One Shot At Pensacola Liquor Store

July 10, 2012

Pensacola Police are investigating a shooting that occurred Monday night inside a Cervantes Street liquor store.

Officers responded to Tom, Ann & Buddy’s  around 9:40 p.m.after dispatchers received a 911 call about the shooting. Upon arrival, police were told a man had been shot inside the establishment and been taken to Baptist Hospital by private vehicle. The man’s injuries were not considered life threatening, according to police.

An employee told police he heard two shots and then saw a man carrying a handgun run  out a door on the east side of the establishment The man was described as a black male, thin
build, short hair, and wearing a gray tank top. Investigators are pursuing leads on the suspect.

Anyone having information on the incident is asked to contact the Pensacola Police Department at (850) 435-1900.

Last December, an officer-involved shooting took place at Tom, Ann & Buddy’s. A Pensacola Police officer was determined to be justified in shooting a man during an undercover drug operation gone wrong.

Man Charged With Opening Fire With AK-47 Assault Rifle At Nightclub

July 10, 2012

A 21-year old Cantonment man has been charged with opening fire with an alleged AK-47 assault rifle at a Pensacola nightclub.

Davaress Lee Dixon of Pace Parkway was charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and discharging a firearm in public . He was booked into the Escambia County Jail with bond set at $22,000.

The incident happened at the Live Nightclub on Pensacola Boulevard at Nine Mile Road, next to the Vallarta Mexican Restaurant, on July 5, according to an Escambia County Sheriff’s Office arrest report.

A 21-year old male told deputies he was in the parking lot when he was attacked by what he believed to be three white males and one black male, and one of them struck him on the head. He told deputies that during the altercation, an older model red sports car pulled up and the black male retrieved a rifle from the car and fired six shots into the air. Witnesses corroborated the victim’s story.

Responding Escambia County Sheriff’s deputies were unable to locate the vehicle in the area, but they did find six 7.62 caliber shell casings in the parking lot of the nightclub, according to an arrest report.

On Sunday, the Sheriff’s Office received a call from a witness that said he saw Thursday night’s incident and that the car and man that pulled an AK-47 were back at the Live Nightclub. When deputies arrived at the Pensacola Boulevard nightclub, the witness said he had information that the vehicle was now at O’Reilly’s Irish Pub on Creighton Road. Deputies reported finding the vehicle at the Creighton Road bar with a handgun in the front driver’s seat and what appeared to be a clip connected to an automatic weapon in a back passenger floorboard.

Dixon was detained in the parking lot of O’Reilly’s Irish Pub and then positively identified by a witness as the man who fired the AK-47 two nights before at the Live Nightclub.

A Pensacola Police Department  K-9 alerted to the presence of narcotics in the vehicle. A search of the car located a Strum Ruger P90 handgun, an Interec TEC-DC9 assault weapon, as well as multiple baggies of marijuana and four Xanax bars, according to Dixon’s arrest report.

Dixon was also charged with possession of marijuana. He remained in the Escambia County Jail Tuesday morning.

50 North Escambia Bridges Need Replacing

July 10, 2012

Think the days of wooden bridges are long gone? Think again. Odds are if you travel an Escambia County road, you will travel over a bridge that has wooden supports under the concrete or asphalt that you see.

Many of Escambia County’s 128 bridges have wooden structures and/or wooden supports, and many are 50 to 70 years old. Eleven are classified as “structurally deficient” and seven are classified as “functionally obsolete”, according to a 2010 report.

The 2010 report says it would take $96.6 million to replace 103 of those bridges — including 50 bridges in North Escambia — within the next 10 years.

bridge11.jpgThe number one bridge on the county’s 2010 wooden substructure bridge priority list is on Fannie Road at Dead Lake, just outside Century. Built in 1960, the 121 foot bridge has a 10 ton weight limit. The bridge is slated to be replaced in 2014.

Bridges like the one on Fannie Road are not dangerous, according to county officials, but they are aging and in need of replacement before they become dangerous or even deadly. While drivers see asphalt on the surface of the bridge, what they don’t see is the wood structure underneath.

