Quantcast
Channel: Crime-public_Safety Rss Full Text Mobile
Viewing all 2542 articles
Browse latest View live

Pizza delivery man served slice of injustice

$
0
0

SPRINGFIELD — Police are investigating the robbery of a pizza delivery man who was held up Tuesday night.

Springfield Police were called to the Maharaja Mobile Home Park, off of Everitt Avenue, Tuesday at about 10 p.m. Officials with the police department said a pizza delivery man was robbed and shot with an air-soft gun while on delivery.

It was unclear how much money was taken from the pizza man.

The robbery suspect then fled the scene on foot, the victim told police, and police are still searching for him. No arrests have been made in the case, and the victim’s name has yet to be released.


Man charged with battery arrested again after missing court

$
0
0

PANAMA CITY — A man who allegedly hit his wife over the head with a hammer and continued to pummel her face with his hands has been rearrested after not showing up to enter a plea in court, according to court documents.

Willie Frank Simmons, 59, posted a $25,000 bond after being arrested on aggravated battery charges after he attacked his wife with a hammer and then his fists. He was arrested May 10, released after posting bond and is now back in custody after missing a court date without a chance of bonding out again, court documents indicated.

According to Panama City police reports, officers were called to an area of 2610 Hwy 77 by witnesses. Simmons and his wife were in a vehicle on the side of the road and were still arguing when the officer walked up, police said.

--- ARREST AFFIDAVIT»»

The victim did not have visible injuries, but she said Simmons attacked her, hitting her on the head with the hammer, while they were stopped in traffic. He continued to hit her in the face and chest afterward, according to police reports.

She went on to tell the officer Simmons becomes violent when he is intoxicated, and that he was intoxicated. Police found a silver hammer in the passenger floorboard and took it as evidence when Simmons was taken to jail.

Simmons posted the $25,000 bond in July and was scheduled for a plea date on Oct. 6. But extenuating circumstances prevented him from appearing, according to his attorney.

In a letter, assistant public defender F.R. Mann Jr. requested Simmons’ bond violation be set aside.

--- ARREST AFFIDAVIT»»

Simmons “suffered some type of psychotic episode the Saturday before the Monday he was supposed to be in court,” said Mann, including that Simmons’ wife took him to the VA hospital for medical treatment that day. “He is currently taking his Risperdal and ready to return to court.”

Simmons was rearrested Monday and surrendered the previous bond he posted. He is now being held without bond.

Police searching for shooter

$
0
0

PANAMA CITY — Police are seeking the public’s help in finding a man who discharged a firearm in a residential neighborhood, officials announced Wednesday.

Panama City Police responded to the 1300 block of Caldwell Drive at about 3 p.m. Wednesday to reports of a firearm being discharged. Once on scene detectives learned that a black male approached a female at a residence and asked the whereabouts of another person of whom she was unaware.

After the female told him to leave, and walked inside the residence, she heard a single gun shot being fired and saw two black males running north on Caldwell Drive, she told police. Police later found evidence of a single gunshot fired at the ground on the side of the roadway.

One black male is described to be about 6 feet tall, thin build, wearing a black hooded sweatshirt and white shorts, the second black male was described as wearing dark clothing.

Anyone with information about this case is asked to contact Detective Joe Adams at the Panama City Police Department, 850-872-3100, or to report tips anonymously to Crime Stoppers at 850-785-TIPS.

Student arrested after Twitter threat

$
0
0

LYNN HAVEN — The Bay County Sheriff’s Office arrested a juvenile Wednesday after it was discovered he posted a threat on Twitter Tuesday evening stating his intention to “blow up” Mosley High School.

A BCSO School Resource Deputy saw the tweet and contact was made with the suspect, who admitted to sending the tweet.

The suspect is a student of Mosley High School. He was charged with threat to place a destructive device, a second degree felony, and turned over to the state Department of Juvenile Justice.

BCSO did not release the student’s name.

Vernon teacher arrested on drug charges

$
0
0

PANAMA CITY BEACH — A Vernon Middle School teacher has been suspended after police found him passed out in front of a convenience store allegedly with controlled substances and paraphernalia, according to official reports.

James Edward Tyre, 27, was arrested on charges of paraphernalia and narcotics possession Tuesday at about 3 a.m. after police found him asleep in his vehicle in front of the Express Lane at 16935 Panama City Beach Parkway. Police said they found clear baggies in Tyre’s pockets and inside his vehicle with the assistance of a Police K-9 unit before taking him to jail on the charges.

