2 food trucks cited - Receive the Entire Key West Citizen Online
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2 food trucks cited - Receive the Entire Key West Citizen Online
The Florida Keys’ Only Daily Newspaper, Est. 1876 Paradise — Inside and on keysnews.com STILL Thursday 50¢ April 10, 2014 ◆ Vol. 138 ◆ No. 100 ◆ 34 pages Peary Court neighbors still angry over plans WEATHER Revised designs for 208-unit project expected to reach HARC on May 7 BY GWEN FILOSA Citizen Staff Almost eight months after developers scooped up the 24-acre Peary Court parcel for $35 million and began drawing up blueprints, those who live on the development’s borders remain angrily opposed to it. Case in point: City Planner Don Logan Hunter, fourth grade, Horace O’Bryant School See forecast on Page 2A ROAD CLOSURE Pipe construction closes entrance The main North Roosevelt Boulevard entrance of Searstown will be closed from 10 p.m. today until 6 a.m. Friday to install a 24inch drain pipe. All other entrances and exits to Searstown will be unaffected. There will also be daytime work at this entrance, but one lane in each direction will be maintained during the day while the crews are installing some drain inlets to take the water from the road. Craig on Wednesday night felt compelled to say this: “I’m not out to destroy anything,” Craig said in response to a local’s criticism of the Peary Court plans. “I’ve never done that. I’m a professional planner giving my best advice based on analysis.” About 60 people met at the Ferry Terminal on Wednesday for City Commissioner Jimmy Weekley’s district meeting over the imminent development that will change the landscape of a corner of Old Town, where for decades has been home to military families in a gated triangle of clustered houses. “I bought a home here and restored it,” said Heidi Glasser, who lives on the borders of Peary Court. “I don’t understand why you want to take a historic neighborhood and force it to blend into a brand new neighborhood that doesn’t even have public streets. I’m at a loss.” White Street Partners, which bought the parcel from the Navy and its private partner in August, says construcSee PEARY, Page 8A Lionfish branded as enemy of the seas FLORIDA KEYS Immunity deals for Cay Club’s attorneys BY GWEN FILOSA Citizen Staff FLORIDA 1 child dead, 14 hurt in day care crash WINTER PARK: A car smashed into an Orlando-area day care Wednesday, killing a child and injuring 14 others, at least 12 of them children, authorities said. Page 8A Photos courtesy of REEF Lad Akins corrals a lionfish. Although lionfish have no controlling predators, diver removals are an effective method of reducing its populations. Left, derbies are capable of removing thousands of invasive lionfish in a single day. NATION Teen stabs 21 students at Penn. high school See TRUCK, Page 8A FWC control aimed at lowering numbers BY TIMOTHY O’HARA Citizen Staff The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) board will vote on a series of proposals Wednesday to make it easier to eradicate lionfish from Florida waters. One proposal would ban the importation of live lionfish, prohibit the sale of illegally imported ON THE RADIO Blackburn NEWS: 7:30, 8:30 a.m., noon, 5 & 6 p.m. Evening Edition 5-5:30 p.m. Two food trucks, one on Duval Street and the other at a Truman Avenue corner, have been cited by city code enforcement for opening up without prior approval by the Historic Architectural Review Commission. Yebo Island Grille, 629 Duval St., and White Street Station, 1127 Truman Ave., may remain open for business but could FLORIDA KEYS MURRYSVILLE: Flailing away with two kitchen knives, a 16year-old boy with a “blank expression” stabbed and slashed 21 students and a security guard in the crowded halls of his suburban Pittsburgh high school Wednesday before an assistant principal tackled him. Page 5A Also on today’s show: • Judd Wise, KWHS • Mary Casanova, Literacy Volunteers • Holly Raschein, state representative • Donie Lee, KWPD • Virginia Panico, KW Chamber • Kirk Zuelch, FKAA 2 food trucks cited Prior HARC OK not given On Thursday, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami entered into immunity deals with two former Cay Clubs attorneys in exchange for their statements and potential testimony. Page 5A Islamorada Mayor Ted Blackburn talks about the concept of a toll on the Overseas Highway. KEY WEST live lionfish, and prohibit aquaculture of lionfish in Florida. Lionfish are commonly sold at pet stores and through the aquarium trade. The state Legislature is also scheduled to vote this month on a piece of legislation supporting the FWC’s position on banning the importation of lionfish. “The bill is in support of the proposed commission changes and will provide much-needed awareness to the issue, serves as a means for the members of the Legislature to express their support for the components of the bill, encourages public participation in addressing the issue, and demonstrates that FWC and the Legislature Citizen Staff The special magistrate presiding over the Impasse Hearing between the School District and its employees’ union has released his recommendation and it appears to side with the workers on at least two fronts: Compensation, and contract language protecting workers from School B o a r d imposed measures such as furlough days, in the future. Porter The nonbinding recommendation, by M. Scott Milinski, was expected by March 31, but only handed down on Saturday. It deals with the district employee’s 2013-14 labor contract. S t u a r t Kessler, chairman of the Hummell-Gorman district’s Audit and Finance Committee, has analyzed the document and concluded that paper victories for the United Teachers of Monroe 2014 Dick files for District 4 BY TERRY SCHMIDA Citizen Staff union are contained in the 25 pages of legalese. “It improves the compensation for teachers from their prior tentative agreement, which gave raises in the vicinity of $600 to $800 per teacher, to $1,900 per teacher,” Kessler said. “The Governor’s state allocation for teachers’ raises was $2,500 per teacher but Monroe County School Board member John Dick will seek a third term in District 4. A native of Brooklyn, N.Y., Dick has lived in Marathon for 24 years. A self-described “fiscal conserDick vative,” Dick attended many school board meetings as a concerned citizen before he decided to seek election to the board. See UNION, Page 3A See DICK, Page 5A See LIONFISH, Page 8A District, Union buoyed by special magistrate recommendation BY TERRY SCHMIDA Election 389158 INDEX ◆ CLASSIFIED ADS – 4-6 B COMICS – 6 A KEYSWIDE CLASSIFIEDS ◆ keysnews.com/classifieds CRIME REPORT – 2A CROSSWORD – 5 B KEYS CALENDAR – 2A OPINION – 4A SPORTS – 1B FOR CLASSIFIEDS ◆ 305-292-7777, Option 3 2A THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014 PAGE 2 Campus. The concert is under the direction of accompanist/directors • Fish fry Friday Jim Cutty and Vincent Zito. Tickets The Knights of Columbus are offerare available at www.keystix.com. ing All-You-Can-Eat fried or baked • ’Let’s Dunk on Cancer’ game fish dinners from 5 to 7:30 p.m. The Sheriff’s “Stars” will play the every Friday to benefit the Basilica KWPD “Finest” in the second annual School of Saint Mary’s Star of the “Let’s Dunk on Cancer” game at 11 Sea Church. The price is $12 for a.m. Saturday at the Key West High adults and $6 for children. There School gymnasium. The event is open will be family rates available. Email to the public. A $5 donation would Wookiebear4345@yahoo.com with be appreciated at the door. There questions. will be food, drinks and raffle tickets on sale. All proceeds will benefit the • FKCC spring concert Friday FKCC’s Keys Chorale invites the com- Relay for Life Team Jailhouse Rock. munity to its spring concert, “Amore: • Earth Day run/walk Saturday Songs of Love and Passion,” at 8 An Earth Day 5K run/walk begins at p.m. Friday at the Tennessee Williams 8 a.m. Saturday at McCoy Indigenous Theater on the college’s Key West Park in Key West, White and Atlantic IN THE PUBLIC’S INTEREST: FLORIDA KEYS HISTORY Boulevard Project COUNTDOWN PROJECTE D DATE be from the scripts. All roles are paid. the Bottle Cap Lounge on Simonton For information, call Bob Bowersox at Street. All proceeds benefit Literacy Volunteers of America — Monroe TheatreXP, 302-540-6102. Editor’s note: To have your event listed in Around the Keys, e-mail County, Inc. For information call 305the who, what, where and when to newsroom@keysnews.com. • Paddleboat pursuit is Saturday 304-0578, or send an email to info@ 4-27. The auditions will be held from Big Pine and Lower Keys Rotary Club lva-monroe.org. streets. All proceeds benefit FAVOR 3 to 5 p.m. Saturday, April 12 at the presents its sixth annual Paddleboat • Big Pine Botanical Society (Florida Keys — the Refuges’ Red Barn Theatre, 319 Duval St., Key Pursuit at 11 a.m. Saturday at Looe Kim Gabel, Monroe County Extension friends group). Race sponsored by Key Tiki Bar waterfront, Ramrod West (behind the Women’s Club). Southernmost Runners Club of Key agent, will talk to the Big Pine Key. Build your own paddle wheeler West. Register online at www.souther- The plays include Marsha Norman’s Botanical Society at 7:30 p.m. Thursand race against your friends and mostrunners.com, or in person at the Pulitzer Prize winning “’Night, Mother,” day at the Lord of the Seas Lutheran neighbors. Only limited materials are Refuges’ Visitors Center on Big Pine, Samuel Beckett’s classic “Waiting Church. The meeting is being held allowed. For a list of materials and For Godot,” and Samuel D. Hunter’s or at the race venue the evening a week earlier than usual because registration information, call 305before and on race day. For informa- new multiaward-winning “The Whale.” of conflicts with the church. She 872-0106 or 305-923-5370. Age ranges are from 10 years (a boy) tion, call 305-872-0645. will be talking about “Insects in the through early 60s. For specific roles • Psychic Night This Friday • Auditions for Summer Stage Florida Keys: The Good, the Bad, the go to www.theatrexp.org. No advance Literacy Volunteers of America (LVA) Key West’s TheatreXP will hold audiHarmless” The public is welcome appointments, headshots, or monowill hold its fifth annual Psychic Night to attend. For information, call Deb tions for unfilled roles for the Key logues required. Cold readings will fundraiser from 4 to 7 p.m. Friday at Curlee at 849-2986. West Summer Stage, set to run July AROUND THE KEYS JULY 21 , 2014 102 DAYS Citizens’ Voice 388992 “Citizens’ Voice’’ is a forum for you to tell us what’s on your mind. Call the “Voice’’ at 305-293-7900 or e-mail to voice@keysnews.com. Some of the comments will be published daily. KEY WEST 5-DAY FORECAST Sand Key Lighthouse and Coast Guard Cutter Ariadne W 101. Photo by Raymond L. Blazevic. “After reading the 2013 city of Key West annual report the one thing all of the departments have in common is obesity. Just by looking at staff pictures obesity levels seem to be above 80 percent. All but one of our city commission is obese. I’m not picking on city workers, they’re a sad reflection of our overall Key West population as a whole. Get out there and ride your bike, walk, count your calories and lobby your politicians for safer streets.” TODAY TONIGHT 78 70 FRIDAY The heart grows full Stars seen through with a partial sun partial clouds SATURDAY 80/73 82/74 Clouds and sun do a zesty tango Sun pretty much most of the day SUNDAY MONDAY 82/75 83/75 Partly sunny with Lingering humidity some sticky humidity with some sun 50 YEARS AGO: A Miami attorney filed notice of a Florida Supreme Court appeal in the case of the four Cuban fishing boats captain found guilty in Criminal Court in February for fishing in Florida waters. George S. Cambridge was elected as St. Peter’s Church delegate to annual convention of Episcopal Dioceses of South Florida at Daytona Beach. Fishermen were reporting seeing the tails of sailfish as they make their annual westerly migration. The USCG Ariadne was leaving Key West for a final time to replaced by a new cutter. The work load of all the Cuban refugees arriving required the services a modern ship. Key West received $21,688 for its share of the cigarette tax collected by the state during February. “Thank you MCSO for cleaning up the Keys, we appreciate it.” “The Key West Aquarium is getting better and better all the time. If you haven’t been there in a few years, you have a treat in store for you.” Photo and text compiled by Tom and Lynda Hambright, Monroe County Library. Visit www.keywestmaritime.org for more rich maritime history of Key West and the Keys. “We were rated the No.1 most dangerous place to ride a bike in Florida and City Engineer Karen Olson is going to solve this by replacing the historic brick in front of the aquarium with asphalt?” Key West 4/10 4/11 4/12 4/13 4/14 Lows 1:22 AM 1:24 PM 2 AM 2:12 PM 2:32 AM 2:53 PM 3:02 AM 3:32 PM 3:31 AM 4:10 PM Marathon Highs 7:55 AM 7:53 PM 8:28 AM 8:43 PM 8:58 AM 9:28 PM 9:28 AM 10:10 PM 9:59 AM 10:51 PM Lows 3:53 AM 4:34 PM 4:40 AM 5:14 PM 5:21 AM 5:51 PM 5:59 AM 6:29 PM 6:37 AM 7:08 PM CITIZEN STAFF “How lucky can you get? 519 more expensive rooms, cars, crowded streets, noise, etc. ISLAMORADA — A 29-yearold man yelling “Where is dude?” while trying to force his way into a friend’s home was arrested Saturday, according to the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office. Daniel Bradley of Islamorada was charged with burglary with battery on the occupant. The homeowner said she and a friend returned home at Mile Marker 90.2 about 5 a.m. when someone began banging on her door, reports state. She opened the door to find a friend of hers, Bradley, angrily yelling, “Where is dude?” When asked who he was talking about, Bradley said, “You know, dude. Where ... is he?” according to reports. She reported that he grabbed her, so she shoved him outside and “Coming from a family with several alcoholics, no drink is worth the costs in terms of the lives it destroys. If you are around alcoholics, do not enable them. Please. It just prolongs the misery for everyone.” “Great letter from Dr. Whiteside. So many drink too much in our little town. You see the end results in hospitals, psychiatric units, jails and morgues every day.” “With one quick removal of all our comfortable plastic chairs, it has taken away most of the social life at the Bayview Tennis Courts. This was a very sad day for a lot of the seniors who enjoyed watching tennis and talking to their tennis buddies.” “Driving past the Zero K event on Saturday immediately reminded me of how Fantasy Fest used to be -- fun! I think that it’s high time we get back to that. The energy and smiles emanating from that Saturday event was amazing. Have you noticed that the Friday evening “Costume Walk” the night before Fantasyfest has grown in popularity as well? How about the incredibly fast growing “Zombie Ride” ? Another fun, family event.” locked the door. He kicked in the front door a few minutes later and continued to yell, “Where is dude?” Both she and her friend pushed him onto the couch and began punching him, but he jumped up and attacked her again. She fought him off, and he ran away, reports state. Bradley was found walking on U.S. 1 a short distance away. He didn’t give deputies a reason for his behavior, according to reports. He was taken to Monroe County Detention Center on Plantation Key. Information in the Crime Report is obtained from reports provided by area law enforcement agencies. If you have information that could help solve a crime in the Keys, call Crime Stoppers, (800) 346-TIPS. Don’t just take a vacation… …make a DONATION! Highs 1:07 PM —————— 12:19 AM 1:38 PM 1:33 AM 2:02 PM 2:28 AM 2:16 PM 3:17 AM 2:20 PM Gainesville 78/50 KEY WEST AVG. WATER TEMPERATURE Orlando 79/61 Tampa 79/61 St. Petersburg 78/65 West Palm Beach 78/68 PRECIPITATION Precipitation Month-to-date Year-to-date Actual 0.47” 0.47” 11.85” Normal 0.06” 0.55” 6.13” Record Last Year 2.68” (2005) 0.00” — 1.41” — 5.15” Fort Myers 82/62 When you go out of town, donate the value of your newspapers to the Newspapers in Education (NIE) Program. Make a difference in a student’s education by donating your newspaper credit during your vacation. The Citizen is used every day in Monroe County classrooms as a powerful tool for teaching current events, reading comprehension and more. “The story in Sunday’s paper, titled “519 Hotel Rooms” featured a pic of a banner proclaiming “Opening Summer 2014.” It should be noted that they were saying Spring 2014 before that. Next it will be saying Fall 2014.” Donation is easy! Just call 305-292-7777 Select Option 4 MARINE WEATHER FORECAST Key West 78/70 Northeast winds 15 to 20 knots. Seas 4 to 7 feet. Isolated showers. Sunrise today...........................7:10 AM Sunset today............................7:47 PM Moonrise today ........................3:56 PM Moonset today .........................4:41 AM At night, east winds near 15 knots and gusty. Seas 3 to 5 feet. Isolated showers. May 6 ROADWORK • Standing N. Roosevelt Blvd. project conditions The length of North Roosevelt, from the Triangle to First Street and Palm Avenue, is now single-lane two-way traffic with a center turn lane. There will be lane closures from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. Monday through Thursday through July. Pedestrians and bicyclists must use the path beside the jersey barriers. Truman Avenue, from First Street and Palm Avenue to Eisenhower Drive, will remain two-way traffic throughout the project. • Key Largo Single lane closures on U.S. 1 between Mile Markers 99 and 106 beginning Jan. 29 for the next six weeks. Closures can occur on the northbound or south- 389201 TROPIC CINEMA • 416 Eaton St. bound lanes and occur between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m. on Sunday nights through Thursday nights. No lane closures in the vicinity of Key Largo Elementary School at Mile Marker 105. • Long Key Bridge There will be single-lane closures between Mile Markers 63 and 65 from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. Sunday evening through Friday morning until October 2015; intermittently, all lanes will be closed for up to an hour. • Information For real-time traffic information, consult 511 or 305-849-1847 or www. fl511.com. For questions, contact FDOT spokeswoman Paulette Summers at 786-5103921 or psummers@mrgmiami.com. BUY TIX WWW.TROPICCINEMA.COM • 877-761-3456 Apr. 15 Apr. 22 Apr. 29 HOW TO REACH US To reach us at The Citizen, come to our offices at 3420 Northside Drive; fax us at 294-0768; or e-mail to editor@keysnews.com. You can also call 305-292-7777. To reach our weekly newspapers: Florida Keys Free Press: 305-853-7277 SUBSCRIPTIONS Florida Keys One month ........................................ $12 Three months .................................... $30 Six months ........................................ $54 One year ......................................... $102 Electronic edition (pdf) One month ........................................ $12 Three months .................................... $30 Six months ........................................ $48 One year ........................................... $90 Two year ......................................... $150 By mail (All U.S. Locations) Three months .................................... $60 Six months ...................................... $120 One year .......................................... $240 By mail (weekend only) and Outside U.S. Please call for rates. TODAY FRIDAY SATURDAY Pearl Outer Mole 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Victory Pier B 7:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Wonder Pier B 11:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Majesty of the Seas Pier B 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. The Citizen is published daily by Cooke Communications, 3420 Northside Dr., Key West, FL. Second class postage paid by The Citizen. (USPS 294-240) Postmaster: Send address changes to The Citizen, P.O. Box 1800, Key West, FL 33041. This newspaper is made using renewable wood fiber from sustainably managed forests that are independently certified to meet globally recognized sustainable forest management standards. This newspaper is recyclable. Cruise ship information is provided by the city of Key West. For updated information, call 305-809-3790. The Key West Citizen corrects all errors of fact. If you find an error in fact in The Citizen call Sandra Frederick at 305-292-7777, ext. 271. She can also be reached at sfrederick@keysnews.com. every Saturday Be He a lt h’ sure t o catch ‘To Your Key Largo 78/68 Marathon 79/70 SUN AND MOON CORRECTIONS BAD WORDS (2:15), 4:15, 6:15, 8:15 LE WEEK-END (2:00), 4:00, 6:00, 8:00 TIM’S VERMEER (3:50) THE MONUMENTS MEN (1:30), 5:45, 8:25 NYMPHOMANIAC VOL 1 (1:30), 3:50, 6:20, 8:50 Ft. Lauderdale 79/70 Miami 79/69 IN PORT “The Zero K run is all about us in the Keys rather than a gross porn circus like Fantasy Fest. It’s time to take our island back. It really is. These are the types of creative, innovative, fun events that we used to be known for.” Daytona Beach 76/58 April 9: 79.5°F Deputies: The dude does not abide here “Many thanks to Denise and Steve Wells, and DeDe Henriquez for bringing back the Conch hospitality to the Key West High School baseball program.” Jacksonville 77/51 TIDES April 9 CRIME REPORT Tallahassee 77/42 Pensacola 74/55 DEPARTMENTS PAUL A. CLARIN/PUBLISHER GARY E. MAITLAND/EDITOR TOMMY TODD/ADVERTISING DIRECTOR NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS The Citizen assumes no financial responsibility for typographical errors in advertisements, but, when notified promptly will reprint that part of the advertisement in which the typographical error appears. All advertising in this publication is subject to the approval of the publisher. The Citizen reserves the right to correctly edit or delete any objectionable wording or reject the advertisement in its entirety at any time prior to scheduled publication in the event it is determined that the advertisement or any part thereof is contrary to its general standard of advertising acceptance. Phone: 305-292-7777, Monday though Friday, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. 