Most of Escambia County’s bridges — all but 13 — are inspected at least every two years by the Florida Department of Transportation. The other 13, all bridges less than 20 feet wide, are inspected by a contractor hired by the county. Monday morning, the Highway 4 bridge over Canoe Creek was the latest bridge to be inspected (pictured top).

Other North Escambia wooden substructure bridges that are considered structurally deficient, with date of construction and replacement cost, are:

  • Beck’s Lake Road across an unnamed branch, 1968, $640,000
  • Pineville Road at Long Hollow Creek, 1968, $610,000
  • Tungoil Road at McDavid Creek 1969, $860,000
  • Lambert Bridge Road at Pine Barren Creek, 1967, $2.24 million
  • Brickyard Road at an unnamed branch, 1960, $640,000
  • Bet Raines Road at Jack’s Branch, 1967, $610,000
  • Occie Phillips Road at Brushy Creek, 1968, $1 million

The county needs a total of $11.8 million to replace the bridges classified as structurally deficient and an additional $7.3 million to replace the ones that are classified as being functionally obsolete.

Other North Escambia wooden substructure bridges on the county’s priority replacement wish list, with date of construction and replacement cost, are:

  • Highway 99A at Boggy Creek, 1969, $770,000
  • Highway 97A at Boggy Creek, 1968, $1.48 million
  • Highway 164 at Pine Barren Creek, 1958, $2.01 million
  • Highway 99A at Little Pine Barren Creek, 1970, $1 million
  • Highway 168 at an unnamed branch, 1968, $610,000
  • Highway 168 at Reedy Creek, 1968,$730,000
  • Highway 168 at Hobbs Branch, 1965, $1 million
  • Nokomis Road at Brushy Creek, 1967, $1.33 million
  • Molino Road at Alligator Creek, 1959, $860,000
  • Schagg Road at Jack’s Branch, 1965, $890,000
  • Molino Road at Penasula Creek, 1958, $610,000
  • Gibson Road  at Alligator Creek, 1959, $1.02 million
  • Rigby Road at Beaver Creek Road, 1965, $1 million
  • Chestnut Road at unnamed branch, 1967, $740,0000
  • Pineville Road at Reedy Branch, 1964, $620,000
  • Pine Barren Road at unnamed branch, 1964, $730,000
  • McKenzie Road,  1961, $620,000
  • Hanks Road at Breastworks Creek, 1968, $730,000
  • Highway 99A at Freeman Springs Branch, 1968, $610,000
  • Schagg Road at branch of Jack’s Branch, 1965, $620,000
  • Sandy Hollow Road at Sandy Hollow Creek, 1959, $730,000
  • Sunshine Hill Road at unnamed branch, unknown age, $470,000
  • Stacy Road at unnamed branch, unknown age,  $490,000
  • Pine Top Lane at unnamed branch, unknown age,  $480,000
  • Chestnut Road at unnamed branch, unknown age,  $480,000
  • Breastworks Road at Hall’s Branch,  unknown age,  $490,000

Fourteen of 16 concrete or steel bridges and culverts classified as “priority two” for replacement, are in North Escambia:

  • Highway 4 at Alligator Creek, 1949, $1.6 million
  • Highway 196 at Jack’s Branch, 1949, $1.35 million
  • Highway 4 at Canoe Creek, 1942, $2.59 million
  • Highway 99 at Pine Barren Creek, 1955, $2.34 million
  • Highway 196 at Penasula Creek, 1949, $1.5 million
  • Highway 4  at Reedy Creek,  1942, $1.38 million
  • Highway 99 at McDavid Creek, 1951, $2.1 million
  • Highway 99 at Little Pine Barren Creek, 1955, $2.1 million
  • County Road 4 at Beaver Creek Dam,  1940, $840,000
  • Quintette Road at unnamed ditch, 1956, $580,000
  • Greenland Road at Pine Barren Creek, 1955, $620,000
  • Molino Road at Dry Creek, 1959, $780,000
  • Highway 196 at unnamed branch, 1959, $550,000
  • Highway 4 at Little Pine Creek, 1942, $640,000

There are additional concrete or steel bridges and culverts in North Escambia on a “priority three” replacement list, including:

  • County Road 97 at Jack’s Branch, 1960, $1.96 million
  • Highway 196 at Cowdevil Creek, 1961, $680,000
  • Highway 168 at unnamed branch, 1967, $980,000

Pictured top and inset: The Highway 4 bridge at Canoe Creek, constructed in 1942 was inspect Monday morning. Replacing the bridge would cost the county an estimated $2.59 million. Pictured below: The wood structure of the bridge on Lambert Bridge Road near Walnut Hill. Replacing the bridge would cost an estimated $2.24 million. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.



