logo
FWC cuffs man who speared protected goliath grouper off Pompano Beach: officials

FWC cuffs man who speared protected goliath grouper off Pompano Beach: officials

Miami Heralda day ago

Florida wildlife officers arrested a man who they say shot a state-protected goliath grouper just offshore of Pompano Beach on Monday.
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission police added that 44-year-old Juan Nealon tried to surreptitiously discard his catch when officers signaled for him to come to shore, which he denies.
The officers said they saw Nealon in a canoe close to the beach and tried to contact him from shore. FWC spokeswoman Arielle Callender noted that 'despite repeated commands to stop,' Nealon paddled farther away from the beach and purposely tipped his canoe to get rid of the fish and his speargun.
The officers went into the water and found the grouper, which weighed more than 100 pounds, with the spear lodged in its body, Callender said.
Nealon was arrested on a total of seven misdemeanors, including spearfishing within 100 yards of the beach, harvesting a goliath grouper without a permit and spearing a goliath grouper.
He told the Herald the entire incident was a mix of ignorance of fishing regulations and not realizing the police were trying to get his attention. He also said he did not intentionally try to conceal the fish that he shot.
Nealon, a professional musician, said he got excited when he saw the large size of the grouper and pulled the trigger without realizing he'd violated the regulations. He called a friend from the canoe, who told him it was illegal to harvest goliaths and to try to release the fish alive back in the water. He said that's what he was doing when the officers saw him from the beach.
He said he rarely shoots fish when swims in the ocean and was actually looking for invasive lionfish, which are legal to kill.
'I'm an Earth-friendly hippy. I do music for a living, I don't even hurt ants,' he said, adding he was surprised he was cuffed and booked into jail for about 12 hours before posting a $500 bond.
'I'm sorry. I didn't know,' Nealon said. 'I understand now, but what's with the hostility?'
Goliath groupers are highly protected in Florida. They almost went extinct from overfishing in the 1980s, and the FWC banned their harvest in 1990.
They can grow up to eight feet long and 800 pounds, in addition to having a long lifespan — between 30 and 50 years old, according to the FWC.
After years of lobbying from various fishing interests who maintain the species not only made a comeback, but were wiping out other species because of their voracious appetites, the FWC agreed in 2022 to open a very limited goliath grouper season.
Still, not many people can harvest them. The season is open from March 1 through May 31, and anglers taking part are chosen from a random lottery. The bag limit is one fish per person, per season, per the FWC.
Callender said the public can report conservation violations by downloading the agency's Wildlife Alert app, calling the Wildlife Alert Hotline at 888-404-FWCC (888-404-3922), or submitting a tip online at MyFWC.com/Wildlife-Alert.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rep. Giménez to visit ICE detention centers in Miami after Herald uncovers harsh conditions
Rep. Giménez to visit ICE detention centers in Miami after Herald uncovers harsh conditions

Miami Herald

time10 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Rep. Giménez to visit ICE detention centers in Miami after Herald uncovers harsh conditions

