Tornado Captured On Video
April 15, 2011
A tornado in Jackson, Mississippi, was caught on video Friday afternoon.
Explosions and sparks from falling power lines and transformers can been seen as the tornado tracks along the ground. To watch the video, click play above.
Deputies: Alabama Man Finds Falling In Love With Local Prostitutes Not Recommended
April 15, 2011
An Alabama man was beaten and robbed early Thursday evening after a local prostitute he developed feelings for set him up.
At around 8:30 p.m., April 14, deputies responded to the Cutty Sark Bar, at 3811 Mobile Highway, for a reported robbery.
According to the victim, identified as 50-year-old Danny Fountain of Summerdale, AL, he was visiting a prostitute, at a residence in the 800 block of Citrus Street, when he was attacked. He could only identify the prostitute by her first name of Terry and her nickname of “Tee”.
Fountain told deputies that he was sitting in his vehicle waiting on the prostitute when he was approached by her and two black males. The two male suspects pulled him from the vehicle and began to beat him and demand money. During the attack, the prostitute directed the male suspects to look in Fountains shirt pocket for the money. One of the suspects reached into his pocket and stole $300 in cash, an ATM card and a driver’s license.
During the investigation Fountain was unable to provide deputies with any other physical description concerning the black male suspects. He did tell deputies that the prostitute had blonde hair and was wearing shorts. He said that he had known the prostitute for several days after picking her up on Citrus Street. He then admitted that he had developed feelings for her and thought that she cared for him. After this incident, he realizes that she didn’t and had set him up.
“Solicitation of prostitution is not a good idea for a number of reasons. One risks the chances of arrest, contracting sexually transmitted disease or a fate similar to the victim in this case,” said sheriff’s spokesperson Deputy Chris Welborn. “Falling in love with our local prostitutes is certainly not recommended.”
Fountain, who was injured during the attack, refused medical treatment.
Deputies Looks For Clues In Arby’s Armed Roberry
April 15, 2011
Escambia County Sheriff’s investigators are hoping the public can help provide information that will lead to the arrest of an Arby’s armed robbery suspect.
On Thursday, April 14, at around 8:40 p.m., deputies responded to the Arby’s restaurant on Davis Highway for a reported robbery. They were told by three employees that a white male wearing a black ski mask that partially obscured his face, blue “hoodie”, blue jeans and white sneakers jumped over the counter with a handgun and demanded money.
According to deputies, the suspect was believed to be armed with a small semi-automatic handgun. They would not disclose the amount of money that was taken before the suspect fled.
“After the suspect ran out of the store he entered an older a 1997 or 1998 Ford F-150 truck. The truck was described as being painted black with a red stripe down the side,” said sheriff’s spokesperson Deputy Chris Welborn. “We’re hoping this information will result in phone calls from the public, which hopefully results in the arrest of this individual.”
Anyone with information about this case is asked to call the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office at (850) 436-9620 or Gulf Coast Crime Stoppers at (850) 433-STOP.
Northview To Hold Beginners Volleyball Clinic Next Week
April 15, 2011
Northview High School will host a Volleyball Junior/Beginners Clinic next week for new players wishing to learn the basics of the game.
Participants must be in at least the sixth grade. High school participants are also welcome if they are new to volleyball. Different skill level groups will be formed during the clinic. Participants will work with current and former Northview players and coaches and learn to improve their individual and team skills. Sessions will begin at 4 p.m. each day April 19-21.
The cost is $30. For a flyer and registration/release form with more information, click here.
For questions, call Betty Heaton at (850) 327-6681 or email bheaton@escambia.k12.fl.us.
NorthEscambia.com file photo, click to enlarge.
Suspect Shot, Killed By Deputy In Armed Santa Rosa Standoff
April 15, 2011
A 45-year old man was shot to death Thursday night after a standoff with Santa Rosa County deputies.
Johann Felber was shot by a Santa Rosa County Sheriff’s Office deputy after he reportedly fired a shotgun out the window of his Milton home during the armed standoff.
Just before 6 p.m. Thursday, deputies responded to a reported armed family disturbance at 4504 Galt City Road where they found Felber standing on his porch armed with a shotgun, according to Sgt. Scott Haines, public information officer for the Santa Rosa Sheriff’s Office. Deputies ordered Felber to drop the weapon, at which time he retreated inside of the residence.
A hostage negotiator was able to reach Felber on the phone.
