Tuesday, July 2, 2024
Weird Stuff

A brothel in a fancy home, turtle on I-95, gator in a trash can: 6 of Florida’s bizarre 2021 headlines – WKMG News 6 & ClickOrlando

Christie Zizo, Digital Editor
Published: 
Updated: 
Christie Zizo, Digital Editor
ORLANDO, Fla. – Many people hoped 2021 would be the year things got back to normal in this world.
Whether that worked out is debatable, but when it comes to Florida news, it definitely seemed to be business as usual.
[TRENDING: Become a News 6 Insider (it’s free!)]
From close encounters with wild animals, to mysterious items washing up on beaches, to bizarre ideas to try and get ahead, weird news in the Sunshine State rarely waivered from the old favorites that make people shake their heads and mutter “oh, Florida!”
We’ve whittled down our exhaustive list of news items from 2021 to six of the most popular and bizarre.
A Jacksonville area pool home is situated in a gated country club of multimillion dollar homes with its own golf course. But behind closed doors, this well-kept property was more than just a fancy home – it was a brothel referred online as the “fungeon,” run by a woman who called herself “Madame D.” She was arrested in January for running an illegal adult business and maintaining a home for prostitution.
In a subsequent interview with partner News4Jax, Domino said none of the women living in the house were forced to have sex with anyone, and they did not receive money in exchange for sex.
Domino said she had been building an education website on prostate and sexual health.
“I’m a dominatrix. I’m Madame D. I’m a madame because my interest is in caring and raising women to become leaders. I want to give them the guidance and all the avenues that they need to be able to support themselves,” Domino said.
The rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine was a major milestone for science in 2021. Many people were anxious to get vaccinated – and some were not willing to wait their turn.
In February, as seniors lined up for their chance to get shots, Orange County health officials admitted that two younger women dressed up as older women to try and get the vaccine.
The costumes included glasses, bonnets and gloves. Vaccinators realized the women looked suspicious and flagged them for the sheriff’s office. It may not have been the first time for the women either – they were coming in for their second dose.
In the pantheon of strange things hitting your car while driving on a highway, a turtle probably tops the list.
Back in April, a 71-year-old woman suffered a gash to her head when a turtle hit the windshield of the car she was riding in on I-95 in Volusia County.
Other than the gash, the woman wasn’t seriously hurt, just a little shell-shocked. And somehow the turtle only suffered a few scratches to its shell. It was released back into the wild.
This is a cautionary tale about making sure, when you sell something, the description is absolutely a description is absolutely accurate.
In April, a man bought a building formerly owned by the city of Brooksville for $55,000 with plans to turn it into a gym.
But it turned out that wasn’t all he purchased. Hernando County informed him he had also inadvertently purchased the city’s entire water tower site – including the water tower.
The buyer was only supposed to get part of the property.
The city blamed the goof on a bad legal description.
Fortunately for the city, the buyer transferred the water tower site back to Brooksville.
Florida wildlife officials will say this was a perfect example of what not to do with an alligator – but the internet loved it anyway.
The video from September showed a Lake County man using a recycling bin to catch an alligator at a home.
🐊Reminder: Alligators are not recyclable in your blue lid cart.

Please call the @MyFWC Nuisance Alligator Hotline at 866-392-4286 for assistance. ❤️ https://t.co/lMF3YNyaeV
The man is seen pushing the open trash can on the gator, which backs into the can. The man then turns the can upright and holds the lid down.
The video, which got millions of views, prompted Orange County to respond:
Reminder: Alligators are not recyclable in your blue lid cart. Please call the @MyFWC Nuisance Alligator Hotline at 866-392-4286 for assistance.”
FWC also chided the video, reminding people to call them so a real trapper can be sent.
All sorts of things wash up on Florida beaches: bottles with messages in them. Boats. Drugs. But this innocuous-looking metal box caused a stir when it washed up on a Brevard County beach in November.
The object was about 20 feet long.
What is it? Officials’ best guess is it’s a ballast tank from a ship. Now they believe the box was used in offshore dredging.
Since it’s empty it wasn’t a public hazard but moving it would not be easy.
According to staff at Canaveral National Seashore, it’s still out there.
Copyright 2021 by WKMG ClickOrlando – All rights reserved.
There’s more than one way to capture a gator.
Recent storms may have pushed a big part of a ship onto a secluded Central Florida beach — and locals are left with questions.
It’s not unusual for rocks and other debris to crash through a windshield and injure a driver or passenger — but a turtle?
It’s a luxury home in a gated country club complete with a sparkling pool and nestled between million-dollar properties that back up to a golf course.
A small town in Florida accidentally sold its water tower in a blundered real estate transaction.
With bonnets on their heads and bespectacled faces, two young women pretended to be seniors so they could get the coronavirus vaccine, and it seems their ruse may have actually worked at least one time.
Christie joined the ClickOrlando team in November 2021.
email
If you need help with the Public File, call 407-291-6000.
Copyright © 2022 ClickOrlando.com is managed by Graham Digital and published by Graham Media Group, a division of Graham Holdings.

source

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *