A business in Southwest Florida says its property was stolen on Christmas.

Lonnie Bailey, the business operations manager of Latitude Tournament Boats in Fort Myers, said Saturday that two boat motors were stolen from the business during the holiday.

Having to replace thousands of dollars in boat parts wasn’t the Christmas gift that Bailey and the business owner were looking forward to. They hope investigators can find who stole from their business.

For Bailey and the owner, who is his childhood friend, building boats meant to last is more than a means for them to put food on the table, it’s a passion.

“We help everybody and it’s just hard when somebody takes it from you,” Bailey said.

Bailey and the owner went to the shop the day after Christmas to take care of business when they realized important parts were missing.

“We noticed a trailer was stolen over the weekend, which we didn’t know because we weren’t here Christmas Day at all,” Bailey said.

He says everything was caught on camera in broad daylight Christmas morning. The company’s security cameras recorded a silver pickup truck backing up to the trailer on the property, and two people jumped out.

“You know, it’s like getting kicked in the gut,” Bailey said. “It’s just an eerie feeling.”

Less than three minutes later, that same silver truck pulls off with the trailer and two motors.

“There’s a bunch of emotions, you get mad,” Bailey said. “But at the same time, what can you do?”

Bailey says the two people were dressed in all black and masked, and the truck’s license plate was covered.

Bailey and the owner filed a report with the Fort Myers Police Department. They both hope cameras around the neighborhood caught a better glimpse of the truck and can help catch the people responsible.

“They knew what they were doing when they got here,” Bailey said. “Hopefully, someone will see the truck and do the right thing and help us get our motors and our trailer back and salvage something from this.”

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In true pop-up art fashion, a nearly 7-foot-tall monolith made of gingerbread mysteriously appeared on a San Francisco hilltop on Christmas Day and collapsed the next day.

The three-sided tower, held together by icing and decorated with a few gumdrops, delighted the city on Friday when word spread about its existence.

During his morning run, Ananda Sharma told KQED-FM he climbed to Corona Heights Park to see the sunrise when he spotted what he thought was a big post. He said he smelled the scent of gingerbread before realizing what it was.

“It made me smile. I wonder who did it, and when they put it there,” he said.

People trekked to the park throughout the day, even as light rain fell on the ephemeral, edible art object. In one video posted online, someone took a bite of the gingerbread.

Phil Ginsburg, head of city’s Recreation and Parks Department, told KQED the site “looks like a great spot to get baked” and confirmed his staff will not remove the monument “until the cookie crumbles.”

It did by Saturday morning, a fitting end to what was surely an homage to the discovery and swift disappearance of a shining metal monolith in Utah’s red-rock desert last month. It became a subject of fascination around the world as it evoked the movie “2001: A Space Odyssey” and drew speculation about its otherworldly origins.

The still-anonymous creator of the Utah monument did not secure permission to plant the hollow, stainless steel object on public land.

A similar metal structure was found and quickly disappeared on a hill in northern Romania. Days later, another monolith was discovered at the pinnacle of a trail in Atascadero, California, but it was later dismantled by a group of young men, city officials said.

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Residents who live at Vi at Bentley Village in North Naples received their first dose of the coronavirus vaccine Saturday.

Olive Hunter, 88, has been there 10 years. She, fellow residents and employees rolled up their sleeves to be the first to get the COVID-19 vaccine.

“It’s amazing. It’s just mind-boggling,” Hunter said.

For many, the vaccine is a sign of hope that things could slowly begin to go back to normal.

“Well, we certainly hope so, waiting to see what happens when we all get our injection,” Hunter said.

Those in Hunter’s age group have been some of the most isolated during the pandemic.

Jonathon Albert, a social services manager, received the vaccine. He has personally seen what isolation has done to residents this year.

“It’s been difficult,” Albert said. “It’s been a whole different year that we’ve been dealing with, and so there’s a lot of residents dealing with feeling sad.”

With Albert working so closely with the residents at the senior community, he too was able to get the vaccine. He says when they found out they could get vaccinated, there wasn’t much hesitation from residents and their families to make it happen.

