A Miami state senator has proposed boosting the penalties in boating accidents with severe injuries to a third-degree felony punishable up to five years in prison and a $5,000 fine, not a misdemeanor.
“Officer Pino killed the love of my life, the pride of my eye, my family tree. He killed me, too,” Hollis told the Miami Herald. “They tried to shut my mouth, but it’s my duty as a mother ...
But it took two years - and a series of Miami Herald articles chronicling investigative failures - for the State Attorney’s Office to charge Pino with a felony in late October. The Herald found ...
With more boats in the water, a bill in the Florida Legislature would send a message that there can be serious legal ...
Gerstein Justice Building, Thursday, Oct. 31, 2024, in Miami, Florida. Carl Juste
[email protected] Pino’s attorney, Howard Srebnick, sent the Herald a statement Thursday afternoon ...
Prosecutors accuse Hollis of a vendetta against Pino, who was cleared in the shooting of her son. Alie Skowronski/Miami Herald The State Attorney’s Office sent a grieving mother whose son was ...
Doral real estate developer George Pino surrendered in open court Thursday ... However, as a series of Miami Herald articles detailed, key eyewitnesses on the scene were never followed up with ...