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Activistas piden moratoria migratoria durante el Mundial y advierten a visitantes sobre posibles redadas en Miami — WPLG Local 10
CommunityWPLG Local 10May 4

Activistas piden moratoria migratoria durante el Mundial y advierten a visitantes sobre posibles redadas en Miami

CORAL GABLES, Fla. — Grupos de derechos civiles están encendiendo las alarmas sobre lo que temen podría ser una arremetida migratoria cuando visitantes internacionales lleguen al sur de Florida a ver la Copa Mundial de la FIFA en junio.El lunes celebraron una conferencia de prensa frente a la sede del comité anfitrión de la FIFA en Coral Gables.Los activistas pidieron una moratoria en los operativos migratorios durante los juegos y eventos relacionados.“Creemos que es una petición muy razonable”, dijo Thomas Kennedy, de la Coalición de Inmigrantes de Florida.La conferencia de prensa sirvió también como advertencia de viaje para los visitantes que vendrán a Miami para los juegos. Los defensores locales dicen que algunas personas podrían no estar seguras y podrían ser detenidas ilegalmente simplemente por estar aquí disfrutando de los partidos o trabajando en el evento.Los activistas dicen que no llaman al pánico, sino a la preparación. Señalan que una vez que lleguen las multitudes y las cámaras para los juegos, podría ser demasiado tarde para advertir.Yareliz Mendez, del Comité de Servicio de los Amigos Americanos, aconsejó a los asistentes conocer sus derechos.“Como, por ejemplo, el derecho a guardar silencio, el derecho a hablar con un abogado, el derecho a comunicarse con su consulado”, dijo Mendez. “Esas son algunas de las cosas que estamos animando a la gente a hacer. Conéctese con su consulado antes de venir.”Local 10 fue a las oficinas de la FIFA en busca de comentarios. Nadie respondió cuando tocamos la puerta. Una llamada telefónica a los organizadores del Mundial tampoco fue devuelta.Copyright 2026 by WPLG Local10.com - All rights reserved.

Katherine LangfordKatherine Langford
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Hombre lanza mesa y televisor desde su balcón en edificio de Miami-Dade y casi golpea a peatones — WPLG Local 10
CommunityWPLG Local 10May 4

Hombre lanza mesa y televisor desde su balcón en edificio de Miami-Dade y casi golpea a peatones

Un hombre de 60 años fue arrestado el fin de semana tras lanzar varios objetos del hogar desde el balcón de su apartamento en un edificio de gran altura, incluyendo una mesa de comedor y un televisor, informaron detectives del Departamento del Sheriff de Miami-Dade.Según el informe de arresto, el incidente fue reportado poco antes de las 6 p.m. del sábado en Brownsville Transit Village, ubicado en 5185 NW 29th Ave.Los detectives respondieron al edificio tras recibir una queja de que los objetos en caída casi golpearon a peatones y vehículos estacionados.Al llegar, los detectives encontraron múltiples objetos del hogar en el suelo, así como una antena de AT&T dañada fijada al exterior del edificio.Según el informe, los detectives fueron al apartamento de Rafael Jorge Gonzalez-Sintes, quien espontáneamente declaró que había lanzado un objeto desde su balcón.El detective que realizó el arresto señaló en el informe que un compañero había respondido a un incidente similar con Gonzalez-Sintes aproximadamente dos semanas antes, cuando presuntamente amenazó con lanzar objetos desde el balcón. Tras ese incidente, fue detenido bajo la Ley Baker de Florida.Las autoridades confirmaron que Gonzalez-Sintes fue arrestado en este último incidente por cargos de lanzar un proyectil peligroso, negligencia culpable, daños criminales a la propiedad y conducta desordenada.Copyright 2026 by WPLG Local10.com - All rights reserved.

