South Florida’s total home sales dropped by double digits in March. Above: Royal Caribbean’s employees and guests welcomed the ‘Icon of the Seas’ from the Perez Art Museum as the ship turns around in front of Miami’s skyline early Wednesday morning during its first arrival into PortMiami, January 10, 2024.
Pedro Portal
pportal@miamiherald.com
More homebuyers are sitting on the sidelines in South Florida, leading to a nearly 15% drop in total residential transactions in March.
Miami-Dade County saw 2,141 single-family home and condo sales in March, down from 2,513 a year ago, according to the latest monthly home sales report by the Miami Association of Realtors.
Broward experienced the same trend, with 1,084 home sales, down from 3,133 sales in March 2023.
It’s the first double-digit drop in South Florida since last August and a sign of mounting pressure on home shoppers.
Buyers face two key pressures: mortgage rates and historically high sales prices.
Miami-Dade has a median sales price of $650,000 for single-family homes — an all-time high — and $445,000 for condos. Broward has a median sales price of $607,000 for houses and $288,750 for condos.
People do continue to buy, but real estate analyst Jonathan Miller believes the purchases mostly come from those moving from the Northeast with equity from selling their home, or higher salaries. Miller said more workers will continue to relocate to South Florida and drive activity given South Florida’s business, finance and tech climate.
South Florida “went from a nice place to visit to a nice place to live — that’s the change,” said Miller, president and CEO of the Miller Samuel real estate consultancy firm.
“This was all enabled by work from home,” he said. “That’s why the future outlook for Florida is undergoing a restructuring, the idea that people are looking at it from a different way.”
What is happening with South Florida housing supply?
Buyers have an increasing number of residential options. Miami-Dade has 4.3 months of supply of houses and 8.2 months of condos. Broward has 3.9 months of houses and 7.2 months of condos. A healthy state consists of six to nine months of inventory, with anything below benefiting sellers and anything above swinging in favor of buyers.
Many buyers continue to shop with cash. Miami-Dade saw 37.2% of deals close in cash, and Broward experienced a slightly higher amount at 42.6%. South Florida continues to have a higher percentage of cash buyers than the national average of 28%.
Moving forward, interest rates will likely be the key factor influencing buyers and sellers.
As of Thursday, mortgage lender Freddie Mac has a 7.1% fixed mortgage rate for a 30-year loan, slightly higher from a year ago at 6.35%. Rate cuts appear off the table any time soon, and Miller said that will likely keep more people in place, especially owners and potential sellers.
Rebecca San Juan writes about the real estate industry, covering news about industrial, commercial, office projects, construction contracts and the intersection of real estate and law for industry professionals. She studied at Mount Holyoke College and is proud to be reporting on her hometown. Support my work with a digital subscription
Home Depot’s “asset protection specialist” has been arrested, accused of setting up the theft of at least $260,000 of goods from Home Depot locations in Miami-Dade.
DAVID J. NEAL
dneal@miamiherald.com
A gang of thieves swiped hundreds of thousands of dollars in tools from Home Depot stores around Miami-Dade County since April of 2023, according to arrest reports. The man who cops say was at the center of making all the thefts possible: a Home Depot loss prevention officer.
South Miami-Dade resident Lazaro Echevarria was arrested last Thursday along with 44-year-olds Jose Bello-Valdez and Yoannys Montano-Solano after Miami-Dade police say search warrants at two places discovered “1,240 items valued at over $260,000. Some of the items were still in the original packaging.”
Obviously, the search warrant wouldn’t have included items already sold. Also, that value estimate didn’t count the items used in an alleged side hustle fraud involving refunds.
The group made another $49,000 by printing out a receipt from a past sale, swiping a matching item from the store with the same UPC code and “returning” the item for the cash value, according to arrest reports.
All three remained in Miami-Dade Corrections custody as of Wednesday afternoon.
Echevarria, 37, had the biggest bond, $98,000, after being charged with one count of organized fraud; one count of unlawful use of a communications device; six counts of dealing in stolen property; six counts of petit theft; and 17 counts of thrid degree grand theft. He’s pleaded not guilty.
Home Depot said Echevarria has been fired, but wouldn’t say how long he’d been working for the company nor confirm any of his positions held.
Bello, a Hialeah resident, received a $85,500 bond after being charged with one count of organized fraud; one count of unlawful use of a communications device; five counts of dealing in stolen property; six counts of petit theft; and 15 counts of third degree grand theft.
South Miami-Dade’s Montano, alleged to be the seller of stolen goods on Facebook Marketplace and OfferUp, faces one count of organized fraud; one count of third degree grand theft; one count of unlawful use of a communications device; and 11 counts of dealing in stolen property. His bond is $82,500.
An “unidentified white male” also joined the group, police said.
As described in arrest reports, their scheme for hitting Home Depot locations in Kendall (15750 SW 88th St), West Miami-Dade (11305 Bird Rd.) and Hialeah (1590 W. 49th St.) started with Echevarria, a Home Depot “asset protection specialist.”
Detectives say Echevarria “facilitated the thefts by opening locked tool cabinets; most likely, furnishing keys and/or combinations to the tool cabinets; and staged various items to be later stolen” such as putting them in predetermined places.
“Once the thefts concluded, he would leave the store still on shift to sell the stolen items.”
Once, the “asset protection specialist” had to protect his partner, an arrest report noted, when a sharp-eyed senior citizen in a Kendall parking lot almost got everyone caught five months ago.
Bello-Valdez strolled into the aforementioned Home Depot in Kendall at around 10:40 a.m. on Nov. 3 and went to the gift center. He picked out tool combination sets from Dewalt and Milwaukee and put them in an empty box on a flatbed cart. Bello-Valdez strolled into the parking lot with the tool sets without pausing to pay.
An “elderly male customer” told store management he saw this. Store management told their asset protection specialist — Echevarria.
Meanwhile, Bello-Valdez was putting the stolen tool kits into the a black Chevrolet SUV when an off-duty Miami-Dade officer came over to him, before he ran towards the nearby Walmart “leaving his vehicle abandoned.”
