2 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● orlandoweekly.com
6/14
CLASSIC ALBUMS LIVE: PRINCE “PURPLE RAIN”
COMING SOON
6/22 PANDORA Y FLANS: INESPERADO USA TOUR
6/28 THE BRIAN MCKNIGHT 4
7/12 TONY HINCHCLIFFE *RESCHEDULED DATE*
7/13 JORGE CELEDON: TOUR USA 2024
7/19 CLASSIC ALBUMS LIVE: THE LITHIUM EXPERIENCE
7/20 ASIA
7/26 THE MARÍAS
7/27 D’AYDRIAN HARDING: STAY SOBER TOUR
8/23 BERES HAMMOND: FOREVER GIVING THANKS TOUR
8/24 TEMS: BORN IN THE WILD TOUR
8/31 THE PSYCHEDELIC FURS
9/03 COAL CHAMBER WITH FEAR FACTORY, TWIZTID, WEDNESDAY 13 & BLACK SATELLITE
9/07 YOUNG MIKO: XOXO TOUR
9/08 YOUNG MIKO: XOXO TOUR
9/14 SOMETHING CORPORATE: OUT OF OFFICE TOUR
9/24 LORNA SHORE: PAIN REMAINS 2024 WITH WHITECHAPEL, KUBLAI KHAN & SANGUISUGABOGG
6/21 ACE FREHLEY WITH SICK DOGS
9/27 BEAT: 80’S KING CRIMSON WITH ADRIAN BELEW, TONY LEVIN, STEVE VAI & DANNY CAREY
10/05 DANIEL HABIF: ASCENDER WORLD TOUR 2024
10/06 BACILOS: US TOUR
10/15 TESTAMENT / KREATOR
10/25 FELIPE ESPARZA: AT MY LEISURE WORLD TOUR
11/01 DANNY OCEAN
11/02 GREEICY: YELIANA
11/05 BABYMETAL WITH SCENE QUEEN
11/06 DAVID KUSHNER
11/07 MANUEL MEDRANO: EL CONCIERTO
11/08 RUSSELL PETERS: RELAX WORLD TOUR
11/14 O.A.R: FLORIDA TOUR ‘24
11/15 WHITNEY CUMMINGS: BIG BABY TOUR
11/23 GIGGLY SQUAD PODCAST LIVE: CLUB GIGGLY *2 SHOWS*
12/07 LEWIS BLACK: GOODBYE YELLER BRICK ROAD, THE FINAL TOUR!
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NEWS+ VIEWS 7 Your Words Letters to the editor, plus a comic by Clay Jones 9 ICYMI Downtown Orlando to launch a new micro-transit service, Board of Ed makes bad choice on how to teach history of slavery, and other news you may have missed; plus “This Modern World” 11 The bare minimum Florida’s majority-Republican Legislature has, yet again, ignored an attempt to reestablish a state labor department to take on wage theft 15 “A public nuisance” Orange County Sheriff’s Office lobbied the Legislature for new way to crack down on nightclubs — and won ARTS+ CULTURE 17 Live Active Cultures An Orlando Fringe Festival post-mortem: Critics’ Choice award winners, an “ineffable vibe shift” and three pieces of advice for next year FOOD+ DRINK 21 Chicken. Run! Pho Ga Hien Vuong specializes in singular slurps 21 Tip Jar Restaurant dish and food events around town FILM+ MUSIC 33 Uncut jams JK and the Contraband bring an alternative mixtape to groovy, jazzy life 35 This Little Underground The severe music of Orlando’s Blade of Phanes comes from a darkness that has little to do with image or style BACK PAGES 36 Selections of the Week Our picks of the best things to do this week 38 Down the Road Big concerts coming up this year 38 The Week Plenty of event listings, plus Kieran Castaño’s “Ripley’s Believe It or Not!” 41 Classified advertisements 21 36 38 37 4 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● orlandoweekly.com
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orlandoweekly.com ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY 5
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6 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● orlandoweekly.com
your words ]
TO THE EDITOR: TRUMP’S GUILTY VERDICT SHOULD DISQUALIFY HIM FROM OFFICE
Donald Trump was found guilty by a jury of everyday Americans on 34 felony counts. He is finally being held accountable for one of his many illegal schemes to gain and hold onto power. His conviction is a reminder that no one — including a former president — is above the law. And it’s another reminder that Trump still poses a major threat to our democracy.
When he was President, Trump attacked our fundamental freedoms, from our freedom to vote in 2020 when he attempted to overturn the will of the people, to appointing three extreme Supreme Court justices that overturned Roe v. Wade and abortion rights for millions of Americans.
The New York trial may be over, but Donald Trump still faces three additional indictments and 54 criminal charges, including federal charges for his efforts to incite violence and overturn the will of voters after he knew he’d lost the 2020 election. And on top of all that, he’s STILL running for president. Don’t let a convicted fraudster hold the highest office in our land.
— Albert Valladares, Orlando
This isn’t just about “hush money” payments. It’s about breaking the law to hide the truth from the American people 11 days before a presidential election. Trump has a clear pattern of lying to the American people and trying to undermine our elections in order to cling to power.
Donald Trump is a convicted criminal who still poses a massive threat to our fundamental freedoms. We can’t let him hold the highest office in our land in 2025. It’s up to all of us to hold him accountable and defeat him at the ballot box in November.
— Dawn Lillis, Altamonte Springs
Donald Trump was found guilty of all 34 felony counts of falsifying his company’s business records to keep information from voters that he knew would
harm his 2016 presidential campaign. Lying on official business filings is a serious criminal offense and another clear example of Trump’s pattern doing anything to gain or stay in power. No one is above the law, and any other American would be punished if they committed the same crime.
Despite the guilty verdict, Trump is still very much running for president. If he is elected to a second term, our democracy would be in serious peril. Trump has pledged to weaponize the Department of Justice to seek revenge against his political opponents, pardon himself and his allies for crimes they commit, and deploy the military against demonstrators exercising their First Amendment rights — all while purging the federal government of anyone who doesn’t agree with him. There’s too much at stake to let Trump return to the Oval Office.
— Bonita Judon, Orlando
Trump’s conviction in New York should remind us all that no one — including a former president — is above the law. It should also remind us of the danger that Trump still poses to our democracy.
In the final weeks of the 2016 election, Trump covered up his affair with Stormy Daniels to dupe voters and improve his chances of winning the election. As it turns out, this would only be his first foray into undermining our elections.
This is a pattern. The jury has done their job to hold Trump accountable. Now, it’s time for the American people to do our part and hold him accountable at the ballot box.
— Odalix Bautista, Orlando
Donald Trump was found guilty of all 34 felony counts of falsifying his company’s business records to keep information from voters that he knew would harm his 2016 presidential campaign. Lying on official business filings is a serious criminal offense, and any other American would be punished if they committed the same crime.
— Alexander Santiago, Orlando
For clean water, please follow Orange County’s fertilizer rules.
FERTILIZE RESPONSIBLY
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orlandoweekly.com ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY 7
8 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● orlandoweekly.com
Downtown Orlando to launch a new micro-transit service, Board of Ed makes bad choice on how to teach history of slavery, Orlando Museum of Art briefly hacked and more news you may have missed.
BY MCKENNA SCHUELER, JESSICA BRYCE YOUNG AND THE NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA
» Downtown Orlando may get new on-demand, eco-friendly shuttle service City officials are considering launching a new, on-demand shuttle service in downtown Orlando in the hopes of expanding transit options and visitation in the downtown core. The program, operated by micro-transit company Circuit Transit, would begin with five electric shuttles that would run seven days a week, for 10 hours per day, from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. to start. The initial fare for the eco-friendly service is “anticipated” to be $1 a ride for passengers, according to city records, although some cities that use this service offer rides fare-free. Circuit Transit has similar shuttle programs in West Palm Beach, Fort Lauderdale and more than 40 other locations across the country. According to city records, the goal of the program is to increase transit options for residents and guests, help address the lack of parking, increase visitors to downtown Orlando and help support local businesses that have struggled to stay afloat or otherwise feel that downtown has become a less-than-ideal place to be. The program would cost the city $595,712 annually, if approved. A city spokesperson confirmed the concept will go before the Orlando City Commission for a vote on June 10.
» Orlando Museum of Art social media hacked to promote ‘meme coin whale pumps’
Orlando Museum of Art, no stranger to mishaps and mess-ups in the past year or so, appeared to be the victim of a social media hack last week — just days before their biggest annual event, the Florida Prize Exhibition. Wednesday night, the official Orlando Museum of Art Instagram page posted a video promoting a new crypto coin, and the URL in their profile was changed from omart. org to “t.me/s/MemeCoin_Whale_Pumps.” Was it a commentary on how crypto-mining is accelerating global warming? Maybe an unpacking of the way NFTs cratered the art market (sort of like the way forged art creates an inherent instability in art as an investment)? Comments on the video, which was joined the next day by a grid post of an NFT-like image of Pepe the Frog sitting on a whale icon, range from “omg” to “SMDH” to “guys, this is just a new style of performance art.” Within minutes after we published a story online about the hack, the video was scrubbed from OMA’s feed, though in the next couple of days, more videos and posts joined the others, touting the get-rich-quick properties of these meme coins. A museum spokesperson responded to our query about the situation, sharing that their digital team was working with Meta to resolve the situation, and by the weekend, the museum had regained control of its account.
» Florida Board of Education replaces ‘gender’ with ‘sex’ in high school athletics bylaws amid federal dispute
The Florida Board of Education, led by former Republican state rep. Manny Diaz Jr., approved changes in the Florida High School Athletic Association’s bylaws last week that include replacing mentions of the word “gender” with the word “sex,” amid a larger dispute between federal and state officials. The changes came as Florida and other Republican-led states are challenging a Biden administration rule that would help carry out Title IX, a decades-old law that bars discrimination in education programs based on sex. The federal rule, in part, would require that discrimination on the basis of gender identity be included under the broader definition of sex discrimination. Diaz Jr., the state’s education commissioner, described the federal regulations as “harmful.” New changes to the FHSAA bylaws included an update to the organization’s policy on “nondiscrimination.” The updated bylaw states, “The association will not discriminate in its governance policies, programs and employment practices on the basis of age, color, disability, sex, national origin, race, religion, creed, or educational choice. Each school is responsible to determine independently its own policies regarding nondiscrimination.” During the education board’s meeting last week, one teacher from Miami Dade Public Schools criticized the bylaw changes after they were approved, calling it “just another way to push the culture wars.” The teacher also warned that Florida’s public schools could lose federal funding if the state doesn’t comply with Title IX. Florida is one of four states that filed a federal lawsuit last month challenging the new Title IX rule, alleging in part that the Biden administration overstepped its legal authority in extending the regulations to apply to discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity. An Alabama federal judge will hear arguments July 1 on a request by the states and other plaintiffs for a preliminary injunction against the rule.
» Teachers union criticizes Florida for keeping history standard touting ‘benefits’ of slavery
In related news, the president of the Florida Education Association, a statewide teachers’ union, last Wednesday criticized the State Board of Education for not reversing course on a controversial history standard approved last summer. The board, meeting in Miami, signed off on some changes to social-studies standards for public schools. But the changes did not revise a sixth-grade African American history standard that drew backlash because of its questionable approach to the concept of slavery. The backlash centered on a standard that says, “Instruction includes how slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.” FEA President Andrew Spar, a former music teacher for over two decades, criticized the standard, which remains part of the larger instructional guidelines. “That is a concern, as well as making sure that our students have a complete and honest history around both the African American experience and all experiences in our country,” Spar said. He urged members of the board to talk with teachers across the state about the standards. Board Vice Chairman Ryan Petty argued that rules and standards approved by the board are crafted with input from educators. “The notion that we’re not out engaged with educators and engaged with teachers in developing these rules is a false notion,” Petty said.
[ news + views ] orlandoweekly.com ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY 9
10 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● orlandoweekly.com
THE BARE MINIMUM
Florida’s majority-Republican Legislature has, yet again, ignored an attempt to reestablish a state labor department to take on wage theft
BY MCKENNA SCHUELER
Florida hasn’t had a state labor department in over 20 years, nor a statewide mechanism to combat wage theft, and a repeat attempt by Democrats to reestablish one during this year’s legislative session was ignored for a fourth year in a row.
Florida Rep. Angie Nixon, D-Jacksonville, filed a bill last November that sought to re-establish a state Department of Labor. This is a department that most states in the U.S. have, but which was dissolved in Florida by Florida lawmakers and former Gov. Jeb Bush in 2002 as his administration instead chose to identify programs that could be “eliminated, consolidated, or privatized.”
The process of the department’s decentralization was initiated during the 1999 legislative session.
Its eventual abolition was accomplished through the passage of several bills in the years after, including a bill during the 2000 session — a reportedly tumultuous affair which left state legislators “tense, tired, and often in tears,” according to the Sun-Sentinel.
Jacksonville Rep. Nixon and Orlando Sen. Victor Torres — a former Lynx bus driver and self-described “labor guy” — have filed legislation to re-create a state labor department or agency every year since 2021, each time without any luck.
Their legislation has been ignored and kicked to the wayside, denied even the dignity of a single committee hearing by their mostly Republican colleagues, who outnumber Democrats in the state Legislature more than two to one.
This year was no different. Except that Nixon withdrew her original bill to reestablish a state labor department and instead pushed for the development of a state Division of Labor Standards — a more practical proposal, perhaps. Torres matched the move with his own bill filed in the Senate.
Under their bills, the state would have been directed to create a division within the Department of Commerce empowered to meaningfully enforce Florida’s minimum wage, and to “investigate and ascertain the wages of persons employed in any occupation or place of employment in the state as the division finds necessary and proper.”
According to disclosure reports, the only lobbyists who bothered registering to track the
bill were four lobbyists for the Florida Chamber of Commerce — a powerful and deep-pocketed business lobbying group that broadly opposes wage mandates.
The cost of creating such a division is unclear, because the bill has never been subject to a staff analysis — that’s reserved for bills that get a hearing.
The overall costs of lacking a state labor department are also unquantified, but can be seen at the very least in the lack of state action taken to combat wage theft — best explained as the failure of an employer to pay an employee what they are lawfully owed. This can include wages, overtime compensation, and tips, but it can also occur in the form of misclassification — when an employer incorrectly identifies and treats an employee as a contractor — or denying an employee mandatory breaks.
Wage theft violations are most frequently discovered in the food service, construction, healthcare and retail industries, according to the U.S. Department of Labor — which helps enforce wage and hour laws in Florida, but is incapable of serving as a replacement for a state enforcement mechanism.
The Wild West of labor law
Today, Florida still doesn’t have any kind of state department or agency that is authorized to crack down on wage theft — unless you make minimum wage.
The Florida Attorney General’s Office, currently led by Republican Attorney General Ashley Moody, is empowered to investigate cases of minimum wage violations only — and public records show even this occurs rarely.
Kylie Mason, communications director for the Attorney General’s Office, confirmed to Orlando Weekly that the office recovered wages for exactly one working adult in 2023 — just about $500 for a Hungry Howie’s delivery driver in Pasco County who was paid a sub-minimum wage.
The AG’s Office, the only state enforcement mechanism for Florida’s minimum wage, recovered unpaid wages for exactly one person last year.
Women, people of color and immigrants, who are over-represented in Florida’s low-wage jobs, are particularly vulnerable to being cheated of pay by law-breaking employers.
When Florida’s state labor department was dissolved, so too was a state agency empowered to investigate complaints of wage theft in a state that now boasts a labor force of over 11 million.
While some programs in the state labor department were handed off to other agencies or not-for-profits with its dissolution, a mechanism for enforcing wage and hour laws was not.
In addition to sending warnings to employers, the office is also authorized under law to bring a civil action, seek injunctive relief, and impose a fine of $1,000 per offense, payable to the state, for willful violations.
Even this single action to recover wages, however, is somewhat exceptional for the Attorney General’s Office — which serves as the only statewide option for recovering unpaid wages beyond taking private civil action.
Although the office has taken an aggressive position on retail theft — and more recently, Starbucks’ diversity, equity and inclusion policies — it doesn’t openly advertise its ability to recover unpaid wages for those who are denied Florida’s minimum wage.
In fact, there’s little to no evidence that the Attorney General’s Office previously recovered a single cent through direct enforcement actions.
“The minimum wage has largely been unenforced for, really, as long as Florida’s had a minimum wage,” Alexis Tsoukalas, a policy analyst for the Florida Policy Institute who’s extensively researched the issue, told Orlando Weekly. Florida’s minimum wage — previously tied to the federal standard — was first established through a ballot referendum in 2004.
Emails that Orlando Weekly obtained through a public records request show the franchise owner of the pizza spot failed to raise minimum pay for her tipped delivery drivers when the minimum wage increased on Sept. 30, 2022, from $6.98 per hour to $7.98 per hour for tipped employees.
