Marilyn M. Aciego

Publisher Marilyn M. Aciego was born and raised in Lake County and is a graduate of Umatilla High School and Lake-Sumter State College. She began her journalism career at LSSC and in 2023 she was honored with LSSC’s Distinguished Alumni Professional Achievement Award. She began working at the Daily Commercial while she was in college and continued her career there as a reporter after she graduated. In her 20+ year-career, she covered many of the area’s top stories including the disappearance of Trenton Duckett, the death of beloved Sheriff Chris Daniels, both in 2006 and an exclusive interview with then-Eustis Police Capt. Gary Winheim, who was ambushed and shot by a wanted felon in 2019. In addition to Inside Lake, Marilyn is the single mom of a teenaged son and the Florida Bureau Chief for an international media organization.

Tomorrow’s Broadcast: Dr. Phil Features Lake County’s ‘Murder-For-Hire Plot’ Cheerleader

The following story was previously published on Lake Legal News.

UMATILLA, Florida — A local case that received national attention last September will be in the national spotlight again on Thursday.

The parents of Alyssa Hatcher, the former Umatilla High School cheerleader who tried to hire two people to murder them, are scheduled to appear on Dr. Phil Thursday, according to the show’s website, drphil.com.

In September 2019, the murder-for-hire plot was foiled after a witness came forward and told the Lake County Sheriff’s Office Hatcher paid two different people to murder her parents — one of them a Clermont Police officer. Hatcher stole her mother’s debit card, spent some of the money on cocaine and the rest on would-be hitmen.   Lake County Sheriff’s detectives arrested Hatcher and charged her with criminal solicitation of murder.

According to drphil.com, the show airs at noon and 3 p.m. Monday through Friday on WOFL Fox 35.

Read our original article here: https://www.lakelegalnews.com/article/lake-juveniles-plot-to-kill-parents-foiled/

Tomorrow’s Broadcast: Dr. Phil Features Lake County’s ‘Murder-For-Hire Plot’ Cheerleader Read More »

Weeks Of Threats To Shoot Up An Astatula House

The following story was published under a different headline in another publication.

ASTATULA, Florida — A Leesburg man who threatened to shoot up his victim’s house for several weeks followed through on his threat Thursday night — the same the day victim attended his daughter’s funeral.

According to an arrest affidavit, Groveland Police were investigating the theft of a 2007 Toyota Scion and Bobby Lynn Russell, 25, was named a suspect. About 10 minutes later, the Lake County Communications Center received a report of a drive-by shooting in Astatula and again, Russell was named a suspect.

The victim told a deputy Russell had been harassing his son for weeks and threatening to shoot up the victim’s home. While visiting with family after his daughter’s funeral the victim heard five to six gunshots outside. The victim stepped outside and a witness told him a black vehicle drove by and a man she believed to be Russell started shooting, the affidavit states.

A deputy did not find any bullet holes in the home, but did find a .380 Hornday shell casing in the road in front of the home. No one was injured.

Believing the Scion was involved in the shooting, various law enforcement officers began searching the area for the Scion when it was spotted shortly before midnight Friday on State Road 19, south of Howey-in-the-Hills. The Scion was traveling northbound when a deputy got behind it and followed it down Dewey Robbins Road and watched it conduct a U-turn in a driveway. The Scion continued northbound through Howey-in-the-Hills and fled when deputies activated their emergency lights.

The Scion sped down State Road 19, almost hitting a deputy and several Tavares Police officers “while driving extremely recklessly,’ the affidavit states. As the Scion approached County Road 561, it made an abrupt turn into a gas station, drove through the parking lot, attempted to get back onto County Road 561 and crashed into a wooded area. Russell exited the Scion with his hands up and was taken into custody. Deputies searched the car and found a stolen Taurus .380 handgun that was loaded and chambered. It was loaded with .380 Hornday self defense rounds — the same ammunition found at the scene of the drive-by shooting.

Russell is charged with shooting a missile at an unoccupied dwelling, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, no driver license, fleeing and eluding with wanton disregard and grand theft of a firearm. He is being held at the Lake County Jail on $96,000 bond.

Weeks Of Threats To Shoot Up An Astatula House Read More »

Meet A Public Information Officer: Lauren Brown

The following story was previously published on Lake Legal News.

As a young boy watching airplanes at North Perry Airport in Pembroke Pines in South Florida, Eustis Police Officer Lauren Brown imagined one day he would be flying one of those planes, but happening upon a vehicle crash changed everything.

