Man who killed friend and fled sentenced to Life

Prosecutor Peter Overstreet cross-examines defendant Jeremiah Beazley, who was found guilty of  murder.

A judge sentenced Jeremiah Beazley to Life in prison Friday, one day after a jury took about 40 minutes to find him guilty of murder, State Attorney Larry Basford announced.

Beazley, 46, was found guilty-as-charged Thursday of Second-Degree Murder with a Firearm and Felon in Possession of a Firearm after a two-day trial for the March 31, 2021 shooting death of Bryan Thomas Anderson. He was facing 25 years to Life in prison under Florida’s 10-20-Life Statute.

Prosecutor Peter Overstreet makes a point to jurors as Circuit Judge Dustin Stephenson observes.

“This is probably one of the most well-known criminals in this area,” Prosecutor Peter Overstreet told Circuit Judge Dustin Stephenson in asking for a Life sentence Friday. “I think just about everything that could be done to try and correct that have been tried and have failed.”

Overstreet said the only way to protect people from the defendant was for him to be kept in prison, which is what members of the victim’s family also requested.

“It’s clear to me that Mr. Anderson was well-liked and loved by all who knew him,” Judge Stephenson said to the defendant before sentencing him to Life in prison. “What’s also abundantly clear … is Mr. Anderson is no longer with us and he’s no longer with us because you killed him.”

Overstreet called 13 witnesses ranging from the victim’s wife and a juvenile who was in the Southport trailer when the victim was shot, to 5 Bay County Sheriff’s Office deputies and 4 Florida Department of Law Enforcement experts.

The defendant testified on his own behalf.
The defendant testifying at sentencing.

The testimony and evidence proved that the victim had given the defendant a place to stay, and that the two were friends although they sometimes argued about what they believed were governmental conspiracies.

The morning of the shooting, the victim, who lived a short distance away, walked to the trailer where the defendant was staying and went into his bedroom. The other occupants of the trailer who testified said they could hear the two talking, but did not hear raised voices or any indication of a scuffle or fight.

They testified they were not concerned until they heard gunshots from the bedroom. The defendant left the bedroom without explanation, got into the passenger’s side of a car that was leaving the residence and hid the gun at a nearby park. The victim was found in the bedroom shot twice, once in the back. The defendant was captured later that day by Bay County sheriff’s deputies.

Basford thanked the Sheriff’s Office for its work in capturing the defendant so quickly and the case it put together, as well as the FDLE for its expert testimony that included findings that the defendant was under the influence of methamphetamine at the time of the shooting. The victim had no intoxicants in his system.

For more information, contact Mike Cazalas at mike.cazalas@sa14.fl.gov, or call 850-381-7454.

2 prosecutors join SAO team

State Attorney Larry Basford welcomes Jeff Moore and Kara Bremer.

Two prosecutors have joined the 14th Judicial Circuit’s team, one with a dozen years’ experience and another who is returning to the courtroom, State Attorney Larry Basford announced.

In the Bay County office, Jeff Moore is handling felony cases with 12 years of prosecutorial experience in Alabama under his belt. Moore previously worked in Alabama’s 12th Judicial Circuit – which includes Enterprise, Ala., – handling cases ranging from drug offenses to homicides.

Moore, who graduated second in his class at Jones School of Law, Faulkner University, has been a frequent visitor to our beaches, Panama City’s Downtown Farmer’s Market, and his favorite ice cream store in Marianna. The last 3 years he taught and served as an administrator at Covenant Christian School, in Troy, Ala., where his daughter attended.

“This area is special to me for a variety of reasons because when my grandparents decided to retire my grandmother bought a place on Panama City Beach,” Moore said. “We spent many summers here.”

With his daughter headed for middle school, Moore’s eyes turned to Bay County. His heart turned toward returning to the courtroom.

“I thoroughly enjoy trial litigation and law enforcement is just something that is very close to me,” he said. “My dad retired from law enforcement and he did become an attorney and dreamed of being a prosecutor, but never achieved that dream. This is one of those things that he was always proud of.”

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The Jackson County office in Marianna also picked up a prosecutor with the return of Kara Bremer, who previously handled cases in Bay County out of the Panama City office.

Bremer, a Mitchell Hamline School of Law Dean’s List Recipient, is active in her church and community, spent time as a teacher, and worked for a private attorney in Marianna.