Under a ballot referendum approved by Florida voters in 2020, the minimum wage is set to rise $1 each year on Sept. 30 through Sept. 30, 2026. Today the tipped minimum wage is $8.98 per hour, and $12 per hour for nontipped employees.
The Hungry Howie’s owner played dumb in email communications with the Attorney General’s Office, which gently reminded her that in addition to raising minimum pay for the driver who filed a complaint, she’d best do the same for her other delivery drivers, too.
“I recommend that you make private efforts to remedy any other employees whose wages were similarly underpaid to avoid further complaints being levied against you,” warned Rebecca Snyder, an attorney in the Attorney General Office’s consumer protection division.
Moody’s top-cop predecessor Pam Bondi, a longtime Donald Trump ally who more recently served as a defense lawyer for the former president during his first impeachment trial, even sided with business groups over workers in efforts to combat wage theft.
Today, the office that doesn’t advertise its ability to recover unpaid pay for the state’s lowest-paid workers receives few complaints. Over email, Mason told Orlando Weekly that the Attorney General’s office received exactly 12 complaints of minimum wage violations in 2023.
Eight of those cases have been closed, with four still under review as of early April. Four of the closed cases, per Mason, were complaints related to other forms of wage theft, while another case was settled privately. Another person was unresponsive, and another had filed their complaint anonymously, which isn’t allowed if you want to recover unpaid wages.
Only one person — the Hungry Howie’s driver — recovered wages with the Attorney General Office’s help. The whole process took about eight months from when the driver filed the complaint in March to when he confirmed with the office over email in November that he’d received a check for $544.29 in owed wages from his panicked employer.
Several people who filed complaints with the Attorney General’s office last year, including the Hungry Howie’s driver, shared that they had also contacted the federal Department of Labor for help.
One woman said in her complaint that the feds had referred her to the state AG’s office because she makes more than the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour, but was paid
[Continued on page 13]
[ news + views ]
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[Continued from page 11]
below Florida’s minimum, which is several dollars higher.
This is one of the gaps in state enforcement that the federal government can’t fill.
Another woman — a restaurant employee — also said her case was denied by the feds, with a federal investigator citing their “current workload” and a statute of limitations on federal wage and hour cases as an excuse.
A spokesperson for the U.S. labor department’s Wage and Hour Division told Orlando Weekly in April that their division recovered over $16.8 million in back wages and damages for more than 11,000 workers in Florida last fiscal year and assessed employers over $1 million in additional civil monetary penalties.
The spokesperson added, however, that there are currently over 9,000 employees in Florida for whom their division has money waiting to be claimed from the last three years of wage theft cases.
“The agency makes every effort to locate and notify all employees who are due back wages. If we cannot find an employee, we hold their back wages for three years while we continue our efforts to locate them,” the spokesperson wrote in an email.
“After three years, if we remain unable to find the person, we are required to send the money to the U.S. Treasury.”
Satisfied with the bare minimum
Florida isn’t the only state that does a poor job in cracking down on wage theft through its own means. Blue states like California and New York — both of which have state labor departments — have also faced scrutiny in recent years over their ability to ensure employers pay up.
Still, a 2017 report from the Economic Policy Institute found that, out of the 10 most populous states, minimum wage workers were least likely to be paid the bare minimum in Florida, with wage theft affecting an estimated one in four of Florida’s low-wage workers — our neighbors, friends and family members.
Nationwide, the report found that employers are estimated to steal billions from workers every year through various forms of wage theft. In the absence of a state mechanism, some cities and counties in Florida have stepped up to create their own local wage recovery programs. Osceola County — an area with a majority Hispanic population south of Orlando — launched its modest wage recovery program in 2015.
An annual report shared with county commissioners shows that, through direct county efforts and hearings, employers were ordered to pay out nearly $80,000 to eight workers from March 2023 to March 2024 who had filed complaints with the county.
The county program received 27 complaints of wage theft during that time frame, and 11 of those still remained open as of March. Nine others were identified as “deficient,” one was withdrawn or dismissed, and five complaints were settled privately.
Through the organizing efforts of mostly labor and immigrant rights groups, similar programs have been established in a half-dozen other counties, including Hillsborough, Pinellas, Palm Beach, Alachua, Broward and Miami-Dade.
Republican state leaders, however, haven’t appeared interested in addressing the issue, and most Democrats — who have little voting power in Florida’s GOP-dominated state Legislature on their own — generally don’t bring it up that often either.
for employers they enter into contracts with, effective Sept. 30, 2026.
Such mandates — known as local “living wage” ordinances — generally require local government contractors to pay their employees a pay rate that’s a few dollars more than Florida’s legal minimum of $12 an hour.
The bill also blocks local governments from requiring employers to adopt heat safety policies for outdoor laborers, as well as those who work indoors with few or no cooling measures, like warehouse workers.
According to emails Orlando Weekly obtained through a separate request, filed post-session, the bill was a priority of the “entire business community” in Florida.
“HEAT cannot die,” wrote Carol Bowen, lobbyist for the Associated Builders and Contractors in Florida, in a text message to the Florida House’s chief of staff the night before the last day of the legislative session.
“The entire business community is in lock step on this.”
The bill was one of the last to pass the next day.
‘Let’s get this straight: There is zero appetite from the majority party to meaningfully increase worker protections.’ — Sen. Victor Torres
The Chamber, and other business lobbying groups, have sought to ban local wage recovery programs like Osceola County’s through similar preemption legislation.
Such preemption bills date back to at least 2011, one year after Miami-Dade County established the very first local wage recovery program in the state.
Businesses complained following its initial passage, and the Florida Retail Federation even sued, unsuccessfully, to have the law invalidated. Within less than three years, the program reportedly ordered employers to pay more than $1.5 million in back wages to workers who had been cheated of pay.
The Florida Chamber of Commerce — a powerful business lobbying group — has also openly celebrated legislators’ neglect of bills like Nixon’s.
In their 2024 legislative recap, the Chamber reported to its members that Nixon’s Division of Labor Standards bill was “defeated” — a very good thing in their view, because the Chamber had opposed it.
As the Chamber saw it, the creation of such a division would negatively impact Florida’s “business-friendly climate” by establishing “new layers of government bureaucracy that interfere in the employer-employee relationship.”
The Chamber also helped draft a bill this year that will block cities and counties from maintaining or enacting wage and benefit mandates
Sen. Torres, who is term-limited from running for reelection this fall, told Orlando Weekly that he was proud to file bills over the last four years to reestablish a state agency to help address pressing labor issues. But with a disinterested GOP majority, he believes the makeup of the state Legislature needs to change before such an effort can really move forward.
“Let’s get this straight, there is zero appetite from the majority party to meaningfully increase worker protections and that won’t change until the legislature changes,” Torres told Orlando Weekly in a statement.
“In one of the hottest states in the country, the legislature has gone as far as preventing local governments from implementing their own heat protections for workers, and has now deeply weakened child labor laws in our state.”
A state labor department, he added, “would be able to enforce the few worker protections we do have, help protect against wage theft, and finally be a state advocate to help workers settle disputes.”
mschueler@orlandoweekly.com
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orlandoweekly.com ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY 13
14 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● orlandoweekly.com
‘A PUBLIC NUISANCE’
Orange County Sheriff’s Office lobbied the Legislature for new way to crack down on nightclubs — and won
BY MCKENNA SCHUELER
The Orange County Sheriff’s Office lobbied the Florida legislature to make it easier for them to crack down on law-breaking nightclubs and hookah lounges, according to public disclosures, and now that they’ve succeeded, Orange County commissioners are getting on board.
Last week, the Orange County board of commissioners approved an update to county law, adding the unlawful sale of alcohol on two or more occasions within a 12-month period to the county’s definition of what constitutes a “public nuisance.”
This gives enforcement action for illegally selling alcohol not just to the Orange County
motioned to approve the changes last week. Four commissioners — Emily Bonilla, Mayra Uribe, Christine Moore and Maribel Gomez Cordero — voted with Demings to approve them. Commissioners Mike Scott and Nicole Wilson were absent for the vote.
These moves by the county didn’t begin at a local level, but came in response to a new state law approved by Republican Gov. DeSantis this year (SB 1090) that increases penalties for the unlawful sale of alcoholic beverages and authorizes local governments to declare the crime a public nuisance.
Effective July 1, business establishments that are declared a “public nuisance” in Orange County will be subject to fines of up to $15,000 and liens. The unlawful sale of alcohol by commercial establishments — a term that is not defined under the new measure — will also change from a second-degree misdemeanor charge to a third-degree felony charge.
A third-degree felony is punishable by a fine of up to $15,000 for a first violation and up to five years’ prison time. A second or subsequent violation will constitute a second-degree felony, punishable by a fine of up to $20,000 and up to 15 years’ imprisonment.
Under current law, a third-degree felony is punishable by up to five years’ prison time and a fine of up to $5,000. Effective July 1, that maximum fine will increase.
Perhaps more interesting to local readers, however, is that these changes to state law — thus paving the way for changes on a local level — appear to have been driven by a call to action last fall from the Orange County Sheriff’s Office, with Orange County Sheriff John Mina demanding state legislators take action.
“Even if we shut these places down, they’re just opening back up the next day,” Mina told Spectrum News 13 in October, following a shooting at a West Orlando hookah lounge that injured three people.
Sheriff’s Office investigators had said they believed the hookah lounge was illegally selling alcohol without a proper license. Mina argued that current penalties for such a crime weren’t enough to deter violations.
sheriff’s office in the state to do so.
Sheriff’s Office attorney Moore wasn’t shy about this in his presentation to county commissioners last week, admitting they went to their legislative team to look for “legislative solutions” that would “provide the deputies some better tools to kind of address these clubs.”
The bill addressing their complaints, sponsored by Republican Sen. Jonathan Martin of Fort Myers, was approved by state legislators in both chambers unanimously, and signed into law by DeSantis in April.
Under Orange County code, defining the unlawful sale of alcohol a “public nuisance” will allow the county to pursue code violations “and other abatement strategies” (according to a county comptroller handout) in addition to siccing sheriff’s deputies on clubs that sell alcohol without a license or in any other way that violates local law.
The unlawful sale of alcohol at a place or premise may only be declared a public nuisance, under the new changes, if such a sale occurs on two or more occasions within a 12-month period.
Other things described as a public nuisance under county code include any place or premise alleged to have been used for prostitution or as a spot where people illegally possess or use controlled substances, among other things.
According to county code, the opportunity to allege a “place or premise” has become a public nuisance is open to any Orange County resident, employee, or officer. Doing so requires filing a complaint with the sheriff’s office, which will then review the complaint for “legal sufficiency.”
If the complaint clears that hurdle, the sheriff’s office will then notify the establishment of the complaint, and give them a “reasonable time” (this isn’t specified) to correct whatever has caused a “public nuisance.” If the establishment doesn’t do this, the sheriff’s office is authorized to refer the case to the county’s Nuisance Abatement Board and request a hearing. New changes would provide the county — in addition to the criminal justice system — with more regulatory power to go after business establishments that break the law.
Sheriff’s Office, but also the county’s nuisance abatement board. The penalties for unlawfully selling alcohol at establishments — including the sale of alcohol without proper licensing — will also increase.
Austin Moore, attorney for the Orange County Sheriff’s Office, told commissioners last week that the sheriff’s office has seen “an explosion” in after-hours clubs in the county over the last three or four years, bringing with them violent crime, drug sales, even rumors of human trafficking.
“Because the money is so good, everyone is trying to get into this business,” Moore explained.
Mayor Jerry Demings, a former Orange County Sheriff and Orlando police chief,
“They don’t care about the little $500 fine,” Mina continued. “But if we’re putting owners and employees in jail awaiting felony charges, which could lead up to prison, we think there [sic] may have greater consequences.”
A staff analysis of the new state measure reveals that the OCSO’s call to action made a difference.
The Spectrum News article, reporting on the law enforcement agency’s demands last fall, was cited in the bill analysis, which notes that representatives of the OCSO “indicated that many after-hours clubs and hookah lounges serve alcoholic beverages without a liquor license and that the current penalty of a second degree misdemeanor has had little deterrent effect.”
Public lobbying disclosure records show the Orange County Sheriff’s Office also lobbied in favor of the measure as it moved through the state Legislature this year — and was the only
If violations continue, the nuisance abatement board would also have the authority to shut the establishment down. But the goal is to bring them into compliance first, before such threats or actions are necessary.
Such changes come as the city of Orlando similarly takes steps to reign in the nightlife scene in downtown Orlando, with city officials considering permanent limits on the opening of new nightclubs.
Last year, the city similarly placed a moratorium on new nightclubs, with limited exceptions, and established new security and permit requirements for downtown establishments that want to legally sell alcohol after midnight.
Are you a business owner or employee who has been affected by new restrictions on local nightlife? We want to hear from you. Contact us at news@orlandoweekly.com.
[ news + views ]
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The crackdown on downtown nightlife continues | Photo by Jim Leatherman
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An Orlando Fringe Festival post-mortem: Critics’ Choice award winners, an ‘ineffable vibe shift’ and three pieces of advice for next year
On Memorial Day, the 33rd Orlando International Fringe Theatre Festival wrapped up with its annual awards ceremony at Loch Haven Park, featuring the presentation of Critics’ Choice awards selected by myself and Orlando Sentinel arts writer Matt Palm.
Over the 14-day event and the week of press previews, I saw more than 85 performances and published reviews of 52 shows on orlandoweekly. com. 2024’s big Best Show winner was Tanabata, an original Japanese-American musical by Andrew Heidorn I hailed as a “diamond-inthe-rough,” which I can see evolving into a Broadway hit.
Other critics’ picks I penned praises of included Joanna Rannelli’s Bangs, Bobs & Banter: Confessions of a Hairstylist for Solo Comedy; At the Table With Keith Brown for Magic Show; Adam Francis Proulx’s Emilio’s a Million Chameleons for Family Show; Edu Díaz’s A Drag Is Born for Solo Specialty; Disco Iskandar’s Journey From the Nile to the Tigris for Dance Show; Amanda Grace’s Love In for Site-Specific Show; Kevin Kriegel’s Mitzi Morris: Live at the Come On Inn for Solo Musical; Big Bang Boom Collective’s Masquerade of the Red Death for Specialty Show; RibbitRePublic Theatre’s Juliet: A Revenge Comedy for Comedy; and Push Physical Theatre’s Hyde (which had addressed many of my initial critiques by the time of their closing show) for Drama. Individual honors also went to Martin Dockery — who earlier endured (with co-star Jon Patterson) a 24-hour marathon of their time-loop play Inescapable, aided by unscheduled pinch-hitter Brian Feldman — for his Original Script of The Stakeout; Amelia Bryant
in The Magic Castle Still Stands for Dramatic Performance; Jessica Hoehn in Cocaine Bear: The Opera for Musical Performance; and — in an unprecedented tie — Rauce Padgett and Joel Warren for their Comedic Performance in 10 Sketches With Rauce and Joel.
The handful of Critics’ Choice winners I wasn’t able to write reviews of before the festival ended included Who’s Afraid of the West Cherry Orchid: An American Classic in an Active Quiznos, a witty Noises Off-style skewering of postwar drama whose crack comedic cast, led by co-writers Mike Carr and Julie Snyder, which earned Best Ensemble; and DK Does ‘Movie’: An Improvised Make’em-Up Cinematic Film Experience (Performed Live on Stage in Front of Audience People), which earned nods for both Longest Title and Technical Achievement, broadcasting the improvised antics of D.K. Reinemer and his pals (including Robby Pigott and the irrepressible Emily Fontano) in real time using roving audience-held cameras.
Damian Barray scored with his tuneful Original Score for Life Goes On?, a heartfelt pop musical about a struggling actor in NYC. Solo Drama winner Eleanor’s Story: Life After War, Ingrid Garner’s riveting sequel about her grandmother’s return from Nazi Germany, was even more emotionally engaging than her original installment. And Chris Metz took home Best Director for Barbenheimer: The Musical, a smarter-than-expected spoof whose staging employed color-changing squares and an instrument-playing ensemble to impressive effect.
Although there were dozens of strong offerings at this year’s Festival, I repeatedly encountered (both in-person and online) patrons, participants and longtime festival supporters expressing concerns about an ineffable “vibe shift” at this year’s Fringe, the first one under interim executive director Scott Galbraith. Some of the complaints I heard seemed petty or personal, but others raised valid questions about Fringe’s ongoing commitment to its mission of being “100% Uncensored.”
The hard numbers may reflect that gut feeling, with the key statistics self-reported by Fringe — 50,000 attendees and 30,753 tickets sold — falling significantly from last year’s post-pandemic peak of 67,241 attendees and 43,428 tickets sold. I know Fringe’s front-line staff [which, full disclosure, includes my spouse, recipient of Fringe’s 2024 Lifetime Achievement award] are already working as hard as they can, but I’ll offer three unsolicited suggestions for stemming the tide.
