<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><channel><atom:link href="http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><title>Blog</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23.aspx</link><description>West Palm Beach criminal defense lawyer Cory Strolla represents clients throughout Florida including Boca Raton, Jupiter, Wellington, Delray,  Palm Beach County, Broward County and Dade County.</description><managingEditor>strollalaw@yahoo.com (Cory Strolla, PA)</managingEditor><webMaster>support@viestly.com (Vesta Digital)</webMaster><pubDate>Fri, 18 May 2012 18:27:56 GMT</pubDate><lastBuildDate>Fri, 18 May 2012 18:27:56 GMT</lastBuildDate><generator>Viestly</generator><ttl>60</ttl><item><title>Judge signs order for Goodman's release from jail.</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/58-judge-signs-order-for-goodmans-release-from-jail.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/58/bv-rating-plaque-4_120x90.jpg" title="Judge signs order for Goodman's release from jail." alt="Judge signs order for Goodman's release from jail." align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />Wellington polo mogul John Goodman should be released from jail today.<p>Palm Beach County Circuit Judge Jeffrey Colbath this morning signed an order, allowing the 48-year-old Texas-born tycoon to return to his home at the International Polo Club Palm Beach instead of beginning to serve a 16-year prison sentence.</p><p>Court-watchers say it could be hours before a record-setting $7 million bond is posted and paperwork is processed by jail officials that allows him to be free while his attorneys appeal his conviction. He was been in jail since a jury on March 23 found him guilty of DUI manslaughter in the crash that killed 23-year-old Scott Wilson.</p><p>A slight hiccup developed this morning when Colbath told attorneys to clarify what Goodman is allowed to do while he is out on bond. He said he wanted to make it clear: no socializing.</p><p>Under the deal negotiated by Goodman's attorneys and prosecutors, Goodman would be released to his home at the polo club and would be allowed to go to his office which is also on club grounds. But, Colbath emphasized this morning, Goodman can not party or socialize.</p><p>The revised order, that Colbath signed shortly before 11 a.m., clarifies that point.</p><p>"While (Goodman) may conduct his business affairs, he shall not participate in any business related social events, including attending polo matches, charity events, membership events, parties or other private events" held on the grounds of the polo club, the order states.</p><p>He will be allowed to visit with family members at his home. He can have two friends over at at time. Heather Hutchins, the 42-year-old Atlanta mother of two whom Goodman adopted, is considered a family member, according to the order. He said he adopted Hutchins to gain more control over his two school-age children's reported $300 million trust.</p><p>"Prosecutor Ellen Roberts said she couldn't predict when Goodman would be released.</p><p>"The biggest part is the transfer of money," Roberts said. "I don't know what it takes. I am not into finances."</p><p>Goodman must come up with $3 million, and his brother and sister the remaining $4 million.</p><p>Goodman attorney Mark Schapiro declined to comment. Neither Goodman and nor his lead attorney, Roy Black, attended the hearing.</p><p>The bond deal calls for Goodman to line up and pay for off-duty police to watch him around the clock.</p><p>The most unusual part of the deal involves Hutchins. If a Delaware court recognizes the adoption and allows Hutchins to receive money she could share with Goodman, a bond revocation hearing would be held immediately.</p><p>Colbath on Friday handed Goodman a 16-year prison sentence. He approved the bond deal in concept but told attorneys to put it in writing for his approval.</p><p>Goodman has been in the Palm Beach County Jail since March 23, when he was convicted in the 2010 crash that killed 23-year-old Scott Wilson.</p><p>Wilson drowned after Goodman's Bentley slammed into and then pushed Wilson's Hyundai into a canal. Goodman didn't call 911 for nearly an hour.</p><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 16 May 2012 16:28:23 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/58-judge-signs-order-for-goodmans-release-from-jail.aspx</guid></item><item><title>One of the fairest judges' credibility attacked, again!</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/57-one-of-the-fairest-judges-credibility-attacked-again.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/57/_120x90" title="One of the fairest judges' credibility attacked, again!" alt="One of the fairest judges' credibility attacked, again!" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />In an effort that some lawyers and a retired judge say is an unprecedented move to stifle a sitting jurist, interim Palm Beach County State Attorney Peter Antonacci wants County Judge Barry Cohen to stop presiding over criminal cases.<p>In a 20-page motion, accompanied by an additional 52 pages of exhibits, Antonacci claims statements the respected longtime jurist has made over the years show he is biased against prosecutors.</p><p>"Judge Cohen's remarks over a period of years reflect a predisposition against the state and a persistent pattern of prejudging criminal cases on account of his bias and prejudices that work against the interest of the state of Florida," Antonacci wrote in an affidavit attached to the motion for recusal.</p><p>The motion, which Cohen rejected this week, recounts comments Cohen has made on the bench, at community meetings and in a guest editorial in The Palm Beach Post. Cohen has railed against the disproportionate number of blacks who are charged with crimes. He has decried mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenses. He has blasted the Florida Legislature for not adequately funding the courts.</p><p>"There is something very wrong in a criminal justice system and every day I look (at defendants) and see faces of young African&shy;-Americans and they have two things in common: their race and their lack of money," he is quoted as saying during a hearing in a 2004 misdemeanor case. "I don't mind that the fact I am saying this in a public courtroom to be noted by anybody. And I am not afraid to be an activist judge. Our system is totally out of kilter."</p><p>Judicial rules prohibit Cohen from commenting on the motion. He simply denied it.</p><p>Antonacci also declined to comment. He said Cohen's decision "is under legal review." He said he has not decided whether to ask the 4th District Court of Appeal to force Cohen to step down.</p><p>He also declined to clear up some of the contradictions within the motion.</p><p>In one place, it asks Cohen to remove himself from a specific first-&shy;degree murder case set for trial in August. In another place, it says his behavior should disqualify him from presiding over any criminal case. In yet another place, it asks that he disqualify himself from hearing felony cases.</p><p>However, some who read the motion said it is clear what Antonacci is doing.</p><p>"To me it just has all the earmarks of an attempt to try to intimidate a judge who sometimes, and I mean sometimes, rules against the state," said defense attorney Richard Lubin. "It's also an attempt to send a message out to other judges who might get out of line. This is very, very unfortunate and unfair."</p><p>Gary Farmer, a retired appeals court judge, scoffed at the notion that Cohen can't express his personal views about the judicial system. "I think it's a bunch of hooey," he said. "The state of Florida is saying it fears the outcome of justice in one of its courts? It's utter nonsense."</p><p>There is nothing in the motion to indicate that Cohen has ignored legal precedents or thumbed his nose at the law.</p><p>In November, for instance, Cohen wrote a five-page order sentencing a man who was found guilty of trafficking in oxycodone. In the motion, which Antonacci cites, Cohen criticized mandatory minimum sentences, saying they were inappropriate because the defendant had never committed a violent crime.</p><p>Overall, he wrote, they lead to needless prison crowding, waste tax money and disproportionately affect blacks.</p><p>Still, at the end, he wrote: "As a judge, however, I have no choice but to follow the law." He sentenced the man, who had turned down a plea deal that would have sent him to jail for one year, to 15 years in prison.</p><p>Farmer said Cohen's actions in that case disprove Antonacci's claim that Cohen is a judge out of control. Further, he said: "Judges are encouraged to talk about the justice system and what's wrong with it."</p><p>Many jurists, including U.S. Supreme Court justices, have made similar observations. "He's just saying something all reasonable observers agree on," Farmer said.</p><p>Attorney Gerald Richman said judicial canons limit what judges can do and say. "But just because you're a judge doesn't mean you give up your rights to free speech," he said. If people don't like a judge's views, they can express their displeasure at the ballot box.</p><p>Farmer said he suspects the motion was politically motivated. Antonacci was recently appointed state attorney by Gov. Rick Scott to replace Michael McAuliffe, who left office in March for a job in the private sector.</p><p>Farmer said he doesn't know what machinations are at work.</p><p>But he said: "This so reeks of politics. It's just dripping in it."</p><p>Cohen, a judge since 1991, consistently scores high on biannual surveys taken by the local Bar association. He typically receives top marks for knowledge and application of the law.</p><p>Circuit Judge John Kastrenakes said he knew nothing about Antonacci's motion. But, he said, like other judges, he respects Cohen immensely. He has gladly turned over some of the felony cases on his crowded docket to Cohen.</p><p>While county judges typically hear only misdemeanor cases, Cohen presides over felony cases by special court order.</p><p>"He's a good guy and a great judge," said Kastrenakes, a former federal prosecutor. "He's a workhorse. He does a good job. What more could you ask for?"</p><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 16 May 2012 16:16:30 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/57-one-of-the-fairest-judges-credibility-attacked-again.aspx</guid></item><item><title>One of the fairest judges' credibility attacked, again!</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/55-one-of-the-fairest-judges-credibility-attacked-again.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/55/strolla_bc_art-5_120x90.jpg" title="One of the fairest judges' credibility attacked, again!" alt="One of the fairest judges' credibility attacked, again!" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />In an effort that some lawyers and a retired judge say is an unprecedented move to stifle a sitting jurist, interim Palm Beach County State Attorney Peter Antonacci wants County Judge Barry Cohen to stop presiding over criminal cases.<p>In a 20-page motion, accompanied by an additional 52 pages of exhibits, Antonacci claims statements the respected longtime jurist has made over the years show he is biased against prosecutors.</p><p>"Judge Cohen's remarks over a period of years reflect a predisposition against the state and a persistent pattern of prejudging criminal cases on account of his bias and prejudices that work against the interest of the state of Florida," Antonacci wrote in an affidavit attached to the motion for recusal.</p><p>The motion, which Cohen rejected this week, recounts comments Cohen has made on the bench, at community meetings and in a guest editorial in The Palm Beach Post. Cohen has railed against the disproportionate number of blacks who are charged with crimes. He has decried mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenses. He has blasted the Florida Legislature for not adequately funding the courts.</p><p>"There is something very wrong in a criminal justice system and every day I look (at defendants) and see faces of young African&shy;-Americans and they have two things in common: their race and their lack of money," he is quoted as saying during a hearing in a 2004 misdemeanor case. "I don't mind that the fact I am saying this in a public courtroom to be noted by anybody. And I am not afraid to be an activist judge. Our system is totally out of kilter."</p><p>Judicial rules prohibit Cohen from commenting on the motion. He simply denied it.</p><p>Antonacci also declined to comment. He said Cohen's decision "is under legal review." He said he has not decided whether to ask the 4th District Court of Appeal to force Cohen to step down.</p><p>He also declined to clear up some of the contradictions within the motion.</p><p>In one place, it asks Cohen to remove himself from a specific first-&shy;degree murder case set for trial in August. In another place, it says his behavior should disqualify him from presiding over any criminal case. In yet another place, it asks that he disqualify himself from hearing felony cases.</p><p>However, some who read the motion said it is clear what Antonacci is doing.</p><p>"To me it just has all the earmarks of an attempt to try to intimidate a judge who sometimes, and I mean sometimes, rules against the state," said defense attorney Richard Lubin. "It's also an attempt to send a message out to other judges who might get out of line. This is very, very unfortunate and unfair."</p><p>Gary Farmer, a retired appeals court judge, scoffed at the notion that Cohen can't express his personal views about the judicial system. "I think it's a bunch of hooey," he said. "The state of Florida is saying it fears the outcome of justice in one of its courts? It's utter nonsense."</p><p>There is nothing in the motion to indicate that Cohen has ignored legal precedents or thumbed his nose at the law.</p><p>In November, for instance, Cohen wrote a five-page order sentencing a man who was found guilty of trafficking in oxycodone. In the motion, which Antonacci cites, Cohen criticized mandatory minimum sentences, saying they were inappropriate because the defendant had never committed a violent crime.</p><p>Overall, he wrote, they lead to needless prison crowding, waste tax money and disproportionately affect blacks.</p><p>Still, at the end, he wrote: "As a judge, however, I have no choice but to follow the law." He sentenced the man, who had turned down a plea deal that would have sent him to jail for one year, to 15 years in prison.</p><p>Farmer said Cohen's actions in that case disprove Antonacci's claim that Cohen is a judge out of control. Further, he said: "Judges are encouraged to talk about the justice system and what's wrong with it."</p><p>Many jurists, including U.S. Supreme Court justices, have made similar observations. "He's just saying something all reasonable observers agree on," Farmer said.</p><p>Attorney Gerald Richman said judicial canons limit what judges can do and say. "But just because you're a judge doesn't mean you give up your rights to free speech," he said. If people don't like a judge's views, they can express their displeasure at the ballot box.</p><p>Farmer said he suspects the motion was politically motivated. Antonacci was recently appointed state attorney by Gov. Rick Scott to replace Michael McAuliffe, who left office in March for a job in the private sector.</p><p>Farmer said he doesn't know what machinations are at work.</p><p>But he said: "This so reeks of politics. It's just dripping in it."</p><p>Cohen, a judge since 1991, consistently scores high on biannual surveys taken by the local Bar association. He typically receives top marks for knowledge and application of the law.</p><p>Circuit Judge John Kastrenakes said he knew nothing about Antonacci's motion. But, he said, like other judges, he respects Cohen immensely. He has gladly turned over some of the felony cases on his crowded docket to Cohen.</p><p>While county judges typically hear only misdemeanor cases, Cohen presides over felony cases by special court order.</p><p>"He's a good guy and a great judge," said Kastrenakes, a former federal prosecutor. "He's a workhorse. He does a good job. What more could you ask for?"</p><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 16 May 2012 16:16:11 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/55-one-of-the-fairest-judges-credibility-attacked-again.aspx</guid></item><item><title>OFFICERS TO FACE MURDER CHARGES</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/54-officers-to-face-murder-charges.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/54/bv-rating-plaque-3_120x90.jpg" title="OFFICERS TO FACE MURDER CHARGES" alt="OFFICERS TO FACE MURDER CHARGES" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />Cops to Be Tried in Alleged Fatal Beating of Homeless Man Caught on Video<br /><br />Two Fullerton, Calif., police officers will be tried in the death of a mentally ill homeless man whose apparent beating by police was captured on video, a judge ruled today.Officer Manuel Ramos, 38, and Cpl. Jay Cicinelli, 40, are charged in the death of Kelly Thomas, 37 -- Ramos with second-degree murder and involuntary manslaughter, and Cicinelli with involuntary manslaughter and assault or battery by a public officer, according to The Associated Press. Both have pleaded not guilty.<br />Attorneys for the officers have questioned whether medical treatment, not the actual beating, could have resulted in Thomas' death.<br />"The grainy-but-gripping video of a homeless man being beaten to death was the key evidence in the prosecution's successful effort to convince the court to force a police officer to stand trial for murder in the second degree," said Royal Oakes, an ABC News legal analyst, according to ABC News Radio.<br />"The video of the beating conjured up memories of the Rodney King police beating of two decades ago," Oakes said. "The videotaped evidence will no doubt be the centerpiece of the D.A.'s case in the upcoming murder trial, where one officer could be facing 15 years-to-life behind bars."<br />The July 5, 2011, surveillance video, taken from a publicly mounted camera, coupled with an audio recording device worn by an officer, stunned a packed courtroom of Thomas' supporters when it was shown for the first time Monday.<br />"I can't breathe man," and, "sorry," Thomas could be heard telling officers as he allegedly endured punches to his left ribs and blows to his face from an officer's knee.<br />Thomas, who is reportedly schizophrenic, repeatedly cried out for his father.<br />He was also Tasered three times with the stun gun applied directly to his skin for five-second periods. He was hit a fourth time with two darts connected to the gun by wires, according to the Orange County District Attorney's office. The entire time he could be heard screaming in agony.<br />The apparent beating lasted nine minutes and 40 seconds and ended with Thomas' limp body in handcuffs.<br />Thomas was transported to St. Jude Medical Center in Fullerton, Calif., for intubation to help him breathe. He never regained consciousness.<br />Five days later, Thomas died. The coroner's office ruled the death a homicide.<br />"You have 1,500 pounds of trained cop on my one little son, but they have to bring this out like they were just so overpowered by this brute to make themselves look innocent and that they're the victims," Ron Thomas, the victim's father, said outside of court Monday.<br />The officers had responded to the Fullerton Transportation Center after receiving a call that a homeless man was seen looking into car windows and pulling on door handles.<br />Six officers arrived at the scene for back-up, but the district attorney determined that there was only enough evidence to charge Ramos and Cicinelli in Thomas' death.<br />The video began with Ramos approaching Thomas and asking him to sit with his legs and hands in front of him. Thomas had trouble complying with the order and appeared to have cognitive difficulties, according to the D.A.'s office.<br />Fed up, Ramos made fists and asked Thomas if he saw them. Thomas replied that he did.<br />"They're getting ready to f--- you up," Ramos told him.<br />When a shirtless Thomas, who had earlier forgotten his name and said he didn't speak English, stood up, Ramos and his partner were shown swinging at him with their batons.<br />Thomas took off and was tackled, setting off the nearly 10-minute beating that allegedly led to his death.<br />Ramos is a 10-year veteran of the Fullerton Police, while Cicinelli has been an officer in Fullerton for 12 years.<br />The video ended with paramedics carrying Thomas' body to an ambulance, revealing a large blood stain on the spot where the altercation took place.<br />"We ran out of options so I got the end of my Taser and I probably ... I just start smashing his face to hell," Cicinelli said at the end of the July 5 video, according to the transcript provided by prosecutors to the Associated Press. "He was on something, 'cause the three of us couldn't even control him."<br />Thomas had no illicit drugs or alcohol in him at the time of the incident, according to the toxicology report.<br />If convicted, Cicinelli could face a maximum sentence of four years in prison and Ramos could be sentenced to life in prison.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 10 May 2012 14:58:31 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/54-officers-to-face-murder-charges.aspx</guid></item><item><title>This is what happens when drugs and money get invovled!</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/53-this-is-what-happens-when-drugs-and-money-get-invovled.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/53/strollalaw1-8_120x90.jpg" title="This is what happens when drugs and money get invovled!" alt="This is what happens when drugs and money get invovled!" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />NEWBURGH, Maine &#8212; A Maine man owed $3,000 to the Florida firefighter he is suspected of killing and told police the firefighter threatened him and his family during a game of pool, according to an arrest warrant.<br />Jerry Perdomo, a Seminole County firefighter and married father of two, disappeared in Maine on Feb. 16. A police investigation began three days later, after a woman described as Perdomo's girlfriend told police in Bangor that she last saw him Feb. 16 with a handgun and that he told her he was going to meet someone who owed him money.<br />Police say that someone was Daniel Porter, 24, who is scheduled to make an initial court appearance Thursday in Waldo County Superior Court in Belfast to face a murder charge.<br />According to the affidavit, Porter told police Perdomo was dead but would not say where his body was. Maine State Police said they found the body after a search with police dogs Tuesday night and Wednesday morning on property owned by Porter's relatives in woods in rural Newburgh.<br />The Maine medical examiner identified the body as Perdomo's, but investigators did not say how he died. An autopsy will not begin until Friday at the earliest.<br />Police said they found blood samples likely matching Perdomo's DNA at a home where Porter was living in the small central Maine town of Jackson, about 16 miles from the town where Perdomo's body was found.<br />Police also said in the affidavit that Porter and Perdomo were involved in drugs and had exchanged death threats in January. Porter complained to police that a man he believed was Perdomo had thrown rocks at his house.<br />"Perdomo stated that he observed Porter with a machine gun and that Porter threatened to shoot him and put him through a wood chipper," according to the affidavit. "Porter stated that Perdomo threatened to cut off his hands and kill him."<br />Christopher MacLean, Porter's attorney, didn't immediately return a message left Wednesday at his office by The Associated Press.<br />The affidavit cites evidence showing that Porter drove Perdomo's rented car to a Wal-Mart store in Bangor and abandoned it, and threw a bag containing Perdomo's wallet, cellphones and keys into a trash container behind a supermarket.<br />Records also show that Porter and his girlfriend had purchased a handgun at a pawn shop on Jan. 20.<br />In Florida, Seminole County Fire Chief Leeanna Mims issued a statement saying the department's thoughts and prayers were with the Perdomo family.<br />"This is a sad and extremely difficult time for the family and his co-workers," Mims said.<br />State police investigators said they would reveal no information beyond what was included in the affidavit.<br />Asked if state police had contacted drug-investigation agencies, state police Lt. Christopher Coleman said, "The investigation is very active and this is one of the pieces we are looking at." Coleman, speaking at a news conference about a half-mile from where the body was found, said additional charges have not been ruled out.<br />Earlier this week, in an interview from her home in Orange City, Fla., Perdomo's wife, Tonya, described the 31-year-old father of 3- and 10-year-old children as "a dedicated dad. He helps people out a lot."<br />Perdomo had left Florida in a rental car and told his wife he was going to see friends in Maine, which she said was not unusual because the former serviceman had friends from all over.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 01 Mar 2012 16:33:17 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/53-this-is-what-happens-when-drugs-and-money-get-invovled.aspx</guid></item><item><title>My former client.  I saved him from criminal prosecution when FWC shot and killed his tiger!</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/52-my-former-client-i-saved-him-from-criminal-prosecution-when-fwc-shot-and-killed-his-tiger.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/52/corystrollabanner-8_120x90.jpg" title="My former client.  I saved him from criminal prosecution when FWC shot and killed his tiger!" alt="My former client.  I saved him from criminal prosecution when FWC shot and killed his tiger!" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />LOXAHATCHEE &#8212; Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission investigators this morning served at search warrant and seized two tigers and a leopard from the property of Steve Sipek, a former Tarzan movie actor who has for many years housed big cats on his premises.<br />Sipek's USDA permit to keep the three large cats at a Loxahatchee facility that he maintains with Melanie Boynes has been revoked, and the state's wildlife officers have removed the big cats from the property in the 3300 block of C Road, said FWC spokeswoman Jorge Pino.<br />According to a spokesman for the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office, which is assisting FWC, Sipek was also arrested at 9:49 a.m. today on misdemeanor charges of possession of a Class 1 animal without a USDA permit and possession of a Class 1 animal as a pet. The spokesman did not say whether Boynes was also arrested.<br />"Mr. Sipek and Ms. Boynes were in violation of federal and state laws that are in place to keep both people and animals safe and healthy," Maj. Curtis Brown, leader of the FWC's Captive Wildlife and Investigations Section, said in a statement this morning. "The FWC removed the animals to protect public safety and to place them in a licensed, healthy and safe facility."<br />In addition, he said the warrant authorized the seizure of the animals based on "the facility's repeated failure to correct violations, including multiple bites and escapes, fencing and caging deficiencies, possession of Class I wildlife without proof of consistent and sustained commercial activity, possession of Class I wildlife without a U.S. Department of Agriculture permit and feeding animals an improper diet."