Bello-Valdez got away and “Echevarria, who was working and present at the time, had no choice but to generate an internal incident report. But he never filed a police report with Miami-Dade police despite finding 19 Dewalt Atomic 20-volt cordless combination kits; five Milwaukee M18 Fuel 120 mph Handheld Blower Kit; four Milwaukee M18 fuel hatchet pruning saws; a 20-volt Max 23 Gauge Pin Nailer Kit; and one Kitchen Cabinet.” Total value: $6,250.
“The incident was captured on closed circuit TV,” the arrest report said. “Echevarria’s report is not consistent with what occurred during the incident.”
Since 1989, David J. Neal’s domain at the Miami Herald has expanded to include writing about Panthers (NHL and FIU), Dolphins, old school animation, food safety, fraud, naughty lawyers, bad doctors and all manner of breaking news. He drinks coladas whole. He does not work Indianapolis 500 Race Day.
Find out which world-famous cruise ports made the Top 25 Most Visited List, as per the travel App. The travel map app helps users map their journeys, check-off famous places and experiences on a travel list and plan their future vacations.
TORONTO, April 16, 2024 (Newswire.com)
– Arriving in High Heels Corporation, published data on the top 25 most visited cruise ports in the world as per their travel app, Visited. The travel app, allows users to check off famous places and experiences, they have had or wish to have.
Currently, the app has over 150 travel lists, including:
On top of the bucket-lists, there are other popular features such as mapping travels, seeing personalized stats and planning your next vacation.
The most popular Cruise Ports are found all over the world, including United States with Miami making it to the 3rd most visited Port and New York placing 6th on the top 10 most popular cruise ports:
Barcelona
Venice
Miami
London
Amsterdam
New York
Naples
Lisbon
Copenhagen
Cozumel
For the full list of top cruise ports, is found inside the Visited app, available to download on iOS or Android for free.
About Visited Travel App
Visited is a travel app, which allows users to track how many countries, states, cities and places they have been to and what experiences they had around the world. The travel map app showcases your personalized travel map along with travel stats. The new travel itinerary takes the guess work of where to travel to next, by ranking countries to visit based on places and experiences you want to have at those places.
The travel list feature allows users to see the most popular destinations and experiences by travel categories. Users can select been places and wished for destinations to see how many of the places they have been to based on top 10 most popular places. Travel lists come in over 150+ categories including National parks, World Wonders, World Capitals as well as very niche travel experiences such as African Safaris, Hot Air balloon destinations, tennis destinations and NHL stadiums.
In addition, the app allows users to print a personalized travel map poster of their travel journey. The poster is shipped around the world and is printed by a world class printer.
The travel app is available in 30 languages and is available on iOS or Android, and is free to download.
To learn more about the Visited app and its latest feature update, please 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.
Visited app has travel stats that are unique to the travel industry with a sample of travel stats reported on their annual travel report.
The traffic mess around Northwest 54th Street behind the rollover on Interstate 95.
Florida Department of Transportation
Avoid Interstate 95 southbound Tuesday morning after a pair of crashes clogged traffic heading into Miami Beach and downtown Miami.
Around 6:40 a.m., a Jeep rolled over at the start of the eastbound Julia Tuttle Causeway, also known as I-195. This backed up traffic to the exit from I-95, and I-95’s problems soon were compounded with a rollover crash just before the exits to 195 and State Road 112.
Though the Jeep in the first crash was turned over at about 7:30 a.m. and will alleviate the Tuttle problem, the even slower-than-usual traffic crawl on Interstate 95 stretches back to the Golden Glades. Take Biscayne Boulevard, Miami Avenue or Northwest Seventh Avenue south if you can.
The traffic on the Interstate 195 spur route as it becomes the Julia Tuttle Causeway. The rollover crash is hidden by the building. Florida Department of Transportation
This is a breaking news story that will be updated.
This story was originally published April 16, 2024, 7:47 AM.
Since 1989, David J. Neal’s domain at the Miami Herald has expanded to include writing about Panthers (NHL and FIU), Dolphins, old school animation, food safety, fraud, naughty lawyers, bad doctors and all manner of breaking news. He drinks coladas whole. He does not work Indianapolis 500 Race Day.
MIAMI – Efforts have been made by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration to stiffen the penalties against protestors, especially when they do things like block traffic.
On Monday, several protesters were taken to the Miami-Dade County Jail after selecting April 15, tax day, in order to further prove their point.
People protesting the rising death toll in Gaza were pulled away and handcuffed by Miami police officers after blocking traffic on Biscayne Boulevard near Bayside in downtown Miami.
“We want to say that we don’t want any more of our tax payers dollars going to genocide funding for the genocide that is unfolding in Gaza,” said protester Ella Fies.
At least seven were arrested Monday afternoon.
The demonstration was part of an international day of protest against the tens of thousands of Palestinians – a large number of them children – killed in the Israel-Hamas conflict.
“I think it’s really heart breaking and upsetting that we do have to take such extreme measures to get people to care,” said Fies. “And I think it’s upsetting that people don’t intuitively care about the tens of thousands of people in Gaza who have been murdered and then the millions have been displaced and are starved”
Florida Senator Rick Scott applauded Miami police enforcement at Monday’s protest, saying on X:
Here’s a warning to any leftist Hamas sympathizers: don’t try this crap in Florida.
We stand with Israel and our Jewish community. We won’t put up with you pitching a fit to defend terrorists. https://t.co/GOuYSQGUO5
“I do not support Hamas. I think that needs to be said very loud and clear,” said Fies. “In no way shape or form is this action in support of the lives that were lost in Israel. We absolutely do not agree with senseless murder of innocent people.”
Miami police has yet to release details on the charges against the protestors who were arrested.
Copyright 2024 by WPLG Local10.com – All rights reserved.
Washington — A former U.S. ambassador formally pleaded guilty Friday to working for Cuba’s spy service for decades and was sentenced to 15 years in prison, bringing a quick end to a case that prosecutors described as one of the longest-running betrayals of the U.S. government in history.
Victor Manuel Rocha, the former U.S. ambassador to Bolivia, was indicted in December on charges that he spied for Cuba’s intelligence agency for more than 40 years. Rocha, who lives in Miami, originally pleaded not guilty in mid-February, then reversed course later that month.