Retreat from downtown:
ArtSpace was a wonderful dream, but (perhaps thanks to Mad Cow’s curse) it has become a monkey’s paw. Until the city rescinds recent restrictions on nighttime parking and provides dedicated funding to staff the space, it will be a drain on the organization. Either affordably sublet it most of the time to local companies seeking space, or surrender the keys.
Back off from BYOVs:
These semi-official off-campus venues were great when Fringe had limited stage capacity, but the far-flung locales can dilute audiences while providing an inconsistent experience for artists. If Fringe can keep using the theaters of Orlando Family Stage after the Lowndes Shakespeare Center’s renovations are complete and make the excellent Renaissance Theater an official venue again, BYOVs would be better used for curated encores in the weeks following Fringe.
Double down on digital:
Matt Palm and myself do our best to inform the public about Fringe in print, as do our radio friends at WMFE and WPRK, but fewer potential new patrons are consuming legacy media today. Fringe needs to expand their marketing reach, leverage social media influencers, and invest in a useful smartphone app in order to make the Festival more attractive to a fresh audience, lest it become a bunch of aging artists passing dollars in a circle.
skubersky@orlandoweekly.com
[ arts
culture ] orlandoweekly.com ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY 17
Orlando Fringe 2024 staffers on the Loch Haven lawn | Photo by Seth Kubersky
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[ food + drink ]
CHICKEN. RUN!
Pho Ga Hien Vuong specializes in singular slurps
BY FAIYAZ KARA
Even before the accolades for Z Asian Vietnamese Kitchen came flooding in from near and far, owners Hien Pham and Huong Nguyen had their sights set on opening a noodle house solely dedicated to serving superlative slurps of pho ga. So, when the couple opened Pho Ga Hien Vuong in the Chinatown Plaza on West Colonial Drive late last year, the concise menu duly placed a focus on the namesake chicken noodle soup (pho ga), and all things chicken, like chicken and rice, chicken salad, chicken gizzards and other fowl things.
In the ensuing months, however, the menu ballooned to include a sampling of the same dishes offered five miles down the road at Z Asian. And while you can get a proper-good bowl of pho ga at the East Colonial Drive restaurant, it won’t be the same as the giant bowl of pho ga ($16.50) at the West Colonial eatery.
“We want it to be a special dish here,” says Pham, and by “special,” he’s referring to the farm-fresh chicken delivered daily by A-Poultry in Winter Park. The free-range, certified halal, antibiotic- and hormone-free birds are used to create an absolutely perfect broth for their pho.
“We start making the broth at 6 p.m. … it’s done at 9 a.m. the next morning,” he says.
The flavors of the 15-hour liquid are as pure, clean and unadulterated you’ll find anywhere this side of Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh City. “We have so many elders who come in and thank us for making chicken pho like this,” says Nguyen. “They all say it reminds them of when they would eat pho ga on Hien Vuong Street in Saigon.”
Prior to the fall of Saigon in 1975, Hien Vuong Street was the place to go for the clucky slurp, so seeing the occasional teary-eyed diner here is not an uncommon sight. Nguyen, unquestionably one of the finest chefs of Vietnamese cuisine in the city, even makes the pickled chili peppers sitting in containers on every tabletop.
“Pho ga isn’t pho ga without these pickled peppers,” she states. The woman clearly doesn’t cut corners, and it shows. When I went with a Viet-Laotian pal of mine on one visit, he immediately noticed a dish called bún dâu mám tôm ($23) listed on a placard on the table. “My dad was from Hanoi and he loved this,” he said about this platter of poultry-free delights.
5282 W. Colonial Drive
Set on the plate were square sheets of rice vermicelli, deep-fried tofu, house-made pork blood sausage, sliced pork, fried spring rolls, and fritters filled with pork and glutinous rice, along with lettuce, perilla leaves and fish mint leaves. We rolled some of the items into the lettuce and dipped it into the star of this funky smorgasbord — fermented anchovy paste laced with Thai hots. “You eat this like an Asian,” Pham said to me.“I am Asian!” I countered with a bit of sass. “Yeah, but you write like a white man,” he said, and the food came spurting out of our mouths in laughter.
No joke, though, Nguyen’s dishes rouse. The chicken salad ($17.50), a tossed mound of Vietnamese coriander, fried onions, crushed peanuts and Thai chilies lightly dressed in a vinaigrette, is a mayo-less wonder — as is the dish of stir-fried gizzards ($16), which also features chicken liver, chicken hearts and chicken ovaries (they taste like egg yolks) in a jumble of still-crunchy sautéed onions, coriander, ginger and a house sauce. When I ask Nguyen about the nature of that sauce, she keeps mum: “It’s a secret.” I dip the bits of offal into another sauce served on the side. It’s made from salt, pepper, lime and a secret ingredient Nguyen also closely guards. “You should eat it with rice,” she says when I start asking too many questions.
The flavor and texture of the sticky-ish, turmeric-tinged heap cooked in chicken broth had me wobbling my head the first time I tried it with the Hainanese-style chicken ($17.50). The poached bird is a true test of the product’s flavor, and there’s no doubt the chicken they procure is top-quality. It’s served with pickled vegetables, topped with a bit of ginger paste and served with homemade ginger dipping sauce
On yet another visit, I try the pho ga but with mién noodles ($17.50) Nguyen imports from Hanoi. The chewy-crunchy strings made from mung beans have a gray hue and add another textural element to the soup teeming with chopped, skin-on chicken. This soup and the traditional pho ga with rice noodles represent the acme of chicken noodle soup in this city.
I’m actually slurping some leftovers as I write these very words, and it has me craving the beverage I never fail to order when I’m at the noodle shop — freshly made sugarcane and kumquat juice ($7.50). A cup of “three color dessert” ($6.50) with ice, condensed milk, beans, jellies and crushed peanuts lends the sweet finish many will inevitably desire. But if you’re coming to Pho Ga Hien Vuong, you’re coming for the pho ga, because here, it’s the chicken that struts its stuff.
fkara@orlandoweekly.com
OPENINGS and CLOSINGS
After numerous delays, much-anticipated Audubon Park restaurant Coro is poised to open this month at 3022 Corrine Drive. The menu will feature Italian-leaning small plates embodying Japanese techniques, philosophy and ingredients, but with global flavors. At Coro’s pop-up dinner in February, Lovero’s dishes were a composition of Italian, Indian, Japanese, French and Middle Eastern flavors, with every dish full of surprising turns … Dada Indian Cuisine has opened in the old Chai Thai/Leafy Hotpot & BBQ space at 2447 S. Orange Ave. in SoDo with nary a urinal on the wall (Dada joke!). The restaurant fills a void left in the downtown area after Urban Turban closed on Pine Street … Istanbul Grill has opened in the space that previously housed Ataj Moroccan Restaurant at 2901 Parkway Blvd. near Celebration … Look for Yeastie Boys Bakehouse, billed as “a bakery where ’90s hip-hop meets croissant,” to take over the Cups and Pups Coffee space this summer at 1307 Edgewater Drive in College Park. Cups and Pups will reopen in a larger space at 2413 Edgewater Drive by the end of the year … BinBông, offering Viet-inflected beverages and desserts like crème brûlée coffee and tofu pudding, has opened at 1200 E. Colonial Drive in Mills 50 … Crush Yard, a Charlestonbased pickleball “eatertainment” venue, will open toward the end of the year at 7840 W. Irlo Bronson Highway near Disney. In addition to indoor pickleball courts, the boob-tube-heavy space will house a modern restaurant plating “elevated comfort food” and will offer 36 beers on tap as well as wine and cocktails … Look for City Food Hall to take over the Hall on the Yard space in Ivanhoe Village. City Food Hall currently operates venues in Destin and West Palm Beach, with Gainesville and Athens, Georgia, locations in the works. No word on an opening date.
NEWS and EVENTS
In celebration of its one-year anniversary, Camille in Baldwin Park will stage a series of chef collaborations, starting with Norigami’s David Tsan June 12, followed by Domu’s Sonny Nguyen June 13 and the Osprey’s Michael Cooper June 14. Visit camilleorlando.com for more info … Superica in Winter Park is staging a Guest Chef Pop-Up Series featuring one-week-only special dishes from Brandon McGlamery (Prato, Luke’s Kitchen & Bar) June 13-19, Andrew Scala (JAM Hot Chicken) July 18-24 and James Petrakis (Ravenous Pig) Aug. 22-28. All proceeds from the special menu items will be donated to the charity of the individual chef’s choice.
PHO GA HIEN VUONG
407-420-0634 $$$
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Add broth, experience bliss | Photo by Rob Bartlett
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UNCUT JAMS
JK and the Contraband bring an alternative mixtape to groovy, jazzy life
BY KYLE EAGLE
Live, Orlando’s JK and the Contraband deliver a show that’s full of the unexpected. The band play free-flowing jams sourced from the likes of alternative-music legends Jane’s Addiction, Soundgarden and an opening number in the heady form of Nirvana’s “In Bloom” — along with their own stunning originals. If comparisons were to be made, the band are in league with contemporaries like Robert Glaspar, Kneebody and Snarky Puppy with an obvious taste for 1990s alternative rock.
Led by one of Central Florida’s most prolific musical thinkers, John Krasula, the Contraband brings a big-city vibe full of stylishly tuneful bravado. They sound tight, they get loose, and they look sharp on stage, emanating a sense of fearless confidence.
Wednesday night’s gig at Judson’s Live will be the band’s second time at the venue. Their first, back in April, was this writer’s umpteenth seeing Krasula perform, but as always it was something fresh and exciting complete with a nearly sold-out audience. Orlando Weekly hopped on the phone for a quick call with Krasula
to get the lowdown on their previous Judson’s show and what to expect with the next.
You all bring such a funky and far-out feel to what you do. It’s jazz, it’s R&B, it’s soul, it’s psychedelic. Best of all, it’s adventurous and accessible. You’re doing exciting things with songs like Nirvana’s “In Bloom.” That’s sacred territory to a lot of people.
John Krasula: I’ve had that arrangement for “In Bloom” for five or so years; the band Contraband was created around originals but we also like that period of music — 1990s-era rock and grunge. So I asked everyone in the band to bring a few songs that they liked from that era and it came together like that. It’s kind of heavy stuff and I was trying to wrap my head around it but Patrick Moreno, the keyboard player, his approach was to just play them. And it pulled together as it’s supposed to and they sound like our sound.
JK AND THE CONTRABAND
7 p.m. Wednesday, June 5
Judson’s Live, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts 445 S. Magnolia Ave. drphillipscenter.org $15
I’d like to take a moment and highlight your keyboardist. The atmospheres he was laying down made for a mesmerizing effect. Closing my eyes, I could imagine I was at a Robert Glasper show.
Sonically speaking, “Three Day Weekend” by Pat, that’s a great original by him. Super hip tune that reminded us of Hiatus Kaiyote. Sampling and looping, I would add to that, to create a sound the way Dilla did. Like hip-hop producers Questlove, Pete Rock, DJ Premier — the way they create sounds. I’ve always had this approach to music that is hip-hop-based.
That’s what the live show is like, an eclectic and groovy mix tape. What’s this week’s Judson’s show going to be like, set-wise?
Some more originals, some more covers. Maybe Queens of the Stone Age. Pull out some more new stuff that is more funky than fusion. I’ve been asked to tackle My Bloody Valentine, who knows. music@orlandoweekly.com
[ local music ]
JK and the Contraband: ‘Smile if you want to cover My Bloody Valentine’ | Courtesy photo
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June 1 - July 28
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LOCAL RELEASES
The severe music of Orlando’s Blade of Phanes comes from a darkness that has little to do with image or style. The sound and message roar at the edge of the abyss, out where the heaviest of metal bleeds into the most hardcore of punk. But unlike, say, the church-burning misanthropy of Norwegian black metal, the fury of Blade of Phanes actually comes from a very human place. In fact, it’s a direct reaction to a kind of inhumanity peaking in America right now.
The solo project of local artist Steve (surname withheld on request), Blade of Phanes just released its debut album, Absence of Light. Although BOP’s lyrics target many social ills, the focus is on homophobia and transphobia, matters that are both political and personal to a queer artist like him. No surprise, then, that the feelings here are expressed with a searing first-person rawness.
Amid a sonic barrage of heaviness that encompasses suffocating black metal, menacing metalcore and brutal hardcore are even harsher lyrics that don’t just blast the persecutors but openly wish punishment on them. As Steve puts it, “This album is an earnest attempt at
song, this isn’t indulgent gore porn. These are the thoughts of someone pushed to the breaking point. Regarding fascists, closing track “Rakuyo” (which notably features a cameo by the Holy Ghost Tabernacle Choir’s Nat Lacuna) says, “When there is no option left but violence, there is no choice but to put these people in the fucking ground.”
If these sentiments shock you, then congratulations: You’ve never been under the boot of the system. But anyone who’s tasted oppression firsthand like their own blood in the mouth will relate. Rather than just screaming into the void with denunciations of injustice, Blade of Phanes is the voice of pushback.
“I think my intent for BOP is best summarized as weaponized empathy and solidarity,” says Steve. “Status quo expects marginalized people to respond to their own oppression with civility, but politely asking for your rights to stop being erased is laughably impotent. I’m writing music for people that have come to that conclusion or need help coming to it.” Absence of Light is extreme music for extreme feelings. In extreme times like these, it’s also sharply topical. While much of political punk focuses on commentary and condemnation, Blade of Phanes’ wartime posture sees the battlefield for what it really is and returns fire to the perpetrators. How Absence of Light hits depends on what side you’re on. But to the oppressed, it’ll be a raging rallying call.
Absence of Light now streams everywhere.
CONCERT PICKS THIS WEEK
‘Status quo expects marginalized people to respond to their own oppression with civility, but politely asking for your rights to stop being erased is laughably impotent. I’m writing music for people that have come to that conclusion or need help coming to it.’
distilling and returning violence to the abusers and oppressors of the world.”
