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Tag: Florida Keys

  • Miami Shores man cuffed after ‘groping’ woman at Florida Keys bar, deputies say

    Deputies say the victim called Monroe County deputies after being groped by a stranger at a Long Key bar. The suspect appeared intoxicated and was jailed.

    Deputies say the victim called Monroe County deputies after being groped by a stranger at a Long Key bar. The suspect appeared intoxicated and was jailed.

    A Miami Shores man spent his Black Friday in jail after deputies say he allegedly assaulted a woman at a Florida Keys bar.

    Around 8:40 p.m., the woman, who was not identified, called the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office for help because she’d been “groped.”

    She told deputies 48-year-old John Vincent Krieny touched her under her shirt and on her pants while at the bar at Lime Tree Bay Resort in Long Key, the sheriff’s office said.

    She didn’t know him and told Krieny several times to stop and her husband would be there soon. Deputies say he did not.

    When deputies arrested Krieny they noted he appeared intoxicated, according to the sheriff’s office. He was charged with battery and committing an unnatural and lascivious act.

    He was booked into the Monroe County jail and later released. It wasn’t clear if he had retained an attorney.

    Devoun Cetoute

    Miami Herald

    Miami Herald Cops and Breaking News Reporter Devoun Cetoute covers a plethora of Florida topics, from breaking news to crime patterns. He was on the breaking news team that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2022. He’s a graduate of the University of Florida, born and raised in Miami-Dade. Theme parks, movies and cars are on his mind in and out of the office.

    Devoun Cetoute

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  • Florida Keys defendant spit on two prosecutors, Monroe Sheriff’s Office says

    A Monroe County jail inmate spit on two prosecutors during a hearing in the Florida Keys Friday, Oct. 24, 2025, according to the sheriff’s office.

    A Monroe County jail inmate spit on two prosecutors during a hearing in the Florida Keys Friday, Oct. 24, 2025, according to the sheriff’s office.

    A defendant attacked two Florida Keys prosecutors during a hearing Friday, spitting on them as court deputies restrained him, according to the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office.

    Scott David Alan Hedger, 45, was attending a hearing around 11:30 a.m. in which Chief Assistant State Attorney Joseph Mansfield was making an argument against his attorney’s motion to reduce his prison sentence for a probation violation.

    Hedger became angry and lunged at Mansfield and Assistant State Attorney Melissa Simons, said Adam Linhardt, a sheriff’s office spokesman.

    As deputies gained control over him, he still managed to spit on the attorneys, Linhardt said.

    Hedger is now in county jail on two counts of battery, but he has bigger issues. The hearing was about him violating his probation on a charge of leaving the scene of an accident involving serious bodily injury, a case in which he was originally charged with several more serious counts, including attempted murder.

    He’s accused of dragging his ex-girlfriend with his pickup truck down a Tavernier street in September 2021. The woman was so badly injured, her leg bone was exposed when deputies arrived, according to his arrest report.

    Scott David Alan Hedger
    Scott David Alan Hedger Monroe County Sheriff’s Office

    Hedger ended up pleading guilty to the charge of leaving the scene of an accident and served seven months in prison, with time served for 35 months he spent in county jail. Mansfield said the reason prosecutors agreed to the plea agreement is because the ex-girlfriend was too afraid of Hedger to testify against him.

    His sentence began in September 2024 and was released at the end of February.

    Although out of prison, Hedger still had four years of probation left on his sentence. One of the terms of probation was not to contact his ex-girlfriend.

    But, within two days of being released on Feb. 24, Hedger called the woman 12 times from a bar in West Palm Beach, court documents reveal.

    On Sept. 26, Monroe County Judge James. W. Morgan sentenced Hedger to 10 years in state prison for the parole violation. On Friday, Mansfield was arguing against Hedger’s attorney’s motion to reduce the sentence when he and his colleague were attacked.

    David Goodhue

    Miami Herald

    David Goodhue covers the Florida Keys and South Florida for FLKeysNews.com and the Miami Herald. Before joining the Herald, he covered Congress, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Energy in Washington, D.C. He is a graduate of the University of Delaware.

    David Goodhue

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  • Photos: Dave Portnoy buys Florida mansion for record-breaking $28M



    Dave Portnoy is expanding his real estate presence with a new Florida Keys residence, and breaking records while doing it.

    The unapologetic internet personality and Barstool Sports founder purchased an Islamorada mansion this week for $27,750,000, the highest property sale the village has ever seen. 

    Located at 76180 Overseas Highway, the home has eight bedrooms, 10 bathrooms and a total 7,562 square feet across a main residence and a guest house. 