3A THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014 MILE MARKERS MARATHON MARATHON Man arrested for shipped pot Jail time for illegal fishing Keys Chorale spring concert Friday A Boot Key Harbor resident was arrested Saturday after he received a FedEx package containing marijuana, according to the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office. David Stegemeier, 58, was charged with felony possession of marijuana. FedEx contacted authorities after received a package addressed to Stegemeier that smelled of marijuana, reports say. Sheriff’s Office detectives then met with Stegemeier at the marina with the package and he agreed to open it. Inside was about an ounce and half of marijuana inside a cereal box, reports say. Stegemeier was taken to Monroe County Detention Center in Marathon. Two men served nearly three months in jail for illegal fishing at the start of lobster season 2011, the state Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission reported Wednesday. Angel Vigoa, 61, and Carlos Infante, 45, were arrested on a vessel near Sunshine Key on Aug. 26, 2011, and found with 53 undersize lobsters, 49 wrung lobster tails on the water, three out-of-season stone crab claws and one whole body stone crab claw. Lt. Ryan Smith handled the case, resolved by guilty verdicts Nov. 22 and sentencing Dec. 2. The men were fined $5,300 each. Florida Keys Community College’s Keys Chorale invites the community to its spring concert, titled “Amore: Songs of Love and Passion,” taking place at 8 p.m. Friday, at the Tennessee Williams Theater on the college’s Key West Campus, 5901 College Rd., Stock Island. A selection of classical, pop and folk songs will comprise the program, including favorites such as “Let It Be Me,” “I Left My Heart in San Francisco,” “The Water is Wide,” “What a Wonderful World” and “Long Time Ago,” in addition to songs from Broadway hits “Carousel,” “Brigadoon,” “Funny Face” and “My Fair Lady.” Classical selections include the Chorus of Wedding Guests from “Lucia di Lammermoor” by Gaetano Donizetti. The concert is under the direction of accompanist/directors Jim Cutty and Vincent Zito. For tickets, visit www.keystix.com. Union Continued from Page 1A the magistrate’s recommendation suggests that the money be shared among other district personnel, and also that the district be allowed to deduct their tax and pension costs.” As to the matter of the furlough-enabling language, Kessler said,“The magistrate recommends that the contract language that allowed the district to impose seven furlough days on its employees be removed. As the magistrate mentioned, this is probably the most contentious issue between the parties. Even with the removal, there is a right under Florida statutes that the district could modify the contract, so they are not left without protections in the event of a new financial crisis or emergency.” Indeed, on page 16 of the document, Milinski writes “It is this magistrate’s opinion that the parties will not be able to reach a final agreement unless the management rights issue is resolved. Without such agreement, in all likelihood a [Unfair Labor Practice] charge will be filed and this issue will drag on for many months – only exacerbating relations between the parties . . . this magistrate recommends and urges the district to agree to current language”, which according to Kessler, a former attorney, “has the effect of eliminating the budget reduction language the UTM was so opposed to.” It now falls to the School District and School Board, and the UTM to decide what happens next. Board chair Ron Martin at press time hadn’t yet read the document, but District 4 member John Dick hinted that the recommendation may run into trouble at the board level. “I don’t want to get too specific, because I’m not sure what I’m allowed to say, but I would remind everybody that from the beginning of this process, the board has the final say,” Dick said. “All of this [Impasse hearing] was time-consuming, when the board had already put out what it wanted.” Superintendent Mark Porter had led the contract negotiations with the UTM, for the district before throwing up his hands last November, saying that negotiations were at a standstill. The district brought KEY WEST Photo courtesy of ALYSON CREAN/Key West police department Early Wednesday morning, at least 24 cars were vandalized in Key West. Police detectives are seeking to identify at least two suspects who took hood emblems, slashed tires and smashed car windows. Many of the vehicles were luxury vehicles. The cars were parked in a number of locations from Atlantic Blvd. to White Street. This surveillance video caught the vandals in action. If anyone has information regarding the identity of the suspects, call 305-8091015 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-346-TIPS. in its former head negotiator, Miami labor lawyer Robert Norton, leading to the official declaration of an impasse in January. At that point, the two sides had met 26 six times, and still no agreement was in sight. The Impasse Hearing was held on March 5, in Key West. Porter, also a former lawyer, said on Wednesday that his administration had yet to decide what recommendation to make to the school board, but he took issue with several of Kessler’s assertions. “There was never enough money in the state allocation funds to give every teacher in Monroe County a $2,500 raise,” he said. “And I believe that $600 to $800 Mr. Kessler is referring to was from an earlier stage of the negotiations. What’s more, the board has remained consistent throughout the process that they were willing to expend all the state allocation revenue to the benefit of teachers and other employees. The district has never tried to use this money to complement its fund balance.” Porter also pointed out that at one point the district was expecting to use a portion of the state cash to this year get rid of the furlough days it imposed on its employees during the previous two school years. That plan went awry when the state Department of Education told the district they couldn’t use the money for that purpose. “So, then the district took that same total amount of money and allocated it mostly to teachers, but also to other employees, who had experienced similar financial challenges in the past years,” Porter said. “We’re going to spend this money, and that’s where we are today. What the board has also done, thought the restoration of the furlough days is provide significantly more financial improvement for all employees, specifically for teachers. The total salary improvement from 2012-13 to 2013-14 will equal $3,000 to $5,000 per teacher, or approximately six to eight percent more. I can’t say exactly what it’s going to be yet, because that depends on what the board will ultimately approve.” On the issue of the waiver language, Porter had this to say: “The budget reduction language was voluntarily removed by the district during the negotiations process. The magistrate simply did not include in his recommendation our requested alternative OBITUARIES SEBASTIAN CABRERA Sebastian Cabrera died peacefully We d n e s d a y afternoon April 3, 2014 at his home. He had a prolonged Cabrera illness and for months slowly declined in health. Mr. Cabrera was married to his beloved wife Rosemary who died in February 2014. Now they are reunited in the presence of God. Mr. Cabrera led the way for the development of Mallory docks and Key West Chamber of Commerce, to be the cen- JERRY “JB” BAILEY Jerry “JB” Bailey, 63 died April 4, 2014 at his home. JB was born August 31, 1950 in Detroit, Mich., son of Bailey Marion “Bill” and Lorene Finley Bailey. JB served in the U.S. Navy during the Vietnam War. He lived in Key West, Fla., where he worked as a bartender at The Bull & Whistle with his two broth- ters of tourism with the help of many others who deserve credit for tourism and hospitality in the Keys. Sebastian took over his father’s wholesale grocery business when he died. The company was the largest grocery company in Key West located on Harbor House, Front St. He later built next door to the company building a restaurant named “Caribe”. At one time, the restaurant enjoyed the longest history under the same management of any restaurant in Key West. Their “Shrimp Sebastian” and Key Lime Pie were outstanding. His restaurant received the first Silver Spoon society award. The society was created in 1964. ers Chuck and Don. He later worked at Pinewood Materials. He was preceded in death by his parents and brother Chuck. Survivors include his soul mate Alison “oop” Young and a brother Don Bailey both of Key West, a sister Sandy Bailey Martin of Copemish, Mich.; three nieces and one nephew of Michigan and one nephew of Georgia. A memorial service will be held at a later date. The Dean-Lopez Funeral Home is entrusted with all funeral arrangements. KEY WEST President Truman on his morning walk on November 1951 stopped to have a cup of coffee with the owner’s Rosemary and Sebastian Cabrera. When he left, President Truman gave the Cabrera’s an autographed dollar bill. Sebastian was an excellent water-skier and brought the sport to Key West. He set up a ski-ramp in Garrison Bight (which was larger than today). On Sunday’s him and friends would put on a ski show for Key Wester’s in the Bight. Sebastian was on the swimming team at Riverside Military Academy in Gainesville, Georgia, before World War II. He was a great swimmer and NOEL ALAN KARTMAN Noel Alan Kartman, 57, of Ramrod Key, Fla., passed away Tuesday, April 8 after a courageous battle with Kartman cancer. He is survived by his mother, Frances Jean Waxman; longtime partner, Paula Dyson; sisters, Laurie (Tim) Jones and Leanne (Hillel) Italie. Noel was passionate about surfer. He was a director of the Florida Restaurant Association. Sebastian and Rosemary traveled the world and he would often say: “the time you spend traveling is not deducted from your days on earth.” Sebastian was a wonderful dancer, a devoted husband, kind, generous, and a man who excelled in whatever he did. Sebastian was lifelong member of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church. The service for Sebastian is: Requiem Mass at 6 p.m. Friday April 11th at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, preceded by the Stations of the Cross at 5:30 p.m. The Dean-Lopez Funeral Home is entrusted with all funeral arrangements. management rights language, his rationale being that the district already has those rights, pursuant to Florida statutes.” Porter said that the district would move quickly to review and submit any exceptions to the recommendation to the magistrate to “maintain our commitment to expedite this process . . . “We have up to 20 days to respond, but will not use that full amount of time, because, pursuant to recent guidelines from the state Department of Education, this needs to be resolved by the end of May,” Porter added. The superintendent held a closed session with the school board, following Tuesday night’s board meeting, and will now discuss the issues raised by the recommendation with district house counsel. Once the district and the UTM have filed any exceptions they have with the magistrate, each side might have with the recommendation, it will fall to the board to vote on the final package. At press time UTM President Holly Hummel-Gorman was headed to Marathon for talks with her board. “Right now I’m headed to a UTM executive board meeting, where we’re going to vote to accept or reject each of the special magistrate’s recommendations, so I don’t want to comment directly on specific recommendation,” HummelGorman said. “However, I can say that the UTM is pleased that an objective third party was able to make fair recommendations, based on the evidence and testimony presented to him.” Other highlights of the special magistrate’s recommendation include: • Additional compensation for the increase work year from 196 days to 197 days; from 198 days to 199 days for new teachers. • A $200 increase in Title 1 supplemental pay for teachers in designated Title 1 schools. • UTM agrees to 2 percent adjustment for School Related Personnel unit, (which includes food service workers, etc.), and principals/assistants, which will come out of the state allocation funds. • UTM also agrees to utilization of state allocation funds for one-half of the cost of the 2 percent salary adjustment for “other employees.” tschmida@keysnews.com NOW ON TOP WEB STORIES 1 2 3 4 5 Report: No pulse when EMS arrived Getting by on minimum wagel 4 Keys homicides inch toward resolution 519 rooms available Alleged illegal gambling parlor raided KEYS VOICES MANDY MILES TAN LINES Online episode intervention SUBSCRIBE ONLINE One-month, three-month, six-month, one-year and two-year subscriptions for Keysnews.com include PDF downloads of each issue of The Citizen and affiliated publications. See page 2A for rates or for information call 305292-7777, option 4. CITIZEN OF THE DAY the ocean, living and working in the Keys through the decades. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to: Seacamp, 1300 Pine Ave, Big Pine Key, FL 33043 ATTN: Grace Upshaw Services to be held Friday, April 11 at 1 p.m. at Levitt Weinstein Memorial Chapel, 8840 W. Dixie Highway, North Miami Beach, Fla. 305-9322700. A service will be held in the Keys at a later date. OBITUARY POLICY Steven D. Lee, 53, passed away Monday, march 24, 2014 at Broward General Hospital in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Viewing is Friday, April 11 from 6-9 p.m. in the funeral home Chapel. Funeral servic- Former Marathon Veterinarian Over 30 Years of Emergency Veterinary Experience! 1118-A White St. 305-294-0099 Dr. Tom Householder 388935 CRAB LEGS. ALL YOU CAN EAT! $24.95 TUES., WED. & SAT. • FREE PARKING 383653 Key West Vets & Pets es at Saturday at 11 a.m. at Newman United Methodist Church. Burial to follow in Key West Cemetery. All arrangements entrusted to Castillo & Thurston’s Key West Mortuary and Cremation Center. 1202 Simonton St. • 296-4811 HEADSTONES CRYPT FRONTS • C U S TO M D E S I G N 305/294-2528 ATLAS MEMORIALS MM 10 Big Coppitt 8am-5pm/Appts. Avail. 388733 STEVEN D. LEE Paid obituaries are published once unless the family or funeral home is willing to pay for reruns. Obituaries up to six inches are $65; $75 with a photo. Those more than six inches will be charged $10 an inch. Free death notices list only the name of the person who died and where services will be held. Obituaries may be edited to conform with Citizen style and usage. E-mailed submissions are preferred. Send them to obits@keysnews.com. MIKE HENTZ/The Citizen Kevin Seymour is from Canada and has lived in Key West for about a year. Seymour, a bartender, server and shift manager at Firefly Southern Kitchen, visited Key West 10 years ago on a whim, went diving and got hook, getting his dive certification immediately after his visit to the Florida Keys. “I am here living the dream in paradise,” said Seymour of the Key West he fell in love with. 4A EDITORIAL BOARD PAUL A. CLARIN/PUBLISHER GARY E. MAITLAND/EDITOR NANCY SCHMOHL BECKWITH ROBERT CINTRON JR. KEN DOMANSKI TODD GERMAN W. ANN REYNOLDS THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014 OPINION Stadium funding bill is worthy of support t seems only fair that professional sports teams should be required to compete among themselves when asking for public money to build a new stadium or make improvements to existing ones. The Florida Legislature this year is considering similar measures in the House and Senate that would rank the various stadium funding requests each year and set an annual cap for the amount of money the state would make available. The proposals make sense and should be supported by lawmakers. Agreeing on a process for evaluating funding requests puts each of the teams on equal footing. It gives the owners and the fans in a particular city a better understanding of why a request is approved or denied, and it establishes accountability measures to ensure the teams are living up to their end of the bargain. Professional sports is big business in Florida, and the state can justify making sensible investments in the facilities where the teams play. Successful teams generate sales tax revenue and attract overnight visitors who pay bed taxes. The teams also help promote the state and the cities where they play. These measures aren’t asking taxpayers to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to build a new stadium for a wealthy owner. The bills cap the state’s total disbursement for stadiums each year at $12 million or $13 million, and they limit each applicant to receiving no more than $2 million or $3 million each year. By and large, this money would benefit public facilities that host plenty of events other than the games played by their most famous tenants. With the arrival next year of a Major League Soccer franchise in Orlando, the state will have 10 major league sports I Editorial franchises playing in stadiums throughout Florida. In addition, the state is home to 33 minor league franchises in various sports, three Arena Football League teams and two NASCAR tracks, according to a state analysis of the Senate bill. Fifteen Major League Baseball teams spend February and March at spring training at facilities in Florida. The state already awards $2 million in sales taxes each year for the facilities where eight of the major league sports franchises play, including Tropicana Field and Raymond James Stadium. The bills being considered would replace the piecemeal process of awarding the state money and replace it with a defined set of rules for teams to follow. The state’s Department of Economic Opportunity would rank the proposals based on a team’s ability to have a positive impact on the state. Among the criteria: the length of time a team has agreed to use the stadium; the number of signature events a facility is likely to host; a facility’s multiuse capabilities; how many Floridians a facility is projected to employ; and how well it will draw tourists. Sen. Jack Latvala, a Clearwater Republican who introduced the Senate bill, said the measures are about creating a process for awarding the money. Last year, there were hard feelings when funding requests that would have benefited facilities in Miami, Orlando, Jacksonville and Daytona Beach were blocked in the House. The teams and local governments vying for this money deserve to be treated fairly, and these bills will go a long way toward achieving that goal. But they also protect taxpayers from the state blindly tossing money at professional sports. — Tampa Tribune LETTERS POLICY: The Key West Citizen welcomes your letters to the editor, and asks that readers follow these guidelines for letter submission. • Only original letters addressed to The Citizen will be published; open letters are not accepted. • Letters must include the writer’s name, address and a daytime telephone number. Pseudonyms are not knowingly accepted. • Maximum length for letters is 350 words. • We do not publish poetry, letters anonymously written, third-party letters, local political endorsement letters or letters praising or criticizing a local business. • Letters of thanks to individuals will be considered; but not letters recognizing sponsors or supporters of organizations or their events. • Writers are limited to one letter every two weeks. • Letters can be submitted via e-mail at editor@keysnews.com, by fax at 305-295-8005, or by mail addressed to: Letters to the editor, Key West Citizen, P.O. Box 1800, Key West, FL 33041. • The publisher has final authority on publication of submitted material. Is Jeb’s presidentian run over before it begins? BY MAUREEN DOWD The New York Times ASHINGTON — The epic sibling drama of the Republican Party