Tuesday, July 26, 2011

FWC DIVISION OF LAW ENFORCEMENT FIELD OPERATIONS WEEKLY REPORT July 15 - 21, 2011


This report represents some events the FWC handled over the past week; however, it does not include all actions taken by the Division of Law Enforcement.

NORTHWEST REGION
ESCAMBIA COUNTY
Officer Nick Barnard was on water patrol in Pensacola Bay near the Naval Air Station when he observed a vessel returning from the Gulf of Mexico.  Upon stopping the vessel to conduct boating safety equipment and fisheries inspections, Officer Barnard determined that the occupants were in possession of red snapper.  Two of the red snapper were under the minimum size limit of 16 inches.  The vessel operator was cited for possession of undersized red snapper.
Officers Gary Ridaught, Randy Webb and Christopher Pettey were on water patrol at  Pensacola Pass conducting boating safety and fisheries inspections.  During a vessel stop, Officer Ridaught noticed the vessel operator showed signs of impairment.  The officer asked the individual to perform several field sobriety tasks and the individual performed poorly.  The operator was arrested for boating under the influence.  Officer Ridaught transported the individual to the Escambia County Jail where the subject provided a breath sample which registered .099 g/210L.
Lt. Dan Hahr was working enhanced patrol within the Perdido River Wildlife Management Area when he located a pile of household trash including two mattresses.  After sorting through the pile, Lieutenant Hahr located a couple of documents with a name.  The investigation led him to an apartment complex from where the trash originated.  The manager of the apartments admitted that her son took some garbage to the landfill for her.  During an interview her son stated that all the garbage fell off his trailer on the way to the landfill; however, the garbage was located well off the road on the edge of a clear-cut area.  Lieutenant Hahr has direct- filed misdemeanor charges for littering and obtained a warrant in the case.
Lt. Dan Hahr filed for a warrant for a man who gave him a false name during an investigation.  Apparently, the subject had an active warrant and did not want to go to jail.  The man will be facing another charge of obstruction by disguise.
OKALOOSA COUNTY
Officer Pete Rockwell and Lt. Steve Bartlett made a Joint Enforcement Agreement case involving a charter boat out of Destin.  The officers received reports of the captain of a charter fishing vessel keeping over the bag limit of red snapper.  The officers observed the charter vessel leaving Destin Pass and followed it into the Gulf of Mexico.  Later, upon checking the vessel’s catch, the officers found the vessel to be 15 snapper over the limit.  The charter captain was cited for the federal violation.
Officers Pete Rockwell and Ryan Nelson were checking boat ramp activity during the recent thunderstorms when they noticed one boat at Joe’s Bayou Boat Ramp staying away from the ramp area.  Officer Nelson walked out onto the dock and called in the vessel.  A fisheries inspection revealed the vessel had approximately 30 filets of red snapper, triggerfish, and white snapper onboard.  The captain was cited for failure to land fish in whole condition.
Lt. Mark Hollinhead and Officer Andy Maltais responded to a boating accident in Poquito Bayou near Shalimar.  The accident occurred when a vessel towing a tube got too close to the shoreline and the tube, with one occupant, struck a tree limb.  The injured subject was air-lifted to Sacred Heart Hospital in Pensacola and was later listed in critical condition.  The investigation is ongoing and charges are pending.
WALTON COUNTY
Officer Randall Brooks stopped a vessel in Choctawhatchee Bay for operating with no navigational lights.  A computer warrants check revealed one occupant on board had an active warrant for failure to pay child support.  The subject was cited for the boating violation and turned over to the Walton County Sheriff's Department to be booked into the county jail for the active warrant.
Gulf County
While working scallop harvesters, Officers Karl Hellett and Hal Webb conducted fisheries inspections at the St. Joe boat ramp.  They checked a vessel with two people  and nine gallons of whole scallops onboard, which was five gallons over the limit.  The subjects were cited for taking over the daily bag limit of scallops.
