TAMPA, Fla. - A chaotic series of events unfolded in Tampa on Sunday night, leaving one person dead and several injured and culminating in a fatal officer-involved shooting. The incident began with a dispute at a Dollar General store and escalated into a violent rampage by a 47-year-old suspect who intentionally struck multiple pedestrians with
The suspect in a deadly spree of hit-and-run incidents that left one victim dead and three injured, was killed by police Sunday night in Tampa, Fla.
The Tampa Police Department released video of the pursuit that ended with shots fired on I-275 late Sunday night.
A suspect who led officers on a chase in Tampa was killed after they were forced to fire, police said. Jeremiah Bailey, 48, had an extensive criminal record and was released from Florida State Prison in 2022.
Police said suspect Jeremiah Bailey, 48, tried to block a car in and got into an argument with the driver of that car. Police say Bailey then followed the victim home and continued the argument there. Police said the two men threw things at each other and Bailey sped off, hitting the victim with his car.
One pedestrian was killed and several pedestrians and officers were hurt by a driver who allegedly carried out multiple intentional hit-and-runs in Tampa, Florida.
There's a growing investigation in Tampa, after officers shot and killed a driver who they said intentionally ran over three people.
Tampa police have now identified a man killed Sunday night by a driver who went on a rampage Sunday night in South Tampa.
From improving area neighborhoods, to advancing innovation and strengthening ties with government agencies, the University of South Florida is proving what’s possible when people of different disciplines unite.
By Tina Meketa, University Communications and MarketingChristian Wells is a known commodity in the Tampa Bay region. The professor of anthropology is
Some experts caution that selling in haste may lose out on bigger gains in the near future or regret handing off a useful asset when political tensions ease
Special legislative sessions in Florida can cost $50,000 a day. But columnist Scott Maxwell says a bigger problem is the hasty way politicians rush to pass bills that nobody has even fully vetted.