Bremer left Bay County and moved closer to family but found herself missing the courtroom.

“I had actually just been talking to my mom about how I missed doing the legal work and loved what I’d been doing and wished I could get back into that,” Bremer said. “She agreed, and that very day I got a text from (Bay County Chief Prosecutor) Mark Graham asking if I was ready to come back.”

Bremer said it was not a tough decision. “I’m very grateful to be back and I love being part of the State Attorney’s Office family,” she said.

For additional information contact Mike Cazalas at mike.cazalas@sa14.fl.gov.

 

Man with enough Fentanyl to cause 25,000 overdoses sentenced to 35 years

A man who brought enough Fentanyl into Bay County to cause 25,000 overdoses has been sentenced to 35 years in prison, State Attorney Larry Basford announced.

Joseph Lord at the time the search warrant was served.

Joseph Earl Lord, 47, was set to go to trial this week on charges of Trafficking in Fentanyl (28 grams of more), Trafficking in Illegal Drugs, and Trafficking in Amphetamine (14 grams but less than 28). Instead, he entered an open plea to the charges, meaning he admitted guilty but left sentencing up Circuit Court Judge Dustin Stephenson.

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All three charges are first-degree felonies normally punishable by up to 30 years in prison. But Prosecutor Nicole Reed proved that Lord’s previous criminal history qualified him to be sentenced as a Habitual Felony Offender – meaning he faced up to Life in prison.

Judge Stephenson adjudicated the defendant guilty on all charges, sentencing him to 35 years with a 25-year minimum-mandatory on the Fentanyl case. The defendant was sentenced to 30 years each on the other trafficking charges to be served consecutively, or at the same time, as the first sentence.

“This wasn’t his first trip, he’s a known supplier of one of the most lethal drugs out there and he was living outside of our area and bringing it into Bay County for sale,” Reed said. “Unfortunately for him, the Bay County Sheriff’s Office was ready and waiting and made the arrest. Our office was ready and waiting to prosecute and now, at 47, he’s been sentenced to spend the next 35 years in prison.”

Fentanyl, Methamphetamine and Heroin seized with arrest.
A test kit gives a positive reaction for Methamphetamine.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Reed was prepared to present witnesses and evidence showing that the BCSO had been investigating drugs coming into Bay County through a specific address and developed information the defendant would arrive there Nov. 10, 2021, with a large amount of narcotics.

When the defendant arrived and walked into the house with a backpack, deputies served a previously obtained search warrant. The defendant ran into the kitchen area and the backpack was found on the floor under a table. Inside the backpack deputies found 50 grams of Fentanyl, 5 ounces of Methamphetamine, and 9 grams of heroin.

Basford thanked the Sheriff’s Office and case agent Phillip Hill for making one of the larger Fentanyl seizures in the area, and their proactive work in seizing the drugs before they made it onto the streets.

For more information, contact Mike Cazalas at mike.cazalas@sa14.fl.gov, or call 850-381-7454.

Man who wrestled deputy’s gun away and tried to kill him sentenced to Life in prison

Former BCSO Inv. Dakota Merritt, left, watches bodycam footage during the trial of Michael Barrett, far right, who was found guilty of trying to kill the investigator and sentenced to Life in prison.
Prosecutor Peter Overstreet, right, and former Inv. Dakota Merritt examine his holstered weapon during trial.

A man who wrestled a gun from a deputy investigating a jewelry theft and tried to shoot him is awaiting transfer to state prison where he has been sentenced to spend the rest of his life, State Attorney Larry Basford announced.

Michael Caleb Barrett, 40, a transient, was found guilty May 31 of Attempted 1st Degree Murder of a Law Enforcement Officer, Aggravated Battery on a Law Enforcement Officer, and Depriving an Officer of Means of Communication. Circuit Court Judge Timothy Register Monday sentenced Barrett to Life.

Michael Caleb Barrett (left to right, top to bottom), at the time of his arrest, during his May trial with his attorney, and at sentencing Monday.

Prosecutor Peter Overstreet presented the case, which resulted in a guilty verdict in about 90 minutes.

