To report a crime or any suspicious activity in your neighborhood, call the Lee County Sheriff’s Office at 477-1000 or you can remain anonymous and call Crime Stoppers at 332-5555 or 1-800-780-TIPS.

? Thanksgiving shopper arrested on grand theft charge

? 2 arrested in Thanksgiving shopping spree — in home

? Bonita Springs man falls victim to bogus e-mail requesting money

? Bonita family’s Thanksgiving argument ends with arrest after woman throws piggy bank at sister

? Thieves break through drywall to get into Comcast office to steal cash

Drug arrests

? Eric Christian Sparkman, 31, of the 4300 block of 22nd Place S.W., Golden Gate, was charged with felony possession of an opium derivative, possession of narcotic paraphernalia (a syringe), and driving with his license is revoked, second offense, after he was arrested Thursday night at a Dumpster behind an East Naples shopping center. It was a month after he’d been released from prison after serving a roughly 1½-year sentence for four drug convictions. Sparkman told him he didn’t want to go back to prison and was about to flee, reports said, when the deputy grabbed him and handcuffed him.

? Serena Kelly, 30, of the 3000 block of Sandy Lane, East Naples, who was arrested by deputies at 10:22 p.m. Thursday near U.S. 41 and Bayshore Drive after being spotted without seatbelts and trying to hide something between the seats, reports say. Kelly had two warrants for her arrest on charges she violated probation on trespassing and obstruction charges. She told the deputy name was Roberta, reports say, and was charged with providing a false name, possession of an opium derivative, possession of a synthetic narcotic, possession of drug paraphernalia, and violating probation, after a deputy found oxycodone and methadone in a pill holder inside her purse.

? Andrew James Litteral, 27, of the 1700 block of 41st Street, Naples, was arrested Wednesday by Lee deputies near U.S. 41 South and Kenwood Avenue in Fort Myers. He was charged with selling opium or a derivative.

? A 15-year-old boy who lives in the 7300 block of Coolidge Road, Fort Myers, was arrested Wednesday by Lee deputies near U.S. 41 South and San Carlos Boulevard in Fort Myers. He was charged with possession of paraphernalia and two counts of possession of more than 20 grams of a controlled substance without a prescription.

? Joshua Charles Martell, 19, of the 22000 block of Fountain Lakes Boulevard, Estero, was arrested Thursday by Lee deputies in Lee County. He was charged with possession of less than 20 grams of marijuana.

Battery arrests

? Alyssia Michele Currington, 26, of Cape Coral, was arrested by deputies shortly after 12 a.m. Thursday after she and her boyfriend fought over who was going to drive home from Coastland Center mall in Naples. She left him there, but felt bad and returned to pick him up. But reports say they continued arguing, he got out and walked toward a gas station, where she grabbed his shirt, kicked a cigar out of his hand, and pushed him.

DUI arrests

? Benjamin Emanuel Kolb, 21, of the 1200 block of Cypress Woods Drive, Naples, was stopped by Naples police at 2:13 a.m. Thursday shortly after he sat at a flashing yellow light at 8th Street South and Third Avenue South, preventing other vehicles from moving.

? Gloria Ann Kleis, 52, of the 1100 block of Forest Mere Drive, Bonita Springs, was arrested by Collier deputies just before 1 a.m. Thursday after a report of a woman passed out in her car by a fast-food restaurant near Immokalee Road and U.S. 41 North.

? Lauren Suzanne Demarest, 26, of the 2800 block of Mizzen Way, North Naples, was arrested at 1:38 a.m. Thursday on Goodlette-Frank Road by a deputy who said he saw her car suddenly stop, swerve from lane to lane and speed eastbound on Pine Ridge Road.

? James Edward Doughty, 63, of the 10000 Block of Noah’s Circle, East Naples, was charged with DUI third violation in 10 years after deputies responded to a crash on Thomasson Drive and Lighthouse Lane at 7:30 p.m. Thursday that landed him in a hospital, where he was charged.

? Chelsea Elisa Stephens, 21, whose address was not released because she is the daughter of a Lee County Sheriff’s Office deputy, was arrested Thursday by Fort Myers police in Lee County.

Other arrests

? William James Burgess, 55, of the 17000 block of Boat Club Drive, Fort Myers, was arrested Wednesday by Lee deputies in Lee County. He was arrested on warrants charging him with burglary of a conveyance, grand theft and failure to appear on grand theft and burglary charges.

? A 16-year-old girl who lives in the 8300 block of Coral Drive, Fort Myers, was arrested Thursday by Lee deputies near College Parkway and South Pointe Boulevard in Fort Myers. She was charged with burglary with battery. She is accused of reaching through a car window and punching another girl in the face.

Police Beat is compiled and written by the Naples Daily News staff/ contributors from oral and written reports by Naples police, Collier Sheriff‘s Office, Lee County Sheriff’s Office, Marco police and other agencies. Arrests indicate suspicion of crime, not guilt.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Police Beat: Nov. 26, 2010

1:10 A.M. — When he and his wife moved from Long Island, N.Y., to San Carlos Park 30 years ago, Walter Hoffmann made a point of inviting as many friends and strangers as he could to his family?s Thanksgiving feasts.

?He?d always tell people, ?Come over. We?ll just put another potato in the pot,?? said Missy Hoffman, the wife of one of Walter Hoffmann?s nine children.

Decades later, Missy and Paul Hoffmann are continuing the family?s oversized Turkey Day tradition. After weeks of planning, the Hoffmanns will host 45 people for Thanksgiving dinner tonight at their two-story San Carlos Park home. The gathering, which will include 14 friends who had nowhere else to go, is one of Southwest Florida?s largest Thanksgiving celebrations.

The feast, which will feature 53 pounds of turkey and 30 pounds of mashed potatoes, will have guests seated at eight tables in the dining and living rooms and outdoor patio.

?It?s a lot of work, but when you?re sitting there for dinner and you look around and see those faces, you know why you did it,? Missy Hoffmann said. ?I feel grateful and blessed to have this amount of family that still wants to be together.?

Missy ? whose husband owns San Carlos Roofing, a business that employs her and other family members ? declined to say how much they spent on the meal.
Although Paul and Missy Hoffmann buy and cook the turkeys, other members of the Hoffmann clan chips in to make some of the side dishes.

One family member brings the broccoli cheese casserole, another brings 10 pounds of mashed potatoes, another brings desserts and so on.

?It?s real organized,? said Mario Lopez, a family friend who will bring his wife, two sons (ages 24 and 19) and 10-year-old daughter. ?The Hoffmanns have been doing this for so long they have it down pat.?

Missy said she tries to purchase meal items a little at a time over a span of three weeks so it?s not a huge financial hit.

?Three weeks ago, I saw that green beans were on sale so I bought four cans,? Missy Hoffmann said. ?And I know I?m going to need lots of flour and butter, so I have 10 pounds of butter in my refrigerator right now.?

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The home changes

A large part of the feast?s preparations involves fixing up the family?s two-story home. In order to accommodate 45 chairs and eight tables, the Hoffmanns have to move almost all of the family?s furniture outside.

Today, you?ll find the family?s two living room couches, a recliner chair, a coffee table and an exercise bike on their porch.

?It?s only about a 1,000-square-foot home, so we?re used to squeezing together,? said Keri Harty, Missy Hoffmann?s niece. ?Missy gets a bunch of folding tables, and she has them everywhere.?

Missy likes to say that her Thanksgiving Day feast is held throughout her home.

Guests will be seated at tables in the dining and living rooms and patio. The Hoffmanns plan to leave the living room?s sliding glass doors open so guests outside can be a part of the dinner discussion.

