TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — The nation is still reacting after officials say a gunman opened fired near the Florida State University Student Union, killing two people and injuring others on Thursday.
At least two people were killed as a result of the active shooter attack and at least six people were injured, according to officials.
According to the Tallahassee Police Department, all injured victims, and the suspect who was injured, are expected to survive.
Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare reported that two patients are expected to be discharged Friday. Three others who were sent to the operating room have improved and are in good condition. One remains in fair condition, they said.
Officials at the hospital, the Tallahassee Police Department and the Leon County Sheriff’s Office all made it clear on Thursday that they would not be releasing any specific details regarding the victims at this time and that included clarification on whether or not those victims were students or staff at the university.
“All of our victims, although some have serious injuries, they’re all in fair condition. They have various injuries but overall, in good spirits and are doing well,” said Dr. Brett Howard of the Tallahassee Memorial Hospital on Thursday
Florida State University Police Chief Jason Trumbower said at a press conference on Thursday that the first shots were fired at 11:50 a.m.
Videos were shared on social media that showed students running for their lives and others exiting the university with their hands up as law enforcement agencies responded and secured the school.
Authorities identified the shooter as 20-year-old Phoenix Ikner, a FSU student and the stepson of a Leon County Sheriff’s Office deputy.
When asked about the weapon used during the shooting, officials shared that Ikner used his stepmother’s previous service weapon.
“A lot of times many agencies, mine included, when we transition to a new handgun, the officers are allowed to purchase the handgun that they used prior. And correct me if I’m wrong, sheriff, but I believe that’s the case here,” said Tallahassee Police Department Police Chief Lawrence Revell.
A memorial has been started on the Florida State University’s campus for all of those involved.
Luke Loucks, 34, will be Florida State’s new men’s basketball coach
Coach Leonard Hamilton is stepping away at the end of this season
Loucks is a Clearwater native and played for Hamilton at FSU from 2008-12
He has been an assistant coach for the NBA’s Sacramento Kings since 2022
A Clearwater native, Loucks played at Florida State from 2008-12. He averaged 7.1 points and 3.3 rebounds as a senior and was part of a Seminoles team that defeated Miami, Duke and North Carolina on consecutive days to win the ACC Tournament title in March 2012.
Loucks had been an assistant coach for the NBA’s Sacramento Kings since 2022. He also has worked for the Golden State Warriors, helping the team win NBA titles in 2017 and 2018, and the Phoenix Suns.
Loucks has not been a head coach at the college or NBA level. But his experience working with NBA coaches like Steve Kerr and Mike Brown, along with his knowledge of the challenges of Florida State’s job, made him an attractive candidate.
“We will have a standard that we stick to on and off the court that will help build a championship-level culture,” Loucks said. “I am privileged to have seen firsthand what winning feels like at Florida State, and I am hungry for more.”
After playing pro basketball for three seasons in Europe and one in the NBA’s developmental league, Loucks has focused on player development in his three NBA stops. In Sacramento, he was in charge of the Kings’ defense — an area that Hamilton prioritized during his 23 seasons as Florida State’s coach.
“Luke was an exceptional Seminole player who played a key role in leading Florida State to its first ACC championship,” said Hamilton, 76. “I’m very proud to see him return as head coach of a program he helped elevate to such great heights.”
Florida State (17-14, 8-12) is the No. 11 seed for the ACC tournament, playing on Tuesday in Charlotte, N.C.
Athletic Director Michael Alford said the search included college coaches and assistant coaches with extensive experience. But administrators opted not to pay a significant buyout to a college coach and chose Loucks in a search that ramped up after Hamilton announced his plans on Feb. 3.
“Luke will bring a unique combination of qualities to our program, and I’m excited to begin the next chapter of our basketball history under his leadership,” Alford said. “Throughout basketball at both the professional and collegiate levels, Luke has earned a reputation as one of the rising stars in coaching.”
The Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), Clemson and Florida State have approved a settlement that would end their legal fights, change the league’s revenue-distribution model and revise the long-term costs for a school to leave the conference.
What You Need To Know
The ACC, FSU and Clemson on Tuesday formally approved a settlement that would end their legal fights
The agreement also changes the conference’s revenue-distribution model to generate more revenue for the league’s top programs
They also provided clarity on the ACC’s exit fee and grant-of-rights agreement that runs through 2036
The deal would allow a school to exit with its media rights after paying the exit fee, according to a presentation to Clemson’s trustees
Trustees at Clemson and FSU both signed off on the deal in Tuesday meetings. That came shortly after the ACC’s Board of Directors — made up of university presidents and chancellors — gave its OK, a person familiar with the situation told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the league and schools had not publicly addressed the settlement at the time.
Most notably, the revenue-distribution model will now incorporate TV viewership as a way for the league’s top programs to generate more revenue. It also provides a clarity on the league’s exit fee and grant-of-rights agreement that runs through the ACC’s TV deal with ESPN through 2036.
Specifically, a slideshow during a presentation to Clemson’s trustees reported the exit fee would be $165 million for the 2026 fiscal year, but it would descend by $18 million per year until leveling off around $75 million for the 2030-31 season. While a grant-of-rights agreement gives the league control of a school’s media rights, the deal would allow a school to exit with its media rights after paying the exit fee, according to that presentation.
The agreement offers a measure of stability for the league in the coming years, though with the longer-term risk of teams potentially deciding to leave in the final years of the current media deal in a time of rapid changes to the college landscape.
“At the end of the day, this innovative distribution model which further incentivizes performance and investment will help strengthen the ACC,” Clemson Athletic Director Graham Neff told trustees before the vote. “A strong ACC is good for Clemson. And a strong Clemson is good for the ACC.”
The exit costs had been a key subject of FSU’s December 2023 lawsuit, filed as it sought to explore potential membership in other leagues, and Clemson’s March 2024 lawsuit. The ACC had conversely sued both schools.
“I got hundreds of emails and text messages and phone calls from friends and people I didn’t know over the last 13 months encouraging us in this journey, and I’m proud of where we’ve landed,” FSU trustee and former Seminoles quarterback Drew Weatherford said during that meeting.
“We made some commitments 14 months ago to make sure we could do everything in our power to compete at the highest level, and I think we’ve done that here.”
The Atlantic Coast Conference, Clemson and Florida State have reached a proposed settlement that would end their legal fight and change the league’s revenue-distribution model, a person familiar with the situation said Monday.
What You Need To Know
FSU, Clemson and the ACC reach proposed deal to end their legal battle, AP source says
If approved, the settlement would boost revenue payouts for teams with the best TV ratings
Trustees at FSU and Clemson and the ACC’s Board of Directors have each scheduled meetings for Tuesday
Top-earning schools could see an upside of $15 million or more
The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because neither the league nor the schools have publicly addressed the settlement, which requires all three to formally approve. ESPN first reported details of the settlement.
Trustees at Clemson and Florida State have each scheduled meetings for Tuesday. The FSU meeting specifically lists lawsuits involving the ACC on the agenda, while the Clemson meeting agenda refers to settling “athletic litigations.”
The ACC’s Board of Directors — made up of university presidents and chancellors — will also hold a call to sign off on the settlement Tuesday during a previously scheduled meeting, the person who spoke to AP said.
If approved, the settlement would incorporate viewership ratings into revenue distribution among member schools, which would increase payouts to schools generating the most TV interest. The upside could be $15 million or more for top-earning schools, while it could also result in a decline of about $7 million for others, the person told the AP.
Still, it would offer another sign of stability in the immediate term for the ACC and Commissioner Jim Phillips, who has spent much of his four-year tenure working to find ways to enhance revenue as the league faces an increasing gap behind the Big Ten and Southeastern conferences.
The settlement comes roughly a month after ESPN exercised its option to extend its media base-rights agreement with the league through 2036, aligning that deal with a separate one that covers their partnership for the ACC Network through that same period.
It also comes in the first year of a Phillips-championed “success initiative” that allows schools to keep more of the money generated by their own postseason success, which could amount to about $25 million in a year — tied mostly to performance in the College Football Playoff.
League schools signed a grant-of-rights agreement that gives the ACC control of media rights for any school that attempts to exit for the duration of the ESPN deal. Schools had signed that agreement in the lead-up to the ACC Network’s 2019 launch, which meant the league could charge hundreds of millions of dollars for leaving the conference early.
Still, FSU filed a lawsuit in December 2023 seeking to explore potential membership in other leagues and challenging the league’s ability to impose those penalties. Clemson followed in March 2024. The ACC had countersued both.
ACC leaders had been discussing ways to rethink revenue distribution to help potentially resolve the legal fights with FSU and Clemson back to last fall.
The ACC has 18 member schools — 17 in football — after realignment led to the addition of Cal, Stanford and SMU.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Six former Florida State basketball players sued Seminoles coach Leonard Hamilton on Monday, alleging he failed to make good on a promise to get each of them $250,000 in name, image and likeness compensation.
What You Need To Know
Six former Seminoles basketball players are suing FSU coach Leonard Hamilton
Their lawsuit alleges that they were each promised $250,000 in name, image and likeness compensation but did not receive it
An attorney was not listed for Hamilton on the lawsuit
None of the players listed in the complaint remain on FSU’s basketball team
The plaintiffs — Darin Green Jr., De’Ante Green, Cam’Ron Fletcher, Josh Nickelberry, Primo Spears and Jalen Warley — filed suit in Leon County Circuit Court. Their attorney, Fort Lauderdale-based Darren Heitner, shared the 20-page complaint with The Associated Press. Yahoo Sports first reported the case.
The former players allege Hamilton promised them the money from his “business partners.” The lawsuit says they walked out of a practice last season over the missed payments and intended to boycott a Feb. 17 game against Duke. They ended up playing — the Seminoles lost 76-67 — amid a guarantee from Hamilton that they would be paid, but they never were, according to the suit.
No attorney for Hamilton was listed in the lawsuit. FSU hosts Syracuse on Saturday.
The complaint includes multiple text-message exchanges between players and some between players and Hamilton.
FSU finished 17-16 last season, including 10-10 in the Atlantic Coast Conference. The 76-year-old Hamilton is in the final year of his contract. The Seminoles are 9-4, including 0-2 in league play.
None of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit remain with the team. Green, who transferred to FSU from UCF, and Nickelberry exhausted their college eligibility last spring, and the four others transferred. Spears is now at UTSA, Fletcher is at Xavier, De’Ante Green is at USF and Warley is at Gonzaga.
The lawsuit is the latest in a growing number of NIL legal battles.
Matthew Sluka, a starting quarterback for the UNLV football team, left the program after three games in September, saying he was never paid a $100,000 NIL deal. Former Florida quarterback signee Jaden Rashada, now playing at Georgia, sued Gators coach Billy Napier last year over an unpaid $13 million NIL deal. And several Tulsa players claim they were never paid thousands in NIL commitments made by former coach Kevin Wilson.
FLORIDA — The Florida Gators’ season did not get off to a great start, but they are coming off a big victory against Southeastern Conference foe Mississippi State two weeks ago, and they have had an extra week to get ready to host UCF.
Meanwhile, the UCF Knights have started slowly in the first halves of their past two games, getting outscored 47-21. UCF rallied to defeat TCU 35-34 on Sept. 14 but never recovered in a mistake-filled, 48-21 loss to Colorado at home last Saturday — even though they had more total yards on offense than the Buffaloes.
And Knights coach Gus Malzahn said after the loss to Colorado, “We’re not the best catch-up team.”
