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  • Triad man killed by “pack of canines,” sheriff says

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    A Davidson County man is dead after authorities say he was attacked by a pack of canines, according to the sheriff’s office. 

    Deputies said the 73-year-old, whose name has not been released, was found dead and “beyond the possibility of life-saving intervention” around 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 8, at a home in the Silver Valley Community on Jeanette Lane.

    His death was caused by “injuries consistent with an attack by a large pack of canines,” the sheriff’s office said in a release.

    Few details have been released, but authorities have said “criminal charges will be forthcoming.”

    Regarding the canines, investigators said they believe the threat to the community has been reduced, but the investigation is ongoing.

    Anyone with information is asked to call 336-242-2134.

    Deputies also ask anyone who has an issue with an animal to report it by calling 336-249-0131.

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    [ad_2] Justin Pryor
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  • Madalina Cojocari: Police still searching 3 years later

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    Three years after the disappearance of Madalina Cojocari, police are still searching for answers.


    What You Need To Know

    • It has been three years since Madalina Cojocari, 11 at the time, was last seen getting off the school bus on Nov. 21, 2022
    • Her mother did not report her missing until Dec. 15, 2022, to avoid a “conflict” with Madalina’s stepfather, Christopher Palmiter, who she divorced earlier this year 
    • Her mother had asked someone for help getting her daughter away from Palmiter before Madalina’s disappearance, according to warrants 
    • After serving jail time for failing to report Madalina missing in a timely manner, her mother went back to her home country of Moldova


    Madalina was 11 years old when her mother, Diana Cojocari, reported her missing to her middle school on Dec. 15, 2022, after school officials began investigating why she did not return to school after Thanksgiving break.

    The last confirmed sighting of Madalina was on Nov. 21 of that year when she got off her school bus in Cornelius, a suburb in Charlotte where she lived.


    Diana Cojocari pleaded guilty in 2024 to failing to report a child missing to police. Madalina’s stepfather, Christopher Palmiter, was found guilty of the same charge.

    Diana Cojocari told investigators she last saw her daughter on Nov. 23, and the following morning, Madalina was not in her room. A backpack and some of her clothes were gone too.

    Diana Cojocari said she waited to report her missing to “avoid a conflict” with Palmiter, according to investigators.

    Search warrants released in March of 2023 revealed that Diana Cojocari had asked a man described as a “distant relative” to get her and her daughter away from Palmiter before Madalina’s disappearance.

    The man “stated that she told him she was in a bad relationship with co-defendant, Palmiter, and wanted a divorce,” the warrant said.

    Diana Cojocari and Palmiter were married in 2016, and their divorce was finalized in March of this year, according to court documents.

    The mother and daughter are from Moldova, in eastern Europe.

    After serving jail time, Diana Cojocari moved back to her native country, according to police.

    Those with any information about the whereabouts of Madalina are asked to contact the Cornelius Police Department at (704) 892-7773, or submit a tip online at tips.fbi.gov.

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    Caroline King

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  • Federal judges uphold several N.C. U.S. House districts drawn by Republicans

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    RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Federal judges on Thursday upheld several U.S. House districts that North Carolina Republicans drew in 2023 that helped the GOP gain additional seats the following year. They rejected accusations the lines unlawfully fractured and packed Black voters to weaken their voting power.


    What You Need To Know

    • Federal judges have upheld several U.S. House districts drawn by North Carolina Republicans in 2023
    • The judges on Thursday rejected accusations that the lines unlawfully fractured and packed Black voters to weaken their voting power
    • The order by three judges didn’t rule on changes made last month to the 1st Congressional District. That alteration is still being considered
    • It stemmed from efforts by President Donald Trump starting in the summer to secure additional GOP House seats through mid-decade redistricting in several states


    The order by three judges — all of whom were nominated to the bench by GOP presidents — didn’t rule on changes made last month to the 1st Congressional District that are designed to unseat Democratic Rep. Don Davis in 2026.

    That alteration, completed at the urging of President Donald Trump as part of an ongoing national mid-decade redistricting fray, is still being considered by the panel. The judges heard arguments on Wednesday in Winston-Salem but didn’t immediately rule on whether they would block now the use of the 1st District and the adjoining 3rd District for next year’s election while more legal arguments are made. Candidate filing for the 2026 elections is set to begin Dec. 1.

    Many allegations made by the state NAACP, Common Cause and voters cover both 2023 and 2025 changes, in particular claims of voter dilution and racial discrimination violating the U.S. Constitution and Voting Rights Act.

    The 2023 map helped turn a 7-7 North Carolina delegation into one in which Republicans won 10 of the 14 seats in 2024. Three Democrats chose not to seek reelection, saying it was essentially impossible to get reelected under the recast lines.

    Thursday’s ruling by 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Allison Rushing and District Judges Thomas Schroeder and Richard Myers rejected claims that GOP legislators drew lines in 2023 so skewed for Republicans that many Black voters could not elect their preferred candidates.

    “We conclude that the General Assembly did not violate the Constitution or the VRA in its 2023 redistricting,” they wrote in a 181-page order.

    The judges convened a trial several months ago hearing testimony for a pair of lawsuits that challenged portions of maps redrawn in 2023. Thursday’s decision focused on five congressional districts: three in the Greensboro region and two in and around Charlotte, as well as three state Senate districts. The judges also upheld the Senate districts.

    The plaintiffs argued Republicans split and weakened the Greensboro region’s concentrated Black voting population within multiple U.S. House districts. Then-Rep. Kathy Manning, a Greensboro Democrat, decided not to run again last year because her district shifted to the right. They also cited what they called packing Black voting-age residents into a Charlotte-area congressional district that in turn helped Republican Tim Moore win an adjoining district.

    Attorneys for Republican leaders argued that lawfully partisan — and not racial — considerations helped inform decision-making on the 2023 map. They pointed out that no information on the racial makeup of regions were used in drawing the lines. A 2019 U.S. Supreme Court decision essentially neutered federal legal claims of illegal partisan gerrymandering going forward.

    The judges’ order favoring the GOP lawmakers said “the circumstances surrounding the plans’ enactment and the resulting district configurations and composition are consistent with the General Assembly’s non-racial motivations, which included traditional districting criteria, North Carolina law, and partisan performance.”

    The ruling can be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. Spokespeople for Republican legislative leaders didn’t immediately respond late Thursday to emailed requests for comment. A lawyers group representing the state NAACP and others said it was disappointed with the ruling.

    Still at issue are the changes made to the 1st and 3rd Districts that GOP legislators said are designed to create an 11-3 seat majority in 2026. Davis continues a line of Black representatives elected from the 1st District going back more than 30 years. But he won his second term by less than 2 percentage points.

    North Carolina is among several states where Trump has pushed for mid-decade map changes ahead of the 2026 elections. This week, a federal court blocked Texas from using a GOP-engineered map.

