Tag Archives: child

Aunt of 4 year old found wandering talks to WINK

FORT MYERS, FL-A four year old child found wandering in the middle of road at two O’clock in the morning is safe at home tonight.
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“I was so scared, a lot of bad things were running through my mind.”
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Sheer terror is what Nancy Jimenez says she was feeling once she realized her four year old niece Catarina was missing from her bed.
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“My husband was sleeping, so he’s all like “she’s sleeping”. He never thought she was going to get up in the middle of the night and walk off.”
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Deputies say, that’s exactly what she did.
Catarina was spending the night at her aunt’s for the very first time.
Jimenez says she put her three children and Catarina to bed and then went to work at a? nearby restaurant.
She got home at around 4:30 in the morning.
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“I don’t see her shoes under the doorstep.”
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Catarina walked from the back of Forestwood Apartment Homes all the way to Brantley Road.
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“My sister says that probably she wanted to go home.”
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Good samaritans found Catarina around 2 a.m and called police. Today Jimenez is counting her blessings.
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“Time is of the essence, especially down here in Florida because this child happened to be in the roadway, there is so much water, there are so many things that could have happened.”
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Scary statistics tonight. When a child is abducted 44 percent die within the first hour.
After three hours, that number jumps to 76 percent and after a full day, a startling 88 percent.
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“How about if someone took her when she was going out the door.”
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Jimenez knows she got lucky.
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“I’m so grateful, I’m so grateful.”

Aunt of 4 year old found wandering talks to WINK

Driver arrested for DUI after striking middle school student on Trafalgar Parkway

CAPE CORAL, Fla. – Cape Coral Police arrested a parent for Driving Under the Influence yesterday evening after he hit a student walking along Trafalgar Parkway and then fled the area. James Alan Moses (DOB: 10/15/1965) was charged with DUI and Hit-and-Run when he returned to the area to see if he had struck a mailbox.

At 4:19 p.m. yesterday, Cape Police responded to a 911 call reporting that a child had been struck by the rear view mirror of a truck while walking from Challenger Middle School. According to witnesses, Moses was traveling eastbound on Trafalgar Parkway after picking up his child from the school. His truck drifted off the roadway and into the grass, and his passenger side mirror hit the head of an 11-year-old male. Moses left the scene and dropped his child at his residence. He then decided to come back to the scene to see if his truck had hit a mailbox. Cape Police Corporal Andy Satterlee located Moses when he returned and with the assistance of Corporal Patrick O’Grady, they determined that Moses was driving under the influence.

The 11-year-old was taken to Cape Coral Hospital and treated for a lump on his head. Moses was arrested and transported to Lee County Jail.

Cape Coral Police have stepped up their presence around school areas during the first week of classes. This added presence contributed to Cape Police finding and arresting the suspect in this hit-and-run accident within a short period of time.

Driver arrested for DUI after striking middle school student on Trafalgar Parkway

Lehigh Acres man charged with killing infant

<br />
 Name: BLACKMORE, MIKLOS OVON<br />
 Charge: NEGLIGENT MANSLAUGHTER AGGRAVATED OF CHILD WARRANT TO ARREST<br />
 Residence: LEHIGH ACRES<br />
 Age: 24</p>
<p> Follow this case online:  http://www.leeclerk.org/court_inquiry_Disclaimer.htm<br />
Please note: Most cases require 2-3 days to be inputted into the public court record.<br />
This gallery is compiled by the Naples Daily News correspondents from written reports by Lee County Sheriff and other agencies.  Arrests indicate suspicion of crime, not guilt.  To report a crime or suspicious activity in your neighborhood, call the Lee County Sheriff’s Office at (239) 477-1000.<br />

LCSO

  • Name: BLACKMORE, MIKLOS OVON
  • Charge: NEGLIGENT MANSLAUGHTER AGGRAVATED OF CHILD WARRANT TO ARREST
  • Residence: LEHIGH ACRES
  • Age: 24

Follow this case online: http://www.leeclerk.org/court_inquiry_Disclaimer.htm

Please note: Most cases require 2-3 days to be inputted into the public court record.