It’s only one loss so far this season, but Malzahn challenged his team to find a way to get better and said they are going to find out this week who the Knights are as a team.
“The way we played (against Colorado), we need to redeem ourselves,” Malzahn said.
To be successful, the Knights will have to get their running game revved up. Top rusher RJ Harvey, who rushed for 448 yards in the first three games, was held to 77 yards against Colorado. Myles Montgomery did not play after getting banged up against TCU, and although Malzahn said he wants to get back on the field, the coach would not say whether Montgomery would play against the Gators.
UCF also will have to find a way defensively to put some pressure on Florida’s offense. Gators quarterbacks Graham Mertz and DJ Lagway combined for 277 passing yards and three touchdowns, and Mertz scrambled for 24 yards against Mississippi State.
Gators coach Billy Napier said he believes the team got better during its off week.
Florida worked on its technique, fundamentals and tightening up its defense, he said. That will be required to stop the combination of UCF quarterback KJ Jefferson and the Knights’ running backs, he said.
“This is a big one. There’s no doubt about that,” Napier said.
The state’s top-ranked team, No. 8 Miami, will hit the road for the first time this season and head way out west to California.
In their last Atlantic Coast Conference game, the Hurricanes escaped with a 38-34 victory against Virginia Tech after a confusing series of rulings by officials eventually concluded that the Hokies did not complete a pass to score a touchdown on the final play of the game.
The key matchup will be Hurricanes quarterback Cam Ward, who has passed for 1,782 yards and 18 touchdowns and rushed for 146 yards and two more touchdowns so far this season, against California’s defense, which has held its opponents to 287.5 yards per game in total offense.
In Tallahassee, Seminoles coach Mike Norvell’s seat is getting a little warm, at least as far as the fans are concerned, in the first year of a new eight-year contract he signed in January.
Saturday’s matchup against 15th-ranked Clemson is unlikely to help. The Tigers seek to stay perfect in the ACC this season, and the Seminoles have only won one game. That 14-9 victory did come against ACC foe California at home Sept. 21. Technically, the game is Clemson’s first road game, though its opener against Georgia was at a neutral site.
The Tigers have given up more than 400 offensive yards a game, and the Seminoles will be breaking in a new starting quarterback, redshirt freshman Brock Glenn.
USF has a bye week.
Here’s a look at this week’s games:
Saturday
Clemson (3-1) at Florida State (1-4), 7 p.m., ESPN
The Tigers, who are undefeated in the ACC so far this year, are not exactly the team the Seminoles want to see this week after getting thumped by new conference member SMU 42-16 last week. FSU will start Brock Glenn at quarterback for the first time because coach Mike Norvell says DJ Uiagalelei, who had struggled all season, will be out for an undesignated period of time with a finger injury. Meanwhile, the Seminoles’ run game is the fourth-least productive in the country. Clemson, which started the season with a 34-3 loss to No. 5 Georgia, has won all its games handily since then and is 2-0 in ACC action.
UCF (3-1) at Florida (2-2), 7:45 p.m., SEC Network
One of the teams not feeling great about itself this week is going to feel better at the end of the night. The Knights are coming off a 48-21 defeat by the Colorado Buffaloes. After going into the game as a 14-point favorite, UCF struggled to score, and quarterback KJ Jefferson threw touchdown passes to running back RJ Harvey and wide receiver Xavier Townsend but also had two interceptions and a fumble. The Knights moved the ball but couldn’t score, and their secondary gave up 418 yards of offense, including three passing touchdowns. The Gators, meanwhile, had a bye week and the time to watch the Knights’ struggles. They are coming off their second win of the season, a 45-28 rout of Mississippi State, and are feeling more confident. Against the Bulldogs, the Gators’ two quarterbacks — Graham Mertz and DJ Lagway — completed 92.8% of their passes and threw for 277 yards to 10 different receivers. Plus, the game is in The Swamp at night, so UCF will have to deal with a lot of noise from the Rowdy Reptiles, who are still upset that the Knights beat their team in the 2021 Gasparilla Bowl. The game will be a homecoming for Knights wide receiver Trent Whittemore, who transferred to UCF from Florida.
Miami (5-0) at California (3-1), 10:30 p.m., ESPN
The eighth-ranked Hurricanes are cruising through the season so far, but three of their victories came against Florida A&M, Ball State and USF, and they opened with a 41-17 victory against struggling Florida. When Miami faced ACC foe Virginia Tech last week, it only won by four points. Quarterback Cam Ward threw for 343 yards and four touchdowns but also had two interceptions. The bad news for Cal is its only loss this season came against FSU. The good news is the Bears had a week off to prepare for the Hurricanes, and they will play at home.
USF is off
Starting quarterback Byrum Brown will have an extra week off after requiring medical attention and leaving the 45-10 loss to Tulane in the third quarter. The Bulls are going to need it because next up is Memphis (4-1), which topped FSU 20-12 on Sept. 14.
FLORIDA — Quarterbacks will take center stage Saturday afternoon in Orlando, and the Fox Big Noon Kickoff will be at UCF to get festivities started Saturday.
The Colorado at UCF matchup features some interesting highlights, including a meeting of the two transfer signal-callers.
The Buffs come in at 3-1 with a 1-0 start in conference play, led by quarterback Shedeur Sanders. Coach Deion Sanders’ son ignites the Colorado offense and is second in the Big 12 in passing with a 67.9% completion rate and 11 touchdowns.
The Knights are led by their own new quarterback, KJ Jefferson, an Arkansas transfer. Jefferson has led the Knights to a 3-0 mark while throwing for 563 yards and five touchdowns after a shaky Week 1 win.
The Knights and Buffaloes have never met on the gridiron.
UCF coach Gus Malzahn recruited Sanders out of high school, when Malzahn was at Auburn.
“You’ve got to put pressure on him. There’s no doubt,” Malzahn said. “You can just tell he’s a veteran guy. You can tell he stays calm. You can tell he’s a smart guy, too.”
Other state squads also are playing important league games.
Seventh-ranked Miami is venturing into Atlantic Coast Conference play, hosting Virginia Tech on Friday.
FSU, which at 1-3 finally picked up its first win of the season last week against Cal, plays at ACC newcomer SMU, which is 3-1 with victories against Nevada and TCU and its only loss coming against BYU.
USF (2-2) seeks to rebound from its 50-15 spanking against Miami by traveling to take on a tough American Athletic Conference opponent, Tulane, team in New Orleans.
Florida is off.
Here’s a look at this week’s games:
Friday
Virginia Tech (2-2) at No. 7 Miami (4-0), 7:30 p.m., ESPN
Can anyone slow down the red-hot Miami Hurricanes offense, led by quarterback Cam Ward, a transfer out of Washington? The Canes have scored 209 points in four contests this season. The Miami defense has allowed just 41 points so far, giving up three touchdowns with a shutout mixed in.
That may not bode well for a Virginia Tech team that has already suffered tough losses this season to the likes of Vanderbilt and Rutgers.
Saturday
USF (2-2) at Tulane (2-2), Noon, ESPNU
The Bulls once again find themselves in bounce-back mode after a second loss to a top-10 ranked team. But the Green Wave won’t exactly be a pushover for USF. After defeating Tulane in 2017, USF has dropped three consecutive meetings, by an average of 23 points. The Bulls will have to get its offense on track and score some points to keep up with the Green Wave’s 35 point-per-game-plus offensive attack.
Colorado (3-1) at UCF (3-0), 3:30 p.m., FOX
The Buffaloes are coming off a 38-31 overtime thriller last week against Baylor, a team that rallied for an improbable comeback against the Knights last season. The game could give an indication on how much UCF has improved for Big 12 play in its second season. Colorado tailback Dallan Hayden is expected to return from injury Saturday, and safety Shilo Sanders hasn’t been ruled out despite having surgery on his arm just over two weeks ago. Quarterback Shedeur Sanders is averaging 335 passing yards per game. For UCF, running back RJ Harvey is leading the offense after three games, averaging 149.3 rushing yards per game and scoring eight touchdowns. The outcome could come down to which team manages the distractions of Fox’s Big Noon Kickoff coming to town and Hurricane Helene, which stirred up some nasty weather in the days leading up to the game. It’s a blackout game for the UCF faithful.
FSU (1-3) at SMU (3-1), 8 p.m., ACC Network
Florida State fans are hoping last week’s 14-9 win against Cal gives the ‘Noles some much-needed confidence. The offense still seems sluggish and mostly out of sync, but quarterback DJ Uiagalelei looked sharper on some deep balls in the win. But every bit of offense may be needed to counter the Mustangs, who have already posted 59- and 66-point games this season. The Seminoles need a win this week because their upcoming schedule includes No. 17 Clemson, at No. 7 Miami and at No. 16 Notre Dame over the next six weeks.
Florida is off
While the Knights are in action, the Gators have an entire week off to get the Swamp stirred up as they try to avenge their 29-17 loss to the Knights in the 2021 Gasparilla Bowl.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — It’s officially Week 1 for the college football season.
And the Sunshine State will see its share of the action during the Labor Day weekend.
Sure, Florida State was a part of the Week 0 kickoff, albeit a disappointing 24-21 loss to Georgia Tech that has dropped the Seminoles six spots in the AP Top 25 Poll, down to No. 16.
FSU (0-1) will try to get back on track this week; UCF and USF both open up at home this weekend with Football Championship Subdivision teams, and No. 19 Miami and Florida have a highlight spot in the holiday schedule, squaring off Saturday night in Gainesville.
A closer look at the games
Thursday, Aug. 29 New Hampshire at UCF, 7 p.m., ESPN+
The Knights bring a lot of new looks this season, including offensive coordinator/wide receivers coach Tim Harris Jr. and defensive coordinator Ted Roof. Last year’s coordinators — Darin Hinshaw and Addison Williams — remain on staff. Overall, the Knights have more than 40 transfers. A new quarterback, fifth-year transfer KJ Jefferson out of Arkansas, will line up behind center. However, RJ Harvey is back to lead a strong running back group for UCF’s rushing offense that was ranked fourth in the nation last season with 228.2 yards per game. And coach Gus Malzahn added to that group with Peny Boone out of Toledo and Myles Montgomery from Cincinnati to go with returning speedster Johnny Richardson. New Hampshire went 6-5 last season and is 21-14 under coach Ricky Santos.
Saturday, Aug. 31 No. 19 Miami at Florida, 3:30 p.m., ABC
In the not-so-distant past, this game would have been one of the most heralded in the country, but both teams have struggled to get on track the past few seasons. Florida coach Billy Napier has an 11-14 record, and Mario Cristobal is 12-13 at Miami. Nevertheless, it’s an intrastate rivalry, and players who are familiar with one another will want bragging rights, and it’s the first game of a home-and-home series. Quarterbacks could play a major role. Miami will start Washington State transfer Cam Ward, who threw for 3,736 yards with 25 touchdowns and ran for eight touchdowns in 2023. The Gators return Graham Mertz, who threw for 2,903 yards and 20 touchdowns. Napier will bring the most experienced and skilled team since he became coach.
B-CU at USF, 7 p.m., ESPN+
The Bulls begin Year 2 under Coach Alex Golesh with a stellar playmaker in junior quarterback Byrum Brown, who threw for 26 touchdowns and ran for another 11. The Bulls’ quick-strike offense also returns top runner Nay’Quan Wright (8 TDs a season ago) and record-setting receiver Sean Atkins (92 receptions and 7 TDs in 2023). Raymond Woodie Jr. is entering his second season as coach after the Wildcats went 3-8 last season. It’s unclear if the team has named a starter at quarterback. Tylik Bethea and Luke Sprague are back from last year’s team, and Micah Bowens transferred in from Charlotte.
