Former Freedom High XC coach charged with sex with student

Former Freedom High track and girls cross country coach Dwight Lamont Smith was booked into the Hillsborough County jail Monday night on sexual assault charges after being accused of having sex with a student on trips to Gainesville and Titusville on consecutive weekends.DwightSmith

Smith, 48 and a resident of Wesley Chapel, faces charges of sexual assault by a custodian and sexual battery of a person aged 12-18. His bond was set at $150,000.

According to the Gainesville Police Deportment report, Smith and his cross country team were in Gainesville Sept. 18 for a meet and staying overnight. At dinner, Smith provided a 17-year-old girl, a student at Freedom and member of the track team, with vodka and orange juice and made her drink it, according to the report. He also gave her a key to his hotel room so she could receive “counseling”. When the girl showed up at his room, he gave her more alcohol until she became intoxicated, and then had sex with her around 7 p.m.

Smith left the room to meet some school alumni for dinner, and told the girl to stay in the room. She did not stay, however. Smith texted the girl later that night after dinner, telling her to return to the room. When the girl entered the room, Smith was naked. He then provided more alcohol to the girl, and they had sex again around 11 p.m.

The following weekend, the two again had sex in a hotel room in Titusville, where the team was competing in another meet.

According to a Tampa Police Department report, on Nov. 11, Smith showed up at her house in a red car, unannounced. Her parents were not home, and he told her he missed her and wanted to come in and have sex. But after seeing her two cats sitting in the window of the house, he said he could not go in because he was allergic to cats. Instead, they sat in her car and kissed as he fondled her. She said she did not want to have sex in the car, and told him she was on her period, so he left.

She then realized that their relationship was wrong, the report states, and reported it to the Freedom principal Kevin Stephenson on Nov. 12, who immediately took her to the School Resource Officer.

Smith, who was a teacher’s assistant in the school’s Exceptional Student Education program, was escorted out of school and has been fired.

 

 

 

Volunteers make New Tampa food drive a success

image4Thanks to New Tampa volunteers, 1,700 local families that could have gone hungry on Thanksgiving were treated to all the food necessary to enjoy a great meal on the recent holiday.

Pam Smith, a resident of Cross Creek, oversees the annual Thanksgiving food drive, now in its 17th year. She has been part of those efforts for the last 10 years. She currently serves as president of the St. Mark the Evangelist Catholic Church Conference of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul. It is based at the church, which is located on Cross Creek Blvd. and one of New Tampa’s largest churches, serving more than 3,000 families.

“St. Vincent de Paul is a standalone, nonprofit organization that helps people in need with food, shelter, clothes and utilities,” Smith explains. It is not a ministry of the church, but is a separate organization. It is made up of Catholic men and women who want to serve the needy and suffering people in their community. It started in France in the 1830s, and was established in the United States in St. Louis, MO, in 1845. The Conference at St. Mark’s is one of 10 in the West Hillsborough District. All are based out of local churches.

“We run a year-round food pantry serving New Tampa, Wesley Chapel, and some surrounding areas,” explains Pam, who also is a member of St. Mark.

At Thanksgiving each year, that effort expands to work with dozens of organizations throughout Tampa and beyond to identify groups and individuals who don’t have the means to buy their own Thanksgiving dinners.

Smith explains she works with outreach groups, such as local Catholic churches, New Life Ministries Outreach, Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Advisory Council, and many others, along with 16 local schools, to identify families in need. Several groups pick up a total of 1,300 prepared boxes of food to distribute among their clients. This year, St. Vincent de Paul volunteer drivers made an additional 408 home deliveries to families in New Tampa, Wesley Chapel, and other parts of Tampa and surrounding communities.

“People don’t think there’s a lot of need in our area,” says Smith, “but that’s because it’s hidden. Our ZIP code actually has the least food resources available, compared to the number of hungry people. We – who are fortunate – don’t think this need is present in our community, but it is.”

Smith and dozens of volunteers spend three weeks collecting food, sorting it, and boxing it up. They get food donations and financial support from the people of St. Mark’s, St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church in Tampa Palms, and other local churches. Plus, many schools whose social workers and guidance counselors identify children in need also hold drives to collect food for the effort. Smith says Boy Scout Troop 148 from St. Mark, the National Honor Society at Wharton High School and Future Business Leaders of America (FBLA) at Freedom High School are among the organizations that provide the resources and manpower to make the colossal project happen.

