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Tag: investigation

  • Judge rules Colorado school district denied care for student with special needs

    Judge rules Colorado school district denied care for student with special needs

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    COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — A Colorado judge on Monday ruled that a Colorado Springs school district denied care for one of its students with special needs.

    Leah and Ronnie Broyles, the parents of 10-year-old Victoria Broyles, filed a complaint against Academy District 20 (D20) in February alleging the school district violated the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). The trial began in June.

    Victoria was born with severe special needs, including spina bifida and other conditions. She also has autism and is non-verbal.

    When the family moved to D20, they sought an individualized education program (IEP) for Victoria, allowing her to be taught at home. That request was denied, meaning Victoria would have to attend school in person.

    The original complaint included two notes attributed to Victoria’s doctors advising she be home-schooled to avoid exposure to viruses.

    A judge on Monday ruled in favor of the Broyles. According to the judge, D20 violated the IDEA by:

    1. Failing to justify its dramatic departure from prior placements
    2. The creation of goals wholly inconsiderate of her individual circumstances
    3. Denied a homebound placement on the basis of district policy which too narrowly interprets regulations and is inconsistent with case law
    4. Obdurately predetermined her placement in general education 40-79% of the time.

    Ronnie said he was “excited” when he learned about the judge’s decision.
    “It proved what I was saying all along. The district predetermined placement. The district arbitrarily made these decisions without any input from us. They didn’t care about anything that we thought. They didn’t give a thought to her medical records. Nothing,” said Ronnie.

    In a statement, a spokesperson for D20 said, “Academy District 20 received the Administrative Law Judge’s decision late on Monday. The District is currently reviewing the decision and considering our options. As such, we appreciate your understanding and will not be making any further comments at this time.”


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    Natalie Chuck

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  • Fullerton police say man called 911 on himself, succeeded in ‘suicide by cop’

    Fullerton police say man called 911 on himself, succeeded in ‘suicide by cop’

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    Fullerton police said Monday that a man they killed last month appeared to provoke the incident in an effort to die.

    On June 15, police said they responded to a 911 call urging the department to send multiple officers to deal with a man who threatened the caller and others with knives on Imperial Highway.

    When officers arrived, they found a man who matched the caller’s description holding what appeared to be two knives, according to police.

    Officers told the man — later identified as 27-year-old Lorenzo Roger Hills III of Brea — to drop the weapons, but instead he ran at them with the knives in hand, prompting officers to fatally shoot him.

    On Monday, police said they recovered two knives and a cellphone. Upon investigation, police said the phone was registered to Hills and was the same one used to make the initial 911 call.

    “It is believed Mr. Hills intentionally provoked a deadly police encounter, commonly referred to as ‘suicide-by-cop,’” the department said.

    Police on Monday released body camera video that shows Hills running toward officers, who shoot him before he nears them.

    Police also released a recording of the 911 call, in which the caller gives his name as Antonio. After the caller reports a mentally ill man wielding knives, the dispatcher tells the caller she’ll remain on the line with him until officers arrive.

    The caller responds that he may have to go, but then doesn’t after the dispatcher tells him he must stay on the phone so officers know exactly where the knife-wielding man is.

    Before officers arrive, the caller says, “My phone is cutting …” and the line goes dead.

    Suicide prevention and crisis counseling resources

    If you or someone you know is struggling with suicidal thoughts, seek help from a professional and call 9-8-8. The United States’ first nationwide three-digit mental health crisis hotline 988 will connect callers with trained mental health counselors. Text “HOME” to 741741 in the U.S. and Canada to reach the Crisis Text Line.

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    Andrew Khouri

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  • ‘I lost several layers of skin.’ Woman attacked by stranger while walking her dog in Fairfax

    ‘I lost several layers of skin.’ Woman attacked by stranger while walking her dog in Fairfax

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    A Los Angeles woman raised concerns about public safety after she was violently assaulted while walking her dog in the middle of a day in the Fairfax neighborhood.

    The victim, Sigal Engelberg, said she noticed an apparently unhoused person across the street at around 4:30 p.m. on June 24.

    She attempted to avoid him as she thought the man looked “mentally unstable and deranged,” but he crossed the street, approached her from behind and attacked her. 

