Posts Tagged ‘bars’
Wednesday, August 26th, 2009 by TCPalm.com
MARTIN COUNTY — If the Martin County Commission approves changes to the shoreline protection law next week, 28 properties with seawalls and hardened shorelines could develop marinas and restaurants within 20 feet of the water.
The change would allow the properties in Community Redevelopment Areas to expand within the current 20-foot wide protection buffer on hardened shorelines. The amendment includes a 10-foot construction setback for principal structures.
Commissioner Doug Smith, who proposed the change, said the amendment will allow waterfront properties to complete shoreline projects that could stimulate business. The waterfront was fruitful for development before the current shoreline protection law passed in the 1990s.
(more…)
Tags: bars, beach, boat, boating, business, commissioners, communication, development, dining, grants, housing, property, restaurant, vote, voting, water
Posted in Economy, Martin County, Treasure Coast business | No Comments »
Thursday, August 20th, 2009 by TCPalm.com
VERO BEACH — Jury selection begins Monday in the DUI trial of Indian River County Administrator Joe Baird and prosecutors will get to use key evidence the defense wanted excluded.
County Judge David Morgan refused defense attorney Bobby Guttridge’s request Wednesday to toss out the May 16 arrest, which the attorney said was based on an invalid stop. (more…)
Tags: alcohol, arrest, attorney, bars, beach, car, communication, court, drinking, driver, driving, dui, engine, engineers, extension, fundraising, green, investigation, jeep, judge, jurors, jury, police, restaurant, saw, trial, video, warrant, zoning
Posted in Stuart | 4 Comments »
Thursday, July 23rd, 2009 by TCPalm.com
VERO BEACH — Indian River County Administrator Joe Baird’s first public appearance in his DUI case came Wednesday in a court hearing that was quickly postponed at the request of defense and prosecution attorneys.
The attorneys said they needed more time to prepare their cases.
But Indian River County Judge David Morgan told the attorneys he intends to set the case for trial the week of Aug. 24.
Baird has pled not guilty to DUI and speeding charges and is asking for a jury trial.
Outside the courtroom, Baird, 52, declined comment on the advice of his attorney. He was accompanied by his girlfriend, Karen Deigl, president of the Indian River Senior Resource Association, who was there for moral support and to drive him to the hearing, Baird said.
The state revoked Baird’s driving license because he refused to take a Breathalyzer test at the time of his arrest on the night of May 16.
Baird’s case next comes up for court review on Aug. 19 when Morgan is scheduled to take up what he didn’t hear Wednesday: Defense attorney Bobby Guttridge’s request that charges against Baird be dismissed because he said police didn’t have justifiable reasons for stopping him.
Police said he was speeding and made a wide turn, according to court records.
Also, Guttridge wants Morgan to suppress Baird’s statement to police that he was going to the Long Branch Saloon, a bar in Vero Beach, when he was stopped by police.
Assistant State Attorney David Dodd said he may have some additional witnesses. Before trial, attorneys are allowed to interview witnesses who may be called to testify at trial.
By Elliott Jones, TCPalm.com
Tags: arrest, attorney, bars, beach, court, driving, dui, girlfriend, judge, jury, police, speeding, trial
Posted in Vero Beach | No Comments »
Thursday, July 23rd, 2009 by TCPalm.com
STUART — More than a century ago, shipwrecked sailors who washed up on the Treasure Coast immediately looked for mile markers nailed to trees and posts to direct them to safety.
These markers were designed to be easily understood by men from every country and education level. Over time they were lost to history, but replicas are currently on display at the House of Refuge at Gilbert’s Bar. (more…)
Tags: bars, beach, camp, children, education, Florida, hand, history, housing, lake, national, North, painting, safety, Stuart, travel, trees, volunteer, volunteering, volunteers
Posted in Stuart | No Comments »
Tuesday, July 21st, 2009 by TCPalm.com
INDIAN RIVER COUNTY — The attorney for County Administrator Joe Baird says the police traffic stop that led to Baird’s arrest on DUI and speeding charges was illegal.
And on Wednesday, attorney Bobby Guttridge plans to ask County Judge David Morgan to throw out the case, according to court documents. (more…)
Tags: arrest, attorney, bars, beach, car, communication, court, driving, fundraising, judge, jury, police, speeding, Traffic, travel, trial, video
Posted in Stuart | No Comments »
Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009 by TCPalm.com
VERO BEACH — The Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles upheld its suspension of County Administrator Joe Baird’s driving license for refusing to take a Breathalyzer test May 16, a state official said Monday.
Vero Beach Police charged Baird with DUI and cited him for speeding. The cases are scheduled to come up for court review on July 22 in Indian River County Court.
Under state law, Baird’s license was automatically suspended for refusing to take a roadside breath test for alcohol. His attorney, Bobby Guttridge, appealed the ruling, saying Baird wasn’t properly advised of the penalties for refusing the test.
(more…)
Tags: alcohol, appeals, arrest, attorney, bars, beach, car, communication, court, driving, Florida, fundraising, police, restrictions, safety, speeding
Posted in Courts, Crime, Indian River County, Traffic | 2 Comments »
Friday, June 19th, 2009 by TCPalm.com
JENSEN BEACH — Martin County sheriff’s deputies arrested a 47-year-old man after he attacked a bartender Wednesday at Harper’s Pub because he thought he spiked his drink, according to a report.
Deputies arrested Matthew Way, of the 2100 block of Northeast Poinciana Lane, after he confronted the bartender, according to the report.
The report gave this account:
The bartender was trying to walk by Way while trying to get supplies out of a side closet. Way accused the bartender of spiking his drink a few weeks ago.
