The Incredible Mortgage Fraud Scandal, It Starts at Home Florida

July 28, 2008 · Filed Under Happens in Weston · Comments Off 

 

 

Don Saxon, commissioner of the Office of Financial Regulation, vowed to work with state Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink to tighten mortgage broker licensing standards.Don Saxon, native Floridian (born Ft Lauderdale), Commissioner Financial Regulation

Under fire for allowing bank robbers and racketeers to sell home loans in Florida, the state’s chief mortgage industry regulator said he fought to ban ex-convicts from the business during the 2008 legislative session.

The regulator, Don Saxon, said he was ”proactive in drafting proposed language to change the law,” in a 40-page defense of his agency last week.

But Saxon, commissioner of the Office of Financial Regulation, never took his case to legislators who could effectively push the change and didn’t ask key Cabinet leaders to support the idea, The Miami Herald has found.

The longtime state regulator has faced mounting calls for his resignation since the newspaper reported last week that his office allowed more than 10,000 people with criminal records to sell mortgages in Florida between 2000 and 2007.

Brokers with convictions went on to steal at least $85 million from consumers and banks, The Miami Herald found, while the state’s mortgage-fraud rate reached the highest level in the nation.

 

Well, I hate to be the bearer of bad news but everytime I research another Florida disaster, ie. mortgage fraud, 911 failure, traffic highway designs, budget corruption and misuse, overcrowding, destruction of the beauty of South Florida, no affordable housing, failure of the education system, etc, etc, etc, if there is a “ground zero” villian it usually goes right to a native Floridian, elected or appointed who seems to have created most of the problem (see Don Saxon, example number one)!

I have been visiting and vacationing in Florida since 1975, I have lived here full time since 2004, all I have have ever hear from the”locals’ is how it’ New Yorker’s who destroyed our state, it’s those “Cubans” who have destroyed our state, it’s those “non -english hispanics” who have destroyed our state, blah, blah blah!

Wake up, do a little research about Your State, it consistenly has been one of Florida’s own who have screwed this state up , like Mr Don Saxon of Ft Lauderdale.

To many homes and condo’s in South Florida?, How did that happen, well it’s a three part equation, Part One a local land owner has to sell it, Part Two a local elected/appointed official has to approve it, and then Part Three the Bad Guys (Ie out of state people) buy and build it!

To many illegal aliens bring down wages (which are always way to low) living in Florida, who’s fault is that.

Right to work state, that translates to me in a Right Not To Make Money State, who’s fault is that.

Horrible traffic, ridiculous highway designs (see the Golden Glades and Route 595 and the turnpike, who’s fault is that.

Tallahasse being held hostage by Disney so that they refuse to allow South Florida to become the tourist capital of the world, which it should be, who’s fault is that.

On, and on, and on, who’s fault is that.

Come on South Florida, wake up and participate, before it really is to late.

responses, suggestions, etc comments@thinkweston.com

 

 

 

Help BSO bring these criminals to justice

July 23, 2008 · Filed Under Happens in Weston · Comments Off 

REMEMBERING SERGEANT CHRIS REYKA

 

 

This August marks the one-year anniversary of Sergeant Chris Reyka’s tragic death. Sgt. Reyka was brutally gunned down while checking on a suspicious vehicle at a Pompano Beach Walgreen’s. The person or persons responsible for this heinous crime have not been brought to justice.

Throughout his career, Sgt. Reyka was highly praised by his superiors and peers for his dedication to duty. Prior to becoming a law enforcement officer, Sgt. Reyka served with the U.S. Marines. He was an outstanding law man, a courageous American and most importantly – a dedicated family man.

The more than 6,000 members of the Broward Sheriff’s Office mourned the loss of Sgt. Reyka. But, there is nobody that felt his loss more than his family. Sgt. Reyka’s widow, Kim, and their four children: Ashley, Sean, Autumn and Spencer have been left to deal with the aftermath of this senseless tragedy.

In just a 12-month period, the Broward Sheriff’s Office suffered the loss of three deputy sheriffs shot and killed in the line of duty.

BSO is committed to solving Sgt. Reyka’s homicide, but we need your help. We are certain that someone; somewhere knows who perpetrated this crime. Our agency will never stop working to solve Sgt. Reyka’s murder. I ask you to visit our web site, www.sheriff.org to view a photo of the car we are looking for. There is a substantial reward for the person that leads us to the successful prosecution of the killer or killers. There could be no better reward than giving the Reyka family the closure they deserve.

