Two Seriously Injured In Bratt Wreck

January 10, 2019

Two people were seriously injured in a head-on crash Wednesday night on North Highway 99 in front of Bratt Elementary School.

Both were trapped in their vehicles following the wreck about 7:45 p.m.

The Florida Highway Patrol said 19-year old Justin Elliot of Atmore was traveling north in a 2001 Chevrolet Tahoe when he crossed the center lane into the path of a southbound 2017 Jeep Cherokee driven by 28-year old Patricia Griener of Brewton.

Elliot was airlifted to Baptist Hospital, and Griener was airlifted in a second helicopter to Sacred Heart Hospital.

Elliot was cited by the FHP for failing to maintain a single lane.

For additional photos, click here.

The Walnut Hill and Century Stations of Escambia Fire Rescue, Atmore Fire Department, Escambia County EMS and MedStar EMS also responded.

NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Hill Seeks Repeal Of Gun Laws Imposed After Parkland Shooting

January 10, 2019

Rep. Mike Hill has filed a bill in the Florida House that would remove some of the gun restrictions put into place after the shootings at last year at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland.

The bill would lower the age to purchase a firearm in Florida from 21 to 18, remove a three-day waiting period to purchase shotguns and rifles, and remove restrictions on bump stocks.

The provisions were signed into law by then-Governor Rick Scott in March 2018.

The bill must navigate through a long process of committee assignments and be approved by the full House and Senate before making it to the governor’s desk to be signed into law.

Sunny And Cool Today, Freezing Cold Tonight

January 10, 2019

Happy New Year! Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:

Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 55. North wind 5 to 10 mph.

Thursday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 31. North wind around 5 mph becoming calm after midnight.

Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 57. Calm wind.

Friday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 41. Calm wind becoming east around 5 mph after midnight.

Saturday: Showers likely, mainly after noon. Cloudy, with a high near 64. East wind around 5 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%.

Saturday Night: A 50 percent chance of showers, mainly before midnight. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 50. Southeast wind around 5 mph becoming northwest after midnight.

Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 58. Northwest wind around 5 mph.

Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 39. North wind around 5 mph.

Monday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 53.

Monday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 35.

Tuesday: Sunny, with a high near 57.

Tuesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 38.

Wednesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 60.

Postal Worker Receives Minor Injuries In Crash

January 10, 2019

A postal worker for Cantonment suffered minor injuries when his delivery vehicle was struck on Scenic Highway Wednesday.

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Robert Holderman IV, age 18 of Navarre, was traveling north on Scenic Highway as postal worker Eric Weatherford, 35, was stopped partially of the road delivering mail. An unknown vehicle in front of Holderman swerved to avoid the postal service vehicle.

The Florida Highway Patrol said Holderman saw the postal vehicle at the last minute and did not have time to avoid a collision. His Ford F-150 struck the rear of the postal vehicle.

Weatherford was transported to West Florida Hospital.

Holderman was not injured. He was cited with careless driving by the FHP.

Escambia County Releases Annual Report

January 10, 2019

The Escambia County Board of Commissioners’ Fiscal Year 2017-18 Annual Report is now available online. The report highlights significant accomplishments, projects, programs and services that took place during the previous fiscal year, which began October 1, 2017 and ended September 30, 2018.

In addition to highlighting Escambia County government’s ongoing efforts to provide efficient, responsive services that enhance the community’s quality of life, the annual report also allows residents to easily access statistics, review the county’s organizational chart and learn more about the Escambia County Board of Commissioners and its departments. The budget pages include data about grant funding, local option sales tax spending and more.

Click here /a> to read the report.

Escambia Fire Special Ops, Ascend Hold Joint Training

January 10, 2019

The Escambia County Fire Rescue Special Operations Team held a confined space rescue drill this week with Ascend Performance Materials.

The training is both mentally and physically challenging and requires a specialized skill set.  Every member of the special operations teams is required to obtain an additional 200 or more hours of training. As with most technical rescue operations, confined space operations requires refresher training on a continual basis.

The training provided a chance for both agencies to work and learn together and prepare for any future emergency.

Photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

DeSantis Makes Supreme Court Justice Pick

January 10, 2019

In one of his first acts after taking office, Gov. Ron DeSantis on Wednesday made a historic appointment to the Florida Supreme Court, naming appellate Judge Barbara Lagoa as the high court’s first Cuban-American female justice.