As the bartender tried walking away, Way punched him and they both got entangled in a fight on the floor. The bartender got on top of Way and waited for deputies to arrive.
Deputies charged Way with battery and disorderly conduct and transported him to Martin County Jail.
By TCPalm Staff
Tags: arrest, bars, bartender, battery, drinking, fight
Posted in Crime, Jensen Beach | No Comments »
Monday, May 18th, 2009 by TCPalm.com
STUART — A constitutional challenge is prompting the Martin County commissioners to rethink a strict noise ordinance they enacted in February to crack down on loud music at bars and other businesses.
Deanna Kernan, the owner of the Martin Downs Sports Resort in Palm City, and Susan Masterson, the resort’s manager, have asked a county judge to declare the noise ordinance unconstitutional because it is “overbroad.”
Kernan, 42, of Palm City, and Masterson, 39, of Stuart, also have asked Judge Stewart Hershey to dismiss the misdemeanor charge they violated the county’s noise ordinance because music from the resort could be heard more than 150 feet away. (more…)
Tags: bars, beach, codes, commissioners, court, crack, deputies, deputy, fines, government, hand, housing, jail, judge, misdemeanor, noise, offender, ordinance, property, restrictions, Schools, sheriff, Stuart, travel, violations, violators
Posted in Stuart | 4 Comments »
Thursday, April 16th, 2009 by TCPalm.com
TALLAHASSEE — The long-sought Indian Street Bridge, along with 16 other transportation projects expected to bring money and jobs to the Treasure Coast, got the green light from the state Joint Legislative Budget Commission Wednesday.
The 14-member commission comprised of Senate and House members agreed, without debate, to accept $3.8 billion in federal dollars that will pay for a cornucopia of projects targeting transportation, health and education.
Backers say the package will help the state recover from the worst recession in decades.
(more…)
Tags: bars, bridge, budget, commissioners, Crist, development, education, emergency, federal, green, hand, Health, housing, hurricanes, Indiantown, jobs, lawsuit, money, property, Publix, raise, raises, recession, roads, sidewalks, stimulus, Stuart, Tallahassee, Traffic
Posted in Economy, Indiantown, Martin County, Palm City, Port St. Lucie, St. Lucie County, State, Stuart, Traffic, Treasure Coast business | 1 Comment »
Tuesday, March 31st, 2009 by Holly Baltz

Timothy McVeigh, who killed 168 people in the Oklahoma City bombing
A jury has sentenced Ricardo Sanchez Jr. and Daniel Troya to death for killing the Escobedo family of four along Florida’s Turnpike in St. Lucie County.
The federal death penalty is different from the state of Florida’s death sentence in many ways.
Only 51 inmates are on federal Death Row in Terre Haute, Ind. Florida houses 392. Crimes punishable by the federal death penalty include genocide, killing witnesses, in a trial, terrorism and murder committed as part of a drug enterprise.
Florida has executed 67 men and women since the death penalty was reinstated by the Supreme Court in 1976. The feds have executed three men since Congress reinstated it in 1988. Some of the more famous of those executed were Timothy McVeigh, the Oklahoma City bomber, and Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, convicted of sabotage for selling atomic secrets to the Soviet Union.
Here’s some of those executed since 1927:

James Horace Alderman
1927: James Horace Alderman, known as “King of the Rumrunners,” was intercepted by a Coast Guard vessel 30 miles off Florida’s coast. His boat was laden with alcohol during the era of Prohibition. As Alderman boarded the vessel, he pulled out his pistol. When two Coast Guardsmen and a Secret Service agent rushed him, he shot them all dead. Later, his execution was scheduled for the Broward County Jail, but the county wanted it to occur on federal property. So a makeshift gallows was erected at the Coast Guard hangar.
“When this is read I will have passed over the brink of eternity into the Great Beyond. “I would like to state through the medium of The Miami Herald that I am feeling fine, physically, mentally and spiritually. With the wonderful comfort and strength that I received from Jesus Christ, I am assured that when tomorrow comes I will go with smiles of comfort on my face. … “As I sit here in my cell I can look back and see just what caused me to be where I am today. Drunkenness first starts a young man to gambling — and swearing grows on him — and from that step he becomes hardened in his heart in envy and hatred toward mankind. Then, as he grows up, he becomes what you would call educated to crime. Bootlegging and smuggling is the next step. And there are other angles of downfall that lead to the devil. “The money I made neither did me nor my dear family any good. We thought it did, but no. You can see what it has done — a death sentence by hanging — and a broken-hearted family.”
Read the 1929 Time magazine account of his hanging, here. (more…)
Tags: adopted, adoption, alcohol, Anthony Chebatoris, appeals, arrest, Arthur Gooch, bars, beat, beating, boat, boating, bond, boy, burglary, car, Carl Panzram, Charles Sherman Ross, child, cole, court, Daniel Troya, death, Diamond King, dies, drinking, drugs, Earl Gardner, escape, Ethel Rosenberg, extension, federal, fire, Florida, George Barrett, government, hand, handgun, handguns, Henry Seadlund, hospital, housing, ill, illness, inmate, jail, James Aldermon, Julius Rosenberg, jury, leg, man, murder, murders, Nelson Klein, plow, prison, property, rape, Ricardo Sanchez Jr., robbed, robbery, sheriff, shooting, shot, shoulder, terror, theft, thief, Timothy McVeigh, trial, Turnpike, volunteer, volunteers, wife, William H. Taft
Posted in Crime, Fort Pierce, Stuart | 1 Comment »