Southeast
Florida girl, 12, hooks multiple fishing records in a few short months: 'On a roll'
An adventure-loving tween from Miami landed two state records and three world records (with one pending) while fishing off the Florida Keys earlier this year — reeling in sizable cobia, a snapper and a grouper that any fisherman would be proud to catch.
This weekend, Julia Bernstein, age 12, will accept the Fleming Species Award, the highest junior honor, from the International Women’s Fishing Association for catching and releasing 37 different species of fish in 2023.
“Once she is hooked up to a fish, she is very determined and has incredible willpower,” Dale Bittner, fishing guide and boat captain of the 27-foot conch boat, “Bait Stealer,” told Fox News Digital.
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“She is very coachable and doesn’t show a lot of emotion high or low. Julia is very quiet and respectful,” Bittner said.
That’s just how the tween snagged the Florida Fish and Wildlife (FWC) state records for cobia and mangrove snapper as well as the International Game Fish Association (IGFA) junior length records for red grouper, red snapper and cobia on Jan. 5.
Guided by Captain Dale Bittner, 12-year-old Julia Bernstein hooks a 24-inch red grouper, which is an IGFA junior length record. (Heidi Mason)
The cobia is still pending certification, but is expected to be approved.
“We went out with a plan,” the young woman told Fox News Digital.
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“When fishing for records, it’s important to have a strategy for the day. We were lucky we were able to get the red snapper on the first drop.”
Twelve-year-old angler Julia Bernstein of Miami, Florida, fights for the IGFA red snapper record on Jan. 5 off the coast of the Florida Keys. “We went out with a plan,” she told Fox News Digital. (Heidi Mason)
It was a sunny day with light winds, said Bittner, who has been fishing with the girl and her family since she was just 10. She targeted the red snapper in 240 feet of water.
“We were on a roll,” young Julia Bernstein said.
After photographing and measuring it, she released the snapper and moved onto her next conquest: cobia.
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“We arrived at a perfect time as they were on the surface and visible above a shipwreck,” she said.
Measuring 25 inches, the red snapper Bernstein caught on Jan. 5 earned her an IGFA junior world record. (Heidi Mason)
“The action was fast, and between the barracudas and cobia, we hooked and released several fish before she landed the qualifying record for IGFA junior release,” said Bittner.
The young angler said she was not in a rush — and on a mission.
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“We stayed longer with the cobia because we knew we could catch both a world record and a state record, and they are one of my favorite species to catch,” young Bernstein said.
By the end of the day, she nabbed her share of record-setting fish — and was appreciative of doing so.
“It’s an incredible sport. You can do it all over the world, and it’s something I can have fun with my whole life.”
“I would have called it a great day if we had caught even one or two records,” she said, “but to pick up four in one day was a very special experience.”
Catching a record fish, Julia Bernstein said, takes a lot of determination and the ability to power through obstacles.
“We try to take advantage of every opportunity we have, but sometimes a shark will eat a fish that you are fighting or it will break off in a wreck,” she said.
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“Things don’t always go to plan with fishing — lines break, fish don’t cooperate, weather plays a part from the first drop. But we never give up.”
She comes by that attitude naturally — as her mom, Dr. Heidi Mason, is a lifelong fisherwoman and has four IGFA records herself.
Seasoned fishing guide Dale Bittner celebrates with Julia Bernstein after the girl reeled in a state-record cobia off the coast of Key West. (Heidi Mason)
“It was something that I loved and treasured as a kid and found it very formative,” Mason, a Miami-based physician, told Fox News Digital.
“It was a lot of fun as a young lady going out and beating the boys. I had a blast with it.”
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Mason said she’s enjoyed watching her daughter learn and grow out on the water.
“She is very focused and very determined,” Mason said.
After it was measured and recorded, Julia Bernstein released her IGFA junior-record cobia back into the ocean and it swam away. (Heidi Mason)
“She’s very teachable. When she sets her mind to something, she says, ‘Hey, I want to do this.’ Maybe the first time she hooks up with a fish, it might not necessarily be the biggest, or she might make a mistake and lose it,” Mason said.
“But she will take feedback and [say], ‘OK, this is what I need to do differently.’ She’ll keep working at it.”
Character-building opportunities through fishing, Mason said, are plentiful.
“With fishing, we honestly don’t get all that many days to go out,” Mason said.
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“When we do, the days are our 12-hour days. We’re out on the water, and it’s very physically demanding,” she added.
“She [her daughter] has to work hard and fight for it the entire time. She’s not whining or complaining. She’s always putting in her full effort.”
Julia Bernstein’s mom, Dr. Heidi Mason, is a seasoned fisherman herself, hooking this African pompano on a recent trip. (Heidi Mason)
With all the work, there’s still time to take in nature’s beauty.