While the lyrics in Absence of Light are the lurid kind that can be found in any death-metal
Speed, Day by Day, Three Knee Deep, Yield to None, Watts: Sydney group Speed are more than just your typical tough-guy band. First, they’re new global ambassadors of Australian hardcore. More importantly — to both me personally and a whole swath of people who’ve grown up at odds with their own cultural stereotype — they’re the voice of representation as a band with three Asians at the front. Their lyrics attack topics like Asian hate and they preach safe, inclusive places for all at their shows. Fuck math club, see you in the pit. (6 p.m. Monday, June 10, The Abbey, $25)
Thomas Milovac Quartet: Of all the jazz acts to play Judson’s Live, Orlando’s Thomas Milovac Quartet will undoubtedly be one of the most daring yet. Steeped in the pedigree of avant-garde improvisation, Milovac and his cohorts are among the leading lights of this city’s young vanguard working deep in jazz’s artistic psyche. This performance is also a big release event for Milovac’s new ensemble album Graphic Scores, so expect debut peeks alongside other originals and well-curated selections. It’ll be an engagement that brings Orlando’s experimental underground and its jet-set establishment into the same room, a valuable enterprise in itself. (7 and 9 p.m. Wednesday, June 12, Judson’s Live, $15) baolehuu@orlandoweekly.com
[ local music ]
Blade of Phanes | Courtesy photo
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WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5
Boulet Brothers’ Dragula Live
It’s a bit of a Beatles/Stones situation amongst drag connoisseurs as to which show is their preferred poison: RuPaul’s Drag Race or The Boulet Brothers’ Dragula. (Don’t get us wrong. As with frenzied teens in the 1960s, most connoisseurs watch both.) Now, with Season 5 of the horror-drag competition on Shudder freshly wrapped, the “Supermonsters” of this latest season are hitting the road with the titular Boulet Brothers to get grotesquely glamorous and entertain you. You will be scared shitless as you swoon to season standouts Niohuru X, Blackberri, Orgotik and Throb Zombie and their unique and boundary-pushing mixture of performance art, grindhouse horror and outsider creativity. There’s a matter of civic pride that mandates attendance, too: Victoria Elizabeth Black, a recent Dragula Titans winner, is from Orlando. So you owe it to yourself to see the wondrous spectacle that, in some ways, she has helped shape. And this will be a spectacle to behold; when the Boulet Brothers step out from their host roles, their crowd-work is top-shelf, up there with Elvira and John Waters. We recently saw the Boulets and co. e ortlessly enthrall a packed room at Spookala. So get ready to scream real loud, as a piece of anthropomorphic furniture once said on Pee Wee’s Playhouse. 8 p.m., The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave., plazaliveorlando.org, $39.50$49.50. — Matthew Moyer
THURSDAY, JUNE 6
The Borscht Belt: Revisiting the Remains of America’s Jewish Vacationland
There are few better compelling testaments to our old lifeways than the architectural ruins they leave behind. Today, the once-legendary “Borscht Belt” of New York State hotels stands as a marker of Jewish immigration,
of the
or as the Holocaust Museum puts it, a “tale of the assimilation of Jewish immigrants.” Photographer Marisa Scheinfeld evocatively captures the eerie twilight of these abandoned resort ghost towns in this show. At its peak sometime in the 1950s, the New York Times claims that over 900 hotels were clustered in the Catskills, about two hours from New York City. The comedians breaking out from their stages — Sid Caesar, Rodney Dangerfield, Joan Rivers — defined an era. That era, though, has passed. Scheinfeld reminds us of this in shots of empty, cracked swimming pools, tattered rose-colored hotel corridors, and overgrown carved stone steps decaying back into nature. Together with her photographs, this traveling exhibit collects old lighters, letter openers, postcards and other artifacts from the hotels on display. Hovering somewhere between poetry and archeology, this show gives one a taste of life when immigrants assimilated by building destination resorts, if only so as to escape rejection and racism. The architectural ruins may be all the more poignant when contrasted with antisemitism’s dark venom evolving today. The exhibition runs through Sept. 9. 6:30 p.m., Holocaust Memorial Resource and Education Center of Florida, 851 N. Maitland Ave., Maitland, holocaustedu.org, free but registration is required to attend. — Richard Reep
FRIDAY-SATURDAY, JUNE 7-8
Forbidden Kingdom
Enter a realm of flashing lights and vibrating eardrums this weekend as dance fest Forbidden Kingdom returns to Orlando. Helmed by EDC promoter Insomniac, headliners like Barely Alive, Muzz, Adventure Club B2B, Subtronics, Ahee, Black Tiger Sex Machine and more promise to keep you moving all weekend long. The Festival o ers up a regal array of dubstep, bass and techno — around 50 artists’ worth — over five stages and immersive installations and environments. The festival tells more than just the story of legions
Wednesday: The Boulet Brothers’ ‘Dragula’ at the Plaza Live COURTESY PHOTO 36 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● orlandoweekly.com
WEDNESDAY–TUESDAY, JUNE 5-11, 2024
of sweaty dancers going all out until the break of dawn; the stages and installations display a story of an age-old struggle between the denizens of the Forbidden Kingdom, a di erent bass-driven fable for each. And yet, you might just be a little bit too distracted to notice. Noon, Orlando Amphitheater, 4602 W. Colonial Drive, forbiddenkingdomfestival.com, $130.40$273.80. — Houda Eletr
SATURDAY, JUNE 8
Franco’s Flop Fest
Flop sweat won’t be a factor for contestants on Saturday during Cholo Dogs’ Franco’s Flop Fest. “Earth’s Premier Belly Flop Contest” returns to Baldwin Park’s Tactical Brewing for a third wild year, and brave floppers will be graded on creativity, sound, splash, impact and showmanship. Contestants may execute their flops in a costume or take the classic barestomach approach for maximum audience “ooooh”s. The prizes include a Franco’s Flop Fest trophy, a Franco’s Flop Fest T-shirt, two free Cholo Dogs and one free Tactical beer. Contestants will be able to fortify themselves with a couple of free Cholo Dogs hot dogs and a free Tactical beverage. Come try your hand at flopping alongside Central Florida’s best — signing a waiver is sensibly required — or just enjoy the show. Noon, Tactical Brewing Co., 4882 New Broad St., cholodogs. com, free-$35. — Sarah Lynott
Dress Like a Dad Pub Crawl
Get fitted up like a dad and make your way to the Curry Ford West neighborhood’s seventh annual Dress Like a Dad Pub Crawl this weekend. The event kicks o at Charlie’s Bakery and Creamery, where guests pick up their wristbands while sampling some of the shop’s tasty ice cream and pastries. Once wristbands are donned, guests can get a total of nine free drinks [you read that frankly eye-popping number right; dads go hard in this neighborhood!] — plus other food and beverage opportunities. The night features stops at some of the neighborhood’s favorite businesses — Roque Pub, Vintage Chair, Hourglass Brewing, Commission Beer Chamber, the Tamale Co. and Claddagh Cottage — along with a Dress Like a Dad costume contest, multiple ra es and the inevitable dad joke contest. Bring your dad jokes, bad puns, Crocs, Tommy Bahama shirts, Ray-Bans, wife guy replies, tuition receipts and benevolently patriarchal attitudes to this night of
fatherly vibes. 5:30 p.m., Curry Ford West, Orlando, Florida, curryfordwest.com, $15-$25. — SL
Liturgy
Avant-metallers Liturgy have been pushing the boundaries of black metal toward a new ecstasy and, yes, transcendence — peep frontwoman and songwriter Haela Ravenna Hunt-Hendrix’s 2010 manifesto “Transcendental Black Metal” for a better sense of their mission — since forming in 2008. The band have carved out their unique and cosmic niche within the usually fell realms of black metal, expanding that sound with sonics drawn from psych-rock and classical music, with heady conceptual underpinnings to match. Loud and unrelenting movements are broken up by lush, questing ambience and ethereal hymn-like reverence before crashing into wild walls of untrammeled, freeform noise. Give sprawling new double album 93696 (out now on Thrill Jockey) several spins to get your sense of reality properly unmoored. This is the new cult. 7 p.m., Conduit, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park, conduitfl.com, $20. — MM
TUESDAY, JUNE 11
Idles
Love is the fing — and Idles are coming to scream that still-essential message right into your brain. You may think you’ve heard it all before, from the Sex Pistols down through Gallows, but this week combustible British noise-punks Idles are here to blast your eardrums clean with heavy guitar ri s; lyrics that urgently reflect on love, subverting masculinity, class warfare and mental health struggles; and an unhinged vocal delivery that coalesces into a groove-heavy yet noisy new spin on a classic sound — exemplified both on slash-and-burn anthems like “Grounds” and “A Hymn,” and on expansive new album TANGK. Hope you snapped up your tickets early, because this show is very sold out (although Ticketmaster has some for resale; very un-punk behavior, but that’s monopolies for you). 7 p.m., House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista, houseofblues.com/orlando, SOLD OUT. — HE
WEEK Submit your events to listings@orlandoweekly.com
Saturday: Liturgy at Conduit
orlandoweekly.com ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY 37
PHOTO OF/BY HAELA RAVENNA HUNT-HENDRIX, COURTESY THRILL JOCKEY
Funk Fest: June 14-15, Orlando Amphitheater
The Menzingers, Lucero, The Dirty Nil: June 14, the Beacham
Blink-182, Pierce the Veil: June 20, Kia Center
Ace Frehley, June 21, Hard Rock Live
The Japanese House, Miya Folick: June 21, the Beacham
The Brian McKnight 4: June 28, Hard Rock Live
Mother Mother, Cavetown, Destroy Boys: June 29, Orlando Amphitheater
PVRIS, Pale Waves: July 2, House of Blues
Def Leppard, Journey, Cheap Trick: July 10, Camping World Stadium
Two Door Cinema Club: July 14, House of Blues
The Aquabats: July 18, House of Blues
Asia: July 20, Hard Rock Live
DIIV, Horse Jumper of Love: July 20, House of Blues
CONCERTS
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5
JK and the Contraband 7 pm; Judson’s Live, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $15.
Luis Miguel 7 pm; Kia Center, 400 W. Church St.; $71-$227; 800-745-3000.
Nesto’s Jazz Trio 10 pm; Lil Indie’s, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free.
Shak Nasti Gemini Party 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $15-$20.
Softie, Theo Butts, Petty Thefts, Double Bubble 6:30 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; $10; 407-270-9104.
Missy Elliott July 30, Kia Center
Janet Jackson, Nelly: July 20, Kia Center
HIRS Collective: July 21, Will’s Pub
Lamb of God, Mastodon, Kerry King: July 24, Orlando Amphitheater
THURSDAY, JUNE 6
Braxton Cook 7 & 9 pm; Judson’s Live, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $40-$50.
Messer Chups, Proxima Tide, Skinny McGee and the Handshakes 7 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $20.
Quit The Industry, Conscription, Graveyard Dogs, Ripped Pitts 7:06 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; $10; 407-270-9104.
FRIDAY, JUNE 7
Calixto Oviedo, Cuban Jazz Train Trio 7:30 pm; Timucua Arts Foundation, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave.; $30; 407-595-2713.
New Found Glory, Sincere Engineer: Aug. 16, House of Blues
Missy Elliott, Ciara, Busta Rhymes, Timbaland: July 30, Kia Center
Lindsey Stirling, Walk Off the Earth: Aug. 2, Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts
Elvie Shane 8 pm; Tuffy’s Music Box, 200 Myrtle Ave., Sanford; $20.
Forbidden Kingdom Orlando Amphitheater, 4603 W. Colonial Drive; $130.40-$273.80; 407-295-3247.
Frankie and the Witch Fingers, Killer Larry, Loose Touch 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $20.
Golden Flower 8 pm; The Nook on Robinson, 2432 E. Robinson St.; free.
Gregory Porter 7:30 pm; Steinmetz Hall, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $40-$179.50; 407-358-6603.
The Mermers, Earthgirl, The Palmettes, New Eagles 7 pm; Stardust Video and Coffee, 1842 E. Winter Park Road; $8-$10; 407-623-3393.
Pylon Reenactment Society: Aug. 30, Will’s Pub
Amorphis, Dark Tranquillity, Fires in the Distance: Sept. 7, Conduit
Twenty One Pilots: Sept. 11, Kia Center
Cigarettes After Sex: Sept. 13, Kia Center
Herbie Hancock: Sept. 14, Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts
Jelly Roll, Warren Zeiders, Alexandra Kay: Sept. 17, Kia Center
Weezer, The Flaming Lips, Dinosaur Jr.: Sept. 20, Kia Center
Squeeze, Boy George: Sept. 22, Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts
Charli XCX and Troye Sivan: Oct. 6, Kia Center
Justin Timberlake: Nov. 9, Kia Center
Monsieur Periné 7 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; 407-228-1220.
Rock The Country: Kid Rock, Jason Aldean, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Brantley Gilbert Majestic Oaks Ocala, 17500 N U.S. Highway 441, Reddick; $189.99-$419.99.
Sammy Figueroa and Aymée Nuviola 7 & 9 pm; Judson’s Live, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $50.
SATURDAY, JUNE 8
Beastplague, Chain Gang, Whatsdysmorphia, Cable, Blown Apart
7 pm; The S.P.O.T., 6633 E. Colonial Drive; $10-$15.
Belanova 7 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $65$150; 407-934-2583.
Claude Bourbon Progressive Blues 7:30 pm; Timucua Arts Foundation, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave.; 407-595-2713.
Concrete Boys 6 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $20; 407-246-1419.
Forbidden Kingdom Orlando Amphitheater, 4603 W. Colonial Drive; $130.40-$273.80; 407-295-3247.
The Intracoastals 8 pm; West End Trading Co., 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; free; 407-322-7475.
Liturgy, Body Void 7 pm; Conduit, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; $20; 407-673-2712.
Megan Thee Stallion, Glorilla 7 pm; Amalie Arena, 401 Channelside Drive, Tampa; $45-$245; 813-301-6500.
Rock The Country: Kid Rock, Jason Aldean, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Brantley Gilbert Majestic Oaks Ocala, 17500 N. U.S. Highway 441, Reddick; $189.99-$419.99.
Sammy Figueroa and Aymée Nuviola 7 & 9 pm; Judson’s Live, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $50.
SUNDAY, JUNE 9
Apollonio Maiello 2:30 pm; Timucua Arts Foundation, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave; free; 40.7-595-2713.
Blue Bamboo Presents: Cigano Swing 11 am; Casa Feliz, 656 N. Park Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-636-9951.
Foghat, Cactus 6:30 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $44-$110; 407-228-1220.
Gears, Widow7 7 pm; Credo Conduit, 1001 N. Orange Ave.; $12; 321-348-8851.
Gunna, Flo Milli 7 pm; Kia Center, 400 W. Church St.; $25-$126; 800-745-3000.
John Dorney, Cat Ridgeway and The Tourists, Hannah Stokes 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $10-$15.
Michael Andrew, John DePaola Quintet 5 & 7:30 pm; Judson’s Live, Dr.
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38 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● orlandoweekly.com
Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $30-$45.
Orlando Gay Chorus Cabaret 3 pm; Orlando Public Library, 101 E. Central Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323.
Peace by Piece 3 pm; Alexis and Jim Pugh Theater, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $25.
Viva La Música: Proyecto Uno 2 & 5 pm; SeaWorld Nautilus Theater, 7007 SeaWorld Drive; $60-$249.99.
MONDAY, JUNE 10
Speed, Day by Day, Three Knee Deep, Yield to None, Watts 7 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $25; 407-704-6261.
TUESDAY, JUNE 11
Idles 7 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $42.50$125; 407-934-2583.
Joseph Jevanni and iNtensity 7 & 9 pm; Judson’s Live, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $15.
Miguel Angeles, F3lix, Heffy 7 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $25; 407-704-6261.
FILM
Cult Classics: The Twilight Saga: Eclipse Danger once again surrounds Bella (Kristen Stewart), as a string of mysterious killings terrorizes Seattle and a malicious vampire continues her infernal quest for revenge. 9:30 pm Tuesday; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-6290054; enzian.org.
Freaky Fridays: The Films of the Gay Girls Riding Club Spearheaded by filmmaker Ray Harrison, the Gay Girls Riding Club (GGRC) took California’s 1960s underground gay scene by storm with drag spoofs of classic Hollywood films. 11:59 pm Friday; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org.
Movie Trash: Embrace of the Vampire 8 pm Saturday; The Nook on Robinson, 2432 E. Robinson St.; instagram.com/ orlandopopupmovieservices.
Saturday Matinee Classics: Man Ray: Return to Reason In these films Ray began discovering the limitless possibilities of montage as well as the direct application onto celluloid of objects such as salt, pepper, pins, and thumbtacks. Noon Saturday; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian. org.
Studio Ghibli Fest: The Secret World of Arrietty A gorgeous adaptation of The Borrowers, one of the most beloved children’s books of all time. 3 & 7 pm Sunday and 7 pm Tuesday; various theaters; $14.91$16.05; fathomevents.com.
COMEDY
Comedy Dark Grab a comedy fanatic and treat them to a showcase featuring professional comedians doing their most insane material. 8 pm Thursday; Grape and the Grain, 1110 Virginia Drive; $12; 407-674-6156.
Corey Holcomb 6:30 & 9:30 pm Friday and 6 & 9 pm Saturday; Funny Bone Comedy Club, 9101 International Drive; $47-$77; 407-480-5233; orlando.funnybone.com.
Gus Constantellis 6 pm Wednesday; Funny Bone Comedy Club, 9101 International Drive; $27-$57; 407-4805233; orlando.funnybone.com.
Orlando Leyba 6:30 pm Thursday; Funny Bone Comedy Club, 9101 International Drive; $25-$55; 407-4805233; orlando.funnybone.com.
EVENTS
6th Annual Cattoo Day Adopt a cat and get a tat! All proceeds are donated to Orange County Animal Shelter in Orlando. Dozens of kittens and cats available for adoption. 11 am Saturday; Golden Tarot Ink Club, 3784 Howell Branch Road, Winter Park; $150; 407725-7072; goldentarotinkclub.com.
The 7th Annual Dress Like a Dad Pub Crawl Each participant will receive a wristband that grants them access to nine free select drinks along the crawl, as well as exclusive food and drink specials throughout the evening. 5:30 pm Saturday; Charlie’s Bakery and Creamery, 3213 Curry Ford Road; $15$25; curryfordwest.com/calendar.
Bad Witch Burlesque Presents: The Tease of Tarot Vol III This thrilling tarot-inspired show features bewitching burlesque and aerial routines set
to a soundtrack of rock and metal hits. 8:30 pm Saturday; Marshall Ellis Theatre, 1300 La Quinta Drive; $25$45; 321-418-1949.
Book Fair and Microcon Comics, graphic novels, toys, collectibles, and vinyl records. Noon Saturday; Ten10 Brewing, 1010 Virginia Drive; 407-9308993; facebook.com/blackbirdcch.
The Borscht Belt: Revisiting the Remains of America’s Jewish Vacationland Marisa Scheinfeld’s large-scale photographs of abandoned sites where Borscht Belt resorts and bungalow colonies once boomed in the Catskill Mountain region of upstate New York. Registration is required. 6:30 pm Thursday; Holocaust Memorial Resource and Education Center, 851 N. Maitland Ave., Maitland; free; 407-6280555; holocaustedu.org.
Brick Fan Expo Come see amazing LEGO creations, large LEGO displays, fan creations, games, contests, STEM zones, speakers, and more. 10 am Saturday-Sunday; Dezerland Park Orlando, 5250 International Drive; $20$25; 321-754-1700; brickfanexpo.com.
Bridal Ball: Vow Renewal Ceremony and Celebration
A memorable evening of renewing vows, champagne toasts, live entertainment, and more. Proceeds support Wedding Wish, providing wedding and mental health services to couples facing health challenges. 5 pm Saturday; Kissimmee Civic Center, 201 E. Dakin Ave., Kissimmee; $25-$100; 407-9065582; weddingwish.org/bridal-ball.