<br />"After previous inspections and correspondence, the couple has continuously failed to comply with FWC and USDA regulations, presenting safety concerns at the facility," Brown said. "Sipek has also told FWC investigators that nobody would ever take his animals, causing additional safety concerns."<br />Tigers and panthers are Class 1 wildlife that are considered to pose significant danger to people. Owners must prove they have extensive experience caring for such animals and meet very specific requirements regarding their cages, according to the FWC.<br />Class 1 species such as cougars, panthers and cheetahs can't be kept for personal possession unless they were owned previous to August 2009. Others had to have been privately kept before August 1980.<br />Information about the big cats being confiscated by FWC this morning, and living conditions were not immediately available.<br />Sipek, a Croatian man who was known during his acting career as the "Spanish Tarzan", has a long-standing affinity for big cats.<br />He has more than once told the story of how in 1975 a lion dragged him out of a fire on a movie set, which made him a big-cat fancier on the spot.<br />In 2004, he was the subject of worldwide media coverage during a 26-hour hunt after a 600-pound tiger named Bobo escaped from Sipek's Loxahatchee compound. Bobo was found and shot five times with an AK-47 assault rifle by a wildlife officer.<br />In 2005, after suffering from a string of setbacks including a house fire and the death of his 22-year-old cougar, Missy, and his 22-year-old lion, Elvis, Sipek paid $3,200 for two tiger cubs he later named Bo and Little Bo.<br />It is unclear if these are the tigers that wildlife officials are collecting this morning.<br />Just last fall, Sipek told a Palm Beach Post reporter that he lets his tigers sleep with him in the house.<br />"When it's cold like last night, they are very warm to cuddle up to," Sipek said at the time.<br />In October, Sipek's license was under review by the FWC.<br />Sipek isn't the only keeper of big cats in Loxahatchee. In fact, he bought Bobo from a man who lives about five miles down the road and runs a wildlife sanctuary that houses 21 big cats, including tigers, a lion and Florida panthers, as well as tortoises, birds, small mammals and venomous snakes on display for private tours.<br />Check back for updates to this breaking news story.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 27 Feb 2012 17:28:45 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/52-my-former-client-i-saved-him-from-criminal-prosecution-when-fwc-shot-and-killed-his-tiger.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Got to love when a mother of a baby lights up at 4:20!</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/51-got-to-love-when-a-mother-of-a-baby-lights-up-at-420.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/51/bv-rating-plaque-2_120x90.jpg" title="Got to love when a mother of a baby lights up at 4:20!" alt="Got to love when a mother of a baby lights up at 4:20!" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />Greenacres duo arrested after baby and suspected pot found in home:<br /><br />A Greenacres female duo was arrested Monday evening when a child services investigator and a deputy found both a baby and suspected marijuana in their home.<br />Ariel Roslyn Mulvey, 18, and Ashley L. Sloan, 20, are being held at the Palm Beach County Jail in lieu of $4,000 and $3,000 bond, respectively. They are facing charges for possession of cannabis, contributing to the delinquency of a minor, possession of drug paraphernalia and tampering with or fabricating physical evidence.<br />According to the probable cause affidavit, a Palm Beach County Sheriff's deputy met with a Florida Department of Children and Families investigator at 8:51 p.m. Monday to remove a one-year-old child from the home in the 300 block of Jennings Avenue because of alleged drug use and domestic violence.<br />When the two knocked on the door of the home, three people -- Mulvey, Sloan and a 17-year-old - walked out with "strong odor of the suspected marijuana emanating" from them, the affidavit stated. Inside, the investigator and the deputy found a baseball cap that was concealing a "pile of loose green leafy substance, cigars wrapped with the similar leafy substance and four additional cigars in the wrapping."<br />The 17-year-old's parents later told the deputy that the teenager had told his parents that he was going to "get a gun and shoot himself next week." They added that they were afraid for his safety and requested a psychiatric evaluation while he is incarcerated in the Juvenile Assessment Center.<br />The affidavit does not elaborate further on the removal of the baby.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 25 Jan 2012 16:10:35 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/51-got-to-love-when-a-mother-of-a-baby-lights-up-at-420.aspx</guid></item><item><title>RECENT WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA ARRESTS</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/50-recent-west-palm-beach-florida-arrests.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/50/strollalaw1-7_120x90.jpg" title="RECENT WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA ARRESTS" alt="RECENT WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA ARRESTS" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />West Palm Beach Police<br />THEFT<br />A 19-inch television was stolen from a display at a store in the 800 block of Southern Boulevard. Security video showed a man taking the TV and walking out .<br />A woman entered a store in the 500 block of South Rosemary Avenue carrying a purse that appeared to be empty. She selected several items from clothing racks and went into the dressing room. When she exited, the clothes were not left behind and her purse appeared to be full. Store personnel tried to detain the woman as she entered a vehicle outside the store. The woman dropped the bag and fled. Merchandise valued at $281.95 was recovered. The woman was caught, arrested and taken to the county jail.<br />A shopper at a store in the 1500 block of Palm Beach Lakes Boulevard took a backpack blower, priced at $299, in a cart and wheeled it out without paying for it. He was stopped by the loss-prevention officer and brought back to the store. He was arrested and given a notice to appear in court.<br />A man placed an order at a restaurant in the 300 block of Clematis Street, then sat down and pretended to read a newspaper while waiting. The man got up, approached the counter and grabbed the tip jar. When he was stopped by the restaurant owner at the door, the man threw the tip jar into the trash. He was detained until police arrived. The jar contained $40. The man was arrested and given a notice to appear in court.<br />COUNTERFEIT BILL<br />Someone passed a counterfeit $100 bill at a business in the 100 block of South Clematis Street.<br />OUTSTANDING WARRANT<br />An officer on patrol saw a man walking in the middle of the road in the 700 block of 44th Street at 9:20 p.m. He stopped the pedestrian, ran a computer check on him and discovered he had an outstanding warrant for burglary. He arrested the man, and in searching him found a marijuana cigarette in his pants pocket. The man was taken to the county jail.<br />Sheriff's Office, Lake Worth<br />BATTERY<br />A deputy stopped a vehicle on South Dixie Highway and Fourth Avenue South at 8:16 p.m. The driver did not have a license. When a passenger disobeyed the deputy's commands, the deputy attempted to handcuff him. The disruptive passenger's mother then punched the deputy. She was arrested and charged with battery on a law-enforcement officer; her son was charged with resisting an officer without violence. The driver received several citations.<br />HOME BURGLARY<br />The owner of rental property in the 1000 block of 16th Avenue South left the windows open to let the apartment air out. When he returned the next day, he found several items had been stolen, including a paint pan, stepladder, extension cords and a wrought-iron table set. Empty food bags were left in the area by the intruder.<br />A man returned to his apartment in the 1500 block of Railroad Avenue to find his AK-47 rifle missing. Nothing else was taken by the thief, who entered through an open window.<br />THEFT<br />A customer at a store in the 1000 block of North G Street grabbed a 16-ounce can of beer and went into the bathroom. He emerged sans beer and left the store. The clerk found the empty can in the trash.<br />Two statues of devil-like dogs with wings were taken from outside a home in the 1200 block of 17th Avenue North during the night. The missing black concrete statues weigh 60 pounds each and are 3 feet high<br />A man ran into a restaurant in the 1200 block of South Dixie Highway, grabbed the tip jar and ran out. It was estimated that $6 was in the jar.<br />DRUGS<br />A report of a suspicious vehicle at the dead end of Pine Terrace brought a deputy to the scene, where he found a man and woman sitting in the front. The man did not have identification but provided his name and date of birth. A computer check revealed the man, who was sitting in the driver seat, had a suspended license. When the deputy asked the man to step out of the vehicle a small bag of white powder fell to the ground. A test revealed its contents to be cocaine. The woman in the vehicle told the deputy the cocaine and straw belonged to her companion, and she was aware he had both in his possession. Both were arrested.<br />Lantana Police<br />THEFT<br />A customer at a store in the 1200 block of South Dixie Highway went into the shoe department, kicked off her flip-flops and donned a pair of boots. She next went into women's lingerie and took two bras, putting one on and stuffing the other one in her purse. Her last stop was in the jewelry department, where she took two pair of earrings and put them in her purse. The woman, who had a small child with her, paid for other items she had picked up, then left. She was stopped outside the store and escorted inside. A police officer arrested the woman and gave her a notice to appear in court.<br />A man ran out of a store in the 1200 block of Hypoluxo Road carrying an 18-pack of beer, a bottle of vodka and a bottle of tequila.<br />An MP3 player valued at $40 was stolen at a business in the 1500 block of West Lantana Road. A clerk saw the man remove the item from a display, then leave the store. She was unable to stop him.<br />VEHICLE BURGLARY<br />Sunglasses and the face plate of a radio were removed from a vehicle in the 100 block of Milton Street. The burglar damaged the convertible top of the vehicle by cutting into it.<br />Police Blotter is compiled by Sy O'Neill from area law-enforcement records.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 23 Jan 2012 15:50:29 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/50-recent-west-palm-beach-florida-arrests.aspx</guid></item><item><title>BOYNTON BEACH DENTAL EMPLOYEE STEALS PATIENTS CREDIT CARD INFO</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/49-boynton-beach-dental-employee-steals-patients-credit-card-info.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/49/corystrollabanner-7_120x90.jpg" title="BOYNTON BEACH DENTAL EMPLOYEE STEALS PATIENTS CREDIT CARD INFO" alt="BOYNTON BEACH DENTAL EMPLOYEE STEALS PATIENTS CREDIT CARD INFO" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />BOYNTON BEACH &#8212; A Boynton Beach woman who works at a dentist's office was arrested for fraud after she allegedly stole a patient's credit card information.<br />Schenique G. Mitchell, 31, is being held at the Palm Beach County Jail in lieu of $9,000 bond. She is facing 10 counts of fraudulent use of a credit card, 10 counts of criminal use of personal identification information, petit theft, organized scheme to defraud and exploitation of an elderly person.<br />Mitchell was arrested after telling a Palm Beach County Sheriff's detective on Tuesday that she had taken a patient's credit card information for a friend she met "on the block" and knows as "MO."<br />While Mitchell told detectives that "MO" told her through a text message to steal credit card information from patients, she didn't give a specific date of when the request was made.<br />She said that "she does not know what was ordered, where it was shipped or if it was received," the affidavit stated. Mitchell also told the detective that "she has done this same crime approximately four other times with four other separate victims."<br />Detectives learned of the most recent incident after a patient of the Boynton Beach dentist's office reported several fraudulent charges to his credit card, from Dec. 28 through Jan. 2.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 18 Jan 2012 16:45:30 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/49-boynton-beach-dental-employee-steals-patients-credit-card-info.aspx</guid></item><item><title>LOCAL PROFESSIONALS ARRESTED FOR SEX STING WITH MINORS</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/48-local-professionals-arrested-for-sex-sting-with-minors.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/48/bv-rating-plaque-1_120x90.jpg" title="LOCAL PROFESSIONALS ARRESTED FOR SEX STING WITH MINORS" alt="LOCAL PROFESSIONALS ARRESTED FOR SEX STING WITH MINORS" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />A professional golfer, a teacher and several college students were among 40 suspected of traveling to meet minors for sex in an undercover sting in Osceola County, the Sheriff's Office said Tuesday.&nbsp; The arrests were the result of a weeklong, undercover operation led by the Osceola County Sheriff's Office, dubbed "Operation Red Cheeks." The operation ran from Jan. 8 through Monday.&nbsp; Undercover detectives posed as children, or as parents or guardians, to chat online with the suspects, who traveled to an arranged meeting location in Osceola County for sex with a child, deputies said.&nbsp; The Sheriff's Office said some of the suspects sent pornographic images to undercover detectives during the online sting, and some brought alcohol or drugs and other items to the meetings.<br /><br />Among those arrested:<br /><br />*Professional Golfer Stephen Wesley Thomas, 55. The PGA's website says the Tupelo, Miss., has played in 44 PGA Tour events and 34 on the Champions Tour. He has three career top-10 finishes.<br /><br />His arrest affidavit states Thomas thought he was chatting with a woman about sex with her 13-year-old daughter. He agreed to meet the teen for sex, deputies say, and sent photos of himself golfing.<br /><br />Investigators searched Thomas' sport utility vehicle after his arrest, the affidavit states, finding three condoms, two packages of chocolate pudding and a bottle of honey. Deputies say he confessed.<br /><br />*Gainesville swim coach Bryan Woodward, 29. The Gainesville Sun reported last week Woodward coached youths for the Gator Swim Club, a private club unaffiliated with the University of Florida.<br /><br />According to his arrest affidavit, Woodward told an undercover posing as a child online that "younger girls turn me on," discussed graphic sex acts and brought candy with him to meet the "child."<br /><br />*Students Marvin Bell, 20, Lucas Clarke, 18, Josean Javier Gaston, 22, Justin Joseph Hall, 30, Cornellus Hunt, 29, Kegan Ritchie, 22, Frederick Adams, 18, Samer Al-Hubaydi, 26, and Winston Stephens, 20.<br /><br />According to the Sheriff's Office, Clarke attends the Golf Academy of America, Al-Hubaydi attends Embry-Riddle and Stephens attends Full Sail. Adams, deputies say, is still in high school.<br /><br />An Embry-Riddle spokesman confirmed Al-Hubaydi's name and birth date match a first-year student. The university will review his student status "taking into account the facts of the case or the outcome."<br /><br />*Eighth grade teacher Alexander Roy, 32. According to the St. Lucie County School Board, Roy works as a math teacher at Manatee Academy on Heatherwood Boulevard in Port St. Lucie.<br /><br />"As per school board policy, this employee will be placed on administrative leave away from students until the completion of any potential adjudication," said school board spokeswoman Janice Karst.<br /><br />*Soldier Shane Daniel Cousins, 26. The Sheriff's Office said Cousins is a member of the U.S. Army Reserves who lives in Kissimmee. His Facebook page says he attended Santa Fe College.<br /><br />*Retired beekeeper Dell Rio Highsmith, 70. The Sheriff's Office said Highsmith is a resident of Fargo, Ga. Authorities also arrested an IT professional and a construction worker, among others.<br /><br />Agencies involved in the sting included the Citrus, Lake, Orange, Sumter, Polk, Hardee and Manatee sheriff's offices and Ocoee, Kissimmee, Sanford, Orlando, Longwood and Casselberry police.<br /><br />The suspects face a variety of charges, including traveling to seduce a child to commit sex acts, using a computer to solicit a child or parent and, for some, attempted lewd and lascivious battery of a child.<br /><br />"These predators stalk the cyber community looking for children," said Osceola Sheriff Bob Hansell, adding that because of the sting, "at a minimum, 40 children did not fall prey to a sexual deviant."<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 18 Jan 2012 16:38:20 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/48-local-professionals-arrested-for-sex-sting-with-minors.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Justifiable homicides rise in Palm Beach County</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/47-justifiable-homicides-rise-in-palm-beach-county.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/47/strolla-law-907-4_120x90.jpg" title="Justifiable homicides rise in Palm Beach County" alt="Justifiable homicides rise in Palm Beach County" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />Though Palm Beach Coun&shy;ty's overall homicide rate continued to decline in 2011, authorities say justifiable homi&shy;cides increased.&nbsp; "There definitely was an increase in the Stand Your Ground claims in 2011," said Terri Skiles, chief of the Major Violent Crimes Division in the Palm Beach County State Attorney's Office.<br />Not counting three fatal shootings that involved officers, six of the county's 84 homicides last year were either determined to be justifiable or resulted in no charges against the alleged assailant. That is the highest number of justifiable homicides involving private citizens since the Stand Your Ground law went into effect in late 2005, according to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.<br />There were four justifiable homicides involving private citizens in 2010, and three each in 2008 and 2009, FDLE statistics show.<br /><br />Law enforcement officials caution that it's too soon to determine whether the increase reflects an emerging trend.<br />However, the Stand Your Ground law became a topic of contention in September when Circuit Judge Richard Oftedahl dismissed charges against Monahan in the shooting deaths of Raymond Mohlman, 49, and Matthew Vittum, 43. At issue was whether Monahan had reason to fear for his life. Neither man was armed and neither touched Mon&shy;ahan.<br />The law says people who are attacked on their property have no duty to retreat and can meet force with deadly force to protect themselves.<br /><br />The law's proponents say it has resulted in law enforcement investigators and prosecutors examining potential instances of justifiable force more thoroughly before pursuing charges.&nbsp; "There's no question that law has certainly brought to light the fact that certain situations and certain circumstances, as tragic as they are, often are the product of justifiable shootings and killings, whether it be self-defense, Stand Your Ground or officer-related shootings," criminal defense attorney Michael Salnick said. "I think it goes to law enforcement's credit and to prosecutors who are doing the right thing in looking at the law before making a snap decision to charge someone."<br /><br />In some situations, such as the Greenacres confrontation, investigators did not file charges. Police said Fritz charged at homeowner Joseph Wagner with knives on July 17 after breaking into the residence.&nbsp; Fritz "was looking for blood," Wagner's son Joe told The Palm Beach Post in July. "We have guns for protection, and now we know why."<br />After a Dec. 29 incident in Royal Palm Beach, Palm Beach County sheriff's detectives determined that Damian Niemeyer fired his gun out of fear when he confronted a teen and two others who were allegedly trying to steal his motorcycle. Niemeyer, 37, told detectives that he fired his gun at them after one of the men pointed a gun at him while Niemeyer was shouting at them from his townhouse's second-floor bedroom window.&nbsp; The shooting left 19-year-old Benjy Young of West Palm Beach dead on the townhouse complex's pavement.<br /><br />Despite the spike in alleged justifiable homicides last year, the county's overall number continued to drop: There were 11 fewer killings in 2011 than in 2010. The total of 84 marked the third straight year that Palm Beach County had fewer than 100 homicides.<br /><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 18 Jan 2012 16:01:21 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/47-justifiable-homicides-rise-in-palm-beach-county.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Man using pencils, pen to stab three of his "court appointed" attorneys.</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/46-man-using-pencils-pen-to-stab-three-of-his-court-appointed-attorneys.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/46/corystrollabanner-6_120x90.jpg" title="Man using pencils, pen to stab three of his "court appointed" attorneys." alt="Man using pencils, pen to stab three of his "court appointed" attorneys." align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />Joshua Monson will be in a Washington state courtroom Monday, but he may not have a lawyer with him. Monson, who was recently convicted on a felony drug charge, stabbed three court-appointed attorneys during his trial, according to authorities.<br />The alleged serial stabbings of defense attorneys transformed what would usually be a run-of-the-mill local criminal trial into a national news story.<br />"I've heard of a defendant going after an attorney from time to time," said Craig Matheson, senior deputy at the Snohomish County prosecutor's office in Everett. "But I have never seen a serial case like this."<br />Matheson's office recently prosecuted the 27-year-old Monson on a methamphetamine charge.<br />The trouble started for Monson's defense attorneys -- none of whom were seriously injured in the stabbing spree -- even before opening statements.<br />On May 9, when Monson and his court-appointed attorney, Tom Cox, were still picking a jury, the defendant snatched a pencil and stabbed Cox in the neck, authorities said.<br />Attorney Gurjit Pandher was then appointed to defend Monson. Authorities alleged that on May 13, Monson hid a pencil in his pants before a meeting with the attorney. During that meeting, Monson stabbed Pandher in the neck, authorities said.<br />The trial was delayed as authorities tried to find another replacement attorney. The judge in the case also ordered that Monson be restrained in court once the trial resumes.<br />Local attorney Jesse Cantor was recruited to defend Monson. Cantor argued that his new client should not be restrained in court because he would not get a fair trial.<br />"There were extensive arguments as to the level of confinement for Mr. Monson; his lawyer argued to lessen the restraint," Matheson said.<br />In November during opening statements, the unrestrained Monson grabbed Cantor's pen and stabbed him in the head with it, authorities said.<br />The three attorneys suffered only superficial wounds, according to authorities.<br />A judge ruled that Monson had forfeited his right to an attorney, and the trial went on with Monson representing himself from a restraint chair.<br />He was convicted on the drug charge and is scheduled to be in court on Monday for a sentencing hearing. At least one new charge is pending in the wake of the stabbings.<br />Another replacement attorney has been appointed to advise Monson but legal experts say defense attorneys do not have many duties at a sentencing hearing.<br />Meanwhile, there are other future legal proceedings for Monson.<br />He has a pending unrelated murder trial scheduled for the near future, according to Snohomish County prosecutors.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 05 Dec 2011 15:44:19 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/46-man-using-pencils-pen-to-stab-three-of-his-court-appointed-attorneys.aspx</guid></item><item><title>FORMER DOLPHINS RECEIVER ARRESTED FOR ASSAULT, WOMAN'S HEAD NEEDED 10 STITCHES.</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/45-former-dolphins-receiver-arrested-for-assault-womans-head-needed-10-stitches.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/45/bv-rating-plaque_120x90.jpg" title="FORMER DOLPHINS RECEIVER ARRESTED FOR ASSAULT, WOMAN'S HEAD NEEDED 10 STITCHES." alt="FORMER DOLPHINS RECEIVER ARRESTED FOR ASSAULT, WOMAN'S HEAD NEEDED 10 STITCHES." align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />BOCA RATON, Fla. -- A night of pizza and alcohol turned into a violent beating of a woman by former Miami Dolphins wide receiver David Boston, according to a Boca Raton police report.<br />The report said Boston, who played for the Dolphins in 2004-05, punched a woman twice in the head, leaving a gash big enough to require 10 stitches after the Tuesday night incident in the 21000 block of Cromwell Circle.<br /><br /><br />The woman who lived in the home where the alleged beating took place told police she got nervous after watching Boston, 33, down a bottle of vodka and a bottle of wine, adding that she also watched him take some sort of pills. At some point, that woman told her friend, who was the one who was later beaten that it would be OK for her to come over to hang out with her and Boston, the report said.<br />It's not known what precipitated the confrontation between Boston and the other woman, nor is it clear what his relationship with the alleged victim is. The woman who lived in the home told police that she and Boston have been "strictly friends" for several years, adding that he had been staying with her for six weeks but was planning to move out and live in a nearby hotel. When he was warned after the alleged beating that they were going to call the police, he ran off, the report said.<br /><br />Officers eventually caught up with Boston, who now faces an aggravated battery charge.<br />Boston was a football star at Ohio State, but enjoyed less success when he got to the NFL in 1999. He did make one Pro Bowl, while playing for Arizona in 2001, and also played for San Diego before suiting up for the Dolphins in 2004-05. He was known for on-field celebrations, off-field issues and humongous arms.<br />Boston played for Tampa Bay in 2006 before a 2007 DUI arrest that later revealed he'd tested positive for a substance banned by the NFL. He played in the CFL in 2008 but fell off the football radar after that.<br /><br />Read more: http://www.wpbf.com/sports/29897446/detail.html#ixzz1fOi6QGG3<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 02 Dec 2011 17:03:19 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/45-former-dolphins-receiver-arrested-for-assault-womans-head-needed-10-stitches.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Michael Jackson's doctor sentenced to 4 years</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/44-michael-jacksons-doctor-sentenced-to-4-years.