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A real WKRP radio comes to Cincinnati, decades after the sitcom about a fictional station — WPLG Local 10
CommunityWPLG Local 10May 4

A real WKRP radio comes to Cincinnati, decades after the sitcom about a fictional station

CINCINNATI (AP) — WKRP isn't dead — as of Monday, it's living on the air in Cincinnati.The call letters from the fictional radio station featured in a CBS sitcom were adopted in time for Monday's morning drive, and co-owner Jeff Ziesmann described listeners as “stoked.”“Our phones have been mobbed this morning, as I'm sure you can imagine,” Ziesmann said.Three stations in Cincinnati, northern Kentucky and Dayton, Ohio, simulcast the station's programming and listeners are now hearing them all identified as WKRP. They will continue to follow the adult-hits format — music from the ‘60s to the ’80s, with an emphasis on the 1970s — they’ve had under “The Oasis” brand.The owners obtained the call letters by making a donation to a North Carolina nonprofit whose low-power radio station had them since 2014. Ziesmann said a full-power station like his can use the same call letters because WKRP-LP in Raleigh is considered a separate class of station under federal regulations.He said the nonprofit donation wasn't a direct purchase of the call letters — it was a purchase of the right to apply to the FCC for the call letters with the North Carolina group's cooperation.The show “WKRP in Cincinnati” ran from 1978 to 1982 and starred Loni Anderson, Howard Hesseman, Tim Reid and Richard Sanders as bumbling newsman Les Nessman.Sanders provided a very Nessman-like comment by email, with the actor saying: “I have spoken with Les Nessman regarding the resurrection of WKRP in Cincinnati. After the failure of his dream to replace Walter Cronkite on the CBS evening news, he is hopeful that he can resume his duties as the News, Sports, Weather, Traffic, and Farm Report Director at WKRP.”“I think we can all hope that WKRP will return to the airwaves with more music and Les Nessman," Sanders said, echoing a running joke on the comedy series.Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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Florida woman intentionally ran over, killed 11 ducklings for making "mess in her yard," sheriff's office says — CBS Miami
CommunityCBS MiamiMay 4

Florida woman intentionally ran over, killed 11 ducklings for making "mess in her yard," sheriff's office says

Local News Florida woman intentionally ran over, killed 11 ducklings for making "mess in her yard," sheriff's office says By Steven Yablonski Steven Yablonski Steven Yablonski is a digital content producer for CBS Miami and the South region. Read Full Bio Steven Yablonski Updated on: May 4, 2026 / 1:06 PM EDT / CBS Miami Add CBS News on Google A Florida woman is facing felony animal cruelty charges after investigators said she intentionally ran over and killed several ducklings with her car. Beverly Sasberry Jacksonville Sheriff's Office/Facebook A couple told the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office that on April 25 they watched as a woman in a red Honda Accord intentionally drove over a group of baby ducklings on Tempest Street.She then allegedly turned her car around "multiple times" to hit them, according to the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office.The couple said that they confronted the woman a few days later about what they had seen, and she allegedly told them that she intentionally killed the ducklings because she was upset that they "made a mess in her yard," according to the sheriff's office.That's when the couple reached out to investigators, and shared surveillance video of the woman running the ducklings over.Investigators were able to determine that Beverly Sasberry, 64, was the owner of the red car. They were able to pull her over on April 30, and after interviewing her they arrested her on 11 counts of cruelty to animals – a felony. In: Florida Animal Cruelty Crime Featured Local Savings

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Showers, storms possible in South Florida on Monday before warm and dry conditions move in later this week — CBS Miami
CommunityCBS MiamiMay 4

Showers, storms possible in South Florida on Monday before warm and dry conditions move in later this week

Local News Showers, storms possible in South Florida on Monday before warm and dry conditions move in later this week By Lissette Gonzalez Lissette Gonzalez Lissette Gonzalez has served as the morning and noon meteorologist for CBS4 News since 2007. Viewers can watch Lissette's weathercasts weekday mornings from 5 to 9 a.m. and again at noon. Read Full Bio Lissette Gonzalez Updated on: May 4, 2026 / 12:49 PM EDT / CBS Miami Add CBS News on Google Keep your umbrella close as scattered showers and thunderstorms will be around South Florida on Monday due to a stalled frontal boundary and plenty of moisture.A few showers popped up on Monday morning, and another round of rain is expected Monday afternoon and evening. The forecast high temperatures in South Florida over the next seven days. CBS News Miami High temperatures will remain below average in the low 80s due to the clouds and wet weather around.There is a moderate risk of rip currents along our Atlantic beaches. Small craft should exercise caution over the Atlantic waters, but there are no alerts or advisories for boaters over the Atlantic waters or Keys waters on Monday.Lingering moisture will lead to passing showers on Tuesday, but the rain won't be as widespread. High temperatures are expected to climb close to the mid-80s. The forecast rainfall chances in South Florida over the next seven days. CBS News Miami It will be drier and warmer mid- to late week as high pressure builds in.The chance of rain will be low on Wednesday and Thursday as high temperatures rise to the upper 80s.Even hotter temperatures are expected at the end of the week as highs climb into the low 90s on Friday and Saturday. Spotty storms will be possible this weekend.Sunday will be warm with high temperatures in the upper 80s with the potential of seeing a few showers. The forecast in South Florida over the next seven days. CBS News Miami In: South Florida Fort Lauderdale Miami Miami-Dade Broward County Featured Local Savings

