Florida
Murder trial for Florida husband accused of killing his wife begins

Trial begins for husband accused of murder
The murder trial for a Florida husband whose accused of killing his wife has begun
ORLANDO, Fla. – It’s been five years since Shanti Cooper-Tronnes died and after many delays, her case is finally going before a judge.
“The evidence in this case will show that on April 24, 2018, the defendant killed his wife,” said a prosecutor.
The first witness to take the stand in the trial was the 911 operator who took David Tronnes’s call on April, 24th, 2018. Then a retired officer responded to the scene.
“He was not crying,” said Steven Wilson, a retired officer.
“Have you never come across who was in shock that displayed grief or such in a manner that was inconsistent with what you would expect normally?” asked the defense.
“I’ve yes, I’ve seen that,” said Wilson. “But in this case, he was acting as though he was sobbing.”
“Objection!” said the defense.
In 2018 police said Cooper-Tronnes was found dead in the shower. David Tronnes told Fox 35 in 2018 that he believed she slipped and fell while getting into the bathroom.
25-year-old Florida woman arrested for beating up her mom and stealing her car, police say
A firefighter paramedic who took the stand described the scene.
“If I remember correctly, I believe her body was wet, better clothes were not,” said Wade Sperry.
Gary Crosby, a crime scene investigator who responded to the scene, took pictures of the bathtub.
“There was what looked like signs of diluted blood all the way around the bathtub, like where a water level was,” said Crosby.
“All right and did there appear to be hair in the bathtub and in the drain?” asked the prosecutor.
“Yeah, there was two sections of hair,” said Crosby.
Prosecutors also talked to a dental assistant who works for a dentist’s office. She said Cooper-Tronnes made an emergency appointment the day before she died, but never showed up and never called to cancel.
The trial will resume tomorrow.

Florida
Auburn, Duke, Houston, Florida Earn NCAA Tournament No. 1 Seeds

Auburn player of the year candidate Johni Broome and the Tigers are the No. 1 overall seed in the … [+]
Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved
Duke and Auburn topped the national rankings the last two weeks, and the NCAA men’s basketball tournament selection committee saw no reason to stray.
Auburn (28-5) was given the No. 1 overall seed in the 68-team field despite losing to Tennessee in the semifinals of the Southeastern Conference tournament, based on its body of work. Auburn has 16 Quad 1 wins, three more than any other team in Division I, while playing the second most difficult schedule.
Duke (31-3), Houston (30-4) and Florida (30-4) are the other No. 1 seeds. All won their conference tournaments — Duke in the Atlantic Coast, Houston in the Big 12 and Florida in the SEC.
Duke enters the NCAA tournament with uncertainty around star freshman and likely NBA 2025 No. 1 draft choice Cooper Flagg, who suffered a left ankle injury in a quarterfinal victory over Georgia Tech and did not play against North Carolina or Louisville.
Cooper Flagg’s left ankle injury did not prevent Duke from winning the ACC tournament. (Photo by … [+]
Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
“It’s full speed ahead,” Duke coach Jon Scheyer said. “Our goal is for Friday (return), and it is his goal as well.”
It did not seem to matter. Duke fellow freshman Kon Knueppel had 63 points in the three ACC tournament games.
Duke earned its 15th No. 1 seed, tying Kansas for second-most overall. North Carolina, the last at-large team in the field according to the selection committee, has been a top seed 18 times.
Auburn and Michigan State are the 1-2 seeds in the South Regional, Duke and Alabama are 1-2 in the East, Houston and Tennessee are 1-2 in the Midwest and Florida and St. John’s are 1-2 in the West.
The East and the Midwest regional winners meet in the national semifinals, as do the South and West winners. The Final Four is in San Antonio, Texas, on April 5 and 7.
The SEC Makes a Statement
Auburn and Florida headlined an SEC assault — a tournament-record 14 SEC teams made the field, shattering the previous record of 11 set by the Big East in 2011, the first year field was expanded to 68 teams.
Florida rolled through the stacked SEC tournament field to win the postseason tournament. (AP … [+]
Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved
The SEC received four of the top eight seeds, and it seems fair. The SEC is ranked No. 1 in both the NCAA RPI rankings and the analytic site Kenpom. Auburn was No. 1 in the AP Top 25 for seven weeks and Tennessee was No. 1 for five. Florida and Alabama reached as high as No. 2, each blocked by Auburn.
The other SEC seeds: Kentucky (3) Texas A&M (4), Ole Miss (6), Missouri (6), Mississippi State (8), Georgia (9), Oklahoma (9), Arkansas (10), Vanderbilt (10), Texas (11). Texas has a playin game against Xavier on Wednesday
Four SEC teams have eight or fewer losses despite playing in the toughest league in Division I.N o other conference can boast that season-long success. The conference has 16 members, and 14 of them had at least 19 wins.
The Big Ten, led by No. 2 seed Michigan State, has eight teams in the field. The Big 12 has seven and the Big East has five. While Duke is seeded on the top line, there are only four ACC teams in the field. The Mountain West also had four.
No. 1 Seed Tournament History
Seeded on the top line does not guarantee success, but it is a good place to start. No. 1 seeds have won six of the last seven tournaments and nine of the last 12.
UConn, the top seed in the tournament in 2024, beat Purdue for its second consecutive championship after winning it all as a No. 4 seed in 2023. The Huskies were the eighth team to win back-to-back titles, and they were the first overall No. 1 seed to win it since Rick Pitino took Louisville to the 2023 title, although that was later vacated because of NCAA violations.
Kansas, Baylor, Virginia, Villanova and North Carolina were No. 1 seeds when they won the championship from 2017-22. The 2020 tournament was cancelled because of COVID.
No. 1 seeds have meet in the championship game three times since 2017. UConn and Purdue were No. 1 seeds a year ago. Baylor beat fellow No. 1 Gonzaga in 2021 and North Carolina beat the Zags in 2017.
What Does KenPom Say?
Analytics guru Ken Pomeroy, a former U.S. government meteorologist, revolutionized the use of statistics as a predictor of success in the NCAA tournament in the early 2000s, and his rankings are recognized as the industry standard.
Since 2001, 95.7 percent of the NCAA tournament champions have ranked in the top 22 in the KenPom adjusted offensive efficiency and 91.3 percent have ranked in the top 32 in adjusted defensive efficiency.
Nine teams are in both camps entering the tournament, including all four No. 1 seeds Duke, Auburn, Houston and Florida. The others are Alabama, Gonzaga, Iowa State, Tennessee and Wisconsin.
Duke has the best combined marks — third on offense and fourth on defense. Houston and Florida are the only other teams in the top 10 in both. Florida ranks first in offense and 10th on defense. Houston is 10th on defense and second on offense.
Who Was Squeezed Out
North Carolina (22-13) was an often-problematic 1-12 in Quad 1 games. A team is credited with Quad 1 win for a home victory against a team ranked 1-30, a neutral site win against a team ranked 1-50 and a road win against a team ranked 1-75.
West Virginia (19-13) was 6-10 in Quad 1 games, with wins over NCAA tournament teams Gonzaga, Arizona, Kansas and Iowa State. Indiana (19-13) was 4-13 in Quad 1 wins, including wins over Michigan State and Purdue.
The Tar Heels’ lone Quad 1 win was against UCLA, but the committee cited its 8-0 record in Quad 2 games. North Carolina athletic director Bubba Cunningham was the chairman of the selection committee, but he recused himself when the Tar Heels were discussed.
Florida
Underwater ‘doorbell’ helps scientists catch coral-eating fish in Florida

Marine scientists in Florida working to help reverse a calamitous decades-long decline in coral reefs caught fishy “porch pirates” in the act with an innovative underwater doorbell-style surveillance camera.
The footage showed that three corallivorous species – redband parrotfish, foureye butterflyfish and stoplight parrotfish – were responsible for eating more than 97% of coral laid as bait by the researchers at an offshore reef near Miami.
The findings, they say, can help inform coral reef repopulation efforts following a 90% decline in Florida’s coral cover since the 1970s following unprecedented bleaching events caused by the climate emergency, particularly record ocean heat over the last two summers.
“Intense fish predation on newly outplanted corals has emerged as a major restoration bottleneck. The main goal was to address our lack of knowledge of the fish species that target corals after outplanting,” said Diego Lirman, a global leader in coral restoration research. He is a project leader and associate professor at the University of Miami’s (UM) Rosenstiel school of marine, atmospheric and earth science.
“Identifying the fish species responsible for coral predation would allow practitioners to avoid reef sites or areas within sites with high abundances of those species and, similarly, select the right coral species for the right outplanting site,” Lirman said.
“The coral-baited underwater cameras provide insight into corallivore behavior and preferences and allow documentation of predation at various sites rapidly and without incurring the cost of outplanting.”
Lirman’s team, funded by a grant from the Fish & Wildlife Foundation of Florida, designed and built a number of recording devices using GoPro cameras in waterproof housing attached to a PVC frame, and with lead weights for stability. After shaky preliminary results, divers secured later models to the seabed at Paradise Reef, close to Key Biscayne in Miami-Dade county, using masonry nails and cable ties.
The so-called C-Bruvs (coral-baited remote underwater video system) were set to record time-lapse video, and footage was collected at 24- and 48-hour periods after deployment and weekly thereafter for the duration of the six-week project.
Lirman said the team overcame initial setbacks including overheating external batteries and leaks causing flooding in the camera housing, while the research was also not immune to petty porch pirate-style pilfery familiar to homeowners above ground who have recorded thefts on their doorstep.
“One of the C-Bruvs with a surface buoy attached was stolen from the reef,” he said.
Overall, however, the researchers considered their experiment a success. After analysis of the imagery, they determined redband parrotfish, which are prolific in the Caribbean and waters off Florida, were the most voracious predators, accounting for 56.3% of bites on the nine coral species put out in fragments as bait.
Next came foureye butterflyfish with 36.9%, and stoplight parrotfish with 4%. The three species, Lirman said: “showed clear preferences” for two or three particular types of coral, which received more than 65% of all bites recorded.
UM marine scientist and research master’s graduate Erin Weisman presented the findings to the Reef Florida symposium of conservation leaders at Miami’s Phillip and Patricia Frost Museum of Science in November.
“By identifying, for the first time, the main fish predators as well as their preferred diet, reef restoration practitioners can select sites and species that would minimize predation impacts and maximize restoration success before large-scale, costly outplanting is implemented,” Lirman said.
Future similar research, he added, could introduce elements of artificial intelligence.
“Analyses of the videos were extremely time-consuming, requiring a constant rewinding and stopping of the footage to record and annotate coral/fish interactions,” he said.
“It will be beneficial to explore AI software that can be trained to identify fish and their behaviors to automate the analysis process.”
Florida
Florida spring breakers hold illegal beach boxing match — complete with cryptocurrency betting: wild video

Now it’s the Sun-shiner State.
Spring breakers in Fort Lauderdale were caught on video holding an impromptu beach prize fight — complete with betting using cryptocurrency — while locals looked on aghast.
A large crowd of rowdy party animals could be seen pushing and shoving in a chaotic circle around two young men who throw haymakers on the beautiful beaches of Fort Lauderdale to the delight of the crowd.
Local resident Joshua Pettus recorded the worrying sight while on a walk in his neighborhood, realizing something strange was going on after overhearing one spring breaker taking bets, he told NBC Miami.
“I started hearing somebody taking bets and they were doing it with crypto,” Pettus told the outlet.
“Boxing gloves came out, the ring got bigger, and I knew the fight was going to start,” he said.
Pettus’ video shows two shirtless young men throwing devastating hooks at each other as a crowd of over 100 people cheered on and recorded with their phones.
“Why aren’t they playing football? Something that is not going to get people injured,” Pettus wondered to the outlet.
Soon after the fisticuffs started flying, police arrived and broke up the beachy bout, according to NBC Miami.
“Fort Lauderdale Police witnessed and broke up two incidents on the beach and the crowd complied both times without further issues,” the city of Fort Lauderdale said in a statement.
“There have been no reported confirmed cases of betting. This type of behavior will not be tolerated,” the statement said.
The city reminded its influx of seasonal tourists that alcohol, live music, and coolers are not permitted at high-traffic beach areas.
Pettus said that while he welcomes the business that the spring breakers bring, he believes they should be maintaining a higher level of civility.
“We want your business. We want you to come and have fun and enjoy our beautiful place down here in sunny south Florida,” he said, adding, “But do it responsibly — without the violence.”
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