Republican Congressman: This Country Is In Trouble

June 15, 2012

Congressman Joe Bonner, R-Ala., says there is a dark cloud hanging across America and Congress must be bold in making changes to bail the country out of its current economic condition.

“Our country is in trouble,” Bonner said at a town hall meeting Thursday morning in Atmore. “There’s just a dark cloud that’s seemingly going across the country.”

He said he doesn’t expect Congress to make any sweeping  changes before this year’s elections as the deficit continues to multiply.

But the current Congress must, he said, deal with several important issues before year’s end. One is the expiration of Bush-era tax cuts that if not extended will amount to a $500 billion tax increase. Other items that must be extended, Bonner said, are provisions for Medicare reimbursements for doctors, payroll tax cuts and a cap on the federal debt limit. The National Flood Insurance Program is also set to expire, Bonner said.

And end to the flood insurance program will force banks to call in mortgage loans of homes located in expanded flood zones that would no longer have flood insurance, Atmore  banker Bob Jones said.

During Thursday’s town hall meeting, Jones also told Bonner that he worries about the potential end to a federal crop insurance program. “We can’t finance it (crops) unless there is a crop insurance program,” he said.

Escambia County (Ala.) Sheriff Grover Smith (pictured left)  expresses his concerns to the congressman about immigration laws and mandates to curb drugs from Mexico.

“We need to get together on immigration and get the burden off local law enforcement,” the sheriff said. “We are not equipped; we are not funded.”

“I believe immigration is not something we have to turn to the states to do,” Bonner said. “The federal government has failed the American people.”

Alabama Rep. Alan Baker, also in attendance at Thursday’s Atmore town hall meeting, said he felt the state was forced to implement tough immigration laws. “We felt like the federal government had not done their jobs,” Baker said. “It was out of frustration.”

In the coming months, Bonner said Congress “has got to have the courage to take on social security and medicare.”

“For the future of this country, we’ve got to turn this ship around,” he said.

Pictured above and below: Congressman Joe Bonner, R-Ala., addresses a small crowd during a town hall meeting Thursday morning in Atmore. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Escambia Man Gets Life Sentence In $2 Million Drug Conspiracy

June 15, 2012

An Escambia County man has been sentenced to life in prison after being convicted on federal drug conspiracy charges.

Leroy Jamal Lymons, 34, was found guilty of participating in a conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute in excess of five  kilograms of cocaine in the Northern District of Florida and elsewhere. The testimony at trial established that Lymons was a supervisory-level conspirator in a multi-state drug operation and responsible, along with his co-conspirators, for distributing about 80 kilograms of cocaine between January 1, 2010, and April 21, 2010.

The wholesale value of the cocaine was estimated to be in excess of two million dollars.

The organization was identified and systematically dismantled by a federal task force comprised of federal, state and local officers. The investigation has resulted in multiple federal and state arrests and indictments in Florida and elsewhere, the seizure of additional kilograms of cocaine and thousands of dollars in illegal drug proceeds, and the seizure of vehicles and other assets connected with this conspiracy.

The case was investigated by the United States Drug Enforcement Administration in Pensacola, with the assistance of the Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation Division, the
Pensacola Police Department, and the Escambia County Sheriff’s Department.

Top Early Childhood Educator Honors For Tate High’s Ralph, Student Honors For Reich

June 15, 2012

Linda Ralph of Tate High School has been recognized as the Early Childhood Education (ECE) Academy Instructor of the Year.

Ralph works with each student to ensure each child can achieve a national industry certification, a Child Development Associate (CDA).  In her academy, students train in schools and daycare centers where the students get paid for their work. Ralph also had a group of ECE Academy students who won gold  and bronze medals at the state SkillsUSA competition.

“We are very excited for Ms. Ralph and for the students,” said Escambia County School Superintendent Malcolm Thomas. “Linda has a great impact on preparing her students to enter the early childhood work force.  Many of these students will eventually be teaching in Escambia District classrooms.”

A Tate High ECE on-the-job training student, Shelly Reich, was also honored as an Early Childhood Education Academy Student of the Year.

“She is an excellent student and employee,” Ralph said of Reich, who worked at the Creative School Age Child Care facility. “A real quality young person.”

Rick Scott: I’m Not Dead Yet

June 15, 2012

Six years before he made national headlines, Gov. Rick Scott found himself being purged from voter rolls after local election officials thought he was dead.

Collier County election officials on Thursday confirmed that the governor was required to vote with a provisional ballot for the 2006 primary and general election after county officials mistook him for Richard E. Scott, who died in January 2006 and had the exact same birthday — 12/1/1952 — as Florida’s 45th governor.