On Friday, August 8, at 9:00 a.m., the Broward Sheriff’s Office will hold a Sgt. Chris Reyka Rally and March staring at BSO’s Pompano District Office. The march will end at the Walgreen’s where Sgt. Reyka lost his life (2.6 mile march). We are asking all Broward residents and business owners to participate. For details about the event you can visit our web site or call 954.831.8902.

When a law enforcement officer is sworn in to duty he must take an oath to serve and protect. Sgt. Chris Reyka was doing just that when he was taken from us. For his sacrifice we will honor him always

any ideas, comments, suggestions click comments@thinkweston.com

 

Mortgage Fraud in Florida, We Earned It!

July 21, 2008 · Filed Under Happens in Weston · Comments Off 

 

 PrisonThe Miami Herald has released  an eight month investigative piece on the mortgage industry in Florida. Well what a shock, the mortgage industry which exploded over the past eight years in South Florida was overwhemed with criminals doing what they do best STEAL. All the sterotypes about Florida fall right into place, criminals flocking to Florida, a local governement cutting corners to make money, unsuspecting seniors and the less sophisticated (which Florida has an abundance) being duped. So what do we have, a recession in Florida additionally feulded by our ”mind set” of  sloppy government who are almost never held to ANY standard! Well the national image of Florida is the “Fraud State“. Hey you can never accuse us of not being good at what we are bad at!

 Miami Herald Investigative Report (Partial):

Gary Kafka, former body builder uith a long rap sheet and violent past, wrote millions of dollars in mortgages in South Florida without ever applying for a state license.

Fresh out of prison after serving time for bank fraud, he never went through a criminal background check before selling loans. He never took a competency exam.

He never had to.

More than half the mortgage professionals registered in Florida — 120,563 — entered the industry this decade without being licensed by the state, The Miami Herald found.

Miami Herald investigation  showed that more than 10,000 people with criminal records were permitted to work in Florida’s mortgage industry during the housing boom between 2000 and 2007. Of those, 4,065 cleared background checks despite having committed crimes that state law requires regulators to screen, including bank robbery, racketeering and extortion.

Florida has the highest mortgage fraud rate in the country.

Known as loan originators, they perform the same job as mortgage brokers but aren’t bound by the same rules.

Time and again, industry leaders asked Florida regulators to bring this group under their watch by imposing mandatory licensing. But regulators refused to press for any changes, claiming that lawmakers would never approve.

The state’s refusal proved costly during the biggest housing boom in Florida history: Thousands of loan originators entered the industry with criminal histories, state records show.

While The Miami Herald found breakdowns in the state’s licensing system for mortgage brokers, the lack of controls over originators created even more problems for an industry steeped in the highest fraud rate in the nation.

The special group was created by state lawmakers 17 years ago to make it easier for lenders to hire people as the industry was growing.

But in the past eight years, more people with criminal records jumped into the business as loan originators than as any other category of mortgage professionals.

‘IT’S EMBARRASSING’

”It’s more than disappointing, it’s embarrassing,” said Joseph Falk, a Miami mortgage broker and former president of the National Association of Mortgage Brokers, who tried to get regulators to license loan originators in 2002.

”It was pretty easy for someone to enter the industry because there were no standards. If there’s no one policing, anyone who wanted to join the industry could do so.”

Pamela Simmons turned to a loan originator with a criminal past in 2005 to refinance her three-bedroom house in Pompano Beach, but ended up losing it.

”This was everything to me,” said the single mother, tears in her eyes as she stood in front of the house. ”It’s the only home I ever owned.”

A review of thousands of pages of court documents, state industry reports, internal e-mails and police reports shows that from 2000 to 2007:

• 5,306 people with criminal histories( did not pass a background check-or were never checked at all!) became loan originators — a rate of nearly two a day. Worse, those include 2,201 who had committed financial crimes

• Even large lenders hired loan originators with criminal backgrounds. The Miami Herald found that in at least 30 companies with 50 or more employees, more than one in five originators had a criminal record.

