Tag Archive | "Palm Beach County"

SUR-13 Gang Member Daniel Robledo Gets Life Sentence

SUR-13 Gang Member Daniel Robledo Gets Life Sentence

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[Manatee County, FL] Another violent SUR-13 gang member is off the streets for good.

On Monday, Daniel “Boom” Robledo, 26, was sentenced to life in prison for the second-degree murder of Elvis Ruiz, 27, during a street fight in which Robledo was the aggressor. Ruiz, who wasn’t packing any heat, was fatally shot in the chest with a shotgun by Robledo.

Both men were from Manatee County.

“This man is the fourth SUR-13 gang member sentenced to prison in recent months. He deserves to spend his life behind bars,” stated Florida Attorney General (FLAG) Pam Bondi.

Robledo is the latest member of the SUR-13 gang to be convicted, sentenced and bussed off to prison. Just last month, three Palm Beach County members of the gang were handed down prison terms totaling 150 years.

According to the FLAG office, that Palm Beach County crew has been terrorizing the area for years with crimes ranging from multiple homicides, armed robberies, a drive-by shooting, aggravated battery, retaliatory arson and multiple theft and drug-related charges.

So far, 14 gang members there have been charged there with crimes, including the three who have already been convicted.

And the state is not done with Robledo – he is charged with three counts of armed Robbery and racketeering and will be tried on those charges in November.

Nationally, the SUR-13 gang – collectively known as “Sureños” (Southerner in Spanish) – has Mexican-American roots and its origins can be traced back to the oldest barrios of Southern California.

SUR-13 has made frequent headlines and is routinely a problem for authorities across the nation, but especially in California and on the East Coast in areas such as Baltimore.

It is believed that “SUR” stands for “Southern United Raza.” The number 13 represents the 13th letter of the alphabet, which is “M,” which pays homage to their original name, Mexican Mafia (also known as “La Eme”).

 

By: Mark Christopher/Sunshine Slate

 

Images: Manatee County SO (mug), Daquella manera (graffiti)

 

SUR-13

 

TB Or Not TB: Where Should DOH Put Tuberculosis Patients?

TB Or Not TB: Where Should DOH Put Tuberculosis Patients?

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[Tallahassee, FL] More than 60 years after the A.G. Holley State Hospital opened in Palm Beach County, lawmakers decided last week to shutter Florida’s last tuberculosis hospital.

But questions remain about how the state will handle the relatively few – but complex and contagious – TB patients who would otherwise get treatment from A.G. Holley in the future.

The state Department of Health (DOH) will have to submit a plan by May 31 for closing the hospital and taking care of patients, with the plan fully in effect by Jan. 1. But the questions center on issues such as which other hospitals would treat the patients and how much Medicaid money would be available.

Sen. Maria Sachs (D-30/Delray Beach) who voted against a Department of Health reorganization bill that includes the A.G. Holley closure, said the state needs to move forward carefully.

“I’m not going to close a hospital and let any patients go without medical care or have them possibly contaminate or … put in jeopardy any other people in the state,” Sachs said Thursday.

Supporters, however, say the state has looked at closing A.G. Holley for years and that Florida is one of only a few states that continue to operate tuberculosis hospitals. In 2010, the Department of Health released a lengthy report about options for closing the facility and moving patients elsewhere.

House Health Care Appropriations Committee Chairman Matt Hudson (R-101/Naples), who has led efforts to revamp the Department of Health, said the agency will not “have to reinvent the wheel.”

tuberculosis

Photo: FL Senate

Sen. Maria Sachs concerned about where tuberculosis patients end up

The bill (HB 1263) requires the Department of Health to contract with another entity to provide care for tuberculosis patients. The contractor would use “existing licensed community hospitals and other facilities,” though the bill does not provide more detailed criteria.

Health Department spokeswoman Jessica Hammonds said in an e-mail Thursday that the agency is in discussions with three potential providers but has not finalized proposals or agreements. She said patient “transition and transfers are an important aspect of our planning efforts.”

Hammonds said, in part, that the University of Florida and Shands health system responded to what is known as a “request for information” – an initial step in determining interest – that was posted in December. Also, the department has had discussions with representatives of the Research Park at Florida Atlantic University.

She said the department is open to discussions with other entities that might be interested. The UF and Shands system released a brief statement Thursday that indicated interest in talking with the department.

“With the research and educational expertise of faculty at UF & Shands, the University of Florida Academic Health Center, we stand ready to assist the state in its efforts to control tuberculosis and welcome discussions with the DOH,” the statement said, using the UF and Shands formal name.

