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House passes Laurel Lee legislation criminalizing ‘sextortion’

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It cleared the chamber on a voice vote with no objections.

The digital age has brought with it new ways to exploit children for sexual reasons. But U.S. Rep. Laurel Lee hopes legislation passed by the House on Monday night will combat the trend of “sextortion.”

The Thonotosassa Republican presented the Combating Online Predators (COP) Act (HR 6719) on the House floor Monday, where it cleared the chamber on a voice vote with no objections.

“The rise of sextortion against our nation’s children is troubling,” Lee said. “Sextortion is a form of exploitation that occurs when someone threatens to distribute another person’s private, sensitive material unless that person complies with demands for additional sexual content, sexual favors or money. Incidents of sextortion have increased dramatically in recent years.”

The legislation now goes to the Senate. If passed and signed, it will for the first time explicitly criminalize threats to distribute child sex abuse materials.

“Sextortion is a devastating crime that preys on fear, shame, and vulnerability — especially among children,” Lee said when she introduced the bill.

“When predators threaten to distribute explicit images of minors, the harm is real and often irreversible. Congress has a duty to ensure our laws keep pace with the tactics used by online predators, and this legislation closes a critical gap to protect children and deliver justice for victims.”

The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children in 2023 reported a major increase in sextortion instances, with 26,718 reported to the organization that year compared to 10,731 in 2022. The FBI said the threat of sextortion has been particularly troubling with teenage boys.

The issue was highlighted last year after the death by suicide of West Virginia teen Bryce Tate. Investigators learned that hours before his death, he was threatened with the release of intimate images.

While the actual distribution of such images is a federal crime, threats to distribute are not covered under federal law, which has resulted in the dodging of changes for many attempted blackmailers, according to Lee’s office.



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Ken Welch campaign in turmoil after $200K-plus stolen from PAC, stagnant fundraising

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St. Petersburg Mayor Ken Welch got robbed blind. Sort of.

The committee supporting his re-election, the Pelican Political Action Committee, suffered $207,500 in unauthorized expenditures that appear to have been taken by the committee’s registered agent, Yolanda Brown. Brown is the founder of Brown Financial & Consulting Services Group, which frequently provides campaign finance services for Democratic political candidates.

Brown’s phone number appears to have been disconnected, and Florida Politics was unable to reach her for comment.

The committee transferred funds beginning Aug. 6 from the PAC to O’Reilly Business LLC, a private business active in Florida for which Brown is the registered agent.

On Aug. 6, the committee in two separate transactions transferred $100,000 and $25,000 to the business, followed by a $20,000 transfer on Oct. 3, $25,000 on Oct. 6, $20,000 on Oct. 8, $10,000 on Oct. 15, and $2,500 and $5,000 on Oct. 30. All of the expenditures are listed as “unauthorized” in the committee’s amended third-quarter report and its new fourth-quarter report.

Asked about the missing funds, those affiliated with the committee said committee officials will speak with state and federal law enforcement to determine next steps.

Adrienne Bogen, an advisor for Welch, said they terminated the contract with Brown “immediately upon discovering” the improper transactions and appointed a new treasurer.

“While we assumed the funds would be returned and the former treasurer provided us a transaction receipt for a wire transfer of the funds back to the committee, the funds have yet to be returned. Accordingly, we are in the process of notifying the appropriate state and federal authorities.”

Bogen also offered a statement supporting Welch, though without responding to the possible theft.

“Mayor Welch has spent his time in office delivering real results for the people of St. Petersburg, advancing historic investments in affordable housing, expanding infrastructure improvements across neighborhoods, strengthening public safety, and supporting economic growth that creates jobs and opportunity,” she said in a prepared statement.

Under his leadership, the City has increased housing resources, invested in streets and stormwater infrastructure, and prioritized community-driven solutions to improve quality of life. The Mayor shows up every day focused on governing, listening, and getting things done for St. Petersburg.”

This isn’t the first time Welch has had an issue with a political committee. The state revoked his original committee, the Pelican PAC, citing its failure to file timely reports, its failure to appoint a replacement Treasurer after one resigned, and its failure to maintain a registered office and registered agent. Its closure prompted the creation of the new committee, which is now facing its own troubles.

And the loss of more than $200,000 is even more problematic for Welch, given that his fundraising was largely stagnant in the most recent quarter, October through December. The committee raised just $48,225 in the fourth quarter, down nearly six figures from the more than $142,000 raised in the third quarter.

With fundraising slowing and unauthorized fund distributions, Welch has just about $32,000 on hand.