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/44/strollalaw1-6_120x90.jpg" title="Michael Jackson's doctor sentenced to 4 years" alt="Michael Jackson's doctor sentenced to 4 years" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />Murray was convicted of involuntary manslaughter after a six-week trial that presented the most detailed account yet of Jackson's final hours but left many questions about Murray's treatment of the superstar with an operating-room anesthetic as he battled chronic insomnia.<br />Lead defense attorney Ed Chernoff highlighted the accomplishments of Murray.<br />"I do wonder though to what extent the court considers the entirety of a man's book of life, as opposed to one chapter," he told the judge.<br />The doctor decided not to directly address the court.<br />Chernoff again attacked Michael Jackson, as he and his team frequently did during the doctor's trial.<br />"Michael Jackson was a drug seeker," Chernoff said.<br />Jackson's death in June 2009 stunned the world, as did the ensuing investigation that led to Murray being charged in February 2010.<br />Murray told detectives he had been giving the singer nightly doses of propofol to help him sleep as he prepared for a series of comeback concerts. Propofol is supposed to be used in hospital settings and has never been approved for sleep treatments, yet Murray acknowledged giving it to Jackson then leaving the room on the day the singer died.<br />Murray declined to testify during his trial but did opt to participate in a documentary in which he said he didn't consider himself guilty of any crime and blamed Jackson for entrapping him into administering the propofol doses. His attorneys contended throughout the case that Jackson must have given himself the fatal dose when Murray left the singer's bedside.<br />In their sentencing memorandum, prosecutors cited Murray's statements to advocate that he receive the maximum term. They also want him to pay restitution to the singer's three children &#8212; Prince, Paris and Blanket.<br />It's unlikely that Murray can pay any sizable sum, including the $1.8 million cost of his funeral. He was deeply in debt when he agreed to serve as Jackson's personal physician for $150,000 a month, and the singer died before Murray received any money.<br />Prosecutors said the relationship of Jackson and Murray was corrupted by greed. Murray left his practices to serve as Jackson's doctor and look out for his well-being, but instead acted as an employee catering to the singer's desire to receive propofol to put him to sleep, prosecutors said.<br />"The defendant has displayed a complete lack of remorse for causing Michael Jackson's death," prosecutors wrote in a filing last week. "Even worse than failing to accept even the slightest level of responsibility, (Murray) has placed blame on everyone else, including the one person no longer here to defend himself, Michael Jackson."<br />Murray's attorneys are relying largely on 34 letters from relatives, friends and former patients to portray Murray in a softer light and win a lighter sentence. The letters and defense filings describe Murray's compassion as a doctor, including accepting lower payments from his mostly poor patients.<br />"There is no question that the death of his patient, Mr. Jackson, was unintentional and an enormous tragedy for everyone affected," defense attorneys wrote in their sentencing memo. "Dr. Murray has been described as a changed, grief-stricken man, who walks around under a pall of sadness since the loss of his patient, Mr. Jackson."<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 29 Nov 2011 18:10:53 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/44-michael-jacksons-doctor-sentenced-to-4-years.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Nancy Blackwell is trying to put the past behind her, but fun and games with her Jack Russell, Rascal, are not the same without the third member of their family</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/43-nancy-blackwell-is-trying-to-put-the-past-behind-her-but-fun-and-games-with-her-jack-russell-rascal-are-not-the-same-without-the-third-member-of-their-family.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/43/corystrollabanner-5_120x90.jpg" title="Nancy Blackwell is trying to put the past behind her, but fun and games with her Jack Russell, Rascal, are not the same without the third member of their family" alt="Nancy Blackwell is trying to put the past behind her, but fun and games with her Jack Russell, Rascal, are not the same without the third member of their family" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />An Inverness woman is upset after her Jack Russell terrier was shot and killed by a Citrus County Sheriff's deputy who said he felt threatened.<br />Nancy Blackwell is trying to put the past behind her, but fun and games with her Jack Russell, Rascal, are not the same without the third member of their family.<br />"You can&#8217;t believe it really happened," Blackwell said. "It just, it just -- there&#8217;s nothing that makes sense about it. Nothing, nothing!"<br />Blackwell's other Jack Russell, Princess, was shot and killed by CCSO deputy Nick Hesse as the deputy served an arrest warrant on Blackwell's son, according to sheriff's officials.<br />"I wake up in the morning thinking about it like, why? It doesn&#8217;t make sense," she said. "Why did they have to do that?"<br />CCSO spokesperson Gail Tierney said Princess began barking at Hesse, got out of Blackwell's house and ran at the deputy while showing her teeth and growling.<br />Tierney said the deputy moved back, shot and killed the dog. Hesse said he felt threatened by Princess.<br />"Given the very short time period that he had to react -- I mean, it all happened within seconds that he made a decision to protect his well-being," Tierney said.<br />Blackwell doesn't agree with the explanation she was given and had harsh words for the deputy: "You&#8217;re an officer of the law and you&#8217;re scared of a Jack Russell? Do you want that kind of person protecting you?"<br />The dog is now buried in Blackwell's backyard, along with her favorite blanket, a toy and her bowl. Blackwell said she won't get another dog.<br />Tierney said the incident is under review, but the deputy had the right to defend himself. New procedures could be put in place to keep a similar incident from happening again<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 28 Nov 2011 16:13:51 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/43-nancy-blackwell-is-trying-to-put-the-past-behind-her-but-fun-and-games-with-her-jack-russell-rascal-are-not-the-same-without-the-third-member-of-their-family.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Boynton Beach cop's mother gets year and a day in prison for helping son flee country.</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/42-boynton-beach-cops-mother-gets-year-and-a-day-in-prison-for-helping-son-flee-country.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/42/corystrolla-5_120x90.jpg" title="Boynton Beach cop's mother gets year and a day in prison for helping son flee country." alt="Boynton Beach cop's mother gets year and a day in prison for helping son flee country." align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />Today, a 51-year-old Coral Springs woman was sentenced to a year and a day in prison for helping her son, a police officer, avoid prison.<br />Janiber Vieira was so protective of David Britto, then a 28-year-old Boynton Beach cop, that she helped him jump bond and flee the country rather than face 10 years to life on drug charges.<br />"I just want to say I'm very, very sorry for everything," Vieira tearfully told U.S. District Judge William P. Dimitrouleas shortly before he sentenced her on one count of conspiracy, under a plea deal struck last month.<br />Vieira has already spent three months in jail. With time off for good behavior, she is likely to be released in seven months. She must also serve three years probation. It could have been far worse: she had faced a maximum of five years in prison. Prosecutors were satisfied with the year's time.<br />"Be hopeful and grateful," Vieira's attorney, David Oscar Markus, told about two dozen of Vieira's friends and family members after the sentencing. They had taken up two rows in the courtroom in a show of support.<br />Though the stay-at-home mom had never before been in trouble with the law, Markus told the group that she will be able to endure seven more months behind bars.<br />Vieira bought a plane ticket for her son on Aug. 23. He cut off an ankle monitor the next day and fled to Brazil, which does not extradite foreign nationals. Britto was born in Brazil but became a naturalized U.S. citizen.<br />Vieira also lied to Drug Enforcement Administration agents several times, denying that she knew where her son was or that she aided in his getaway. She was arrested in September at JFK International Airport in New York as she was about to board a flight to Sao Paulo.<br />Defense attorneys argued that Vieira acted out of desperation because her son appeared suicidal while on bond awaiting trial.<br />"She was terrified that he would kill himself," psychologist Merry Sue Haber testified on behalf of the defense.<br />The eldest of Vieira's three sons, Britto was a former Marine and Boynton Beach's 2010 Officer of the Year. He was arrested in July on charges of conspiring with another man to possess and traffic 500 grams of methamphetamines.<br />He'd pleaded not guilty and was released on bond in early July. Boynton Beach fired Britto in September.<br />The government has not revealed any of the evidence against him.<br />In court today, however, Assistant U.S. Attorney Adam Fels said the former officer did not take "a single payment" in the drug scheme, but sold guns to traffickers at fair market value.<br />He also said Britto refused money from a drug dealer for driving him around during a deal.<br />Fels did not disclose any other details of the case.<br />During the sentencing hearing, Vieira's defense team tried to convince the judge that Vieira should be released because she is an extremely good, even "angelic," church-going woman, who made a big mistake out of a desperate desire to save her son's life.<br />"I think she's ruled by her emotion," Haber, the psychologist testified.<br />She said Vieira has no idea where Britto is, hasn't heard from him and "doesn't know if he's dead or alive."<br />Defense attorney Margot Moss likened the escape to a crime of passion.<br />Before sentencing Vieira, Dimitrouleas noted that she was willing to do whatever was necessary to rescue her son, at her own risk, yet that same son wasn't walking through the courtroom doors to "face the music" and help his mother.<br />Later, in an interview, Markus doubted that the sentence would do any good.<br />"I don't think putting her in jail for a million years would deter any mother in her shoes," he said.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 22 Nov 2011 17:12:25 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/42-boynton-beach-cops-mother-gets-year-and-a-day-in-prison-for-helping-son-flee-country.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Police arrest man accused in botched cosmetic procedure</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/41-police-arrest-man-accused-in-botched-cosmetic-procedure.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/41/strollalaw1-5_120x90.jpg" title="Police arrest man accused in botched cosmetic procedure" alt="Police arrest man accused in botched cosmetic procedure" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />A south Florida resident was arrested this week after police allege he practiced medicine without a license, injecting a patient's buttocks with a "cocktail of chemicals" for cosmetic purposes. The so-called cocktail consisted of cement, tire sealant, super glue and mineral oil, according to a police statement.<br />Police say the incision was later sealed with super glue.<br />"They agreed on a price of $700 ... to enhance her buttocks," Miami Gardens Police Sgt. Bill Bamford told CNN affiliate WPLG.<br />Soon after the May procedure, the patient "had serious complications" and suffered from "very serious pains in her abdomen and her body," likely stemming from the procedure, he added.<br />The patient was then hospitalized at a nearby medical center and listed in serious condition, the statement said. Police did not disclose the current condition of the patient.<br />The police statement identified the suspect only by his last name, Morris, though CNN affiliate WPLG disclosed his full name, citing police, as Oneal Ron Morris, 30.<br />"We might have additional victims in our community that could be afraid to come forward with their report fearing to be penalized," Capt. Ralph Suarez said. "We urge those victims to come forward if they have been the victim of this subject. Those victims have not done anything illegal and they should not be afraid to come forward."<br />WPLG reported Morris has been released on $15,500 bond.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Share this on:<br />Facebook Twitter Digg delicious reddit MySpace StumbleUpon LinkedIn<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 21 Nov 2011 16:16:38 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/41-police-arrest-man-accused-in-botched-cosmetic-procedure.aspx</guid></item><item><title>PALM BEACH GARDENS — Police arrested a 40-year-old man Tuesday who they say walked into the Palm Beach County Jail five times falsely claiming he was an attorney recognized by the Florida Bar.</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/40-palm-beach-gardens-police-arrested-a-40-year-old-man-tuesday-who-they-say-walked-into-the-palm-beach-county-jail-five-times-falsely-claiming-he-was-an-attorney-recognized-by-the-florida-bar.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/40/corystrollabanner-4_120x90.jpg" title="PALM BEACH GARDENS — Police arrested a 40-year-old man Tuesday who they say walked into the Palm Beach County Jail five times falsely claiming he was an attorney recognized by the Florida Bar." alt="PALM BEACH GARDENS — Police arrested a 40-year-old man Tuesday who they say walked into the Palm Beach County Jail five times falsely claiming he was an attorney recognized by the Florida Bar." align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />PALM BEACH GARDENS &#8212; Police arrested a 40-year-old man Tuesday who they say walked into the Palm Beach County Jail five times falsely claiming he was an attorney recognized by the Florida Bar.<br />Justin T. Wilson, of Palm Beach Gardens, was arrested on five counts of practicing law without proper authority and also on a charge of DUI and possession of oxycodone without a prescription.<br />According to a Palm Beach County Sheriff's probable cause affidavit, Wilson walked into the jail's Release/Visitation lobby on June 23, July 29, July 31, Aug. 4 and Aug. 5, and gave corrections deputies false credentials.<br />The deputy who allowed Wilson into the jail said Wilson gave him an "attorney bar card and photo identification," so he was issued a "blue and white pass and logged him in as an attorney," the affidavit says.<br />The deputy said the Florida Bar card had the "Scales of Justice" emblem and Wilson's photograph on it.<br />Wilson misrepresented himself at the jail to see an inmate named Kristina Vulpis who told deputies she was friends with his sister, and that he probably wanted to help her because he has "always had a thing for her," the affidavit says.<br />Wilson allegedly gave Vulpis legal advice and told her not to take the first deal the state offered.<br />Details regarding Vulpis' case were not given in the affidavit. But records show that 23-year-old Vulpis, of Wellington, was booked into the jail on May 21 on probation violation charge with no bond.<br />When Wilson was denied entry to the jail on Aug. 25 he became frustrated and said "just forget it," to the deputy. The next day he returned and was denied again.<br />He became nervous, and as he walked out said that he was an attorney but to just "forget it," the affidavit said.<br />Sheriff's officials arrested Wilson late on Nov. 7 after he was seen driving erratically on Florida's Turnpike.<br />According to a separate probable cause affidavit, Wilson's speech was slurred and his eyes were glazed. He was swerving from lane to lane almost striking the center median and a side guard rail, the affidavit says.<br />Deputies found oxycodone pills in his car along with a wad of money next to Wilson's right hand.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 10 Nov 2011 14:45:13 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/40-palm-beach-gardens-police-arrested-a-40-year-old-man-tuesday-who-they-say-walked-into-the-palm-beach-county-jail-five-times-falsely-claiming-he-was-an-attorney-recognized-by-the-florida-bar.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Palm Beach County Booking blotter stories...</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/39-palm-beach-county-booking-blotter-stories.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/39/corystrolla-4_120x90.jpg" title="Palm Beach County Booking blotter stories..." alt="Palm Beach County Booking blotter stories..." align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />Boca Raton<br />DUI<br />A girl was arrested and charged with DUI after she drove recklessly for several miles and then lost control of her car and destroyed two street signs, a barricade and a water line before crashing in the 4900 block of North Federal Highway.<br />BURGLARY<br />A woman was given a trespass warning after taking flowers from a supermarket in the 7400 block of North Federal Highway.<br />A man was given a trespass warning after taking doughnuts from the same supermarket.<br />During the night, a thief smashed a window and entered a house in the 1300 block of Southwest 16th Street and stole jewelry worth approximately $45,000.<br />THEFT<br />A teenager drove an electric shopping cart away from a supermarket in the 1900 block of Northeast Fifth Avenue, however she was stopped before she could leave the parking lot. She was turned over to her mother.<br />Someone stole an aluminum picnic table and bench set from the pavilion in the 600 block of Northeast 24th Street. The set was not bolted down.<br />Five plastic drums were taken from the front yard of a house in the 100 block of Lancaster Street. Total loss is $110.<br />A man dressed as a chef walked into an exam room at a veterinarian hospital on North Congress Avenue and stole several syringes and needles. He was next seen on video at a gas station on Congress Avenue where he walked up to a cooler and took a bottle of water and a V8 juice. In the pharmaceutical aisle, he removed one tampon from a box of them and then paid for the stolen items with a stolen credit card.<br />FRAUD<br />A woman in the 800 block of East Jeffery Street received a call from a blocked phone number. The caller claimed to be her grandson and she wired $1,000 to get him out of jail.<br />Boynton Beach<br />DUI<br />A woman was arrested and charged with DUI after she was stopped while driving westbound in the eastbound lane on East Boynton Beach Boulevard.<br />Police were called to the 900 block of South Congress Avenue in reference to a crash of a vehicle into a house. It appeared that a vehicle traveling northbound on Congress struck the rear of another vehicle on the road, then veered off the road and through the bushes and crashed into a house in Leisureville. Minor injuries were reported.<br />HIT AND RUN/ASSAULT<br />A man was arrested and charged after being involved in a hit-and-run accident at Savannah Lakes Drive and Gateway Boulevard. After the crash, there was property damage and the police learned that the driver did not have a license. While trying to take the man into custody, he attempted to head-butt an officer but missed.<br />NUDE SWIMMING<br />Officers patrolling the beach in the 300 block of North Ocean Boulevard saw a woman wearing only a tiny pair of black panties. They asked her why she was nearly naked, but she cursed at them and began swimming away from the beach until she disappeared and they could no longer hear her shouting. A search was begun and 30 minutes later an officer saw her swimming back to shore. She refused medical treatment and said she was fine. When asked why she swam out so far, she said, "because I wanted to test myself."<br />went unanswered.<br />Police Blotter is compiled by Bonnie Chynoweth from area law-enforcement records.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 09 Nov 2011 17:05:04 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/39-palm-beach-county-booking-blotter-stories.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Fake marijuana, fake cocaine makers skirt Florida bans.</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/38-fake-marijuana-fake-cocaine-makers-skirt-florida-bans.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/38/strollalaw1-4_120x90.jpg" title="Fake marijuana, fake cocaine makers skirt Florida bans." alt="Fake marijuana, fake cocaine makers skirt Florida bans." align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />Florida's fight against fake marijuana and fake cocaine is heating up. Yet as police try to put the drug makers and sellers behind bars, most are slipping through their fingers, skirting state and federal bans of their products and still raking in the money.<br /><br />Earlier this year, alarming reports of overdoses from the products led the federal Drug Enforcement Administration and Florida legislators to outlaw a long list of chemicals found in fake weed and fake cocaine.<br /><br />But drug manufacturers are one step ahead of police, changing the chemical compounds just enough to beat the bans.<br /><br />"It's a frustrating road," said Special Agent David Gross, of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. "These are not traditional drugs&#8230;these are chemical substances."<br /><br />Trying to keep up with these manufacturers, Gross is working with state authorities to amend the laws to include more banned chemicals and subtle variations of them.<br /><br />Still, there have been few arrests around the country, and packets of synthetic marijuana, sold as herbal incense, and fake cocaine, sold as bath salts, keep turning up in stores and keep sending people to South Florida emergency rooms, authorities said.<br /><br />Between January and October, 149 overdoses in Florida were linked to illicit bath salts, including three deaths, the Florida Poison Information Center in Miami said. Another 374 overdoses, including two deaths, were linked to fake marijuana.<br /><br />Last week, the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office made the area's first arrests, hauling in a smoke shop owner and clerk for selling faux weed in suburban West Palm Beach, they said.<br /><br />The undercover sting was in response to repeated calls from parents complaining about kids getting ill from smoking fake weed, Sheriff's Office Lt. Dennis St.Cyr said.<br /><br />Monica Lee, 37, owner of the Hidden Treasures store on Purdy Lane, and her employee Hope Shipley, 27, face charges of selling controlled substances.<br /><br />A month earlier, in September, Jacksonville police busted two convenience-store owners, seizing $1 million-worth of synthetic marijuana and arresting them on drug-trafficking charges.<br /><br />With manufacturers now upping the stakes, it's tricky to make these kinds of arrests, St.Cyr said.<br /><br />No one can tell if a package of "K2" or "Spice," for example, is legal without first testing it, he said, and police don't yet have test kits to detect the new chemical formulas on the spot. However, a new field-test kit likely will go on the market in January, he said.<br /><br /><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 08 Nov 2011 14:41:08 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/38-fake-marijuana-fake-cocaine-makers-skirt-florida-bans.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Angry Bank Customer Urinates In Drive-Through Tube</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/37-angry-bank-customer-urinates-in-drive-through-tube.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/37/corystrollabanner-3_120x90.jpg" title="Angry Bank Customer Urinates In Drive-Through Tube" alt="Angry Bank Customer Urinates In Drive-Through Tube" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />A disgruntled north Florida customer urinated in a drive-through bank tube after a teller told him he couldn't buy a money order, deputies said.<br />The urine spilled into the lap of the unlucky customer who pulled in behind him Thursday morning.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br />The St. Augustine Record reported the man mumbled something about bad customer service before driving away.<br />Flagler County sheriff's deputies said the next customer alerted bank officials after the liquid spilled on her. The customer and bank officials told deputies the liquid smelled like urine.<br />Investigators are searching for the man. He could be charged with causing a nuisance injurious to health, which is a second-degree misdemeanor.<br /><br /><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 07 Nov 2011 19:46:40 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/37-angry-bank-customer-urinates-in-drive-through-tube.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Man Robs Greenacres Bank Using Drive-Through</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/36-man-robs-greenacres-bank-using-drive-through.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/36/corystrolla-3_120x90.jpg" title="Man Robs Greenacres Bank Using Drive-Through" alt="Man Robs Greenacres Bank Using Drive-Through" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />GREENACRES, Fla. -- Police are searching for a man who robbed a Greenacres bank using the drive-through.<br />The robbery occurred at the TD Bank on Lake Worth Road shortly before 3 p.m. Sunday.<br />Greenacres police said a Hispanic man driving a green Honda Civic gave the drive-through teller a note demanding money and displayed what the teller believed to be a gun.<br /><br /><br /><br />The teller gave him the money, and the man drove off.<br />Anyone with information about the robbery is asked to call detectives at 561-385-3780.<br /><br /><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 07 Nov 2011 19:42:50 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/36-man-robs-greenacres-bank-using-drive-through.aspx</guid></item><item><title>New rules slashing crack cocaine sentences go into effect...</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/35-new-rules-slashing-crack-cocaine-sentences-go-into-effect.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/35/strollalaw1-3_120x90.jpg" title="New rules slashing crack cocaine sentences go into effect..." alt="New rules slashing crack cocaine sentences go into effect..." align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />Nachmanoff noted under the old guidelines someone who had just 5 grams of crack cocaine would receive a mandatory minimum sentence of five years. But someone would have to have 500 grams of powdered cocaine to receive a similar sentence.<br />Nachmanoff's district is believed to have the largest number of people in the country -- between 800 and 900 people -- who might benefit from the reduced sentencing guidelines on crack. He said 75 of his clients were expected to be released on the first day of retroactivity.<br />Under the terms of his original sentence, he would have been eligible for release in October 2018, and that sentence was reduced a few years ago so that his revised release date was June 2014.<br />Families Against Mandatory Minimums has fought for changes in mandatory cocaine penalties for years.