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Wednesday, January 22, 2025

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Orlando Woman Charged With DUI With Serious Bodily Injury After Crash Critically Injuring 2 Young Children In Frostproof Crash

32-year-old Ashauntie Cox (DOB 2/15/1991) of Orlando, who caused serious bodily harm to two children in her vehicle while fleeing from two crashes and driving under the influence, was arrested in Polk County on Friday, May 19, 2023, and charged with several felonies.

According to witnesses and information developed during the investigation, the first crash occurred around 8:00 p.m. on US Hwy 27 at the intersection with US Hwy 98 near Frostproof. Cox was driving a blue Kia southbound on Hwy 27 when she struck a grey Chevy Silverado pickup truck and then fled at a high rate of speed. As she continued to recklessly speed south down Hwy 27, weaving in and out of slower moving traffic, she rear-ended a 2016 Honda CRV while trying to pass between that SUV and the vehicle next to it which were both also going southbound. The victim driving the CRV was taken to Sebring Hospital, where he was treated and released with minor injuries.

The collision caused Cox’s vehicle to flip several times, ejecting two Orlando children, ages 5 and 8 years old. Both sustained significant injuries, and they were taken to Tampa General Hospital where they are both in critical condition. A 27-year-old female passenger was also seriously injured along her spinal cord, hip, and back. She remains at Lakeland Regional Health Medical Center in stable condition.

When deputies arrived at the scene of the crash, they detected the odor of marijuana and located a bottle of tequila in Cox’s vehicle. Cox was transported to the hospital and interview by deputies. Cox told deputies they were driving from Orlando to Avon Park to celebrate the 5-year-old’s kindergarten graduation. She admitted to smoking marijuana earlier in the day, and to having four shots of tequila. Her blood was drawn for further analysis, and she displayed several signs of impairment. 

She was booked into the Polk County Jail and is being charged with:

·        Three counts DUI with serious bodily injury (F3)

·        Two counts negligent child abuse with great bodily harm (F2)

·        Reckless driving (F3)

·        One count DUI with property damage (M1)

·        One count DUI (M2)

Further charges are pending the outcome of the investigation. 

“This woman had no regard for anyone’s life when she got behind the wheel intoxicated and then drove recklessly down a major highway, but what’s worse is the blatant disregard she had for the lives of the innocent children in her car. I expect a successful prosecution to hold her accountable—and let’s hope she loses her driving privileges if she’s released from jail or prison. Please keep these babies and their families in your prayers.” – Grady Judd, Sheriff

In Loving Memory of Edwin Morris Friedlander, 93, of Lake Wales

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Edwin Morris Friedlander, 93, of Lake Wales, Florida, passed away peacefully in his home on January 19, 2025.  Edwin was born on July 13, 1931, at Lake Wales Hospital to Harry and Celia Friedlander.  He graduated from Lake Wales High School in 1948 and the University of Florida in 1952.  He enlisted in the US Army upon graduation from UF and went on to serve his county in Korea before returning home to Lake Wales. 

Edwin’s lifelong contributions to this community are remarkable and have left an indelible impact.  He served on countless boards and volunteered across the county with the Rotary, Chamber of Commerce, Lake Wales Hospital, Boy Scouts, where he was an Eagle Scout, and many other organizations.  Edwin was also known in the community for his Five and Dime in downtown Lake Wales that was a fixture for decades. He loved visiting with people, both new and old friends.  He was a lifelong Florida citrus grower and rancher who worked hard to preserve the way of life and landscape he inherited from his father.  Edwin was recognized as the Lake Wales Citizen of the Year and later as Pioneer of the Year for his many accomplishments.  Edwin never met a stranger and was known for his kindness, curiosity, and wit.  He was an avid Gator fan who was rarely seen not wearing something orange and blue. 

Through all Edwin accomplished in his life, he would say it was the relationships that meant the most to him.  He is survived by his wife of 42 years, Kathy, who faithfully cared for and supported him.  Edwin was a proud father of Randy (Julie) of Columbus, OH, Doug (Anne) of Atlanta, GA, Allen of Winter Haven, FL, Carolyn (Bobby) of Lake Wales, FL, and Laurie (Keith) of Alachua, FL.  He was preceded in death by a son, Marty.  Edwin is also survived by 10 grandchildren, 3 great-grandchildren, and countless more whom he considered family. 

A visitation will be held on Wednesday, January 22 from 6:00-8:00pm at Marion Nelson Funeral Home in Lake Wales and a graveside service will be held on Thursday, January 23 at 11:00 am at Oak Hill Burial Park in Lakeland.

In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made in his memory to Bok Tower Gardens or the Marfan Foundation. 