Monday, Sept. 2, 7:30 p.m., ESPN Boston College at No. 16 FSU (0-1), 7:30 p.m., ESPN
The Seminoles will look to bounce back and avoid slipping to 0-2 in conference play. The Seminoles looked listless at times during the loss to Georgia Tech in Ireland, with new quarterback DJ Uiagalelei failing to spark sustained drives. The Seminoles’ defensive line was viewed as one of the Atlantic Coast Conference’s best but did not record a sack and allowed Tech to run at will last Saturday. FSU scored easily on its first drive, but the offensive line could not clear the way for the rushers after that. But the Seminoles can stay in the playoff hunt if they get back on track. “We’ve got to take a step as a football team and not let this one game define the outcome of what our season will be,” FSU coach Mike Norvell said.
This story previously aired on June 20, 2020. It was updated on Aug. 3, 2024.
Produced by Josh Gelman and Jaime Hellman
Mike Williams, a successful 31-year-old real estate appraiser, left home to go duck hunting on Lake Seminole in Florida on Dec. 16, 2000. His wife Denise said he set out early and promised to be back by noon so they could celebrate their sixth wedding anniversary that evening. When he didn’t return home, Denise started calling around looking for him. Six hours later, a massive search was underway.
Law enforcement, friends and family set out to find Williams, says Jennifer Portman, who covered the story for the Tallahassee Democratand was a “48 Hours” consultant.
“They found the boat, his truck – that was all there,” Portman tells “48 Hours” correspondent Richard Schlesinger.
Williams was nowhere to be found.
Mike Williams
Tallahassee Democrat
The search was called off after 44 days. Williams was listed as “still missing.” Some wondered if he’d just run off. Then another explanation was offered: he was snatched by an alligator.
Scott Dungey, one of Williams’ best friends, had gone up in a helicopter as part of the search. “And, you know, one of the things that I noticed – there were no less than 15 to 20 very large alligators swimming all around this area.”
“People are attacked by alligators,” says Portman. “Little dogs are eaten by alligators. But you never hear of someone who’s just vanished, eaten by – whole – by an alligator.”
Six months after he went missing, a local fisherman found a pair of waders in Lake Seminole. And two days later, Williams’ fishing jacket, hunting license and a flashlight were found at the same spot.
Williams’ mother, Cheryl Williams, never believed her son was eaten by alligators or died by accident. Her mother’s intuition told her that something bad had happened and she was determined not to give up until someone took her seriously. She compiled 27 pages of single-spaced notes and evidence and wrote the governor of Florida every day for nine years. She contacted wildlife experts who told her that alligators do not feed in cold winter months.
“She was absolutely possessed with finding this out, what had happened to Mike,” says Patti Ketcham, the wife of Williams’ boss and friend, Clay Ketcham. “He didn’t just fall out of the boat. This wasn’t just a hunting accident.”
Now, the answers Cheryl Williams has waited 18 years for — and a jury decides: was it murder?
VANISHED
You’ve got to really love duck hunting to love Lake Seminole. It’s shallow, it’s swampy, and it’s popular with the local alligators. Mike Williams really did loveduck hunting. And people say that’s why he came here alone, well before dawn on Dec. 16, 2000.
His wife said the plan was that Mike would be back home in time to celebrate his wedding anniversary.
But 12 hours later, after his wife reported him missing, Lake Seminole would be swarming with rescuers searching for Mike Williams on land, on the water and in the air.
Richard Schlesinger [looking at a map]: Can you show me the area that you guys searched in?
Alton Ranew | Florida Fish and Wildlife Officer: Basically this area, from here to there. About 5 acres.
Alton Ranew and David Arnette were among the first law enforcement officers to get a call about a missing duck hunter.
David Arnette | Florida Fish and Wildlife Officer: What we thought had happened is that he possibly fell out of the boat or capsized.
Richard Schlesinger: Is it unusual for people to fall out of boats while they’re huntin’ for ducks?
Alton Ranew: It’s not unusual. It happens, um, quite often out here, as far as they might hit a stump and throw ’em out.
Early the next morning, there was a break. Mike’s boat was found. On board were some decoys and his shotgun, but no sign of Mike himself.
Alton Ranew: We done a grid search … very slow, meticulous grid search, back and forth over the search area.
Mike Williams’ boat was found the next morning. Teams scoured the murky bottom of Lake Seminole in a gruesome search for his body
State Attorney’s Office
And what began as a search and rescue soon turned into a search for a body.
Alton Ranew: We stayed with that grid until we covered this whole area.
Cadaver dogs were brought in, while teams scoured the murky bottom of Lake Seminole in a gruesome search for Mike’s body that was high intensity and low tech.
Richard Schlesinger [on an airboat, holding a PVC pipe pole]:This is the tool of your trade, right?
Alton Ranew: That was actually one of the poles.
Richard Schlesinger: And all you do is put it in the water and see if you feel anything.
Alton Ranew: If it’s a log, it’s kind of a thump, kind of a hard thump, if it would’ve been … a body, you hit it, it’s kinda like a pillow.
Richard Schlesinger: Did you feel something ever on the bottom that felt like a body?
Alton Ranew: Never. Never.
Mike and Denise Williams
Russell Grace
Williams vanished one day before his sixth wedding anniversary. He met his wife Denise at North Florida Christian High School. He was a football player; she was a cheerleader. He was president of the student council; she was the secretary.
Richard Schlesinger: How’d they seem together?
Scott Dungey: Great couple.
Scott Dungey met Mike in high school. He and his wife Anessa were among Mike’s best friends.
Scott Dungey: If you knew Mike, he’s the kind of person that uh, is gonna do anything and everything for you. So Denise, you know, found a gem.
They both graduated from Florida State University. Denise became an accountant for the state; Mike became a real estate appraiser, working for Clay Ketcham.
Clay Ketcham: This kid was straight as an arrow. He really, truly was.
Clay and his wife Patti got to know Mike well.
Clay Ketcham: He was an unbelievable worker. It was not uncommon for him to do 15-hour days. I mean, he would be in there early, work until 1:00 or 2:00 in the mornin’ and then be right back. He had incredible energy.
Before long, Mike’s career took off. And that’s when he married Denise.
Clay Ketcham: He loved his wife. He even would leave the office and go pump her gas.
Richard Schlesinger: I’m sorry, go pump her gas?
Clay Ketcham: Yes. She would call him and say [laughs], “Mike, I need gas.” And Mike would run over there, pump her gas and run back. We all said we wanted to be married to Mike [laughs].
Just before Mother’s Day in 1999, Denise gave birth to the couple’s daughter. And by chance, a local Tallahassee TV station, WCTV, was at the hospital:
DENISE WILLIAMS : We’re just totally overwhelmed. She was due Tuesday and she would have made me wait a whole ‘nother year for Mother’s Day.
MIKE WILLIAMS: It was unbelievable. I have a whole new respect for my wife and women in general and what they go through to bring a, a new child, new life into the world.
Nineteen months after he became a father, Mike was missing. And the longer the search lasted on Lake Seminole, the harder it was on the searchers, who were afraid of what they might find.
One of Mike’s oldest friends, Brian Winchester, was out there looking for him from the start. And it was Brian who discovered Mike’s empty boat.
Brett Ketcham: Brian decided that we didn’t want to be there when Mike’s body was pulled up.
Longtime friends Mike Williams, left, and Brian Winchester, right, in photos from their high school days. It was Brian who discovered Mike’s empty boat.
Brett Ketcham was with Brian during the search.
Brett Ketcham: So we would get in a car and drive to a gas station and go get a Coke. And it was very emotional trips. I mean, it was, you know, crying. And it was tough.
The search was called off after 44 days. Rescuers could find no trace of Mike Williams. He was listed officially as “still missing” and some people wondered if he had just run off.
David Arnette: Maybe he just abandoned his family or somethin’ like that. That — that was the strongest scenario of everything that we had.
Richard Schlesinger: Do you believe that? I mean, did you think that was possible?
David Arnette: I thought that was a possibility.
Richard Schlesinger: What did you think?
Patti Ketcham: We knew Mike had not run off. I mean, he loved his family and he adored his daughter. Adored her. So Mike did not run off. This was not some elaborate ruse.
Soon there was another explanation offered for why Mike’s body could not be found: that he had been snatched by an alligator.
Scott Dungey: Alligators — they don’t eat you right then. And this is morbid to talk about, but they go stuff you somewhere for six months and — and then come back later.
One of the rescue teams agreed, writing, “the alligators have dismembered and have stored the remains in a location that we would not be able to find.”
But there was at least one person who had serious doubts about that theory — Mike’s mother Cheryl.
Patti Ketcham: She pretty early on … believed that there was more to this. And that he was not in Lake Seminole. I think she just thought something — something’s not right here.
A MOTHER’S INTUITION
Six months after Mike Williams disappeared investigators had no new leads and no real hope of finding him. And then, what could be a break bubbled up from the muck of Lake Seminole.
Alton Ranew [on an airboat]: That pole is markin’ a spot where the waders had popped up.
A local fisherman found a pair of waders — waterproof pants with attached boots — which were believed to have belonged to Williams.
Richard Schlesinger [on an airboat]: Did it makes sense to you that they popped up here? I mean …you had searched that area, right?
Alton Ranew: We had searched it many times.
Richard Schlesinger Well?
Alton Ranew: Very well.
Then, two days after that, Mike’s fishing jacket and his hunting license were found at the same spot, along with a flashlight.
But Williams was still missing. His wife Denise was raising their 2-year-old daughter, alone.
Clay Ketcham: Denise was a doting mother. … the pride and joy of her life.
But Scott Dungey says now that Denise was a single mom, money was getting tight.
Scott Dungey: I was helping her with some of the items that needed to be sold and to generate some cash until the insurance money came.
And there was a lot of insurance money involved. Williams had three policies worth more than $1.75 million.
Patti Ketcham: Mike wanted to make sure his family was taken care of because Mike hunted and fished and did some pretty high risk activity … And Clay really encouraged him to load up.
With her expenses reportedly mounting, Denise went after the insurance money quickly.
Jennifer Portman: While the search, itself, is still going on, while he is still actively missing, they’re still actively searching for him — she is going and filing a claim against his life insurance.
Jennifer Portman has covered this case for the Tallahassee Democrat and is a “48 Hours” consultant.
Jennifer Portman: She was really ready to accept the fact that he was missing and presumed dead very early on.
But the State of Florida was not. According to Florida law, since there was no proof Williams had died, he would not be declared dead for five years. Denise did not want to wait that long to collect on Mike’s life insurance.
Richard Schlesinger: And how much time did it take in this case?
Jennifer Portman: It took six months. It was very fast– abnormally fast.
That’s because Denise’s attorney argued to a judge that the waders, the vest and the hunting license were proof enough that Williams was dead. The judge agreed and issued a death certificate. Cause of death: “Accidental drowning while duck hunting on Lake Seminole — body has not yet been recovered.”
Jennifer Portman: Based on that and that alone was what got him declared dead.
Richard Schlesinger: A pair of waders and a fishing license and some other stuff.
Jennifer Portman: Yep. Yep. Yeah. Exactly.
The case of the missing hunter seemed closed and was soon forgotten by almost everyone. But not by Mike’s mother Cheryl Williams.