“There are the most magical, incredible sights to be seen,” Mason said.
“These magical moments where you stop and look at the amazing, beautiful world and the ocean around you — it really makes you appreciate everything that we have,” she said. She also said she hopes people “realize the importance of conservation.”
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All of Julia Bernstein’s world-record catches have been released, per IGFA rules.
“It’s amazing to catch and release a fish and watch it swim away, knowing it’s going to keep growing, and hopefully someone else will get to have the same fun I had when I caught it.”
“It’s teaching the kids, from a very young age, the importance of this amazing resource,” Mason said. “We have these incredible sites and animals, but we have to take care of them.”
Julia Bernstein is on board with the conservation concept.
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“It’s amazing to catch and release a fish and watch it swim away, knowing it’s going to keep growing,” she said, adding that she hopes “someone else will get to have the same fun I had when I caught it.”
A straight-A student, Bernstein is also an accomplished sailor.
Also an accomplished sailor, Bernstein was chosen last week to be on the U.S. team for a regatta in the Netherlands. Team USA won the regatta, and she was fifth in her fleet. (Heidi Mason)
Recently, she was chosen to be on the U.S. team for a regatta in the Netherlands.
Team USA won the regatta last week, and Bernstein was fifth in her fleet.
The girl and her mom said they hope their fish stories inspire other girls and women to try the sport.
“I would love for more girls and women to be out there doing it,” Mason said.
“It’s amazing to catch and release a fish and watch it swim away, knowing it’s going to keep growing.”
“It’s an amazing family activity. Some people think of fishing as a solitary sport, where you sit at the end of the dock. But if you’re doing it at this level, it’s very much a team sport.”
Fishing also levels the playing field, young Bernstein said.
“I think it’s cool that boys and girls compete against one another for junior records,” she said.
“A lot of times it comes down to finesse and strategy, particularly if you fish with lighter line. It’s not just brute strength, so it’s something that we can compete in as equals.”
Bernstein will be accepting the Fleming Species Award from the International Women’s Fishing Association for catching and releasing 37 different species of fish in 2023. (Heidi Mason)
Bernstein said that whether she’s fishing offshore out of Key West, in the Everglades or in the Florida flats, she’s in it for the long haul.
“It’s an incredible sport,” she said.
“You can do it all over the world, and it’s something I can have fun with my whole life.”
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Southeast
Florida mom says teens ‘lured’ 14-year-old daughter into woods before shooting, setting her on fire: report
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The mother of murdered Florida teenager Danika Troy says her 14-year-old daughter was lured into the woods by one of the boys now charged with killing her, a teen she believed had romantic feelings for her.
In an interview with the New York Post, Ashley Troy said 16-year-old Gabriel Williams “pretended to have feelings for her,” leading Danika to trust him enough to follow him into the wooded trail where she was ambushed.
“That’s how she was lured,” she said.
Williams and 14-year-old Kimahri Blevins have both been charged with first-degree premeditated murder in Danika’s death.
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The mom of Danika Troy, a 14-year-old Florida teenager, says she believes her daughter was lured into the woods by Gabriel Williams, who allegedly pretended to have romantic feelings before the girl was murdered. (GoFundMe)
Ashley said she is still desperate for answers. “I still need answers. I’m just left asking why,” she told the outlet. “She just wanted to be in love.”
Danika was reported missing by her mother on Dec. 1. The next day, a passerby discovered her body in a wooded area in Pace, a community in Florida’s Panhandle. Investigators said she had been shot multiple times and set on fire.
Authorities quickly identified the alleged killers, two teens who knew Danika from school, and took them into custody.
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Authorities said two teenagers are facing murder charges in the death of 14-year-old Danika Troy, who was found shot to death and burned in a wooded area in Florida after being reported missing. (Santa Rosa County Sheriff’s Office)
Detectives initially believed the murder may have stemmed from a social-media dispute over Thanksgiving break. According to the sheriff’s office, the boys claimed they targeted Danika because she had blocked Blevins on social media and called Williams “worthless and a gang banger.”
Ashley rejected that narrative. “What those boys said is an excuse,” she told the Post.
Santa Rosa County Sheriff Bob Johnson confirmed Thursday that Danika’s body had been positively identified and said investigators rapidly zeroed in on Williams and Blevins. Both suspects had prior “run-ins” with law enforcement, he said, though details were not released because of their ages.
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Santa Rosa County Sheriff Bob Johnson told reporters that the suspects were supposedly friends with the victim from school. He said investigators were still working to determine a motive. (Santa Rosa County Sheriff’s Office)
Johnson described the killing in stark terms.
“This is where it gets really horrific,” he said, explaining that Williams allegedly stole his mother’s handgun before shooting Danika. “It’s bad enough you kill a 14-year-old. You’re 14. You’re 16. Shoot her multiple times, and then they set her on fire.”
