Tag Archives: News

Ex-Yankee Jim Leyritz acquitted in fatal DUI crash

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) – A jury in Florida has acquitted former major league baseball player Jim Leyritz of DUI manslaughter in a 2007 crash that killed a mother of two.

However, jurors on Saturday did convict Leyritz of driving under the influence, a misdemeanor. Leyritz had faced up to 15 years in prison if convicted. The misdemeanor conviction carries a maximum six-month sentence.
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Testimony was inconclusive on whether Leyritz ran a red light on Dec. 28, 2007, when he collided with a vehicle driven by 30-year-old Fredia Ann Veitch, who died.

Defense experts testified that Leyritz may have been below Florida’s 0.08 percent blood-alcohol level when the crash occurred, even though it was 0.14 percent three hours later.

Leyritz played 11 major league seasons, hitting a memorable World Series home run for the New York Yankees in 1996.

Ex-Yankee Jim Leyritz acquitted in fatal DUI crash

Lee County Library System offers thousands of free e-books for download

LEE COUNTY, Fla.- The days of book drops and overdue fines may be numbered. Lee County is putting more of its $2.8 million dollar book budget toward E-books, available for download at the click of a mouse.

“It’s completely free. It’s a library checkout, so it’s just like our print books, so you can check them out for free,” Debra Czarnik, Technical Services Manager at Lee County Library System said.

All you need is a valid library card and computer access to start browsing E-books on the library’s main website.

There are 28,000 digital titles to choose from. Once you log on and plug in, E-books are automatically transferred in a matter of minutes.

“Harry Potter might take you half an hour to download, but a shorter title might take you ten minutes, from the point of finding it and downloading it,” Czarnik said.

For those who aren’t exactly tech-savvy, a Digital Bookmobile is in town. It’s making pit-stops at three libraries in Lee County to walk users through downloading E-books onto electronic reading devices.

“We’re introducing them to the website and showing them how to search and find their favorite authors,” Czarnik said Friday.

Say farewell to those infamous late fees. Digital downloads have an electronic time stamp, automatically expiring titles within two weeks of checkout.

“That’s the beauty of it. It returns itself and there’s never any fines with this,” Czarnik said.

For a complete list of electronic reading devices that are compatible with Lee County Library System, visit this website:

http://lcls.lib.overdrive.com/

For more information on downloading digital titles from the library, visit:

library.leegov.com/

Lee County Library System offers thousands of free e-books for download

Lehigh shooting investigation

LEHIGH ACRES, Fla. – A man is in the hospital after a shooting in Lehigh Acres Thursday night.

It happened just after 8:00 pm on Millstead Avenue.?

The man tells the Lee County Sheriff’s Office he was walking his dog when another man got out of a white van and shot him in the soulder.

The vicitm was flown to Lee Memorial Hospital with non-life threatening injuries.

Lehigh shooting investigation

TECO: Gas service restored to 98% of commercial customers, 35% residential

LEE COUNTY, Fla. – TECO Peoples Gas now says service has been restored to 98% of its commercial customers, and about 35% of residential customers affected by Thursday’s gas line explosion.

A customer spokesperson estimates that leaves less than 4,000 homeowners still without gas.

TECO says it will emphasize residential customers during its repair work on Wednesday, including the following neighborhoods: Fiddlers, The Brooks, Tarpon Bay, Mediterra (west), Tiburon, The Reserve, Estuary @ Grey Oaks, Aviano, Mediterra (east), Grey Oaks, Tuscany/Tuscany Reserve, Quail Woods, Treviso Bay and River Reach.

The company says Peoples Gas crews will need to enter a customer’s home or business to restore gas service and re-light pilot lights. So, it is important to have someone at least 18 years of age available at home or at the business to allow crews to enter.

TECO Peoples Gas is encouraging customers to be safe, reminding homeowners that its crews working on behalf of the company carry identification. Contractors also have letters from the vice president of TECO Peoples Gas. TECO says customers should ask to see credentials to help ensure their safety.

TECO: Gas service restored to 98% of commercial customers, 35% residential

Fla. lawmakers set to override Gov. Crist’s vetoes

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) – Florida lawmakers are poised to do something they haven’t done in 12 years and that they’ve accomplished only twice in the last 24 – override a governor’s veto.

The Republican-controlled Legislature’s agenda for a planned one-day special session Tuesday includes override votes on up to seven bills and one budget item. All were vetoed earlier this year by Gov. Charlie Crist, who quit the GOP to run unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate as an independent.

None, though, will be as contentious as an abortion bill that was one of two vetoed measures the Legislature last overrode on March 11, 1998.?The Legislature says it will not?consider hot-button?vetoes on teacher merit pay and retention, elections and abortion during the one-day session.