“They said, ‘When? Hurry up, and let’s get it,’” Albert explained. “They’re excited. They want their loved ones to get vaccinated, so again they can see each other.”

Randy Richardson, president of Vi at Bentley Village, said the vaccine is serving as a light at the end of the tunnel for those living and working in the community.

“It’s been over nine months, and our employees have done a remarkable job managing through this pandemic, and our residents have been terrific too,” Richardson said. “They’ve been patient and worked with us to do everything they can to keep people safe.”

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The Lee County Sheriff’s Office partnered with Waste Pro USA this holiday season to help keep community members safe by allowing everyone to dispose of their cardboard recyclables after opening gifts.

According to the LCSO Facebook post, empty gift boxes can be safely disposed at district substations instead of being put at the end of driveways. This program is limited to disposal of cardboard recyclables.

Substations accepting empty boxes include:

  • South District – 10520 Reynolds Street, Bonita Springs
  • West District – 15650 Pine Ridge Road, Fort Myers
  • Central District – 14750 Six Mile Cypress Parkway, Fort Myers
  • East District – 1301 Homestead Road, Lehigh Acres
  • North District – 121 Pondella Road, North Fort Myers
  • Gulf District – 13921 Waterfront Drive, Pineland

The crime prevention recycling program with Waste Pro and LCSO began at 9 a.m. Saturday and will operate at participating substations until 5 a.m. Dec. 31.

Anyone with questions about drop-off locations can contact the LCSO community response unit at 239-477-1CRU (278).

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As of 2 p.m. Saturday, there have been 1,264,588 positive cases of the coronavirus recorded in the state. The case count includes 1,243,118 Florida residents and 21,470 non-Florida residents. There are 21,135 Florida resident deaths reported, 302 non-resident deaths, and 61,288 hospitalizations at some point during illness, according to the Florida Department of Health.

*Numbers are released by the DOH every afternoon. There was no report on Friday, Dec. 25, due to the Christmas holiday, and state-supported testing sites were closed Dec. 24 and 25. Saturday’s numbers reflect a two-day total.

STATEWIDE NUMBERS

Total number of recorded cases: 1,264,588 (up from 1,247,546)
Florida resident deaths: 21,135 (up from 20,995)
Non-resident deaths: 302 (up from 300)
Total deaths in state (Fla./non-Fla. residents combined): 21,437 (up from 21,295)

  • 17,042 total new cases reported Saturday
  • 140 new resident deaths reported Saturday
  • 2 new non-resident deaths reported Saturday
  • Percent positive for new cases in Fla. residents: 8.00%
    • This percent is the number of people who test PCR- or antigen-positive for the first time divided by all the people tested that day, excluding people who have previously tested positive. 

SOUTHWEST FLORIDA NUMBERS

Total recorded cases in SWFL: 73,923 (up from 73,302)
Deaths: 1,317 (up from 1,299)

  • 621 total new cases reported Saturday
  • 18 new deaths reported Saturday

Lee County: 38,575 cases (up from 38,288) – 651 deaths (5 new)
Collier County: 21,558 (up from 21,428) – 326 deaths (1 new)
Charlotte County: 7,000 (up from 6,854) – 228 deaths (11 new)
DeSoto County: 2,835 (up from 2,816) – 52 deaths
Glades County: 760 (up from 759) – 11 deaths
Hendry County: 3,195 (up from 3,157) – 49 deaths (1 new)

Click HERE* for a case-by-case breakdown – updated daily.

*If not linked, the final report has not yet been made available.

TESTING DATA

Effective Oct. 27, the Florida Department of Health ceased releasing data showing overall testing numbers. Their statement: “The Florida Department of Health is making adjustments to the COVID-19 dashboard and daily report to provide clear, accurate information for Florida families. Moving forward, the daily report will focus on the number of tests reported to the state by day and the corresponding positivity rate by day. The previously reported cumulative number did not reflect the current status of the pandemic in Florida. This change is in line with the CDC recommendation that calculation of percent positivity [is] applied consistently and with clear communication, will allow public health officials to follow magnitude and trends effectively, and the trends will be useful for local public health decision making.”


