Woman's body found in Dollar Tree freezer in Miami, police say

A 32-year-old woman was found dead inside a freezer at a Dollar Tree in Miami over the weekend, according to local police.

A Dollar Tree employee contacted Miami police at about 8 a.m. on Sunday, Dec. 14, and said the body of the deceased woman was found inside the store. The department described the area she was found in as a freezer or cooler.

The department identified the woman as Helen Massiell Garay Sanchez and said her death is being investigated. Foul play is not suspected, but the department said it is still investigating.

The Miami-Dade Medical Examiner Department told USA TODAY on Tuesday, Dec. 16, that a manner and cause of death have not been determined for Garay Sanchez.

Dollar Tree declined to answer questions and confirm the woman's connection to the store, but said in a statement to USA TODAY on Tuesday, Dec. 16, that the company's "thoughts are with the individual's family and loved ones."

"We are cooperating fully with the authorities at this time," the statement read.

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Passages 2025: Those we've lost through the year

Helen Massiell Garay Sanchez was visiting father in Miami, friend says

Garay Sanchez is from Nicaragua and was visiting her father in Miami, according to a GoFundMe page organized after her death.

Stefany Pereira started aGoFundMeto raise money to get Garay Sanchez back home. Garay Sanchez was a mother of two, as well as an anesthesiologist specializing in congenital heart disease, the fundraiser says.

Pereira, who described Garay Sanchez's death as a tragic accident while abroad, said the deceased woman's family wants to send her off properly. As of Tuesday, Dec. 16, the fundraiser has collected over $13,000 toward its $20,000 goal. The funds will cover repatriation, transportation and funeral services in Nicaragua.

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Facebook user Andrea Tamara Campos also dedicated a post to Sanchez, reflecting on how they lived together while studying at Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Nicaragua.

Campos said Garay Sanchez was the only anesthesiologist in Nicaragua who specialized in congenital heart disease.

Campos said she last saw her friend on Nov. 29 during a trip to Leon. The pair went to the supermarket, bought a sangria, some glasses and towels, and then went to grab a bite to eat. They passed a historic landmark where poetRigoberto López Pérez assassinated dictator Anastasio Somoza, and was soon killed himself.

According to Campos, Garay Sanchez was happy to go to Miami to visit her father, and she was supposed to return on Monday, Dec. 15. She said she will miss her friend and the moments they spent together drinking wine, dancing, going to the theater and having dinner, the Facebook post reads.

Saleen Martin is a reporter on USA TODAY's NOW team. She is from Norfolk, Virginia–the 757. Email her at sdmartin@usatoday.com.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Woman found dead in Dollar Tree freezer in Miami, police say

Woman's body found in Dollar Tree freezer in Miami, police say

A 32-year-old woman was found dead inside a freezer at a Dollar Tree in Miami over the weekend, according to local police...
A driver is found dead in a submerged car near Seattle after a week of heavy rain and flooding

TUKWILA, Wash. (AP) — A man who drove past warning signs was found dead early Tuesday in a car submerged in floodwaters near Seattle, officials said, in the first reported death following a week of heavy rain and flooding in the region.

Rescue swimmers found the driver and his vehicle in about 6 feet (1.8 meter) of water in a ditch in the Snohomish area northeast of Seattle, the Snohomish County Sheriff's Office said in a news release. The driver, believed to be a 33-year-old man, was pronounced dead at the scene after lifesaving measures failed, officials said. No one else was in the car and the death was under investigation.

During abriefingon flood damage from last week's storm, Snohomish Regional Fire and Rescue Battalion Chief Jamal Beckham said the majority of calls his crews responded to were from people who tried to drive through water or were stranded atop vehicles.

"They did not understand how rapidly the water rises," Beckham said Saturday. "We pulled people off the roof of their cars. And if we had not gotten there the car would have been completely covered."