is finally coming to a climax. For many years, George and Barbara Bush assumed that their second son, Jeb, would be a winner in politics, while W., their eldest, would be a loser. Jeb was the prince of the dynasty, destined to be king. (Poppy Bush would only call their dynasty “the d word,” wrinkling his nose in a vain attempt to seem like a Greenwich populist.) The raffish Roman candle, W., on the other hand, was discouraged by his mother from running for governor of Texas when his father was in the White House. Bar also did not want W. to run for that office in 1993 at the same time that Jeb was running for governor of Florida, for fear that W. would divert too much money from the Bush Rolodex of donors and turn the contest into “a People magazine story,” as Jeb resignedly called it back when he told me he couldn’t “control” his older brother. Democrats began mocking them during their twin races as “Tweedledee and Tweedledum,” especially after W. began stealing Jeb’s best campaign lines. Yet when I covered the fraternal gubernatorial bids in the South, it was quickly apparent that W. had a crackle that Jeb did not have, not to mention a crack consultant: Karl Rove. W. was driven by a zeal to prove his parents wrong, one of the most powerful impulses on earth. Jeb, the Good Son, seemed more phlegmatic, bogged down in wonky discourse about “visioning,” “prioritizing,” “empowering” and “sharing a good exchange of ideas.” Jeb lost his race and W. won his, starting the reversal that would lead to W.’s becoming the black-sheep king, once Jeb W had helped secure Florida for him. Now Jeb has to figure out if W. has fouled the waters forever or if Americans, lulled by the ex-president’s winsome paintings, have grown less disgusted by his disastrous wars, misadventures in torture and economic belly flop. Jeb’s father desperately wants him to run, and his mother now says it would be O.K., despite her reservations about two families trading Air Force One back and forth. As Hillary Clinton prepares to restore her dynasty, Jeb Bush is dropping a handkerchief about restoring his. He has campaigned for Republicans around the country, and influential donors in the GOP have started a draft-Jeb movement. He was the speaker at a VIP dinner in Las Vegas with Sheldon Adelson. He has reached out to Southern evangelical leaders. And he had a star turn at the 25th anniversary celebration of his father’s presidency over the weekend at the George H.W. Bush library in College Station, Texas. But is Jeb’s race over before it begins? He would be running, after all, to lead a party he seems to disdain, a party that has become so fragmented and pulled to the right that it would rather lose the election than be led by someone as moderate as Jeb Bush. Even W. is considered a liberal in today’s fire-breathing GOP. “I do think we’ve lost our way,” Jeb said in an interview on stage with a Fox News reporter, urging Republicans to move out of Crazy Town: “We need to elect candidates that have a vision that is bigger and broader, and candidates that are organized around winning the election, not making a point.” Sounding nostalgic for a world before Dick Cheney, Sarah Palin and Ted Cruz, the 61-year-old said he would run only if he could bring a “hopeful” message and campaign “joyfully,” avoiding “the vortex of the mud fight.” Then he stumbled into the vortex by repeating his support for Common Core education standards and by trying to inject some compassion into the immigration issue, which sends older, white tea partiers into frenzies of fanaticism. “Yes, they broke the law, but it’s not a felony,” he said of illegal immigrants sneaking into the country to provide for their families. “It’s an act of love.” (Jeb has been married to the Mexican-born Columba for 40 years.) Karl Rove and Bill Kristol mused that Jeb’s “Bulworth” moment, as Politico dubbed it, may show he’s been out of the mix for too long. Conservative columnist Byron York suggested that the “mudfight-averse” Jeb “just doesn’t seem like a politician in top fighting shape.” Michelle Malkin tweeted: “He’s pro-amnesty, proCommon Core, pro-Big Business and he wants to be president. #CancelJebBush.” Marco Rubio said he would not step aside for his mentor in a presidential race. And Stephen Colbert eulogized, “He will be missed.” Some of those close to Jeb say he’s serious about running and bringing back a civil tone to Republican politics. Others say he needs to act as though he’s running to keep his speaking fees high and options open. Rush Limbaugh thinks Jeb’s “act of love” comment was a gambit to tick off the tea party and “get the conservative backlash to him out of the way.” Jeb thinks Republicans have lost their way. He may soon learn that a lot of conservatives think they have found their way — and it’s not the joyful, loving, government-can-be-a-force-for-good way. It’s the mean, cruel, gut-the-government way. When this crowd thinks of A Thousand Points of Light, they’re thinking of torches as they march toward the Capitol. Maureen Dowd is a syndicated columnist with The New York Times. Her column appears in The Citizen on Thursdays. If we’re going to play hockey with Putin, then we better get serious who want to break free of Russia’s orbit. Are we and our The New York Times allies ready — through the International Monetary Fund hortly before the Sochi — to finance Ukraine’s masOlympics, Russian President Vladimir Putin sive rebuilding and played in an exhibition hockey fuel needs, roughly $14 billion for startgame there. In retrospect, he was clearly warming up for his ers, knowing that this money is going to a takeover of Crimea. Ukrainian governPutin doesn’t strike me as ment that, before a chess player, in geopolitithe overthrow of the cal terms. He prefers hockey, without a referee, so elbowing, previous president, ranked 144 out of tripping and cross-checking 177 on the Transparency are all permitted. Never go to a hockey game with Putin and International list of most corrupt countries in the world, expect to play by the rules of equal with Nigeria? touch football. Moreover, we can’t help The struggle over Ukraine Ukraine unless we and the is a hockey game, with no European Union have a serireferee. If we’re going to play, ous renewable energy and we, the Europeans and the pro-Western Ukrainians, need economic sanctions strategy — which requires us to sacrito be serious. If we’re not, we fice — to undermine Putin and need to tell the Ukrainians Putinism, because Ukraine will now: Cut the best deal with never have self-determination Putin that you can. as long as Putin and Putinism Are we serious? It depends thrive. Putin’s foreign policy on the meaning of the word “serious.” It starts with recog- and domestic policy are inextricably linked: His domestic nizing what a huge lift it will policy of looting Russia and be to help those Ukrainians BY THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN S keeping himself permanently in power with oil and gas revenue, despite a weakening economy, seems to require adventures like Ukraine that gin up nationalism and anti-Westernism to distract the Russian public. And are we ready to play dirty, too? Putin is busy using pro-Russian Ukrainian proxies to take over government buildings in eastern Ukraine — to lay the predicate either for a Russian invasion there, or de facto control there by Russia’s allies. Finally, being serious about Russia means being serious about learning from our big mistake after the Berlin Wall fell. And that was thinking that we could expand NATO — when Russia was at its weakest and most democratic — and Russians wouldn’t care. It was thinking we could treat a democratic Russia like an enemy, as if the Cold War were still on, and expect Russia to cooper- ate with us as if the Cold War were over — and not produce an anti-Western backlash like Putinism. As historian Walter Russell Mead put it in a blog post: “The Big Blini that the West has never faced up to (is): What is our Russia policy? Where does the West see Russia fitting into the international system? Ever since the decisions to expand NATO and the E.U. were taken in the Clinton administration, Western policy towards Russia ... had two grand projects for the post-Soviet space: NATO and the E.U. would expand into the Warsaw Pact areas and into the former Soviet Union, but Russia itself was barred from both. ... As many people pointed out in the 1990s, this strategy was asking for trouble.” One of those pointing that out was George Kennan, the architect of containment and opponent of NATO expansion. I interviewed him about it in this column on May 2, 1998, right after the Senate ratified NATO expansion. Kennan was 94. He had been a U.S. ambas- sador in Moscow. He knew we were not being serious. “I think it is the beginning of a new Cold War,” Kennan said to me of NATO expansion. “I think the Russians will gradually react quite adversely and it will affect their policies. I think it is a tragic mistake. There was no reason for this whatsoever. No one was threatening anybody else. This expansion would make the founding fathers of this country turn over in their graves. We have signed up to protect a whole series of countries, even though we have neither the resources nor the intention to do so in any serious way. (NATO expansion) was simply a lighthearted action by a Senate that has no real interest in foreign affairs.” “What bothers me is how superficial and ill informed the whole Senate debate was,” added Kennan. “I was particularly bothered by the references to Russia as a country dying to attack Western Europe. Don’t people understand? Our differences in the Cold War were with the Soviet Communist regime. And now we are turning our backs on the very people who mounted the greatest bloodless revolution in history to remove that Soviet regime. And Russia’s democracy is as far advanced, if not farther, as any of these countries we’ve just signed up to defend from Russia. It shows so little understanding of Russian history and Soviet history. Of course, there is going to be a bad reaction from Russia, and then (the NATO expanders) will say that we always told you that is how the Russians are — but this is just wrong.” We need a strategy to help Ukraine and to undermine Putinism today — and to reintegrate Russia tomorrow. It’s a big, big lift. So let’s be honest with ourselves and with the Ukrainians. If Putin’s playing hockey and we’re not, Ukrainians need to know that now. Thomas Friedman is a syndicated columnist with The New York Times. 5A THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014 FLORIDA KEYS time,” Dick said jokingly, in a reference to a recent debate with board colleague Ed Davidson of District 3. A proud veteran, Dick currently serves as the commander of the Key West American Legion Arthur Sawyer Post 28, and was previously the commander of the Key Largo VFW Post 10211. He is a member of the Marathon Rotary Club, the Elks Lodge in Marathon and the Islamorada Moose Lodge. He also serves on numerous volunteer boards throughout the county, such as the DUI Advisory Board, the Monroe County Coalition for A Safe and Drug Free Community, and the Miami/Dade Monroe County Disabled Transportation Board. Dick is optimistic about the future of the school district. “When I’ve gone out into the public getting my petitions signed to get on the ballot, I see people that I know, and others that I’ve never met, and by a wide, wide margin, they all seem to feel that the district is getting a lot better,” Dick said. “These are all kinds of people. Years ago, I remember hearing about what a mess the district was in. “Thankfully, those days are now over, and we’re able to concentrate on improving the district for our children, and employees, in the future.” tschmida@keysnews.com Continued from Page 1A He filed his paperwork on April 3 at the elections office in Marathon. At present, Dick is running unopposed for the seat, which encompasses Marathon, Islamorada and parts of Tavernier. “I want to continue serving in order to continue with the improvements we have made in the quality of the education of our children,” Dick said. “Now that the economy has improved, I want to continue with increasing the salary of our employees so that they can better afford to live here. Since I have been on the board, we have greatly improved the salary of our teachers and other employees, and have reduced the amount of administration in the district in order to get more funding to our teachers and other frontline employees.” Dick graduated from the New York City Technical College in 1966 with a degree in mechanical technology, and was drafted shortly thereafter by the U.S. Army. He spent two years in Vietnam before being honorably discharged. Upon his return to the U.S., he owned and operated an auto repair shop in Brooklyn for decades, before selling his shop and moving to the Keys. “I might have even done a little welding during that Immunity deals for Cay Club’s attorneys BY ROBERT SILK Citizen Staff Top executives of the former development company Cay Clubs appear to be the target of a federal criminal investigation. On March 10, the U.S. A t t o r n e y ’s Office in Miami entered into immunity deals with two former Cay Clubs Clark attorneys in exchange for their statements and potential testimony. The statements by Orlando-based Coleman attorney Scott Callahan and Fort Myers-based attorney Charles Phoenix, which accuse the development company of defrauding lenders and customers, make specific reference to CEO Dave Clark, Clark’s wife, Cristal Coleman, CFO Dave Schwarz and Barry Graham, the company’s director of sales. Both Callahan and Phoenix also acknowledge taking part in efforts to conceal from lenders information about Cay Clubs’ business practices in order to make the investments seem less risky. Dennis Urbano, a Miamibased federal defense attorney unaffiliated with the case, said the Justice Department is using these immunity deals as build- ing blocks for something larger. “When the government puts itself in a position that they’re giving immunity, they ... intend to charge somebody,” Urbano said. The statements of Callahan and Phoenix emerged when the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission entered them into the record last month in the $300 million civil Ponzi scheme case it is pursuing against Clark, Coleman, Schwarz, Graham and Cay Clubs Director of Investor Relations Ricky Lynn Stokes. Between 2004 and 2008, according to the SEC, company executives enriched themselves to the tune of millions at the expense of 1,400 unwitting condominium investors, while failing to complete any of the promised 17 upscale condominium complex redevelopments in the Keys, on Florida’s west coast, and in other states. U.S. Attorney’s Office Spokeswoman Michelle Alvarez didn’t respond to a phone message recently for comment on whether the immunity agreements for Callahan and Phoenix mean the Justice Department is building a criminal case against Clark, Coleman, Schwarz or Graham. In his statement, Phoenix said the 15 percent leaseback payments that Cay Clubs promised investors were concealed from lending institutions on closing documents in order to bolster the company’s claim that it was selling real estate and not securities — a key issue in the SEC case. File photo by MARK PHELPS/The Citizen Sombrero Cay Club Resort in Marathon is seen here when the company allegedly was flourishing in the Florida Keys and elsewhere. Concealing the guaranteed 15 percent returns gave lenders an inaccurately rosy picture of the company’s equity in each property. Phoenix also stated that Cay Clubs continued to promise leaseback payments to new investors, even after the company had reached a point where it didn’t have the funds to make those payments to earlier investments. “In Phoenix’s view, there came a time during the course of the operation of Cay Clubs where it could fairly be described as a ‘Ponzi scheme’ due to its inability to pay existing leaseback obligations without new investor money,” the immunity statement reads. Kenneth Hazouri, the attorney for Clark, Coleman and Schwarz, didn’t respond to messages for comment on potential criminal investigations into his clients. But he did address the immunity statements in a motion for them to be disal- lowed as evidence in the SEC case. The Justice Department, he wrote, induced Callahan and Phoenix to provide the statements through the threat of criminal prosecution. Meanwhile, the SEC filed the statements just 48 hours before a March 20 hearing before Judge James Lawrence King in the Key West courthouse for the purpose of “smearing” the Cay Clubs defendants, he claims. Notably, the statements of Callahan and Phoenix reference four of the five defendants in the Cay Clubs SEC case, but not the investor relations director, Stokes. Russell Weigel, Stokes’ attorney, said last week that he has heard rumblings of a criminal investigation into Cay Clubs executives, but he does not believe that his client is part of such a probe. “I am not aware of any serious threat to prosecute Mr. Stokes,” Weigel said. rsilk@keysnews.com French Fare • French Fare • French Far e rustaceans g in Seafood & C Specializin serving daily 11am-10pm Kitchen ar Japanese Sushi B Tuesdays m Sushi Bar Closed pm / 5-10p Hours 11am-2:30 ecials Nightly DinneronSpthe Half Shell ks Oysters & Lil Nec ials: ured Lunch Spec This Weeks Feat owdah Ch p of h Roll with a Cu or salad $14.00 1/2 Lobsta up so iso lls & choice of m $13.50 2 Sushi Ro*8 Selections of rolls* ke Cocktails Beer, Wine & Sa $8* ecials Starting at *Daily Lunch Sp om 5-7pm* *7 items for $7 fr th purchase of food ur Yuenglings wi y Hour Specials $1.50 Happy Ho ot valid on Happ -N ID th wi nt ou est.com Local Disc Menu: elmarkeyw See ou - Near & Fitzpatrick the Corner of Greene 305-517-6282 *Entrees $20 5-6:30pm Casual French & American Food Lunch & Dinner *50% Happy Hour 4-6:30pm Off the Bar Menu, Beer & Wines Café Solé 1029 Southard St. 305-2940230 Bistro Solé 1019 White St. 305-9222177 by the Glass *Not valid with any other offer. 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Stahler Jim Unger MARMADUKE Brad Anderson Jim Davis HERMAN BEETLE BAILEY Mike Peters Mort Walker Art & Chip Sanson ARLO & JANIS FRANK & ERNEST Jimmy Johnson Bob Thaves SUDOKU Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively. THE GRIZZWELLS MONTY Bill Schorr Jim Meddick THE WORLD ALMANAC BIG NATE Lincoln Peirce TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS: William THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014 Hazlitt (1778-1830), writer; William Today is the 100th day of 2014 and Booth (1829-1912), Salvation Army the 22nd day of spring. founder; Joseph Pulitzer (1847-1911), TODAY’S HISTORY: In 1866, the publisher; Harry Morgan (1915-2011), American Society for the Prevention actor; Max von Sydow (1929- ), actor; of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) was Omar Sharif (1932- ), actor; John Madden (1936- ), football coach/ founded in New York City. broadcaster; Steven Seagal (1952- ), In 1925, F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “The actor; Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds Great Gatsby” was published in New (1959- ), singer-songwriter/producer; York City. Michael Pitt (1981- ), actor; Mandy In 1938, Nazi Germany officially Moore (1984- ), actress/singersongwriter; Haley Joel Osment (1988annexed Austria. ), actor. In 1972, famed comic actor and TODAY’S FACT: According director Charlie Chaplin received an to 2014 estimates from the CIA, honorary Oscar. residents of the 0.77-square-mile In 2003, Congress approved the principality of Monaco enjoy the Amber Alert system, which alerts the longest life expectancy in the world, at public to child abductions. an average of 89.6 years. TODAY’S SPORTS: In 1947, the Brooklyn Dodgers announced the purchase of Jackie Robinson’s contract from the Montreal Royals, a minor-league club. TODAY’S QUOTE: “Man is the only animal that laughs and weeps; for he is the only animal that is struck with the difference between what things are, and what they ought to be.” -William Hazlitt TODAY’S NUMBER: 69.9 million -- dogs owned as pets in the United States in 2012. TODAY’S MOON: Between first quarter moon (April 7) and full moon (April 15). Find Today's Horoscope, Crossword Puzzle, Celebrity Cipher, Bridge Tips and Dear Abby in the Citizen Keyswide Classified Section. 