    The estate sits on 1.65 acres of waterfront land, and it comes with two pools, a private beach, a boat ramp and dock, an outdoor kitchen and 150 feet of private water access, per the listing. Inside, there are two laundry rooms, an elevator, a 180-bottle glass wine cellar, Sonos sound system and more.

    There are also two gated driveways, a four-car garage and lots of tropical landscaping. 

    Portnoy, 48, already owned more than $95 million worth of real estate in both Florida and other areas like Montauk, Nantucket and Saratoga Springs. He also is the owner of a $14 million home in Miami.

    All photos are from Realtor.com.

    Every house has a story, and our mission is to tell Orlando’s story through the lens of our community’s most exceptional and historic homes. Orlando Weekly’s real estate features are not ads and are assembled by our editorial department. But we love public input. Do you know of a unique Florida home we should highlight? Let us know, and email cgreenberg@orlandoweekly.com.





    Chloe Greenberg
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  • Hurricane Debby blows cocaine worth over $1 million onto beach in Florida Keys, U.S. Border Patrol says

    Hurricane Debby blows cocaine worth over $1 million onto beach in Florida Keys, U.S. Border Patrol says

    Hurricane Debby brought more than powerful winds and storm surge to Florida — packages of cocaine worth more than $1 million also made landfall, officials said, marking the latest in a string of recent discoveries of drugs along Florida shores.

    Debby, which slammed into the state as a Category 1 hurricane but has since been downgraded to a tropical storm, washed the drugs ashore in the Florida Keys, U.S. Border Patrol acting chief patrol Agent Samuel Briggs II wrote on social media.

    “Hurricane Debby blew 25 packages of cocaine (70 lbs.) onto a beach in the Florida Keys,” Briggs wrote, posting two images of the packages.

    “Hurricane Debby blew 25 packages of cocaine (70 lbs.) onto a beach in the Florida Keys,” U.S. Border Patrol acting chief patrol Agent Samuel Briggs II wrote on social media.

    U.S. Border Patrol acting chief patrol Agent Samuel Briggs II


    Briggs said the trove of drugs, which has a street value of more than $1 million, was found by a good Samaritan who contacted the authorities.

    Cocaine has been found on numerous occasions on and near the shores of Florida, which is not far from Caribbean transit hubs for drugs being trafficked from South America to the U.S. and Europe.

    In June, recreational boaters off the coast of the Florida Keys found 65 pounds of cocaine floating in the ocean, Briggs said.

    Earlier that month, divers found 25 kilograms of cocaine about 100 feet underwater off Key West. The very next day, the same amount of suspected cocaine was found washed up on Dauphin Island, Alabama.

    In May, a beachgoer found about $1 million worth of cocaine washed up along the Florida Keys, CBS News Miami reported.

    In 2023, packages of cocaine worth more than $100,000 washed up on several Florida beaches. Also last year, Tampa Mayor Jane Castor, while on a fishing trip with her family, reeled in 70 pounds of cocaine

    In 2019, bricks of cocaine were discovered on two beaches after Hurricane Dorian lashed the Florida coast.  

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  • Cleveland Browns player arrested for DUI after driving into Key West restaurant, police say

    Cleveland Browns player arrested for DUI after driving into Key West restaurant, police say

    KEY WEST, Fla. – Cleveland Browns defensive end Lonnie Phelps is facing a drunken driving charge in South Florida after police said he slammed an SUV into a Key West restaurant Wednesday night.

    Phelps, of Cincinnati, was booked into the Monroe County jail just after 9:45 p.m. Wednesday, according to online records.

    According to the Key West Police Department, the 23-year-old drove into the Red Shoe Island Bistro at 411 Petronia St. just before 9 p.m. He had a woman with him in the Hyundai Tucson at the time, authorities said.

    A post on the KWPD Facebook page states the “building and the vehicle were significantly damaged, but there were no injuries.”

    A photo shared in the post shows a large hole in the side of the eatery. Red Shoe Island Bistro posted a video showing the aftermath to its own Facebook page.

    “No one was hurt by the car that drove into our restaurant tonight. Thankfully, we were closed,” the post reads. “It could’ve been really bad…Angels were looking out for us all.”

    According to an arrest report, both Phelps and the woman he was with appeared to be intoxicated. Witnesses said the two got into an argument after the crash, police wrote.

    KWPD Officer Andrea Bernatova wrote in the report that Phelps was “very agitated” and had “glassy, watery, blood-shot eyes, droopy eyelids, and a strong odor of alcohol coming from his breath.”

    She said the NFL player “kept throwing his hands in the air and rushing us to ‘do what we have to do’” and, at one point, “turned around, placing his hands behind his back without any direction to do so.”

    Police said he was uncooperative as they questioned him about the crash.

