A Winter Park woman trying to order food from a Winter Park Steak ‘n Shake drive-through Thursday morning made a wrong turn and crashed straight through the front door, police said.
Brittany Christian’s sport-utility vehicle shattered the entrance at about 1:21 a.m. and nearly reached the counter of the restaurant on U.S. Highway 17-92, according to spokeswoman Sgt. Jamie Loomis.
No patrons were inside at the time and no one was hurt, Loomis said.
Another person was inside the vehicle but police did not identify that person.
Christian, 21, was charged with driving under the influence with property damage, police said.
She was booked into the Orange County Jail on $1,000 bond, records show.
Police said the restaurant continued to serve customers to its drive-through.
A convicted drug trafficker was arrested in Brevard County on Friday, accused of pimping, beating and having sex with an Orlando runaway, Brevard County deputies said.
Deputies were conducting an online investigation, the Sheriff’s Office said, targeting prostitution through social media websites. The investigation led to Reginal Hardy, 38.
Deputies say Hardy, who served about 17 years in federal prison on drug trafficking charges, met the runaway shortly after his July 2009 release, when she was 14.
The teen was found with bite wounds on her back, and scratches and bruising on her neck. She was released to Crosswinds Youth Services, and will be reunited with family.
Deputies say Hardy was driving the teen to engage in prostitution. The girl, Jessica Sockabasin, 30, and Phillip Johnson, 21, face prostitution-related charges, officials said.
Hardy faces charges of procuring a person under the age of 18 for prostitution and unlawful sexual activity with certain minors. The adults were jailed in Brevard County.
The Sheriff’s Office is seeking additional information related to the investigation. Anyone with info can call deputies at 321-633-8407 or the Crimeline at 1-800-423-8477.
Sheriff’s detectives said they linked several robberies that occurred at businesses in east Orange County to a man arrested Thursday after he robbed a man at an ATM.
Felix Javier Munoz, 39, was taken into custody following a vehicle pursuit, which involved a deputy who witnessed the robbery at the Chase bank on South Goldenrod and Curry Ford Rd.
According to a Sheriff’s Office report, a 69-year-old drove up to the ATM about 5:20 a.m. and withdrew $100.
After withdrawing the cash, a van pulled up and stopped in front of his vehicle, blocking his exit.
The driver of the van, later identified as Munoz, pointed a semi-automatic handgun at the victim and said, “Give me the money,” the report said.
Eventually, the victim reversed his vehicle and accelerated backward. Munoz got back into his van and drove off.
The Sheriff’s Office report said a deputy witnessed the incident, followed Munoz in his vehicle and ultimately engaged Munoz in a pursuit along with other units.
Detectives said Munoz has been linked to several other robberies:
• A March 25 robbery at a 7-Eleven on South Bumby Avenue.
•An April 10 robbery at a Walmart Neighborhood Market on South Chickasaw Trail.
•An April 10 robbery at a Racetrac on South Goldenrod Road.
Munoz was booked into the Orange County Jail on a count of robbery with a firearm.
After a Daytona Beach police officer spotted a stolen car in a parking lot Tuesday night and arrested the driver, a mobile methamphetamine lab was found in the trunk of the vehicle.
Robert W. Smith Jr., 37, and Robert W. Smith Sr., 72, both face charges of manufacturing and possession of methamphetamine. Smith Jr. also is accused of grand theft auto.
Both men listed permanent addresses in Bowling Green, Ky., as well as an address in Holly Hill.
The 1995 Pontiac Firebird, reported stolen from Bowling Green in January, was spotted outside the Daytona Family Market, 1260 Mason Ave., about 7:20 p.m. Smith Jr. was behind the wheel and the engine was running, police said. The man told officers a friend let him use the car so he could visit his father.
Absorption Rate: The rate at which consumed alcohol finds its way into the blood stream. While alcohol sits in the stomach, its absorption is delayed. Absorption rate will be affected by how much was eaten, individual biologic differences, and what type of beverage was consumed. When drinking continues over a course of hours, both absorption and “burnoff” (metabolizing of alcohol) will be happening simultaneously.
Administrative License Suspension: A law that allows the prompt suspension of the license of drivers charged with Driving While icated (DWI) when a driver has a BAC above the prescribed limit, or sometimes if a driver refuses to take a roadside blood or breath test. Thus the license may be suspended before adjudication of the DWI charge.