7A THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014 NATION FRESNO, CALIF. BATON ROUGE, LA. AUSTIN, TEXAS CLEVELAND Man confesses to 40 killings GOP chair wants McAllister to quit Man tries to buy 10-year-old A suspected contract killer charged in Central California with murdering nine people confessed to investigators that he carried out up to 40 slayings in a career spanning decades, a prosecutor said Wednesday. Errek Jett, the district attorney in Lawrence County, Alabama, said that Jose Manuel Martinez, 51, told investigators he carried out the crimes working as an enforcer for a drug cartel. Jett said they believe Martinez because of the details he gave investigators. Martinez was arrested last year shortly after crossing the border from Mexico into Arizona and sent to Alabama, where he awaits trial on one murder charge. Captured on tape kissing another man’s wife, a Republican congressman from Louisiana was urged Wednesday by the leader of the state GOP to resign from the seat he’s held since November. Rep. Vance McAllister appealed for privacy for his family “during this difficult period.” But a person close to the Republican Party of Louisiana told The Associated Press that party chairman Roger Villere was trying to convince McAllister to step aside immediately. The source asked not to be named because Villere hadn’t spoken directly with McAllister and conversations continue with the congressman’s staff. A brief statement from McAllister on Wednesday offered no answers to the questions that have swirled about his private life — or political future — since the videotape surfaced. Federal authorities say a northeast Ohio man has pleaded guilty to charges alleging he tried to buy a 10-year-old girl to engage in illegal sexual activity. U.S. Attorney Steven Dettelbach in Cleveland said Wednesday that 37year-old Robert W. Thomas Jr. pleaded guilty to enticement and receiving and distributing visual depictions of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct. The Cuyahoga Falls resident was arrested in January after an online sting. He was accused of asking an undercover officer in Alliance to arrange a marriage between him and the officer’s daughter. The officer says Thomas told him he wanted the girl for sex. JACK PLUNKETT/The Associated Press Former NAACP chairman Julian Bond, left, and U.S. Rep. John Lewis of Georgia, take part Wednesday in the “Heroes of the Civil Rights Movement” panel during the Civil Rights Summit in Austin, Texas. PEOPLE IN THE NEWS LOS ANGELES — Julia Louis-Dreyfus better hope her latest tattoo is a temporary one. The cover image of next month’s Rolling Stone magazine featuring the “Veep” star depicts a nude Louis-Dreyfus Louis-Dreyfus with a tattoo of the U.S. Constitution signed by John Hancock across her back. The problem is Hancock signed the Declaration of Independence, not the Constitution. Louis-Dreyfus’ jokingly blamed the blunder in a Twitter post on Wednesday on the fictional “Veep” character who serves as communications director to Louis-Dreyfus’ Vice President Selina Meyer on the HBO comedy series. Rolling Stone spokeswoman Melissa Bruno said the Declaration of Independence is on the other side of her body, but the signatures wouldn’t fit. ✬✬✬✬✬ LOS ANGELES — Drake is carving out a new niche as a television host and will helm the 2014 ESPYs, the sports award show of ESPN. The Toronto-based rapper, singer and actor and the sports entertainment network announced the gig Wednesday. The annual light-hearted awards show will be held July 16 at the Nokia Theatre L.A. Live in Los Angeles and will be broadcast live. Drake’s used to the live TV thing. He turned in a strong performance as host and musical guest on “Saturday Night Live” in January. And he hosted the 2011 Juno Awards in Canada. The 27-year-old also has ties to the sports world. He’s affiliated with the NBA’s Toronto Raptors and memorably played a teen basketball player Drake on “Degrassi: The Next Generation” before picking up the mic. ✬✬✬✬✬ EW YORK — Emmy-award winning actress Katherine Heigl has sued Duane Reade Inc., saying the company is using a picture of her leaving one of its pharmacies in its promotional materials. The 35-year-old who acted in the television series “Grey’s Anatomy” and in movies including “Knocked Up” and “27 Dresses” is seeking at least $6 million in damages. The lawsuit was filed Wednesday in federal court in Manhattan. A Duane Reade spokesman did not immediately return a message seeking comment. The lawsuit says Heigl was recently photographed by paparazzi in New York City as she left a Duane Reade pharmacy. It says the company is exploiting the actress’ image for commercial gain despite her Heigl objection. The complaint says Heigl plans to donate any lawsuit proceeds to a charitable foundation that helps animals. Teen stabs 22 at high school BY JOE MANDAK AND KEVIN BEGOS The Associated Press MURRYSVILLE — Flailing away with two kitchen knives, a 16-year-old boy with a “blank expression” stabbed and slashed 21 students and a security guard in the crowded halls of his suburban Pittsburgh high school Wednesday before an assistant principal tackled him. At least five students were critically wounded, including a boy whose liver was pierced by a knife thrust that narrowly missed his heart and aorta, doctors said. Others also suffered deep abdominal puncture wounds. The rampage — which came after decades KEITH SRAKOCIC/The Associated Press Alex Hribal, the suspect in the multiple stabbings at the Franklin Regional High School in Murrysville, Pa., is escorted by police Wednesday to a district magistrate to be arraigned in Export, Pa. Feast your eyes on our online photo galleries: Local news, sports, events and weekly top photos. in which U.S. schools geared much of their emergency planning toward mass shootings, not stabbings — set off a screaming stampede, left blood on the floor and walls, and brought teachers rushing to help the victims. Police shed little light on the motive. The suspect, Alex Hribal, was taken into custody and treated for a minor hand wound, then was brought into court in shackles and a hospital gown and charged with four counts of attempted homicide and 21 counts of aggravated assault. He was jailed without bail, and authorities said he would be prosecuted as an adult. His attorney did not immediately respond to a message for comment. The attack unfolded in the morning just minutes before the start of classes at 1,200-student Franklin Regional High School, in an uppermiddle-class area 15 miles east of Pittsburgh. It was over in about five minutes, during which the boy ran wildly down about 200 feet of hallway, slashing away with knives about 8 to 10 inches long, police said. Nate Moore, 15, said he saw the boy tackle and stab a freshman. He said he going to try to break it up when the boy got up and slashed his face, opening a wound that required 11 stitches. “It was really fast. It felt like he hit me with a wet rag because I felt the blood splash on my face. It spurted up on my forehead,” he said. The attacker “had the same expression on his face that he has every day, which was the freakiest part,” Moore said. “He wasn’t saying anything. He didn’t have any anger on his face. It was just a blank expression.” Assistant Principal Sam King finally tackled the boy and disarmed him, and a Murrysville police officer who is regularly assigned to the school handcuffed him, police said. King’s son told The Associated Press that his father was treated at a hospital, though authorities have said he did not suffer any knife wounds. ® NOTICE OF MEETING Art In Public Places Board Monday, April 14, 2014 at 3:00 p.m. City Hall, Habana Plaza 3126 Flagler Avenue City Commissioner Conference Room Members of the Key West City Commission may be in attendance at this meeting. It is the policy of the City of Key West to comply with all requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Please call the TTY number at 305-809-1000 or the ADA Coordinator at 305-809-3731 at least five business days in advance for sign language interpreters, assistive listening devices, or materials in accessible format. April 10, 2014 Key West Citizen 389588 NOTICE OF MEETING DEVELOPMENT REVIEW COMMITTEE (DRC) MEETING Thursday, April 24, 2014 at 10:00 a.m. City Commission Chambers, Old City Hall, 510 Greene Street, Key West DRC meeting agendas can be viewed online at www.keywestcity.com under City Board & Committee Agendas. ADA Assistance: It is the policy of the City of Key West to comply with all requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Please call the TTY number at 305-809-1000 or the ADA Coordinator at 305-809-3731 at least five business days in advance for sign language interpreters, assistive listening devices, or materials in accessible format. Please note that one or more City Commission, Planning Board, HARC, Bight Board and/or Tree Commission members may be present at this meeting. April 10, 2014, Key West Citizen 389591 388954 Spread the word with Advertising! Placing Your Ad Is Quick & Easy. Contact Tammy Collins, Advertising Representative, to advertise your business or event today! (305) 396-7423 tcollins@keysnews.com 383847 8A THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014 STATE 1 child dead, 14 hurt in day care crash BY MIKE SCHNEIDER AND SUZETTE LABOY The Associated Press WINTER PARK — A car smashed into an Orlandoarea day care Wednesday, killing a child and injuring 14 others, at least 12 of them children, authorities said. Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children wasn’t releasing any more information on the age and sex of the child who died, said Katie Dagenais, a spokeswoman for the hospital where the most-seriously injured were being treated. One person at the hospital was in critical condition and five others were in serious condition, Dagenais said. In all, 13 people were hospitalized and two others were treated at the scene, said John Mulhall, a spokesman for the Orange County Fire Rescue. Several of the injured at the KinderCare building in Winter Park were reported to be in “very, very serious condition,” said Florida Highway Patrol spokeswoman Wanda Diaz Diaz said the Toyota Solara convertible had gone out of control after it was struck by a Dodge Durango, jumped a curb and smashed into the day care, breaking through the wall and into the building. That driver was not hurt. The Durango fled the scene but was located almost two hours later after it had been left at a home. Highway patrol said it is looking for 26-year-old Robert Corchado. Troopers said he was the driver of the Durango, but wouldn’t say how they established that. Troopers said Corchado may be trying to leave the area. “Please keep a lookout and let us know if you see anything,” said Orange County Mayor Teresa Jacobs said. Jacobs called the crash an “absolute tragedy and disaster.” Local television footage showed small children and infants in cribs taken outside on the day care’s playground and several of the injured were carried out on stretchers. The highway patrol reported that the injured were taken to five different hospitals. Late Wednesday afternoon parents could be seen waiting to pick up their children, and then clutching them in their arms as they were escorted to JOHN RAOUX/The Associated Press Parents with their children are escorted away with Orange County deputies after a vehicle crashed into a day care center Wednesday in Winter Park. their vehicles by authorities. The day care’s website says the center provides childcare and learning opportunities for children ages 6 weeks to 12 years old and has been in the community for over 25 years. House to vote on Carry and Conceal bill BY KAREEM COPELAND The Associated Press Photo courtesy of REEF Elizabeth Underwood gets ready to net a lionfish. Lionfish Continued from Page 1A stand together in our desire and efforts to deal with this problem,” FWC spokeswoman Amanda Nalley said. The FWC board will vote on another proposal Wednesday to make it easier for lionfish derbies to be held. The Florida Keys-based Reef Environmental Education Foundation (REEF) holds several derbies a year, with the goal of wiping out as many lionfish as divers can spear. The proposal would streamline the permitting process for derbies. The proposed rule would allow the FWC executive director, or his designee, to issue permits to tournaments or other approved events for use of spear-fishing gears in areas where spearing is prohibited. These permits would only be issued for the removal of lionfish. Organizers of lionfish tournaments in the Florida Keys would still have to receive the permission of the sanctuary if divers plan to spear lionfish in areas where it is prohibited, such as special protection areas and the Key Largo and Looe Key sanctuary areas, sanctuary Superintendent Sean Morton said. REEF is currently conducting studies looking at the effectiveness of diver removal and of derbies, said Elizabeth Underwood, REEF’s lionfish program coordinator. Lionfish are an invasive species from the Indo-Pacific region. The Florida Keys has seen a significant increase in lionfish in the past five years. It is having a major impact on the local reef ecosystem as lionfish compete with native species for food, scientists have said. Lionfish eat more than 70 species of fish and possess venomous spines capable of deterring predators, and inflicting mild to serious stings on divers, according to REEF officials. The FWC, the Florida Keys Sanctuary, REEF and other ocean conservation groups have launched efforts to eradicate lionfish, including fishing derbies, cookbooks and outreach programs to remind divers there is no bag or size limit, and the fish is never out of season. One of the key weapons in the battle against lionfish is making the fish a commercially sold product. Many Florida Keys trap fishermen are subsidizing their income by selling the fish that have made their way into traps. Those fishermen are pulling traps in waters deeper than 100 feet, which are Truck Continued from Page 1A face fines if found in violation after a hearing, the code enforcement director Jim Young said Wednesday. At issue for both food trucks, the citation says, is a failure to obtain HARC approval as either a minor or major development in Key West’s historic district. White Street Station, known for its chickenbased Rotisserie Reuben, burgers and mac and cheese sandwiches, and owned by restaurateur Michael Wilson, still needs building and electrical permits, according to code officer Paul Nickle, who cited the business on Thursday. Yebo Island Grille, whose menu includes tacos and burritos, and is run by Joel Dos Santos, also has portable signs that are banned in the historic district, code officer Leo Hernandez found March 29. Both owners are due to appear at the 1:30 p.m. code compliance hearing set for April 23 at Old City Hall, 510 Greene St. Wilson on Wednesday said he didn’t want to comment on the case until after the hearing, while Yebo’s private planner questioned whether HARC had any jurisdiction over food trucks. Yebo in September won unanimous approval home to the larger concentrations of lionfish, according to commercial trap fisherman Gary Nichols. Nichols harvested 7,000 pounds of lionfish this past lobster season, 10,000 pounds the prior season, and 6,000 pounds two seasons ago, he said. Nichols sells them to local restaurants and fish houses. “They are eating up everything,” Nichols said. “We have even found ones with smaller lionfish in their mouths. They are eating their buddies.” Also on Wednesday, the FWC board will vote on a proposal to limit the number of sea cucumbers commercial divers can harvest from state waters. There is a growing overseas market for the sea slug, which is commonly found in Florida Keys waters. The emerging market has the FWC proposing tighter restrictions on the harvest of sea cucumber. The board will vote on a proposal to limit the daily commercial harvest of sea cucumbers to 200 per vessel per day, according to Nalley. Currently, commercial fishermen with a basic saltwater products license can harvest as many as they want. The FWC board meetsTuesday, Wednesday and Thursday in Havana (near Tallahassee). tohara@keysnews.com by the planning board for a minor development plan to build some structures around the food truck for seating, structures and ADA-compliant restrooms. But HARC members were dismayed by the proposal, and the city’s preservation planner said it was inappropriate for the neighborhood and the item has been postponed five times since October. Those plans, however, don’t concern the food truck, which has a mobile vendor licence and is registered with the state, said private planner Owen Trepanier. “We don’t believe there is any regulation about the food truck itself,” said Trepanier. “It’s the development we’re not allowed to do.” Trepanier said HARC governs architectural plans. “Not the kind or type or color of a vehicle,” Trepanier said. Food trucks, a phenomenon in parts of the nation, are relatively new in Key West. City planners have asked for a freeze on accepting applications for new food trucks for up to six months so they can draw up specific regulations for them. The planning board has that item on its agenda for its 6 p.m. Thursday meeting, having postponed it last month. gfilosa@keysnews.com TALLAHASSEE — The Florida House is scheduled to vote on a bill that allows the public to carry concealed firearms while evacuating their home during an emergency. The bill (H.B. 209) was extensively debated Wednesday and placed on Friday’s schedule. Sponsor Rep. Heather Dawes Fitzenhagen, R-Fort Myers, explained the bill extends carry-and-conceal privileges to those fleeing during a mandatory evacuation declared by the governor or local officials. bill doesn’t supersede Individuals, otherwise, existing laws and that must be in compliance the Florida Sheriffs with all laws, including Association does not having the right to be in possession of a fire- Legislature support the legislation. The Senate version arm. “My bill does make it clear (S.B. 296) has to clear one that felons are not allowed to more committee before being carry a firearm,” Fitzenhagen heard on the floor. Sherriff John Rutherford told said. “However, this bill is for people who are lawfully a Senate committee Tuesday allowed to possess a firearm that officers need guidelines in their home to be able to as to what qualifies as being in take that firearm with them the act of complying with the when they are evacuating in ordered evacuation. NRA lobbyist Marion an emergency.” Rep. Kionne McGhee, D- Hammer said, “You leave, you Miami, pointed out there is get there. That’s the time frame no exact language that the we’re talking about.” 2014 Peary Continued from Page 1A tion will transform the gated, suburban-style complex into an extension of the historic district. But a couple dozen residents who call streets like Angela, Newton, Fleming and Frances home haven’t let up on their opposition to the plans, which they say will bring horrendous traffic and parking problems. “One hundred years from now you will be able to discern where Peary Court ends and Old Town begins,” said Art Levin. Every new detail handed out by city planners is possible grist for the mill when it comes to the neighborhood critics. Craig noted Wednesday that Peary Court will have private streets, per the developers’ plans. In addition to Glasser, another neighbor to Peary Court took aim at the idea of private streets. “I was horrified to realize the streets will be private streets,” said former county mayor Shirley Freeman, who worried parking will disappear to Peary Court’s spill-over. “They can park on our streets but we can’t park on theirs?” Weekley said he purposely didn’t invite the developers to Wednesday’s meeting, which he reserved for locals to make comments and suggestions. Members of the city’s appointed Historic Architectural Review Commission (HARC) and the Planning Board were in attendance, along with City Commissioners Tony Yaniz and Teri Johnston, who took notes on a legal pad. Twice now, White Street Partners has failed to persuade HARC to approve its plans and the firm even hired a new architect after the first round of proposed designs fell flat. HARC is expected to have yet another revised proposal for the major development on its May 7 meeting agenda. Meanwhile, city staff says it will deliver a traffic study and continue to accept the public’s comments. “We will be looking at ways to make traffic safe, slow and uninterferring,” Craig said, adding a few times that he lives in the same neighborhood as many of the Peary Court critics. “I walk my dogs once or twice a week on Angela,” he said. “I know,” a woman replied. City commissioners will have the final say on the proposed development, comprising mostly single family homes but required to include 48 units of affordable housing. At one point, Craig tried a historical tack. “Anybody remember when Key West was first born in 1823? Over 180 years ago. Street grid by street grid. That’s how historic cities are developed. That’s how the Meadows was allowed to become an area off White Street.” gfilosa@keysnews.com Proceeds to benefit Newspapers p p s in Education n Over $1000 In Prizes Enter & Vote! Vote today on the web: http://www.keysnews.com GREAT PRIZES GREAT CAUSE Keys Cutest Pet Keys Ugliest Pet Keys Cutest Dynamic Duo $ 20 Entry fee (per photo) $1 per online vote (5 vote minimum) Proceeds to benefit Newspapers in Education Each school year, Cooke Communications donates over 125,000 copies (more than 3,500 papers a week) of The Citizen to classrooms throughout the Monroe County School District. Your participation in this contest raises funds to pay for these newspapers. 