Tyre, of Chipley, was released on pretrial probation before his first appearance in court Wednesday. He has been placed on paid leave from his duties as a teacher at Vernon Middle School.

Washington County Superintendent of Schools Joseph Taylor placed Tyre on paid leave. He later indicated he would recommend at the Monday’s School Board meeting the teacher be placed on unpaid leave until Tyre’s next court date.

Tyre’s first arraignment takes place Dec. 16.

Tyre is the son of long-time Washington County Superintendent of Schools Jerry Tyre.

According to arrest records, K-9 officer Blitz detected a clear baggie in Tyre’s front pocket containing cocaine; a sunglasses case containing a baggie of marijuana, a glass pipe and Visine; and a cigarette pack with a baggie of marijuana within. Under the driver seat, where police found Tyre, Blitz found another baggie with a white powdery residue coating its lining and containing a small amount of marijuana, police reported.

Police found less than 20 grams marijuana during the search, they reported, which is a misdemeanor offense. However, Tyre is facing felony charges for allegedly possessing a controlled substance and paraphernalia.

PCB boil water notice rescinded

$
0
0

PANAMA CITY BEACH — The boil water notice posted for portions of Panama City Beach on Tuesday has been rescinded. A bacteriological survey deemed water to be safe following a damaged water main.

The following areas were impacted: 8706-9007 North Lagoon Drive, 104-170 Rusty Gans Drive, 2832-3003 Allison Avenue and the Dollar General Store and Express Lane.

Bond reduced for vehicular homicide suspect

$
0
0

PANAMA CITY — The bond for an Arkansas man charged with the vehicular homicide of a Panama City Beach woman was reduced Thursday.

Adam Brian Bailey, 23, was being held on a $30,000 bond after a Sept. 7 crash at Upas Street and Beach Drive that caused the death of 31-year-old Tara Marie Ashley. Bailey said he was on his way to meet a girl when he t-boned the convertible containing Ashley at about 4 p.m., and that he was exceeding the posted speed limit, according to Florida Highway Patrol reports.

Though prosecutors argued Bailey has no ties to Bay County, District Judge Brantley Clark reduced his bond to $15,000 during the hearing Thursday. Clark also ordered that Bailey be subjected to random urinalysis tests and not allowed to consume alcohol.

Man arrested on drug, gun charges

$
0
0

PANAMA CITY — Police have arrested a Monticello man on charges of trafficking in more than 100 grams of MDMA, according to Panama City Police Department officials.

Tyler Thompson Winchester, 32, was arrested in the 200 block of U.S. 231 at about 7:45 p.m. Wednesday after a pursuit by police that began at 15th Street and June Avenue, during which a hit and run occurred. The arrest stemmed from a U.S. Marshals Fugitive Task Force tip that Winchester, who had active warrants in Panama City Beach, was in the area, according to a police news release.

After police caught up with Winchester, they found a loaded shotgun, a loaded semi-automatic pistol, nearly 142 grams of MDMA, commonly referred to as “Molly,” and approximately 280 grams of what police believe is synthetic marijuana.

Winchester is labeled as a registered career offender in Florida and has numerous weapon, theft, robbery and gun charges, police said.

Winchester was taken to the Bay County Jail on charges of trafficking in MDMA, felon possession of a firearm and ammo, fleeing and attempting to elude, resisting an officer without violence, possession of marijuana less than 20 grams and paraphernalia, leaving the scene of a crash with property damage and driving with a suspended or revoked license.


UPDATE: Man dies after crashing moped

$
0
0

PANAMA CITY — A Panama City man died following a single-vehicle crash on a moped Wednesday night, the Panama City Police Department reported.

The crash occurred at the intersection of 11th Street and Fairy Avenue at around 10 p.m., according to a news release. Barry T. Richardson, 27, was traveling east on 11th Street on a moped when he veered from the roadway and struck a curb. After hitting the curb he was ejected and struck a telephone pole, the release stated.

PCPD officials said Richardson was not traveling at a high rate of speed and bystander accounts did not indicate other vehicles may have caused the accident.

“We have eyewitnesses that say nobody else was in the area at the time,” said PCPD Lt. Jon Morris.

He was taken to the hospital, where he later died, PCPD reported. Police said Richardson was not wearing a helmet.

A stretch of the roadway from Lisenby Avenue to Fairy Avenue was blocked off Thursday afternoon for mapping of the scene.

The investigation is ongoing and anyone with additional information is asked to call Sgt. Melanie Law at 850-872-3100.