That is a significant disadvantage for the incumbent Mayor, who faces credible opposition in this year’s re-election contest. City Council member Brandi Gabbard has already said publicly that she intends to run, and former Mayor Charlie Crist has said he’s seriously mulling a bid. St. Pete Shines, a political committee expected to support his eventual campaign, launched late last year and raised $725,000 in just 49 days.

“I’m sad to see this happen to my longtime friend, Ken Welch. It is a shame he is facing campaign finance challenges again,” said Michelle Todd Schorsch, the Chair for St. Pete Shines, referring to Welch’s past troubles with his previous political committee.

“While we are hopeful the situation is appropriately addressed with law enforcement, St. Pete Shines will continue its work supporting leaders who can support the city of St. Petersburg today, tomorrow and beyond,” she added.

To put Welch’s fundraising position into perspective, he had two banner fundraising months for his now-defunct committee, one in September 2021 of more than $233,000 and another the following month of nearly $179,000. Not counting his political committee, Welch’s official campaign raised more than $500,000.

It’s important to note that Welch does not oversee his PAC, and, by design, he cannot. Political committees cannot directly coordinate with candidates’ campaigns. Brown was involved in Welch’s first mayoral PAC, but was assigned only after problems came to light. She has also worked with him since his first mayoral run.

It’s not clear yet whether the new committee will be able to recoup any of the lost funds.

The Pelican Political Action Committee’s fourth quarter fundraising included a $25,000 check from the Tampa Bay Rays, but other than that, not a single contribution exceeded $2,500.

Welch has not filed to run for re-election yet, and therefore does not have a campaign account. The only candidate filed to date is Maria Scruggs, who has run for office unsuccessfully several times before, including against Welch when he was a Pinellas County Commissioner.

While Welch has plenty of time to bridge the funding gap — the Primary is Aug. 18, with a General Election runoff, if necessary, scheduled for Nov. 3 — slow fourth-quarter fundraising suggests to potential opponents that Welch may be an incumbent worth challenging.

“It’s clear from the extensive support we received for St. Pete Shines’ mission to identify and support a leader who can usher St. Petersburg into its next chapter, and the comparatively lackluster support for maintaining the status quo, that our fine city is ready for fresh perspectives and experienced leaders. We will continue to work tirelessly to ensure the city has the support needed to grow and thrive for current and future generations,” Todd Schorsch said.



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Last Call for 1.12.26 – A prime-time read of what’s going down in Florida

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Last Call – A prime-time read of what’s going down in Florida politics.

First Shot

After months of speculation, Jay Collins is officially in the race for Governor, launching his campaign with a Fox News exclusive that leaned heavily on biography, service, and continuity with the DeSantis era — even as the Governor himself declined to offer an endorsement.

“I’m running for Governor because leadership is forged under pressure, not in soundbites. I served over 23 years in the United States military, mainly as a Green Beret, where accountability is real, decisions have consequences, and service comes before self. That experience shaped how I lead and why I believe public office is a public trust,” Collins said.

Collins praised Gov. Ron DeSantis in his announcement, casting himself as a results-oriented conservative focused on law enforcement, public safety, and maintaining Florida’s national profile. DeSantis, however, struck a notably noncommittal tone when asked about Collins’ bid just minutes before the announcement.

“Jay’s a good guy. He served this country admirably as a Green Beret,” DeSantis said in Davie. “If I get involved in the Primary, you’ll know it. It’ll be at a time and place of my choosing.”

First elected to the Senate in 2022 after defeating Janet Cruz, Collins briefly flirted with a congressional run before switching to the state Senate with a field-clearing endorsement from DeSantis. Since becoming Lieutenant Governor, he has embraced a far more visible role than his predecessors, earning national media hits — and occasional controversy — along the way.

But visibility alone may not close the gap. Collins enters the race with roughly $900,000 in his political committee, Quiet Professionals FL, well behind Byron Donalds and Paul Renner, who have raised more than $35 million and $5.4 million, respectively.

Donalds, who entered the race with Donald Trump’s endorsement, remains the early front-runner in polling — a poll released last week showed Donalds would lead Collins 45%-6% if he were a candidate.