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Spirit Airlines asks guests not to go to the airport, or expect rebookings — WPLG Local 10
CommunityWPLG Local 10May 4

Spirit Airlines asks guests not to go to the airport, or expect rebookings

DANIA BEACH, Fla. — Spirit Airlines is asking guests on Monday not to go to the airport, or to expect rebookings to other airlines. Instead, the struggling discount carrier — that has twice filed for bankruptcy — announced that they will “automatically process refunds” for flights purchased through Spirit with a credit or debit card.Related link: Information for guests Howard Musgrove said he was in Mississippi and looking forward to his cruise adventure out of South Florida when he learned that his flight was canceled. During a news conference at Newark Liberty International Airport, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced Spirit Airlines had ceased operations at 3 a.m. on Saturday. Related document: Airlines For America plan“Spirit does not have airplanes in the air flying as of this morning. Also, their call centers are closed, and they don’t have staff at ticket counters,” Duff said. “So, if you have a flight scheduled with Spirit Airlines, don’t show up at the airport. There will be no one here to assist you.”Musgrove said Spirit Airlines refunded him directly. “I had to start scrambling to find another ride,” Musgrove said on Monday at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport’s Terminal 4. Duff said United Airlines, Delta, and JetBlue were capping ticket prices for Spirit Airlines customers. “You have to go to their websites to take advantage of these special offers,” Duff said. Copyright 2026 by WPLG Local10.com - All rights reserved.

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FIU launched the careers of these Artemis rocket scientists — Miami Community Newspapers
CommunityMiami Community NewspapersMay 4

