The Winter Haven Recreational and Cultural Center is accepting registrations for the 2016/17 school year After School Program.

The Winter Haven Recreational and Cultural Center is accepting registrations for the 2016/17 school year After School Program.

Cost is $20/City-Resident and $30 /Non-City Resident. After school homework assistance and recreational activities are provided.

Transportation is available upon request from Garner and Elbert Elementary, and Brigham Academy.

Program dates are Monday – Friday, August 15, 2016 – June 2, 2017, except holidays and teacher’s days off.

Program hours are 3-5:30 p.m. For more info call 863-291-5675.

 

whreccenter

LWMC ANNOUNCES QUARTERLY AWARDS

0

LWMC ANNOUNCES QUARTERLY AWARDS

Lake Wales, FL – Lake Wales Medical Center presented quarterly awards recently.

 

Employee of the Quarter was Maria Enriquez, from HIM. She was recognized for her professionalism, pleasant demeanor, and willingness to always make sure the customers’ needs are met.

Maria Enriquez2

Manager of the Quarter was Amanda Williams from the Wound Healing Center at LWMC. She was nominated by numerous coworkers, physicians and patients, who note that she is a pleasure to work with and always takes great care of the patients and helps ensure great communication at the Wound Healing Center.

Amanda Williams

Volunteer of the Quarter was Marianne Siders, who volunteers in the hospital’s Ambulatory Surgery Unit. She was nominated by several ASU employees, who noted that she makes the patients and their families comfortable with her pleasant greeting when they arrive for surgery. She also helps ensure the families are kept updated on their family member’s surgery, and assists with their needs in the waiting area.

Marianne Siders

Bartow AG Arena Closed For $114,000 Worth Of Improvements

Photo Provided By Polk County
Photo Provided By Polk County

Bartow, Florida — Due to construction, Polk County Parks and Recreation’s Bartow AG Arena will be closed August 1 through September 11. $114,000 worth of improvements were voted on by commissioners back in April. The money comes from a grant by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. Improvements will include additional bleachers, sound system repairs and irrigation system repairs. The Bartow AG Arena is at 1702 U.S. 17 S., Bartow, FL 33830. For more information, call (863) 534-4340.

POLK MUGSHOT OF THE DAY – AUGUST 1, 2016

CORY STANFIELD

stanfield

Race: W Sex: M DOB: 5/18/1990 Height: 505 Weight: 170

Charge Number 1

Statute: 893.13(1)(A)2***.*. SELL OF CANNABIS
Charge on Arrest Docket: SELL SALE OF CANNABIS SENTENCED
Bond Type:
Bond Number: Purge Number:
Purge/Bond Amount: Surety:
Cash: Bond Exp.: Disposition:
Upgrade/Reduction:

Charge Number 2

Statute: 893.147(1)**** POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNAL
Charge on Arrest Docket: USE/POSS OF DRUG PARA SENTENCED
Bond Type:
Bond Number: Purge Number:
Purge/Bond Amount: Surety:
Cash: Bond Exp.: Disposition:
Upgrade/Reduction:

Charge Number 3

Statute: 381.00785(1)(C) Practice Tattooing Outside Establishment
Charge on Arrest Docket: Practice Tattooing Outside Establish
Bond Type:
Bond Number: Purge Number:
Purge/Bond Amount: Surety:
Cash: Bond Exp.: Disposition:
Upgrade/Reduction:

Charge Number 4

Statute: 893.147(1)**** POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNAL
Charge on Arrest Docket: USE/POSS OF DRUG PARA SENTENCED
Bond Type:
Bond Number: Purge Number:
Purge/Bond Amount: Surety:
Cash: Bond Exp.: Disposition:
Upgrade/Reduction:

The views, opinions, positions or strategies expressed by the authors and those providing comments are theirs alone, and do not necessarily reflect the views, opinions, positions or strategies of PolkMugShot.com or any employee thereof.

Cooking On The Ridge: Garlic Cheddar Chicken

Garlic Cheddar Chicken

garliccheddarchic

Ingredients

Directions

  • Prep 15 m

  • Cook 40 m

  • Ready In 55 m

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
  2. Melt the butter in a saucepan over low heat, and cook the garlic until tender, about 5 minutes.
  3. In a shallow bowl, mix the bread crumbs, Parmesan cheese, Cheddar cheese, parsley, oregano, pepper, and salt.
  4. Dip each chicken breast in the garlic butter to coat, then press into the bread crumb mixture. Arrange the coated chicken breasts in a 9×13 inch baking dish. Drizzle with any remaining butter and top with any remaining bread crumb mixture.
  5. Bake 30 minutes in the preheated oven, or until chicken is no longer pink and juices run clear.