Richard Schlesinger: Did she believe that her son drowned in Lake Seminole?
Jennifer Portman: She never, ever believed that her son was in the lake.
Richard Schlesinger: Not from day one?
Jennifer Portman: Not from day one.
Richard Schlesinger: What did she think had happened to him?”
Jennifer Portman: She didn’t know. All she knew … was that her son was not in that lake. She just knew it, knew it like a mom knows something just deep inside of her. And she was absolutely committed to finding out what happened to him.
Cheryl caught the attention of the local news:
CHERYL WILLIAMS [WCTV-TV REPORT]: It’s never out of my head. “Where is this child?” … He may be dead, but he’s not in that lake. And if somebody did hurt my child, I want ’em found and I want ’em punished.
Patti Ketcham: I was still, “This is so sad that Cheryl can’t accept the fact that Mike in all likelihood, has drowned” … But, this is her child. She’s gonna hold out that hope.
Jennifer Portman: Cheryl … started keeping notes of everything, copious notes of all of the … you know, strange things that were going on.
She eventually filled 27 single-spaced pages with lots of unanswered questions like, what made the waders float after 6 ½ months under water? Her notes ended with a plea to anyone who would listen: “Please help me find my son.”
Jennifer Portman: She was basically … just trying to compile all of the evidence that she could find and trying to get it in front of someone who would listen to her.
Richard Schlesinger: Well did Denise help her?
Jennifer Portman: Oh no. Denise completely cut her off.
Clay Ketcham: Denise was adamant, no investigation.
Richard Schlesinger: She threatened to withhold Cheryl’s granddaughter from her?
Clay Ketcham: Correct … She said, “If you continue to press for this investigation, you will never see your granddaughter again.”
Richard Schlesinger: So what did she do?”
Patti Ketcham: She took the energy she would’ve spent lovin’ on that child and tried to find her daddy.
Cheryl pressed on and started poking holes in the official version of what happened to her son.
For years after Mike Williams disappeared there was a theory that the reason his body was never found was that he had been eaten by alligators. It turns out, there’s a problem with that theory.
Cheryl contacted Matthew Aresco, an alligator expert. Florida has a few of them. In his response, he explained that alligators do not feed in the cold winter months.
MATT ARESCO [WCTV-TV REPORT]: Cold weather, um, causes water temperatures to drop so alligators don’t feed in the winter time.
What’s more, Aresco said that when alligators kill there is always forensic evidence left behind. And he said attributing Mike’s disappearance to an alligator attack “may be a convenient explanation for the authorities”… but was “virtually impossible.”
“People are attacked by alligators,” says Tallahassee Democrat reporter Jennifer Portman. “Little dogs are eaten by alligators. But you never hear of someone who’s just vanished, eaten by – whole – by an alligator.”
AP Photo
Jennifer Portman: We’re in north Florida. There are a lot of alligators. I will give you that. But … It is winter. Alligators do not eat human beings without leaving a trace in the middle of December when it’s cold. It just doesn’t happen.
EVIDENCE OF A CRIME?
Jennifer Portman | Tallahassee Democrat reporter: If not for Cheryl Williams, there’s no way that we would know where Mike Williams was or anything that ever happened to him. …She was the driving force.
Cheryl Williams knew — because an expert told her — that her son was not eaten by an alligator. But she did not know much else about how he vanished.
In 2004, four years after Mike disappeared, Cheryl Wiiliams’ campaign finally caught the attention of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement [FDLE]. Investigators met with her and then launched a multi-agency investigation.
WCTV-TV
Jennifer Portman: One of the things that has been so difficult about this case is that there was an absolute lack of physical evidence. You didn’t have a body. …You didn’t have any of these things that maybe could point you towards something.
But Cheryl had something: those 27 pages of detailed notes. In 2004, four years after Mike disappeared, Cheryl’s campaign finally caught the attention of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement [FDLE]. Investigators met with her and then launched a multi-agency investigation.
Richard Schlesinger: When did you first begin thinking this was a crime?
Derrick Wester: Probably the first night we talked to Miss Cheryl.
At the time, Derrick Wester was with the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office. He was part of the investigation.
Derrick Wester: She had it all wrote down. …And then as she’s relayin’ this story, all these inconsistencies start adding up.
Richard Schlesinger: Do you remember what some of those inconsistencies were?
Derrick Wester: The insurance…
It was Mike’s three life insurance policies that caught their attention – particularly, the last one he bought not long before he disappeared worth $1 million.
Richard Schlesinger How did Mike Williams end up with that million-dollar life insurance policy? Who sold it to him?
Jennifer Portman: Brian Winchester sold him the million-dollar life insurance policy … about six months before he went missing.
Brian Winchester was an insurance agent. He had been Mike’s best friend since high school, where, like Mike, he met his future wife, Kathy Aldredge. And from then on, the two couples were inseparable.
Scott Dungey: They did literally everything together. They went out to dinner together, they bought houses at the same time.
Annessa Dungey | Friend of Mike Williams: They got married at the same time, pretty much had babies at the same time.
Scott Dungey: They were very close.
Richard Schlesinger: Brian Winchester was in the insurance business.
Jennifer Portman: He was.
Richard Schlesinger: So it’s not that odd that he would sell his friend an insurance policy. Is it?
Jennifer Portman: No. It’s not. I mean, just the timing of it, in retrospect, looks a little weird.
That wasn’t the only thing that started to look weird. Those waders that popped up in Lake Seminole surfaced just as Denise Williams needed proof that her husband was dead in order to get the insurance money.
Richard Schlesinger: How many days before the court hearing these waders popped up?
Jennifer Portman: Less than a month. I mean, it was really close.
They had supposedly been submerged in the lake for six months.
Alton Ranew | Florida Fish and Wildlife Officer: These waders was — in very good shape. They were also not slimy.
Richard Schlesinger: And what did that mean?
Alton Ranew: That they had not been in the water very long.
And there was something about that flashlight they also found: it still worked.
Scott Dungey: I went to turn it on thinking there’s no way it’s gonna turn on, and lo and behold, it worked [laughs]. And so I was like, “Man, I need to get me one of these.”
Richard Schlesinger: So you looked at that stuff and you thought to yourself what?
Derrick Wester: Planted.
Richard Schlesinger: It was planted?
Derrick Wester: Uh-huh [affirms].
No one could say for sure who planted it but, as time passed, Denise Williams and Brian Winchester started attracting attention and some suspicion, because years after Mike disappeared, Winchester divorced his wife Kathy. He began dating Denise. And then he married her.
Patti Ketcham | Friend of Mike Williams: We went to the wedding.
Richard Schlesinger: Was she a suspect in your mind at that point?
Patti Ketcham: I think in mine, I was — yes. …The minister at some point said, “I’ve counseled with this couple and … they have no secrets I don’t know.” And Clay and I both went — [nudges her husband].
Clay Ketcham | Friend and employee of Mike Williams: We kind of nudged each other like, “Well, there might be this one little secret you don’t know.
Patti Ketcham: Just a few.
Jennifer Portman: All these things start becoming, like, clear that — now, we’ve got the insurance. Now, we’ve got the waders. …We’ve got the alligator theory being busted by the experts. So as they’re building their case, you know, they talk to people. They start getting somewhere.
One of the first people investigators talked to was Denise Williams.
Derrick Wester: There’s no emotion. There’s no softenin’ up. There — there’s nothin’. I mean, she’s just matter-of-fact and cold.
But Brian Winchester had much more to say. He offered detectives an alibi for the morning Mike Williams went missing. He said he was 60 miles away from the lake — in bed.
Derrick Wester: Brian tells us that – he was goin’ huntin’ with his father-in-law and overslept.
Richard Schlesinger: You know for a fact that Brian was not telling you the truth then?
Derrick Wester: Uh-huh (affirms).
Winchester could not have known it, but detectives already had a witness who said he saw Brian that morning at Lake Seminole.
Derrick Wester: I know the — the man personally. I mean, I’ve known — I’ve known him all my life. And — I composed the lineup. And I took it to him. … Joel says, “Well, he wasn’t smilin’ like that, but that’s him.” And he pointed to Brian Winchester.
When shown a photo lineup, a witness identified Brian Winchester as the man he saw at Lake Seminole on Dec. 16, 2000.
State Attorney’s Office
Richard Schlesinger: And he had seen that same man, he said, when?
Derrick Wester: That morning.
There was one more thing Winchester didn’t know: police were talking to his ex-wife. And she told them Denise and Brian might have been having an affair for years before Mike disappeared.
Derrick Wester: There was definitely a suspicion that him and her were havin’ an affair well before that December.
Richard Schlesinger: So that Brian and Denise were having an affair.
Derrick Wester: Yes.
Richard Schlesinger: While Denise was still married to Mike?
Derrick Wester: Yes.
The plot was sure thickening, but investigators still weren’t sure what the full story was. After two years, the FDLE hit a wall. But Cheryl Williams, who had been fighting since the day her son disappeared, was not giving up.
CHERYL WILLIAMS [WCTV-TV REPORT]: And it’s horrible not knowing what happened to him.
Jennifer Portman: She was very, very, very frustrated with FDLE and felt that they were not doing their job. They weren’t trying.
Mike Williams’ mom, Cheryl Williams, holds up one of his missing person signs.
Tallahassee Democrat
Patti Ketcham: So she picketed [laughs]. You know, she– she would have signs made and walk up and down in front of the church.
Scott Dungey: Every year, she would have — billboards put up around town.
Patti Ketchum: It showed a picture of Mike and missing and if you have any — information, who’s to contact.
Richard Schlesinger: And she went after the governor?
Jennifer Portman: She wrote the governor a letter every day for nine years.
Richard Schlesinger: And you mean, literally, she writes to the governor every single day?
Jennifer Portman: Literally.
In fact, the governor received 1472 letters — that we know of.
Richard Schlesinger: Well, what did people make of that behavior?
Scott Dungey: You know, candidly, I thought it was crazy.
Richard Schlesinger: Crazy?
Scott Dungey: Right. And I’m ashamed to say that.
If people thought she was crazy, Cheryl didn’t seem to care.
Clay Ketcham: Her suspicion was always with Brian and Denise. More so with Denise.
Jennifer Portman: The two people who were considered most likely suspects were together. And unless one of them turned on the other, you were never gonna find out what happened here.
Richard Schlesinger: Did you think this case would get broken?
Derrick Wester: Not until I found out that they were havin’ — marital problems. …They turned on each other like rats in a sack.
A BREAK IN THE CASE
CHERYL WILLIAMS [WCTV-TV REPORT]: Until God tells me in my heart that that child is dead, I cannot give up looking for him.
As the years dragged on, it looked like the mystery of what happened to Mike Williams might never be solved.
Jennifer Portman: I mean, I would joke around the newsroom that, you know, they’d have to drag me out of the old lady reporter nursing home when they finally found Mike Williams. …I never thought that … we would ever know anything about what happened to him.
If Brian and Denise knew anything about Mike’s disappearance, they weren’t talking and no one could make them. By Florida law, as long as they stayed married, neither could be forced to testify against the other.
Jennifer Portman: With Brian and Denise being married … how were you ever gonna get the truth because one is not gonna turn on the other.”
Brian Winchester and Denise Williams
Scott Dungey/Russell Grace
But behind the scenes, Denise and Brian’s marriage was disintegrating. In 2012, after seven years, they decided to separate.