Evening Reads

—”Donald Trump is trying to change how the Midterm Elections are conducted” via Patrick Marley and Yvonne Wingett Sanchez of The Washington Post

—”Today is the day that Democrats’ chances of winning the Senate got real” via Chris Cillizza of So What

—”Fed changes course and takes on Trump’s political fight” via Colby Smith of The New York Times

—”Banana Republicanism” via Jonathan Chait of The Atlantic

—“Fifty people control the culture” via Ted Gioia of The Honest Broker

—“The speed-obsessed Texas wildcatter in pole position for Venezuela’s energy riches” via Benoît Morenne of The Wall Street Journal

—”Uber costs down after Florida tort reform” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics

—”Florida deregulated nursing schools. Scam colleges and failing students followed” via Annie Martin of the Orlando Sentinel

—“Nick DiCeglie brings thoroughbred decoupling effort to the Senate” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics

—”Kathryn and Brian Ballard’s latest FSU gift punctuates long history of giving back” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics 

Quote of the Day

“Jay’s a good guy. … If I get involved in the Primary, you’ll know it. It’ll be at a time and place of my choosing. And so we’ll see.”

— Gov. Ron DeSantis, minutes before Lt. Gov. Jay Collins announced his campaign for Governor.

Put it on the Tab

Look to your left, then look to your right. If you see one of these people at your happy hour haunt, flag down the bartender and put one of these on your tab. Recipes included, just in case the Cocktail Codex fell into the well.

Ron DeSantis says James Uthmeier is still reviewing potential charges against Nicolás Maduro. We’re still reviewing whether the Attorney General gets a Guarapita.

U.S. Rep. Randy Fine’s bill to annex Greenland and admit it to the union is a long shot, but he gets a 51st State for the effort.

It looks like St. Petersburg Mayor Ken Welch was served a Daylight Robbery by the person running his political committee.

Breakthrough Insights

Tune In

Lightning aiming for 10 straight wins, first place

The Tampa Bay Lightning can move into first place in the NHL’s Eastern Conference standings as they face the Flyers in Philadelphia tonight (7 p.m. ET, WXPX, ESPNT+).

Just over halfway through the season, the Lightning trail the Detroit Red Wings by a point in the standings. With a victory over the Flyers and a Red Wings loss to the Carolina Hurricanes, the Lightning would jump to the top of the standings.

Tampa Bay has won nine straight games, including a 7-2 victory on Saturday night in Philadelphia. Nikita Kuvherov scored a pair of goals in the win. He has recorded at least two points in all nine of the games in the current winning streak. Goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy has won seven straight games in the streak.

The winning streak came after three straight losses by the Lightning and seven defeats in a nine-game stretch. 

After tonight’s game, the road trip continues. Tampa Bay visits Pittsburgh, St. Louis, and Dallas before returning home for a Jan. 20 meeting with San Jose. The Lightning will enjoy a six-game homestand starting Jan. 26 that includes an outdoor game against the Boston Bruins at Raymond James Stadium on Feb. 1.

___

Last Call is published by Peter Schorsch, assembled and edited by Phil Ammann and Drew Wilson, with contributions from the staff of Florida Politics.



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Senate panel advances bill to strengthen Tax Collector oversight of commercial driving schools

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‘We want to make sure that when they’re out on the road, they’re not going to be a menace to society.’

A proposal meant to crack down on fraudulent commercial driver’s license activity at DMV sites zipped through its first Senate committee with unanimous support.

Members of the Senate Transportation Committee advanced the measure (SB 584) by Miami Springs Republican Sen. Bryan Ávila, who said there’s a rising trend in Miami-Dade of people lying about being licensed to drive commercial vehicles.

Ávila said Tax Collector Dariel Fernandez approached him about the problem, which could spread to other parts of the state, if it hasn’t already.

“The goal here, Senators, is to protect the integrity of driver licensing processes, deter fraud and support compliant driving schools without altering curriculum testing standards or a statewide eligibility criteria,” he said.

“This is an effort to make sure we can cover all our bases through cooperation and through collaboration with our Tax Collector.”

If approved, the legislation would authorize the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles to formally delegate enforcement authority over commercial driving schools to county Tax Collectors through interagency agreements.

Under those agreements, Tax Collectors could bar driving school operators from Tax Collector Offices, investigate fraud or practices undermining license integrity, require license verification and inspect driving school premises for legal compliance

“We want to make sure that when they’re out on the road, they’re not going to be a menace to society,” Ávila previously told Florida Politics while discussing his 2026 legislative priorities. “We want everyone that is driving any truck or vehicle on our roadways to be absolutely qualified and licensed to be driving.”

Barney Bishop of the Florida Smart Justice Alliance and Carlos San Jose of Corcoran Partners signaled support for the measure, which will next go to the Appropriations Committee on Transportation, Tourism and Economic Development.

A House twin of the bill (HB 953) by Miami Republican Rep. Omar Blanco awaits committee referrals.



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