The case’s resolution was briefly in doubt during a hearing on Friday when U.S. District Judge Beth Bloom questioned whether a plea deal Rocha struck with prosecutors was tough enough, since it lacked restitution for possible victims and did not revoke Rocha’s U.S. citizenship. Prosecutors argued that 15 years was sufficient given the 73-year-old would likely die in prison.
The plea deal was ultimately amended to include restitution for potential victims, which will be determined at a later time. Denaturalization is also possible as a civil action down the line.
Rocha’s work for Cuba
Victor Rocha appears at a hearing in federal court in Miami on Friday, April 12, 2024.
Lothar Speer
Little has been revealed about what Rocha did to help the communist regime or how he may have influenced U.S. policy while he worked for the State Department for two decades. He held high-level security clearances that gave him access to top secret information, according to the indictment, which could have made him a valuable asset to Cuba, which has long had hostile relations with the U.S.
But Rocha was not charged with espionage, and instead was accused of acting as a foreign agent, which the Justice Department refers to as “espionage lite.” Acting as a foreign agent carries a shorter prison sentence.
Attorney General Merrick Garland has described the case as “one of the highest-reaching and longest-lasting infiltrations of the U.S. government by a foreign agent.”
Born in Colombia, Rocha moved to New York when he was 10 years old after his father died. His family lived with his uncle in Harlem, supported by his mother’s job in a sweatshop sewing factory and food stamps. In 1965, a scholarship to attend Taft School, an elite boarding school in Connecticut, changed the trajectory of his life, he told the school’s alumni magazine in 2004. But while there, he experienced discrimination and considered suicide after his closest friend refused to be roommates with him over the color of his skin, he said.
Investigators alleged Rocha was recruited by Cuba’s spy agency in Chile in 1973 after he graduated from Yale University. That same year, Chile’s socialist president, Salvador Allende, was ousted in a U.S.-backed coup.
He became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1978 and also holds degrees from Harvard and Georgetown universities. His career at the State Department began in 1981 and included various positions in Latin America. He briefly held an influential role at the White House National Security Council during the Clinton administration. His career at the State Department culminated in an ambassadorship in Bolivia from 2000 to 2002.
As the ambassador to Bolivia, Rocha warned Bolivians that electing leftist coca farmer Evo Morales, a protege of Fidel Castro, as president would jeopardize U.S. aid to the country. The intervention was credited with helping boost Morales’ standing, and he thanked Rocha for being his “best campaign chief,” the New York Times reported in 2002.
Cuba also fell under Rocha’s purview during his stint at the National Security Council and while he was posted at the U.S. mission in Havana in the 1990s. After leaving the State Department, he was an adviser to the commander of the U.S. Southern Command, whose area of responsibility includes Cuba.
His positions within the government would have given him compartmentalized access to information involving Cuba, including U.S. assessments of the Cuban regime, biographic profiles, details about covert programs run by the U.S. and diplomatic reports from across the world about the Cubans, according to John Feeley, a former U.S. ambassador to Panama who once considered Rocha a mentor.
“He would have been enormously valuable to them,” Feeley told CBS News.
The State Department and the intelligence community are assessing the possible damage to national security, State Department spokesman Matthew Miller told reporters after Rocha’s arrest.
An attorney for Rocha, Jacqueline Arango, did not return a request for comment.
“The shock is complete”
This image provided by the Justice Department and contained in the affidavit in support of a criminal complaint shows Victor Manuel Rocha during a meeting with a FBI undercover employee.
Department of Justice / AP
Details about how the FBI began to suspect Rocha had acted as a covert agent for Cuba are unclear, other than it received a tip before November 2022, according to court documents. In the following months, the agency surveilled Rocha as he met with an undercover FBI agent whom he believed to be a representative of Cuba’s spy agency.
On Nov. 15, 2022, the undercover agent sent the retired diplomat a WhatsApp message “from your friends in Havana,” the documents said.
“I know that you have been a great friend of ours since your time in Chile,” the undercover agent told Rocha in a subsequent phone call. The two agreed to meet in person the next day.
During their conversations over the next year, Rocha referred to the U.S. as “the enemy” and said “what we have done” was “enormous” and “more than a grand slam,” court documents said.
“My number one concern; my number one priority was … any action on the part of Washington that would — would endanger the life of — of the leadership, or the — or the revolution itself,” Rocha allegedly told the undercover agent.
The complaint also alleged that Rocha met with his Cuban handlers as recently as 2017, first flying from Miami to the Dominican Republic using his American passport, then using a Dominican passport to fly to Panama and onto Havana.
Rocha said Cuba’s spy agency had instructed him to “lead a normal life,” and he eventually created a cover story “of a right-wing person” to conceal his double life, according to the complaint.
Feeley, who worked under Rocha when he was the deputy chief of mission for the U.S. Embassy in the Dominican Republic, said in recent years Rocha became an “over-the-top Donald Trump guy.” The two had kept in touch since their posting in the Dominican Republic, but when Feeley last saw Rocha in 2019, the previously apolitical Rocha had “gone down a Trump-MAGA rabbit hole,” as Feeley put it.
“It was really uncomfortable,” Feeley said, adding that he and his former colleagues never suspected it was a cover. “I’ve already been through the whole cycle of grief here. The shock is complete.”
Feeley resigned as U.S. ambassador to Panama in 2018 over policy disputes with the Trump administration.
Rocha did his job well and was generous with his mentoring, but he also had a strong ego and thought he was smarter than others, Feeley said.
On June 23, 2023, Rocha held his last meeting with the undercover FBI agent at an outdoor food court behind a church in Miami. Prosecutors said Rocha became angry when the agent asked, “Are you still with us?”
“I am pissed off,” Rocha allegedly responded, saying it’s “like questioning my manhood. … It’s like you want me to drop them … and show you if I still have testicles.”
Why did a septuagenarian who had managed to escape detection for decades and had long been retired from government service bite so easily at the FBI’s outreach?
“My feeling is that he felt irrelevant,” Feeley said. “You do something for 40 years, it gives you kind of a sense of purpose, and there’s no gold watch at the end of it.”