Born in Jamaica, Brown, 35, moved to Fort Lauderdale when he was only 10 years old. “My parents wanted to get out of there. [They] wanted to give me a better life,” Brown tells Lake Legal News. He had a love of airplanes and wanted to be a pilot, even building model airplanes as a child. Being a law enforcement officer was not something he planned on. “That was not really on my radar at all.”

Brown was studying aerospace around 2007 and was driving home when he drove up on the wreck. “I was looking at this wreck and [I wanted] to help,” Brown explains to LLN. “That urge to help people is what drives me.” It was after that he switched from aerospace to criminal justice and received a degree from Broward College.

His urge to help people and charming personality make him a great fit for two roles at the Eustis Police Department — community relations officer and public information officer (PIO.) “I wear two hats,” Brown said, “community relations and public information officer.”

As community relations officer, Brown is out in the community at different events and gets to know the residents he serves. “People get to interact with a uniformed officer,” he said, “I get out of the car and shake their hands; I want to hear their stories. That’s one of the big benefits.” Brown feels his position has repaired old friendships between the department and the community and created new ones. “It’s created a lot of bridges.”

Brown is also the man behind the department’s Facebook page. He posts many different things from suspect photos to public service announcements. In January, he began posting as his alter ego, Major Trooper, donning a Star Wars’ storm trooper mask— a recent gift from his younger sister. Major Trooper has different rules when Chief Gary Calhoun is out of town, including Rule No. 4: “The only donuts that will be allowed are glazed and sprinkled. Sprinkles are for winners.” The department’s Facebook followers seem to be having fun being silly with Brown. Many of the Major Trooper posts have dozens of comments and shares.

In his role as PIO, Brown is the liaison between the media and the police department. He has to prepare press releases, answer the tough questions asked of him by the media and sometimes get in front of a live camera. He was thrust in front of several print media outlets and numerous television cameras for a major press conference when Capt. Gary Winheim was shot in December 2019. “I’ve always known at some point I’d have to get in front of the cameras—can’t hide behind press releases forever,” he tells LLN.

Brown believes his different roles both in law enforcement and working with law enforcement have helped him. He began his career at the Broward County Sheriff’s Office (BCSO) as a community service officer, a civilian position that entailed taking reports, crime scene investigation and crash reports. “Nothing in progress,” Brown explains to LLN, ”just after-the-fact stuff.”

After a new sheriff (the infamous Scott Israel) was elected in 2012, BCSO suffered numerous cutbacks and Brown was laid off. He put in applications at several agencies and was hired at the Lake County Sheriff’s Office as a crime scene investigator. He worked there for four years and during that time attended the law enforcement academy. He went to school at night while working days and completed his training.

He was hired by the Eustis Police Department five years ago. Brown said his CSI experience helps him a lot as an officer. He can collect his own evidence and dust for prints; having both the patrolman’s point of view and seeing the importance of the evidence gives him a complete advantage, Brown notes.

Meet A Public Information Officer: Lauren Brown Read More »

Exclusive: Wounded Eustis Police Captain Says, “I Want My Story To Be Told By Me.”

The following story was previously published on Lake Legal News.

EUSTIS, Florida — Eustis Police Captain Gary Winheim is grateful to be alive and grateful to the community he serves.

“I am humbled by the outpouring of support from the community. [I have] enormous respect for all the fire, medical and law enforcement professionals in the incident. Our community is truly strong.”

Just two days after being shot in the neck by an ex-con with a violent history, Winheim, his wife, Stephenie, and their beloved dog Laike sat down in their home with Lake Legal News for an exclusive interview Saturday. “This is my story,” Winheim said. “And I want my story to be told by me.”

Sporting bandages on his ear, neck and back, Winheim, 49, a 24-year veteran of Eustis Police Department is doing well after having surgery to remove the 9mm bullet that clipped his earlobe, entered his neck and travelled slightly down his back. Doctors at Orlando Regional Medical successfully removed the bullet Friday and he was released from the hospital. He is expected to make a full recovery.

Thursday, around noon, Winheim was in full uniform and in his unmarked truck— a truck well-known in the community to be driven by Winheim— at the traffic light at County Road 44 and State Road 19 when he heard gunshots coming from the area of a small mechanic shop, a Shell gas station and a Winn Dixie. Winheim’s wife, Stephenie, a former ICU nurse, was on the phone with him when he heard the shots. “I was not responding to a burglary call or a robbery call. I was not responding to any call. I was minding my own business,” the captain explains to LLN.

The Shell station at 1905 North State Road 19 in Eustis, Florida, was held up by an armed robber Tuesday evening and EPD was working on getting a warrant for the suspect’s arrest Thursday morning. 