“My personal inclination would be not to try and take up anything in special session that was a big, more regular session-type issue such as health care or education,” incoming House Speaker Dean Cannon said.

Instead, Cannon and Senate President Mike Haridopolos said they picked legislation that passed by wide margins and with bipartisan support. The override candidates include a $9.7 million appropriation for the University of Florida’s Shands Teaching Hospital and a bill that would dilute the powers of the governor and other executive branch officials by requiring legislative approval of administrative rules with an economic effect.

Another bill?would let local governments put yard trash in garbage dumps so they no longer will have to make separate pickups for each type of refuse.

The two leaders Monday dropped two of the 10 override attempts they’d originally proposed, including one at the request of Governor-elect Rick Scott, a fellow Republican. That bill?would have stripped the governor of sole authority over the Department of Management Services and required him to share it with the three Cabinet members.

Scott “thinks he has the right skill set to turn around this area, and it needs a lot of turn around,” Haridopolos said.? The agency has drawn criticism from lawmakers over its building construction, maintenance and leasing functions.

The other bill contained provisions designed to control the state’s costs for risk management and workers compensation, including a cap on how much doctors can get reimbursed for drugs they dispense to injured workers. Crist’s veto was supported by doctors who donated heavily to Republicans, including political committees formed by Haridopolos and Cannon.

Besides the overrides, votes also are planned on appropriating $31 million in federal stimulus money for consumer rebates on purchases of solar energy and high-efficiency heating and air conditioning systems and delaying a new septic tank inspection requirement for six months until next July 1.

The last time the Legislature, also with Republican majorities in both chambers, overrode vetoes was when Democrat Lawton Chiles was governor

Republicans also voiced opposition to higher taxes, yet one vetoed bill set for possible override would triple the tax on citrus to 3 cents a box. The increase is expected to raise $3.5 million a year for research on such things as greening, a citrus disease.

Haridopolos said he supports the increase because growers approved it in a referendum.
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Fla. lawmakers set to override Gov. Crist’s vetoes

Hotels reporting thousands of dollars in losses due to gas outage

LEE COUNTY, Fla.- Gas is still cut off to hundreds of businesses in Lee and Collier County. Many restaurants and hotels are weathering thousands of dollars worth of lost revenue in the aftermath of the gas explosion.

“Basically, we’re at a standstill,” Hampton Inn General Manager Jeff Webb said.

Business is not as usual at the Hampton Inn on Colonial. They’re without gas, and have been for two days. It’s costing the hotel close to $9,000 in cancellations.

“You can’t replace that. Hotel business is probably one of the most perishable industries in the world because you can never sell that room again,” Webb said Saturday.

A hot shower at the Hampton Inn hasn’t been an option ever since the gas was shut off. They’re now slashing weekend rates up to 50%, and doing anything to keep guests from walking out the door.

“Free movies, free pay-per-view movies, all the bottled water they need, free baked cookies around the clock,” Webb said.

Gas-powered laundry service is causing another headache. The hotel is using an unexpected source- the competition- to keep linens clean. The Holiday Inn Express at The Forum is all-electric, and unaffected by the gas outage.

“I want every guest that comes into the area, whether they stay with my hotel or another hotel to have a great experience. Unfortunately, this incident has hurt some of our economy right now, so whatever I can do to help the competition will help me,” Holiday Inn Express General Manager Sean Archer said Saturday.

While over 200 TECO workers try to restore service to businesses, folks over at the Hampton Inn are managing to take it all in stride.

“I’ve been in the business 24 years. I’ve been through Hurricane Andrew, all the way up. So I guess it’s just another feather in my cap,” Webb said.

Gas is now back on at some businesses in Lee and Collier counties, but there is no definite timeline for when all service will be restored.

Hotels reporting thousands of dollars in losses due to gas outage

Caterers get creative to cook without gas for dozens of events

COLLIER COUNTY, Fla. – A wedding, a party, a big event. Just because the gas is out doesn’t mean these events stop. Caterers all over Lee and Collier County are scrambling to improvise how to keep these parties going, or loose out on the money.

“Literally didn’t think about it, flipped the valve and no gas, we really have no gas.”

Tastebuds of Naples owner Greg Shapiro didn’t have time to get heated over the situation. Instead, he had to start thinking quickly because he has a party tomorrow with more than 50 people waiting to be fed.

Shapiro tells WINK News he’s going to have to move his whole operation to his client’s house.

“Salt, pepper, garlic, all your vegetables. I’m going to bring a blender and different appliances and things.”

Everything from tongs and spatulas, to pots and pans must go. It wasn’t until Shapiro started rattling off everything he needs that it struck him as a lot of work.

“I think it’s going to be pretty heavy now that I’m thinking about it. It’s a little nuts.”