• Nearly two dozen people stripped of their licenses as mortgage brokers were able to sidestep regulators by becoming loan originators. Nine others who were denied licenses because of prior crimes or regulatory violations were able to do the same.

”It’s a huge hole,” said Ronald Brenner, a former Florida mortgage regulator who once led the agency’s Miami office. ”You could get the worst thief in the world, a fraudster to the nth degree, and when he gets out of jail he can come work at your mortgage operation, and if he doesn’t have a broker’s license, all the better.”

Kafka, 48, joined America’s Best Lending in Boynton Beach in 2004 after living in a halfway house.

While his federal probation officer said in court records that Kakfa should not be working in the mortgage industry, he went on to join two other firms without disclosing his past.

Two years after he began to peddle mortgages, he was convicted of cheating lenders of $2.7 million in loans at America’s Best Lending by inflating incomes, boosting assets and misrepresenting other finances.

”You never would have guessed it,” said Philip Sencer, who hired Kafka at a Wellington firm in 2006. ”He was the type of guy you’d invite to your home for a barbeque.”

BURDEN ON LENDERS

State regulators say they don’t license loan originators, but they regulate those who hire them: mortgage lenders. The 1991 law allowing originators made it clear: The burden is on the lenders to ensure that everyone follows the law.

If a lender refuses to act on complaints against a loan originator, the state can discipline the lender, said Terry Straub, recently appointed director of the Office of Financial Regulation’s Division of Finance.

”We hold them accountable,” he said. But The Miami Herald found that in at least nine major cases when originators were arrested for mortgage fraud, no action was taken against their lenders.

While Florida requires lenders to report the names of their loan originators every quarter, the newspaper found that hundreds of companies don’t follow the law. In the first half of 2005 — during the peak of the boom — 355 didn’t file required reports, according to the state’s own records.

Falk, the former president of the National Association of Mortgage Brokers, said the lack of reporting in the state system allows too many gaps.

The lack of tracking leads to even more problems: Without any central registration and with no requirements for entry, loan originators with criminal histories can move from firm to firm without divulging their past.

There is no state law requiring lenders to check their background.

If they had, they would have found that Kafka spent nearly three years in federal prison for loan fraud in 1999 and illegally keeping an arsenal of guns and ammunition while a resident of Ocean Ridge, near Boynton Beach.

Sencer, who hired Kafka at Financial Security in Wellington, said he learned of Kafka’s police record only after federal Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agents showed up at his office in 2005. Sencer said that when he met with prosecutors, ‘they told me, ”You got duped.’ ”

Assistant U.S. Attorney Neil Karadbil, who prosecuted Kafka, said the former loan originator was able to conceal his past while peddling loans, partly because he didn’t have to submit to criminal background checks.

”There has to be some way to know in this industry whether you’re dealing with a convicted felon,” Karadbil said. ”At least borrowers or employers should know that.”

Even before his latest conviction, Kafka had a criminal record dating to 1977, including 15 arrests and four felony convictions, court records show. The charges include grand theft, burglary and possession of contraband in prison.

He is now back in prison — serving 57 months — for the most recent mortgage scheme.

A NEW CALLING

Harry Rolle was a convicted felon who had declared personal bankruptcy three times before he became a loan originator in 2001 for International Lenders of South Florida in Oakland Park.

Within months, he found his first victim: Elsa Erarte, a single mother who worked at Walgreens in Miami. Rolle pocketed a $16,000 down payment she had given him while he was supposed to help her find a home, saying it was nonrefundable.

She sued Rolle in Miami-Dade Circuit Court and got her money back in a judgment in 2004. ”It was all the money she had,” recalled her attorney, Joel Friedman. ”She had spent years saving it.”

But the court case didn’t stop Rolle.

The 53-year-old loan salesman went on to cheat four more borrowers through a variety of means: pocketing their down payments, skimming from their loans, and selling their homes without their approval, court records state.

”The guy was a consummate con artist,” said Joseph Wilson, an investigator for the Office of Financial Regulation, who referred the case to police. ”He had the ability to gain people’s confidence by saying what people wanted to hear.”

In 2005, the Miami-Dade County state attorney’s office finally prosecuted Rolle as a habitual offender on fraud charges — for ripping off Erarte and others. A judge gave him a year in jail.

Under state law, there is nothing to stop loan originators convicted of ripping off borrowers from returning to the industry.