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

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    Associated Press

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  • 20 people displaced after 3-alarm fire destroys Charlotte apartment complex

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    Twenty people lost their homes overnight Thursday as a 3-alarm fire ripped through a Charlotte apartment complex, fire officials said.


    What You Need To Know

    •  The fire started around 3 a.m. Thursday at an apartment complex on Branch Way Court in Charlotte, N.C.
    •  Officials said the fire was accidental and started from improperly discarded smoking materials on an exterior second-floor balcony
    •  No injuries were reported
    • Officials said 12 units were affected, 20 people were displaced and damaged estimates are around $1.6 million


    The fire happened just before 3 a.m. on Branch Way Court. When crews arrived, Charlotte Fire Department said the fire had already extended into the attic space after burning through the second and third floors of the three-story complex.

    By 3:13 a.m., crews requested a third-alarm due to “the amount of fire and the structural concern from falling debris,” officials said.


    Fire crews were able to safely evacuate residents, officials said, and brought the fire under control shortly before 4 a.m.

    No injuries were reported.

    Officials say 12 apartment units were affected by the fire, and 20 residents were displaced. Damages have been estimated around $1.6 million.

    The fire was caused by “improperly discarded smoking materials on an exterior second-floor balcony,” investigators said, and has been ruled accidental.

    Charlotte Fire is reminding residents to properly dispose of cigarettes, cigars and other smoking products. These items should never be placed in planters, mulch beds, or on balconies, officials said.

    Instead, use a deep, sturdy, non-combustible container filled with sand or water and ensure the material is fully out before disposal. “This simple step can prevent devastating fires and protect lives,” Charlotte Fire said in a post on X.

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

    [ad_2] Justin Pryor
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  • Eden dump truck driver indicted on murder charges in utility workers’ deaths

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    The driver of a dump truck that crashed into a crew of utility workers in Eden, North Carolina, earlier this year has been indicted on murder charges, court records show.


    What You Need To Know

    •  Authorities said Michael Vernon was driving a dump truck on April 24 when he crashed into a crew of utility workers in Eden, N.C.
    •  Four of the linemen were killed, two were seriously injured and a third suffered minor injuries
    •  On Tuesday, Nov. 19, Vernon was indicted on multiple counts of second-degree murder and assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injury


    Michael Ray Vernon, 66, is charged with four counts of second-degree murder and three counts of assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injury.

    The indictments were issued Tuesday afternoon, according to records.

    The murder charges are related to the deaths of Douglas Garland Sides, 72, of Summerfield; Madison Carter, 32, of Sandy Ridge; William Evans, 35, of Randleman; and Matthew Lockwood, 30, of Winston-Salem, all of whom died at the scene.

    The assault charges are connected to three linemen who were injured, two seriously, during the crash.

    On Thursday, April 24, Vernon failed to stop on Carroll Street at the intersection with Church Street and Park Road and hit the workers, who were conducting power line work, according to the North Carolina State Highway Patrol.

    Vernon also hit a bucket truck before stopping in a ditch.

    A week after the incident, the city of Eden announced that Vernon and Public Works Operations Superintendent Elmer “Dusty” Curry had been fired and Public Works Operations Manager Darren Gatewood had announced his retirement.

    Vernon was initially charged with a stop sign violation and several counts of misdemeanor death by motor vehicle, according to court records. Those charges were dismissed following Tuesday’s indictments.

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

     

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    Justin Pryor

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  • Durham City Council approves $44 million bond for major redevelopment in Hayti

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    DURHAM, N.C. — City leaders, housing officials and longtime residents say the Fayette Place project site marks a major step toward rebuilding a neighborhood that has awaited revitalization for decades.


    What You Need To Know

    • The 20 acres of land has sat empty since 2009 after old buildings were torn down
    • Durham City Council approved a $44 million bond that will support the components for the mixed-use development
    • More than 250 affordable homes are planned to be built 
    • Construction for phase one can begin as early as next year


    For nearly 16 years, 20 acres in the heart of Hayti have remained empty, a silent reminder of the once-thriving Black neighborhood.

    But now, the Durham Housing Authority, a partner in the project, says the redevelopment will help reconnect the community with its roots.

    “There are efforts underway to reclaim the life of what once was there,” said Anthony Snell, interim CEO of DHA. “I’m not saying that we can reclaim all of it with this initiative, but what we are doing, certainly, I think is in the right direction.”

    The redevelopment plan includes over 250 affordable housing units, which would serve families earning 30% to 80% of Durham’s area median income. It’s a decision that project leaders say is critical at a time when housing costs are so high.

    Just blocks away, longtime Durham resident and business owner Angel Greene says she knows firsthand how challenging it has become to find affordable housing in the city. 

    Greene now owns a flower shop, Angel World of Flowers, that has served the community for nearly three decades. She took over the business earlier this year and says she wouldn’t be able to live in Durham today if she hadn’t purchased her home years ago.

    “If I hadn’t purchased my home years and years ago, I don’t know that I would be able to even live in Durham,” Greene said.

    Despite the challenges the community has faced over the years, Greene says she is optimistic.

    “I’m hoping in a few years, with the revitalization and all the money that’s been poured into this community, I’m really looking forward to the business booming,” she said.

    Snell says that is the goal, to rebuild Hayti in a way that benefits the people who have long called it home.

    “Give us an opportunity. I’m not saying that we have the panacea here,” he said. “We are not, going to be the one project that’s going to tilt the community back to its original state, but I think we are a critical piece of it because of our commitment.”

    DHA estimates the total cost of the development at $86 million, and officials say phase one of construction could begin as early as next year.

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

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    Ryan Hayes-Owens

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  • Maersk’s new Charlotte-based North American headquarters will create 520 jobs

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    Maersk, a global logistics company, has chosen Charlotte as the location for its new North American headquarters, Gov. Josh Stein announced Tuesday.


    What You Need To Know

    •  Global integrated logistics company Maersk has selected Charlotte for its new North American headquarters location
    •  The new headquarters will bring 520 jobs to the Queen City
    •  Officials say the average salary is expected to be around $101,000, which is roughly $15,000 more than the Mecklenburg County average
    • The Charlotte headquarters will house corporate functions, including finance, human resources, commercial strategy and technology, according to a release


    “Maersk’s decision to bring its North American headquarters to Charlotte speaks to North Carolina’s reputation as a top destination for global business,” Stein said in a release. “We are home to a world-class workforce, and we’re proud to welcome Maersk to North Carolina – the top state for business in the country.” 

    The new headquarters is expected to bring 520 jobs over the next several years, officials said, as well as a $16-million investment in Mecklenburg County.

    “North Carolina has been a key partner in our growth for more than two decades, “ said Charles van der Steene, president of the North America region at Maersk. “Designating Charlotte as our North American headquarters location reinforces our confidence in the state’s business climate and workforce. We’re investing in North Carolina’s future because it’s a place where innovation and opportunity come together.”

    The Charlotte headquarters will house corporate functions, including finance, human resources, commercial strategy and technology, according to a release.