BAC: Short for “blood alcohol concentration.” BAC refers to the amount of alcohol in your bloodstream and is measured in percentages. BAC can be measured either by breath, blood or urine testing and is often used by law enforcement to determine whether or not a motorist is “legally drunk.” All 50 states have adopted BAC laws that make it illegal to drive with a BAC at or above a set amount. As of May of 2007, all 50 states have adopted 0.08% as the BAC limit.
Blood Test: A laboratory test that directly measures the percentage of alcohol content of the blood drawn from a DWI suspect.
Breath Test: A test of blood alcohol level that is derived from measuring the alcohol level of the suspect’s breath. It depends for its accuracy on the machine’s receiving air from deep in the lungs, and a mathematical formula is used to extrapolate the blood alcohol level from the lung-air alcohol level.
Breathalyzer: A portable machine used by law enforcement to measure the BAC of suspected drunk drivers.
Burn off Rate: The rate at which alcohol in the body is metabolized. During burn off, the blood alcohol level drops, giving rise to the “falling curve” term to describe the graph of the decrease in BA.
Chemical Test: As it relates to DUI, a test of the alcohol or drug concentration in a person’s blood. A Breathalyzer, blood analysis, or urinalysis can be used as chemical tests for alcohol. If other drugs are suspected, a blood test or urine test is used.
Commercial Vehicle: A vehicle driven for business purposes. In the DUI context, these are the consequences for driving a commercial vehicle while drunk.
Community Service: Depending on the offense, your state may offer community service as a way to work off fines or jail time, which means you are living at home and reporting during the day to pick up trash, sweep public buildings, assist community charitable or public oriented organizations, or perform other services to the community. Community service may also be a mandatory part of your sentencing.
Conditional License: A conditional license is a license granted “on condition” of something, such as completing a DUI course or alcohol treatment program. Once that “condition” has been met, a standard license is generally issued or reinstated.
Diversion: A court program that can suspend the prosecution of a criminal DWI charge in exchange for performing certain tasks, such as attending a drinking driver program. At the end of the period of successful diversion the charges are dismissed. This is less frequently used in DWI cases these days, but still exists in some states.
Driver Responsibility Tax: Some states charge those convicted of a DUI with an extra tax on top of fines and court costs. This usually consists of a tax that is payable to the state for three years after the incident occurred (e.g.: $250 per year for three years). In most cases, failure to pay the yearly assessment on time results in license suspension.
DUI School: DUI schools are typically drug and alcohol education programs designed to help you realize how dangerous drinking and driving is and to hopefully ensure you are not a repeat offender. Your state will likely have a list of approved schools for you to choose from.
DUI: Driving While Under the Influence. Just a different way of stating DWI.
DWI: Driving While icated. Just a different way of stating DUI.
Felony: A serious crime, such as murder, rape or burglary, for which there is a stricter sentence given than for a misdemeanor. Felonies are usually categorized by degrees. 1st degree felonies are the most serious class (with the highest fines and penalties), 2nd degree felonies are less serious, and so on. Many states treat DUIs that cause serious bodily injury as a 3rd degree felony. If there has been a death as a result of the DUI, it might be classified as a 1st or 2nd degree felony, depending upon the prosecutor and the situation. Some states elevate DWI to felony status even without an injury or death, if the suspect has a given number of prior DWI convictions. A felony can result in a sentence to state prison instead of county jail.
FST: Field Sobriety Test. A series of physical and mental coordination tests designed to help an officer decide if a driver is DWI. These may include walking the straight line, reciting the alphabet, standing still with feet together and arms extended, standing on one foot, etc. These are highly subjective, but if the officer concludes the driver was DWI, he will require a BA test. States seldom have statutes that penalize refusing to perform FST’s, but most will penalize refusal to take a Blood Alcohol Test with license suspension or other penalties.
High BAC: Threshold blood alcohol content for which maximum penalties and fines may apply, even on a first offense.
Ignition Interlock Device: An ignition interlock device is an in-car alcohol breath screening device that prevents a vehicle from starting if it detects a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) over a pre-set limit of .02 (i.e., 20 mg of alcohol per 100 ml of blood). The device is located inside the vehicle, near the driver’s seat, and is connected to the engine’s ignition system. Many states require that the device be used by those convicted of DUI.