Because they aren’t licensed, there are no records of discipline or past crimes involving money or moral turpitude — and no files for public inspection.

Bernard Williams, who pleaded guilty to stealing $6,000 from two elderly women — the bills ripped from the seams of their clothes — said he found the easiest route to sell home loans by becoming a loan originator in 2001.

”I didn’t have a problem getting in,” he told The Miami Herald.

Williams, 54, said he decided to sell loans because the market was booming and he knew that ”there was money to be made.” Over the next five years, he worked for three separate lenders.

But while he was writing loans for dozens of working-class families, he and several co-conspirators were accused by Florida’s attorney general of fleecing 80 people of nearly $2 million, according to a civil fraud suit filed in Broward County Circuit Court in January.

The suit says Williams, who has not been criminally charged, joined others in a scheme to siphon money from loans designed to save people from losing their homes. Like Pamela Simmons, several claim that Williams put their homes up for sale without their permission. He and others then pocketed tens of thousands of dollars in profits in each case by charging inflated fees, the suit alleges.

”I worked hard — three jobs — to get that house,” said Simmons, 40, who has five children.

Williams insists he did nothing wrong, saying the suit will be resolved in his favor. ”This is all a headache,” said Williams, who continues to work as a loan originator in North Miami-Dade.

He refused to talk about his guilty plea in 1994 for stealing from two elderly women, drawing a 30-day sentence and five years of probation.

`FEEDING FRENZY’

As the housing boom exploded in 2001, so did the number of people rushing into the mortgage industry, with loan originators leading the way. But as their numbers rose each year — 66 a day in 2005 — so did the number of former criminals.

With home sales rising more than 20 percent a year in parts of Florida, mortgage companies were hiring loan originators at an unprecedented rate, state records show.

”Back then, it was such a feeding frenzy,” said David Velazquez, 37, a former loan originator in Broward who served time in prison for drug trafficking. ‘People were saying, `We need loan originators. We’ll train you.’ It was so busy. They were pulling in anyone they could.”

In all, more than 5,300 people with criminal histories rushed into Florida’s mortgage industry as loan originators since 2000. Even for people who had five or more convictions, there were no impediments to getting in.

According to state Department of Corrections data and county court records:

• Brian Lendin served six prison terms totaling a dozen years between 1983 and 2000 for crimes including grand theft, manslaughter and aggravated battery.

• Rosendo Perez was convicted of mortgage fraud, grand theft and forgery between 1990 and 2000.

• Ronald D. Collins was convicted 37 times between

Living with rednecks and Davie

July 18, 2008 · Filed Under Happens in Weston · Comments Off 

 I live on the border of Davie, a town in Broward County. And if you didn’t know Davie prides itself on its “Redneck” image, which includes not being so friendly to strangers, especially if they have a “Yankee” accent ( I kid you not). Well of course being a “Yankee-Boy” who moved there I was given an initial period of grief. But  being a classic New York City Boy (Hell’s Kitchen) I can’t be run off easy ( to stubborn or to stupid). The good stuff is that I had to bone up on the Civil War, in Davie I presume like it is in the rural South they still argue about it like it was only a couple of years ago,  I trashed them about their racial intolorance, their anti-semitism, and there basic anti-If your not like Larry The Cable Man ( who happens to be a very intelligent guy as most comics are) we don’t like you social position. They gave me a hard time about being from New Yawk, wearing shirts with collars, reading a newspaper at the bar, and stuff like that. After a year or so, the rednecks and I have resolved our casual “friendship”, and have met at some kind of middle ground. Some have become very good friends, and with this in mind I pay homage with some of my favorite Redneck Jokes, I hope you like them,

You know that your a redneck if;

You’ve been to a funeral and there were more pick-ups than cars.
 .

 You prefer car keys to Q-tips.

 Your soap on a rope doubles as an air freshener

 You have spent more on your pickup truck than on your education

You’re a lite beer drinker, because you start drinking when it gets light.

 Your Junior/Senior Prom had a Daycare.

You think the last words to The Star Spangled Banner are, “Gentlemen, start your engines.”

  You can remember the entire NASCAR series schedule but can’t remember your wifes birthday, kids birthday, or anniversary.

 You own a home that is mobile and 5 cars that aren’t.