    Officials say salaries for the new positions will vary, with the average annual salary expected to be nearly $101,000. Mecklenburg County’s current average salary is roughly $86,000.

    “This is a proud day for Charlotte and our state. Maersk’s investment brings not only hundreds of good-paying jobs, but also new opportunities for our local workforce and small businesses,” said N.C. Senator DeAndrea Salvador. “I’m committed to ensuring that this growth benefits all our communities and strengthens our region’s position as a hub for global commerce.”

    “Maersk’s selection of Charlotte is another win for our city and a signal to the world that North Carolina and the Mecklenburg County region is a premier destination for innovation and investment,”said N.C. Representative Terry M. Brown Jr. “As someone who has long championed economic opportunity, I’m excited to see how this move will uplift our communities and create new pathways to prosperity.” 

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

     

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    Justin Pryor

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  • Former Marine sniper accused of mass shooting and warning signs that came before

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    Estranged friends and family and even a judge had raised concerns months before authorities say a wounded Iraq War veteran killed three people and injured five at a North Carolina waterfront bar.


    What You Need To Know

    • Estranged friends and family and even a judge had raised concerns months before authorities say a wounded Iraq War veteran killed three people and injured five at a North Carolina waterfront bar.
    • A former friend got a no-contact order against Nigel Max Edge, saying he feared for his safety and describing the former Marine sniper as armed and “mentally unstable”
    • Several people told The Associated Press they inquired about having Edge involuntarily committed for psychiatric evaluation but believed they lacked standing
    • Edge has been charged with first-degree murder and attempted murder but the case has been postponed to January


    Marc Simmons hadn’t heard from his estranged friend in nearly seven years. Then, Nigel Max Edge showed up at his work and falsely accused Simmons of stealing his identity.

    They met taking community college classes and bonded over their time with the Marines in Iraq. Simmons’ kids once called Edge “Uncle Sean” — back when his name was still Sean William DeBevoise.

    Simmons was now terrified his old friend would retaliate against him, he told a judge.

    “The defendant, Nigel Edge, is mentally unstable,” Simmons said in a handwritten request for a protective order. “Always has a pistol on him, on high doses of medications that cause defendant to be anxious.”

    That was back in May, four months before authorities say Edge, a former Marine sniper, guided a motorboat up to a crowded Cape Fear River bar in Southport, North Carolina, and opened fire with an AR-style rifle, killing three and wounding five.

    Edge, 41, is charged with first-degree murder and attempted murder and has been in jail without bond since the Sept. 27 shooting at the American Fish Company. A November hearing to determine next steps in the case was pushed to January.

    Prosecutors and Edge’s attorney did not respond to questions about why the case was postponed.

    Options to intervene

    Following the shooting, police recovered two handguns and a short-barreled rifle from Edge’s car and boat. At his home, they found two more rifles and pistols, including one with a silencer.

    Democratic Gov. Josh Stein said North Carolina needed to join the 21 states that have “red flag laws,” which allow authorities to temporarily confiscate guns from people deemed a threat. But there was another legal option.

    It’s unclear whether anyone petitioned a magistrate to involuntarily commit Edge to a psychiatric facility for evaluation because the records are not public. But anyone could have, not just close family and friends, said Mark F. Botts, a University of North Carolina School of Government associate professor.

    “It seems like he was estranged from the very people that would normally intervene,” Botts said.

    Rachel Crowl feels there’s a lot of blame to go around, from his family, to the government, even herself.

    “We failed him, as a whole,” she said.

    Struggling to understand

    In this undated photo provided by Rachel Crowl, Nigel Max Edge, then known as Sean DeBevoise, lies in a hospital bed next to his wife, Rachel Crowl, in Tampa, Fla. (Rachel Crowl, via AP)

    Edge joined the Marines right after high school, eventually rising to the elite recon sniper corps. He was shot four times in 2006 on his second deployment to Iraq. The wounds led to his medical retirement in 2009.

    When he returned from Iraq, a large chunk of his skull missing and an insurgent’s bullet still lodged in his brain, Marine Sgt. Sean DeBevoise — as he was then known — still seemed to have a firm grip on reality, Crowl said.

    Crowl, who fell in love at 14 with the blond, blue-eyed wrestler when he came to her New York middle school for a match, said his description of how he was wounded in Iraq matched his comrades’ version of events; he loved his family, and they loved him.

    Then he began patrolling the house with a rifle and sleeping with a loaded pistol under his pillow. Separate bedrooms led to estrangement, then, ultimately, divorce.

    When Crowl last saw him, 10 years ago on a Wrightsville Beach pier, “it was heartbreaking,” she said.

    “He looked me straight in my face and told me a completely different story,” she said. “Basically, how I hired the platoon to kill him, and the friendly fire. And did I know they buried him and peed on him? And why would I do this? And then asked me about if I remember us being sex trafficked when we were in high school, and told me his parents had kidnapped him and weren’t his parents.”

    Those are the stories he told in “Headshot: Betrayal of a Nation,” the book he self-published in 2020. Three years later, he legally changed his name, saying there are “events in my life that I don’t understand” and that he did “not trust my family.”

    Doubts about how to help

    Crowl said she didn’t hear from Edge again until May, when the man she’d nursed, bathed and fed filed a federal lawsuit against her, Simmons, an ex-girlfriend and a former Marine from his first Iraq deployment. It alleged they were all part of a “Civil Conspiracy” to sexually traffic and kill him, or to make him kill himself.

    Edge filed lawsuit after lawsuit against friends, family, doctors, hospitals, the Department of Veterans Affairs, even a church. Crowl and others said they thought authorities would get him the mental health care they felt he clearly needed.

    “Plaintiff suffers from war injuries and he suffers from delusions” and post-traumatic stress disorder, his mother, Sandra DeBevoise, wrote in a legal response last December, after he sued her and her husband. “The VA needs to take care of him!!!”

    The VA declined to comment, citing medical privacy laws.

    The legal onslaught became so bad that a judge in Brunswick County moved to restrict Edge from filing lawsuits without court approval.

    Several people told The Associated Press they believed they lacked standing to file a commitment petition because they were not close relatives.

    And the state Department of Health and Human Services cautions that this is “a last resort.”

    “A person like this just falls through the cracks,” Botts said.

    In June, a judge ordered Edge to stay away from Simmons. Simmons told AP he did not want to talk about his former friend.

    Behind bars, Edge hasn’t been idle.

    About three weeks after the shooting, he filed a handwritten notice of appeal after a federal judge dismissed his civil rights lawsuit against the FBI, U.S. Department of Justice, several local law enforcement agencies and a charity that helps veterans.

    On lined notebook paper, he wrote, without further context: “Recent events, ‘Self defense’ against ‘White Supremacist Pedophiles’ directly related to this case.”

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    Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Funeral to be held Monday for WakeMed officer killed in line of duty

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    Funeral services for WakeMed Officer Roger Smith will be held Monday, Nov. 17, officials announced on Friday.