Winheim, a 12-year SWAT team member, saw a dark-colored SUV leaving the parking lot of the Winn Dixie driving erratically and he began to follow it. Winheim followed the SUV eastbound down County Road 44, when it suddenly pulled over near Trout Lake Nature Center. Winheim pulled over too. At this point, Winheim did not know he was following Jayson Colvin, the man suspected of robbing Shell. “I had no idea who he was,” Winheim said. “No clue.” As captain over the Criminal Investigations Division, Winheim was familiar with the investigation and where that investigation was, but it never entered his mind that he might be following Colvin, he tells LLN. “We firmly believed he had left town.”

“I firmly believe he knew who I was because he has history in this county,” Winheim said. Colvin, who has a criminal history in Lake County dating back to 1998, was arrested by EPD in March for resisting without violence, possession of a controlled substance and possession of drug paraphernalia and again in April for resisting without violence. All the charges from the March case were dropped; he was sentenced to probation and given a fine in the April case.

“I was catching up to him and he pulled over,” Winheim relates. He did not know why the SUV stopped because he had not activated his emergency lights. He was not sure if the driver needed assistance, or if he was pulling over for sinister reasons. “All the scenarios that you’re going through—‘Is he hurt, was he just shot at, does he have somebody in the truck who’s hurt, or was just shot at?’” In addition to wondering if the man needed assistance, Winheim also wondered about his own safety. “Is he flagging me down because he needs assistance or does he have bad intent right now? This is how it processes for law enforcement; all of the bad things that could be happening to them that we need to help them with, or all of the bad things that they’re intending to do to us. You have all that processing through your head,” Winheim tells LLN.

“He (Colvin) jumps out, immediately raises the gun and starts firing at me. It’s an ambush,” Winheim recalls thinking. Winheim was still sitting in his truck when he took fire; he never got the chance to get out, or to grab his gun.

Colvin fired multiple shots (the exact number has not been released, as it is part of the still-active investigation) striking Winheim once, through the windshield of his truck.

“So when he jumped out and started shooting at me, I had no idea what was going on at that point. When he started popping off rounds and I got hit in the neck and I knew I was hit in the neck, it stunned me.” Winheim tried to lie down over the seat, but his truck has a large center console and he could not get low enough, “So I caught the round in the neck.”

When asked what was going through his head once he realized he was being shot at, Winheim said he thought to himself, “I’m in a really bad spot.”

“We can train for a whole bunch of tactical scenarios. You cannot train for an ambush. An ambush is an ambush. The only thing about an ambush is you can train to fight through an ambush.”

Colvin fled and Winheim bailed out, ran to the back of his truck and thought to himself, “This is not where I end.” At that point, his main concern was blood loss. A vehicle pulled in behind Winheim during the shooting and Winheim ran to it. The driver rolled down the window and said, “I’m on the phone with 9-1-1.” Winheim responded, “Ma’am, I am 9-1-1. I’ve already called them.” He asked her how bad he was bleeding and she gave him her jacket and put it against his neck and held pressure to his wound. 

EPD Senior Officer Wayne Perry Sr. was the first to arrive and was getting his med kit as EPD Sergeant Dan Post arrived and Winheim said “Dan, give me your med kit,” and  Post replied, “I brought a fire truck.” “Love me some Dan Post,” Winheim says. “He’s awesome.”

Winheim likes to give the fire department a hard time. “I mess with firefighters horribly,” he adds with a grin. “The old police-fire thing. I am ruthless with the fire department.” But Winheim teases them affectionately, “I truly do love those guys and appreciate the job they do.”

A firefighter Winheim has known for many years treated him, and Winheim looked at him and said, “Do not let me die.” And he said, “Oh, I’m not letting you die; you’re not going anywhere.” Winheim responded, “Great! Take care of me. I’m getting through this. I’m not done yet.” The firefighter said, “No, you’re not done yet. You’re getting through this.”

Always the jokester, even in a crisis, Winheim said, “And I want everybody here to know, all those jokes I made, I was just kidding.”

Colvin fled to Umatilla and crashed near Cookie’s Junkyard & Towing, 19813 County Road 450, bailed and ran into a wooded area. More than 500 law enforcement officers responded to the search scene from local, state, and federal agencies, Lake County Sheriff Peyton Grinnell said in a press conference Thursday.

After nearly seven hours of searching, a helicopter pilot from the Marion County Sheriff’s Office (MCSO) Aviation Unit spotted Colvin hiding under a canoe, along the shoreline of a small lake. The pilot saw him take position in an aggressive manner. Colvin refused to comply with deputies’ orders and was shot and killed.

