Circuit Judge Dawn Nichols denied Kristopher Henriqson’s request for a sixty-day trial delay, though she remains open to a postponement if he secures a medical expert. Henriqson, representing himself against capital charges, seeks to prove a discredited theory regarding physical evidence. The court also ruled that defense witnesses cannot offer opinions on the victim’s truthfulness, citing strict evidentiary rules, a further blow to Henriqson’s defense. He goes on trial on capital rape charges next week.
All Else
Mental Health Issues May Have Played a Role as Details Emerge in Flagler Beach U-Haul Standoff
The woman at the center of a standoff involving a U-Haul truck in Flagler Beach Monday may have been experiencing a mental health episode and delusional issues, according to details of her arrest that emerged today. May Ling Ip “called 911 and made numerous statements indicating emotional instability and possible delusional thinking,” according to a sheriff’s report. The trigger of the incident on reports of the Ip’s suspicious behavior, especially after her initial interactions with a deputy, doesn’t appear to have been unreasonable.
Defying DeSantis’s ‘Terrorist’ Designation, CAIR Florida Officials Drop In for Muslim Day at State Capitol
Officials from the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) Florida came to Tallahassee Monday to speak with lawmakers about pending legislation during the annual “Muslim Day” at the Capitol, but found conditions far different than in the past. In an absurd posting, Florida Attorney James Uthmeier asked law enforcement to be “on heightened alert for any possible security threats.” At least seven members of the Florida Capitol Police stood sentry in the rotunda of the Capitol as the press conference took place — as noted by one lawmaker who spoke.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Tuesday, February 3, 2026
The Flagler Woman’s Club hosts Candidates’ Night for the Flagler Beach election, the Palm Coast City Council meets, Charlie Hebdo and The Economist’s take on American ICE-bound streets.
The Long-Lasting Negative Effects on Children Who Are Detained or Watch Their Parents Deported
When Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents detained Liam Conejo Ramos, a 5-year-old boy who is an asylum seeker, in Minneapolis on Jan. 20, 2026, the photos quickly became a flash point in the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration enforcement activity. Exposure to severe immigration enforcement experiences during childhood carries long-term, significant consequences: These children are twice as likely to suffer from anxiety in young adulthood.
Lord’s Domain: Flagler’s Emergency Management Director Re-Elected President of State Association
Flagler County’s Emergency Management Director, Jonathan Lord, will remain the face of Florida’s disaster-preparedness professionals for another year. Re-elected as President of the Florida Emergency Preparedness Association, Lord’s tenure reflects a decade-long climb through the organization’s ranks. County officials lauded the move as a boon for local safety, even as Lord balances local oversight with statewide domestic security responsibilities.
A Hurricane of a Life: Flagler Bids Farewell to Firebrand Activist Jane Gentile-Youd
Friends, family, and local officials gathered at the Palm Coast Community Center to honor the memory of Jane Gentile-Youd, a formidable community activist known for her fierce advocacy, vibrant personality and her grudges. Speakers highlighted her complex legacy, her enduring marriage to Mark Gentile-Youd, and her impact on Flagler County politics, concluding with a tribute to her transformative and multi-dimensional spirit.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Monday, February 2, 2026
Ex-paramedic James Melady is sentenced, the Beverly Beach town commission meet, free tax preparation services in Flagler County, Gail Wadsworth’s birthday, Al Green’s change.
First a State Guard. Now Florida Wants a State Anti-Terrorism Police.
A proposal by Riverview Republican Rep. Danny Alvarez to create a statewide counterintelligence and counterterrorism unit cleared its first House committee stop. HB 945 would require the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) to establish and administer a Statewide Counterintelligence and Counterterrorism Unit tasked with identifying and disrupting foreign and domestic threats operating in, or targeting, Florida.
On DeSantis’s Supreme Court, Ethnic Diversity Masks Ideological Monoculture
Florida’s judiciary is undergoing a radical transformation as Governor DeSantis replaces retiring moderates with rigid originalists like Justice Adam Tanenbaum. While the court maintains ethnic diversity, it has become ideologically monolithic, systematically dismantling voter-approved mandates and legal precedents. This shift toward a Federalist Society-aligned bench threatens the future of voting rights, reproductive freedom, and the principle of an independent judiciary.
I’m an Ex-FBI Agent. Here’s How Federal Agents Are Undermining Law Enforcement Principles
The killing of Good and Pretti raises legal, tactical and policy questions regarding law enforcement practices by federal agents. These cases illustrate how some federal agents are engaging with the public in a way that undermines established principles of policing and constitutional law.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Sunday, February 1, 2026
The cold-weather shelter opens yet again, ‘I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change,’ At Limelight Theatre, reflections on that lucky old sun, plus Ray Charles and Black Elks speaks on the cold.