Jennifer Portman: He is, you know … self-describes as being a sex addict. …He’s trying to please her by going to therapy, by getting counseling … it’s like he’s jumping through all these hoops trying to do all these things to get her back, and she’s not kind of accepting them.
Richard Schlesinger: Did he seem under stress? Did he seem like a different guy back then?
Annessa Dungey: He did to me.
Scott Dungey: He aged quickly.
Annessa Dungey: He did. He was also very adamant that he … absolutely did not want to be divorced, that he was miserable without her.
After four more years of trying to patch things up, Brian snapped.
Jennifer Portman: One morning, Denise gets in her car … she’s driving to work. And she senses something in the back. And Brian Winchester has hidden in the back of her car and is coming over the seat and has got a gun.
Richard Schlesinger: He’s got a gun?
Jennifer Portman: He’s got a gun … He had a gun. He had a tarp … the idea was that … he was gonna kill her. …He is … completely unhinged.
Richard Schlesinger: But she managed to talk him down?
Jennifer Portman: She manages to talk him down.
Denise reported her kidnapping to the Leon County Sheriff’s Office:
IN THE INTERROGATION ROOM:
DENISE WILLIAMS: He’s screaming and I’m just like shaking. And he’s telling me to stop crying that people are going to notice.
DENISE WILLIAMS: I was like, “are you planning on, y’know ending both of our lives today?” “Well, mine. I’m planning on mine.” And then he would say “I want to kill my – ” he must have said a million times “I want to kill myself.”
Brian Winchester was soon arrested and charged with the kidnapping and aggravated assault of his wife.
Brian Winchester
Leon County Sheriff’s Office
IN THE INTERROGATION ROOM:
DENISE WILLIAMS: I was just kind of agreeing with whatever he was saying. And I was like, “I know that you love me…”
Police quickly realized that the rift in Denise and Brian’s marriage presented an opportunity.
Jennifer Portman: Word travels fast in law enforcement circles … And they recognized it for what it was. This was a huge break in the Mike Williams case.
A tag team of detectives arrived to see what they could get out of Denise — to see if she would now flip on her estranged husband and talk about his involvement in Mike William’s disappearance.
Tallahassee Detective David McCranie tried:
DET. DAVID MCCRANIE: I know Denise, he did it and you know exactly what I’m talking about … and he was gonna do it again.
DET. DAVID MCCRANIE: He wasn’t gonna kill himself Denise, he was gonna kill you so that you couldn’t talk about him later. That is the truth.
McCranie turned up the heat:
DET. DAVID MCCRANIE: Fifteen years ago he walked in and told that you he had done something. Didn’t he?
DENISE WILLIAMS: No.
DET. DAVID MCCRANIE: Denise.
DENISE WILLIAMS: No.
DET. DAVID MCCRANIE: You have got … he is — this is not going away. OK? He’s going to kill you.
But Denise did not budge. So Special Agent Mike Devaney came in. He’d been working the Williams case for years:
SPECIAL AGENT MIKE DEVANEY: Do you think he’s responsible for Mike’s disappearance?
DENISE WILLIAMS: I do not and I never have, I would have never married him if I thought that … I mean in my mind and in my heart, no.
Richard Schlesinger: She wasn’t giving up anything.
Jennifer Portman: She was giving up absolutely nothing.
SPECIAL AGENT MIKE DEVANEY: Where do you think Mike’s buried at?
DENISE WILLIAMS: Oh, I – I have no idea.
SPECIAL AGENT MIKE DEVANEY: Any speculation on that?
DENISE WILLIAMS: On where he’s buried?
SPECIAL AGENT MIKE DEVANEY: Buried.
DENISE WILLIAMS: I mean I believe…
SPECIAL AGENT MIKE DEVANEY: You don’t really believe he — he died at — on the lake.
DENISE WILLIAMS: I do.
SPECIAL AGENT MIKE DEVANEY: Why?
DENISE WILLIAMS: I just — I just always have. That’s what I believe.
Jennifer Portman: That was her story and sticking to it.
That left Brian as the only possible source of information in the Williams case. He was facing a long stretch in prison for the kidnapping. But there was no word about what – if anything – he would say about Mike’s disappearance.
Sixteen months later, Brian pleaded guilty to kidnapping and assaulting Denise and appeared in court for his sentencing.
Tim Jansen is Brian Winchester’s lawyer.
Tim Jansen: We had a plea. And we weren’t sure what the government was gonna ask for.
We had indicated we want 15 …The State gets up and asks for 45.
TIM JANSEN [in court]: My client would like to address the courtroom.
BRIAN WINCHESTER [in court]: Never ever did I have any intentions of harming Denise, nor would I. Nonetheless I do know that she was hurt by my actions and again I am truly sorry.
Richard Schlesinger: Denise showed up at the sentencing. What was she like there, what did she want?
Jennifer Portman: She wanted him to go to prison for the rest of his life.
DENISE WILLIAMS [in court]: I start each day, with the memory of him jumping out of the back. And I end each day feeling the gun shoved in my ribs when I turn on my right side trying to sleep [cries].
Jennifer Portman: She was scared. She was compelling.
DENISE WILLIAMS [in court]: He will finish what he has started no matter what age he is when he is released …
Jennifer Portman: I think most people in the courtroom were pretty stunned by it. It was pretty powerful.
Denise Williams reads a statement in court as her estranged husband Brian Winchester, center left, looks on during his sentencing hearing.
WCTV-TV
DENISE WILLIAMS [in court]: I am asking you to sentence him to life in prison for the crimes he has committed. It comes down to my life or his and I am asking you please, choose mine. Thank you.
For kidnapping Denise, Brian was sentenced to 20 years behind bars.
Clay Ketcham: He was shackled at the waist and the ankles and when they shuffled him off to prison, we felt so defeated. … Because we said, “There’ll never be an answer to our friend Mike. Never an answer. We won’t know.”
Richard Schlesinger: Well, you were wrong.
Clay Ketcham: We were wrong … they had found Mike’s body.
“HE WAS MURDERED”
Jennifer Portman: This was so huge. …It still is really pretty stunning.
Just one day after Brian Winchester was sentenced for kidnapping Denise Williams, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement held a news conference and the news really was huge.
FDLE PRESS CONFERENCE: Standing here now, I can tell you that we know what happened to Mike Williams. He was murdered.
They know that because, sometime before he was sentenced for kidnapping, Brian Winchester cracked and confessed in these audio recordings:
BRIAN WINCHESTER CONFESSION: I went and met Mike at a gas station…. I followed him to the lake … We launched the boat. It was just like a hunting trip was supposed to be.
Winchester had cut a deal with prosecutors. In exchange for his confession, he would not be charged with murder, even though he admitted killing his best friend:
BRIAN WINCHESTER CONFESSION: I got him to stand up and I pushed him into the water. …and he was in a panic, obviously. I was in a panic … I didn’t know what to do and I ended up shooting him … (cries).
INVESTIGATOR: Where did you shoot him?
BRIAN WINCHESTER: In the head.
Tim Jansen: The agreement that we drafted up said that anything he said that day could not be used against him.
Winchester gave prosecutors what they wanted most: the location of Mike Williams’ body:
BRIAN WINCHESTER CONFESSION: I backed my Suburban down to the edge of the lake and put his body in the back and pushed his boat back out into the water.
Brian says he left Mike’s truck and trailer at Lake Seminole to make Mike’s disappearance look like an accident. But actually, Mike’s body was nowhere near Lake Seminole.
He was 60 miles away at Carr Lake, a remote marshy area just 10 minutes from Winchester’s home. Brian led investigators here to the spot where he buried Mike in 2000.
Jennifer Portman: They commenced what FDLE … has told me is the most extensive search they have ever undertaken in the history of the agency.
Mike Williams’ shirt, wedding band and gloves found at Carr Lake. Lower right is an X-ray of Williams’ skull – showing the pellets that were fired into him.
State Attorney’s Office
That search uncovered Mike’s skeletal remains and his wedding ring, among other things. And there was horrifying evidence of what happened to him.
Jennifer Portman: And what they were able to show very clearly was that he had been shot, basically, at point-blank range in the face with a shotgun.
Richard Schlesinger: This was up close and personal, deadly and gruesome.
Jennifer Portman: Yeah.
Scott Dungey: I put myself in Mike’s shoes and I struggle with the last couple seconds of his life. And the fact that he knew what was happenin’ and saw it happening really bothers me [cries].
And Winchester provided one final piece of the puzzle: he said it was all Denise’s idea:
BRIAN WINCHESTER CONFESSION: She would not get divorced and so she basically said there’s only one solution.
Jennifer Portman: As he tells it, she was not willing to endure the public shame of a divorce. …So she thought murder was a better answer.
Scott Dungey: I guess it was better to be known as … a widow than a divorcee.
Richard Schlesinger: Wow. That is incredibly cold.
Jennifer Portman: And wouldn’t it be great if we also, oh by the way, collected, you know, almost $2 million in insurance.
BRIAN WINCHESTER CONFESSION: We would end up together, we would live happily ever after, oh, and as a side note, we’ve got all this money to enjoy a wonderful life together.
The “happily ever after” part didn’t work out so well. In May 2018, five months after the discovery of Mike’s body was announced, Denise Williams was arrested and charged with first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit murder and accessory after the fact.
In May 2018, five months after the discovery of Mike Williams’ body was announced, Denise Williams was arrested and charged with first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit murder and accessory after the fact.
Tallahassee Democrat
Jennifer Portman: It was a very bizarre moment. And she said nothing. And she didn’t look at anybody. She just looked straight ahead.
WCTV-TV ANCHOR: This woman is behind bars at Leon County tonight, a grand jury indicting her for allegedly killing her husband nearly 18 years ago.
Patti Ketcham: It’s a bittersweet feeling. You are so thankful that she has been outed for the true person she is. But it doesn’t — [cries] — you’re still left with the same result.
Richard Schlesinger: Even though you saw her led away in shackles – handcuffs.
Patti Ketcham: In an ugly dress — and hair that needed a dye job. I gotta tell ya, that felt pretty good to me. …’Cause I know how important appearances are to her.
At her bail hearing, Denise had to listen to all two hours of Winchester’s confession:
BRIAN WINCHESTER CONFESSION: Her story that she needed to believe … was the story that we created for her, which was that she was at home with her baby, Mike went hunting and she has no idea what happened.
Denise was denied bail and is currently awaiting trial in county jail.
Ethan Way: She didn’t do it. She had nothin’ to do with it. She’s completely innocent.
Defense attorney Ethan Way is representing Denise.
Richard Schlesinger: Did she know about it?
Ethan Way: No. Not before. Not during. Not after.
Richard Schlesinger: You are very confident.
Ethan Way: I have an innocent client. It’s the best kind.
Defendant Denise Williams listens during her trial for the murder of her husband Mike Williams, in Tallahassee, Fla., on Dec. 12, 2018. The confessed killer of a Florida man contends he and the man’s wife, Denise Williams, were “partners in crime” and compared the couple to famed outlaws Bonnie and Clyde.
Alicia Devine/Tallahassee Democrat via AP, Pool
On December 11, 2018, prosecutor Jon Fuchs gave his opening argument at Denise Williams’ murder trial:
PROSECUTOR JON FUCHS [in court]: Denise likes the sound of being a widow much more than being a divorcee. Obviously, you can’t be caught with a murder. So, they had to make it look like an accident.
BRIAN WINCHESTER [in court]: We wanted to be together and we weren’t going to let anything stop that.
