Escambia Postal Worker Arrested For Trying To Run Down A Child, FHP Says

January 1, 2026

The Florida Highway Patrol has arrested a postal worker on Wednesday for allegedly trying to run down a child with his USPS vehicle.

William White Jr, 41, was charged with felony aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, petit theft, and criminal mischief.

According to FHP investigators, the incident was sparked by a simple delivery error. White had reportedly dropped off a package at the wrong address on Kingfisher Way. The child, whose family lives at the residence, noticed the package was intended for a different neighbor.

In an effort to help, the child placed the package on his electric scooter and began riding toward the correct address. Troopers say that when White saw the child with the mail, he incorrectly assumed the 10-year-old was stealing the package.

Witnesses and investigators state that White then purposely steered the USPS vehicle toward the child. The boy managed to jump into a nearby yard just moments before the mail truck ran over his scooter.

The confrontation didn’t end there. After yelling at the child, White allegedly retrieved the mangled scooter from beneath his truck and placed it inside the USPS vehicle. When a family member of the child ran outside to confront the carrier, White fled the scene. He later threw the scooter into a yard on Blue Jay Way before continuing his route.

Flashback: Century Opened A Millennium Time Capsule In 2025. Here’s What They Found.

January 1, 2026

The Town of Century opened a millennium time capsule a year ago, finding a lot of wet items and a few notable glimpses at local history.

The time capsule was buried in front of the town hall on January 1, 2000, and set for opening in January 2025. Over the past 25 years, water filled the concrete vault. Murky, dirty, stinky water also infiltrated the plastic bags and other containers inside. Most of the newspapers and other paper items were mush. Many photos had been printed on inkjet printers of the day, and the photos had washed away.

For a photo gallery, click here.

Several people present for the opening discovered items that they had placed in the capsule, or items from now-deceased relatives. A form created by the town back in 2000 asked residents to write down what was in each bag, along with their contact information and heirs with the apparent intent of returning the items in 2025. The time for residents to claim items passed in late 2025.

Some residents took family items home, and the Alger Sullivan Historical Society took the rest of the items to dry out what they can and document.

And, in a bit of a surprise, the lid covering the vault was signed by numerous people, most if not all of were high school students (it’s pictured in the gallery).

NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Local Drivers Continue To Get Holiday Break From Road Construction Lane Closures

January 1, 2026

Drivers in Florida will continue to get a break from road construction. Through 11:59 p.m. on Friday, January 2, there will be no lane closures or other activities that impede traffic on major state roads throughout the Florida Panhandle, according to the Florida Department of Transportation. The break from lane closures has been ongoing since Christmas Eve.

NorthEscamba.com file photo, click to enlarge.

Here’s Where To Watch The College Football Bowl Games

January 1, 2026

Here is where to watch the remaining college football bowl games.

All times are Central.

Friday, Jan. 2

12 p.m. | Rice vs. Texas State | Armed Forces Bowl (Fort Worth, Texas) | ESPN
3:30 p.m. | Navy vs. Cincinnati | Liberty Bowl (Memphis, Tenn.) | ESPN
7 p.m. | Wake Forest vs. Mississippi State | Duke’s Mayo Bowl (Charlotte, N.C.) | ESPN
7 p.m. | SMU vs. Arizona | Holiday Bowl (San Diego) | FOX

Thursday, Jan. 8

6:30 p.m. | Fiesta Bowl (CFP Semifinal) (Glendale, Ariz.) | ESPN

Friday, Jan. 9

6:30 p.m. | Peach Bowl (CFP Semifinal) (Atlanta, Ga.) | ESPN

Monday, Jan. 19

6:30 p.m. | College Football Playoff National Championship Game (Miami, Fla.) | ESPN

Molino Man With 14 Prior Felony Convictions Charged With Stealing Truck, Shoplifting, Weapon Possession

December 31, 2025

A Molino man with a lengthy criminal history is facing multiple felony charges after allegedly stealing a vehicle and shoplifting from a local retailer while armed with brass knuckles.

James Douglas Arnold III, 30, was arrested by the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office following two separate incidents that occurred in mid-December.

According to arrest reports, the first incident began on December 12 at the Keeton Correctional Facility at 225 Brent Lane. A 2009 black Dodge Ram was reported stolen from the front of the building after the owner’s son left the keys inside the facility’s front office.

Later that same evening, deputies were dispatched to the Walmart at 8970 Pensacola Blvd regarding a theft in progress. Loss prevention officers reported seeing Arnold opening multiple pocket knives and a crossbow from their packaging, concealing the items, and discarding others around the store. When deputies detained Arnold, they reportedly recovered black brass knuckles from his pants pocket.

Arnold was not immediately jailed following the Walmart incident as he was transported to a local hospital after claiming he had ingested multiple Xanax pills.