 Your boat has not left the drive-way in 15 years.

You have a picture of Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson, or Elvis over your fireplace.

You’ve ever financed a tattoo

Have some more redneck jokes we can publish send to comments@thinkweston.com

 

 

Fast changing South Florida, the need to improve Broward County

July 16, 2008 · Filed Under Happens in Weston · Comments Off 

 

 

 

This story, which is incredibly sad ( a life was lost),  points out that there may be another infrastructure service is in need of an overhaul and accountability. Now this 911 complete screw-up happened in the solid community of Plantation, and this could be an isolated incident, but looking at the amount complaints that are currently online, I do not think so. The town of Plantation  pays their civil servants a good wage to work there, and the citizens of Plantation who pay taxes expect at the very least professional and alert town employers, in this 911 case they found out they didn’t.

Here is what I am feeling, and I am using this case as an example of what I believe is a much bigger issue, the level of quality and professionalism from our town and county employees and systems.

Stating the obvious, Broward County is growing and changing dramatically. Here is how it used to be ( up to maybe 15 years ago), people came to South Florida to retire and mellow out, younger people came here to live and party  full time in tropical weather, people came to live here because it was a less formal lifestyle, people came here to live because they could live in a mobile home for one tenth what a house would cost anywhere else in the country, people came to live here because you did not need to have winter clothes and a real wardrobe, people came to live here like it was said in the classic movie “Midnight Cowboy” to live in a place where the sun still shines when it’s raining, people came to live here to escape responsibilities child support, alimony because you they knew you could ” get lost” here for years, people came here to ride their motorcycles without helmets all year long, criminals came her because they could exploit the retirees and knew that the local police  forces where not sophisticated enough to keep track of them ( CBS’s 60 minutes did an annual story about this). That was then

This is 2008:

South Florida now has doubled in population, they are knocking down all the mobile home parks, there is less places to ride your four wheeler, the traffic has gotten to legendary status nationwide, there are no longer farms and orange groves, it has been replaced by strip malls and cookie cutter housing developments People come here to start their lives not to finish it, people come here because they believe their is business opportunities and less competition, people come here because they feel more in control of lifes with these planned communities, people come here because South Florida is a nicer place to live than most places. People come here because they have a life plan, take their lives seriously, and are accustom to quality services. I always here from people who are suprised by the lack of skills when they cross paths with local administrations.

 911 Failure in Plantation, the story:

 PLANTATION - Police officials concluded their internal affairs review of the April 25 murder-suicide in their station parking lot, praising the officer who shot at the killer but barely mentioning the department’s handling of the victim’s 911 call.

Records show that the 911 center did not alert officers that a gunman was chasing a woman to the police station until after the woman had been shot. The delay put an officer who was in the lobby in a precarious situation when she was forced to react to the shooting without any knowledge of what was going on.

The Police Department has not conducted a formal review of how the call was handled.

City officials hope the department can at least draw some lessons from the case

“Talk about a catastrophic incident. If there were mistakes, let’s learn from them and make sure we don’t do them again,” said City Council President Rico Petrocelli. “When they talk about training people, they’ll use this as an example: ‘Here’s an in-progress of someone looking to get to a police station, and here’s what Plantation did and could have done.’”

The internal investigation centered on the two bullets Officer Amy Wetzel fired from her service handgun in an attempt to stop Carlos Cevallos, 48, from shooting Olidia Kerr Day, 45. Cevallos and Day had met about three weeks earlier at a local Winn-Dixie, where he was a butcher, but were never more than acquaintances, Day’s family said.

Police departments routinely launch internal investigations whenever an officer fires a service weapon. In Plantation, issues involving the 911 center typically are investigated or reviewed by the center’s supervisors, officials said.

In Day’s case, the 911 center manager at the time did an undocumented, informal review, said Detective Robert Rettig, a Police Department spokesman. Public Safety Communications Manager Lori Fletcher concluded that the center did the best it could, Rettig said. Fletcher was fired May 28, although the police chief said at the time her firing was not a result of the how Day’s call was handled. The city plans to hire a replacement today.

Day had been on the phone with 911 operators for about three minutes before she reached the parking lot. She said she was driving to the police station with a gunman in pursuit, but operators never alerted officers. Wetzel told investigators she first learned of the situation when Cevallos and Day crashed in the station parking lot. Wetzel, 28, was sitting in an office behind the front desk with a community service aide and a lead dispatcher who was on a dinner break, officials said.

