Boxer Gervonta 'Tank' Davis arrested in South Florida on misdemeanor domestic violence charge
Davis, 30, was picked up shortly after midnight near the popular Lincoln Road area of Miami Beach, officials said.
The charge was connected to an incident that occurred last month in Doral, a residential city in western Miami-Dade, Miami Beach police spokesperson Christopher Bess said. Davis and his vehicle information had been added to a law enforcement database, and a license plate reader set up in Miami Beach flagged his car.
Miami Beach police made the initial stop and then turned Davis over to Doral police, Bess said.
Davis was being held on $10,000 bail. Jail and court records didn't list an attorney for Davis. His promoter didn't immediately respond to an email seeking comment.
Davis, who is from Baltimore, is in the regular conversation for best pound-for-pound boxer. The WBA lightweight champion won his first 30 bouts, 28 by knockout, with his devastating punching power drawing sellouts crowds from New York to Washington to Las Vegas.
But Davis was booed during his most recent fight. Despite being an overwhelming favorite, he underperformed March 1 in Brooklyn's Barclays Center but escaped with a majority draw against Lamont Roach that allowed Davis to retain his belt.
Referee Steve Willis' decision not to award Roach a knockdown in the ninth round ultimately changed the fight's outcome.
Whether that performance was a one-off for Davis or an indication of a declining fighter, crowds still likely will turn out to see Davis if and when he returns to the ring after his most recent legal trouble.
He was sentenced to 90 days of house arrest for a hit-and-run in November 2020 in Baltimore that injured several people. Davis eventually served the remainder of the sentence in jail after checking into a luxury hotel and then a new home without the court's permission.
Davis also was charged in two other domestic violence cases, both in South Florida. The first case was discharged, according to ESPN. The second was dismissed after the woman refused to press charges.
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Tennessee Titans practice updates Day 1: Latest news, highlights from NFL training camp
Cam Ward and the Tennessee Titans will convene for the first training camp practice of the 2025 NFL preseason on Wednesday, July 23, kicking off the start of coach Brian Callahan's second season in charge and Ward's debut as the quarterback of the present and future. The Titans will begin practice at 9:05 a.m. CT from Ascension St. Thomas Sports Park, with Ward, the No. 1 overall pick of the 2025 draft, leading the way. The team will feature several new faces acquired in the offseason, including veterans like tackle Dan Moore Jr., receiver Tyler Lockett and linebacker Cody Barton, as well as rookies such as outside linebacker Femi Oladejo, safety Kevin Winston Jr., and receivers Elic Ayomanor and Chimere Dike. Callahan will address the media prior to the practice, and Ward is expected to speak to the media afterward. This session is the first of nine before the team's preseason opener Aug. 9 against the Buccaneers in Tampa, Florida. Here are highlights from training camp, as well as updates on the Titans' season ahead. Tennessee Titans practice updates for Day 1 training camp Post-Day 1 notes from players speaking to the media Jeffery Simmons said the defense did 40 up-downs before practice, an idea of defensive coordinator Dennard Wilson. Simmons mentioned multiple times that he wanted the team to have the mentality to not have a season like 2024 happen again. "Not making the playoffs sucks," Simmons said. "That should be personal." Cam Ward: "We were mid in practice today, offensively." More Ward: "Just the pieces that we have, I think we are capable of being one of the top offensives in the league." Cam Ward speaks to the media Cam Ward will speak with the media soon. Below is the Titans' press conference feed, with other players also expected to speak: Cam Ward in 11-on-11 work Cam Ward and the Titans' first-team offense are working through 11-on-11 team periods right now. First drive: Ward completes short passes to Van Jefferson and Tyler Lockett, with a couple runs in between. Second drive: Ward is 1-for-2, with a Jarvis Brownlee pass breakup on a Van Jefferson target and a screen pass completed to Tyjae Spears Third drive: Ward throws complete to Chig Okonkwo for a short gain, then his pass to Calvin Ridley is incomplete. Fourth drive: Ward finds Tyler Lockett on a quick pass for a few yards, can't connect with Treylon Burks on a deep ball and has a pass batted down at the line of scrimmage. Ward finishes 5-for-9 in the first team period of camp, all on relatively short targets