January 2010 Archives

January 27, 2010

ONLY IN ST. PETE: Woman Stabs Boyfriend Multiple Times over "American Idol" Dispute

In another "only in St. Pete type of case," the St. Petersburg Police Department said that a St. Petersburg woman took a TV dispute too far Tuesday night when she stabbed and scalded her boyfriend over American Idol. According to the St. Pete Times, this is what happened:

Police arrested Cynthia E. Bettis-Ware, 52, on a charge of First-Degree Attempted Murder of her boyfriend Kevin Johnson, 47.

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It happened at 11:22 p.m. at the infamous Empress Motel, 1501 Martin Luther King St. N, which the couple listed as their "permanent address," said police spokeswoman Jennifer Dawkins.

The couple were watching American Idol when they began arguing over something that happened on the show, Dawkins said. He changed the channel to stop the argument, Dawkins said, but she kept arguing so "he decided, 'Well, I'll go to bed.'''

He awoke to Bettis-Ware wielding a 10-inch butcher knife. She stabbed him five (5) times in the back and two (2) times in the chest, an arrest affidavit states. Police said she also severely burned Johnson with hot cocoa.

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Johnson took the knife from her and ran to the motel parking lot, Dawkins said. Bettis-Ware chased after him with another knife, she said.

Soon a crowd formed and someone called police, who arrested Bettis-Ware in her motel room. She was being held without bail in the Pinellas County jail Wednesday.

According to a report on BayNews9, Johnson is still in the hospital with non life-threatening injuries

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January 13, 2010

CLEARWATER: Aqib Talib Applies for Pre-Trial Intervention (PTI) Program

Tampa Bay Buccaneers cornerback Aqib Talib has applied to enter a Pre-Trial Intervention (PTI) program as a way of resolving his misdemeanor Battery charge.

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The Pinellas County State Attorney's Office is reviewing his application and should know within a few weeks if Talib will be accepted into the program.

The State's Pre-Trial Intervention (PTI) program is usually reserved for first-time, non-violent offenders. If accepted into the State of Florida's PTI program, Talib will most likely be ordered to attend an anger management class and/or perform some community service hours. However, if Talib successfully completes the twelve (12) month program, the State Attorney's Office will dismiss the criminal charge against him.

Talib was arrested August 19th after the Florida Highway Patrol said he hit cab driver David Duggan in the neck and ear with a closed fist while riding from a St. Petersburg club to a Tampa hotel. For more information on this case, please check out the initial TBCDLB post from October 22, 2009.

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January 10, 2010

SAFETY HARBOR: McDonald's Employee Smashes Man in Face with Coffee Pot

In another "only in Pinellas County" type of story, a McDonald's employee who police say smashed another man in the face with a glass coffee pot was arrested late Saturday.

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The 6 p.m. attack in the fast food restaurant's kitchen at 2454 McMullen Booth Road, in Safety Harbor, left Marcus Grahm with a cut under his right eye, a Pinellas County Sheriff's deputy wrote.

Earl Cockerham, 19, was charged with Aggravated Battery just before midnight. He was promply booked into the Pinellas County Jail where he remained before he was released on his own recognizance (ROR'd).

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January 10, 2010

TAMPA: Marijuana Grow House Busted by Hillsborough Deputies

The Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office uncovered a marijuana grow house in the Plantation subdivision of Tampa on Sunday.

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More than fifty-five (55) marijuana plants averaging four (4) to five (5) feet tall were found in the home at 11313 Hollyglen Drive, according to the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office.

Deputies also found lighting and growing equipment which will probably lead to a Felony charge of Cultivation of Marijuana.

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On Sunday evening, deputies were in the process of dismantling the equipment and seizing the marijuana plants and growing paraphernalia.

A 60-year-old man was taken into custody at the home, the Sheriff's Office said.

He was not immediately identified.

For those of you that are not familiar with the signs of a "Grow House," check out the diagram above to see if you recognize any in your community.

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January 2, 2010

ST. PETERSBURG: Woman is Victim of Cell Phone Stalker

A 26-year-old man is accused of Stalking a woman and making threats against her life, according to a story in today's St. Pete Times. The stalker has been using his cell phone to leave the victim disturbing voice mail and text messages.

Texts such as "I'll kill you" and "take 'em to your grave" were sent to the victim, according to the St. Petersburg Police Department.

The woman and her mother may have even been the target of a "drive-by shooting" last month, though no one has been arrested in connection with that.

Jared Borgesto Murray was arrested and charged Monday with Aggravated Stalking (a very serious Felony).

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According to his arrest warrant, Murray is accused of harassing the victim between November 20th and December 20th. The victim and her mother called the police in November and told them that Murray had been calling both of them and leaving threatening messages.

As they spoke to an officer the morning of Nov. 20th, the arrest warrant said, the victim's cell phone received two (2) text messages from Murray threatening to hurt her and the police if they "get in my way."