DeSantis’ selection of Lagoa, the daughter of Cuban émigrés, was the first of three Supreme Court appointments the new governor will make, following the mandatory retirement of three justices who comprised what had been the court’s more liberal-leaning bloc.

Lagoa’s addition will cement a conservative majority that will include Chief Justice Charles Canady and justices Alan Lawson and Ricky Polston, all of whom Lagoa cited as references in her application for the post. It also will keep DeSantis’ pledge to purge the Supreme Court of “activist” jurists.

DeSantis, a Harvard Law School graduate who served as a judge advocate in the Navy and who was sworn into office on Tuesday, hailed Lagoa as “the essence of what a judge should be.”

Lagoa, 51, grew up in Miami and attended New York’s Columbia Law School, where she edited the prestigious law review. A onetime federal prosecutor in Florida’s Southern District, Lagoa had experience in criminal and civil litigation before former Gov. Jeb Bush appointed her to the 3rd District Court of Appeal in 2006, where she has served for more than 12 years.

Recently, Lagoa has been chief judge of the appellate court, which hears cases from Miami-Dade and Monroe counties.

In addition to her legal bona fides, Lagoa has a “great personal history,” DeSantis said, pointing to the location of Wednesday’s announcement, the Freedom Tower in Miami, as symbolic of his choice.

“I thought it was fitting, given that her parents came to Florida as Cuban exiles,” DeSantis, 40, said. “She understands the rule of law, how important that is to a society.”

Because of Lagoa’s family’s history, “she understands that, in Cuba, the rule of law doesn’t mean anything,” DeSantis said.

“The Cuban people do not know what laws apply to them or whether they will receive a fair trial after arbitrarily being accused of political crimes,” he said.

In her remarks, Lagoa, accompanied by her parents, husband and three daughters, left little doubt that she will fulfill DeSantis’ expectations.

The Florida Supreme Court is “tasked with the protections of the people’s liberties under law,” Lagoa said.

“And in that regard, I am particularly mindful of the fact that, under our constitutional system, it is for the Legislature and not the courts to make the law. It is the role of judges to apply, not to alter, the work of the people’s representatives. And it is the role of judges to interpret our Constitution and statutes as they are written,” she said.

Lagoa contrasted the experiences of people in her parents’ homeland with those of people in their adopted country and indicated that helped shape her legal views.

“In the country my parents fled, the whim of a single individual could mean the difference between food or hunger, liberty or prison, life or death. In our great country and our great state, we are governed by the rule of law, the consistent and equal application of the law to all litigations regardless of a judge’s personal preferences,” she said. “Unlike the country my parents fled, we are a nation of laws, not of men.”

DeSantis’ replacements for the three justices who were required to retire this week — R. Fred Lewis, Barbara Pariente and Peggy Quince — will reshape a court that for years has been a thorn in the side to the Republican-dominated Legislature and former Gov. Rick Scott.

Over the past decade, the court overturned a number of policies important to GOP leaders, wrangled with lawmakers over congressional and Senate maps and, following a U.S. Supreme Court ruling, ordered the Legislature to require unanimous jury recommendations for the death penalty to be imposed.

During his inaugural speech Tuesday, DeSantis blasted the court for expanding its powers “beyond constitutional bounds” and substituting “legislative will for dispassionate legal judgment.”

“To my fellow Floridians, I say to you: judicial activism ends, right here and right now,” DeSantis said during the speech. “I will only appoint judges who understand the proper role of the courts is to apply the law and Constitution as written, not to legislate from the bench. The Constitution, not the judiciary, is supreme.”

Senate President Bill Galvano, a Bradenton Republican who played a major role in drafting legislative districts rejected by the Supreme Court, echoed DeSantis’ critique of the court while praising the governor’s choice.

“I share the governor’s concern that in recent years the power of the judicial branch has extended beyond its limited constitutional responsibility, in many cases eroding the authority of the legislative branch. I believe democracy is at its best when each branch of government exercises both authority and restraint at the appropriate time. That concept was certainly at the heart of … many of the comments we heard from the governor yesterday, and echoed again this morning with the appointment of Justice Lagoa,” Galvano said in a statement Wednesday.

Lagoa’s selection also drew praise from the business-backed Florida Justice Reform Institute, which, in a statement, called DeSantis’ appointment “the first step towards fulfilling his promise to appoint judges who will interpret the law and not legislate from the bench.”