besides the Burks incompletion. Another Cam Ward practice clip Cam Ward's first camp practice Cam Ward opens his first training camp practice in the NFL with some tosses in front of the fans. It cannot be understated how much this season hinges on Ward's development, good record or not. More notes from Brian Callahan Lorenzo Carter's retirement shouldn't impact the amount of practice reps among the edge rushers during training camp, though some younger outside linebackers may get a bit of an increased look in practice. Callahan believes he has improved in several areas ahead of his second year as an NFL head coach. "I feel really good about where I've developed too, just like our players probably too from their first year to their second year," Callahan said. Brian Callahan: 'Hopefully sooner than later' for L'Jarius Sneed being activated from the PUP Titans coach Brian Callahan didn't have much of a timeline for L'Jarius Sneed's activation off of the physically unable to perform (PUP) list, but Callahan wants Sneed to get up to speed when he's ready. "Hopefully sooner than later he'll be out here," Callahan said Wednesday. "He hasn't practiced a lot as of late, and we're going to have to get his legs back under him, get him back in shape. 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The Titans will match up against the Bucs and the Atlanta Falcons for joint practices before preseason games, and will end the preseason by hosting the Minnesota Vikings for a matchup on Aug. 22. When are Titans open practices? The open dates for fans at Titans practices throughout training camp can be found here. When are Titans joint practices? The Titans will battle Tampa Bay in joint practices on Aug. 7 and Atlanta Aug. 12-13. Both joint practice sessions will be on the road. Titans preseason schedule The Titans play at Tampa Bay on Aug. 9 (6:30 p.m. CT), at Atlanta on Aug. 15 (6 p.m. CT) and against Minnesota on Aug. 22 (7 p.m. CT). The game against the Falcons will be broadcast on NFL Network and the Vikings game will be on CBS. Titans odds 2025 BetMGM gives the Titans +20,000 odds to win the Super Bowl, tied with the New York Giants for the longest odds in the league. The Titans have +800 odds to win the AFC South, with +425 to make the playoffs. Nick Suss is the Titans beat writer for The Tennessean. Contact Nick at nsuss@ Follow Nick on X @nicksuss. Subscribe to the Talkin' Titans newsletter for updates sent directly to your inbox. This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Titans training camp updates Day 1: News, highlights from practice
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TPD, Florida DCF refuse to release records involving Missy Mogle abuse investigations
The two public agencies that dismissed allegations 5-year-old Missy Mogle was molested by her stepfather nearly a year before her murder refuse to hand over any documents related to the investigations. In their denials, both the Tallahassee Police Department and the Florida Department of Children and Families cited laws designed in part to protect the rights of their parents or caregivers. In Missy's case, that includes her stepfather and mother, Daniel and Chloe Spencer — both of whom are charged in her murder. However, Florida's child welfare law includes a provision allowing 'any person or organization,' including DCF itself to petition the court for an order that would open DCF's records on Missy Mogle's abuse case to public scrutiny. 'Floridians have the right to expect transparency and accountability from DCF – especially when a child's death or serious injury is linked to abuse or neglect,' said Robin Rosenberg, deputy director of Florida's Children First, a nonprofit based in Boca Raton. INVESTIGATIVE REPORT: 'Destined to fail': 5-year-old's murder exposes cracks in Florida child protection system In July 2024, the Tallahassee Police Department and the Florida Department of Children and Families responded to the apartment where Missy resided after she told loved ones that her stepfather choked her and touched her genitals. TPD, in consultation with the State Attorney's Office, ended its investigation without making an arrest because of a lack of probable cause. DCF closed its investigation the same month it came in. According to confidential DCF documents obtained by the Democrat, the agency did so because Missy's mother had signed a power of attorney agreement for her to live with a close family friend and have no contact with her stepfather. Several months later, Missy went back to live with Daniel and Chloe Spencer at their Southwood residence. She died May 19 after she lost consciousness and was rushed to the hospital with signs of severe abuse. After her death, the Democrat requested