“Law enforcement and their families risk so much every single day,” Overstreet said. “This verdict will remind those who try to harm our law enforcement officers that we will aggressively prosecute these cases and seek the mandatory life sentences they deserve. And it will remind our officers that this community supports them.”

Former Bay County Sheriff’s Office Inv. Dakota Merritt was investigating a jewelry theft April 29, 2021. He received information the defendant, a suspect in the case, was outside near the Bay County Library and headed there even though his shift was minutes away from ending.

Overstreet presented testimony and witnesses proving Merritt found the defendant, identified himself as a deputy, and the defendant reached into his pocket and refused commands to stop. A struggle ensued and the defendant gained control of Merritt’s weapon, striking the investigator in the face. Bloodied, Merritt testified he held onto the slide of the gun as the struggle continued and a bullet was fired beside his face.

Merritt, who suffered a severely broken nose and orbital socket around his eye, was able to regain control of the gun and the defendant was shot once in the shoulder.

BCSO Cpl. Jacob McGowin spoke for Merritt, who retired a few months after the attack, at Monday’s sentencing. McGowin said Merritt was “put on this earth to be a cop,” and took every case seriously.

“He is more than a victim” in this case, McGowin told the court. “He is a survivor, a warrior, and a hero. He won a fight for his life that others wouldn’t have won.”

Basford thanked the Sheriff’s Office and the Panama City Police Department for their rapid response that day, and for the thorough investigation conducted with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.

For more information, contact Mike Cazalas at mike.cazalas@sa14.fl.gov, or call 850-381-7454.

Woman with Meth spilling from bag during pursuit sentenced to 22 years

A woman found guilty of Trafficking in Methamphetamine after bags of the drug fell from her bag during a foot pursuit was sentenced to 22 years in prison Thursday, State Attorney Larry Basford announced.

Kizzy Gentina Patterson, 44, of Panama City, was found guilty as charged of Trafficking in Methamphetamine (more than 200 grams), after 26 minutes of deliberation May 3.

Prosecutor Frank Sullivan addressing jurors during the trial.
Kizzy Patterson
Seized methamphetamine

Circuit Court Judge Brantley Clark Thursday sentenced her to 22 years in prison. Under Florida’s enhanced drug trafficking statutes, the defendant will have to serve a minimum-mandatory 15 years and pay a $250,000 fine.

“This defendant made some bad choices to avoid capture when she fled deputies, drove into their vehicles and then fled on foot – all with innocent bystanders nearby,” Prosecutor Frank Sullivan said after the trial. “Florida has made some good choices with its enhanced penalties for drug traffickers.”

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At trial, three current or former Bay County Sheriff’s Office investigators testified that on Jan. 9, 2020, the defendant was under surveillance after information was received that she was going to be in possession of a large amount of methamphetamine.

She fled from deputies who attempted to pull her over, colliding with at least two of their vehicles, before fleeing on foot. She stumbled crossing a ditch and bags of what turned out to be methamphetamine spilled out of her bag. The recovered drugs weighed about 420 grams.

Basford thanked the Sheriff’s Office for its work on the case and for safely apprehending the defendant, as well as the Springfield Police Department for capturing the video.

For more information, contact Mike Cazalas at mike.cazalas@sa14.fl.gov, or call 850-381-7454.

Marianna resident guilty of severely injuring man with box cutter

MARIANNA – A Jackson County jury took about 40 minutes Wednesday to return a guilty verdict against a man who sliced his victim from his chest to his neck with a box cutter, State Attorney Larry Basford announced.

Johnathon Clarence Coulliette, 37 of Marianna, was found guilty of Aggravated Battery (With a Deadly Weapon Causing Great Bodily Harm) after a two-day trial. Circuit Court Judge Ana Maria Garcia set sentencing for July 13.

Johnathon Coulliette

Prosecutor Lawrence Gill is seeking to have the defendant, who was released from prison about two months before this offense, sentenced as a Habitual Felony Offender and Prison Release Reoffender. That would double the potential penalty from up to 15 years in prison to 30 years.

“In this case, a defendant who had only been out of prison about two months nearly killed a man,” Gill said. “People making false claims of self-defense will be held accountable.”

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Gill and Jackson County Chief Prosecutor Shalla Jefcoat called five witnesses and put on evidence proving that the defendant attacked the victim with a box cutter Sept. 11, 2021.