Caitlin Yilek is a politics reporter at cbsnews.com and is based in Washington, D.C. She previously worked for the Washington Examiner and The Hill, and was a member of the 2022 Paul Miller Washington Reporting Fellowship with the National Press Foundation.
According to TMZ, law enforcement agents informed the outlet this afternoon that Homeland Security was executing a raid on Diddy’s homes. The sources reportedly explained that additional law enforcement agencies were also onsite at the raids.
Officers were reportedly walking through Diddy’s residences with “guns drawn,” and speaking to everyone present.
The outlet notes that a representative for the music mogul has not issued a statement about the incident.
Since TMZ‘s initial report, photos have surfaced of Diddy’s sons, Christian Combs and Justin Combs, being placed in handcuffs and questioned by agents. The outlet has also obtained a video from the music mogul’s Miami home.
According to the outlet, the raid is connected to a case being handled out of the Southern District of New York. However, no additional information about what prompted the search has yet been released.
A Brief Recap Of The Sexual Assault Allegations Against Diddy
As The Shade Room previously reported, Diddy’s ex-girlfriend, Casandra Ventura, initially filed a 35-page lawsuit against him in November 2023. The suit accused Diddy of sexual assault, abuse, and trafficking.
A few days later, Ventura privately settled the suit, per The Shade Room. However, the allegations didn’t end there.
In December 2023, the music mogul was hit with another lawsuit. This one accused him of engaging in the sexual assault of a minor in 2003, per The Shade Room. Then, in February, a former male employee filed a 73-page sexual assault lawsuit against Diddy.
The lawsuit accused Diddy of “grooming” the former male employee for sex, “drugging and raping” the male, and enlisting his son Justin Combs to find underage girls and prostitutes for alleged sexual escapades.
To date, Diddy’s attorney has denied all allegations against him.
This is a developing story. Be sure to check back with The Shade Room for more updates.
This artisanal dining spot celebrates its five-year milestone as it strengthens its bond with the lively Miami neighborhoods it calls home
MIAMI, March 25, 2024 (Newswire.com)
– Rodilla, the renowned artisanal eatery, proudly celebrates its 5th anniversary of delivering authentic Spanish flavors to Miami’s vibrant culinary scene. This popular Spanish chain was founded by Antonio Rodilla in 1939 and has grown to over 160 locations throughout Spain. Rodilla is owned and operated by Estrella Damm and The Damm Company, a Spanish brewery dedicated to producing and distributing beer, water, and flavored drinks. In 2019, Rodilla debuted in Miami, introducing its delicacies to Wynwood and Brickell City Centre, strategically choosing these two neighborhoods for their central locations and vibrant ambiances.
“Expanding to the U.S. market has been a significant milestone for Rodilla. Miami’s diverse culinary landscape provides an ideal space to introduce our authentic Spanish cuisine to American and Latin American markets,” said Alfonso Rodríguez de Rivera Rico, Marketing & Business Development Manager at Rodilla. “As we celebrate this achievement, we reaffirm our commitment to delivering exceptional culinary experiences and fostering lasting connections with our guests while collaborating with the Wynwood community in many ways.”
Whether guests seek to unwind while sipping sangria over brunch, work from Rodilla with a sweet baked treat, catch up with friends over coffee, or read a good book, Rodilla provides the perfect backdrop for creating memorable moments with its vintage, cozy style.
Staying true to its craftmanship, Rodilla’s arrives to Miami directly from Spain, ensuring authenticity and quality in every bite. Reflecting the rich tapestry of Spanish culinary tradition, Rodilla offers casual, artisanal sandwiches and fresh, daily baked treats. Its most popular offerings are the ensaladilla sandwich, which features a tuna spread, artichokes, boiled eggs, peas, red peppers, and the chicken curry and bacon filling sandwiched between poppy seed bread.
Rodilla also offers exceptional catering services, for gatherings of all sizes. Whether for a business meeting, celebration, or boat outing, these perfectly sized sandwiches make a great catering option.
As part of its entertainment offerings, Rodilla is hosting live music events in partnership with Young Musicians Unite and presenting brunch specials at its Wynwood location on Saturdays from 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Celebrate the fifth anniversary of Rodilla in Miami with an exciting lineup of upcoming events, including performances by The Jazz Collective on April 20th and LoBac on May 11th.
MIAMI – The Ultra Music Festival’s beat of electronic dance music went on longer on its second night after the first night ended early because of stormy weather.
UMF organizers expected about 55,000 EDM fans to take over Bayfront Park. Miami police officers closed a section of Biscayne Boulevard in both directions starting Thursday night.
The festival’s lineup included Swiss DJs Adrian Shala and Adrian Schweizer, better known as Adriatique; Scottish DJ Calvin Harris, French DJ David Guetta, and English DJ Alexander “Elderbrook” Kotz.
The list of Dutch DJs included Nick “Afrojack” van de Wall and Armin van Buuren. The list of Swedish DJs included Eric Prydz and Adam Beyer. The few women performing included Belgian DJ Amelie Lens, Russian DJ Nina Kraviz, and Swiss-South African DJ Daniela “Nora En Pure” Di Lillo.’
Chief Manuel Morales said on Wednesday that his teams were ready to work in and around the area.
“We search everybody as they’re coming in to make sure there are no weapons or illegal items,” Morales said adding, “We have undercover officers inside, not only looking for individuals looking to prey on victims — but any type of suspicious individuals.”
The festival opens from noon to 10 p.m. on Sunday. For more information about UMF, visit his page.
Traffic alert
Police officers plan to close an area of Biscayne Boulevard until 7 a.m., on Monday.
Officers plan to re-route Biscayne Boulevard’s northbound traffic to the southbound lanes from Southeast First Street to Northeast Fourth Street.
Officers plan to re-route Biscayne Boulevard’s southbound traffic westbound at Northeast Sixth Street to Second Avenue and North Miami Avenue.
Police officers will not block access to PortMiami at Northeast Fifth Street and ask drivers to use the Port’s tunnel on Interstate 395.