a TPD police report referenced in court documents pertaining to its sex abuse investigation of Daniel Spencer. TPD declined the public records request in its entirety, citing Marsy's Law, the constitutional amendment that grants privacy and other rights to crime victims and their families, and Florida Statute 119.071(2)(h). That section makes any information that reveals the identity of victims of child abuse or sex offenses confidential. TPD also cited Marsy's Law when it declined to identify Chole and Daniel Spencer in the hours after their arrest on aggravated child abuse and neglect charges in Missy's death. Alicia Hill, a TPD spokeswoman, told the Democrat July 18 that the department considers any case involving the sexual abuse of a child, either living or dead, totally exempt from Florida' public records laws. But Barbara Petersen, executive director of the Florida Center for Government Accountability, said TPD is supposed to redact any exempt information from their reports, like names, and release the rest. 'They're not protecting the rights of the child,' Petersen said. 'The child is dead. They're protecting the parents. And are they protecting themselves? They investigated this. It makes no sense for them to invoke all of these laws that protect the identity of the victim when that victim is a child and she's dead as a result of child abuse.' Miguel Nevarez, DCF press secretary, told the Democrat in a July 16 email about Missy Mogle records that 'information specific to this case is confidential per section 39.202, Florida Statutes.' That statute says that 'in order to protect the rights of the child and the child's parents or other persons responsible for the child's welfare,' all records concerning reports of child abuse are confidential and exempt from public records laws. Rosenberg, a board certified juvenile lawyer, said that in 2014, Florida enacted a statute requiring public disclosure relating to child deaths. It also required DCF to disclose child deaths on its website. 'We hope that DCF will continue its long-standing practice of fully embracing transparency and accountability when children die or are seriously injured and there is an allegation of abuse or neglect,' Rosenberg said. Contact Jeff Burlew at jburlew@ or 850-599-2180. This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat: TPD, DCF block release of records involving Missy Mogle investigations
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'Destined to fail': 5-year-old's murder exposes cracks in Florida child protection system
Pepper Mogle saw her granddaughter Missy for the last time at the Leon County Courthouse, where the 5-year-old's allegedly abusive stepfather was on trial after his arrest in an undercover child sex sting. Mogle's daughter, Chloe Spencer, who is Missy's mom, called April 15 to say the little girl was hungry. Mogle showed up with a Happy Meal from McDonald's — and a message of hope that she whispered into Missy's ear. 'I told her that I loved her,' she said. 'I kept giving her kisses and told her that I was trying everything I could to get her home.' But Missy never made it back to her grandparents' house in Wakulla County, where she was showered with love and attention for years before Chloe Spencer, 23, and her husband, 35-year-old Daniel Spencer, got custody of her. Just weeks later, on May 19, after police said she suffered severe abuse at Daniel and Chloe Spencer's home in an affluent Tallahassee neighborhood, Missy lost consciousness, was rushed to the hospital and died. Her mother and stepfather were arrested the same day and indicted July 21 on first-degree murder charges. The pair could face the death penalty, prosecutors say. Her death sparked an outpouring of grief in Florida's capital city and raised mounting questions about how the state's child welfare system, the courts, police and others might have failed to protect her. A judge's decision not to jail Daniel Spencer after he was found guilty in the earlier sex sting — which left him free on bond just before the murder — led to harsh criticism from State Attorney Jack Campbell and prompted Attorney General James Uthmeier to propose a new law in Missy's honor. Missy's demise coincided with a big drop in Florida in the number of kids placed in foster care because of abuse, abandonment or neglect — a statistic Gov. Ron DeSantis' administration has touted but that troubles some in the child protection field. It also overlapped with a decline in Leon County of child protective investigators, who play a crucial role on the front lines of abuse cases, according to the Florida Department of Children and Families' Office of Child Welfare dashboard. Missy's loved ones, including Pepper Mogle and her husband, Andy Mogle, blame police and DCF for not doing more after getting complaints last year that Daniel Spencer molested her. The state agency could have taken the allegations to a dependency judge — a routine step in sex abuse cases — but instead signed off on a questionable solution that was designed to keep Missy away from her stepfather but wound up sending her right back to him. According to confidential DCF documents obtained by the Tallahassee Democrat and the USA TODAY NETWORK - Florida, the agency OK'd an arrangement in which Chloe Spencer gave Missy to a family friend with a simple power-of-attorney agreement that Chloe could revoke at any time. 