This gallery is compiled by the Naples Daily News correspondents from written reports by Lee County Sheriff and other agencies. Arrests indicate suspicion of crime, not guilt. To report a crime or suspicious activity in your neighborhood, call the Lee County Sheriff’s Office at (239) 477-1000.

Police have filed aggravated manslaughter charges against a man for the January death of his 8-week-old daughter.

Miklos Ovon Blackmore, 24, and the girl’s mother took her to the hospital on January 29th around 7 p.m. because the child was not breathing, according to police.

CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THE STORY

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

Lehigh Acres man charged with killing infant

Dangerous intersections: U.S. 41 is accident central throughout south Lee

Scenes at the intersection of Sanibel Boulevard and U.S. 41, one of the most dangerous intersections in Lee County. Greg Kahn/Staff

Photo by GREG KAHN // Buy this photo

Scenes at the intersection of Sanibel Boulevard and U.S. 41, one of the most dangerous intersections in Lee County. Greg Kahn/Staff

The Daily News reviewed crash reports from 2006 through 2008 for 22 intersections south of Daniels Parkway, determining which had the most accidents and the highest crash rates compared with traffic volume.

Of about 1,400 crashes in the three-year period of the Daily News analysis, about half were rear-end collisions. Another 450 weren’t classified. Fewer than 300 were either side-swipes or angled collisions and 33 were head-on crashes.


Vivian Jones waved her hands back and forth, criss-crossing over her head, swooping down into a loud clap.

That was her impersonation of traffic at one of the most crash-prone intersections in south Lee County.

Jones lives, works, shops and takes her child to day care near the crossroads of Sanibel Boulevard and U.S. 41 in San Carlos Park.

She drives cautiously and remains alert on the streets she calls stressful.

“When you’re driving,” Jones said, “you can’t just drive for you. You have to drive for everyone else because everyone else is bang, bang, bang.”

Nearly 47,000 cars pass through this spot every day. With more than one crash every two weeks, these cross streets ranked fourth-highest in an analysis of south Lee County’s most dangerous intersections.

The Daily News reviewed crash reports from 2006 through 2008 for 22 intersections south of Daniels Parkway, determining which had the most accidents and the highest crash rates compared with traffic volume.

Traffic engineers and law enforcement officers use statistics such as these to highlight roadways in need of safety improvements or extra enforcement.

Officials interviewed for this story felt that the intersections in south Lee County were, overall, in pretty good shape.

“There’s no intersection on U.S. 41 that’s been raised to the (DOT) for issues of safety,” Florida Department of Transportation spokeswoman Debbie Tower said. “We see crashes at signalized intersections. That’s unfortunately not atypical. And we do see a lot of rear-end crashes. … We’re just not seeing anything out of the ordinary.”

Of about 1,400 crashes in the three-year period of the Daily News analysis, about half were rear-end collisions. Another 450 weren’t classified. Fewer than 300 were either side-swipes or angled collisions and 33 were head-on crashes.

“There’s no intersection on U.S. 41 that’s been raised to the (DOT) for issues of safety,” Florida Department of Transportation spokeswoman Debbie Tower said. “We see crashes at signalized intersections. That’s unfortunately not atypical. And we do see a lot of rear-end crashes. … We’re just not seeing anything out of the ordinary.”

A number of factors play into the safety equation: design flaws, congestion, traffic signals that allow for dangerous movements and distractions, such as driveways into businesses.

By far, the No. 1 cause of crashes is driver error, officials said.

Engineers attributed 90 percent of collisions to distractions such as following too closely or turning attention to text messages or kids in the back seat.

“You’re going to have crashes because we’re humans and humans make mistakes,” said Stephen Jansen, Lee County’s senior traffic engineer.

When those mistakes happen at an increasing rate, Jansen takes note to see if anything can be done to reduce drivers’ risks.

One such analysis took place a few years ago at the Sanibel and U.S. 41 intersection near where Jones works at Taco Viva.

The county traffic division noticed there had been 84 crashes in 2004 and 2005, 21 of which resulted in injuries.

“Turning off of (U.S.) 41 in each direction was a problem,” Jansen said.