Stephenie Winheim, now a Realtor, was home when she found out her husband was shot and Winheim called her himself. “Damn right, I did, That’s my wife.” He said, “Baby, I want you to know I’m OK. I’ve been shot. And I love you.” Choking back tears, he recalled, “I told her I was not gonna die and I was not leaving her.”

Since they’ve been together, Captain Winheim has been involved in three other shootings prior to Thursday’s shooting, “I definitely didn’t react the same way to this one as I reacted to the first one,” she tells LLN. “I worked in ICU, it’s high stress level. We see a lot of things; we’re good compartmentalizers. You can’t freak out— you have to deal with what’s going on.”

The shooting was just one week after the pair celebrated their seventh anniversary. They were married on December 12, 2012, (12-12-12) and dated for five years prior to getting married. They travelled to Nashville, Tennessee, to celebrate their anniversary and returned just three days before the shooting.

The love the two share for each other is obvious. Each one choked back tears several times while talking with LLN. They speak in unison, finish each other’s sentences and complement each other’s personalities. They both told LLN that they are best friends. 

Notably, the couple taught a section at EPD’s in-service training program to help teach spouses how to cope with the aftermath of serious incidents. “Almost 24 years with Eustis, almost 12 years as a SWAT operator; I’m an active shooter instructor, reality-based training. I’ve been really fortunate in my career to have attended a lot of training classes and a lot of firearms-related training classes. I consider myself a tactical guy,” the captain states.

Captain Winheim tells LLN that he thinks law enforcement is excellent at training, and he has seen it get better and better over his career, but there are still some flaws. “We are awesome at training right up to the point of pulling the trigger. We don’t teach our officers what happens afterward. We don’t teach officers about the media coming and asking them questions and getting on their Facebook to find things out,” he explains to LLN.

“There are law enforcement officers who believe, ‘Don’t include your spouse in your work. Don’t burden your spouse with your work. Don’t bring your work home,’” Winheim notes, but he disagrees. “If you don’t inoculate your spouse to what you do, prior to an event like this, how do you expect your spouse to get through an event like this? The body can’t go where the mind hasn’t been.” 

Exclusive: Wounded Eustis Police Captain Says, “I Want My Story To Be Told By Me.” Read More »

Mascotte Police Cruiser Crashes, Burns, Injured Officer Ejected — All As Brazen Pair Loot Police Property

The following story was previously published on Lake Legal News.

MASCOTTE, Florida — A pair of accused thieves are behind bars after stealing from a wrecked police cruiser.

Shortly after 3 a.m. Saturday, Mascotte Police officers responded to a single-car crash involving a Mascotte Police officer at North Talbott Avenue and East Myers Boulevard in Mascotte. The cruiser — which caught fire — was totaled, the officer badly injured, and numerous items were ejected as a result of the crash, according to arrest affidavits.

Police observed Lisa Carol Goodwin, 52, standing around near the crash scene with other civilians, according to an arrest affidavit. Bystanders told police that Goodwin was “stealing items from the Mascotte patrol vehicle and around the vehicle.” According to the affidavit, Goodwin was searched with negative results — however a witness later came forward and told police that he had purchased a flashlight from Goodwin for $10. Upon learning the flashlight was a stolen item, the witness contacted police and provided a sworn statement.

An eyewitness flagged an officer down and said she saw a man, later identified as Robert Charles Caruso, 37, take a scale, a flashlight, a knife and a vape that belonged to the officer.

Police found Caruso walking east on Myers Boulevard and “observed bulging objects coming from his pocket,” an affidavit states. Police asked what was in his pockets and he emptied them, and stated he was going to return the items to the injured officer at the hospital. Police secured Caruso and found a syringe filled with a clear liquid that tested positive for methamphetamine, though Caruso told officers, “it’s just water that’s in there.”

According to police, Goodwin claimed Caruso gave her the flashlight — which Goodwin admitted “she knew it belonged to the Mascotte Police officer that crashed.” Goodwin’s arrest affidavit notes, “The defendant uttered, ‘I knew you guys were coming for me.’”

Goodwin and Caruso were both arrested and taken to the Lake County Jail. Goodwin is facing charges of dealing in stolen property, larceny of law enforcement equipment from a vehicle and tampering or fabricating evidence. She is being held on $7,000 bond. Caruso was charged with larceny of law enforcement equipment from a vehicle, tampering with evidence and possession of methamphetamine. He is being held on $5,000 bond.

