Florida
Incensed owner of $8M Florida mansion ransacked by teens wants them prosecuted
The proprietor of an $8 million Florida mansion that was ransacked by a bunch of invading teenagers throughout a wild Saturday night time bash needs them prosecuted to the fullest extent of the regulation.
“All of it,” she instructed The Put up. “Criminally. Civilly. All of it. Their dad and mom ought to maintain them accountable. In the event that they don’t, we’ll.”
The incensed sufferer, who lives within the Watercolor, Fla., dwelling together with her husband and two small children, mentioned her household was out of city when cops known as to ask if she was conscious of a celebration in progress in her dwelling.
Authorities first started investigating the scenario after receiving suspicious 911 hold up name from the deal with, she mentioned.
“I used to be simply shocked,” she recalled of her preliminary response. “It was a sense of disgust that these children would try this. We’ve lived locally for six years, we raised children right here.”
The illicit revelers ransacked the home whereas blasting music, boozing and even organising boxing matches in the lounge.
Cops mentioned in addition they made off with a trove of luxurious items and tried on clothes they discovered whereas rifling by means of closets and drawers.
She mentioned the haul included a signed Peyton Manning soccer and a bottle of wine price about $1,500.
The home-owner theorized that the intruders noticed that the home was up on the market and focused it for his or her rager.
“They may simply see that individuals have been dwelling there,” she mentioned, including that she was surprised by their willingness to submit footage of the throwdown to social media and that the movies turned her abdomen.
The mother mentioned she has two older children who don’t reside within the dwelling and didn’t acknowledge any of the partiers featured within the footage.
She mentioned mates and neighbors kindly cleaned up the chaotic aftermath of the celebration earlier than she arrived dwelling. They’d collected ten luggage of trash within the course of.
In addition they modified the sheets as a result of all of the beds within the dwelling had been sampled by intruders in some unspecified time in the future, the girl famous.
“The group is simply outraged,” she mentioned. “I don’t understand how these children thought they may simply stroll in to somebody’s dwelling and do that. We aren’t going to face for it.”
Florida
Macy's is closing 66 stores in 2025, including these in South Florida
Macy’s is moving forward with its planned closures of stores in South Florida and across the country, the company announced Thursday.
Sixty-six locations were listed to close, most during the first quarter of 2025, though some had already been shut down.
In South Florida, the closures only affect the furniture stores at the following locations:
- 4501 North Federal Highway in Fort Lauderdale
- 13640 Pines Boulevard in Pembroke Pines
- 13251 South Dixie Highway in Miami – already closed in 2024
But if you’re a faithful shopper, fear not. The company said these three furniture businesses are relocating to a nearby full-line location.
Additionally, these locations are closing or have already closed in Florida:
- 9339 Glades Road in Boca Raton – This furniture store already closed, and will relocate to a nearby full-line location.
- 801 North Congress Avenue Suite 100 in Boynton Beach at the Boynton Beach Mall
- 298 Westshore Plaza in Tampa at the WestShore Plaza
- 820 West Town Parkway in Altamonte Springs
- 3501 South Tamiami Trail Suite 600 in Sarasota
For that Altamonte Springs location, a going-out-of-business sale is planned for the first quarter of 2025.
In the announcement, Macy’s said the closures were part of their Bold New Chapter strategy.
“This plan is designed to return the company to sustainable, profitable sales growth which includes closing approximately 150 underproductive stores over a three-year period while investing in its 350 go-forward Macy’s locations through fiscal 2026,” their news release reads.
Go here to see the list of all 66 closing Macy’s locations.
Florida
SpaceX readies for next Starlink launch from Florida coast. Here’s when
BREVARD COUNTY, Fla. – SpaceX is readying for its next Starlink mission launch from Florida’s Space Coast on Friday morning.
In a release, the company announced that a Falcon 9 rocket will carry 21 more Starlink satellites into orbit from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.
SpaceX officials said that liftoff is targeting 11:21 a.m., though backup opportunities will run until 2:15 p.m.
More opportunities will also be available on Saturday starting at 10 a.m. if needed.
The 45th Weather Squadron forecast shows that the chance of weather interfering with Friday’s launch attempt is less than 5%. However, that risk rises to 20% if pushed to this weekend.
Regardless, SpaceX reports that this is set to be the 25th flight for the first-stage booster used in this mission, which has previously been used to launch CRS-22, CRS-25, Crew-3, Crew-4, TelkomSat-113BT, Turksat-5B, Koreasat-6A, Eutelsat HOTBIRD-F2, Galileo L13, mPOWER-A, PSN MFS, and 13 other Starlink missions.
News 6 will stream the launch live at the top of this story when it happens.
Copyright 2025 by WKMG ClickOrlando – All rights reserved.
