
FROM CLAY MURPHY CAMPAIGN PAGE ON FACEBOOK, circa 4PM, May 10, 2026:
In secret, behind locked gates, our Nation's Oldest City dumped a landfill in a lake (Old City Reservoir), while emitting sewage in our rivers and salt marsh. Organized citizens exposed and defeated pollution, racism and cronyism. We elected a new Mayor. We're transforming our City -- advanced citizenship. Ask questions. Make disclosures. Demand answers. Be involved. Expect democracy. Report and expose corruption. Smile! Help enact a St. Augustine National Park and Seashore. We shall overcome!

FROM CLAY MURPHY CAMPAIGN PAGE ON FACEBOOK, circa 4PM, May 10, 2026:
Florida taxpayers reportedly blew some $218,000,000 already on this foolish project, out of a total of $1.7 billion, the Lion's share of which reportedly will be Florida tax dollars.
It's our money.
May we have it back, please?
This performative, ill-conceived environmentally destructive vanity project is exposing police, guards, nurses staff and detainees to mosquto-borne diseases and wasting our money on performative buffoonery.
Wonder why?
Kooky PR stunt?
At the behest of Florida's pugilistic, bumptious Boy Governor RONALD DION DeSANTIS (J.D. Harvard University Law School) and Attorney General JAMES UTHMEIER (J.D. Georgetown University Law Center)?
What a waste of a good education.
Two dubious dopes forgot their legal education, the Rule of Law and their fiduciary duty to the people.
DeSANTIS and UTHMEIER were trying to impress President DONALD JOHN TRUMP with their sadism and Philistinism.
It's time for them to go!
Taxpayers, legislators and journalists are waiting on answers on lack of planning.
As the late great conservative political columnist, PBS Firing Line host and National Review Editor William F. Buckley, Jr. once asked, "Why does baloney reject the grinder?"
Enough feculent flummery, dupery and nincompoopery from unjust stewards in Tallahassee and Washington, D.C.
Enough wasteful spending by Tinpot Napoleons.
Fun fact: I first saw RON DeSANTIS at the public, televised League of Women Voters and St. Augustine Record debate at County Auditorium in August 2012. The Money Power supported him.
DeSANTIS was running to be our St. Augustine and Sixth District U.S. Congress-critter, in a closed Republican Primary. He seemed a bit smarmy, immature and out of his league.
DeSANTIS appeared to me then to be ill-informed and inauthentic, not unlike an alien implant from KOCH INDUSTRIES and HERITAGE FOUNDATION.
As Congressman, he was a recidivist feculent guest on faux FOX NEWS some fifty (50) times.
DeSANTIS stiffed our respected St. Johns County Commission Chairman. The Chairman had flown to Washington, checked into a hotel and arrived for an urgent scheduled meeting with the Chairman in DeSANTIS''s office in his House Congressional office on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. The subject was beach erosion, a matter of urgency for our tourism-based economy. No advance notice. No explanation. No rescheduling, No respect. No class. What an ass.
DeSANTI$ ia still selfish, shrill, silly, and practicing rote rotomonade, repeating superficial silly slogans and simplistic shibboleths.
Waste, fraud, abuse, misfeasance, malfeasance, nonfeasance and environmental depredation?
Cliches by the carload?
What do y'all reckon?
You tell me.

From Washington Examiner:
Florida officials are in talks with the Trump administration about closing down “Alligator Alcatraz,” the cheeky term for a pop-up detentioncenter for illegal immigrants in the Everglades, in the near future, the Washington Examiner has learned.
“It is closing,” a former senior administration official with knowledge of the talks told the Washington Examiner on Friday. “Too expensive and they want it out before this hurricane season.”
Hurricane season runs from June 1 to Nov. 30.
A second official, a senior DHS official, confirmed “it is closing.”
The confirmation follows a New York Times report this week that state and federal officials were in talks about shuttering the site soon. A spokesperson for Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) did not comment on the future of Alligator Alcatraz and referred the Washington Examiner to the governor’s remarks a day earlier.
DeSantis stopped shy of admitting during a press conference on Thursday that the site would be closed, only noting that both parties were discussing operations moving forward.
“They haven’t said they want to wind it down. I mean, it’s been discussed about, because I think you had a new secretary come in, take a fresh look at these things,” DeSantis said. “At some point we will, we will, of course, break it down. That was always the goal.”
While open, approximately 22,000 illegal immigrants who were housed on-site have been deported, DeSantis said on Thursday.
“If we didn’t have that facility … they would have been released back to the public,” DeSantis said. “I have no doubt that that has made the state of Florida safer. I have no doubt that that has saved lives.”
Due to a shortage of federally contracted detention space early on in the Trump administration’s effort to carry out mass deportations, the Department of Homeland Security brokered deals to build new and sometimes makeshift facilities that allow ICE to detain thousands of illegal immigrants as they are arrested inside the country.
Those initially detained by federal immigration authorities in the region have been held at Alligator Alcatraz, which was named in light of the 200,000 wild alligators that live in the surrounding swampland. The White House applauded this and other efforts by the DeSantis administration and called for more of them.
“‘Alligator Alcatraz’ is a state-of-the-art facility that will play a critical role in fulfilling the President’s promise to get the worst criminal illegal aliens out of America as fast as possible,” White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson wrote in an email.
Alligator Alcatraz had space for 2,000 people initially, and its operators intended to grow detention space over time. Last July, DeSantis debuted Alligator Alcatraz with a visit from President Donald Trump and then-Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.
“One of the reasons why this was a sensible spot is because you have this runway that’s right here,” DeSantis said last July. “You don’t have to drive them an hour to an airport.”
The Trump administration used the remote site that is adjacent to an airplane runway to deport illegal immigrants once a judge signed off on the order.
Between July 2025 and September 2025, the DHS partnered with state officials and opened Alligator Alcatraz and “Deportation Depot” in Florida, “Speedway Slammer” in Indiana, “Cornhusker Clink” in Nebraska, and “Louisiana Lockup” in Louisiana, with more alliterative facilities expected on the horizon.
Combined, the state sites added jail space for an additional 10,000 illegal immigrants beyond the roughly 50,000 beds available at existing ICE facilities, and though some have faced legal challenges, most notably Alligator Alcatraz, the administration has vowed to move forward with its detention center expansion.
The Everglades site has cost approximately $1 million a day to operate, money that Florida is still waiting for DHS to reimburse.
U.S. OFFICIALS GRAVELY CONCERNED CARTELS WILL TAKE FIGHT AT BORDER TO THE SKIES
The future of the other temporary detention sites remains unclear. It has survived legal action in court and was recently spared by a federal appeals court decision not to shut it down.
A spokesperson for the DHS insisted that the facility was not closing.
“Any reports that DHS is pressuring the state to cease operations at Alligator Alcatraz are false,” the DHS spokesperson said in a statement. “Florida continues to be a valuable partner in advancing President Trump’s immigration agenda, and DHS appreciates their support. DHS continuously evaluates detention needs and requirements to ensure they meet the latest operational requirements.”