    What You Need To Know

    •  Officer Roger Smith was killed in the line of duty on Saturday, Nov. 8
    •  Smith was shot during a struggle, officials said, at WakeMed Garner Healthplex
    •  The suspect has been arrested and charged with murder, officials said
    • A memorial service will take place Monday, Nov. 17, at noon in Raleigh, N.C., followed by interment in Clayton, N.C.


    The service will start at noon at Providence Church in Raleigh, North Carolina. 

    Smith’s casket will be taken by the North Carolina State Highway Patrol’s Caisson Unit, starting at 10:45 a.m., down Glenwood Avenue from Mitchell Funeral Home to Providence Church.

    Following the service, Smith will be buried at Pinecrest Memorial Park in Clayton, N.C., officials said.

    A visitation will be held on Sunday, Nov. 16, from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. at Mitchell Funeral Home at Raleigh Memorial Park, according to Smith’s obituary.

    Smith, 59, served as an officer with WakeMed Campus Police for 14 years.

    He was shot and killed on the morning of Saturday, Nov. 8, while on duty. Officials say the shooting happened during a struggle at the WakeMed Garner HealthPlex.

    The suspect has been arrested and charged with murder, officials said.

    Authorities have not released many details as to what led up to the shooting. The Garner Police Department and the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation are investigating.

    “He will be remembered for his compassion, his dedication to others, his kind smile, his friendship and his heroism,” WakeMed Health and Hospitals said in a statement earlier this week. “Officer Smith lost his life while protecting the lives of others – and we will forever remember and honor his memory.”

    A spokeswoman for WakeMed Health and Hospitals said there will be a memorial in Smith’s honor soon.

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

     

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    Justin Pryor

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  • Immigration enforcement arrests begins in Charlotte, officials confirm

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    Federal officials confirmed Saturday that a surge of immigration enforcement in North Carolina’s largest city has begun, as agents were seen making arrests in multiple locations.

    “Americans should be able to live without fear of violent criminal illegal aliens hurting them, their families, or their neighbors,” Assistant Homeland Security Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement. “We are surging DHS law enforcement to Charlotte to ensure Americans are safe and public safety threats are removed.”


    What You Need To Know

    •  Federal immigration agents began a large enforcement action in Charlotte Saturday
    •  Agents made several arrests, including in front of news crews as the operation began
    •  The Border Patrol operation was met by protests in the Queen City
    •  Immigration officials said they made 81 arrests in Charlotte on Saturday


    Local officials including Mayor Vi Lyles criticized such actions, saying in a statement that they “are causing unnecessary fear and uncertainty.”

    “We want people in Charlotte and Mecklenburg County to know we stand with all residents who simply want to go about their lives,” the statement said. It was also signed by Mecklenburg County Commissioner Mark Jerrell and Charlotte-Mecklenburg school board member Stephanie Sneed.

    There were several protests in the Queen City Saturday and more protests are planned in Raleigh and Charlotte Sunday.

    Federal agents arrested 81 people Saturday, Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino said in X Sunday morning. 

    Crime is down in the city this year through August, compared with the same months in 2024. Homicides, rapes, robberies and motor vehicle thefts fell by more than 20%, according to AH Datalytics.

    But President Donald Trump’s administration has seized upon the fatal stabbing of Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska on a Charlotte light-rail train to argue that Democratic-led cities fail to protect residents. A man with a lengthy criminal record has been charged with the woman’s murder.

    Enforcement begins after rumors

    The federal government had not previously announced the push. But County Sheriff Garry McFadden said this week that two federal officials told him Customs agents would be arriving soon.

    Charlotte is a racially diverse city of more than 900,000 residents, including more than 150,000 who are foreign-born, according to local officials.

    Willy Aceituno, a 46-year-old Honduran-born U.S. citizen, was on his way to work Saturday when he saw “a lot of Latinos running,” chased by “a lot of Border Patrol agents.”

    Aceituno said he himself was stopped — twice — by Border Patrol agents. During the second encounter, they forced him from his vehicle after breaking the window and threw him to the ground.

    “I told them, ‘I’m an American citizen,’” he told The Associated Press. “They wanted to know where I was born, or they didn’t believe I was an American citizen.”

    After being forcibly taken into a Border Patrol vehicle, Aceituno said, he was finally released after showing documents proving his citizenship. He had to walk some distance back to his car and later filed a police report over the broken glass.

     

    Spokesperson Paola Garcia of Camino, a bilingual nonprofit serving families in Charlotte, said she and her colleagues have observed an increase in stops by U.S. Customs and Border Protection and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents since Friday.

    “Basically what we’re seeing is that there have been lots of people being pulled over,” Garcia said.

    Greg Asciutto, executive director of the community development group CharlotteEast, said via email that the “significant border patrol activity” was seen Saturday.

    “Most have been extremely quick, targeted arrests; others have been them ‘fishing,’” Asciutto said.

    An encounter in a front yard

    In east Charlotte, two workers were hanging Christmas lights in Rheba Hamilton’s front yard in the morning when two Customs and Border Patrol agents walked up. One tried to speak to the workers in Spanish, she said. They did not respond, and the agents left without making arrests.

    “This is real disconcerting, but the main thing is we’ve got two human beings in my yard trying to make a living. They’ve broken no laws, and that’s what concerns me,” said Hamilton, who recorded the encounter on her cellphone.

    “It’s an abuse of all of our laws. It is unlike anything I have ever imagined I would see in my lifetime,” the 73-year-old said.

    Amid reports of the crackdown, she had suggested the work be postponed. But the contractor decided to go ahead.

    “Half an hour later, he’s in our yard, he’s working and Border Patrol rolls up,” she said. “They’re here because they were looking for easy pickings. There was nobody here with TV cameras, nobody here protesting, there’s just two guys working in a yard and an old white lady with white hair sitting on her porch drinking her coffee.”

    Some businesses close

    JD Mazuera Arias, who was elected to the City Council in September, was among a group standing watch outside a Latin American bakery in his east Charlotte district.

    Another bakery nearby closed for fear of the crackdown, he said, showing the harm to livelihoods and the economy.

    “This is Customs and Border Patrol. We are not a border city, nor are we a border state. So why are they here?” he said. “This is a gross violation of constitutional rights for not only immigrants but for U.S. citizens.”

    Asciutto said many businesses in his part of town were closed and “We’re brainstorming ways to keep them afloat, as we don’t know how long this is going to last.”

    The Trump administration has defended unprecedented federal enforcement operations in cities like Los Angeles and Chicago as necessary for fighting crime and enforcing immigration laws.

    Some in North Carolina welcomed the blitz. Mecklenburg County Republican Party Chairman Kyle Kirby said Democratic officials “have abandoned their duty to uphold law and order” and are “demonizing the brave men and women of federal law enforcement.”

    “Let us be clear: President Trump was given a mandate in the 2024 election to secure our borders,” Kirby said in a statement. “Individuals who are in this country legally have nothing to fear.”

