Miami, FL
CBS News Miami Investigates: Here’s how to safely navigate plastic surgery
MIAMI – South Florida has become a top destination for cosmetic surgery, as people flock from all over the country to get nipped and tucked.
CBS News Miami investigates how to safely navigate plastic surgery.
Several women from different parts of the country told CBS News Miami they traveled to Miami specifically for plastic surgery.
“It just felt very factory-like. Let’s just get you in and get you out,” said one woman from Texas who did not want her identity revealed.
She decided she was ready for a new look by getting the popular surgery a Brazilian Butt Lift or BBL.
“My number one goal was, I wanted to look natural. And I didn’t want to look like I had surgery. I wanted to look like me, just a little more enhance,” said the woman from Texas.
She set out on a journey to find the right surgeon in Miami because the surgery is so common here, but with her living out of state, the search for her doctor was done remotely.
That’s when the red flags started as most of her consultations were not even with a doctor.
“Personally, I felt like in my research that a lot of doctors were more concerned rock star status that BBL’s gave them versus the actual outcome for the patient. Because it could be a life-changing procedure for a lot of women,” said the woman from Texas.
More than 28-thousand people decided to get the body contouring surgery in 2022, a two percent increase from 2019.
While the woman who traveled from Texas says she found the right doctor, not everyone was as lucky.
Tierra Gosha also did not want to be on camera, she instead wants the focus of her story to be on her mother Tanesha Walker.
“Things will never be the same. Holidays, birthdays, feel empty inside,” said Gosha.
Tanesha traveled from Indiana to South Florida for a breast augmentation that her original doctor said it wasn’t safe due to pre-existing conditions.
That’s when someone suggested another doctor.
Gosha says, before the surgery, she spoke to her mom on the phone. “She said, hey Tierra I’m here. She said I will call you when I’m out of surgery. I said okay mom, I love you. She said I love you too. I never heard anything else from my mom.”
Gosha told CBS News Miami that her mother said the new doctor told her mother to come in for surgery, the day after she contacted him.
It was their only in-person meeting, but according to her instead of Tanesha having her breasts done, the plan had changed.
Her daughter told CBS News Miami the new doctor performed a 360 liposuction and a BBL.
According to the medical examiner, the grandmother of 11 died after the procedure
As a result, the Florida Department of Health disciplined the doctor.
He was fined 10 thousand dollars, had to attend a one-hour lecture on safety and complications when it comes to a BBL and keep a record of conducting the procedure with ultrasound technology for 6 months.
“Her medical clearance was not for that type of procedure. So he should have not proceeded to attempt to do that type of procedure on her. She did not go through the proper medical clearance to be done,” said Gosha.
Since 2019 a total of 45 people have died from complications of plastic surgery in Miami alone.
Tanesha Walker was one of them. 21 have died since she did.
Despite the deaths, people are still traveling to South Florida to get popular surgeries like the Brazilian Butt Lift.
“Most of these patients are young mothers. It’s not just that one person has died. This death is incredibly tragic, but if affects the children. It affects the significant other. It affects the whole family,” said Dr. Pat Pazmino.
Dr Pat Pazmino with Miami Aesthetics has performed plastic surgery for 20 years and is a member of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.
He told CBS News Miami the cosmetic surgery world is always changing and the demand is at an all-time high as more women are inquiring about body contouring procedures.
That means not everyone is being cared for the way they should be.
“Many times they would show up having already paid for the surgery. Having somebody who is not a doctor determines what procedure they were going to get. Then they would meet the surgeon five minutes before they were wheeled into the OR,” said Pazmino.
He says that’s not what should happen and insists that surgeons and patients should be creating plans for before, during and after surgery.
“Learn about the patient’s medical history, the patient’s surgical history and then do a physical exam. And all of that together is what the doctor uses to counsel the patient, what’s possible, what’s available,” said Pazmino.
A total of 10 women have died from a fat embolism in Miami since 2019, a complication commonly seen post BBL surgery.
The alarming amount of deaths has led to things like Florida House Bill 1471, which requires doctors to see someone a day before the surgery, the doctor on record to be the one to perform the surgery and ultrasound technology must be used during the procedure to guide where the fat is being injected.
“Really investigate the doctor. Go ahead and google. Google the doctor. Google the address where the procedure will take place. The best thing to do is to go to websites like check your surgeon dot com. They can also go to the Florida Department of Health because these resources only list the legitimate boards,” said Pazmino.
And there’s this advice from one patient to a potential one?
“Do your best to meet with the doctor in person because that’s when you really get an even greater feel of the competency of the doctor and who they are. How they’re going to take care of you because once you’re done with the surgery, their part may be finished but you still have a long road ahead of you,” said the woman from Texas.
Dr. Pazmino also says another way to see If your doctor is the right one for you is to ask questions, like where will the surgery take place and can it be done in an hospital?
Miami, FL
MLS: Messi double helps Inter Miami slay Rapids in front of huge crowd
Argentine forward’s brace included the match winner against Colorado Rapids in front of over 75,000 fans in Denver.
Published On 19 Apr 2026
Lionel Messi scored a brace and German Berterame headed another as Inter Miami earned a 3-2 win over the Colorado Rapids in Major League Soccer (MLS) on Saturday in Denver.