When it opened in 1950 as the Southeast Florida TB Hospital, A.G. Holley was built to serve as many as 500 patients, according to the department. It was one of four such state hospitals that opened between 1938 and 1952, with all of the others closed since 1974.

A.G. Holley now serves only an average of 37 people, as drugs and other medical advances have reduced the need for intensive hospital care. But those remaining patients have the “most difficult, dangerous and resistant forms of tuberculosis – those strains that cannot be treated in the community,” the department’s website says.

tuberculosis

Photo: FL House

Rep. Matt Hudson says DOH will not “have to reinvent the wheel”

Also, about 60% of A.G. Holley’s patients are sent there by court order, mostly because of not adhering to treatment elsewhere, according to the 2010 department report.

That report focused, in part, on finding ways to put A.G. Holley patients in other hospitals. As an example, it said the state could help hospitals pay for renovations that would be needed to create isolation rooms – possibly using money from the sale of the A.G. Holley site to pay the state’s share.

The report also offered alternatives such as renovating an unused hospital or building a new facility in North Central Florida and teaming with the University of Florida and Shands for operations. Another possibility was downsizing to an area of the A.G. Holley campus that included a vacant Department of Juvenile Justice building.

Leaders of the Florida Hospital Association have long expressed concerns about closing A.G. Holley. Along with issues such as possibly needing to renovate hospitals to care for the patients, they also point to a limitation on Medicaid funding.

That limit blocks Medicaid payments for inpatient care that lasts more than 45 days. A.G. Holley has a “waiver” of that limit, but other hospitals do not – and the average stay for A.G. Holley patients is about six months.

“Most hospitals are not equipped to take care of these patients because of the length of time and the level of complexity,” said Bill Bell, general counsel of the Florida Hospital Association.

Hammonds said in the e-mail that the bill addresses the Medicaid funding issues. It directs the state Agency for Health Care Administration to make changes – and, if necessary, to seek federal approval – so Medicaid funding would be available throughout the time that TB patients are being treated in hospitals.

 

By: Jim Saunders/The News Service of Florida

 

Lead image: FLDOH

 

 

tuberculosis

 

Peter Antonacci Is The New State Attorney For The 15th Judicial Circuit

Peter Antonacci Is The New State Attorney For The 15th Judicial Circuit

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[Tallahassee, FL] It appeared that Gov. Rick Scott was having a hard time filing the position as the the deadline was approaching and he had extended the application date.

On Friday, Scott announced that he had found his man for the job of State Attorney for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit: Peter Antonacci.

“Pete’s distinguished legal career and experience as a prosecutor in complex cases has earned him a well-deserved reputation throughout the state,” Scott said. “I am confident he is well qualified to serve as State Attorney for the 15th Judicial Circuit.”

Antonacci, 63, of Tallahassee, will take over for Michael F. McAuliffe, whose officially resigns from the Palm Beach County position on March 16, 2012, and who’s term ends January 7, 2013. McAuliffe (D) has taken up employment with Oxbow Carbon, a private energy company, according to reports.

While Antonacci will fill the role for less than a year, he seems to have the pedigree for the task at hand. He has served the state in a variety of ways including as Deputy Attorney General under Bob Butterworth (1990-1997), Statewide Prosecutor (1987-1990), assistant with the State Attorney’s Office for the 2nd Judicial Circuit (1979-1987) and Statewide Grand Jury Legal Unit (1982-1984).

Antonacci also has served on the Governing Board of the Northwest Florida Water Management District, 2nd Judicial Circuit Nominating Commission, Florida Commission on Ethics and as the vice chair of the First District Court of Appeal Judicial Nominating Commission.

He is a Florida State University law grad with a bachelor’s degree and a master’s degree in health planning.

In the private sector, has practiced law with the high-powered law firm of Gray Robinson P.A. where he handled civil litigation, white collar defense, governmental lobbying, and administrative law. He also worked at Rumberger, Kirk and Caldwell P.A.

 

By: Mark Christopher/Sunshine Slate

 

Image: Gray Robinson P.A.

 

Peter Antonacci

 

Florida Gun Laws Allow Firearms In Child Care Centers & Gov’t Buildings, State Rep. Wants Limits

Florida Gun Laws Allow Firearms In Child Care Centers & Gov’t Buildings, State Rep. Wants Limits

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[Tallahassee, FL] Months after lawmakers approved a measure to overrule cities and counties with get-tough Florida gun laws, a Palm Beach County lawmaker on Tuesday introduced a bill to begin restoring some limits on where residents can carry guns.