For more information about the traffic flow changes, call 786-767-7272.
Stay informed with regular breaking news alerts
Copyright 2024 by WPLG Local10.com – All rights reserved.
SHARPSTOWN, Texas – 114 days have gone by, and the clock keeps ticking as Amanda Herro waits for her package to be delivered.
“It was a Jaeger-LeCoultre 13-Joule Atmos Vendome clock. It was a mantel clock. So, it was big, and it was heavy,” said Herro.
Herro sold the award-winning clock on eBay. She shipped the clock from a Miami post office to Houston on November 28.
“It literally just disappeared off the map for ten days. No tracking updates, no nothing,” Herro said.
“Then miraculously, it appeared in Houston, Missouri City initially,” Herro said.
Herro’s tracking information shows the clock bounced back and forth between the Houston North and Missouri City distribution centers. She was able to file a refund through eBay for the customer, but getting the package back has still been a mess.
Herro said the last update she got from the post office was back on January the 9.
“It was sent to the recovery center, which I believe is in Atlanta, if I’m not mistaken,” Herro said.
Herro has insurance on the package, but she said it has not helped her time-ticking situation.
“I obviously hope to either get the clock back or be rightfully reimbursed, because I paid for insurance on the clock. It’s the worst part about it. I insured the clock for the $1,775, which was its value with proof of purchase from eBay that the customer paid for it. I just want the money, or I want the clock back,” Herro said.
KPRC 2 Received this response from USPS:
While a vast majority of mail in the Houston area is being delivered in a timely manner, the Postal Service is continually working to improve mail processing at the North Houston Processing and Distribution Center (P&DC) and South Houston Local Processing Center (LPC). Our goal is to provide timely and reliable mail and package delivery in the Houston area, which is and will remain a high priority for the management of the Postal Service. Customers are reminded that, if they need assistance with mailing or shipping concerns, they have a variety of options for reaching us, including contacting a manager or supervisor at their local Post Office, calling 1-800-ASK-USPS (1-800-275-8777), or visiting our website at www.usps.com. As we continue to modernize our processing facilities in the Houston area, we will report on our efforts.
Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.
MIAMI – Another relief flight transporting U.S. citizens out of Haiti landed at Miami International Airport on Thursday.
The Global X charter flight from Cap-Haïtien touched down at 11:53 a.m.
It is unclear how many passengers were on board.
Thursday’s transport came days after the first official evacuation flight brought in 30 Americans to Miami on Sunday after the airport in Port-au-Prince remained closed as gangs continued to control the area.
Amidst a backdrop of escalating gang violence and a worsening humanitarian crisis in Haiti, Haitian-Americans arriving in Miami from Cap-Haïtien expressed relief to be back on U.S. soil. For many, the decision to leave Haiti was driven by concerns over personal safety, food shortages, and the deteriorating security situation.
As gang violence continues to grip neighborhoods, causing widespread fear and displacement, the United Nations has labeled Haiti’s humanitarian situation as dire. Citizens recount harrowing experiences, with some recalling moments of terror amidst gunfire and uncertainty.
“What did it mean for you when you landed and you know that you got here safely?” Local 10 News reporter Christina Vazquez asked passenger Gaston Desirre, who was staying in the Port-au-Prince area.
“I’m just happy because I get to the United States,” Desirre responded.
Local 10 News also spoke with Wilson Joseph who was one of several charter flight passengers arriving to Miami International Airport from Cap Haitien to say they felt relieved to be back on U.S. soil.
“Why did you want to seize this opportunity?” Local 10 News reporter Christina Vazquez asked Joseph.
“Because was going to Haiti for 15 days and (I) already get mugged,” he responded. “The people as for only one person who can help—Guy Philippe, everybody is looking for him to be president.”
A National Security Council spokesperson released a statement to Local 10 News Thursday on their efforts to bring American citizens who are stranded back home:
Local 10 News also spoke with Yves Stinfil who went to Haiti to pick up his 69-year-old mother Marrie.
Stinfil said while the area his mother’s from is not as dangerous as areas north of Port-au-Prince, he’s grateful she made it back to America.
“She’s happy she left Haiti.” At @iflymia spoke with charter flight passengers from Cap Haitien to include Yves Stinfil who went to Haiti to “pick up” his 69yo mom Marrie. While area she’s from not as dangerous he said as areas north of Port-au-Prince—he’s grateful she’s here. pic.twitter.com/9PfGcFyUdx
— Christina Boomer Vazquez, M.S. (@CBoomerVazquez) March 21, 2024
On a U.S. government-assisted charter flight, Ashley Nurilus and her mother Acephie found themselves in a predicament along with other passengers. They expressed concerns as their departure from Haiti approached, only to realize they couldn’t leave. Flight cancellations left them feeling trapped.
“It was very scary,” said Nurilus. “I was supposed to come back March 10 (until) they canceled my flight, so I got stuck there.”
Authorities confirmed the first flight chartered by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis landed late Wednesday in Orlando and brought home 14 passengers who were stranded on the island amid the increase of gang violence throughout Haiti.
The sudden evacuation plan was not in place late last week, signaling a rapid response to the escalating situation.
Details about future flights remain uncertain, with flights operating out of Cap-Haitien, located 100 miles from Port-au-Prince, on a highway made perilous by armed gangs.
During a State Department Briefing on Monday, Principal Deputy Spokesperson Vedant Patel stated, “We are continuingly staying in touch with American citizens and those who may either be interested in hearing from embassy operations or interested in potential assistance in departing.”
“It is not a hyperbole to say this is one of the most dire humanitarian situations in the world,” Patel added. “Gang violence continues to make the situation in Haitian untenable. U.S. citizens should not go to Haiti and those in Haiti should depart immediately.”
Meanwhile, private efforts, including those led by Florida Congressman Cory Mills, an Army combat veteran and defense contractor, have successfully evacuated dozens, including missionaries using helicopter connections.
More than 90 Americans were able to depart Haiti on flights chartered by the U.S. Thursday, according to a State Department official.
The official told ABC News that more than 60 U.S. citizens left by plane, taking off from Cap-Haitien, Haiti and landing in Miami, and that more than 30 others were able to leave Port-au-Prince by helicopter for the Dominican Republic.
