Archive for December, 2009

Florida Police Crack Down On Seat Belt Violaters

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

Florida police are ticketing over a thousand motorists every day for seat belt violations.

Authorities have written more than 190,000 seat belt tickets since a new, tougher law took effect June 30 that requires drivers to buckle up. That averages slightly more than 1,000 drivers each day.

The primary seat belt law permits officers to pull drivers over if they or their front seat passengers are not buckled up. Anyone under 18 must wear seat belts regardless of where they sit in the vehicle.

Florida Highway Patrol Capt. Mark Welch said it’s estimated the new law will save about 125 lives annually and prevent more than 1,700 serious injuries.

An October survey shows 85 percent of Florida drivers are buckling up now.

 

Family Sues Fort Lauderdale Doctor Over Man’s Suicide

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

A Fort Lauderdale doctor who advertises as both a pain and addiction specialist is facing a wrongful death lawsuit from the family of a former patient who allegedly became addicted to drugs while under the doctor’s care before committing suicide.

The lawsuit, filed Dec. 22 in Broward County Circuit Court, says Dr. Michael Lazzopina turned Benjamin Eiseman into a drug addict through a regular regimen of addictive painkillers and anti-anxiety drugs between 2005 and July 2008, when the 30-year-old Coral Springs electrician killed himself with an overdose of pills prescribed from the pain clinic where Lazzopina works.

Lazzopina first treated Eiseman for back pain, and prescribed the painkiller oxycodone months before receiving MRI results confirming an injury, the suit says. The suit also says Lazzopina failed to reduce the oxycodone dosage after Eiseman’s back ailment improved, and “never referred Benjamin Eiseman to a drug addiction specialist.”

Lazzopina, 85, specializes in urology, according to the Florida Department of Health. But in newspaper advertisements, he offers detoxification treatment for drug addicts and pain-management treatment. Lazzopina’s attorney said the doctor is board-certified in pain management, and the doctor is approved by the federal government to dispense special narcotics to treat addiction.

Lazzopina works part-time as a contract employee at the Fort Lauderdale Pain Relief Center, a clinic at 201 W. Oakland Park Blvd. According to the suit, Lazzopina treats as many as 44 patients a day at the clinic, where the doctor receives a fee for every patient he sees.

The attorney said neither the doctor nor the clinic did anything wrong. The lawyer said Eiseman was “doctor shopping,” seeking pills from other doctors, and that Eiseman was abusing illegal drugs, which were found in his system when he died.

Eiseman killed himself only days after his wife had kicked him out of the house — suggesting domestic strife pushed him to suicide, not addiction, the attorney said. Eiseman’s widow, Paulette, declined to comment.

The Fort Lauderdale Pain Relief Center is owned by Integra Health Services, a company founded by chiropractors Michael Rechter and David Romano.

Records show the pair also created an MRI facility last year in eastern Kentucky, a hotbed of illegal trafficking of painkillers from South Florida pain clinics. The attorney said the Fort Lauderdale clinic does not accept MRI tests from the owners’ Kentucky facility, or from any other out-of-state providers.

In an effort to weed out “doctor shopping” addicts seeking unjustified prescriptions, the clinic also refuses to accept out-of-state patients, and requires patients to sign a “pain contract” swearing not to seek pills from other doctors, the lawyer said.

“They do everything strictly by the book,” the attorney said.

Two Florida Youths On ATV Critically Injured In Hendry County Collision

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

Two youths, ages 13 and 11, on an ATV were critically injured Thursday in a collision with a vehicle in Hendry County.

According to the Florida Highway Patrol Report, the ATV failed to yield after coming to a stop sign at Bald Cypress and North Kennel in Montura and collided with a vehicle being driven by Benjamin Rodriguez Ofray, 30, of Clewiston.

The 13-year-old from Montura was taken by helicopter to Lee Memorial Hospital and the 11-year-old from Clewiston was taken to Health Park. Their names are being withheld due to their ages.