Officers Arnie McMillion and Hal Webb were checking scallop harvesters at the St. Joe ramp and checked a vessel with four persons onboard.  They were in possession of 11 gallons of whole bay scallops, which was three gallons over the daily bag limit.  The vessel captain was cited for taking over the bag limit of bay scallops.
FRANKLIN COUNTY
Officer Scott Hoffman was off duty when he observed a vessel’s occupants deploying what appeared to be a monofilament entangling net and harvesting mullet.  After recovering the net, the individual went to the shore and hid the net in the vegetation and left the area.  Officer Tony Lee and Investigator Steve Thomas located the suspect vessel at a nearby ramp being loaded on a trailer, following positive identification from Officer Hoffman.  The subject was in possession of 213 mullet.  The net was located from the shore and seized as evidence.  The subject was arrested and transported to the Franklin County Jail.  He was charged with illegal use of a monofilament gill net, which is a felony, and three misdemeanor violations for illegal use of an entangling net.
Officer Nick Price was on patrol when he checked two subjects crabbing.  They were in  possession of blue crabs, whole stone crabs, and 55 bay scallops in an area closed to scalloping.  The subjects were cited for scalloping in a closed area and received written warnings for taking whole and out of season stone crabs.
BAY COUNTY
Officers Warren Walsingham, Larry Morris, and Lane Kinney worked Econfina Creek and Emerald Springs for unruly behavior, littering, and boating safety.  The officers issued two dozen warnings for safety equipment on vessels.  They also issued over a dozen citations for no personal flotation devices, four citations for fishing license violations, and approximately 35 warnings for other boating- related violations.  Officer Kinney cited one individual for possession of marijuana and for no personal flotation device in the vessel.
WASHINGTON COUNTY
Officer Lane Kinney assisted a Department of Corrections probation officer in Chipley with a wildlife violation the officer encountered.  Their investigation led to a subject being charged with unlawful possession of an alligator.  Officer Kinney cited the individual for the violation and seized a three-foot alligator hide.
While conducting boating safety inspections in the Spring Run area, Officer Warren Walsingham observed an individual disobeying his command to stop.  The subject had been talking to boaters at the springs and had arrived there on foot by trespassing on private property.  The subject fled back through the property to a vessel left on the bank of the Choctawhatchee River.  Officer Walsingham launched his vessel and located the subject a couple of miles away near the Cedar Tree Landing.  The individual ignored Officer Walsingham on the river as they passed; however, he eventually stopped as commanded.  Officer Walsingham charged him with trespassing and warned him for boating safety requirements.
ESCAMBIA COUNTY
Officers Lane Kinney and Larry Morris assisted with boating safety enforcement during the Blue Angels Air Show.  Officer Larry Morris arrested two individuals for Boating Under the Influence (BUI).  He also assisted Lt. Doug Berryman with a combative subject he was attempting to arrest.  Later, Officer Kinney assisted another officer with an individual who was resisting arrest.  Although injured from a fall, the officer successfully handcuffed the subject.  Officer Kinney assisted in placing the subject into the patrol boat and transporting him to awaiting units for transport to jail.
HOLMES COUNTY
Officers Warren Walsingham and Larry Morris concluded an investigation into the cultivation of marijuana with the arrest of an individual.  Several months ago, Officer Kenny Atkins located some plants growing along the boundary of the Choctawhatchee River Wildlife Management Area.  The officers maintained periodic surveillance and eventually located other plants in the vicinity as well.  The officers arrested an individual who was tending the plants off of Highway 179 and transported him to the Holmes County Jail.  The charges included one misdemeanor charge for possession of cannabis under 20 grams and two felony counts of cultivation of cannabis.  The officers pulled and placed 210 marijuana plants into evidence.



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1 comment:

Dumpster Dude said...

A short and sweet report on the Law enforcement agencies, Good to see these kind of reports, from which others can learn to behave properly.

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