The end of 2020 is upon us all, as a historical year heads for the books and a new year comes before us.

Naturally, as you set sail for 2021, it’s time for the age-old question of what your New Year’s resolution will be.

Watch the video above for the full story by WINK News Reporter Zach Oliveri, who spoke to people about what they are looking forward to most in the new year.

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An East Naples man is accused of pointing a green laser at a Collier County Sheriff’s Office helicopter.

Michael Christian Adcox was arrested on suspicion of misusing a laser lighting device, a third-degree felony, according to the Collier County Sheriff’s Office.

The incident happened as a crew was flying Air1 on patrol over an area of Davis and Santa Barbara boulevards at around 1 a.m. on Monday, the sheriff’s office said.

A green laser light shined inside the aircraft and momentarily hit the tactical flight officer in one of his eyes, causing him to lose sight for a few seconds, according to CCSO.

The officers determined the laser was coming from the Wildwood Lakes area. Using infrared technology, they identified the subject as Adcox.

CCSO said Adcox admitted to pointing the laser but said it was a mistake. Authorities determined Adcox pointed the laser at the helicopter for about two to three minutes.

 

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FGCU confirms Wednesday the Eagles men’s basketball’s home opener against North Alabama has been postponed due to a positive coronavirus test result and contact tracing within the program’s tier-1 group.

According to the university, the ASUN series between the Eagles and Lions was scheduled for Friday and Saturday Jan. 1 and 2.

There is now a 14-day quarantine period being implemented, so this will impact future scheduled Eagles men’s basketball games against Liberty University.

There was no specific information released by FGCU about who in the Eagles men’s basketball program tested positive for COVID-19.

“While we are disappointed not to be playing this week, this is an unfortunate scenario that has played out through all of college sports this year,” head coach Michael Fly said in the press release. “I appreciate all the work our athletics sports medicine unit, the university medical staff and the Florida Department of Health have done to keep our student-athletes and staff safe. We will undertake the appropriate measures so that we can return to play following the 14-day period.”

There are no rescheduled dates confirmed for games against North Alabama or Liberty.

Unless there are further changes, the official ASUN opener for the Eagles will be Jan. 15 and 16 Friday and Saturday against Bellarmine University at Alico Arena.

“Every missed opportunity to compete disappoints us. We want our student-athletes to play,” ASUN Commissioner Ted Gumbart said in the press release. “Postponing play is the safe and responsible step, but always disappointing. We have plans to adjust and will work throughout the season to maximize the playing options for all ASUN student-athletes.”

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A serene beach near Wiggins Pass in Collier County saw some excitement this week as beach-goers watched a capsized boat get to shore.

The boat capsized Tuesday afternoon, according to Kimberly Mason, a paddleboarder who watched it happen.

“It was just sailing quietly and then, it just tipped over that quick,” Mason said. “Within minutes there were jet skis and then within five to 10 minutes, the police.”

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Dawn Wells, who played the wholesome Mary Ann among a misfit band of shipwrecked castaways on the 1960s sitcom “Gilligan’s Island,” died Wednesday of causes related to COVID-19, her publicist said. She was 82.

Wells died peacefully at a residential facility in Los Angeles, publicist Harlan Boll said. “There is so much more to Dawn Wells” than the “Gilligan’s Island” character that brought her fame, Boll said in a statement.

Besides TV, film and stage acting credits, her other real-life roles included teacher, motivational speaker and conservationist, Boll said.

Tina Louise, 86, who played Ginger the movie star, is the last surviving member of a cast that included Bob Denver as the title character; Alan Hale Jr. as the Skipper; Jim Backus and Natalie Schafer as wealthy passengers Thurston and Lovey Howell, and Russell Johnson, known as the Professor.

FILE – In this 1965 file photo, Dawn Wells, center, poses with fellow cast members of “Gilligan’s Island,” Bob Denver and Alan Hale Jr., in Los Angeles. Wells, who played the wholesome Mary Ann on the 1960s sitcom “Gilligan’s Island,” has died. Her publicist says Wells died early Wednesday, Dec. 30, 2020, in Los Angeles, of causes related to COVID-19. (AP Photo/File)

“I will always remember her kindness to me,” Louise said in a statement. “We shared in creating a cultural landmark that has continued to bring comfort and smiles to people during this difficult time. I hope that people will remember her the way that I do — always with a smile on her face.”

“Oh, this so sad. Bon voyage, Mary Ann,” Jane Lynch posted on Twitter.

“Two and a Half Men” star Jon Cryer tweeted that it was a “thrill” to meet Wells when she visited the show, adding, “She could not have been more lovely and gracious.”