Florida
Lawsuit seeks to push DeSantis to call special elections for Florida Legislature seats
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Accusing Gov. Ron DeSantis of violating “his mandatory statutory duty,” the American Civil Liberties Union on Thursday filed a lawsuit asking a judge to order DeSantis to set special elections for two legislative seats that opened as part of a political shakeup after President-elect Donald Trump’s win in November.
Former Rep. Joel Rudman, R-Navarre, stepped down from the state House District 3 seat last week, and state Sen. Randy Fine, R-Brevard County, will exit his Senate District 19 seat on March 31 as they run in special elections for congressional seats.
The lawsuit filed in Leon County circuit court Thursday argued that DeSantis not setting special elections for the legislative seats will leave voters in Rudman’s district without representation “for the entirety of the 2025 session” and voters in Fine’s district without representation for about half of the 60-day legislative session, which begins March 4.
Voters “have a clear legal right to have the governor fix the date of a special election for each vacancy,” and the governor “has a clear legal duty to fix the dates of the special elections,” attorneys for the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Florida wrote in the lawsuit.
Plaintiffs in the case are Christina Forrest, a voter in House District 3, and Janet Laimont, a voter in Senate District 19.
“When a vacancy arises in legislative office, the people have the right to fill that vacancy in a special election,” the lawsuit said, pointing to a Florida law. “The reason is obvious: No Floridian should be deprived of representation because of the death, resignation, or removal of their representatives. But left to his own devices, the governor would deprive the residents of SD 19 and HD 3 of their constitutionally protected voice in the Capitol.”
The lawsuit said DeSantis “clear legal duty is ministerial and nondiscretionary in nature.” It seeks what is known as a “writ of mandamus” ordering DeSantis to set the special election dates.
“Each resident of the state has the right to be represented by one senator and one representative. These legislators are their voice in the halls of the Capitol,” the ACLU lawyers wrote. “The vacancies in these districts arose over 40 days ago. No other governor in living memory has waited this long to schedule a special election.”
Mark Ard, a spokesman for the Florida Department of State, said in an email that the agency “continues to work with the supervisors of elections to identify suitable dates for special elections” in the legislative districts.
“The election dates will be announced soon,” Ard wrote.
Fine and Rudman announced their plans to run for Congress in late November, as Trump began to fill out his administration.
Rudman is seeking to replace former U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, who resigned in Congressional District 1 after being tapped by Trump to serve as U.S. attorney general. Gaetz later withdrew his name from consideration for attorney general amid intense scrutiny related to a congressional ethics report.
Fine is running to replace U.S. Rep. Mike Waltz, who will serve as Trump’s national security adviser. Waltz will step down in Congressional District 6 on Jan. 20, the day Trump is sworn into office.
DeSantis quickly ordered special elections to fill the vacancies created by Gaetz and Waltz, the lawsuit noted. Special primary elections for the congressional seats will be held on Jan. 28, and special general elections will take place on April 1.
Rudman’s former state House district is made up of parts of Okaloosa and Santa Rosa counties, while Fine’s Senate district consists of part of Brevard County. DeSantis’ delay in setting special election dates in the districts also has drawn attention because they are in areas dominated by Republicans.
Previous governors’ “routine practice” was to “quickly call a special election for the resigning legislator’s seat and hold it concurrently with the special election for the higher office,” the lawsuit said, referring to the congressional seats as being the higher office.
In the two decades before DeSantis took office, 15 legislative vacancies occurred because a state lawmaker resigned to run for another office, according to the lawsuit. DeSantis’ predecessors set special elections to fill the resigning legislators’ seats on the same dates as the elections in which the legislators resigned to run, or earlier.
“But lately, Governor DeSantis has more often chosen to deviate from Florida’s longstanding practice of timely special elections, in violation of his mandatory statutory duty,” the lawsuit said.
As an example, the ACLU lawyers pointed to DeSantis’ drawn-out response to the 2021 death of U.S. Rep. Alcee Hastings, a Broward County Democrat.
DeSantis “failed to call a special election for 30 days — longer than any Florida governor had ever taken to call a special election in at least the prior 22 years, and possibly ever in the history of the state” to fill Hastings’ seat, the lawsuit argued.
DeSantis ultimately ordered a special election to fill Hastings’ seat — more than nine months after the congressman died.
DeSantis in 2021 also waited more than 90 days to order special elections to fill three seats vacated by legislators who sought to replace Hastings.
“The governor did not call special elections until he was forced to — after residents of the districts petitioned this court for mandamus relief,” Thursday’s lawsuit said. “Following months of inaction, the governor called elections within days of this court ordering him to show cause why the writ should not issue.”
In 2023, DeSantis waited 38 days to set a special election for a legislative vacancy.
“Yet again, the governor did not call the election until he was forced to — after this court ordered the governor to show cause why mandamus should not issue in a lawsuit brought by a district resident,” the ACLU’s lawyers wrote.
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