Saying she hopes to at least generate debate, State Rep. Lori Berman, (D-86/Delray Beach) filed a proposal to bar hand guns from childcare care centers and government buildings.

Lawmakers earlier this year passed HB 45, which prevents counties and municipalities from enacting gun ordinances stricter than the state. The bill prompted many cities to repeal a host of laws or face fines.

Berman said it has led to a wholesale abolition of local gun ordinances that has caused ‘a gaping hole” she contends was unintended by state lawmakers.

The bill would prevent the carrying of concealed weapons in most county, city and school buildings. State Sen. Maria Sachs (D-30/Boca Raton) is expected to file a Senate version.

Berman said she filed the bill after consulting with Palm Beach County officials, who were forced to rescind a number of local gun restrictions following the bill’s passage earlier this year.

Local officials included county commissioners Shelley Vana and Burt Aaronson, Tax Collector Anne Gannon, and West Palm Beach Mayor Jeri Muoio.

“We must protect our children when parents enroll them in a childcare facility,” Aaronson said in a statement. “Guns do not belong there. We must protect the people who visit their local government offices.”

State Sen. Maria Sachs

Photo: YouTube video

State Sen. Maria Sachs (D-30/Boca Raton)

Backers of last year’s bill defended it as a simple requirement – that Florida gun laws should trump local law. In several instances, local governments have enacted differing laws, which was confusing to gun owners and also simply bad policy.

It also allowed areas where local leaders disagreed with the “law of the land” in the state to skirt the law, backers said.

“The only thing this bill punishes is arrogance,” State Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-4/Fort Walton Beach) and the bill’s sponsor, said during debate over the issue.

Lawmakers last session passed two measures pushed by gun rights activists. Along with HB 45, they passed another measure (HB 155) that limits a doctor’s ability to ask questions about gun ownership.

House Democrats slammed the measures for favoring the rights of gun owners over a doctor’s interest in protecting patients – particularly children – and the rights of counties and cities to pass ordinances to protect the safety of their residents.

HB 155 limits a doctor from asking a patient about gun ownership if it’s not relevant to the patient’s care, and prevents the doctor from noting gun ownership in a patient’s medical file unless the information is pertinent to the patient’s safety or the safety of others.

That measure has prompted a lawsuit. In June, a group of physicians filed suit in a Miami federal court to nullify a controversial measure. In September, U.S. District Judge Marcia Cooke barred enforcement of the ban while the lawsuit winds its way through the court.

Never dull, Florida gun laws continue to be a source of legislative controversy and courtroom drama.

 

By: Michael Peltier/The News Source of Florida

 

Lead image: M Glasgow/Flickr

 

Florida gun laws

 

Florida Redistricting Process Produces Careful Discussion, Attention To Fair Districts Amendments

Florida Redistricting Process Produces Careful Discussion, Attention To Fair Districts Amendments

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[Tallahassee, FL] With critical votes approaching in the once-a-decade redistricting process, House lawmakers listened Thursday to a series of presentations on a variety of maps that could form the basis for future districts in their own chamber and Congress.

But few questions were asked, and those that were largely avoided any mention of politics or incumbency, what appears to be the latest in a series of overt steps to convey at the least the message that lawmakers are following the “Fair Districts” Florida redistricting amendments approved by voters last year, and upheld by a judge in September.

Those amendments, aimed at cutting back on gerrymandering to help political parties and incumbents in the line-drawing process, have so far hovered over every committee meeting about crafting the lines. And legislative leaders say they have sent a clear message to the members of the panels now trying to decide how to reshape Florida’s political future.

“We’re blessed in one regard, and that is that our members are very aware of the amendments that took place last year,” said Rep. Chris Dorworth, a Lake Mary Republican (District 34) who chairs the Florida redistricting subcommittee redrawing House districts. ” … Ten years ago, 20 years ago, 30 years ago, there was a certain liberty in designing seats that does not exist anymore.”

Dorworth’s committee studied five maps for House districts, all of which would slightly cut back on the number of seats that were carried by Republican Gov. Rick Scott in 2010, though those districts would remain a strong majority of the seats in the Florida House. But the maps would also draw together several incumbents, including Republicans.

Chris Dorworth (Photo: Lance Turner/latuphoto.com for Sunshine Slate)

Photo: Lance Turner/latuphoto.com for Sunshine Slate

Rep. Dorworth chairs the subcommittee redrawing House districts

“That means that many of us are not going to live in the seats we had before and just because you feel like you should, that doesn’t necessarily mean that’s going to be the case,” Dorworth said.