The Consequences of Repeated Government Lying
In fast-moving crises, early official statements often become the scaffolding on which public judgment is built. Sometimes those statements turn out to be accurate. But sometimes they do not. When the public repeatedly experiences the same sequence – confident claims, partial disclosures, shifting explanations, delayed evidence, lies – the damage can outlast any single incident.
Saturday in Byblos:
Mme de Sévigné at 400
The 400th anniversary of Mme de Sévigné’s birth is a chance to revisit the enduring vitality of her 17th-century correspondence. While modern communication devolves into emojis and AI-generated snippets, Sévigné’s letters remain vivid psychological studies and prose poems, her voice a warm, essential guide to living, loving, and aging.
Wei, Li, Chen, and Ayala Top Leaderboard as Junior Golfers Take Palm Coast
The City of Palm Coast hosted 74 junior golfers for a Florida State Golf Association tournament at Palm Harbor Golf Club on January 24–25. The event tested players aged 9 to 12 with its challenging layout while drawing families to local businesses. The FSGA returns in March for the teen division.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, January 31, 2026
The shelter opens again tonight as temperatures fall into the low 20s with wind chills in the teens, Kava Kula Palm Coast Grand Opening, the Doomsday Clock is closer to midnight than ever, Sartre on the choice for life.
ICE Is a Paramilitary Force. That Makes Curbing It Difficult.
There is no question that ICE fits the definition of a paramilitary police force. It is a police force under the control of the federal government, through the Department of Homeland Security, and it is heavily militarized, having adopted the weaponry, organization, operational patterns and cultural markers of the regular military. The United States is nearly alone among established democracies in creating a new paramilitary police force in recent decades.
In Florida, Driver’s Tests Will be English-Only Starting Feb. 6
Driver’s license tests in Florida will be administered only in English starting Feb. 6, the state Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles announced Friday.
Unmask ICE. End the Rittenhousing of America.
Masked ICE agents operate with dangerous impunity typical of paramilitaries and militias in third-world countries. It’s time to take off their masks, end their immunity, require bodycams, and to diminish the undisciplined violence of amateurs, prevent any agent hired within the past year to be in the streets.
Florida Ethics Commission Dismisses Unrelated Complaints Against Three Flagler County and City Officials
The Florida Commission on Ethics dismissed three complaints against former Acting Palm Coast City Manager Lauren Johnston, Flagler Executive Airport Director Roy Sieger, and Bunnell Planning Board member Lynn Lafferty, ruling them legally insufficient. The commission found that allegations of conflicts of interest and mismanagement lacked substantive evidence or fell outside their jurisdiction.
The Last Gallery Standing: How GOLA’s Crafty Art Defies the Odds in Flagler Beach
Amid a shrinking local art scene, Marge and Ted Barnhill’s Gallery of Local Art (GOLA) remains a vital hub for creators in Flagler Beach. Now expanding into their adjacent restaurant, GOLA recently featured photographer Sayre Berman’s striking metal prints. Berman’s work, ranging from iconic rock stars to coastal landscapes, seeks to evoke deep, tactile emotions.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Friday, January 30, 2026
The Jane Gentile-Youd Memorial at the Palm Coast Community Center, Branson Illusionist REZA at Fitzgerald Performing Arts Center, Donald O’Brien talks Charter Review Committee on Free For All Friday, Bruce Springsteen sings Minnesota.
The Gun Lobby Against the White House
When various figures in the Trump regime suggested that CBP agents had been justified in shooting Alex Pretti because he was carrying a holstered weapon, they provoked outrage from gun rights activists. And, significantly, many of these people are usually on the same page as the White House about pretty much anything.
DeSantis Signs Third Death Warrant of 2026 Following Record-Breaking Year
Governor Ron DeSantis signed a death warrant for Billy Leon Kearse, convicted of the 1991 murder of a Fort Pierce police officer. Kearse’s execution, scheduled for March 3, follows warrants for Ronald Heath and Melvin Trotter as Florida continues a rapid pace of executions after setting a state record last year.
Florida Board of Governors Moves to Freeze H-1B Visas at Public Universities, Stifling Expertise
The Florida Board of Governors has preliminarily approved a one-year freeze on new H-1B visa hiring for public universities, effective through January 2027. Prompted by Governor Ron DeSantis and President Donald Trump, the move responds to a new $100,000 federal application fee and concerns over “cheap labor.” While university officials intend to study program costs, critics and faculty representatives argue the pause undermines meritocracy and threatens the state’s ability to recruit top-tier global expertise.