'It was destined to fail,' said Robert Latham, an attorney, child welfare expert and associate director of the Children & Youth Law Clinic at the University of Miami. 'Something bad is going to happen' At the time of her death, Missy was living with her mother and stepfather, their three other young children and a retired doctor who owned the home in Tallahassee and was like an adoptive father to Daniel Spencer, according to court records. But Missy grew up mostly in Wakulla County with Pepper and Andy Mogle. They got temporary custody of her before her first birthday after they said their daughter, a rebellious 17-year-old, showed no interest in raising her. In 2023, when Missy was 3, Chloe Spencer filed to regain custody in the courts, which operate under the long-standing presumption that children should be raised by their parents. General Magistrate Dina Foster, who heard the case in Wakulla County, found Chloe Spencer was 'no longer unfit' and that there were no issues then related to DCF, safety plans or injunctions. Foster wrote that Daniel Spencer, who worked at Publix, demonstrated 'stability' and didn't abuse alcohol or drugs. She noted, however, worries expressed by the grandparents. 'The petitioners testify they are concerned about the mother becoming unstable again and a proper transition plan,' she wrote. 'The petitioners expressed concern that Mr. Spencer has been abusive to mother in the past.' After a July 10, 2023, hearing, Foster ruled in favor of Chloe Spencer, writing that she and her parents agreed a transition plan was in Missy's "best interests." Circuit Judge J. Layne Smith approved the recommended order. Pepper Mogle said the rulings came despite warnings from her in open court. 'I said, 'I give you six months of Chloe having that baby that something bad is going to happen,' ' she said. No recording of that hearing exists because of a technical problem, which necessitated another hearing a week later in which all parties stipulated they didn't want to rehear the case. During that hearing, Pepper Mogle asked the court to allow her to keep custody of Missy and only allow visitations until "the bond is there" between Missy and her mother. But Chloe Spencer got Missy back on Feb. 3, 2024, the Mogles said in a court filing. A couple days after that, Chloe Spencer gave Missy to Paig Carnahan, a friend who served with Andy Mogle, a retired Army mechanic, in the second Persian Gulf War. She also signed a power of attorney so Carnahan, described as a "maternal aunt" in DCF records, could take Missy to a doctor if needed. Less than two weeks later, on Feb. 16, 2024, Daniel Spencer got arrested after traveling to meet who he thought was a 15-year-old girl but was actually a cop. That prompted Chloe Spencer to modify the power of attorney specifying Missy wouldn't have contact with her stepfather, Pepper Mogle said. Days after Daniel Spencer's arrest, Missy's grandparents filed a petition in their family court case for emergency custody of Missy. Judge Smith denied it because the custody case was already closed. "The petitioners may want to report their concerns to the Florida Department of Children and Families," Smith wrote in a Feb. 21, 2024, order. "The petitioners may institute a case by filing a new petition that seeks temporary custody of their grandchild." Pepper and Andy Mogle heeded Smith's order and filed a new petition several months later ― after hearing disturbing new allegations about Daniel Spencer. Missy said she was abused, but it wasn't enough as investigators scrutinized her story In July 2024, the Mogles got a phone call from Carnahan saying they needed to get to her place right away. On the ride up, they got another call from someone saying Daniel Spencer molested Missy. 'I said I want DCF and the police department waiting for me when I get there,' Andy Mogle said. The Mogles found out that Missy, then 4, told one of Carnahan's roommates, and later others, that Daniel Spencer put his hands around her throat while touching her private parts. She recounted the story herself to her grandparents, who said the abuse allegedly happened during overnight visitations. 