? 3 men accused of armed home invasion to collect marijuana debt

? Chokoloskee woman charged with “doctor shopping” for prescription drugs

? Naples High School student charged with trying to pickpocket $13 from classmate

? Hyatt employee accused in cash theft, missing shoes

? Estero woman suspected of shoplifting at Dillards

DUI arrests

? Joshua Hurley, 30, of the 1900 block of Visland Avenue in North Naples, was arrested by Florida Highway Patrol officers on the southbound ramp of the Interstate 75 and Pine Ride Road interchange on Monday and charged with DUI, driving under a suspended license, possession of drug paraphernalia, possession of a controlled substance and refusal to submit to submit to a urine test.

Battery arrests

? James Larry Tackett, 58, of the 8100 block of Albatross Road, Fort Myers, was arrested Monday by Lee deputies at home. He was charged with battery/domestic violence. He is accused of pushing his wife, causing her to fall into a dresser and then to the floor.

Drug arrests

? Darrel Priestly, 27, of the 500 block of 107th Avenue North in North Naples was arrested by Collier County Sheriff’s Office deputies on Monday night at the corner of Flamingo Avenue and Vanderbilt Drive in North Naples and charged with possession of drug paraphernalia.

? Theophilus Malcom Washington, 17, of the 12000 block of Rock Brook Run, Fort Myers, was arrested Monday by Fort Myers police in Lee County. He was charged with possessing less than 20 grams of marijuana, illegally possessing a firearm by a minor, fleeing law enforcement officers, leaving the scene of a crash resulting in property damage, grand theft auto and driving without a valid license.

Grand theft arrests

? Christopher Emmanuel Nash Jr., 17, of the 7300 block of Penzance Boulevard, Fort Myers, was arrested Monday by Fort Myers police in Lee County. He was charged with grand theft, resisting a loss prevention officer and robbery/home invasion.

? Ryan C. Baumgart, 26, of the 9200 block of Coach House Lane, Estero, was arrested Monday by Lee deputies in Lee County. He was charged with dealing in stolen property and false declaration of ownership to a pawn broker. He is accused of stealing jewelry in October from a house in the 6000 block of Sand Trap Drive in Estero.

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. 23, 2010

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 This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Police MUG SHOTS: Nov. 22, 2010

Natural gas service in Southwest Florida was shut down Thursday because there is only one line in which to route the fuel’s flow through most of Lee and Collier counties.

When it was severed by a construction worker, it carried a multimillion-dollar price tag and sent another dagger into the hearts of business owners struggling to stay afloat in the worst recession since the Great Depression.

Graphic: Southwest Florida’s gas network
Related: Gas restored to about 500 customers

Gas, which powers everything from dryers to water heaters to residential and commercial ovens, was turned off when the main supply pipe that runs from the Caloosahatchee River in northern Lee County to Fiddler’s Creek in southern Collier County was hit by a road worker.

Lance Horton, a senior project manager with Tampa-based TECO who headed up the building of the system in the late 1990s, said Saturday alternate supply lines have not been built.

“There is yet no redundancy,” Horton said. “As systems go, this one is immature.”

Gas service to this area began in 1998.

“We don’t have ways to reroute the gas as yet,” he said. “Those will come based on customer growth.”

Horton said in older systems – such as in St. Petersburg, Tampa and Miami that have used natural gas for almost 100 years – time has allowed TECO to develop work-around routes so only small sections of homes and businesses are affected if there is a line break.

In a newly developed area such as Southwest Florida, building alternate routes where there are few customers is usually cost-prohibitive.

“Since the system is originally designed based on where the customers are located,” said TECO spokesman Rick Morera, “it is difficult and costly to build redundancy not knowing the direction of future growth.”

Area businesses continued to suffer Saturday.

(2 of 2)

“My business was barely surviving in this grim economy,” said Mike Lavin, owner of Gulf Gate Laundry in Naples. “It is possible this shutdown will do me in.”

For some, though, better times were at hand.

Service to the company’s highest priority customers – hospitals and elder care centers – was restored Friday night. By Saturday evening, crews working 15-hour shifts, had an estimated 500 users up and running.

And Morera said “work in the Fort Myers Beach and downtown areas has gone well.”

For others, however, it could take the better part of a week before gas service resumes.

Restoring service is a complicated and lengthy process, Horton said. It includes a representative visiting each customer.

“Our goal is one visit. That’s a tough objective,” he said. “A business might be closed and we can’t get in touch with them. Or someone’s not home. That’s why it takes a week to get all the service back.”

Those visits include turning the gas off at the meter, turning it back on and reigniting a pilot light.