Mascotte Police Cruiser Crashes, Burns, Injured Officer Ejected — All As Brazen Pair Loot Police Property Read More »

Ford of Clermont Body Shop Manager Accused of $500,000 Embezzlement

The following story was previously published on Lake Legal News.

CLERMONT, Florida – A Clermont man is facing scheme to defraud and grand theft charges after a nearly year-long investigation by Clermont Police revealed he stole more than half a million dollars from his place of employment, according to a probable cause affidavit.  

Michael Deardoff, owner of Ford of Clermont, and another individual went to Clermont Police Department in October 2018 to report he suspected his body shop manager, Thomas Joseph Pritchard, 60, was misappropriating funds and claimed he had documentation to prove it. He also told police several employees had knowledge of Pritchard’s fraudulent practices, the affidavit states.

Lake Legal News called Deardoff for comment, but he had not returned the call at press time.  

One employee told a Clermont Police detective she was asked to go to the onsite body shop to assist Pritchard in getting things in order. The employee said she immediately knew something was not right, according to the affidavit. The employee reported “that when she walked onto the lot she discovered several vehicles that had never been to the dealership. [She] discovered some vehicles that had been in their service department yet never showed to have a body shop repair at their facility. The total of vehicles located was 19”, according to her police statement. She reportedly asked Pritchard what was up and according to her statement to police, Pritchard immediately became defensive and stated those vehicles were his and she needed to stay out of his business.

The employee also told police she found several older vehicles, some that had been there for more than a year. She questioned Pritchard about those and again, he told her to stay out of his business. The employee reported her findings to Deardoff and he also questioned Pritchard, who provided him with owner names. However those vehicles did not have repair estimates, and an estimate is always provided, according to the affidavit.  

The same employee was closing out repair orders and found Pritchard had “flagged” a technician for work one to two months prior. The employee questioned Pritchard about it and he began yelling at her and telling her it was none of her business, the affidavit states. She continued going through repair orders and found repairs were allegedly being charged out on tickets that did not belong to the vehicle, or technicians were being paid before a job was complete, in addition to the wrong technicians being flagged on vehicles that were finished. A meeting was called to include several employees including Pritchard and the employee who found the discrepancies. After the meeting, Pritchard called the employee into his office and told her to close the door. Pritchard began yelling at her and throwing his fists in the air, the affidavit states. Pritchard yelled, “[Expletive] this, I’m over this [expletive]!” The employee tried to calm him and he reportedly yelled, “I’m going to kill myself because I know I’m going to jail!” The employee asked why and Pritchard stated he “[expletive] up big time.”

The employee advised since her first day at the body shop customer would come to the shop and ask for Pritchard by name and if they couldn’t speak with him, they would just leave without leaving their name or a message and say they would just call him directly. Another customer came in to pay her bill and was very upset at the amount, $437.03. Pritchard came out and spoke with her and reduced her bill to $93.36. The employee told police Pritchard removed parts from the customer’s invoice to lower the bill, according to the affidavit.

Police spoke with another employee, a technician, who told him Pritchard had come to him on numerous occasions and instructed him to work on vehicles without repair orders. He also said Pritchard had called him in on several Sundays to work, the affidavit states. Yet, another employee in the parts department told police he questioned Pritchard about the parts he was ordering and Pritchard told him, leave it alone and it would all wash out in the end. The Clermont Police detective requested an investigative subpoena for bank records.

In February 2019, the detective conducted an interview with a fourth employee, an auto body mechanic. The mechanic told police Pritchard would give him side work after hours and on weekends and he would be paid either in cash, or Pritchard would add hours to work orders. The employee told police he had seen Pritchard accept cash from customers, as well.

The detective received documentation from one bank and found Pritchard had an additional account with another bank. This account was a business account for 1st Sterling Glass Repair/Superglass Windshield Repair. The detective found multiple checks in large amounts being written as payroll from the business account to Pritchard. The detective compared the account to documentation provided by Ford of Clermont and was unable to trace exact dollar amounts due to the fact Pritchard had allegedly accepted cash from customers. However, the detective was able to find parts and labor were misappropriated to repair orders that did not require the parts or labor associated with the repair.

The detective determined $565,328.13 was stolen.

Pritchard was arrested Sunday. He bonded out of the Lake County Jail the same day he was arrested on $35,000 bond. 

Ford of Clermont Body Shop Manager Accused of $500,000 Embezzlement Read More »

Child Reports Being Molested By Man And Woman — Man Released From Lake County Jail, Woman Remains On “No Bond”

The following story was previously published on Lake Legal News.