Despite the tight quarters, Harty said her family has few quarrels on Thanksgiving. She said her extended family, almost all of which lives in Lee County, has an unspoken rule not to fight.

?We have everything in our family from super liberal Democrats to super conservative Republicans, and it can get quite heated at some points, but we don?t fight,? Harty said. ?If someone makes you upset, you just walk away, and then we come back and we?re together again.?

Inviting others

Lopez, who has been attending the Hoffmanns? Thanksgiving feasts since 1997, marvels at how well the family interacts and how it continually opens its door to strangers.

Lopez said the Hoffmanns ?adopted? him and his family 13 years ago.

?We moved here from Long Island because my wife got a job down here and we didn?t have any family here so they just adopted us,? Lopez said with a laugh. ?We met through a baseball team that had one of my sons and one of their sons.?

Lopez said the Hoffmanns invite his family for every birthday or holiday celebration, and he rarely turns them down.

?It?s great to have family, especially at this time of year,? Lopez said. ?I came from a big family in Long Island and it?s great to have a big family here in Florida.

?The Hoffmanns are very special people.?

Crowd to converge at Lee County home

11. November 2010 · Comments Off · Categories: Family, Home, News, Tech, Video · Tags: , , , , , , ,

7:39 P.M.The News-Press and news-press.com are following a Lee County gas line explosion on Colonial Boulevard near Treeline and State Road 82 involving a construction worker.

All of TECO?s 8,000 customers in Lee and Collier counties will be without gas for several days as the Tampa-based gas company begins the lengthy process of restoring service.

Company representatives will have to personally visit each customer to cut gas service, company spokesman Rick Morera said. And after they fix the break and return pressure to the lines, technicians must go to each home or business turn the gas valves on and re-ignite pilot lights. The law prohibits customers from igniting the lights themselves.

?This is going to be a difficult and lengthy repair,? Morera said. The company will prioritize hospitals and schools when it begins the restoring service and may bring in help from other companies in the state.

Region-wide service cuts are rare, Morera said, though the company had a similar service interruption in Jupiter in May when more than 10,000 customers lost service for several days.

No one has gas, according to Arturo Brawn, manager at Cantina Laredo off Big Pine Way in the Bell Tower Shoppes.

But, he?s still cooking his enchiladas.

?I still have a full restaurant because the majority of my equipment is electrical,? Brawn said. ?We have stoves and steamers that keep the food hot and we can still make any type of enchilada.?

He said he spoke to the city this evening and was told the issue with would be fixed by the end of the night.

Brawn said the restaurant will be closing at their normal time.

The only hiccup is he?s running out of corn tortillas and will be switching to flour ones soon and they can?t serve steaks because they cannot use the grill.

?I?m at the door asking people, ?where are you going?? we?re the only ones serving food,? Brawn said.

7:27 p.m. update

TECO has confirmed 8,000 customers this evening in Lee and Collier counties are without gas.

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The company doesn?t know how long they?ll be without their supply. They have to assess the damage.

Those customers are commercial and residential, according to a TECO spokesperson.

Several restaurants at Bell Tower Shops are taking a hit in sales after their gas supply was cut.

Restaurants as far south as Bahama Breeze at U.S. 41 and Six Mile Cypress have reported gas outages.

Carrey Smith, a server at Taste of New York, said the impact on business there will be huge.

?All of our customers pretty much left,? Smith said.

The restaurant is still serving cold subs and salads.

Bistro 41 and Blue Pointe both confirmed their gas supply was out, but managers there declined to comment.

Arturo Braun, manager at Cantina Laredo, said the restaurant is managing with electric equipment.

?We?re still open, but we?re serving a limited menu,? he said.

6:49 p.m. update

The Fort Myers Police Department has identified the victim of this afternoon?s construction accident as Mario Santos, 30, of Bonita Springs.

The westbound lanes of Colonial Boulevard are expected to remain closed until midnight. The eastbound lane has reopened. Drivers are asked to avoid the area.

Fort Myers police suggest drivers take Gateway Boulevard or Daniels Parkway.

6:32 p.m. update

Several restaurants at the Bell Tower could not serve hot dishes tonight due to having their gas supply cut off by the explosion. Patrons are advised to call ahead to see when service will be restored.

6:01 p.m. update

After the fire broke out, passerbys in the Publix Plaza gathered to watch the flames.

Most scattered after a couple of hours.

Businesses in the area have not reported any impact as of 4 p.m.

Inside Publix, in the deli section, Nichole Shepherd, 19, of Lehigh Acres said the explosion sounded like a sonic boom that reverberated the walls.

?I didn?t know what it was,? Shepherd said. ?And it seemed like no one else heard it because it gets pretty loud back there.?

It did cause a box of cups to fall from a shelf right in front of one of her co-workers.

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Ken Bennett, fire marshal for the Lehigh
Acres Fire District, said that the best way to address a gas fire was to turn off the gas and let it burn out.

Authorities earlier in the afternoon did just that.

?Believe it or not, unless there?s a hazard nearby that forces you to put it out right away, that?s the safest thing to do,? Bennett said. ?It eventually dies down, once there?s no gas, but in the mean time it?s under a lot of pressure.?

Bennett said it usually takes the flames at least an hour to die down and burn up the fuel.

4:53 p.m. update

The severely injured construction worker jumped from the bulldozer, according to Fort Myers police.

4:45 p.m. update

The eastbound lanes of Colonial Boulevard have reopened. The westbound lanes remain closed.

The seriously injured construction worker is being taken from Lee Memorial to a hospital in Tampa.

4:19 p.m. update

TECO Peoples Gas reports at this time approximately 300 residential and 50 commercial customers are without service. TECO has approximately 3,500 customers in Lee County

Compressed natural gas (CNG) trailers, which will help stabilize pressure on the system, are en route.

3:57 p.m. update

Steve Byrne, a Fort Myers firefighter, said “it sounded like a jet engine. It was pretty intense. When we got there, it was roaring.”

The flames shot up 50 feet or higher when it was burning, he said.

Firefighters were pumping water from a hydrant at the CVS store down the street to a fire truck, which then used the water to help extinguish the blaze.

3:22 p.m. update

Capt. Chris Bevan of the Fort Myers Fire Department said the gas was shut down about 30-60 minutes ago. Now, the fire department is spraying the backhoe with water to make sure everything is out.

Also, the worker who was injured suffered burns to over 50 percent of his body, Bevan said.

3:41 p.m. update

Fort Myers police say a second victim, also a Posen construction worker, was treated and released on scene with minor injuries.

3:22 p.m. update

TECO Peoples Gas reports that the pipeline break has been contained.

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As soon as access can be gained, construction of a bypass around the break will be attempted.

A small number of customers are out of service at this time.

Posen Construction is required to contact OSHA to investigate the fire.

3:04 p.m. update

The injured worker is in critical condition at Lee Memorial Hospital.

Fort Myers police are waiting to notify the construction worker?s family before releasing his identity.

Flames aren’t visible anymore as the fire appears to have been almost completely extinguished. Thick black smoke continues to pour out of the ground where the explosion occurred.

3:02 p.m. update

Lee County transportation director Paul Wingard said Posen employees were mixing stone into the dirt – a vital step in stabilizing the soil below the roadbed.

“There must have been a gas line close to the surface,” Wingard said.

This is not the first accident on the site for Posen.

Posen employee Tom Maines, 58, was injured on the same site in late June after a piece of a crane boom fell on him. Crews were working on the boom on the south side of Colonial Boulevard near the Home Depot, county officials had said.

