The bill was inspired by the violence at a Donald Trump rally in Pennsylvania.
Those looking to harm Presidents, Governors and other heads of state may pay the ultimate price in Florida — even if they don’t succeed in killing their target.
Sen. Blaise Ingoglia’s measure (SB 776) which cleared the Criminal Justice Committee, contemplates adding to Florida law that the death sentence can be issued when a “capital felony was committed against the head of a state, including, but not limited to, the President or the Vice President of the United States or the Governor of this or another state, or in an attempt to commit such crime a capital felony was committed against another individual.”
Ingoglia noted that “the death penalty is reserved for those convicted of heinous crimes” and that his helps to facilitate that by adding aggravating factors of an assassination of a head of state or the killing of another person in attempting to do so. He described the attempted assassination of Donald Trump and the concomitant killing of Corey Comperatore as heinous and worthy of extraordinary sanction in law.
One citizen opposed the bill.
Grace Hannah of Floridians Opposed to the Death Penalty said the bill would fall under federal jurisdiction and that an incident like that contemplated by the bill is “extremely rare.”
Maximum speeds on limited access highways could jump to 75 mph.
Florida may soon raise its speed limit caps.
Sen. Nick DiCeglie, a Pinellas Republican, filed an amendment to a transportation bill (SB 462) that could hike speed limits on major roads by 5 miles per hour.
The bill, should the amendment pass, would set a minimum speed on all highways, meaning those roads with at least four lanes of traffic. The exact speed allowed would depend on other factors.
DiCeglie’s legislation would call for the maximum speed limit on limited access highways to jump from 70 miles per hour to 75 mph. For any other highways outside urban areas, meaning those with populations of 5,000 or more, the speed limit would ramp up from 65 mph to 70 mph, so long as there was a median strip dividing the lanes of traffic.
The language filed by DiCeglie would also allow the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) to set maximum speeds for other roads deemed as safe and advisable as high as 65 mph. The agency right now only has discretion to boost the maximum speed on such roads to 60 mph.
The amendment was filed on a bill related to other transportation planning issues, including the distribution of the State Transportation Trust Fund, and regulations including construction and maintenance contracts.
A staff analysis of the pre-amendment bill notes that FDOT has a responsibility to plan and develop highway corridors that allow for high speed and high volumes of traffic. That includes setting out 20-year plans for the state’s interstate system.
The legislation is expected to land in front of committee for the first time on Wednesday at 9 a.m., when the Senate Transportation Committee considers the bill. It must go through two other committee stops before reaching the Senate floor.
Notably, a companion bill (HB 567) in the House carried by Republican Rep. Fiona McFarland includes no language about changing speed limits at the moment.
Higher education institutions that fail to effectively tamp down on antisemitism will face continued defunding until they correct course, U.S. Department of Education Secretary Linda McMahon says.
“Discrimination in any form is not to be tolerated on any campus,” she said. “It’s totally unacceptable.”
McMahon is doubling down on actions President Donald Trump’s administration took to address violence and discrimination against Jewish students at schools across the country, including canceling $400 million from Columbia University early this month.
McMahon said Columbia Interim President Katrina Armstrong has since asked for a list of actions the school must take to regain the funding. She described Armstrong’s request as “incredibly sincere.”
Columbia has become the first target in Trump’s campaign to cut federal money to colleges accused of tolerating antisemitism amid the Israel-Hamas war that began on Oct. 7, 2023.
The university was at the forefront of U.S. campus protests over the war last Spring. Pro-Palestinian demonstrators set up an encampment in April and inspired a wave of similar protests. Protesters at Columbia went on to seize a campus building, resulting in dozens of arrests when police cleared the building.
Student protesters camp on the campus of Columbia University on April 30, 2024, in New York. Image via Mary Altaffer/AP.
A few weeks after that, a university task force said that Jews and Israelis at the school were ostracized from student groups, humiliated in classrooms and subjected to verbal abuse amid the spring demonstrations.
In recent days, a much smaller contingent of demonstrators have staged brief occupations of buildings at Columbia-affiliated Barnard College to protest the expulsion of two students accused of disrupting an Israeli history class. Several students were arrested following an hours-long takeover of a building Wednesday.
Many people involved in the protests have said there’s nothing antisemitic about criticizing Israel over its actions in Gaza or expressing solidarity with Palestinians.
Some students, and an attorney advising them, see the university’s new disciplinary crackdown as an effort to mollify the government by suppressing pro-Palestinian speech.
Federal immigration authorities this month arrested multiple people who participated in pro-Palestinian protests at Columbia. One had their student visa revoked. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the Trump administration is expecting to revoke more student visas in the coming days.
Columbia is among a handful of colleges that have come under new federal antisemitism investigations. Others include the University of California, Berkeley; the University of Minnesota; Northwestern University; and Portland State University.
“(To) our higher ed institutions, one of the things I wanted to make clear was this is not about free speech. This is about civil rights,” McMahon said. “Have debates, voice differences of opinion, but … let’s do it in a way that’s nonviolent.”