MINNEOLA, Florida — A woman is behind bars and a man released on $100,000 bond after a child disclosed to a school resource officer she had been molested, according to arrest affidavits.

Cassandra Leigh Montgomery, 44, admitted to a Lake County Sheriff’s Office detective that she told the victim — who was 7 years old at the time — to touch Emmanuel Paul Blaise’s penis before Montgomery had sex with him in front of the little girl, according to Montgomery’s arrest affidavit. Due to heavy redaction in the affidavit, it is unclear what Montgomery’s relationship is to the victim.

Montgomery told LCSO Blaise, 35, would often have fantasies about having sexual encounters with children and she “just played along sort of like in a role play scenario.”

The victim told an interviewer at the Children’s Advocacy Center Montgomery was only present when she directed the victim to touch Blaise, but Blaise touched her on three other occasions when “everyone was asleep or not home,” the affidavit states. On one of those occasions, Blaise is alleged to have attempted sexual intercourse with her, but “stopped when she was in obvious pain.”

Montgomery was arrested Wednesday after admitting the acts to LCSO and Blaise was arrested after refusing to answer a detective’s questions. Montgomery is facing charges of lewd and lascivious behavior, victim less than 12; lewd and lascivious molestation, victim less than 12 and child neglect. She is being held in the Lake County Jail on no bond. Blaise is facing charges of sexual battery on a child under 12 a capital felony punishable by mandatory life; lewd and lascivious molestation and lewd and lascivious exhibition. He has been released on $100,000 bond.

Child Reports Being Molested By Man And Woman — Man Released From Lake County Jail, Woman Remains On “No Bond” Read More »

Sheriff Chris Daniels

This Article was First Published in Lake Legal News in August 2016 — Issue No. 27.

LAKE LEGAL NEWS EDITOR’S PROLOGUE: Our LLN associate editor, Marilyn M. Aciego, worked for a local newspaper in 2006. Just a few months after she was promoted to the Lake County, Florida, police beat, the county experienced a year its citizens would never forget. On an August day in 2006, Marilyn found out she was pregnant with her only child on the very same day that little Trenton Duckett was reported missing. Marilyn would become a frequent guest on Nancy Grace to discuss the nationwide story and just a few months later — in October of 2006 — she would also cover the death of Lake’s beloved Sheriff Chris Daniels. The following is an account of both tragic stories from her personal point of view.)

October 14, 2006 was a Saturday night and my roommates and I were playing Monopoly. Granted, there isn’t much for a single, pregnant girl to do on a Saturday night in Lake County, Florida. I was still writing almost daily stories on the Trenton Duckett case and I was sick all the time and exhausted. Being the police reporter at a local newspaper, I knew that the annual Battle of the Badges charity bus race was scheduled for this same evening in nearby Volusia County, but I had decided not to cover it. It was a great networking event, but no “real” news ever happened, so I decided to skip it. My instincts failed me that day.

It was around 10:15 p.m. and we were well into our game. My phone rang and it was one of my better sources. As soon as I saw his name on the screen I knew it must be something important. He didn’t call that late often, so I immediately turned on my reporter brain

“Hello.”
“Hey, what are you doing?”
“Playing Monopoly.”
“Well, get up, you’re going to work.”
“Ha, I’m not going to work at 11 o’clock
on a Saturday night.”
“Yes, you are. Chris Daniels is dead.”

I honestly couldn’t believe what I heard. A million thoughts ran through my head. Could this really be true? What happened? Was he shot? Heart attack? Car crash? I was dumbfounded. My source told me he had been run over by a bus at the Battle of the Badges. That was even more unbelievable. I quickly hung up with him and called the Lake County Sheriff’s Office Public Information Officer, Sergeant Christie Mysinger. (Mysinger is now a lieutenant in the Road Patrol Division.)

Mysinger answered the phone and she was very subdued. If you have ever met Mysinger, you know she has a bubbly, happy personality. When she answered, I only asked her this: “Is it true?” And she burst into tears. That was all the confirmation I needed. By this time, it’s nearing 11 p.m. and the paper will be going to press within the hour. I called the copy desk and said words I never thought I’d say — “Stop the presses!”

The next call I made was to our newspaper photographer, David Manning. David knew when he saw my number, especially that time of time of night, it was something serious. I told him to meet me at the Lake County Jail in Tavares, Florida — and there began a very long night.