FIU launched the careers of these Artemis rocket scientists

FIU Community NewsFlorida International University FeaturedFlorida International University Home FIU launched the careers of these Artemis rocket scientists By Florida International University - May 4, 2026 FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... A dozen College of Engineering & Computing graduates are working on mission-critical aspects of NASA’s Artemis program, the effort to establish a long-term human presence on the moon by 2030. Last month, the Artemis II mission marked a major milestone by sending four astronauts on a 10-day lunar flyby. Get to know a few of the FIU alumni powering the human journey through the cosmos. Claudia Eyzaguirre Claudia Eyzaguirre ’14 helps make spaceflight possible long before a rocket ever leaves the ground. As an element operations manager at NASA, she works across teams, contractors and partner companies to ensure that the many systems inside a spacecraft are assembled correctly and ready for launch. It’s high-stakes, detail-driven work, exactly the kind she began preparing for as a student at FIU. Eyzaguirre interned at NASA twice before landing a full-time role that quickly pulled her into the Artemis program, the agency’s effort to return humans to the Moon. “Thanks to FIU, I’m here,” says the Venezuelan native who arrived in Miami with her family as a teen. “FIU did a great job preparing me. The professors challenged you but were also personable, and they took the time to have office hours and give you the extra help you might need to succeed.” At the university, she built her foundation both inside and outside of the classroom. She was a member of Tau Beta Pi, the engineering honor society, competed in the SAE Aero Design model aircraft competition and conducted undergraduate research on nanomaterials. Claudia Eyzaguirre in front of NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, which carried the Artemis II astronauts into space on April 1, 2026. Her NASA career has taken her across the globe. She was selected for the highly competitive Systems Engineering Leadership Program, which took her to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California. There, she contributed to the Europa Clipper Mission, which aims to study Jupiter’s moon. Through a NASA collaboration, she also spent nearly a year in France working as the director of a 2024 Space Studies program for the International Space University, an institution dedicated entirely to space education. In her role, she managed the development of the curriculum, taught a class and coordinated activities. Already working on the Artemis III mission, she appreciates what the program means to both the country and herself. “I feel so humbled that I was part of something so significant,” she says. “I’m so lucky to say that this is my job.” Edsel Christopher Sanchez Surrounded by FIU swag and sipping cafecito in his office at Kennedy Space Center, Edsel Christopher Sanchez ’03 is exactly where he always imagined he would be. The Miami native realized his childhood dream of working for NASA, but the path started much closer to home. Growing up, he often drove past FIU’s Engineering Center, a constant presence that eventually shaped a big decision. When it came time to apply to college, he chose just one. “FIU has everything I need to be successful,” he told friends. More than two decades later, that belief still holds. “I chose FIU, and it was a slam dunk for me, for my goals, for my passion.” As an electrical engineering major, Sanchez seized a selective NASA internship during his senior year. The six-week experience turned into a job offer after graduation—and into a 22-year career. A self-described “lifer,” he has risen from system engineer to division chief of technical performance and integration. Along the way, he leaned on the same lessons he first developed at FIU: rigorous academics, collaboration and connection. “That’s one of our NASA core values: teamwork. We can’t really launch rockets, we can’t really design stuff without being part of a team.” Caption: Edsel Christopher Sanchez (center) with fellow FIU alumni and NASA co-workers William Denis ’04 (left) and Michael Milbert ’91. At FIU, Sanchez learned not only how to innovate and think creatively, but also how to plug into a broader professional community. Through his involvement in Eta Kappa Nu, Tau Beta Pi and FIU’s chapter of the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers, he built meaningful connections. Today, his division plays a critical role in NASA’s Artemis efforts, ensuring that complex systems operate in sync and infrastructure is ready to support each mission. “We also do all the major construction of infrastructure that supports Artemis…from the liquid hydrogen tank that is used as fuel [to] the construction of the platforms used in vehicle assembly.” His team—about 170 people—functions as a single unit, reflecting the same teamwork he has valued since his college days. In recent years, Sanchez has shifted toward project management, overseeing schedule, scope and cost while keeping progress on track. It’s a role that calls for the kind of leadership skills he began developing as an undergraduate and continues to rely on today. “I’m very thankful for FIU.” Allan Villorin Allan Villorin ’11, MS ’17 credits the Honors College with steering him to the moon. The double alumnus has spent 17 years at NASA. His bachelor’s degree and online master’s in computer engineering set him up perfectly for hi

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Austria expels 3 Russian Embassy staff over suspected antenna spying in Vienna — WPLG Local 10
CommunityWPLG Local 10May 4

Austria expels 3 Russian Embassy staff over suspected antenna spying in Vienna

VIENNA (AP) — Austria expelled three Russian Embassy employees who were suspected of espionage by using antennas on Russian diplomatic buildings, the Foreign Ministry said Monday.The ministry confirmed a report aired Sunday by the Austrian public broadcaster ORF, which said Austrian authorities suspected the three diplomats of engaging in spying activities using antennas on the roofs of the Russian Embassy in Vienna and a diplomatic compound in the Donaustadt district.The installations allowed Russia to intercept data transmitted by international organizations based in Vienna via satellite internet, ORF reported.Austria hosts several U.N. agencies, including the International Atomic Energy Agency, as well as the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.“Espionage is a security problem for Austria. In this government, we have changed course and are taking decisive action against it,” Austria’s Foreign Minister Beate Meinl-Reisinger said in a statement.“We have made this unequivocally clear to the Russian side, also with regard to the array of antennas at the Russian embassy. One thing is clear: it is unacceptable for diplomatic immunity to be used to engage in espionage."Western European nations and Russia have expelled each others’ diplomats on several occasions since Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Austria, a European Union member with a policy of military neutrality, was initially hesitant to take such action but has recently expelled more Russian diplomats.According to ORF, the Russian ambassador was summoned to the Foreign Ministry in April over the diplomats' activities. The Russian side was asked to lift their immunity in order to allow prosecutors to pursue an investigation, but it refused, leading to the expulsions, ORF reported. They have already left Austria, it said.In her statement, the foreign minister said that Austria was currently tightening the espionage law to prevent such cases. The legislation now in place punishes espionage by foreign services only if it targets Austrian interests. According to the Austria Press Agency, changes proposed by the government would call for the similar protections when it comes to international organizations.The Russian Embassy said in a statement on Monday that it had taken note of Austria's “outrageous” decision concerning its employees.Moscow will respond strongly, the statement said, adding, “Vienna bears full responsibility for the further deterioration of bilateral relations, which are already at a historical low.”Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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What Matters More: Your Party, or Your Pocket — Miami Community Newspapers
CommunityMiami Community NewspapersMay 4