Day got out of her car and Cevallos ran after her. Wetzel ran outside and ordered Cevallos to drop his handgun, police said. Cevallos shot Day in the back and chased her across the parking lot, where she collapsed. As Cevallos stood over Day, Wetzel fired two shots at him but missed. Cevallos shot Day once more in the back before turning the gun on himself.

Day, a divorced mother of three, died that night at Broward General Medical Center.

Sgt. Richard Vincent wrote in the internal affairs report that even though Day died, “the end result does not diminish the professionalism and courage displayed by Officer Wetzel in the face of extreme danger.”

Wetzel could not be reached for comment Tuesday.

Vincent’s report only outlines the 911 center’s involvement, because the focus was on whether Wetzel violated any policies.

Police Chief Larry Massey has stood by his department’s handling of the 911 call, but on May 8 he wrote a memo calling for a revamp of the center’s training program. He directed department administrators to develop new training programs for 911 center employees on how to deal with critical events, as well as research whether applicants could be sent to a training academy before they begin on-the-job training.

Currently, 911 center operators and dispatchers statewide aren’t required by law to have any formal training. Each 911 center sets its own standards and policies.

In March, Plantation police officials pointed out a lack of up-to-date, in-house training programs and manuals available to its 911 center employees, who began using a new computerized dispatch system about a year ago, records show. The department had blamed the computer system in March 2007 when a dispatcher handling a call about a heart attack victim sent paramedics to the wrong address.

The Police Department was in the process of updating its training materials when it fired Fletcher, the 911 center manager, in May, according to records in her personnel file.

Massey said Fletcher stood in the way of planned improvements to the 911 center. Fletcher disagreed.

The City Council plans to fill the vacancy by approving the hiring of David J. Tomlinson, a retired technology support manager for Archonix Services LLC, a New Jersey company that creates software for computerized dispatch systems. Tomlinson, of Glenside, Pa., would start Aug. 11 with a salary of $60,000.

 

 

PSA, Major Advancement in Breast Cancer Detection

July 8, 2008 · Filed Under Happens in Weston · Comments Off 

 

rib3.gif - 3.2 KHere
is a subject that probably has had an impact for most of us, I know it has
had impact in my life. I have lost two very good friends to Breast Cancer in the
past ten years. Of course the public awareness and improvement in detection
has evolved where there has been significant progress in fighting this deadly
disease. Well now there is dramatic and inexpensive leap forward in Breast
Cancer Detection and I want to use this forum to pass it along.-Thomas

Here are Facts We Should All Know:

Breast cancer is a significant health issue for women. Some critical statistics are:1 in 8 women are expected to develop breast cancer during their lifetime

Breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer death for women 20-59

Over 200,000 new cases of breast cancer are expected this year, with over 40,000 deaths.

Early detection is the single most important factor in surviving breast cancer, because early, localized malignancies are more than 90 percent
curable.

Exciting New Advance in Early Breast Cancer Detection:

§ The HALO™ Breast Pap Test gives doctors and patients a new method to monitor breast cancer risk, quickly and easily.

The fact is, all women are at risk for developing breast cancer. In the US
we spend $3 billion annually on breast cancer screening, yet more than 70%
of lumps are discovered during self-exams. Unfortunately, by the time a woman
can actually feel the lump, the disease is no longer in its earliest, most
treatable stage.

Like a pap test for cervical cancer, this new test is looking for abnormal cells inbreast fluid, up to several years before they become lesions.

How Does the HALO Breast Pap Test Work

HALO Breast Pap combines warmth, massage and suction to obtain nipple aspirate fluid (NAF) from the milk ducts. 95% of all breast cancers originate in the milk ducts. HALO Breast Pap obtains this fluid in 5 minutes; it is then placed in a collection cup for transport to the laboratory were the pathologist analyzes it.

The process is similar to cervical pap smears. For decades, clinicians
have known that nipple aspirate fluid is an indicator of a woman’s breast health.
What is new is the ability to perform this test on a regular office visit with
a device that is quick, noninvasive, and simple. HALO Breast Pap is FDA approved.

What do the results mean?