“We work on a mandated protocol for safety,” he said. “We don’t want our customers turning the gas on or off.”

TECO’s assault on the problem resembles, in many ways, how a utility company goes about getting the lights back on following a hurricane.

The company has set up a large staging area at its Fort Myers headquarters just west of Interstate 75 near Luckett Road. More than 200 technicians and repair personnel have come from all over Florida to help.

Horton said the trouble here has not presented insurmountable problems.

“All situations are unique,” Horton said, “and all are similar. You have different geographics, and in this situation, it is a little more difficult because our 7,200 customers are spread out across 50 miles.

“But we know what to do, and how to handle it.”

One gas line, and it was cut

Video from NBC-2

An 11-month investigation into alleged drink tampering at

Blue Martini bar in North Naples has ended, with no evidence of any suspicious activities, drugs or tampering.

At a news conference Tuesday afternoon, Collier Sheriff’s Sgt. Bryan Sawyer said deputies, including three women and state Division of Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco investigators, worked undercover as patrons, obtaining drink samples and watching for suspicious activities by customers and staff.

In addition, he said, detectives reviewed surveillance tapes. Blood, urine, hair and drinks were tested and 150 patrons, including roughly 50 alleged victims, were interviewed, but no evidence of spiking was found at the bar and restaurant, located at 9114 Strada Place in the upscale Mercato shopping center.

“All reporters had considerable alcohol in large amounts,” Sawyer said of alleged victims, adding that no crimes occurred.

Three people made reports after arrests, he said, citing a man stopped on a drunken driving charge, a female Blue Martini employee arrested in Lee County, and a woman charged with disorderly intoxication. Sawyer said the three blamed Blue Martini.

Since late 2009, they investigated more than 50 reports by patrons who said they became ill, passed out later or inside the bar. Many believed their drinks were tampered with.

Sawyer, who headed the investigation, suggested a Daily News article about three women who filed complaints prompted similar reports. After the article in early November, he said, more than 50 others came forward.

But the initial tip to the Daily News last fall showed that bar management believed it was enough of a problem to meet with employees and urge them to watch patrons and staff.

A private laboratory analyzed hair follicles, which can show drugs for long periods, and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement lab tested blood, urine and drink samples.

Detectives reviewed video surveillance tapes and saw no unusual activity. The video, obtained by a subpoena, was over a limited period that didn’t cover most reported incidents in 2009 and early 2010.

Evidence from patrons treated in emergency rooms shortly after the alleged spiking was reviewed, but medical staff found no illicit substances. Patients’ blood-alcohol content ranged from .117- to .228 percent; 08 percent is the level a person is presumed impaired.

Sawyer emphasized the Sheriff’s Office is not closing the door on its investigation, but will continue looking into claims of drink tampering.

“We did a comprehensive check on the reporters,” Sawyer said of the alleged victims, who ranged in age from 21 to 82 and were more than 80 percent women. “We have conducted every reasonable investigative step we could see. … Unfortunately, we haven’t been able to come to a conclusion as to what caused the symptoms of the reporters.”

Blue Martini and Mercato officials worked closely with the Sheriff’s Office and the Mercato started a safety task force that included deputies and state Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco investigators.

The managers of all the Mercato restaurants and businesses came together to address safety issues and share tips about hiring and training employees, preparing and serving food and drinks, said Mike Hoyt, senior vice president of the Lutgert Companies, which manages the Mercato.

“If anything, the silver lining to all this is it helped us get even more focused on getting that high level of safety and comfort to our guests,” Hoyt said, adding that he was grateful the Sheriff’s Office did a thorough investigation.

“It seemed like from the beginning they were serious about digging into this,” he said.

Attempts to reach Blue Martini spokesman and attorney Richard Chosid of Boca Raton were unsuccessful. This summer, he said the allegations led to bad press that hurt business.

The crime, “slipping a Mickey,” isn’t new. It’s occurred for decades, mostly involving well-off bar patrons who later find they were robbed.

Most recently, Palm Beach Shores police headed an investigation into rich men’s drinks being spiked with Rufinol, a date rape drug, in March and April. News reports showed five men in their 50s and 60s blacked out and were robbed of money, watches and jewelry after drinking at bars in Deerfield Beach, West Palm Beach, Palm Beach Shores, Palm Beach and Boca Raton.

They said flirtatious women approached them, they drank and awakened hours later, only to find they were robbed. Police, who obtained video showing one alleged robber, believe more victims exist, but they’re afraid to come forward because they’re married.