McMahon’s comments came Tuesday afternoon during a roundtable discussion on education at the Kendall campus of True North Classical Academy, a charter network in Miami-Dade.
Other roundtable participants included, among others, Florida International University Interim President Jeanette Nuñez, Miami Dade College President Madeline Pumariega, Miami-Dade School Board member Monical Colucci, education entrepreneur and former Collier County School Board member Erika Donalds, and former state Rep. Michael Bileca, True North’s CEO.
Jeanette Nuñez lauded Florida’s response to antisemitism as an example for the nation. Image via Jesse Scheckner/Florida Politics.
Nuñez, Florida’s immediate past Lieutenant Governor, said the state is “leading the charge” on combating on-campus antisemitism. After the Oct. 7 attack, she said, state lawmakers and Gov. Ron DeSantis worked to “eliminate any opportunity to do any sort of camping” and ensure that protestors “could not cover their faces with masks” to shield themselves from consequence.
Colucci noted that in August, the Miami-Dade School Board approved an initiative to review whether district-approved curriculum includes examples of antisemitism. Other school boards in Florida have taken similar steps.
Pumariega said Miami Dade College made its policies against antisemitism known early and that most on-campus agitators aren’t students and have no connection to the institution. But while Florida’s educational institutions have indeed led the fight against anti-Jewish speech and actions, she said, some other states have not passed laws strong enough for their schools to enforce rules against on-campus discrimination.
McMahon said she’d look into it.
The U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights sent letters to 60 colleges and universities last week advising them that they are under investigation for violations “relating to antisemitic harassment and discrimination.” The letters, McMahon said, warned the schools to take corrective steps or lose “enormous public investments funded by U.S. taxpayers.”
“That support is a privilege and it is contingent on scrupulous adherence to federal antidiscrimination laws,” she said.
Two Florida schools, the University of South Florida and University of Tampa, were on the list.
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Material from The Associated Press was used in this report. Republished with permission.
Cutting through the waters and chilly temperatures off Florida’s Gulf coast just after sunrise early Tuesday, a trio of fishermen aboard a small boat experienced the catch of a lifetime: They spotted two 16-year-old friends who had spent the night adrift on a paddleboard waving down their rescuers from atop an oyster bar miles from shore.
The teens, identified by family and friends on social media as Eva Aponte and Avery Bryan, survived 16 hours on the water in temperatures that dipped into the low 40s. Rescuers described them as shivering cold with cuts to their hands and feet from razor-sharp oyster shells but otherwise OK.
The teens were blown off course Monday about 4:30 p.m. near the fishing village of Cedar Key by strong winds while wearing just shorts and sweatshirts with no life jackets.
As darkness fell — and temperatures dropped — so did the odds of survival. A massive search of the Gulf waters by the Coast Guard, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, Sheriffs’ Offices and a fleet of volunteer civilian boats continued all night without success.
Capt. Will Pauling of Inglis and his fellow anglers Alex Jefferies of nearby Yankeetown and Russell Coon of Clermont, near Orlando, scrapped their plans early Tuesday for a morning of snook fishing to join the search. They were on the water looking for the teens by 8:30 a.m., just after sunrise, and found them within 30 minutes.
“We tried getting out there as soon as we could, and it paid off,” Pauling said in a phone interview.
Jeffries said he told the teens after their rescue, “You laugh about this one day, just not today.”
The teens and their families didn’t immediately respond to phone messages Tuesday to discuss their ordeal.
Winds pushed the teens off course returning from Atsena Otie Key, an historic and uninhabited island town of abandoned buildings about a half mile from Cedar Key, across a shipping channel. The paddle is popular and usually safe when tides are favorable and winds are mild, generally below 5 mph. Monday’s winds were gusting more than twice as strong.
It wasn’t clear initially where the teens may have drifted. Tides and current could have pushed the teens into the Gulf, further from shore. It turned out, their inflatable paddleboard had acted like a sail and was pushed by winds southeast across Waccasassa Bay toward Mangrove Point, off the coast of Yankeetown, about 15 miles away.
“It was an inflatable object. It’s treated more like a balloon,” said Cap. Gary Bartell Jr. of Crystal River, who spent the night searching for the teens. He picked them up in his airboat from Pauling’s small boat.
A photo shows the rescuers carrying the wayward teens — who were too weak to stand — over their shoulders across an oyster bar toward the airboat. On board, Bartell and his 8-year-old son, Brody, gave the girls snacks and the coats off their backs. Bartell then delivered them to their families and officials at Waccasassa Bay Preserve State Park.
“They had a great spirit for two young ladies that were stranded in the middle of the night, that had drifted 15 miles from their original location, especially in those high winds that we had last night,” Bartell said.
Sue Colson, the Mayor of picturesque Cedar Key, said the Gulf waters can be more dangerous than they look.
“We look so picture card perfect, and just slick and pretty,” Colson said. “You just don’t feel in danger here, which is a great thing to feel by the way.”
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This story was produced by Fresh Take Florida, a news service of the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications. The reporter can be reached at [email protected]. You can donate to support our students here.