“It’s not just an effort of St. Vincent de Paul,” Pam says. “It truly takes a whole conglomeration of community groups to make this happen.”

fooddriveSteve Channels is Pam Smith’s neighbor in Cross Creek, and he’s also a Freedom High School teacher and advisor for the school’s FBLA group, and leader with Boy Scout Troop 180 and Cub Scout Pack 360, both in Tampa Palms. He says he has participated in Thanksgiving food drive for eight or nine years now, encouraging the groups he leads to collect food, and bringing volunteers out to help. He says this year, he and about 40 Freedom students sorted food and packed nearly 700 boxes of the 1,300 that were filled for families.

“Students get community service hours, but that’s not why they’re there,” Channels says. “Most of them really want to be there because they enjoy being a part of what this is all about.”

“People are very generous,” says Smith, who explains the Thanksgiving outreach takes about $35,000 in addition to the food donations that are collected and countless volunteer hours. She says each family receives enough non-perishable food items for a complete Thanksgiving meal, including stuffing, potatoes, rice, beans, corn, yams, gravy, cranberries, and even cake mix and frosting. This year, they also received a box of Bisquick and a loaf of bread. Each family also receives a gift card to buy a turkey. “We used to distribute turkeys, but logistically, it’s difficult. Plus, the week before Thanksgiving, the price of turkey is much less than we can purchase in advance, so we give a gift card, which allows the families to purchase their own turkeys at a lower cost, and allows us to serve more people.”

Smith says there’s one word to describe how people feel when they receive the Thanksgiving box that’s been prepared for them, and that’s “grateful.”

“The folks we deliver food to are very vulnerable,” she explains. “Just yesterday, I delivered a box to a family in a motel. Another family had just moved into an apartment, and it had literally nothing in it. No couches, nothing in the kitchen, no TV. It’s sobering when you go to them. But, they are super grateful, because now, at least they have food.”

She says she followed up with the family in the apartment so that St. Vincent de Paul can help them get the basic things the mom, dad, and three children need.

And while the Thanksgiving food distribution has just wrapped up, Dec. 5 marks the first weekend of collecting toys, which will be given to children in need for Christmas.

“We provide toys to kids, and also socks, shoes, and pajamas to children of migrant workers, who prefer those gifts at Christmas,” Smith explains. A “giving tree” has been set up at St. Mark’s Church for the church members and larger community to share their generosity.

If you would like to support the efforts of St. Vincent de Paul at St. Mark’s, you can drop off or mail donations to St. Vincent de Paul, in care of St. Mark the Evangelist Catholic Church at 9724 Cross Creek Blvd. To volunteer, email Smith at SVDP@stmarktampa.org.

UPDATE: Blight ordinance and Mike Moore's traffic thoughts

By Matt Wiley and Gary Nager

Mike MooreDist. 2 Pasco County commissioner (and Wesley Chapel resident) Mike Moore says that dilapidated businesses soon will no longer have a place in the county, now that the Pasco Board of County Commissioners (BOCC) has adopted new rules to eliminate local eyesores. Moore told the 20 people in attendance at the Nov. 12 Wesley Chapel Republican Club (WCRC) meeting (held at Wesley Chapel Hyundai on S.R. 54) that the so-called “Blight Ordinance” (which is actually called Pasco’s “Commercial Property Maintenance Ordinance”) he sponsored was passed unanimously (5-0) on Oct. 20 by the Pasco Board of County Commisioners (BOCC).

The ordinance gives Pasco the right to issue fines and even possibly put property owners who let their commercial properties become dilapidated in jail. Moore said the new law gives the county more power to clean up and even get rid of those dilapidated properties in order to attract new businesses, clean up the county’s image and help prevent the crime that occurs in buildings that aren’t maintained.

Moore noted that the ordinance, which was modeled after a similar Hillsborough County law, won’t go into effect until May 1, 2016, but at that time, property owners whose properties are abandoned and/or in disrepair a 30-day notice to get their blighted buildings repaired, or be subject to a fine. They will then be given another 30 days to fix the problem.

If the problem persists beyond those 60 days, the property owners will be subject to a fine of $500 per day until the problem is fixed. If it’s discovered by the county attorney that a business owner has the means to fix the problem or demolish a blighted building and still chooses not to, that person could even face jail time.

“What we’re trying to do here is tell people, ‘You need to fix the problem,’” Moore told the WCRC members in attendance. “Fix the problem or you’re going to get fined. It’s not good for the surrounding property owners, it’s not good for the community and it’s not good for the people of Pasco County.”

Moore also says that business owners have told him that areas that have vacant and rundown structures do not promote local business growth, they bring down property values and discourage other local businesses that are maintained properly.