389319 SPORTS Shabazz Napier THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014 1B TITLE TOWN 2014 UCONN READY TO MAKE MOST TO CHAMPIONSHIPS, 3B PREP BASEBALL: CORAL SHORES 4, MARATHON 1 SPORT SHORTS BATTLE FOR 1ST ALEX BRANDON/The Associated Press Marlins second baseman Derek Dietrich uses his bare hand to field a ball hit by teh Nationals’ Denard Span, who was out at first on the play on Wednesday at Nationals Park in Washington. The Nats won, 10-7, behind a Jayson Werth grand slam. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL MLB names reliever awards after Rivera, Hoffman NEW YORK — Now that they’re no longer receiving awards, Mariano Rivera and Trevor Hoffman are getting their names on some. Major League Baseball said Wednesday it created a “Mariano Rivera American League Reliever of the Year Award” and a “Trevor Hoffman National League Reliever of the Year Award.” Rivera, a 13-time All-Star, retired after last season with a record 652 saves. Hoffman, a seven-time All-Star, retired after the 2010 season and is second with 601 saves. Both spent their entire careers in one league. The new honors replaces MLB’s “Delivery Man of the Year Award,” which was given to one winner annually from 2005-13. It will be voted on by nine retired relievers, with Rivera and Hoffman joined by Hall of Famers Dennis Eckersley, Rollie Fingers, Rich Gossage and Bruce Sutter along with Lee Smith, John Franco and Billy Wagner. Hurricanes take control of SFBC with win against rival Dolphins BY J.W. COOKE Citizen Staff Writer MARATHON — It was a battle for first place in the South Florida Baseball Conference (SFBC) on Wednesday between Monroe County rivals Marathon High and Coral Shores High, and it would be the Hurricanes that returned the favor with a 4-1 victory on the road giving the ’Canes control of the top seed in the postseason. The Dolphins picked up the first victory between the two teams this season, 5-0 on the Hurricanes’ home diamond, but on Wednesday Coral Shores freshman Jose Lima KATHY LANCASTER/The Citizen Hurricanes baserunner Justin Perrine slides home on a fielder’s choice by Kyle Gates as Dolphins catcher Kevin McKeon looks for the throw. Perrine’s run put the ’Canes ahead 3-1 in the fourth inning on Wednesday at Simcic Field in Marathon. tossed the complete-game victory striking out nine to hand Marathon (11-11 overall, 8-2 SFBC) its second conference loss of the season. Coral Shores (11-10, 7-1), connected for five hits off Dolphins starter COLLEGE BASKETBALL Center Chris Walker staying ‘one more year’ at Florida GAINESVILLE — Highly touted center Chris Walker is giving Florida “one more year.” Walker announced Wednesday via Twitter that he will stay in college for another season, a decision that could make the Gators a contender again in 2015. “This year has been a great one, and I’m happy to say I will be joining the gatornation again for one more year!,” Walker posted. The 6-foot-10 Walker is widely considered a first-round pick when he enters the NBA draft. Walker missed the first three months of last season while waiting to be cleared by the NCAA. He made his collegiate debut on Feb. 4, played in 18 games and averaged 1.9 points and 1.3 rebounds in 4.8 minutes while playing behind Patric Young, Will Yeguete and Dorian Finney-Smith. COED SOFTBALL Menendez singles home Kibler to fuel Gas House Gang’s win BY RON COOKE Citizen Staff KEY WEST — T & W Chevron’s Juanito Menendez stroked a walk-off single, his third hit of the night to drive in Dylan Kibler, also with a trio of base hits, to power the Gas House Gang to a 5-4 win over We Cycle last Wednesday in Key West Coed Softball League action at Pepe Hernandez Field. Sharon Wiley and Amber Menendez each doubled and smacked a pair of base hits; Nicole Yancey ripped a two-bagger and singled; Ben Blattenberger and Chuck Malby hoisted two hits apiece; and Ariana Corsi and Shia Marzetti each slugged a base hit. Joe Obert and Chris Needham singled three times apiece to lead We Cycle at the plate. Jason Pfahl, Shaniya Watson, Megan Benstedt and Samantha Sanchez each singled twice; as Ashley West, Brendon Curley, Lauren Pazo and Ronnie Ramsing aired out a base hit. KEYS CALENDAR TODAY IN THE KEYS PREP BOYS LACROSSE Coral Shores at Westminster, 4:30 p.m. PREP SOFTBALL Doral at Marathon, 6 p.m. TODAY ON TV COLLEGE BASEBALL ESPNU — Tennessee at Georgia, 7:30 p.m. GOLF ESPN — Masters Tournament, first round, at Augusta, Ga., 3 p.m. Kyle Pierce, who struck out seven big defensive plays. “It really was a pitchers duel,” said in the complete-game loss. Justin Perrine, Daryl Chou, Will Goodwin, Coral Shores coach Pat Meyers. “Kyle Cody Richards and Luke Lofton had pitched great, but so did Jose.” the hits for the Hurricanes, with See BASEBALL, page 3B catcher Kyle Gates making several RON COOKE/The Citizen We Cycle outfielder Lauren Pazo camps out under a See COED, page 3B fly ball to left centerfield. Sandy’s Cafe second base Brooke Voss makes the catch for a force out on Wednesday night. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL MLB — Regional coverage, Oakland at Minnesota or Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs (2:15 p.m.), 1 p.m. WGN — Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs, 2:15 p.m. MLB — Regional coverage, Boston at N.Y. Yankees or Milwaukee at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. MEN’S COLLEGE HOCKEY ESPN2 — NCAA Division I, playoffs, semifinal, Boston College vs. Union (N.Y.), at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. ESPN2 — NCAA Division I, playoffs, semifinal, North Dakota vs. Minnesota, at Philadelphia, 8:30 p.m. NBA TNT — San Antonio at Dallas, 8 p.m. TNT — Denver at Golden State, 10:30 p.m. NHL NBCSN — St. Louis at Minnesota, 8 p.m. SOCCER FS1 — UEFA Europa League, quarterfinal, second leg, Juventus vs. Lyon, at Turin, Italy, 3 p.m. FIND IT ONLINE FLORIDA LOTTERY See: http://www.flalottery.com NBA: MEMPHIS 107, MIAMI 102 Gasol, Randolph lead Grizzlies past Heat BY CLAY BAILEY The Associated Press MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Zach Randolph had 25 points and 11 rebounds, Marc Gasol added 20 points and 14 rebounds and the Memphis Grizzlies kept their playoff hopes alive with a 107-102 victory over the Miami Heat on Wednesday night. LeBron James led the Heat with 37 points, connecting on 14 of 23 shots, including 3 of 5 from beyond the arc. Rashard Lewis scored 17, and Chris Bosh finished with 13 points. Mario Chalmers scored 12 points for the Heat. Meanwhile, the loss, coupled with the Indiana Pacers’ 104-102 win at Milwaukee, dropped the Heat into the second spot in the Eastern Conference. Mike Conley finished with a teamhigh 26 points and handed out six assists as Memphis remained one game behind the Phoenix Suns for the final playoff spot in the Western Conference. The Suns defeated the New Orleans Pelicans 94-88 also on Wednesday night. Courtney Lee added 18 points for Memphis. The scoring of Randolph and Gasol contributed to a 60-30 advantage in the paint for Memphis. The Grizzles outrebounded the Heat 41-27, who were without reserve frontline players Greg Oden and Chris Andersen. Both teams shot well — Memphis hitting 55 percent of its shots, compared to 52 percent for Miami, but the Heat was 15 of 25 from outside the arc. The teams were tied at 91 after Lewis’ 3-pointer was topped with a foul when Gasol bumped him. The ensuing free throw tied the game. MARK HUMPHREY/The Associated Press Heat forward LeBron James (6) reacts to an official’s call in the first half Wednesday in Memphis, Tenn. Memphis turned up the defense at that point and scored in its transition game. Conley’s 3-pointer with just over 4 minutes left gave Memphis a 100-93 lead, causing Miami coach Erik Spoelstra to call timeout. KEYSNEWS.COM — AND SPORTS TOO The Grizzlies got another turnover on the next possession and Conley converted another 3-pointer to give Memphis its first doubledigit lead at 103-93, completing a 12-2 run with 3:34 left and sealing the game for Memphis. 2B THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014 SPORTS: Scoreboard XXXXX MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL X OBIT COLLEGE ATHLETICS Elbow ligament on Rays’ Moore ‘not fully torn’ Marlins RHP Turner to DL after hurting self in BP FAMU introduces Winslow as athletic director KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Rays were still unsure whether left-hander Matt Moore will need surgery on his left elbow after he was examined Wednesday by orthopedic surgeon James Andrews. Rays manager Joe Maddon said after a 7-3 loss to the Royals that the team was still awaiting results from a series of tests that Andrews performed. Maddon did say that it appears the ligaments in Moore’s elbow were not fully torn. If that was the case, seasonending surgery would be a foregone conclusion. Moore was placed on the disabled list Tuesday. WASHINGTON — Marlins right-hander Jacob Turner has been placed on the 15-day disabled list after hurting himself swinging during batting practice, and righty reliever Arquimedes Caminero has been recalled from Triple-A New Orleans. Turner was scratched from his scheduled start Wednesday and replaced by left-hander Brad Hand, who had been in the bullpen. Turner strained his pitching shoulder during BP before a 5-0 loss to Washington on Tuesday and was sent home to Miami for an MRI. Manager Mike Redmond says Turner “took a swing and felt something in his shoulder area.” TALLAHASSEE — Florida A&M has officially announced Kellen Winslow Sr. as its next athletic director. The university held a ceremony on campus Wednesday to introduce the College and Pro Football Hall of Famer. Winslow was the No. 13 pick in the 1979 NFL draft and was a fivetime Pro Bowl tight end with the San Diego Chargers. He recently worked as director of planning and new business development at Disney’s Wide World of Sports. Winslow was vice president for athletics and wellness at Lakeland College in Plymouth, Wis., from August 2012 through March 2013. MATTHEW DAE SMITH /The Associated Press Michigan State basketball player Adreian Payne leaves a message for Lacey Holsworth on Wednesday night, in East Lansing, Mich., where he and other people gathered along the banks of the Red Cedar River on MSU campus. The little girl affectionately known as “Princess Lacey” finally succumbed to the cancer that she battled since 2011. Her father, Matt Holsworth, said Lacey died at their home late Tuesday “with her mommy and daddy holding her in their arms.” Lacey met Payne during one of her hospital stays, and their friendship quickly blossomed. The little girl became known to legions of basketball fans, cheering on Payne and the Spartans on Twitter as they became a popular pick to win it all this season. SCOREBOARD SPREADS GLANTZ-CULVER LINE Major League Baseball National League FAVORITE LINEUNDERDOG Pittsburgh -135 at Chicago at Washington -230 Miami at Philadelphia -135 Milwaukee at Atlanta -145 New York at San Francisco -140 Arizona American League Oakland -135at Minnesota Boston -115 at New York at Toronto -210 Houston Cleveland -115 at Chicago LINE +125 +210 +125 +135 +130 +125 +105 +190 +105 NBA FAVORITE LINE at Dallas Pk at Golden State 11 O/U (205) (214) NHL FAVORITE at N.Y. Rangers at Carolina Toronto at Tampa Bay at Montreal at Ottawa Boston St. Louis at Nashville Los Angeles Colorado UNDERDOG Buffalo Washington at Florida Philadelphia N.Y. Islanders New Jersey at Winnipeg at Minnesota Phoenix at Edmonton at Vancouver LINE -350 -125 -125 -135 -250 -135 -170 -135 -120 -135 -135 UNDERDOG San Antonio Denver LINE +270 +105 +105 +115 +210 +115 +150 +115 +100 +115 +115 AUTO RACING NASCAR-SPRINT CUP SOUTHERN 500 Site: Darlington, S.C. Schedule: Friday, practice (Fox Sports 1, 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m., 2-3 p.m.), qualifying (Fox Sports 1, 6-7:30 p.m.); Saturday, race, 6:30 p.m. (Fox, 6-10:30 p.m.). Track: Darlington Raceway (oval, 1.366 miles). Race distance: 501.3 miles, 367 laps. Last year: Matt Kenseth raced to the third of his career-high seven victories in his first season at Joe Gibbs Racing, easily holding off teammate Denny Hamlin. Last week: Joey Logano won the rain-delayed race at Texas on Monday, passing Jeff Gordon on the last lap in a green-white-checkered finish. Fast facts: Seven drivers have won in the first seven races, three off the 2000 series record for events at the start of the season without a repeat winner. Defending season champion Jimmie Johnson and second-place Kenseth are winless this year. Johnson won the 2012 race for his third Darlington victory. ... Gordon has seven Darlington wins, the last in 2007. ... Johnny Mantz won the inaugural race at the egg-shaped track in 1950. ... David Pearson holds the track record with 10 victories, one more than Dale Earnhardt. Next race: Toyota Owners 400, April 26, Richmond International Raceway, Richmond, Va. Online: http://www.nascar.com NATIONWIDE VFW SPORT CLIPS HELP A HERO 200 Site: Darlington, S.C. Schedule: Thursday, practice; Friday, qualifying (Fox Sports 2, 4-5:30 p.m.), race, 8 p.m. (ESPN2, 7:30-10 p.m.). Track: Darlington Raceway (oval, 1.366 miles). Race distance: 200.8 miles, 147 laps. Last year: Kyle Busch raced to the fifth of his 12 2013 series victories. Last week: Chase Elliott won at Texas for his first series victory, holding off Busch. The 18-year-old Elliott is the son of 1988 Cup champion Bill Elliott. Fast facts: Busch won this year at Phoenix and Bristol to push his series-record victory total to 65. Busch, Matt Kenseth and series regular Elliott Sadler are driving for Joe Gibbs Racing. The team has won seven of the last eight Darlington races, with Denny Hamlin winning three times, Busch twice and Tony Stewart and Joey Logano once each. ... Elliott is the second-youngest winner in Nationwide history at 18 years, 4 months, 7 days. Logano was 18 years, 21 days when he won at Kentucky in June 2008. Next race: ToyotaCare 250, April 25, Richmond International Raceway, Richmond, Va. Online: http://www.nascar.com CAMPING WORLD TRUCK Next race: North Carolina Education Lottery 200, May 16, Charlotte Motor Speedway, Concord, N.C. Last race: Defending series champion Matt Crafton won the rain-delayed race at Martinsville on March 30 for his fourth career victory. Darrell Wallace was second. Online: http://www.nascar.com VERIZON INDYCAR GRAND PRIX OF LONG BEACH Site: Long Beach, Calif. Schedule: Friday, practice; Saturday, practice, qualifying (NBC Sports Network, 6-7 p.m.); Sunday, race, 4:40 p.m. (NBC Sports Channel, 4-7 p.m.) Track: Streets of Long Beach (street course, 1.968 miles). Race distance: 157.4 miles, 80 laps. Last year: Takuma Sato became the first Japanese winner in IndyCar history, giving A.J. Foyt Racing its first victory since 2002. Last race: Team Penske’s Will Power opened the season with a victory in St. Petersburg, Fla., on March 30. He has won three straight races and four of the last six. Fast facts: Power won at Long Beach in 2008 and 2012. ... Juan Pablo Montoya, the 1999 winner, was 15th in St. Petersburg for Penske in his return to IndyCar after almost five seasons in Formula One and seven in NASCAR. ... Mike Conway, the 2011 winner, is driving for Ed Carpenter Racing. ... The Indy Lights race also is Sunday (NBC Sports Network, 2:30-4 p.m.). Andretti Autosport’s Zach Veach won at St. Petersburg in his series debut. Next race: Grand Prix of Alabama, April 27, Barber Motorsports Park, Birmingham, Ala. Online: http://www.indycar.com NHRA FOUR-WIDE NATIONALS Site: Concord, N.C. Schedule: Friday, qualifying; Saturday, qualifying (ESPN2, 9-8 p.m.); Sunday, final eliminations (ESPN2, 8-11 p.m.). Track: zMAX Dragway. Last year: Matt Hagan won in Funny Car to end a 17-month winless streak. Spencer Massey won in Top Fuel, Mike Edwards in Pro Stock, and Hector Arana Jr. in Pro Stock Motorcycle. Last event: Alexis DeJoria won in Funny Car and Erica Enders-Stevens topped the Pro Stock field in Las Vegas on March 30 for the second female double in NHRA history. Enders-Stevens and Courtney Force also accomplished the feat in the 2012 Northwest Nationals. Tony Schumacher won in Top Fuel for his division-record 73rd victory and eighth at Las Vegas. Fast facts: The event features racing in four lanes instead of the traditional two. A center wall separates the second and third lanes. ... John Force won the season-opening Winternationals in Pomona, Calif., for his record 139th victory. The 64-year-old driver won his record 16th season title last year. ... The series will return to zMAX Dragway in September for the O’Reilly Auto Parts NHRA Nationals, the opener in the six-race Countdown to the Championship. Next event: O’Reilly Auto Parts NHRA SpringNationals, April 25-27, Royal Purple Raceway, Baytown, Texas. Online: http://www.nhra.com Marine News: Fishing tournaments coming up in the Keys release of game fish. All participating anglers receive certificates noting their catches and qualify for a variety of prizes. Contact Rob Harris at 305-587-6718 and Doris at 305-295-6601 or send an email to kwft@comcast.net. second runners-up. Trophies are to be awarded to the top boat teams and individual sailfish anglers. Proceeds benefit Hospice of the Florida Keys. Contact Matt Anthony 305-684-9799 or send an email to sparkyslanding@aol.com April 11 - April 13: 16th Annual Captain Leon Shell Memorial Sailfish Now - Nov. 30: Key West Fishing Tournament, in Marathon.The 16th Tournament, in Key West. More than annual tournament offers two full 40 species of fish are targeted durdays of sailfishing and a $25,000 ing these months, with divisions for cash purse. The winning boat men, women, junior anglers (ages team is to receive a grand prize of 10 to 14) and Pee Wees (under $20,000 cash (with 20 registered 10 years old). The Key West Fishing boats), and cash prizes to first and Tournament strongly encourages the April 23 - April 27: Key West Sailfish Championship in Key West. This four-day challenge is to offer up to $50,000 for first place prize, $15,000 and $10,000 to secondand third-place anglers, respectively. Early entry angler fee per angler is available. Contact Mike Weinhofer at 305-395-3474. All Aboard: If you have an outstanding catch or fishing news to report: • • • • BAHRAIN GRAND PRIX Next race: Chinese Grand Prix, April 20, Shanghai International Circuit, Shanghai. Last week: Lewis Hamilton won in Bahrain for his second straight victory, beating Mercedes teammate Nico Rosberg by a second. Hamilton and Rosberg also finished 1-2 in Malaysia. Online: http://www.formula1.com OTHER RACES TUDOR UNITED SPORTSCAR CHAMPIONSHIP: Tequila Patron Sports Car Showcase at Long Beach, Saturday (Fox Sports 1, 6-8:30 p.m., Streets of Long Beach, Long Beach, Calif. Online: http://www.imsa.com WORLD OF OUTLAWS: Sprint Car: Friday, Kings Speedway, Hanford, Calif.; Saturday, Perris Auto Speedway, Perris, Calif. Late Model: Friday, Duck River Raceway Park, Wheel, Tenn.; Saturday, Tazewell Speedway, Tazewell, Tenn. Online: http:// www.worldofoutlaws.com NHL NHRA MELLO YELLO DRAG RACING ON THE WATER No matter what the season, there’s always something to fish for in the waters surrounding the Florida Keys and Key West. The calendar here lists select tournament highlights. A comprehensive schedule of Keys angling challenges can be found at www.fla-keys. com/fishing. FORMULA ONE Fax: 305-295-8016 Write: Daily Fishing Report, P.O. Box 1800, Key West, FL 33041 Drop it off at The Key West Citizen building (3420 Northside Dr.) Email: jwcooke@keysnews.com EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W z-Boston 79 53 x-Montreal 80 45 x-Tampa Bay 79 43 x-Detroit 80 38 Toronto 80 38 Ottawa 79 34 Florida 80 28 Buffalo 79 21 Metropolitan Division GP W y-Pittsburgh 80 51 x-N.Y. Rangers 80 44 x-Philadelphia 79 41 Columbus 80 42 Washington 79 36 New Jersey 79 34 Carolina 79 34 N.Y. Islanders 79 31 L 18 27 27 27 34 31 44 49 OT 8 8 9 15 8 14 8 9 Pts GF 114 254 98 214 95 232 91 218 84 229 82 230 64 190 51 152 GA 171 202 211 228 251 262 263 238 L 24 31 29 31 30 29 34 37 OT 5 5 9 7 13 16 11 11 Pts GF 107 244 93 216 91 225 91 226 85 226 84 191 79 197 73 216 GA 200 191 222 211 237 201 219 262 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-St. Louis 79 52 20 7 111 246 181 x-Colorado 79 51 21 7 109 243 210 x-Chicago 80 46 19 15 107 262 209 x-Minnesota 80 42 26 12 96 200 197 Dallas 80 39 30 11 89 231 226 Nashville 79 35 32 12 82 200 234 Winnipeg 80 35 35 10 80 220 233 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Anaheim 79 51 20 8 110 254 202 x-San Jose 79 49 21 9 107 239 192 x-Los Angeles 79 45 28 6 96 197 166 Phoenix 79 36 28 15 87 212 225 Vancouver 79 35 33 11 81 187 213 Calgary 79 34 38 7 75 201 228 Edmonton 80 28 43 9 65 198 265 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for OT loss. x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division Tuesday’s Games Minnesota 4, Boston 3, SO Dallas 3, Nashville 2, SO Detroit 4, Buffalo 2 Ottawa 4, N.Y. Islanders 1 N.Y. Rangers 4, Carolina 1 Columbus 4, Phoenix 3, OT Tampa Bay 3, Toronto 0 Philadelphia 5, Florida 2 Washington 4, St. Louis 1 Colorado 4, Edmonton 1 Wednesday’s Games Pittsburgh 4, Detroit 3, SO Chicago 3, Montreal 2, OT Columbus 3, Dallas 1 Los Angeles at Calgary, late San Jose at Anaheim, late Today’s Games Buffalo at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m. Washington at Carolina, 7 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Montreal, 7:30 p.m. New Jersey at Ottawa, 7:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m. Toronto at Florida, 7:30 p.m. Phoenix at Nashville, 8 p.m. St. Louis at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Boston at Winnipeg, 8 p.m. Los Angeles at Edmonton, 9:30 p.m. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division Toronto Tampa Bay Baltimore Boston New York Central Division Detroit Cleveland Kansas City Chicago Minnesota West Division Seattle Oakland Texas Los Angeles Houston W 5 5 4 4 4 L 4 5 5 5 5 Pct .556 .500 .444 .444 .444 GB — 1 2⁄ 1 1 1 W 4 5 4 4 3 L 2 4 4 5 5 Pct .667 .556 .500 .444 .375 GB — 1 2⁄ 1 1 1 2⁄ 2 W 5 5 4 3 3 L 2 3 5 5 6 Pct .714 .625 .444 .375 .333 GB — 1 2⁄ 2 1 2 2⁄ 3 Tuesday’s Games Baltimore 14, N.Y. Yankees 5 Texas 10, Boston 7 Cleveland 8, San Diego 6 Toronto 5, Houston 2 Tampa Bay 1, Kansas City 0 Chicago White Sox 15, Colorado 3 L.A. Dodgers 3, Detroit 2, 10 innings Seattle 5, L.A. Angels 3 Wednesday’s Games Cleveland 2, San Diego 0, 1st game Oakland 7, Minnesota 4, 11 innings Kansas City 7, Tampa Bay 3 Colorado 10, Chicago White Sox 4 San Diego 2, Cleveland 1, 2nd game Boston 4, Texas 2 Baltimore 5, N.Y. Yankees 4 Toronto 7, Houston 3 Detroit at L.A. Dodgers, late L.A. Angels at Seattle, late NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division Milwaukee Pittsburgh St. Louis Chicago Cincinnati West Division San Francisco Los Angeles Colorado San Diego Arizona Today’s Games Pittsburgh (Cole 1-0) at Chicago Cubs (T.Wood 0-1), 2:20 p.m. Miami (Koehler 1-0) at Washington (Strasburg 0-1), 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee (Estrada 0-0) at Philadelphia (Lee 2-0), 7:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Mejia 1-0) at Atlanta (Hale 0-0), 7:10 p.m. Arizona (Delgado 0-1) at San Francisco (Vogelsong 0-0), 10:15 p.m. NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W x-Toronto 46 x-Brooklyn 43 New York 33 Boston 23 Philadelphia 17 Southeast Division W y-Miami 53 x-Charlotte 40 x-Washington 40 Atlanta 35 Orlando 23 Central Division W y-Indiana 54 x-Chicago 46 Cleveland 32 Detroit 29 Milwaukee 14 L 32 35 45 55 61 Pct .590 .551 .423 .295 .218 GB — 3 13 23 29 L 25 38 38 43 55 Pct .679 .513 .513 .449 .295 GB — 13 13 18 30 L 25 32 47 50 64 Pct .684 .590 .405 .367 .179 GB — 1 7 2⁄ 22 25 1 39 2⁄ WESTERN CONFERENCE Today’s Games Oakland (Straily 0-1) at Minnesota (Pelfrey 0-1), 1:10 p.m. Boston (Buchholz 0-0) at N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 0-1), 7:05 p.m. Houston (Keuchel 0-1) at Toronto (Dickey 1-1), 7:07 p.m. Cleveland (Salazar 0-0) at Chicago White Sox (Danks 0-0), 8:10 p.m. Washington Atlanta Miami New York Philadelphia Central Division Cincinnati 4, St. Louis 0 Colorado 10, Chicago White Sox 4 San Diego 2, Cleveland 1, 2nd game Washington 10, Miami 7 Milwaukee 9, Philadelphia 4 Atlanta 4, N.Y. Mets 3 Chicago Cubs 7, Pittsburgh 5 Detroit at L.A. Dodgers, late Arizona at San Francisco, late W 6 5 5 3 3 L 2 3 4 5 5 Pct .750 .625 .556 .375 .375 GB — 1 1 1 2⁄ 3 3 W 6 5 5 3 3 L 2 3 4 5 6 Pct .750 .625 .556 .375 .333 GB — 1 1 1 2⁄ 3 1 3 2⁄ W 6 6 5 3 2 L 2 3 5 6 8 Pct .750 .667 .500 .333 .200 GB — 1 2⁄ 2 1 3 2⁄ 5 Tuesday’s Games Milwaukee 10, Philadelphia 4 San Francisco 7, Arizona 3 Washington 5, Miami 0 Cleveland 8, San Diego 6 N.Y. Mets 4, Atlanta 0 Pittsburgh 7, Chicago Cubs 6 St. Louis 7, Cincinnati 5 Chicago White Sox 15, Colorado 3 L.A. Dodgers 3, Detroit 2, 10 innings Wednesday’s Games Cleveland 2, San Diego 0, 1st game Southwest Division W y-San Antonio 60 x-Houston 52 Dallas 48 Memphis 46 New Orleans 32 Northwest Division W y-Oklahoma City 56 x-Portland 50 Minnesota 39 Denver 34 Utah 24 Pacific Division W y-L.A. Clippers 55 Golden State 48 Phoenix 47 Sacramento 27 L.A. Lakers 25 x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division L 18 26 31 32 46 Pct .769 .667 .608 .590 .410 GB — 8 1 12 2⁄ 14 28 L 21 28 39 44 54 Pct .727 .641 .500 .436 .308 GB — 1 6 2⁄ 1 17 2⁄ 2212⁄ 3212⁄ L 23 29 31 51 53 Pct .705 .623 .603 .346 .321 GB — 1 6 2⁄ 8 28 30 Tuesday’s Games Detroit 102, Atlanta 95 Minnesota 110, San Antonio 91 Brooklyn 88, Miami 87 Dallas 95, Utah 83 Oklahoma City 107, Sacramento 92 Houston 145, L.A. Lakers 130 Wednesday’s Games Orlando 115, Brooklyn 111 Charlotte 94, Washington 88, OT Cleveland 122, Detroit 100 Toronto 125, Philadelphia 114 Atlanta 105, Boston 97 Chicago 102, Minnesota 87 Indiana 104, Milwaukee 102 Memphis 107, Miami 102 Phoenix 94, New Orleans 88 Denver 123, Houston 116 Sacramento at Portland, late Oklahoma City at L.A. Clippers, late Tonight’s Games San Antonio at Dallas, 8 p.m. Denver at Golden State, 10:30 p.m. KEY WEST LITTLE CONCH BASEBALL SCHEDULE Mon 4/7/14 Wed 4/9/14 Fri 4/11/14 8U 6pm Cardinals vs Orioles Field B 6U 6pm Bandits vs Lugnuts Field C 8U 6pm Nationals vs Orioles Field B 10U 6pm Yankees vs Angels Field C 8U 6pm Blue Jays vs Cardinals Field B 10U 6pm Rangers vs Angels Field C 12U 6pm Reds vs Phillies Field D 14U 6pm Tigers vs Giants Field A Tue 4/8/14 8U 6pm Braves vs Nationals Field B 10U 6pm A’s vs Rangers Field C 12U 6pm Phillies vs White Sox Field D Thurs 4/10/14 8U 6pm Padres vs Braves Field B Sat 4/12/14 10U 6pm Red Sox vs Yankees Field C TBall 9am Marauders vs Grasshoppers Field D 12U 6pm Reds vs Marlins Field D TBall 10am Riverdogs vs Knights Field D 14U 6pm Giants vs Brewers Field A TBall 9amThreshers vs Iron Birds Field A 12U 6pm Marlins vs White Sox Field D 6U 9am Hot Rods vs Lugnuts Field C 8U 9am Blue Jays vs Padres Field B 14U 6pm Brewers vs Tigers Field A The Key West Citizen is a Proud Supporter of Little Conch Baseball 386827 3B THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014 SPORTS COLLEGE BASKETBALL Coed Continued from page 1B TWICE THE CELEBRATION UConn hoping to capitalize on championships BY PAT EATON-ROBB AND JESSICA HILL The Associated Press STORRS, Conn. — Campus celebrations are winding down after two nights of championship parties, yet the off-court excitement could be just beginning at the University of Connecticut. With students, faculty and alumni beaming with pride following the men’s and women’s basketball team’s national titles, the university administration is looking far beyond the Gampel Pavilion sports arena for a payoff. The teams’ accomplishments led national news and sports broadcasts and appeared on news Shabazz or sports pages of Napier newspapers across the world. UConn is the only school to ever win the NCAA Division I Baseball Continued from page 1B Marathon used small ball to take the early 1-0 lead on a Raymond Crespo RBI single in the bottom of the first inning, but the ’Canes defense would clamp down and not allow another run. Coral Shores would take the led with three runs in its next at-bat behind an RBI triple from Perrine and a RBI ground out by Gates, which were set up by a handful of Marathon errors. The Dolphins committed six total errors in the loss. Both pitchers would settle 0 men’s and women’s titles in the same year, a feat it also accomplished in 2004. Money can’t buy that kind of publicity, and an expected result is a boost in finances, admissions applications and recruiting. UConn President Susan Herbst said it is hard to quantify the effect the titles will have on donations and student applications, but she’s sure they’ll increase. “They get the attention, they win, and then I take that attention and turn it toward the academic mission,” she said Tuesday. Stefanie “People are thinking about Dolson UConn and when they get to me with congratulations, then, I have to talk about our health center, our excellence in education, our student success.” down and go the distance with only one more run crossing the plate in the final frame on a RBI single from Lofton, scoring Richards who reached on a walk. Coral Shores still has a SFBC double header remaining against Miami Country Day, the fourth place team in the conference, and at least one win against the Spartans on Friday will clinch the Hurricanes’ third regular season title in four seasons. Last year, the Hurricanes were the No. 1 seed, but were eliminated by the Dolphins in the semifinal for the second time. BAREFOOT BILLY’S WATERSPORTS 11, AMY’S LIQUOR STORE 0 Samantha Sanchez doubled twice; John Childs, Tommy Lapp and Dee Dee Harnish each slapped a two-base hit and a base hit; Mark Hoffer and Kelly Niles both singled twice; Geoff Lemos homered insidethe-park; Maritza Lamberson doubled; and Bobby Lopez, Sandy Bartlett, Jason Johnson and Robin Tomita each singled. For Amy’s Liquor, Tyler Cottar, Jennifer Lopez McClendon, Colby Saunders and Joe Alfonso corked one hit each. MARGARITAVILLE 13, KEY WEST HAMMOCK 10 Photos by RON COOKE/The Citizen Margaritaville wasted no time building a 13-1 lead, but Key West Hammock hung around for nine runs in Dave Hall fields a ball for Sandy’;s Cafe backed up by George Rodriguez at third. their final two at bats to almost sew up the win. George Mensah tripled and singled two times; Petra Hagenag and Art Singley slapped three hits apiece; Pabel Noguera homered inside-the-park and singled plating four runs; Kaitlyn Leeman and A.J. Luciano each smacked a two-base hit and base hit; Maria Costillo booked a pair of base hits; as Alex Seytlin and Caryn Grzegorek both squeezed out a hit. For Key West Hammock, Lauren Pazo doubled and singled twice; Pete Kammerer, and Veronica Herrera laced three hits each; Nick Hogen and Veronica Brown both doubled and singled; Tom Haas slammed two hits as Ben Shaniya Watson takes a cut at an incoming pitch Blattenberger, Jay Tola and Brandi Ortiz all hung base hit. Wednesday night at Pepe Hernandez Field. rcooke@keysnews.com If the Hurricanes can maintain, Coral Shores will look to take on County Day in the opening round of the playoffs, while Marathon will face Palmer Trinity, which was the other SFBC team to defeat the Dolphins this season. “No disrespect to County Day, we haven’t played them yet, but Palmer is a good team and we would rather be taking on the fourth seed at this point,” said Meyers. “The kids knew what was on the line, and they knew it was going to be a battle. But they stayed upbeat and we got a couple of timely KATHY LANCASTER/The Citizen hits and played great defense.” Coral Shores’ Kyle Gates (20) gets caught in a fourth inning run down between pitcher Kyle Pierce and jwcooke@keysnews.com third baseman Mark Keller on Wednesday. WE QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE! CALL NOW! (305) 294-5126 % Financing For UpTo 72 Months DUNCAN 1618 N. Roosevelt Blvd, Key West Mon. – Sat. 8am – 7pm Under Credit Union Rates New 2014 Toyota Prius C $189 New 2014 Toyota Corolla LE $239 New 2014 Toyota Tacoma Double Cab 36 mo. lease New 2014 Toyota Rav4 36 mo. lease $189 New 2014 Toyota Camry SE $299 New 2014 Toyota 4Runner SR5 2013 Kia Rio LX $12,995 2009 Ford Fusion SE One Owner $13,995 36 mo. lease 2012 Toyota Rav4 $189 $299 36 mo. lease 2005 Hyundai Elantra 2004 Mini Cooper $19,990 $1,495 $5,590 2013 Ford Escape SE 2006 Dodge Stratus 2003 Ford Expedition XLT 2003 Toyota Camry LE 2006 Chrysler PT Cruiser $20,990 $3,995 $5,995 2013 Nissan Frontier 5,000 Miles Crew Cab, V-6, 4x4 $25,990 $3,995 $6,995 2012 Ford Escape XLT 2013 Jeep Wrangler Sahara Blue Hard Top $17,990 Will Pay $500 Over B. Book Visit Duncanauto.com Earl’s Pearls 2013 Toyota Corolla LE $16,590 Used Cars & Trucks 36 mo. lease 36 mo. lease New Arrivals WANTED: 2004 Mercury Mountaineer 2004 Toyota Tacoma Pre-Runner $33,590 $5,590 $10,950 Leases are based on 12K miles per year, $2,699 down plus first month payment, tag and fees with approved credit. Photos are for illustration purposes only and may not match the exact vehicle. 389422 4B THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014 KEYSWIDE CLASSIFIED HOROSCOPES for today BRIDGE TIPS Your relationship with friends, peers and partners will suffer if you display jealousy. people’s business. Stick to your chores and stay out of trouble. THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014 It will take a lot of energy to meet the goals you’ve set. It will be important to accept help and to call in favors. Don’t be too proud to let those you’ve aided in the past return the favor. You will be respected for your perseverance. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Gather together with friends who share your passion and vision. You can mix business and pleasure while collaborating on a new venture.Your final result could prove very lucrative. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- Take a backseat and relax for a change. Let others make decisions. Pick your battles and don’t let a difference of opinion turn into a major problem. Strive for equality. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -Your home and work environment will be filled with tension if you gossip or get involved in other CANCER (June 21-July 22) -If you have ideas for improvement at your workplace, speak up. Even if your suggestions are not acted upon, you will gain respect and credit for making the offer. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- Take a break from your usual schedule. Get out into the fresh air with friends or loved ones. A brief jaunt to a nearby park or nature trail will get your juices flowing. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Your emotions are on a rollercoaster ride, with you tearful one moment and cheerful the next. Don’t let this instability lead to an impulsive decision that can influence a contract or promise. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- An elderly relative may be a burden. Look over your budget and see where you can make beneficial adjustments. Contracts, investments or legal matters should be dealt with now. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Don’t reveal too many details about what you are up to. A colleague may be trying to get ahead at your expense. Someone who seems overly enthusiastic could have an ulterior motive. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- The time is right for love. Take things slow and easy. You may be feeling romantic, but don’t come on too strong, or your special someone may take off in the other direction. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -Keep an open mind today.A casual remark from an old friend will give new spark to your creativity. A trip to an unfamiliar location will result in a rewarding partnership. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- Don’t waste time gossiping or sharing personal stories when you should be working. You’ll be criticized if you don’t finish what you start with efficiency and dispatch. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- You don’t appreciate being scrutinized, so don’t question what others are up to. Be trusting. THE POINT-COUNT POINTS THE WAY By Phillip Alder Edith Wharton was a Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist who was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1927, 1928 and 1930. She said, “One knows one’s weak points so well, that it’s rather bewildering to have the critics overlook them and invent others.” One of the weak points of most bridge players is the inability to track the highcard points -- and that is arguably the most important thing to count during a deal. How would that help East to find the right defense here? South is in four spades. West leads the heart ace. What should happen? The auction follows Standard American. If you have taken up two-over-one game-force, North might rebid three spades (forcing). Then South would probably settle into four spades, since he has a minimum opening bid. However, his secondary club fit might make him wonder about a slam. Note that if, for example, North’s diamond king were the heart king, six clubs would be an excellent contract. Since East does not want his partner to shift suits, he should encourage enthusiastically with his heart eight. Then West should cash his heart king and lead his third heart. After winning this trick, East should track the highcard points. The dummy has 13, West has produced seven, and East has seven. That leaves only 13 missing. South must have the spade ace-king and diamond ace. This means that the defenders cannot win a minor-suit trick. They must get a trump trick to defeat the contract. So East should lead his last heart. When West ruffs with the spade eight, it effects an uppercut and gives East that crucial trump winner. KEYSWIDE CLASSIFIEDS 000 ® 100 SERVICES 110..............................Child/Adult Care 112...................................Money To Lend 120............................Private Instruction 130................................Mortgage Broker 200 EMPLOYMENT 210........................................Jobs Wanted 220...............Help Wanted Lower Keys 010 Public Notice NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS In case of errors, please check your ad the first day it appears. In the event of an error, we are responsible for the first incorrect insertion of an ad. The Citizen does not assume responsibility for any reason beyond the cost of the ad itself. CANCELLATIONS All word ad rates are placement fees and non-refundable (for frequency days canceled). Ads may be removed from publication with placement fee remaining. 400 MERCHANDISE 402.......................................Roommates 404............................Rooms Lower Keys 406..........................Rooms Middle Keys 408............................Rooms Upper Keys 410...............Mobile Homes Lower Keys 412.............Mobile Homes Middle Keys 414...............Mobile Homes Upper Keys 416........Furnished Condos Lower Keys 417....Unfurnished Condos Lower Keys 418........................Condos Middle Keys 420..........................Condos Upper Keys 422............Furnished Apts. Lower Keys 424...........Furnished Apts. Middle Keys 426............Furnished Apts. Upper Keys 428................Unfurn. Apts. Lower Keys 430...............Unfurn. Apts. Middle Keys 432................Unfurn. Apts. Upper Keys 434.................Furn. Houses Lower Keys 436................Furn. Houses Middle Keys 438................Furn.. Houses Upper Keys 440.............Unfurn. Houses Lower Keys 300 305......................................................Pets 310..................................Sporting Goods 315...............................................Bicycles 320..............................Household Goods 321...........................................Furniture 325...................................Miscellaneous 327...............................................Jewelry 329.....................................Yard Sale Map 330.......................Yard Sales Lower Keys 331.....................Yard Sales Middle Keys 332.......................Yard Sales Upper Keys 335...........................................Antiques 337....................................................Art 338...............................................Fine Art 340.........................Musical Instruments 345.........................................Appliances 350...............................Office Equipment 351.........................................Electronics 355....................................Wanted to Buy 220 HELP WANTED LOWER KEYS CABINET SHOP Looking for hardworking, sober, laborer. Must have clean driving record. Must pass drug test. Pick up app. at 5750 2nd Ave Stock Island CASHIER Needed at Truman and White Chevron. Part time positions available.Come in and fill out an application. 1126 Truman Ave. DIVERS DIRECT 535 Greene St. Now hiring part-time seasonal CHANGES sales associates. Once an ad has been Weekends/customer placed only acceptable service skills a must. minor changes can be Retail/dive experience/ made to the ad. product knowledge preferred. Apply online @ 220 HELP WANTED LOWER KEYS BANYAN RESORT is looking for a full time Front Desk and Reservationist. ASAP! Must be willing to work weekends. Competitive hourly rate, medical benefits and vacation. Please apply in person. EOE Drug Free Workplace RENTALS 220 HELP WANTED LOWER KEYS 220 HELP WANTED LOWER KEYS position also requires some cleaning, lifting, mixing of daiquiri product and pays $12-$14/hour depending on experience. Apply in person at 305 Duval St. HOME DELIVERY CARRIER The Key West Citizen is currently accepting applications for Home Delivery Carrier In Big Pine Key. This is an Independent Contractor position where contractor will deliver papers 7 days a week, 4 hours a night and before 6am. Pay rate averages $418.00 per week. Call or come by Bo Bowman 305-292-7777 ext. 221 Full Time Construction Laborer Construction Experience a plus, but not necessary.Will train. Plenty of room to grow within the company. Must be able to pass a drug test, back ground check, have a valid Drivers License and come to work Monday Thru Friday 7-5 with some Saturdays and over time required. Positive attitude and the desire to learn and work well with others a must!!! Compensation based on Experience For more informationplease call:305-292-7889 www.diversdirect.com/careers This is a Drug Free Workplace FAT TUESDAY Is hiring DOOR / SECURITY / MIXERS. The ideal applicant should have experience with guest service and checking ID's. The Sous Chef Massage Therapist Nail Technician Bell/Valet Attendant Great pay and benefits. KW’s friendliest staff and working environment. Apply in person at Zero Duval. 