There are three results you can get from the HALO Breast
Pap Test:

No
Nipple Aspirate Fluid (NAF)

 NAF
with no abnormal epithelial cells

 NAF
with abnormal epithelial cells

The first two are considered normal results. NAF with atypical cells is an abnormal result and requires
further investigation. In the past couple of years over 18,000-breast pap’s
have been performed in the United Sates and there are already many examples
of the test’s ability to find otherwise non-detectable disease. Here a few
examples. In June 2006 a 69-year-old patient had an annual visit and a breast
pap with her gynecologist. She had a mammogram as well. The mammogram result
was normal but the halo breast pap was not. This led to her gynecologist to
order an evaluation, which resulted in diagnosing ductal carcinoma in situ.
Here in South Florida at Dr Simon Weiss’s office, in February of this year;
an abnormal breast pap result in a 30-year-old patient, has led to close monitoring.

Here in Florida Simon Weiss MD and his associates recognize
that the breast pap is an important component of any well-woman checkup and
encourages all women ages 25 and up to discuss it with their physician. “ How
could I not?” says Dr. Weiss. “ Any chance of detecting a cancer at the earliest
possible stage cannot be passed up. Breast cancer
is the most common
cancer in women and it is my obligation to find it as early as possible”

Medicine is moving health care from treatment to prevention.
The Halo breast pap is the first such move in the fight with breast cancer.
Like the Pap test for cervical cancer, HALO cannot definitively rule out the
presence of cancer, so it is important to continue with routine mammograms
and breast exams as recommended by your doctor.

For more information on this
low cost Breast Cancer Detection call:

Simon Weiss MD, Helen Spalding
MD, Jose Rivas MD and Marion Lacombe MD.

Locations:

Miramar 954-538-1300
Hollywood 954-518-4100

§

Delray Beach Little League Intergrates in 2008

July 7, 2008 · Filed Under Happens in Weston · Comments Off 

 

 1444R-144057 © BananaStockThe Tri-county area of South Florida for all the influx of people moving here from around the world over the past thirty five years, we are still a Southern red state. But this article should stun us, it did me. Again, if you read “between the lines” the casualness of it being 2008 and the Delray community is celebrating intergration in the United States of American in the 21st century! They should be embrassed, but hey it is Florida.

 

Delray Beach Little League Celebrates Intergration 

The Yankees had just won the Delray Beach Little League Championship — the first since Delray Beach two Little Leagues combined.

For decades, there had been the Delray National league, made up of mostly white players, and Delray American league, made of mostly black players. The National league played at Miller Field; the American League played at Pompey Park, in the city’s historically black center.

This year the differences disappeared. Tim Stebbins, a director of Delray National, described it this way:

“One builds up all these fears, and then you get to the thing and say, ‘Why didn’t we do this two centuries ago?’”

A divided history

When Delray National was established in 1953 it excluded black neighborhoods in the middle of the city. So in 1971, Eddie Odom started Delray American to cover the “doughnut hole” left out by Delray National.

Little League International has never issued charters that bar children because of race and says it lost hundreds of charters in the South during the 1950s because of that policy. Delray Beach National’s charter was able to set boundaries that excluded black neighborhoods likely because of a rule that dictates one charter per 20,000 people, Little League International spokesman Chris Downs said.

This year after years of talking, the ingredients — some practical, some altruistic — came together. The leagues started acting as one. They held a combined draft and teams from both leagues played each other for one championship. To an outsider, it looked like the leagues had merged, although they didn’t actually go that far. Both leagues kept their charters and their boundaries remain unchanged.

“The case of Delray Beach is a little bit unique because they are considered Delray Beach Little League, but it has two separate board of directors,” Downs said. “What they did is something called combined teams.”

The two leagues started drawing kids citywide, meaning Delray Beach had fully integrated Little League teams this year. The change was welcomed.

“It has been a blessing,” Delray American President Rick Grant said on opening day, March 29. “We’ve made some close friends.”

From opening day to the championship on May 19, the South Florida Sun-Sentinel followed two teams in the new Delray Beach Little League — the Yankees and the Sand Gnats, both former Delray National teams. The teams in the 9- to 11-year-old division embodied the spirit of the new league: They were a mix of black, white and Hispanic players. Before combining the leagues, both teams were predominantly white.