    But several hundred people protested Saturday in a Charlotte park.

    Democratic Gov. Josh Stein said the previous day that the vast majority of people detained in such operations have no criminal convictions, and some are citizens. He urged people to record any “inappropriate behavior” and notify local law enforcement.

    The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department has emphasized that it is not involved in federal immigration enforcement.

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

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    Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Border Patrol official says dozens arrested in N.C. enforcement surge

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    A top Border Patrol commander touted dozens of arrests in North Carolina’s largest city on Sunday as Charlotte residents reported encounters with federal immigration agents near churches, apartment complexes and stores.

    The Trump administration has made the Democratic city of about 950,000 people its latest target for an immigration enforcement surge it says will combat crime, despite fierce objections from local leaders and downtrending crime rates.

    Gregory Bovino, who led hundreds of U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents in a similar effort in Chicago, took to X to document a few of the more than 80 arrests he said agents had made. He also posted a highly-edited video of uniformed CBP officers handcuffing people.

    “From border towns to the Queen City, our agents go where the mission calls,” he posted on X, referring to Charlotte.

    The effort was dubbed “Operation Charlotte’s Web” as a play on the title of a famous children’s book that isn’t about North Carolina.

    Some welcomed the intervention, including Mecklenburg County Republican Party Chairman Kyle Kirby, who said in a post Saturday that the county GOP “stands with the rule of law — and with every Charlottean’s safety first.”

    Fear and many questions

    The flurry of activity prompted fear and questions, including where detainees would be held, how long the operation would last and what agents’ tactics — criticized elsewhere as aggressive and racist — would look like in North Carolina. On Saturday, at least one U.S. citizen said he was thrown to the ground and briefly detained.

    At Camino, a nonprofit group that offers services to Latino communities, some said they were too afraid to leave their homes to attend school, medical appointments or work. A dental clinic the group runs had nine cancellations on Friday, spokesperson Paola Garcia said.

    “Latinos love this country. They came here to escape socialism and communism, and they’re hard workers and people of faith,” Garcia said. “They love their family, and it’s just so sad to see that this community now has this target on their back.”

    Bovino’s operations in Chicago and Los Angeles triggered lawsuits over the use of force, including widespread deployment of chemical agents. Democratic leaders in both cities accused agents of inflaming community tensions. Federal agents fatally shot one suburban Chicago man during a traffic stop.

    Bovino, head of a Border Patrol sector in El Centro, California, and other Trump administration officials have called their tactics appropriate for growing threats on agents.

     

    Bovino posted pictures Sunday of people the Trump administration commonly dubs “criminal illegal aliens,” meaning people living in the U.S. without legal permission who allegedly have criminal records. That included one of a man with an alleged history of drunk driving convictions.

    “We arrested him, taking him off the streets of Charlotte so he can’t continue to ignore our laws and drive intoxicated on the same roads you and your loved ones are on,” Bovino said.

    Residents report activity at churches and apartment complexes

    The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees CBP, did not respond to inquiries about the Charlotte arrests. Bovino’s spokesman did not return a request for comment Sunday.

    Elsewhere, DHS has not offered many details about its arrests. In the Chicago area, the agency only provided names and details on a handful of its more than 3,000 arrests in the region from September to last week. U.S. citizens were detained during several operations. Dozens of protesters were arrested.

    By Sunday, reports of CBP activity around Charlotte were “overwhelming” and difficult to quantify, Greg Asciutto, executive director of the community development group CharlotteEast, said in an email.

    “The past two hours we’ve received countless reports of CBP activity at churches, apartment complexes and a hardware store,” he said.

    City council member-elect JD Mazuera Arias said federal agents appeared to be focused on churches and apartment buildings.

    “Houses of worship. I mean, that’s just awful,” he said. “These are sanctuaries for people who are looking for hope and faith in dark times like these and who no longer can feel safe because of the gross violation of people’s right to worship.”

    DHS says so-called sanctuary policy plays a role in Charlotte operation

    Two people were arrested during a small protest Sunday outside a DHS office in Charlotte and taken to a local FBI office, said Xavier T. de Janon, an attorney who was representing them. He said it remained unclear what charges they faced.

    DHS said it was focusing on North Carolina because of so-called sanctuary policies, which limit cooperation between local authorities and immigration agents.

    Several county jails house immigrant arrestees and honor detainers, which allow jails to hold detainees for immigration officers to pick them up. But Mecklenburg County, where Charlotte is located, does not. Also, the city’s police department does not help with immigration enforcement.

    DHS alleged that about 1,400 detainers across North Carolina had not been honored, putting the public at risk.

    “We are surging DHS law enforcement to Charlotte to ensure Americans are safe and public safety threats are removed,” Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement.

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  • Democrats, Republicans react to prospect of Border Patrol in Charlotte

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    CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Charlotte is awaiting the arrival of U.S. Customs and Border Protection as early as this weekend.


    What You Need To Know

    • U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents are expected to arrive to Charlotte as early as this weekend 
    • Local and state Democratic leaders voiced their opposition to the presence of federal agents
    • Meanwhile, Republican Rep. Tim Moore said this is a targeted operation to catch criminals 
    • Everyone has constitutional rights if they encounter federal agents, according to an attorney


    Local and state Democratic officials and community organizations held a press conference Friday opposing Border Patrol agents coming to Charlotte, which they said would create fear in the immigrant community. 

    Among the speakers was council member-elect JD Mazuera Arias, who is representing East Charlotte.

    “This is personal. I know what fear feels like. I know what it feels like to have it in your bones,” Mazuera Arias said. 

    He said he is a former undocumented immigrant who grew up with a legal status in Charlotte. 

    “I heard from constituents all over District 5, which is East Charlotte, one of the most predominant immigrant districts in our city, say, ‘what does this mean for us? Is this true? Should we go? Should we stay at home? Should we take our kids to school?’” Mazuera Arias said. 

    In a statement, the office of U.S. Rep. Mark Harris, a Republican who represents a portion of Charlotte, said, “Congressman Harris continues to stand with law enforcement and supports deporting every criminal alien Joe Biden and radical progressive Democrats have let loose into our country.”  

    President Donald Trump has defended sending military units and immigration agents to other cities run by Democrats, saying the deployments are needed to fight crime and carry out his promise of mass deportations. 

    However, Mazuera Arias doesn’t see it that way.

    “We have seen the horrors that took place in the city of Chicago and seeing people, CBP came and disrupted those people’s lives. So for me, it’s not about fixing crime or public safety, it’s about fear tactics,” Mazuera Arias said. 

    Carolina Migrant Network is a nonprofit providing free legal representation for undocumented immigrants in removal proceedings and detention facilities.

    Communications director Daniela Andrade said they’ve received calls about Border Patrol agents in the city. 

    “I’m not aware that they have encountered them directly as of now. But what I can say is that the reports that we have been receiving is people just fearful and reporting and ready to protect each other,” Andrade said.