RESOURCES

VACCINES: State of Florida’s COVID-19 vaccine reports

NOW HIRINGSWFL companies adding jobs

FOOD PANTRIES: Harry Chapin mobile food pantry schedule, week of Dec. 21

REPORT COVID-19 DIAGNOSIS/TEST: International self-reporting system


IF YOU FEEL SICK:

The Florida Department of Health has a 24-hour COVID-19 Call Center at 1-866-779-6121. Questions may also be emailed to covid-19@flhealth.gov. Email responses will be sent during call center hours.

LINKFlorida Department of Health COVID-19 updates

*The map is best viewed on a desktop computer. If you don’t see the map above tap HERE for a fullscreen version.

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Almost 75 pounds of cocaine were found this week floating off the Florida Keys.

A fisherman found the cocaine bricks about 15 miles south of Sugarloaf Key on Wednesday, according to the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office.

The packages were in federal waters so a sheriff’s deputy turned the cocaine over to the U.S. Border Patrol, the sheriff’s office said in a statement.

Drugs floating off the Florida Keys are nothing new, according to the Miami Herald.

In August and September, almost 150 pounds of marijuana were found floating off the island chain or washed up on the shore.

In July, more than 50 pounds of cocaine washed up near Grassy Key. Earlier that month, 29 bricks of cocaine came ashore in the Middle Keys city of Marathon. In October, more than 30 pounds of marijuana washed up in the Keys.

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A federal judge said the Justice Department unlawfully rescheduled the execution of the only woman on federal death row, potentially setting up the Trump administration to schedule the execution after President-elect Joe Biden takes office.

U.S. District Court Judge Randolph Moss also vacated an order from the director of the Bureau of Prisons that had set Lisa Montgomery’s execution date for Jan. 12. Montgomery had previously been scheduled to be put to death at the Federal Correctional Complex in Terre Haute, Indiana, this month, but Moss delayed the execution after her attorneys contracted coronavirus visiting their client and asked him to extend the amount of time to file a clemency petition.

Moss prohibited the Bureau of Prisons from carrying out Lisa Montgomery’s execution before the end of the year and officials rescheduled her execution date for Jan. 12. But Moss ruled on Wednesday that the agency was also prohibited from rescheduling the date while a stay was in place.

“The Court, accordingly, concludes that the Director’s order setting a new execution date while the Court’s stay was in effect was ‘not in accordance with law,’” Moss wrote.

The Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Under the order, the Bureau of Prisons cannot reschedule Montgomery’s execution until at least Jan. 1. Generally, under Justice Department guidelines, a death-row inmate must be notified at least 20 days before the execution. Because of the judge’s order, if the Justice Department chooses to reschedule the date in January, it could mean that the execution would be scheduled after Biden’s inauguration on Jan. 20.

Biden “opposes the death penalty now and in the future” and would work as president to end its use in office, spokesman TJ Ducklo has told The Associated Press. But Biden’s representatives have not said whether executions would be paused immediately once Biden takes office.

Montgomery was convicted of killing 23-year-old Bobbie Jo Stinnett in the northwest Missouri town of Skidmore in December 2004. She used a rope to strangle Stinnett, who was eight months pregnant, then a kitchen knife to cut the baby girl from the womb, authorities said.

Prosecutors said Montgomery removed the baby from Stinnett’s body, took the child with her, and attempted to pass the girl off as her own. Montgomery’s legal team has argued that their client suffers from serious mental illnesses.

“Given the severity of Mrs. Montgomery’s mental illness, the sexual and physical torture she endured throughout her life, and the connection between her trauma and the facts of her crime, we appeal to President Trump to grant her mercy, and commute her sentence to life imprisonment,” one of Montgomery’s lawyers, Sandra Babcock, said in a statement.

Two other federal inmates are scheduled to be executed in January but have tested positive for coronavirus and their attorneys are also seeking delays to their executions.

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Law enforcement sources told CBS News the suspect in the Nashville explosion on Christmas Day may have been killed in the blast. DNA tests are being conducted on the human remains found at the scene.

Multiple sources confirm that Anthony Quinn Warner, a Nashville area resident, has been identified as a person of interest in this case. Federal agents are currently searching his home.