Lakeland K9 Officer Stabbed By Suspect

0

Lakeland,  Florida – The Lakeland Police department responded to a report of an aggravated assault at the Crestwood Hotel, 4360 Lakeland Park Drive, at 8:40 p.m. on Friday, July 29, 2016. Upon arrival, officers interviewed a female victim, Raquel Rios, that had been strangled with a dog leash. The suspect, Reuben B. Smith, age 42, had already fled the scene in a vehicle headed to Hillsborough County, armed with a knife. Rios stated that Smith had asked her if she knew what it was like to be strangled. Rios ran to the bathroom and Smith forced his way in. Rios then stated that Smith proceeded to force his way onto her and wrap a leash around her neck and choke her until she lost consciousness and fell to the floor.
After Rios woke up, Smith escorted her to the bed and again wrapped a leash around her neck however Rios was able to escape and ran out of the hotel room. At this time, Smith left the scene in a white Buick, Regal.
At approximately 3:00 a.m. Smith had returned to Lakeland and was spotted driving eastbound on George Jenkins Boulevard. After seeing officers, Smith sped off and a vehicle pursuit began. During the pursuit, Smith intentionally drove off the roadway on Swindell Road at the Interstate 4 overpass. He rammed the barrier fence attempting to drive on to the interstate but disabled his vehicle upon hitting the ditch. Smith then fled on foot, running eastbound along the shoulder of the interstate for several hundred yards before ducking into a wooded area.
Canine Officer Jeremy Williams and his K-9 partner Hyde responded to the area and began tracking Smith. Officer Williams briefly lost site of Hyde in the wooded area and attempted to call him back, but Hyde did not return. Moments later Officer Williams found Smith holding the canine down. Hyde had been stabbed twice by Smith, once in the left front leg and once in the left side chest. Both injuries required sutures (2 staples per wound) but appeared to be non-life threatening. K-9 Hyde was released after treatment.
Smith continued to resist officers as he was placed into custody. Smith is charged with:
1. Aggravated Assault
2. Fleeing or Attempting to Elude
3. Aggravate Assault with Deadly Weapon Without Intent to Kill
4. Injuring/Killing a Police Dog
5. Resisting an Officer with Violence

Longtime Business Leader & Polk Pioneer Richard R. Frisbie Leaves An Amazing Legacy

0

Richard FrisbieBartow, Florida – Richard R. Frisbie, 92, long-time Bartow business and civic leader, died on Monday afternoon, July 25, 2016, at Good Shepherd Hospice in Auburndale, several weeks after suffering a stroke. He was born in Tampa on Feb. 18, 1924, to Lloyd and Marguerite Frisbie. The family moved to Bartow in 1931 when Lloyd Frisbie and his father, Sayer L. Frisbie, founded The Polk County Democrat, which remained in the Frisbie family for 75 years. Mr. Frisbie was a member of the Summerlin Institute Class of 1942, where he was class president and an all-conference athlete in basketball, baseball and tennis. He attended Emory College in Oxford, Georgia, for a year before enlisting in the U.S. Army Air Force at age 19. He was a B-17 pilot during World War II, stationed in British Guyana with an air-sea rescue squadron. While serving in the military, he completed an accelerated two-year course in aeronautical engineering at Tennessee Tech in only six months. After returning to civilian life, he joined the Florida National Guard, serving for 18 years until his retirement in 1968 with the rank of lieutenant colonel. The high point of his career was his assignment as commander of the 149th Field Artillery Battalion. He was a past president and director of the Bartow Chamber of Commerce, a long time member and past president of the Bartow Lions Club, and past chairman and long-time board member of Bartow Memorial Hospital. He served on the Bartow Planning and Zoning Commission. He was a director of the Church Service Center and served as a hospice volunteer. He was awarded the Bartow Rotary Club Medal of Honor for service outside his vocation in 1976 and the Bartow Lions Club Outstanding Citizen Award in 1992. He was inducted into the Bartow High School Hall of Fame in 2009. He was an organizer and charter member of Asbury United Methodist Church, where he served as Sunday School teacher and superintendent, and church treasurer. He later became a member of Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church, where he served as an elder. In 1945, after his discharge from the Army Air Force, he joined his father, grandfather and brother in the family business, working first on the newspaper, The Polk County Democrat, and later becoming president of Bartow Printing Company and publisher of the company’s longest-published magazine, Citrus Industry. In 1992, he started the Citrus Expo, Florida’s largest educational event for citrus growers. He received Florida Southern College’s Citrus Club Man of the Year award in 1995. He served on the board of Printing Industries of Florida for several years. In 1945, he married Mamie Nelle Odum, whom he met while attending Emory. They were married for 56 years, until her death in 2001. He also was predeceased by his parents and his older brother, S. Loyal Frisbie. He later married Ann Lipscomb Weld, a Summerlin classmate. Other survivors include five children, Rick Frisbie and wife Jane of Tucker, Ga., Hank Frisbie and wife Carol of Bartow, Mariann Holland and husband Carl of Babson Park, Lisa Cullins of Brunswick, Ga., and Mark Frisbie and wife Lou Anne of Fort Myers; eight grandchildren, Lloyd Frisbie, Tommy Frisbie and wife Amanda, Maggie Holland, Rick Holland, Ashley Cullins, Lauren Cullins, Jordan Frisbie, and Madison Frisbie; six great-grandchildren, Clay Frisbie, Tyler Frisbie, Gabe Frisbie, Ava Frisbie, Hawk Frisbie, and Nova Grant; one nephew. S. L. Frisbie, IV, and wife Mary; two great nieces, Peggy Frisbie and Carolyn Frisbie Holton; a great nephew, Loyal Frisbie-Knudsen and wife Julie; and three stepdaughters, Diane Ashley, Patti Pike and husband Skip, and Nancy McKirchy and husband John.