All of the House maps would also create additional seats with a good chance of electing minority candidates. For example, one House map would also create three new minority seats by carving out an “access” district in Orange County with a black voting-age population of more than 40%; a Palm Beach County seat with a Hispanic majority; and the division of what used to be a single Hispanic majority seat in Osceola and Orange counties.

Rep. Mack Bernard (D-84/West Palm Beach) said members aren’t necessarily being overly cautious about discussing the maps.

“Members are just trying to speak along [with] what’s in the constitution of the state of Florida,” Bernard said, adding that members weren’t “scared or afraid.”

There were some questions. Bernard, for example, asked about the lack of a Hispanic majority seat located entirely in Broward County, where about a quarter of the 1.7 million residents are Latinos. House staff members said they would review the idea, but noted that parts of the county are needed to help shore up Hispanic seats that start in Miami-Dade County.

Some conversations about the maps have reportedly taken place. The Senate Reapportionment Committee said earlier this week that it had received a tentative House proposal for congressional districts despite the subcommittee dealing with that issue having not formally pared a set of seven proposals into the three it is required to send the full House Redistricting Committee, much less one.

But even what form of Florida redistricting map was being discussed isn’t clear. Congressional Redistricting Subcommittee Co-Chair Doug Holder (R-70/Sarasota), said he wasn’t involved in those conversations.

“We have narrowed down all of the ideas into the seven maps that we displayed today, and we will narrow those seven into three and then submit those to the main committee,” he said.

 

By: Brandon Larrabee/The News Service of Florida

 

Lead image includes official House photos by Mark Foley. Rep. Dorworth photo by: Lance Turner/latuphoto.com for Sunshine Slate

 

Florida redistricting

 

Supremes: The “Robo-Signing” Show Must Go On

Supremes: The “Robo-Signing” Show Must Go On

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[Tallahassee, FL], In a split ruling likely to send shivers through the mortgage banking community, the Florida Supreme Court ruled Thursday that it will hear a case involving alleged “robo-signing” by a major mortgage lender even though parties in the individual case settled and asked that the case be dismissed.

In a 4-3 ruling, the state’s highest court said it will take up a case pitting a Palm Beach County homeowner against the Bank of New York Mellon even though the parties in July asked that the case be dropped.

The bank began foreclosure proceedings against homeowner Roman Pino, who filed a lawsuit contending that the bank had illegally back-dated documents in his case. In response, the bank dismissed its foreclosure proceeding. Pino’s lawyers contend the bank did so to avoid having to address the allegations of fraud.

The Fourth District Court of Appeal, ruled in favor of BNY Mellon’s motion to dismiss, but asked the state Supreme Court to review the case because “many, many mortgage foreclosures appear tainted with suspect documents.”

In a group opinion, the majority on Thursday ruled that the issue was too important to allow it to be dropped, agreeing with the 4th DCA that the case, “may dramatically affect the mortgage foreclosure crisis in this State.”

In dissent, Chief Justice Charles Canady said the court was overstepping its bounds by forcing them to continue their legal battle.

 the foreclosure problem from  robo-signing

Graphic: Flickr/truliavisuals

A robo-signing survey from 2010

“The parties to this proceeding have rights,” Canady wrote in a dissent joined by justices, Ricky Polston and Peggy Quince. Justice Charles Canady wrote in a dissenting opinion. “They should not be dragooned into litigating a matter that is no longer in controversy between them simply because this Court determines that an issue needs to be decided.”

Voting in the majority were Justices Jorge Labarga, Fred Lewis, Barbara Pariente and James Perry.

 

By: Michael Peltier/The News Service of Florida

 

Lead image: Flickr/Nick Bastian Tempe, AZ

 

Related reading:

Grand Jury transcripts in foreclosure fraud case released (KSNV MyNews3) News 3 has received full transcripts of the grand jury indictment of Gary Trafford and Gerri Sheppard, the title officers who allegedly directed a “robo-signing” scheme that led to the filing of tens of thousands of

Maine Court Refuses To Find GMAC In Contempt On Robo-Signing  (MortgageOrb.com) Maine’s Supreme Judicial Court has ruled against finding GMAC Mortgage in contempt for robo-signing practices. The Associated Press reports that the court, in a 5-1 decision, upheld a 2010 decision by a

2010 United States foreclosure crisis – Wikipedia, the free … The terms robo-signing and robo-signers then gained wider exposure by other mortgage fraud activists Michael Redman and Lisa Epstein via their blogs.