    “He punched me on the cheek just from behind so hard that he knocked me to the ground,” Engelberg recounted, explaining the attack left her with scrapes and bleeding from her knee and arms. 

    “I lost several layers of skin,” Engelberg said, as her dog was also knocked down and injured in the incident.

    Two female passersby stopped to call police, but it took an hour for LAPD officers to arrive, Engelberg said. 

    The LAPD confirmed the assault but added that shortly after responding to the incident, its officers were called away to respond to a stolen car report. Instead, West Hollywood Sheriff’s deputies, who happened to be passing by, stopped to assist and took a courtesy report for the LAPD.

    Engelberg expressed her concern for more potential victims. 

    “I was told by other people in the neighborhood that he has been attacking other women,” she said, adding that another woman in the area saw the same man throwing rocks at other women. 

    “I’ve been living here for 10 years, and we never had anything like this happen before. I really hope that they can control the area more,” she said.

    Engelberg, who described the man to be approximately 6 feet tall with a muscular build, urged anyone who sees him to contact the authorities immediately to prevent further attacks.

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    Helen Jeong and Xuanjie Coco Huang

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  • Plot thickens in Oakland as grand jury investigates influential family, Mayor Thao, her partner

    Plot thickens in Oakland as grand jury investigates influential family, Mayor Thao, her partner

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    Federal investigators are ordering the city of Oakland to hand over documents involving a prominent, influential local family who hold a waste management contract with the city, as well as Mayor Sheng Thao and her partner, according to documents reviewed by The Times.

    The federal subpoena, issued five days after federal agents raided Thao’s home on June 20, confirms there is a current federal grand jury investigation that appears centered around Cal Waste Solutions Inc.; its owners, members of the Duong family; and their dealings with Oakland city officials, particularly its mayor.

    Dated June 25, the eight-page subpoena asks the city to turn over all documents and communications regarding Cal Waste Solutions, all of its employees and representatives, and any documents involving appointments to prominent city posts.

    The deadline is Thursday.

    A spokesperson for the Department of Justice did not immediately respond to questions regarding the subpoena.

    Federal investigators are also requesting documents related to the 2022 Oakland mayoral election, when Thao was elected as the first Hmong mayor of a major U.S. city.

    The subpoena further reveals the possible involvement of Thao’s partner, Andre Jones, in the inquiry. Investigators requested the city turn over calendar entries and records involving meetings for Thao and Jones from June 1 to the present.

    Attorneys for Thao declined to comment on the subpoena but said the investigation involving Thao did not involve criminal charges or allegations.

    Thao has denied any wrongdoing.

    “I can tell you with confidence that this investigation is not about me,” the mayor said in a news conference three days after FBI agents raided her home.

    Exactly what the focus of the federal investigation is remains unclear, but the June 25 subpoena offered a slightly wider glimpse into the scope of the federal investigation, the latest scandal to plague the Bay Area city that has recently faced a mayoral recall effort, a growing budget deficit, and concerns about crime that have driven out major businesses.

    Shortly after city officials received the subpoena, Oakland’s city attorney directed staff in an email to preserve all records involving Thao, Jones, and the Duong family, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

    A spokesperson for the Oakland city attorney’s office confirmed the existence of the memo to staff but in an email declined to provide a copy of it or answer questions about it, referring to the memo as “confidential attorney-client communication between the Oakland City Attorney and the other city of Oakland staff members.”

    The federal subpoena, issued by the U.S. attorney’s Northern District of California, requests multiple documents involving the Duong family, including David, Andy, Kristina, Victor and Michael Duong.

    For at least five years, the family has been at the center of an investigation involving the state’s Fair Political Practices Commission and the Oakland Public Ethics Commission. The family is accused of using “straw donors” to circumvent legal donation limits and fill the campaign coffers of elected public officials while the family’s companies sought contracts with cities.

    The family’s company, Cal Waste Solutions, currently provides recycling services to Oakland.

    After the warrants were executed, Cal Waste Solutions officials issued a statement saying they were surprised by the searches and had cooperated with investigators.

    “We believe that we have not engaged in or committed any illegal activities and are awaiting the decision of the law enforcement agency,” the company statement read.

    A spokesperson for the company did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday.

    But the state and local inquiry into the family’s dealings with city officials in the area paint a troubling picture.

