The Charlotte County Special Magistrate hearing on Nov. 5 concluded with orders, continuances and fines across a large slate of consent and new‑business cases. Many matters were processed on affidavit where no respondent appeared; others prompted brief testimony from owners or representatives.
Common outcomes across the docket included: deadlines (typically 15–30 days) for respondents to bring properties into compliance; daily fines commonly set at $50 per day for continued violations (some cases set $100 per day); issuance of two‑year cease‑and‑desist orders for repeat zoning violations in several matters; and abatement authority with costs to be added to fines if the county must perform abatement.
Examples read into the record by the magistrate included: Gulf Coast Property Management and Development (omnibus filing; 30 days, $100/day if unresolved); Conrad Flores, COD2400765 (30 days, $50/day); Binh Wen & Trang Wen, 115 Poinsettia Circle, COD2501613 (30 days, $50/day); Rio Homebuyers LLC, COD2501837 (30 days, $100/day); Corporal Circle Properties LLC, COD2500613 (15 days, $100/day); Kenneth Noble, COD2500383 (30 days, $50/day); Sergei Prokopets, COD2501351 (15 days, $50/day); Vincent Cavalier II, COD2501230 (30 days, $50/day); and Carlos & Jeanette Christie, COD2501685 (15 days, $50/day). The magistrate also signed orders without testimony for other uncontested consent‑agenda cases.
Where respondents appeared and requested additional time, the magistrate sometimes granted continuances (for example, Charles Goldie Jr. and Janine Orndorff were continued to Dec. 4 for follow‑up on habitat‑conservation and septic documentation, respectively). In cases involving permits (roofing, reconstruction), county staff and planners noted that active permits often provide time to complete repairs without immediate further penalty.
The magistrate announced the next Special Magistrate hearing for Dec. 4, 2025 at 9 a.m.