized opposition to Amendment 4 has not emerged.

But critics of the measure — including Scott and former Congressman Ron DeSantis, who’s in a heated contest with Democrat Andrew Gillum to replace the governor — maintain that the proposal treats convicted felons too leniently.

“The governor believes that in order for felons to have their rights restored, they have to demonstrate that they can live a life free of crime, show a willingness to request to have their rights restored and show restitution to the victims of their crime,” Lauren Schenone, a spokeswoman for Scott’s U.S. Senate campaign, said in an email.

DeSantis “believes in second chances,” but with a caveat, according to campaign spokesman Stephen Lawson.

“He is in favor of giving offenders an opportunity to earn their rights back; however, he believes that automatic restoration is inappropriate as recidivism is still very high. Prior offenders must show their commitment to be a law-abiding member of their community after serving their sentence before they have those rights restored,” Lawson told The News Service of Florida.

But Amendment 4 has drawn national support, with Florida one of a handful of states that have laws on the books critics say are remnants of post-Civil War Jim Crow policies designed to keep blacks from casting ballots.

Vermont-based Ben & Jerry’s has placed the Florida initiative among its top-tier 2018 election issues. The left-leaning dessert company will give away free ice cream at early voting sites throughout the state in advance of the Nov. 6 election, according to the Second Chances Campaign, an organization behind the amendment.

R&B musician John Legend recently headlined an event in Orlando to rally support for the amendment. MSNBC’s Chris Hayes recently visited the state to call attention to the proposal. And HBO host John Oliver last month made an appeal to Florida voters during a “Last Week Tonight” segment devoted to the amendment.

The amendment also has a plethora of lesser-known advocates in Florida, including Purple Heart recipient Alan Rhyelle. The Vietnam vet, who was shot through the chest in 1967 and was later diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, turned to marijuana as an alternative to highly addictive and toxic medications prescribed to treat his pain and anxiety.

After his daughter, Peaches, suffered traumatic injuries in a car accident a decade ago, Rhyelle began growing pot to provide what he considered a better alternative to the multiple prescription pain medications doctors had ordered for his bedridden daughter.

But shortly before drying cannabis was ready for Peaches’ consumption, his daughter died.

When the paramedics arrived at his house to take his daughter to the medical examiner’s office, they smelled marijuana and alerted the sheriff’s office, Rhyelle said in a recent interview.

As a result, he lost his right to vote.

“I love my country. I’ll stand up and I’ll fight if anybody was to invade our shores,” Rhyelle, a Sarasota County resident,l said.

Rhyelle, 72, said he hasn’t applied to have his rights restored because of the backlog ahead of him, but he’s signed on to promote Amendment 4 with the hope of assisting others.

“I thought, well, hey, even if I can’t get it, it will help them, and I’ll have the satisfaction of knowing I’ve done something to help somebody,” he said.

Forgiveness is another theme that resonates for backers of Amendment 4.

Karen Leicht, who was convicted of conspiracy to commit insurance fraud and served more than two years in federal prison, said a “debt, when it is paid, is paid.”

“Why can’t the state of Florida forgive us? When you have paid, and your family has paid dearly, shouldn’t you be allowed to vote?” Leicht told the News Service.

Ivey, meanwhile, is haunted by the image of that critical piece of paper, which he never put to use.

“I see my voter’s registration card in my mind, over and over again,” he said. “And now that it’s so close, I really want this.”

by Dara Kam, The News Service of Florida

Camp Fire Century Holds Trike A Thon For St. Judes

October 23, 2018

The Children at Camp Fire Century held their annual St. Jude’s Trike-A-Thon recently,  their seventh year hosting the event. The children learned about trike safety, raised  money for St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital and enjoyed the ride. They learned about being a community helper, volunteering and giving back to others in need.

Photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Early Voting Begins

October 23, 2018

The unofficial early voting turnout in Escambia County was 2,862 on Monday, the first day of early voting. That is a 76 percent increase over the first day of early voting in the 2014 election.

Early voting continues through November 3 from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m. at the following locations:

  • Supervisor of Elections Office, 213 Palafox Place, Second Floor
  • Main Library, 239 Spring Street
  • Molino Community Center, 6450-A Highway 95A, Molino
  • Genealogy Branch Library, 5740 B, 9th Avenue
  • Southwest Branch Library, 12248 Gulf Beach Highway
  • Mobile Hwy/Pine Forest Rd Early Voting Center, 6675 Pine Forest Road
  • Escambia County Extension, 3740 Stefani Road, Cantonment
  • Brownsville Community Center, 3200 W. DeSoto Street
  • University of West Florida, Building 90, Campus Lane

Flomaton Delivers Hurricane Relief Supplies To Apalachicola

October 23, 2018

The Flomaton Fire Department and MedStar Ambulance delivered Hurricane Michael relief supplies to Apalachicola Monday . The supply donation was coordinated with the help of Flomaton High School. Photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

A Few Showers Today, Sunny For Wednesday

October 23, 2018

Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:

Today: Rain, mainly before 1pm. High near 69. East wind around 5 mph becoming calm. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.

Tonight: A 30 percent chance of showers before 7pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 55. Calm wind becoming northeast around 5 mph after midnight.

Wednesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 76. Northeast wind around 5 mph.

Wednesday Night: A 50 percent chance of showers after 1am. Cloudy, with a low around 61. East wind around 5 mph.

Thursday: Showers and possibly a thunderstorm. High near 67. East wind around 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 90%.

Thursday Night: A 50 percent chance of showers. Cloudy, with a low around 57. East wind around 5 mph.

Friday: A 20 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 67. Northwest wind around 5 mph.

Friday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 50. Northwest wind around 5 mph.

Saturday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 70. Northwest wind around 5 mph.

Saturday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers. Partly cloudy, with a low around 51.

Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 71.

Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 51.

Monday: Sunny, with a high near 72.

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