Flagler County Triggers Conflict Resolution Over Flagler Beach Annexation as Both Sides Seek to Avoid Lawsuit
The Flagler County Commission voted 4-1 to initiate a formal conflict-resolution process against Flagler Beach regarding the Summertown annexation. Despite Commissioner Andy Dance’s efforts to use a less confrontational agreement to avoid the appearance of litigation, the majority opted for a legal framework to protect the county’s rights. The dispute involves infrastructure and environmental concerns, notably drawing accusations of “bad faith” from the City Attorney regarding the county’s past approval of the same development.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Thursday, January 29, 2026
The cold-weather shelter opens again, joint workshop between the County Commission and Palm Coast Council on animal sheltering and animal control options, Pamela Hemphill refuses a pardon, and what heroic acts are made of, even when we are no heroes.
Florida Lawmakers Advance Measure to Circumvent Minimum Wage for ‘Trainees’
A Florida House subcommittee approved a bill allowing trainees, interns, and work-study participants to waive their rights to the state’s $15 minimum wage in favor of the lower federal floor. Republican supporters argue the current wage limits entry-level opportunities, while Democrats contend the measure exploits workers to enrich corporations. The proposal includes time limits on these lower-pay training periods.
Filming ICE Is Legal. Here’s How to Minimize Risk.
The hard truth for anyone filming law enforcement today is that the same technologies that can hold the state accountable can also make ordinary people more visible to the state. Recording is often protected speech. But recording, and especially sharing, creates data that can be searched, linked, purchased and reused. Video can challenge power. It can also attract it.
Michelle Moore and Calvin Grant Named Flagler Schools’ Teacher and Employee of the Year
Michelle Moore of Belle Terre Elementary School was named the 2025-2026 District Teacher of the Year. Calvin Grant of Flagler Palm Coast High School was named the 2025-2026 District Employee of the Year. Moore and Grant will represent Flagler Schools in the Florida Department of Education’s state-level competitions later this year.
Dispute Over Noises and Name-Calling at Planet Fitness Leads to Child Abuse Arrest
A 48-year-old F-Section woman faces a felony child abuse charge after she confronted her daughter’s 16-year-old ex-boyfriend for making noises during a workout and allegedly slapping him in the parking lot after he called her a name.
Ethics Commission Clears Flagler Beach City Manager Dale Martin in Golf Course Sale
The Florida Ethics Commission has cleared Flagler Beach City Manager Dale Martin of any wrongdoing regarding the $800,000 sale of the Ocean Palms Golf Club. An investigation by the commission found no evidence that Martin secretly shared non-public information or misused his position. The Ethics Commission advocate concluded that the sale was discussed publicly and Martin acted within his administrative authority.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Wednesday, January 28, 2026
The cold-weather shelter is open tonight, with night temperatures in the 20s, the Flagler County Commission talks about suing Flagler Beach, Fitnan O’Toole on the normalization of outrage.
Flagler Fire Rescue’s Lt. Karl Froling Is Florida’s Search and Rescue Responder of the Year
Recognized for his technical expertise and leadership, Froling pioneered standardized animal technical rescue training following a 2012 incident in Volusia County. His work with the University of Florida and the National Fire Protection Association has elevated regional emergency response capabilities and established Flagler County’s rescue team as a premier program within the state.
They’re Polarized, But Americans Share Deep Existential Anxieties
While political polarization has many potential causes, existential anxiety– humanity’s inherent confrontation with mortality, moral responsibility and search for meaning–has received less attention. Higher levels of existential anxiety are associated with indicators of poor mental health, such as symptoms of depression or among those who have experienced a life-threatening event. It is also associated with aggression.
Judge Bars Coastal Family Church Services at Flagler Square, Citing Covenants; Liberty Counsel Appeals
Coastal Family Church is appealing a court injunction that prohibits it from holding services at its Flagler Beach location, in the former Badcock Furniture store. Liberty Counsel argues the ban violates First Amendment rights. But Circuit Judge Sandra Upchurch ruled that private property covenants explicitly prohibit large public assemblies. Flagler Square owners claim a church would overwhelm parking and diminish retail value. The court suggests Flagler Square will likely prevail based on established contract and property law.
Florida House Moves to Ban Certain School Library Books Regardless of Literary or Artistic Value
A Florida House committee has approved HB 1119, a bill establishing a specific legal definition for school library materials deemed “harmful to minors.” The legislation builds on a 2023 law by potentially allowing the removal of books even if they possess literary, artistic, or scientific value. While supporters argue the measure protects students from pornography, critics contend it facilitates censorship and unfairly targets LGBTQ narratives. The bill now heads to the House floor for a final vote.