    Court records reveal the Fair Political Practices Commission has been probing political donations made by the family since 2019. The agency alleges that Andy Duong and former business associates used friends and business connections to make political contributions, then reimbursed them with cash to hide the true origin of the money.

    “CWS was the true source of at least 93 contributions to multiple local campaign committees,” the court record reads, with the goal being “to curry favor with candidates and provide more access to candidates.”

    The agency tracked questionable donations made in Oakland, as well as San Jose and other parts of Santa Clara County, where the family was looking to do business.

    The investigation found there had been multiple contributions made to Thao’s campaign in 2018 for City Council, including “seven of which were admitted reimbursements by or on behalf of [Andy] Duong.”

    One former associate told investigators, according to court records, he saw Andy Duong pull cash from a drawer in his office at Cal Waste Solutions to reimburse people for donations.

    FPPC officials confirmed their inquiry is still ongoing.

    Federal officials are also requesting documents involving the city’s declaration of a local emergency on homelessness, and any communication regarding the former Oakland Army Base, a site that had been considered as possible housing for unhoused individuals.

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    Salvador Hernandez

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  • Man charged with concealing corpse after woman’s remains found in sleeping bag

    Man charged with concealing corpse after woman’s remains found in sleeping bag

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    KIPS BAY, Manhattan (WABC) — A 55-year-old man is in police custody after the body of 31-year-old Yazmeen Williams was found inside a sleeping bag in Kips Bay last week.

    The medical examiner’s office determined Williams had been shot in the head and her death was ruled a homicide.

    Chad Irish faces a slew of charges, including concealment of a corpse, criminal possession of a weapon and menacing.

    Police say Irish threatened a 47-year-old man who identified him at the Strauss Houses on East 28th Street, where Williams’ body was found.

    He has not been charged with the death of Williams, but the investigation continues.

    Irish has 21 prior arrests in a record that goes back to the early ’90s and has been in and out of state prison.

    He was most recently released on parole for a July 2022 robbery in the Bronx.

    The community where the woman was found is outraged. On Monday evening, a crowd mobbed Irish as he was taken out of his home on a stretcher and taken into custody. They yelled murderer, cursed him out and threw punches and asked why he would kill a woman who grew up in the neighborhood and who by all accounts never had a problem with anyone.

    Detectives believe Irish was the man in the motorized wheelchair seen on video dragging and leaving the body on East 27th street Friday, using a dolly to wheel it.

    Meanwhile family and friends continue to mourn the death of their loved one as a makeshift memorial has been created.

    Williams’ family described her as someone who wanted to be an advocate for women and part of the justice system to fight for victims.

    “She was beautiful, she was sweet, she was college-educated, she was just a good person,” said the victim’s aunt Nisha Ramirez.

    Senator Kristen Gonzalez, Assemblymember Harvey Epstein and Councilmember Carlina Rivera released a joint statement on Williams’ death and said they also are grieving and outraged:

    “Our hearts go out to Yazmeen’s family, particularly her mother, Nicole Williams, who has shown immense strength during this unimaginably difficult time. Yazmeen was a bright and accomplished individual, a graduate of Buffalo State University with a degree in criminal justice, and she had just begun a promising career with the New York City Housing Authority. The loss of someone so deeply committed to the wellbeing of her neighbors is immeasurable. This tragedy has left a void in the hearts of all those who knew and loved her.”

    The statement went on to say that members of the Straus Houses community have requested more security cameras to enhance safety and the lawmakers will do everything in their power to improve safety and security.

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  • Alec Baldwin’s involuntary manslaughter trial begins with jury selection