Lee County hired Posen in March 2009 on a $16.7 million contract to widen the road between Interstate 75 and State Road 82. The company is also widening Summerlin Road as part of a $25.1 million contract with the county.

The Summerlin project is 10 months behind and millions of dollars over budget after crews there were forced to rebuild an overpass and environmental regulators found asbestos chunks in the fill.

The injured construction worker was with Posen Construction, the main contractor on the widening of State Road 82.

Fort Myers police suggest drivers take Gateway Boulevard or Daniels Parkway since Colonial Boulevard is closed.

Russ Reed with FPL came out with another worker to look out for their feeder, which lies just west of the fire that continues spouting off billows of smoke and flames.

“It doesn’t look like it’ll affect it,” Reed said. “But, we’re going to watch it and make sure to keep everybody in service.”

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If the wires burn down, it would directly affected the area locally, which includes the Publix plaza and CVS.

2:50 p.m. update

Kenny Winstead, a witness who was driving by, said he heard the explosion that sounded like a sonic boom.

“God help who was on it,” he said, referring to the backhoe that is completely engulfed in flames.

He said you could still hear hissing from the gas line.

2:47 p.m. update

At 1:46 p.m. today, the Fort Myers Police Department responded to a construction accident near the intersection of State Road 82 and Colonial Boulevard, according to the Fort Myers Police Department. Upon arrival police learned a construction worker on a bulldozer severed a natural gas line and caused an explosion. The construction worker was transported to Lee Memorial Hospital trauma alert. Right now Colonial Boulevard is shutdown between State Road 82 and Treeline Avenue.

The fire department also is on scene. Police expect the road to remain closed while repairs are made to the gas line.

Rick Morera, a spokesman for TECO, a Tampa utility, confirmed that construction equipment pierced an 8-inch gas main. The company doesn?t know how many customers will be affected by the explosion.

A Marine Corps veteran at the Blockbuster video store in the Crossroads Plaza at State Road 82 and Lee/Colonial Boulevard heard the explosion.

“It was like a Humvee blew up,” said Chance Hood, 36, who estimated the explosion occurred about 250 yards away. “We didn’t know what it was.”

Hood said the explosion shook the plaza.

The Lee County Sheriff’s Office is directing traffic. Traffic heading east toward Lehigh Acres is blocked at Colonial Boulevard.

2:26 p.m. update

Motorists are asked to avoid the area of State Road 82 and Colonial Boulevard because of a gas line explosion. Both directions of Colonial are closed starting at Treeline Boulevard. Both directions of State Road 82 are closed at Forum Boulevard and Gateway Boulevard. Both directions of Lee Boulevard are closed at State Road 82.

The Lee County Sheriff?s Office is now assisting the Fort Myers Police
Department with the investigation.

2:08 p.m.update

Reports of heavy equipment hitting a gas line, sparking a fire, have caused Colonial Boulevard to be closed at Treeline to SR 82 both directions. SR 82 is closed between Gateway Blvd and Forum Blvd both directions. The Fort Myers Police Department responding.

This is a developing story. Check back for more updates, photos and video.

Explosion cuts gas service to 8,000

Patty Rojas, 14, stands in front of a whiteboard before a small group of her peers looking at the question she had written on the board.

“Can any of Thailand’s strategies to slow down birth rates and population growth be applied in other countries like the U.S. and China?” she reads. She works through the problem as her fellow students ask her questions.

“The problem is Thailand had a carrying capacity, which means the availability of resources was limited. It’s like when you have a party and you have food for seven people and 200 show up,” she said.

But sometimes the explanation, which includes comparing Thailand’s Population and Community Development Association with U.S. organizations like Planned Parenthood, leave her with more questions.

“This has so much publicity in Thailand. How come this one does not have so much sparkle?” she asked.

Her teacher, Jennifer Gaddis, poses a question back.

“Maybe at this point, the United States doesn’t have the need?” she said.

She might not have all the answers, but Patty’s way of getting to her answer is just one way Collier County is hoping to change the culture at local high schools.

The district is taking a new approach to education for some students by using a national program called AVID. Advancement Via Individual Determination, or AVID, is a college-readiness system designed to increase the number of students who enroll in four-year colleges by focusing on the least-served students in the academic middle.

The formula of the program sounds simple: Raise the expectations of the students and, with supports in place, the students will rise to the challenge.

The purpose of the AVID program is to identify students in Collier County and ensure that they have every opportunity to be college-ready, according to Irene Benfatti, director of advanced students and gifted learners at the Collier County School District.

“It is about giving them the opportunity,” she said. “We don’t know how many students will go to college. … But we want to raise the level of conversation and engagement.”

The program, which is available in several other counties in Florida _ including Lee _ is open to all students, but district officials acknowledge it is directed at students who have potential and who are committed to hard work.

“They have to apply, they have to sign a contract. There are commitments on the part of the parent,” said Benfatti. “You have to jump through some hoops if you want this.”

Krystal Ayres, the district’s AVID co-director and Springboard trainer, said district officials recruited students in middle schools last year at those schools that fed into the four pilot schools. Students must have at least a 2.0 grade point average to participate.

Sarah Bond, co-director of the AVID program and a gifted specialist with the Collier County School District, said the program focuses on the students in the middle.

“We take those students and we front-load them into honors or (Advanced Placement) classes that challenge them. We give them support. They attend tutorial sessions twice a week,” she said.

The program is being piloted this year at four of the district’s high schools: Lely, Golden Gate, Immokalee and Everglades City. About 50 freshmen from each school take part in the program.

As part of the program, students take an AVID elective, which meets during one class period five days a week. On Mondays and Wednesdays, students receive lessons in the AVID curriculum, which includes lessons on handling conflict management and teaching them study skills, like how to take Cornell notes — a note-taking system that condenses and organizes notes.

Tuesdays and Thursdays, students have tutorial sessions where they break into small groups to help each other work through the problems.

“It is not your typical shoulder-to-shoulder training,” said James Briggs, the grant manager for the program. “The student does a presentation of the problem and other students ask questions. The idea is for the student to receive that ah-ha moment without giving them the answer. We want them to arrive at the answer themselves.”

Gaddis, a Lely High School English teacher and one of the AVID co-teachers, said teachers and tutors who volunteer their time to work with the students are trained to take a hands-off approach.

“We’re there to model good questions,” she said. “It’s amazing. These students are 14, 15 years old and they sit and teach each other unaided.”

On Fridays, the classes take field trips to local colleges or have guest speakers come in and talk to them about college or their careers. “We want the students to start making the connection now,” said Benfatti.

Gaddis said sometimes the biggest challenge is getting the students past teenage apathy.

“We want them to care about setting goals and academics,” she said.

Lely High School freshman Sogeily Gadoua, 15, said she wanted to join the AVID program because she thought it could “help me in the long run.”

“I thought it would help me get into college and to be more organized,” said Sogeily, who hopes to attend Dartmouth College when she graduates.

And it is helping. Sogeily said her grades have improved since the start of the semester.

“In my AP class – I have one AP class and the rest are honors – I had a D and I brought it up to a B-plus, almost an A. And I had a C in science, but I brought that up to an A,” she said. “When I started, I would ask random questions. When I saw that I had a D, I took it more seriously and started to ask better questions.”

Lely High School algebra and AVID co-teacher Alan Davis said he has seen a difference in his classes between the AVID students and the general population.

“When I teach algebra, I will see students taking poor notes or no notes at all,” he said. “But David (an AVID student who is in his algebra class) takes the skills he learns here and takes all of these notes. And when the test comes around, he just blows it away.”

Gaddis said the ultimate goal is that what the AVID students are learning becomes a positive shift in school culture.