The motive for the killing remains unclear. Johnson said the explanations the teens offered “don’t fit the forensics or any facts of the case,” adding, “so we don’t have a legit motive.”
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Both suspects remain held without bond at the Department of Juvenile Justice on first-degree murder charges. Prosecutors are coordinating with investigators as they determine whether the teens will be charged as adults.
“If you do an adult crime, you gotta do adult time,” Johnson said.
Ashley previously said she believes “evil influence” played a role in her daughter’s killing, but she wants accountability. She said she wants “nothing less than for them to be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.”
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Fox News Digital reached out to the Santa Rosa County Sheriff’s Office for comment, but did not immediately receive a response.
Fox News Digital’s Stephen Sorace contributed to this report.
Stepheny Price covers crime, including missing persons, homicides and migrant crime. Send story tips to stepheny.price@fox.com.
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Southeast
Miami in political crosshairs: Democrat hunts historic upset against Trump-backed candidate
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Voters in Miami, Florida, cast ballots Tuesday in a runoff election for mayor in a race that’s grabbed plenty of national attention in recent weeks as Democrats aim to end a decades-long losing streak in red-leaning Florida.
Democrat Eileen Higgins, a former county commissioner, is facing off against Republican Emilio Gonzalez, a former city manager backed by President Donald Trump.
While the election is technically nonpartisan, the ballot box face-off has become the latest showdown this year between Democrats and Republicans, with both parties pouring in resources.
And Democrats, energized by last month’s decisive 2025 election victories and by last week’s double-digit overperformance in a special election in a red-leaning congressional district in Tennessee, are aiming for victory in Miami for an office they haven’t held in 30 years.
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Democratic County Commissioner Eileen Higgins and Gov. Ron DeSantis-backed Republican candidate Emilio Gonzalez will advance to a runoff Dec. 9 that will determine Miami’s next mayor after no candidate received 50% of votes. (Matias J. Ocner/Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images; Rebecca Blackwell; The Associated Press)
The Democratic National Committee (DNC) and allied groups have invested in the race.
DNC Chair Kent Martin told Fox News Digital that following last week’s “historic overperformance in Tennessee and the record Democratic momentum across the country this year,” the DNC is now “laser focused” on Miami’s mayoral runoff.
“The energy is on Democrats’ side and the DNC is all-in support of Eileen Higgins from now until Election Day,” Martin emphasized in a statement to Fox News Digital last week.
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Meanwhile, the Republican Party of Florida has been helping Gonzalez.
And Trump, over the weekend, took to social media to try and boost Gonzalez.
“Miami’s Mayor Race is Tuesday. It is a big and important race!!! Vote for Republican Gonzalez,” the president wrote.
City of Miami mayoral candidate Emilio González speaks during a press conference outside his home on Wednesday, July 16, 2025, in Miami. (Matias J. Ocner/Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
Florida was once the largest of the general election battleground states, but has shifted dramatically to the right over the past decade.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis won re-election by nearly 20 points in 2022, and Trump carried the state by 13 points in last year’s presidential election victory.
But Miami remains a rare blue oasis in the Sunshine State. Trump narrowly lost the city in last year’s presidential election, although the president won the wider Miami-Dade County by 11 points.
Higgins, a mechanical engineer and former Peace Corps director in Belize, focused on the issue of affordability and of making local government work better and faster during her campaign.
Eileen Higgins, a Miami-Dade County commissioner who is running for Miami mayor, speaks to supporters preparing to go canvas on her behalf, Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025, at Miami City Hall in the Coconut Grove neighborhood of Miami. (Rebecca Blackwell/AP Photo)
González, a veteran and senior adviser at an asset management firm, spotlighted the fight against overdevelopment and called for the elimination of property taxes for primary homes, as he bid for mayor.
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Higgins captured 36% of the vote in the Nov. 4 election, with Gonzalez coming in second at 19%, in the multi-candidate field.
The runoff winner will succeed term-limited Republican Mayor Francis Suarez, who grabbed national attention two years ago as he briefly and unsuccessfully ran for the GOP presidential nomination.
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Southeast
North Carolina teen sues school after Charlie Kirk tribute sparked ‘criminal investigation’ and censorship
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EXCLUSIVE – A North Carolina high school student said she was accused of vandalism by her school and told she was being investigated by law enforcement after she painted her school’s “spirit rock” with a religious and patriotic tribute to slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk.
According to a new complaint filed Monday and shared first with Fox News Digital, Gabby Stout, a junior at Ardrey Kell High School, called her school’s front office on September 12 to ask if she could paint the school spirit rock with a patriotic message honoring Kirk, who was killed two days prior. Stout was told she could do so as long as the message didn’t contain vulgarity or political speech.