Pasco Sheriff Chris Nocco said at a Sept. 30 town hall meeting about the ordinance that it also is important because it will help reduce crime — including drug use, squatting and other illegal activities — in the abandoned or run-down structures. He said the U.S. 19 corridor gets by far the most calls about crime at various rundown businesses, but that U.S. Hwy. 41, S.R. 54 and U.S. 301 also prompt calls by residents and other business owners, too.

“From a law enforcement standpoint,” Nocco said, “(ordinances like this) are things that we need. If we can limit the places crimes can occur, we can push crime somewhere else. And, we’re trying to push it out of Pasco County.”

Meanwhile, Moore said he is convinced the ordinance will deter current and future businesses from letting their storefronts and surrounding area from becoming unkempt.

“It doesn’t matter what corridor it is,’’ Moore said. “This ordinance will be a deterrent in the hopes that future commercial property owners will realize that if they let their properties become dilapidated, they’re going to get fined.”

According to Pasco’s senior assistant county attorney Kristi Sims (who appeared at the same Sept. 30 town hall meeting where Sheriff Nocco spoke), the new ordinance shifts the burden to the property owner to force them to spend their own money to either repair or tear down their dilapidated properties.

Also On Commissioner Moore’s Agenda…

Although he didn’t discuss the 2016 presidential election during his presentation to the WCRC, Moore did provide updates on a number of other topics, including the extension of S.R. 56 to U.S. 301 in Zephyrhills, which he said he strongly supports.

He noted that he believes that shortly after this issue reaches your mailbox, the State Legislature could approve the plan proposed in April of this year by Dist. 38 State Rep. Danny Burgess and Dist. 17 State Sen. John Legg to build a four-lane extension, rather than just the two lanes that are currently funded.

Moore added that he is a strong supporter of the Florida Department of Transportation’s concept of a “diverging diamond” to better handle the traffic at the S.R. 56 exit of I-75. “I’ve told my friends in Tallahassee that this has to happen way sooner than (the current plan of) 2021-22,” Moore said. “We need relief now.”

After being introduced by current WCRC president James Cracchiolo, Moore (the group’s president the previous two years) touted his support of stricter sexual offender rules in Pasco and the new indoor athletic complex in Wiregrass (see pg. 1) during his hour-long chat. He also noted that he’s still studying the proposed Bruce B. Downs Blvd. Bypass Loop Rd. concept discussed in our Sept. 26 issue.

The WCRC meets at Hyundai of Wesley Chapel (27000 Wesley Chapel Blvd.) the second Thur. of each month at 6:30 p.m., with the next meeting scheduled for Thur., Dec. 10. The club welcomes new members and guests. For more info, visit WCRepublicans.com.

Busy weekend ahead for area road construction

75trafficTraffic around the I-75 intersections at Bruce B. Downs and State Roads 56 and 52 are expected to be busy construction zones through the rest of the month, and especially this weekend so travelers might want to plan accordingly.

It’s all part of the ongoing widening project between E. Fowler Ave. in Temple Terrace to S.R. 56, which hoped to be complete by September but is now most likely finishing up closer to its originally planned completion time in the spring of 2016. The 11.4-mile, $96.6-million project to widen I-75 from four to six/eight lanes was delayed by the summer’s heavy and constant rains.

Most of the construction this weekend will take place at night, but those coming home from, say, the Tampa Bay Lightning game Saturday, will want to drive carefully.

Here are the area that will be under work, according to Florida Department of Transportation spokeperson John McShaffrey.

NEW TAMPA

Southbound I-75 exit to Bruce B. Downs may be closed two nights
The southbound I-75 exit ramp to Bruce B. Downs Boulevard (Exit 270) may be closed from 10:30 p.m. to 5 a.m. Sunday and Monday (November 22 and 23) nights. [This ramp will not be closed at the same time as the SR 56 exit]
DETOUR: Continue past Exit 270. Exit to Fletcher Avenue (Exit 266). Turn left at the bottom of the ramp and go east on Fletcher Avenue under I-75. Turn left and enter northbound I-75. Use northbound Exit 270 to Bruce B. Downs Boulevard.

Southbound I-75 exit to State Road 56 may be closed two nights
Southbound I-75 Exit 275 to State Road 56 may be closed from 10:30 p.m. to 5 a.m. Sunday and Monday (November 22 and 23) nights. [This ramp will not be closed at the same time as the Bruce B. Downs exit]
DETOUR: Continue south and use Exit 270 to Bruce B. Downs Boulevard. Turn left onto Bruce B. Downs Blvd. and cross under I-75, then turn left and enter northbound I-75 to Exit 275 (SR 56).