“By the time these kids are seniors, one-quarter of our students will be in AVID,” she said. “Other teachers are using the Cornell notes.”

While it is too early to draw any conclusions, school officials eagerly anticipate the results.

A shift in culture is the goal, Benfatti said.

“We want to increase the number of students in the system who are into this higher order of thinking,” she said. “We want the kids to be able to get feedback and give thoughtful feedback.”

Nationally, of the 2009 AVID graduates, 92 percent planned to attend college; 60 percent to a four-year college and 32 percent to a two-year college, according to the program’s web site. Since 1990, more than 65,000 students have graduated high school and planned to go to college, according to the web site.

Patty, 14, said she joined the program to get to college so that she can help support her family both here in the United States and in Venezuela.

“I would like to bring more of my family here,” she said, adding she is thinking about attending Ohio State University to study psychology.

While the schools started with freshmen this year, the program will continue with them as sophomores, as juniors and seniors as new classes of freshmen AVID students come up behind them.

Lely High School sophomore Ryan Bessette, 16, who participated in an AVID program at an Orlando middle school before moving to Naples, said he wishes the program was available to more students than freshmen this year.

“It helped me to get organized,” he said. “It improved my grades. I was a C and B student. … It helped me connect with the school, but also get connected with the community because there was a community service piece. I think it prepares you for college life.”

Ryan said although he doesn’t have access to the program, he is still using strategies like the Cornell Notes to help him in high school.

“It stays with you forever,” he said.

Connect with K-12 education policy reporter Katherine Albers at www.naplesnews.com/staff/katherine-albers/.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

School program aims to help more students go to college

27. October 2010 · Comments Off · Categories: Drugs, Family, Home, naples, News · Tags: , , , , , , ,

To report a crime or suspicious activity in your neighborhood, call the Naples Police and Fire Department at 213-4844, the Collier County Sheriff’s Office at 774-4434, the Lee County Sheriff’s Office 239-477-1000 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              239-477-1000      end_of_the_skype_highlighting or the Marco Island Police Department at 389-5050.

? Lee County woman accused of stabbing boyfriend

? 2 men accused of attacking pregnant woman

Flee/elude arrest

? An 18-year-old Golden Gate man was arrested by Collier County Sheriff’s Office deputies Tuesday after fleeing a marked patrol vehicle with activated lights in Golden Gate.

Daniel Rivera Rojas, of the 1800 block of 48th Terrace Southwest, was charged with fleeing and eluding a marked unit after he accelerated to 60 mph to avoid the patrol car on a 25-mph street.

He was also charged with driving with an invalid license, failing to register motor vehicle, and attaching a tag not assigned

Domestic violence arrest

? Jennifer Ann Hicks, 29, of a withheld Golden Gate Estates address, was arrested by Collier deputies at a withheld address Tuesday. She was charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon with no intent to kill and violating her state probation for child neglect.

DUI arrests

? Juan Carlos Buenorodriguez, 38, of the 2000 block of River Reach, East Naples, was arrested by Collier deputies Tuesday at Airport-Pulling Road and Davis Boulevard.

? Kristopher Scott Makocy, 26, of the 9200 block of Pineapple Road, Fort Myers, was arrested Wednesday by Lee deputies near Broadway Avenue and U.S. 41 South in Lee County.

? Bryan C. Scariano,26, of the 19000 block of Casa Verde Way, Fort Myers, was arrested Wednesday by Cape Coral police in Lee County.

? Ryan Richard Solano, 29, of the 3200 block of Pine Ridge Road, North Naples, was arrested by Collier deputies Tuesday at U.S. 41 and Pelican Bay Boulevard South. He was also charged with refusing to take a breath test.

? Timothy M. Thompson, 50, of the 100 block of 14th Street Southwest, Golden Gate Estates, was arrested by Collier deputies Monday at Golden Gate Boulevard and Second Street Southeast.

? Javier Torres De La O, 36, of the 13000 block of Bonita Beach Road, Bonita Springs, was arrested Wednesday by Lee deputies at the jail on Martin Luther King Boulevard in Fort Myers. He was charged with driving while license suspended/second offense and a capias warrant for DUI/third offense.

Drug arrests

? Hersueen V. Pugh, 28, of the 2400 block of Chadwick Circle, Immokalee, was arrested Wednesday by Fort Myers police in Lee County. He was charged with disturbing the peace and possession of less than 20 grams of marijuana.

Other arrests

? Alfred Junior Everett III, 22, of Lehigh Acres, was arrested by Naples police Tuesday at 1900 Ninth Street North. He was charged with possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.

? Julio Cesar Rodriguez, 26, of the 3100 block of Southwest 41st Street, Naples, was arrested Tuesday by Lee deputies near U.S. 41 South and Bonita Beach Road in Bonita Springs. He was charged with carrying a concealed weapon.

Click here to view the Collier County Sheriff’s Office’s Cold Case Facebook page

Police Beat is compiled and written by the Naples Daily News staff/ contributors from oral and written reports by Naples police, Collier Sheriff‘s Office, Lee County Sheriff’s Office, Marco police and other agencies. Arrests indicate suspicion of crime, not guilt.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Police Beat: Oct. 27, 2010

To report a crime or suspicious activity in your neighborhood, call the Naples Police and Fire Department at 213-4844, the Collier County Sheriff’s Office at 774-4434 or the Marco Island Police Department at 389-5050.

? 25-year-old Bonita Springs woman arrested after bar fight

? Lee County man accused of raping family’s babysitter

? Lee County man charged with hosting underage house party

Other arrests

? Danielle Valerie Hutton, 34, of the 3100 block 30th Avenue SE, Golden Gate Estates, was arrested Sunday by Collier deputies at the intersection of Fourth Avenue SE and Everglades Boulevard South. She was charged with criminal mischief of more than $1,000.

? Jessica Nicole Hincapie, 28, of the 15000 block of Upwind Drive, Bonita Springs, was arrested Sunday by Lee deputies in the 21000 block of Stoneybrook Golf Boulevard in Estero. She was charged with disorderly conduct/brawling, fighting.

? Dustin Joseph Tarvin, 20, of the 17000 block of Johnstown Court, Fort Myers, was arrested Saturday by Lee deputies near Miller and Morris Roads in Fort Myers. He was charged with leaving the scene of a crash resulting in property damage.

? Calvin Pettrey, 52, of Painesville, Ohio, was arrested Saturday by Marco Island Police in the 1000 block Anglers Cove in Marco Island. He was charged with burglary.

? Leland Thomas Jr., 44, homeless, was arrested Sunday by Collier deputies in the 200 block Boston Avenue, Immokalee. He was charged with two counts of trespassing and two counts of possession of a harmful new legend drug without a prescription.

? Alfonso Matyises, 38, address unknown, was arrested Saturday by Collier deputies at the Hess station, 11655 Collier Blvd. He was charged with resisting law enforcement, trespassing and theft under $100.

Grand theft arrests

? Douglas Jay Purvis, 22, of the 10000 block of Akron Place, Fort Myers, was arrested Sunday by Lee deputies in Lee County. He was charged with using an anti-shoplifting device and two counts of grand theft.

? Herode St. Pierre, 29, of the 4500 block Coral Palms Lane, Golden Gate, was arrested Sunday by Collier deputies at home. He was charged with grand theft auto, obtaining property by impersonation and fraud by obtaining property worth less than $20,000.

DUI arrests

? Dian K. Lane, 59, of the 28900 block Vermillion Lane, Bonita Springs, was arrested Sunday by Florida Highway Patrol at the North Collier Hospital. She was charged with DUI and damage to property with personal injury after she was involved in a traffic accident at Immokalee Road and Juliet Boulevard.