Election officials said the governor was required to vote provisionally because local election officials had received a Social Security Death Index Death Record showing that Richard E. Scott died Jan. 27, 2006.

The governor, whose full name is Richard Lynn Scott, recounted his voting difficulties in radio interviews on Thursday as the state tangles with the federal government over just that – how likely is it that elections officials might make a mistake and purge the wrong person from the voter rolls?

An election official noted, however, that despite the initial mistake, both of the governor’s votes were counted.

“I’ve been here for more than seven years and it’s the first time I am aware of somebody who was removed for being deceased and it was a mistake,” said Tim Durham, Collier County deputy election supervisor. “It was the exact same name, Florida resident, identical date of birth.”

Scott mentioned his brief, encounter with the state’s provisional ballots during an interview with Preston Scott on WFLA Radio in Tallahassee Thursday morning.

“I had to vote provisionally because they said I’d passed away,” Scott said. “So I said, ‘I’m here, here’s my driver’s license, I’m really alive.’ And so they allowed me to vote provisionally. And then they went back and checked and said I was alive.”

Scott later repeated a version of the story in an interview with a Tampa station.

The revelation couldn’t have come at a more opportune time for Scott, who is battling with federal officials over the state’s effort to purge ineligible voters from Florida rolls.

Critics have said Scott’s efforts would disenfranchise some eligible voters mistakenly included in the list of those not allowed to cast ballots. But Durham said since Scott’s provisional votes were counted in 2006 – under a system set up following the 2000 recount to allow contested ballots to be cast and counted – it proves the system protects legitimate voters.

Scott spokesman Lane Wright said Thursday that the governor’s personal vignette bolsters his contention that the push to purge the voting rolls would not prevent eligible voters from casting ballots.

Florida’s provisional ballot process allows contested voters to cast ballots and requires local election officials to verify their status within 30 days.

“If there is any error, it is not going to prevent someone from voting,” Wright said Thursday.

Over the past several weeks, Scott has been at the center of the storm as state and federal agencies battle over a Scott-backed attempt to purge ineligible voters from the rolls. The Florida Secretary of State and the U.S. Department of Justice have traded lawsuits over the issue.

“The system is set up so that people can vote,” Wright said.

By The News Service of Florida

Two Charged With Holding Man Hostage For $300 Drug Debt

June 15, 2012

Two Escambia County men are charged with kidnapping a man and holding him hostage for ransom to settle up a $300 drug debt.

Michael Shawn Hastings, 39, and Nathan Anton Vazques, 33, were both charged with kidnapping an adult for ransom. Both were booked into the Escambia County Jail with bond set at $50,000.

The victim’s wife told Escambia County Sheriff’s deputies that she received a call at 1:30 in the morning from a man calling himself “Slick” informing her that her husband was being held captive until she delivered $300 in cash to the Bayou Grande trailer park. She was told, according to the Sheriff’s Office, to come alone and not call the police.

As the victim’s wife was talking to a deputy, another call demanding the ransom cash came in, and the deputy was able to listen as the caller detailed where to take the cash and what the persons she needed to meet look like.

More deputies were dispatched to the Bayou Grand trailer park where Hastings and Vazques were detained.

The victim had escaped his captors and was found a short distance away. He told deputies that a guy he knew as “Nate” forced him to get money for the narcotics he had used. He drove him to an ATM, but he was unable to get the cash at which time he was beaten up and taken back to the trailer park.  Then “Nate” and another male began calling his wife demanding the $300, he reported to deputies.

Tate, Army Grad Zach Price Honored By Blue Wahoos

June 15, 2012

Zach Price, an infielder who graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point in May threw out a ceremonial first pitch for the Pensacola Blue Wahoos Thursday night.

Price, a graduate of Tate High School, was Army’s co-captain and helped lead his squad to a record setting 41 victories this year. He has also been honored as the Patriot League’s Scholar-Athlete of the Year and was a First Team Academic All-America selection this season.

The Cantonment native led the Patriot League this past season with 50 runs scored and ranked second all-time at West Point with 173 runs scored, as well as third in Academy history with 238 career base hits and fourth with 55 stolen bases.

Following his graduation for the United States Military Academy at West Point with a degree in Systems Engineering, Price plans on interning with the athletic department at West Point for the fall semester before heading to Oklahoma for officer training.

Two Charged With Burglaries Of 55 School District Vehicles

June 14, 2012

Two Escambia County residents were arrested this morning connection with the burglary Monday night of 55 Escambia County School District vehicles. They were busted after police tracked cell phones that were stolen from the vehicles.

Shawn Michael Jenkins, 21,  and Robert Louis Lumzy, 18,  were each charged with 55 counts of burglary, one count of grand theft and one count of vehicle theft by the Pensacola Police Department.