    Republican U.S. Rep. Tim Moore, a former state House speaker who now represents a district west of Charlotte, said this is a targeted operation. 

    “This is not going to be a matter of you’re going to have Border Patrol, like patrolling the streets, … this is a limited law enforcement activity where they have and presumably they know who it is they’re looking for. And these folks … are probably dangerous criminals,” Moore said. 

    He added community members shouldn’t feel fearful.

    “Unless someone is a criminal, they don’t need to be fearful of anything. But if they are criminal, they should be fearful. If somebody is out here selling drugs, you know, engaging in human trafficking out here, spreading fentanyl that’s killing people. I hope they are feeling fearful and I hope they get arrested,” Moore said. 

    Mazuera Arias is sending a message to immigrant neighbors.

    “You are not alone. You are seen. You are valued and you belong here,” Mazuera Arias said. 

    The Carolina Migrant Network said it is posting updates and partnering with community agents to see how they can support people affected by a potential immigration crackdown. 

    Immigration attorney Jamilah Espinosa said she recommends families have an action plan in case an undocumented relative is detained. 

    She added regardless of immigration status, everyone has constitutional rights and should remain calm and respectful when encountering federal agents. 

    “You have the right to decide that you’re not going to answer their questions. Also understanding the difference between public and private settings, they are able to enter public settings. If you are a private business, you can ask them to leave,” Espinosa said.

    The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department and the Mecklenburg County Sheriff’s Office said they are not participating in any immigration enforcement operations. 

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

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    Estephany Escobar

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  • Border Patrol heads to Charlotte, Mecklenburg County sheriff confirms

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    Agents with U.S. Customs and Border Patrol plan to deploy to Charlotte as soon as this weekend, according to the Mecklenburg County Sheriff’s Office.


    What You Need To Know

    • Mecklenburg County Sheriff Garry McFadden says he has confirmation that U.S. Customs and Border Patrol personnel are planning to come to Charlotte
    • Reports circulated Wednesday that federal immigration agents operating in Chicago would move to Charlotte 
    • The sheriff’s office and Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department say they are not involved in any activities that Customs and Border Protection might be planning in the city
    • Activists, faith leaders, and local and state officials in the city have been preparing the immigrant community, sharing information about resources and trying to calm fears

    There were reports Wednesday that the federal agents stationed in Chicago would move to Charlotte to continue enforcing the Trump administration’s crackdown on immigration.

    “Mecklenburg County Sheriff Garry L. McFadden was contacted by two separate federal officials confirming that U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) personnel will be arriving in the Charlotte area as early as this Saturday or the beginning of next week,” the sheriff’s office said in a release.

    The sheriff’s office said federal officials have not shared details of what CPB will do in the Queen City and has not asked the office for help.

    “We value and welcome the renewed collaboration and open communication with our federal partners,” McFadden said in a news release. “It allows us to stay informed and be proactive in keeping Mecklenburg County safe and to maintain the level of trust our community deserves.”

    Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin declined to comment, saying, “Every day, DHS enforces the laws of the nation across the country. We do not discuss future or potential operations.”

    President Donald Trump has defended sending the military and immigration agents into Democratic-run cities like Los Angeles, Chicago and even the nation’s capital, saying the unprecedented operations are needed to fight crime and carry out his mass deportation agenda. Charlotte is another such Democratic stronghold, and the state will have one of the most hotly contested U.S. Senate races in the country next year.

    Activists, faith leaders, and local and state officials in the city had already begun preparing the immigrant community, sharing information about resources and attempting to calm fears. A call organized by the group CharlotteEAST had nearly 500 people on it Wednesday.

    “The purpose of this call was to create a mutual aid network. It was an information resource sharing session,” said City Councilmember-Elect JD Mazuera Arias.

    “Let’s get as many people as possible aware of the helpers and who the people are that are doing the work that individuals can plug into, either as volunteers to donate to or those who are in need of support can turn to,” said CharlotteEAST executive director Greg Asciutto.

    The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department also sought to clarify its role, saying it “has no authority to enforce federal immigration laws,” and is not involved in planning or carrying out these enforcement operations.

    Mazuera Arias and others said they had already begun receiving reports of what appeared to be plainclothes officers in neighborhoods and on local transit.

    “This is some of the chaos that we also saw in Chicago,” state Sen. Caleb Theodros, who represents Charlotte and Mecklenburg County, said Thursday.

    Theodros was one of several local and state officials who issued a statement of solidarity this week.

    “More than 150,000 foreign-born residents live in our city, contributing billions to our economy and enriching every neighborhood with culture, hard work, and hope,” it read, adding: “We will stand together, look out for one another, and ensure that fear never divides the city we all call home.”

    Gregory Bovino, the Border Patrol chief who led Customs and Border Protection’s recent Chicago operation and was also central to the immigration crackdown in Los Angeles, had been coy about where agents would target next.

    The Trump administration’s “Operation Midway Blitz” in the Chicago area was announced in early September, over the objections of local leaders and after weeks of threats on the Democratic stronghold.

    It started as a handful of arrests by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers in the suburbs but eventually included hundreds of Customs and Border Protection agents whose tactics grew increasingly aggressive. More than 3,200 people suspected of violating immigration laws have been arrested across Chicago and its many suburbs dipping into Indiana.

    The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees both immigration agencies, has offered few details on the arrests, aside from publicizing a handful of people who were living in the U.S. without legal permission and had criminal records.

    The group Indivisible Charlotte and the Carolina Migrant Network will be conducting a training for volunteers on Friday.

    “Training people how to recognize legitimate ICE agents, versus obviously those who don’t look legitimate,” said Tony Siracusa, spokesman for Indvisible Charlotte. “They’re not always wearing vests that say ‘ICE.’ And what your rights are.”

    The groups will also discuss areas where they can conduct “pop up protests.”

    “Obviously, we’re not doing anything that is going to encourage people to go get arrested by federal agents,” he said.

    Siracusa said locals are “not freaking out, but very definitely concerned. Nobody asked for this help. Nobody asked for this, at least no one of any official capacity.”

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

     

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    Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Unused funds for HIV housing in Durham total $1.3 million

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    DURHAM, N.C. —  A Spectrum News 1 investigation reveals that over a million dollars meant to help provide housing to people with HIV and AIDS in Durham remain unspent, leaving local organizations and advocates frustrated and confused.


    What You Need To Know

    • Over $1.3 million in the Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS program, or HOPWA, funding from 2023-24 remains unspent in Durham, according to city records
    • The HOPWA program provides federal funding to states, cities and counties for housing assistance for people living with HIV and AIDS
    • Durham County ranks No. 5 in the state for total HIV and AIDS cases
    • City officials say staff changes, compliance issues and the government shutdown have delayed their ability to give out funds




    Since 2020, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, or HUD, has sent the city anywhere from half a million to a million dollars a year under the Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS, or HOPWA.

    These grants aim to help people with HIV and AIDS, ensuring they have secure, affordable housing, which researchers say boosts survival rates.