Franco’s Flop Fest Belly-flop contestants will be judged on creativity,
sound, splash, impact and showmanship. Noon Saturday; Tactical Brewing Co., 4882 New Broad St.; instagram. com/cholodogs.
Great Florida Bigfoot Conference
An all-star lineup of Bigfoot researchers, investigators, and authors ready to interact with fans and share their experiences. 9 am Saturday; World Equestrian Center, 1390 NW 80th Ave.., Ocala; $25; 423-584-3513; gatherupevents.com/florida-bigfoot-conference.
Let There Be Light
Experience inspiration as you journey through the intersection of art and faith with our diverse and talented cohort of artists as they present their original works. Join us for unconventional expressions of faith that will equally excite and inspire you. 2:30 & 7 pm Saturday; Alexis and Jim Pugh Theater, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $35-$45; drphillipscenter.org.
Paws and PreRolls
This event combines two of life’s greatest joys pets and cannabis making it a fun and unique pet adoption event! In Partnership with New Hope Animal Shelter, Gurrs and Purrs, and DeLand Cat Cafe. 11 am Saturday; Chronic Guru, 146 N Woodland Blvd., Deland; free; 407-984-5335; chronicguru.com.
Therapeutic Pottery Program
Learn about the history of clay and the benefits to your body of working with clay while being led through a stepby-step air-dry clay pottery event. Registration required. 11 am Friday; Orlando Public Library, 101 E. Central Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323; attend.ocls. info.
Women’s College Prep and Safety Course Covers mindset, preparation, safety awareness, and tactical defensive techniques. Students who attend this class will develop assertiveness and boundary-setting by gaining knowledge of the criminal mindset and predatory types. Noon Saturday; 6 Levels MMA and Fitness Center, 16112 Marsh Road, Winter Garden; $125; 407905-9982; jbselfdefense.com/store.
LEARNING
Adventure Begins with Bookmaking: Youth Art Workshops Create a series of maze books, each from a single sheet of paper. Age 5-10 with accompanying adult. 10 am Saturday; Rollins Museum of Art, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-646-2526; rollins.edu/rma.
Lunch and Learn: Lightning (Sometimes) Strikes Twice What makes our area so attractive for lightning storms and how much havoc have they wrought in the past century? Explore the electrifying history of lightning strikes in Central Florida. Noon Friday; Orange County Regional History Center, 65 E. Central Blvd.; $5$14; 407-836-8500; thehistorycenter. org.
The Pendulum of Pride: A History of LGBTQ Resilience in Central Florida In this program, David Matteson, a past Board president of the LGBTQ History Museum of Central Florida, will survey the history of the LGBTQ community in the region by focusing on moments of progress, resistance, and resilience. Sunday June 9, 2 pm; Orange County Regional History Center, 65 E. Central Blvd.; free; 407836-8500; thehistorycenter.org.
[ the week ]
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comply can result in sanctions, including dismissal or striking of pleadings.
Repairs Legal, Public Notices
Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
WANTED - All motorhomes, fifth wheels and travel trailers. Cars, vans and trucks any condition. Cash paid on the spot. Call 954-595-0093.
ALL ABOARD STORAGE NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Personal property of the following tenants will be sold at public sale to the highest bidder to satisfy a rental lien in accordance with Florida Statutes, Sections: 83.801 - 83.809. All units areassumed to contain general household goods unless otherwise indicated. Viewing of photos will be available on www.lockerfox.com, up to 5 days prior to each scheduled sale. The owners or their agents reserve the right to bid on any unit and also to refuse any bid. All items or units may not be available on the day of sale. The Public Sale will take place via www.lockerfox.com on: Wednesday, June 26, 2024 1:30 p.m., or thereafter, at: SANFORD DEPOT 2728 W 25th St, Sanford, FL 32771 407-305-3388 Summer Brown #1351, Brian Brookins #1578, Jessica Betourd #1626, Daphne Daniels #1253, Breanna Carrington #1588, Kellie Moore #1647, Natalie Brzeski #1099, Timothy Ortiz #1273, Sylvia Wimberly #1145, Hannah Robinson #1162. The above Tenants have been given proper notice, fourteen days prior to the first publication of this Notice of Sale, that the Owner will enforce a statutory lien on the property located in their respective unit of the above-mentioned self-storage facilities. Publication Dates: June 5 and June 12, 2024.
Case No.: 2024-DR-005011-O In Re. The Marriage of: CHACON, HEINER RICARDO and FIGUEROA, KAREN ESTEFANIA NOTICE OF ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE (NO CHILD OR FINANCIAL SUPPORT) TO: KAREN ESTEFANIA FIGUEROA, last known address of 1537 Lake Sims Pkwy, Ocoee, FL, 34761. YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action for dissolution of marriage has been filed against you and that you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it on HEINER RICARDO CHACON, whose address is 1537 Lake Sims Pkwy, Ocoee, FL 34761 on or before 7/4/24, and file the original with the clerk of this Court at 425 N Orange Avenue, Orlando, FL 32801, before service on Petitioner or immediately thereafter. If you fail to do so, a default may be entered against you for the relief demanded in the petition. The action is asking the court to decide how the following real or personal property should be divided: Not applicable, the parties had one 2023 Nissan Armada, which is in the process of being repossessed. Copies of all court documents in this case, including orders, are available at the Clerk of the Circuit Court’s office. You may review these documents upon request. You must keep the Clerk of the Circuit Court’s office notified of your current address. (You may file Designation of Current Mailing and E-Mail Address, Florida Supreme Court Approved Family Law Form 12.915.) Future papers in this lawsuit will be mailed or e-mailed to the address(es) on record at the clerk’s office. WARNING: Rule 12.285, Florida Family Law Rules of Procedure, requires certain automatic disclosure of documents and information. Failure to
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 1001 Lee Rd. Orlando, FL 32810 (407) 489-3742 on June 21st, 2024 12:00PM. Doris Roper- Household items, boxes; Joy Taffanni- Clothes, bedding, mattresses; Tarasheka Davis- Boxes, clothes household appliances; Ryan Rege- boxes, chairs, clothes. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on June 21, 2024 at the location indicated: Store 3404: 2650 N Powers Dr Orlando, FL 32818, 407.982.1032 @ 1:00 PM: William Vermillion-Household Goods, Windy Lorthe-Household Goods, William Vermillion-Household Goods, Diana Cox-Household Goods, hayle dujon-Furniture,Faranda Fontaine-studio equipment and boxes, Mario Pierre-Household Goods, Nicole Compose-Household Goods. The auction will be listed and advertised on www. storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Life Storage/ Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: June 21st, 2024. at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage 11920 W Colonial Dr Ste 10, Ocoee FL 34761, 407-794-6970. Jessica Silkes- Household items. Gregory Charles Spreng- household items. Maurice Lewisshoes. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: June 21, 2024 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage 1101 Marshall farms rd., Ocoee FL 34761, 407-516-7221 Ranilo Milan-Mattress, totes. Joyce Wilkins-table set. Dandry Rodriguez- Tools, totes. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated June 25, 2024 at the time and location listed below. 12:00PM Extra Space Storage 1451 Rinehart Rd Sanford, FL 32771 (407) 915-4908. The personal goods stored therein by the following: Michelle Taylor: electronics, sports items. Lawrence Mason: furniture, boxes. Branden Hoffman: kid’s items, totes . Ravi Vangala: furniture, boxes, office. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: June 25th, 2024 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00 PM Extra Space Storage 610 Rinehart Rd. Lake Mary, FL 32746 (407) 637-1360 Justin Sawicki-Boxes furniture, Lonnie Thompson-2009 grey Honda Accord vin# 1HGCP26839A181119, Preston Siler-: Furniture, Electronics, Irma Montarsi-Qn bed - Dresser - 2 night stands - futon - tv5 totes - microwave - coffee maker -. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage, on behalf of itself or its affiliates, Life Storage or Storage Express, will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 8235 N Orange Blossom Trl, Orlando FL, 32810, 727.428.6564 @ 12:00PM on June 21, 2024 April Anderson- Household Goods/ Furniture, TV/Stereo Equipment Stephen Allison- washer/dryer, king bed, boxes Pamela Borges Roque- king bed, sofa, boxes, tv , dining room sofa Teala Tyler- 3 bedroom home Joshua Shirley- Household Goods/Furniture Shawn FeldtHousehold Goods/Furniture Shelia BaxterHousehold Goods/Furniture Dominique Speight- Household Goods/Furniture. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility inorder to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage, on behalf of itself or its affiliates, Life Storage or Storage Express, will hold a public auction to
sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: June 27, 2024, at the times and locations listed below: The personal goods stored therein by the following: 10:00AM Life Storage, 12280 East Colonial Drive, Orlando FL 32826, 3212867324: Billie Brice: Household Goods, Boxes, toys, bed frame, Tv, nightstand; Troy Block: Tools, golf clubs, ladder, toolboxes, gas can, storage case; Jeffrey A. Gomez: boxes, Christmas decor, totes, cooler, rugs, tv, chair The personal goods stored therein by the following: 10:00AM Life Storage, 14916 Old Cheney Hwy, Orlando FL 32826, 4079179151: LaDale Whaley: boxes, bags, totes, chairs, tv, suitcases, shelving; Juwanna Menzie-Cobbins: boxes, bags, chairs, clothing, couch, printer, dresser, tv, laptop; D’vonte Burke: boxes, clothes, mattress, mirror, wagon; Alyssa Wilbanks: boxes, totes, dishes, kitchenware, wall art, holiday decor, pressure washer, Apple monitor, chair, canopy, luggage; Janessa Hammerle: boxes, bags, totes, toys, luggage, tent; Jasmine Porter: boxes, clothes, mattress, toys, bike, tv, easel, tables, dresser, night stand; Roberto Estevez: boxes, bags, totes, wall art, couch, dresser, night stand; Jonathan Okoye: boxes, car parts, car seats, tv The personal goods stored therein by the following: 10:00AM Life Storage, 3364 W State Rd 426 Oviedo, FL 32765, 4079304293: Rudolph Narcisse: Household goods, Electronics, Boxes, Mattress. Janiece Hill: Mattress, Headboard, Chair, Piano Keyboard. Catherine Morales: Toys, Electronics, Stationary Bicycle. Janine Gomez: Household goods, File Cabinet, Electronics, Boxes, Office The personal goods stored therein by the following: 10:00AM Life Storage, 1010 Lockwood Blvd Oviedo, FL 32765, 4079304370: Daniel Gump: Household goods, Tools box, Plastic Bags, Clothing, Flowers Decorations. Donna Gump: Household goods, Bins, Boxes, Wall Art, Ladders and Flower Decorations. Jon Azaldegui: Household goods, Boxes, Mattress, Bins and Plastic Bags. Richard Davidson: Household goods, Boxes, Bins and Plastic Bags. Kerri Spencer: Boxes, Bins and Plastic Bags. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 10:00AM Life Storage, 6068 Wooden Pine Drive, Orlando, Florida, 32829, 4079745165: Saba Cleaners LLC: business items The personal goods stored therein by the following: 11:00AM Life Storage, 9001 Eastmar Commons Blvd, Orlando, FL 32825, 4079016180: Emilio Reyes: Tires, rims, speakers, wall art, shelves. Rosa Duran: Generator, tools, wall art, toys, totes, boxes. Melissa Nunez: Couch, Mattresses, bicycle, boxes, totes. Tarra Harris: Luggage, clothing, totes, boxes. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 11:15AM Extra Space Storage, 1305 Crawford Ave. St. Cloud FL 34769, 4075040833: Anthony Muriel, household items The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage, 11071 University Blvd Orlando, FL 32817, 3213204055: Michael Tunay: Boxes, furniture; Nelson Guerra: Household items The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage, 12915 Narcoossee rd. Orlando FL 32832, 4075015799: Junius Roane Riddick La Rosa- Mattress’s, Speakers, Paintings, Kitchenware, Rug, Suitcase; Patricia Garcia-Shelves, Clothing, Boxes, Toys; Mureke Rwaramba-Clothing, Boxes, Shelves, Bedding, Totes; Emily Marques-Boxes, Household goods The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage, 342 Woodland Lake Drive Orlando FL 32828, 3218004793:
Antavio Kinsler: shelving; Andrew Owens: Bed set, boxes, shelve; Andrew X: Bed set, boxes, shelve Tishia Skeete, living room set, washer, dryer, some items from bedroom, clothes The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:45 PM Extra Space Storage, 9847 Curry Ford Rd Orlando, FL 32825, 4074959612: Wanda Falcon-Household goods; Tiffany Hazel-plastic containers, bags, clothes, bedding, tv box, garage items. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 1:15PM Extra Space Storage, 11261 Narcoossee Rd. Orlando FL 32832, 4072807355: Anthony Fournier: Household items The personal goods stored therein by the following: 1:30PM Extra Space Storage, 10959 Lake Underhill Rd Orlando FL 32825, 4075020120: Linoshka Villanueva Carrero: Household items; Tamirys Rodrigues: Beds boxes furniture; Chiseah Rubiera: Appliance and furniture
The personal goods stored therein by the following: 2:00PM Extra Space Storage, 12709 E Colonial Dr, Orlando FL 32826, 4076343990: Andrea Marie Canterbury
Zimmerman: Electronics, boxes, totes, Holiday decor The personal goods stored therein by the following: 2:00PM Extra Space Storage 11971 Lake Underhill Rd, Orlando FL 32825, 4075167913: Jason Den homegoods, Omyraliz Ortiz homegoods
The personal goods stored therein by the following: 2:30PM Extra Space Storage, 15551 Golden Isle Blvd Orlando, FL 32828, 4077101020: Kayla Wells: 2 TVs, furniture, mirror, bags, Eduardo Prado: HVAC items, FORD sign, tire, bikes. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage, on behalf of itself or its affiliates, Life Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 2650 W.25th St. Sanford, Fl 32771, 407-324-9985 on June 25, 2024 at 12:00pm Robert Beron: household goods, Jesus Canales: Household Goods, Samuel Hardy: clothes. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage, on behalf of itself or its affiliates, Life Storage, will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: Life Storage, #3700, 5645 W State Road 46, Sanford, FL 32771 (321)2867326. On June 25th, 2024 at 12:00 PM Chris Cossairt- Office Furn/Machines/Equip, Max Berry- Household goods, Chad Neuroth- Household goods. The auction will be listed and advertised on www. storagetreasures.com Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property
Extra Space Storage/ Life Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: Store 3057 4066 Silver Star Rd, Orlando, FL 32808 (407) 734-1959 on June 21st, 2024 12:00PM Willis Purcell- Ladders, Boxes, Tools Sabrina Johnson- Totes, Bags, Chairs, Mattress& Bedding, Boxes Eric Lopez- TV, Cage, Kids Bikes, Chairs, Totes. Clothing& Shoes, Toys, Baby Toys Willie Owens- TV, Bags, Bikes, Scooter, Dishes& Kitchenware, Lamps, Clothing, Mattress& Bedding, Boxes, Computers, Tools& Supplies Raphendy Raphael- TV, Totes, Boxes, Mattress& Bedding Tori Kelly- Totes, Suitcases, Bags, Clothing& Shoes, Boxes Jocelyn Colon- Totes, Luggage, Ladder, Bikes, Bags, Washer, Dryer Equanda Gandy- TV, Bikes, Chairs, Tables Donnie Knight- Clothes, TV, Boxes. The auction will be listed and advertised on www. storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
FLORIDA DISCOUNT SELF STORAGE
Personal property of the following tenants will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy a rental lien in accordance with Florida Statutes, Sections 83.801 - 83.809. Auctions will be held on the premises at locations and times indicated below. Wednesday June 19, 2024, Thursday June 20, 2024. Contents: Misc. & household goods and vehicles. Viewing is at time of sale only. The owners’ or their agents reserve the right to bid on any unit, and to refuse any bid. 2580 Michigan Ave Kissimmee,FL 34744 (Wed, June 19 @ 11:30am) 0456-Barbara Dolphus, 0469-Loreley Garcia, 1056-Lucile Ryan, 1523-Christian Santiago, 1615Curt Morse; 2011 DUTC Travel Trailer, VIN#47CTF3K23BM440056, Owner:Curt Allen Morse, Lien Holder:Bank of the West 5622 Old Winter Garden Rd Orlando,FL 32811 (Wed, June 19 @ 1:00pm) 0160-Mohammed Al-Hamed, 0180-Valton Registe, 0247-Dwyane Comrie, 0539-Antwann Artist, 0551-Quanisha Valerin, 0559-Ursula Sureda, 0564-Jennifer Cashen, 0734-Richard Crain, 1043-Shawnett Cosby, 1087-Cindy Burke 6401 Pinecastle Blvd Orlando,FL 32809 (Wed, June 19 @ 2:30pm)224-Cherymar Rivera, 257-Pahola Leguizamon, 528-Libanesa Vargas 3625 Aloma Ave Oviedo,FL 32765 (Thurs, June 20 @ 11:00am) 0507-Christopher Howard 17420 SR 50 Clermont,FL 34711 (Thurs, June 20 @ 1:00pm) 0347- Stephen A Rassen, 0610- Alex Da Rocha, 7118- Adam Brown 2300 Hartwood Marsh Clermont,FL 34711 (Thurs, June 20 @ 2:00pm) 132-Natalie Albert Colon, 632-Myrranda Hunter, 633-Cynthia Brittain, 733-Robert Hendricks. Run dates 5/29/24 and 6/5/24.