The evidence showed the defendant’s girlfriend invited the  victim and his girlfriend to the defendant’s home, but shortly after they arrived the defendant was upset and pacing back and forth. The evidence showed that the victim and victim’s girlfriend had only been at the defendant’s residence for approximately 15 minutes, when the defendant went into a shed and came back out with a box cutter.

 

Witnesses said he approached the victim and swung at him, creating a cut from his chest to near his throat that took dozens of staples to close. The jury rejected the defense’s argument that it was self-defense.

The victim and his girlfriend made it back to their car and called 911.

Basford thanked the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office and Florida Department of Law Enforcement for their work on the case.

For more information, contact Mike Cazalas at mike.cazalas@sa14.fl.gov, or call 850-381-7454.

2 Life sentences in child sexual abuse case

A judge Wednesday ordered a man to spend the rest of his life in prison after his April convictions of sexually abusing a child for years, State Attorney Larry Basford announced.

Circuit Court Judge Brantley Clark gave Sean Michael Talkington, 45, two separate Life sentences – one for each count of Sexual Battery on a Child under the age of 12 – 25 years for Lewd and Lascivious Molestation, and 15 years for Lewd and Lascivious Battery. He ordered the terms served consecutively.

The defendant approaches for sentencing.
Circuit Court Judge Brantley Clark delivers the sentence.

The sentencing ended a case that involved prosecutors and law enforcement in both Bay County, where the crime occurred, and Kansas, where the defendant was questioned.

“I’m happy we were able to close this chapter and help her on her healing journey,” Prosecutor Nicole Reed said. “The collaboration between our office, the Bay County Sheriff’s Office and the Lawrence, Kansas, Police Department shows that justice isn’t bound by jurisdictional lines.”

Reed, who read the victim’s impact statement to the court during sentencing, said the effort put into the case by everyone involved paid off, “knowing that a Sexual Predator has been put away for the rest of his life and the victim can breathe easier.”

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In her Victim Impact Statement, the victim wrote about her pain and suffering, saying, “The journey to healing has only begun and I have a lifetime of healing and self-discovery to fight for, and I’ll never stop fighting for this life and for peace.”

During the April trial, Reed called four witnesses and presented evidence that proved the defendant repeatedly sexually assaulted the victim between 2005 and 2012. Among the state witnesses were Bay County Sheriff’s Office Investigator Jake Roberts and Lawrence, Kansas, Police Department Sgt. Jamie Lawson, who traveled to Bay County to testify. Roberts was the case agent. Sgt. Lawson conducted an interview with the defendant in Kansas during which the defendant made admissions.

The jury deliberated for just over 30 minutes.

Basford thanked the BCSO and Lawrence, Kansas police for their collaborative work on a case that spanned years and nearly 1,000 miles.

For more information, contact Mike Cazalas at mike.cazalas@sa14.fl.gov, or call 850-381-7454.

JURY: Woman fleeing with 400+ grams of meth guilty of trafficking

A Bay County jury Wednesday returned a guilty verdict against a woman caught with more than 400 grams of Methamphetamine after she fled from law enforcement and tripped in a ditch, spilling multiple bags of the drug, State Attorney Larry Basford announced.

Prosecutor Frank Sullivan during his opening statement to jurors Wednesday.
The defendant, left, and her attorney.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kizzy Gentina Patterson, 44, of Panama City, was found guilty as charged of Trafficking in Methamphetamine (more than 200 grams), after 26 minutes of deliberation. Circuit Court Judge Brantley Clark set sentencing for May 25 at 9 a.m.

The crime is a first-degree felony and under Florida’s Statute for enhanced penalties in drug trafficking cases, the defendant faces a minimum of 15 years in prison and up to 30 years.

“This defendant made some bad choices to avoid capture when she fled deputies, drove into their vehicles and then fled on foot – all with innocent bystanders nearby,” said Prosecutor Frank Sullivan. “Florida has made some good choices with its enhanced penalties for drug traffickers, and we anticipate she will pay a steep price for her actions.”

Bay County Sheriff’s Office Lt. Doug Smith testifies while jurors watch video of the defendant fleeing and hitting unmarked vehicles.
Seized methamphetamine

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Sullivan called three current or former Bay County Sheriff’s Office investigators who testified that on Jan. 9, 2020, the defendant was under surveillance after information was received she was going to be in possession of a large amount of methamphetamine. A fourth witness from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement testified that the seized drugs tested positive for methamphetamine and weighed about 420 grams.