Edwin will be deeply missed by his family, friends, and all who knew him.  His legacy of service, kindness, and dedication to his community will continue through the many he touched. 

Accident on 60 in West Lake Wales Causing Delays

Photo by Maria Iannucci 

At approximately 3:33 PM, on Tuesday, January 21, 2025, a traffic collision was reported at Highway 60 W. and W. Lake Wales Rd. North in Lake Wales.

There is one vehicle at the scene showing damage, and law-enforcement is present. There is a backup of traffic, headed west on Highway 60, but no lanes are blocked.

Please proceed with caution as you are driving through this area and expect a short delay.

Party Like The 1840s at the Alafia River Rendezvous This Weekend Near Bartow

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by James Coulter

Get ready to party like it’s the 40s. The 1840s! Come to Alafia River Rendezvous this weekend in Homeland (near Bartow) and check out how life was like for pioneers in the good old days.

Hosted by the Florida Frontiersmen, the Alafia River Rendezvous is the largest pre-1840 living history encampment in the Southeast U.S.

More than 1,000 historical reenactors, including adults and children, congregate in the Florida Wilderness to set up camp and live the life of pioneers in pre-1840s America.

Come see blacksmiths craft tools and weapons from red-hot, bakers bake homemade bread and other pastries from clay ovens, and woodworks make brooms and other household items from hay and wood.

Greg Fulbright, President of the Florida Frontiersmen, has been attending the Alafia River Rendezvous with his wife for nearly 30 years. Being able to recreate the life of the good old days has been quite the experience.

Every year, the Rendezvous draws in hundreds of children from local schools and scout troops. Greg mentions how many of the children really enjoy being able to experience living history, to the point where they prefer it to other local attractions.

“The kids really love it,” he said. “They write us letters every year saying they’d rather come here than go to Disney World.”

The Alafia River Rendezvous will be hosted on Fri., Jan. 24 and Sat., Jan. 25, 2025 from 9 AM to 3 PM. The event will be hosted at 1000 Old. Ft. Meade Rd. in Homeland, FL, six miles south of Bartow off of Highway 98 & CR 640.

Admission is $15 for adults, $5 for children under 15 and veterans, and free for children under 4. For more information, visit their website at AlafiaRiverRendevous.org 

Greg Fulbright recently appeared on our newest episode of the Chattin on the Ridge podcast. Give it a listen on Acast: https://shows.acast.com/chattin-on-the-ridge/episodes/ep-51-alafia-river-rendezvous-wgreg-fullbright

Babson Park Woman’s Club Spaghetti Dinner Jan. 25

This Saturday, January 25, 2025, the Babson Park Women’s Club, located at 1300 N Scenic Hwy., Babson Park, is hosting a Spaghetti Dinner from 5:00 – 7:00 p.m.

Spaghetti, salad, garlic, bread, and dessert will be served. Tickets are $12 foradults, and $6 for children under 12. Attendees may dine in their historic building or have their meals packed to enjoy at home.

For more information, email [email protected].

In Loving Memory of Autrey Gene Henson, Sr., of Frostproof

Autrey Gene Henson, Sr. “Big Gene” or “Papa Gene” of Frostproof passed away Saturday, January 18, 2025, at his residence. 

He was born August 11, 1942, at Huxford, AL to the late Carey and Girlie Henson and he came here in 1970 from LaBelle. He was 100% native American Indian and member of the Poarch Band of Creek Indian Tribe. He loved his family and friends and being a truck driver.   He was very well loved by everyone and was known as a very giving person. He enjoyed going on trips to Statenville, Georgia to see Wayne and Wendell. He had a green thumb and enjoyed going to breakfast at the Roost. He liked the casinos and his black ’72 Chevy truck. He looked forward to going on the senior trips with the Poarch Band of Creek Indian Tribe.

Autrey was preceded in death by his wife, Raquel Henson, his son, CJ Henson and a brother, Ray Henson. Survivors include his children, Becky Williams (Jeff) of Avon Park, Autrey Gene Henson Jr “Willie” of Frostproof, Marty Henson of Avon Park, Laurie Painter (Mike) of Avon Park, Maggie Elyard (Tom) of Frostproof, Rebecca Henson of Frostproof and Jessie Henson of Frostproof; sisters, Kay Pierce of Arkansas, Ellen Creek (Larry) of Fort Pierce, Judy Flint (Chris) of Fort Myers, Yvonne Hunt of Lehigh, Beverly Balint (Serb) of Lehigh and Nancy Rispoli (Tony) of Lehigh; brothers, Terry Henson (Janet) of Tennessee, Wayne Henson of Avon Park and Kenneth Henson of Frostproof; 11 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren.