Mass. sues over ‘robo-signing’ (USAToday.com) Massachusetts has filed the first major lawsuit over so-called “robo-signing” foreclosure processing.

Scripps Research Institute: Scientific Discoveries? Yes. Jobs? Not So Much

Scripps Research Institute: Scientific Discoveries? Yes. Jobs? Not So Much

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Eight Years Ago Promises Were Made To The Residents Of Florida … Have They Been Kept?

By: Lilly Rockwell/The News Service of Florida

[Jupiter, FL] It’s a familiar promise: if lawmakers do something to bring a new business to Florida, the new enterprise will generate thousands of jobs, and boost Florida’s reputation as business-friendly.

Eight years ago, lawmakers were considering whether to spend money to lure Scripps Research Institute into opening a Florida campus, hoping to mimic the biotechnology success that Scripps brought to San Diego.

During a special October 2003 session, lawmakers gave approval for the state to spend $310 million to permit Scripps Research Institute, a non-profit biomedical research operation focused on drug discovery, to build a Florida campus.

At the time, some lawmakers were swayed by an economic study that predicted Scripps itself would have over 2,000 employees and bring 44,000 direct and indirect jobs to the South Florida region over 15 years.

The deal that brought Scripps to Palm Beach County eventually totaled over $550 million and resulted in a guarantee that the research outfit would eventually hire 545 people by March 2014. Scripps Florida is on track to meet that goal, with 410 hires made as of June, and plans to level out at about 600 employees.

But documents from the Scripps Florida Funding Corp., an entity that oversees the state’s payments to Scripps, show that Scripps Florida has fallen short of the larger economic impact promised in early studies.

So far, according to economic impact studies contained in the Scripps Florida Funding Corp. annual report, Scripps has generated 11,274 direct, indirect and induced jobs since 2003. While no doubt delivering an economic boost to the region, it seems unlikely Scripps Florida will generate anywhere near 44,000 jobs by 2018.

Supporters say Scripps has bolstered the South Florida region’s reputation as a biotechnology hub. Scripps is responsible for over a dozen start-up companies and company relocations to the area, including the decision by German-based biotechnology research institute to build a facility called The Max Planck Florida Institute a stone’s throw from the Scripps campus.

Scripps Florida

Photo: The Scripps Research Institute

The Scripps Research Institute (Scripps Florida) in Jupiter

There’s now a cluster of biotechnology research outfits in nearby Port St. Lucie, that has also brought millions of dollars in grant money to the state that otherwise would have gone elsewhere.

Economic impact studies show that Scripps has added $2 billion to the region’s economic engine in eight years.

Any potential failure to live up to the lofty jobs expectations, Scripps officials say, stems from a combination of the recession, economic headwinds in the pharmaceutical industry, the lack of venture capital focused on investing in biotechnology in Florida and little understanding of the lengthy and expensive process of drug development.

Scripps officials say it takes at least 10 years to turn a discovery into a marketable drug.

“Start-up money is hard to come by, venture money is hard to come by,” said Harry Orf, the vice president of scientific operations for Scripps, who is leaving his post in February for a new job. “It is a testament that we have been here seven years and there are four (start-up) companies” spawned from Scripps discoveries, he said.

 

Scientific Breakthroughs

The two-year-old Scripps Florida campus adjacent to a Florida Atlantic University campus in the Palm Beach County city of Jupiter sits among new home developments and a bustling shopping center.

Freshly landscaped, the complex, which is largely paid for by taxpayer dollars, even offers the perk of a cafeteria for workers in the mode of Silicon Valley tech giants Google and Facebook.

Scripps focuses on making scientific discoveries that could yield new, effective treatments to combat diseases such as Alzheimer’s, cancer, diabetes, and even addictions, such as drugs, alcohol and cigarettes.

Scripps does the research at the very beginning stages of a drug’s life cycle, trying to determine what molecules could make good potential drugs or develop technology to help in drug discovery. It also has a graduate school and hopes to open a research hospital across the street.

A non-profit, Scripps relies heavily on grant money from the National Institutes of Health to operate. The money from the state and county were used to pay for the Scripps building, salaries of workers, and other operational costs, Orf said.