They also responded to people who didn't expect their houses to be flooded and did not leave when they were told, he said

The National Weather Service's Weather Prediction Center expects wind, winter and flooding watches and warnings in much of the Northwest for the next couple of days as a series of storm systems bring heavy rain, heavy mountain snow and high winds. The first storm system was set to arrive in the Pacific Northwest on Tuesday night, bringing heavy rainfall from the northern California coast up to western Washington on Wednesday. Heavy snow was forecast for the northern Cascades on Tuesday evening was expected to spread to the southern Cascades Wednesday morning.

Residents near a breached levee in King County, in Washington, were told to leave their homes early Tuesday, just hours after an evacuation alert was lifted for residents nearanother broken leveein the same county. Police in the city of Pacific, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) south of Seattle, urged those in the evacuation area near the White River to "Go Now!" The National Weather Service office in Seattle issued a flash flood warning for the levee breach until later Tuesday morning.

Faced with the breach, Pacific's police department put out a call on social media Tuesday morning for a tractor with a bucket capable of reaching 8 feet high, to fill a sandbagging machine. Once the tractor was acquired, the department called for members of the public to help fill sandbags.

A 911 caller who reported water entering an apartment in Pacific around 1:20 a.m. Tuesday was the first sign of the levee breach for the Valley Regional Fire Authority, spokesperson Kelly Hawks said. Crews evacuated about 100 people early Tuesday, pulling some people from the windows of their first-floor apartments, she said.

"That was how quickly the water was coming in," Hawks said, adding that eventually the residents of about 220 homes were told to evacuate. No injuries were reported.

Public works officials were working Tuesday to clear the water and repair the levee so people can return to their homes, she said.

The King County Sheriff's Office used a helicopter equipped with a loudspeaker and knocked on doors to alert people to the evacuation order, evacuating about 1,200 people overnight, according to Brandyn Hull, communications manager for the sheriff's office.

The levee breaches followed days ofheavy rain and floodingthat inundated communities, forced the evacuations of tens of thousands of people and prompted scores of rescues throughout western Washington state.

On Monday, crews used sandbags to shore up the Desimone levee beside the Green River after a small section of it failed, prompting an evacuation order covering parts of three suburbs, officials said.

The evacuation order from King County was sent to about 1,100 homes and businesses east of the Green River, said Brendan McCluskey, the county's emergency management director. On Monday evening, King County officials announced that the evacuation alert was lifted east of the Green River and it was safe to return to the area.

Rush reported from Portland, Oregon. Associated Press writer Christopher L. Keller contributed from Albuquerque, New Mexico.

A driver is found dead in a submerged car near Seattle after a week of heavy rain and flooding

TUKWILA, Wash. (AP) — A man who drove past warning signs was found dead early Tuesday in a car submerged in floodwaters n...
New Photo - Johnny Depp to star as Scrooge in Ebenezer: A Christmas Carol movie directed by Ti West

The film marks Depp's first project from a major American studio since his controversial defamation trial with his exwife Amber Heard. Johnny Depp to star as Sc

The film marks Depp's first project from a major American studio since his controversial defamation trial with his ex-wife Amber Heard.

Johnny Depp to star as Scrooge in Ebenezer: A Christmas Carol movie directed by Ti West

The film marks Depp's first project from a major American studio since his controversial defamation trial with his ex-wife Amber Heard.

By Wesley Stenzel

Wesley Stenzel

Wesley Stenzel is a news writer at **. He began writing for EW in 2022.

EW's editorial guidelines

October 23, 2025 4:02 p.m. ET

Johnny Depp at Paris Fashion Week 2025

Johnny Depp at Paris Fashion Week 2025. Credit:

Swan Gallet/WWD via Getty

- Johnny Depp is attached to play Ebenezer Scrooge in *Ebenezer: A Christmas Carol*.

- The movie will be directed by horror filmmaker Ti West (*X*, *Pearl*).

- Andrea Riseborough is also attached to costar in an undisclosed role.

Johnny Depp is mounting a Hollywood comeback.

