Showing posts with label Florida. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Florida. Show all posts

Monday, February 9, 2015

Florida man admits serving alligators for Super Bowl meal

A Florida man was arrested Sunday after admitting he caught and killed five small alligators and served them for Super Bowl dinner.

Richard Nixie cut off the gators’ tails to prepare the meal, the Orlando Sentinel reports. 

The alligators were less than five feet in length, the Daytona News-Journal reports.

“No one should have possession of a Florida alligator unless they are a state nuisance-alligator trapper,” Greg Workman, a spokesman for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, told the paper.

Alligators are federally protected while their considered threatened. It is legal to hunt them, but only during harvest seasons and with a permit, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation website.

The 30-year-old was arrested three hours before the start of the big game at his home. 

His prior arrest record included misdemeanor drug possession, felony weapon possession and armed burglary, the paper reports. He also served three years in prison for trafficking stolen property in Seminole County, Florida.

Click for more from Orlando Sentinel.

Click for more from Daytona-News Journal.


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Florida man admits serving alligators for Super Bowl meal

Monday, January 12, 2015

Florida ends gay marriage ban

Tuesday, January 06, 2015 | 10:59 AM    

KISSIMMEE, Florida (AP) — Florida’s ban on same-sex marriage ended statewide at the stroke of midnight Monday, and court clerks in some counties wasted no time, issuing marriage licences and performing weddings for same-sex couples in the early morning hours.

But they were beaten to the punch by a Miami judge who found no need to wait until the statewide ban expired. Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Sarah Zabel presided over Florida’s first legally recognised same-sex marriages Monday afternoon.

Still, most counties held off on official ceremonies until early Tuesday, when US District Judge Robert L Hinkle’s ruling that Florida’s same-sex marriage ban is unconstitutional took effect in all 67 counties.

“It’s been a long time coming. We’re just so excited and so happy,” Osceola County Commissioner Cheryl Grieb said after she married Patti Daugherty, her partner of 22 years, at a courthouse in Kissimmee, just south of Orlando. In matching white pants and white embroidered shirts, the couple stood under a canopy of lace and ribbons as County Clerk of Court Armando Ramirez officiated and US Rep Alan Grayson, D-Fla, served as a witness. Supporters counted down to midnight, with a clock ticking away at the front of the room.

Florida — the third-most populous state, with 19.9 million people — becomes the 36th state where gay marriage is legal. Seventy per cent of Americans now live in states where same-sex couples can legally wed.

In several of the Deep South states surrounding Florida, gay marriage bans remain in place. That puts Florida — a state much changed since the 1970s, when former beauty pageant queen and orange juice spokeswoman Anita Bryant started her national campaign against gay rights in the 1970s — in place to potentially serve as a mecca for gay couples who could travel there for weddings.

But while the end of the ban was met with cheers or even shrugs from Florida’s more liberal enclaves, political and cultural divisions remained in the battleground state, especially farther north, where more conservative Floridians live.

In Jacksonville, Duval County Court Clerk Ronnie Fussell shut down the courthouse chapel, saying no marriage ceremonies — gay or straight — would be allowed. At least two other northeast Florida counties did the same.

“The day is going to come very soon where America is going to wake up and say, ‘Whoa! Wait a second! I wanted two guys to live together. I didn’t want the fundamental transformation of society,"” said John Stemberger, president of the Florida Family Policy council. He led the petition drive to put the gay marriage ban on the ballot back in 2008.

There were no such obstacles in Key West, at Florida’s southern tip. Aaron Huntsman and William Lee Jones received the Keys’ first marriage licence issued to a same-sex couple early Tuesday. They exchanged nuptials in matching black tuxedos with blue vests, in front of several hundred people on the Monroe County Courthouse steps.

After their vows, Jones removed a large silver-toned bracelet that encircled his left wrist. He called it “my shackle of inequality”.

“I’m elated. Overjoyed that I am finally legally recognised with the man I have loved for 12 years now,” Jones said.

Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi is still pursuing appeals, at both state and federal levels. She wants to uphold the ban voters approved in 2008.

Tellingly, though, the 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals and then the US Supreme Court refused Bondi’s request to extend an order blocking same-sex marriages beyond Monday. That essentially gave the green light to weddings.

On Friday, US Supreme Court justices will decide in private whether to rule on the merits of gay marriage during their current term.

Bondi shares her position with former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, who’s considering a Republican run for president: that marriage should be defined by each state.

But even Bush tried to find a middle ground Monday. In a statement, he urged people to “show respect for the good people on all sides of the gay and lesbian marriage issue — including couples making lifetime commitments to each other who are seeking greater legal protections and those of us who believe marriage is a sacrament and want to safeguard religious liberty”.

The remaining political divides hardly bothered the couples celebrating in much of Florida on Monday and Tuesday. Churches held mass weddings for same-sex couples, as did several cities and counties at courthouses or City Halls.

More than 40 couples married Tuesday morning on the red-carpet-draped steps outside Orlando’s City Hall. A four-tiered wedding cake featured a rainbow-colored bottom, and Orlando’s gay chorus sang ‘Over the Rainbow’. Many couples were accompanied by their young children.