Lawyer: Murder confession coerced

$
0
0

PANAMA CITY — The trial of a man jailed on charges he shot his landlord on church grounds will be delayed as defense attorneys attempt to suppress a video taken the day of his arrest.

Christopher Hyler, 49, was the authorities’ prime suspect in the death of 43-year-old Robert S. Ellison after a nearly two-year-investigation from the August 2010 shooting in the construction office of First Baptist Church in Panama City Beach. Hyler was arrested in May 2013 at a property Ellison owned, and had lived in another of Ellison’s properties in the past. Police suspected other parties contributed to Ellison’s death, but no other arrests were made.

Hyler later confessed to the shooting in a police interrogation video but was coerced to do so, according to Hyler’s attorney.

--- DOCUMENT: MOTION TO SUPPRESS EVIDENCE»»

Hyler appeared in court Thursday, now with a shaved head, after filing a motion to suppress the interrogation video taken at the time of his arrest. Hyler’s legal counsel argued that after two hours of intense questioning, he simply agreed to the facts presented by interrogators.

Hyler “had used methamphetamine heavily prior to his arrest by law enforcement and was still under the influence of the drug during the interrogation,” Public Defender Henry Sims wrote in his motion to the court.

Sims said Hyler’s intoxication, coupled with a reasonable self-defense scenario presented by law enforcement to “escape” the pressure being asserted on him, amounted to coercion.

Hyler’s “statement was a result of police coercion as evidenced by the video of the interrogation process,” he said. “Therefore, admissibility is prohibited.”

Five shell casings littered the construction office’s floor at 204 Cobb Road where EMS found the lifeless body of Ellison lying face down. Rigor mortis had not set in, but blood pooled around the body from the gunshots to Ellison’s chest, abdomen and right arm.

DNA evidence collected from a cigarette butt and cellphone at the scene belonged to another man other than Hyler, according to court documents.

However, court documents indicate prosecutors will highlight Hyler’s past conviction for violent acts to link him to Ellison’s death during the trial. He previously pleaded guilty to stalking and breaking into his wife’s home after mailing a letter in 2003.

“I will get my stuff or you will pay for the rest of your life,” Hyler wrote. “I’m smarter than Bay County cops. … You’ll get it, you wait.”

--- DOCUMENT: MOTION TO SUPPRESS EVIDENCE»»

In addition, Hyler threatened the victim’s life.

“I’ll kill you,” he wrote.

Judge Brantley Clark did not rule on whether the video would be suppressed Thursday, but he did set Hyler’s trial date back a month to Jan. 12 to give attorneys more time to prepare.

81-year-old charged with looting tangerine grove

$
0
0

LAKELAND — A Lake Wales man was charged Wednesday with stealing 11 truckloads of tangerines from groves around Polk County then selling the fruit at Parksdale Farms in Plant City.

Herman Southall, 81, was charged with 11 counts of transporting citrus without a certificate, grand theft between $300 and $5,000, grand theft of more than 2,000 pieces of citrus, and trespassing. He was in the Polk County Jail this morning.

Southall and Christopher Scarlett were found by deputies Wednesday picking fruit in a Dundee grove after a Sheriff’s Office helicopter pilot saw them.

A Polk County Sheriff’s Office report said the two had picked more than four rows of tangerines, about 2,000 pieces of Sunburst tangerines. The report said they were preparing to load the fruit into Southall's truck.

Detectives reported that Southall sold a separate load of tangerines valued at $338 to Parksdale Farms on Tuesday.

Murder suspect withdraws plea to represent himself

$
0
0

CHIPLEY — An inmate facing a first-degree murder charge has had a change of heart regarding his request to the court last month to represent himself.

Clinton L. Powers, who is currently being held in the Santa Rosa Correction Institute, was indicted by a grand jury in September for the July 2011 murder of a fellow inmate at the Northwest Florida Reception Center, Washington County’s state prison in Greenhead.

Powers told a Washington County court last month he didn’t believe he was receiving adequate service from his attorney and requested that he be allowed to represent himself on the case.

A hearing was held on the matter last week, at which Powers rescinded his request and agreed to representation by the public defender’s office. The state is seeking the death penalty in the case.

Powers’ case is expected to go to trial as early as late January.

Powers’ convictions and prison history include a five-year sentence for sexual battery, an 18-month sentence for escape and a life sentence for a 1996 first-degree murder conviction in Jackson County.