“The suspect was very irate and told the negotiator that either the deputies would die, or he would die, and that he was not going to come out of this situation alive. During the negotiations, the suspect fired numerous rounds from a shotgun inside of his residence. Deputies could hear the suspect reloading his shotgun on numerous occasions,” Haines said.
At about 8:43, Felber broke out the front bedroom window of the home with the shotgun.
“The suspect then pointed the shotgun at a deputy that was outside, at which time the deputy fired his weapon at the suspect. The suspect dropped out of view and it was not immediately known if the suspect was incapacitated,” according to Haines.
The Santa Rosa Sheriff’s Office SWAT team deployed robot inside the home. The suspect was located on a video feed from the robot incapacitated in the bedroom where he was last seen in the window. The SWAT team then entered the home where Felber was found dead.
As is standard practice, the officer-involved shooting is under investigation by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.
Escambia Considers Moving School Bus Stops That Avoid Sex Offenders
April 15, 2011
The Escambia County School District is looking at new bus stop policies in an effort they say will keep children safe from sexual offenders and predators.
The district is set to vote at a meeting next week to lower the distance between bus stops and some sex offenders. Under the current rules, bus stops are not allowed within 1,000 feet of a registered offender or predator’s home. That policy, according to district officials, forces some children to walk long distances to a bus stop, perhaps putting them in greater risk of contact with a sex offender.
Across Escambia County, officials say 44 percent of all public school children live within 1,000 feet of a registered sex offender.
The new policy under consideration would follow current state law by keeping bus stops 1,000 or more feet from a sexual predator or offender being monitored by the state. But in the case of other offenders, the limit would be lowered to 100 feet.
The final vote on any bus stop changes will come at the next meeting of the Escambia County School Board next Tuesday.
Escambia’s Top High School Seniors Are Honored
April 15, 2011
Escambia County’s top seniors were honored Thursday night at the 2001 Senior Academic Awards at the Mustin Beach Officers’ Club.
The banquet was sponsored by the Escambia County Public Schools Foundation and Kerrigan, Estess, Rankin, McLeod and Thompson.
Recipients were:
Northview High School
Ashley E. Digmon
LaNeicia D. Gomez
Jocelyn M. Gould
Sarah Malinda Killam
Emily F. Vickrey
Mallory Ann Bell
Christina N. Sepulveda
Colton Sims
James Tyler Garrett
Hayley Renee Simpson
Allyson M. Bullard
Tate High School
Caitlyn Nicole Gallagher
Michael Todd Lowery
Kimberly Noelle McCroan
Caroline Marie Merritt
Shawna Rachelle Murphy
Jessica Lee Mack
Denis Alex McKinnon III
Kelly Hendricks Ewing
Christopher Taylor McKeon
Bryan Jeffrey Rhodes
Kristyn Alyse Covotta
West Florida High School
Hieu Chau
Rocio Gomez Novo
Daniel L. Grenier
Stephanie M. Hayley
Matthew O’Rear
John P. Ansardi, Jr.
Nicholas Dolan Rivers
Benjamin Parrish
James Sidney Clements III
Hannah Pate
Miranda Bjorklund
Pine Forest High
Sirikanya Sellers
Kristen Lassen
Nicole Scully
Krista MacMurray
Hillare’ LaFond
Joseph Mills
Kristi Spatter
Michael Core
T’Kara Mullins
Austin Williams
James Wood
Escambia High School
Hannah Bergstrom
Brianna Biggs
Jeff Cutaio
Khoa Cao Dang
Shawn Patrick Reid
Brandon Mejias
Jessica Reed
Raymond Tu
Anthony J. Bushey
Alexanderia Newman
Erick Hudson, II
Pensacola High School
Ivory Leonard
Edith Licona
John Michael Morales
Henry Nguyen
Sandy Nguyen
Uniqua Monae Rogers
Indy Daigle
Yu Ting Zheng
Christian Bulosan
Diana Nguyen
Aleitha Smith
Pensacola High IB Program
Jemimah Chen
Priya Garg
Nathan Prasad Gupta
Fareed Rifai
Julie Phuong Vu
Samantha Paedae
Nick Feroce
Kay Li
Michael Brusoski
Jamie Landa
Angela Joy Menah
Washington High School
Thomas Campbell Arnold
Tam Mai
Diana M. Manis
Shannon Robinson
Michael Cleveland Stavely
Aryn Bradley
Bradley Leon
Alex Goodspeed
Lindsey Shaw
Matthew Horne
Parvina A. Kudyakova
National Merit Finalists
Andrew Clark
Melody Dalton
Helie Dharia
Priya Garg
Nathan Gupta
Kay Li
Julie Vu
Savannah Wing
Northview JV Downs Flomaton
April 15, 2011
The junior varsity Northview Chiefs ended their season Thursday with a win over the Flomaton Hurricanes. Northview beat the ‘Canes 9-5 to end their season at 14-3.
