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Monday, May 23, 2011

Tampa Bay Criminal Defense Lawyer - Man crashes into police car while drunk...


By Nicholas Dorsten, Esq.

From the Bay News9 website, what NOT to crash into while you have been drinking and driving (note: joking aside, drinking and driving do NOT mix)!

PINELLAS--
A Tampa man was arrested on DUI charges after crashing into a Pinellas County deputy's cruiser just after midnight on Saturday morning.

The DUI suspect collided with the cruise at Forest Lakes Blvd. and Pine Ave., according to the report.


The Deputy had just pulled a different driver over and they were both completely off the roadway on the eastbound shoulder of Forest Lakes Boulevard.

Officials said the deputy, who was operating a fully-marked 2007 Chevy Impala Sheriff's cruiser, had his emergency lights activated and was positioned behind the motorist he had stopped.

According to the report, the deputy was out of his vehicle, and had just walked back to his cruiser after speaking to the driver of the car he had pulled over when a Ford Mustang driven by the defendant, approached from behind at a substantial speed and rear ended the Deputy's marked cruiser.

The Deputy was struck by the cruiser door after the impact which caused minor scrapes and bruising to his arms.

He was taken to a local hospital where it was determined he suffered a fracture to the right arm.

No other injuries were reported.

Both the Mustang and the Sheriff's cruiser sustained heavy damage.

The airbags in the Mustang were immediately deployed upon impact and the drunk driving suspect was uninjured.

During the crash investigation it was found he had been drinking. He failed sobriety tests and was administered a breath test which determined his blood alcohol content was .106, which is over the legal limit of .08.

The man was arrested for Driving Under The Influence, Driving Under The Influence With Property Damage, and Driving Under The Influence With Injuries.

While DUIs
are not a laughing matter, I put this under humor as noone (especially the deputy) was injured and you know that this was the deputy's easiest arrest of the night!

Have you or someone you loved been arrested for a DUI charge? Then contact the law offices of Blake & Dorsten, P.A. to speak with an experienced Pinellas criminal defense lawyer now!

Our office is located at 4707 140th ave. N, Suite 107, Clearwater, FL 33762, across from the criminal courthouse and minutes from Tampa and St. Petersburg. You can contact your St. Petersburg criminal defense attorney by phone at 727.286.6141 or online at info@BlakeDorstenLaw.com.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Tampa Bay Criminal Defense Lawyer - Pinellas Park Prescription Fraud

By Nick Dorsten, Esq.

First they came for the doctor...now they got the office manager (from the times website).

PINELLAS PARK — The former office manager at a doctor's office that authorities say was operating as a pill mill was arrested on multiple charges Monday.

The office manager, 31, of Tampa was arrested on charges of racketeering, conspiracy to commit racketeering and conspiracy to traffic oxycodone.

She worked as an office manager at the Pinellas Park clinic of a doctor, who was arrested April 28 on similar charges, Pinellas sheriff's officials said. The doctor was accused of running a pill mill out of her Pinellas Park office and an office in Lee County.

The United States Marshal's Service Florida Regional Fugitive Task Force arrested her in Hillsborough County on Monday at the request of Pinellas sheriff's officials. He was being held at the Hillsborough County Jail on Monday night in lieu of $75,000 bail.

Pinellas investigators said the doctor, 41, scheduled five patients every 15 minutes, commonly seeing more than 60 a day, some by webcam. Her Pinellas Park office was on Park Blvd.

She was released from the Pinellas County Jail on Friday after she posted $160,000 bail.

Have you or someone you loved been arrested for a prescription drug or a theft charge? Then contact the law offices of Blake & Dorsten, P.A. to speak with an experienced Pinellas criminal defense lawyer now!

Our office is located at 4707 140th ave. N, Suite 107, Clearwater, FL 33762, across from the criminal courthouse and minutes from Tampa and St. Petersburg. You can contact your St. Petersburg criminal defense attorney by phone at 727.286.6141 or online at info@BlakeDorstenLaw.com.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Tampa Bay Criminal Defense Lawyer - teenage robbery suspects at large

By Nicholas Dorsten, Esq.

From TampaBay website, be on the lookout in Tarpon Springs...

TARPON SPRINGS — Police are looking for two teenagers they suspect may be responsible for two robberies Wednesday night and Thursday morning, including one in which a man was beaten, authorities said.

They're also looking for a third teen who was involved in the first robbery, but not the second.