<br />"Most mandatory sentences are so high and so rigid that judges can't get around them, so people are going to prison for extraordinarily long times, way beyond what they need to learn their lessons," said FAMM spokeswoman Julie Stewart.<br />But even with the changes, there is still an 18-to-1 disparity in sentences for crack and powder cocaine offenses. Nachmanoff said now a person with crack will have to have 28 grams before triggering a mandatory five-year minimum sentence. But the person with powder cocaine still must have a much larger amount -- at least 500 grams.<br />"Ultimately the right answer is 1 to 1, and people in the law enforcement community and the criminal justice system recognize that," said Nachmanoff. "But that just means that there's still more work to do."<br />CNN's Mary Snow and Meghan Rafferty contributed to this report<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 02 Nov 2011 17:29:16 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/35-new-rules-slashing-crack-cocaine-sentences-go-into-effect.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Ocala police officer arrested on fraudulent scheme to obtain federal income-tax refunds.</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/34-ocala-police-officer-arrested-on-fraudulent-scheme-to-obtain-federal-income-tax-refunds.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/34/corystrollabanner-2_120x90.jpg" title="Ocala police officer arrested on fraudulent scheme to obtain federal income-tax refunds." alt="Ocala police officer arrested on fraudulent scheme to obtain federal income-tax refunds." align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />An Ocala police officer was arrested Tuesday after an investigation that the FBI says exposed a fraudulent scheme to obtain federal income-tax refunds.<br />Dana Brown, 37, was suspended without pay following his arrest at 7:10 a.m. as he began his shift for the day, authorities said.<br />According to federal court documents, Brown illegally accessed the Florida driver-information database to help two accomplices file fraudulent income taxes in other people's names and receive government refunds.<br />Topics Police Investigations Crimes Police Arrests See more topics &#187; X<br />FBI<br /><br />Justice System<br /><br />Interior Policy<br /><br />Personal Data Collection<br /><br />Facebook<br /><br />Maps Ocala, FL, USA<br /><br /><br />Two of the payees were dead when the checks were issued. Sixteen others told FBI agents that the addresses and signatures on the checks were not theirs.<br /><br /><br />Video: Heirloom necklace stolen off jogger's neck<br /><br /><br /><br />One of the accomplices, Howayda Hamdan, who worked at Regions Bank in Land O' Lakes, was arrested in May on state charges of scheming to defraud and criminal use of personal identification. Hamdan opened 184 bank accounts using names and Social Security numbers of 149 people at the direction of another accomplice, court records show.<br />Brown looked up all the names in the drivers' database, prosecutors allege. He received 15 percent of each check, documents state. The dollar amount isn't clear, but court papers indicate that checks totaling in the tens of thousands of dollars &#8212; and possibly in the hundreds of thousands of dollars &#8212; checks were involved.<br />An anonymous caller in July told Ocala police that Brown had tried to recruit the caller to cash checks. The caller said Brown promised to have an identification card made for the caller in the name of a person who legitimately was supposed to receive a check, according to court papers. The caller was to receive a percentage of the check.<br />Investigators used phone records, email and Facebook in their investigation, documents show.<br />Brown was arrested on charges of conspiracy, aggravated identity theft and fraud, and related activity in connection with computers. He posted bail at the courthouse and was not taken to jail, an FBI spokesman said.<br />Ocala.com reported in 2009 that Brown was suspended for 60 hours and placed on probation for a year for ignoring underage drinking at a party. He told internal investigators that he didn't see anyone drinking, the website reported. At the time, Brown had been on the job for about three years, according to ocala.com.<br />sjacobson@tribune.com or 407-540-5981<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 28 Oct 2011 16:35:29 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/34-ocala-police-officer-arrested-on-fraudulent-scheme-to-obtain-federal-income-tax-refunds.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Merhige sentenced to 7 consecutive sentences of life in prison....</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/33-merhige-sentenced-to-7-consecutive-sentences-of-life-in-prison.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/33/corystrolla-2_120x90.jpg" title="Merhige sentenced to 7 consecutive sentences of life in prison...." alt="Merhige sentenced to 7 consecutive sentences of life in prison...." align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />By Daphne Duret and Julius Whigham II<br />Palm Beach Post Staff Writer<br />Updated: 2:02 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 27, 2011<br />Posted: 5:35 a.m. Thursday, Oct. 27, 2011<br />E-mail Print ShareLarger Type Small Type<br />WEST PALM BEACH &#8212; WEST PALM BEACH &#8211; A judge has accepted a plea deal and sentenced Paul Michael Merhige to seven consecutive life sentences, sparing him the death penalty for killing four of his relatives in Jupiter during a Thanksgiving Day 2009 shooting spree.<br />"He will never see the light of day," Circuit Judge Joseph Marx said.<br />The plea ends the case against Merhige, who was arrested in Jan 2010 after a month-long manhunt that began after he unleashed an attack against his flesh and blood at the end of a holiday get-together.<br />Merhige shot and killed his 33-year-old twin sisters, Carla Merhige and Lisa Knight, his 76-year-old aunt Raymonde Joseph and 6-year-old Makayla Sitton, his cousin's daughter.<br />Merhige told the judge he has been on anti-psychotic and anti-depressant drugs.<br />Prosecutors called several witnesses in the hearing, including Merhige's parents Carole and Michael.<br />Carole Merhige said she'd planned to grow old with her daughters but for the past two years has been struggling to come to grips with the violence that she says has caused her to lose all three of her children.<br />"Everyone is hurting," Carole said. "And everyone is blinded by their own pain."<br />Jim Sitton held a lock of his daughter Makayla's hair in his hand as he spoke to the judge, pleading with him to postpone the hearing. The Sittons have said that they wanted prosecutors to take the case to trial and continue seeking the death penalty.<br />"Makayla didn't have a chance to beg for her life," Jim Sitton said. "Why should he have the chance to beg for his?"<br />Public defender Carey Haughwout had intended to pursue an insanity defense in the case, but at this afternoon's hearing she announced that she would withdraw the notice as part of the plea agreement.<br />Merhige has been sitting stoically throughout the hearing, listening as Muriel Sitton announced in court that she is now pregnant again. She later said she is expecting a daughter.<br />Aside from losing her daughter, Muriel Sitton said, Merhige also killed Joseph, her mother.<br />"No sentence on earth can ever make up for what we have lost," Muriel Sitton said. "But we plead with you to let this case go to trial and give us a chance to get the justice the victims deserve."<br />After the hearing, though, Muriel Sitton said she respects the judge's decision.<br />"In the end, we know (Merhige) will never come out (of prison) unless it is in box," she said.<br />Staff writer Cynthia Roldan contributed<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 27 Oct 2011 18:13:11 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/33-merhige-sentenced-to-7-consecutive-sentences-of-life-in-prison.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Federal judge temporarily bars Florida's welfare drug-test law.</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/32-federal-judge-temporarily-bars-floridas-welfare-drug-test-law.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/32/strollalaw1-2_120x90.jpg" title="Federal judge temporarily bars Florida's welfare drug-test law." alt="Federal judge temporarily bars Florida's welfare drug-test law." align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />A federal judge has temporarily blocked a controversial Florida law requiring all welfare applicants to be drug-tested.<br />U.S. District Court Judge Mary Scriven issued a temporary injunction Monday evening against enforcement of the law's "suspicionless drug testing" of adults seeking federal welfare.<br />The law went into effect July 1, but a single father and the American Civil Liberties Union contend in a lawsuit that the new law is unconstitutional and violates Fourth Amendment protection against unreasonable search and seizure.<br />"Perhaps no greater public interest exists than protecting a citizen's rights under the Constitution," the judge wrote, quoting a 1997 Hawaii case.<br />Under the law, the Florida Department of Children and Family Services requires the drug tests of adults applying to the federal Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program. The aid recipients are responsible for the cost of the screening, which they recoup in their assistance if they qualify.<br />Those who fail the required drug testing may designate another individual to receive the benefits on behalf of their children, but they do not receive a refund for cost of the test.<br />Florida Gov. Rick Scott has championed the law, saying it provides "personal accountability." He added it was "unfair for Florida taxpayers to subsidize drug addiction."<br />The ACLU filed a class-action suit on behalf of an Orlando single father who opposed the drug test.<br />Luis Lebron, an unemployed adult college student who cares for a 4-year-old son and disabled mother, was denied temporary cash assistance because he refused to be drug tested. The Navy veteran, an undergraduate at the University of Central Florida, contends the law violates his rights and adds he has never used illegal drugs.<br />The judge, sitting in Orlando, agreed to halt the drug testing until the ACLU lawsuit is settled.<br />The GOP-controlled legislature passed the bill, and Scott signed it into law in May 2011.<br />"The governor obviously disagrees with the decision and he will evaluate his options regarding when to appeal," said his deputy press secretary Jackie Schutz.<br />Since campaigning for governor, Scott has said that the drug-testing of welfare recipients "will help to prevent misuse of Florida tax dollars" and make sure the money goes to the children.<br />"Research shows higher drug use among individuals receiving government assistance, and drug abuse also forces children into welfare assistance," Scott said while signing the bill into law.<br />The ACLU said the state's own study found that of the 2,000 people who took the state drug test, only a small percentage tested positive.<br />"It shows that a little bit more than 2% of the welfare applicants tested positive for drugs where it's about 8&#189;% in the general public," said Howard Simon, executive director of the ACLU of Florida.<br />Lane Wright, the governor's press secretary, said the study is flawed. "It doesn't take in the deterrent effect," Wright said.<br />Wright added there's no way to factor how many people avoided taking the test fearing they would test positive for drugs.<br />After being approved for temporary cash assistance, Luis Lebron was shocked by the mandatory drug test. He then contacted the ACLU.<br />"This is an unconstitutional invasion of privacy, that you can't condition getting some benefit from the government by surrendering your constitutional rights," Simon said.<br />Attorneys for the state say pre-employment drug testing is commonplace and that the Navy vet himself could have been subjected to random drug testing while in the military.<br />The governor's office said it is confident the judge ultimately will uphold the constitutionality of the law, contending it's popular among the people of Florida.<br />But Judge Scriven said in her ruling that based on the evidence, "there is a substantial likelihood" that Florida's law could be found unconstitutional.<br />Added the ACLU's Simon: "We're the only state in the country that has this (law)."<br /><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 26 Oct 2011 16:07:09 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/32-federal-judge-temporarily-bars-floridas-welfare-drug-test-law.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Teen carjacker gets caught because he cant drive stick-shift!!</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/31-teen-carjacker-gets-caught-because-he-cant-drive-stick-shift.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/31/corystrollabanner1-2_120x90.jpg" title="Teen carjacker gets caught because he cant drive stick-shift!!" alt="Teen carjacker gets caught because he cant drive stick-shift!!" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />CLEARWATER, Fla. - Rudolph Beckmann was sitting in his Toyota Corolla parked in his driveway Saturday night, fiddling with the lottery tickets he had just bought.<br />But as the 72-year-old who lives in Clearwater turned to his left, a young man greeted him, a gun pointed directly at him.<br />"He got it right in my face," Beckmann remembers. "I didn't have time (to be scared)."<br />Beckmann said the young man demanded his car and his money. Beckmann gave both up willingly, telling the young man, "be my guest," as he handed over the keys and his wallet.<br />Then Beckmann went inside his house and called 911.<br />"I talked to the guy (at 911 dispatch) for a couple of minutes and I looked out and the car was still sitting there," Beckmann said.<br />As Beckmann later found out from police, the young man -- later described by police as being a 16-year-old -- was unable to drive a stick shift. Beckmann's Corolla was a manual transmission and the teenager couldn't get it in gear.<br />Instead, police say the 16-year-old left Beckmann's car and moved down the street. He found a woman's Honda Accord -- an automatic -- to steal. Police say he swiped it and led police on a chase.<br />Eventually, police were able to stop him with spike strips. He wrecked the Accord, leaving it severely damaged.<br />The 16-year-old now faces charges of attempted carjacking and grand theft auto.<br />Beckmann, who has always driven cars with manual transmissions, joked he never expected one of the benefits of avoiding automatics to be that it would keep his car from being stolen.<br />"That's a selling point for stick shifts," he said.<br /><br /><br />Read more: http://www.abcactionnews.com/dpp/news/region_south_pinellas/seminole/a-teen%27s-inability-to-drive-a-manual-stick-shift-foils-carjacking?hpt=ju_bn4#ixzz1boIyYezs<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 25 Oct 2011 16:11:38 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/31-teen-carjacker-gets-caught-because-he-cant-drive-stick-shift.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Wrongly jailed woman seeks action against Atlanta cops!</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/30-wrongly-jailed-woman-seeks-action-against-atlanta-cops.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/30/gavel-2_120x90.jpg" title="Wrongly jailed woman seeks action against Atlanta cops!" alt="Wrongly jailed woman seeks action against Atlanta cops!" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />Atlanta (CNN) -- When Teresa Culpepper called Atlanta police to report her car stolen, the last thing she expected was to land behind bars for 53 days in a case of mistaken identity.<br />Mistaken for a woman of the same first name who was wanted on a battery charge, Culpepper is now trying to return her life to normal after the ordeal cost her home and her car. Her attorney said none of it would have happened if police had followed basic procedures.<br />"This is something that should not have ever happened. It is nuts," said attorney Ashleigh Merchant.<br />While police did not return calls to CNN about Culpepper, the district attorney has determined that she was the wrong person arrested.<br />Culpepper's saga started August 21, whe she called police to report that her car was stolen, Merchant said. An officer took information from her, but never filed a report. Shortly after, police dispatchers called out a bulletin, alerting officers to look out for a woman named Teresa Gilbert who was suspected of aggravated battery.<br />Police returned to Culpepper's house and arrested her. And the differences between the two women didn't stop at their last names, Merchant said.<br />"The birth dates didn't match. The addresses were different. The description didn't match. Other than the name Teresa, nothing matched," Merchant said. "All they had to do was show a picture of Teresa to the victim and none of this would have happened."<br />Even so, Culpepper was held in jail, handed a bond she couldn't cover and indicted. She remained in jail for days, thinking there was no way out of the predicament.<br />It wasn't until weeks later that the battery victim came forward in court and cleared Culpepper's name.<br />Still, released on October 12, Culpepper found herself homeless and her car in the impound lot.<br />"After investigating this matter thoroughly and discussing it carefully with the Atlanta Police Department, we have concluded that the wrong person was arrested," District Attorney Paul Howard Jr. said in a written statement to CNN affiliate WSB. "The fact that both of the women in question had the same first name and lived in the same police beat led the officer to believe Ms. Culpepper was responsible ... Unfortunately, the officer never presented a picture or any form of identification to the victim."<br />Culpepper is seeking legal action against the Atlanta police, Merchant said.<br />"It is scary, really," Merchant said. "Because it is not like Teresa is an uncommon name. It makes you feel that it could have happened to anybody."<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 24 Oct 2011 17:22:52 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/30-wrongly-jailed-woman-seeks-action-against-atlanta-cops.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Riviera Beach police officer faces assault charge for pushing boy, 12</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/29-riviera-beach-police-officer-faces-assault-charge-for-pushing-boy-12.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/29/strolla-law-907-3_120x90.jpg" title="Riviera Beach police officer faces assault charge for pushing boy, 12" alt="Riviera Beach police officer faces assault charge for pushing boy, 12" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />A Riviera Beach Police officer was charged with assault on Thursday for pushing a boy and threatening him with a Taser.<br />Palm Beach County Sheriff's detectives say 31-year-old Cherline Cornelius pushed the 12-year-old while on duty in July so she could "teach him a lesson and show him what it's like to get pushed."<br />Cornelius was charged with assault, battery and improper exhibition of a dangerous weapon or firearm, according to the State Attorney's Office. Her first court appearance will be on Nov. 15.<br />The alleged assault took place on July 12, at Kelsey Park in Lake Park, where Cornelius was with children from the Weed and Seed camp program and camp counselors.<br />An investigation by Palm Beach County sheriff's deputies showed that the boy, who was part of the camp, had gotten into a spat with the girl. After a brief scuffle, a camp counselor took the boy aside and told him he could not push the girl again, according to a probable cause affidavit.<br />At some point, Cornelius called the boy over and "pushed" him to "let him see how it feels," the affidavit said. When the boy balled up his hands into fists, Cornelius said to "go ahead" and hit her "so she could shoot him" with the Taser, according to the affidavit.<br />Numerous eye witnesses told sheriff's detectives that Cornelius was "the primary aggressor." Cornelius "pushed (the boy) multiple times, pulled out her department-issued Taser and pointed it at (the boy) and started removing her gun belt when her actions were questioned by a Weed and Seed counselor," the affidavit stated.<br />Riviera Beach spokeswoman Rose Anne Brown could not comment on the incident Wednesday, saying the department is conducting an internal affairs investigation.<br />She could not provide details of Cornelius' employment status with the department.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 21 Oct 2011 15:15:08 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/29-riviera-beach-police-officer-faces-assault-charge-for-pushing-boy-12.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Storms blasts DJJ in letter, second committee over use of drugs on jailed kids</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/28-storms-blasts-djj-in-letter-second-committee-over-use-of-drugs-on-jailed-kids.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/28/corystrollabanner-1_120x90.jpg" title="Storms blasts DJJ in letter, second committee over use of drugs on jailed kids" alt="Storms blasts DJJ in letter, second committee over use of drugs on jailed kids" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />After blistering the Department of Juvenile Justice in her own committee Tuesday for its use of psychotropic medication on minors, state Sen. Ronda Storms again took agency officials to task in a letter Wednesday and another committee Thursday. The department is conducting an internal investigation into the use of drugs after The Palm Beach Post revealed the agency has given heavy doses of psychotropic medications to jailed children and that one in three DJJ psychiatrists had taken payments or gifts from the makers of the drugs.<br />On Wednesday, Storms, R-Valrico, admonished Department of Juvenile Justice Secretary Wansley Walters in a letter after Walters failed to appear before Storms&#8217; Children, Families and Elder Affairs Committee on Tuesday. At that meeting, Storms upbraided Walters&#8217; aides for not being candid with the committee about the use of the mind-altering medicines.<br />Storms ordered Walters to appear at the committee&#8217;s next meeting in November.<br />On Thursday, in the Senate Criminal and Civil Justice Appropriations Committee, Storms ordered DJJ&#8217;s director for administrative services, Fred Schuknechts, to come back with a financial analysis of the department&#8217;s spending on psychotropic drugs &#8220;for your entire population for whatever the reason. &#8230; And I would like that post-haste.&#8221;<br />In a comparison of DJJ&#8217;s use of the medications to that of the Department of Children, Families and Elder Affairs, Storms told Schuknechts, &#8220;We have children who have been scalded and burned and had acid poured on them, who have been starved, who have been beaten, who&#8217;ve had bones broken, who have had horrible things happen to them. In that population, only 14 percent of the population is medicated. Of your population, over 34 percent of your population is medicated with psychotropic drugs.&#8221;<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 21 Oct 2011 15:09:15 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/28-storms-blasts-djj-in-letter-second-committee-over-use-of-drugs-on-jailed-kids.aspx</guid></item><item><title>ACLU: Lawsuit alleges 3 immigrant women assaulted while in ICE custody</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/27-aclu-lawsuit-alleges-3-immigrant-women-assaulted-while-in-ice-custody.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/27/gavel-american-flag-3_120x90.jpg" title="ACLU: Lawsuit alleges 3 immigrant women assaulted while in ICE custody" alt="ACLU: Lawsuit alleges 3 immigrant women assaulted while in ICE custody" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />(CNN) -- A class-action lawsuit has been filed on behalf of three immigrant women who were allegedly sexually assaulted while in the custody of Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Texas, the American Civil Liberties Union said this week.<br />The ACLU, citing documents it said it had obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, said in a news release that there have been nearly 200 allegations of sexual abuse of immigration detainees jailed at detention facilities across the United States since 2007.<br />The ACLU release did not give dates of any of the alleged assaults, including those involving the three women who are plaintiffs in the class-action suit. The plaintiffs were identified only as Sarah Doe, Kimberly Doe and Raquel Doe "to protect them from further harm," the ACLU said.<br />The alleged attacks occurred while the plaintiffs were being transported from the T. Don Hutto Family Residential Center in Taylor, Texas, to the airport or bus station in nearby Austin, the ACLU said.<br />Its release did not say where the class-action suit was filed Wednesday, but it said defendants include three ICE officials; Williamson County, Texas, where the Hutto facility is; the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), a private prison company that manages the Hutto facility; the former facility administrator for Hutto; and a guard at the facility.<br />The lawsuit alleges that ICE along with Williamson County and the Corrections Corporation of America were "deliberately indifferent and willfully blind to the fact that (the guard named as a defendant) and other employees regularly violated the rule that detainees are not be transported without another escort officer of the same gender present," the ACLU said.<br />ICE did not comment specifically on the ACLU's announcement of the lawsuit, but an agency spokeswoman said ICE "maintains a strict zero tolerance policy for any kind of abusive or inappropriate behavior and requires all contractors working with the agency to adhere to this policy."<br />ICE Public Affairs Officer Gillian Christensen added that the agency requires regular criminal backgrounds checks for its workforce.<br />"The (Department of Homeland Security) Office of the Inspector General and ICE's Office of Professional Responsibility investigate ALL allegations of sexual abuse or misconduct and the agency takes appropriate action -- whether it is pursuing criminal charges or administrative action -- when those allegations are substantiated," Christensen said in the ICE statement.<br />The Corrections Corporation of America did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the ACLU announcement.<br />The ACLU said it was basing its claim that there have been 185 allegations of sexual abuse in federal detention centers against female immigration detainees on various federal documents.<br />The documents -- obtained from the Department of Homeland Security's Office of Inspector General, Office of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties and ICE, according to the ACLU -- showed that Texas had more alleged abuse cases, 56, than any other state, the organization's news release said.<br />"While the information gleaned from the documents likely does not represent the full scope of the problem given that sexual abuse is notoriously underreported, the documents nonetheless make clear that the sexual abuse of immigration detainees is not an isolated problem limited to a few rogue facilities or to a handful of bad-apple government contractors who staff some of the nation's immigration jails," the ACLU said.<br />"Unfortunately, we believe these complaints are just the tip of the iceberg," said Mark Whitburn, senior staff attorney for the ACLU of Texas.