? Paul D. McCallion, 49, of the 9400 block of Springview Loop, Estero, was arrested Friday by Lee deputies near Stoneybrook Golf Boulevard and Courts in Estero. He was charged with DUI with a blood alcohol content of more than 0.15.

? Claude Esperence, 40, of the 11000 block of Whistlers Cove Boulevard, Naples, was arrested Friday by Florida Highway Patrol troopers. He additionally was charged with refusing to take a DUI test.

? Christopher Michael Lameo, 18, of the 6600 block of Crestridge Loop, Fort Myers, was arrested Sunday by Lee deputies near Six Mile Cypress Parkway and Plantation Road. He was additionally charged with driving while license suspended possession of less than 20 grams of marijuana and possession of alcohol by a person younger than 21 years old.

? Javier Ayala, 33, of the 5000 block of Southwest 2nd Court, Naples, was arrested Sunday by Florida Highway Patrol troopers in Lee County.

? Brian William Markowski, 28, of the 8800 block of Woodgate Manor Court, Fort Myers, was arrested Sunday by Lee deputies near Lakeridge Road and South Cleveland Avenue in Fort Myers.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Police Beat: Oct. 18, 2010

Dr. Richard Linden may look more familiar with rubber gloves on because he's a dentist by trade -- but a rocker by avocation for the Physicians' Talent Show Tuesday to benefit the Neighborhood Health Clinic.

Photo by supplied

Dr. Richard Linden may look more familiar with rubber gloves on because he’s a dentist by trade — but a rocker by avocation for the Physicians’ Talent Show Tuesday to benefit the Neighborhood Health Clinic.

What: Physician’s Talent Show, benefiting the Neighborhood Health Clinic and music scholarships for Steinway Piano Gallery

When: Cocktail and hors d’oeuvres reception with silent auction at 6:30; talent show begins at 7:30

Where: Sugden Community Theatre in Naples

Admission: $75

Information: (239) 498-9884


You may know your doctor’s bedside manner.

But can you also claim to know his song-and-dance routine?

At 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, you’ll have a chance to do that very thing. That’s when the sixth annual Physician’s Talent Show returns to Naples, a one-night-only performance that will give 19 local docs a chance to strut their non-medical stuff on the stage of the Sugden Community Theatre in Naples.

There will be music. There will be magic.

And it all benefits a very good cause: Proceeds from sales of the $75 tickets supports Naples’ not-for-profit Neighborhood Health Clinic, which provides medical services for low-income working Collier County adults, as well as scholarships for students at the Steinway Piano Gallery.

Dr. Millard Brooks, an anesthesiologist with Collier Anesthesia, will present his perennially popular “Billy Ray, the Trailer Trash Magician” character, just as he has done for the past six shows. Billy Ray is not dumb, Brooks explains, not exactly. He’s just a little bit different — and a lot sarcastic.

“I’ve gotten such a great response with him,” Brooks says. “It’s basically comedy magic.”

The character hails from the “piney woods of Southeast Texas,” Brooks says, “where teeth are optional.”

It’s a locale that’s not far from where the good doctor was himself raised, and asked how Billy Ray decided to pursue magic as a profession, Brooks deadpans that it was prompted by a revelation from Billy Ray’s sister: She told him she was getting $50 a trick.

“I will take it to the edge,” Brooks says of his comedy.

What’s not unnecessary is explaining how much fun the show is each year for the doctors. For the physicians, it’s a chance to indulge their creative sides, which may not happen during the course of a regular workday. All have something they enjoy doing that’s outside their normal work, Brooks explains — whether it’s pulling rabbits out of hats or playing golf.

Brooks does not play golf.

“It gives me a chance to be on the stage and do what I really enjoy doing,” Brooks says.

“And they keep wanting me to come back, so I do and I wished I had more opportunities to do it.”

He is the only magician in the show. The majority of the performers are musicians, such as Dr. Martin Cohn, a sleep specialist with the Sleep Disorder Center of Southwest Florida, and Dr. Corey Howard, an internist who focuses primarily on health and fitness.

Cohn has a longtime affection for the clarinet; he grew up in Chicago during the Big Band Era, and as early as age 10, he begged his parents to let him learn.

“The ‘licorice stick’ just struck me as a neat instrument,” Cohn recalled.

Howard plays the tenor sax, and when not practicing medicine, he plays in the rather dubiously named band “Throat Culture.”

Like Cohn, he has a lasting love of music; he actually began his education as a music major in college, and played in New York City in a band with vocalist and former Miss America Vanessa Williams. Medicine eventually won out over music, but he never forgot his first love, and now he likes to play the saxophone for fun and for his family.

The annual talent show benefits the clinic and scholarships, but “it’s also an opportunity to show my kids” what he can do., he says. The plan may be working: He is delighted to report that his son recently abandoned the trumpet in favor of the tenor sax.

Cohn, for his part, will perform in a traditional Jewish music quartet called the Naples Klezmer Revival Band. Joining him will be his fellow band mates Stu Warshauer on violin, Arnold Saslavsky on drums and Jane Galler on guitar. Galler also is the band’s vocalist. The band will play three songs, including Der Heyser Bulgar, which means “The Hot Bulgar Dance.”

The music is danceable, Cohn explained, adding, “We’re going to get the crowd on its feet.”

Cohn isn’t sure why so many doctors seem to have secret inner artists. Perhaps it’s something in the way their brains are wired, he suggests. But he does know it’s rewarding to find an outlet for his passion. It’s also nice to have the applause, he concedes, and he knows most audience members appreciate his efforts.

“People seem to appreciate it, and that’s a good feeling. I don’t get that in medicine. No, I’m just joking,” he says with a laugh.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Local docs rock for charity

6:35 P.M. — SAN JOSE MINE, Chile ? Fresh air and freedom were just hours away today for the first of 33 miners trapped a half-mile underground for 69 days, men whose endurance and unity captivated the world as the Chilean government meticulously prepared their rescue. No one in the history of mining has been trapped so long and survived.

The first miner was expected to be lifted to the surface late today in a custom-made capsule. President Sebastian Pinera was at the mine, waiting to greet him.

“We made a promise to never surrender, and we kept it,” Pinera said at about 5:45 p.m. local time (4:45 p.m. EDT), shortly before two rescue workers were expected to go down to prepare the miners for their trip. The president said the first miner will be brought up about two hours later.

Chile has taken extensive precautions to ensure the miners’ health and privacy, sending down Navy special forces paramedics to prepare them for the trip and using a screen to block the top of the shaft from more than 1,000 journalists at the scene.

The miners will be ushered through an inflatable tunnel, like those used in sports stadiums, to an ambulance for a trip of several hundred yards (meters) to a triage station for an immediate medical check. They will gather with a few family members, in an area also closed to the media, before being transported by helicopter to a hospital.

Each ride up is expected to take about 20 minutes, and authorities expect they will be able to haul up roughly one miner an hour. The rescue of the last miner will end a national crisis that began when a cave-in sealed off the gold and copper mine Aug. 5.

The only media allowed to record them coming out of the shaft will be a government photographer and Chile’s state television channel. Their images will be delayed about 30 seconds or more to prevent the release of anything unexpected.

The worst technical problem that could happen, rescue coordinator Andre Sougarett told The Associated Press, is that “a rock could fall,” potentially jamming the capsule partway up the shaft. But test rides suggest the ride up will be smooth.