BRIAN WINCHESTER [in court]: We had an agreement that she would never say anything about me and I would never say anything about her, because we felt like as long as neither one of us talked that nobody would ever find out what happened.
Brian Winchester sits on the witness stand during cross-examination in the trial of Denise Williams in Tallahassee, Fla., on Dec. 12, 2018.
Alicia Devine/Tallahassee Democrat via AP, Pool, File
Ethan Way was in an enviable position for a defense attorney representing an accused murderer. The prosecution’s star witness admits he is the killer.
ETHAN WAY: When you shot Mike Williams at Lake Seminole with a 12-gauge shotgun, was Denise Williams standing with you?
BRIAN WINCHESTER: No, she wasn’t, she was in my head, behind me.
ETHAN WAY: Is it fair to say that over the years you’ve been obsessed with Denise Williams?
BRIAN WINCHESTER Obsessed? … Denise and I were best friends, we were Bonnie and Clyde, we were partners in crime.
ETHAN WAY: You pulled the trigger.
BRIAN WINCHESTER: Yes sir.
ETHAN WAY: Denise had no idea that you shot her husband in the face with a shotgun, did she?
BRIAN WINCHESTER: That’s correct.
Of course, Cheryl Williams always suspected her one-time daughter-in-law. Cheryl was now a witness for the prosecution:
PROSECUTOR JON FUCHS: The initial theory was that he was missing and possibly eaten by alligators.
CHERYL WILLIAMS: Right.
PROSECUTOR JON FUCHS: You never believed that, did you?
CHERYL WILLIAMS: No, sir.
PROSECUTOR JON FUCHS: How long did it take before Denise called you and said I’m sorry, I was wrong all these years?
CHERYL WILLIAMS: She never did.
After three days of testimony, both sides rested. Ethan way was so confident the State had no hard evidence he didn’t want the jury to consider any charges less than murder one.
JUDGE JAMES C. HANKINSON [to Denise Williams]: This is a strategy decision … You understand it’s a little bit out of the ordinary. I guess for want of a better word it’s a little bit of a gamble. If convicted as charged on first-degree murder … my hands are going to be tied … on sentencing, you understand that?
DENISE WILLIAMS: Yes.
The jury was now facing an all or nothing decision. The attorneys presented their closing arguments:
ETHAN WAY: This is not a case about trying to get, quote, “Justice for Mike.” …This is a murder case. … There’s no evidence that supports any of the allegations against my client. … We are counting on you to return a verdict that speaks the truth and that verdict is not guilty.
PROSECUTOR JON FUCHS: Think back – three days ago, Brian Winchester’s on the stand, describing how he shot his best friend. …Everybody in this entire room was moved by … the sheer horror of that situation. Except for one person. That one person sat here … absolute stone-faced. Didn’t bat an eye. Didn’t shed a tear. …That lady right there, Ms. Denise Williams is guilty.
Mike’s family and friends waited 18 years for answers; they only had to wait 8 hours for the jury’s verdict:
JUDGE HANKINSON READS VERDICT: As to count one of the indictment, the defendant is guilty of conspiracy to commit first- degree murder. As to count two, we the jury find the defendant is guilty of first-degree murder. As to count three … the defendant is guilty of accessory after the fact of first-degree murder.
Nick Williams, left, brother of Mike Williams, the man who was shot and killed by his best friend 18 years ago, Cheryl Williams, center, mother of Mike Williams, alongside family friend Josey Visnovske, cry tears of joy for a the guilty verdicts in the trial against Denise Williams, Mike’s former wife, Friday, Dec. 14, 2018.
Alicia Devine/Tallahassee Democrat via AP, Pool
For Cheryl Williams, it’s a been a long, heartbreaking fight. But, now, she can finally lay her son to rest.
Jennifer Portman: It hit her really hard. And I think she’s still coming to terms with it. I mean, the brutality of it, the — the finality of it — how anyone could do this to Mike.
Scott Dungey: It kinda destroys your — your faith in man.
Anessa Dungey: To do this to him, in the way it was done, andit’s just unimaginable.
Richard Schlesinger: You still miss him?
Patti Ketcham: Oh yeah [in tears].
Clay Ketcham: Well, I think, you know, [sighs], it’s– it’s because he was such a good guy. …He loved to work. He loved his family. He put ’em on a pedestal and he got killed for it. That’s the irony of this, is the kid did nothing wrong.
In 2020, an appeals court overturned Denise Williams’ murder conviction and life sentence. Williams was later resentenced to 30 years in prison for conspiracy to commit murder.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — James Tibbs III hit his third home run of the game, a two-run shot in the top of the 12th inning, and Florida State defeated UConn 10-8 on Saturday, sweeping the Tallahassee Regional for a berth in the College World Series.
After Max Williams led off the 12th with a single and Cam Smith flied out, Tibbs drove a 1-0 pitch deep over the fence in right field for the go-ahead runs. In the bottom of the inning, Conner Whittaker allowed a two-out single but struck out Paul Tammaro to end it and send the eighth-seeded Seminoles to Omaha, Neb., for the 24th time. They have never won the national championship.
Tibbs’ dramatic home run was his third two-run shot of the game. It was his 31st home run of the season and his 100 RBI are tied for first in the nation. He went 5-for-6 with six RBI on Saturday. Williams had three hits and scored twice.
In the top of the ninth, Florida State (47-15) loaded the bases on a walk, a single and an error. Then Drew Faurot lifted a fly to left field and Jordan Williams scored from third. The next two batters flied out to end the inning.
UConn’s Matt Malcolm tied it with a leadoff home run in the bottom of the ninth.
Connecticut (35-26) loaded the bases with two outs in the sixth inning. Luke Broadhurst laced a double to center field, scoring three runs and giving the Huskies a 7-6 lead. Earlier, he had an RBI-single in the first inning and a two-run home run in the fifth. He finished 4-for-5 with six RBI.
In the top of the eighth, Jaxson West tied it up with a leadoff home run to right field.
There were eight home runs in the game, six by Florida State.
In Game 1 of the matchup on Friday, FSU set NCAA super-regional records for the most runs scored in a game and largest margin of victory in a 24-4 victory. Jaime Ferrer hit two of Florida State’s five home runs, and Tibbs III and Marco Dinges each added four RBIs. The Seminoles drew 15 walks and struck out just once. Five of their 18 hits were homers, including two-out shots by Dinges and Williams. Smith and Tibbs each drew two-out, bases-loaded walks in the third inning for an 8-0 lead.
Caglianone’s 32nd HR helps Florida beat host Clemson 10-7 in Game 1
CLEMSON, S.C. — Jac Caglianone hit his 32nd home run of the season to spark Florida’s seven-run fifth inning, and the Gators beat Clemson 10-7 on Saturday to win Game 1 of the best-of-three Clemson Super Regional.
Florida (33-28) can clinch a berth in the College World Series with a win in Game 2 on Sunday.
Caglianone, a former standout at Tampa’s Plant High, hit an 0-1 pitch over the wall in left field for a three-run home run to give the Gators the lead for good before Michael Robertson’s RBI single capped the explosion and made it 9-4 in the top of the fifth.
Tristan Bissetta hit a solo shot for Clemson (44-15) in the home half of the inning, and Jarren Purify scored on a sacrifice fly before a groundout by Blake Wright drove in Alden Mathes in the bottom of the sixth to pull the Tigers within 9-7.
Caglianone, a projected top-10 pick in the upcoming MLB draft, finished 2-for-4 with a walk. Dale Thomas went 2-for-5 with an RBI, and Tyler Shelnut hit a solo homer for Florida.
Jimmy Obertop drew a two-out walk to load the bases before and advanced to second, while Mathes scored on a wild pitch. Bissetta walked to again load the bases, and Jack Crighton took four consecutive balls to get Wright home and give Clemson a 2-0 lead in the top of the first.
Purify led off the second inning with a triple and scored on a wild pitch to make it 3-0, and after Ashton Wilson’s sacrifice fly drove in Cade Kurland to get Florida on the scoreboard in the top of the third, Obertop led off the home half of the inning with a homer to make it 4-1.
Mathes finished 3-for 5-with two runs for the Tigers.
Brandon Neely came on in the sixth and pitched four scoreless innings, giving up a hit and a walk while striking out seven for Florida to earn his fourth save of the season.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Max Williams hit a three-run home run to cap a nine-run fifth inning, and No. 8 national seed Florida State went on to defeat UCF 12-3 on Sunday night to claim the championship at the Tallahassee Regional of the NCAA Baseball Tournament.
The Seminoles (45-15) advance to the super regionals, which begin on Friday.
Jack Zyska, who hit the go-ahead home run in UCF’s win over Stetson earlier in the day, went deep to stake the Knights (37-22) to a 2-0 lead in the first inning. That score held until the fifth, when FSU scored nine runs on five hits.
Cam Smith hit a two-run home run with one out to get the big inning rolling. Three batters later, Jaime Ferrer laced a two-run double down the left-field line. Jaxson West delivered a two-out, two-run single and Williams followed with his three-run blast.
The Knights scored single runs in the sixth and seventh innings. Then Florida State wrapped it up with a three-run seventh, the only hit coming on Marco Dinges’ single to shortstop.
Earlier in the day, UCF had defeated Stetson 5-2 in an elimination game.
Florida stays alive in Stillwater, Okla., regional
STILLWATER, Okla. — Ashton Wilson went 3-for-4 with two runs, Colby Shelton hit a three-run home run and Florida beat host Oklahoma State 5-2 Sunday night to remain alive at the Stillwater Regional.
Florida again plays the Cowboys (42-18), who beat the Gators 7-1 Saturday to knock them into the elimination bracket, for the regional title on Monday.
After Jac Caglianone walked to lead off the inning and Wilson followed with a single, Shelton hit a three-run home run over the wall in right field to ignite a four-run sixth for the Gators that capped the scoring.
Florida starter Cade Fisher gave up two runs — one earned — on five hits and two walks with four strikeouts over 3-1/3 innings. Luke McNeillie came on and walked a batter before he was replaced by Brandon Neely, who struck out a career-high 11 and allowed a hit and three walks over 5-2/3 innings to improve to 3-4 this season.
Colin Brueggemann hit a one-out double and scored when Tyler Wulfert reached on an error to give the Cowboys a 2-1 lead in the bottom of the fourth inning.
Nolan Schubart hit a two-out single in the bottom of the first and scored three pitches later when Zach Ehrhard hit an RBI double to right field that gave Oklahoma State a 1-0 lead.
Earlier in the day, the Gators routed the Nebraska Cornhuskers 17-11 in an elimination game.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Carson Dorsey allowed two runs, one earned, and struck out seven over 8-2/3 innings to lead host Florida State to a 7-2 victory over Stetson on Friday in the opening round of the NCAA Tallahassee Regional Baseball Tournament.
The Seminoles (43-15), seeded No. 8 nationally, move on to face the UCF on Saturday.
Dorsey (6-4) scattered nine hits and walked only one. The junior college transfer barely missed pitching his first complete game, exiting after a single and Florida State error in the ninth.
Stetson (40-21), which won the ASun Conference Tournament, got a runner to third before reliever Brennen Oxford struck out Yohann Dessureault to end the game.
Florida State added to what was already the largest turnaround in the nation, winning 20 more games than last season.
The Seminoles jumped out with solo homers in the first two innings from Daniel Cantu and Max Williams, who opened with a leadoff shot over the right-field fence in the bottom of the first.