A visitation will be held from 6:00 until 8:00 p.m. Thursday, January 23, 2025, at Marion Nelson Funeral Home in Frostproof. The funeral service at 1:00 p.m. Friday, January 24, 2025, at Family Life Church of Frostproof with Pastor Richard Cecil and Rev. Kelly Galati officiating. Interment will follow at Silver Hill Cemetery. 

JC Reviews: Kraven the Hunter Makes Madame Web Look Good!

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by James Coulter

 

Let’s be honest: was anyone expecting this movie to be good?

Kraven the Hunter is the last in the line of films attempting to create a cinematic universe of Spider-Man characters sans Spider-Man: Venom, Morbius, and Madame Web. And to no one’s surprise, nobody wanted to watch Spider-Man movies without Spider-Man.

 

Every single one of these movies has been terrible. The only exception is Venom, but only because those movies proved to be so bad they’re hilarious. So, was it any surprise Kraven the Hunter turned out to be a massive flop?

Honestly, the only reason I even watched this stinker was because I had to watch two movies, one of which was Nosferatu. The only other movies playing at the theater were Sonic 3 (which I already reviewed), Gladiator II (which I never saw the first movie), and Mufasa (which I refuse to watch on principle).

So, I knew I was watching this movie under protest. And I knew it was going to be bad. The only question was, “How bad?” Bad enough to make you visit the DVD aisle of a store just so you can find a copy of Madame Web and apologize for being too harsh on it.

Yes, that bad!

Let’s skip pretenses. We know this movie was awful. Let’s just explain why.

Kraven the Hunter follows the story of Sergei, one of two sons of a criminal overlord. During a hunting trip, he is mauled by a lion. His life is saved through a potion given to him by a voodoo priestess. That potion also gives him the strength and agility of a lion. Sergi eventually escapes the clutches of his abusive father and uses his new powers to hunt down poachers. And so he becomes Kraven the Hunter, a hunter who hunts the hunters.

Years later, his brother, Dimitri, is kidnapped, and now Kraven needs to hunt down his captors. However, he will need to evade a super-powered assassin and one of his father’s former colleagues to do so. Will Kraven take down the hunters along with his father and his criminal empire?

Kraven the Hunter does the impossible. It makes Madame Weblook good in comparison. Yes, it’s really that bad!

Madame Web was undoubtedly bad, but at least it was bad in interesting ways. At least it had interesting ideas and concepts, even if it failed spectacularly in implementing them.

Madame Web had an interesting concept concerning time travel and manipulation. It didn’t implement that concept very well, but it was interesting nonetheless and could have made for a good movie if done properly.

Sure, Madame Web had bad dialogue, line deliveries, flat characters, and incessant Spider-Man Easter eggs up the wazoo, but at least all of those flaws made the film so bad it’s good. At least Madame Web was bad enough to be unintentionally hilarious. At least it had notable flaws to talk about.

But, folks, what am I supposed to talk about with Kraven the Hunter? This isn’t even a movie that’s so bad it’s good. It’s just so bad it’s boring. There is nothing interesting to talk about, either good or bad.

Stop me if you heard this one before: a person is on the near brink of death until he is saved by magic that gives them superpowers. If that sounds like something that’s been done before, that’s because it is, and Kraven the Hunter does absolutely nothing new or original with it. Kraven is just some guy who’s super strong and agile and who uses his powers to fight criminals…you know, like most other superhero movies!

The only interesting note is with the villains. One is an assassin who can freeze time, which sounds cool, but, like everything else in the movie, this character’s not put to good use. And his defeat in the end feels extremely anti-climatic.

And then there’s the Rhino. No spoilers, but let’s just say that anyone who ever made fun of the Rhino mech suit in The Amazing Spider-Man 2 owes it an apology. Because…my goodness, is this version of the Rhino bad!

The only good part of the movie is the opening act, which is an excellent prison breakout scene. In fact, if you do watch this movie, only watch that part and stop the movie after it’s done. Because the movie won’t get any better after that.

To quote another movie critic, Kraven the Hunter is “less of a structured narrative with a beginning, middle, and end and more like disjointed scenes and action sequences thrown into a blender and spat out the other side. Actions and events have almost nothing in common with their consequences, characters talk at each other like they’re having completely different conversations, the antagonist is one of the weakest and most ludicrous villains I have seen in any movie ever, the acting is atrocious, the effects are laughable, and there’s an almost palatable air of indifference to the entire movie.”

Thus Kraven the Hunter ends the Spider-Man-less Spiderverse, not with a bang, but a whimper.

