On this Thursday, Oct. 21, edition of Sundial:
Parkland shooter trial
The trial of the confessed Parkland school shooter is moving faster than expected.
He pleaded guilty in court Wednesday to all of the charges related to the 2018 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, which is 17 counts of first-degree murder and 17 counts of attempted first-degree murder.
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The trial now heads to the penalty phase.
鈥淭hat is when a jury of 12 people 鈥 they're not there to decide if he's guilty or not. That's already [been decided]. We're moving on from that. They're there to truly just decide should he spend his life in prison without parole or should he receive the death penalty,鈥 said SA国际传谋鈥檚 Broward reporter Caitie Switalski Mu帽oz.
Find more of her reporting here and a link to mental health resources in South Florida here.
Sen. Taddeo鈥檚 bid for governor
There is still more than a year before Floridians go to the ballots to pick their next governor.
Gov. Ron DeSantis has announced his run for re-election. There are still questions as to whether he鈥檒l run for president in 2024.
On the Democratic side, already campaigning for the job are former governor and current Congressman Charlie Crist and Florida Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried.
And now enters state Senator Annette Taddeo.
鈥淲e have to register voters and continue to register voters and register more voters, and that is something that we [Democrats] have gotten behind on,鈥 said Taddeo. 鈥淲e can energize voters across the state and grow support among our among the pivotal NPA [non-party affiliated] voters who are so disgusted with the divisive politics of today.鈥
She added that COVID-19 and expanding Medicaid are top priorities for her.
Misinformation during AIDS and COVID
The AIDS epidemic was one of the defining moments of the 1980s.
Myths and falsehoods about the new disease spread like wildfire in newspapers, on television, and in public spaces.
Five years ago, medical experts examined more than 500 books about HIV and AIDS at the in Fort Lauderdale. They found more than 75 books contained inaccurate information.
So, they were taken off of public shelves. But the museum kept those books as a special collection.
鈥淲e kept them because they were an important part of gay culture. This is an important piece of what the gay community went through in the 1980s and '90s,鈥 said Hunter O鈥橦anian, the executive director at the museum.
That special collection is now part of a new exhibit titled 鈥淢is-Information鈥 that looks at parallels of the information spread at the beginning of the AIDS epidemic and how it compares with the COVID-19 pandemic.
鈥淔or me, it was very early on in the COVID crisis when we saw government leaders point fingers at other ethnic groups. The Chinese were being blamed in the beginning and then there was a parallel that you felt about going back to the days that only Haitians or drug users or gay people could get AIDA,鈥 said O鈥橦anian, who curated the exhibit.
The exhibit is open to the public and will be open until the end of July 2022. Find more information .