On December 20, a deputy spotted the stolen Dodge Ram parked at a cul-de-sac on Ives Place. Arnold was located in the passenger seat and was found in possession of a”personal use” amount of fentanyl. Authorities also discovered a collection of tools, a mini machete, and a BB gun inside the vehicle that did not belong to the truck’s owner.

Investigators noted that Arnold, a 14-time convicted felon, also presented a bill of sale for the truck that the owner later identified as a forgery

Arnold is charged with grand theft of a motor vehicle, possession of a controlled substance, possession of a weapon by a convicted felon, and retail petit theft with prior convictions.

Here’s The New Year’s Holiday Closures And Trash Schedule You Need To Know

December 31, 2025

Here’s the New Year’s holiday closure list for government offices and the trash schedule you need to know.

ESCAMBIA COUNTY

In observance of New Year’s, the following Escambia County offices will be closed Wednesday, Dec. 31 and Thursday, Jan. 1:

  • Escambia County Board of County Commissioners (all departments)
  • Escambia County Administration
  • Escambia County Area Transit Administrative Offices
  • Escambia County Department of Animal Welfare and Animal Shelter
  • Escambia County Extension Office
  • Escambia County Waste Services Administration
  • West Florida Public Libraries (all locations)
  • Escambia County Property Appraiser
  • Escambia County Supervisor of Elections

Normal Escambia County operations will resume Friday, January 2.

TAX COLLECTOR

  • Escambia County Tax Collector offices will be closed Wednesday, Dec. 31-Friday, Jan. 2.

PERDIDO LANDFILL

  • The Perdido Landfill will close at 2 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 31 and remain closed Thursday, Jan. 1.
  • The landfill will reopen with regular hours Friday, Jan. 2.

ECAT

  • ECAT administrative offices will be closed Wednesday, Dec. 31 and Thursday, Jan. 1. Customer service offices will be closed Thursday, Jan. 1.
  • ECAT will run modified holiday service Wednesday, Dec. 31:
    • The last bus will depart from ECAT at 5:30 p.m.
    • Commuter Route 60 will depart from ECAT at 6 p.m.
  • FlexTransit will run regular service Wednesday, Dec. 31.
  • ECAT will not run regular bus service or FlexTranist service Thursday, Jan. 1.
  • Regular bus service and FlexTransit service will resume Friday, Jan 2.

ESCAMBIA CLERK OF THE COURT

  • The Clerk’s Official Records, Finance, Treasury and Clerk to the Board offices at 221 Palafox Place will be closed Wednesday, Dec. 31.
  • All offices of the Clerk of Court and Comptroller will be closed in observance of New Year’s on Thursday, Jan. 1.

ECUA

  • ECUA offices will be closed Thursday, Jan. 1.
  • Collection will be made on Friday, Jan. 2, 2026. Friday’s collections will be on Saturday.

TOWN OF CENTURY

  • Town of Century offices will be closed Thursday, Jan. 1 and Friday, January 2 for the Christmas holiday.
  • Century trash collection will be on Wednesday, Jan. 30. Wednesday is the normal collection day.

Pictured: Palafox Place. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.

Former Coastal Alabama Community College President Arrested

December 31, 2025

The former president of Coastal Alabama Community College was arrested Tuesday.

Craig Pouncey, 67, was charged with multiple counts of use of position for personal gain. He was released on a $30,000 bond, according to Baldwin County Jail records. Exact details on the allegations against have not yet been released.

Pouncey was the Jefferson County (Alabama) School Superintendent and retired as president of Coastal Alabama in 2023.

Coastal Alabama Community College has campus locations in Atmore, Brewton, Bay Minette, Monroeville and other South Alabama towns.

Kimberly Ripley Named Escambia Westgate Teacher Of The Year

December 31, 2025

Kimberly Ripley was named the Escambia Westgate School Teacher of the Year.

“Ms Ripley makes science come alive, our students love going to Science Lab,” the school said.

Photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Kenneth Atkinson Named Beulah Middle Teacher Of The Year

December 31, 2025

Kenneth Atkinson was named the Beulah Middle School Teacher of the Year. NorthEscambia.com photo.

Century Violent Sexual Predator Charged With Felony Registration Violation

December 30, 2025

A 67-year-old violent sexual predator from Century has been arrested for failing to register with the Florida Sexual Offender/Predator Registry.

Anthony Darnell Goldsmith was charged with a felony sexual predator violation for failing to register quarterly. He remains in jail without bond under the Jessica Lunsford Act.

Goldsmith was convicted of predatory sexual assault of a child in Cook County, IL, in 2005. He was then convicted of two sexual predator registration violations in Escambia County in 2008 and 2011.

He was also convicted in 2018 of indecent exposure for exposing and pleasuring himself at Panera Bread in Pensacola; he received 11 months in the county jail for that offense. In addition, he served a year in state prison for a 2002 aggravated assault case from Escambia County.

« Previous PageNext Page »