Implied Consent Laws: Some states have implied consent laws. If you have a driver’s license in one of these states, you have, by implication, consented to have your blood alcohol concentration measured. In many states, you may refuse to take the test, but fines and license suspensions may be the result. In some states, an officer may not pull over drivers randomly to test them, but must have “probable cause” to believe the driver is DWI before pulling them over (such as observing “weaving”).
ilyzer: A brand name for a blood alcohol breath testing machine.
License Revocation: A license revocation means your driving privileges have been cancelled. You will likely need to reapply for a driver’s license after a designated length of time.
License Suspension: A license suspension means you may not drive for the period of your suspension. Driving privileges are typically administered by a state agency other than the court system. It could be the Secretary of State, the Department of Motor Vehicles or another agency. If your license is suspended, the suspension will likely take effect immediately upon arrest, and not upon conviction. Check your state’s laws. You, or your lawyer on your behalf, may be able to negotiate a limited suspension, meaning you may drive to and from work, but nowhere else.
Miranda Rights: The formal advisement that you have the right to remain silent and to have a lawyer present before answering questions, which police must recite prior to questioning someone who is in custody. Seldom relevant to DWI cases, because the police never arrest anyone until after questioning (Have you been drinking?), after the FSTs, and maybe even after the Blood Alcohol Testing. Of course, one does have the right not to answer questions like that one, or “How much have you had to drink? When?”, but no officer will advise you of that.
Misdemeanor: A crime less serious than a felony. Misdemeanors are sometimes categorized by degrees. 1st degree misdemeanors are the most serious class (with the highest fines andpenalties), 2nd degree misdemeanors are less serious, and so on. Many states treat a first DUI conviction as a misdemeanor.
Open Container Laws: In some states, it is illegal to have an open container of alcohol in your vehicle. Many states have laws that make it illegal for drivers and passengers to have open containers in the vehicle.
Probation: When all or part of the required jail time is suspended in exchange for good behavior, as determined by checking in with a probation officer. Jail time may be reinstated if it is found the terms of probation are being violated. Some grants of probation are unsupervised, but a violation may be found after a new arrest.
Provisional (or Restricted) License: AA provisional license typically withholds certain license privileges. In a DUI context, a provisional license might be granted to someone to drive to and from work only, or to and from the court ordered drinking driver program.
Regurgitation: Ejecting some stomach contents up into the throat or mouth. With alcohol in the stomach, this can fool a Breathalyzer into thinking that the blood alcohol level is much higher than it is. Officers administering a breath test are supposed to watch the suspect to see he does not burp or regurgitate prior to the test. A cloud of alcohol burped up into the mouth will invalidate the breath test results.
Rising Curve Defense: A defense to DWI based upon the claim that the driver was not under the influence and did not have .08% blood alcohol when he or she was driving, but that it rose to that level after arrest due to the fact that alcohol was still being absorbed. Consequently, a long delay between being pulled over and having a BA test helps the suspect in many cases.
Sobriety Checkpoints: A system where law enforcement agencies select a particular location for a particular time period and systematically stop vehicles (for example, every third car) to investigate drivers for possible DWI. If any evidence of ication is noted, a detailed investigation ensues.
Urine Test: A laboratory chemical test of the suspect’s urine to determine the suspect’s blood alcohol level. Can be inaccurate because of the mixing of higher alcohol level urine from earlier with lower alcohol level urine closer to the driver’s being pulled over. Can give an artificially high reading for that reason.
Vehicle Impound/Immobilization: Vehicle impound is an option used by some states when there has been more than one DUI conviction. The vehicle may be seized, or an ignition interlock device may be installed on the steering wheel of the car, requiring the driver to pass a breath test using the device before he or she can start the vehicle and drive away.
Zero Tolerance BAC: Allowable blood alcohol content for minors (as defined by the state). This percentage can be as low as 0% (meaning no alcohol content may be detected-hence the term “zero tolerance.”) or as high as 0.02%.
Contact an Experienced Florida DUI Attorney
For more information on Florida DUI laws, or if you have been arrested for DUI, please schedule a free confidential consultation with an experienced criminal defense attorney. 407-849-9990.
Time is important; experience does matter.