389331 HAIR STYLIST w/FL Lic. needed immediately (Big Pine) Top stylist is military, being relocated on Apr. 23. Stylist is needed to take over her clients. 55% Commission+ Call for interview 305-872-4010 HARD ROCK CAFE Key West Is expanding and opening an outdoor bar. We are hiring for all positions, full time hours available. HRC Key West offers full benefits, including healthcare and employee parking. Bring your rock star personality and apply in person Monday - Friday, 3P - 6P. The Key West Citizen’s creative department is hiring for the following positions: Ad Designer — P/T Job duties and requirements include: • Design client ads and in-house promotions to specifications • Special sections layout and design • Prepare overlays for newspaper production • Assist with preparing classifieds • Proofreading bbowman@keysnews.com 3420 Northside Drive, Key West, FL 33040 HOME DELIVERY CARRIER The Key West Citizen is currently accepting applications for Home Delivery Carriers in Key West This is an Independent Contractor position where contractor will be required to deliver papers before 6am 7 days a week for 3 hours per day. Payrate averages $333.00/week. Contractor is responsible for providing own transportation and must have valid driver’s license and insurance. Call, Click or Come by. Bo Bowman 305-292-7777 ext. 221 jbowman@keysnews.com 3420 Northside Drive Key West, Fl 33040 Insurance Processor Key West Insurance Agency hiring Insurance Processor to process crucial documents in a paperless environment. Must have experience working with Microsoft Outlook, Internet Explorer and Web 442...........Unfurn. Houses Middle Keys 444.............Unfurn. Houses Upper Keys 446..............Wanted To Rent Lower Keys 448............Wanted To Rent Middle Keys 450..............Wanted To Rent Upper Keys 451.....................Mobile Home/RV Sites 452............Vacation Rentals Lower Keys 454..........Vacation Rentals Middle Keys 456............Vacation Rentals Upper Keys 458..............Vacation Rentals Elsewhere 460..........................Commercial Rentals 462.......................................Office Space 464...............................................Storage 513........................................Timeshares 514..........................Condos Lower Keys 516.........................Condos Middle Keys 518..........................Condos Upper Keys 520...........................Homes Lower Keys 522..........................Homes Middle Keys 524...........................Homes Upper Keys Commercial 526......................Business Opportunity 528...............................Business Wanted 530.......................................Investments 532................................Income Property 534.......................Commercial Property Other Real Estate 536...............Lots & Acreage Lower Keys 538.............Lots & Acreage Middle Keys REAL ESTATE 540...............Lots & Acreage Upper Keys 542...............................Realty Elsewhere Mobile Homes 502........................................ Lower Keys 544...................................Realty Wanted 504.......................................Middle Keys 506........................................Upper Keys AUTOS/ 508................................ Lots Lower Keys TRANSPORTATION 510............................... Lots Middle Keys 512................................ Lots Upper Keys Autos/Trucks 610................................................Trucks Homes For Sale 500 600 Proofreader/Traffic Desk — P/T Job duties and requirements include: • Coordinate ad materials and files • Email proofs to sales reps • Make simple corrections on advertisements using Adobe InDesign • Excellent organizational and customer service skills Work in the exciting fast paced world of newspaper advertising using the PC and Mac. The ideal candidate will be proficient in Microsoft Word. InDesign knowledge helpful. Entry level position. Layout and/or proofreader test required at interview. Please no phone calls. Previous applicants need not apply. Interested applicants should forward resume as a PDF to Danette Baso Silvers at: dbsilvers@keysnews.com 389193 900 LEGALS 220 HELP WANTED LOWER KEYS 220 HELP WANTED LOWER KEYS 220 HELP WANTED LOWER KEYS Navigation. Must be extremely detail oriented and able to multi task under pressure of meeting deadlines. Excellent customer service skills mandatory. Prior experience in financial institutions or office mgt required. Send resume to: in Social Work or related field required. Bilingual a plus Office / Warehouse / Delivery Assistant Class A CDL Required (Next Driver When Needed) Full Time Position Gold Coast Beverage Distributors Please apply in person at 161 US Highway 1 Rockland Key, FL Our Kids of Miami-Dade/Monroe Is seeking a Regional Mgr in Monroe to provide, direct and co-ordinate Community Based Care Operational Services in our Monroe regional service hub. Serves as Regional liaison to all Service providers, clients and DCF. Exp. in Child Welfare a must. Bilingual preferred. For more info or to apply, go to: www.ourkids.us under “About Us” or email resume to: HR@ourkids.us or by Fax (305)377-7029. personnel@kwdiamond.com Inez Martin Child Development Center is seeking an experienced Assistant Site Director. 45 hrs. of Child Care Training or FCCPC Certification required, Director’s credentials preferred. Competitive salary plus good benefits. JEWELRY SALES-PART TIME Needed for busy Mallory Square Location. Sales Employer and Drug Free experience with or Workplace Knowledge of Jewelry For detailed job preferred. 4:30 to 9:30 descriptions visit pm shifts during the week wesleyhouse.org and weekends. 25 hours Send application/resume a week. $10.50/hour. to HR@wesleyhouse.org plus 5% commission. or 1304 Truman Ave. APPLY ONLINE AT : Competitive salary plus www.historictours.com good benefits. Local Applicants Only, WHFS is an EEOC Please. EOE/DFW Employer and Drug Free Workplace F/T MAINTENANCE Boyd’s Campground, MEDICAL RECORDS family owned business CLERK since 1963. Competitive Excellent opportunity with wages w/medical & benefits. Computer skills retirement benefits. with billing background. On-site living a possibility $14 to $15 an hour Duties required: depending on Janitorial, yard & experience.Contact maintenance Apply in Regional Personel person at 6401 Maloney Department. Ave. 305-294-1465 855-839-7051 Making a Difference NAILTINI NAIL BAR with Children and AND DAY SPA Families Seeks Nail Technician Send resume to: Full Case Manager- Key nailtinikeywest@gmail.com West, Marathon, or call 305-731-8383 Tavernier NEWSPAPER Provides direct case HAWKERS management services Applicants must be able (voluntary and court to work early morning ordered) to children, birth hours 7 days a week families, foster families in an outdoor and primary caregiver(s) environment. This in the home setting, day position pays daily care, preschool, and/or and has a weekly bonus school to ensure they depending on sales. receive services Please complete an appropriate to their application in person at needs. Bachelor’s degree The Key West Citizen, 3420 Northside Drive., Key West. No calls please. Night Security Guard For the Galleon Resort and Marina. 40 hrs. with benefits. Apply in person, 619 Front Street. HELP WANTED Successful candidates will be comfortable using Macintosh publishing applications: Adobe InDesign, Photoshop and Illustrator. Excellent organizational and typing skills, attention to detail, the ability to work on multiple projects under deadline, schedule flexibility, and a positive, professional attitude are the keys to success. 615..................................Auto Financing 620....................................Autos For Sale 622.....................................SUVs For Sale 625.....................................Classic Autos 630....................................Autos Wanted 640..........................................Auto Parts 645.............................Heavy Equipment Recreation 650.............................................Scooters 652.......................................Motorcycles 654....................................Travel Trailers 656............................................Campers 658...........................RVs/Motor Homes 660....................................Marine Needs 661....................................Marine Parts 662.......................................Powerboats 664............................................Sailboats 665.......................................Houseboats 667.........................................Misc. Boats 669.............................Dockage/Storage 670.............................................Aviation 220 HELP WANTED LOWER KEYS HOUSEKEEPER AM/PM HOSTESS AM\PM SERVER ASSIST. GROUNDS ATTENDANT WATERCRAFT ATTENDANT GREAT PAY, INCENTIVES, BENEFITS, PAID VACATION HIRING BONUS AFTER 90 DAYS Please apply in person at 28500 Overseas Highway, Little Torch Key 387435 ANNOUNCEMENTS 010....................................Public Notices 020............................Volunteers Wanted 030...............................................Travel 040.........................................Personals 050....................................Lost & Found 060..........................................Pets Found 230..............Help Wanted Middle Keys 240.................Help Wanted Upper Keys OVERSEAS LUMBER SUPPLY AND FOREST TEK LUMBER Is now accepting applications for the following positions at our Big Pine facility: Retail Sales Applicant must be dependable, have a neat clean appearance and be customer service oriented. Experience in lumber and building materials, hardware and paint a plus. Position is full or part time with competitive pay and benefits Driver / Yardworker Applicant must have a current Class B CDL license, be able to load/unload building materials and work daily outside. This position is full time with competitive pay and benefits. Apply in person at 30251 Overseas Hwy., Big Pine Key. EOE SALES ASSOCIATES PART-TIME GFS Marketplace is currently seeking part-time Sales Associates for their Key West location. Flexible schedule offered To apply, please visit our website at: www.gfs.com. Search for "Retail Sales Associate-Key West, FL". Sales Associate’s shifts will be available Monday through Saturday 6am to 10pm and Sunday 7am to 7pm.. GFS Marketplace, an equal opportunity employer, is proud to be a drug-free workplace that drug tests all employees. PART-TIME SECURITY OFFICERS Needed at KW Golf Club community. Apply in person at guard house off of College Rd. Stock Island. PIER HOUSE RESORT AND SPA We are actively recruiting for the following positions: * Server * Line Cook * Spa Receptionist * AM F & B Supervisor * PM F & B Supervisor * Front Desk Agent * Hostess * Room Inspector * Reservations Agent Apply in person at 1 Duval St., Key West. Pier House is an equal opportunity employer and a drug free workplace. POSITIONS AVAILABLE at *WESTIN KEY WEST* *SUNSET KEY* *WEATHER STATION* * *BANANA BAY* and *BAYSIDE INN* Westin * Front Desk Agent * Server * Bellstand * Line Cook * Groundsperson * Restaurant Manager Marketing Consultant (Outside Sales) Key West If you are integrity-oriented, serious about customer service, care about solving problems for your clients, are self -motivated, you may be a candidate for an Outside Advertising Sales position. We are currently looking for outside advertising sales representatives who will assist local businesses with their advertising needs in the Islamorada and Key Largo area. We offer a competitive salary and commission package with benefits including paid vacation, group health and dental insurance, 401K plan and more. Please e-mail your resume and business references to: Tommy Todd; ttodd@keysnews.com, or fax to: 305-295-8004. EOE 389194 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014 ACROSS 1 Chicago trains 4 Sock flaw 8 Grant 12 Zodiac sign 13 Woodwind 14 Luau strummers 15 Purse item 17 Barbecue entrees 18 Not on board 19 Tour of duty ANSWER GRID FOR 4/9/14 CROSSWORD 220 HELP WANTED LOWER KEYS * Painter Sunset Key * Busser * Line Cook * Housekeeping Manager * Boat Captain + Previous applicants need not apply again. + Application hours are from 9am to 3:30pm. +Can also apply on-line to: DEAR ABBY: I’m a 27-yearold woman who has never had a boyfriend or been kissed. I was never interested in romance or having a significant other. I felt strong being independent and taking care of myself. Now that I have a degree, a career and a house, I feel ready to try to let a man into my life. I met a really nice guy a month ago. “Brian” and I have gone out several times and have a lot in common. He’s a gentleman, and he says he’s willing to wait for me. I have been having a difficult time letting myself be physical with him. Even hugging is uncomfortable for me. I know it’s because I have been a shy loner my whole life and I’m unaccustomed to being close to people. Even though Brian says he’ll be patient, I can sense his frustration. Physical closeness should come easily if you like and are attracted to someone. I feel abnormal. I don’t know if I’ll be this way forever or get more comfortable the more I know him. I’m afraid Brian -- and most men -- won’t be willing to wait that long. I’m afraid if I don’t move faster I’ll lose a great guy and never get another chance. What do you think? -- BLOCKED IN BOISE DEAR BLOCKED: Being intimate with someone because you’re afraid you’ll lose him or it will be your last chance is the wrong reason. I think that the sooner 440 UNFURN. HOUSES LOWER KEYS SOUTHERNMOST HOTEL COLLECTION Has the following positions available: *Assistant Housekeeping Supervisor * Room Attendant * Barback * Director of Engineering * House Attendant Southernmost is an EOE M/F/D/V Please apply at: semi-private front yard. No Pets. $1,395. month, includes all utilities.Contact Everett Watkins Preferred Properties 305-292-5097 WHY RENT? FREE MONEY Up to $10,000 to purchase BRAND NEW Home. Find out how to get: -Up to $10,000 in Down Payment Assistance -All Closing Costs Paid -Move in a Home from NO Money Down to $3500 total cost. -Low Payments starting at $1500 per month (+ taxes and insurance) Call Joe Cleghorn at (305) 304-6627 Call Compass Realty for an appt. 292-1480 or 888-884-7368 THE BANYAN RESORT is looking for Full Time General Maintenance Staff. General repair and maintenance skills required. Other experience is a plus: a/c , plumbing & electrical repair; pool maintenance, tile & grout experience and customer service. Need to fill ASAP. Medical and Vacation Benefits. Please apply in person at 323 Whitehead St. Drug Free Workplace resumehome@comcast.net The Sheraton Suites Key West Is currently looking to fill the following positions: Please pick up an application at any of our properties and leave at the front desk along with your resume. Crowne Plaza La Concha 430 Duval St. The Inn at Key West 3420 N. Roosevelt Blvd. Southernmost House 1400 Duval St. No phone calls please. Remington is an EOE ROUNDSMAN AT BISTRO SOLE’ FT position. Apply in person: 1019 White St, from 9am to 10pm. SALES Aqua Beachwear is hiring. Must have strong sales skills and work nights/weekends. Call Rose 305-292-9300. SECURITY STAFF MEMBERS Sloppy Joe’s is currently seeking full-time Security Staff Members. Qualified candidates must possess security, military, or martial arts experience. Must be able to work PM shifts to close. If interested, contact Marian Kershenbaum on 305-296-2388, x123 or marian@sloppyjoes.com EOE SEEKING FULL-TIME employee with A/C experience to assist with estimates, permit processing, coordinating inspections, etc. Must have valid driver's license. Please apply in person with Sub Zero, Inc. at 6003 Peninsula Ave, Stock Island MAN IS PATIENT AS INDEPENDENT WOMAN STRUGGLES WITH INTIMACY 440 UNFURN. HOUSES LOWER KEYS Drug Free Work Place An Equal Opportunity Employer Apply in Person 245 Front Street, Key West, FL 33040 Tel: 305-294-4000 Fax: 305-292-4348 RECEPTIONIST KW Insurance Agency needs experienced F/T receptionist with excellent phone/people skills. Must have extensive computer knowledge. Send resume to: *Night Audit *Wine Attendant *Front Desk Agent *Lobby Ambassador *Baristas *Food Runners *Pool Server *Line Cook *AM Server *Bartenders *Bellman DOWN 1 She, in Cancun 2 Aloha tokens 3 Former frosh 4 Souped-up cars 5 Theater awards 6 Place (abbr.) 7 Blondie’s shrieks 8 Odd 9 Being very thrifty 10 Car loans 11 Hairpin curve 16 Filleted fish 20 Explosive letters 22 Brooded over 24 Runway sight 25 Actress -Hagen 26 Frat party fixture 28 Wear and tear 31 Electric fish 33 Links grp. 34 Motor lodge 35 Pull 37 Huskier 39 Avenue crossers 42 Fleming of 007 novels 44 Departed 45 Bread ingredient 46 Accord maker 48 Humane org. 50 Many parents 52 Yul’s film realm 53 Active volcano 54 Campus figure 55 Radio personalities 57 Kind of tent 422 FURNISHED APTS. LOWER KEYS hr@westinkeywestresort.com REMINGTON LODGING AND HOSPITALITY Is now hiring for the following positions: 21 Insurance claim 23 Eggy drinks 24 Feinted 27 Ballet costume 29 Monsieur’s summer 30 Witnesses 32 Kind of curl 36 Marks 38 Meadow browsers 40 Wildebeest 41 Scrabble block 43 Longbow’s sound 45 Not so fast! 47 Challenge 49 Coon dog 51 Knew intuitively 55 Bumper mishap 56 Hunger 58 Green mineral 59 Kind of tape 60 Santa -winds 61 Bright object 62 Resorts 63 Fellow 220 HELP WANTED LOWER KEYS www.highgatecareers.com Full Time Positions *Front Desk Supervisor *Front Desk Agent *Night Auditor *Driver *Restaurant Supervisor *PM Room Attendant Full/Part Time Postions *Line Cook The Sheraton Suites Key West offer competitive pay, benefits to full-time employees and growth opportunity. *EOE & Drug Free Work Place Apply in person at: 2001 South Roosevelt Blvd.M-F, 10 am - 4 pm or e-mail to hr@sheratonkeywest.com 335 Antiques Wanted: Quality Chinese Antiques Buying: Jade figurines, bronze Buddhas and deities. Quality pieces. 314-503-4847. 404 ROOMS LOWER KEYS KEY HAVEN Waterfront Room Furnished. One person ony. $950 F/L/S. 395-8977 416 FURN CONDOS LOWER KEYS SMATHERS BEACH 1 and 2 bedroom fully furnished condos on 8 acres of gated seclusion, 2 pools & tennis courts. All you need are clothes and groceries. Available for 6 to 9 month leases. Monthly rates range from $1,350 to $1,850. Some Utilities included. Gale Shepard 305-294-6069 422 FURNISHED APTS. LOWER KEYS OLD TOWN 1 BD/1BA Fully Furnished, Available now through 12/31/14. Front porch, 5B KEYSWIDE CLASSIFIED 428 UNFURNISHED APTS. LOWER KEYS OLD TOWN DELUXE 1BD/1BA All new,W/D, Central air, Asking $1,925. mth plus utilities.Contact Everett Watkins Preferred Properties 305-292-5097 AT HOME IN KEY WEST 888-337-9029 Pictures and more properties at www.athomekeywest.com OLD TOWN Spacious 2/1.5 cottage with central AC, Washer/dryer, shared pool. Cats only. Available now. $2050/mo + utilities. NEW TOWN APR-NOV RENTAL: Furnished 2/2 condo with remodeled bathrooms; Split floorplan. Central AC, washer/dryer, shared pool, parking. Sorry no pets. $1800 includes utilities. See pictures & more properties @ www.athomekeywest.com AT HOME IN KEY WEST 888-337-9029 PRIME OLD TOWN Location Spacious 2BR/2BA Apt. $2,300/mo. Water/Sewer/Trash Inluded. Available May 1. 305-304-4797 434 FURNISHED HOUSES LOWER KEYS 1BR COTTAGE Suitable for 1 or 2 people, non-smokers, no pets. $1,200/mo. 1 year lease required, $1,000 security deposit. Includes, electric, water, propane, W/D and a fenced in yard for privacy plus assigned parking. Located on East Rockland Key, mm9.5. Call Roberta 305-587-3688. 440 UNFURN. HOUSES LOWER KEYS All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference limitation or discrimination.” This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation or the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. 352007 COMPASS REALTY 305-292-1480 Unfurnished Homes Call for more information. Furnished Homes: Several furnished units available for the next several months. Call for more information CLASSIFIED CUSTOMERS: Don’t deal with traffic or severe weather, just pick up the phone! Most classified advertising can be placed over the phone. Call today. 