UPDATE: Sexual battery at Mosley leads to student’s arrest

$
0
0

LYNN HAVEN — A 17-year-old Mosley High School student has been arrested following the alleged sexual battery of a disabled student, the Lynn Haven Police Department (LHPD) announced Friday.

Jay D. Jordan, 17, was arrested after a LHPD investigation into reports of a sexual battery on a 17-year-old female student with a developmental disability at Mosley High School. Police said their investigation revealed Jordan allegedly forced a sexual act upon the girl on school grounds, during school hours.

Both students are mentally disabled, according to school officials.

“She’s not as developed mentally as the average 17-year-old,” said LHPD Chief David Messer. “But when she went home, she was obviously upset.”

Bay District Schools spokeswoman Karen Tucker declined to comment on the incident.

When police arrived at the home of the victim Thursday, the girl told officers Jordan had raped her in the school gym Tuesday. She said she didn’t want to go to the gym with Jordan during lunchtime, but he threatened her and she reluctantly went along. They then went into a vacant room near the gym, where Jordan forced himself upon her, she told police.

Her parents told police she didn’t say anything Tuesday, came home complaining of stomach pains Wednesday and went straight to her room Thursday without talking to her mother or father.

After the parents inquired into what was bothering the girl, they called the authorities.

Jordan, of Youngstown, was arrested and charged with sexual battery. He was then taken to the Department of Juvenile Justice Detention Center.

Former Bay County employee charged with grand theft (REPORTS)

$
0
0

PANAMA CITY — The former executive administrative assistant to the Bay County Commission has been arrested on grand theft charges after allegedly obtaining $48,830 from the county by providing false information.

Gina Rena Gainey, 43, of 304 Odom Road, Chipley, was arrested after a county investigation found she allegedly falsified grades in county-funded classes, bolstering the amount she received.

Gainey could not be reached for comment Friday.

--- DOCUMENT: GAINEY'S PERSONNEL FILE»»

--- DOCUMENT: INCIDENT REPORT»»

County spokeswoman Valerie Sale said because it is an active investigation she could not comment. Before the investigation, Gainey resigned from her position as the executive assistant to both the Bay County Commission and the assistant county manager.

“It is with deepest regrets that I am writing this letter,” Gainey wrote to the county’s Human Resources Department on Sept. 24. “Please accept this as an official letter of resignation effective Nov. 1, 2014 due to my health.”

The arrest report states county Human Resources Director Amy Cooper learned through casual conversations with other county employees that Gainey may have falsified information on her employment application.

“Upon verifying that information, they discovered that Ms. Gainey had been fired from a previous job, never listed that employer on her references, and stated on her employment application that she had never been fired.”

County officials then learned Gainey had been fired from a company called BetterBuilt in 2006.

“Gina Gainey’s employment was terminated upon discovery that funds had been embezzled from BetterBuilt,” an agreement for release of liability dated March 25, 2006, and provided to Bay County officials states. “Gina Gainey does admit that she embezzled the funds from BetterBuilt.”

The agreement states the amount owed to BetterBuilt was $200,000.

The county subsequently conducted a review of all financial transactions Gainey had conducted while employed by Bay County.

Investigators later discovered that between June 2008 and August 2012, Gainey had been taking online courses through Birmingham, Ala.-based Virginia College, the arrest report states, and was paid for multiple classes she never took.

“A check with the college showed that Ms. Gainey changed some of her grades, thus affecting the percentage she was reimbursed [by Bay County] for those classes. Additionally, it was determined that after completing her associate degree, Ms. Gainey did enroll (into) the college in 2010 and continues to submit false grade reports and transcripts, eventually claiming she completed her bachelor’s degree.”

The county’s investigation also determined Gainey received compensation from the Veterans Administration, a scholarship from her husband’s branch of military service and Pell grants, the arrest report states.

--- DOCUMENT: GAINEY'S PERSONNEL FILE»»

--- DOCUMENT: INCIDENT REPORT»»

“None of these documents have been provided as of this writing from Virginia College, and this would affect the total amount of money Ms. Gainey should have received from the county as she claimed no outside sources of money for her classes,” the report states.

Gainey received a nearly perfect job performance review in her most recent evaluation, earning top grades in dependability, interpersonal skills, teamwork and acceptance of job instructions and responsibilities.

“Gina can be depended upon to do her job, and consistently go beyond expectation,” the review stated. “She is very accomplished at dealing with a variety of citizen types.”

Elderly woman injured in house fire

$
0
0

SPRINGFIELD — An elderly Springfield woman was transported to Bay Medical Center with multiple burns shortly after 3 p.m. on Friday after a fire broke out in the widow’s home at 615 Williams Ave.