Speaking at the Freedom Tower, Lagoa recounted her life as an only child growing up in Hialeah, where she “rode my bike” and “roller-skated down the streets and the sidewalks … under the watchful eye of my grandmother while my parents worked long hours.”

“Mami and papi, your hard work, your belief in the value of education, your love for what this country represents, your unparalleled work ethic, have made me what I am today,” Lagoa said.

DeSantis’ office said Lagoa will be the first Hispanic woman to serve on the Supreme Court. Former Justice Rosemary Barkett was born in Mexico, but because her parents were of Syrian descent, she has credited former justice Raoul Cantero with being Florida’s first justice of Hispanic descent. Cantero and current Justice Jorge Labarga are Cuban-Americans.

Lagoa will serve as a role model to young women, said DeSantis, who was also accompanied by Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nuñez on Wednesday.

The governor recalled that, when he announced Nuñez as his running-mate last year, he said “Jeanette’s life, what she’s done, was really an inspiration to a lot of young women.”

“I think the same of Barbara,” he said Wednesday. “I think people look at what she’s done, as a professional, as a wife, as a mother. This is really the way it should be done. I’m real excited about being able to put her on the court. “

by Dara Kam, The News Service of Florida

Arrest Made In Armed Robbery Of Century Convenience Store

January 9, 2019

An arrest has been made in connection with the armed robbery of a convenience store last summer in Century.

Devante Aaron Knight, 27, was charged with robbery with a firearm and grand theft for the July 2, 2018, robbery of the Century Kwik Stop at 8130 North Century Boulevard.

Knight pointed a gun at the clerk and ordered him to empty the register, according to an arrest report. He fled the store with $1,800.

Knight was booked into the Escambia County Jail Tuesday night. His bond was set at just over a quarter million dollars.

ECAT To Launch Expanded Local North Escambia Service Next Month

January 9, 2019

Escambia County Area Transit (ECAT) will soon roll out an expanded local service in North Escambia on February 20.

Smaller 9-10 passenger vehicles will be used to run an “on demand” service serving the area north of Quintette Road, including Century, Bratt, McDavid, Walnut Hill and Molino.

Riders will call ECAT a day in advance to schedule a ride in the area with pickup at the their home or other location and local transport within the area. Riders must live within the service boundaries and will be asked to complete a one-time form with their address. Rides are expected to cost between $1 and $2 each direction.

Rides will be available for residents of Century, Molino and McDavid on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. The bus will be available for Walnut Hill, Davisville and Bratt residents on Tuesday and Thursday each week.

The vehicles will not run fixed-stop routes and will operate 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday.

ECAT Transit Division Manager Tonya Ellis said local system will connect to current fixed route ECAT service to Pensacola. The current route between Century and Pensacola arrives and departs outside the daily scheduled ECAT bus to Pensacola, but Ellis said changes will be considered.

ECAT is planning a series of public meeting to provide additional information and receive public input. Meeting dates and locations will be published on NorthEscambia.com.

The service will be funded by a $50,000 grant and an additional $16,000 Community Development Block Grant.

Photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Cantonment Man Charged With Indecent Exposure After Traffic Crash

January 9, 2019

A Cantonment man has been charged with indecent exposure after an alleged incident in the back of an Escambia County EMS ambulance.

On August 2, 2018, Justin Ray Landers, 26, was involved in a rollover accident on Highway 29 near Kingsfield Road.

After the vehicle was located without a driver, Landers tried to report his mother’s vehicle as stolen, but the Florida Highway Patrol determined he was the driver, an arrest report states. When deputies responded to his address on Eden Lane, they called Escambia County EMS due to the severity of the crash. With one wrist in handcuffs, he was transported to Sacred Heart Hospital.

Before transport, the deputy noted that he was very aggressive toward EMS and repeatedly called a medic an offensive term. On the way to the hospital, Landers intentionally exposed himself to the medic and made a lewd comment, according to an arrest report.

Because he was admitted to the hospital, a warrant was issued for Landers’ arrest. He was taken into custody Saturday night, January 5. He was released from the Escambia County Jail on a $1,000 bond.

Landers was cited for careless driving by the FHP, and his license was suspended last month.

NorthEscambia.com file photos by Kristi Barbour, click to enlarge.

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