According to Tarpon Springs police, here's what happened:

The first incident happened around 8:45 p.m. Wednesday when the three, all boys described as being in their early to mid teens, approached a 57-year-old man at the intersection of Dodecanese and Roosevelt boulevards at the Sponge Docks and asked for a dollar.

The man refused and the three walked away.

Moments later, the three returned and one of the teens pointed a handgun at him and demanded his money.

The man again refused, at which point one of the other teens took the gun, pointed it at him again and began beating him, along with the teenager who originally brandished the weapon, Tarpon Springs police said.

The two teens then stole the man's wallet, police said.

The third teen did not participate in the beating, police said.

The victim was taken by ambulance to Helen Ellis Memorial Hospital, where he was treated for a cut to his head that required stitches, then released, according to a Tarpon Springs police spokesman.

The three teens then rode away on bicycles, heading south on Roosevelt.

Police said they believe two of the trio — the ones involved in the beating — showed up at an apartment on Harrison Street about 5:15 a.m.

A resident, 53, was awake and making peach cobbler with her front door propped open when the two teens, both armed with handguns, went into her apartment. Her two grandchildren, a high school student and a preschooler, were asleep in the apartment.

One teen held her at gunpoint while the other went upstairs, police said.

The teens stole some items from her residence, but police declined to disclose specifically what was stolen, citing an ongoing investigation.

The two then fled.

Both teens were wearing black, long-sleeve shirts and masks that covered their faces entirely except for their eyes. The taller of the two was wearing black long pants. The smaller of the two had on checkered shorts.

Young said police hoped the public could help identify the boys, all are described as black, so they could be located soon.

"Any time you have acts of this nature involving guns, and especially guns in hands of young offenders, those are crimes we definitely look at as more serious crimes and hopefully we're able to make a quick resolution," the spokesman said.

Have you or someone you love been arrested for a violent crime, drug crime or a criminal offense? Then call the St. Petersburg criminal defense attorneys today for a free consultation!

For more information, or to speak directly with experienced St. Petersburg criminal defense lawyers please contact BLAKE & DORSTEN, P.A. at 727.286.6141 or email the lawyers your questions at: info@blakedorstenlaw.com. We are located at 4707 140th Ave N, Suite 104 in Clearwater, across from the criminal courthouse in the airport business center, minutes from Tampa and St. Petersburg.

Tampa Bay Criminal Defense Lawyer - Worst pill mill in Pinellas?

By Nick Dorsten, Esq.

Hot on the heels of other stories about prescription pill abuse comes a story from the Times website about possibly the biggest pill mill in Pinellas...

PINELLAS PARK — Authorities on Thursday arrested a doctor they said was filling out the prescriptions in the largest, most flagrant pill mill in Pinellas County history.

After a nearly two-year investigation, the doctor was arrested on charges of racketeering, money laundering and conspiracy to traffic in oxycodone.

Authorities say the docotr was operating pill mills from her Dollar Medical Clinics at Park Blvd. in Pinellas Park and in Lehigh Acres in Lee County.

Discussing the investigation for the first time Thursday, Pinellas County sheriff's detectives painted a picture of abuse:

Over two years, the doctor, 41, deposited $1.3 million in cash in seven bank accounts and appeared to pay employees in cash. She scheduled five patients every 15 minutes, commonly seeing more than 60 patients a day, some by webcam. She presigned prescriptions. She had no other doctors, nurses or physician assistants, and many of her employees had criminal records.

"She was not practicing medicine per se," said a Pinellas sheriff's Captain of the narcotics division.

The doctor had previously talked to a Fort Myers television station about allegations that she was running a pill mill and said: "I've never been near any of these illegal activities. The only things I have are my practices, which are legit. I've been victimized by the war against drugs."

Authorities first raided her clinics in October. The Pinellas County Justice and Consumer Services Department cited her for operating a pain management clinic without a license.

In 33 patient records seized that day — a snapshot of her operation, deputies said — authorities found that patients got 106,929 opioid pills and 29,890 methadone pills. Oxycodone was the most commonly prescribed drug. Moreover, deputies said, every patient received prescription drugs.

Deputies cited numerous other issues that called into question her medical practices. Most patients interviewed by detectives said they had received an exam, but that the exam measured nothing more than flexibility, blood pressure and weight.

The doctor was booked into the County Jail. Bail was set at $1 million.

Have you or someone you loved been arrested for a prescription drug or a theft charge? Then contact the law offices of Blake & Dorsten, P.A. to speak with an experienced Pinellas criminal defense lawyer now!