The investigation is pending.

Florida Teen Dies After Being Thrown From Truck Bed

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

A teenager died after being thrown from the bed of a pickup in southern Hillsborough County.

The Florida Highway Patrol reports that 15-year-old Nativada Cervantes and four other people were in the back of the truck Saturday when it ran off the road and hit a light pole. All five were thrown from the vehicle, and Cervantes died at the scene. Two others in the back and the truck’s driver were taken to a Tampa hospital with serious injuries. The front-seat passenger and two other people in the back were not transported.

No charges have been filed, but FHP says an investigation is still ongoing. 

Titusville Florida Man In Wheelchair Killed By Car

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

A Titusville man was struck and killed by a reportedly drunken driver.

Titusville police say 32-year-old Michael J. Leininger, who suffered from cerebral palsy, was crossing the street early Sunday morning when 48-year-old Thomas Clavin Pitt hit him. Pitt reportedly had a green light at the intersection when the crash occurred

Police say Pitt had just left a sports bar when the crash occurred. Pitt reportedly failed sobriety tests and submitted to a breath test, which revealed his blood-alcohol level to be 0.10. State law considers a person impaired at 0.08.

Pitt was arrested and charged with DUI manslaughter and DUI with property damage.

China Plant Shuts After Children Poisoned By Lead

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

Chinese authorities Monday started administering health checks on all children living near a battery factory in the south of the country and closed the plant after more than 40 children were found with lead poisoning.

The discovery of clusters of lead poisoning in recent months has sparked unrest and growing domestic anger over public safety scandals in which children have been the main victims. The incidents also highlight the heavy environmental cost of China’s rapid economic development.

Excessive amounts of lead in the body can harm the nervous and reproductive systems and cause high blood pressure and anemia. In severe cases, it can lead to convulsions, coma and death.

Children living in Yinyuan, an industrial district in Guangdong province about 30 yards (30 meters) away from the battery factory Aokelai Power Co. Ltd., were to begin receiving health examinations Monday, said a statement from the Qingyuan municipal government.

A report by the official Southern Daily newspaper earlier this month said 44 children living in the area had excessive levels of lead in their blood.

The government statement says the city’s environmental bureau ordered the battery plant to shut down on Saturday after tests on the factory’s water discharge found lead content exceeding provincial safety standards.

Last month, Chinese authorities said they would relocate 1,400 families in northern Shaanxi province who live near a smelter that caused lead poisoning in about 850 children, after protests erupted in August. Similar reports of lead poisoning have emerged in Yunnan, Fujian and other provinces in recent months, affecting more than 3,000 children.

The ruling Communist Party is worried that mass protests will threaten the country’s social stability and considers the demonstrations a serious challenge to its grip on power.

Man Paragliding In South Florida Dies After Crashing Into Ocean

Monday, December 28th, 2009

A man died and his wife was injured when the tandem paraglider they were riding crashed into the ocean Friday morning.

According to the Broward Sheriff’s Office, 52-year-old Roberto Fernandez and his 23-year-old wife, Catya Fernandez, were paragliding near the Dania Pier at about 9:20 a.m. when the accident happened.

Police said Roberto Fernandez was controlling the single-engine paraglider with his wife sitting in front of him.

According to BSO, Roberto Fernandez lost control, and the couple went into the ocean. Catya Fernandez escaped from the harness, but her husband was unable to get out.

Lifeguards dragged Roberto Fernandez out of the water, and Dania Beach Fire Rescue workers tried to revive him. He was pronounced dead at Hollywood Memorial Regional Hospital.

Catya Fernandez was treated at the hospital and released.

BSO is investigating the incident.

Ormond Teen Killed In One Vehicle Florida Car Crash

Monday, December 28th, 2009

A 17-year-old Ormond Beach resident was killed in a one-vehicle crash Sunday evening in Volusia County.