What Matters More: Your Party, or Your Pocket

Miami Gardens Community NewsMiami-Dade Community News What Matters More: Your Party, or Your Pocket By Commissioner Oliver G. Gilbert III - May 4, 2026 FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... There’s a quiet bet being made on the American voter. Not in public speeches. Not in campaign  ads. But in strategy rooms, in legislative maps, and in the lines being drawn across this country. The bet is simple. That your party identity matters more to you than your actual condition.  Because if that bet is right, accountability becomes optional. As conversations heat up around  redistricting and control of the House, this is being framed as strategy. Who gets how many  seats. Which party wins. What maps hold power. But underneath all of that is something more  consequential. What happens when elections are shaped in a way that reduces the need to  answer for real life outcomes? When districts are drawn to be safe, the pressure to perform  disappears. When outcomes don’t threaten power, results stop mattering.  And that’s where voters come in. Because the assumption being made is not just about maps. It’s about you. It’s the assumption that if you identify as a Republican, you will vote Republican. No matter what your grocery bill looks like.  No matter what you’re paying at the pump.  No matter what you’re paying for healthcare premiums, or whether you can even afford to see a  doctor when you need one.  No matter whether the wars you were told would end are still dragging on, or new ones keep  pulling America back into conflict.  No matter whether the truth ever fully comes out, including what’s in the Epstein files and who  is held accountable.  No matter whether your rent has gone up, your insurance has spiked, or your wages haven’t  kept pace.  It’s the belief that the issues that divide us can be made to outweigh the conditions we all live  in. That if the conversation is loud enough about who belongs, who is right, and who is wrong,  then it won’t matter what’s happening in your bank account or your daily life. And to be clear,  those issues matter to people. Deeply. But so do the things we share.  Because most Americans, regardless of party, want the same basic things. Affordable living. Safe communities. A fair shot at opportunity. A system that works for them, not just for the  powerful.  That’s the 90 percent.  But the bet being made is that the 10 percent, the issues that divide, can be used to override  the 90 percent we have in common. That if you are pushed hard enough on identity, culture, or  fear, you won’t demand results on the things that actually shape your life.  And if that works, accountability disappears. Because reality doesn’t check your party registration before it hits you. Families don’t  experience rising costs differently based on ideology. Communities don’t absorb policy decisions  differently because of party. And economic pressure doesn’t care how you voted. The effects  are real. And they are shared. That’s why this moment isn’t just about redistricting. It’s about  whether voters will demand performance over allegiance. Whether they will ask a simple  question of anyone seeking power:  Is my life better because of the policies you support?  Not your rhetoric.  Not your party.  Not your ability to win an argument.  Your results.  Because the truth is, the things we argue about the most are often not the things that shape  our lives the most. Healthcare costs don’t care how you vote.  Grocery bills don’t check your party. Gas prices don’t rise differently for Republicans or  Democrats. And the ability to see a doctor, afford your medication, or take care of your family is  not a partisan issue, it’s a human one. That’s the 90 percent. And yet, the expectation is that  your vote will be decided somewhere in the 10 percent.  In the arguments.  In the outrage.  In the things that divide us.  Because if that holds, accountability never has to show up. But if voters decide that their lived  reality matters more than their political identity, then everything changes. Because at that  point, power has to answer to results.  And once that happens, it’s no longer about holding districts.  It’s about delivering for people.   Instagram: OGilbert3 X: OGilbert Facebook: Oliver Gilbert Connect To Your Customers & Grow Your Business Click Here

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