(2 of 8)

Panic attacks are the rescuers’ biggest concern. The miners will not be sedated ? they need to be alert in case something goes wrong. If a miner must get out more quickly, rescuers will accelerate the capsule to a maximum 3 meters per second, Health Minister Jaime Manalich said.

Mining Minister Laurence Golborne, whose management of the crisis has made him a media star in Chile, said authorities had already thought of everything.

“There is no need to try to start guessing what could go wrong. We have done that job,” Golborne said. “We have hundreds of different contingencies.”

As for the miners, they were kept busy today making final preparations “to keep their spirits up,” Manalich said. He added that they were doing well: “It remains a paradox ? they’re actually much more relaxed than we are.”

Rescuers finished reinforcing the top of the 2,041-foot (622-meter) escape shaft early Monday, and the 13-foot (four-meter) tall capsule descended flawlessly in test runs.
The white, blue and red capsule ? the biggest of three built by Chilean navy engineers ? was named Phoenix I for the mythical bird that rises from ashes.

The miners will be closely monitored from the moment they’re strapped into the claustrophobic steel tube to be hauled up the smooth-walled tunnel. For the last six hours before surfacing, they’ll drink a special high-calorie liquid diet prepared and donated by NASA, designed to keep them from vomiting as the rescue capsule rotates 10 to 12 times through curves in the 28-inch-diameter escape hole.

Engineers inserted steel piping at the top of the shaft. They stopped sooner than planned after the sleeve became jammed during a probe of the curved top of the hole, which is angled 11 degrees off vertical at its top before plunging like a waterfall.
Drillers had to curve the shaft so that it would pass through “virgin” rock, narrowly avoiding collapsed areas and underground open spaces in the overexploited mine, which had operated since 1885.

As each miner is hauled up, a small video camera in the escape capsule will be trained on his face so rescuers can watch for panic attacks. The miners will wear oxygen masks and have two-way voice communication.

(3 of 8)

Their pulse, skin temperature and respiration rate will be constantly measured through a biomonitor around their abdomens. To prevent blood clotting from the quick ascent, they took aspirin and will wear compression socks.

The miners will also wear sweaters because they’ll experience a shift in climate from about 90 degrees Fahrenheit underground to temperatures hovering near freezing if they emerge at night. Those coming out during daylight hours will wear sunglasses.

Seconds before each miner surfaces, an ambulance-like siren will sound and a light will flash for a full minute. Officials are calling this the Genesis alarm, meant simply to alert doctors that a miner is arriving.

Many steps have been taken to protect the emerging miners from the media.
Photographers and camera operators will be able to see light but little more from a platform set up more than 300 feet (90 meters) away.

After initial medical checks and visits with family members selected by the miners, the men will be airlifted to the regional hospital in Copiapo, roughly a 10-minute ride away. Two floors have been prepared where the miners will receive physical and psychological exams and be kept under observation in a ward as dark as a movie theater.

Chilean air force Lt. Col. Aldo Carbone, the choppers’ squadron commander, said the pilots have night-vision goggles but will not fly unless it is clear of the Pacific Ocean fog that rolls in at night, a notoriously thick, humid blanket Chileans call “the camanchaca.” Night traffic on the mine road was banned as a precaution to keep headlights from interfering with the night-vision goggles, and to keep the road clear for ambulances should they be necessary.

Families were urged to wait and prepare to greet the miners at home after a 48-hour hospital stay.

“In Chile, we have huge families,” Manalich said, joking that if they weren’t stopped, entire football teams of people would crowd into the hospital’s wards. He also said that no cameras or interviews will be allowed until the miners are released, unless the miners expressly desire it.

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Officials have drawn up a secret list of which miners should come out first, but the order could change after paramedics and a mining expert first descend in the capsule to evaluate the men. First out will be the four miners best able to handle any difficulties and tell their comrades what to expect. Then, the 10 who are weakest or suffer from hypertension, diabetes, dental and respiratory infections and skin lesions from the mine’s oppressive humidity.

The first miner to be rescued will be Florencio Avalos, according to his mother, Maria Silva, and uncle Alberto Avalos, who said Pinera told them that.

The last miner out, according the list, will be shift foreman Luiz Urzua, whose leadership was credited for the miners’ survival during the 17 days when they were utterly closed off from the outside world. The men stretched an emergency food supply meant to last just 48 hours by taking tiny sips of milk and bites of tuna fish every other day.

Several of Urzua’s relatives told the AP that he was last on the list, speaking on condition of anonymity to avoid upsetting government officials.

“He’s a very good guy ? he keeps everybody’s spirits up and is so responsible ? he’s going to see this through to the end,” said his neighbor Angelica Vicencio, who has led a nightly vigil outside the Urzua home in Copiapo.

The government has promised that its care of the miners won’t end for six months at least ? not until they can be sure that each miner has readjusted.

“We learned something in medicine, that our job is to provide benefit and not harm,” Manalich said. “We have to protect them until the last minute, until they can return to normal lives with their families.”

Psychiatrists and other experts in surviving extreme situations predict their lives will be anything but normal, and that both the miners and their families have been forever changed by this experience.

Since Aug. 22, when a narrow bore hole broke through to their refuge and the miners stunned the world with a note, scrawled in red pen, that announced their survival, these families’ lives have been exposed in ways they never imagined. Miners had to describe their physical and mental health in minute detail with teams of doctors and psychologists. And in some cases, when both wives and lovers claimed the same man, everyone involved had to face the consequences.

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By the time of the rescue, nerves were beyond frayed outside the mine in “Camp Hope,” where miners’ families and reporters from all over the world slept side by side in tents and campers, enduring the baking days and frigid nights of the desolate Atacama desert.

Many relatives privately described their feuds and jealousies with an AP reporter who spent the past month at the camp.

“Here the tension is higher than down below. Down there they are calm,” said Veronica Ticona, sister of 29-year-old Ariel Ticona, a trapped rubble-removal machine operator.

Alberto Iturra, chief of the psychology team, told the families to go home, get some rest, and prepare to reunite in several days.

“I explained to the families that the only way one can receive someone is to first be home to open the door,” Iturra said.

1:26 p.m. update

SAN JOSE MINE, Chile ? The first of 33 trapped miners is expected to be lifted to the surface late Tuesday after miraculously surviving more than two months about half a mile below ground, Chile’s Mining Minister Laurence Golborne announced.

The minister told a news conference that officials “hope to have at least one of our miners on the surface” before the end of the day ? apparently the longest period anyone has ever been trapped underground.

President Sebastian Pinera was expected to arrive shortly before the first miner is pulled out in a carefully choreographed operation meant to minimize any risk.

Asked about the biggest technical problem that could hit the rescue operation, coordinator Andre Sougarett said: “A rock could fall.”

“There is no need to try to start guessing what could go wrong. We have done that job,” a confident Golborne said. “We have hundreds of different contingencies.”

Rescuers were keeping the miners busy on final preparations they were to climb into a custom-made capsule for what tests indicated should be a smooth ride to the outside world.

“The miners are very busy ? that’s also to keep their spirits up,” Health Minister Jaime Manalich said. “It remains a paradox ? they’re actually much more relaxed than we are.”

(6 of 8)

As the miners emerge, they will be sheltered from the glare of TV cameras. They will get an immediate medical check and gather with a few family members in an area closed to the news media. Officials say a siren will sound as each miner emerges.

Then, they will ride in helicopters ? two at a time if they are in beds, or four at a time if they can sit up ? to the regional hospital in Copiapo for a battery of physical and psychological exams.

“Our job is to provide benefit and not harm,” Manalich said, urging the media ? more than 1,000 journalists are working on the story ? to respect their privacy. “We have to protect them until the last minute, until they can return to normal lives with their families.”