Sawyer warned customers to watch their drinks, never leave them unattended, don’t accept drinks from strangers, watch the bartender mix the drink, and don’t drink anything with an unusual odor or taste. He cautioned that patrons should never drink beverages that were moved or suddenly have more or less liquid.

Staff writer Ryan Mills contributed to this report.

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

VIDEO/PHOTOS: Blue Martini probe ends, no evidence of drink tampering found


UPDATE:

Hedwig Marcial has been located and is safe, reported the Collier County Sheriff’s Office in a prepared release at about 8:30 p.m. Sunday.

Hedwig Marcial

Submitted Collier County Sheriff’s Office

Hedwig Marcial

Collier deputies are looking for a 72-year-old Golden Gate woman missing since about 12:30 p.m. Sunday.

Hedwig Marcial, 72, of 195 Via Perignon, which is in the Vineyards of North Naples, was last seen walking at about 12:30 p.m. Sunday after returning home from church with a neighbor.

Marcial is described as 5 feet 6 inches tall, 130 pounds, red hair with white roots and hazel eyes. She was last seen wearing either a black dress or black pants with a white top.

Anyone with information is asked to call the Collier County Sheriff’s Office at 239-252-9300

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

Update/ Photo: Collier deputies found Golden Gate woman reported missing

Collier County residents and visitors interested in donating blood in remembrance of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks can do so Saturday at the Waterside Shops from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The Community Blood Center blood mobile will be on site near the Barnes and Noble book store.

Successful donors will receive a $10 gas card or specialty gift card while supplies last. Participants will be automatically eligible for the chance to win a summer grand prize drawing for a Lovers Key Staycation package for two. The drawing will be Oct. 2.

In years past, when the Sept. 11 memorial blood drive has been held at Waterside, turnout usually has been 125 donors or more.

Immediately following the 2001 terrorist attacks, hundreds of people from throughout Collier turned out at the Community Blood Center’s headquarters at the time, at the former Grand Central Station near downtown Naples, to donate blood to help save the lives of those injured in the attacks.

Within hours of the attacks, donors saw the wait grow to several hours so volunteers and staff with the American Red Cross helped triage the donors, and local restaurants brought food and beverages for the staff and donors. The blood center records show that 1,100 people registered to donate blood on the day of the attacks and on the two days that followed. A total of 865 pints of blood were collected.

For more information about Saturday’s blood drive, call the center at 436-5455.

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

Blood drive is Saturday on 9/11 ninth anniversary

Golden Gate and Palmetto Ridge will play football Friday at Immokalee High.

After that, their nomad days should end.

A manufacturing defect in the synthetic TigerTurf led to delays in installation at both schools and forced the Titans and Bears to move their home games to neighboring Collier County facilities.

While Golden Gate?s turf is expected to be ready by Tuesday, according to athletic director Pete Seitz, a TigerTurf representative said its product will arrive at Palmetto Ridge early next week.

That means Palmetto Ridge?s homecoming on Sept. 24 won?t be an away-coming.
?I don?t allow it to frustrate me,? Palmetto Ridge athletic director Trent Holt said. ?It is what it is. I can?t change it. But it does make my job more difficult.?

Seitz added, ?It?s unfortunate that it happened, but it?s not anybody?s fault or not something anybody did intentionally. You can either get upset or figure out the best path to take.?

TigerTurf is a different surface than what was laid down at other Collier County Schools the past few years. Based in Austin, Texas, TigerTurf has been in business 28 years and has operations in the United States, United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand, according to chief sales officer Chuck Fleishman.

ProGrass, whose workers install the field, notified TigerTurf of the defect.

?We noticed a defect that we didn?t see in the plant under light,? Fleishman said. ?When you add heat and humidity, it didn?t work as far as the backings go so we immediately replaced them.

?It was like, ?Whoa, whoa, whoa, we don?t like that. You know what? We don?t want to give them a bad field, so let?s pull it up and put in a new field. At least they know our warranty is good. We just didn?t expect it to be this soon.?

Fleishman said the warranty for the turf is eight years, but with proper maintenance and normal wear-and-tear, it should last longer than that.

The schools also will be reimbursed for lost ticket, parking and concession sales and travel costs their staffs had to make.

(2 of 2)

Golden Gate coach Steve Crowley said playing away from home hasn?t been a big deal. ?Our kids are mature and not concerned with it,? he said.

Joe Kemper, coordinator of interscholastic athletics in Collier County, said this is a short-term problem.

?In a couple of weeks, when we get into Weeks 5, 6 or 7, it?ll all be a memory. They?ll be happy with the turf they got.?