Wells, a native of Reno, Nevada, represented her state in the 1959 Miss America pageant and quickly pivoted to an acting career. Her early TV roles were on shows including “77 Sunset Strip,” “Maverick” and “Bonanza.”

Then came “Gilligan’s Island,” a goofy, good-natured comedy that aired from 1964-67 that became an unlikely but indelible part of popular culture. Wells’ comely but innocent Mary Ann complemented Louise’s worldly Ginger, and both became innocuous ’60s TV versions of sex symbols.

Wells’ wardrobe included a gingham dress and shorts that modestly covered her belly button, with both costumes on display in Los Angeles at The Hollywood Museum.

TV movies spinoffs from the series followed, including 1978′s “Rescue from Gilligan’s Island,” but Wells also moved on to other TV guest roles and films including the 2002 vacuum cleaner salesman comedy “Super Sucker” with Jeff Daniels. She starred on stage in dozens of plays, including “Chapter Two” and “The Odd Couple.”

In 2013, she was honored for her work with a Tennessee-based refuge, The Elephant Sanctuary.

To mark the 50th anniversary of “Gilligan’s Island.” Dawn wrote “A Guide To Life: What Would Mary Ann Do?” with observations about her character and the cultural changes that took place while she was stranded.

Two years ago, a friend launched a GoFundMe drive to help cover medical and other costs for Wells, although she protested she didn’t need the assistance. She did end up acknowledging her need and accepted more than $180,000 in donations.

“Wow! I am amazed at the kindness and affection I have received” in response to the fundraising drive, Wells said in a social media post at the time. She said a “dear friend” undertook it after a frank conversation.

She recounted musing to him, “’Where did the time go? I don’t know how this happened. I thought I was taking all the proper steps to ensure my golden years. Now, here I am, no family, no husband, no kids and no money.’”

Wells added in the post that she was grateful to her supportive fans and that her outlook remained positive.

Dawn is survived by her stepsister, Weslee Wells, Boll said.

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NCH Healthcare System has announced it will begin to vaccinate “pre-hospital workers” in Collier County on Thursday.

EMS and paramedics will be able to get the first dose of the Moderna vaccine at NCH Baker Hospital.

“These vaccinations will represent the first vaccine shots administered at NCH to our community’s emergency medical personnel with direct patient contact an at highest risk for developing COVID-19,” according to a news release.

First responders in Lee County began to get vaccinated last week ahead of the county releasing the vaccine to those 65 and over in the general public.

The Department of Health in Lee County began to offer the vaccine on Monday, and has quickly run out of doses each day this week.

The Department of Health in Collier County will offer the vaccine to the public over 65 beginning Jan. 3. It opened up appointments on Wednesday and quickly ran out of slots.

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Detectives began investigating after a bull was found slaughtered in Lee County.

Lee County Sheriff’s Office said Wednesday a bull was found dead in a private pasture on Shawnee Road near the intersection with State Road 82 and Daniels Parkway.

Investigators say someone broke into the pasture and slaughtered the animal for its meat.

Shawnee Rd. has a theme: It’s secluded.

“As you can imagine, everybody on this road, everybody’s got guns; everybody’s got dogs,” Kevin Schermerhorn said. “A lot of times, the cattle comes over, so it’s kind of neat to see, I guess you could say.”

The pasture is a wide-open space right near busy roadways in Lee County.

“They have several horses,” Schermerhorn said. “Down the road here, there’s some more horses too, and everybody for the most part has chickens. Up until this point, I haven’t heard of anything going wrong with the chickens.”

It’s a space for people like Schermerhorn and his wife to keep their horses.

“We have surveillance; plus, we have three dogs that roam the property. One stays out at night, so, primarily, that was to keep coyotes away because we have chickens too,” Schermerhorn said. “But now we kind of look at it as humans, unfortunately.”

Investigators believe someone got onto the property and killed a bull and took its meat.

“Whatever picture she saw, looks like they kind of cut the back end of the bull off or whatever,” Schermerhorn said.

We asked Schermerhorn why he thought someone might do this.

“Who knows? With COVID and everything else, people are obviously going through a tough time, and maybe it’s the only way they can get food in their stomach,” Schermerhorn said.

Horses were reportedly slaughtered in Southwest Florida earlier in 2020, but this is the first time we’ve learned about reports of a bull slaughtered in the region or around the state this year.

The sheriff’s office explained detectives have not made any connection between the Lee County bull and other similar killings of horses.

Schermerhorn hopes, for his horse’s sake, that’s not the case.

“My wife would be devastated,” Schermerhorn said.

The Lee County Sheriff’s Office says anyone with information is asked to call them at 239-477-1000 or call Southwest Florida Crime Stoppers at 800-780-TIPS.