Messi scored the go-ahead goal in the 79th minute. He started a run just inside midfield and went unchallenged until the box, where he blasted into the upper left corner for a 3-2 lead.
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Rafael Navarro and Darren Yapi each scored for Colorado (4-4-0, 12 points) in front of 75,824 at Empower Field, the second-largest crowd in MLS history.
Miami (4-1-3, 15 points) took a 1-0 lead in the 18th minute after Colorado goalkeeper Zack Steffen’s pass was intercepted by Yannick Bright. Josh Atencio offered a hard challenge and was shown a yellow card after video review.
Messi took the resulting penalty and rolled his shot straight down the middle as Miami took a 1-0 lead.
Colorado had a solid look at the goal when midfielder Wayne Frederick attempted a one-touch lob. Miami goalkeeper Dayne St. Clair was out of position and well beyond the penalty arc after heading away a loose ball, but Frederick’s attempt sailed over the open net.
In the fifth minute of first-half stoppage time, Miami extended their lead to 2-0, connecting on a series of passes deep in their attacking third. Messi got the run of play started with a tight touch pass to Rodrigo De Paul.
De Paul sent Mateo Silvetti on a run to the boundary line. His inward-spinning cross floated to the front of goal, where Berterame rose above the Colorado defence and tucked a header under the bar.
Navarro’s goal cut Miami’s lead to 2-1. He started a run in midfield and used a step-over move to get an open shot a few steps into the box that tucked inside the left post past a diving St. Clair in the 58th minute.
In the 62nd minute, second-half substitute Yapi settled on a direct pass from Lucas Herrington and sizzled a shot past St. Clair for the equaliser.
Miami closed the win playing a man down as Yannick Bright was sent off with a red card in the 87th minute.
Miami, FL
Former Titans GM mock Miami right tackle to the Cleveland Browns at 6
The Cleveland Browns traded for an extended right tackle, former Houston Texan Tytus Howard, at the start of free agency as they began their rebuild of the offensive line that was awful in 2025. But Howard has played every position on the offensive line except for center, so if it’s all about getting your best five on the field, which it should be, there’s a chance Howard doesn’t play at right tackle in 2026.
While doing a mock draft on Peter Schrager’s podcast, former Tennessee Titans general manager Ran Carthon had the Browns drafting Miami (FL) right tackle sixth overall. He talked about the issue with Howard, but said Mauigoa could either take over the tackle spot or be a really good guard.
Carthon said he knows that Mauigoa would be one of their best five, whether it is at guard or tackle. Some will say that a guy who may be best at guard isn’t worth the sixth overall pick, and I have to disagree. You should draft the best football players, and Francis Mauigoa is my highest-rated offensive lineman and seventh overall. It might be at guard, but I have a good feeling that Mauigoa will find a home in the NFL as a high-quality offensive lineman.
Miami, FL
Inventory drops for first time since 2023 as sales rebound across coastal Miami, beaches
Inventory of homes and condos across the coastal Miami mainland and Miami Beach and the barrier island markets fell in the first quarter, marking the first big inventory drops since 2023.
The Corcoran Group’s first quarter reports don’t cover all of Miami-Dade County, but they offer insight into how the coastal markets, which have a higher share of luxury properties, are performing.
In Miami Beach, Sunny Isles Beach, Bal Harbour, Bay Harbor Islands, Surfside, Miami Beach, Fisher Island and Key Biscayne, single-family home inventory dropped 15 percent annually to 398 listings, and condo inventory was down 13 percent to 3,919 listings.
On Miami’s coastal mainland markets, which include Aventura, Miami Shores, Upper East Side, Edgewater, downtown Miami, Brickell, Coral Gables and Coconut Grove, inventory slipped 4 percent to 4,584 condo listings and 555 single-family listings, down 6 percent year-over-year.
Here’s a closer look at the market:
Miami Beach and the barrier islands
Single-family sales rose 13 percent year-over-year to 85 closings, the first time they have increased since the second quarter of 2024. Condo closings rose 15 percent to 693 closings, the first increase since the last quarter of 2024.
Pricing dropped, with the median price of single-family homes down 4 percent to $3.5 million and the median condo price down 9 percent to $640,000. The average price per square foot was nearly flat at $1,119.
Still, buyers set records with their purchases. Billionaire Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg paid $170 million for the waterfront mansion at 7 Indian Creek Island Road, and Starbucks billionaire Howard Schultz paid $44 million, or $7,949 per square foot, for a penthouse at the Four Seasons Residences at The Surf Club.
Coastal mainland
Sales of single-family homes on the coastal mainland rose 16 percent to 220 closings. While markets like Coral Gables experienced declines in condo and single-family home sales, Coconut Grove home sales surged — up over 100 percent for single-family homes to 47 closings and up 55 percent to 87 condo closings. Condo sales rose 13 percent to 759 closings.
The median price of single-family homes across the coastal mainland rose 11 percent to just over $2 million. The median price of condos increased slightly, up 1 percent, to $602,000.
The priciest deals in the first quarter were the $32 million trade of 12 Tahiti Beach Island Road in Coral Gables, and the $19.8 million sale of a penthouse at Vita at Grove Isle.
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