He also will have to switch from cooking in a speedy convection oven, to using his smoker, nearly doubling the time.

Although Shapiro believes it will cut into this bottom line he says the party must go on.

“You just jump in and you do what you have to do.”

Caterers get creative to cook without gas for dozens of events

Smart car street show

FORT MYERS, Fla. – Smart cars invade the streets of Southwest Florida as the Smart USA Street Tour hits Punta Gorda.?

The Green Futures Expo and Energy Options Conference happens on Friday, November 12 and Saturday, November 13 at the Charlotte Harbor Event and Conference Center on 75 Taylor Street.

Smart car street show

PHOTOS: Counterfeit credit cards discovered during I-75 traffic stop

Juan A. Rodriguez

Lee County Sheriff’s Office

Juan A. Rodriguez

Joel Milian-Gonzalez

Lee County Sheriff’s Office

Joel Milian-Gonzalez


The Lee County Sheriff’s Office discovered 76 counterfeit credit cards Wednesday while conducting a traffic stop on Interstate 75.

Deputies charged Juan A. Rodriguez, 52, and Joel Milian-Gonzalez, 35, each with 76 counts of felony possession of a counterfeit credit card one count of trafficking (10 or more) in counterfeit credit cards, two counts of possession of fraudulent driver’s licenses and one count of possession of a controlled substance without a prescription.

The men were arrested after a deputy with the Sherff’s Office’s Highway Interdiction Unit was patrolling I-75 in North Fort Myers and saw a Ford Taurus traveling too closely and with illegal window tint.

After stopping the car, the deputy noticed an odor of burnt marijuana coming from inside. A K-9 alerted to the presence of drugs in the vehicle.

After a search, the deputy found the credit cards, two fake driver licenses and three Furosemide pills.

A U.S. Secret Service agent confirmed the credit cards were fraudulent. Neither of the men had a prescription for the pills.

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

PHOTOS: Counterfeit credit cards discovered during I-75 traffic stop

County agrees to start Bonita Beach Road widening in 2011 — ahead of schedule

After about two years of back and forth, Lee County Commissioners agreed on Tuesday to Bonita Springs’ request to widen another mile of Bonita Beach Road ahead of schedule.

Old 41 Road to Imperial Street, fronting Naples-Fort Myers Greyhound Track and the proposed Lowe’s, will be widened to six lanes.

The $7.5 million project will be split between the city and the county, with the county borrowing $3.75 million from itself to pay its share.

Bids have yet to go out, but Lee County’s transportation planning manager, Dave Loveland, said he anticipated ground could break in the first quarter of 2011 and may take up to two years to complete.

It’s a huge accomplishment for Bonita Springs, said Mayor

Ben Nelson.

“Anybody who commutes on this road knows all the development that is closest to coming to fulfillment is between Old 41 and the interstate,” Nelson said. “Plus it’s an access road to Bonita Beach and to I-75.”

Bonita Springs has, for at least two years, tried to convince the county that it is ready to move ahead with the plan originally slated for 2012-2013.

“We proved we have the money and they kept telling us we didn’t” Nelson said. “We kept after them because it was so important.”

The county completed widening between Interstate 75 and Imperial Street. Other phases include widening east of I-75 to Bonita Grande Drive and continuing west of U.S. 41 to Vanderbilt Drive. Though Loveland said there may be a move to stop the widening at U.S. 41 because acquiring the right of way could prove too complicated.

Additionally, Lee County agreed to an interlocal agreement with Bonita for beach renourishment on the northern end of Little Hickory Island.

The state would pay for about a third of the $1 million project. The remaining cost would be shared by the county at 55 percent and the city at 44 percent.

In 1996, two groins were installed near Big Hickory Pass with sand infill along 4,100 feet of the beach. More sand was replaced in 2004 with expectations that it would be done again in 2010 or 2011.

Nelson said the city doesn’t have the money now and it would need to develop a plan for determining public and private interest and who should fund renourishment on an on-going basis.

Also, the Six Mile Cypress public safety building will soon get its power from the sun. Commissioners agreed to the final requirement before a new solar panel project could go live, allowing Florida Power & Light Co. access to the panels in case of an emergency.

It’s Lee County’s first project using solar panels installed on top of the building to move almost entirely off the electric grid.

On a cloudless day, panels will generate 54,000 watts, enough to power 10 homes, said Rich Beck, facilities director.

If the new panels creates more energy than needed, the county will get a credit from Florida Power & Light. A refund is unlikely, he said, because the building houses a sheriff’s office and emergency medical services – a 24 hour operation.

The $326,000 project was paid for with grants funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. Beck said there are no current plans to put more buildings on solar power, but if more grants become available that could change.

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

County agrees to start Bonita Beach Road widening in 2011 — ahead of schedule