Chicago man charged with hate crime, alleged homophobic vandalism
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:27:52 GMT
CHICAGO — A Chicago man is facing multiple felonies of stalking and hate crime with vandalism in regard to homophobia, police say. Police say 62-year-old Thomas Howard is facing a felony count of hate crime, two felonies of stalking and another felony of criminal damage to property. Howard was arrested in the 5100 block of North Milwaukee Avenue Tuesday and was identified as the man who criminally damaged the property of a 41-year-old woman and a 43-year-old man in the 5700 block of North Mason Avenue. String of armed robberies near West Town Thursday morning Police reports state that the vandalism was homophonic in nature and was committed multiple times from May 2022 to January 2023. The man was placed into custody and charged accordingly. There is no additional information on the incident.FAA: Two people on board small plane crash in Lincoln
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:27:52 GMT
UPDATE (7:40 a.m.) -- The Federal Aviation Administration released a preliminary statement on the crash. It confirms a single-engine Piper PA-32 crashed southwest of Logan County Airport around 7:30 P.M. Wednesday. Two people were on board. The FAA says the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) will investigate.UPDATE (09:53 p.m.) -- The plane is registered to James Grimaldi and William Bates. Right now, it's unclear if either person was on the plane at the time of the crash.LINCOLN, Ill. (WMBD)-- According to the Lincoln Fire Department, a plane crashed in Lincoln Wednesday night. The Lincoln Daily News reports a small plane crashed near Open Arms Christian Fellowship Church in Lincoln.The locally-owned newspaper also reports that a meeting was inside the church, and the plane hit a block structure and came to a halt.The paper also indicates injuries are reported inside the aircraft. This developing story will be updated once more details become available.Despite $1.73 Trillion Spending, US Military Members Struggle to Afford Basic Necessities
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:27:52 GMT
1 person injured in crash between pickup, semi-truck; Traffic blocked on I-35 service road at Riverside
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:27:52 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) -- One person was sent to a hospital after a crash between a semi-truck and pickup truck on the southbound I-35 service road near Riverside Drive. Real time traffic map The crash was reported at 6:15 a.m. Austin Police said the pickup truck hit the semi from behind and caught fire. The fire was put out. Austin Travis County-EMS said one person was pinned in the vehicle and had to be extracted. They were declared a trauma alert and taken to the hospital with serious injuries. As of 7:20 a.m., the drive time on northbound I-35 from Kyle to downtown Austin is 63 minutes because of delays associated the crash. It's causing heavy delays in both directions.Avoid the area and use alternate routes if possible. There is also a crash on southbound I-35 in Round Rock at McNeil Road causing very heavy delays through the Round Rock corridor. As of 7:20 a.m., the drive time from Georgetown to downtown Austin on southbound I-35 is 90 minutes.The bats are back, adding to Austin's charm
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:27:52 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) -- We love seeing them when they're here. They add a certain "je ne sais quoi" ambiance to Austin, attracting both locals and visitors. It's also possible that some plan their vacation around seeing them.Local band musicians? No. We're talking about the bats. The mammals lend so much to a tourists' visits.The bats have returned. Not just any bats. Our city's residents are Mexican free-tailed bats. They make their pilgrimage each spring when they leave central Mexico to various places over the southwestern United States. Many of them congregate at the Congress Ave. bridge where they take flight every night. They started appearing a little earlier than the start of spring because of the warm temperatures that we had during late-winter. Our friends from the Austin Bat Refuge reported they started arriving during the third week of February. They also report that it just wasn't the Mexican free-tailed bats that showed up but also bats from other colonies using Congress as a...Get some new gear from the 2023 Birds Collection at Kiener Plaza
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:27:52 GMT
ST. LOUIS - It's Opening Day, and you don't want to start the new season with last year's gear.FOX 2's Tim Ezell and Chelsea Haynes have more than a few new options for you. They shared some of Arch Apparel's new gear from the 2023 Birds Collection at Kiener Plaza. Trending: What to know for the 2023 St. Louis Cardinals home opener From crews necks to cropped hoodies, there's a style for every Cardinal's fan.Opinion: If the Denver school board won’t ensure school safety, vote them out
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:27:52 GMT
Our schools must be a safe place to learn, but too often they are not.In early September, two people, including an East High School student was shot near the school. Two weeks later, East High School had its first lockdown.On Feb. 13, Luis Garcia, a 16-year-old East student, who excelled on the soccer field and classroom, was shot and fatally wounded near the school while sitting in his car.A mere six weeks later, two school staff members, Jerald Mason and Eric Sinclair were shot and wounded after conducting a routine safety check on Austin Lyle, a 17-year-old student, while students were nearby attending an assembly. Lyle, who had been expelled from the Cherry Creek School District, was subject to a safety plan that required him to be searched.Parents anxiously waiting to hug their children outside of schools is an all too familiar scene in America today. If I were one of those parents at East last week, I would be shopping for a new school.No parent or child should have to endur...Few Black women become Colorado firefighters. Lt. Kathleen Hancock is blazing a trail.
