Florida
3 Massachusetts high school students dead, 1 injured after Florida car wreck
Weeks before school ends, Concord-Carlisle High seniors Jimmy McIntosh, Hannah Wasserman and Maisey O’Donnell died after a Florida car crash.
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A fatal car wreck in the Panhandle led to three Massachusetts high school seniors dead and one critically injured, according to law enforcement and school officials.
The Florida Highway Patrol said on April 21, an SUV with four 18-year-old students from Concord-Carlisle High School collided with a tractor-trailer making a U-turn in the paved median of U.S. 98 in Walton County.
The driver and one passenger were pronounced dead at the scene, the FDLE said. The other two passengers were transported to a hospital to be treated for severe injuries, and one died the next day, according to school officials.
What happened in the Florida crash that killed Massachusetts students?
According to the FDLE, at about 9:28 p.m., the students were traveling westbound in an SUV on Highway 98 in Inlet Beach about a mile west of South Watersound Parkway when it crashed into a tractor-trailer making a U-turn in the median.
The SUV was thrown across the median and both eastbound lanes before coming to rest near a wooded tree line.
The SUV’s driver, identified as Jimmy McIntosh, and a front-seat passenger, Hannah Wasserman, were declared dead at the scene. The other two passengers were rushed to Ascension Sacred Heart Bay Hospital in Panama City in critical condition.
McIntosh was wearing a seatbelt, according to the crash report.
The people in the tractor-trailer — a 19-year-old driver from DeFuniak Springs and a passenger, a 23-year-old man from Panama City Beach — were not injured, the FDLE said.
The FDLE said the crash remains under investigation.
Who was killed in the Walton County, Florida, wreck?
The two people who died at the scene have been identified as Concord-Carlisle High School seniors Jimmy McIntosh and Hannah Wasserman, according to a statement from Concord-Carlisle Regional School District Superintendent Dr. Laurie Hunter.
“We offer our deep condolences to the families and friends of Hannah and Jimmy during this unimaginable time. Their loss will be deeply felt by our school community as well as by so many families in Carlisle and Concord,” Hunter said in a statement. “We are also keeping the other two students in our thoughts and wish them strength and a swift recovery.”
In a message to parents, staff and students, Concord-Carlisle High School Co-Principal Katie Stahl identified the two students injured in the wreck as Lauren Costa and Maisey O’Donnell.
Hunter announced the next day that O’Donnell had also died.
“It is with great sadness that I share additional information about the tragic car accident in Florida. We learned that a third CCHS senior, Maisey O’Donnell, passed this afternoon. Maisey is in the organ donation program as her family hopes that it will give meaning to these meaningless tragedies,” Hunter said.
Concord, Massachusetts, where the school is located, sits about 25 miles northwest of Boston.
Florida
Photos show Trump Christmas 2025 with Melania at Mar-a-Lago in Florida
Trump’s Mar-a-Lago Years: Palm Beach history, headlines, and legacy
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President Donald Trump and his wife, First Lady Melania, are spending Christmas at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida.
The Trumps spent Christmas Eve on calls with children and military service members.
According to a social media post, Trump and the first lady attended a Christmas Eve dinner in one of Mar-a-Lago’s luxurious ballrooms.
Trump also extended Christmas wishes in a post on TruthSocial, including to what he called the “Radical Left Scum.”
“Merry Christmas to all, including the Radical Left Scum that is doing everything possible to destroy our Country, but are failing badly,” the post reads in part.
See photos: President Trump, Melania spend Christmas 2025 at Mar-a-Lago
Contributing: Antonio Fins, The Palm Beach Post
Florida
‘The naughty list:’ Wrong tag leads to arrest of wanted Central Florida man
VOLUSIA COUNTY, Fla. – A wanted Central Florida man was caught after deputies noticed that his car had a wrong tag, according to the Volusia Sheriff’s Office.