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 21 Oct 2011 15:04:04 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/27-aclu-lawsuit-alleges-3-immigrant-women-assaulted-while-in-ice-custody.aspx</guid></item><item><title>SECOND TIME "JOHNS" TO HAVE PHOTO MADE PUBLIC.</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/26-second-time-johns-to-have-photo-made-public.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/26/strolla-law-907-2_120x90.jpg" title="SECOND TIME "JOHNS" TO HAVE PHOTO MADE PUBLIC." alt="SECOND TIME "JOHNS" TO HAVE PHOTO MADE PUBLIC." align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />Andrew Abramson, Palm Beach Post staff writerWEST PALM BEACH, Fla. &#8212; The city is bringing back public shaming to deter prostitution.<br />The city commission agreed Monday to post booking photos of johns arrested for soliciting prostitutes on the city's web site.<br />West Palm Beach received national attention in the 1990s when it enacted a similar program, but it cost the city a $10,000 settlement after a man whose name was printed was acquitted and sued the city.<br />This time, West Palm Beach will only post the photos of johns who have been arrested more than once.<br />Mayor Jeri Muoio agreed not to post the photos of first-time offenders after attending a Prostitution Impact Prevention Education course. The PIPE class is based in West Palm Beach, and seeks to educate first time offenders.<br />"We didn't want to interfere with the success they have in that program," Muoio said. "We decided that second-time, multiple offenders would be the way to target it."<br />Residents in the city's north end have complained that prostitution is on the rise during the economic downturn. Myrna Sossner, a north end resident, said she agrees with the city's decision not to post first-time offenders, but believes repeat offenders should be shamed.<br />"If they've been arrested a second time, or beyond, you've got to make them realize that they're not helping society and they're endangering their own lives and the lives of any other," Sossner said.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Read more: http://www.wptv.com/dpp/news/region_c_palm_beach_county/west_palm_beach/second-time-johns-to-have-photos-made-public-on-west-palm-beach-website-in-anti-prostitution-effort#ixzz1b9Y9ytNb<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 18 Oct 2011 16:53:52 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/26-second-time-johns-to-have-photo-made-public.aspx</guid></item><item><title>County Sheriff Charged With Ten Felonies, another "SWORN TO SERVE AND PROTECT" HUH!?</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/25-county-sheriff-charged-with-ten-felonies-another-sworn-to-serve-and-protect-huh.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/25/corystrollabanner_120x90.jpg" title="County Sheriff Charged With Ten Felonies, another "SWORN TO SERVE AND PROTECT" HUH!?" alt="County Sheriff Charged With Ten Felonies, another "SWORN TO SERVE AND PROTECT" HUH!?" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />A man sworn to enforce the law is now accused of breaking it. Friday, after three years of investigation, Unicoi County Sheriff Kent Harris was indicted by a grand jury on multiple felony charges.<br />"There were six counts of official misconduct, one theft over $1,000, a criminal simulation, an attempted aggravated assault and also a tampering with evidence," said Tony Clark, the Unicoi County District Attorney.<br />The six counts of misconduct stem from incidences last year when Harris allegedly had inmates work on his property. When the investigation began in 2008 the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation also suspected that Harris altered a memo in order to get personal payment for a donated car.<br />"We know that Harris has made or altered a memo requesting payment from Unicoi County for a vehicle that had actually been donated to the county," explained TBI spokeswoman Kristin Helm. "Then he received the money from that theft later in September of 2008."<br />Two TBI investigators testified in the case on Friday. District Attorney Tony Clark says other witnesses were issued subpoenas, but many did not want to take the stand against Harris. "No one came voluntarily," Clark said. "Witnesses we subpoenaed came from the sheriff's department and the community."<br />Few citizens we spoke with in Erwin wanted to talk about the case on camera. Many said it's a small town and it's best to keep things like this quiet. Some residents said off camera they don't want to talk because they were afraid it would hurt their business.<br />Others disagreed with the charges altogether. W. A. Wilson, a lifelong Erwin resident, said, "I think it's wrong. I think people ought to leave him alone and let him take care of it himself. And then check with him because he will take care of it."<br />Harris is scheduled to appear in court on November 22. Despite the ten felony charges, the sheriff was not arrested. Clark says that is unusual for a case like this but it was the judge's decision.<br />"Generally with ten felonies, there would have been an arrest warrant issued," Clark said. "In this case there was not and that was solely the decision of Judge Brown."<br />We stopped by Sheriff Harris' house but he did not want to comment on the indictments. Harris has to appear in court within ten days to be processed.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 18 Oct 2011 16:47:31 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/25-county-sheriff-charged-with-ten-felonies-another-sworn-to-serve-and-protect-huh.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Conrad Murray didn't comfort Jackson's kids in ER, family says.</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/24-conrad-murray-didnt-comfort-jacksons-kids-in-er-family-says.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/24/studying-1_120x90.jpg" title="Conrad Murray didn't comfort Jackson's kids in ER, family says." alt="Conrad Murray didn't comfort Jackson's kids in ER, family says." align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />Los Angeles (CNN) -- Michael Jackson's oldest son disputed Dr. Conrad Murray's claim, given in his police interview, that the doctor comforted him and his siblings in the emergency room after they learned their father was dead, according to a Jackson family member who was with the children that day.<br />Prince Jackson told his family that Murray's account played in his involuntary manslaughter trial this week was not true, Trent Jackson, the nephew of Katherine and Joe Jackson, said Thursday.<br />"Perfect storm" of drugs killed Jackson, sleep expert says<br />Jackson family members were upset that jurors may sympathize with Murray because of perceived compassion for the children that day, Jackson told CNN.<br />"I hugged them all, gave comfort to Paris, comfort to Prince, comfort to Blanket, which is the last little guy, because whenever they were sick, they would always ask for Dr. Conrad," Murray told detectives two days after Jackson's death in 2009.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Anesthesiologist on propofol dosing<br />Trent Jackson, who drove Katherine Jackson to Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, where doctors were trying to revive her son, said Murray did not have a conversation with Paris Jackson, the 12-year-old daughter, as he told police.<br />"She asked me, 'Dr. Murray, you said you save a lot of patients. You know, you save people with heart attacks, and you couldn't save my dad," Murray told detectives. "I said, 'I tried my best.' And she said, 'I know that, Dr. Murray. At least I know. I know you tried your best. I know you tried your best, but I'm really sad. You know, I will wake up in the morning, and I won't be able to see my daddy.'"<br />Prince, Paris and Blanket Jackson were initially kept in an SUV outside of the emergency room after they followed the ambulance carrying their father to the hospital, Trent Jackson said. Frank Dileo, who was Michael Jackson's manager, later escorted them inside after their grandmother arrived, according to Trent Jackson.<br />Murray never spoke to Michael Jackson's mother at the emergency room, contrary to his statement to police, Trent Jackson said.<br />While the truthfulness of Murray's interview is a major issue in the trial, it is not expected that Michael Jackson's 14-year-old son Prince will be called to testify, the relative said. Katherine Jackson, who has custody of the children, is opposed to any of them being called as witnesses, he said.<br />Prosecutors are near a conclusion to their direct presentation in Murray's trial, but rebuttal witnesses could be called next week after the defense rests its case.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 14 Oct 2011 16:54:16 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/24-conrad-murray-didnt-comfort-jacksons-kids-in-er-family-says.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Five Law Enforcement Officers, among 70, charged in Federal Drug-Trafficking.</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/23-five-law-enforcement-officers-among-70-charged-in-federal-drug-trafficking.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/23/strollalaw1-1_120x90.jpg" title="Five Law Enforcement Officers, among 70, charged in Federal Drug-Trafficking." alt="Five Law Enforcement Officers, among 70, charged in Federal Drug-Trafficking." align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />(CNN) -- Five law enforcement officers were among 70 people in Arkansas charged in a federal drug-trafficking crackdown that also involved public corruption charges, authorities said Tuesday.<br />The five officers took bribes to look the other way while crimes were being committed, authorities said.<br />Investigators are continuing to look at other law agencies for criminal misconduct, authorities said.<br />On Tuesday, 800 federal and local authorities arrested 51 of the 70 people, officials said. Five others were already in custody, and the remaining 14 defendants are considered fugitives, authorities said. The Arkansas National Guard was also involved in making the arrests, authorities said.<br />One agent was shot while serving warrants, and he is hospitalized with injuries that are not life-threatening, authorities said.<br />The law enforcement figures named in indictments are Helena-West Helena Police Department officer Herman Eaton, 46; Helena-West Helena officer Robert "Bam Bam" Rogers, 35; Helena-West Helena Sgt. Marlene Kalb, 48; Marvell police officer Robert Wahls, 42; and former Phllips County Deputy Sheriff Winston Dean Jackson, 44, who's now a Helena-West Helena police officer, according to court records and a prosecutors' statement.<br />Their attorneys couldn't be immediately determined or reached for comment.<br />A two-year investigation, called Operation Delta Blues, focused on public corruption, cocaine and crack cocaine trafficking, and money laundering in the Helena-West Helena and Marianna, Arkansas, areas, authorities said. Investigators used 16 court-authorized wiretaps in their investigation, officials said.<br />"Today's indictments and arrests are merely the beginning. We believe there are more cases of corruption, and we intend to press forward with our investigation to weed out those who would sacrifice their oath and violate the public's trust," said Valerie Parlave, special agent in charge of the Little Rock field office for the Federal Bureau of Investigation.<br />"Several of those indicted today are no strangers to law enforcement. Many have been charged in state court with some of the serious class (of) felonies, including murder," Parlave continued. "Yet they remain free today. As our investigation moves forward, we continue to find instances where these violent felonies were never completely prosecuted and some of the most serious charges were dropped."<br />Added U.S. Attorney Christopher R. Thyer of the Eastern District of Arkansas, "Our commitment to eradicating drug trafficking and violent crime has never been stronger.<br />"When these two elements are mixed with law enforcement corruption, it can make for the perfect storm in a community. It can paralyze honest law enforcement action, silence witnesses, and erode public confidence in our system of justice," Thyer said in a written statement.<br /><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 13 Oct 2011 14:14:45 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/23-five-law-enforcement-officers-among-70-charged-in-federal-drug-trafficking.aspx</guid></item><item><title>MILLIONAIRE MURDER TRIALS... ONE BECAME A MILLIONAIRE(CASEY ANTHONY), NOW ONE DEFENDS HIMSELF!</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/22-millionaire-murder-trials-one-became-a-millionairecasey-anthony-now-one-defends-himself.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/22/gavel-1_120x90.jpg" title="MILLIONAIRE MURDER TRIALS... ONE BECAME A MILLIONAIRE(CASEY ANTHONY), NOW ONE DEFENDS HIMSELF!" alt="MILLIONAIRE MURDER TRIALS... ONE BECAME A MILLIONAIRE(CASEY ANTHONY), NOW ONE DEFENDS HIMSELF!" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" /><strong>(CNN) -- Jurors heard differing stories Thursday about the final moments of a 55-year-old Florida woman, with prosecutors claiming her millionaire husband callously shot her while his lawyers characterized her death as a "tragic" accident.<br />After three days of jury selection, James "Bob" Ward's trial kicked off in Orlando with opening statements and testimony. Ward, 63, is charged with second-degree murder over the September 21, 2009, death of his wife inside their upscale Windermere home.<br />"Diane Ward was killed by a single gunshot wound as she struggled with her husband over a loaded a gun," the defendant's attorney Kirk Kirkconnell said. "This entire incident happened in a blink of an eye. Her death was an unexpected and tragic accident."<br />But prosecutors painted a very different picture, casting doubt on Ward's unruffled demeanor and what they characterized as his ever-changing story of what happened.<br />"This case is about the fact that it was Bob Ward that shot her almost dead between the eyes," said Assistant State Attorney Robin Wilkinson in her opening statement.<br />She brought up the 911 call, placed at 7:50 p.m. that night, in which Ward called and flatly said, "I just shot my wife." But later in the call, according to Wilkinson, he started to change his story: "It becomes an accident and he doesn't know what happened ... Diane just ended up on the floor."<br />According to the arrest affidavit from Orange County Sheriff's Office, the victim was found in the master bedroom -- "a large pool of blood at the top of her head (and) a .357 Magnum hand gun (in) the top drawer of a nightstand next to the bed." Ward told police that the couple were the only ones in the house at the time, besides their four dogs.<br />Wilkinson also brought up how Ward acted upon arriving at the police station, during which investigators described him as "calm, polite and not really in distress."<br />In several videos from an interrogation room -- which the prosecutor promised would be played in court -- Ward offered an array of stories in phone conversations with family and friends, from "It was a tragic accident" to "Diane killed herself."<br />The next day, medical examiner Joshua Stephany determined preliminarily that the mother of two college-age children had been killed in a homicide.<br />Prosecutors, in opening statements, highlighted the financial troubles facing Ward -- who, along with his wife, had been set to testify in bankruptcy proceedings related to one of his companies a few days before the shooting.<br />Kirkconnell, though, insisted that in no way did his client benefit from his wife's death: "From a financial standpoint, the death of Diane Ward ruined Bob Ward financially," he said.</strong><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 19 Sep 2011 14:56:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/22-millionaire-murder-trials-one-became-a-millionairecasey-anthony-now-one-defends-himself.aspx</guid></item><item><title>THIS IS WHAT I CALL JOB SECURITY!</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/21-this-is-what-i-call-job-security.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/21/strolla_bc_art-4_120x90.jpg" title="THIS IS WHAT I CALL JOB SECURITY!" alt="THIS IS WHAT I CALL JOB SECURITY!" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" /><strong>Tom Negovan, WGN <br /><br />In the early hours of Saturday morning, one man's solitary quest for a meal caused him to break into a fast food joint. But after he squeezed himself through a small drive-thru window, all that remained were his underpants.<br />The man spent 20 minutes sliding himself through the security bars of Mr. Beef and Pizza in Illinois, before he tripped the alarm.<br />Despite hearing the alarm blaring, the man continued to finish his food hunt, put his clothes back on and get himself a drink from the soda machine with a straw.<br />He even managed to find time to rummage through the freezer, grabbing chicken tenders and fries and tossing them in the microwave.<br />Clearly, there was no time to fire up the deep fryer because police arrived just minutes later, questioning the intruder through the driver-thru window.<br />When the man disappeared from view, officers climbed in the same way the suspect did -- but managed to keep their clothes on. The food bandit was quickly arrested.<br />The restaurant owner Rich Rubel said he was just glad the incident ended well, and was even happy for the free publicity.<br />"Nobody got hurt and there really wasn't much damage," said Rubel. "The customers get a kick out of it."<br />The 19-year-old suspect was arrested and charged with burglary.<br />Police say he has no criminal record and was not under the influence, nor did it appear that he tried to steal any money.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Copyright 2011 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.<br /><br />Read more: http://www.wptv.com/dpp/news/local_news/water_cooler/a-late-night-snack-attack-causes-a-man-to-break-into-a-fast-food-restaurant#ixzz1Xwkyr3Qa</strong><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 14 Sep 2011 16:57:31 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/21-this-is-what-i-call-job-security.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Former Red Sox Manny Ramirez arrested on charge of domestic battery!</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/20-former-red-sox-manny-ramirez-arrested-on-charge-of-domestic-battery.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/20/gavel-american-flag-2_120x90.jpg" title="Former Red Sox Manny Ramirez arrested on charge of domestic battery!" alt="Former Red Sox Manny Ramirez arrested on charge of domestic battery!" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />All-star slugger Manny Ramirez has been arrested in southern Florida on one charge stemming from a domestic dispute, officials said Monday, a former Boston Red Sox.<br />CNN-All-star slugger Manny Ramirez has been arrested in southern Florida on one charge stemming from a domestic dispute, officials said Monday. The former Boston Red Sox star was arrested at a residence on one charge of touch/strike battery, the Broward County Sheriff's Office said in a statement.<br />Ramirez -- who hit 555 career home runs -- announced his retirement from Major League Baseball in April, rather than continue with the league's drug prevention and treatment program.<br />He was suspended in 2009 for 50 games after violating the league's drug policy. Ramirez is 39.<br /><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 13 Sep 2011 16:55:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/20-former-red-sox-manny-ramirez-arrested-on-charge-of-domestic-battery.aspx</guid></item><item><title>Murder charges dismissed against man who shot two on his Riviera Beach boat.</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/19-murder-charges-dismissed-against-man-who-shot-two-on-his-riviera-beach-boat.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/19/studying_120x90.jpg" title="Murder charges dismissed against man who shot two on his Riviera Beach boat." alt="Murder charges dismissed against man who shot two on his Riviera Beach boat." align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />Judy Mohlman thought there would at least be a trial. She said as much to her niece when she called to tell her that Michael Monahan, the man who shot Mohlman's son Raymond to death in April, had walked out of the Palm Beach County jail a free man.<br /><br />In an application of Florida's controversial "Stand your Ground" statute, Circuit Judge Richard Oftedahl last week dismissed two first-degree murder charges against Monahan, 65, ruling that he was justified in shooting Raymond "Ramie" Mohlman and Matthew Vittum out of fear for his life during a dispute aboard a 35-foot sailboat anchored near Phil Foster Park.<br /><br />"I don't understand it," Judy Mohlman said. "My whole family, we just didn't think it would happen this way."<br />In the 11-page ruling filed Tuesday, Oftedahl reconstructed details of the Sunday afternoon shooting, calling it a clear case of justified force under "Stand your Ground," an act signed into law in 2005 which gives a person the right to respond with force when threatened with death or bodily harm.<br /><br />Riviera Beach police arrived at the park April 3 to find Monahan paddling his kayak away from the Green Galleon, where Ramie Mohlman and Vittum lay dead. In interviews with police Monahan said the men had tried to remove him from the sailboat, which he had bought from Mohlman six months earlier for $1,000.<br /><br />Mohlman, 49, a one-time competitive wrestler who quit his teaching job at Palm Beach Lakes Community High School in June 2010 and spent much of the next 10 months in Belize, had confronted Monahan claiming the older man had racked up $500 in tickets in his name because he refused to register the boat properly. Mohlman had previously confronted Monahan about the tickets, saying the fees prevented him from taking a trip back to Belize.<br />But according to Monahan's attorney, Assistant Public Defender Elizabeth Ramsey, witnesses told police that by the time Mohlman boarded the Green Galleon with Vittum on the day they died, his plans were to either evict Monahan from the boat or kill him.<br /><br />In the motion to dismiss the charges Ramsey filed in August, she pointed out that Monahan said Mohlman never showed him any proof of the tickets and felt cornered when Mohlman and Vittum boarded his boat without his permission. He said he didn't have time to call police.<br /><br />"Monahan unequivocally stated 'I was afraid for my life,' " Ramsey wrote.<br />Ramsey also noted that autopsy reports later showed that Mohlman's blood-alcohol level was at .23 when he died, nearly three times the level at which drivers are presumed legally impaired. Vittum's blood-alcohol level was .11 and the autopsy concluded he had cocaine, oxycodone and marijuana in his system when he was killed.<br /><br />In her attempt to stop Oftedahl from dismissing the charges, Assistant State Attorney Jacqui Charbonneau pointed out that, among other things, that neither victim was armed when they boarded the boat. Charbonneau said Vittum was standing 20 feet away on the bow of the boat when Monahan shot him. Monahan also admitted that neither man ever touched him during the confrontation, and at the time of the shooting, Mohlman was still the legal owner of the Green Galleon.<br /><br />Oftedahl noted those facts in his ruling, but said the law didn't require the men either to be armed or actually commit physical violence for Monahan to have a reasonable fear that they would either kill or severely harm him aboard the boat that had been his home since October 2010.<br /><br />Prosecutors had originally sought the death penalty against Monahan but later dropped that pursuit. Charbonneau on Friday said she respected Oftedahl's ruling but stood by her arguments that a jury should have decided whether Monahan acted in self-defense.<br /><br />Monahan's release marks the second case in as many years where a shooting at Phil Foster Park ended with freedom for a shooter using the "Stand Your Ground" statute as a defense.<br /><br />In May 2010, a jury acquitted Timothy McTigue of second-degree murder in the 2007 death of 23 year-old Michael Palmer, who died after the two fought briefly and McTigue shot Palmer in the back of the head as Palmer hoisted himself out of the water around a floating dock.<br /><br />For Judy Mohlman, the release of the man who fatally shot her son, leaves her with more questions than answers. Her son's death five months ago marked the second time she has lost a child. Her daughter died at 21 from an epileptic seizure.<br /><br />Judy Mohlman said her son "wasn't perfect" but also believes Monahan got away with murder.<br />"The hardest part is not getting anymore phone calls from him," Judy Monahan said of her son. "I miss hearing his voice."<br /><br />Staff Researcher Niels Heimeriks contributed to this story.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 12 Sep 2011 18:23:40 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/19-murder-charges-dismissed-against-man-who-shot-two-on-his-riviera-beach-boat.aspx</guid></item><item><title>STRAUSS-KAHN'S RAPE CHARGES DROPPED.  THANK GOODNESS FOR ETHICAL PROSECUTORS!</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/18-strauss-kahns-rape-charges-dropped-thank-goodness-for-ethical-prosecutors.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/18/strolla_bc_art-3_120x90.jpg" title="STRAUSS-KAHN'S RAPE CHARGES DROPPED.  THANK GOODNESS FOR ETHICAL PROSECUTORS!" alt="STRAUSS-KAHN'S RAPE CHARGES DROPPED.  THANK GOODNESS FOR ETHICAL PROSECUTORS!" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />NEW YORK (AP) &#8212; Prosecutors sought on Monday to dismiss the criminal charges in a sexual-assault case against former International Monetary Fund leader Dominique Strauss-Kahn, saying persistent lying by the hotel maid who accused him of trying to rape her in his posh suite made it impossible for them to determine what really happened.<br />In a 25-page court document, Manhattan prosecutors described the lies and inconsistencies they said had shattered the housekeeper's credibility, delved into DNA evidence they said showed sexual contact but not necessarily a forced encounter and discussed why they saw medical findings as inconclusive.<br />They said they "simply no longer have confidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty."<br /><br />With that, the district attorney's office asked a judge to put an end to a case that created a cross-continental sensation. A formal dismissal is expected at Strauss-Kahn's court date Tuesday, though the maid, Nafissatou Diallo, is asking the judge to boot the DA's office off the case and put it on hold until a special prosecutor can be appointed.<br />Still, if the criminal case is dismissed, efforts to shed light on what transpired in Strauss-Kahn's suite at the Sofitel hotel are bound to continue in another court: the Bronx civil court handling Diallo's lawsuit against him.<br />Echoing and expanding on concerns prosecutors had raised previously, they said in court papers Diallo repeatedly lied to investigators and grand jurors about her life, her past and her actions following her encounter with the French diplomat.<br />She gave three versions of what she did right after when she says she was attacked and established a troubling ability to present "fiction as fact with complete conviction" by telling a phony tale of a previous rape, prosecutors wrote. She also was evasive about nearly $60,000 that other people had moved through her bank account and insisted she had no interest in getting money from Strauss-Kahn &#8212; once telling prosecutors no one could "buy" her &#8212; only to sue him within three months, they said.