The complaint states that she and two friends proceeded to paint a heart and an American flag with the message “Freedom 1776,” and a tribute to Charlie Kirk: “Live Like Kirk—John 11:25” on September 13. The students also painted their first names on the rock.
Within hours, school officials painted over the rock, according to the complaint. On September 14, the principal sent out a school-wide message saying that the spirit rock had been painted with a message that was not authorized. The message called it an act of vandalism and a violation of the student code of conduct, saying that law enforcement had been contacted, and an investigation was underway.
Charlie Kirk is seen in the Fiserv Forum on the third night of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wis., on Wednesday, July 17, 2024. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)
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“I was completely shocked,” Stout told Fox News Digital. “I was very intimidated and scared as I had no idea what I did wrong or that I could be getting in trouble for simply sharing and expressing my views and beliefs.”
Stout sent a message the same day to school officials acknowledging she had painted the rock but had been given permission by the front office.
The next school day, she was repeatedly pulled out of class and sent to the principal’s office, where she was questioned and instructed to write a statement about what she had done and then forced to revise it after she forgot to include the Bible verse in her emotional state. She was also told to give up her cell phone to be searched, all without being advised of her constitutional rights or with legal counsel present.
“I was so scared I could barely hold my pen and write it [the statement],” she told Fox News Digital.
The following day, the district announced a revised policy for its Spirit Rock Speech Code that bans all political or religious messages and requires messages to reflect “positive school spirit,” “inclusive values,” and be in “good taste.”
Gabby Stout and her friends painted a Charlie Kirk message on the school’s “spirit rock” after his death. (Alliance Defending Freedom)
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The same day, Stout’s mother was told by the principal that the investigation into her daughter had been closed, and no disciplinary action would be taken.
On October 11, the school district sent out an internal message to the Ardrey Kell High School community to “clarify” the principal’s September 14 statement. The message stated that the spirit rock incident was “not an act of vandalism,” “was not a violation of the student code of conduct” and “law enforcement was not contacted to conduct an investigation.”
The complaint alleges that the school’s statement did not acknowledge it had compelled Stout to prepare a written statement without advising her of her rights and said its claim it had not contacted law enforcement contradicted its prior statement to local news outlet WFAE.
Stout’s parents say the school board has refused to issue a public correction to clear Gabby’s name, despite their repeated requests.
Since the incident, she has faced health problems from stress, alienation and ostracization from friends and fellow students, the complaint says. On social media, the complaint says, Stout was targeted for roughly six weeks with messages from students and others online celebrating the news that she would be investigated and disciplined. Messages celebrated the idea of Stout and her friends going to prison, labeled them as “racist thugs” and left threats like “Die like Kirk.”
An image of slain conservative commentator Charlie Kirk is placed at a memorial in his honor, at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah. (Jim Urquhart/Reuters)
The complaint, filed by Alliance Defending Freedom on behalf of the student’s parents, alleges that the school’s actions and policies violated her First, Fourth, Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. It calls for the school to issue a public statement acknowledging these violations, for the school to remove all negative information from Stout’s school records and issue a formal letter of apology.
It also demands the school stop enforcing its vandalism and revised speech code policies regarding the spirit rock, alleging the policies enable viewpoint discrimination.
The school had allowed personal and political messages on the rock before this incident. In 2020, the school allowed students to paint a pro-Black Lives Matter message on the rock. Students painted a “black power” fist symbol along with names of individuals they believed were victims of police brutality, the complaint states. After other students painted over the BLM message, the school board held an emergency meeting and allowed students to repaint the BLM message again, this time with more political messages, including “No Justice. No Peace,” “I can’t breathe” and “End police brutality.”
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Image of “Spirit Rock” painted with Black Lives Matter message in 2020. (Alliance Defending Freedom)
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In November, school officials also facilitated a student walkout from class to protest Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”) raids, Alliance Defending Freedom Senior Counsel Travis Barham told Fox News Digital.
“So they’ll facilitate that kind of left-wing student expression and not just facilitate it, but praise the students who participated,” he said. “But let Gabby express a conservative or Christian view on the spirit rock, and criminal charges fly.”
Stout told Fox News Digital she felt targeted for her beliefs.
“I don’t think it was fair what happened to me because of my beliefs or my views, which are religious and conservative,” she said. “This has never happened to another group that the school district or school has agreed with. I thought that I was going to get in trouble for sharing my views and my beliefs.”
A new complaint by Alliance Defending Freedom alleges a North Carolina high school district violated a student’s constitutional rights in how it handled a conflict over a spirit rock painted in tribute of Charlie Kirk. (plherrera/Getty)
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The complaint is brought by the student’s parents against the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education. It also asks the court to award nominal and compensatory damages for the constitutional violations, attorneys’ fees and costs and any additional relief the court deems proper.
The Board declined to comment.
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