    “When I asked Phelps if he could tell us how the crash happened, he said it happened and asked what does he have to pay for. I asked Phelps where he was driving from and he said ‘right in front of it,’” Bernatova wrote. “I re-asked the questions four times in a different way and Phelps always answered, “right in front of it”. Phelps also asked me what did he crash into.”

    He later told an officer “he wants to pay for whatever damages he needs to pay for and be done with it” and “kept rambling about his credit card,” police said.

    During an attempt to get Phelps to complete field sobriety tests, he told the officer she “was tripping,” at one point telling the officer, “Just put the tape down so I can walk the line like a concussion test,” the report states.

    During that test, Phelps claimed he “cannot count” and eventually “performed a casual stroll next to the line not even resembling what I instructed him to do,” Bernatova wrote.

    The uncooperative football player was later placed under arrest.

    “Phelps talked about how thirsty he was, how he did not know what I was going to do to him because females are the worst, asked me not to kill him, asked me how long it takes to bail out, how long I was a detective, and informed me I was Russian,” Bertnova wrote.

    During a breathalyzer test, Phelps asked to go to the bathroom, police said.

    Bernatova wrote that she told him he could use the bathroom after the diagnostic was complete but he insisted he had to “go now.”

    “Phelps said, ‘I’m peeing, bro,’ and he did,” she wrote.

    Bernatova said Phelps, after urinating himself, declined to provide a breath sample.

    Phelps remained in the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office Key West jail facility as of around noon Thursday, online records show.

    He’s facing a misdemeanor charge of driving under the influence causing property damage.

    Phelps was signed by the Browns as an undrafted free agent in 2023 after playing college football for Ohio’s Miami University and the University of Kansas.

    He has been on the team’s practice squad and hasn’t yet appeared in a regular-season game.

    Copyright 2024 by WPLG Local10.com – All rights reserved.

    Janine Stanwood, Chris Gothner

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  • Private island in Florida Keys selling for $2.5M

    Private island in Florida Keys selling for $2.5M

    MARATHON, Fla. — A unique private island resting just off the coast in the middle of the Florida Keys is looking for new owners to call it home.

    Pretty Joe Rock, also known as Sea Shell Key, is being offered for $2.5 million. It comes with a private dock and with its location just offshore from 43rd Street in Marathon, dining and shopping options ‘off the island’ are just minutes away.

    In 2014, the 9,190-square-foot property was featured on HGTV’s “Buying the Beach”. However, Hurricane Irma destroyed the home in 2017, according to WFLA.

    One of just nine islands in the Keys with the ability for a home to reside on it, the new owners of this island will be given as much as 4,000 square feet to build back the rare piece of paradise.

    If you’re interested in purchasing the island, the realtor Gidget Johnson can be contacted at 305-900-8217.

    NBC2 News

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  • Underwater Music Show Spotlights Coral Reef Protection

    Underwater Music Show Spotlights Coral Reef Protection

    BIG PINE KEY, Fla. (AP) — Hundreds of divers and snorkelers listened to an underwater concert that advocated coral reef protection Saturday in the Florida Keys.

    The Lower Keys Underwater Music Festival, which also spotlighted eco-conscious diving, took place at Looe Key Reef, an area of the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary located about 6 miles (10 kilometers) south of Big Pine Key.

    Established in 1990, the sanctuary protects 3,800 square miles (9,800 square kilometers) of waters including the barrier reef that parallels the 125-mile-long (201-kilometer-long) island chain.

    Participants swam among Looe Key’s colorful marine life and coral formations while listening to water-themed music broadcast by a local radio station. The music was piped undersea through waterproof speakers suspended beneath boats above the reef.

    The oceanic playlist included the Beatles’ “Yellow Submarine,” Jimmy Buffett’s “Fins” and the theme from “The Little Mermaid.”

    Tunes were interspersed with diver awareness messages about ways to minimize environmental impacts on the world’s coral reefs, whose rich biodiversity has led them to be called the rainforests of the sea.

    While the festival’s primary purpose was to encourage reef preservation, it also afforded a singular underwater experience. “Mermaids” and other costumed characters added unique visual elements to the auditory offering on part of the continental United States’ only living coral barrier reef.

    The four-hour musical event was staged by local radio station 104.1 FM and the Lower Keys Chamber of Commerce.

    In this photo provided by the Florida Keys News Bureau, mermaid Donna Whitney pretends to play a harp Saturday, July 8, 2023, at the Lower Keys Underwater Music Festival in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary near Big Pine Key, Fla. Several hundred divers and snorkelers submerged along a portion of the continental United States’ only living coral barrier reef to listen to a local radio station’s four-hour broadcast, piped beneath the sea to promote coral reef preservation. (Frazier Nivens/Florida Keys News Bureau via AP)

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  • Scientists work to save Florida’s coral reef

    Scientists work to save Florida’s coral reef

    Scientists work to save Florida’s coral reef – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    The world’s third-largest coral reef just off the Florida Keys was once a vibrant habitat for millions of plants and animals. But an outbreak of stony coral tissue loss disease is threatening to destroy it. Scientists are trying to regrow the coral in a lab hundreds of miles away to save it. Manuel Bojorquez takes a look.