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As of 2 p.m. Wednesday, there have been 1,306,123 positive cases of the coronavirus recorded in the state. The case count includes 1,283,701 Florida residents and 22,422 non-Florida residents. There are 21,546 Florida resident deaths reported, 311 non-resident deaths, and 62,508 hospitalizations at some point during illness, according to the Florida Department of Health.

*Numbers are released by the DOH every afternoon.

STATEWIDE NUMBERS

Total number of recorded cases: 1,306,123 (up from 1,292,252)
Florida resident deaths: 21,546 (up from 21,409)
Non-resident deaths: 311 (up from 309)
Total deaths in state (Fla./non-Fla. residents combined): 21,857 (up from 21,718)

  • 13,871 total new cases reported Wednesday
  • 137 new resident deaths reported Wednesday
  • 2 new non-resident deaths reported Wednesday
  • Percent positive for new cases in Fla. residents: 8.72%
    • 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: 76,664 (up from 75,880)
Deaths: 1,352 (up from 1,330)

  • 764 total new cases reported Wednesday
  • 22 new deaths reported Wednesday

Lee County: 40,169 cases (up from 39,679) – 673 deaths (20 new)
Collier County: 22,267 (up from 22,132) – 333 deaths (2 new)
Charlotte County: 7,282 (up from 7,192) – 231 deaths
DeSoto County: 2,883 (up from 2,858) – 55 deaths
Glades County: 769 (up from 764) – 11 deaths
Hendry County: 3,274 (up from 3,255) – 49 deaths

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

VACCINE IN SWFL: COVID-19 vaccine schedules for SWFL

VACCINE IN FLORIDA: State of Florida’s COVID-19 vaccine reports

NOW HIRINGSWFL companies adding jobs

FOOD PANTRIES: Harry Chapin mobile food pantry schedule, week of Dec. 28

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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This weekly WINK News segment features fugitives from justice right here in Southwest Florida.

This is your chance to help out the community and give the tip that gets these people off the street. These suspects need to be found – and you can help. If you have seen them, reach out to Crime Stoppers or your local law enforcement. Call 1-800-780-TIPS (8477).

Here are Southwest Florida Crime Stopper’s three most-wanted fugitives for 2020.

Troy Bolin

Troy Bolin (DOB 8/25/60) – Wanted in Lee County for sexual battery on a child under 12 years of age.

Bolin was first arrested in 2005 for sexual assault on a teenager. Shortly before he was released from jail, a second victim came forward and told a trusted adult that she, too, had been raped repeatedly by Bolin starting when she was 7 years old.

When those charges came to light, Bolin bolted and hasn’t been seen since. Bolin was living in Lehigh Acres when these accusations came to light.

He frequently held Bible study with neighborhood kids, but behind closed doors, Bolin was accused of doing heinous acts.

Crime Stoppers says, “Family members in Georgia claim they haven’t seen Bolin in years, but we’re confident they’re being less than truthful and that he’s out there somewhere – and all we need is that one tip to hold him accountable for his actions.”

Rosalia Tejeda Diaz

Rosalia Tejeda Diaz (DOB 11/26/67) – Wanted in Lee County for leaving the scene of a crash involving a death.

A warrant for the arrest of Rosalia Tejeda Diaz was issued just days after the incident that left Kate Johnson and her dog Diva deceased along McGregor Boulevard back in January of this year.

Johnson was taking her dog for a walk along McGregor around 10 p.m. on Jan. 22 when she was struck by a car driving northbound. Rather than do the right thing and stay on scene, Diaz made the conscious decision to leave Johnson on the side of the road without a single attempt to render aid or call 911.

Diaz has been on the run since the crash and troopers are hoping to hear from anyone who may have seen or heard from her.

Upon her arrest, Diaz will be charged with hit and run involving a death, which is punishable in the state of Florida by up to 30 years in prison.

Bryan Vega Martinez

[CAPTURED] Bryan Vega Martinez (DOB 1/22/92) – Wanted in Lee County for violation of community control for willful child abuse.

This North Fort Myers resident was caring for a 14-month-old baby who woke up crying at 5:30 in the morning.

Vega Martinez went to tend to the baby and seemingly soothed the infant back to sleep. However a few hours later, a family member noticed significant redness and bruising on the child.

When questioned about the injuries, Vega Martinez admitted to hitting the infant in the face in an attempt to calm him down. That violent method landed him in jail for three days, and now he’s violated the probation that followed that arrest.

In addition to the child abuse charge, he has also been jailed for several counts of drug possession. He is 5’11”, 175 pounds and upon his arrest, he will be held without bond.


If you have a tip on the whereabouts of any of these wanted suspects contact Southwest Florida Crime Stoppers. All callers will remain anonymous and will be eligible for a cash reward of up to $3,000.