Escambia Commission To Discuss RESTORE Act Funds

July 10, 2012

The Escambia County Commission will discuss the federal RESTORE Act at meetings on Thursday. The RESTORE Act requires 80 percent of all fines paid by BP in future settlements for the Deepwater Horizon oil spill to go to Florida, Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi and Texas. The fines are estimated to reach up to $21 billion.

“We understand that the money will be coming more quickly than expected,” said Commissioner Wilson Robertson. “I think it’s important for the Commission to start discussing the approach for deciding a methodology and criteria for determining the best use of these funds in our community.”

Although Louisiana will collect the largest share of the total fine, Florida will receive a significant portion of the funding under a distribution formula that will factor in the number of residents living along coastal areas. Although the final amount is uncertain, some estimates place Florida’s share at $100 million. Escambia, Santa Rosa, Bay Franklin, Gulf, Okaloosa, Wakulla and Walton counties will receive 75 percent of Florida’s share of money.

“Everyone seems to have a lot of ideas about how to spend the money,” said Commissioner Robertson. “However, it’s ultimately the Escambia County Commission’s responsibility to ensure this money is administered in a manner that best benefits our residents.”

The RESTORE Act funds will be discussed during the Commission’s Agenda Review meeting at 9 a.m. Thursday and during a special meeting at 5:30 p.m. Both meetings will take place in Commission Chambers at 221 Palafox Place in Pensacola.

Health Department Urges Residents To Protect Against Mosquitoes

July 10, 2012

The Escambia County Health Department is urging the public to take steps to protect against mosquitoes, including a tip to “drain and cover” to protect against mosquitoes.

The health department advises residents to drain standing water in and around homes to prevent mosquitoes from laying eggs. Mosquitoes are known carriers of West Nile Virus, and other disease-causing viruses.

“Given the recent rains we have experienced, mosquitoes may be more prevalent in the upcoming weeks,” says Dr. John J. Lanza, director of the Escambia County Health Department. “Individuals should do all they can to avoid mosquito bites, in order to prevent the spread of infections carried by the insect.”

Adult mosquitoes lay their eggs in standing or slow-moving water.  Even one teaspoon of water is adequate for breeding.  Mosquitoes are most active during evenings, nighttime and the dawn hours. Being outdoors at these times increases people’s chances of being bitten unless they cover their skin with clothes and/or an effective mosquito repellant.

The health department also offers these tips:

Drain standing water.

  • Drain water from garbage cans, house gutters, buckets, pool covers, coolers, toys, flower pots or any other containers where sprinkler or rain water has collected.  Water held in open containers is also a potential breeding location for mosquitoes.
  • Discard old tires, bottles, pots, broken appliances and other items that aren’t being used.
  • Empty and clean birdbaths and pets’ water bowls at least twice a week.
  • When protecting boats and vehicles from rain, ensure that tarps don’t accumulate water.
  • Maintain swimming pools in good condition and keep them adequately chlorinated.  Empty plastic swimming pools when not in use.

Cover skin with clothing or repellent and cover doors and windows.

  • Clothing – Wear shoes, socks, long pants and long sleeves when mosquitoes are most prevalent.
  • Use repellents with DEET, picaridin, oil of lemon eucalyptus, or IR3535.
  • Always use repellents according to the label.  Using too much repellent doesn’t make it work better or last longer.
  • Re-apply mosquito repellent as often as needed to prevent mosquito landings and bites.
  • When using repellent on children, apply to hands first and then rub on their arms and legs.
  • Instead of repellent, use mosquito netting to protect children younger than 2 months old.
  • Place screens on windows, doors, porches, and patios.  Always repair broken screens.

