There were at least 25 arrests for looting statewide.
The storm's core angled across Florida to enter the gulf north of Tampa, its path crossing some of the area hit by Charley, which killed 27 people in Florida and caused an estimated US$7.4 billion in insured damage.
The nine Florida deaths blamed on Frances included a grandson and a former son-in-law of Florida State University football coach Bobby Bowden. The pair died in a collision on a rain-slippery highway.
On Monday, a school employee died in Ocala after falling from a ladder while checking the roof of a middle school for damage.
A man in the Fort Myers area died Sunday while walking his dog when he was struck by flying debris.