Patrick Griffin - The Scripps Research Institute

Photo by Lucien Capehart, courtesy of The Scripps Research Institute

Scripps superstar scientist Patrick Griffin

Patrick Griffin, the Director of the Translation Research Institute at Scripps, is an example of the type of superstar scientist Scripps hoped to recruit to Florida. Recruited from New Jersey in 2004, Griffin arrived in Jupiter when there was no campus built yet and only a small handful of employees.

His specialty involves examining proteins that control transcription of genes involved in disorders such as diabetes and cancer. He studies how to manipulate these proteins. Proof positive of his effectiveness as a researcher, Griffin has published three scientific papers in the highly-respected Nature journal in the last 15 months.

Scripps serves an important role in drug discovery, Griffin said. Pharmaceutical companies like to outsource this early-stage discovery work to research outfits like Scripps, and then take over when it gets to clinical trials, he said.

Griffin said Scripps is particularly good at understanding how drugs work in the body and making discoveries that could lead to major breakthroughs in drug development. “Not everybody is going to be good at it and not everybody is going to have the resources to be good at it,” he said. Scripps does have those resources.

He said Scripps didn’t have enough employees or facility space to generate substantial research until five years ago, so to judge Scripps’ drug discovery success on the roughly eight years it has been in Florida is not fair. In the world of drug development, five years is about half the time it takes a drug to go from idea to the marketplace.

Scripps Florida has filed for 107 patents since inception and its technology has yielded 47 license agreements, though none of these licenses have generated revenue, according to Scripps Florida Funding Corp.

Though Florida has concentrated its efforts on bringing new biotechnology employers to the state, such as Scripps and Max Planck, it hasn’t solved the problem of lack of venture capital investment in biotechnology.

Biotechnology-oriented venture capital firms are still heavily concentrated in areas like Boston and California, where the biotechnology industry is well-established. Even if Scripps makes a potential groundbreaking discovery, a company in San Diego may license it.

“To think that technology would be here and only spun out here is a bit naïve, because there is a reason why companies want to be in Boston,” Griffin said. “They are going to tend to want to invest in their backyard. If they are interested in the technology, they can bring it there.”

Joseph Cortright - Impresa

Photo: Impresa

Joseph Cortright of Impresa

Joseph Cortright, who studies industry clusters at his Oregon-based consulting firm called Impresa, said it would be nearly impossible for any city or region to mimic the biotechnology successes in areas like San Diego and Boston.

“The die is already cast on this,” Cortright said. “This industry is very concentrated and there huge economic advantages to investors and workers to being in places like Boston or San Diego or San Francisco.”

He said in the eight years that Florida has been pursuing the biotechnology industry, the miniscule amount of venture capital investments into biotech start-ups in the state has not grown. “Florida’s spending on (Scripps) has done very little to change the role it plays in incubating this industry,” Cortright said.

Still, there are four biotechnology start-ups in the Palm Beach County area that were spawned directly from research completed at Scripps Florida. Jupiter-based Envoy Therapeutics was formed in 2010 to collaborate with Scripps in identifying new drugs for Parkinson’s disease.

And Miami-based Opko Health bought another Scripps-based spinoff company called CURNA Inc. earlier this year. CURNA, established in Jupiter in 2008, is focused developing treatments for diseases such as diabetes and Alzheimer’s.

 

The Promise Of Jobs

Even with these economic bragging rights, it appears the research institute will fall short of the ambitious estimates that Miami-based Washington Economics Group made in 2003.

At the urging of then-Gov. Jeb Bush, Washington Economics Group had predicted the “clustering” effect of bringing Scripps to Florida would yield 44,000 jobs and nearly 500 biotechnology companies over 15 years.

The theory was that Scripps would act like a magnet in luring more biotech businesses to Florida and the money these businesses spend and the employees they hire would have a multiplier effect on the region.

State officials – including Bush – quoted this 44,000 job promise in newspaper reports extensively during the time Scripps incentive funding was being debated in the Legislature.

A report by the Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability in 2010 shows that before 2003, Palm Beach County had 46 biotechnology-related businesses.

By December 2008, that number had risen by eight companies.

Overall, there were 37 more biotechnology businesses in Florida, the report says, than 2003. But in that same time the state had spent $759 million trying to lure biotechnology companies to Florida.

The report concluded that “biotechnology clusters have yet to grow substantially in the six counties where (incentive programs) have established facilities,” placing the blame largely on lack of venture capital investment.

Dan Gelber

House photo by Mark Foley

Dan Gelber in action in Tallahassee in 2008

Former State Sen. Dan Gelber, a Miami-based attorney and candidate for Attorney General (who lost to Pam Bondi in 2010), said he voted against giving money to Scripps in 2003 because the process was rushed and there wasn’t time to study the economic projections.