The burglaries of 55 pickup trucks and vans were discovered around 6 a.m. Tuesday when employees arrived for work at the J.E. Hall Center at 30 E. Texar Drive. Two of the vehicles had been left unlocked. Access to the remaining vehicles was made by smashing windows or breaking locks on vehicles. Among the items stolen from vehicles were multiple tools, three mobile phones and eight laptop computers. The pair is also charged with stealing a 2003 white Chevrolet Silverado pickup from the fenced-in compound.

The suspects were tracked by the cell phones that were stolen. They taken into custody Wednesday morning at  Pensacola Village at 500 E. Fairfield Drive.

The vehicles were kept in the district’s maintenance compound and were used to do custodial, air conditioning, plumbing, and other repairs for the school district. Access to the  compound was gained through a locked gate where the chain and lock had been cut and removed from the scene.

177 Prisoners Released Or Moved From Escambia County Jail After Flood

June 14, 2012

The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office has released details on exactly how the inmate population at the Escambia County Jail was reduced after weekend flooding on the lowest level of the facility.

The Sheriff’s Office, State Attorney’s Office, Public Defender’s Office and the chief judge for the 1st Judicial Circuit are currently reviewing several inmate cases to determine if any would be eligible to be released.

The Sheriff’s Office provided the following list of inmates that were transferred to another facility or had sentences reduced following the flood:

  • 50 — were eligible to be released for time served and were released
  • 48 — were transferred to state prison (already sentenced to state prison and their transfers were expedited)
  • 31– were bonded out by various bail bondsmen
  • 4 — posted their own cash bond
  • 18 — were being held for other agencies and they were transferred to those various agencies
  • 15 — were federal inmates and were released to the U.S. Marshals
  • 6 — were nolle pros
  • 1 — was sent to work release
  • 1 — was sent to Keeton Correctional Facility
  • 1– was sent to Pathways for Change
  • 1– was sent to probation/parole
  • 1– was purged (paid monies which were owed for civil commit order)

“At no time has an inmate been released who was serving a sentence. Releasing and transferring inmates happens on a daily basis,”  according to Sgt. Mike Ward, public information office for the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office. “The Sheriff’s Office does not have the authority to release inmates beyond our statutory authority.”

Three Sentenced In Massive Tax Preparer Fraud Case

June 14, 2012

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Three more people have been sentenced to probation in a case that the IRS says was the biggest tax fraud case of its kind in Alabama.

Linda Thomas, 58, of Repton, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to defraud the Internal Revenue Service and was sentenced to five years probation.

Tax preparer Alice Mobley, paid $10 to $20 per person to Thomas to gather social security numbers to fraudulently use on tax returns. Those selling their information were paid $500 for adult numbers and $600 for childrens’ numbers. When Mobley’s Preyear Tax and Check Cashing in Atmore, Mobley’s home and other business locations were raided by federal agents on March 4, 2010, investigators found complete identification information on 536 people, including Social Security cards, Medicaid cards and other documents.

Mobley also “split” dependents, using the identity of some children on one return to obtain Earned Income Credit, and on other returns to obtain Child Credit and Dependent Care Credits. Mobley’s firm also prepared returns which claimed business tax deductions for business which did not exist and farm tax deductions for clients who did not have farms, the DOJ said.

Two other people that worked for Mobley, Fretizell Locke-Wiggins and Latana Locke, were sentenced to three years probation for their part in the tax scheme.

Mobley pleaded guilty last year to conspiracy, tax perjury, wire fraud and aggravated identity theft for orchestrating what was described as a systematic schedule to file thousands of false tax returns and defraud the government of hundreds of thousands of dollars.

She was sentenced to 6 years and 3 months in federal prison by Chief U.S. District Judge William Steele. She will also forfeit $593,949.77 in cash and property seized from her home and business locations in March 2010, and she was ordered to pay $720,067 in restitution to the federal government.

Federal agents raided Mobley’s Preyear’s Tax & Check Cashing, LLC on Ridgely Street in Atmore and other locations in March 2010.

Pictured above: A federal agent enters Preyear’s Tax & Check Cashing, LLC in Atmore March 4, 2010. Pictured inset: Agents search a vehicle at the business. Pictured below: A federal agent and an Atmore Police officer talk to an employee of the business during the raid. NorthEscambia.com exclusive photos, click to enlarge.

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Tate’s Jacob Lasky Signs With Southeastern Lousiana University

June 14, 2012

Tate High offensive lineman Jacob Lasky has signed a letter of intent to play football at Southeastern Louisiana University.

Pictured: standing (L-R) are Coach Huggins, Head Coach  Naggatz , and Coach Reyes. Picture seated are Larry Lasky, Jacob Lasky and Kathie Lasky. Submitted photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

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