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Bay Crime Watch ~ Keeping track of criminal activity in Bay County

Archive for the 'observation' Category

The Blotter bad girls edition

November 20th, 2007, 11:54 am by Brady Calhoun

The Blotter is intended to show that there is more to policing than many realize, and is based on reports from the Bay County Sheriff’s Office.

Nov. 19: A woman traveling south in the northbound lanes of State 77 nearly ran over a Bay County Sheriff’s deputy. The deputy had to take “evasive action” to avoid getting hit. She then began to pursue the woman. After about a mile and a half the woman finally pulled over near Southport Elementary School.
As the deputy approached she noted the distinct smell of alcohol emanating from the woman’s vehicle. The woman asked the deputy why she had pulled her over and the deputy informed the woman that she been traveling the wrong way on State 77.
“Well, I’m not from around here,” the woman replied. “I don’t know which way these roads go.”
The woman was arrested for driving under the influence and possession of alcohol by someone under 21. The woman told deputies that she lives in Chipley.

Nov. 19: There was probably no tip either.
An all night restaurant in Callaway is prepared to prosecute over a $6.49 bill. A “heavy set” woman with long, hair extensions ordered two waffles and a piece of ham. After she “consumed the food” the woman left the restaurant without paying. If deputies find the woman restaurant officials say they are prepared to go to court.

Nov. 19: A woman said her husband was abusing her but it just turned out to be a cold sore.
The woman told a deputy that she her husband had slapped her in the face and busted her lip. But when a deputy examined the wound it turned out to be a cold sore. The woman also said she had been pushed into a coffee table by her husband causing a bruise on her leg. The deputy examined that bruise but it was not consistent with the woman’s story about how she hit the coffee table. The woman also had a broken toe but could not tell deputies how it happened. The woman’s landlord doubted that any domestic violence occurred and said that when the woman is drunk, she frequently falls down.

Nov 18: A deputy observed a driver going the wrong way on Tyndall Parkway. The driver was leaving a pharmacy and attempted to drive over a concrete median. The deputy turned on her lights and sirens and directed traffic around the driver.
When the driver got back to the parking lot he stepped out of his vehicle.
“At which time I noticed that (he) had urinated on himself,” the deputy wrote in an incident report. “I could see that the front of both legs all the way down to his feet were wet.”
The man did not have a driver’s license. The man was arrested because he did not have a license and for driving under the influence.

99 mph on East Ave.

November 20th, 2007, 9:22 am by Brady Calhoun

“As bad as it was … he could have sailed through to (U.S. Business) 98,” said Rene Ouellette. “Imagine if he would have hit a family or some poor guy on his way to work.”Panama City police said Darryl Lee Rogers, 24, of 1706 E. Sixth St. in Panama City, lost control of a 2004 Chevrolet Trailblazer as he traveled south on East Avenue at about 1 a.m. Friday. The vehicle smashed into a blue Chevrolet Malibu parked in Ouellette’s yard at 617 N. East Ave. and pushed it about 10 feet.

The Trailblazer then went airborne, hitting the roof of Ouellette’s porch and causing it to collapse. The vehicle blasted through a wooden fence and entered the front yard of 613 N. East Ave., where it began to flip end over end, hitting a 2008 Expedition and a 2007 Dodge Ram. The Trailblazer also smacked that home, hit a tree and landed on the roof of a third home, police said.

The two vehicles and the second home belonged to Jeffrey and Mona Farver Jr. The third home, at 611 N. East Ave., is owned by Farver’s parents, Jeffrey and Helen Farver Sr.

Witnesses told investigators that Rogers was ejected from the vehicle, into a tree and landed in a flower bed. He was pronounced dead at the scene. The crash still is under investigation, police said.

Woman isn’t only thing smoking

November 19th, 2007, 4:38 pm by mcazalas

The Blotter is intended to show that there is more to policing than many realize, and is based on reports from the Bay County Sheriff’s Office. 

Nov. 16: A man reports that a woman at a bar  “asked him to come party with her group. He stated that he told her no, and that she grabbed his gold necklace and stated that she liked it.” The man reports the woman ran past her “group,” shouting, “I got it, let’s go,” and ran into the oparking lot. The  man caught her in the parking lot, where she punched him in the face. Twice. “He then lost sight of her,” the deputy reported.