The *Pirates of the Caribbean *star has been tapped to play Ebenezer Scrooge in *Ebenezer: A Christmas Carol*, an adaptation of Charles Dickens' classic 1843 novella, ** has confirmed. Paramount Pictures is in final negotiations to produce the project.

The film will be directed by Ti West, best known for his recent trilogy of horror movie starring Mia Goth: *X*, *Pearl*, and *Maxxxine*. The screenplay will be written by Nathaniel Halpern, best known for creating Prime Video's sci-fi series *Tales from the Loop* (which featured an episode directed by West).

Ti West; Andrea Riseborough

Ti West; Andrea Riseborough.

Julien Hekimian/Getty; Theo Wargo/Getty

Andrea Riseborough is also attached to costar in *Ebenezer*, though her role is being kept under wraps. The most prominent female roles in prior adaptations of Dickens' story tend to be Scrooge's ex-fiancée, Belle, and Mrs. Cratchit, the wife of Scrooge's employee Bob Cratchit. It's also possible that Riseborough could portray any (or all) of the film's triumvirate of ghosts.

A logline for the film calls it "A thrilling ghost story set in Dickens' London, following one man's supernatural journey to face his past, present and future and fight for a second chance." Sounds like *A Christmas Carol*, all right!

Emma Watts will produce the film, and Stephen Deuters and Jason Forman will serve as executive producers.

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Keira Knightley, Orlando Bloom, Johnny Depp in Pirates of the Caribbean

Paramount aims to release the film Nov. 13, 2026. That date positions *Ebenezer* against an untitled Blumhouse horror project, coming a week after Warner Bros.' animated *Cat in the Hat* and a week prior to Lionsgate's star-studded *Hunger Games* prequel *Sunrise on the Reaping*.

*Ebenezer* will mark Depp's first film by a major American studio since his controversial legal battle with ex-wife Amber Heard, which ended in 2022 after a jury found that Heard had defamed the *Chocolat* actor in a 2018 *Washington Post* op-ed that claimed he abused her. After Heard appealed that verdict, the two actors settled the case later that year.

Johnny Depp at the 'Jeanne du Barry' premiere in London

Johnny Depp at the 'Jeanne du Barry' premiere in London.

Neil P. Mockford/Getty

Depp has been involved in a few film projects since the trial, including Maïwenn's 2023 French-language historical drama *Jeanne du Barry* and his upcoming directorial project *Modì, Three Days on the Wing of Madness*, starring Al Pacino. The latter project will release in theaters Nov. 7.

***Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with our EW Dispatch newsletter.***

Depp is also starring in Lionsgate's *Day Drinker*, from director Marc Webb. The film marks Depp's fourth collaboration with Penélope Cruz. No release date has been announced for the project.

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Johnny Depp to star as Scrooge in Ebenezer: A Christmas Carol movie directed by Ti West

The film marks Depp's first project from a major American studio since his controversial defamation trial with h...
New Photo - Back to the Future crew member saved Michael J. Fox from dangerous stunt pushed by director

Fox recalled the confrontation between &34;Back to the Future&34; director Robert Zemeckis and his first assistant director over a dicey stunt in his new memoir

Fox recalled the confrontation between "Back to the Future" director Robert Zemeckis and his first assistant director over a dicey stunt in his new memoir, "Future Boy."

Back to the Future crew member saved Michael J. Fox from dangerous stunt pushed by director

Fox recalled the confrontation between "Back to the Future" director Robert Zemeckis and his first assistant director over a dicey stunt in his new memoir, "Future Boy."

By Ryan Coleman

Ryan Coleman author photo

Ryan Coleman

Ryan Coleman is a news writer for with previous work in MUBI Notebook, Slant, and the LA Review of Books.

EW's editorial guidelines

on October 23, 2025 9:01 p.m. ET

Back to the Future (1985) Michael J. Fox

Michael J. Fox in 'Back to the Future' (1985). Credit:

Universal Studios

It takes a village to make a movie. In the case of *Back to the Future*, it took several vital members of that village to stop their leader from making a dangerous mistake.

In his new memoir on the making of the classic 1985 time travel comedy, *Future Boy* (released on Tuesday) star Michael J. Fox pours out his respect and adulation for the film's stunt team, with particular regard to then-rising stuntman Charlie Croughwell, who doubled for Fox on the film.

"Without Charlie, there would be no *Back to the Future* as we know it," the actor wrote.

But there was one stunt so important to director Robert Zemeckis that not even Croughwell could save him.

Back to the Future (1985) (l-r) Christopher Lloyd as Emmett Brown (Doc Brown) and Michael J. Fox as Marty McFly

Christopher Lloyd and Michael J. Fox in 'Back to the Future'.

"I later discovered that Charlie's first stunt was a point of contention between Bob Zemeckis and the 1st AD," Fox wrote.

That assistant director, David McGiffert, recalled in conversation with Fox, "'I don't usually do this, but I had to put my foot down with Bob. He wanted you to be on the skateboard in front of the car, which would be pushing you. He had a certain angle in mind that only worked if you were the one doing the bit, so he said, 'Yeah, I want Michael to do it.' I shook my head. 'Bob, he can't do that.'"

So swords were drawn.

It's not unusual for directors and their assistants to have disagreements over issues like stunt safety, blocking, and camera placement. But a lot was riding on the success of *Back to the Future *for Fox, who was caught in the middle of the tense confrontation.

Michael J. Fox on finally meeting Eric Stoltz 40 years after replacing him in 'Back to the Future'

Michael J Fox, Eric Stoltz

Michael J. Fox addresses notorious 'Back to the Future' goof that fans still hound him about

BACK TO THE FUTURE, from left: Granville 'Danny' Young, Michael J. Fox, 1985.

The year 1985 marked his first pair of leading roles in feature films: *Future* and *Teen Wolf*, which Fox had already compartmentalized as "not my magnum opus" by the time he joined the former film. The breakout star of *Family Ties*, Fox was eager to show he had potential beyond the sitcom setup. With a team of talent behind it like Zemeckis, who directed *Romancing the Stone *to massive success the previous year, and Steven Spielberg, who was, well, Steven Spielberg, *Future *had to go perfectly.**

McGiffert recalled that he continued to press the issue with Zemeckis. "'You can't have your lead actor in that position. I know it's an off chance, but if he falls under the car, it's over in a heartbeat.'"

But Fox remembered that Zemeckis put his foot down, further escalating the conflict. "Bob really wanted his shot. He insisted again that I do the stunt, and that's when David, in a rare moment of defiance, said, 'Okay, if you do that, I'm going to have to put a note on the slate that says 'First AD protests.' And that's when Bob relented."

Michael J. Fox in 2024

Michael J. Fox in 2024.

Terry Wyatt/Getty

** has reached out to a representative for Zemeckis for comment.**

With the stalemate broken, Fox and Croughwell went back to their respective duties.

"I did much of my own skateboard work in the movie, including hooking onto a few moving cars as they drove through Courthouse Square," Fox recalled. "But Charlie handled the crazy stunts. It was Charlie, not me, who sailed through the air the entire length of Biff's [Thomas F. Wilson] open convertible and reunited with the skateboard as it glided out the other end."

**Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with our EW Dispatch newsletter.**

Luckily for Fox, what seemed like an existential deadlock turned out to be just another day on the moviemaking grind. Shooting wrapped on *Back to the Future *(which Fox shot simultaneously with *Family Ties*, leading to grueling, sometimes 20-hour days), and the film was released to supersonic success. The film spent three months at the top of the domestic box office, winding up as the highest grossing film of 1985, earning an Academy Award for Best Sound Effects Editing, and transforming Fox's career for good.

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Back to the Future crew member saved Michael J. Fox from dangerous stunt pushed by director

Fox recalled the confrontation between &34;Back to the Future&34; director Robert Zemeckis and his first ass...

 

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