This brings the total number of private American citizens who have departed Haiti since March 17 through transportation organized by the U.S. to 160.
Local 10 News reached out to Global X for information about Thursday’s flight and how many passengers were involved, but the airline declined to comment about “any flights operated on behalf of their “charter clients.”
The U.S. embassy in Haiti released an advisory for American citizens looking to leave the country, which you can find by clicking here and here for the latest security information.
Rachel Lindsay, Callie Curry, and Jodi Walker break down ‘Summer House,’ the ‘Real Housewives of Miami’ Season 6 reunion, and the Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 13 reunion
Rachel Lindsay and Callie Curry begin today’s Morally Corrupt with a breakdown of Summer House, Season 8, Episode 4 (4:21), before getting into the conclusion of the Real Housewives of Miami Season 6 reunion (24:20). Then, Rachel is joined by Jodi Walker to discuss the end of the Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 13 reunion (30:45) and Season 11, Episode 7 of Vanderpump Rules (51:39)
MIAMI – In a letter obtained by Local 10 News Thursday, former Miami-Dade Public Schools Superintendent and iPrep Principal Alberto Carvalho shared his thoughts with commissioners prior to Miami-Dade County School Board members unanimously sponsoring an item that formally supports re-engaging with the city of Miami on the plan to expand the public school iPrep on public land on the city’s Biscayne Park in Edgewater.
The letter expresses dismay and concern over recent attempts to manipulate public resources for personal gain.
“I, Alberto Carvalho, am both appalled and disturbed by the attempts made over these past several years to scheme and contrive for personal gain. The awarding of a no-bid contract for a parcel of public land to a for-profit entity,” the letter stated in part.
Carvalho highlights an instance involving the awarding of a no-bid contract for a parcel of public land to a for-profit entity, which he believes should have been used for the benefit of the community.
He emphasizes the collaborative efforts between various entities, including the Omni CRA, the School Board, the City of Miami, and Miami-Dade’s Department of Public Housing and Community Development, to develop plans that would benefit the public education system and the community at large.
“A tremendous amount of consideration and painstaking effort went into the CRA’s plan to realize several community benefits, including the expansion of quality school access to residents in Downtown Miami,” he wrote. “The provision of workforce and affordable housing opportunities.”
In letter to commissioners obtained by Local 10 —former @MDCPS Superintendent & iPrep Principal Alberto Carvalho says “appalled and disturbed by the attempts…to scheme and contrive, for personal gain, the awarding of a no-bid contract for…public land to a for-profit entity.” pic.twitter.com/JRWQ4pYwZF
— Christina Boomer Vazquez, M.S. (@CBoomerVazquez) March 14, 2024
Carvalho asserts that the dismissal of these collaborative efforts in favor of a no-bid contract is detrimental to the city and the public education system in Miami-Dade County.
A Florida Department of Law Enforcement special agent previously said Diaz de la Portilla sidelined the iPrep plan after he began accepting tens of thousands of dollars in private school cash from David and Leila Centner, owners of Centner Academy, who want to build an indoor athletic complex for their students on the public land, located at 150 NE 19th St.
Diaz de la Portilla is facing several criminal corruption charges, including money laundering and bribery after prosecutors allege he failed to disclose the money he was receiving from the Centners and failed to refrain from voting on the matter.
The Centners’ lobbyist and lawyer, attorney William Riley, is also facing charges in the case.
Investigators said Diaz de la Portilla was an advocate for the Centner plan.
The school board item states that had the original, years-long redevelopment plan been implemented, “the plan would have doubled the number of students served and enhanced the educational experience of current iPrep students and families with a new facility and access to outdoor recreational space.”
Main sponsor Dorothy Bendross-Mindingall explained that it’s an area brimming with new, higher-density housing projects, which in turn is creating a greater need for public school seats.
“It is very rare for the board to take a stand on another governing body, but we stand together for what is best for our children, families, residents of District 2 and the community as a whole,” she said. “We want to make sure no matter what the property looks like now, we can make it a place for children.”
Miami-Dade School Board members and public school iPrep parents came to the meeting to express their opinion on the deal asking commissioners to support an item sponsored by Miami Commissioner Miguel Gabela to revoke the licensing agreement with Centner Academy and revisit a previous plan to expand iPrep on the public land.
“The deal was a bad deal,” said Gabela. “It was a no-bid deal. Only one entity participated and that was the Centners. It calls into question how the deal was put together.
The Centner’s have denied any wrongdoing and have not been charged in the case and on Thursday, they pulled out of the deal.
“We are pulling out,” said David Centner. “Maybe we should re-examine this.”
“It’s a process that has been demoralizing and we frankly have had it,” he added.
“All we wanted to do is beautify and if so if someone else wants to donate money to beautify, we support that said Leila Centner, David Centner’s wife.
“I think that is the best thing they could have done because they took initiative because of so much controversy,” said Miami Commissioner Damian Pardo. “I think it made perfect sense politically. They didn’t have the votes.”
“Was there no way this deal could ever overcome the association with those charges?” Local 10 News reporter Christina Vazquez asked Pardo.
“Yeah, absolutely correct.” Pardo replied. “There was never any kind of bid.”
In the meantime, iPrep parents, many who said they enrolled their children at the public school under the understanding that the campus would be expanded at Biscayne Park and felt blindsided by the revelations in Diaz de la Portilla’s arrest warrant, have mobilized to bring back the former plan.
Public school parents showed up to city hall Thursday to advocate for the original Biscayne Park redevelopment plan, but the private school supporters argued a deal is a deal, also showing up to be heard.
“We are excited to hear that and the fact maybe we can go back to the drawing board which is what we are asking for,” said Mureen Luna, a mother of two.
iPrep parents arrived in pink shirts that read “public land for public schools” while supporters for the Centners wore green “support Biscayne Park” shirts.
Both sides learned the related resolution they came to address was deferred until Thursday’s meeting and both saying a deferment is not a deterrent and that they would be back in March.
The parcel of publicly-owned land in Biscayne Park was described in Diaz de la Portilla’s arrest warrant as “one of the largest remaining undeveloped tracts of land in Miami’s urban core.”