'She said he's touching me down below and choking me,' Andy Mogle said. Andy Mogle said he called police, who arrived soon after, followed by a DCF investigator. Officers spoke with Carnahan and Missy but not the Mogles, the couple said. Later, Missy met with police a few times, but they expressed doubts about the allegation. 'They kept saying Missy was all over the place with what she was saying,' Pepper Mogle said. 'They (said) she was coached into saying it.' Both DCF and the Tallahassee Police Department ended their investigations without taking any apparent further action. Campbell, whose office consulted with TPD, said the only evidence was testimony from someone too young to know the truth from lies – not enough for probable cause. TPD refused to release any record pertaining to its molestation investigation, citing Marsy's Law. DCF also refused to release records, citing Florida statutes. Pepper Mogle said she, her husband and others made numerous calls to DCF's abuse hotline. According to DCF's confidential court filing, the agency ended its investigation the same month it came in. 'The Department's investigation closed because the mother had signed a power of attorney for the child to live with her maternal aunt and agreed that (Daniel Spencer) should not have any contact with her child,' DCF said in the court filing. Missy goes back to her mother and stepfather in Tallahassee Pepper Mogle said Chloe Spencer tore that agreement up shortly after the investigations closed. In September, Carnahan returned Missy to the Spencers because she was leaving the state. And while Carnahan said she and others pleaded with DCF to take action, Missy wound up in the same Southwood neighborhood home in Tallahassee where prosecutors said Daniel and Chloe Spencer suffocated and tortured her. Both have pleaded not guilty to the charges. In July 2024, Pepper and Andy Mogle filed a new petition in Wakulla County seeking custody of Missy. A hearing was set for January 2025 but got canceled. Over the ensuing weeks and months, Pepper Mogle called and texted her lawyer, William Stephen Black II of Tallahassee, repeatedly about the need to set a new court date. Black did not return a phone call or email from the Democrat. "Have you heard anything?" she asked her lawyer at one point. "I'm trying to touch base with you," she said another time. On April 15, 2025, the same day Pepper Mogle last saw her granddaughter Missy at the courthouse, Daniel Spencer was found guilty for traveling to a meet a minor. At the end of his one-day trial, Assistant State Attorney Jasmine Mattear asked Leon Circuit Judge Tiffany Baker-Carper to jail Daniel Spencer while he awaited sentencing. The prosecutor didn't mention the earlier molestation allegation against Spencer, though it's unclear whether she was aware of it. Baker-Carper announced she wasn't going to incarcerate him because he had been out of jail on bond for a year without any violations and had no violent criminal history. "You're free to enlighten the court if I've missed something," the judge told the prosecutor before Spencer left the courthouse a free man. A week before Daniel Spencer's trial, a hearing date for Pepper and Andy Mogle's petition to get Missy back was set for June 3, 2025, nearly a year after they filed it. By then, Missy was dead. The problem with 'power of attorney' Latham, the University of Miami professor, said DCF agreed to an 'out of home, non-judicial" placement for Missy, meaning she was allowed to live with someone else without the oversight of a judge. He said such an arrangement might work in certain situations, like a parent who is on drugs but getting help. 'I can imagine a scenario where it makes sense – just not for a sex abuse case,' he said. 'That's the part that I find the most offensive. They should have gone ahead with a judicial case.' Latham said a DCF safety plan, which prescribes a course of action to keep a child from harm, shouldn't have relied on a power of attorney involving an 'aunt,' who in Missy's case was not a blood relative. Instead, DCF could have helped the family file what's known as a Chapter 751 case to officially give custody to a relative. 'That way the people involved could not unilaterally return the child,' he said. 'They would have to go to court and have the judge approve the return. That would have been an extra level of safety. But in a sex abuse case where the mother lives with the perpetrator ... I think even that would have been a stretch.' Robin Rosenberg, deputy director of Florida's Children First, a nonprofit, nonpartisan advocacy group, said DCF's safety plan is supposed to go through various reviews at set intervals. She agreed it isn't appropriate to use a power of attorney in a case involving a sexual abuse allegation. 