Winter Haven Couple Arrested After PCSO Detectives Learn Alleged Stalking Claim Was Bogus

Winter Haven Couple Arrested After PCSO Detectives Learn Alleged Stalking Claim Was Bogus
24-year-old Brianna Lang of Winter Haven is charged with Knowingly Giving False Information to a Law Enforcement Officer, and False Information to LEO During an Investigation.  Her husband, 27-year-old James Bradley Lang is charged with Domestic Violence – Strangulation, and Domestic Violence Battery.  Both were booked into the Polk County Jail late Friday, July 29, 2016.

As previously reported, Brianna Lang made a report of an alleged attack and stalking to PCSO detectives on July 14, 2016. (In the original report, Brianna’s name was withheld per Florida State Statute 119 pertaining to victims of staking. 
Her name is now released due to the claim being false and her subsequent arrest.  However, her address and that of her husband who resides with her, is withheld per FSS 119 as a result of the Brianna being the victim of Domestic Violence at the hands of her husband, James.)
 
On multiple occasions; July 14th, July 19, July 22nd, July 26th and July 28th, Brianna gave detectives specific details about a person whom she said came into her fenced backyard when she was mowing and attacked her telling detectives she was able to fight back and get away.  Brianna Lang also told detectives the alleged attacker stalked her, showing up at several businesses around Winter Haven.
She even provided photos of a black male leaning against a car whom she claimed was the alleged suspect and “helped” detectives with a composite drawing of her “attacker.”  At no time during the previous interactions with detectives did Brianna Lang report her husband had battered her.
On Friday, July 29th, detectives learned Brianna’s co-workers had confronted her on two different occasions when they noticed obvious injuries and were concerned.  Detectives asked Brianna about these reports and she admitted she had lied about the attack and that her husband James had choked her.  Detectives learned James had battered Brianna in May and again earlier this month.  Brianna told detectives the “attacker” she described had been a random customer at her work location who had commented to her, “You should smile more.”
Brianna Lang is being held on $1000 bond; $500 per count.  James Lang is being held on NO bond.

Winter Haven Police are Asking for the Public’s Help Identifying Four Suspects Caught on Video in the Recent Sprint Store Burglary

Winter Haven Police are asking for the public’s assistance in identifying four suspects caught on video in a recent Sprint Store burglary.
On 7-27-16 at approximately 2 a.m., four suspects shattered the front door of the Sprint PCS Store (725 3rd St SW, Winter Haven) with a brick. Once inside the suspects took multiple cellphones and ransacked the entire inside of the business. The suspects were inside of the store in just over one minute.
They left the store and are seen entering a white newer model Chevrolet 4 door vehicle.

Anyone with information on the identities of these suspects is asked to call Heartland Crime Stoppers at 1-800-226-TIPS (8477).

Callers can remain anonymous and could be eligible for a CASH reward.

image001image003image004image002image005

The Winter Haven Police Department Received its Accreditation From The Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies (CALEA) on Saturday

The Winter Haven Police Department received its accreditation from the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies (CALEA) on Saturday.

accredidation
The accreditation process requires that the Winter Haven Police Department meets the requirements of a highly regarded and broadly recognized body of law enforcement, which is internationally recognized.

Accreditation embodies the precepts of community-oriented policing. It creates a forum in which police and citizens work together to prevent and control challenges confronting law enforcement and provides clear direction about community expectations.

Chief Charlie Bird, Deputy Chief David Brannan, City Manager Deric Feacher, Mayor Brad Dantzler and Accreditation Manager Christina Barlow accepted the award.