Diaz de la Portilla is facing 11 felony charges that include bribery and money laundering.
Copyright 2024 by WPLG Local10.com – All rights reserved.
Miami Beach is cracking down on the rowdy partyers that show up every March by imposing a series of rules for visitors, such as curfews and DUI checkpoints. Cristian Benavides has details.
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MIAMI – Detectives with the Miami Police Department are investigating after three people were shot in the city’s Liberty City neighborhood Tuesday afternoon.
A spokesperson for the agency said there were two scenes along Northwest 10th Avenue: One near 55th Street and another near 62nd Street.
According to Miami Fire Rescue, a man at the scene near Northwest 55th Street was in “extremely critical condition” while a woman was in serious condition.
The third victim’s condition wasn’t immediately clear. A spokesperson for the fire department said its crews did not transport any patients from the scene near Northwest 62nd Street.
Local 10 News has a crew headed to the scene, where police are expected to provide an update later in the afternoon.
This is a developing story. Stay with Local 10 News and Local10.com for updates.
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Rachel Lindsay and Jodi Walker begin this week’s Morally Corrupt by dissecting the idiotic comments made by Sandoval in his interview with The New York Times magazine (1:10). Then they launch into a recap of Vanderpump Rules Season 11, Episode 4 (12:30) and discuss the Season 13 finale of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills (25:18), before Rachel is joined by Callie Curry to break down The Real Housewives of Miami Season 6 finale (41:26) and the Season 8 premiere of Summer House (54:25).
Rachel, Callie, and Jodi join together to talk about this week’s Bravo news
On today’s Morally Corrupt, Rachel Lindsay kick off the show with Callie Curry and the Bravo news of the week (1:16), then jump into a recap of The Real Housewives of Miami Episode 16 (14:00). Then, Jodi Walker joins Rachel to discuss the third episode of Vanderpump Rules (30:22) and the penultimate episode of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills (52:45).
Host: Rachel Lindsay Guests: Callie Curry and Jodi Walker Producer: Devon Manze Additional Production: Ashleigh Smith Theme Song: Devon Renaldo
MIAMI – Luis Garcia-Blanco, a Cuban who had arrived in Miami on the Mariel boatlift, was accused of shooting his ex-girlfriend Maricel Gutierrez in the head with a machine gun in 1980, in Miami-Dade. He had allegedly also cut off her finger and kept it in a Bible.
In 1981, Garcia-Blanco was working as a bodyguard for Rafael Leon Rodriguez, who police knew as the Venezuelan son of a cop who was a marksman-turned-hitman and a cocaine distributor for Colombian traffickers. A law-enforcement task force pounced on them.
Julie Hawkins, a former Metro-Dade detective, told Netflix Tudum that day she was holding a phone with one hand and a police radio with the other to help catch Rodriguez — who was better known as “Amilcar” — and was a murder suspect in several cases.
“It was crazy! Everybody’s talking — trying to advise where he is — and at one point, one of our detectives even rammed the car that Amilcar and this other guy were driving,” Hawkins told Tudum.
There weren’t cell phones when detectives arrested Rodriguez. Since he used payphones, Hawkins said they used a “trap and trace device,” which identified the phone number of the payphone he was using. With the number, the phone company provided the location, and she shared it with operatives in the field.
There was a shooting when police officers tried to arrest Rodriguez and Garcia-Blanco. While Garcia-Blanco fired at police officers and was arrested, Rodriguez ran away. A man nearby told police Rodriguez took off his Rolex and gave it to him in exchange for his car and sped away.
Hawkins told Tulum that she found Rodriguez hiding behind a washing machine and described him as “soft-spoken” and “very calm.” When he was in handcuffs, he was wearing a brown velvet blazer, a white long-sleeve collared shirt, a brown leather belt, and brown aviator sunglasses.
DIRTY MONEY TRAIL
The United Nations Office of Drug and Crime released this graphic to explain the common stages of money laundering. (UN)
Federal agents already knew that Rodriguez’s lavish lifestyle included living in posh apartments in Miami’s Brickell neighborhood and Miami-Dade’s city of Aventura. Foreign money has helped fuel Miami-Dade’s boom in high-end real estate, according to the National Association of Realtors.
William P. Rosenblatt, a U.S. Army veteran who worked in federal law enforcement, was dedicated to targeting the way dirty money was flowing from cocaine users in the U.S. to a supply chain of dealers, distributors, and foreign traffickers.
“You can take a large corporation, take the top executive away, the financial structure is still there,” Rosenblatt told Local 10 News Reporter Mark Potter in 1982. “You take the financial structure away from a legitimate or legal organization, it crumbles.”
Rosenblatt had worked for the U.S. Customs Service in New York, Los Angeles, and San Francisco before meeting Potter as the Special Agent-in-Charge in Miami. He was part of Operation Greenback, which focused on the cartel’s money laundering strategy to make “dirty money” appear “clean.”
Rosenblatt said the operation was meant to bring “pressure to bear on the financial side of these narcotics organizations.” They relied on the Bank Secrecy Act of 1970, which established a program with reporting requirements and recordkeeping to prevent money laundering.
In 1982, the operation also resulted in a case against The Great American National Bank of Dade County on four counts of failure to file currency transaction reports with the Internal Revenue Service. In 1984, a group was arrested for buying cashier’s checks and money orders in amounts less than $10,000 to avoid transaction reports and deposit them in banks in Miami.
At a crime scene in 1982, Metro-Dade Sgt. Skip Pearson, who focused on narcotics, told Potter the violence in Miami-Dade was a sign of trouble to come.
“You are going to see South Florida not only the base for drug distribution and cocaine distribution for the Colombians,” Pearson said. “You are going to see it for every South American country that has the capability of either manufacturing cocaine or the coca paste.”
Over four decades later, the new challenge for authorities is money laundering through cryptocurrencies — untraceable by design — and new synthetic drugs. U.S. authorities have identified Venezuela as “a major” money laundering country. Other countries of concern include Haiti and Panama.