Our office is located at 4707 140th ave. N, Suite 107, Clearwater, FL 33762, across from the criminal courthouse and minutes from Tampa and St. Petersburg. You can contact your St. Petersburg criminal defense attorney by phone at 727.286.6141 or online at info@BlakeDorstenLaw.com.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Tampa Bay Criminal Defense Lawyer - Prescription pad stealing

By Nick Dorsten, Esq.

From the Times website...

PINELLAS COUNTY — Two Brooksville residents, including a woman with 13 prior drug convictions, are accused of stealing a prescription pad from a doctor's office.

A woman and a man, both 46, were arrested Friday on charges of petty theft and illegal possession of 15 counterfeit-resistant prescription blanks. They were each being held on $75,250 bonds.

The two criminal defendants were in a doctor's office for an appointment at Springs Family Medical Center in Weeki Wachee when the woman noticed the prescription pad, authorities said.

Hernando County Sheriff's deputies said she then slid the pad in her purse, gave it to the man and he left the center. Deputies said both admitted later that they had taken the pad, and she pulled it out from under the back seat of his vehicle.

Have you or someone you loved been arrested for a prescription drug or a theft charge? Then contact the law offices of Blake & Dorsten, P.A. to speak with an experienced Pinellas criminal defense lawyer now!

Our office is located at 4707 140th ave. N, Suite 107, Clearwater, FL 33762, across from the criminal courthouse and minutes from Tampa and St. Petersburg. You can contact your St. Petersburg criminal defense attorney by phone at 727.286.6141 or online at info@BlakeDorstenLaw.com.

Tampa Bay Criminal Defense Lawyer - Fake prescriptions called in by Nurse

By Nicholas Dorsten, Esq.

From the Tampabay.com website, yet another casualty in the ongoing prescription drug epidemic...

PINELLAS PARK — A nurse who used her position to file bogus pill prescriptions was arrested Wednesday, Pinellas sheriff's deputies said.

The female nurse, who lives in St. Petersburg, was arrested on eight counts of obtaining a controlled substance by fraud and seven counts of trafficking in hydrocodone, deputies said.

The investigation began March 24 when deputies received a tip that the lady, whose state nurse's license identifies her as a practicing nurs was regularly using a previous employer's name to order hydrocodone and Soma, deputies said.

She was being held Wednesday night at the Pinellas County Jail in lieu of $51,000 bail.

This shows that anyone can be affected by prescription pills. Drugs like zanax or oxycodone are so very dangerous as not only are they extremely addictive but it does not take many pills in your possession before the state can charge you with drug trafficking. With that, you are looking at mandatory prison time, large fines and a whole host of problems!

Have you been arrested on prescription pill or trafficking in oxycodone charges? Then the Pinellas, Florida based Blake & Dorsten, P.A. Pinellas criminal defense lawyers are at your service.

For more information, or to speak directly with experienced Pinellas County criminal defense attorneys, please contact the law firm of BLAKE AND DORSTEN, P.A. at 727.286.6141or email the defense lawyers at: info@blakedorstenlaw.com

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Tampa Bay Criminal Defense Lawyer - Shooting in St. Petersburg

By Nick Dorsten, Esq.

Another shooting in St. Petersburg, Fl, per the Times website...

ST. PETERSBURG, FL — A man and a woman were shot and another man pistol-whipped on Monday evening in what police called a drug sale gone awry.

The incident happened about 6:15 p.m. in an alley north of the 5200 block of Third Avenue S.

Police said that a man, 26, woman, 21 and another man, 22, drove into the alley and met two unidentified suspects.

The first man got out of the car while the others waited in the vehicle. Shortly after meeting with the two suspects, the first man was pistol-whipped.

The other two in the vehicle tried to speed away and the suspects fired three rounds at the vehicle, according to police.

One round hit the man's cheek, and another grazed the woman's back, police said. They drove to St. Anthony's Hospital, where they were expected to live, police said.

The two suspects fled.

The first man, who was left behind as the other two sped away, managed to run from the area, police said.

The two in the car, who are dating, told police they didn't know they were going to a drug deal.

The woman said she and her boyfriend got a call from the first man, asking if they could drive him to pick up clothing.

"I didn't know anything," she said. "I just gave somebody a ride."

She said she was in the passenger seat, studying for a marketing test.

As of this time this was written, no word on the identity of the suspects

Have you or someone you love been arrested for a violent crime, drug crime or a criminal offense? Then call the St. Petersburg criminal defense attorneys today for a free consultation!