Night lane closures on Bruce B. Downs Boulevard at I-75
One to three lanes may be closed on westbound/southbound Bruce B. Downs Boulevard in the I-75 area (Dona Michelle Drive to Tampa Palms Boulevard) between 10:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. Sunday and Monday (November 22 and 23) nights. At least one lane will be open.

WESLEY CHAPEL

Night lane closures on northbound I-75 approaching State Road 56
One to three lanes may be closed on northbound I-75 between the exit to State Road 56 (Exit 275) and the State Road 56 overpass from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. Sunday and Monday (Nov. 22 and 23) nights. At least one lane will be open.

Night lane closures on southbound I-75 near SR 56 and I-275
One to three lanes may be closed on southbound I-75 from State Road 56 (Exit 275) to I-275 (Exit 274) from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. Friday night, Nov. 20 and Sunday and Monday (Nov. 22 and 23) nights. At least one lane will be open.

WESLEY CHAPEL/SAN ANTONIO

Night lane closures on I-75 in central Pasco County
One lane may be closed in each direction of I-75 anywhere from north of County Road 54 (Exit 279) to north of SR 52 (Exit 285) between 9 p.m. and 6 a.m. Friday night, Nov. 20 and Sunday through Tuesday (Nov. 22 – 24) nights.

Night lane closures on State Road 52 in the I-75 area
There may be lane closures on State Road 52 between Old Pasco Road and McKendree Road between 9 p.m. and 6 a.m. Friday night, Nov. 20 and Sunday through Tuesday (Nov. 22 – 24) nights. Watch for flaggers directing traffic.

Night lane closures on I-75 in upper Pasco County
One lane may be in each direction of I-75 from north of State Road 52 (Exit 285) to the Hernando County line (north of County Road 41/Exit 293) between 9:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. Friday night, November 20 and Sunday through Tuesday (November 22 – 24) nights.

Boys basketball tips off tonight

IMG_5311
Freedom guard Sheldon Odunna looks for two points during a game last season.

The boys basketball season tipped off this week.

Wesley Chapel opened up with Anclote.

Wharton, winners over Strawberry Crest in its first game, travels to Wiregrass Ranch tonight for a neighborhood showdown in the Bulls’ season opener.

Freedom heads over to Leto tonight for the Patriots first game.

Here’s the season preview capsules:

FREEDOM BOYS BASKETBALL
Head coach: Cedric Smith
Last year:
22-7
District record (7A-8):
10-0
District outlook:
Freedom will be reunited with rival Wharton in district play this season, making the two meetings between the teams this season must-see basketball in New Tampa.
Key returners:
G Sheldon Odunna (Sr., 6-3), G Nasir Cole (Sr., 6-0), PG Dylan Angel (Sr., 6-1), C Alex Rojas (So., 6-8).
X-Factor:
F Chase Creasy (Jr., 6-4).
Season Outlook:
Last year, the Patriots spread the ball around, as 17 different players scored. Well, 15 of those players were underclassmen, giving Smith the most experienced team he’s ever had. It could prove to be his best team, as well. Odunna continues to show great improvement year-to-year and is the team’s best player, averaging a team-high 16.1 points last season. Smith says he is one of the best guards in the county. He shares the backcourt with Cole and Angel, and guard play is one of the Patriots’ strengths. Freedom has a host of long wings to fuel the defensive side, like senior Jamal Byrnes and Quenden James, and Smith said Creasy is good enough to be a starter but he needs his offense off the bench. After reaching the regional final in 2013-14, Smith and his Patriots are ready for the next step.
The schedule:
Freedom opens up on the road with a game at Leto (Nov. 18) before the home opener Nov. 20 vs. Sickles. Oh, and then it’s Wharton on Dec. 1.