    Alec Baldwin’s involuntary manslaughter trial begins with jury selection

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    Alec Baldwin’s trial in the shooting of a cinematographer begins Tuesday with the selection of jurors who will be tasked with deciding whether the actor is guilty of involuntary manslaughter.Getting chosen to serve in a trial of such a major star accused of such a major crime would be unusual even in Los Angeles or Baldwin’s hometown of New York. But it will be essentially an unheard-of experience for those who are picked as jurors in Santa Fe, New Mexico, though in recent years the state has increasingly become a hub of Hollywood production.Baldwin and his wife Hilaria arrived at the courthouse Tuesday with their youngest child, Ilaria Catalina Irena Baldwin. The couple have seven children, ranging in ages from 1 to 10.Baldwin, 66, could get up to 18 months in prison if jurors unanimously decide to convict him. The jurors are tasked with deciding whether Baldwin committed the felony when, during a rehearsal in October 2021, a revolver went off while he was pointing it at cinematographer Halyna Hutchins, killing her and wounding director Joel Souza. They were on the set of the Western film “Rust,” at Bonanza Creek Ranch some 18 miles from where the trial is being held.Baldwin has said the gun fired accidentally after he followed instructions to point it toward Hutchins, who was behind the camera. Unaware that the gun contained a live round, Baldwin said he pulled back the hammer — not the trigger — and it fired.The star of “30 Rock” and “The Hunt for Red October” made his first appearance in the courtroom on Monday, when Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer, in a significant victory for the defense, ruled at a pretrial hearing that Baldwin’s role as a co-producer on “Rust” isn’t relevant to the trial.On Tuesday, 79 people will be questioned and narrowed down. “It’s a process where both sides get to ask really specific questions of jurors,” John Day, a legal expert with sister station KOAT, said.He added, questions will come after some extensive research by both the prosecution and the defense.”Like, looked up their social media posts to see if they’ve said anything about this trial, or about guns in general, or Alec Baldwin in particular,” Day said.Candidates will also be grouped up in a 50-minute selection to ensure a faster process. Something that differed from Hannah Gutierrez-Reed’s trial. Twelve jurors and four alternates were selected in her case.”They were feeling pretty strongly that she had one job, and she didn’t do it,” Day said. “Her job was to make sure that there was no live ammunition on the set and that the guns didn’t have anything that was going to hurt someone.”That means finding the perfect juror will be key in a limited amount of time. “The ultimate juror is someone who can say, ‘I might know about the case, but I don’t have an opinion,’” Day said.However, certain ideas may be favored.For the prosecutions, the team will be looking closely at gun safety.”You’re going to want people on the jury who are familiar with gun safety issues, right?” Day said. “Who knows about gun safety, and who is going to be skeptical of somebody pointing a gun at someone without knowing what’s in it.”As for the defense, attorneys will closely look at movie set protocols.”You’re going to want people who would agree that a film is not like real life,” he said. “That if you’re an actor on a film set and someone hands you a gun and says it’s safe, there’s no reason to think otherwise.”But each side can only reject a certain number of potential jurors. “People that can kick off or they can say, ‘we’re not going to take that person for this reason,’” Day said. “It’s a process of narrowing down a large pool into a much smaller pool of jurors and alternates.”Jury selection will begin Tuesday morning at the Santa Fe County Courthouse. Opening statements are expected Wednesday.The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Alec Baldwin’s trial in the shooting of a cinematographer begins Tuesday with the selection of jurors who will be tasked with deciding whether the actor is guilty of involuntary manslaughter.

    Getting chosen to serve in a trial of such a major star accused of such a major crime would be unusual even in Los Angeles or Baldwin’s hometown of New York. But it will be essentially an unheard-of experience for those who are picked as jurors in Santa Fe, New Mexico, though in recent years the state has increasingly become a hub of Hollywood production.

    Baldwin and his wife Hilaria arrived at the courthouse Tuesday with their youngest child, Ilaria Catalina Irena Baldwin. The couple have seven children, ranging in ages from 1 to 10.

    Baldwin, 66, could get up to 18 months in prison if jurors unanimously decide to convict him. The jurors are tasked with deciding whether Baldwin committed the felony when, during a rehearsal in October 2021, a revolver went off while he was pointing it at cinematographer Halyna Hutchins, killing her and wounding director Joel Souza. They were on the set of the Western film “Rust,” at Bonanza Creek Ranch some 18 miles from where the trial is being held.

    Baldwin has said the gun fired accidentally after he followed instructions to point it toward Hutchins, who was behind the camera. Unaware that the gun contained a live round, Baldwin said he pulled back the hammer — not the trigger — and it fired.

    The star of “30 Rock” and “The Hunt for Red October” made his first appearance in the courtroom on Monday, when Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer, in a significant victory for the defense, ruled at a pretrial hearing that Baldwin’s role as a co-producer on “Rust” isn’t relevant to the trial.