For more information, or to speak directly with experienced St. Petersburg criminal defense lawyers please contact BLAKE & DORSTEN, P.A. at 727.286.6141 or email the lawyers your questions at: info@blakedorstenlaw.com. We are located at 4707 140th Ave N, Suite 104 in Clearwater, across from the criminal courthouse in the airport business center, minutes from Tampa and St. Petersburg.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Tampa Bay Criminal Defense Lawyer - St. Petersburg police are tracking juvenile criminals


By Nick Dorsten, Esq.

From the tampa bay.com website, a story about how the St. Petersburg, FL police are cracking down on juvenile crime...

ST. PETERSBURG,FL — They skipped school and stole cars, broke into houses and got high, racking up arrest after arrest.

They spent a few days locked up, then they were back on the streets. Judges meted out curfews and home detentions.

Some got the message.

The rest were put on the list.

There are 143 names on it now, young serial criminals that St. Petersburg police believe merit special attention. The biggest offenders, they say, commit the most crimes.

One juvenile criminal was on this list, long before the 16-year-old was accused of gunning down a police officer on a dark downtown street.

Every day a special police unit aggressively monitors these juveniles — at home, at school, even in court. The teens know they're being watched. Every misstep, every missed curfew, will put them back in handcuffs. If they try to disappear, the unit will find them.

The message for those on the list is simple: Get it together. Or else.

"You hope what you're doing reaches these kids," said a Detective, "but you know you won't reach them all.

"Who's the next Nick Lindsey? That's what we're trying to stop."

• • •

By day, COTA detectives hunt for the city's most-wanted adult fugitives.

At night, they check on the troubled teens on the list.

The detectives of COTA — the Career Offender Tracking and Apprehension unit — find those who don't want to be found, regardless of age.

Detectives track down their friends, ferret out their new cell numbers, stake out their haunts, then swoop in and arrest them.

The first list was created in 2009 as a way to tackle soaring car thefts and burglaries.

Police believed juveniles were behind many of them.

They hold an edge over adult criminals. The juvenile system is even more of a revolving door. The longest they can be held is 21 days. Most only stay a few days.

To the police, that means the same thieves get out to commit more crime before their earlier cases are even tried. The state couldn't keep up with them all to make sure they were meeting the conditions of their release.

But St. Petersburg could.

In December, a reporter rode with the unit as officers worked the list, making sure teens were going to school, obeying curfew and staying clean. Violations resulted in another arrest. Their aggressive handling of young repeat offenders was hailed when the city's auto thefts plunged.

• • •
The detective is the new man in COTA.

He's a week into the job, a transfer from downtown patrol, where he was Crawford's zone partner before that fateful night. His new partners call him "Etch."

He's in Roser Park to pick up a 16-year-old who lives off 13th Avenue S.

The teen was first arrested on charges of burglary and dealing in stolen property just days shy of his 11th birthday. A lewd and lascivious charge followed at age 12; grand theft at 13; grand theft auto at 14; possession of marijuana at 15; another grand theft auto and leaving the scene of a crash at 16.

Besides the arrest orders — one for driving without a valid license, two for failing to appear in court — a burglary detective wants to question the teen about a recent break-in.

COTA has been looking for him for days. A detective got him on the phone days ago and asked him to turn himself in. The teen said he would meet him in 15 minutes. Then he called and said he lost his shoe. He never showed.

The detective knocks on the screen door and loudly calls: "Police."

Eventually a young man answers the door. Is the teen home? The man says he'll check and walks back inside.

The detective goes on alert. If the teen is home, the officer worries, he might try to run out the back. The officer doesn't have any backup to cover the rear.

Then the teen walks outside. He is shirtless and wide-eyed, as if he has just awakened. He is small, barely 5-foot-5.

How come you weren't home when we came to check on you he is asked.

The teen says he was at his girlfriend's. He says he doesn't know why he's in trouble again. He has a court date soon that will take care of everything.

"Sir, sir, sir," he stammers. "I don't even understand what's going on."

The Detective puts him in the back of his cruiser.

The teen's father, also shirtless, walks outside.

"Don't resist or do anything foolish," the man tells his son. "Don't give them anything else they can pin on you."

His father and stepmother decline to speak to a reporter.

Etcheson's new squad praises his catch. Smaller kids make great burglars, they say. They can slip into homes easily, and slip away from police.

"If we didn't find him tonight," a Detective says, "he'd do three more burglaries tomorrow."

• • •

It's a week after the detective took in the 16-year-old teenager.

He is in court, dressed in red coveralls, but COTA is still watching.