ON FEBRUARY 2012, TALLAHASSEE SUBMITTED THOUSANDS OF HABITUAL TRAFFIC OFFENDER STATUS OUT TO THE DIVISION OF MOTOR VEHICLE (DMV). THESE INFRACTIONS WERE DUE TO CITATIONS PAID YEARS AGO THAT NEVER WERE SUBMITTED TO DMV. THIS MEANS MANY FLORIDA RESIDENTS ARE CURRENTLY DRIVING ON AN HTO LICENSE AND IT WILL REMAIN THIS WAY FOR 5 YEARS!
LAW OFFICES OF TRACEY KAGAN HAS BEEN PROVIDING LEGAL ASSISTANCE TO ALL THOSE AFFECTED BY THIS MATTER. OUR CONSULTATIONS ARE FREE! 407-849-9990
A convicted felon who was on probation when cameras caught him stealing a sport utility vehicle pleaded no-contest to a count of grand theft this week, Orange County court records show.
Michael Daniel Carlisle, who has a criminal record in Florida that goes back at least to 2000, is accused of stealing a Mercury Mountaineer from a Circle K at Sand Lake Road and Interstate 4 in July.
The owner of the SUV told authorities he left his keys on the seat when he stopped at the store.
Carlisle, who was sentenced to two years in prison in 2009 for grand-theft auto, will be sentenced March 9.
The plea agreement calls for three years prison, followed by two years probation with drug treatment, the State Attorney’s Office said.
A Central Florida physician was sentenced in Osceola County this afternoon to 25 years in prison for his involvement in an oxycodone-trafficking case.
Jose Carlos Menendez, who worked at the Physicians Care Partners Inc. in Osceola County, was arrested in October 2010. Menendez pleaded guilty in October to one count of conspiracy to traffic in oxycodone.
Orange Osceola Circuit Judge Jon B. Morgan today said Menendez was motivated by greed and used his prescription pad as if it were a “money-making machine.”
Morgan said he could not in good conscience sentence Morgan to the minimum of 15 years requested by his defense attorney and he should be treated like any other drug dealer.
The doctor’s wife and his parents gasped and wept after Morgan handed down the sentence.
Agents began investigating Menendez as part of a drug trafficking case against two other men, Tyrone Anderson and William Frank Sellers, the Osceola County Sheriff’s Office has reported.
When Anderson and Sellers were arrested, drug agents said they recovered 56 prescriptions for 18 patients.
Based on those arrests, agents obtained two search warrants in Sarasota County. There, investigators uncovered eight pounds of marijuana, guns, hundreds of empty pill bottles, and about 2,000 pills, the Sheriff’s Office said.
Agents said most of the pills listed Menendez, who lived in Casselberry at the time, as the prescribing doctor.
Sellers was recently sentenced to 25 years in prison.
‘Operation Red Cheeks’ nets 40 who travelled to Osceola for sex with ‘child,’ deputies say
A professional golfer, a teacher and several college students were among 40 suspected of traveling to meet minors for sex in an undercover sting in Osceola County, the Sheriff’s Office said Tuesday.
The arrests were the result of a weeklong, undercover operation led by the Osceola County Sheriff’s Office, dubbed “Operation Red Cheeks.” The operation ran from January 8 through Monday January 16, 2012.
Undercover detectives posed as children, or as parents or guardians, to chat online with the suspects, who traveled to an arranged meeting location in Osceola County for sex with a child, deputies said.
The Sheriff’s Office said some of the suspects sent pornographic images to undercover detectives during the online sting, and some brought alcohol or drugs and other items to the meetings.
Among those arrested:
*Professional Golfer Stephen Wesley Thomas, 55. The PGA’s website says the Tupelo, Miss. resident, has played in 44 PGA Tour events and 34 on the Champions Tour. He has three career top-10 finishes.
His arrest affidavit states Thomas thought he was chatting with a woman about sex with her 13-year-old daughter. He agreed to meet the teen for sex, deputies say, and sent photos of himself golfing.
Investigators searched Thomas’ sport utility vehicle after his arrest, the affidavit states, finding three condoms, two packages of chocolate pudding and a bottle of honey. Deputies say he confessed.
*Gainesville swim coach Bryan Woodward, 29. The Gainesville Sun reported last week Woodward coached youths for the Gator Swim Club, a private club unaffiliated with the University of Florida.