“We wanted to marry on this historic day,” said Brandon Walker-Hodge, who held 5-week-old daughter Karaleigh Ruth as he exchanged vows with Josh Walker-Hodge. “And really it’s all about her at this point and everything that comes with the legality of marriage.”

In Palm Beach County, celebrity financial adviser Suze Orman showed up at a mass courthouse wedding to support two friends. Orman, who married wife Kathy Travis a decade ago in South Africa, said she’s happy same-sex couples are finally being recognised legally in Florida, where she lives part time.

“This is an investment in validity,” Orman said.

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Florida ends gay marriage ban

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Tropical Storm Arthur forms off Florida coast

The first tropical storm of  the 2014 Atlantic Hurricane Season formed on Tuesday and could affect North and South Carolina in the United States as a hurricane by Thursday.

Tropical Storm Arthur strengthened after it became a tropical depression late Monoday off  the coast of  Florida.

The system is moving with maximum sustained winds of  40 miles per hour, and tropical-storm-force winds extend 45 miles from its centre.

The National Hurricane Centre said the storm is located about 95 miles southeast of  Cape Canaveral.

A tropical storm watch has been issued for the coast of  east-central Florida from Fort Pierce north to Flagler Beach and the storm is expected to produce 1 to 3 inches of  rain in the watch area later on Tuesday.


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Tropical Storm Arthur forms off Florida coast

Monday, August 5, 2013

VIDEO: Man paddles from Cuba to Florida

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VIDEO: Man paddles from Cuba to Florida

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Explosions rock Florida gas plant

30 July 2013 Last updated at 02:40 ET Aerial footage shows a tower of flames rising into the sky, as the BBC’s Peter Bowes reports

At least seven people were injured by a series of explosions at a gas plant in the US state of Florida, officials say.

They were working at the Blue Rhino propane plant, in the town of Tavares, when the blasts began at about 23:00 (03:00 GMT), blowing the roof off.


The explosions continued for about an hour and caused a large fire. The cause of the initial blast is not yet known.


Fifteen workers were found safe after initially being unaccounted for, while two others managed to escape unhurt.

John Harrell, Lake County Sheriff’s Office: “More and more explosions”

A spokesman for the Lake County Sheriff’s Office, John Harrell, said the missing workers had merely “scattered” when the explosions began and had since been contacted by their managers and emergency crews.


People living within 0.5 miles (0.8km) of the plant have been evacuated, although Mr Harrell said emergency crews believed the fire had been contained and that there was no immediate danger to them.


Officials are investigating the blasts. There were an estimated 53,000 tanks at the plant at the time.


Former plant supervisor Don Ingram told WESH-TV that Blue Rhino took in propane tanks used for home barbecues, cleaned them, checked their valves and then refilled them.


About 4,000 to 5,000 tanks were refilled each night and were stacked on plastic pallets four or five high behind the filling station, Mr Ingram added.


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Explosions rock Florida gas plant

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Seven killed in Florida hostage siege

27 July 2013 Last updated at 16:11 ET Victim’s daughter: “I heard 15 to 20 shots”

A gunman holding hostages in a building near Miami in the US state of Florida killed six people before being shot dead by police, officials say.

Officers stormed the block of flats in Hialeah, north of Miami, on Saturday morning after a stand-off lasting several hours.


Two hostages were freed unharmed, police said.


Five of the victims were found inside the complex. Another man was killed while walking across a street outside.

‘Screaming’

Police were called after shots were fired on Friday evening.


They said gunman Pedro Vargas, 43, set his apartment on fire. When the building manager and his wife noticed the smoke and ran to his apartment, he shot them dead.


Map

The couple’s daughter Shamira Piscotti said: “I heard about 15 to 20 shots and so I went outside.


“My neighbours were screaming that my parents had been shot. I guess there was an altercation and the person opened fire on both of them.”


The attacker went on to kill a man walking in the street and a family of three who lived downstairs, police said.


He is then believed to have barricaded himself in a flat and taken two people hostage.


Police moved in after almost eight hours of negotiations, local media said.


“They made the decision to go in there and save and rescue the hostages,” Sgt Eddie Rodriguez told the Associated Press.


A 9mm pistol was found at the scene.


Police say there was no clear motive for the shooting and they are still investigating the circumstances.


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Seven killed in Florida hostage siege

Gunman among seven dead after Florida apartment shoot-out

News

Sunday, July 28, 2013

HIALEAH, Florida (AP) — A gunman holding hostages inside a South Florida apartment complex killed six people before being shot dead by a SWAT team that stormed the building early yesterday morning following an stand-off, police said.Sgt Eddie Rodriguez told The Associated Press that police got a call around 6:30 pm EDT Friday that shots had been fired in a building with dozens of apartments in Hialeah, just a few miles north of Miami.Although a crisis team was able to briefly establish communication with the man, Rodriguez said talks eventually “just fell apart” with the gunman, who was holding two hostages on the fifth floor. Both of them survived when officers stormed the building, fatally shooting the gunman during an exchange of gunfire.The dead bodies of three women and two men were found at two different apartment units inside the building, which Rodriguez said was in a “very quiet neighbourhood”. Another man who was walking his children into an apartment across the street was also killed.

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Gunman among seven dead after Florida apartment shoot-out