Florida
Central Florida beaches prepare for spring break crowds
Central Florida beaches prepare for spring break
Spring Break 2024 is right around the corner; beaches in Central Florida are preparing for the influx of young tourists.
ORLANDO, Fla. – Spring Break 2024 is right around the corner; beaches in Central Florida are preparing for the influx of young tourists.
FOX 35’s Kelsie Cairns spoke to New Smyrna Beach, Cocoa Beach, and Daytona Beach officials.
Each city has its own approach to rule crackdowns.
Starting with New Smyrna Beach, you may remember the infamous Spring Break of 2022, with videos circulating online of high-school-aged kids taking over the streets and dancing on top of cars on Flagler Avenue.
New Smyrna is ensuring all bases are covered to curb the chaos this year.
“If this is the Spring Break where you were hoping to fill up a cooler with beer and head to NSB, then this probably isn’t the location you wanna pick,” says New Smyrna Beach Police Department Chief Eric Feldman.
“We welcome kids, we welcome everybody to enjoy our beach, but we want them to treat it as if it is their own backyard,” says Lisa Martin, City Commissioner.’
“When they come in, they’re going be greeted by an army of police officers smiling on foot – who will absolutely write you a ticket for not having your seatbelt on,” Chief Feldman said.
The city will be enforcing its 11 p.m. curfew for anyone under 17. The city has this rule year-round but will use extra resources to ensure it’s followed.
City leaders anticipate the biggest “kid crowds” in the third week of March.
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“Based on experiences we’ve learned over the last couple of years, we will have significant extra staffing this year,” Feldman said.
Martin said, “This is not the same crowd that spends in our shops and restaurants – it’s a different crowd, and they’re kids who wanna have fun.”
Bike Week in Daytona Beach begins Friday
Daytona Beach is preparing for an influx of bikers, and Bike Week kicks off on Friday and runs through the following Sunday. Over 400,000 bikers are expected, and local law enforcement will step up patrols to keep people safe.
Moving on to Cocoa Beach, Wes Mullins, the Chief of the Cocoa Beach Police Department, said, “We’re not Miami, but we’re also a town that has 2.5 million visitors a year.”
City Manager Wayne Carragino said, “We just want to get the word out, like we do every year, that anybody that has the intention of coming to Cocoa Beach and making a mess, drinking excessively, driving after they drink, and causing rowdiness, We’re just not going to put up with it.”
Mullins and Carragino want to ensure beach safety. Mullins said, “We’re staffed appropriately. We’re out on the beaches. We are out on the waterways and the roadways to ensure that everybody in the city of Cocoa Beach is going to be safe.”
Cocoa Beach and New Smyrna Beach have contacted state agencies for extra help on standby. FOX 35 contacted Daytona Beach officials, who said there would be no curfews for Spring Break.
Florida
Gov. Ron DeSantis orders flags to be flown half-staff for Florida soldier who was killed in the Iran war
Gov. Ron DeSantis on Friday ordered Florida and U.S. flags at the state Capitol and all local and state buildings to be flown at half-staff on Saturday to honor U.S. Army Reserve Capt. Cody Khork, a Winter Haven resident, who was killed in Kuwait by Iranian drone strikes on March 1.
“Capt. Khork served our Nation with honor and dedication in the United States Army since 2009. He served as a Multiple Launch Rocket System/Fire Directions Specialist and was commissioned as a Military Police Officer in 2014,” a release from DeSantis’ office states. “He is remembered not only for his service to our Nation and State but as a true American hero who exemplified the values of patriotism, leadership, and selfless service. Our prayers go out to the family he leaves behind.”
Khork, 35, was one of the first U.S. casualties after the U.S. and Israel launched strikes at Iranian military and political leadership targets on Feb. 28.
A 2008 graduate of Lake Region High School in Polk County, Khork joined the National Guard in 2009.
He served overseas in Cuba, Saudi Arabia, Poland, and Kuwait and was posthumously awarded the rank of Major.
Florida
Central Florida man arrested after Miami Beach hit-and-run crash leaves 2 pedestrians dead, police say
A central Florida man has been arrested after Miami Beach police say he hit and killed two pedestrians on Collins Avenue and then fled the scene on Wednesday night.
Miami Beach police said that around 9:07 p.m., a black Nissan Sentra, which was being driven by Adan Negron-Morris, 42, of Lakeland, was spotted heading eastbound on 71st Street toward Collins Avenue in a reckless manner, and without the vehicle’s headlights on.