    On Tuesday, 79 people will be questioned and narrowed down.

    “It’s a process where both sides get to ask really specific questions of jurors,” John Day, a legal expert with sister station KOAT, said.

    He added, questions will come after some extensive research by both the prosecution and the defense.

    “Like, [they may have] looked up their social media posts to see if they’ve said anything about this trial, or about guns in general, or Alec Baldwin in particular,” Day said.

    Candidates will also be grouped up in a 50-minute selection to ensure a faster process.

    Something that differed from Hannah Gutierrez-Reed’s trial. Twelve jurors and four alternates were selected in her case.

    “They were feeling pretty strongly that she had one job, and she didn’t do it,” Day said. “Her job was to make sure that there was no live ammunition on the set and that the guns didn’t have anything that was going to hurt someone.”

    That means finding the perfect juror will be key in a limited amount of time.

    “The ultimate juror is someone who can say, ‘I might know about the case, but I don’t have an opinion,’” Day said.

    However, certain ideas may be favored.

    For the prosecutions, the team will be looking closely at gun safety.

    “You’re going to want people on the jury who are familiar with gun safety issues, right?” Day said. “Who knows about gun safety, and who is going to be skeptical of somebody pointing a gun at someone without knowing what’s in it.”

    As for the defense, attorneys will closely look at movie set protocols.

    “You’re going to want people who would agree that a film is not like real life,” he said. “That if you’re an actor on a film set and someone hands you a gun and says it’s safe, there’s no reason to think otherwise.”

    But each side can only reject a certain number of potential jurors.

    “People that [the teams] can kick off or [that] they can say, ‘we’re not going to take that person for this reason,’” Day said. “It’s a process of narrowing down a large pool into a much smaller pool of jurors and alternates.”

    Jury selection will begin Tuesday morning at the Santa Fe County Courthouse. Opening statements are expected Wednesday.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Colorado legislators demand answers from Aurora VA about patient safety, halt in surgeries due to mysterious residue

    Colorado legislators demand answers from Aurora VA about patient safety, halt in surgeries due to mysterious residue

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    Colorado’s senators and a congressman are demanding answers from U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs leadership over a series of troubling reports about its Aurora hospital.

    Sens. Michael Bennet and John Hickenlooper, both Democrats, and Rep. Jason Crow, an Aurora Democrat, sent a letter to VA leadership on Monday requesting an accounting of patient safety issues, further explanation over its current pause in surgeries due to a mysterious residue on its medical equipment, and steps the hospital has taken to address pervasive cultural problems among its staff.

    “As problems persist within the (Eastern Colorado hospital system), we are increasingly concerned about the quality of care Colorado veterans receive, a lack of adherence to the required medical and employee procedures, and how recent leadership changes have impeded the system’s effectiveness,” the lawmakers wrote.

    The letter comes on the heels of two scathing reports from the VA’s Office of Inspector General, which investigates departmental waste, fraud and abuse.

    The probes, released June 24, found Aurora’s Rocky Mountain Regional VA Medical Center paused surgeries for more than a year in 2022 and 2023 because the hospital didn’t have the staff to care for those patients after their procedures. They never told the federal VA as required, the investigation found.

    The second inspector general report said the Aurora VA suffered from poor organizational health, citing widespread fear among staff that promoted disenfranchisement. Doctors stopped performing high-risk procedures, one staffer said, for fear of punishment if something went wrong.

    The investigation mirrored The Denver Post’s reporting since last fall, which found the toxic workplace and culture of fear had permeated a wide swath of departments, leading to high turnover, especially among senior leadership positions. The Post also found that the head of the hospital’s prosthetics department was instructing employees to cancel veterans’ orders to clear a large backlog. The VA later confirmed The Post’s reporting.

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    Sam Tabachnik

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  • 1 dead, 1 in critical condition after boat hits tubers at Navajo State Park

    1 dead, 1 in critical condition after boat hits tubers at Navajo State Park

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    One person is dead and another in critical condition after a boat hit three tubers at Navajo State Park on Saturday, according to Colorado Parks and Wildlife.

    Around 2:30 p.m. on Saturday, a boat hit a tube that was being towed behind another boat near Windsurf Beach at Navajo State Park. People on the two boats called 911 and rangers, as well as Southern Ute police officers, arrived shortly after the incident. Three people were riding on the tube, according to a Saturday news release from CPW.