<br />"In virtually every substantive interview with prosecutors, despite entreaties to simply be truthful, she has not been truthful on matters great and small," they wrote. "... Our grave concerns about (Diallo's) reliability make it impossible to resolve the question of what exactly happened."<br />Prosecutors met briefly Monday with Diallo and her attorney, Kenneth Thompson, who emerged blasting them for their decision.<br /><br />District Attorney Cyrus Vance "has not only turned his back on this innocent victim, but he has also turned his back on the forensic, medical and other physical evidence in this case," Thompson said.<br />Strauss-Kahn lawyers William Taylor and Benjamin Brafman, meanwhile, said he and his family were grateful for prosecutors' decision. "We have maintained from the beginning of this case that our client is innocent," they said in a statement. "We also maintained that there were many reasons to believe that Mr. Strauss-Kahn's accuser was not credible."<br />The case captured international attention as a seeming cauldron of sex, violence, power and politics: A promising French presidential contender, known in his homeland as the Great Seducer, accused of a brutal and contemptuous attack on a West African immigrant who had come to clean his plush suite.<br />The stakes were high for Strauss-Kahn, who resigned his IMF post, spent nearly a week behind bars and then spent possibly hundreds of thousands of dollars to pay for house arrest, as well as for Vance, who was handling the biggest case he has had during his 18 months in office.<br />Strauss-Kahn, who's 62 and married, was arrested after Diallo, 32, said he chased her down, grabbed her crotch and forced her to perform oral sex. Strauss-Kahn denied the allegations, and his lawyers have said anything that happened wasn't forced.<br />Like many sexual assault cases, in which the accused and the accuser are often the only eyewitnesses, the Strauss-Kahn case has hinged heavily on the maid's believability.<br /><br />Early on, prosecutors stressed that Diallo had provided "a compelling and unwavering story" replete with "very powerful details" and buttressed by forensic evidence; his semen was found on her uniform. The police commissioner said seasoned detectives had found her credible.<br />But then prosecutors said July 1 they'd found the maid had told them a series of troubling falsehoods, including a persuasive but phony account of having been gang-raped in her native Guinea. She said she was echoing a story she'd told to enhance her 2003 bid for political asylum, but there's no mention of it on her written application, prosecutors said in Monday's filing. She told interviewers she was raped in her homeland under other circumstances.<br />She also wasn't consistent about what she did after her encounter with Strauss-Kahn, first telling a grand jury she had hovered in a hallway, then saying she had continued cleaning a nearby room and then Strauss-Kahn's before bumping into her supervisor and obliquely telling her about the encounter, according to Monday's filing. Then, when electronic key-card records showed she had been in the nearby room for less than a minute, she said had only popped into it to retrieve cleaning supplies and denied having said otherwise, prosecutors said.<br />Diallo has said any discrepancy was a misunderstanding. She also had a recorded phone conversation, with a jailed man in her life, in which "the potential for financial recovery" from Strauss-Kahn was mentioned, prosecutors wrote.<br />The man, who has been convicted of delivering more than $36,000 to undercover officers to buy marijuana, came up again as prosecutors were exploring the $60,000 in deposits that people in four states had made into her checking account, they said. She told prosecutors she'd allowed the jailed man to use her account to make deposits and have her withdraw cash to give to a person she thought was his partner in a clothing and accessory business.<br />She has told interviewers the man used the bank account without telling her. As for the phone call, Thompson said, she mentioned Strauss-Kahn's money only to say that the man she accused of attacking her was influential.<br /><br />Strauss-Kahn's semen was found on her uniform dress, his DNA was identified on pantyhose and underwear she was wearing and a gynecological exam found an area of "redness," according to prosecutors. But they said none of that was incontrovertible proof of a sexual assault.<br />In asking for a special prosecutor, Diallo's lawyer said the DA's office has "sabotaged" the case, accusing prosecutors of leaking damaging and false information about Diallo to reporters, among other claims. Many echo issues he had raised in asking Vance last month to step aside.<br />Special prosecutors are most often appointed when a DA has a personal conflict of interest, such as when a DA's office staffer is arrested or the DA represented a defendant while in private practice. Thompson notes that one of Brafman's partners is married to one of Vance's top deputies.<br />Vance's office has said there's no basis for recusing it from the case. Legal experts have given Thompson's request slim chances.<br /><br />Meanwhile, Diallo sued Strauss-Kahn Aug. 8, seeking unspecified damages and promising to air other allegations that Strauss-Kahn accosted and attacked women in other locales.<br />His lawyers called her suit a meritless claim that proved she was out for money.<br /><br /><br />The Associated Press generally doesn't name people who report being sexually assaulted unless they agree to be identified or publicly identify themselves, as Diallo has done.<br />___<br />Associated Press writer Sarah DiLorenzo in Paris contributed to this report.<br /><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 23 Aug 2011 13:59:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/18-strauss-kahns-rape-charges-dropped-thank-goodness-for-ethical-prosecutors.aspx</guid></item><item><title>21 ARRESTED AT V.A. HOSPITAL FOR ILLEGAL DRUG ACTIVITY</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/17-21-arrested-at-va-hospital-for-illegal-drug-activity.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/17/gavel-american-flag-1_120x90.jpg" title="21 ARRESTED AT V.A. HOSPITAL FOR ILLEGAL DRUG ACTIVITY" alt="21 ARRESTED AT V.A. HOSPITAL FOR ILLEGAL DRUG ACTIVITY" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />Palm Beach Post Staff Report<br /><br />RIVIERA BEACH &#8209; A seven-month undercover investigation has led to the arrest of 21 people involved in illegal sales of narcotics at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Riviera Beach.<br />Those taken into custody include veterans, medical center employees and associates, said Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office Capt. Eric Coleman.<br /><br />The joint investigation by the VA Office of Inspector General and the Palm Beach Sheriff's Office was launched after the inspector general's office contacted the sheriff's office over concerns about the "diversion" of pharmaceutical drugs, Coleman said. Sheriff's office undercover officers were able to buy narcotics from the 21 in custody, he said.<br />In all, 6,000 oxycodone pills were seized along with more than $200,000 in cash.<br />In some cases, veterans were selling drugs to make money. The source of some of the drugs remains under investigation.<br /><br />The probe is continuing and more arrests are likely, Coleman said.<br />Those arrested include a pharmacist, nursing assitants, a respiratory therapist, a pharmacy technician and even people who worked in the laundry room, Coleman said. No doctors were charged.<br /><br />Earlier today, medical center public affairs officer Mary Ann Goodman confirmed an investigation was taking place.<br /><br />"The medical center is fully cooperating with authorities," she said.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 18 Aug 2011 17:19:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/17-21-arrested-at-va-hospital-for-illegal-drug-activity.aspx</guid></item><item><title>IN HONOR OF SDPD Officer Jeremy Henwood; Always hate to lose a great one like this!</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/16-in-honor-of-sdpd-officer-jeremy-henwood-always-hate-to-lose-a-great-one-like-this.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/16/strollalaw1_120x90.jpg" title="IN HONOR OF SDPD Officer Jeremy Henwood; Always hate to lose a great one like this!" alt="IN HONOR OF SDPD Officer Jeremy Henwood; Always hate to lose a great one like this!" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />IN HONOR OF SDPD Officer Jeremy Henwood<br /><br />SAN DIEGO &#8212; A surveillance video at a City Heights McDonald&#8217;s shows the poignant encounter between a San Diego police officer and local boy minutes before the officer was shot and killed by a suicidal gunman.<br /><br />The Aug. 6 tape, which police released Tuesday, shows Officer Jeremy Henwood walking up to the counter at 5:24 p.m. He appears to take awhile deciding what to order. Moments later, a boy sidles up to the counter beside him and appears to look at his police belt full of equipment. The boy smiles as he and the officer exchange words. Henwood buys the boy cookies along with a meal for himself, all the while talking to the boy.<br /><br />Four minutes later, the officer was shot while driving east on University Avenue near 45th Street. Police found the McDonald&#8217;s bag in his patrol car, the food inside still warm. Authorities said the gunman, Dejon White, 23, had come behind the officer&#8217;s car and flashed his headlights. The officer, possibly thinking the motorist was in trouble, pulled into the next lane. White drove alongside him, pointed a shotgun out the window and fired at Henwood, striking him in the head.&nbsp; White was killed about 30 minutes later when he went to grab a shotgun and was killed in a hail of police gunfire. He had left behind a two-page suicide note in his nearby apartment.<br /><br />At Henwood&#8217;s funeral Friday, friends and family spoke about his kindness and generosity.<br />"That was Jeremy. He&#8217;d make you smile, then he&#8217;d buy you lunch," his younger brother, Robbie, said. The boy, 13, told the news website Speak City Heights that he&#8217;d asked the officer for 10 cents for a cookie. According to the website, he said the officer asked him about his goals, and then told the boy as they shared a cookie, &#8216;Hard work in life will do you well."<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 18 Aug 2011 15:15:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/16-in-honor-of-sdpd-officer-jeremy-henwood-always-hate-to-lose-a-great-one-like-this.aspx</guid></item><item><title>The countdown to August 26, 2011 has begun. Yeah, More Casey Anthony(place sarcasm here)!</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/15-the-countdown-to-august-26-2011-has-begun-yeah-more-casey-anthonyplace-sarcasm-here.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/15/strolla_bc_art-2_120x90.jpg" title="The countdown to August 26, 2011 has begun. Yeah, More Casey Anthony(place sarcasm here)!" alt="The countdown to August 26, 2011 has begun. Yeah, More Casey Anthony(place sarcasm here)!" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />(CNN) -- Casey Anthony's attorneys will appeal the order that she must serve one year of supervised probation on a check-fraud conviction, her lead attorney confirmed Monday.<br />Orange County Chief Judge Belvin Perry Jr. ruled Friday that Anthony has to report to a state Department of Corrections facility in Orlando no later than noon on August 26.<br />Anthony, who was acquitted in July of murder charges in the 2008 death of her 2-year-old daughter, Caylee, had previously been convicted of felony check fraud for stealing a checkbook from a friend and writing five checks for $644.25.<br />Orange County Superior Court Judge Stan Strickland ordered Anthony to serve the year of probation following her release in the charges involving her daughter, but a clerk misunderstood the judge and prepared an order that the judge later signed instructing that Anthony would serve the probation while in custody awaiting trial.<br />The order was updated on Aug. 1 adding the words "upon release."<br />Anthony's attorneys contend she cannot be made to serve probation if she served it while in custody under a signed order from Strickland, saying it would violate constitutional protections against having to serve a sentence twice for the same offense.<br />The motion, filed by attorney J. Cheney Mason, calls the amended documents "a fraudulently filed product of a previously disqualified judge."<br />Strickland presided over Anthony's murder case until April 2010, when he pulled out of the case after the defense accused him of being a "self-aggrandizing media hound" who was biased against her.<br />Perry said Strickland's verbal order was binding, and that "to bar the court from correcting a clerical mistake and to permit the defendant to serve probation in jail while awaiting trial on a totally unrelated charge without any possibility of complying with the terms of the probation order would clearly thwart society's interest in extracting a full, fair and just punishment for a crime."<br />He said ordering Anthony to serve probation on the check-fraud case does not violate double jeopardy, since the check fraud crimes that Anthony was convicted of and those she was acquitted of are distinct. He also said Anthony couldn't have complied with the probation terms while in jail.<br />Anthony's probation order requires her to live in Orange County unless the probation office allows her to leave. She has received no such approval, a corrections department spokeswoman has said.<br />CNN's Emily Barsh contributed to this report.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 15 Aug 2011 15:20:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/15-the-countdown-to-august-26-2011-has-begun-yeah-more-casey-anthonyplace-sarcasm-here.aspx</guid></item><item><title>FWC officers using social media to help with poachers who brag with photos and status updates.  It only took them watching TV!</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/14-fwc-officers-using-social-media-to-help-with-poachers-who-brag-with-photos-and-status-updates-it-only-took-them-watching-tv.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/14/full-cthouse_120x90.jpg" title="FWC officers using social media to help with poachers who brag with photos and status updates.  It only took them watching TV!" alt="FWC officers using social media to help with poachers who brag with photos and status updates.  It only took them watching TV!" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />"After spearing a snook in the Intracoastal Waterway in June, Brian Spuler proudly posted photos of his catch on Facebook. Days later, he was arrested and fined $350.<br />Florida wildlife officials have gone undercover on Facebook and other social media sites to catch poachers like Spuler showing off pictures of their illegal catch. And it often is the lawbreaker's online friends who get a cash reward for tipping them off.<br />"People go on Facebook bragging about their exploits. They think they're protected," said Lt. George Wilson, who oversees the Internet Crimes Unit of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.<br />The urge to brag on the Internet has proven valuable to investigators, who use the online photos, videos and comments as evidence. They create fake Facebook accounts to befriend fishermen and hunters or, most often, access photos through a tipster's account.<br />The growing number of Internet-related calls led the commission to create the unit in late 2009. The commission reviews about 10 complaints a week in South Florida about people who post images of hunting and fishing out of season or breaking other wildlife laws.<br />In 2010, the Internet Crimes Unit made 177 arrests and gave 92 warnings.<br />In June, wildlife officers arrested Spuler, 18, of Port St. Lucie, who posted a photo of himself with a snook that appeared to have been killed with a spear gun. Snook fishing in Florida is highly regulated, and it's illegal to take the popular game fish out of season or capture it with a net, spear or trap.<br />FWC investigators identified people in the photos with a tipster's help, called them up and tracked down the alleged law breaker. Spuler, originally from Boca Raton, met with officers and admitted spearing the snook , according to his arrest report. He was charged with taking snook out of season and taking snook by an illegal method.<br />The teen, who gave the fish to his mother for dinner, pleaded no contest on Friday to taking snook out of season, and a Martin County judge imposed the fine and gave him six months probation. Prosecutors dropped the charge of taking snook by an illegal method.<br />Spuler said investigators violated his privacy, and that he didn't know it was illegal to fish snook at the time. It's wrong for officers to go snooping through photos on private Facebook accounts, he said, although he thinks he allowed public access to his photos.<br />"Every day I see people posting pictures of marijuana and cocaine, and I get in trouble for this?" he asked.<br />Wildlife officials pay about $100 to tipsters for each misdemeanor conviction, wildlife officials said. Fines imposed on law breakers often are used to pay future rewards. In 2010, FWC paid $23,550 in rewards to people who tipped them off to wildlife violations.<br />"Sometimes [tipsters] are motivated by money or because they don't like someone," said FWC Investigator Jon Garzaniti, who works for the Internet Crimes Unit in West Palm Beach. Others are genuinely concerned about the wildlife, he said.<br />Local anglers have mixed feelings about the commission's strategy. Tom Twyford, president of the West Palm Beach Fishing Club, said he hopes wildlife officers will focus on flagrant crimes and take it easy on people who don't know the law.<br />"It's easy to get confused," Twyford said. "Florida's laws are lengthy and complex."<br />Ken Sorensen, president of the Boynton Beach Fishing Club, said he applauds the agency's efforts and thinks officers should go after violators however they can.<br />It's upsetting to see people disrespect wildlife laws, he said. He often sees people upload photos to Facebook of undersized fish. The arrests will set an example and prevent others from doing the same.<br />"They broke the law &#8230; they deserve it," he said. "If I had a friend breaking the law I would turn him in, too."<br />Officers with the Internet Crimes Unit use their discretion, sometimes giving warnings instead of making arrests, Garzaniti said. It depends on how serious the crime is and whether a person realized it was illegal. Many times, social media evidence helps them figure out a person's intention.<br />The unit also investigates black-market wildlife sales on sites such as Craigslist. On July 11, officers arrested a Fort Lauderdale man on charges of illegal possession, sale and caging of a marmoset monkey. The 26-year-old man allegedly tried to sell the native South African monkey online without a permit for $2,700.<br />One flagrant poaching case in April 2010 involved a Martin County man who allegedly boasted on Facebook about shooting an alligator with a rifle in his backyard. Someone who saw his photos on Facebook turned him in, according to an FWC arrest report.<br />The photos on Tom Doyle's profile show his son, rifle in hand, sitting on an alligator about 9 or 10 feet long. In the Facebook comments, Doyle, 49, said he shot the gator in the eye. It's illegal to shoot an alligator in Florida, and only a licensed trapper or agent can kill it with a bang stick on designated lands during hunting season.<br /><br />"Wish my first one could have been a legal kill," Doyle commented beneath one of the photos.<br />When wildlife officers knocked on his door, Doyle told them he killed the alligator with a bang stick because it was threatening his goats, the arrest report said. One of the officers pointed out his Facebook comment that he shot it. Doyle said he was only bragging.<br />Doyle later showed officers the alligator meat packed in plastic bags, buried at the bottom of a freezer.<br />The meat was seized and Doyle was arrested for illegal possession of an American alligator. He pleaded no contest and was fined $480.<br />In a telephone interview, Doyle said he killed the alligator during the legal hunting season. He still posts photos of his hunting catches on Facebook, he said, and has no opinion about officers accessing his private profile.<br />"I don't know if they should be doing that or not," he said.<br />On June 17, a Facebook complaint led to the arrest of a Tampa man who admitted to killing a deer and an alligator with an AK-47, according to FWC. Kyle Edwards, 21, reportedly told investigators he was trying out his new assault rifle.<br />Edwards allegedly admitted posting the photos on Facebook, and investigators later found the two animal carcasses, the agency said. He was cited for hunting deer during closed season and illegally taking an American alligator.<br />The widespread visibility of social media has made it harder for violators to hide, and easier for investigators to find them, Garzaniti said.<br />"Some people might have 2,000 friends on Facebook and not realize it," he said. "If we're lucky, their page is set to public.""<br /><br /><br /><br />Copyright 2011 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 02 Aug 2011 16:17:32 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/14-fwc-officers-using-social-media-to-help-with-poachers-who-brag-with-photos-and-status-updates-it-only-took-them-watching-tv.aspx</guid></item><item><title>SUPREME COURT Administrative Suspension based on "Lawful Arrest".</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/13-supreme-court-administrative-suspension-based-on-lawful-arrest.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/13/strolla-law-907-1_120x90.jpg" title="SUPREME COURT Administrative Suspension based on "Lawful Arrest"." alt="SUPREME COURT Administrative Suspension based on "Lawful Arrest"." align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" /><div class="caselawcontent searchable-content"><center><h3 style="font-size: 20px"></h3><strong><p><h3>FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAY SAFETY AND MOTOR VEHICLES v. HERNANDEZ</h3><p>&nbsp;</p><p><p>FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAY SAFETY AND MOTOR VEHICLES, Petitioner, v. William HERNANDEZ, Respondent.</p><p>Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, Petitioner, v. George McLaughlin, Respondent.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>Nos. SC08&#8211;2330, SC08&#8211;2394.</p><p>-- June 09, 2011 </strong></center><br /><p>Robin F. Lotane, General Counsel, Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles and Douglas D. Sunshine, Assistant General Counsel, Tallahassee, FL, and Heather Rose Cramer, Assistant General Counsel, Lake Worth, FL, for Petitioner.Susan Z. Cohen and David M. Robbins, Jacksonville, FL, for Respondent.Tony C. Dodds, Lakeland, FL, for Respondent.Michael Ufferman, Chair, Florida Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, Tallahassee, FL, as Amicus Curiae. </p><!-- main body --><p>The issue we address is whether an individual's driver's license can be suspended by the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles (DHSMV) under section 322.2615, Florida Statutes (2006),<a href="http://caselaw.findlaw.com/fl-supreme-court/1570685.html#footnote_1" name="footnote_ref_1"><sup><font color="#006699">1</font></sup></a> for the refusal to submit to a test of his or her breath-alcohol level where the refusal is not incident to a lawful arrest and, if not, whether the hearing officer has authority to review whether the refusal was incident to a lawful arrest.<a href="http://caselaw.findlaw.com/fl-supreme-court/1570685.html#footnote_2" name="footnote_ref_2"><sup><font color="#006699">2</font></sup></a> In the cases under review, Hernandez v. Department of Highway Safety &amp; Motor Vehicles, 995 So.2d 1077 (Fla. 1st DCA 2008), and McLaughlin v. Department of Highway Safety &amp; Motor Vehicles, 2 So.3d 988 (Fla. 2d DCA 2008), the First and Second District Courts of Appeal reached opposite conclusions as to the scope of the hearing officer's authority to review the suspension.<a href="http://caselaw.findlaw.com/fl-supreme-court/1570685.html#footnote_3" name="footnote_ref_3"><sup><font color="#006699">3</font></sup></a> The First District also certified the following questions of great public importance to this Court in Hernandez, 995 So.2d at 1080:</p><p>Can the DHSMV suspend a driver's license for refusal to submit to a breath test, if the refusal is not incident to a lawful arrest? If not, is DHSMV hearing officer required to address the lawfulness of the arrest as part of the review process?</p><p>We have jurisdiction based on express and direct conflict and based upon a certified question of great public importance. See art. V, &#167; 3(b)(3), 3(b)(4), Fla. Const.</p><p>Because the certified question involves two separate but related issues, we rephrase them and answer them separately. The first certified question as rephrased is:</p><p>Can the DHSMV suspend a driver's license under section 322.2615, Florida Statutes, for refusal to submit to a breath test if the refusal is not incident to a lawful arrest?</p><p>The second certified question as rephrased is:</p><p>Is the issue of whether the refusal was incident to a lawful arrest within the allowable scope of review of a DHSMV hearing officer in a proceeding to determine if sufficient cause exists to sustain the suspension of a driver's license under section 322.2615, Florida Statutes, for refusal to submit to a breath test?</p><p>We agree with the First District in Hernandez, 995 So.2d at 1079, and the Fifth District Court of Appeal in Department of Highway Safety &amp; Motor Vehicles v. Pelham, 979 So.2d 304, 305&#8211;08 (Fla. 5th DCA 2008), review denied, 984 So.2d 519 (Fla.2008), that a suspension can be predicated upon a refusal to take a breath test, but only if the refusal is incident to a lawful arrest. We further agree that the driver whose license is suspended should be able to challenge whether the refusal was incident to a lawful arrest in the proceedings before the hearing officer, who is reviewing the legality of the suspension. We thus answer the first certified question in the negative and the second certified question in the affirmative, approve Hernandez, approve of the reasoning in Pelham, and quash McLaughlin.</p><p>FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY</p><p>In Hernandez, William Hernandez challenged the suspension of his driver's license for refusal to submit to a breath test, asserting that the request for a breath test was not incident to a lawful arrest. In the hearing to determine if the suspension should be sustained, the DHSMV hearing officer did not consider whether the request that Hernandez submit to a breath test was made incident to a lawful arrest. Hernandez, 995 So.2d at 1078. Accordingly, the DHSMV sustained the suspension of the driver's license. Upon petition for writ of certiorari to the circuit court, which is the authorized statutory route for review of a decision made by the DHSMV, see &#167; 322.2615(13), Fla. Stat., the circuit court agreed that the legality of the arrest was outside of the scope of consideration for the hearing officer under section 322.2615(7), Florida Statutes (2007). The First District, relying on the reasoning of the Fifth District in Pelham, concluded that section 322.2615(7)(b), Florida Statutes, governing proceedings to review license suspensions must be read together with section 316.1932(1)(a)1.a., Florida Statutes (2007), Florida's implied consent law, because under the &#8220;statutory scheme, the lawfulness of the suspension is central to any determination that there is &#8216;sufficient cause&#8217; to &#8216;sustain&#8217; &#8220; the suspension. Hernandez, 995 So.2d 1079 (quoting Pelham, 979 So.2d at 308).