Southwest Florida Crime Stoppers
1-800-780-TIPS (8477) or
southwestfloridacrimestoppers.com

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Campaigns and outside groups are making a final push to turn out election-weary Georgians whose votes will determine control of the U.S. Senate, from a crush of text messages and television ads to dueling visits from President-elect Joe Biden and outgoing President Donald Trump.

More than 2.5 million people — about half the turnout of last month’s presidential election — had already cast their ballots early, in person or by absentee ballot, by Wednesday morning.

With margins in the Jan. 5 runoffs expected to be tight, the campaigns for Republican U.S. Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler and Democratic challengers Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock are all focused on mobilizing voters.

That means everything from individual voter contacts urging early voting, which ends Thursday, to last-minute campaign stops from national headliners trying to boost Election Day turnout. The Democrats’ campaigns announced Wednesday that Biden would campaign Monday in Atlanta with Ossoff and Warnock. Trump already had announced plans to rally Monday evening, just hours before polls open, with the Republican senators in the north Georgia town of Dalton. Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, meanwhile, will come to Savannah on Sunday.

“We want to run through the tape. We don’t want to leave anything for granted,” said Jessica Anderson, executive director of Heritage Action, a grassroots conservative organization that has volunteers and staffers knocking on doors, making phone calls and sending text messages.

Roshan Mody is the co-founder of Plus1Vote, which focuses on getting young people out to vote on climate change, social justice and voting rights. He told progressive activists Monday during an online briefing that it’s going to come down to turnout.

“All the signs are good,” he said of Democrats’ chances. “But a blowout is less likely than us kind of going over the edge by 10-20,000 votes.”

In the nearly two months since the general election in November, Georgians have been inundated by radio and television advertisements, mailings, calls, text messages and even hand-written notes from out-of-state residents urging them to vote.

Runoff elections historically draw a much lower turnout than general elections, and in Georgia they have favored Republican candidates in the last decade or so. But in this unique election — with national attention, money pouring in and control of the Senate at stake — the normal rules don’t seem to apply.

Rather than dropping dramatically, early voting for the runoff is only about 20% lower than the early turnout at the same point before the general election, though missed days over Christmas make a direct comparison difficult. Experts who track early voting data say the high turnout, particularly among African American voters, and the continued engagement of younger voters is a good sign for the Democrats.

“These are the numbers that the Democrats need in order to be able to win the election,” said Michael McDonald, a University of Florida professor who tracks vote counts for the U.S. Elections Project. “It doesn’t mean that they are going to win. It’s just the numbers they would want to see if they are going to win.”

But McDonald and others are quick to say that the election results are likely to be very close, and there’s too much uncertainty to draw sweeping conclusions from the early voting data.

While early voting trends so far seem to favor Democrats, Republicans typically have higher Election Day turnout and they could also make gains in the final days of early in-person or absentee voting, McDonald said. There are also wildcard factors like the weather — though the current Election Day forecast is mild and dry across the state.

In-person early voting ends statewide Thursday, though some counties observe New Year’s Eve as a holiday so Wednesday will be their last day. Absentee ballots can be returned by mail or in drop boxes to be counted as long as they’re received by 7 p.m. on Election Day.

Perdue and Loeffler both failed to win a majority of votes in the general election last month, forcing the runoffs.

After a bitter fight during the general election between Loeffler and third-place finisher GOP U.S. Rep. Doug Collins, Republicans need to focus on making sure Collins voters now support Loeffler, Emory University political science professor Bernard Fraga said. They also need to stress the importance of voting despite repeated baseless claims from Trump and his allies that the presidential election was rigged and marred by fraud.

“Republicans can’t afford to throw away any votes,” Fraga said. “I think this just adds to the pressure on Trump to make a very forceful push to his supporters regarding the importance of this election and the importance of their participation in this election.”

The president already held a rally earlier this month in Valdosta, in south Georgia. Vice President Mike Pence and other high-profile Republicans have also traveled to Georgia.

In the final days before the election, Democrats need to work on turning out Latino and Asian American voters, Fraga said. Participation by both groups surged in the general election, but they are less consistent voters and will need extra mobilization to turn out, he said. A continued focus on younger voters is also critical.

“It looks a lot better for Democrats now than anyone would have predicted based on the historical record,” Fraga said. “I think the question is whether it’s enough and the next few days are going to be key for seeing whether the group-level differences in turnout are suggestive of a pattern that favors Democrats.”

So far, very few of the runoff voters are people who didn’t vote in general election, Fraga said.

“If we assume that very few people are changing their minds about which party they’re going to vote for in the runoff, then much of the electoral landscape has already been baked in in Georgia and it’s really a story about turnout instead of changing people’s minds,” he said.

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