'A power of attorney gives the caregiver the authority to obtain services for a child, but does not preclude a parent from having custody of a child," Rosenberg said. DCF itself recognized the inherent dangers of relying on a power of attorney in abuse cases. In a 2010 memo, Alan Abramowitz, state director of DCF's Family Safety Program Office, said child protective staff should not use power of attorney as a safety action. 'If during a protective investigation, the non-custodial caregiver has a power of attorney and the return of the child to the parent does not place a child at risk, this is a lawful use of a power of attorney,' he wrote. 'However, child protective staff should not consider this decision in their overall safety action determination and shall proceed as if there is no power of attorney where the safety of the child is of concern.' DCF issued a short statement about Missy's death in a July 16 email to the Tallahassee Democrat and USA TODAY NETWORK - Florida but said it couldn't go into details about the case. 'The Florida Department of Children and Families investigates all child deaths related to allegations of abuse, neglect, or abandonment in close coordination with law enforcement,' the agency said. 'Information specific to this case is confidential per section 39.202, Florida Statutes.' DCF's Child Fatality Prevention Program website showed 257 child fatalities so far this year in Florida but only three from "inflicted trauma," not including Missy's case. The leading causes were drowning, at 27%, sleep-related, at 9%, and natural, at 7%. 'It could have been prevented' On the morning Missy died, Robert Frable, the retired doctor who lived with the Spencers, heard a loud crash in her bedroom. Daniel Spencer claimed a camera had fallen over, but Frable doubted that because the noise was so loud. About a half hour later, Spencer came to him carrying Missy's limp body, according to police reports. Frable was performing CPR when first responders arrived. Investigators said it appeared Daniel Spencer was on 'illicit narcotics' when he spoke to them. Her loved ones said he was a meth user. Missy had injuries 'from head to toe,' including bruises in various stages of healing, cuts on her face, ligature marks around her wrists and burns on all of her fingers, according to police and DCF reports. Investigators also found surveillance video from Missy's bedroom. 'Evidence reviewed ... depicts hours of Daniel physically abusing Melissa by hitting her, violently pulling her arms, shoving her face into a bed, binding her feet and hands together, and covering her with pillows and comforters,' an arrest report says. DCF's website says a "special review" of Missy's case is in progress and that "causal factors" are under investigation. In the days following her death, State Attorney Campbell blasted Baker-Carper's decision, saying if Daniel Spencer had been in jail after his conviction of a child sex crime, "I'd have a 5-year-old who had a lot more life to live." In June, Attorney General Uthmeier proposed 'Missy's Law,' which would prohibit the release of defendants after they have been convicted of a sex crime. He said Missy's case was so tragic because 'it could have been prevented.' The Mogles also believe Missy's murder was avoidable if someone had listened to them. Pepper Mogle said after DCF closed its molestation investigation, the agency never checked up on Missy again. But it wasn't the last time DCF heard about the Spencers or their kids. On Oct. 31, 2024, Chloe Spencer called police alleging Daniel Spencer shoved her into a wall the night before during an argument. Although no arrest was made, TPD filed an online report with DCF as required because children were home during the incident. All the Mogles have left now are their photographs and memories of Missy, who loved ballet, playing with her dog Daisy and doting on children smaller than herself. 'DCF should have followed up,' Pepper Mogle said, 'and done the right thing by staying in touch and keeping my baby safe.' On July 11, Pepper Mogle called the Leon County Detention Facility to get word to her daughter about a different death in the family. To her surprise, Chloe Spencer was allowed to call back. Mogle put her on speaker phone. "I told her we do love her and that we wish that she would have reached out to us and let us have the baby back," Pepper Mogle said. "And she started crying, and she says, 'I know Mama, I'm sorry.'" Contact Jeff Burlew at jburlew@ or 850-599-2180. This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat: Missy Mogle murder and abuse case: A Florida system failure