Marco Dinges went 2-for-4 with a walk, and Jaime Ferrer also had two hits for the Seminoles. James Tibbs III drew four walks and scored three runs.
Sundean’s pinch-hit RBI in 9th lifts UCF over Alabama
Pinch-hitter Andrew Sundean’s two-out, RBI single in the ninth inning broke a 7-all tie and sent second-seeded UCF to an 8-7 victory over No. 3-seeded Alabama in the Tallahassee Regional at the NCAA Tournament. Jack Zyska led the inning off with a walk and was moved to second on a sacrifice bunt by Danny Neri. After Alabama reliever Alton Davis II got the second out on a fly ball, Sundean sent a single to left to bring home Zyska with the winning run.
Alabama (33-24) got a two-out single in the bottom of the ninth. But UCF reliever Kris Sosnoski got William Hamiter on a groundout to end the game.
It was a back-and-forth game, with Snell giving Alabama a 3-2 lead with a three-run homer in the first. UCF rallied with for a 6-5 lead in the fifth on RBI doubles by Matt Cedarburg and Zyska. Alabama tied the game a final time, 7-7, on Hodo’s RBI single in the eighth.
Sosnoski (1-0) pitched the final two innings for the victory. Davis (4-2) took the loss for Alabama.
UCF (36-19) will take on top-seeded and home-standing FSU on Saturday.
Alabama plays Stetson to avoid elimination.
Wilson’s hot hitting powers Florida past Nebraska
Ashton Wilson doubled three times and hit his first home run for Florida, and the Gators opened the NCAA Stillwater Regional with a 5-2 victory over Nebraska. Wilson made just his fifth start of the season, all since May 16, after transferring from Charleston Southern. His two-run double in the third inning gave the Gators (29-27) the lead for good, and his homer to left field in the ninth put them up three runs.
Freshman starter Liam Peterson (3-4) allowed two runs on four hits, walked three and struck out seven over 5-1/3 innings for the Gators, who will play Saturday against the winner of Friday night’s game between Niagara and Oklahoma State.
Big Ten pitcher of the year Brett Sears (9-1) gave up three runs on 10 hits and a walk in five innings and took his first loss. The Cornhuskers (39-21), in their first regional since 2021, will play the Niagara-Oklahoma State loser in an elimination game on Saturday.
The Gators, the national runners-up to LSU last year and in their 16th consecutive regional, went ahead 1-0 when leadoff man Cade Kurland hit Sears’ third pitch over the left-center field fence. Nebraska got that run back in the bottom of the first, but Wilson’s double down the left-field line in the third restored the Gators’ lead.
Gabe Swansen’s homer in the sixth pulled the Huskers within 3-2. The Gators got their final runs on Kurland’s single in the eighth and Wilson’s first home run since April 16, 2023, when he played for Charleston Southern.
ATLANTA – Powerful storms packing hurricane-force winds killed at least one woman Friday in Florida as a week of deadly severe weather continued in the South, where uprooted trees crashed onto homes and knocked out electricity to thousands in several states.
City officials in Tallahassee said wind gusts of 80 to 100 mph (128 to 161 kph), speeds that exceed hurricane intensity, were reported in Florida’s capital city. Images posted on social media showed mangled metal and other debris from damaged buildings littering some areas.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Friday issued an executive order declaring a state of emergency for 12 counties in the northern part of the state affected by the storm.
A statement on the Tallahassee government’s website said crews were scrambling to repair 100 broken power poles while half the homes and businesses were left without electricity in a city of 200,000 people. It said the National Weather Service was assessing paths of three potential tornadoes.
“Our area experienced catastrophic wind damage,” Tallahassee Mayor John Dailey said on the social platform X.
Crews have told customers in the dark that the restoration may take days. City officials expect the work to restore power will go through the weekend.
City spokesperson Alison Faris told The Tallahassee Democrat that the extent of the damage has made restoration hard-going because crews are focused on fixing the transmission infrastructure before they can start work on the distribution of power that energizes homes and businesses.
“Transmission first and then we restore circuits which impacts distribution,” Faris told the Democrat. “All hands are on the transmission. We should start seeing some circuits repaired here shortly.”
The first wave of more than 215 personnel from 20 utilities in Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia and South Carolina has arrived to help crews as they work to repair the electric system.
The sheriff’s office for Leon County, which includes Tallahassee, said in a Facebook post Friday that a woman was killed when a tree fell onto her family’s home.
The storm that struck Tallahassee early Friday also knocked two chimneys from apartment buildings at a complex where fallen trees covered a row of cars. Fencing was left bent at the baseball stadium of Florida State University, where classes were canceled Friday.
DeSantis said on social media Friday that the state Division of Emergency Management was working with local officials to “do everything possible to return life to normalcy for our residents as quickly as possible.”
The woman killed in Florida was at least the fifth death caused by severe weather in the U.S. this week. A powerful tornado that ripped through a small Oklahoma town on Monday left one person dead, and storms on Wednesday were blamed for killing two people in Tennessee and one person in North Carolina.
An estimated 201,000 homes and businesses from Mississippi to North Carolina were blacked out Friday afternoon, according to the tracking website poweroutage.us. Most of those outages were in Florida, where lights and air conditioning were out for nearly 142,000 customers.
In Mississippi’s capital city of Jackson, authorities on Friday were asking residents to conserve and boil water as a precaution after a power outage at one of its major water treatment plants. JXN Water, the local water utility, said customers could expect reduced water pressure as workers assessed damage from overnight storms.
“It will take many hours for the system to recover and some places may take longer,” Ted Henifin, the water system’s manager, said in a statement.
Other parts of the South were cleaning up from storm damage inflicted earlier in the week. In the rural farming community of Vidalia, Georgia, and surrounding Toombs County, officials said a tornado left a path of destruction roughly 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) long Thursday afternoon.
About 10 houses had trees crash onto or through their roofs and crews worked through the night to remove about 50 downed trees that were blocking roads, said Lynn Moore, emergency management director for Toombs County. A dozen car wrecks were reported as the storm passed, Moore said, but nobody in the county was reported injured.
“We’re fortunate that it wasn’t stronger than it was,” Moore said.
Also Thursday, the weather service reported a hurricane-force wind gust of 76 mph (122 kph) in Autauga County, Alabama. And one person was injured in Rankin County, Mississippi, after a tree fell crashing onto a home, according to weather service damage reports.
Since Monday, 39 states have been under threat of severe weather. On Wednesday and Thursday, about 220 million people were under some sort of severe weather risk, said Matthew Elliott, a Storm Prediction Center forecaster.
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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida on Wednesday joined an antitrust lawsuit filed by the states of Tennessee and New York, the District of Columbia and the Commonwealth of Virginia that challenges the NCAA’s rules restricting how athletes can commercially use their name, image, and likeness and prohibiting compensation for recruits.
What You Need To Know
The state of Florida on Wednesday joined an antitrust lawsuit against the NCAA
The lawsuit challenges the name, image and likeness restrictions of the college sports governing body
The original lawsuit was filed Jan. 31 by Tennessee, New York, Virginia and the District of Columbia
The legal case said the rules hurts the states’ economies and the welfare of their athletes
The lawsuit says the restrictions are anticompetitive and violate the Sherman Act. It says enforcement of the rules harms “the states’ economies and the welfare of their athletes, and should be declared unlawful and enjoined.”
Florida is joining the lawsuit, originally filed on Jan. 31, after reports in January that the NCAA was investigating Florida over its recruitment of class of 2023 quarterback Jaden Rashada, who signed with Florida in December 2022 but never enrolled and later enrolled at Arizona State. The NCAA also announced Level II sanctions against Florida State during the same month, accusing its athletic program of using NIL payments to entice recruits. The NCAA said it sanctioned Seminoles assistant coach Alex Atkins and an unnamed booster for impermissible recruiting activity and facilitating impermissible contact with a NIL-related booster.
The lawsuit says the NCAA changed its rules to permit college athletes to earn certain types of compensation from their NIL. “But, after allowing NIL licensing to emerge nationwide, the NCAA tried to stop that market from functioning” by allowing NIL compensation for current athletes but enforcing its rules for prospective athletes, including those in the transfer portal.
In a statement, Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody said, “It appears no one could ever comply with these ever-changing and unfair regulations that limit the ability of student athletes to negotiate in good faith. I am taking legal action to reverse the unlawful restrictions the NCAA has placed on Florida universities and our collegiate athletes.”
The NCAA restrictions prohibit prospective student-athletes from discussing NIL opportunities with schools and collectives prior to enrollment, including:
Negotiating with collectives,
Reviewing NIL offers prior to making enrollment decisions,
Learning about the full scope of NIL-related services schools might offer upon enrollment.
In late February, U.S. District Judge Clifton Corker in the Eastern District of Tennessee issued a preliminary injunction that bars the organization from enforcing its rules prohibiting NIL compensation for recruits, but that ruling covered one district. If the NCAA appeals, the case would go to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overseeing Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio and Michigan. Florida is part of the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals.
Corker’s ruling undercut what has been a fundamental principle of the NCAA’s model of amateurism for decades: Third parties cannot pay recruits to attend a particular school.
The judge wrote the NCAA’s stance likely violates antitrust law because Congress so far has been unwilling to give the association an antitrust exemption. The judge said athletes with a limited recruiting window are hurt by not being able to know their true value before committing to a school.
The NCAA said it would review the ruling and talk with its member schools about possible policy changes. But the NCAA said turning rules supported by its members “upside down” will only make an already chaotic situation worse and lessen protections keeping athletes from being exploited.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida A&M University is moving on from basketball coach Robert McCullum after seven seasons.
Florida’s only public historically Black university announced Wednesday that it will not renew McCullum’s contract, which expires at the end of June.
McCullum went 67-133 during his tenure with the Rattlers, including a 53-61 mark in conference play. The team finished 6-23 this past season. McCullum was named the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Coach of the Year in 2021.
“I want to thank Coach McCullum for his dedication to FAMU and our basketball student-athletes,” Athletic Director Tiffani-Dawn Sykes said in a statement. “He has led this program with integrity and has positively influenced countless young men, both players and coaches. We wish Coach McCullum and his family the very best in the future.”
The school will form a committee to conduct a national search for FAMU’s next head coach.
WASHINGTON — Jamir Watkins scored 12 of his career-high 34 points in the final three minutes, Jalen Warley added 18 points and ninth-seeded Florida State pulled away in the second half to beat No. 8-seeded Virginia Tech 86-76 on Wednesday in the second round of the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament.
What You Need To Know
FSU defeated Virginia Tech 86-76 Wednesday in the second round of the ACC Tournament
Jamir Watkins led the Seminoles with 34 points, a team record in the tournament
Next up for ninth-seeded FSU is top-seeded North Carolina at noon Thursday
Sean Pedulla scored 24 points for Virginia Tech
Watkins was 9 of 15 from the field and 14 of 17 at the free-throw line to set a program record for points in an ACC Tournament game. He also had 11 rebounds and four steals. Warley made 8 of his 10 shots as Florida State shot 54% from the field.
Virginia Tech was 4-of-17 shooting in the opening 17 minutes of the second half. The Hokies also finished with 13 turnovers, leading to 25 points for the Seminoles.
Florida State (17-15) advances to play top-seeded and fourth-ranked North Carolina in the quarterfinals at noon Thursday. The Seminoles dropped both regular-season meetings with the Tar Heels, 78-70 on the road and 75-68 at home. Florida State hasn’t beaten North Carolina since the 2020-21 season.