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  • Scientists hope lab-grown coral can save endangered Florida Keys reef

    Scientists hope lab-grown coral can save endangered Florida Keys reef

    Scientists work to save Florida’s coral reef


    Scientists work to save Florida’s coral reef

    02:20

    Orlando, Florida — Just off the Florida Keys lies the world’s third-largest coral reef, which was once a vibrant habitat for millions of plants and animals. 

    But an outbreak of stony coral tissue loss disease threatens to destroy 20 of the 45 species found there, including larger reef-building corals. 

    “This disease that’s burning through the Florida Keys is an incredible event that’s happening,” said Andrew Stamper, conservation science manager at Disney’s Animals, Science and Environment. “It’s like a wildfire.” 

    Stamper says that endangers Florida’s fishing industry and food supply. 

    “Unfortunately, we do not know exactly what is causing this,” he said. 

    In order to save the reef, scientists have moved some species hundreds of miles away to a lab in Orlando. Scientists at the lab work to simulate breeding conditions — work that is both delicate and painstaking. LED lights replicate the sun and moon cycles. Volunteers feed the coral in water treated to mimic its real habitat. 

    “This essentially is a gene bank,” said Jim Kinsler, aquarium curator at SeaWorld Orlando. “We’re trying to protect the genetics of these corals so that their offspring can ultimately be returned back to the Florida reef tract.”

    The task of relocating the lab-grown coral to the sea is also a delicate task. 

    Kinsler, who is part of a team of private and public partners operating the Florida Coral Rescue Center, said it’s the first time many of them have been involved “in rescuing an entire ecosystem.” 

    “We think the real challenge is just growing them out to a size that we can test them in those waters, test their disease resistance, and then propagate the successful corals by the hundreds of thousands — literally,” said Andrew Walker, president of the Fish and Wildlife Foundation of Florida. 


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  • Visited App Releases List of Most Popular Snorkeling Destinations in the World

    Visited App Releases List of Most Popular Snorkeling Destinations in the World

    Travel App Highlights the Most Popular Snorkeling Destinations based on user’s travel preferences.

    Press Release


    Oct 25, 2022 08:00 EDT

    The travel app Visited, published by Arriving In High Heels Corporation has released a list of the top 10 most popular snorkeling destinations in the world.

    Visited, available on iOS or Android, is a popular travel app with international traveling users. The app allows users to mark off places they’ve visited, see a custom map of their travels, discover new destinations, set travel goals, and get a personalized printed travel map.

    The top 10 snorkeling destinations in the world according to Visited include:

    1. Cancun, Mexico is the most popular snorkeling destination, with expansive coral reefs and a wide variety of marine life in the Caribbean.
    2. Bali, Indonesia has beautiful beaches and hundreds of different marine species. Bali is part of the Coral Triangle, which has 75 percent of the world’s marine life, with almost 600 species.
    3. Cozumel, Mexico offers abundant coral reefs in the warm waters of the Caribbean. 
    4. Great Barrier Reef, Australia has the world’s largest coral reef and is one of the Seven Natural Wonders of the World.
    5. Phuket, Thailand has crystal-clear waters and ample marine life for snorkeling. 
    6. Florida Keys, United States features pristine waters and beautiful snorkeling opportunities. 
    7. Red Sea is a saltwater inlet of the Indian Ocean with clear reefs and plentiful sea life for snorkeling off the coast of Egypt.
    8. California, United States features 840 miles (1,352 km) of stunning coastline with snorkeling in many places, including Glass Beach and Monterey.
    9. Cenotes, Mexico has thousands of cenotes – deep water wells – with beautiful snorkeling off the coast of the Yucatan Peninsula.
    10. Phi Phi Islands, Thailand is a group of 6 islands with clear waters and a wide range of marine life that are part of the Coral Triangle.

    To see the complete list of the most popular snorkeling destinations and over 50 lists of the top places to visit, download Visited on iOS or Android. Find out more about the top worldwide destinations on the Visited blog

    To learn more about the Visited app, visit https://visitedapp.com

    About Arriving In High Heels Corporation

    Arriving In High Heels Corporation is a mobile app company with apps including Pay Off Debt, X-Walk, and Visited, their most popular app. 

    Contact Information

    Anna Kayfitz

    anna@arrivinginhighheels.com

    Source: Arriving In High Heels Corporation

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