Bryce E. Robinson was driving a 2002 Ford Explorer east on State Road 40 when, for some unknown reason, he lost control and it overturned, the Florida Highway Patrol reported.

Robinson, who was wearing no seat belt, died. Passenger Andy Haynes, also 17 and also from Ormond Beach, was seriously injured, the agency reported.

He was taken to Halifax Medical Center.

Car Accident Shuts Down Northbound I-95 In Brevard

Monday, December 28th, 2009

Troopers said a fatal multiple vehicle accident in Brevard County has shut down the northbound lanes of Interstate 95 at Malabar Road in the Palm Bay area.

Some reports show two people died at the scene. Palm Bay Fire Rescue units treated 10 patients, including at least one patient who was airlifted to a local hospital.

The accident happened at 6:03 a.m. and Florida Highway Patrol troopers will remain at the scene while they investigate and clear the crash.

Palm Bay spokeswoman Yvonne Martinez said police are helping FHP troopers divert traffic.

American Airlines Jamaica Plane Crash Investigation Continues

Monday, December 28th, 2009

Jamaican and U.S. authorities launched a probe Thursday examining whether the pilot of American Airlines Flight 331 could have avoided an accident that cracked open the plane and sent nearly 100 people to the hospital.

One alternative could have been to abort the landing and circle around for another attempt, Oscar Derby, director general of Jamaica’s Civil Aviation Authority, told The Associated Press.

“We would want to look at why that option was not selected,” he said, adding that he was not sure it would have been possible. “Runway excursions are responsible for many of the fatalities in modern aviation.”

The Boeing 737-800 skidded off the runway of Kingston’s Norman Manley International Airport late Tuesday, lurching as it stopped at the edge of the Caribbean Sea. The flight originated from Reagan National Airport in Washington and left Miami International Airport about an hour late.

The plane’s fuselage broke open, its left main landing gear collapsed and its nose was crushed.

All 154 people aboard survived, with 92 taken to hospitals, but none of the injuries were considered life-threatening. The U.S. State Department said 76 of the passengers were Americans.

Many on board clapped as the plane landed, said Anthony Davis, who was traveling with his wife.

“The landing wasn’t smooth, but I think with the weather and the rain, people were so happy they came down from the sky,” he said. “Next thing I know, I hit my head violently on the seat. It was as if somebody had picked me up and threw me.”

He said he grabbed his wife’s hand, hurried out in a daze onto the plane’s wing and jumped into a puddle below. The pilot emerged and asked people to remain still in the pouring rain so he could get a head count, Davis said.

“The pilot looked like somebody who was under control. He didn’t display any panic,” said Davis, who is the athletic director at the University of Technology, Jamaica.

While fire trucks responded immediately, it took authorities some time to get organized, he said.

“The persons didn’t know there was an accident. The police were standing around. The area was not secured,” he said.

Jamaican Information Minister Daryl Vaz did not return calls for comment.

Investigation of the wreckage will likely wrap up on Sunday, Derby said. Officials were interviewing the crew and passengers and looking at flight controls and weather conditions.

Other planes landed safely and without difficulty that night, but conditions varied from landing to landing, Derby said.

“The weather was changing by the hour,” he said. “The weather experience for that particular flight at that moment could have been somewhat different from the weather experienced by other airlines.”

Norman Manley International Airport reopened Thursday to large planes that had been diverted to Montego Bay, according to customer service spokesman Chad Anthony Smart.

A team of six U.S. investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board was in Kingston to assist a probe led by the Jamaican government, agency spokesman Keith Holloway said.

One of two flight data recorders from the plane was retrieved and taken to the NTSB laboratory in Washington. The second will arrive sometime after the holidays, Holloway said. He could not estimate how long the analysis of the recorders would take.

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration declined comment and referred all questions to the NTSB.

It is the worst accident that Jamaica’s main airport has seen, Derby said.