School Prayer Bill Clears First Hurdle
April 15, 2011
A bill permitting prayers at school events such as graduations or assemblies cleared the Senate Education Pre-K-12 Committee on a unanimous vote Thursday.
The bill sponsored by Sen. Gary Siplin, D-Orlando allows school districts to adopt policies regarding the “delivery of inspirational messages, including prayers” at graduation ceremonies or other “noncompulsory student assemblies.”
Only students could deliver the prayers and the language must be nonsectarian, the bill says.
David Barkey, an attorney with the Anti-Defamation League, said the specificity of the bill, including the use of the word “prayer” violates state and federal constitutional requirements that prohibit the endorsement of one religious philosophy by the government. And by stipulating what can be said in a prayer, that would require school involvement to police it, Barkey said.
Even with the nod from the Senate committee, the bill’s future is murky. A similar bill in the House has not yet been heard by a single committee.
By The News Service of Florida
Education Savings Account Bill Moves Forward
April 15, 2011
A bold plan to allow parents to use state funding to pay for private school tuition, college savings plans, or tutoring cleared its first committee on Thursday.
The ambitious plan (SB 1550) would take 40 percent of the state’s per-pupil spending on a public school student and deposit it into an account – the bill calls it an “education savings account” – where it may be used to pay private school tuition, for tutors, or for college savings accounts.
That would amount to about $3,100 per student under this year’s education funding formula.
“This is a very innovative program that recognizes that parents should have choices,” said Sen. Joe Negron, R-Stuart, the bill sponsor. He added that “I don’t believe public schools are going to fold” because of the bill. “Public schools are competing with private schools,” Negron said.
Any student, whether they currently attend public or private school, would be eligible to open an account.
Gov. Rick Scott has previously stated his support for savings account plans for parents, and the idea is supported by an education policy group founded by former Gov. Jeb Bush.
Though the bill cleared the Senate Education Pre-K-12 Committee on Tuesday, supporters and detractors alike said it isn’t likely to progress much further.
Its House companion (HB 1225) has not yet been heard in a committee.
“It won’t get much further this year,” said Jaryn Emhof, a spokeswoman for the Foundation for Florida’s Future, the education think tank affiliated with Bush that is pushing various proposals that would channel more state funding into charter, virtual and private schools. “It was heard as a courtesy.”
Emhof said this is the first year the idea has gotten a hearing in the Legislature and that education savings accounts are likely to return next year for more serious consideration.
Critics say the education savings account bill is just another voucher program. Its unique structure, which doesn’t mandate that taxpayer money go to a private school, may allow the state to skirt around the constitutional issues that have been problematic for school voucher programs in the past.
A previous attempt at a wide-ranging school voucher program called Opportunity Scholarships was struck down in 2006 after the Florida Supreme Court said it violated the state constitution.
“It’s constitutional,” Negron said after the committee. “We do the same thing in voluntary (pre-kindergarten),” Negron said, though the bill analysis says it may be “constitutionally challenged.”
Several teachers spoke against the bill Thursday, saying it is a way of diverting funds away from public schools and into private schools and the hands of parents who home school their children.
“While this might be something that seems like a good idea in theory, in reality if we were to have a large number of people opt into this program…I do see us losing some of our wonderful programs,” said Barbara Wilmarth, a Pinellas County public school teacher.
Negron said it doesn’t hurt public schools. He said the measure would allow schools to keep 20 percent of the state’s per-pupil spending cost, even though the student would be gone, though the bill didn’t spell out that percentage.
But the proposal does provide a strong incentive for parents to take their kids out of public schools, critics say.
“What is to stop families from saying ‘I am going to keep my child home’ and just take the money and it is not going to appropriate educational opportunities?” asked Sen. Lizbeth Benacquisto, R-Fort Myers.
Negron said by requiring the money be deposited into banks and having only certain approved expenditures, such as tuition, books, tutors and college savings plans, would avoid abuse.
The bill would cost the state’s Department of Financial Services over $760,000 to set up, and about $168,541 each year to maintain. The department would be in charge of setting up the savings accounts.
Negron said he was focused on moving the bill forward in the Senate, though acknowledged that “it is a transformational idea and so we are making progress as with any big idea.”
By Lilly Rockwell
The News Service of Florida