According to his arrest affidavit, Woodward told an undercover posing as a child online that “younger girls turn me on,” discussed graphic sex acts and brought candy with him to meet the “child.”
*Students Marvin Bell, 20, Lucas Clarke, 18, Josean Javier Gaston, 22, Justin Joseph Hall, 30, Cornellus Hunt, 29, Kegan Ritchie, 22, Frederick Adams, 18, Samer Al-Hubaydi, 26, and Winston Stephens, 20.
According to the Sheriff’s Office, Clarke attends the Golf Academy of America, Al-Hubaydi attends Embry-Riddle and Stephens attends Full Sail. Adams, deputies say, is still in high school.
An Embry-Riddle spokesman confirmed Al-Hubaydi’s name and birth date match a first-year student. The university will review his student status “taking into account the facts of the case or the outcome.”
*Eighth grade teacher Alexander Roy, 32. According to the St. Lucie County School Board, Roy works as a math teacher at Manatee Academy on Heatherwood Boulevard in Port St. Lucie.
“As per school board policy, this employee will be placed on administrative leave away from students until the completion of any potential adjudication,” said school board spokeswoman Janice Karst.
*Soldier Shane Daniel Cousins, 26. The Sheriff’s Office said Cousins is a member of the U.S. Army Reserves who lives in Kissimmee. His Facebook page says he attended Santa Fe College.
*Retired beekeeper Dell Rio Highsmith, 70. The Sheriff’s Office said Highsmith is a resident of Fargo, Ga. Authorities also arrested an IT professional and a construction worker, among others.
Agencies involved in the sting included the Citrus, Lake, Orange, Sumter, Polk, Hardee and Manatee sheriff’s offices and Ocoee, Kissimmee, Sanford, Orlando, Longwood and Casselberry police.
The suspects face a variety of charges, including traveling to seduce a child to commit sex acts, using a computer to solicit a child or parent and, for some, attempted lewd and lascivious battery of a child.
“These predators stalk the cyber community looking for children,” said Osceola Sheriff Bob Hansell, adding that because of the sting, “at a minimum, 40 children did not fall prey to a sexual deviant.”
A suspect who led law enforcement officers on a high-speed chase has crashed into several vehicles at the intersection of Colonial Drive and Orange Avenue in downtown Orlando.
Orange County Sheriff Jerry Demings is at the scene.
Two people inside a white four-door Toyota Corolla began fleeing from deputies in east Orange County around noon, before zigzagging their way into downtown. At times speeds exceeded 80 miles per hour. Officers trailed the fleeing car at a distance, while a television news helicopter followed it from the air.
It’s unclear why the men were fleeing. Calls to the Orange County Sheriff’s Office were not immediately returned.
The chase ended abruptly when the suspect T-boned several vehicles at the intersection near the Orlando Sentinel building.
The driver, who was wearing a white, long-sleeve shirt, jumped out of the car and limped onto the road. He was immediately taken into custody by officers who were trailing the fleeing car.
Witness James Simpkins said he was walking along Colonial Drive when the crash occurred.
“I heard a car coming and I thought he was going to stop, but he didn’t,” Simpkins said. “He hit him [another car], he hit him hard.”
Simpkins said the impact from the crash was so intense, it pushed the other vehicles “in the air.”
Another witness, Warren Chase who works at the Sentinel, believes his vehicle was hit by flying debris. He was stopped at the red light on Colonial Drive when the crash occurred.
Chase said the Corolla “came flying through the intersection” and hit the vehicles.
Numerous patrol vehicles descended on the intersection just seconds after the crash.
Deputies with guns drawn approached the suspect vehicle. One deputy used a baton to break the passenger side window of the suspect vehicle and remove the passenger.
That person appeared to be badly injured and was loaded onto a backboard and neck brace.
WESH Channel 2 is reporting that the suspects may have been involved in a robbery earlier today. This has not been confirmed.
It’s not clear whether either suspect was armed, but deputies were seen removing items from the suspect vehicle.
Fire engines and other law enforcement are on the scene. There is no word on whether others were injured.
The chase began further east, in the Goldenrod area of Orange County. The driver car sped on city streets while unmarked law enforcement vehicles followed and a Orange County Sheriff’s Office helicopter flew overhead.
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