TIMELINE OF FEDERAL LAWS
Federal anti-money laundering laws evolved slowly during the 80s and 90s, and so has the technology used for recordkeeping, financial management, and auditing.
In 1986, the Money Laundering Control Act introduced civil and criminal forfeiture for BSA violations. In 1988, the Anti-Drug Abuse Act expanded the definition of financial institution to include car dealers and real estate closings and required the verification of identity for monetary instruments over $3,000.
In 1992, The Annunzio-Wylie Anti-Money Laundering Act strengthened the sanctions for BSA violations, it required suspicious activity reports and verification for wire transfers. In 1994, the Money Laundering Suppression Act required banks to enhance procedures for referring cases to law enforcement.
In 1998, The Money Laundering and Financial Crimes Strategy Act required banking agencies to develop anti-money laundering training for examiners and created specialized task forces. The 911 attack also revealed a need to strengthen laws and law enforcement.
The 2001 PATRIOT Act criminalized the financing of terrorism, prohibited financial institutions from engaging in business with foreign shell banks, required due diligence procedures, and improved information sharing between financial institutions and the U.S. government.
The Intelligence Reform & Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 required the Secretary of the Treasury to regulate cross-border electronic transmittals of funds.
As we’ve been following, the estranged couple have been on several ups and downs in the past few months, but could this mean they’ve worked out their differences for good? Or, at least, for this time? The pair have had their share of on again, off again moments over the years, and most recently they were OFF! Yet on Wednesday night photogs captured them having a dinner date at the Italian restaurant Carbone in Miami — and they certainly don’t look too broken up anymore!
The Migos rapper can be seen in pics entering the restaurant a little while after the Bodak Yellow artist, taking some time to greet fans and sign some autographs. Perhaps to try and throw off paps and the people awaiting outside from their little rendezvous?? Either way, after dinner they left and got back into their car together.
This, of course, has left everyone wondering just where they stand. We mean, Cardi did admit they were still sleeping together as of New Year’s — but still denied they were officially back on. But a romantic dinner on Valentine’s Day is definitely looking like they’re at least headed back toward being together again — if they’re not there already.
MIAMI – Federal agents with the Drug Enforcement Agency waited for guests to arrive for a baby shower at a restaurant in Miami’s Little Havana. When they moved in to arrest a woman, two men who were near her ran away holding cases for what appeared to be a violin and a guitar.
DEA agents searched the woman and found she was carrying $1,200 in cash. They suspected the men were bodyguards and announced that they had arrested Martha Libia Cardona, a top fugitive — but it wasn’t her. The embarrassing mistake was in 1983.
Special Agent Brent Eaton, then the spokesman for the DEA, had to explain the error to reporters. The fingerprints of the suspect, Lilia Reyes, didn’t match those of Cardona, who had fled Miami after paying a $1 million bond after her arrest in 1980. The tip came from two witnesses.
“It’s not clear whether she ever said specifically that she was Martha Cardona, but both people independently drew that conclusion,” Eaton told reporters about the witnesses who had believed Reyes, 38, was Cardona, 36, who had been arrested in 1980 in Miami.
Paying for bonds after arrests in the U.S. was part of the cost of doing business when extradition from Colombia to the U.S. was rare. There were the payoffs to corrupt officials and those who paid with their lives. The risk was higher for families who had turned into crime rings at the service of the Medellin cartel.
In 1982, former Local 10 News reporter Mark Potter interviewed a U.S. smuggler for his “Colombian Drug Wars” five-part investigative series. Speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation, the American pilot said that while working in Colombia he had paid off a police officer, a senator, coronels, and generals.
“You can make arrangements to land in an international airport like Barranquilla or land in a military base off of Guajira, and have the military load the airplane for you,” he said. “They use forklift trucks and converter belts, load the airplane for you, and protect the field to be sure that no bandits come around.”
Cardona, a mother of four, became a widow when her husband Luis Carlos Gaviria was killed during a transaction involving 400 kilos of cocaine in 1977 in New York. DEA agents believed that was when she had to step up as the matriarch of the family business.
The DEA released this photo of Griselda Blanco with her four sons: From left, Michael Carleone, Osvaldo Trujillo, Uber Trujillo, and Dixon Trujillo. (DEA)
Cardona’s Medellin cartel associate Griselda Blanco — a powerful crime boss who wanted to be known as “The Godmother” because she was a fan of the 1972 epic crime film “The Godfather” — knew that cost well. Only one of her four sons survived, according to the DEA. He was named after the film’s Michael Corleone.
The murder of Blanco’s 27-year-old son Osvaldo “Ozzy” Trujillo Blanco, also known as John Owaldo Trujillo Blanco, was the most public. After he was released from a U.S. prison, he had been in Colombia for four months. He was the target of a mass shooting in 1992 at La Baviera, a trendy tavern in Medellin.
Blanco was already in prison when she learned of the murder. U.S. justice had already caught up with Cardona. Colombian law enforcement arrested her in 1991, and a judge ordered her extradition to face drug trafficking charges in U.S. federal court in Miami.
Colombian officials told Potter they lacked the resources to destroy coca plants or to eradicate the remote “kitchens” that were used to produce cocaine for industrial-scale trafficking. Medellin’s Chief Judge Flor Palacio was among those who held the U.S. responsible for the demand that was fueling the corruption.
“I believe very much in the honesty of the officers directing the security organizations,” Palacio told Potter. “At the same time, I think the majority of the agents are corrupt.”
In 2000, the U.S. launched Plan Colombia. It had cost U.S. taxpayers about $14 billion as of 2022, according to the Congressional Research Service. In the 2024 budget request, President Joe Biden’s administration asked for $444 million to deal with counternarcotics and migration management in Colombia.
The players have changed. Mexican and Balkan criminal groups have moved closer to coca production in South America to gain access to wholesale quantities and make supply lines more efficient, according to the United Nations Office on Drug and Crime.
The Colombian diaspora continues. The population of Colombian migrants who move to the U.S. has been increasing since 1980. Miami-Dade and Broward counties had the highest populations in 2021.
Visit Local10.com on Thursday, Feb. 15 for Part 4 of the 5-part series of “Colombian Drug Wars.”
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