 Nov. 16: Deputies are dispatched to a disturbance, and upon arrival find what appears to be a wreck with multiple vehicles parked along the road and one person laying in the road and another in a ditch.  Female No. 1, blood in her hair, says she was hit in the head by another girl armed with a crutch. She said it started with a fight between guys until “one girl hit one of the males.” Female number 1 asked the second woman why she hit the man, and the second female “pushed (female No. 1) in the forehead. (She) tried to defend herself … and was struck once in the head with a crutch …”

It did not get any simpler from there. In the end, it was turned over to the teens’ parents, who “expressed the desire to deal with their childrens’ activities at home.”

 Nov. 16: A store clerk reports that two men in an older model Honda Acura did more than run out with a measly six-pack of beer. He said one distracted him by talking while the other left with a “five-liter keg of Henieken Beer.” The clerk “made contact” with the man in the parking lot, and the “suspect returned the keg.”  Unfortunately, the clerk discovered another keg missing, and suspects the men already had one in the car before he caught on.

Nov. 16: The Dollar General store clerk knows what is suspicous and what is normal, and there was something going on with the woman with the dolphin.

“He stated that what caught his eye about (suspect) is she had a cart full of stuff, but was keeping a plastic dolpin in her hand.” Sure enough, the woman left the store with the dolpin stuffed in her purse. She was detained and warned.

Nov. 17: A woman walks outside of her home “to smoke a cigarette and observed her vehicle was on fire.” The deputy notes that the vehicle is smoking and the passenger’s seat is destroyed.

Nov. 17: A woman reports her ex-boyfriend showed up at her house “beating on the door and asking for money.” He is gone when deputies arrive, and the woman is told to call again if he returns. He does, and she does.

“When I turned onto (the) street I observed a cloud of dust from the parking area” at the residence. The deputy sees the vehicle, with no tag, pull into a store, and the suspect gets out.

“When (he) saw me, he placed his hands behind his back and stated, ‘You got me.’ He then stated, ‘Did you see me leave (her) house?’ I told him no, but I saw the dust.” The man told the deputy he was “just trying to drown his troubles in alcohol,” and did not have a driver’s license. He is arrested.

Running into a burning building

November 7th, 2007, 3:19 pm by Brady Calhoun

I talked to several firefighters today about their work. One question I asked them was, “How do you manage to run into a burning building when everyone else is running away?” Their answer was “training.”

Firefighters receive “Life Saving” award after rescue
By S. Brady Calhoun
News Herald Writer
747-5075 / bcalhoun@pcnh.com
PANAMA CITY
It was 4 a.m. and the back of a Hickory Avenue house was engulfed in flame - just another day on the job for Panama City firefighters.
A crew from station 2 in St. Andrews, lead by Lt. Scott Flitcraft, arrived first.
“Fire was ripping up into the sky from the back of the house,” Flitcraft said.
As they began setting up a neighbor told the firefighters that a resident was still inside. Flitcraft felt certain the person inside would be dead. After 23 years on the job Flitcraft has seen how badly these things can go.
“Usually, people are dead by the smoke before you get there,” he said.
Flitcraft grabbed a hose and ran in first. Firefighter Ryan Smith rushed in behind him while Firefighter Andrew Shortt fed them hose from the door.
Inside the house the smoke was thick and it stretched from the ceiling to the floor. Flitcraft placed his hand over his eyes Wednesday to describe the visibility.
Blind but still moving, something, Flitcraft attributed it to God or luck, nudged them into making a right turn inside the house, Flitcraft said. If they had gone straight they would have ended up on the other side of the one-story, wood-frame home, instead they entered Joseph Adams’ bedroom.
Flitcraft said he believed Adams, who is in his late 70s, woke up, rose from his bed and then fell on the floor. From the floor Adams managed to grab Flitcraft’s glove. The lieutenant picked Adams up from behind and began dragging him out of the house. Smith assisted with the rescue by grabbing Adams’ legs. Flitcraft and Smith carried Adams back out of the house and handed him off to other firefighters who performed first aid on the man and gave him oxygen.
Then Flitcraft and Smith rushed back inside to fight the fire.
Adams was taken to a nearby hospital where he was treated for smoke inhalation. However, his $150,000 home was destroyed in the blaze and he currently lives with family in Foley, Ala., Flitcraft said.
Investigators determined that the blaze was accidental and probably started with an electrical short from a window air-conditioning unit in the back of the home.
In a ceremony on Wednesday morning Flitcraft and Smith were given the department’s “Life Saver” award for their actions on Oct. 7. Shortt and Joe Moody, an engineer, were also commended for their work that morning.
Flitcraft said the crew got their real award shortly after the fire when they visited Adams in the hospital and hugged his neck.
“That was the best reward,” Flitcraft said. “I told him to buy a lotto ticket. `The man upstairs likes you.”’

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