Warner, a Nashville area resident, had a similar make and model RV as the one in photos released to the public. Warner was described as a 63-year-old White man.

This image taken from surveillance video provided by Metro Nashville PD shows a recreational vehicle that was involved in a blast on Friday, Dec. 25, 2020 in Nashville. (Metro Nashville PD via AP)

FBI Special Agent in Charge Doug Korneski said Saturday there is no indication of additional explosive threats. He said officials had received about 500 tips and are “not working on any assumptions.”

Police responded to a call of shots fired early Friday near the AT&T building in downtown Nashville. Instead, they found an RV with clothes and blinds covering the windows. Shortly afterward, the warning of an imminent bomb started blaring and an explosion rocked the area at about 6:30 a.m.

Shell casings have been found at the scene, but the ammunition related to them is believed to have been set off by the large explosion. The scene is very large, and authorities said they are beginning at the “outermost” perimeter of the blast and working their way in.

There is video of the RV in downtown Nashville. Investigators have a Google Maps photo of the address of the person of interest that shows a similar looking camper in the yard. Google Maps says the picture was taken in May 2019.

At least three people were wounded and Nashville Metro police chief John Drake said Friday that authorities had found tissue they believe could be connected to human remains near the site of the explosion. They have not indicated whether the remains are from someone connected to the explosion or from an innocent victim.

At least three people were wounded in the blast.

Police later said they believed the bombing to be an “intentional act.” No motive has been given.

There is a curfew in effect for the area around the blast.

This is a developing story. It will be updated.

Jeff Pegues, Andres Triay and Pat Milton contributed reporting.

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Golf Hall of Famer Greg Norman shared photos on social media Friday suggesting he has been hospitalized with COVID-19.

The 65-year-old Australian posted a video on Instagram on Thursday night saying he was experiencing coronavirus symptoms, then posted photos Friday showing himself in a hospital bed.

“This sums it all up,” he wrote. “My Christmas Day.”

Norman’s son, Greg Norman Jr., also said on social media that he and his wife, Michelle, have tested positive. The Normans played in the father-son PNC Championship in Orlando last weekend.

The elder Norman said Thursday that he had flu-like symptoms, including a mild fever, a cough, aches and pains, and a mild headache. He said he took a virus test Tuesday that came back negative, but he was in self-quarantine anyway.

He was apparently admitted to a hospital Friday, sharing a photo of himself in a hospital bed and another of a medical professional in head-to-toe personal protective equipment.

“It’s been an ugly one,” Norman said Thursday. “I for one am looking forward to getting out of this quarantine and looking forward to building whatever the great future is for 2021 and beyond.”

 

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Burmese python may not be everyone’s first food of choice for festive holiday fare — or second, third or fourth either.

For starters, it’s snake. Plus, because of potentially high mercury levels, there’s still a lot of uncertainty over the health risks posed by eating South Florida’s most destructive invasive species.

But one South Florida python hunter has been experimenting with what some have dubbed “chicken of the Glades” — making meals, snacks and even sweets that could give the holidays that distinctive South Florida flavor. How about python jerky, a plate of constrictor and grits for breakfast, or maybe a nice Christmas cookie whipped up with snake-yolk dough?

“I really like making jerky because it’s a great snack, but the meat is also good for pasta sauce and sliders, especially when mixed with some other meat like hog,” said Donna Kalil, a veteran python hunter who just bagged snake number 470 since she joined the python elimination program at the South Florida Water Management District when it started in 2017.

While on a hunt last week, Kalil shared some of her jerky, which she munches to help refuel during the often 10-hour days out in the Everglades looking for the stealthy snakes. A recent batch with her own secret barbecue sauce, which she has named Everglades Boys, turned out too hard. But a batch with mojo was spot on: chewy on the inside, slightly crispy on the outside.

Her top cooking tip: “Don’t overcook python. It’s really tricky to get it right. It takes practice.”

Her health advice: She uses a home testing kit to check mercury levels in the meat and cooks only small snakes, which are likely to have the lowest levels of the contaminant. That’s still a big snake as they can reach six feet or more in their first year.