    However, records show funds from five years ago are still waiting to be used, and there’s currently no plan for how to use over $1.3 million received in the past two years. 

    CAARE-The Healing Center in Durham, once a bustling hub for community care, now sits mostly quiet.

    Executive Director Carolyn Hinton, who co-founded the organization, said the need for housing and health support hasn’t gone away, but funding delays have made it harder to keep up.

    “We want to continue to help build our community up,” Hinton said. “Our community consists of everyone, not just people with healthy lives.”

    CAARE and several other nonprofits applied for HOPWA funding from the city earlier this year. They waited for months before hearing back.

    When responses finally came in September, every request was rejected.

    A city memo obtained by Spectrum News 1 stated the applications were denied because the organizations “lacked sufficient organizational capacity to effectively administer their proposed programs.”

    “It has made a significant difference in my ability to have clients,” Hinton said. “Fees paid for housing and to locate… housing in the community.”

    According to 2024 data from the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, almost 1,900 people in Durham County are living with HIV, and more than 700 residents have been diagnosed with AIDS at some point.

    It makes Durham County the fifth-highest in North Carolina for total HIV and AIDS cases.

    Duke infectious disease fellow Dr. Hayley Cunningham, who helps leads a Coalition to End HIV in Durham, spoke up at the Oct. 23 city council meeting, urging the council to move the process along. The deadlines for using HOPWA money are approaching rapidly, unless HUD extends them, which is possible.

    The city acknowledges that it’s struggled to distribute the money efficiently. Officials cited a department reorganization, staff turnover, and what they called “notification delays.”

    Durham has requested extensions from HUD to spend leftover funds from 2020 through 2022, but HUD returned the request asking for more information, which the city says it’s now preparing. Those extensions, they said, are held up by the government shutdown.

    As organizations await clarity, advocates said the delays come with a high cost. 

    “My question to the city of Durham is, why are you creating a barrier for people to have a decent quality of life?” Hinton asked.

    The community and health leaders keep pushing city officials for info and to guarantee the money helps the intended recipients.

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

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    Ryan Hayes-Owens

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  • How Charlotte police cracked a 10-year-old cold case from New Jersey

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    A person’s remains found in 2016 have finally been identified, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department announced Monday.

    Skeletal remains were found on Jan. 29, 2016 in a wooded area off of University Point Boulevard in the University City area, investigators said. At the time, officials said they were only able to determine the victim was male and there were “no obvious signs of foul play.”

    After conventional means failed to identify the victim, authorities said a sample of the remains was sent to Texas-based Othram Labs in 2022 for advanced DNA testing.

    In 2025, genetic research that stemmed from the 2022 sample allowed investigators to ultimately obtain a DNA profile from a close relative and confirm the victim’s identity, according to a release.

    The victim has been identified as Kenneth McCarthy. McCarthy, born in 1961, was a New Jersey native living in Charlotte at the time of his disappearance.

    His family said McCarthy worked in the IT field for several major corporations, the release said.

    Police have not said what led to McCarthy’s death. The investigation is, however, active and ongoing, CMPD said.

    Anyone with information is asked to call 704-432-8477 (TIPS) or Crime Stoppers at 704-334-1600.

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

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    Justin Pryor

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  • Teacher attendance seems normal, schools say, despite calls for walkout

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    School districts across the state were concerned about teacher shortages after an anonymous social media post pushing for teachers to call out of work Friday and Monday went viral.


    What You Need To Know

    • An anonymous post called on North Carolina teachers to call out of work Friday and Monday
    • Schools in Durham and Guilford counties said there were not an unusual number of teacher absences as of Friday morning 
    • The post called for the protest because of the lack of a state budget, leading to stagnant wages for teachers 
    • Teachers’ unions across the state criticized the anonymous post and asked its members to not participate in the walkout 


    Some schools alerted parents Thursday to warn them of the potential disruption.

    “While students may have a different teacher or classroom location for the day, learning will continue as planned,” reads an email from North Garner Middle School sent to parents Thursday night.

    But administrators from Durham and Guilford county schools said they had not seen an increase in teacher absences as of Friday morning.

    The post calling for the protest cited the lack of a state budget, leaving schools to operate with the same amount of funding as last year. Without money for regular raises, teacher’s wages were left stagnant. 

    None of the large teacher unions in North Carolina have claimed credit for the post, and the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Association of Educators asked its members not to take part in the walkout.

    “CMAE does not endorse and will not participate in the anonymously organized social media campaign encouraging educators to call out on Nov. 7 and 10,” reads a statement issued by the union Thursday. “Our power as educators comes from unity, strategy, and collective action—not isolated walkouts.”

    Wake North Carolina Association of Educators also criticized the post.


    “Big serious actions aren’t generated by viral social media posts,” reads its post reacting to the call for the walkout.

    It highlighted the months of planning and organizing that it took for previous walkouts in 2018 and 2019.

    On May 16, 2018, more than 1,000 teachers called out of work in Durham County Schools alone, causing the county’s schools to close that day.

    The following year, Raleigh’s streets were once again filled with teachers, who called out of work to protest and demand higher compensation.  

    “Winning campaigns are strategic,” the post from the Wake North Carolina Association of Educators reads. “They have specific targets, with well-designed tactics, and demands.”

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

     

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    Caroline King

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  • Cleveland Co. deputy charged in deadly domestic violence shooting, officials say

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    A deputy with the Cleveland County Sheriff’s Office has been charged in connection to a deadly shooting late Thursday evening, authorities said.


    What You Need To Know

    •  Cleveland County Sheriff’s Deputy Mitchell Hilton is accused of fatally shooting someone during a domestic incident Thursday evening
    •  The deputy was off-duty, officials said, when the shooting happened at the Crown Ridge Apartments in Shelby, N.C.
    •  Hilton is charged with first-degree murder
    • The SBI is leading the investigation


    Deputy Mitchell Hilton, 37, was off-duty when authorities say he shot and killed someone during a domestic dispute at the Crown Ridge Apartments on South Dekalb Street in Shelby, North Carolina.

    Shelby police officers responded to the shooting call, according to a release, and immediately asked the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation for assistance.

    After learning the suspect in the case was a deputy, “the NC SBI was called to ensure a fair and impartial investigation,” officials said.

    Hilton has been charged with first-degree murder.

    “Domestic violence is a devastating issue that affects individuals and families from all walks of life, including members of the law enforcement community. It serves as a painful reminder that no one is immune to the far-reaching impact of these tragedies,” the sheriff’s office said in a release. “Our thoughts and heartfelt condolences go out to the family and loved ones of the victim during this incredibly difficult time.”

     

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

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    Justin Pryor

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  • ‘We are desperate’: Stein calls session on Medicaid funding as cuts hit

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    RALEIGH, N.C. — As a budget stalemate continues in Raleigh, Gov. Josh Stein is renewing calls for the General Assembly to get back to work on a deal.

    With no budget, the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services cut Medicaid reimbursement rates, saying it needed to make up for a gap in funding.