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:27:52 GMT
She beamed as she made her way across the sandwich shop to where Aurora Fire Rescue Lt. Kathleen Hancock was standing.“Sorry to interrupt,” the Black woman said, but she wanted to introduce herself to Hancock, Aurora’s first Black female firefighter who was just promoted to lieutenant.“I kind of got emotional,” Terri House said. “She is a beacon. I feel really excited to just see a female Black firefighter. I feel pride. I feel a piece of me is represented.”Terri House of Aurora, left, shakes hands with Lt. Kathleen Hancock, the first black female firefighter in Aurora Fire and Rescue, as Hancock picks up lunch on Thursday, March 16, 2023. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)House is a program manager for the Latino Coalition and invited Hancock to speak to an empowerment group for young girls. The firefighter, who traded her track and field jackets and medals in high school and college for her fire uniform, is used to people stopping her in public. (Hanco...Injured woman sues Vail Resorts after the rescue toboggan she was riding in crashed
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:27:52 GMT
A Connecticut woman is suing Vail Resorts because of injuries she allegedly suffered in the crash of a rescue toboggan as ski patrollers evacuated her after she was hurt in a fall while skiing.Kathryn Stoupas fell at the bottom of the Geronimo trail at Keystone Resort, which is owned by Vail, in February 2021, injuring her left shoulder, and called for ski patrol assistance.But the two patrollers who were navigating the toboggan in which she was riding were traveling at a “high rate of speed” and lost control, according to a lawsuit filed in Broomfield County Court last week. As a result, the Stoupas claims that the toboggan overturned, “dragging (her) on her left side and face along the snow until it came to rest.”The lawsuit claims she suffered further damage to her already injured left shoulder, along with a fractured humerus bone in her upper arm, nerve damage, abrasions and contusions to her face.“What we’re alleging is that this was certainly negl...Denver’s population rebounds slightly, but it’s among metro counties facing growth headwinds
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:27:52 GMT
Denver and other metro area counties are losing residents to other parts of Colorado and out of state, new census estimates show, as pandemic disruptions, rising housing costs and an aging population continue to scramble Colorado’s formerly robust growth patterns.Like Denver, Jefferson and Arapahoe counties are seeing more people move out than move in, while Douglas County and sprawling Weld County have been big gainers in terms of net migration.Thanks to natural growth from births outpacing deaths, the city and county of Denver still managed to grow in population from mid-2021 to mid-2022, partially rebounding from a decline the prior year. It reached 713,252 residents as of July 1, according to annual population estimates released Thursday by the U.S. Census Bureau. That reflects an uptick of 1,929 residents compared to mid-2021, or 0.3% growth.But since the 2020 census, which pegged population counts to April 1 of that year — right as the coronavirus pandemic was taki...Latest news
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