Rep. Carlos Giménez plans to tour Florida facilities holding immigration detainees following a Miami Herald investigation into harsh conditions and use of force at the Federal Detention Center in Miami. The federal lawmaker said that he first learned about the reported conditions at FDC Miami when a journalist from the Washington Journal's C-Span program asked him about the Herald story this morning. 'I will be investigating those conditions,' said the Miami Republican during an interview on Capitol Hill. 'Right now is the first I've heard of it.' The Federal Detention Center in downtown Miami has been housing detainees in civil immigration custody since February, when the Federal Bureau of Prisons signed a contract with United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement to house immigrants in BOP facilities amid overcrowding at ICE detention centers. Six detainees told the Herald that officers had launched crowd-control grenades and sprayed what appeared to them as rubber bullets or pellets into a room with about 50 detainees in April in response to their protests over lack of water, food, and medication. The detainees said that they had begun to overflow toilets to get the attention of officers, and the room was full of water. Afterwards, the men were transferred back to an ICE detention center. At least two detainees filed lawsuits about the incident in May, which were signed by at least 30 detainees who say they were also present when it happened. 'I keep reliving the explosions over and over again,' one wrote in the lawsuit. A judge dismissed the lawsuit without prejudice due to procedural errors. 'It all felt like unnecessary torture.' Giménez said that he has investigated ICE facilities in the past during his tenure as mayor of Miami-Dade County, and would 'protest to the administration' if he found anything inappropriate. 'If I find something that is wrong, or shouldn't be, I'll be the first to come out and say, 'by the way I found something, this is what's going on,'' Giménez said on C-Span. Detainees, as well as employees who work at the facility, described harsh conditions, including broken toilets and air conditioning, and out-of-service elevators. They also reported day-long lockdowns and a lack of outdoor space. The immigration detainees are not at the facility for criminal convictions, but instead have ongoing civil cases to determine if they can stay in the U.S. ICE data shows that about half of the ICE detainees at FDC have criminal records – and half don't. Three employees spoke with the Herald on the condition of anonymity, due to fear of retaliation. 'I've seen some inmates just sit there and cry,' said one officer. 'Some cry all day. Grown men, just crying.' Detainees also have limited access to counsel, according to lawyers who said that the jail is not giving the ICE inmates key legal documents for their cases or ways to send legal mail out. 'There is an access-to-justice crisis here,' said Evelyn Wiese, a senior litigation attorney at Americans for Immigrant Justice. 'There is a due-process crisis.' Roberto Lugones, Giménez's communications director, confirmed to the Herald that the representative is in the process of planning a tour of a local immigration facility, but does not have one scheduled. He said the representative is looking into touring Krome North Service Processing Center, which is in his district. Detainees and lawyers have repeatedly reported to the Herald severe overcrowding at Krome since February, with people sleeping on the floor for days. Last week, a group of Cuban detainees staged a protest, lining up in the courtyard to spell 'SOS' with their bodies. Other federal lawmakers from South Florida, including Democrats Rep. Frederica Wilson and Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, recently visited Krome. They raised alarm about conditions at the facility as well as about recent deaths in ICE custody in South Florida.

Florida black bear caught on camera taking a dip in hot tub, napping 6 hours under lanai
Florida black bear caught on camera taking a dip in hot tub, napping 6 hours under lanai

CBS News

time17 hours ago

  • CBS News

Florida black bear caught on camera taking a dip in hot tub, napping 6 hours under lanai

Residents of an affluent community in Southwest Florida were shocked to find an uninvited guest in their midst over the weekend, one with fur, claws and a taste for luxury. On June 8, landscapers at Punta Gorda Isles spotted a black bear running through a backyard and called 911, according to CBS affiliate WINK. Punta Gorda police officers then went to the residence to warn the homeowner about the bear in his yard. Bear caught on security camera lounging in hot tub and lanai Homeowner Lynn Martin said at first he thought they were joking — that's until he checked his home security cameras. The bear was caught on video taking a dip in his hot tub. It then moved to a couch underneath a lanai, a a type of covered outdoor area commonly found in Hawaiian and Florida architecture. "He just took the pillows off of the couch and was getting ready to take a nap," Martin said. And nap it did — for nearly six hours. FWC responds with bear trap and hazing techniques Punta Gorda police contacted the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. They sent officers who placed a trap on the property. FWC officials then used hazing techniques to encourage it to leave. The bear eventually moved to a nearby vacant lot and climbed a tree. FWC placed a trap at the base of the tree and maintained a presence in the area. People who live in the neighborhood said the bear clearly meant no harm. "He's not looking for any trouble, that's for sure," Martin said. The following day, the bear was spotted napping in another tree in the neighborhood. The FWC waited for the bear to wake before trapping it. The bear was then safely relocated back to its natural habitat. Deadly black bear attack reporter near Naples This was not the first encounter with a black bear in Florida this year. On May 5, black bears attacked and killed a man and his dog near Naples, according to the FWC. Robert Markel, 89, and his dog were not killed at the same time, according to the FWC which believes more than one bear was involved. That night, FWC officers killed the three bears in the area. DNA samples from the scene and the bears were sent to Gainesville for testing. Necropsy results revealed that one bear contained the partial remains of Markel, according to the FWC. Testing showed that the same bear's DNA was present on Markel's body, inside his home and on the dog's body. Wildlife officials have not explicitly said that bear is the one that killed Markel, an autopsy by the Collier County Medical Examiner found that Markel's cause of death is consistent with a bear attack. Florida man bit by bear while protecting dog near Pensacola A few weeks after Markel's attack, a man in Gulf Breeze, near Pensacola, reported that he had been bitten by a bear while protecting his dog. The man said he had just gotten home from work and was letting his dog out when the wild animal charged at them in his backyard. The man said after the bear bit him, he kicked it in the face. He said that's when the bear charged him again. He said he was able to make it to the house, shut the door on the bear and call 911. The man was taken to the hospital where he was treated and released. Florida's growing black bear population leads to more encounters Florida's black bear population, once classified as threatened, has rebounded in recent decades. The state has more than 4,000 black bears, according to the FWC. Bear sightings and interactions with people have become more common, particularly in rural areas of north and central Florida. The FWC has an interactive bear map to show bear related calls. FWC tips: What to do if you encounter a bear "First things first, stand your ground. Make yourself look large, talk to the bear in a calm fashion. Do not run, do not play dead. If you have small dogs or small children, pick them up. Make yourself look large. If a bear is touching you, you need to fight back. So if you're in Florida and you know you're having a conflict with a bear, fight back, because people have successfully been able to fight off bears," Mike Orlando, the FWC's bear management program coordinator, said. He added it's important to never intentionally approach a bear and never feed one, either intentionally or unintentionally.