RV
RV Sales
orlandoweekly.com ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY 41
Legal, Public Notices
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY STATE OF FLORIDA. JUVENILE DIVISION: 07/WOOTEN CASE NO: DP18-179, IN THE INTEREST OF A.M.R. DOB: 3/26/2021, minor child. NOTICE OF ACTION, TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO: ELIJAH RUFFIN, Address Unknown. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that the State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, has filed a Petition to terminate your parental rights and permanently commit the following child for adoption: A.M.R. born on 3/26/2021. You are hereby commanded to appear on July 3, 2024, at 9:30 AM before the Honorable Wayne Wooten at the Orange Courthouse, 2000 East Michigan Street Orlando, Fl 32806, for an ADVISORY HEARING. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES A CONSTRUCTIVE CONSENT TO THE TPR PETITION OF THE CHILD(REN) AND COULD RESULT IN THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THE CHILD(REN). WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 31st day of May, 2024. CLERK OF COURT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk. (Court Seal)
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA JUVENILE DIVISION: 7/WOOTEN CASE NO.: DP 23-440 IN THE INTEREST OF MINOR CHILD: C.C. DOB: 11/26/2023 SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING ON PETITION FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO: MARISOL CERROBLANCO, address Unknown. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that the State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, has filed a Petition to terminate your parental rights and permanently commit the following child for adoption: C.C., Date of Birth: November 26th, 2023. You are hereby commanded to appear on July 12th, 2024, at 9:30 A.M. before the Honorable Wayne C. Wooten, Judge of the Circuit Court, in Court Room 6 of the Thomas S. Kirk Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 E. Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. YOU ARE ENTITLED TO HAVE AN ATTORNEY PRESENT TO REPRESENT YOU IN THIS HEARING AND AT ALL STAGES OF THIS PROCEEDING. IF YOU WANT AN ATTORNEY BUT ARE UNABLE TO AFFORD ONE YOU MUST NOTIFY THE COURT AND THE COURT WILL DETERMINE IF YOU ARE ENTITLED TO COURT APPOINTED COUNSEL. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS OF THIS CHILD(REN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD OR CHILDREN NAMED IN THIS NOTICE. WITNESS my hand as Clerk of said Court and the Seal thereof, this 13th day of May, 2024. This summons has been issued at the request of George Lytle, Esquire Florida Bar Number: 985465 george.lytle@myflfamilies. com CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT, By: /s/ Clerk (seal)
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA.CASE NO. 2024-DR002026 IN RE: The Marriage of ANITA P. DIAS, Petitioner/Wife, and ALBERT A. DIAS, Respondent/Husband. NOTICE OF ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE. TO: ALBERT A. DIAS; 5211 Montague Place, Orlando FL 32808. YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action has been filed against you and that you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it on Michael T. Mackhanlall, Esq., On Behalf Of ANITA P. DIAS, whose address is 37 N. Orange Ave Suite 500, Orlando FL 32801 on or before 7/4/2024, and file the original with the clerk of this Court at 425 N. Orange Ave Orlando FL 32801, before service on PETITIONER or immediately thereafter. If you fail to do so, a default may be entered against you for the relief demanded in the petition. The Action is asking the Court to dissolve the bounds of marriage in this case. There is no real or personal property. Copies of all court documents in this case, including orders, are available at the Clerk of the Circuit Court’s office. You may review these documents upon request. You must keep the Clerk of the Circuit Court’s office notified of your current address. (You may file Notice of Current Address, Florida Supreme Court Approved Family Law Form 12.915.) Future papers in this lawsuit will be mailed to the address on record at the clerk’s office. WARNING: Rule 12.285, Florida Family Law Rules of Procedure, requires certain automatic disclosure of documents and information. Failure to comply can result in sanctions, including dismissal or striking of pleadings. Dated 5/17/2024. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT by: /s/ Robert Hingston, Deputy Clerk (court seal).
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA. JUVENILE DIVISION: 3/TYNAN, CASE NO.: DP19-461 In the Interest of: A.W. DOB: 11/09/2013, minor child. NOTICE OF ACTION FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA. TO: JULIETTE ROMEO, ADDRESS UNKNOWN. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that the State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, has filed a Petition to terminate your parental rights and permanently commit the following child for adoption: A.W. born on November 9, 2013. A copy of the Petition is on file with the Clerk of the Court. You are hereby commanded to appear on June 24, 2024, at 9:00 A.M., in person before the Honorable Judge Greg A. Tynan at the Thomas S. Kirk Juvenile Justice Center, in Courtroom 5, the address of which is 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING AND MANIFEST BEST INTEREST HEARING. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS OF THIS CHILD (OR CHILDREN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE NAMED IN THIS NOTICE. WITNESS my hand and seal of this court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 10th day of May, 2024. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk (Court Seal)
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE
COUNTY, FLORIDA. JUVENILE DIVISION: 3/TYNAN, CASE NO.: DP23-231 In the Interest of:T.S. DOB: 05/04/2009, T.S. DOB: 09/12/2011, minor children. NOTICE OF ACTION FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA. TO: SHAWN JERMAINE SCHUMAN, ADDRESS UNKNOWN. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that the State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, has filed a Petition to terminate your parental rights and permanently commit the following children for adoption: T.S. born on May 4, 2009, and T.S. born on September 12, 2011. A copy of the Petition is on file with the Clerk of the Court. You are hereby commanded to appear on July 19, 2024, at 10:15 A.M., in person before the Honorable Judge Greg A. Tynan at the Thomas S. Kirk Juvenile Justice Center, in Courtroom 5, the address of which is 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING AND MANIFEST BEST INTEREST HEARING. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS OF THIS CHILD (OR CHILDREN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE NAMED IN THIS NOTICE. WITNESS my hand and seal of this court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 21st day of May, 2024. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk (Court Seal)
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA. JUVENILE DIVISION: 3/TYNAN, CASE NO.: DP22-486 In the Interest of: J.B. DOB: 11/11/2022, minor child. NOTICE OF ACTION FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA. TO: KRISTIN BELL, ADDRESS UNKNOWN. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that the State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, has filed a Petition to terminate your parental rights and permanently commit the following child for adoption: J.B., born on November 11, 2022. A copy of the Petition is on file with the Clerk of the Court. You are hereby commanded to appear on August 5, 2024, at 9:30 A.M., in person before the Honorable Judge Greg A. Tynan at the Thomas S. Kirk Juvenile Justice Center, in Courtroom 5, the address of which is 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING AND MANIFEST BEST INTEREST HEARING. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS OF THIS CHILD (OR CHILDREN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE NAMED IN THIS NOTICE. WITNESS my hand and seal of this court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 28th day of May, 2024. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk (Court Seal)
Life Storage/Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: Store 8439:1420 N Orange Blossom Trl Orlando, FL 32804 (407) 312-8736 on June 21st, 2024 12:00PM Mariah Herron-household goods Saundra Jones-household goods. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.
storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Life Storage/ Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Life Storage/Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 7244 Overland Rd Orlando, FL 32810 (407) 794-7457 on June 21st, 2024 12:00PM Dixon Ramon Diaz Tovar-Clothing, furniture;David Perkins-Clothes, Furniture, Toys; Yolanda James-Household Goods/Furniture, TV/Stereo Equipment, Tools/Appliances, Office Furn/Machines/ Equip, Acct.; Armani Harris-household items, luggage, totes, small furniture; Kerry McClelland-Household Goods/Furniture, TV/Stereo Equipment, Office Furn/ Machines/Equip. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Life Storage/Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION FOR MONIES DUE ON STORAGE LOCKERS LOCATED AT UHAUL COMPANY FACILITIES. STORAGE LOCATIONS AND TIMES ARE LISTED BELOW. ALL GOODS SOLD ARE HOUSEHOLD CONTENTS, MISCELLANEOUS OR RECOVERED GOODS. ALL AUCTIONS ARE HELD TO SATISFY OWNER’S LIEN FOR RENT AND FEES IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUTES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807, STARTS AT 8:00am and RUNS CONTINOUSLY. Auction will be held online: www.storagetreasures.com U-Haul Ctr. 508 N. Goldenrod rd. Orlando Fl. 32807 06/13/2024: 337 Africayahna Laing, 737 Kobe Amburgey, 223 Angelo Mcleod, 718 William Gufford, 605 Sherley Duremy, 726 Erick Blakey, 315 Jean Blaise, 430 Jasmine Jackson. U-Haul Ctr. 4001 E. Colonial Dr. Orlando Fl. 32803 06/13/2024: B181 Tiesha Wilkinson, D121 Sandro Amaro, A115 Christian Artiles. U-Haul Ctr. 3500 S. Orange ave. Orlando Fl 32806 06/13/2024: 1935 Kadyrah Payne, AA0602M Monique Hubbard, 1067 Jean Pico Soria, 1634 Lee Lumpkins, 1429 Carlos Stokes, 1607 Sabrina Warning, AA6665K Monique Hubbard. U-Haul Ctr. 11815 E. Colonial Dr. Orlando Fl 32826 06/13/2024: 1603 Angel Alvarado, 1123 Frantzy Jerome, 1512 Celso Degrande, 1019 Riddick Bowe, 1521 Melody Allen.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on June 21st, 2024 at the location indicated: Store 1334: 5603 Metrowest Blvd Orlando FL, 32811 407.516.7751 @ 12:00PM: Brandon Burch: furniture, boxes, household items; Duriel Brown: 2 bedroom home w/d; Jackson William Felski: living room & bedroom furniture; Kamil Antoury: Household goods; Michelle Codner: Beds, Dressers, End Tables, Couch, Clothes; Sabrina Rodrigues: household goods; Sebastian Mont-Louis: furniture; Tenisha Gilmore: 1 bedroom home with a grill. The auction
will be listed and advertised on www. storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Extra Space Storage, on behalf of itself or its affiliates, Life Storage or Storage Express, will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on June 21, 2024 at the location indicated: Store 3502: 1236 Vineland Rd, Winter Garden Fl, 34787, 407.794.6460 @12:00 PM: Shirley Dixon-Snyder-Household Goods/ Furniture; Michelle Albarran-Boxes and some furniture. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on June 24, 2024 at the location indicated: Store 7590: 7360 Sandlake Rd Orlando, FL 32819, 407.634.4449 @ 11:45 AM: Kaelib McNair- boxes, book cases, washer dryer; Nazneen Chowdhury- extra household items, bins; Paul Contreras Chandler- books, papers, clothes. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Extra Space Storage, on behalf of itself or its affiliates, Life Storage or Storage Express, will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on June 21st, 2024 at the location indicated: Store 8460: 4390 Pleasant Hill Rd Kissimmee FL 34746 407.429.8867 @12:15 PM: Rafael Lebronsofa sectional dining table; Rashaan Hill- Clothing, Furniture, and Collectables; Lorraine Lorenzo- Boxes; Kirsten Vegas-Johnson- Household items; Milagros Rivera- Housegoods; VELANDE SEIDEBoxes Store 8753: 540 Cypress Pky, Poinciana, FL 34759 863.240.0879 @ 12:45
PM: Jason Pusey’brown - Household Items; Gregory Hayes - Bed Set; Theodore Sims - Household Items; Luz RosaHousehold Items; Elijah Bryan - Speakers, Wall Art; Bonnie Mills - Household Items; Jason Pusey’brown - Cabinet, Chairs; Felicia Marchese - Household Items; Melanie Feliciano - Household Items. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal
42 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● orlandoweekly.com
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
To satisfy the owner’s storage lien, PS Retail Sales, LLC will sell at public lien sale on June 14, 2024, the personal property in the below-listed units, which may include but are not limited to: household and personal items, office and other equipment. The public sale of these items will begin at 09:30 AM and continue until all units are sold. The lien sale is to be held at the online auction website, www.storagetreasures.com, where indicated. For online lien sales, bids will be accepted until 2 hours after the time of the sale specified. PUBLIC STORAGE # 07030, 360 State Road 434 East, Longwood, FL 32750, (407) 392-1525 Time: 09:30 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures. com1320 - Delcampo, Breanna; 1409Ferraro, Pierluigi; 2708 - Mclean, Heather; 3101 - Allwood, Sharnita; 3625 - Cella, Chris PUBLIC STORAGE # 23118, 141 W State Road 434, Winter Springs, FL 32708, (407) 512-0425 Time: 09:45 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com I260 - Hellekson, Michael; J356 - Bolden, keith; K435 - Boone Jr, William PUBLIC STORAGE # 24326, 570 N US Highway 17 92, Longwood, FL 32750, (407) 505-7649 Time: 10:00 AM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. B229 - ROI Home Services Haugabrooks, Sherrard; E019 - Jackson , Karianna; E050 - Fidler, Machaela; G004 - hyacinthe, james; G014 - Gadson, Shamell; G020 - martinez, JJ; G045 - Willoughby, Yvonne PUBLIC STORAGE # 24328, 7190 S US Highway 17/92, Fern Park, FL 32730, (407) 258-3060 Time: 10:15 AM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. C323 - Harvey, Sidney; D407 - Normand, Don; J911Mark, Kristan PUBLIC STORAGE # 25438, 2905 South Orlando Drive, Sanford, FL 32773, (407) 545-6715 Time: 10:30 AMSale to be held at www.storagetreasures. com. D028 - Thompson, Novian; F009Wallen, Kimberly; F012 - Diaz, Carlos; H036 - NICHOLSON, Sarah; J117 - Williams, Vickie; J303 - blake, ashley; J304 - Mingo, Marlene PUBLIC STORAGE # 25842, 51 Spring Vista Dr, Debary, FL 32713, (386) 202-2956 Time: 11:00 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures. com. 00282 - Rodriguez, Alexa; 00516Thomas, Redajia; 00547 - Coffey, Christine PUBLIC STORAGE # 25893, 3725 W Lake Mary Blvd, Lake Mary, FL 32746, (407) 495-1274Time: 11:15 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 2073Rodriguez, Noah; 2084 - Robbins, DC; 4018 - yuriar, Jacquelinne; 5075 - Strong, Will Public sale terms, rules, and regulations will be made available prior to the sale. All sales are subject to cancellation. We reserve the right to refuse any bid. Payment must be in cash or credit card-no checks. Buyers must secure the units with their own personal locks. To claim tax-exempt status, original RESALE certificates for each space purchased is required. By PS Retail Sales, LLC, 701 Western Avenue, Glendale, CA 91201. (818) 244-8080
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE To satisfy the owner’s storage lien, PS Retail Sales, LLC will sell at public lien sale on June 14, 2024, the personal property in the below-listed units, which may include but are not limited to: household and personal items, office and other equipment. The public sale of these items will begin at 01:15 PM and continue until all units are sold. The lien sale is to be held at the online auction website, www.
storagetreasures.com, where indicated. For online lien sales, bids will be accepted until 2 hours after the time of the sale specified. PUBLIC STORAGE # 07029, 3150 N Hiawassee Rd, Hiawassee, FL 32818, (407) 392-0863 Time: 01:15 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com 1817 - Giddens, Vicky; 1908D - Jefferson, Serita; 2426 - Gould, Tracy; 2522 - aubuchon, Jason; 2523 - Denard, Shirley; 2609 - Gage, Felicia. PUBLIC STORAGE # 08326, 310 W Central Parkway, Altamonte Springs, FL 32714, (407) 487-4595 Time: 01:30 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures. com. 0008 - Williams, Porscha; 0029 - Contreras, Brenda; 0252 - culp, Melahn; 0260 - solodky, Richard; 1015 - Findley, William A; 2008 - caraballo, Luis; 2059 - Dixon, Asha. PUBLIC STORAGE # 08705, 455 S Hunt Club Blvd, Apopka, FL 32703, (407) 392-1542 Time: 01:45 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 6220Reese, Timothy PUBLIC STORAGE # 08732, 521 S State Road 434, Altamonte Springs, FL 32714, (407) 487-4750 Time: 02:00 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1026 - Rachel, Jerron; 3024 - Gruse, David; 6087 - Orr, jacqueline; 6131 - Ojha, Satat; 6135 - Peters, Anissa; 8004Baez, Gil. PUBLIC STORAGE # 20729, 1080 E Altamonte Dr, Altamonte Springs, FL 32701, (407) 326-6338 Time: 02:15 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com.