Negron-Mossis ended up speeding past a Miami Beach police officer who was conducting a high-visibility patrol detail in the area of Indian Creek Drive, and that officer was attempting to respond just as several 911 calls were being made about a reckless driver in the area, police said.
Negron-Morris then turned left onto Collins Avenue, and police said he eventually hit two pedestrians at the intersection of 73rd Street and Collins Avenue.
Miami Beach police said the vehicle continued to 74th Street and Collins Avenue and came to a stop. At that point, police said Negron-Morris got out of the car and fled into a nearby Walgreens.
Witnesses were able to direct responding police officers to Negron-Morris’s location, and he was taken into custody.
Police said that oofficers in the area immediately began to render aid to the two pedestrians who were hit until Miami beach Fire Rescue could arrive at the scene. Both victims were then rushed to Jackson Memorial Hospital’s Ryder Trauma Center in critical condition, where they later died.
Miami Beach police said that a DUI investigation was immediately launched after the incident, and Negron-Morris was taken to the Miami Beach Police Department’s Criminal Investigations Division.
Negron-Morris has since been charged with leaving the scene of a crash with death and vehicular manslaughter.
Florida
Florida Gov. DeSantis criticizes sheriffs who want undocumented immigration reform
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Gov. Ron DeSantis rebuked some of Florida’s top law enforcement officials Thursday, criticizing their calls to Congress and President Donald Trump to work on a path to citizenship for some undocumented immigrants.
“This idea that unless you’re an axe murderer you should be able to stay, that is not consistent with our laws, and it’s also not good policy,” DeSantis said at an event in Bradenton.
[WATCH: State Immigration Enforcement Council meeting (via The Florida Channel)]
On Monday, the State Immigration Enforcement Council, a group of local law enforcement officials who were appointed to advise the State Board of Immigration Enforcement on illegal immigration enforcement, decided to send a letter to federal government officials asking them to work on a path to citizenship for noncriminal undocumented immigrants who pay a fine.
“My job as governor is to do what’s best for the people, not what any one person who gets elected in one county thinks,” DeSantis said.
[WATCH: DeSantis unveils an aggressive immigration and border security policy (from 2023)]
Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd, chair of the council, said Monday that immigrants who aren’t criminals should be able to stay in the country, under certain conditions. Other council members, like Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri and Charlotte County Sheriff Bill Prummell, agreed with him.
“What’s right’s right, and what’s not’s not,” Gualtieri said at the meeting, “And going after the mom, who’s got three kids, who’s just trying to make a living, who’s been here for 15 years…that isn’t right, and they do need to fix it.”
DeSantis said Florida has become the national standard for illegal immigration enforcement after enacting legislation and pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into law enforcement, state-run detention facilities, and working directly with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
“Who does (border czar) Tom Homan cite as the way to do this? He cites Florida without hesitation,” DeSantis said. “We’ve got to keep the momentum going, we certainly don’t want to backtrack on this.”
Judd and Gualtieri, two of the four sheriffs on the council, have consulted DeSantis and the legislature over the past couple of years about local law enforcement’s role in illegal immigration enforcement.
[WATCH: DeSantis outlines immigration priorities ahead of Trump’s new presidency (from 2025)]
The switch to advocating for a path for citizenship is a 180-degree turn for Judd. Last year in a council meeting, Judd asked Trump to sign more executive orders to allow state law enforcement to expedite the removal of undocumented immigrants, including those who do not have removal orders or criminal records.
But on Monday, Judd suggested writing a letter to elected officials, including Trump, the Speaker of the U.S. House and the U.S. Senate Majority Leader, and federal agencies to work on a path to citizenship.
All council members except Jacksonville Sheriff T.K. Waters, who was not at the meeting, agreed.
“There are those here that are working hard, they have kids in college, are in school, they’re going to church on Sunday, they’re not violating the law, and they’re living the American dream,” Judd told council members.
After receiving backlash for his comments, at a press conference the day after the meeting, Judd said he heard from sheriffs across the state who called him in support.
The sheriff, who stood his ground and again called for the federal government to work on a path to citizenship for some undocumented immigrants, calling it “common sense.”
“They’re not a drag on society. In fact, they’re helping society. We need to find a path for them,” Judd said.
[WATCH: Sheriff Judd calls on feds to pull back mass deportation campaign]
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