Nearby, the miners’ families have been holding vigil at a place called “Camp Hope.”

“Here the tension is higher than down below. Down there they are calm,” said Veronica Ticona, sister of 29-year-old Ariel Ticona, a trapped rubble-removal machine operator.

After 68 days of shared fears and jitters ? all of it under the close scrutiny of dozens of reporters that have now grown to a battalion ? the early fellowship has frayed. Some relationships, once at least cordial, are as hostile as the desolate sands of the surrounding Acatama desert.

Relatives privately shared stories of the divisiveness with an Associated Press reporter who spent the past month at the camp, frequently bedding down in a tent beside theirs, sharing coffee and gossip.

The feuds and jealousies within families centered on such matters as who got to take part in weekend videoconferences with the miners, who received letters and why ? or even who should speak to the media and how much they should be revealing about a family’s interior life.

Some relatives complained about distant kin seeking the international media limelight, giving interviews about trapped miners they barely know.

Then there are those who, despite only distant blood ties to miners, lined up for donated gifts including sexy lingerie, bottles of wine and electronic toys and Halloween costumes for children.

(7 of 8)

There were even fights over who constitutes a close relative ? or even a miner’s preferred conjugal companion.

So Alberto Iturra, the chief of the psychology team advising the trapped men, decided that after each miner rides an escape capsule to daylight, the rescued man will meet with between one and three people whom the miner has personally designated.
Then there is the question of money.

It has already strained relations between families as some seem to be getting more than others, including from some news media, who outnumber the miners’ relations several fold.

Cognizant of the emotional toll, Iturra recommended Monday that the relatives leave the mine, go home and get some rest.

“I explained to the families that the only way one can receive someone is to first be home to open the door,” Iturra said.

The dramatic endgame was hastening as the rescuers finished reinforcing the escape shaft early Monday and the 13-foot (four-meter)-tall rescue chamber descended flawlessly nearly all the way to the trapped men in a series of test runs.

On Monday, the Phoenix I capsule ? the biggest of three built by Chilean navy engineers, named for the mythic bird that rose from ashes ? made its first test runs after the top 180 feet (55 meters) of the shaft were lined with steel pipe, the rescue leader said.

Then the empty capsule was winched down 2,000 feet (610 meters), just 40 feet (12 meters) short of the shaft system that has been the miners’ refuge since an Aug. 5 collapse.

“We didn’t send it (all the way) down because we could risk that someone will jump in,” a grinning Golborne told reporters on Monday.

Engineers had planned to extend the piping nearly twice as far, but they decided to stop after the sleeve ? the hole is angled 11 degrees off vertical at its top before plunging down, like a waterfall ? became jammed during a probe.

Officials have drawn up a secret list of which miners should come out first, but the order could change after paramedics and a mining expert first descend in the capsule to evaluate the men and oversee the journey upward.

(8 of 8)

First out will be the four miners fittest of frame and mind, health minister Jaime Manalich said. Should glitches occur, these men will be best prepared to ride them out and tell their comrades what to expect.

Next will be 10 who are weakest or ill. One miner suffers from hypertension. Another is a diabetic, and others have dental and respiratory infections or skin lesions from the mine’s oppressive humidity.

The last out is expected to be Luiz Urzua, who was shift chief when the men became entombed, several family members of miners told the AP, speaking on condition of anonymity because they did not want to upset government officials.

The men will take a 20-minute ride to the surface in the capsule, which will rotate as it passes through gentle bends in the bore hole. It should take about an hour for the rescue capsule to make a round trip, Aguilar told the AP.

Plans called for the media to be blocked by a screen from viewing the miners when they reach the surface. A media platform has been set up more than 300 feet (90 meters) away from the mouth of the hole.

After being extracted, the miners will be ushered through inflatable tunnels, like the ones used in sports stadiums, to ambulances that will take them to a triage station.

Once cleared by doctors there, they are to be taken to another area where they’ll be reunited with the chosen family members. Next stop: a heliport and the flight to Copiapo.

At the hospital, all the miners will be kept for 48 hours of observation that will begin when the last one exits the escape shaft.

Chile choreographs dramatic finish to miner rescue saga

To report a crime or suspicious activity in your neighborhood, call the Naples Police and Fire Department at 213-4844, the Collier County Sheriff’s Office at 774-4434, the Lee County Sheriff’s Office 239-477-1000 or the Marco Island Police Department at 389-5050.

?Two men charged with indecent exposure at Sugden park

?Assistant manager accused of stealing $3,500 from store

?Family business: Mom, two sons, girlfriend charged in pot bust

?Naples woman accused of selling stolen gold teeth, jewelry

?Burglary victim helps nab suspect

?FGCU students find girl, 4, wandering at 2 a.m.

?Cleaning lady accused of taking her employer to the cleaners

Battery arrests

? Christopher Ray Willson, 33, of the 90 block of River Drive in East Naples, was arrested Thursday at Alladin Lane and Poplar Way and charged with felony battery after Collier deputies say he beat up another man, punching him in the head. Willson told deputies the fight happened after the victim tried to buy $500 worth of crack/cocaine from him, but only produced $15. “How he gonna come to my house and disrespect me like dat,” Willson told deputies.

Domestic Violence

? Jose Alanis Torres, 37, of the 4200 block of Heritage Circle in Golden Gate, was arrested Thursday after he reportedly became jealous and got into a fight with his girlfriend after a house party.

According to reports, after she told him she no longer wanted to be with him, he struck her in the face, threw lamps around her house and pulled her hair. When the victim told Torres she was going to call the police, he reportedly threatened to kill her and her child and then go to Mexico.

? Hanny A. Hanein, 31, of the 2700 block of Orange Grove in Golden Gate Estates, was arrested Wednesday after he reportedly got into a fight with his wife about the father of her child, who is living with them. According to reports, Hanein pressed his fist against his wife’s chest, cut some clothes in her closet with a knife, and grabbed her face and her pony tail. Hanein told deputies he fought with his wife, but that no physical violence occurred. She did not have any visible marks.

Drug Arrests

? David Granado, 20, of the 1200 block of 47th Avenue in Golden Gate Estates, was arrested at home Thursday and charged with trafficking cocaine. According to sheriff’s reports, he sold 61 grams of cocaine to a Collier deputy working undercover back in December.

? Keith Lee Cecil, 25, of the 5000 block of Hickory Wood Drive in Golden Gate Estates, was arrested Wednesday by Collier deputies on Livingston Road near Vanderbilt Beach Road. He was charged with possession of marijuana, not more than 20 grams, and possession of narcotics equipment.

DUI arrests

? Michael Joseph Olson, 39, of the 200 block of Fairway Circle in North Naples, was arrested by Collier deputies Thursday at Pelican Marsh Boulevard and U.S. 41. He also received a warning for speeding.

? Roberto Bladimir Vasquezortiz, 25, of the 1700 block of Wellesley Circle in Golden Gate, was arrested by Collier deputies at the 4600 block of Green Boulevard on Thursday. He was also charged with violation of probation. He’s on probation for felony battery.

? Warren John Boseker II, 51, of the 27000 block of Matheson Avenue in Bonita Springs, was arrested by Collier deputies Thursday at Livingston Road and Learning Lane.

? Maryann Downey of the 600 block of Spinnaker Drive in Marco Island, was arrested by Marco Island Police on Kendall Drive near North Collier Boulevard on Wednesday. She was also issued citations for driving with a suspended license, operating a vehicle without insurance, an expired tag and having an open container.