“I seen the smoke in the street and thought someone was burning something, then it got thicker,” said neighbor Terryl Vann.

Vann realized the smoke was billowing out of the home of 75-year-old Suhpa Catlett. He was immediately concerned when he didn’t see her on the front porch.

“I kicked the door open and went in there for her, but I couldn’t get past the first room,” Vann said. “The smoke pushed me back out. It was so black, you couldn’t see nothing.”

Fire Chief Alexander Baird said there was heavy fire on the back side of the house when the Panama City Fire Department arrived.

Firefighters located Catlett inside the house. She was breathing, but not alert when they carried her out to rest on the ground outside. She was then transported to the hospital by Bay County EMS. Her condition was not immediately known.

Neighbor Denise Qureshi said Catlett wasn’t the only victim inside. The woman had four dogs in the house that had been Catlett’s companions since her husband passed away two years ago from cancer.

Two of the dogs were found dead by firefighters.

Catlett is originally from Thailand and attends Wat Buddhasaengdham, a nonprofit run Buddhist temple on Cherry Street. Her monk and friends from the temple stood outside the home with other concerned neighbors waiting for more details about what caused the fire.

Catlett’s son, who didn’t give his name, said he’d just seen his mother around 1:15 p.m.

“I always bring her food,” he said. “She was sleeping. She always takes a nap around 1.”

Neither the victim’s son nor Chief Baird could say why the fire started. Baird said the cause would be under investigation by Panama City fire inspectors and the State Fire Marshal.

“One of our major concerns was the house next door is relatively close,” Baird said. “The fire coming out of this house was getting very close to impending on that house.”

But firefighters stopped the blaze before it left Catlett’s property. Bystanders looked both shocked and relieved the damage wasn’t worse than the smoke made it appear.

“It just hurt me that I couldn’t go no further than that first room,” Vann said. “There was so much stuff behind the door, I just couldn’t really get in.”


Teen Court celebrates 20 years of rehabilitating youth

$
0
0

PANAMA CITY — Juvenile offenders who get their day in Bay County Teen Court get a lot more than a chance to explain their actions to a jury of their young peers.

If all goes according to plan, it’s the last time they’ll ever find themselves playing the role of defendant.

“Once they get through the program, you can see the light bulb come on,” said director Suzanne Cox. “It’s just a totally different child.”

Teen Court is a diversion program for first-time misdemeanor offenders between the ages of 8 and 17. Participation allows youth to avoid traditional juvenile court and a criminal record by admitting guilt and complying with the Teen Court regimen.

The program celebrated its 20th anniversary in May and has served more than 7,669 teens since its inception. Judge Judy Pittman Beibel and other forward-thinkers founded Bay County Teen Court in May 1994 after a visit to Sarasota to see the successful program there.

Teen Court is held on three Tuesdays each month during which the state “prosecutes” defendants accused of a misdemeanor crime in a sort of a role-play court session. Teen volunteers fill the roles of juror, legal counsel, bailiff and clerk. A local attorney takes the judge’s gavel.

The Oct. 14 docket covered some unsettling offenses. First up was a 12-year-old girl charged with battery for beating a former friend in the face for talking badly about her behind her back.

“Could you explain to the court what happened?” the prosecutor asked.

The defendant gave her account, describing how she’d gone with a friend to the victim’s home and knocked on her front door to confront her. The argument escalated into a fight and the defendant said she joined in the beating “to fit in” and “look cool.”

When asked if she felt any remorse for giving in to peer pressure to commit a violent act, the defendant gave a sheepish response.

“I feel bad for what I did because she didn’t do anything to me physically,” she said.

One of Teen Court’s objectives is to educate teens on the consequences they could face if charged as an adult for the same crime. Volunteer Judge Quinten Broxton, a local juvenile defender, explained the severity of the girl’s offense carried the potential for the defendant to have a second-degree misdemeanor on her record with a sentence of up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine.

Next, the jury heard the case of a 13-year-old boy who’d been suspended when marijuana and related paraphernalia were found in his bag at school.

“I was going to use them to smoke,” the defendant said of the pipe and two lighters found in his possession.

In his hearing, the prosecutor and jury learned the boy started smoking marijuana occasionally during the summer and had done so before school a couple times. The prosecutor asked the boy if he was aware of what marijuana does to the user.

“It can kill brain cells and get you high,” he said.