Photo Credit: LLN Magazine

The Battle of the Badges was a charity fundraiser hosted by Volusia County Sheriff Ben Johnson to benefit the Florida Sheriff’s Youth Ranches. Participants drove retired school buses in vibrant colors with painted windshields in a short race that was in its fifth year. In the 12th lap of the 15-lap race, Daniels’ blue bus was struck by a bus being driven by Seminole County, Florida, Sheriff Don Eslinger. The impact threw Daniels from the bus and he was run over by his own bus (and Eslinger’s). Daniels’ wife Michelle was in the stands along with numerous Lake County Sheriff’s Office employees. (Also in attendance that night was Lake County Jail Operations Chief Gary Borders. Within hours of Daniel’s death, Borders would be appointed as Lake County’s new sheriff by then-Governor Jeb Bush.)

I arrived at the jail before any of the other media outlets. I had never been there that late and it was dark and eerie. I sat in my car and waited for Mysinger. She pulled up about 10 minutes later and though I am not a touchy-feely person, I extended my arms to her. (That was the beginning of a long friendship, lasting to this day.) She looked broken; there is really no other word for it. Every time I saw her, she was so well put-together and that night she was a mess. We waited for hours outside the jail. Early Sunday morning Mysinger called a press conference and made the official announcement. Lake County Sheriff Chris Daniels was dead. On his 47th birthday.

As things unfolded, the Florida Highway Patrol began investigating and Lake County began to mourn. Everywhere you went, flags were at half-staff, law enforcement officers wore black bands around their badges and local businesses changed their signs to reflect their sorrow. Daniels was very well-liked and you’d be hard-pressed to find a longtime LCSO employee that doesn’t have a fond “Chris” story.

The mood around the county — especially in the Golden Triangle area — was somber for many, many months following Daniels loss in 2006. People were sad and hurt, but most of all I think they were in shock. Our young, vibrant, newly-married sheriff had been taken away from us and it was hard to accept. FHP released its findings and we found out Daniels was not wearing his seat belt.

(EPILOGUE: When recently asked to reflect back and provide her thoughts about that fateful night a decade ago, Lieutenant Christie Mysinger recalls, “I had conducted a lot of press conferences as the Sheriff’s Office Spokesperson, but that night was different, that night it was family.” She adds, “I think we were all in shock. We had just had cake and sung ‘Happy Birthday’ to him hours earlier at a D.A.R.E charity golf tournament and then, he was gone.”

Lake County’s current (and third longest serving) sheriff, Gary Borders, told LLN back in a 2009 interview about having suddenly become Lake County’s top-cop: “I would give it all back to have Chris Daniels here.” For this current article Sheriff Borders adds: “Chris had so much vision and was very passionate about leading the Sheriff’s Office. But he wasn’t only a great leader, he was also a great friend to our community. He was well respected and just an all-around great guy. He’s still missed to this day.”

In an extremely rare public statement, Chris White — who took Daniels in as a boy, following Daniels’ father’s death — shared the following exclusively with LLN: “Chris was special as both a child and a man. His father was my best friend. On his deathbed he asked two favors of me, Please promise me you will see my child gets a high school diploma,’ and ‘When you think he is old enough to appreciate it, please give him my First American Edition of Don Quixote.’ I felt honored to achieve both of his wishes. It was many years later before I discovered the significance of his last wish. George Washington purchased a copy of Don Quixote just hours after signing the Constitution, signaling that the responsibility of upholding the document was now in the hands of the nation. People like Chris are the ones who live in memory forever.”)

Sheriff Chris Daniels Read More »

Lake Juvenile’s Plot to Kill Parents Foiled

The following story was previously published on Lake Legal News.

[09/11/19 1:44 p.m.] UMATILLA, Florida – In a story that has now gained national attention, LLN was the very first to report that one of the the Umatilla High School cheerleader’s intended murder victims – her stepfather – is a Clermont law enforcement officer. Now LLN is the very first to report that this same 17-year-old girl who is accused of plotting to have her mother and stepfather killed is no stranger to the law. LLN was tipped off late Tuesday that Alyssa Hatcher’s stepfather’s guns were stolen last year during one of multiple house parties thrown by Hatcher. The parties were thrown while her mother and stepfather, Clermont Police Lt. Michael Scheller were out of town.

PHOTO: Facebook

According to the report taken by Umatilla Police Department and obtained exclusive by LLN, Scheller arrived home from vacation in September 2018 to find that the keys to his gun safe were missing. He later found them in Hatcher’s room. Once he opened the safe, he found that his department-issued Glock 22, a Para Ordinance 45 and a Ruger 357 revolver were missing.  His duty belt, handcuffs and flashlight were also missing. (The Clermont Police Department is also listed as a named-victim in the police report.)