WESLEY CHAPEL BOYS
Head coach: Doug Greseth
Last year: 17-10
District record (5A-7 in 2014-15): 8-6
District outlook: Greseth said he expects the Wildcats to fight for the district’s top spot, and the teams that he thinks will be in his team’s way are Zephyrhills, Ridgewood and maybe Pasco. The Bulldogs, who lost in the title game last year, lost only three seniors.
Key returners: F Theo Williams (Sr., 6-6), G Malik Dillard (Sr., —), PG Sam Schneidmiller (Jr., 6-1), F Reggie Jennings (Jr., 6-3).
X-Factor: Schneidmiller.
Season Outlook: Greseth really likes this team. He thinks his starting five can hang with anyone, but the Wildcats will need to avoid the injury bug because the bench is not very deep. Williams, who averaged 13 points to lead the team and was second with 7.6 rebounds a contest, made a big jump from his sophomore to junior season, and if he does the same this year look out. Pairing Wiliams with Jennings (8.7 ppg, 4.7 rpg) gives Wesley Chapel one of the best forward combinations around. Schneidmiller could be the key. He was felled early last season by mononucleosis and never recovered to 100 percent but should be a big weapon in 2015-16. The Wildcats will try to push the ball up the floor as usual, using spacing and ball reversals to work the ball inside or produce open shots, and the defense will play man-to-man almost exclusively with lots of pressure. At full strength, Greseth has high hopes. “Injuries decimated us last season,” Greseth said. “If we stay healthy I expect big things.”
The schedule: Wesley Chapel opens up with 10 straight district games, including a road game at Zephyrhills Nov. 24. Its schedule is currently made up of all Pasco County teams, with the exception of a game against Tarpon Springs at the Ridgewood Holiday Tournament on Dec. 21.

WIREGRASS RANCH BOYS
Head coach: Jeremy Calzone
Last year: 13-13
District record (7A-8 in 2014-15): 5-4
District outlook: The Bulls were in the middle of the pack last season and considering the roster losses would do well to remain there this season. The district is markedly tougher with the addition of Wharton and Plant, two playoff regulars the last decade. The Bulls probably face their longest playoff odds since 2009.
Key returners: G Jordan Miner (So., 6-2), F Valentin Garcia (So., 6-3), G Mekhi Jarvis (Sr., 5-10, F/C Kem Asomba (So., 6-4).
X-Factor: G Devin Wilson (Jr., 6-2)
Season Outlook: The Bulls had two players average over 20 points last year, and another averaged 10, but they are gone. Graduation gives Calzone the youngest team he’s had yet, with just one senior. To get a picture of just how young the Bulls will be, consider that the four key returners combined to score 85 points last season. But teaching a young group the frenetic shoot-quick style the Bulls play has been a treat so far. “It’s so nice, you have no idea,’’ said Calzone. “We’re having a lot of fun right now. It takes me back to when the school first started. The difference is, we have a lot better players.” Calzone will rely on Jarvis to lead the way, but there is good athleticism there with Miner and Garcia as well, and Asomba showed some good stuff last season. Wilson will be crucial as well, and the coach has high expectations for a breakout season. He is also high on freshmen Dorien Green and Elijah Howell, a pair of quick 6-foot guards. The Bulls beat Springstead 68-65 in their preseason game, and Calzone said he will be looking for steady improvement as the year goes on. “As long as we’re playing well in February, I don’t care what our record is,’’ the coach said.
The schedule: How’s this for a tip-off – the Bulls open the season with two district games, the first Wednesday night against Wharton at home, and then on the road at Leto, who boast David Jones, a guard that averaged 31 points in two preseason games. The schedule gets a little easier the rest of the way.

WHARTON BOYS BASKETBALL
Head coach: Tommy Tonelli
Last year: 24-5
District record (8A-7 in 2014-15): 9-1
District outlook: The Wildcats’ new District 7A-8 will be even tougher this year, with the addition of a Sickles team that is probably the District’s favorite. But, the Wildcats and Freedom should both be in the playoff race.
Key returners: G/F Evan Trice (Sr., 6-2), F Josiah Crawford (Sr., 6-3), G Matthew Tonelli (Sr., 5-11), F Devontres Dukes (Sr., 6-4), PG Tray Gildon (Jr., 5-10)
X-Factor: F Dae’Son Barnes (So., 6-3).
Season Outlook: Since returning for his second stint as Wharton head coach in 2009, Tonelli has averaged 23.6 wins a season. The Wildcats should approach that mark again this time around, too. Trice (12 ppg, 4 assists, 4 rebs) and Crawford (9 ppg, 6 rebs) will lead the way after a big offseason in which Wharton captured the Southeast Basketball Academy (SEBA) Summer League title. Gildon will run the point and Tonelli said the shifty guard has shown tremendous improvement this offseason. Gildon will be backed up by the coach’s scrappy son Matthew Tonelli, and Dukes can be a force inside. Barnes could be a special find for the Wildcats as he moves up from junior varsity. In fact, Barnes could be one of a few jayvee players from last year’s 15-1 squad to have on impact on varsity.
The schedule: The Wildcats open the season Nov. 17 hosting Strawberry Crest, and also play Nov. 18 (at Wiregrass Ranch), 20 (at Plant) and 21 (host Newsome).