Each offender is given a chance to express regret for their actions prior to sentencing, but this defendant was not showing much.

“They don’t teach you much at that school anyways,” he said.

Broxton told the defendant his grandmother, who the boy had lived with since he was 7, could be charged with possession and taken to jail if he were to leave any remnants of cannabis on her property.

Teen Court punishment is doubled for drug-related offenses. All participants in the program are drug tested. Offenders who test positive get education from a medical examiner on the consequences of drug use. Parents and juveniles also are screened by a counselor to see if additional services are needed.

“I’ve been working with delinquent kids for 22 years,” said assistant director Randy Jordan. “When I go to the jail now, I still see some of them. They didn’t learn.”

Jordan said juveniles referred to Teen Court come from every walk of life and socioeconomic class. He said circumstances in life are not always the strongest factor in why kids commit misdemeanor crimes.

“There’s no real catalyst, except for drug use,” Jordan said. He said when youth cross the line to accept drug use, their mind shifts to being open to committing other illegal acts.

The program strives to give a meaningful experience when attempting to rehabilitate youth. Staple consequences are multiple sessions of jury duty, 16 to 64 hours of community service, a tour of Bay County Jail and education on communication and other life skills.

Community service hours are deputy supervised and usually consists of doing yard work for the elderly, disabled and hospice patients referred by churches, social services and code enforcement. Offenders also are of service at community events and city cleaning projects.

“We try to do worthwhile projects,” Cox said. “If it’s something we can do, we do it.”

Some are assigned essays with topics exploring wrongful deeds and letters of apology to the victims.

A part of the sentence doled out to the 12-year-old facing battery charges was to write a letter of apology to the former friend she beat up and a 700-word essay on thinking before she acts. The boy caught with marijuana was assigned an essay about the effects his drug of choice would have on his brain.

Cox said a large number of offenders return to volunteer when their obligation is complete.

“It’s been a very rewarding program,” she said. “I’ve got kids that come back 15 years later just to say hello.”

Children are referred to Teen Court by law enforcement, the State Attorney’s Office, the Department of Juvenile Justice and school resource officers. Cox said upon referral, the goal is to get offenders to a first appearance as soon as possible.

“The quicker you get to them, the better chance of them not getting another charge,” she said.

Xavian Pinkney, a 16-year-old junior at Bay High School, has volunteered for the past two years since he first appeared as a defendant when he was arrested for stealing.

Pinkney said he’ll never forget doing 24 community service hours of yard work in the summer heat. He’s thankful the program helped set him straight.

“It was definitely life changing,” he said.

In prison ministry, inmates find the power to overcome

$
0
0

MALONE — At first glance, the chapel appears ordinary.

A golden, wooden lectern is flanked on both sides by speakers. Two keyboards rest farther to the left, at this meeting unused. There are padded pews, filled about halfway to capacity with parishioners, some clutching black Bibles.

But a religious icon — any for that matter — is conspicuously absent. All of these parishioners  — all men — wear the same uniform, faded, cornflower blue V-necks and pants featuring white stripes down the legs. Two frosted windows frame the left side of the chapel wall. As the sun peeks through the mid-morning clouds, coils of barbed wire are illuminated in blurry spirals.

Minister Rick McClung of First Baptist Church Panama City delivered his sermon Oct. 30 to about 30 inmates at Jackson Correctional Institute (JCI) in Malone, north of Marianna.

“If you don’t believe in God and the devil, come walk in my shoes for a few days in this prison and you’ll see both at work,” said one inmate, who was wearing a yarmulke.

Chris Hayes has done his best to make prison a place of self-discovery, productivity and spirituality. He’s a barber on the inside, keeping busy with his hands as he had as a mechanic in his hometown of Miami. Most Excellent Way, McClung’s ministry, was Hayes’ first step in his growth as a Christian, since forming a weekly prayer circle with friend Truman Louis.

Grappling with guilt

“It’s a very conducive environment to learning,” Hayes said. “Even though I’m in bondage, it could have been much worse.”

However, when the cell doors clank home at night, Hayes grapples with guilt. He previously has found it difficult to live with his crime, although he said God’s forgiveness eventually granted some relief. Now 43, he looks back on his 20-year-old self with regret. The way Hayes described it, a gun accidentally discharged, killing someone. He was convicted of robbery and second-degree murder and easily could have received life behind bars. He’s been at Jackson Correctional for a year and before that spent four years in county jail. He still has five years on his sentence.

“I realized the hurt I caused. When the victim’s family was on the stand, I couldn’t look up,” Hayes said. “Especially now that God has softened my heart, that was somebody’s life.”

