Says: do not 'speculateÂ’
By GEORGE MCGINN
Staff Writer
NORTH PORT -- “We now know that Dale (Fullwood) had no involvement, participation, or knowledge about the murder (of Coralrose Fullwood),” said Debra Salisbury, his custody attorney.
In press release sent late Monday, Salisbury wrote that DNA evidence has cleared Dale of any involvement in the death of his 6-year-old daughter, and there is “absolutely no evidence that Dale was the so-called other person involved” in her death on Sept. 17.
Salisbury would not elborate, but did confirm sending the release in a phone call. Her press release arrived 15 minutes after her office in Sarasota closed.
However, North Port Police Chief Terry Lewis said Salisbury's information about Fullwood being cleared is incorrect.
“Dale Fullwood has not been cleared, nor for that matter, anyone else,” Lewis said regarding the murder investigation. Coralrose was found dead two blocks away from her Calabash Lane home in North Port. Her siblings, ages 4 to 13, were removed from the home by Children and Family Services two days after Coralrose's death.
Lewis said he has not shared information with Salisbury. He's not aware of anyone on the investigation team talking about the case.
“If she got any information, it has not been from the North Port Police Department,” Lewis said.
Salisbury said she sent the press release to provide the public with "accurate information" about the case, and made it on behalf of Dale.
Salisbury said that public agencies (involved with the investigation) allowed people to speculate that Dale was somehow involved in the death of Coralrose.
“This was unfair, unjust, and compounded the family’s tragedy,” Salisbury stated. “The public agencies will have to answer why they did this, and why they have grossly exaggerated the criminal case pending against Dale.”
Salisbury did not clarify whether she meant the child











case, or the murder investigation. She is his court-appointed child custody attorney.
Assistant Public Defender Adam Tebrugge is defending Fullwood on two criminal charges of possession of child











, which is scheduled to go to trial July 16. This is a separate case from the custody hearing.
“The case is an ongoing matter before the courts, and it would be inappropriate for me to discuss it,” Lewis said.
Salisbury stated DaleÂ’s child











charges are not related to Coralrose's death. Lewis agreed saying that is still true.
Tebrugge said SalisburyÂ’s case is moving on a fast track, and will be completed before his criminal case goes to trial.
“I do not know what information she may have,” Tebrugge said about Salisbury’s claims.
Tebrugge said he is not working with Salisbury on her dependency case. However, Tebrugge said that for “judicial economy,” both of them may sit and depose a witness who is involved in both cases.
“For example, if the same doctor is going to testify in both cases, we will do our depositions together, so the person only has to make one trip,” Tebrugge said.
Tebrugge said he has not yet done any of “these kinds” of depositions.
Salisbury also wanted to clarify what happened in court last week. She said it was reported that the parents lost a custody hearing last week.
“This is incorrect. The hearing last week did not involve any custody matters,” Salisbury wrote.
Salisbury wrote the hearing was a motion where the parents sought to dismiss the dependency proceeding as a sanction for the stateÂ’s failure to provide discovery information required by the court, she said.
Circuit Court Judge Charles Williams denied the request without say much. However, Williams did order the state to comply by Jan. 29 to produce all evidence and discovery.
“I urge the public to refrain from engaging in speculation and gossip,” Salisbury said. “Instead, the public should be urging its elected officials to focus its resources, reunite the Fullwood family, and swiftly find the person in our community who murdered Coralrose.”
Speculation has thrived for four months on blogs such as CourtTV and many other sites, where friends, neighbors, family members, and strangers discuss the case.
Companies selling goods such as comforters, tires, have placed the death of Coralrose on its Web sites so it will show up on Google Alerts.
A hearing about visitation is scheduled on Jan. 24, and the trial for custody has been set for Feb. 14.
“The parents are anxious to return their children to some degree of normalcy and reduce the trauma caused by their removal from their parents,” Salisbury said.
Two days after CoralroseÂ’s body was found, a circuit court awarded temporary custody of FullwoodÂ’s four other children to their grandparents, Saul and Doreen VanderWoude in Fort Myers. Dale, and his wife, Ellen-Beth, are living in separate houses.
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