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Justices upheld a decision by the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in the lawsuit filed by Karyn Stanley, a fire-department lieutenant who retired in 2018 at age 47 because of the effects of the disease.
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Florida had 800 manatee deaths in 2022, before the number dropped to 555 in 2023 and 565 in 2024, according to Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission data.
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Attorney General James Uthmeier says Contac Medical Supply and its Miami-based reseller sold devices that secretly sent sensitive health data to China.
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A trial involving claims that State Senate District 16 was racially gerrymandered concluded. Although this is about one district, the anticipated decision could potentially shape Florida's future.
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Florida Highway Patrol troopers have used Flock Safety’s private license plate reader system more than 250 times in recent months to aid immigration enforcement efforts — an unusual practice among Florida agencies that has drawn concern from civil liberties advocates.
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Michael Bell, 54, is scheduled to die by lethal injection July 15 for the mistaken-revenge killing of two people outside of Jacksonville bar in 1993.
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Brown, who played with Tampa Bay during its 2020-21 Super Bowl year, is accused of grabbing a handgun from a security staffer and firing two shots at a man he had gotten into a fistfight with earlier.
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Among other things, the Clean & Safe Program would provide social outreach efforts to address homelessness, as well as clean sidewalks and graffiti in downtown areas.
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Thomas Gudinas was convicted in the 1994 murder of Michelle McGrath in Orlando. His representatives argue “evolving standards of decency have rendered the execution of ... constitutionally impermissible.”
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Florida officials warn against law-breaking ahead of planned protests against President Donald TrumpFlorida officials are issuing warnings in advance of weekend protests against President Trump, with Attorney General James Uthmeier saying, "We are not California."
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James Gaddis claims retaliation from the Florida Department of Environmental Protection.
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About 250 people are participating in the visits. Among them are family members of 25 of the 49 people killed by the gunman.
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The U.S. Department of Labor in the Biden administration had said parts of the state law, such as the dues-deduction change, interfered with workers’ collective bargaining rights.
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In briefs filed Sunday and Wednesday, Thomas Gudinas’ attorneys argued that executing him “would serve no purpose beyond base vengeance.”