In a release on Wednesday, deputies said they initially spotted a car with a tag that didn’t belong on it.
“A little research showed (the driver) had an open warrant for occupied burglary,” the release reads. “He tried to accelerate and ram his way out of trouble, but that only led to more charges.”
Body-camera footage shows deputies confront and ultimately catch the driver, identified as 33-year-old Dillon Cottrell.
According to the sheriff’s office, deputies also recovered a trafficking amount of fentanyl and other drugs.
Now, Cottrell faces charges of burglary, criminal mischief, fleeing law enforcement, trafficking in fentanyl, possession of a controlled substance without a prescription, aggravated battery on a law enforcement officer, resisting arrest, and obstructing law enforcement.
He is held without bond. His passenger, Kelli Jo Hands, was also arrested, deputies added.
“Both are still in jail and most likely spending Christmas there,” the release concludes.
Copyright 2025 by WKMG ClickOrlando – All rights reserved.
Florida
Grand Rapids police chief is candidate for Florida job: Eric Winstrom faced early trial
GRAND RAPIDS, MI – Just weeks into his new job, Grand Rapids Police Chief Eric Winstrom – sharing a small apartment with his wife and two children – was told that an officer was just involved in a shooting.
A former commander for Chicago Police Department, Winstrom had dealt with many shootings involving police.
Officer Christopher Schurr shot and killed Black motorist Patrick Lyoya after a Feb. 4, 2022, traffic stop. Schurr, a white officer, shot Lyoya in the back of the head.
Winstrom, who was named this week one of three finalists for police chief in Pensacola, Florida, recalled the tragedy in Grand Rapids in an MLive video 13 months after the killing.
He became chief in Grand Rapids on March 7, 2022.
He described the shooting as “just like a slap across the face and a wake-up call because I had been involved in so many of these difficult situations in Chicago. So I was like, ‘Oh, OK, I guess we’re doing this here so quick’ and it was I would say a progression of sadness.”
He met with Lyoya’s family in his office, “crying literally with them.” He knew that Schurr, who was ultimately acquitted by a Kent County jury of second-degree murder, and his family were devastated, too.
Winstrom fired Schurr after charges were filed.
He knew that his officers had strong feelings, with many supporting Schurr, who said he acted in self-defense when Lyoya gained control of his Taser.
Winstrom, who often responds to serious crime scenes, said: “I’ll say that this department – I’m sure everybody’s got their opinions – but from what I’ve seen they’ve handled it professionally … have not let it impact job performance at all which was something that I was really afraid of.”
That has happened in other U.S. cities after controversial police shootings. Lyoya’s supporters held many protests, particularly when the officer was on trial.
Windstrom said that calls to defund police can lead to a ‘mass exodus’ of officers, which data shows results in increasing violence in minority neighborhoods.
He said that “officers in Grand Rapids, whether they agree with my decision to fire Christopher or not, come to work every day. They just do a phenomenal, professional job. I’m really proud of them.”
Winstrom is a finalist for the Pensacola job with Brian Dugan, a former Tampa police chief, and Erik Goss, the acting deputy chief in Pensacola, the Pensacola News Journal reported.
The selection process will occur Jan. 12 to 14.
Winstrom declined an MLive request for comment on Wednesday, Dec. 24, but issued a statement the previous day.
He asked for patience while he considered what is best for him and his family. He said he will be “engaged here as ever” during the process and “I remain fully committed to ensuring the City of Grand Rapids is a community where people feel safe and are safe at all times.“
City Manager Mark Washington appointed Winstrom nearly four years ago knowing “that he was a highly qualified, top-tier professional in the field of public safety. While he hadn’t served as a Chief of Police, his potential was evident.”
Washington added: “Given the significant progress he has led within the Grand Rapids Police Department – specifically in advancing constitutional policing, enhancing transparency, and centering the department’s commitment to serve all residents – it is certainly not surprising that other communities would seek out his leadership and expertise.”
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