Hayes has vowed that he will not re-enter the trappings of his former life. Like Louis and McClung, he is a former addict and alcoholic. He wants to follow in McClung’s footsteps and serve prisoners or people in shelters.

“There’s no way I can do something with even a 10 percent chance of landing me back here,” Hayes said. “I’d rather be homeless.”

McClung has been conducting Most Excellent Way, his drug addiction ministry, in prisons for six years. He’s been going to the Bay County Jail for eight years. The total years for the program, the foundation of which is the weekly meetings at First Baptist, is 12 years.

“Some of the best Christians I’ve met are guys spending life in prison,” McClung said. “There’s not privilege for the Christian in prison.”

‘I was not alone’

Both Hayes and Louis were attracted to Most Excellent Way because of its reputation at JCI. Once they attended the meeting, they were struck by McClung’s down-to-Earth approach. They received no judgment from the pastor and appreciated McClung was willing to share his personal story.

“Because of his life story, that gave me confidence that I was not alone,” Louis said.

McClung has been clean since 1984. He said coming clean was directly related to receiving Christ as his savior. His addiction started with weekend binge drinking and eventually expanded to include cocaine and barbiturates.

“I hadn’t gone to church three times in my life before that,” he said. “It’s about what God can do in a person’s life when they let Him.”

McClung said the only way Most Excellent Way is different than programs like alcoholics and narcotics anonymous is the use of the Bible. The theme of McClung’s sermon on Thursday was repentance, beginning with a reading from the Sermon on the Mount. The pastor added that attendance is voluntary for anyone, although judges have used the program as part of a court order, but only after McClung negotiates for the subject’s approval.

Louis was a deacon before he was incarcerated five years ago. He said he was arrested for a domestic dispute and is trying his hardest to be a better husband and father to his five children.

“Prison, for me, is a place where you can rebuild. It gave me the time to look in the mirror,” he said. “I’m choosing to follow a way to lead me back to society. My life can be an example as a way to overcome obstacles.”

Both Hayes and Louis say the Bible is their toolbox and medicine cabinet to tackle any lingering temptations. They agreed Galatians 2:20 is a continued source of inspiration.

“Christ is living in me,” Louis said. “It gives me the power to overcome.”

On the outside

Matt Hamric has been a participant in Most Excellent Way for 11 years, but he relapsed multiple times in that time. He said he hit rock bottom in 2007 when he attended a Most Excellent Way meeting high, pledging to McClung that he would get clean and then was picked up just days later for 10 counts of burglary. At that point, Jackson County Glass House, a processing camp for federal inmates, was a relief, Hamric said.

“People relapse all the time,” McClung said.

Hamric has been clean for nine months now. Crack was his drug of choice when he was younger, around the time he went to Pensacola teen challenge. Powerful prescription drugs like Vicodin or Oxycontin were the cause of his most recent relapse. He said he would trick doctors for pain meds with tales of toothaches.

“It’s so readily available,” Hamric said.

Even when he was clean, Hamric would stash drugs in different parts of his house so an emergency fix was available.

“I enjoyed the high, but I was more addicted to the lifestyle,” Hamric said. “I really didn’t know anything else.”

Hamric works for a landscaping company now, his boss a fellow regular for Most Excellent Way. Hamric said he has changed his mindset in dealing with his addiction.

“It’s not about staying clean,” he said. “It’s about raising my family to live for God.”

McClung told the inmates at JCI that October Thursday the most important themes of the new testament are forgiveness and redemption.

“It’s about being honest with God first and being honest with yourself next,” McClung said. “It’s a support group. There’s nothing magical about it.”

FDOT projects underway

$
0
0

The Florida Department of Transportation has several ongoing projects in the area. Officials remind drivers to use caution and remain alert in these areas.

On State 389 from State 30 (US 98B) to US 231, nighttime paving work continues.

On State 77 between the Bailey Bridge US 231, nighttime work is underway including installation of sidewalks and driveway turnouts and other asphalt work.

On State 77 from State 30 (U.S. 98B) to U.S. 231, construction is underway including resurfacing the roadway, adding Americans with Disabilities Act upgrades, minor signal upgrades, signage and pavement markings.

All construction activities are weather dependent and may be delayed or re-scheduled in the event of inclement weather.

For more information, follow the Florida Department of Transportation District Three on Twitter @myfdot_nwfl or find them on Facebook at www.facebook.com/MyFDOTNWFL.