292-7777 Ext. 3 www.compass-realty.com KEY WEST REALTY Management Group 305-294-RENT (7368) www.keywestrealty.com Key West Golf Club 2br/1ba, W/D, D/W, C/A/C. $1,800/mo. plus utilities, F/S/S 2br/2ba Stock ISland W/D, C/A/C, D/W, fenced yard and 2 OSP’s. $1,800/mo., 6 month lease. Avail. May 1st. F/L/S. (305) 394-2762 452 VACATION RENTALS LOWER KEYS PLANNING YOUR TRIP TO KEY WEST? Historic Hideaways has been providing customers with Vacation Rentals for 25 years. Rent a private home or condo w/ pool for the same price as a hotel. Weekly, monthly or longer. Visit us in person at: 1109 Duval Street or www.HistoricHideaways.com or call at 800-654-5131. Full service property management. 464 Storage STORAGE Industrial Warehouses Sizes vary. Storage Containers On our site or yours. Call (305)294-0277 Get results now! Advertise here! Call 292-7777 514 CONDOS LOWER KEYS Key West By The Sea ON SMATHERS BEACH Oceanfront 2/1 2nd floor updated with storeroom $440,000. Ocean view/pool view 2/1 4th floor updated $365,000. Ocean view/pool view 1/1 3rd floor. $275,000. SOLD Pool/ courtyard view 3/2 3rd (top) floor $389,000. Pool/ courtyard view 2/1 3rd (top) floor $340,000. On 8 acres, lushly landscaped, pools, tennis courts, gated, no transient rentals, secured parking. Gale Shepard, Broker 305-294-6069 462 Office Space BUSINESS CENTER $600- $700 Includes all utilities Fleming St. at Duval 305-296-4087 keywestbc@aol.com BUSINESS IDENTITY $170/mo. 520 HOMES LOWER KEYS VA SPECIAL IS BACK Two Brand new 3/2 Bay Point Key homes. One on the water, one off the water. Ready to move in. you talk with a licensed therapist about your lifelong shyness and discomfort, the quicker you can understand the reasons for it and overcome it. Your doctor should be able to refer you to someone. If Brian is the right man for you, he will stand by you. But if he doesn’t, you’ll be able to more easily relate to someone else. DEAR ABBY: I am planning my wedding in the fall. My fiance and I are paying for the wedding and reception. I have worked at my job for a year, and I haven’t always been treated well by a few co-workers. I am reluctant to invite these people because I’m worried about the repercussions if I do. I know they will judge every aspect because they did it to another co-worker. I like a few of the people I work with, but I don’t know if I can invite only them. What do I do? -WEDDING PLANNER IN OMAHA DEAR WEDDING PLANNER: What you do is invite only those people you truly want to attend your wedding. It’s not necessary to apologize for it or to explain why. If you are put on the spot and feel you must give a reason, say that your guest list is limited because of financial constraints. It’s far more tactful than saying they are being excluded because they are rude, awful people, and you don’t want them anywhere near you on such an important occasion. 520 HOMES LOWER KEYS 520 HOMES LOWER KEYS 0 Down. 0 closing costs. Payment starting at $1,877/mo. including taxes & insurance. Program available on these homes only. Call Joe Cleghorn 305-304-6627 including Key West. 96.5% to 100% financing. Low payments, Low flood insurance. Call Joe Cleghorn 7 days a week anytime. 305-304-6627 KEY HAVEN 8 Azalea Drive, 3BR/2.5BA with pool on a canal. $530,000.Call for an appointment. Karen Carter Realtor 305-797-4553 Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate 3-4 BR/2BA Key Haven Large, 2,500 sq ft. immaculate home. 8,500 sq ft landscaped elevated corner lot. #1 Birchwood Dr. $649,000. Raymond Capas, Realtor 305.587.3483 BRAND NEW WATER FRONT Big Coppitt Key. 3BR/2BA, Call for details. 305-923-4153. FOR SALE BY OWNER 16-G Roberta, Stock Island. 3/2 Modular. Great buy at $325K. One owner Fla Lic REALTOR. Call Ken @ 393-9263. Brand New Waterfront Homes Big Coppitt, Geiger Key, Bay Point, Sugarloaf, Ramrod, Summerland, Little Torch, Big Pine, Tavernier & Key Largo. We also have homes available on dry lots in all the same locations 526 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY LIQUOR LICENSE FOR SALE 6 COP $3,000/mo. $20,000 down. Full financing available. Call 305-766-3417. 534 COMMERCIAL PROPERTY TURNKEY OLD TOWN 11,000 sq. ft. restaurant/bar complex . 190 seats, large garden/patio dining plus brewery operation. $4.9 million. Ray Capas, Realtor 305-587-3483 2 COMMERCIAL FISHING LOTS On Lucretia St. in BPK for sale. Owner financing considered. Call Rob 305-917-5218 REMAX COMMERCIAL International Exposure & Local Service to LIST & SELL valuable Commercial property & Businesses in the Florida Keys! *Bars/Restaurants -6COP Liquor License Valid for all Monroe County. Full Liquor Bar &/or Package. $3,000/mo. $25,000 -903 Duval St. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014 KEYSWIDE CLASSIFIED LEGAL NOTICES WITNESS my hand and the Official Seal of Said Court, this 13th day of March, 2014 Amy Heavilin, Clerk of the Circuit Court Monroe County, Florida By: Shonta McLeod Deputy Clerk Florida Statute 45.031: Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the Lis Pendens must file a claim within 60 days after the sale. April 10 & 17 , 2014 Key West Citizen Proposed Flood Hazard Determinations for the Unincorporated Areas of Monroe County, Florida , and Case No. 14-04-3390P. The Department of Homeland Security's Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) solicits technical information or comments on proposed flood hazard determinations for the Flood Insurance Rate Map (FIRM), and where applicable, the Flood Insurance Study (FIS) report for your community. These flood hazard determinations may include the addition or modification of Base Visible Corner lot, 4,575 sf Bldg, 2 COM units. Reduced $550,000 Bring Offers!! *BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES -Stock Island Marina 40 Wet & 72 Dry slips, fully leased & turnkey operation. 6 acres, vacant lot on US 1 for expansion. $4,600,000 -Old Town restaurant great location, good lease & Strong Gross & Net. $575,000 -White Knuckle Charters2 Custom Jet Boats w/ cruise ship contracts. Fun, profitable & growth potential. $339,000. *PRIME DUVAL ST. FOR LEASE -130 Duval St. Free standing 6,000+sf Bldg. 2 stories. May consider dividing. $40,000/mos., NNN $200,000 -222 Duval St. Entire Bldg. Retail w/ sales booth down. Apt. & storage up. $25,000/ mos. NNN, $50,000 & storage up. $25,000/ mos. NNN, $50,000 Curtis Skomp, CCIM Broker/Owner ReMax Keys Connection Commercial Division 410 Caroline St. The Heritage House Museum Visit our downtown office with parking! 296.1400-ofc 304.0084- Call or text. commercial sales and lease volume in 2013 and for the last 10 years combined. Commercial For Sale Search All Key West and FL Keys Commercial RE and Businesses For Sale at www.KeysRealEstate.com Turn Key Night Club For Sale or Lease. Strong Numbers, 1 Block from Duval Street. Old Town Restaurant 150 seats with full SRX liquor, Profitable. Real Estate included 631 Whitehead St. 4,020 SF building. Mix use, includes lg parking lot 1/2 blk from Duval St 16 Unit Stock Island Trailer Park Fully occupied, bring offers 5 Unit Investment Property Fully Occupied, steps to Duval Street Professional Office Condo For Sale On Kennedy Drive. 2,860 SF. Perfect for Doctor's Office. Contact Claude J. Gardner, Jr. or Will Langley. 305-766-3133 Prudential Knight & Gardner Realty # 1 in KEY WEST Uppper Sugarloaf 2 lots 1 permit. $ best offer. 797-8514 BIG COPPITT WATER FRONT ROGO exempt lot. Owner financing. Call 305-923-4153 2013 Kia Soul Fully loaded, 6K miles SAVE, SAVE, SAVE ----- 2011 Kia Sorento Auto, a/c, 44K miles. SAVE, SAVE, SAVE File No: 2013-CP-234-K IN RE: ESTATE OF PETER FRANCIS MCDONNELL A/K/A PETER F. MCDONNELL Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The administration of the estate of Peter Francis McDonnell a/k/a Peter F. McDonnell, deceased, whose date of death was October 17, 2013, is pending in the Circuit Court for Monroe County, Florida, Probate Division, 2014 Kia Sorento Auto, a/c, 10K miles. SAVE, SAVE, SAVE 305-295-8646 2013 Hyundai Genesis Coupe, fully loaded. 12K miles. SAVE, SAVE, SAVE 2014 New Kia Soul Starting at $15,900 ________ 2013 Kia Forte EX Auto, a/c, 16K miles. SAVE, SAVE, SAVE 2012 Kia Optima SX Turbo Auto, a/c, 22K miles. SAVE, SAVE, SAVE 2011 Kia Soul Auto, a/c, 39K miles. SAVE, SAVE, SAVE Tax, tag and DOC fee not included in sale price (305)295-8646 Call us and SAVE, SAVE, SAVE AIR CONDITIONING GENERATORS American Cooling Service LLC 305-407-6259 We Install Generators Diesel or L.P. 292-9277 AUTOS HOME Lic #CAC1817214 Service & Installation PAINTING & DECORATING Kenneth Wells 669 DOCKAGE/ STORAGE 305-332-0483 Painting • Faux Finishes PRINTING Commercial Printing on Quality Newsprint AUTOS WANTED ALL YEARS Junk or Used Cars, Vans & Trucks Running or Not! 4 Generations (305) 296-6985 Tabloids • Booklets Newletters • Info Guides 386896 19’ PROLINE FLATS BOAT Loaded with extras. New $3,000 trailer, well maintained $6,500 OBO. In Sugarloaf. Call Jim at 810-523-4987. WE CARE FOR YOUR UNOCCUPIED HOME Erika Lesta Cooke Communications elesta@keysnews.com 305-292-7777 Ext. 202 www.HomeWatchFLKeys.com Slips for rent at beautiful Sunset Marina 45 feet Commercial. Concrete floating docks in well- protected harbor. Please stop by Sunset Marina, 5555 College Road, Key West, or call (305) 296-7101 for more information. Naples-Liveaboard Slip Slip sales starting at $39,000. Slip rental starts @ $400/mo. Contact: (239) 289-3143. COMPUTER SERVICES • Web Site Design • Internet Advertising • Search Engine Marketing • Google Certified Partner 305-292-1880 (305) 509-3272 WINDOW PRESSURE WASHING JET SKI REPAIR Accurate Window and Pressure Washing LLC Keeping the Keys Clean JET SKI REPAIR ASE Certified Mechanic 30 Years Experience MM 23 Call Rick CONSTRUCTION RUDY KRAUSE, Let us take care of all your vehicle needs. Save your miles and drive with Niles. CONSTRUCTION Residential, Commercial & Property Mgt. Senior Discount ~ Licensed & Insured 305-395-9144 accuratewindowpressurewashing.com 305-712-0130 YACHT & SHIP SALES MARINE Looking to buy or sell a quality boat or yacht? MARINE DIESEL of the FLORIDA KEYS INC. Yacht Brokerage Since 1959 Lic. & Ins. CGC1520363 A Full Service Construction Company, Offering Quality New Construction, Renovations, Concrete Restorations, Docks and Seawalls We offer Nissan rentals: Sedans, Vans & Sports Cars Bill Leonard 305-872-2100 Authorized Diesel Sales & Service, Installation Rudykrauseconstruction.com 305-292-2300 Fiberglass Boat Repair and Custom Parts We offer nice, clean vehicles. Call us for our Daily, Weekly and Long term rates. 3500 N. Roosevelt Blvd. 305-294-1003 305-809-2104 www.nilesnissan.com ----- CALL 292-7777 X3 662 Power Boats 2014 Kia Rios In Stock Starting at $14,900 April 3 & 10, 2014 Key West Citizen Service Directory APRIL 9 – 15, 2014 2006 Toyota Highlander Auto, a/c, leather. SAVE, SAVE, SAVE 2014 Kia Optimas In Stock Personal Representative JOSEPH STETTER 15906 Nottinghill Drive Lutz, Florida 33548 Attorney for Personal Representative: ALAN ECKSTEIN, ESQ. Florida Bar No. 870064 3010 Flagler Avenue Key West, Florida 33040 Telephone: (305) 294-2247 Fax: (305) 293-9333 Primary E-Mail: Roccofat@aol.com Make sure they know your business. Advertise in the Citizen for just over $2.88 per day. KEY WEST KIA 3424 N. Roosevelt Blvd. Key West, FL 33040 2014 Kia Sorentos In Stock The date of first publication of this notice is April 3, 2014 New Residents Arriving Daily! 2012 Kia Sorento Auto, a/c, 30K miles. SAVE, SAVE, SAVE 620 Autos For Sale 2014 Kia Fortes In Stock IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR MONROE COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION 620 Autos For Sale 2004 Jeep Liberty Auto, a/c, 42K miles. SAVE, SAVE, SAVE The All-New 2014 Kia Cadenzas In Stock April 3 & 10, 2014 Key West Citizen 389018 FloridaKeysCommercial.com 536 LOTS & ACREAGE LOWER KEYS The administration of the estate of Gerald Ross Campbell a/k/a Gerald R. Campbell, deceased, whose date of death was November 7, 2013, is pending in the Circuit Court for Monroe County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is Clerk of the Circuit Court, Monroe County Courthouse, Probate Division, 500 Whitehead Street, Key West, Florida 33040. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative's attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against the decedent's estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court 388541 4,400sf. ground floor Bldg plus vacant 4,400sf. lot. 180 Seats. Mostly renovated. Lease $25,000/mos., NNN or Sale 4,500,000. -320 Grinnell Street Finnegan’s Irish Pub. 174 Seats In & Out, Real Estate, 2 Apts plus profitable Bus. $2,100,000 -Duval St. Prime location 150 Seats Indoor and large outdoor patio dining. Proven income and long-term lease. $1,500,000 -Greene St. Totally renovated and Turnkey. 150 Seat Rest & Bar. Long term lease. $925,000. -2338 N. Roosevelt Blvd 85 Seats, ample parking & Drive thru. $7,500/ mos NNN *MULTI-UNIT -808 Southard St. Historic Harris School 2 Acres on high ground; Solaris Hill. 18,000sf. Bldg. 5 RES units included. $12,500,000 -423 Duval St. 5,600sf. Bldg. Four NNN leased retail stores. 6% Cap rate $7,500,000 -Stock Island 6410 Fifth Street Fenced 2 Acres, entire block of 15 lots. 4,560sf. COM Bldg $3,950,000 -Summerland Key, 25000 Overseas Hwy. 10,000sf. Special Purpose bldg, and large corner lot. Lease $25/sf. or Sale. $3,392,500 -Cudjoe Key 50-90 Cruickshank Lane Oceanfront profitable Vacation Rental property. 1+ acres, Grand home plus 5 extra units, pool, Boat Docks. $2,750,000 -511 Olivia St. & 820 Center St. 2 Blgs, 2 Lots, 4 transient licenses, pool & great income. $1,999,000 -517 Truman Ave. & 924 Center St.Laundromat, 3 apts, rental cottage & 4 tran sient licenses. $1,999,000 Islamorada 82748 Overseas Hwy. 2/3 Acre Lot, Huge 10,000sf Bldg. Ample parking & great visibility on US1. $1,750,000 -1301 Truman Ave. Old Town. 8 legal RES units, corner L-shape lot with pool. $1,200,000 -Stock Island 6670 Maloney Ave. 4 lots w/separate util. 3 mobile homes rented. Zoned URM. $750,000 -925 Truman Ave. IN RE: ESTATE OF GERALD ROSS CAMPBELL A/K/A GERALD R. CAMPBELL. Deceased. 388556 534 COMMERCIAL PROPERTY File No: 2013-CP-236-K SP 1259 534 COMMERCIAL PROPERTY Personal Representative ALAN ECKSTEIN 3010 Flagler Avenue Key West, Florida 33040 Attorney for Personal Representative: ALAN ECKSTEIN, ESQ. Florida Bar No. 870064 3010 Flagler Avenue Key West, Florida 33040 Telephone: (305) 294-2247 Fax: (305) 293-9333 Primary E-Mail: Roccofat@aol.com IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR MONROE COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION NOTICE TO CREDITORS PUBLIC NOTICE DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY FEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY 534 COMMERCIAL PROPERTY The date of first publication of this notice is April 3, 2014 April 10 & 17, 2014 Key West Citizen PUBLIC NOTICE the address of which is Clerk of the Circuit Court, Monroe County Courthouse, Probate Division, 500 Whitehead Street, Key West, Florida 33040. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative's attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against the decedent's estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court WITHIN THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM. All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against the decedent's estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN SECTION 733.702 OF THE FLORIDA PROBATE CODE WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT'S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. 388537 THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED LAND, SITUATE LYING AND BEING IN THE COUNTY OF MONROE, STATE OF FLORIDA, TO WIT: ON THE ISLAND OF KEY WEST AND KNOWN ON THE KEY WEST REALTY COMPANYS SUBDIVISION OF TRACT 21 AND SALT POND LOTS NOS. 1, 2, 3, 4 AND 5 AS LOT 7 IN BLOCK 34, ACCORDING TO A DIAGRAM OF SAID SUBDIVISION RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 1 PAGE 43, MONROE COUNTY RECORDS: COMMENCING AT THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF HARRIS AVENUE AND 2ND STREET AND RUNNING IN A WESTERLY DIRECTION ALONG HARRIS AVENUE FIFTY FEET; THENCE AT RIGHT ANGLES IN A NORTHERLY DIRECTION ONE HUNDRED (100) FEET; THENCE AT RIGHT ANGLES IN AN EASTERLY DIRECTION ALONG AN ALLEY FIFTY (50); THENCE AT RIGHT ANGLES IN A SOUTHERLY DIRECTION ALONG 2ND STREET ONE HUNDRED (100) FEET TO THE PLACE OF BEGINNING. And commonly known as: 1303 2ND STREET, KEY WEST, FL 33040. And the Docket Number of which is Number 44-2012-CA-748-K 388532 YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action has been filed against you and that you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it on Carlos A. Perez whose address is 6500 Maloney Ave., Lot # 56, Key West, FL 33040 on or before May 7, 2014, and file the original with the Clerk of this Court at 500 Whitehead St, Key West, FL 33040 before service on Petitioner or immediately thereafter. If you fail to do so, a default may be entered against you for the relief demanded in the petition. The action is asking the court to decide how the following real or personal property should be divided: NONE Copies of all court documents in this case, including orders are available at the Clerk of the Circuit Court's office. You may review these documents upon request. You must keep the Clerk of the Circuit Court's office notified of your current address. (You may file Notice of Current Address, Florida Supreme Court Approved Family Law Form 12.915.) Future papers in this lawsuit will be mailed to the address on record at the clerk's office. WARNING: Rule 12.285, Florida Family Law Rules of Procedure, requires certain automatic disclosure of documents and information. Failure to comply can result in sanctions, including dismissal or striking of pleadings. SHERRY L. CULPEPPER, FREDRICK E. CULPEPPER, et al, Defendants. 388539 TO: MARIA YOLANDA VALDEZ Last Known address: UNKNOWN Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, AMY HEAVILIN Clerk Ad-Interim Clerk of the Circuit Court of Monroe County, Florida, will, on the 24th day of April, 2014, at 11:00 o'clock a.m., at 500 Whitehead Street, Monroe County, in the City of Key West, Florida, offer for sale and sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for CASH the following described property situated in Monroe County, Florida, to wit: 389019 NOTICE OF ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE (NO CHILD OR FINANCIAL SUPPORT) 388538 MARIA YOLANDA VALDEZ Respondent IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR MONROE COUNTY NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE BY CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT PUBLIC NOTICE WITHIN THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM. All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against the decedent's estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN SECTION 733.702 OF THE FLORIDA PROBATE CODE WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT'S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. Free Consultation Oceanman Fiberglass 305-766-0715 388543 NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE CARLOS A. PEREZ Petitioner And THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON F/K/A THE BANK OF NEW YORK, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE CERTIFICATE HOLDERS OF THE CWABS, INC., ASSET-BACKED CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2007-13, Plaintiff vs. PUBLIC NOTICE Flood Elevations, base flood depths, Special Flood Hazard Area boundaries or zone designations, or the regulatory floodway. The FIRM and, if applicable, the FIS report have been revised to reflect these flood hazard determinations through issuance of a Letter of Map Revision (LOMR), in accordance with Title 44, Part 65 of the Code of Federal Regulations. These determinations are the basis for the floodplain management measures that your community is required to adopt or show evidence of having in effect to qualify or remain qualified for participation in the National Flood Insurance Program. For more information on the proposed flood hazard determinations and information on the statutory 90day period provided for appeals, please visit FEMA's website at www.fema.gov/plan/prevent/fhm/ bfe, or call the FEMA Map Information eXchange (FMIX) toll free at 1-877-FEMA MAP (1-877-336-2627). 388540 April 3, 10, 17 & 24, 2014 Key West Citizen NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE Pursuant to ORDER CANCELING FORECLOSURE SALE AND RESETTING SAME entered in a case pending in said Court, the Style of which is: 388533 Case No.: 14-DR-300--K Family Division NOTICE OF ACTION Dated March 31, 2014 Amy Heavilin Clerk of the Circuit Court By: Brittany Burgohy Deputy Clerk 388735 NOTICE OF ACTION IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 16TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR MONROE COUNTY, FLORIDA 388888 6B Key West Sales Office Serving the entire Florida Keys keylimeboats@att.net Cell (305) 481-0063