 

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MERCURY STANDARDS

Mercury occurs naturally in the earth but it can also build up in ocean waters and places like the Everglades, entering the atmosphere mostly through the burning of fossil fuels and mining and traveling long distances before settling. Once deposited, certain microorganisms can change mercury into more dangerous methylmercury, a highly toxic form that builds up in fish, shellfish and animals that eat fish, in a process known as bioaccumulation.

That’s why many coastal and freshwater fish in Florida, including the largemouth bass, already have recommended consumption limits by the Florida Department of Health.

But in general, the bigger the predator, the more mercury that is likely accumulated. And that makes pythons a problem, as they grow massive — some more than 18 feet and 100 pounds — and eat just about everything else in the Everglades, including the occasional alligator.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and the Florida Department of Health are conducting a joint study on mercury contamination in pythons that are caught by the state contractors in Broward, Miami-Dade, Monroe, Collier, Palm Beach, Hendry, and Lee counties. The goal is to develop consumption advisories for Burmese pythons in South Florida, so the public can understand the risks before putting snakes on the plate.

Kalil doesn’t eat python on a daily basis because it’s still unclear how contaminated the snakes are. When she does, she likes to pressure cook the meat for a few minutes before using it in sautees or in pasta sauce.

When she is lucky enough to catch an egg-bearing female, she removes the eggs, which are a bit bigger than chicken eggs, and cooks them either hard-boiled with Sriracha sauce or in frittatas. Kalil also freezes the eggs, which she uses for cookies.

The soft and leathery eggs might turn off less adventurous foodies, but the gluten-free rocky road and sugar cookies she made last week to share with friends as pre-holiday treats were pretty delicious.

HUNTING FOR SNAKES

Just as achieving the right consistency for python meat dishes is a challenge, spotting and capturing the invaders in the Everglades is an art in itself. As a professional hunter, Kalil goes out almost every single day, combing the marshes that surround levees for the characteristic pattern: tan and light brown marked with dark brown and black blotches.

She slowly drives her 1997 Ford Expedition on the levees while a partner or volunteer stands on a custom-made perch she had installed on top of the car, like a tuna tower with powerful lights on all sides, for night hunts.

“You have to have a mix of expanded peripheral vision and moments of laser-sharp focus if that makes any sense,” she laughed while looking out the car window to the sloping grassy area between the levee and the shallow water.

From the perch, Kalil’s fellow hunter Amy Siewe focused on the other side of the levee, looking out at breathtaking views of cypress domes. They both sported pink T-shirts with the Everglades Avengers logo.

Siewe, a self-described herper — reptile and amphibian enthusiasts — moved from Indiana to South Florida to become a python hunter last year. “There could be dozens of pythons surrounding us right now but they are so good at occupying this habitat that we can’t see them,” said Siewe.

The giant snakes are everywhere in South Florida, devouring mammals in the Everglades and disrupting the natural balance of predator and prey. They are such a threat to the health of the fragile ecosystem that state wildlife managers have put a bounty on their heads and enlisted teams of hunters to track them down and take them out.

Pythons are believed to have appeared in the Everglades in the early 1980s, having been kept as pets and then released by frustrated owners who got tired of feeding them mice and other live meals. The snakes also got loose during the destruction of Hurricane Andrew and were never recaptured. In the wild, they found perfect conditions: plenty of water in which to mate and abundant food. The invaders have no predators, which has led to high reproduction rates: females can lay up to 100 eggs a year.

In addition to the District’s paid python hunters, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission also runs a python elimination program by employing contractors. This year was a record, with nearly 3,000 snakes removed by both teams. Since the start of the programs in 2017 nearly 6,300 pythons have been captured, said Eric Sutton, FWC’s executive director.

He said the state and federal governments are spending billions in Everglades restoration and that the python is a significant threat to the success of the programs.

“If you’re going to get the water right, you have to make sure the right ecosystem is there,” Sutton said.

Allowing the consumption of python meat might encourage more people to get involved in catching them, Kalil said.

“It’s a great source of protein, so if we can find a safe way to use the whole animal and not just the skin, it might encourage more people to get involved in saving the Everglades.”

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