There were fears early on that one league would take over the other, that parents would not want to take their kids to the other league’s park, and that children would not connect.

“I was very skeptical at first,” said Shelly Ann Brewster, whose son, Lamar, plays for the Sand Gnats. “I didn’t know where my kid was going to have to go and who he was going to have to play with.”

Over the season, Brewster became the Sand Gnats’ No. 1 cheerleader. From the stands she would shout to the Sand Gnats’ players, “If you hit a home run, I’m taking you to Burger King.

Of course it is a happy ending, kids are kids, they want to play and have fun together. The idea that the parents made some new friends, yep that is right! Thank God for the kids of South FLorida!

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The Mysteries of South Florida, Teen Found 31 Years Later!

July 3, 2008 · Filed Under Happens in Weston · Comments Off 

 

 

 

 

The more I live here in Broward County, the more I shake my head at things that happen here that seem  very improbable. Take this most recent case:

Missing Teen for 31 Years, Found  Blocks from home

The human bones found inside a sunken van in a Coral Springs canal earlier this year were officially identified Wednesday as those of Jeffrey Walter Klee, a teenager first reported missing more than three decades ago.

How Klee died remains a mystery. Police in Coral Springs are asking the public’s help in solving the case.

The black Chevy van belonging to Klee was pulled out of the water in March by Broward Sheriff’s Office divers. His own house was only blocks away.

The divers were doing a routine sweep of the canal at Nob Hill Road and Coral Ridge Drive for vehicles sunk for insurance fraud.

The Broward County Medical Examiner’s Office is still trying to figure out Klee’s cause of death.

At the time he disappeared, Klee was living with his parents and three younger sisters in Coral Springs. Friends told The Miami Herald that Klee’s father gave him the van when he was 16 years old.

Klee’s sister, Cyndee Klee, is now a sergeant with the Coral Springs Police Department.

She and her mother, Florence, declined to comment.

The events leading to Klee’s disappearance so many years ago began the night of July 12, 1977, when the teen and some pals from Coconut Creek High School got together at the Crown Lounge, a Tamarac bar where they often hung out. The friends had a few rounds of beer. His own house was three blocks away.

He never made it.

”He disappeared,” Cusanelli told The Miami Herald in March.

Huh ?-He did not disappear as much as it looks like nobody looked for him!This is the third article like this that I remember from this year alone. The other two were very similar, close to home, car in a canal, nobody finds them ( didn’t anybody think to look-at least in the nearby canals?) , even though they been there for years!!!. Wow,  wonder why criminals keep flocking to South Florida, it is kinda of obvious that the investigative skills for looking for missing local residents( amoung other things) are not “Columbo like” in  zeal.   I mean in this article they say it was a rountine sweep of the canal, hey this big old van has been there for 31 years, is this telling us there have not been any ”rountine” sweeps of the canals before (especially when the Klee kid went missing)?!

 Yikes-What has been going on in Broward County the past three decades!

 

Help me Howard Helps Broward County

July 2, 2008 · Filed Under Happens in Weston · Comments Off 

 

 

 

Well it’s at least progress (although about 30 years behind the times), but the bigger “read between the lines” issue is how far removed Florida has been and in some cases still is in terms civic matters-Thomas

Howard Finkelstein, head of the Public Defender’s office in Broward County, Florida (Ft. Lauderdale), has thrown a monkey wrench into the court system. He’s alerted Broward’s state and local judges that his public defenders will advise against a guilty plea by any defendant at the time of arraignment (when charges are first presented to the court) unless the public defender has had adequate time to meet with the client.

The public undoubtedly thinks that’s normal procedure, but they moved away from “normal procedure” decades ago in Broward County.

According to Dan Christensen of the Daily Business Review—

Pleas at arraignment began to occur about 20 years ago in Broward in response to jail overcrowding and federal court mandates to reduce the number of inmates, said Chief Assistant Broward Public Defender Bob Wills. “What started as a system issue has snowballed into a case management issue,” he said. “It shouldn’t be that way.”
It really should be viewed as what it is—unconstitutional.

… the desire of judges to move cases expeditiously is now at odds with the Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel. The first rule of the American Bar Association’s model rules of professional conduct says “competent representation” requires “the legal knowledge, skill, thoroughness and preparation reasonably necessary for the representation.”
Even the prosecutors agree

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