On Dec. 15th, according to the arrest warrant, the woman told the police that she was still receiving threats even after changing her cell phone number. That month, she also obtained a Domestic Violence Injunction (DVI) against Murray.

Two (2) days later, the woman's mother told the police that she heard a "loud bang" around 12:25 a.m. Police found bullet holes in the Mazda parked outside and a hole in the front of their house. Fortunately, no one was injured.

The arrest warrant also detailed a number of threatening text messages:

"Immna kill you. An then I'm gonna kill myself."

"U hurt me now its time for u to hurt exclusively lol watch thank god."

"Anybody ... even look at me crazy your jeopardizing ya whole family an dats on my life."

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Sprint was able to connect the two (2) cell phone numbers that the police said were being used to harass the victim to Murray. Murray was also arrested last year in a separate Domestic Battery incident involving the same victim, according to the police.

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Murray, of 2500 14th Street South, posted $100,000 bail and was released from the Pinellas County Jail on Monday.

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January 2, 2010

TAMPA BAY: "SCRAM" Monitor Usage on the Rise

A story in this morning's St. Pete Times about the "SCRAM" monitor caught my attention:

For a solid year, Stephen Hulgin knew he could not sneak a drink without getting locked up.

The reason was strapped around his ankle: an alcohol monitoring device he wore 24 hours a day, as part of his sentence for a Driving Under the Influence (DUI) conviction. If he took a drink, the device would know it.

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"I knew it was there; I knew I couldn't beat it," Hulgin said. And he knew what the judge had told him: One more drink and "I go to prison for four (4) years."

Hulgin, 44, who lives in a Clearwater rehab center and has a paving company, recently had his electronic monitor removed after an alcohol-free year. He says the device helped him and was a "big component of me getting out of jail."

It also is becoming part of the anti-alcohol strategy for the criminal justice system in the Tampa Bay area. Judges are increasingly requiring monitoring devices for Defendants who need to prove they're not drinking.

"I think it can be a very effective tool in protecting the public," said Pinellas County Judge Donald E. Horrox, who has ordered Defendants to wear them.

Week after week, judges sentence people for Driving Under the Influence (DUI) and other alcohol-related offenses. While some get jail time, probation usually follows. Others are released on bail as they await their trial.

Judges almost always order these people to stop drinking alcohol while they are on probation or awaiting their trial. But how do you make sure someone doesn't drink?

There are ways, such as random urine samples, mandatory AA meetings, and visits to probation officers -- all with the threat of more jail time looming overhead.

But it can still be possible to cheat, partly because traces of alcohol disappear from the body more quickly than other drugs. Alcohol monitors are designed to take away that possibility.

The Secure Continuous Remote Alcohol Monitor, or "SCRAM" brand alcohol bracelet, which has been used in Pinellas, Hillsborough and Pasco counties, is strapped to a Defendant's leg above his or her ankle and can be hidden under a pants cuff.

It samples sweat on the skin every thirty (30) minutes, and detects the presence of alcohol. It records the data and sends results back to a central computer and, eventually, on to the court system.

"It's a Breathalyzer for your ankle," said Kathleen Brown, spokeswoman for the Denver-based company that makes them, Alcohol Monitoring Systems.

It also contains anti-tampering technology designed to detect when someone is trying to fool the device -- such as the person who wedged a piece of baloney in between his ankle and the bracelet. (Baloney may feel roughly like skin, but it's cold and doesn't sweat.)

About fifty (50) of the SCRAM bracelets are in use at any one time in the Tampa Bay area, said local representative and bail bondsman Frank Kopczynski. More than 10,000 are in use nationwide, Brown said.

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Pinellas County Judge Paul Levine said he became intrigued with the alcohol bracelets when he realized they provide a good way to continuously check on serious alcohol offenders, such as repeat drunken drivers. They're also good for Domestic Violence offenders who get violent when drunk; take away the alcohol, and you often take away the violence, he said.

But over time, he said he heard from Defendants who say "they can't believe they actually went ninety (90) days without drinking, and it helps their recovery."

"It's a tool now to help break the cycle of drinking," he said.

Hulgin agrees. He said when he was sentenced in Pasco County to wear the bracelet for a full year, the judge told him "If I drank, I'd be in prison. He made sure I understood that if I failed ... I'm going away."

He wore it 24 hours a day, even in the shower. After about three (3) sober months, he said he felt his alcohol cravings subside. Now that he is off the bracelet, he is optimistic that he will also be able to stay off alcohol, with help from his family and the Christian recovery center where he lives, called Center of Hope.

"It helped me," Hulgin said. And he added, "it's nice to be able to prove to the Court system and society that I haven't drank a drop."

But he does have a reason to be happy to get off of it. It costs $10 a day, and he's the one who had to pay it.

That $300 a month is a burden that not everyone can afford. But Kopczynski, the Tampa Bay representative for SCRAM monitors, said $10 a day is less than some people spend at bars. He also has a question for people who have been released from jail but are complaining about the cost of the bracelet:

"How much money are you making in jail?"

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