Florida child welfare agency calls ICE on teen migrant in foster care, sparking criticism
Florida child welfare agency calls ICE on teen migrant in foster care, sparking criticism

Miami Herald

time21 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Florida child welfare agency calls ICE on teen migrant in foster care, sparking criticism

Florida child welfare authorities turned over a 17-year-old foster child to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, sparking intense criticism that the action could hinder efforts to protect children in the state's large immigrant communities. The Honduran teen, named Henry, was removed from his Pensacola foster home Monday morning — in handcuffs and shackles – and transferred immediately into ICE custody. The boy and his mother had crossed the southwest border into the U.S. without permission, sources familiar with the case told the Miami Herald. After being separated from his mother, who was later deported, Henry traveled from Texas to Pensacola, where he sought work. He entered foster care after he was found living in a shed with no source of food, shelter or income, records show. He also may have been a victim of labor trafficking. The Herald is not fully naming him to protect his privacy. The decision to alert immigration authorities to Henry's status as an undocumented migrant is at odds with decades of child welfare practice in Florida – and it appears to violate a 30-year-old state Department of Children and Families rule that prohibits workers from acting upon a child's status. Fran Allegra, a children's attorney who ran Miami-Dade's private foster care agency from 2004 until 2014, said if DCF's action in Henry's case represents a formal change in policy, it 'puts Florida children at risk, and introduces a new chilling effect on reports to the [state's] child abuse hotline. Reports about undocumented families are already low. This shift makes the chance for reporting, and, therefore, rescuing kids, less likely.' State Sen. Ileana Garcia, a Miami Republican who has been openly critical of the Trump administration's immigration policies after previously supporting them, spoke Monday about Henry's plight after working behind the scenes to keep him within state care. While declining to name the child, she told the Herald she is concerned his case may be part of a larger pattern in which children in the state's foster care system could be picked up at the homes of their foster parents by federal immigration authorities. Lawyers told the Herald it's been years since they heard about state child welfare agencies, like DCF, notifying ICE about children in their custody. 'Somehow they are collecting these records because they are going to their houses,' said Garcia, a co-founder of Latinas for Trump. 'What really bothers me is that these are victims of human trafficking. You would think they would have more protections.' In a post on social media, Garcia said the effort to target minors in foster care is a 'desperate' attempt to meet a 'quota of deportations.' Typically, unaccompanied children who are detained at the border are placed in the custody of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Office of Refuge Resettlement, which locates available relatives and suitable sponsors or places children in shelters. But Henry was detained by local authorities in Escambia County and placed in state care, instead. Historically, ORR has been reluctant to take children who had been released from their care – or had never been in their custody – if they were already placed with a local or state agency. But experts told the Herald that has changed under the Trump administration, which they say has been apprehending kids already in the U.S. and putting them into ORR custody. As part of its crackdown, the administration also has cut funds for lawyers in kids' immigration cases – and provided ICE access to a database about unaccompanied children. Henry's journey to the U.S. Henry, whose father was deceased, crossed the border with his mother at age 13, both as undocumented migrants. The details of his first years in the U.S. are not completely clear but a source told the Herald he was initially released into the custody of an uncle. Multiple sources said both Henry and his mother had endured enormous trauma during the journey. At some point, Henry moved in with his mother, but he did not remain there long. It appears Henry's mother was arrested and jailed somewhere in Texas, and then deported back to Honduras. The teen found his way to Pensacola, where his brother lives, seeking employment. He found it, working for $10-per day. He 'realized he was being overworked, and ran away,' records show. Henry may also have been 'labor trafficked.' By the winter of 2024, Henry had been in Pensacola for several months. A report was made to DCF's child welfare hotline in November alleging the teen, who was not yet 17, was homeless, and 'did not have a caregiver available.' Henry was then placed with a local family, where he remained for 11 days before leaving after disagreements over a