Seventeen crashes happened when cars tried to turn left from U.S. 41 and collided with traffic moving straight through the intersection.

In 2006, that signal was changed to limit left turns to green arrows only. In the years that followed, left-turn injury crashes became practically nonexistent. From 2007 through 2009 there were 63 crashes, nearly half the annual rate from earlier years. Nine crashes in the three-year span resulted in injuries, two of which were left-turning vehicles colliding with through traffic.

(Monday, it will be your chance at naplesnews.com to Sound Off about traffic. Return to our website on Monday and take several polls about traffic in our area.)

Thursday: Collier’s most dangerous intersections

Today: South Lee’s most dangerous intersections

Weekend: Dangerous intersections, by community

Monday: Readers’ choices and several polls for you to Sound Off about Southwest Florida traffic

(Pick up copies of the Daily News this Sunday and Monday for newspaper versions of this series and a full-page map showing the most dangerous intersections)

The intersection still ranks high for crashes, however those typically don’t involve injuries. Most often, there are rear-end collisions that typify driver error.

“It doesn’t matter what you do to the road if the driver’s not paying attention,” Jansen said.

When Jansen’s crash-rate analysis shows less than one crash for every million vehicles, he considers it to be in good shape. Between one and two crashes per million are basically safe, but could possibly trigger a review. Anything more than two crashes per million vehicles is a red flag.

In the Daily News analysis, just two south Lee County intersections along U.S. 41 surpassed Jansen’s threshold: Old 41 Road had 2.15 crashes per million and Corkscrew Road saw 2.08 crashes per million vehicles.

Old 41 Road is a city of Bonita Springs road, but Daryl Walk, the city’s public works manager, said the city doesn’t have the engineering staff to analyze crash statistics. Crashes along there trended down, with 61 reported in 2006, 39 in 2007 and 25 in 2008.

Tower said she couldn’t be sure what the numbers were illustrating. In 2006, U.S. 41 was under construction from Old 41 Road south, but she declined to say whether that was a factor.

“I just can’t draw that conclusion,” she said.

However, Jansen said where there is construction there are distracted drivers. They turn their attention to construction work or become confused by barricades.

Rodgers Wilkinson, 56, manager of the Circle K on U.S. 41 near Old 41 Road, said traffic usually moves along at a good pace with few accidents.

“You do start to see (traffic) back up here,” Wilkinson said. “Usually it flows pretty good.”

Corkscrew Road at U.S. 41 carried the second-highest crash rate in the Daily News analysis and saw about 127 crashes in three years. Most of those were rear-end and side-swipes.

Jansen said those types of accidents were congestion-related. A fix for that is coming by early next year. The state plans to six-lane U.S. 41 from Corkscrew north to Hickory Drive.

Most top spots for crashes occur at higher-volume roads.

Six Mile Cypress Parkway at U.S. 41 carried about 88,000 vehicles each day.

Between one and two crashes per million are basically safe, but could possibly trigger a review. Anything more than two crashes per million vehicles is a red flag. In the Daily News analysis, just two south Lee County intersections along U.S. 41 surpassed the threshold: Old 41 Road had 2.15 crashes per million and Corkscrew Road saw 2.08 crashes per million vehicles.

Though its crash rate didn’t make the top five, that intersection saw 116 crashes from 2006-08, ranking fourth in total collisions.

Drivers can expect some relief there as well. A state project will double the capacity of the left-turn lanes in both directions on U.S. 41.

That’s where Brooke Wallis, 52, manager of the DQ Grill & Chill near the intersection, calls traffic “crazy.”

“This light backs up a lot and people are trying to squeeze into the turn lane for the beach,” Wallis said.

The two turn lanes already operating in both directions aren’t enough to keep cars from overflowing into lanes where traffic is continuing through the intersection.

“If you’re not prepared for it,” Wallis said, “you can bump into someone else.”

Once all of U.S. 41 is six lanes, it will likely not get wider, Tower said, so new north-south corridors become key to managing growth.

That’s why Metro Parkway will be extended to U.S. 41 in 2012.

Still, some see enforcement as the crux to safe streets.