Wednesday’s roundup

GIRLS GOLF
CAPE CORAL 148, SOUTH FORT MYERS NTS (5 Holes)
Royal Tee, Par 36
CAPE CORAL: Regina Sim 20, Carrier McDonald 40, Gwendolyn Sanabaria 43, Shivani Desai 45
SOUTH: Fort Myers Rachel Adams 35
RECORDS: Cape Coral 2-0

BOYS GOLF
South Fort Myers 81, Cape Coral 142, East Lee County NTS
Royal Tee, Par 36
(Teams only played five holes because of weather)
SOUTH: Austin Schultz 1-over 21, Joey Jamison 22, Alec Carlisle 23, David Triana 23
CAPE CORAL: Lawrence 24, Langford 25, Nowall 30, Maranack 31
EAST LEE: Joe Melendez 24, Brandon Manville 33
RECORDS: South Fort Myers 1-0, Cape Coral 0-1, East Lee County 0-1

Tuesday’s roundup

GIRLS SWIMMING
Estero 149, Riverdale 88, Palmetto Ridge 79
200 medley relay: Estero 2:03.93; 200 free: DuBrasky (E) 2:00.53; 200 IM: Lawson (E) 2:22.09; 50 free: Faunce (E) 27.97; Diving: Bond (PR); 100 fly: DeVeny (E) 1:04.53; 100 free: Lawson (E) 59.09; 500 free: DuBrasky (E) 5:06.37; 200 free relay: Estero 1:53.65; 100 back: Faunce (E) 1:08.00; 100 breast: Fournier (PR) 1:10.35; 400 free relay: Estero 4:19.93

Cape Coral 94,
South Fort Myers 75
200 medley relay: Cape Coral 2:12.22; 200 free: Angelitta (CC) 2:09.63; 200 IM: Fisher (SFM) 2:23.91; 5O free: Javorowsky (SFM) 29.13; 100 fly: Steakley (CC) 1:14.66; 100 free: Santiago (SFM) 1:15.66; 500 free: Jaeger 5:37.38 (CC); 200 free relay: SFM 2:10.15; 100 back: Langford (CC) 1:10.78; 100 breast: Fisher (SFM) 1:17.91; 400 free relay: Cape Coral 4:08.71.

BOYS SWIMMING
Estero 142, Palmetto Ridge 88, Riverdale 81
200 medley relay: Estero 1:54.34; 200 free: Snew (E) 1:50.65; 200 IM: Snew (E) 2:02.68; 50 free: McCaw (E) 24.18; Diving: Indart (PR); 100 fly: Palmetto Ridge 58.88; 100 free: McCaw (E) 57.25; 500 free: Zacka (E) 5:16.18; 200 free relay: Estero 1:46.96; 100 back: Zacka (E) 1:03.12; 100 breast: Latorre (E) 1:10.18; 400 free relay: Estero 3:52.93

Cape Coral 105,
South Fort Myers 64
200 medley relay: Cape Coral 1:48.50; 200 free: Murza (CC) 2:03.94; 200 IM: Dall (CC) 2:21.06; 50 free: Keating (CC) 24.59; 100 fly: Bradley (SFM) 1:02.69; 100 free: Thresher (CC) 54.62; 500 free: Carter (CC) 6:21.24; 200 free relay: South Fort Myers 1:43.46; 100 back: Bradley (SFM) 1:00.97; 100 breast: Murza (CC) 1:11.18; 400 free relay: Cape Coral 3:44.65.

HS ROUNDUP: Turf woes put teams on road to start year

A marijuana grow house bust in East Naples on Wednesday ended with two men in jail and investigators from the Collier County Sheriff’s Office uncovering more than $450,000 worth of pot and growing equipment.

Around 7 a.m., detectives with the Sheriff’s Office’s Vice and Narcotics Bureau executed a search warrant at a home in the 10600 block of Greenway Road, the agency reported. The detectives discovered an indoor marijuana growing operation in a barn in the back of the home. A search of the barn turned up marijuana plants and equipment used to grow marijuana including high-intensity light bulbs, power transformers, buckets, and fertilizer.

Detectives also found an electrical panel that controlled the lights, timers and electricity that was being diverted for the operation.

They confiscated 135 plants weighing just over 51 pounds, which has a street value of $405,000, the Sheriff’s Office reported. The grow equipment was valued at about $50,000.

Humberto Martinez, 29, and Raul Morales, 32, who are residents of the home, were there when the warrant was executed and were arrested on charges of trafficking marijuana over 25 pounds and possession of narcotic paraphernalia. They were being booked into the Collier County jail on Wednesday afternoon.

Continue to follow this story on naplesnews.com.

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

Two men arrested in $450,000 marijuana grow house bust in East Naples

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.