Another detective attends as many of these hearings as he can.

He goes to brief the judges, lawyers and probation officers on the specifics of each case. The unit doesn't want a teen released early because the court doesn't know about his latest violation.

Each arrest pushes the worst offenders closer to being sent to a secure facility. That's what police want. It's the only way to keep juvenile offenders off the city's streets for a significant amount of time.

The 16-year-old's criminal defense lawyer brokers a deal: The teen will spend up to nine months in a residential facility.

"That's one kid off the streets," he says, "one kid we don't have to worry about for nine months."

Last year, reported crimes fell 19 percent. In a city where property crime was once rampant, auto thefts plummeted 45 percent and burglaries dropped 18 percent in 2010.

The Assistant Chief credited the drop with the mind-set COTA represents: identifying and tracking the worst adult and juvenile criminals and arresting them faster. The rest of the department is adopting that approach, trying to spot and react to patterns.

"There's a lot of ripples going on here," he said. "If it's driving down crime, we're happy about that."

But while crime is down, these days the city is haunted by another statistic. There were 13 murders in 2010, one of the lowest numbers on record.

But in the first three months of this year, there have been eight. Three were police officers.

• • •

Another Detective hears the screaming before he even gets to the door.

He's making an 8 p.m. curfew check at the Disston Heights home. The 14-year-old girl inside was arrested in November on charges of burglary and auto theft. It was her first and, until that morning, only arrest.

She decided not to go to school, violating probation. Her mother called police and had her arrested.

The teen was back home that same day.

The officer asks the mother and daughter to step into the cool night air to calm their tempers.

The mother complains that her daughter won't listen. She feels exhausted and powerless. She declines to give her name.

Her daughter went off the rails in the eighth grade, she says. Now she's a freshman with a substance abuse problem.

The mother is an accountant in a new job. It's tax season. She's a single parent and works long hours. She can't watch her daughter during the day. She knows her girl is running with the wrong crowd again.

She has no help: "None of my friends want her around their daughters."

A week earlier, the mother watched her daughter testify against her co-defendant. The story she told under oath doesn't match the one she told at home.

The Detective pulls the girl aside and she insists that she is not a drug addict.

"She just thinks she made a mistake," the mother says. "She doesn't see herself on the path to self-destruction. She's 14. She's invulnerable."

• • •

The call on the radio sends COTA cars flying in from all over: 16-year-old with a gun.

Yet another Detective is fighting midday traffic, hitting every school zone on his way to the scene.

The address is familiar. The young suspect is on the list. But his probation ended a few weeks ago. The curfew checks stopped.

Police, frankly, are stunned by who called them: the boy's father.

"He always seemed to have a problem with us," the Detective says. "But it's a good sign that he reached out to us now."

The father, 50, made the teen watch Officer Crawford's funeral procession. But his son didn't see a connection. He didn't seem to care.

He was first arrested at age 10 on charges of burglary with assault. Last year, at age 15, he was arrested on charges of possession of marijuana and throwing a deadly weapon. Police put him on the list.

The father thought things were getting better, until this afternoon.

He found out his son was hiding a gun under his mattress, showing it off to his friends.

The father ran across the street to Northeast High to get help from the school resource officer.

The father didn't want police to storm his house, so he sent his son to buy sweet tea. When the teen returned, police were waiting.

"I can't allow him to hurt somebody," he said. "He'll have to live with it for the rest of his life."

He thinks his son got the .22-caliber revolver for protection from a rival gang. But he admits his son likes being a "thug" and has no fear of the juvenile justice system.

"He thinks it's just a joke," the father says.

The detectives are relieved.

"We got a gun off the streets today," "Who knows what he could have done with it?"

The 16-year-old, handcuffed in the back of a police cruiser, won't even look at his dad.

"I didn't call the cops to get you in trouble," he yells to his son through the cage.

If he had stayed out of trouble for another year, the teenager would have gotten off the list.

He's going to be on it for a long time now.

"I know he's mad right now," the father says. "But I know I saved his life."


Have you or someone you love been arrested for a juvenile offense, theft or battery? Then call the criminal defense attorneys today for a free consultation!

For more information, or to speak directly with experienced criminal defense lawyers please contact BLAKE & DORSTEN, P.A. at 727.286.6141 or email the lawyers your questions at: info@blakedorstenlaw.com. We are located at 4707 140th Ave N, Suite 104 in Clearwater, across from the criminal courthouse in the airport business center, minutes from Tampa and St. Petersburg.