Tyler Nickel sank a long 3-pointer with 7 minutes, 28 seconds left to tie the score at 57, but Virginia Tech did not make another field goal until Sean Pedulla’s basket with 2:42 remaining to pull within 71-62.
Florida State took advantage of back-to-back Virginia Tech turnovers with layups by Warley and Primo Spears to take a 63-58 lead with 5:01 left. Another steal under the basket led to Warley’s fast-break layup to make it 68-58 at 3:06.
Each team turned it over on an inbounds play, and Watkins was fouled before making two free throws at 2:49. Watkins added two more free throws at 2:30 and had an alley-oop dunk at 2:11 for a 74-65 lead.
Spears finished with 10 points for the Seminoles.
Pedulla scored 24 points, Nickel added 18 and MJ Collins had 15 for Virginia Tech (18-14).
Both teams shot 55% or better from the field in the first half. Virginia Tech shot 64% (16 of 25), despite going 4 of 11 from 3-point range, in the first half before finishing at 49%.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Mike Martin, a member of the College Baseball Hall of Fame who won an NCAA Division I record 2,029 games in 40 seasons as Florida State’s baseball coach, died Thursday after a three-year battle with Lewy body dementia. He was 79.
What You Need To Know
Former FSU baseball coach Mike Martin passed away after fighting Lewy body dementia
The Seminoles advanced to the College World Series a record-tying 17 times in his 40 seasons as coach
Martin’s teams won an NCAA Division record 2,029 games
Many of his players went on to long careers in Major League Baseball
The school announced Martin’s death on social media.
Martin, nicknamed “Eleven” for his jersey number, was the head coach at Florida State from 1980 through 2019, getting to the College World Series a record-tying 17 times in that span — including his first and last seasons in Tallahassee. The Seminoles finished second twice at the CWS and third on three other occasions under Martin, who never won a national title.
He passed Texas’ Augie Garrido as the NCAA wins leader on May 5, 2018, when Florida State beat Clemson 3-2. That was win No. 1,976 for Martin; he would add 53 more to the total before retiring after the 2019 season.
“I want to be remembered as a guy that did it right, that put education first, that made sure that guys understood what’s expected of them, that they’re coming to Florida State to get a degree first,” Martin said on June 19, 2019, when his career ended with a CWS loss to Texas Tech in Omaha, Nebraska. “We’re not a school that just wants baseball players. We’re a university that demands that you do what you’re supposed to do in the classroom, and that’s give it your best shot.
“I want to be remembered as a guy that played the game hard but made others around him feel good when they whipped my fanny.”
Martin won the Atlantic Coast Conference’s coach of the year award seven times and coached a slew of players who would become Major League Baseball standouts — among them Buster Posey, Deion Sanders, Stephen Drew, J.D. Drew and Doug Mientkiewicz.
A native of North Carolina, Martin graduated from Florida State in 1966, spent three seasons as a minor-league player and got his first coaching job in 1970 — as the basketball coach at Tallahassee Community College.
He returned to the Seminoles as an assistant for the baseball program in 1975 and never left. Martin became head coach for the 1980 season and was wildly successful, winning at least 40 games in all 40 of his FSU seasons, at least 50 games in 24 of those seasons and reached the 60-win mark twice in his tenure.
Martin is survived by his wife of 59 years, Carol; children Mike Jr., Melanie and Mary Beth; and grandchildren Hannah Elizabeth, Tyler, Thomas Joseph and Lexi.
FSU Vice President and Director of Athletics Michael Alford posted a tribute on X, formerly known as Twitter.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida A&M has introduced James Colzie II as its 19th football coach.
What You Need To Know
James Colzie III is the new football coach at Florida A&M
Former coach Willie Simmons took a job as running backs coach at Duke
Colzie was the assistant head coach at FAMU last season
The goal is to win the Florida Classic, SWAC championship and the Celebration Bowl
Colzie replaces Willie Simmons, who took a job as an assistant coach for running backs at Duke earlier this month after leading the Rattlers to the Historically Black Colleges and Universities national championship.
“Today begins a new era in FAMU football. Today, we will add a new name to the legacy of FAMU football coaching greats,” Vice President/Athletic Director Tiffani-Dawn Sykes said. “…At the end of this process, James Colzie III emerged as the right person at this time to lead FAMU football.
“Our priority was identifying a coach who, first and foremost, had a commitment to academic excellence and has a comprehensive understanding of APR (Academic Progress Rate). Coach Colzie is currently a doctoral student at Capella University, studying leadership and higher education. It is clear he understands and appreciates the importance of higher education.”
Colzie joined the FAMU coaching staff in 2022 as cornerbacks coach. At the end of that campaign, Simmons promoted him to assistant head coach. Before he came to FAMU, Colzie was head coach at Saint Mary’s University in Canada, where he had an overall record of 23-19.
The former Florida State football and baseball player also held a variety of coaching jobs at the University of British Columbia, at Simon Fraser University, Southern Arkansas, West Georgia and Valdosta State.
Colzie said he wants the team to win the Florida Classic, which has been played in Orlando against Bethune-Cookman University for many years, as well as the Southwestern Athletic Conference Championship and the Celebration Bowl, the postseason college football game between the conference champions from the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference and the SWAC.
“I want to make sure we do it with class,” Colzie said. “The FAMU standard is going to be about winning, but also about the right culture. We already have a contagious culture. I can’t wait to add to that.”
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida State and football coach Mike Norvell have agreed to terms on what the university called an “enhanced contract,” the school announced Friday.
What You Need To Know
FSU and football coach Mike Norvell have reached terms on an “enhanced contract,” the program announced
Terms were not revealed, but AP and Yahoo reported the deal is worth over $10 million per year for eight years
Norvell’s name had come up in speculation as a replacement for recently retired Nick Saban at Alabama
The Seminoles have gone 31-17 in Norvell’s four seasons and 23-4 the past two seasons.
The Seminoles did not release the terms of the deal, but the Associated Press, citing a source with direct knowledge of the deal, confirmed initial reports by Yahoo that the deal is for eight years and more than $10 million per year.
The agreement came as Norvell’s name had been mentioned in media reports as a possible replacement at Alabama for Nick Saban, who announced his retirement as the Crimson Tide’s coach on Thursday. The Associated Press and ESPN reported Friday night that Washington coach Kalen DeBoer, whose team was the runner-up to Michigan in the national championship game, has signed a deal to take Alabama’s job. AP cited a source who spoke on condition of anonymity because neither school had announced DeBoer’s decision.
“We came to Tallahassee four years ago, and it was a life-changing experience,” Norvell said in a statement on seminoles.com. “Knowing the great history, tradition and expectation has guided our staff on a daily basis. It has been an incredible journey these last four years, and I have fallen in love with this program, the university and the people who I get to represent. I am so excited to continue our climb to push Florida State back to the top of college football. We are committed to being our best on and off the field while helping develop our players to be their best in every area of their lives. I am incredibly thankful for the amazing commitment into our student-athletes and staff from President McCullough, AD Alford and the Board of Trustees.”
Norvell led the Seminoles (13-1) to an unbeaten regular season in 2023 before they were the first undefeated Power Five conference champion left out of the College Football Playoff, following a season-ending injury to quarterback Jordan Travis.
Since they were not selected for the College Football Playoffs, the Seminoles have faced some adversity. Norvell stood up for his program and expressed how angry he was that the program was left out after becoming the first undefeated team in CFP history to be left out. The program has filed a lawsuit against the Atlantic Coast Conference, challenging the league’s grant of rights that ties the program to the ACC.
The Seminoles, who subsequently lost many of their key players to injuries or the NFL Draft before the bowl game, then got crushed by Georgia in the Orange Bowl 63-3. On Thursday, the NCAA announced that a Florida State assistant coach has been suspended for the first three games of the 2024 season for violating recruiting rules by connecting a potential transfer with a representative from a name, image and likeness collective during an official visit. FSU agreed to two years of probation, the loss of a total of five football scholarships over the next two seasons and other restrictions on recruiting, including a reduction of official visits. The school was also fined $5,000.
In four seasons at Florida State, the 42-year-old Norvell has dramatically improved the program and is 31-17, including 23-4 the past two seasons. The Seminoles went 3-6 in his first season as coach, but Norvell worked patiently through the COVID-19 pandemic to steadily rebuild the program.
Despite the lopsided Orange Bowl loss, the Seminoles place sixth in the final Top 25 rankings. Norvell was voted the 2023 Atlantic Coast Conference Coach of the Year and the AFCA Region 1 Coach of the Year. He was one of five finalists for the George Munger Coach of the Year Award presented by the Maxwell Football Club and one of 12 finalists for the Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Award.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — The Florida State Board of Trustees on Friday cleared the way for a lawsuit against the Atlantic Coast Conference, challenging a contract that binds the school to the league for the next 12 years and creating a potential path to leave without paying more than $500 million in penalties.
What You Need To Know
FSU trustees Friday approved a legal challenge to the contract that ties the Seminoles to the ACC
The university seeks a way to potentially leave the conference without paying over $500 million in penalties
The lawsuit says the ACC’s grant of rights violates antitrust law and its penalties are unenforceable
The ACC said the move violates FSU’s commitments to the ACC and its members and that the program re-signed the deal in 2016
“I believe this board has been left no choice but to challenge the legitimacy of the ACC grant of rights and its severe withdrawal penalties,” Florida State Board of Trustees chairman Peter Collins said during a trustees meeting.
The lawsuit was filed soon after in Leon County Circuit Court, claiming the ACC has mismanaged its media rights and is imposing “draconian” exit fees
Florida State outside counsel David Ashburn said a lawsuit was ready to be filed that claims the ACC’s grant of rights violates antitrust law and has unenforceable withdrawal penalties. Ashburn said it would cost a school $572 million to withdraw from the conference. The lawsuit also accuses the ACC of breach of contract and violation of public policy.
ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips and Virginia President Jim Ryan, chairman of the conference’s board of directors, posted a response to the lawsuit on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.
“Florida State’s decision to file action against the Conference is in direct conflict with their longstanding obligations and is a clear violation of their legal commitments to the other members of the Conference,” the ACC said in the post. “All ACC members, including Florida State, willingly and knowingly re-signed the current Grant of Rights in 2016, which is wholly enforceable and binding through 2036.”
Florida State is looking for a way out of the conference it has been a member of since 1992 because it believes the ACC is locked into an undervalued and unusually lengthy media rights deal with ESPN that runs through 2036. The school leaders also say the league refuses to change its revenue distribution model to match FSU’s value.
“It is a simple math problem,” Florida State athletic director Michael Alford said. “A very clear math problem.”
FSU leaders have been pushing for unequal distribution of revenue for more than a year. The ACC has agreed to create a bonus system that would direct more revenue to schools that have postseason success in football and basketball, but that has not solved the frustration at FSU.
“It’s time for us to try to do something about it,” Florida State President Richard McCullough said.
McCullough said the trustees’ approval of the legal challenge was not a direct reaction to FSU recently being left out of the College Football Playoff, despite having an undefeated record. Florida State will play Georgia at 4 p.m. Dec. 30 in the Orange Bowl at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens.
“This is not a reaction, but something we’ve done a lot of due diligence on,” he said.
Florida Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis said on X, “Proud of Florida State, Pres McCullough and the FSU BOT for their bold action today to take a stand against an untenable situation. Unfortunate that it came to this, but college athletics is changing by the second and Florida must once again lead the way.”