Second Crash at Same Lake Wales Intersection This Weekend, Vehicle Rollover

Photo credit: G. Torres, with permission

At approximately 11:45 on Monday, January 20, 2025, the traffic collision was reported at or near the intersection of Highway 60 E. and Hunt Brothers Road in Lake Wales.

This is the second accident at or near this intersection in as many days.

It is a rollover crash and there is significant road blockage.

Photo credit: D. True, with permission

Nathaniel Gale, public information officer for Polk County Fire Rescue, advises that a trauma alert patient was flown by air to the hospital.

Lake Wales Daily has reached out to Lake Wales Police Department for further information. The story will be updated.

In Loving Memory of Annie Jones Houston, 90, of Frostproof

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Annie Jones Houston, 90

Annie Jones Houston of Frostproof passed away Thursday, January 16, 2025 at her residence.

She was born September 16, 1934 in Brewster to the late Herbert and Ruth Jones; she was a member of HighPoint Church. Annie was a retired caretaker and in her younger days loved to fish. She enjoyed crocheting and doing needle point. Annie loved to sing and play piano. She was strong in her faith and loved the Lord.

Annie was preceded in death by her first husband, Eugene Paul Hjort, Sr.; and second husband, Robert N. Houston. She is survived by her daughter, Karene Barker (Warren); son, Eugene Paul Hjort, Jr. (Neva); seven grandchildren; several great-grandchildren; and several great-great-grandchildren.

Saturday Evening Lake Wales Wreck Charged to DUI Driver, LWPD Says

Photo: D. Scott, with permission

Yesterday evening, January 18, 2025, a four vehicle accident occurred at Hunt Brothers Road and Highway 60 in Lake Wales. We now know that that accident was caused by a driver who has been charged with several crimes.

Lt. Dale Hampton, public information officer at Lake Wales Police Department, has confirmed that Damian Kochanowski, date of birth 09/19/1999, was arrested last night and has been charged with, “DUI with property damage and serious bodily injury; possession of Alprazolam; possession cannabis over 20 grams; possession of drug paraphernalia; delivery of cannabis.”

Hampton says that Kochanowski failed FST’s (field sobriety tests) and is suspected to have had a “narcotic influence.”

According to LWPD, Kochanowski was driving the at fault vehicle, when he crashed into vehicle 2, which was stopped, and caused a chain reaction 4 -car crash. 

“Alprazolam was found in his pockets…125 grams of marijuana was found prepackaged along with $9200 in the car,” says Hampton.

The accident sent three adults to the hospital; Polk County Fire Rescue says one was transported by helicopter, and two went to the hospital via ambulance.

Maria’s Meal Picks: A Show-Stopping Strawberry Snack

When you are craving something sweet, sometimes you just can’t get it off your mind until you have just one bite. You need something small, delicious and something that will ease your cravings. This recipe for Chocolate Coated Strawberry Treats is not only fun to make, but will give you that perfect little snack you have been longing for.

Locally, strawberry season is just on the horizon, so I want to you be prepared.

The recipe begins with fresh strawberries and ends with a drizzle of mouthwatering peanut butter sauce. This is a great recipe for little ones looking to help out in the kitchen. These strawberries are fun to dip and even more enjoyable to devour.

This snack can also be perfect for date night, a romantic date or just a picnic in the park with friends. They are easy to transport from place to place and don’t leave a huge mess behind to clean up afterwards.

It’s also simple to just melt, whisk, dip and repeat. The red, ripe berries are bursting with color and the chocolate is glazed right across the top for the perfect bite.

The best part is you can be creative and dip these strawberries into a number of your favorite ingredients you already have in your pantry at home. This includes, sprinkles, small candies, white chocolate drizzle and different kinds of nuts. The possibilities are endless.

Next time you can’t get chocolate off your mind, enjoy something delightful, rich and a show-stopping snack.

Chocolate Coated Strawberry Treats

Servings: 5

 

1 1/4    baking chocolate chips

1/2       baking peanut butter chips

3          tablespoons coconut oil, divided

1          pound fresh strawberries

            shredded coconut

            crushed almonds

 

In saucepan, add baking chocolate chips and two tablespoons of coconut oil. Melt on low to medium heat and whisk until smooth.

In a small bowl, add baking peanut butter chips and 1 tablespoon of coconut oil. Microwave in 30 second intervals until melted. Whisk together until smooth.

Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.

Dip all strawberries into melted chocolate. Then, dip 1/3 in coconut, 1/3 in almonds and 1/3 just chocolate and lay on tray.

Drizzle the melted peanut butter over the plain chocolate strawberries.

Put in the fridge for at least 30 minutes or until strawberry treats are chilled.