visitor and when he was supposed to sleep, records say. Another hotline report followed on April 21: The month before, Henry had run away from Lutheran Services Florida Currie House, and he was not 'welcome' to return, records say. On March 28, DCF was told Henry was 'staying in a shed and was homeless and may be a runaway and possibly labor trafficked.' On April 24, DCF filed what's called a 'shelter petition,' asking an Escambia County child welfare judge to designate the teen a dependent of the state. Henry was placed in foster care, where he remained until this summer. On June 6, sources told the Herald, a DCF administrator reported Henry to ICE. Three days later, Henry was taken from his foster home – in handcuffs and leg irons – by ICE agents, a source said. The boy is now in the custody of the Office of Refugee Resettlement, which handles cases of unaccompanied kids. ICE does not detain unaccompanied minors in its own facilities; they are generally housed by ORR. A source told the Miami Herald the teenager does not have a deportation order. A policy shift? DCF administrators did not respond to queries from the Herald about the decision to report Henry to ICE, which appears to run counter to previous state policy. In response to litigation, DCF passed a governing procedure in 1995 called the Undocumented Child Rule. The lawsuit had been filed in federal court by 'Jane Doe,' a 14-year-old migrant from Haiti who had entered the U.S. in 1985 without permission. Collateral damage in a tug of war between Florida and federal immigration authorities, the girl was about to be tossed out of foster care. Among other things, the rule requires the agency to screen and respond to child abuse hotline calls 'without regard to the immigration status' of the child or family at the center of the report. The rule states, in part: 'No such status check or other contact shall be made for the purpose of seeking the child's or the family's detention by [immigration authorities] or the initiation or resumption of deportation or exclusion proceedings against the child or the child's family, irrespective of the outcome of the dependency proceeding. No Department of Children and Family Services staff member may attempt to place any alien child in [immigration] custody.' Robert Latham, associate director of the Children & Youth Law Clinic at the University of Miami School of Law, said DCF appears to have violated that rule by reporting Henry to ICE. 'Every administration since then has followed' the rule, he said. 'If this is a policy decision, it is a huge deal.' Latham said DCF keeps records of which children in state care are undocumented, partly because Medicaid, the state's insurer of disabled and impoverished Floridians, will not pay for their healthcare. Most foster children are insured by Medicaid. 'It's unconscionable of DCF to cooperate in a way that puts children at risk of harm,' Latham said Monday. 'They are entrusted with caring for these children and should do everything they can to protect them.' Fear of suppressed reports One of Latham's greatest fears – and that of other children's advocates – is that immigrant communities will decline to report suspected child abuse or neglect for fear that child protection authorities will report a youngster's immigration status to ICE. People who become aware of maltreatment may fear deportation more than they fear abuse. 'If people don't report, DCF can't respond, and children and families will be left at higher risk of harm.' Latham added: 'I suspect that's the point. The whole push over the past few months has been to destabilize immigrant communities. This seems like another way to do that.' DCF's action could discourage relatives, neighbors and others from seeking help from the state when they fear a child is in danger, said Ron Davidson, former director of Mental Health Policy at the University of Illinois at Chicago who consulted with that state's Department of Children and Family Services for more than 20 years. 'Florida and every other state must rely on the implicit trust of private citizens to come forward and report harm to children in the community. Whenever that basic trust is violated — as it appears in this case — then the risks of harm to children are dramatically increased,' Davidson said. Florida has one of the largest populations of undocumented immigrants among the 50 states, according to Department of Homeland Security Data. Estimates of Florida's undocumented residents range from 590,000 to 1.02 million people. That includes nearly 165,000 undocumented children under 18, according to the Center for Migration Studies of New York. 'If DCF's public policy changes from refugee care and resettlement… to deportation, our vulnerable migrant communities across the state will no longer look to DCF for help for abused, abandoned and neglected children,' said Allegra, who headed the Our Kids foster care agency for a decade. She added: 'These children will suffer more harm under this policy shift and abuse will go unreported.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store