B106 - GEREMAIA, SHENA; D047 - Jones, Chanda. PUBLIC STORAGE # 22130, 510 Douglas Ave, Altamonte Springs, FL 32714, (407) 865-7560 Time: 02:30 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com
C1017 - Durrance, Brian; D2192 - Moise, Keyline. PUBLIC STORAGE # 24107, 4100 John Young Parkway, Orlando, FL 32804, (407) 930-4381 Time: 02:45 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com.
B214 - Wimberly, Gerald; B230 - FLEUR, Mackendy SAINT; B248 - Galloway, Kathryn; B266 - Hall, Dasha; C316 - Samuels, Sam; C353 - Pickett, DeMarcus; E006Mcwhite, Audrey; E009 - Galloway, Anson; H803 - Gomer, Brenden; J916 - Bittner, Francis. PUBLIC STORAGE # 25780, 8255 Silver Star Rd, Orlando, FL 32818, (321) 247-6799 Time: 03:00 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1441Evans, Jabari; 2001 - Sinora, Annthesa; 2049 - Bhasin, Pawan; 2144 - Wilcox, Janet; 2166 - Cole, Alexia; 2422 - myers, Jaquesta; 2627 - Holmes, Amelia. PUBLIC STORAGE # 25813, 2308 N John Young Pkwy, Orlando, FL 32804, (407) 603-0436 Time: 03:15 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. B010B - Otero, Megan; B017 - Larue, Chelsey; B025A - Law, Lakeithia; B026A - MITCHELL, MICHAEL; B069A - Williams, Tamyra; B074A - Marin, Arthur; D032 - Davis, Dion; D035 - williams, Sharella; D042 - Roper, Johniece; F039 - Valdez, Kenneth; F114Thomas, Quandra; G014 - Perez, Emely. PUBLIC STORAGE # 25814, 6770 Silver Star Rd, Orlando, FL 32818, (407) 545-2394
Time: 03:30 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 0021 - russ, Hannah; 0121 - Powell, Betenia; 0128Loussaint, Katiana; 0137 - Lee, DeAndrae; 0142 - Sanders, Patrice; 0199 - Grimmage, Karissa; 0259 - Longstreet, Charleen; 0276 - GRACIA, DUVALSON; 0292 - Samuels, Dwayne; 0307 - Dumas, Daren; 0339 - hall, reginald; 0593 - Longstreet, Charleen; 0599 - Richard, Tiffany; 0652 - Serrano, Edwin; 0859 - Thomas, JeNay; 0869 - Hill, Ianaya. PUBLIC STORAGE # 25891, 108 W Main St, Apopka, FL 32703, (407) 542-9698
Time: 03:45 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 0409 - Wilson, Enriqus; 0513 - DeJesus-Wilkinson, Jeanette; 0517 - Jenkins, Banyesha; 0523 - Perez, Tamara; 0812 - wyatt, Luigi; 0914
- Sands, Tashara; 1368T - Dejesus, Maria; 1412T - Newsome, Jeromy; 1719 - Polk, Deirdre; 1722 - Williams, Danielle; 1731clark, Kelisha; 1752 - CARRION BARRETO, FRABIAN. PUBLIC STORAGE # 25895, 2800 W State Road 434, Longwood, FL 32779, (407) 392-0854. Time: 04:00 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com 0702 - Caverly, Peggy; 0732 - Montoya, Annia; 0759 - Caverly, Peggy; 0832 - Heath, Alrahman; 0834 - Whelan, Jennifer; 0845 - Ross, Chandelle; 0855 - Eidemiller, Robert. PUBLIC STORAGE # 28091, 2431 S Orange Blossom Trail, Apopka, FL 32703, (407) 279-3958 Time: 04:15 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1057 - Wade, Lily; 1103 - Fail, Alexandria; 1168Miller, Marilyn; 1260 - Cody, Jennifer; C036 - Spivey, Michael; NA01 - Jones, Evan; P112 - Gamez, Alexis; V013 - Lowman, Dasha; X012 - Tom, Sylvia. Public sale terms, rules, and regulations will be made available prior to the sale. All sales are subject to cancellation. We reserve the right to refuse any bid. Payment must be in cash or credit card-no checks. Buyers must secure the units with their own personal locks. To claim tax-exempt status, original RESALE certificates for each space purchased is required. By PS Retail Sales, LLC, 701 Western Avenue, Glendale, CA 91201. (818) 244-8080.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Extra Space
Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on June 21, 2024 at the location indicated: Store 1317: 5592 LB McLeod Rd Orlando, FL 32811, 407.720.2832 @ 2:00 PM: Neeka Johnson-sofa, boxes; Errol McFarlane-Mattresses, bed frames, tv stand, containers of clothes, a desk; Lamel Hamburg-ent center 2 couches table bins of clothes and misc racks; Joshua Greggs-small furniture; Cindy Cardenas-household items; Total Body Sports LLC-Michael Lockley-gym equipment; Carlos Martinez-Van. FORD 350. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Extra Space
Storage, on behalf of itself or its affiliates, Life Storage or Storage Express, will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on June 14, 2024 at the location indicated: Store 1333: 13125 S. John Young Pkwy, Orlando FL. 32837, 407.516.7005 @ 10:00 AM: Kiasha Bennett-home items,Stefani Viramontes-furniture,Stefani Viramontes-home items,Azary Crespo-household items. Store 1631: 5753 Hoffner Ave, Orlando, FL 32822, (407) 212-5890 @ 10:15 AM: Jessica Gray- Bag, luggage, clothing; Brittany Ramos- Boxes, car parts, dresser, bed frame, toys, bicycle, tv; Belmarie Ortiz- Bins, kitchen stuff, baby’s items, bicycle; Christopher Jordan- Bins, boxes, microwave, furniture, luggage; Destiny Johnson- Vacuum, chairs, bike, toys; Dominique Taylor-tables, couch, vacuum, clothing; Store 7057: 13597 S. Orange Ave Orlando FL 32824, 407.910.2087 @ 10:30 AM: Raul Omar Plata Gomez - Office supplies; Nelson Muniz Martinez - Household items; Jhasmin Lajara - Gym equipment,
3 Bedroom house; Harold Knight - boxes, clothes, household goods; Harold Knight - boxes, clothes, household goods; Maverick Matos - Household goods. Store 7107: 6174 S Goldenrod, Orlando, FL 32822, 407.955.4137 @ 10:45 AM: Jonathan William Morris - Office Supplies; Nicole Valencia - 1 bedroom apartment; Chad Hair - furniture, couches and a bed; Nelson Maldonado - school supplies; Cindy Ortiz - boxes, clothes, totes, shoes, personal & beauty items; Agustin Guzman - boxes, totes; Peabo Ingram - Household items Store 3024: 11955 S Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando FL 32837, 407.826.0024 @ 11:00 AM:Keith Roberts-drums, exercise equip,luggage, bookcase,golf bags; Angela Reynolds-Bins, bags, toolbox; Renee Stansell-Bags, electronics; Joi Postell-Bins; Rodolfo Crispim-vacuum, luggage, chair bins, ladder Store 3378: 475 Celebration Pl, Celebration FL 34747, 321.939.3752 @ 11:15 AM: Trudie SandersClothes, Boxes, Electronics; David CaranHousehold Items; David Waters- Household Items, Clothes; Coral Cintron- Totes, Home Decor, Household Items Store 8931: 3280 Vineland Rd, Kissimmee FL 34746, 407.720.7424 @ 11:30 AM: Erik Mosher House contents, Mariannette Torres Bins, Stanphill Donawa boxes & queen bed, Lucas Johnston Clothing, Clayton Jackman Furniture and books, David Rivers Furniture, clothing & electronics, Brittany Kneisler Totes, 2 Mattress & Household items, Jorge Lisboa Ruiz TV and a couple of boxes with clothes and a twin mattress, Kia Phillips furniture, Dargenis Cruz Rincon Household items, Demond Williams Beds and boxes, David Bass Boxes, furniture & household goods, Daniel Peccia Housegoods, William Hendrickson boxes. Store 3519: 4020 Curry Ford Rd, Orlando, 32806, 407.901.0194 @11:45 AM: Frances Ramirez- Household goods; Justine Caba- Household goods, furniture; Phillando Duncan- Household goods, furniture, tools, appliances; Yesenia Rodriguez- Household goods, furniture; Clayton Smith- Household goods, furniture, TV, electronics; Clayton Smith- Household goods, furniture; Sache Eure- Household goods, furniture; Jeremiah DownsHousehold goods, furniture; Wendy Robinson- Household items, furniture. Store 8136: 3501 S. Orange Blossom Trail Orlando FL 32839, 407.488.9093 @ 12:00pm: Jasmond Simmons-Clothes,Shoes,Luggage,Books:Taiysha Kelly-Household Furniture,RollerSkates, Toys Baby Games:Victoria Hayward-Fans,Boxes,Beddind ,Furniture,Office Equipment: Rodine Richards-Eliptical Machine,Mirrors,Household Goods:Tanshenika Miller-Clothing ,Shoes, Kitchenware,Household Goods:Lachelle Annette Bridges-Bike ,Kitchen cookware ,Totes, Clothing :Wilber Leonor-Bike,Couch,Mattress,Bedding ,Totes Store 7306: 408 N Primrose Dr, Orlando, FL 32803, (321) 285-5021 @ 12:15 PM: Soundbar LLC; sound system equipment. Pom Poms Teahouse; office equipment. Celistine Moors; household goods, bed. Soundbar; music and sound equipment. Samaria Woodberry; Furniture and clothes. Tiffany Swanson; kings size bed, Boxes. Store 8612: 1150 Brand Ln Kissimmee FL 34744, 407.414.5303@ 12:30PM: Princess Prado –beds, boxes, weights, furniture, Pac-Man arcade game machine, appliances; Alberto Sanchez Jr – chairs, boxes, furniture; Dominique Mitchell – books, furniture, bikes. Store 3526: 4650 S. Semoran Blvd, Orlando Fl 32822, 407.823.7734 @ 12:45 PM: LaShelle Parrish- household items, clothes; Kevin Watson-Household goods, furniture, Tv; Amber Collier- Household
Goods/Furniture; Kayla King-Boxes, kid items, totes; Cynthia Diaz- Household Goods/Furniture, electronics, Tools; Sharlae Carn-Vending machine; Andrea E Hogan-Classroom items, grill, furniture; Johnathan Davila- Tools/Appliances, boxes. Store 8778: 3820 S Orange Ave Orlando FL 32806, 321.270.3440 @ 1:00 pm Rebbeca Powell 1 bedroom apt/ Shachel Mills 2 couches, 2 beds/ Christina Bates household goods/ Virginia Nina Ayala bins. Store 4107: 9080 W. Irlo Bronson Memorial Hwy, Kissimmee Fl 34747, 407.238.1799 @ 1:15 PM: Johnniey Hill-Hshld goods, appliances and tools; Francisco Benitez- Plastic bins, sofa, boxes, shelves; Bradford Jefferson-Hshld goods/furniture; Brittany Roberts-Hshld goods; Gema Logan- Hshld goods; Susa Atkins-Hshld goods/furniture; Desne Vanmeter-Hshld goods/furniture, TV/stereo equipment Store 4109: 13450 Landstar Blvd Orlando, FL 32824, 407.601.41.69@ 1:30 PM: Janet Torres- Household Goods/ Furniture Store 4217: 5698 S Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, Fl 32839, 754.551.4774 @ 1:45 PM: Jessy Laine Rivera Garcia-Furniture,boxes,bed/Stephanie Pooley-tools,equipment,electronics/Ke’Arrah Washington-contents of a one bedroom apartment/Sol Garcia-boxes,coach,kitchen/Terri Carey-boxes,bins,household goods/Marie Alvarez Household items Store 4227: 2334 S Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL 32822, 407.930.4541 @ 2:00 PM: Myeisa Campbell - boxes. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY
Notice is hereby given that Mindful Storage will sell at public auction, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following times and locations: June 19th, 2024 9:30am, Mindful Storage facility: 900 Cypress Pkwy. Kissimmee, FL 34759 (321) 732-6032
The personal goods stored therein by the following:following: #1106-Households, #C113-Boxes, #1083-Households, #1096-Households, #1036-Furniture, #D214-Households, #D233- Households, #D246-Boxes, #D254-Furniture, #K205-Households, #2074-Households. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Mindful Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
property.
orlandoweekly.com ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY 43
44 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● orlandoweekly.com
Legal, Public Notices
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Extra Space Storage, on behalf of itself or its affiliates, Life Storage, will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: Site #3086, 130 Concord Drive, Casselberry, FL 32707, June 25, 2024 @ 12:00 pm Jennifer Gest- Household Goods/Furniture Lawrence Baileycouch desk TVs boxes Johnny Joachimtools, jacks Diamond Alexander- boxes clothes microwave 2 lamps stools. The auction will be listed an advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purcase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Extra Space Storage, on behalf of itself or its affiliates, Life Storage or Storage Express, will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: Site #3503, 1170 W State Road 434, Longwood, FL 32750 - (407)602-3999, June 25, 2024 @ 12:00 pm Frederick Tanzer-Household Items,Mark Anderson-Household goods,Heidi Betancourt-Household Items The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE To satisfy the owner’s storage lien, PS Retail Sales, LLC will sell at public lien sale on June 13, 2024, the personal property in the below-listed units, which may include but are not limited to: household and personal items, office and other equipment. The public sale of these items will begin at 09:30 AM and continue until all units are sold. The lien sale is to be held at the online auction website, www. storagetreasures.com, where indicated. For online lien sales, bids will be accepted until 2 hours after the time of the sale specified. PUBLIC STORAGE # 08711, 3145 N Alafaya Trail, Orlando, FL 32826, (407) 613-2984 Time: 09:30 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com 2390 - Morgan, Mariah; 3012 - shourka, Younse; 5059 - Carbone, Jose; 5131 - Byrd, Bladen PUBLIC STORAGE # 08726, 4801 S Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL 32822, (407) 392-4546 Time: 09:50 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 0169Caraballo, Jaylin; 0227 - Taylor, Renna; 1013 - Allen, Darryl; 3031 - Chapman, Carol; 7058 - Alvarado, Daniel; 7103Hernandez, Angela Rivera; 8042 - Diaz, Diandra PUBLIC STORAGE # 08729, 5215 Red Bug Lake Road, Winter Springs, FL 32708, (407) 495-2108 Time: 10:00 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com 2043 - McNeil, Dorothy; 2051 - Rios, Jose; 2096 - Brown, Sarah; 3034 - Gonzalez, Edith PUBLIC STORAGE # 08765, 1851 N Alafaya Trail, Orlando, FL 32826, (407)
513-4445 Time: 10:10 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com 1014 - Acevedo, Yarimel; 4012 - Pitts, Tom; 4021 - Armstrong, Sherry; 4049 - Hoequist, Margaret; 4062 - Vasquez, Omar; 5019 - St. Surin, Ahriele; 5029 - Ramos, Magdelane; 7024 - Gray, Geyanna PUBLIC STORAGE # 20179, 903 S Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL 32807, (407) 392-1549 Time: 10:20 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com.
D026 - Alvarez, Salinas; D153 - Castro, De leon; E003 - Phillips, Gloria; E037 - Adams, Reginald; E055 - Morales, Iris PUBLIC STORAGE # 24105, 2275 N Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL 32807, (407) 545-2541 Time: 10:30 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1320 - Finkelstein, Cheryl; 2127 - Rojas, Reinaldo; 2264 - Fah, Audrika; 2410 - Tidy tee cohen, Tanya; 3272 - Adams, Nadeje; F410 - Randolph, Toni; H572Stanley, DeAndre; H578 - Brown, Melody; H605 - Floyd, Brandon PUBLIC STORAGE # 25781, 155 S Goldenrod Rd, Orlando, FL 32807, (321) 247-6790 Time: 10:40 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1208 - montalvo, Ray; 1238 - cruz, Luis; 1250 - Larroy, Miriam; 1757 - Celestin, David; 2291 - Layme, Porscha; 2606 - Oliver, Charissa PUBLIC STORAGE # 25851, 10280 E Colonial Dr, Orlando, FL 32817, (407) 9012590 Time: 10:50 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1404Mcnair, Vanaya; 2217 - Dao, Alice; 2428 - Vaughn, Jemetrius PUBLIC STORAGE # 25897, 10053 Lake Underhill Rd, Orlando, FL 32825, (407) 901-6126 Time: 11:00 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 0177 - Johnson, Carina; 0479 - Perez, Zulay; 3058 - Borges, Angel; 3090 - Del Rio, Alicia; 3107 - plumacher, Melissa PUBLIC STORAGE # 25973, 250 N Goldenrod Rd, Orlando, FL 32807, (407) 901-7489 Time: 11:10 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. A249 - garcia, grisel; C364 - Johnson, Cierra; D461 - Dieudonne, Carol; E503 - Coy, Charles PUBLIC STORAGE # 25974, 1931 W State Rd 426, Oviedo, FL 32765, (407) 901-7497 Time: 11:20 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. A007cawthon, Jennifer; A031 - rywalt, Quintin; C084 - Hinds, Rondell PUBLIC STORAGE # 28084, 2275 S Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL 32822, (407) 545-2547 Time: 11:30 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures. com. B111 - Viering, Talisha; B168 - Davis, Brooke; C105 - Santiago, Manuel Public sale terms, rules, and regulations will be made available prior to the sale. All sales are subject to cancellation. We reserve the right to refuse any bid. Payment must be in cash or credit card-no checks. Buyers must secure the units with their own personal locks. To claim tax-exempt status, original RESALE certificates for each space purchased is required. By PS Retail Sales, LLC, 701 Western Avenue, Glendale, CA 91201. (818) 244-8080.