    One person died at the scene and another was airlifted to a hospital in critical condition. The third tuber was not injured, park officials said. The identity of the person who died has not yet been publicly released.

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    Julianna O'Clair

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  • Community mourns NYPD officer killed in Deer Park nail salon crash

    Community mourns NYPD officer killed in Deer Park nail salon crash

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    NEW HYDE PARK, Long Island (WABC) — It was an emotional day on Long Island as friends, family, and co-workers came together to remember an NYPD officer killed by an out-of-control car at a nail salon in Deer Park.

    A large sign was set up on the street with a picture of Officer Emilia Rennhack outside the home where her funeral was held Saturday in New Hyde Park.

    Rennhack was one of four people killed when an alleged drunk driver crashed into a nail salon in Deer Park last Friday.

    Pictured left to right: Jiancai Chen, Emilia Rennhack and Meizi Zhang

    Also killed in the crash were Jiancai ‘Kenny’ Chen, 37, of Bayside, Queens, Yan Xu, 41, of Flushing, Queens, and Meizi Zhang, 50, of Flushing, Queens.

    The 30-year-old was off-duty at the time, getting her nails done for a wedding.

    Officer Rennhack was assigned to the 102nd Precinct in Queens, where her husband is a detective.

    Police say Steven Schwally, 64, was drunk when he plowed an SUV through Hawaii Nail Salon.

    Schwally, of Dix Hills, has been charged with DWI, and additional charges could still be filed against him.

    This is not Schwally’s first DWI incident. He pleaded guilty to similar charges in Suffolk County in March 2013.

    Schwally was held on $1 million cash bail at his arraignment Monday afternoon in Central Islip.

    Prosecutors say he is a Marine Corps veteran who is living at a Motor Inn in Commack.

    He told police he had 18 beers the night before the crash, and stopped drinking at 4 a.m.

    Schwally is due back in court on July 12.

    ALSO READ | Family demands accountability for New York police killing of 13-year-old boy

    Family demands accountability for NY police killing of 13-year-old boy

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  • 1 dead, 1 injured in overnight shooting at Aurora apartment complex

    1 dead, 1 injured in overnight shooting at Aurora apartment complex

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    One man was killed and another was seriously injured Friday during an early morning shooting according to Aurora police.

    Aurora police officers responded to reports of a shooting at the Abrigo apartment complex — located at 12170 East 30th Ave. — around 12:15 a.m. Friday, according to a news release from the department.

    When officers arrived at the apartment building — located near Peoria Street and down the road from Park Lane Elementary School — they found two men with gunshot wounds, the release stated.

    Paramedics transported both men to the hospital, where one later died from his injuries, police said. The other man remains hospitalized.

    Police originally suspected the two men had shot each other, but further investigation revealed that two unidentified suspects came into the apartment and fired multiple shots at both men, according to a 6:45 a.m. update.

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    Lauren Penington

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  • Deer Park, Long Island nail salon where 4 killed in DWI crash now site of growing memorial

    Deer Park, Long Island nail salon where 4 killed in DWI crash now site of growing memorial

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    DEER PARK, Long Island (WABC) — The Long Island nail salon where a suspected drunk driver plowed through the front glass, killing four people is now the site of a growing memorial.

    Among the victims – an off-duty NYPD officer and three members of the salon staff, who were all beloved by the community.

    Hawaii Nail and Spa in Deer Park was where customers used to go to feel beautiful.

    “Last Thursday Joy did my manicure and Jenny did my pedicure. She would always pick my colors,” said customer Patricia Castillo.

    It was where customers felt like family.

    Now, the spa is boarded up and is covered with all the markings of sorrow – candles, flowers and condolences.

    “They were gorgeous. I’ve been going here 15 years. I love them all, they are like family,” added Karen McClorey.

    On Friday afternoon, a speeding SUV crashed all the way through the store, killing three beloved staff members and off-duty NYPD offier Emilia Rennhack, 34.

    Rennhack was getting her nails done for a wedding that night. She was also married to a detective in the same 102 Precinct.

    Suffolk County Police believe the driver was so drunk he turned his vehicle into a weapon. Records show Steven Schwally, 64, has a prior DWI conviction.