Palm Coast Charter Committee Wraps Up Work with Several Recommendations That Sharply Diverge from Council
The Palm Coast Charter Review Committee concluded its work, submitting its recommendations to the City Council for the November ballot. Key proposals include eliminating council health benefits, maintaining a $15 million borrowing limit, and requiring physical presence for votes. The City Council will review these advisory suggestions on February 17, determining which amendments will be presented to Palm Coast voters.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Tuesday, January 27, 2026
The School Board holds its pair of workshop and evening meeting, the Flagler County Affordable Housing Committee meets, Weekly Chess Club for Teens, Evan Shinners’s WTF Bach podcast and the killing of classical music.
Minnesota Is Raising Unprecedented Constitutional Issues
A federal judge heard arguments on Jan. 26, 2026, as the state of Minnesota sought a temporary restraining order to stop the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement operation in the state. The administration has sent some 3,000 immigration agents to Minnesota, and attorneys for the state have argued, in part, that it amounts to an unconstitutional occupation, on 10th Amendment grounds.
Black History Museum Bill Advances
A proposal that would move forward with creating a Florida Museum of Black History in St. Johns County drew support from a second Senate committee Monday but awaits action in the House.
Six Strong Finalists Emerge in Search for Next Flagler Beach Police Chief, 3 With Local Ties
Six highly experienced candidates have been shortlisted to become the next Flagler Beach Police Chief. The finalists include internal acting chief Lance Blanchette, local veterans Anthony Raimondo and FBI agent Andrew Klopfer, alongside external leaders Pedro Delgado, Edward Fingers, and Jeffrey VanAuken. The diverse pool features extensive backgrounds in municipal administration, federal investigations, and large-scale state operations. City Manager Dale Martin will make the final selection following upcoming interviews conducted by a peer panel.
Flagler County Unemployment Drops Slightly from 5 1/2-Year High But Labor Force Also Shrinks
Flagler County’s unemployment rate fell to 5.5 percent in December, down from November’s 6.1 percent, though the labor force shrank a bit. State legislators are advancing a bill to further tighten unemployment benefit eligibility. Florida saw anemic job growth in 2025, hampered by losses in construction and manufacturing. Locally, the housing market reflects a slight cooling trend, with inventory rising and homes taking significantly longer to sell.
Sheriff’s Office Answers 19 Questions on Acquisition and Future Operations of Emergency Helicopter
Answering 19 questions submitted by FlaglerLive, the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office addressed concerns regarding its recent $1.4 million helicopter acquisition, half of which was funded by attorney Dan Newlin. The agency defended the lack of a feasibility study by citing the sheriff’s prior air-operations experience in orange County. The agency clarified that the aircraft will focus on proactive patrols and emergency medical transport, and maintained that the independent office acted within its constitutional authority.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Monday, January 26, 2026
The Cold-Weather Shelter opens tonight, Temple Beth Shalom Blessing of the Pets, the Bunnell City Commission, Du Souhait’s 1612 short story about a man who jus can’t stop getting cuckolded even after death.
Again Flouting International Law, Israel Is Razing Lebanon’s Orchards and Wildlife
More than a year after a ceasefire nominally ended active fighting, much of southern Lebanon bears the ecological scars of war. Avocado orchards are gone and beehives destroyed. So, too, are the livelihoods they supported. Fields and forests have disappeared under Israel’s white phosphorus shelling. This destruction indicates a grave breach of international environmental law and raises the question of whether Israel committed war crimes in Lebanon by deliberately targeting natural resources and engaging in environmental warfare.
Mourning for a Vanishing America
The United States is undergoing a self-inflicted social and economic trauma through aggressive mass deportations. By prioritizing performative violence and warrantless incursions over economic stability, the current administration mirrors historical failures like the 1924 Immigration Act whose agents are dismantling the nation’s community fabric in a futile pursuit of an unattainable, exclusionary utopia.
Florida U.S. Rep. Maxwell Frost Assaulted by Racist Maga Supporter
Florida Representative Maxwell Frost was assaulted Friday at a Sundance Film Festival party by a man shouting racist deportation threats. Police arrested Christian Joel Young for the attack, which also targeted a woman at the venue. The incident parallels a surge in aggressive federal immigration enforcement and fatal shootings by agents in Minneapolis.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Sunday, January 25, 2025
The Stetson University Concert Choir in concert with the Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra, Palm Coast Farmers’ Market at European Village, Jules Verne on Greenland.
Stripping DEI from Health Care May Make Americans Sicker
As of Aug. 20, 2025, the National Institutes of Health has terminated over 5,100 grants totaling over US$4.4 billion in research funding. Likewise, the National Science Foundation, which seeks among other things to advance the nation’s health, has rescinded over 1,700 research grants totaling over $1 billion in funding. These terminations have disproportionately affected projects that study the experiences of marginalized groups and funding to scientists from social groups that are underrepresented in academia.




















