He paid for his own study that showed Scripps likely wouldn’t bring more than 16,000 jobs to the region in 15 years. “I commissioned the study because I felt the projections were inflated and could use independent review,” Gelber said in an email Thursday.

“I didn’t oppose the idea of bringing Scripps to Florida – I objected to the deal. We basically offered to build their buildings, pay their employees and give them naming rights.”

Gelber said lawmakers were so afraid of appearing like they were against creating jobs that they did not closely scrutinize the deal to establish a Scripps campus in Florida.

He sees parallels with the current debate over destination resorts – at least one casino operator is promising 100,000 direct and indirect jobs and annual gambling revenue of up to $6 billion.

“They are promising absurd revenue and job projections (and) believe we are desperate enough to make a fool’s gamble,” he said. But, he added that Scripps had the potential to be much more beneficial to the state than a proposed expansion of gambling.

Officials at Scripps say they weren’t the ones pushing those pie-in-the-sky economic development numbers and that they will deliver the jobs promised. Orf urged patience in scrutinizing the economic impact of Scripps because drug development is a misunderstood and lengthy process.

“We have been here six-and-a-half years and we already have got 30 products through development and two in clinical trials,” Orf said. He said there is “plenty of evidence” to show Scripps has already bolstered Florida’s biotechnology industry.

“Since we’ve been here we brought the state of Florida $223 million in federal money that would not have come into the economy of Florida and you can’t discount that,” he said. “It is very real.”

 

Scripps Research Institute

 

65-Year Sentence For Palm Beach “Top 6″ Gang Leader

65-Year Sentence For Palm Beach “Top 6″ Gang Leader

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[Tallahassee, FL]Yesterday, the office of Attorney General Pam Bondi press-released that a notorious “Top 6″ gang leader has been sentenced to a lengthy prison term for terrorizing West Palm Beach residents.

For the crimes of racketeering, conspiracy to commit racketeering and others, Futo Charles, 30, was sentenced to 65 years behind bars.

“We have successfully prosecuted this criminal and kept a dangerous gang member off our streets,” said Attorney General Pam Bondi. “I am grateful to state, federal and local law enforcement for their hard work investigating and detaining this violent gang.”

The sentence is the end of a long legal journey that began in 2007. It was the first such indictment issued by the Statewide Grand Jury on Gangs in December 2007. To date, two other Top 6 members have already been convicted – also of racketeering – and sentenced to 25 years in state prison.

According to the press release, the Top 6 gang has been linked to 14 homicides and 150 shootings in the past few years, mostly in Palm Beach County. Through the years-long trial process, Charles has always maintained that Top 6 was a rap group.

Now he will spend the rest of his life behind bars.

Charles’ influence is still being felt on the streets however, as a witness set to appear at his trial was found shot to death before he could testify.

 

By: Mark Christopher/Sunshine Slate

 

Image: 2006 mug shot
Resource: Attorney General’s office press release

 

Related links:

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BNY Mellon sued over currency prices The bank overcharged the Florida Retirement System Trust Fund by millions of dollars, said Pam Bondi, the state’s attorney general, in a statement Thursday. Her Virginia counterpart, Kenneth T. Cuccinelli, said his state had lost about $40 million.

9th Annual Digital Counties Survey: Palm Beach #1 In U.S.

9th Annual Digital Counties Survey: Palm Beach #1 In U.S.

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[Folsom, CA]In the current issue of Digital Communities, Palm Beach County – one of the geographically largest counties in the nation – was selected as the best county in the country with a population over 500,000 in the 2011 Digital Counties Survey.

With 3,068 counties in the U.S., that is no small achievement.

Three other Florida counties made the list as well: Orange County (7th, 500,000 or more population), Leon County (9th, 250,000-499,999 population) and Martin County (4th, less than 150,000 population).

It is the 9th year of the survey, conducted by e.Republic’s Center for Digital Government and the National Association of Counties (NACo).

What exactly did Palm Beach County and the others do to earn the recognition?

By being resourceful, collaborative and “effectively economizing and finding innovative ways of using technology to meet the higher demand for services during this trying economic time,” says Digital Communities Director Todd Sander. “Counties are consolidating and sharing services to cut down on costs and leveraging technology like virtualization to capture critical savings.”

Palm Beach County is both tech savvy and beautiful

The survey identifies counties with the best electronic practices, that is, county governments that use the latest and up-to-date information and communications technology to save time and money.