    As the community turns to prayers for comfort, they are left with the bitter loss that such gentle souls are now gone.

    A candlelight vigil is planned for Monday night. Given the constant stream of mourners all weekend, the gathering is expected to be quite large and emotional.

    ALSO READ | Police searching for suspect after sunbathing woman sexually assaulted in Central Park

    Lindsay Tuchman has details on the manhunt of a suspect wanted for sexual assault in Central Park.

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    Lucy Yang

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  • Matthew Perry’s Ex Claims He DATED Charlie Sheen’s Ex Brooke Mueller, Who Was Questioned In Friends Star’s Death! – Perez Hilton

    Matthew Perry’s Ex Claims He DATED Charlie Sheen’s Ex Brooke Mueller, Who Was Questioned In Friends Star’s Death! – Perez Hilton

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    Talk about a plot twist here!

    Since last year, the Los Angeles Police Department has been trying to figure out how Matthew Perry got the ketamine that killed him. As we previously reported, the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner’s Office blamed “the acute effects” of the drug as the cause for the heart attack he had in the hot tub. He was undergoing ketamine therapy to treat depression and was closely monitored by medical professionals at the time. However, his last infusion therapy was a week and a half before his death – which means that it did not cause the cardiac arrest “since ketamine’s half-life is 3 to 4 hours or less.” So, the actor must have got the drug from somewhere else. It also meant that he was not 100 percent sober as we all thought!

    At one point, the LAPD’s investigation into this matter led them to a female celebrity who has since been identified by In Touch as Charlie Sheen’s ex-wife Brooke Mueller. She reportedly was questioned “multiple” times by the police about his death in May while she was at a sober living residence and even turned over her laptop and iPhone. She’s cooperating with the investigators, which is good! Although Brooke apparently swears she did nothing wrong, In Touch claimed she already lawyered up.

    Related: Lisa Kudrow Rewatching Friends For This Absolutely Heartbreaking Reason

    As for how Matthew and Brooke know each other? The insider for the outlet said the pair — who both struggled with addiction over the years — “met in rehab” and “formed an unexpected friendship.” Well, they were possibly a lot more than just pals!

    The Friends star’s ex-girlfriend and former assistant Kayti Edwards claimed to The Us Sun on Friday that he was “romantically involved” with Brooke almost two decades ago after they met in an alcoholics anonymous meeting! In fact, Matthew and Brooke were supposedly dating at the same time he was dating Kayti! Whoa! She told the outlet:

    “Brooke dated Matthew in 2006, at around the time I first started hanging out with Matthew. They definitely did not first meet initially in rehab, we all met in AA in 2006. She and I were seeing him at the same time, there was no girlfriend and boyfriend relationship – we just dated. He would take me out on dates and he would take her out on dates. It was kind of like this thing, like ‘Are you going out with Brooke tonight? ​​It was back and forth between her and I but they were definitely romantically involved.”

    What?! Kayti said the relationship between Brooke and Matthew probably lasted about three months:

    “She was like my rival, I knew of her and I’m sure she knew of me. We were hanging out with Matthew, dating him and it wasn’t really a big deal. It was probably a three-month thing because that’s what him and I were. Him and Brooke and me and he never went out publicly and looked romantic, it was always in his house.”

    Of course, Brooke married Charlie two years after they supposedly dated. For years, she and the comedian seemingly were not in contact. Kayti shared:

    “Back in 2010 when I started working for Matthew I even asked about her and if he still talked with Brooke and what he thought about her being with Charlie. He said it didn’t surprise him because that was who she was. She wanted to hook up with an actor with money, so it didn’t surprise him. That’s what she wanted, that lifestyle of being married and having kids with an actor, and I don’t think Matthew was ever going to give that to her.

    Kayti believes the actress and Matthew reconnected sometime after she last spoke to him following the release of his memoir Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing in November 2022 because he never told her about it. She explained:

    “At that time he said he didn’t talk to her so they must have reconnected more recently, in the last two years or so I would guess. She was sober when she was dating Matthew in 2006 because he was sober at that time. It’s possible that after Charlie she went off the rails and they reconnected in rehab. I guess I never asked but if they were hanging out I’m pretty sure he would have said ‘Guess who I ran into?’”