</p><p>The Second District in McLaughlin engaged in an opposite statutory analysis regarding the scope of the hearing officer's authority based on its determination that the plain language of section 322.2615(7)(b) limits the hearing officer's scope of review to the three specific determinations set forth in the statute, none of which includes consideration of whether the person was placed under lawful arrest. McLaughlin, 2 So.3d at 991&#8211;92. The Second District in McLaughlin never specifically addressed whether the DHSMV could suspend a driver's license for refusal to submit to a breath test if the refusal was not incident to a lawful arrest.</p><p>ANALYSIS</p><p>Because the two rephrased certified questions present issues of statutory interpretation, our review is de novo. Heart of Adoptions, Inc. v. J.A., 963 So.2d 189, 194 (Fla.2007). &#8220;Legislative intent guides statutory analysis, and to discern that intent we must look first to the language of the statute and its plain meaning.&#8221; Fla. Dep't of Children &amp; Family Servs. v. P.E., 14 So.3d 228, 234 (Fla.2009). In this regard, &#8220;legislative intent is determined primarily from the text&#8221; of the statute. Cont'l Cas. Co. v. Ryan, Inc. E., 974 So.2d 368, 374 (Fla.2008).</p><p>As this Court has previously announced:</p><p>When the statute is clear and unambiguous, courts will not look behind the statute's plain language for legislative intent or resort to rules of statutory construction to ascertain intent. In such instance, the statute's plain and ordinary meaning must control, unless this leads to an unreasonable result or a result clearly contrary to legislative intent.</p><p>Koile v. State, 934 So.2d 1226, 1230&#8211;31 (Fla.2006) (citation omitted) (quoting Daniels v. Fla. Dep't of Health, 898 So.2d 61, 64 (Fla.2005)). &#8220;However, if the statutory intent is unclear from the plain language of the statute, then &#8216;we apply rules of statutory construction and explore legislative history to determine legislative intent.&#8217; &#8220; Id. at 1231 (quoting BellSouth Telecomms., Inc. v. Meeks, 863 So.2d 287, 289 (Fla.2003)). Among the basic principles of statutory construction is that statutes relating to the same subject matter must be read together, or in pari materia. Fla. Dep't of State v. Martin, 916 So.2d 763, 768 (Fla.2005) (&#8220;The doctrine of in pari materia is a principle of statutory construction that requires that statutes relating to the same subject or object be construed together to harmonize the statutes and to give effect to the Legislature's intent.&#8221;).</p><p>I. Answering the First Rephrased Certified Question:</p><p>The DHSMV cannot suspend a driver's license under section 322.2615, Florida Statutes, for refusal to submit to a breath test if the refusal is not incident to a lawful arrest.</p><p>Florida law does not require an individual to submit to a breath alcohol-detection test simply because that person possesses a driver's license. The obligation to submit to breath-alcohol testing emanates from section 316.1932, Florida Statutes (2006),<a href="http://caselaw.findlaw.com/fl-supreme-court/1570685.html#footnote_4" name="footnote_ref_4"><sup><font color="#006699">4</font></sup></a> commonly known as the implied consent law. See State v. Miles, 775 So.2d 950, 952 (Fla.2000) (recognizing section 316 .1932, Florida Statutes, as part of Florida's &#8220;implied consent law&#8221;).<a href="http://caselaw.findlaw.com/fl-supreme-court/1570685.html#footnote_5" name="footnote_ref_5"><sup><font color="#006699">5</font></sup></a> The statute provides that any person driving within Florida is deemed to have consented to testing to determine &#8220;the alcoholic content of his or her blood or breath if the person is lawfully arrested for any offense allegedly committed while the person was driving or was in actual physical control of a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcoholic beverages.&#8221; &#167; 316.1932(1)(a)1.a., Fla. Stat. (emphasis added). The statute further provides that the test &#8220;must be incidental to a lawful arrest and administered at the request of a law enforcement officer who has reasonable cause to believe such person was driving or was in actual physical control of the motor vehicle within this state while under the influence of alcoholic beverages.&#8221; Id. (emphasis added). Accordingly, the Legislature has authorized the administration of a breath test only if it is incident to a lawful arrest and based on probable cause to believe that the person driving was under the influence of alcoholic beverages. As stated by the Fifth District in Pelham, 979 So.2d at 306, &#8220;It necessarily follows that an individual does not violate the Implied Consent Law when he or she refuses to take a test that is not incidental to a lawful arrest.&#8221;</p><p>Further, under the implied consent law, the person must be advised of the punishment for refusing to submit to a test:</p><p>The person shall be told that his or her failure to submit to any lawful test of his or her breath will result in the suspension of the person's privilege to operate a motor vehicle for a period of 1 year for a first refusal, or for a period of 18 months if the driving privilege of such person has been previously suspended as a result of a refusal to submit to such a test or tests, and shall also be told that if he or she refuses to submit to a lawful test of his or her breath and his or her driving privilege has been previously suspended for a prior refusal to submit to a lawful test of his or her breath, urine, or blood, he or she commits a misdemeanor in addition to any other penalties.</p><p>&#167; 316.1932(1)(a)1.a., Fla. Stat. (emphasis added).</p><p>Section 322.2615, Florida Statutes, the statute before us in this case governing the suspension of an individual's driver's license and the right to review of such a suspension, authorizes a law enforcement officer, on behalf of the DHSMV, to suspend the driver's license of any person who refuses to submit to a &#8220;lawful &#8221; breath test. &#167; 322.2615(1)(b)1.a., Fla. Stat. (emphasis added). Specifically, the statute requires that a notice of suspension be sent to the driver to inform him or her as follows:</p><p>The driver refused to submit to a lawful breath, blood, or urine test and his or her driving privilege is suspended for a period of 1 year for a first refusal or for a period of 18 months if his or her driving privilege has been previously suspended as a result of a refusal to submit to such a test&#8228;</p><p>Id. (emphasis added). Despite using the adjective &#8220;lawful&#8221; in section 322.2615, nowhere in that section does the Legislature define or provide notice as to what constitutes a lawful breath-alcohol test. The only location in the Florida Statutes where the definition can be found is section 316.1932(1)(a), which provides that a driver is only required to submit to an breath-alcohol test if the driver is (1) operating a motor vehicle within this state and (2) subject to a lawful arrest for (3) an offense allegedly committed while driving or in the actual physical control of a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcoholic beverages. Nowhere else does the Legislature mandate the circumstances under which an individual must submit to a breath-alcohol test or else face suspension of his or her driver's license under section 322.2615, Florida Statutes, in this context.<a href="http://caselaw.findlaw.com/fl-supreme-court/1570685.html#footnote_6" name="footnote_ref_6"><sup><font color="#006699">6</font></sup></a> </p><p>The only definition of a lawful breath test under section 322.2615 is found in section 316.1932(1)(a). For that reason, the statutes must be read in pari materia. In other words, section 316.1932 is the only statute that defines the parameters of a lawful breath-alcohol test in section 322.2615. If the statutes are not read in pari materia, then there is no notice as to when citizens are required to submit to the test or else face suspension of their driver's licenses. Accordingly, we hold that a &#8220;lawful test&#8221; under section 322.2615, Florida Statutes, is one that is requested incident to a lawful arrest, as specified in section 316.1932, Florida Statutes.</p><p>For this reason, we conclude that the DHSMV cannot suspend a driver's license under section 322.2615 for refusal to submit to a breath test under section 316.1932 if the refusal is not incident to a lawful arrest. Thus, we answer the first rephrased certified question in the negative.</p><p>II. Answering the Second Rephrased Certified Question and Resolving the Certified Conflict:</p><p>The issue of whether the refusal was incident to a lawful arrest is within the allowable scope of review of a DHSMV hearing officer in a proceeding to determine if sufficient cause exists to sustain the suspension of a driver's license under section 322.2615, Florida Statutes, for refusal to submit to a breath-alcohol test.</p><p>This second question is related to the first question and concerns the method of challenging a suspension for refusal to submit to a breath test. After an individual's driver's license is suspended under section 322.2615 for refusing to submit to a breath test under section 316.1932, that section entitles the driver to request a formal or informal review of the validity of the suspension. &#167; 322.2615(1)(b)3., Fla. Stat.; see also &#167;&#167; 322.2615(4), (6), Fla. Stat. The statute defines what the hearing officer may review in either a formal or informal review hearing:</p><p>(7) In a formal review hearing under subsection (6) or an informal review hearing under subsection (4), the hearing officer shall determine by a preponderance of the evidence whether sufficient cause exists to sustain, amend, or invalidate the suspension. The scope of the review shall be limited to the following issues:</p><p>&#8228;</p><p>(b) If the license was suspended for refusal to submit to a breath, blood, or urine test:</p><p>1. Whether the law enforcement officer had probable cause to believe that the person whose license was suspended was driving or in actual physical control of a motor vehicle in this state while under the influence of alcoholic beverages or chemical or controlled substances.</p><p>2. Whether the person whose license was suspended refused to submit to any such test after being requested to do so by a law enforcement officer or correctional officer.</p><p>3. Whether the person whose license was suspended was told that if he or she refused to submit to such test his or her privilege to operate a motor vehicle would be suspended for a period of 1 year or, in the case of a second or subsequent refusal, for a period of 18 months.</p><p>&#167; 322.2615(7), Fla. Stat.</p><p>In the prior version of the statute, the hearing officer's scope of review included consideration of the additional issue of &#8220;[w]hether the person was placed under lawful arrest for a violation of s. 316.193.&#8221; &#167; 322.2615(7)(b)(2), Fla. Stat. (2005), amended by ch.2006&#8211;290, &#167; 45, Laws of Fla. Because the Legislature deleted this statutory language and made other deletions in the amended statute, the DHSMV contends that the issue of whether a person was placed under a lawful arrest is no longer a consideration in the suspension process.</p><p>As noted by the circuit court in McLaughlin, although the Legislature's removal of the &#8220;lawful arrest&#8221; requirement from section 322.2615(7) may seem clear, the Legislature left that requirement in the implied consent law. McLaughlin v. Fla. Dep't of Highway Safety &amp; Motor Vehicles, No.2007&#8211;CA&#8211;001672, order at 4 (Fla. 10th Cir.Ct. Sept. 18, 2007) (order denying petition for writ of certiorari) (stating that the Legislature had created an &#8220;unnerving quagmire&#8221;). We agree with the First and Fifth District Courts of Appeal that section 322.2615 cannot be read in isolation but must be read in concert with section 316.1932, which defines the scope of the driver's obligation to submit to a breath test. As the Fifth District cogently explained:</p><p>Section 322.2615 does not establish any obligation on the part of a driver to take a test upon the request of law enforcement; it only establishes consequences for refusal. Section 316.1932 is what creates and defines the scope of the obligation, and its mandate is certain: the test must be incident to a lawful arrest. These statutes cannot be construed in isolation, therefore, as Petitioner urges, because they are interdependent. Instead, we must consider them in pari materia. See Ferguson v. State, 377 So.2d 709, 710 (Fla.1979) (basic rule of statutory construction that statutes which relate to the same or to a closely related subject or object are regarded as in pari materia and should be construed together and compared with each other). When we do, the conclusion is inescapable that a suspension may not be predicated on refusal to take a test that is the product of a unlawful arrest.</p><p>Pelham, 979 So.2d at 307 (emphasis added).</p><p>We further agree with the statutory construction analysis utilized by the Fifth District in construing section 322.2615(7):</p><p>Nor have we overlooked the language of subsection 322.2615(7), which purports to &#8220;limit&#8221; the scope of review to three issues. The first issue, probable cause, is a concept that is often inextricably intertwined with the lawfulness of the detention as it is in this case. The second issue directs the hearing officer to address whether the driver &#8220;refused to submit to any such test.&#8221; (Emphasis added). &#167; 322.2615(7)(b)2., Fla. Stat. We construe &#8220;any such test&#8221; to refer to the &#8220;lawful&#8221; test that the suspension must be &#8220;pursuant to.&#8221; The final issue, the provision of notice, relates to the form of notice mandated by the same statute, which too refers to a &#8220;lawful&#8221; test. Therefore, we do not construe this so-called limitation on the hearing officer's scope of review to nullify the statute's directive that the hearing officer &#8220;determine &#8228; whether sufficient cause exists to sustain, amend, or invalidate the suspension.&#8221; &#167; 322.2615(7), Fla. Stat. (2007). Under the statutory scheme, the lawfulness of the suspension is central to any determination that there is &#8220;sufficient cause&#8221; to &#8220;sustain&#8221; it.</p><p>Id. at 307&#8211;08 (citation omitted).</p><p>To fail to read these related statutes together would also have serious constitutional implications. A driver whose license is unlawfully suspended must have a means to challenge that suspension, and the only means by which a driver can challenge the suspension of his or her driver's license for failure to submit to a breath test is through section 322.2615.</p><p>Whether denominated a &#8220;right&#8221; or a &#8220;privilege,&#8221; the loss of a driver's license is most definitely an extreme hardship. In Bell v. Burson, 402 U.S. 535, 539, 91 S.Ct. 1586, 29 L.Ed.2d 90 (1971), the United States Supreme Court stated: &#8220;Once licenses are issued &#8228; their continued possession may become essential in the pursuit of a livelihood.&#8221; In the almost forty years since Bell was decided, driving has become an increasingly important part of American life and a near necessity in obtaining and maintaining employment. The Bell Court explained:</p><p>Suspension of issued licenses thus involves state action that adjudicates important interests of the licensees. In such cases the licenses are not to be taken away without that procedural due process required by the Fourteenth Amendment. This is but an application of the general proposition that relevant constitutional restraints limit state power to terminate an entitlement whether the entitlement is denominated a &#8220;right&#8221; or a &#8220;privilege.&#8221;</p><p>Id. (emphasis added) (citations omitted).</p><p>With regard to due process rights, in N.C. v. Anderson, 882 So.2d 990, 993 (Fla.2004), this Court stated:</p><p>The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that no state shall &#8220;deprive any person of life, liberty or property, without due process of law.&#8221; This same protection is provided in the Florida Constitution. See Art. I, &#167; 9, Fla. Const. &#8220;Procedural due process serves as a vehicle to ensure fair treatment through the proper administration of justice where substantive rights are at issue.&#8221; Department of Law Enforcement v. Real Property, 588 So.2d 957, 960 (Fla.1991). Procedural due process requires both reasonable notice and a meaningful opportunity to be heard. See id. The notice must be &#8220;reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency of the action and afford them an opportunity to present their objections. The notice must be of such nature as reasonably to convey the required information, and it must afford a reasonable time for those interested to make their appearance.&#8221; Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank &amp; Trust Co., 339 U.S. 306, 314, 70 S.Ct. 652, 94 L.Ed. 865 (1950).</p><p>(Emphasis added.) Here, the interpretation of the statutes urged by DHSMV would allow the DHSMV to suspend a driver's license without reasonable notice and no possibility of a meaningful process to review the lawfulness of the suspension.</p><p>A reading of section 322.2615 to prohibit review of an unlawful license suspension would lead to an unreasonable result that would render the statutory scheme constitutionally infirm. We have held that &#8220;[s]tatutes, as a rule, &#8216;will not be interpreted so as to yield an absurd result.&#8217; &#8220; State v. Iacovone, 660 So.2d 1371, 1373 (Fla.1995) (quoting Williams v. State, 492 So.2d 1051, 1054 (Fla.1986)). Further, &#8220;[t]his Court has an obligation to give a statute a constitutional construction where such a construction is possible.&#8221; Tyne v. Time Warner Entm't Co., 901 So.2d 802, 810 (Fla.2005). We conclude that the only reading of the statute that avoids an unreasonable and unconstitutional result is to construe sections 322.2615 and 322.1932 in pari materia and allow the hearing officer to review whether the test was administered incident to a lawful arrest.</p><p>We conclude, as did the First and Fifth Districts, that reading the two statutes together leads to the conclusion that there must be a means for challenging the legality of the suspension when the request for a breath test was not incident to a lawful arrest. Once section 322.2615 and section 316.1932 are read together, it becomes clear that under the statutory scheme, &#8220;sufficient cause&#8221; to sustain the suspension under section 322.2615(7) and &#8220;whether the person whose license was suspended refused to submit to any such test&#8221; require that the hearing officer make the determination of whether the test was administered incident to a lawful arrest, as required by section 316.1932, Florida Statutes.</p><p>Accordingly, we answer the second rephrased certified question in the affirmative. Because the Legislature has mandated that an individual need only consent to a test under section 316.1932 if the test is administered incident to a lawful arrest and has provided the procedure for challenging a suspension for a refusal, an individual must be able to challenge the legality of the suspension if the refusal was not incident to a lawful arrest. To read the statute otherwise would produce an unreasonable&#8212;and unconstitutional&#8212;result.</p><p>The dissent contends that licensed drivers are chargeable with knowledge of the laws and that the lawfulness of a suspension will be upheld without regard to whether the suspension was incident to a lawful arrest. However, the dissent overlooks the fact that a driver is on notice that he or she must consent to a breath test or else face suspension of his or her driver's license only if the test is administered incident to a lawful arrest. That is what the Legislature has expressly provided for in section 316.1932. To remove that consideration from the hearing officer's review would allow illegal suspensions without any possibility of a meaningful process to challenge the legality of the suspension. Under the dissent's view, an illegal suspension that is contrary to the implied consent statute would be automatically upheld.</p><p>The dissent also asserts that our reading of the statute abrogates legislative intent. To the contrary, such a reading is necessary in order to save the legislative scheme from constitutional infirmity and the unreasonable result that while a driver need only submit to a breath test incident to a lawful arrest, the absence of that legislatively imposed requirement cannot be challenged. Under the dissent's view, police may suspend an individual's driver's license on a whim without following the requirements of law set forth by the Legislature.</p><p>CONCLUSION</p><p>For the foregoing reasons, we answer the first rephrased certified question in the negative and hold that the DHSMV cannot suspend a driver's license for refusal to submit to a breath test if the refusal is not incident to a lawful arrest. We answer the second rephrased certified question in the affirmative and hold that the issue of whether the refusal was incident to a lawful arrest is within the allowable scope of review of the DHSMV hearing officer. Accordingly, we quash the decision of the Second District in McLaughlin. We approve the decision of the First District in Hernandez and the reasoning of the Fifth District in Pelham.</p><p>It is so ordered.</p><p>I concur in the result here because to do otherwise would leave the respondents in the untenable position of having a right with no remedy. It is unmistakably clear to me that a person's privilege to drive on the highways of this State can only be taken away if he refuses a test of his blood alcohol level and that refusal is incident to a lawful arrest. In other words, a driver's license cannot lawfully be suspended unless the request to take the test and the refusal are incident to a lawful arrest. In situations, such as the ones before us, where there has been no opportunity to judicially test the lawfulness of the arrest and the hearing officer cannot inquire into that issue, a person's license will nonetheless be suspended without the critical issue of lawful arrest having ever been determined. Thus, I agree that the driver must have an opportunity to challenge the issue prior to suspension of his license.</p><p>However, I cannot concur in the majority's statutory construction that the hearing officer is statutorily authorized to determine the lawfulness of the arrest. But I acknowledge that there must be a mechanism by which a driver can challenge the lawfulness of the arrest. Without such a method, the statutory scheme would be unconstitutional.</p><p>I would adopt the reasoning of the Second District in McLaughlin v. Department of Highway Safety &amp; Motor Vehicles, 2 So.3d 988 (Fla. 2d DCA 2008), and accordingly answer the rephrased first certified question in the affirmative and the second rephrased certified question in the negative. The contrary view adopted by the majority here effectively rewrites the text of section 322.2615(7), Florida Statutes (2006), to expand the scope of the hearing officer's review beyond the ambit unequivocally laid down in the statute.</p><p>The other statutory provisions relied upon by the majority were adopted by the Legislature prior to the adoption of chapter 2006&#8211;290, section 45, Laws of Florida, which removed from the hearing officer's scope of review the issue of whether the license holder &#8220;was placed under lawful arrest for a violation of s. 316.193.&#8221; &#8220;[W]hen two statutes are in conflict, the later promulgated statute should prevail as the last expression of legislative intent.&#8221; McKendry v. State, 641 So.2d 45, 46 (Fla.1994).</p><p>Section 322.2615(7) expressly limits the issues which may be considered by the hearing officer in a proceeding challenging an administrative suspension. The majority transgresses the limits set forth in the text by reading back into section 322.2615(7) the provision repealed by the Legislature in 2006 which permitted the hearing officer to consider whether the suspension was incident to a &#8220;lawful arrest for a violation of s. 316.193.&#8221; A more direct abrogation of legislative intent is hard to imagine.</p><p>In analyzing the issue of constitutionality&#8212;an issue not addressed in either of the decisions on review&#8212;the majority fails to acknowledge that with the adoption of chapter 2006&#8211;290, section 45, Laws of Florida, the Legislature clearly provided that an administrative suspension may not be invalidated on the ground that the license holder had not been &#8220;placed under lawful arrest for a violation of s. 316.193.&#8221; Contrary to the majority's reasoning, the legislative limitation of the grounds for challenging an administrative suspension does not result in authorizing the Department &#8220;to suspend a driver's license without reasonable notice and no possibility of meaningful process to review the lawfulness of the suspension.&#8221; Majority op. at 14. Licensed drivers are chargeable with knowledge of the laws promulgated by the Legislature. They are therefore on notice of the limited grounds for challenging an administrative suspension and that the lawfulness of a suspension will be upheld without regard to whether the suspension was incident to a lawful arrest for a violation of section 316.193.</p><p>The majority fails to explain why procedural due process precludes the Legislature from restricting the substantive grounds on which an administrative suspension may be invalidated. Neither the respondents nor the majority have provided any basis for concluding that it is unconstitutional for the Legislature to authorize administrative suspension of a license when the license holder has not been subjected to a lawful arrest for a violation of section 316.193.</p><p>PER CURIAM.</p><p>PARIENTE, LEWIS, and PERRY, JJ., concur.QUINCE, J., concurs in result only with an opinion.CANADY, C.J., dissents with an opinion, in which POLSTON and LABARGA, JJ., concur.POLSTON and LABARGA, JJ., concur.</p><p>&nbsp;</p></div><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 22 Jul 2011 18:42:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/13-supreme-court-administrative-suspension-based-on-lawful-arrest.aspx</guid></item><item><title>CASEY ANTHONY: TO TESTIFY OR NOT TO TESTIFY</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/12-casey-anthony-to-testify-or-not-to-testify.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/12/corystrollabanner1_120x90.jpg" title="CASEY ANTHONY: TO TESTIFY OR NOT TO TESTIFY" alt="CASEY ANTHONY: TO TESTIFY OR NOT TO TESTIFY" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" /><div>How on earth can the defense team call her as a witness when they filed a motion that she is not competent to testify or help aid in her defense?&nbsp; Moments away will be the final decision for the defense!<br /></div><br />As a defense attorney, I am thoroughly confused how counsel can tell the Court she is not competent, but then act like they are calling her to the stand.&nbsp; As their final witness nontheless!&nbsp; A good defense must always start strong and end stronger.