Sascha Cordner
Phone: (850) 487-3086 x404
Sascha Cordner worked at NPR member station WUFT-FM in Gainesville for several years. She's worked in both TV and radio, serving in various capacities as a reporter, producer and anchor. She's also a graduate of the University of Florida with a bachelor's degree in telecommunications. She has received several Florida Associated Press Broadcasters Awards with one of her award-winning stories titled "Male Breast Cancer: Lost in the Sea of Pink." Currently, Sascha serves as the host and producer of local and state news content for the afternoon news program "All Things Considered" at WFSU. Sascha primarily covers criminal justice and social services issues. When she's not reporting, Sascha likes catching up on her favorite TV shows, singing and reading. Follow Sascha Cordner on Twitter: @SaschaCordner.
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Following last week’s mass school shooting, about 100 Parkland students are expected to come to Tallahassee this week to speak to Florida lawmakers...
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A number of child welfare bills are continuing to move in the Florida Legislature.
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Will a descendant of a Confederate soldier be willing to agenda a controversial bill that’s next heading to his Florida Senate committee? The measure...
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Already, the Florida Supreme Court has rejected more than three dozen appeals involving death row inmates, who received their sentences before 2002 and...
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The Florida House has passed a bill making it easier for law enforcement to return firearms to certain gun owners without a court order.
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Florida lawmakers are working to create a centralized location for criminal justice data statewide.
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A gun bill that’s had some problems in the Florida Senate this legislative session has passed its first House committee.
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A bill has passed its first legislative committee requiring schools to display the state motto, “In God We Trust.”
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Two Democratic Lawmakers are hoping Florida gets involved in a movement that would change the way Floridians vote for the President.
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Should inmates be criminally charged when cell phones are found on their person? In Florida prisons, that can occur. But, in county jails, not so much....
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Unless Florida lawmakers act, an organization created to aid in the efforts of Florida’s Guardian ad Litem program is set to expire later this year.