This time last year, just the thought of Tua Tagovailoa playing for the Miami Dolphins was enough to set butterflies aflutter in football fans stomachs. But after a topsy-turvy rookie season, it seems as though Tua is a forgotten or worse, a disrespected man.
Has everyone already forgotten what the Dolphins have in Tua Tagovailoa? With a month of the offseason in the rearview mirror, it s time for fans to take a deep breath and remind themselves that the Dolphins have one of the premier young signal callers in the league. Nothing that happened in 2020 changed that. If anything, business is ahead of schedule.
When Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis went to vote on Monday, poll workers in Tallahassee told him there was a problem: Their records indicated that his primary residence was a condo in West Palm Beach, not the Florida Governor s Mansion.
Naturally, state officials launched an investigation. Yesterday, agents with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) descended upon the state s west coast and arrested a 20-year-old Naples man they suspect of changing the governor s address.
Anthony Steven Guevara faces two felony charges of altering a person s voter registration without their knowledge or consent and accessing a computer or electronic device without authorization. As of this morning, he remained at the Collier County jail on a $5,000 bond.
The Miami Heat is most famously known for two things: culture and championships. If we had to pick a third thing, alternate jerseys might be it.
For years, the Heat has widely been crowned the unanimous alternate-jersey champions of the basketball world. Then 2020 happened, and it all went to shit.
The current rainbow version of the Miami Heat s iconic Vice jersey is, well, not our favorite. It s actually a bit embarrassing, to be honest.
Seeing as how awful the current version is, we decided to compile a list of all of the Heat s previous iterations to cheer us up. Agree to disagree if the current version is anywhere but last on your list.
Less than two months after commissioners in Miami-Dade voted to revive the county s police oversight board, lawmakers in Broward County have voted to create a similar panel to investigate complaints against officers.
The new policing and criminal-justice review board was approved at the commission s October 20 meeting. The board will be made up of 24 members, including lawyers, health-industry experts, and representatives from various organizations, activist coalitions, and cultural groups in Broward.
Two of the 24 seats will be reserved for active members of law enforcement. One will be nominated by the Broward County Chiefs of Police Association, the other will be handpicked by the sheriff.
When the
Miami Herald series about Jeffrey Epstein called Perversion of Justice blew up on the cable TV stations, private eye Mike Fisten was happy to see some attention finally paid to the travesty he d investigated for years.
The former Miami-Dade homicide detective interviewed Epstein victim after Epstein victim, roughly 40 in all, for a civil lawsuit alleging that their rights had been violated in a 2008 plea deal that allowed the billionaire to skirt a lengthy prison sentence.
Fisten thought his 30 years in law enforcement had left him emotionally invulnerable to such stories, but he recalls one young teen victim in particular who d been recruited to give Epstein massages in his Palm Beach mansion.