“They can do anything to the roads, but the only thing that will change drivers is seeing more police on the roads,” said Marilyn Kidder, 61, a saleswoman for Carl’s Patio at the Alico Road and U.S. 41 intersection.

Lt. Jim Drzymala, traffic commander of the Lee County Sheriff’s Office, agreed.

“Once we determine the education and engineering won’t work, we’ll go out and focus some enforcement on (a section of road),” he said.

County engineering, enforcement and education officials meet monthly to discuss streets in need of attention.

“We don’t have any bad intersections,” Drzymala said. “We have high-volume intersections, but that’s just part of growing pains in Southwest Florida.”

While some growing pains can be alleviated by widening streets, some streets have had all of the fixing they will likely get.

?Dangerous intersections: Where you’re most likely to crash in Collier County

Bonita Beach Road carries an average of 67,000 cars each day and saw 139 crashes, or 1.9 crashes per million vehicles. But plans to widen it west of U.S. 41 are stalled with a lack of money, Jansen said.

“There’s never going to be enough money for all the needs,” added Harry Campbell, Lee’s traffic director. The intersection maintenance budget has been cut from about $1 million to $750,000.

To the extent possible, traffic signals can promote efficiency and safety.

Yellow lights can be lengthened to give drivers more time to pass through the intersection, as can the full cycle from green to red to handle peak-season or peak-hour volumes.

Law enforcement officers can be tipped off to red-light runners by special lights on signals that illuminate when a car has run a red light.

?Dangerous intersections: How we did our analysis in Collier, south Lee

?Dangerous intersections: Lee data

Sometimes those lights aren’t perfect, though, and the county can fix glitches when notified by the public.

Michael Condello, 31, of Naples who works at the Subway at the intersection of Corkscrew Road and U.S. 41, said his biggest traffic concern is sensors.

Sensors detect when a car is waiting for a green arrow. But that can be problematic for people riding motorcycles, which sometimes may not be detected by sensors.

“I have to wait for a car to come behind me for the light to turn,” Condello said. “Sometimes I just have to blow through it.”

Tower was adamant, however, that drivers shouldn’t consider traffic signals as tools for safe streets.

“Traffic signals are not safety devices,” she said. “They assign right of way.”

Sometimes if a driver is killed, family will ask for a traffic light at the crash location. But lights installed arbitrarily may cause more problems, Tower said.

“Safety is in the hands of drivers,” she said.

Sometimes residents see a problem where traffic officials don’t.

Several drivers interviewed for this story said turning at the Bonita Beach Road and Arroyal roads intersection is the most dangerous in south Lee County.

Athena Andrus, 25, who works at CVS near the U.S. 41 and Bonita Beach Road intersection, said the problem is turning left.

“When there are other cars in the turn lane (across from you) you can’t see oncoming traffic,” Andrus said. “People behind honk at you, but you can’t see and you can’t take that risk.”

Tami Gruver, 39, of Bonita Springs, was in an accident there.

“It totaled my car and I had neck injuries,” she said. “I get nervous going through there.”

The intersection allows cars to turn left on the green arrow and green ball.

With about 15 accidents a year and more than 30,000 cars traveling through the intersection each day, the Arroyal-Bonita Beach Road intersection sees about one crash per million drivers.

“In the grand scheme of things it’s not that bad,” Jansen said.

Maintaining traffic flow and safety is a balancing act.

“I can make these roads so safe nobody would die,” Jansen said. “But nobody wants to go 15 miles per hour.”

__ Connect with Tara E. McLaughlin at www.naplesnews.com/staff/tara-mclaughlin/

DANGEROUS INTERSECTIONS: The series so far

?Dangerous intersections:The series

?Dangerous intersections: A map of crash rates

?Dangerous intersections: A map of crash totals

?Dangerous intersections: Where you’re most likely to crash in Collier County

?Dangerous intersections: A closer look at five of Collier County’s worst

?Dangerous intersections: Collier data

?Dangerous intersections: U.S. 41 is accident central throughout south Lee

?Dangerous intersections: Lee data

?Dangerous intersections: How we did our analysis in Collier, south Lee

This series was reported by Ryan Mills, Tara McLaughlin and Tracy Miguel. Video by Carrie Wise. Database by Joseph Prehoda.

