Page 18 - 7-21-15 Tuesday's Edition
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Funerals
RAY WILLIAMS
WILSON
National
DEATH LIST
AIKENS FUNERAL HOME
Mrs. Gladys Kitchens, Tampa.
Mr. Isaiah Murray, Tampa.
Mrs. Geraldine Qualls, Tampa.
HARMON FUNERAL HOME
Mr. Ruben Castro. Tampa.
Ms. Veronica Hamil- ton, Tampa.
Mr. Rufus Palmer, Tampa.
JACKSON FUNERAL HOME
Aaron L. Stillings, Tampa.
RAY WILLIAMS FUNERAL HOME
Mr. Vincent Butler, Tampa.
Mrs. Fannie James, Tampa.
Mrs. Delores Lovett, Lutz, FL.
Mr. Albert Roberts, Tampa.
Mr. Sidney Simpson, Jr., Tampa.
Mr. David Snow, Jr., Tampa.
WILSON FUNERAL HOME
Mrs. Hazel T. Cressie, Tampa.
Mr. Calvin Engram, Tampa.
Oriana O. Williams, Tampa.
MR. DAVID SNOW, JR.
Mr. David Snow, Jr., of Tampa, passed away Thurs- day, July 16, 2015.
A Memorial service will be held Thursday, July 23, 2015, at 6 p. m. at Ray Williams Memorial Chapel, 301 N. Howard Avenue.
Mr. Snow was a native of Tampa, and was educated in the public schools of Hills- borough County.
He leaves to cherish his memory: his loving wife, Beatrice Rodriguez Snow; six children, Ada Marie Snow Lee, David Snow, III, Patricia Snow, Robert Snow, Tara Judkins (Tim), and Michael Snow; 17 grandchildren, 14 great grandchildren, and 3 great great grandchildren; step daughter, Kamorra Zer- tuche; 3 step grandchildren; and extended family, Cheryl Rodriguez and family, Debo- rah Rodriguez and family, and Andre’ Rodriguez and family.
Arrangements entrusted to RAY WILLIAMS FU- NERAL HOME, Rhodes & Northern, Owners.
MRS. HAZEL T. CRESSIE
Graveside service for Mrs. Hazel T. Cressie, 88, a long- time educator who passed away peacefully on Friday, July 17, 2015, at Wellswood Care Center, will be held on Tuesday, July 21, 2015, at 2 p. m. at Rest Haven Memorial Park Cemetery, with Mr. Michael Tabor, officiating, and Rev. Ronnie L. Murray, eulogist.
She was preceded in death by her parents; beloved daughter; brothers and hus- band.
Hazel is survived by: her great niece and guardian, Deborah Davis; granddaugh- ters, Lisa Nicole White, An- gela Jennings and Andrea Griffin; great grandsons, Nicholas White, Jarrad Bryant and Joseph Bryant; sister, Beatrice Rodriquez Snow; aunt, Lily Bell Williams; nieces, Lillian Pon- der, East Cobb, GA, Jacque- line Tabor, Inglewood, CA, Shirley Camacho, Sharon Tabor, Cheryl Rodriquez and Deborah Rodriquez; nephews, Michael Hines Tabor (Jackie), Aaron Brice Tabor, Edward Tabor, Jr., Anthony Connolly (Dionne), Derrick Tabor, Darryl Tabor and Andre Rodriquez; sis- ters-in-law, Norma Tabor and Barbara Tabor; and many other relatives and friends.
Hazel was born on May 17, 1927, in Tampa, to the late Aaron Tabor, Sr., and Gussie Williams Tabor.
Hazel was a 1946 graduate of Middleton High School. After graduating from high school, she received a B. S. Degree in Elementary Educa- tion from Florida A&M Col- lege. Following her teacher training, she taught with Hillsborough County District Schools for over 35 years. She taught at Meacham, Col- lege Hill and Broward Ele- mentary Schools.
Family, friends, and oth- ers, whose lives Hazel touched, are invited to Wil- son’s Funeral Home for visi- tation on (today) Tuesday, July 22, 2015, from 11 a. m. – 1 p. m. to reminisce, grieve, and support each other.
Memorial contributions can be made to Hospice Care of Temple Terrace Teal Team.
“A WILSON SERVICE” www.wilson-funeral-
home.com
Mississippi Horse Trainer Who Died From Chokehold Laid To Rest
Pallbearers bring out the casket containing the body of Stonewall, Miss., resident Jonathan Sanders following his funeral services Saturday, July 18, 2015, at the Family Life Center in Quitman, Miss. Sanders, who had been driving a horse and buggy.
STONEWALL, MS --- Jonathan Sanders died on July 8, following a phys- ical encounter with a white police officer for the town of Stonewall, Mississippi. What happened that night when Sanders — a 39- year-old Black man riding in a two-wheel buggy pulled by a horse — crossed paths with Kevin Herrington — a 25-year-old part-time of- ficer — is intensely dis- puted.
Lawyers for the Sanders family and witnesses say Herrington engaged in an unprovoked attack on Sanders after the two saw each other at a convenience store about a mile across town.
Trying to sort out the facts are the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation and
the FBI. Herrington is on unpaid leave and left town on a family trip, Ready said. Sanders' survivors — in- cluding a mother, sister and two children — buried him Saturday.
Authorities are asking for calm while they finish in- vestigating. But there were already two protests last weekend attended by hun- dreds in this town of 1,100 near the Alabama line.
Another protest was planned Sunday, as attor- neys for Sanders' family paint his death as part of a larger nationwide struggle over police brutality against Black men, and they see it as part of the unfinished civil rights movement in Stonewall, a town named after Confederate general Stonewall Jackson.
Doctor Gets 45 Years For Giving Patients
Without Cancer Chemo
OAKLAND COUNTY, MI - - Dr. Farid Fata has been sentenced to 45 years in fed- eral prison without parole for violating more than 550 pa- tients’ trust in Oakland County, Michigan.
Fata, who owned his own cancer center, was charged with multiple counts of health care fraud, money laundering and conspiracy to pay and receive kickbacks.
He repeatedly told non- cancer patients they had can- cer, treated them with chemotherapy, and raked in more than $17 million from fraudulent billings. For those who did have cancer, he ei- ther under-treated or over- treated them with drugs – which ever was more prof- itable.
Before his sentencing, Fata could be seen crying as he told the court that he is “horribly ashamed” and prays for repentance. “U.S. Attorney Barbara Mc- Quade’s prosecutors asked
DR. FARID FARA
for 175 years, the maximum penalty. “Chemotherapy, as you know, is poison,” she said. “Dr. Fata gave poison to people who didn’t even have cancer ... to make money.”
Dr. Fata’s officer man- ager George Karadsheh, a blew the whistle. He said he started asking questions after staffers kept quitting the practice, and that’s how he found out that Fata was administering chemotherapy to patients who didn’t need it. He then reported his find- ings to healthcare authori- ties.
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