When asked why she had the safe keys, Hatcher advised police she took the keys the mow the yard as her parents had requested. She also told police three unknown males attended the party and she saw them in the hallway, but “never thought anything of it and just thought they were going to the restroom.”

Umatilla Police investigated and interviewed numerous juvenile witnesses, but the guns were never found.

[09/10/19 2:13 p.m.] UMATILLA, Florida – LCSO Sgt. Fred Jones confirmed to LLN that Hatcher’s stepfather is a law enforcement officer. Outside sources and social media confirm that her stepfather is Clermont Police Lt. Michael Scheller. Hatcher is a former Umatilla High School cheerleader.

[Original Breaking Story] UMATILLA, Florida – A 17-year-old girl is facing murder solicitation charges after detectives say she paid two different people to murder her parents. LLN is actively working to confirm whether one of the alleged intended victims — the girl’s stepfather, is a Clermont, police officer.

An unidentified juvenile made contact with a Lake County Sheriff’s Office school resource deputy and told the deputy the suspect had given her friend “a lot of money” to kill her parents, according to the arrest affidavit. An investigation found that Alyssa Hatcher stole her parents’ debit card and completed two transactions, totaling more than $1,400. She was arrested by Umatilla Police Department on theft charges.

LCSO Det. David Causey interviewed the suspect’s boyfriend who told him he saw his girlfriend at a “known drug house” early Monday morning and she told him she wanted to kill her parents. Causey interviewed Hatcher, who admitted she stole the debit card and wanted her parents dead. She said she spent $100 on cocaine and gave $400 to the unidentified friend. The friend never carried out the murder plot, so Hatcher gave $900 to a black male to complete the job. The plot was foiled when the witness came forward. The victims, Hatcher’s parents, advised they wanted to prosecute and the girl was charged with criminal solicitation of murder.

This is a developing story.

Lake Juvenile’s Plot to Kill Parents Foiled Read More »

Inappropriate Teacher-Video Leaks Out To Lake County Students

The following story was previously published on Lake Legal News.

[09/06/19 9:45 p.m.] UMATILLA, Florida – Due to the nature of its content, LLN is declining to publish the video itself, to avoid further mental harm to students. However, even a cropped screenshot excerpt of the leaked video reveals that the unnamed woman appeared shocked at the salacious language being used, which is the subject of the ongoing investigation by Lake County Schools.

[09/06/19 4:56 p.m.] UMATILLA, Florida – Lt. John Herrell has informed LLN that the LCSO took a report, investigated the matter, and having determined that no criminal violation exists, has referred the matter to Lake County Schools.

09/06/19 2:45 p.m.] UMATILLA, Florida – A Umatilla Middle School teacher is under investigation by Lake County Schools after several social media videos went viral during the hurricane break.

Todd Erdman, employed since 2007, shared numerous videos on the social media platform TikTok, containing sexually explicit statements. The videos were spotted by a student who then shared them with friends and they spread throughout the community in a matter of hours. The videos were sent to LLN Thursday, by a concerned parent. The school district was made aware of the videos after a parent complained about the videos early Thursday morning.

Imani Williams, multi-media specialist and assistant public information officer for Lake County Schools told LLN that Erdman called in sick Thursday and Friday, but is under an active investigation. When he returns to work, he will be placed in a no-student contact position, Williams said. “We urge all of our teachers to operate with integrity.”

Geoff Rose, whose children were taught by Erdman, is appalled. “I find it disgusting. As a parent and youth coach, doing things like this is highly unacceptable,” Rose said. Rose has coached youth sports for 20 years.

Erdman has no prior disciplinary action, according to Williams. What happens next will be determined by outcome of the investigation. “We are working our hardest to do the most thorough investigation we can,“  Williams said. “We are here to do the best job possible.” Williams said the Lake County Sheriff’s Office also investigated. A call to LCSO was not returned by press time.

[Original Breaking Story] TAVARES, Florida – Sources are telling LLN that a Lake County middle school teacher is under investigation after inappropriate videos shared on the social media platform TikTok were viewed by numerous students during the hurricane break. A student stumbled upon the video and shared it with friends and it spread on social media in a matter of hours.  

A concerned parent emailed two of the videos to LLN Thursday. One video, 16 seconds in length shows the teacher having a verbal exchange with an unknown female. The conversation has graphic sexual connotations that most would consider vulgar. The second video, just eight seconds, shows the teacher in a bathtub making another graphic sexual remark.

No one could be reached at Lake County Schools after hours.

This is a developing story.

Inappropriate Teacher-Video Leaks Out To Lake County Students Read More »

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