? Holly Marie Callahan, 24, of the 1200 block of Paradise Lake Drive in Tarpon Springs, Fla., was arrested by Florida Highway Patrol on Wednesday near the intersection of Collier Boulevard and State Road 84.

? Randy Thomas Baum, 46, of Michigan, was arrested Thursday by the Florida Highway Patrol near the intersection of Pine Ridge Road and Vineyards Boulevard. He was also charged with damage to property, following a traffic accident, and failure to properly register his truck.

? Heidi Tneta Keye, 40, of the 15000 block of Knotts Landing, Fort Myers, was arrested Thursday by Florida Highway Patrol troopers in Lee County. She was additionally charged with property damage, driving while license suspended, possession of paraphernalia and purchase of heroine.

Other arrests

? James David Utley, 57, of the 300 block of Danley Drive, Fort Myers, was arrested Thursday by Lee deputies at home. He was arrested on a Georgia warrant for homicide by non-family. His permanent address was listed as Augusta, Ga., but no further information was available and Georgia Bureau of Investigation had no information on him.

? Kacie Moran, 24, of the 21000 block of Brixham Run Loop, Estero, was arrested Thursday by Lee deputies in Lee County. She was arrested on a warrant charging her with illegal use of a credit card, petty theft and fraudulent use of identification.

? Shane Brantley Simmons, 20, of the 18000 block of Quincy Road, Fort Myers, and Caitlin Renee Hagan, 19, of the 13000 block of Eagle Ridge Drive, Fort Myers, were arrested Thursday by Fort Myers police in Lee County. They were each charged with possession of alcohol by a person younger than 21 years old.

Police Beat is compiled and written by the Naples Daily News staff/ contributors from oral and written reports by Naples police, Collier Sheriff‘s Office, Lee County Sheriff’s Office, Marco police and other agencies. Arrests indicate suspicion of crime, not guilt.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Police Beat: Oct. 8, 2010

Scenes during culinary class at Golden Gate Middle School on Thursday, Sept. 16, 2010. The class, which teaches basic culinary skills along with safety and sanitation in the kitchen, was started in August. The program is part of a push by Collier County high schools to start academies to help students who want to go into a specific field such as medical or culinary. Greg Kahn/Staff

Photo by GREG KAHN // Buy this photo

Scenes during culinary class at Golden Gate Middle School on Thursday, Sept. 16, 2010. The class, which teaches basic culinary skills along with safety and sanitation in the kitchen, was started in August. The program is part of a push by Collier County high schools to start academies to help students who want to go into a specific field such as medical or culinary. Greg Kahn/Staff


Becky Iannone likes to refer to her classroom as “organized chaos.”

Students come into her classroom and put on T-shirts in bright greens and orange. They pull hair nets out of small, plastic bags and place them on their head.

And then they grab the knives.

But in Iannone’s class, it is OK to have knives. Iannone runs Golden Gate Middle School’s culinary arts class. The school developed a specialized culinary program as a way to offer high school credit to eighth-grade students who didn’t take algebra or Spanish, the two other high school courses offered at the school.

The program also boosts interest for Golden Gate High School’s culinary academy.

“It is the only place where a student can earn a high school credit that will be attached to a high school academy while attending a middle school,” wrote Dale Johnson, the district’s supervisor of Career and Technical Education, in an e-mail. “Specifically, it is hoped that middle school students will be more likely to complete high school academy requirements if the program begins in eighth grade.”

Iannone, who taught culinary arts for years up North before coming to Collier County 10 years ago, said she approached Golden Gate Middle School Principal Leslie Morris and asked if she could look for a culinary curriculum that was being stored in the kitchen on the second floor of the school.

“It is the only place where a student can earn a high school credit that will be attached to a high school academy while attending a middle school,” wrote Dale Johnson, the district’s supervisor of Career and Technical Education, in an e-mail. “Specifically, it is hoped that middle school students will be more likely to complete high school academy requirements if the program begins in eighth grade.”

“She said, ‘You taught culinary. Why aren’t you teaching it now?’” said Iannone, who also teaches technology at the school. “It’s my passion.”

Iannone and Morris agreed to pilot the program last year with her technology students. Iannone taught technology to the students for nine weeks and culinary arts for nine weeks.

Although the program isn’t officially part of the Golden Gate High School Culinary Academy due to requirements placed on the academy by the National Restaurant Association, students do earn the high school credit for Culinary 1.

Still, other middle schools in the county have programs designed to encourage students to enter the academy programs at the high schools they eventually might attend.

The Gateway to Technology program at East Naples Middle School is designed to create student interest into the Pathways to Engineering and Architecture Academy at Naples High School. The students don’t earn high school credit, but they are introduced to the basic components of engineering and technology.

Students at Cypress Palm Middle School in Golden Gate Estates are given the opportunity to participate in a special technology course called Exploration of Production Technology that introduces students to the various components of construction, with the hope that it will spark interest in the construction academy at Palmetto Ridge High School.

This year, Iannone started with two classes of eighth-graders, with about 40 students in each class.

“The joys of the class-size amendment,” Iannone jokes, referring to the state Constitutional Amendment that requires class sizes to be limited in core classes like English and math to 22 students in middle school.

The unintended result is that elective classes such as culinary arts have more than 22 students in the class.

Because her classes have so many students, Iannone teaches one lesson over four days. A group of about 10 students works in the kitchens, with Iannone supervising them. The remaining eighth-graders work in groups on lessons about cooking.

On Thursday, while students learned to peel and chop vegetables that will eventually be used in muffins and soup, the other students learned about the different types of knives and the different parts of the knife.

“I like being in the kitchen much better (than the classwork),” said eighth-grader Faryn Loskot, 13. “It’s a good class. I wanted to learn to cook better. And it’s good to know in case you need a job.”

“I was tired of my mom telling me I didn’t know how to cook,” said Katya Lopez, 13. “It’s a really fun class. It was this or P.E. and I’m not going to sweat.”

Many of the students who selected culinary arts as an elective said they wanted to learn how to help their mothers at home.

“I was tired of my mom telling me I didn’t know how to cook,” said Katya Lopez, 13. “It’s a really fun class. It was this or P.E. and I’m not going to sweat.”

Katya said she likes the new version of the culinary class.

“I took a similar class last year and the teacher never let us do anything,” she said. “In this class we get to cut the vegetables, we get to make the appetizers.”

The students’ first project was to work in teams to make appetizers like artichoke cheese puffs, creamy bruchetta and black bean dip. The students then had to present their appetizers in a buffet.

“They were so proud and everything was edible,” Iannone said. “We didn’t have to like everything, but we had to try it. Then they evaluated what the best dish was, who did the best presenting.”

Aaren Jones, 13, said she took the class to “learn how to cook American food.”

“My family is Haitian, so we cook Haitian food,” she said, adding her favorite Haitian dish is fried plantains. “Now that I (am cooking), I could see myself doing this for a job. It’s fun.”

When students leave her classroom, Iannone said she hoped the students have the basic culinary industry standard skills and confidence in themselves to read a recipe and have it turn out well. She said she hopes the students understand that food allows them to be creative and use their imaginations.

“I think a lot of the students came in thinking we were just going to bake cookies and eat them,” she said. “I want to push them beyond the obvious.”

Eventually, Iannone said it is her hope the students will be able to make dishes to sell to faculty members as a fundraiser for the program.

“It would be great if one of them like it enough that they would get out and learn to work in this industry,” she said. “In this area, it’s great because of all of the restaurants we have in town.”

__ Connect with K-12 reporter Katherine Albers at www.naplesnews.com/staff/katherine-albers/.

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PHOTOS Food for thought: Golden Gate Middle adds culinary arts class