&nbsp; This is going to be like watching a trainwreck, I don't want to look, but I really&nbsp;want to see what happens.&nbsp; I almost want to be&nbsp;sworn in&nbsp;as an Assistant State Attorney again so I could cross examine her!&nbsp; I would do it for free.<br /><br />Either way it is a tough charge to prove with the evidence presented, firsty degree murder that is.&nbsp; My opinion, guilty of aggravated child neglect and manslughter.&nbsp;&nbsp;To be continued...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 30 Jun 2011 17:23:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/12-casey-anthony-to-testify-or-not-to-testify.aspx</guid></item><item><title>CASEY ANTHONY JUNE 22 TRIAL UPDATE, FAMILIAR DEFENSE AS HER CELLMATE</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/11-casey-anthony-june-22-trial-update-familiar-defense-as-her-cellmate.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/11/gavel_120x90.jpg" title="CASEY ANTHONY JUNE 22 TRIAL UPDATE, FAMILIAR DEFENSE AS HER CELLMATE" alt="CASEY ANTHONY JUNE 22 TRIAL UPDATE, FAMILIAR DEFENSE AS HER CELLMATE" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" /><p>(CNN) -- Prosecutors in the Casey Anthony murder trial said Tuesday they are looking into information regarding a woman who at one point was incarcerated with Anthony, and whose child died in a way similar to the way Anthony's defense says her 2-year-old daughter Caylee died.</p><p>The matter was mentioned in a conversation regarding discovery items provided to the defense after the jurors in Anthony's murder trial left the Orlando courtroom for lunch.</p><p>April Whalen's child died in a pool and the child's body was discovered by the child's grandfather, prosecutor Linda Drane Burdick told Orange County Chief Judge Belvin Perry Jr.</p><p>Whalen says she never spoke with Anthony, but did not know whether Anthony may have talked to other inmates, Burdick said. "It's being explored whether there was indirect contact," she said. The information came from a citizen who called the Orange County Sheriff's Office late last week, suggesting the two could have been in contact, Burdick said.</p><p>In response to a question from Perry, Burdick said she does not currently plan for Whalen to testify, but the information could become relevant.</p><p>Whalen told CNN's sister network HLN she never met Casey Anthony during the few days she was in jail for driving with a suspended license and has nothing to do with the case. </p><p>According to the Orlando Sentinel newspaper, Whalen's 15-month-old son, Isaiah Whalen, drowned in a backyard pool on Christmas Day 2007. After finding him in the pool, the boy's grandfather performed CPR and called 911, Burdick said in court Tuesday.</p><p>Casey Anthony, 25, is charged with seven counts in her daughter's death, including first-degree murder. If convicted, she could face the death penalty.</p><p>Prosecutors allege Anthony used chloroform to render her daughter unconscious, then used duct tape to cover her nose and mouth, suffocating her. Caylee's remains, prosecutors allege, were then put into Anthony's car trunk and eventually disposed of. The girl's skeletal remains were found in a wooded field on December 11, 2008, nearly six months after her family last reported having seen her.</p><p>Defense attorneys say Caylee was not murdered, but that she accidentally drowned in the family pool on June 16, 2008, the day she was last reported to have been seen. They argue that Anthony and her father, George Anthony, panicked and covered up the death. George Anthony has rejected that scenario in his testimony.</p><p>Caylee was not reported missing to police until July 15, 2008, when Casey Anthony's mother, Cindy, tracked down her daughter and demanded answers regarding Caylee's whereabouts.</p><p>Allen Moore, a spokesman for the Orange County Sheriff's Office, said Whalen was in the same dormitory as Anthony for five days, from June 4 through June 8, 2009. There are no jail records, investigations or reports that indicate any contact occurred between the two, he said.</p><p>Records show Whalen pleaded guilty to receiving money from a pawnbroker by false verification and was sentenced in August 2009 to six months in jail.</p><p>A Dutch forensic scientist also testified Tuesday that given even a small amount of DNA, it would be possible to extract a DNA profile from the duct tape covering the mouth portion of Caylee's skeletal remains.</p><p>But DNA expert Richard Eikelenboom testified that he did not ask to test the duct tape, although he said he offered to investigate. Perry barred defense attorney Jose Baez from asking if the state did not want Eikelenboom to take possession of the duct tape to test it.</p><p>Eikelenboom testified about "low copy number" DNA, a technique by which small samples of DNA are amplified and copied in an effort to obtain a full profile.</p><p>He said that, when tape is used to cover a person's mouth, it is possible the sticky side of the tape could contain skin cells from the face as well as DNA from the mouth. However, he told Assistant State Attorney Jeff Ashton, factors such as heat and water have "a very detrimental effect" on DNA and it would be difficult to determine a profile from tape that, as in this case, had been exposed to the elements for as long as six months.</p><p>An FBI examiner previously testified that DNA testing on the tape was inconclusive, but a possible indication of DNA there did not appear to match that of Caylee, Casey Anthony or George Anthony.</p><p>Eikelenboom told jurors he previously worked on the Tim Masters case in Colorado. Masters was convicted in 1999 of a 1987 murder, but was freed in 2008 after Eikelenboom and his wife discovered new DNA evidence.</p><p>Eikelenboom said that the forensics company his wife founded, which he joined in 2005, received international attention after his work in the Masters case.</p><p>Also Tuesday, Marcus Wise, an analytical chemist from Tennessee's Oak Ridge National Laboratory, testified that, while testing on carpet from Anthony's trunk showed the presence of chloroform, a test to determine how much chloroform was present would have been meaningless, as chloroform is a "volatile chemical" that evaporates, much like gasoline,</p><p>Asked what effect a closed trunk would have on that, Wise said it would not slow the chemical's volatility but might make it more difficult for the chemical to escape the trunk.</p><p>Arpad Vass, another research scientist at the national laboratory, testified earlier in the trial the amount of chloroform found in the trunk was "shockingly high." Wise told Ashton on Tuesday that the "relative abundance" of chloroform was "very unusual to me."</p><p>Wise said that, when he tested air samples from the trunk, he found nothing, "but my experience with many gas sampling bags is that chemicals you put in those tend to diffuse out over a few days." He said he was not surprised the testing did not show the presence of chloroform.</p><p>Baez attempted through questioning to cast doubt on the lab's protocols and on the testing procedures used, as well as to suggest that Wise was seeking attention and funding for one of his projects. </p><p>Earlier in the day, a forensic botanist testified Caylee's remains could have been at the site where they were found -- less than a mile from her grandparents' home -- for as little as two weeks, based on plant evidence found there.</p><p>"I don't know exactly when" the remains were placed there, Bock said. "My best guess is what I have presented today."</p><p>Ashton introduced into evidence a photo of Caylee's skull, showing leaf matter and debris that had accumulated up to the lower portion of the eye sockets. He asked Bock if that could have occurred in just two weeks.</p><p>"If these leaves are, in fact, the level that has fallen since the skull has been there, then clearly the skull has been there for a lot longer than two weeks, wouldn't you agree?" Ashton asked.</p><p>"Given your hypothesis that it had lain there undisturbed all that time, the answer would be yes," Bock acknowledged. She told Ashton she could not say for sure if it was possible the skull could have sunk into the leaf litter.</p><p>As the photo of the skull was shown in the courtroom, Anthony looked downward with her mouth pressed to the back of her hand.</p><p>Bock also told jurors on Tuesday that fragments found on and in Casey Anthony's car did not match the vegetation at the scene where the remains were found.</p><p>Meanwhile, wrangling between the prosecution and the defense continued Tuesday outside the presence of the jury.</p><p>Eikelenboom submitted an affidavit, but did not write a report outlining the opinions he would testify to, in violation of an order issued in December by Perry. Perry called Eikelenboom to the stand without the jury present Tuesday and questioned him closely about whether he had ever been told such a report was required. Eikelenboom said he had not.</p><p>Perry ruled a "willful" and "substantial" violation had taken place by the defense.</p><p>Ashton told Perry he took a deposition from Eikelenboom on Monday afternoon and did not object to his testifying, but asked that a portion of his testimony -- his opinion that DNA is recoverable from fluids associated with human decomposition -- not be allowed without a hearing on whether it should be admissible. The opinion, Ashton said, is not based on research, but on Eikelenboom's own anecdotal evidence.</p><p>Baez argued against it, but Perry agreed with Ashton, saying that at least until a hearing can be held, Eikelenboom cannot testify about that matter. Perry told the attorneys that "since it looks like we're going to be doing this for the next two weeks," they can schedule a hearing on whether that testimony can be admitted if they want. "I will not permanently shut the door," the judge said.</p><p>Baez complained to Perry on Monday that Ashton deliberately refused to take a deposition from Eikelenboom on Saturday. Ashton told the judge that Baez had sent Eikelenboom to his office with a half-page report that "indicated nothing, essentially," leaving him with little for questioning.</p><p>Ashton also recommended Tuesday that Perry proceed with contempt of court proceedings against Baez at the conclusion of the trial -- something the judge has threatened to do.</p><p>On Monday, the judge abruptly canceled court for the day after scolding both sides for continued "gamesmanship," ruling that neither Eikelenboom nor forensic anthropologist William Rodriguez could testify.</p><p>Rodriguez had planned to testify Saturday about duct tape found near Caylee's skeletal remains and a controversial video that prosecutors say proves that a piece of duct tape could have been the murder weapon.</p><p>But Rodriguez's opinions were not contained in his report filed with the court and weren't shared with prosecutors, another violation of the December order, according to the judge. Perry ordered him off the stand, calling the omission "quite intentional." Rodriguez has not returned to the witness stand. </p><p>Perry warned any further deliberate violations of his orders to reveal evidence and opinions to opposing attorneys could result in the exclusion of that evidence from the trial.</p><p>That is an extreme step that has not yet been upheld in Florida courts, but Perry said he would be willing to take the action "at the cost of doing this all over again" should the violations continue.</p><p>The trial entered its fifth week Monday. Perry told jurors that the trial will go only until about noon Wednesday, adding that he has a meeting at 1 p.m. concerning state trial court budgeting.</p><p>Perry also made good on his Saturday threat to hold court longer; testimony on Tuesday lasted until 6 p.m. instead of the usual 5 p.m<br /></p><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 22 Jun 2011 18:20:46 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/11-casey-anthony-june-22-trial-update-familiar-defense-as-her-cellmate.aspx</guid></item><item><title>MAN ROBS A BANK FOR $1 AND MEDICAL CARE</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/10-man-robs-a-bank-for-1-and-medical-care.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/10/strolla-law-907_120x90.jpg" title="MAN ROBS A BANK FOR $1 AND MEDICAL CARE" alt="MAN ROBS A BANK FOR $1 AND MEDICAL CARE" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" /><p>Man&nbsp;jailed in Gastonia, N.C. on charges of larceny after&nbsp;robbing a Bank for $1 so he could get health care in prison. Richard James Verone handed a female teller a note demanding the money and claiming that he had a gun, according to the police report.&nbsp; Then waited for police to arrive on the sofa!&nbsp;&nbsp;He&nbsp;told the teller, 'I'll be sitting right over here, on the chair, waiting for the police,". <br /><br />Richard James Verone, age 57,&nbsp;apparently robbed a bank for a total of $1.&nbsp; This&nbsp;crime was committed all in an attempt to get health care.&nbsp; Apparently he believed if he went to prison he would get free healthcare, as he could not afford private health care.&nbsp; After taking the $1,&nbsp;he just&nbsp;waited for the police. </p><p>A bank teller explained to the 911 dispoatcher that, "He's sitting on the sofa as you walk in the front door,".&nbsp; Ultimately the police did arrive and arrest Verone exactly as decribed,&nbsp;sitting on the sofa.&nbsp;&nbsp;In addition, it should be noted that he was&nbsp;completely unarmed.&nbsp;&nbsp; Verone said he only asked for $1 to&nbsp;prove that his intentions were for medical reasons and&nbsp;not financial gain, according to news reports and ABC News.&nbsp;&nbsp;<br /><br />Having a growth in his body,&nbsp;ruptured disks in his back&nbsp;and&nbsp;unemployed, Verone hoped a&nbsp;prison term&nbsp;would&nbsp;provide him the health&nbsp;services he requires.&nbsp; "I'm sort of a logical person and that was my logic, what I came up with," Verone told reporters. "If it is called manipulation, then out of necessity because I need medical care, then I guess I am manipulating the courts to get medical care." </p><p>Unfortunately for this gentleman,&nbsp;the charge of unarmed&nbsp;petty theft&nbsp;in North Carolina&nbsp;is likely to keep Verone in the local county jail at worst, not prison in which he had hoped!&nbsp; </p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 21 Jun 2011 18:43:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/10-man-robs-a-bank-for-1-and-medical-care.aspx</guid></item><item><title>CASEY ANTHONY TRIAL UPDATE,  JUNE 8, 2011</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/9-casey-anthony-trial-update-june-8-2011.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/9/strolla_lawnbc-web1_120x90.jpg" title="CASEY ANTHONY TRIAL UPDATE,  JUNE 8, 2011" alt="CASEY ANTHONY TRIAL UPDATE,  JUNE 8, 2011" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" />(CNN) -- Someone conducted keyword searches on "chloroform" using a desktop computer located in the home Casey Anthony shared with her parents, a computer examiner testified Wednesday in Anthony's capital murder trial.<br /><br />The searches were found in the "deleted" or "unallocated space" portion of the computer's hard drive, Detective Sandra Osborne of the Orange County Sheriff's Office testified, meaning they had been deleted.&nbsp; However, she told jurors, deleted material remains on a computer's hard drive and can be retrieved until it is overwritten by new data. It had not been overwritten on the Anthonys' computer, she said, and "a complete Internet history" was obtained. Osborne said she turned the data over to her sergeant, who is an expert at analyzing such material.<br /><br />Anthony, 25, faces seven counts in the death of her 2-year-old daughter, Caylee, including first-degree murder, aggravated child abuse and misleading investigators. If convicted, she could face the death penalty.<br />The toddler's family last saw her on June 16, 2008, but no one alerted police until July 15, when the girl's maternal grandmother tracked down the suspect and demanded answers. <br /><br />Prosecutors allege Anthony used chloroform on her daughter and suffocated her by putting duct tape over the little girl's mouth and nose. They allege Anthony put her daughter's body in her car trunk before disposing of it. Caylee's skeletal remains were found in December 2008, less than a mile from the home of Anthony's parents.&nbsp; Anthony has pleaded not guilty and denied having anything to do with her daughter's death. Defense attorney Jose Baez has said that when all the facts are known, it will become clear his client is innocent.<br /><br />On cross-examination, Osborne told Baez that while there were two user-created profiles on the computer -- an "owner" profile and a profile called "Casey" -- she could not tell who performed the searches.&nbsp; She also testified she found no reference to chloroform on a computer belonging to Ricardo Morales, Anthony's former boyfriend. Shown a photo Morales earlier admitted posting on his MySpace page featuring a couple with the caption, "Win her over with chloroform," Osborne said either it had been deleted and overwritten or posted from another computer. <br />She said a keyword search would not necessarily have located the picture, since the keyword was embedded in pixels in the picture. Morales earlier testified he posted the photo as a joke.&nbsp; Osborne said she also was asked to find any records on the computer relating to a Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez. Anthony told authorities Gonzalez, who had been Caylee's nanny for years, abducted her.&nbsp;&nbsp;Osborne testified she found searches for Gonzalez on people search sites, Google and high school class reunion sites, along with the social networking site MySpace. All of those searches were conducted on July 16, 2008 -- the day after Caylee was reported missing to authorities, she testified.&nbsp; But Osborne said she found no searches for Gonzalez before that date, another blow to Anthony's claims to authorities that she had been frantically searching for Gonzalez and her daughter during the month before police were notified Caylee was missing.<br />Anthony's former boyfriend, friends and acquaintances who saw her during that time recalled her shopping, eating out, going to parties and hitting nightclubs, but all of them testified she never mentioned her missing daughter and none of them noticed any change in her demeanor. <br /><br />Her mother testified that Anthony had moved out of her parents' home about the time Caylee went missing, offering little in the way of explanation, and that when she inquired after Caylee, she was told she was with her nanny.<br />Police were never able to find the nanny. They did find a woman named Zenaida Gonzalez, who denied ever meeting Anthony or Caylee and later sued for defamation.&nbsp; Earlier Wednesday, jurors heard testimony that a second cadaver dog alerted to the potential scent of human remains in the backyard of the Anthony home, but -- like the first dog -- failed to do so again once land in that area was disturbed.&nbsp; Within three to four minutes of being given a command to search in the yard, "I saw there was an area of interest he kept going back to and sniffing pretty hard," Osceola County, Florida, sheriff's Sgt. Kristin Brewer said of her dog, Bones. The dog made a second lap around the backyard and then gave his final alert -- sitting down, she said.&nbsp; The alert was within 6 to 8 feet of that made the same day, July 17, 2008, by another cadaver dog, named Gerus, Brewer said -- although she did not find that out until afterward.&nbsp; She said she and Bones returned to the Anthony home the following day, but several crime scene units were working there and "a lot of dirt, mulch, pavers ... changed the landscape quite a bit."&nbsp; Bones did not alert to any locations in the yard on the second search, she said. Gerus also did not alert the second day, Gerus' handler, Orange County sheriff's Deputy Jason Forgey, testified Tuesday.&nbsp; Gerus also alerted to the smell of human remains in the trunk of Anthony's car, Forgey testified Tuesday. When the dog passed around Anthony's white Pontiac Sunfire on July 17, 2008, "he started indicating in the rear of the vehicle," Forgey said. "I could tell he was working something."&nbsp; After the trunk was opened, Gerus put his front paws inside and then lay down, signaling that he had detected the scent of remains.<br /><br />Forgey explained the conflicting results in the Anthony backyard by saying that he believed Gerus alerted to a scent on the surface of the land. Once technicians disturbed the surface, he said, the scent was diminished "where the dog wouldn't find it. It was gone at that point."&nbsp; On cross-examination, however, Forgey said he does not know the real reason behind the conflicting alerts. Still, he said, "in every single time (Gerus has) had an alert besides this case, he's had a find," that is, he found remains.&nbsp; Brewer offered a similar explanation on Wednesday. "Whatever he was alerting to could have been moved or destroyed or dissipated because of all the work that had been done," she said, "or they may just not have dug enough to find what was below the surface."&nbsp; A crime scene investigator, the operator of a towing company and members of Anthony's family all have testified they smelled a bad odor coming from Anthony's car after it was found abandoned in a parking lot on June 27, 2008, and then towed four days later.&nbsp; A bag of trash found in the trunk, which had been sitting there for weeks during a Florida summer, has been suggested as a possible source of the odor. But Forgey told Burdick his dog does not alert on trash, and has been trained around garbage.&nbsp; Forgey told Baez that he's smelled human remains on numerous occasions and "I smelled it clear as day" in Anthony's car.<br /><br />Also Tuesday, FBI forensic chemist Michael Rickenbach testified he analyzed pieces of Anthony's trunk liner, carpet and parts of the spare tire cover, among other items.&nbsp; On those, he said, chloroform "residue" was found, but it was at low levels. But he did not want to offer specific levels, saying it would not be appropriate because he conducted qualitative testing, confirming chloroform's presence, rather than quantitative testing, which would detect its level. <br />Under questioning from prosecutor Jeff Ashton, Rickenbach said the samples were sent to him in a cardboard box, not a sealed container, which could have allowed some of the chloroform to evaporate, lowering the levels present. Having the car trunk open for a time might also lower the levels, he said.&nbsp; On Monday, Arpad Vass, a senior research scientist at Tennessee's Oak Ridge National Laboratory, testified that the presence of chloroform on a carpet sample from the trunk was found at a "shockingly high" level -- far beyond what normally would be seen in environmental samples.<br />Both Vass and Rickenbach tested the carpet inside the trunk. However, Vass, who is not a chemist, was attempting to find compounds associated with human decomposition. Rickenbach was specifically testing for the presence of chloroform.&nbsp; Earlier Tuesday, crime scene technician Gerardo Bloise testified about the bag of trash in the trunk. Asked what the trash smelled like, Bloise said it smelled like garbage. He told jurors it did not smell the same as the other odor in the trunk.&nbsp; The trash bag held items including food wrappers, soft drink cans, pieces of an empty pizza box and napkins, Bloise testified. He said some of the items were wet when he received them and he put them in a "drying room" -- a common procedure for wet evidence.&nbsp; On Monday, Vass told jurors in the Orlando courtroom that the presence of a decomposing human body is the only plausible explanation for the odor in Anthony's trunk and the results found in forensic testing. <br /><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 08 Jun 2011 18:20:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/9-casey-anthony-trial-update-june-8-2011.aspx</guid></item><item><title>SEAL OR EXPUNGE YOUR FLORIDA CRIMINAL ARREST</title><link>http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/8-seal-or-expunge-your-florida-criminal-arrest.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://ibdata.intellibuilder.net/ib-strollalaw/files/Blog/23/8/strolla_bc_art-1_120x90.jpg" title="SEAL OR EXPUNGE YOUR FLORIDA CRIMINAL ARREST" alt="SEAL OR EXPUNGE YOUR FLORIDA CRIMINAL ARREST" align="left" style="margin-right:10px;" /><p>A criminal record may sometimes prove to be a wall between the person and the opportunities which can lead&nbsp;to a better future. If you have a criminal history, you may have the privilege to get it sealed and/or expunged. Sealing and/or expunging&nbsp;a record is the process of removing the criminal arrest record pertaining to you from&nbsp;review by the public. However,&nbsp;a "sealed"&nbsp;record may not completely disappear and may still be reviewed under very limited circumstances; in most instances it requires a Court order to unseal records.&nbsp;An expungement cannot be viewed, even under a Court's order.&nbsp; An expungement acts like a "legal eraser", and all files related to that single arrest are ordered destroyed.&nbsp; Florida Department of Law Enforcement provides a service through which certain criminal records can be sealed or expunged. To qualify for sealment, a person must not have&nbsp;had any prior criminal record sealed, and may only seal an arrest record that did not result in a criminal conviction, including a "withhold of adjudication".&nbsp; Contact Cory Strolla P.A.&nbsp;to find out if your are eligible under Florida Law for this relief.&nbsp; To qualify for an expungement, the above pre-conditions must still be apply, but the case must have ended with either no criminal charges filed, or the State dropping the charges.<br /><br />Prior to petitioning the Court to seal or expunge&nbsp;a criminal arrest&nbsp;record, a certificate of eligibility from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement must be obtained. FDLE charges $75 for this application. You must first obtain and submit to FDLE a set of fingerprints and an application attested by the prosecuting authority. &nbsp;A certified copy of the disposition order of the case to be sealed or expunged must also be submitted to FDLE.&nbsp; Thereafter, once the FDLE certificate is issued, a petition for sealing or expunging&nbsp;the record is presented to the&nbsp;jurisdictional court and state attorney's office together with an appropriate statutory affidavit from the petitioner.&nbsp;A copy must also be filed with the original arresting agency.<br /><br />The entire process can take&nbsp;up to six months from my experiences.&nbsp;This is due to delays in both&nbsp;FDLE and the State Attorney's Office.&nbsp;Attorneys have no control over this, and can be frustrating to our clients. After the order of sealing or expungement&nbsp;is granted, certified copies&nbsp;will either be mailed out by the Clerk of Court or can&nbsp;be purchased from the clerk of the court for distribution to the relevant law enforcement agencies who will be affected by the order. This can be different for every jurisdictional county.<br /><br />If you have been arrested for a crime you were not convicted of, and you do not have a conviction for any past crime, you may be eligible for this relief.&nbsp; Contact The Law Offices of Cory Strolla PA to inquire.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br />&nbsp;</p><p><a href="http://www.viestly.com">Distributed by Viestly</a></p>]]></description><dc:creator>Cory Strolla</dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 31 May 2011 15:47:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.strollalaw.com/blog-23/8-seal-or-expunge-your-florida-criminal-arrest.aspx</guid></item></channel></rss>