The annual survey is taken March – April and the awards are at the NACO conference in July. All U.S. counties are invited to participate.

“The Digital Counties Survey identifies the very best examples of how counties are aligning technology to support strategic priorities and create crucial operational and administrative efficiencies,” said NACo Executive Director Larry E. Naake. “Especially important during these tough economic times, counties across the country are using innovative technologies to reduce county operations costs and enhance service delivery.”

The Center for Digital Government, a division of e.Republic, is a research and advisory institute serving state and local governments. e.Republic is a national publishing, event and research company that helps municipalities employ smart media for public sector innovation.

The National Association of Counties (NACo), founded in 1935, lobbies the White House and Congress on behalf of counties.

 

By: Mark Christopher/Sunshine Slate

 

Images: Palm Beach County website
Resources: Digital Communities, NACo
Canadian Security Giant Garda Moving U.S. Headquarters To Boca Raton

Canadian Security Giant Garda Moving U.S. Headquarters To Boca Raton

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[Montréal, Canada] Today, Gov. Rick Scott announced that Canadian cash-security behemoth Garda will be moving their state-side headquarters to Boca Raton from their current place in Pasadena, California. After deciding to leave California, Garda went on a quest to find the best deal in terms of subsidies.

Garda chose Florida over the two other states in final contention, the names of which were undisclosed by the governor’s office.

“This announcement speaks volumes about the strides we are taking to create the best business environment in the U.S.,” said Scott, who was quick to point out that both of the losing states in the Garda bid had higher corporate income tax rates than Florida.

Garda sounds really happy about it all, especially since they got $1 million in subsidies to make the jump from the West coast to the East. The majority of that money came from the state, while the rest came from Boca Raton and Palm Beach County.

“Our new U.S. headquarters in Boca Raton will provide us with the ability to continue our expansion; from the start of our U.S. operation in 2005 to becoming one of the leading cash logistics and armored transportation providers in the U.S. and part of a corporation that today has global sales of $1.2 billion,” said Garda President and CEO Stephan Cretier.

 


Gov. Scott & Garda President and CEO Stephan Cretier in Montréal

 

The big move will take place this month. It couldn’t come at a better time for Scott, who is still reeling from attacks from both sides of the aisle along and smarting from abysmal approval ratings (the lowest of any state leader in the country). Scott is portraying the Garda deal as proof that his policies are working.

The Canadians like what they see, anyway.

“We have been extremely impressed with the vibrant business climate that the state of Florida is working to create,” said Cretier. “We appreciate the cooperation and economic incentives extended to us by the state, Palm Beach County and the City of Boca Raton and look forward to contributing to this growing economy.”

Too bad Scott really had nothing to do with the deal. Or the one with Vision Airlines. Or the one with Bing Energy. All three were touted by Scott but started and nearly completed by Gov. Charlie Crist while he was still in office.

In the case of the Garda deal, the announcement was made public back in February, just a month after Scott took office. The credit should go to Crist.

Boca Burglers … Or Saviors?

So what does the Garda deal actually mean for Florida’s struggling economy and dismal unemployment numbers? The estimated economic impact of Garda’s move to the Boca Raton area is a healthy $44 million over five years, according to media sources. That’s a sizable chunk of change for an area in desperate need of something positive.

But don’t expect much of a dent in the jobs front – according to the governor’s office, Garda will create 100 new professional-level jobs in The Sunshine State averaging $65,000 per year. That brings Scott’s job creation total to approximately 50,000 so far, each of which comes with an asterisk, mind you, and a tag reading “Made By Charlie Crist.”

 

Everyone in Boca Raton will now have to dress like this (not really)

 

 

Bringing Home The Canadian Bacon

Scott made the announcement on day three of his five-day “trade mission” to Canada, which is an apparent hard target of the current administration. The gushing governor makes it sound like the phone is ringing off the hook.

“Many companies here in Canada have expressed their desire to do business with Florida because of our excellent business climate and commitment to cut taxes and grow jobs – proof that we are capturing the attention of the business community worldwide,” said Scott from the road.

The Montréal, Canada-based Garda is a worldwide mega-conglomerate, handling security, monetary transport and something called “global risk consulting” for a wide range of clients in a multitude of industries.

And their U.S. headquarters are now in Florida. Thanks to Charlie Scott (or Rick Crist, whichever you prefer).

Interested in one of those 100 sweet Garda gigs? Start here: http://www.gardapreemployment.com/en/contact/

 

- Mark Christopher

 

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