Sex offender back behind bars

$
0
0

PANAMA CITY — A sex offender whose recent release caused tension between law enforcement and prosecutors has been arrested after he violated terms of his probation and called the sheriff to complain about the strict monitoring of his activities.

Horace Monroe Wood, 45, was released the day he was supposed to go to trial at the end of October, although he was accused of sexual battery by four under-age victims. He pleaded no contest to one count of lewd and lascivious molestation and was sentenced to three years’ probation.

The Bay County Sheriff’s Office criticized the State Attorney’s Office’s handling of Wood’s case and another molestation case.

However, deputies arrested Wood about 10 a.m. Tuesday after he was caught allegedly violating the terms of his release at a motel in Youngstown. He now could face 15 years in prison when he is sentenced by Judge James Fensom.

Wood called Sheriff Frank McKeithen on Monday to complain that BCSO deputies were checking on him too much.

A short time later, Wood was spotted by Parole and Probation officers at a different location even though his electronic monitoring device pinpointed him at his room in the Youngstown Motel on U.S. 231. Wood had removed his monitoring device for an hour and 51 seconds before he was taken into custody.

“Due to the fact he was a sexual predator, it was only a matter of time before he re-offended,” McKeithen said. “We were watching him not because of what he’d done in the past, but what we feared he would do in the future.”

Wood was under the Jessica Lunsford Act following his release. He initially was arrested in November 2013 after one victim came forward, which led to an investigation into three other abuses by Wood.

According to the prosecution’s notes on the case, the incidents took place as far back as 2006 on girls as young as 3 years old. Both factors conspired to result in deficient memories among the girls. Several of their accounts conflicted with one another when pressed on details, which would be used at trial, according the prosecuting attorney Matt Pavese.

“However guilty we all know the defendant to be, we just did not have the case to put him away for life,” Pavese wrote in his conclusion. “I believe I did the best justice could afford in this case and made sure the defendant was labeled a sex offender.”

Following Wood’s release McKeithen criticized the handling of the case and lack of punishment, stating in a letter to State Attorney Glenn Hess that Wood had “not been held accountable.”

“Sexual abuse to our children is a very high priority to the BCSO and I would hope it would be to you, too,” McKeithen wrote.

Hess defended his office’s work. Although the pieces of evidence on their own could not amount to a conviction, Fensom will consider the maximum statutory penalty of 15 years in prison, Hess said.

“Having taken a no-contest plea in the end was better than a not guilty from a jury,” Hess said.

In light of Wood’s arrest, McKeithen said he still believed the case could have been handled differently.

“Point is, now he is in jail,” McKeithen said.

According to court documents, as of Wednesday a date had not been set for Wood’s violation of probation hearing.

McKeithen also criticized the state’s treatment of a lewd and lascivious molestation case against 36-year-old Clay Cowart.

Cowart was charged with two counts of molestation after he was arrested in March 2013. Those charges were reduced Oct. 28 to a single misdemeanor count of battery and the case was transferred to another court.

“When you have a he-said, she-said case and she decides not to testify, you have no case,” Hess said.

Cowart’s case is ongoing, but he was accused of twice molesting the daughter of a woman with whom he was living. Depositions in the case were filed from deputies, investigators and family members who could only testify to hearing the story from victim.

The victim never testified in state depositions.

Hess said the main reason victims back out before testifying is the amount of scrutiny and possible embarrassment they are subjected to, which is inherent in a legal system where two sides battle over the “beyond a reasonable doubt” burden of proof for conviction.

“Many of the victims reach a point where they’ve had enough,” Hess said.

Grill causes overnight fire

$
0
0

PANAMA CITY — Fire crews were called to douse an early morning fire Monday, which appeared to be caused by a patio grill, according to a news release from the Panama City Fire Department.

The Fire Department was called to a two-story, residential structure fire at 1209 B Capri Drive Monday at about 3:30 a.m. Several units including 13 firefighters, three engines, one tower truck, a battalion chief and the fire chief responded to the alarm.

The fire was brought under control at 4:01 a.m. Damage to the wood-frame structure was estimated by officials to be about 30 percent. Content damage was estimated at about 10 percent.

“The first arriving unit found heavy smoke throughout the structure and flames at the rear,” PCFD said in the release. “A 4-inch supply line was laid. Two attack lines were used to extinguish the fire. There were no injuries to civilians or firefighting personnel.”

The State Fire Marshal determined the cause to be accidental and from the barbeque grill on the back patio.

Viewing all 2542 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>