Former investigator Stephen O’Bryen said the defendant was seen leaving the house with a large black bag which was believed to contain methamphetamine. Lt. Doug Smith said an undercover deputy using his emergency lights attempted to pull her over for a violation, but she fled.

O’Bryen testified he was in an unmarked vehicle in front of the defendant when the traffic stop was initiated, and she ran into the rear of his car trying to get away. Video from a Springfield patrol car captured the defendant then attempting to turn left and escape, but hitting another vehicle before being pinned against a power pole.

At that point, the video showed the defendant leaping out of the car and running away with a black bag. A pursuing investigator testified she stumbled while crossing a ditch and that multiple baggies of what turned out to be methamphetamine tumbled out. She was captured a few yards away.

Basford thanked the Sheriff’s Office for its work on the case and for safely apprehending the defendant, as well as the Springfield Police Department for capturing the video.

For more information, contact Mike Cazalas at mike.cazalas@sa14.fl.gov, or call 850-381-7454.

Meth trafficker sentenced to 12 years

A Circuit Court Judge Monday sentenced a woman to 12 years in prison, one month after a jury found her guilty of Trafficking in Methamphetamine, State Attorney Larry Basford announced.

Jacqueline Michelle Long, 48, of Panama City was found guilty of Trafficking in Methamphetamine (28 grams or more) and Possession of Paraphernalia April 4 after jurors deliberated for about 15 minutes.

Prosecutor Josh James shows the defendant and her attorney evidence before presenting it to a witness.
The defendant testified that the drugs recovered in her home were not hers.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Monday, Circuit Court Judge Devin Collier Monday sentenced her to 12 years in prison and she was fined $100,000. Under Florida’s drug trafficking laws, the defendant will have to serve a minimum-mandatory 7 years in prison for the first-degree felony.

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Prosecutor Josh James called witnesses who testified that a Bay County Sheriff’s Office investigation generated enough evidence for them to obtain a search warrant, which they served on May 7, 2021. The defendant and a male co-defendant were present.

Two Sheriff’s Office investigators testified they found about 34 grams of Methamphetamine in two baggies, hundreds of smaller baggies for distributing the drug, cash, and digital scales.

In bodycam footage played for jurors, the defendant stated the drugs were hers and. “there ain’t no more to find, you found it all.”

Basford thanked the BCSO investigators for the thoroughness of their case and the strong evidence they gathered.

For more information, contact Mike Cazalas at mike.cazalas@sa14.fl.gov, or call 850-381-7454.

Use, discharge of firearm in attempted killing equal a 20-year sentence

A domestic argument that erupted with shots being fired at a gas station and a nearby home 3 years ago ended with a plea of no contest and a 20-year prison term, State Attorney Larry Basford announced.

Assistant State Attorney Frank Sullivan said that under Florida’s 10-20-Life law, Daniel Joseph Betsy, 49, of Panama City, will have to serve every day of the 20-year sentence imposed by Circuit Court Judge Dustin Stephenson before he is released. He pled no contest to Attempted Second-Degree Murder with a Firearm, Shooting into an Occupied Vehicle, Aggravated Assault with a Firearm, 2 counts of Tampering with a witness and being a Felon in Possession of a Firearm.

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Daniel Betsy

While no one was injured in the June 27, 2020 shooting at a Parker gas station and residence, the discharge of a firearm during the defendant’s attempt to cause harm made him eligible for the penalty. The defendant was upset after seeing his ex-girlfriend with her new boyfriend at a gas station, fired shots at their vehicle as they departed, then followed them and fired more shots at her residence.

“He used a large-caliber pistol to shoot at a moving car and did it again after he followed it to the victim’s home,” Sullivan said. “Then he pointed the gun at a witness. The defendant endangered not only the lives of the people in that car, but of everyone in the vicinity.

“Florida’s 10-20-Life addresses crimes like this,” Sullivan continued. “If you use a firearm during the commission of a crime here, there is a heavy price to pay.”

For more information, contact Mike Cazalas at mike.cazalas@sa14.fl.gov, or call 850-381-7454.