Notice of Public Sale:
Pursuant to F.S. 713.78 on June 21st, 2024 at 9:00 am, Riker’s Roadside Of Central Florida, INC, 630 E Landstreet Rd, Orlando, FL 32824, will sell the following vehicles and/or vessels. Seller reserves the right to bid. Sold as is, no warranty. Seller guarantees no title, terms cash. Seller reserves
the right to refuse any or all bids; 1FAHP35N59W217354 2009 FORD
1FATP8UH7P5103457
2023 FORD
1G8ZP12861Z289596 2001 STRN
1GCCS199298102140 2009 CHEV
1NXBU40E29Z062503
2009 TOYT
1XPBD49X3RD638431
2024 PTRB
4V4NC9EH9LN239994
2020 VOLV
4V4NC9EHXMN271337
2021 VOLVO
5NPDH4AE8FH613040
2015 HYUN
5V8VC5329PT306269
2023 VANGUARD NATIONAL TRAILER
5XXG14J2XMG015791
2021 KIA
5YFS4RCE5LP040545
2020 TOYT
JM1DE1HY5B0103517
2011 MAZD
JT4RN70D6G0014306
1986 TOYT
KNDJ23AU3P7892067
2023 KIA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: NEW GENERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC
gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on the following dates, 08:00 am at 10850 COSMONAUT BLVD ORLANDO, FL 32824, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. NEW GENERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids.
JUNE 18, 2024
1G1ZD5ST2LF032801
2020 CHEV
JUNE 20, 2024
2GNALAEK7E6130567
2014 CHEV
JUNE 21, 2024
WAULK78K79N034424
2009 AUDI
JUNE 22, 2024
1GKLRLEDXAJ110134
2010 GMC
4T1G11AK3RU195997
2024 TOYT
JUNE 23, 2024
1FA6P8TH7G5259500
2016 FORD
2HGFG12827H506807
2007 HOND
3N1AB7AP9EL653152
2014 NISS
JUNE 24, 2024
3N1BC1CPXCK224200
2012 NISS
JUNE 25, 2024
4T1BF1FK8HU367749 2017 TOYT
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: NEW GENERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on the following dates, 08:00 am at 2603 OLD DIXIE HIGHWAY KISSIMMEE, FL 34744, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. NEW GENERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids.
JUNE 21, 2024
3GSDL63708S656759
2008 STRN
JUNE 22, 2024
1G1AL52F857568630
2005 CHEV
3CZRU5H5XGM712641
2016 HOND
3VW2K7AJ9BM360965
2011 VOLK
Notice of Public Sale: Notice is hereby given that Storage King USA at 4601 S Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL 32839 will sell the contents of the storage units
listed below at a public auction to satisfy a lien placed on the contents (pursuant to Chapter 83 of the Florida Statutes). The sale will take place at the website StorageTreasures.com on June 19th, 2024, at 9:00 am. The sale will be conducted under the direction of Christopher Rosa (AU4167) and StorageTreasures.com on behalf of the facility’s management. Units will be available for viewing prior to the sale on StorageTreasures.com. Contents will be sold for cash only to the highest bidder. A 15% buyer’s premium will be charged as well as a $100 cleaning deposit per unit. All sales are final. Seller reserves the right to withdraw the property at any time before the sale or to refuse any bids. The property to be sold is described as “general household items” unless otherwise noted. Chance James - #0A038, Marie Franchette - #0C006, John Charlebois - #0C020, Hailey Bliven - #0D028, Ernson Juste - #0D040, Gupson Jeannelus - #0E030, Jordany Charles#0F015, Geston Desir - #0H047.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE. To satisfy the owner’s storage lien, PS Retail Sales, LLC will sell at public lien sale on June 13, 2024, the personal property in the below-listed units, which may include but are not limited to: household and personal items, office and other equipment. The public sale of these items will begin at 01:00 PM and continue until all units are sold. The lien sale is to be held at the online auction website, www.storagetreasures.com, where indicated. For online lien sales, bids will be accepted until 2 hours after the time of the sale specified. PUBLIC STORAGE # 08714, 8149 Aircenter Court, Orlando, FL 32809, (407) 792-4965 Time: 01:00 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 2020 - Negron, Yoshuanick; 2052C - Adorno, Raul; 3065Coughenour, Brent; 4005 - Kanupp, Beth. PUBLIC STORAGE # 08717, 1800 Ten Point Lane, Orlando, FL 32837, (407) 545-4431
Time: 01:15 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 6005 - Cano, Jossie; 7036 - portillo, Genesis; 7040 - Vladi Transportation Inc. Serrano, Damaris; 7155 - Mauigoa, Wukilani; 8016 - Flores, Frederick. PUBLIC STORAGE # 20477, 5900 Lakehurst Drive, Orlando, FL 32819, (407) 409-7284 Time: 01:30 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. C156 - Mangham, Shanel A; D154 - Ogando, Enrique Junior; E238 - Prince, Georgie. PUBLIC STORAGE # 20711, 1801 W Oak Ridge Road, Orlando, FL 32809, (407) 792-5808
Time: 01:45 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. D011 - Miller, Tikese; G015 - christopher, Jayquan; J053 - Vera, Robert; J058 - Vives, Maritza; J072 - Berry, David; J174 - Paz, Sherry; K058Sanchez, Eddi. PUBLIC STORAGE # 22120, 7628 Narcoossee Rd, Orlando, FL 32822, (407) 237-0496 Time: 02:00 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. A285 - Harlow, Stephanie. PUBLIC STORAGE # 22129, 13151 Reams Rd, Windermere, FL 34786, (407) 395-2605 Time: 02:15 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com 1332 - Prout, Jacqueline; 2313 - Hodges, Latavia. PUBLIC STORAGE # 24303, 1313 45th Street, Orlando, FL 32839, (407) 278-8737 Time: 02:30 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. A131Halstead, Shernasha; B294 - Serrano, Paula; C325 - Wright, Matthew; D414 - Ferguson, Jalissa; F618 - jones, Samuel; F640 - Waits, Miyea. PUBLIC STORAGE # 25454, 235 E Oak Ridge Road, Orlando, FL 32809, (407) 326-9069 Time: 02:45 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. A103 - Martinez, Ramon; B246 - Adorno,
Raul J; E506 - Decembre, ALLEN; F613 - Diaz, Rosendo; G731 - goldston, Dylan; H807 - Blanco, Yurys; J030 - Evans, Tyrek J; O514 - Jett, Brittney. PUBLIC STORAGE # 25782, 2783 N John Young Parkway, Kissimmee, FL 34741, (321) 422-2079 Time: 03:00 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 12067 - Gema, Vanessa; 12209 - Yezzyworldwide llc Blanc, Gabby; 12409 - VARGAS ALEQUIN, ELLIOT; 12417 - Collier, Alliya; 307Castleberry, Kayla; 592 - Venezia, Chris; 611 - CRUZ, ARLENE; 883 - Quirindongo, Keila. PUBLIC STORAGE # 25806, 227 Simpson Rd, Kissimmee, FL 34744, (407) 258-3087 Time: 03:15 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 002Fernandez, Christian; 032 - Hayes, William; 060 - Blinkey, Brandi; 084 - Morales, Jose; 102 - OrTiz, Miosoty; 120 - MARION, QUINTON; 152 - OTERO OTERO, CARMEN; 314 - Gomez Santiago, JOSE; 323pijuan, Michael; 439 - Dotson, Michael; 717 - vazquez, manuel; 876 - Rodriguez, Dominick; 884 - cruz, Carmen. PUBLIC STORAGE # 25846, 1051 Buenaventura Blvd, Kissimmee, FL 34743, (407) 258-3147 Time: 03:30 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 01130 - Romero Esquilin, Ninoshka; 02507 - Waterman, Veronique; 05331 - Reilly, James; 05332Gracia, Ivelisse; 05340 - Santiago torres, Ivonne. PUBLIC STORAGE # 25847, 951 S John Young Pkwy, Kissimmee, FL 34741, (321) 236-6712 Time: 03:45 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com 1010 - Lazala, Teresa; 1140 - Thompson, Shemariah; 1204 - Gillett, Jasmine; 1226Alamo, Jazmin Fernandez; 2069 - Green, Aidan; 2136 - rivera, Marmir; 2167 - Manzi, Mario; 2220 - Thompson, Shemariah; 2252 - Rivera, Brian; 2315 - Harris, Lorenzo C. PUBLIC STORAGE # 25892, 1701 Dyer Blvd, Kissimmee, FL 34741, (407) 392-1169 Time: 04:00 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 0017 - Vincente, Hamlett; 0083 - Peacon, Daisy; 2061 -Figueroa, Julio; 2106 - Platone, Oscar; 3016 - Roman, Jose Rafael; 4018 - Austin, Raina; 6064 - Ball, Henry; 8004 - Murillo Varela, Luis; 8034 - Sanchez, Franklin. PUBLIC STORAGE # 25896, 6040 Lakehurst Dr, Orlando, FL 32819, (407) 545-5699 Time: 04:15 PMSale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 0149 - NOSIL, HEMLYNE COMPERE; 0210 - Soares Pereira, Clauderson; 0246 - Walker, Jenna; 0333 - schiffer, mikayla; 1046 - Jimenez, 1056 – Sanchez, Maria; Juan; 2143 - Capella, Shaina. PUBLIC STORAGE # 28075, 4729 S Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando, FL 32839, (407) 986-4867 Time: 04:30 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 0131 - Kimble, Octavia; 0136 - Vinson, Tiffany; 0214 - Mack, Evelyn; 0222 - Chang, Marcello; 0329 - Nunez, Ivelis; 0338 - Singley, Angelia M; 0817 - green, Breanna; 0819 - Hall, Somarra; 0903 - Franklin, Adriana; 0910 - Davis, Robert; 09124 - Herrera, Fanny; 0928 - Lero, Stephanie; 0936 - Lovett, Roy; 0985 - Hawkins, Johnnette; 1012Barthelemy, Micheline; 1242 - Ruiz Nunez, Orlando; 1326 - De La Cruz Rodriguez, Yahaira; 1387 - Manuel, Monique. Public sale terms, rules, and regulations will be made available prior to the sale. All sales are subject to cancellation. We reserve the right to refuse any bid. Payment must be in cash or credit card-no checks.
Buyers must secure the units with their own personal locks. To claim tax-exempt status, original RESALE certificates for each space purchased is required. By PS Retail Sales, LLC, 701 Western Avenue, Glendale, CA 91201. (818) 244-8080.
orlandoweekly.com ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY 45
2008 Toyota
VIN: JTDKB20U887787977
2016 Dodge
VIN: 1C3CDFEB6GD750962
2013 Volkswagen
VIN: WVWBN7ANXDE504738
To be sold at auction at 8:00 am on June 26, 2024 at 7301 Gardner Street, Winter Park, FL. 32792 Constellation Towing & Recovery LLC
NOTICE OF SALE
ADVERTISEMENT OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned intends to sell the personal property described below to enforce a lien imposed on said property under The Florida Self Storage Facility Act. Bidding takes place on lockerfox.com and concludes Thursday the 27th day of June, 2024 at 10:00 AM with payment at the facility. Store Space Millenia, 4912 S. John Young Pkwy, Orlando, FL, 32839. Anthony Montalvo ; Esther Joseph ; Taquilla Toliver; Esther Joseph ; Tyra Jones ; Cynthia Holmes ; Kiana Cooper ; Monica Thomas ; Teresa A Johnson ; Ruben Luis Suarez ; Varbaraly Cintron-Sanchez ; Esther Joseph ; Rahul Patel ; Rahul Patel ; Jasmine Hilts ; Maribel vasquez ; Nikkiya Brown ; James Coleman ; Travis Davis ; Ashley Autrey ; Latresia Brown ; williams Lumaine ; James Hart ; Jasen White ; Jasmine Downer ; Camirra cavanaugh ; Vincent Forbes ; Jamie Mince ; Tameka Davis ; Carlos Liriano ; Lisa Lieberman ; Sigrid Yanira Sanchez Ospina ; Tiffany Cook ; Anteria Pollock ; Tabatha Brown ; Luz Medina ; Brian Melendez ; Jacinta Gerardin ; Aidan Jacobs ; Anaysha Hernandez ; Ericka Dunlap Redie Cobb ; Kiara Holmes ; Store Space Sanford - Storage, 3980 E. Lake Mary Blvd., Sanford, FL, 32773 Ryan Mathews ; Travis Brooks ; Shanya Thompson ; Vernia Jackson ; Quinton Young ; Janeen Boone ; Tyrone Henderson ; Napoleon Thanis ; Hector Febles ; Marshal L Taylor ; Melana Prescott ; Candyce Nesheim ; Christina Brown ; Tyrone Henderson ; Brandon Camille ; Fashana Alexander ; Michael Shepherd ; Michael Shepherd ; Nicole Alawdi ; Alexus Porter ; Latasha Wynn ; devanni walker ; Kadijah Tillmon ; Mitchell Hall ; Shawn Johnson ; Deatric Davis ; Angel Rodriguez ; Paris Williame ; Nicholas Keen ; Jerry Spencer ; Mark marcano ; edward debose ; Jalyn Vallot ; Pagie Blackwell ; Keishla Matos ; Alexis Weaver
Employment
Accounting Officer needed for Pheak Solutions LLC, Orlando, FL 2 prep, proc, & audit payroll. Responsible 4 AP & receivable. Reconcile Co credit cards, supplier stmts, invoices, deps, & cr ctrl. Prep & rpt cash flow forecasts. Confer w/ Pres about fin & regulatory matters. Establish tables of accts & assign entries. Req B in Accounting or related fld, + 2 yrs exp as accountant or bookkeeper. FT. Mail res: Pheak Sol, 2101 Premier Row,
Orlando, FL 32809.
Driver. Solar energy Company needs a driver to operate company vehicle with a capacity of less than 26,001 pounds GVW (pickup trucks/vans) to transport solar equipment and material to and from installation job sites; pick up material from suppliers; load and unload the vehicles; review route sheets; verify the contents of inventory and inspect to ensure it’s in proper condition; perform heavy lifting; operate vehicles with care. The position involves daily travel to worksites within Osceola, Polk, Lake, Seminole, and Brevard Counties. Req.: 12 months of experience as driver and Class E Driver’s License. Send resume to HOME IMPROVEMENT SOLAR LLC to 8427 Southpark Cir, ste 130, Orlando, FL, 32819 or to alejandro.yu@homeimprovementsolar.net
Lead Digital Technician at ROQ US, LLC, Clermont, FL: Duties include: Assembling, installing, and testing industrial equipment including pneumatic, mechanical, and electronic components, as well as training customers on operating the equipment; Providing printer maintenance training; Identifying equipment issues and provide technical information/repair guidance. Reqs: associate’s degree (U.S. or foreign equiv.) in electrical eng. or clsly rltd plus 1 yr exp in electrical engineering, industrial service electrician, or rltd, and 5 yrs exp with installing, repairing, and maintaining industrial machinery, including CNC’s, grinders, radial drills, lathes, EDMs, and stamping presses; installing residential, commercial, and industrial electric systems; and designing and building control panels, programmed logic controllers, and motor drives. Email CV & CL to rhunter@roq.us.
Preschool Teacher needed for Fiorella Prep. School, Orlando, FL to org. & les. plan., clrom. mngmt., lead actvt. dsgn. to prmt. phys. mntl, & scl. Dev. like gms arts & crafts, mus, strytel. & fld trips. Teach skls like clr, no. & ltr. recog. Obsrv. & eval. chld’s perfm., behvr., scol. devlp., & phys. hlth. Srv. meals & snks in accdn. w/nutr. gudlin.. Req. 2 yrs exp. teach. & FL DCF cert. chld growth & Dev, Hlth, Sfty & nutr. & chld care facl. Rules & regs. F/T, mail resume to 6965 Piazza Grande Ave. # 102, Orlando FL 32835.
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Proposal/Estimating Manager
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refuse any bid.
NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to
Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale:
Claims Associate
Compensation GreatInsuranceJobs.com 6602600 Group Exercise Instructor - Cycle, Downtown YMCA Family Center YMCA of Central Florida 6602592 46 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 5-11, 2024 ● orlandoweekly.com
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