Posted on 05/23/2026 12:52:18 AM PDT by Governor Dinwiddie
PENSACOLA, Fla. -- The woman who made headlines earlier this year for allegedly urinating on Pensacola Airbnb furniture is back behind bars on a new, similar charge.
Nicolette Keough, 31, was arrested Wednesday on a felony charge of property damage worth over $1,000.
She appeared in court Thursday, where a judge issued her a $10,000 bond for the charge. However, she'll remain in Escambia County Jail, as her bond was revoked for violating bail conditions for a battery arrest in mid-March.
WEAR News first reported about Keough in March after she was arrested on two counts of felony criminal mischief.
According to arrest reports, Keough urinated on furniture in two Downtown Pensacola Airbnb homes -- both on N Guillemard Street. She reportedly caused thousands of dollars of property damage. The report states she also uploaded videos of the incidents to an adult content website.
Keough's new charge reportedly stems from videos surfacing on the internet.
According to the report, the owner of an Airbnb on Riddick Drive talked to Pensacola Police on April 24. He said videos show Keough -- who stayed at his residence from Aug. 31 to Sept. 11 of last year -- urinating on furniture inside the home. Pensacola Police were provided the videos, which reportedly confirmed the allegations.
The report states the total estimated value of the property damage came out to $17,395:
Pensacola Police says while they believe there haven't been any new incidents since Keough's first arrest in March, more charges for similar previous incidents are possible.
"These are incidents that happened around the same time frame. It's just that the owners are just now finding out about it and reporting it to us," Officer Mike Wood said.
"[Keough is] being very cooperative with us when she's confronted -- and that's how we know there's probably going to be some more properties involved," he added.
Should Keough later get released on bond, the judge ordered that she stay off of social media.
Officer Wood says Keough's motivation for these incidents is money.
"It goes to show that people will stoop to new lows these days to make money. And that's a problem," Wood said.
"Social media platforms, even adult sites, have rules. If they had a rule to something like this is not permitted, that would help a lot," he added. "Because then people are not able to make money doing this type of thing. Hopefully that would put a stop to this. But right now these sites are permitting this sort of thing and these people are making money. And that's the problem."
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Look at her,so proud of herself and glowing in the limelight. “I Did That!!”
Some folks never quite outgrow the Potty stage.
Hahahah! Just imagine her joy over a nice bowel movement!
She looks nice.
She probably makes her living as a Soros paid rioter.
Borderline personality disorder. Look at the lips.
guess was right, this and platner yanking his crank in a porta potty
She seems quite taken with herself.
My guess: bipolar.
Rub her nose in it and hit her with a rolled up newspaper, while shouting at her .
Grandpa, what’s a newspaper ?
She is pissed!
Not guilty !
She has a urination fetish because she is sectually deprived.
She needs help, and should be allowed to walk like all the South American murderers who have been given so many chances?
If murderers get off why shouldn’t pissers?
She has a good civil defence to this claim.......no mens urea.
The eyes give it away... Posting videos on an adult website of herself doing it shows issues and a fetish.
“The judge is overstepping here. She can communicate how and when she pleases. If she’s incarcerated, that’s different. She may be a bad little girl, but the judge is completely out of his lane here. We are ruled by judicial fiat more and more as time goes on. I’ m having a hard time with that. My 5+ years on the DC Police Department taught me all I need to know about judges.”
I think the order may be because of the sentences,
“The report states she also uploaded videos of the incidents to an adult content website.”
and
“Keough’s new charge reportedly stems from videos surfacing on the internet.”
I thinks she’s the one that they claimed was pissing on Trump....new meme - “Florida Woman”
Roger that.
“Woman faces new charge of urinating on Pensacola Airbnb furniture, causing $17K in damage”. When you gotta go you gotta go.
Protective Orders: Courts can issue restraining or protective orders that extend to virtual spaces, explicitly prohibiting contact via social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. Violating these digital restrictions is treated as a breach of the court order.
Probation Conditions: Judges may impose specific conditions on probation that forbid defendants from using any social media sites or apps. These conditions are often applied in cases involving harassment, stalking, or cyberstalking, and failure to comply can result in revocation of probation and jail time. Probation Conditions: Judges may impose specific conditions on probation that forbid defendants from using any social media sites or apps. These conditions are often applied in cases involving harassment, stalking, or cyberstalking, and failure to comply can result in revocation of probation and jail time.
Additionally, judges have the authority to block users from commenting on their official or personal social media accounts, provided the action is not considered a "state action" under the First Amendment. The Supreme Court clarified in Lindke v. Freed (2024) that officials can block constituents if they were acting in a private capacity or lacked the actual authority to speak for the state on that specific matter.
Most likely.
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