? Homeless man accused of trying to steal computer from hotel

? Berry bad: Man charged with stealing, selling 200 pounds of picked palmetto berries

? Local man claims wife beat him with electrical cords for seven months

Battery arrests

? Grant D. McCoy, 37, of the 780 block of 95th Avenue North in North Naples, was arrested by Collier deputies on Monday at his home. He was charged with aggravated battery after he was accused of knocking down his pregnant girlfriend, choking her and trying to smother her with pillows. He was also charged with kidnapping/imprisonment. According to reports, he trapped his girlfriend in the bedroom and wouldn’t let her leave the house.

? William M. Deguzman, 27, of the 11000 block of Char Ann Drive, Fort Myers, was arrested Tuesday by Lee deputies at home. He was charged with battery.

DUI arrests

? Richard William Mitchell, 35, of the 1700 block of 41st Terrace Southwest in Golden Gate, was arrested Tuesday by Collier deputies at U.S. 41 East and Lakewood Boulevard. He was found passed out in the driver’s seat near a closed Hess station.

? Joseph Allen Greene, 31, of the 26000 block of Robin Way in Bonita Springs, was arrested on Tuesday by Collier deputies at Immokalee Road and Wilson Boulevard. He has a prior DUI conviction in Palm Beach County.

Fraud arrest

? Elizabeth J. Farmer, 20, of the 25000th block of Busy Bee Lane in Bonita Springs, was arrested Tuesday by Collier deputies at 3301 U.S. 41 East and charged with fraud for using someone else’s identification card to visit a prisoner at the Collier County jail. Farmer is on probation for grand theft. Felons can’t visit inmates in the jail.

Grand theft arrest

? Kimberly Burnett, 38, of the 10th block of Salinas Drive in East Naples, was arrested Tuesday by Collier deputies and charged with dealing in stolen property, grand theft and defrauding a pawnbroker. She was arrested at 6060 Collier Boulevard after she sold stolen jewelry to First Pawn on Airport-Pulling Road. According to reports, she sold two gold necklaces and a gold bracelet for $820. The victim reported that two shoe boxes full of jewelry had been stolen from her home, valued at $41,400.

The victim said Burnett was her housekeeper.

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: Sept. 1, 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, the Lee County Sheriff’s Office 239-477-1000 or the Marco Island Police Department at 389-5050.

? Miromar shoe store employee assaulted by suspicious customer

? Man returns from vacation to find 5 ATVs, equipment, tools stolen

Battery arrests

? Brittany Anne Barrett, 22, of the 1300 block of Mainsail Drive, East Naples, was arrested by Collier deputies Tuesday at Golden Gate Parkway. She was charged with striking the face of her boyfriend, tearing his shirt and scratching his arm and neck.

DUI arrests

? John Edward Evenson, 47, of the 7500 block of Captiva Boulevard, Fort Myers, was arrested Tuesday by Cape Coral police in Lee County. He was additionally charged with refusing to submit to a DUI test.

? David Barry Gardner, 32, of Lehigh Acres, was arrested by Collier deputies Tuesday at Vanderbilt Beach and Livingston roads.

? James P. Linus, 24, of the 23000 block of Merano Court, Bonita Springs, was arrested by Florida Highway Patrol troopers Tuesday near mile marker 114 on Interstate 75. He was charged with two counts of DUI, one with property damage.

? Delvys R. Machado, 27, of Miami, was arrested by Collier deputies Tuesday at 10996 Winterview Drive. He was also charged with driving with an invalid license.

? John Michael Snyder, 33, of the 17000 block of Miami Boulevard, Fort Myers, was arrested Tuesday by Cape Coral police in Lee County. He was additionally charged with possession of paraphernalia and possession of less than 20 grams of marijuana.

Drug arrests

??Carlos E. Then, 20, of the 100 block of Vintage Bay Drive, Marco Island, was arrested by Marco Island police Tuesday at 51 Bald Eagle Drive. He was charged with possessing a controlled substance.

Other arrests

? Kristine Anne Clark, 31, of the 27000 block of Pierce Avenue, Bonita Springs, was arrested Tuesday by Lee deputies at the Sheriff’s Office Substation, 8951 Bonita Beach Road, Bonita Springs. She was charged with knowingly making a false report to law enforcement. She is accused of reporting her 2002 Mercedes Benz stolen. Her boyfriend said she knew he had the car.

? Danny Vincente Andrade, 39, of the 21000 block of Berwich Run, Estero, was arrested Tuesday by Lee deputies in Lee County. He was charged with false statement to unemployment. Details were not immediately available.

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: Aug. 11, 2010