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

Dangerous intersections: U.S. 41 is accident central throughout south Lee

Summer reading keeps students from falling behind in school, experts say

Research shows that children who don’t continue reading through the summer can lose a month or more of progress made during the school year.

The following are books recommended for the summer of 2010 by Just Read, Florida! _ an initiative adopted by then-Gov. Jeb Bush in 2001 that aims to help every student become a successful, independent reader:

—Kindergarten through third grade—:

• “Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People’s Ears: A West African Tale” by Verna Aardema

• “Pancakes for Breakfast” by Tommie DePaila

• “Charlotte’s Web” by E.B. White

• “Miss Nelson is Missing” by Harry Allard

—Grades four and five—:

• “Princess Academy” by Sharon Hale

• “Island of the Blue Dolphins” by Scott O’Dell

• “Sarah, Plain and Tall” by Patricia MacLachlan

• “Discovering Mars” by Melvin Berger

—Grades six through eight—:

• “Wangari’s Tree of Peace” by Jeanette Winter

• “Hoot” by Carl Hiaasen

• “Bridge to Terabithia” by Katherine Paterson

• “The Lightning Thief” by Rick Riordan

—Grades nine through 12—:

• “The Book Thief” by Markus Zusak

• “The Old Man and the Sea” by Ernest Hemingway

• “A Separate Peace” by John Knowles

• “In the Time of Butterflies” by Julia Alvarez


Lisa Wendel walked out of the headquarters branch of the Collier County Public Library ready for summer.

In her arms were a stack of books, mysteries and romances, waiting for their pages to be opened.

“I just do it for fun,” Lisa, 14, said of reading. “Not too many of my friends do it, but I read a lot because it lets me find more things to build (my knowledge) on.”

Whatever she is reading, Lisa is cracking a book this summer and that’s something educators and researchers believe is necessary to help her when she soon starts her freshman year at Gulf Coast High School.

And it is not just true for high school students.

Kaitlin Yonge, 10, a fifth-grader at Pelican Marsh Elementary School, said she has enjoyed reading The Beacon Street Girls, a series of books written by Annie Bryant.

“They’re about a group of girls who go through problems and solve them,” she said.

Kaitlin also had a copy of Judy Blume’s “Fudge-a-Mania” in her hands. Blume is an author familiar to her mother, Stephanie Yonge, who read Blume’s books when she was younger.

“I think she likes to get lost in the stories. She likes being taken away to another place,” Yonge said.

Yonge said she tries to encourage both Kaitlyn and younger sister, Megan, to be good readers.

“It is important to read. You learn how to learn,” she said. “And I think it helps with boredom. It breaks up the summer. They also need to be in the practice of reading. You don’t want them to be out of school for two months and not pick up a single book.”

Research backs up Yonge’s assertion that children need to read over their summer vacation and shows that children who don’t continue reading through the summer can lose a month or more of progress made during the school year. Of greater concern, according to the International Reading Association, is that the losses are cumulative, creating a wider gap each year between more-proficient and less-proficient students.

Current research points out that more summer reading reduces the amount of summer learning loss.

“A key step toward stopping the summer slide is the development and launch of high-quality programs that take advantage of time outside the school day and year to help children learn, grow and develop,” Education Secretary Arne Duncan has said.

A study by Scholastic Inc. revealed that the No. 1 complaint from children regarding reading is that they don’t read more because they cannot find books they enjoy.

Lisa said she would recommend that students like herself read books by Nicholas Sparks.

“They’re all kind of the same, but I like sad books,” she said. “They’re just really good books.”

Parents are a top source of book suggestions for kids who read most, according to Scholastic’s Kids and Family Reading Report.

But for parents who don’t have book suggestions for their children, there is help.

The Collier County School District publishes reading lists for students in kindergarten through fifth grade. The lists are available on the district’s Web site, www.collier.k12.fl.us/parents/summerreading.asp.

Just Read, Florida! _ the reading initiative signed by then-Gov. Jeb Bush in 2001 _ also has developed a recommended reading list for students in kindergarten through 12th grade. It is available at www.justreadfamilies.org/SummerReadingList.pdf.