Radio Dial Shuffle: Your Favorite Station May Be Moving Sunday

July 10, 2012

Confusing…that might be the best way to describe what’s happening to radio stations heard in the local area come Sunday afternoon.

Three stations will actually “move”, changing their frequencies at noon Sunday.

K-LOVE, which recently purchased WABB 97.5, will move and be heard on 98.3 FM.  After the March 1 change, the format and air staff from WABB went to WABD 104.1.

On Sunday, WABD 104.1 — airstaff, music format and all — will move back home to 97.5 FM.

And, “smooth hits” WDLT 98.3 will move to 104.1 FM at noon Sunday.

The announcements were made Monday on-air at WABD 104.1 and via the station’s Facebook page.

Deputies Investigate As Bricks Are Thrown Through Windshields

July 10, 2012

Deputies are looking for the person or persons that have been throwing bricks into the windshields of vehicles in Escambia County.

The latest of six incidents occurred early Monday morning on Highway 297A at Pine Cone Drive, about a mile west of Pine Forest Road. The victim was traveling south on Highway 297A when someone threw a brick at his Jeep Grand Cherokee.  The brick bounced off the hood and through his windshield, sending shattered glass all over the vehicle.

The man was not seriously injured. He drove to a nearby Circle K at Pine Forest and Nine Mile roads and called for help.

Anyone with information about the brick attacks is asked to call Escambia County Crime Stoppers at (850) 433-STOP.

Pictured: A brick attack early Monday morning is under investigation. A brick was thrown into this Jeep Grand Cherokee. Photos by WEAR 3 for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Deputies Seek Suspect Known To Frequent Cantonment

July 10, 2012

The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office is asking for the public’s help in locating a suspect known to frequent the Cantonment area.

Joseph Logan Banks is wanted for dealing in stolen property and obstruction of justice by tampering with, or harassing, a witness, according to the Sheriff’s Office. He often goes by his middle name “Logan”, deputies said.

Banks is six-feet tall and weighs 165 pounds.

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

Florida Takes Lead In Congressional Hearing On Crimes Against Homeless

July 10, 2012

Florida is both a model and a cautionary tale for other states grappling with violent crimes against homeless people, and on Tuesday it will play a lead role at a congressional hearing on the subject.

A model: Florida passed a law in 2010 making violence against the homeless a hate crime, including a corresponding increase in penalties. It was the second state to do so.

A cautionary tale: Florida led the nation in violence against homeless people last year and drew national headlines in late May because of the bizarre “face-eating” attack on a homeless man in Miami.

Broward Sheriff’s Capt. Rick Wierzbicki will testify Tuesday, urging the U.S. House of Representatives to adopt legislation to track assaults on the homeless nationwide. He and Broward Sheriff Al Lamberti, having overseen a series of gruesome crimes against homeless people in their jurisdiction, led the BSO in becoming the first Florida law enforcement agency to back protective legislation.

Among the crimes they oversaw was a 2006 cluster of attacks by teens using baseball bats. One assault was captured on video, and three of the teens were convicted. The skull of another victim, 45-year-old Norris Gaynor, a homeless veteran, was split as he slept on a park bench.

“Unfortunately, in Florida a lot of homeless like to live outside,” said Wierzbicki. “They’re much more vulnerable.”

As to the cannibalistic attack in May, the Broward Sheriff’s Office noted, “It seems the recent savage attack that left a Miami homeless man with his face disfigured may be the impetus for the renewed interest in curbing such violence on the national level.”

That may be, but most people see it as an isolated incident, said Tom Pierce, who heads the state Office of Homelessness at the Department of Children and Families.

Wierzbicki said he thinks violence against Florida’s homeless has lessened since the 2010 hate-crimes law, but both he and Pierce said the numbers of homeless people are vastly under-estimated – as are the crimes against them.

That’s partly because only residents of homeless shelters and identifiable street locations are counted by the federal government. People who are “doubled up” – living with relatives or friends – are not counted. Neither are those in the woods or other encampments.