    What You Need To Know

    • DHHS cut Medicaid reimbursement rates for some services by 3% to 10% on Oct. 1, citing a funding shortfall
    • Parents sued DHHS over cuts to behavioral health treatment and a judge awarded a pause
    • Gov. Josh Stein called on lawmakers to return to Raleigh and reach an agreement to fund Medicaid
    • Republicans in the House and Senate are at odds over a potential state investment in a children’s hospital and have not reached a budget deal


    Now, some of those cuts are being pulled back by a judge’s order.

    Health care providers saw Medicaid reimbursement rates drop less than a week ago.

    On Wednesday, Superior Court Judge G. Bryan Collins issued a temporary restraining order that puts a pause on cuts to Medicaid reimbursement rates for behavioral health treatments.

    The state Department of Health and Human Services cut Medicaid reimbursement rates for certain services by 3% to 10% on Oct. 1.

    It included a 10% rate decrease to research-based behavioral health treatments.

    Twenty-two parents of children diagnosed with autism or who are receiving therapy sued DHHS, saying the cuts would keep kids from being treated.

    They said it’s a violation of the state’s constitution.

    The plaintiffs in the lawsuit against DHHS filed a motion for a preliminary injunction.

    That would keep the Medicaid rates for behavioral health services in place until the case is decided in court.

    A judge will choose whether to grant that request in a hearing on Nov. 10.

    Stein did not address that lawsuit in a press conference outside the state capitol on Thursday but acknowledged the cuts’ potential impact to people with autism and vulnerable populations.

    He called on lawmakers to come back to Raleigh for an extra session on Nov. 17 to hammer out a deal to fund Medicaid.

    “We are desperate to restore the funding levels to where they were before, but by law we cannot spend money that we do not have, nor should we spend money that we do not have,” Stein said. “The legislature has not fully funded Medicaid, they know they’ve not fully funded Medicaid.”

    DHHS Secretary Dev Sangvai said the state’s Medicaid shortfall is roughly $319 million.

    He said the department is starting to receive emails from a handful of larger providers saying they may exit Medicaid at the end of the month.

    Republicans have been critical of Stein and DHHS, saying the cuts to Medicaid were unnecessary.

    House Speaker Destin Hall has called it a “manufactured crisis.”

    The governor today used the same term but blamed the General Assembly.

    To this point the House and Senate appear no closer to funding Medicaid or reaching a budget agreement, with leadership from both chambers signaling they’ve likely already cast their final votes of the year.

    The chambers have been at odds over potential state funding for a children’s hospital system and money for a rural health care initiative.

    Republicans in the Senate are in favor, but Republicans in the House are opposed.

    Stein said his most recent conversations with Republican leadership in the House and Senate did not go as he had hoped.

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

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    Marshall Keely

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  • Could the shutdown impact rocket launch cadence?

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    CAPE CANAVERAL SPACE FORCE STATION — It’s known that the federal government shutdown is impacting commercial flights, but as it drags on, some are asking how staffing shortages will affect other ways of flying?


    What You Need To Know

    • As the federal government shutdown continues, questions are being raised about how staffing shortages will affect space launches
    • Experts say the high cadence of launches could be disrupted if the government isn’t able to approve launches in a timely manner
    • That could include test launches in Texas for Starship — which is expected to start launching from the Space Coast in the near future
    • Starlink missions could also be impacted if the Federal Communications Commission isn’t able to approve the broadband internet satellite launches


    Experts say the high cadence of rocket launches could be disrupted if the government isn’t able to approve launches due to staffing shortages.

    This potential setback comes as the Space Coast is on the cusp of a record number of launches in a year.

    There were 93 last year — the Space Coast is at 92 right now. 

    But each launch requires an FAA approved license, and those could be delayed if the government shutdown means there’s no one around to sign off on them.

    “There just won’t be personnel at the FAA to be able to grant new licenses and evaluation of any types of new launch applications,” said Don Platt, director of the Spaceport Education Center at Florida Tech. “So even groups like SpaceX may start to be affected by this.” 

    That could include test launches in Texas for Starship — which is expected to start launching from the Space Coast in the near future.

    The tests are much different than proven Falcon 9 launches.

    “Their test launches and doing unusual and different things,” Platt said. “There’s a good possibility we could see delays because of the shutdown.”

    He said a commercial space company trying to make a profit with launches might not be prioritized for approval.

    Starlink missions could be impacted if the Federal Communications Commission isn’t able to approve the broadband internet satellite launches.

    And it’s not just launches, but booster landings are part of the licensing process for the trajectory as they come back to Earth.

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    Greg Pallone

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  • ‘This is No. 1 priority for us’: Authorities continue manhunt in Craven County

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    The State Bureau of Investigation, N.C. State Highway Patrol and the U.S. Coast Guard have deployed air units to assist in the search for a Craven County man accused of killing his grandmother and stabbing a deputy, Craven County Sheriff Chip Hughes said Tuesday.


    What You Need To Know

    • The search continues for Dominic Connelly, 24, who is accused of multiple crimes, including arson, murder and stabbing a Craven County deputy
    • The deputy was stabbed inside a Bojangles in Vanceboro on the night of Wednesday, Oct. 29
    • Connelly’s grandmother was found dead inside a burning home on Oct. 25
    • He is considered armed and dangerous, officials said, and should not be approached. Anyone who sees him should immediately call 911


    Craven County Crime Stoppers and the U.S. Marshals have also issued a $5,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of Dominic Connelly.

    On Nov. 4, authorities said Connelly was seen on a home surveillance camera in the area of N.C. 43 Highway and Mile Road in Vanceboro, North Carolina.


    Hughes said that in prior sightings, Connelly had typically been seen wearing dark-colored clothing and seemed unprepared for the elements. However, in the Nov. 4 footage, Hughes said Connelly appears to have gotten a pair of desert sand colored coveralls.

    “We do have reason to believe there might be people out there assisting him in some way, shape or form. Whether it’s money, food, water, clothing… he does have family in the area,” the sheriff said.

    Authorities are continuing to ask the public to report any sightings of Connelly. He is considered armed and dangerous, officials say, and should not be approached.

    Anyone who sees Connelly should call 911 immediately.


     

    On Oct. 29, a deputy encountered Connelly in the bathroom of a Bojangles at the corner of Dawson Lane and Highway 43 in Vanceboro, North Carolina, according to a release. Connelly stabbed the deputy with a knife, officials said, before running off toward the Bailey Lane Apartments behind the Bojangles.

    The sheriff’s office said they were initially looking for Connelly in connection to the death of his grandmother, Patricia Lopedote, 72, on Oct. 25.

    Lopedote’s body was found inside a burning home on N.C. 101 Highway in Havelock, North Carolina, investigators said.

    Authorities said Connelly set the fire and took off in Lopedote’s vehicle, which was found unoccupied in a New Bern, N.C., parking lot on Pine Tree Drive on Oct. 28.

     

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    Justin Pryor, Caroline King

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