The Collier County Public Library also offers a free summer reading program that gives students incentives to read. For the younger students, the library allows students to get a pocket prize each time the students report they have read a book over the summer.

In addition, the library will enroll students who read between five and 15 books, depending on the child’s age and reading ability, into a drawing for a pass to the Sun-N-Fun Lagoon in North Naples. Gold medal winners, those students who have gone above the initial Sun-N-Fun drawing, will be entered into a drawing for a one-year family membership to the Naples Zoo.

For students age 11 to 17, the library will give a $5 gift card from Amazon.com for every 1,000 pages read.

Both contests run through July 26.

“It’s a good incentive,” said Yonge, who signed both of her daughters up for the program. “We participate every year.”

In a 2003 study, University of Florida education professors Anne McGill-Franzen and Richard Allington found that a summer setback is a bigger problem for children from low-income families. One of the reasons, the two say, is that economically disadvantaged children don’t have their own bedroom libraries.

Barnes and Noble Booksellers is looking to remedy that. The book retailer, which is located at the Waterside Shops, is offering students in grades one through six the opportunity to receive a free book through its “Passport to Summer Reading with The 39 Clues” program.

Children have to read any eight books by Sept. 7, 2010, and record them in a passport, which is available at the store. Once the student has recorded the books, and where those books took place, he or she will be allowed to pick from a list of free books to add the book to his or her library.

Before school was out for the year, Sea Gate Elementary teacher Maria Cabrera spoke with all of the parents of her students, giving them information about the Barnes and Noble program _ the store is virtually across the street from the school _ and the public libraries.

“It’s my job to help them find the resources they need to help their children,” said Cabrera, who teaches English Language Learners. “We try to tell them what books are appropriate or what titles their students might like. If they don’t read, they will learn what they lose over the summer.”

A complete list of recommended books is available at www.justreadfamilies.org/SummerReadingList.pdf

Click here for the list

_ Connect with 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.

Summer reading keeps students from falling behind in school, experts say

Lehigh Acres man indicted for killing infant grandson, severely injuring daughter

<br />
 Name: Rosales, Manuel De Jesus<br />
 Charge: Crimes Against Person Specif Felony Commit Act Could Cause Death/dv, Homicide-wilful Kill Murder Premeditated<br />
 Residence: Lehigh Acres<br />
 Age: 43</p>
<p> Follow this case online: Lee County Clerk of Courts<br />
Please note: Most cases require 2-3 days to be inputted into the public court record.<br />
This gallery is compiled by the Naples Daily News correspondents from written reports by Lee County Sheriff and other agencies.  Arrests indicate suspicion of crime, not guilt.  To report a crime or suspicious activity in your neighborhood, call the Lee County Sheriff’s Office at (239) 477-1000.</p>
<p>

LCSO

  • Name: Rosales, Manuel De Jesus
  • Charge: Crimes Against Person Specif Felony Commit Act Could Cause Death/dv, Homicide-wilful Kill Murder Premeditated
  • Residence: Lehigh Acres
  • Age: 43

Follow this case online: Lee County Clerk of Courts

Please note: Most cases require 2-3 days to be inputted into the public court record.

This gallery is compiled by the Naples Daily News correspondents from written reports by Lee County Sheriff and other agencies. Arrests indicate suspicion of crime, not guilt. To report a crime or suspicious activity in your neighborhood, call the Lee County Sheriff’s Office at (239) 477-1000.

A grand jury indicted a Lehigh Acres man who killed his infant grandson and severely injured his daughter by cutting their throats.

Manuel De Jesus Rosales, 43, is charged with first degree murder for the death of the child, three-month-old Josue Rosales, and attempted first-degree murder for injury to his daughter Karminda Rosales Salazar, 20.

According to an arrest report, Rosales stabbed his daughter and cut her throat following an argument at their home. As the victim lay in the driveway, Rosales was then said to bring the child out from the house and cut his throat in front of her.

First-degree murder is a capital felony, punishable by execution or life in prison. Rosales is being held without bond in the Lee County Jail.

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

Lehigh Acres man indicted for killing infant grandson, severely injuring daughter