So while the 2012 federal point-in-time survey showed 54,300 homeless Floridians, Pierce said, state school districts reported 56,000 homeless children for the 2010-2011 academic year. And where there are homeless children, he said, there are homeless parents.

Many are frightened of the authorities, which makes counting them – or helping them – more difficult.

“Homeless families with children make it difficult to find them,” said Pierce. “They’re fearful that the government will take their children away because they can’t support an environment for them.”

According to the National Coalition for the Homeless, one of the co-sponsors of Tuesday’s hearing, the numbers of homeless families and children are growing – to one in three of the total homeless population. Veterans make up more than one in 10 homeless people.

“We have no idea how many homeless people there are,” said Neil Donovan, the coalition’s executive director. “And you can’t dedicate resources appropriately when you are lacking information.”

That’s why Wierzbicki, who tracks national as well as Florida crimes, said a law to simply count the crimes is the first step in curbing them. In other states, he added, violence against the homeless is increasing.

“You read almost every day about a homeless person who was the victim of a homicide or a sexual battery,” he said. “We had one report where a person was degutted.”

Donovan said he doesn’t expect legislation to track violence against the homeless will result from Tuesday’s hearing. “If it passes, great,” he said. “But it’s a very difficult climate…Our goal is to make inroads at the state level.”

By The News Service of Florida

Blue Wahoos Win 6-3 For Seventh Straight Series

July 10, 2012

Blue Wahoos third baseman David Vidal homered for the second time in as many days, while starting pitcher Daniel Corcino earned his fourth consecutive victory at home as Pensacola topped the Mobile BayBears 6-3 to win their seventh straight series on Tuesday night at Pensacola Bayfront Stadium.

The win moves the Fish to a 12-7 record in the second half, and are assured of at least a tie at the top of the Southern League’s South Division, pending the outcome of Montgomery’s contest against Jackson tonight. The loss dropped Mobile to an 8-11 mark since the league’s All-Star Break. The team has now won each of their last seven series dating back to their four-game sweep of Birmingham between June 7-10.

The Blue Wahoos got the scoring started in the second inning with two early scores. 2B Brodie Greene led off the inning with a double to center and moved over the third on a groundout before coming home on C Tucker Barnhart’s run-scoring single to left-center to make it 1-0. Vidal drew a free pass in the frame before eventually being plated on a BayBears throwing error to push the advantage to two.

Pensacola would then bring home four additional tallies in the sixth to extend the margin to six. 1B Beau Mills and RF Josh Fellhauer each reached with a base hit prior to LF Bryson Smith’s RBI base knock to left. Vidal and Fellhauer subsequently scored on Vidal’s three-run shot to left-center, his fourth of the year and second in as many games.

Mobile would make things interesting in the seventh, narrowing their deficit to three. 3B Matt Davidson began the frame with a single and moved to second and third on back-to-back walks drawn by 1B Marc Krauss and 2B David Nick, before coming plateward on a groundout. Krauss would eventually score on a sacrifice fly to right by RF Wladimir Sutil, while Nick went home on C Rossmel Perez’s run-scoring infield single.

Fish starting pitcher Daniel Corcino (6.0 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 3 BB, 5 SO) earned the win victory to improve to 6-4 after yielding just two earned runs on three hits in his six frames, while closer Justin Freeman (2.1 IP, 3 SO) tossed the final 2.1 perfect frames to notch his eighth save. Mobile starter Derek Eitel (6.0 IP, 8 H, 6 R, 5 ER, 1 BB, 2 SO) suffered the defeat to fall to 6-7 after allowing six runs (five earned) on eight hits in six innings.

Pensacola has Tuesday off and will travel to Chattanooga for a three game series with the Lookouts, the Double-A affiliate of the Los Angeles Dodgers, with the opening contest scheduled for 7:15 p.m. ET on Wednesday night. RHP Tim Crabbe is expected to take the mound for the Fish, while RHP Matt Magill is slated to toe the rubber for the Lookouts.

By Andrew Green

Pictured top: Daniel Corcino earned his fourth straight win at home in the Wahoos’ 6-3 win Monday. Photo by Chris Nelson for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

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