Miami Herald (Sunday)

Two manatees fatally struck by boats in Florida Keys

- BY DAVID GOODHUE dgoodhue@flkeysnews.com Charles Rabin: 305-376-3672, @chuckrabin

Two manatees in the Florida Keys were killed earlier this week in the same area from boat strikes, according to a Key Largo marine mammal rescue organizati­on.

It’s not clear if both mammals — an adult and a juvenile — died from the same boat strike. But, both manatees’ bodies were found near Grouper

Creek a day apart from each other.

The adult female was found Monday, and the juvenile on Tuesday, according to the Dolphins Plus Marine Mammal Responder team.

The nonprofit is one of several in the Keys certified with the Florida

Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission and the National Marine Fisheries Service to respond to marine mammal emergencie­s, including mass strandings.

On Saturday, a witness called the FWC to report a fast-moving boat struck at least one manatee, and “possibly a mother calf pair,” Dolphins Plus said in a Facebook post Friday. The boat’s driver did not stop, witnesses said.

“On scene boaters were helpless and observed one of the critically injured manatees struggling to stay afloat in the mangrove roots,” the post reads.

Volunteers searched the area the rest of the day and Sunday, but it wasn’t until Monday that the first manatee’s body was found, according to the post.

Officer Bobby Dube, spokesman for the FWC in the Keys, said as of now, the agency thinks the manatees were killed in two separate strikes.

“I believe it’s highly unlikely that one boat could run over two separate manatees at the same time,” Dube said.

Anyone who sees an injured or dead marine mammal is asked to call the FWC at 888-404-FWCC.

Tommy Reyes, a soft-spoken progressiv­e sergeant, will lead the largest and most powerful police union in Miami for at least another two years, after holding off a challenge from a suspended firebrand and fellow officer in this week’s runoff election.

Reyes, a 35-year-old sergeant with 14 years on the force, easily outdistanc­ed Capt. Javier Ortiz, collecting two-thirds of the vote to retain his post as president of Miami’s Fraternal Order of

Police. The turnout was strong, with about three-quarters of the 2,000 qualified sworn officers and retirees casting a ballot.

Reyes, who was not feeling well Wednesday, did not comment.

The union vote, usually a behind-the-scenes affair that doesn’t pique much public interest, gained some media attention this year mostly because of the outspokenn­ess of two of the candidates.

Ortiz, who served three terms as union president up until

2017, was suspended indefinite­ly with pay a year ago after a public outburst in the city’s commission chamber in which he referred to Blacks as “Negroes” and explained how he was actually Black and not Hispanic — citing an old racist trope known as the one-drop rule — to the city’s only Black commission­er.

That fiasco was preceded by a series of racially charged social media posts, including one in which the captain referred to 12-year-old Tamir Rice, shot and killed by a Cleveland cop while playing with a toy gun, as a thug.

The win by Reyes sidelines Ortiz from being the lead voice in sensitive contract negotiatio­ns with the very people who were responsibl­e for his suspension.

Ortiz and Reyes made the runoff after being the top two vote-getters in an early December election that also included the vice president of the department’s Black police union, who during last summer’s heated social justice protests accused the city’s current police chief of using the N-word decades ago and lambasted him for not promoting enough Black males to top positions in the department.

Police Lt. Ramon Carr, 48, who has been with the department for 25 years, also referred to Ortiz as a “raving lunatic who doesn’t deserve to be a cop.” He finished third in December and didn’t qualify for the runoff.

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