    If this is true, is that why the police reportedly wanted to question Brooke? Because they reconnected years after their alleged relationship? It is unknown what the police wanted to ask her about Matthew’s death. Kayti has a theory, though! She claimed the Fools Rush In star had a history of asking people to deliver him drugs:

    “Here’s the bottom line, Matthew was very persuasive. When he was in active addiction he would make out that it wasn’t a big deal. In my mind it was like ‘If it’s not a big deal why don’t you go and get it?’”

    Even she acted as a “courier” for her at times! Kayti recalled:

    “One time he was shooting at Paramount Studios and he sent me to pick up a package for him from an office, it could have been a doctor’s office. I didn’t open it, it was just a box but I had to walk it through the studio with a name tag on and drive to his trailer and was greeted with an envelope of cash for delivering the box. To this day I don’t know what was in the box.”

    With all this in mind, Kayti thinks Brooke allegedly could have “picked something up” for Matthew sometime before his death:

    “Matthew never got caught for possession because he was smart and he had everybody else do his dirty work. I don’t feel for the doctors who gave it to him but I do feel bad if somebody is going to get in trouble for doing him a favor. I don’t know Brooke enough but I know that if she was involved in this it was probably just picking something up for him.”

    Whoa…

    Brooke has not been arrested for anything at this time. However, the LAPD told People this week that the case is “nearing its conclusion” and feels “multiple people” should be charged with crimes in connection to his death. The US Attorney’s Office will make that final decision after getting all the evidence. If all this is true — Is Brooke one of those people? At this time, she has not addressed any of the reports. But Charlie’s lawyer, Gregory J. Pedrick, addressed the situation, saying:

    “I believe Ms. Mueller’s past choices may have put her in a position to provide some incidental, anecdotal background to the authorities investigating Mr. Perry’s death. Nothing more.”

    Wild stuff! Reactions, Perezcious readers? Let us know in the comments below!

    [Image via InTouch Weekly/The Late Show With Stephen Colbert/YouTube, Nikki Nelson/WENN]

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    Perez Hilton

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  • ‘Kind of bunk’: A closer look at the controversial case against a top L.A. D.A. official

    ‘Kind of bunk’: A closer look at the controversial case against a top L.A. D.A. official

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    One legal expert called it “kind of bunk.” Another said it simply raises more questions than it answers.

    But two months after state prosecutors announced 11 felony charges against a top advisor to Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. George Gascón, a newly unsealed court record offers a window into the controversial case.

    The basis for the allegations against Gascón advisor Diana Teran had remained opaque since California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta announced them in April.

    State prosecutors have said only that Teran improperly accessed confidential police records while working as the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department’s constitutional policing advisor in 2018, then improperly used data from those records when she joined the district attorney’s office three years later.

    It’s been unclear whose files she’d allegedly used or how, but after weeks of legal wrangling, an attorney for the Los Angeles Public Press convinced a judge to unseal the affidavit used to justify the arrest warrant.

    The 15-page document, unsealed late Tuesday, shows the core allegations are focused on Teran’s efforts to include more deputies’ names in district attorney’s databases used to track problem officers, much as her attorney had previously speculated.

    But the document also shows that records of disciplinary against at least two of the 11 deputies were already public when she flagged them for inclusion. This week, The Times found the records were easily located through a Google search.

    The identities of the nine other deputies were still redacted in the public version of the affidavit — though Teran’s lawyer said he was “99% confident” their records were already public as well.

    “I can’t believe a case would be filed on this type of evidence,” James Spertus told The Times. “I understated before how bad this case was.”

    On Wednesday, several legal experts who reviewed the affidavit raised questions about the case.

    “It strikes me as we’ve lost the forest for the trees from a broader criminal justice point of view,” said Hanni Fakhoury, a San Francisco attorney with a background in computer crimes. “It’s not like she’s putting people on the database who shouldn’t be there.”

    In an emailed statement, Bonta’s office declined to comment, citing the need to “protect the integrity” of a pending case.

    One law enforcement source familiar with the matter — who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the record — said the state is considering dropping two of the charges against Teran, and late Wednesday, Spertus confirmed that was his expectation as well.

    With months to go before the general election — in which Gascón is facing a serious challenger — some have taken the Teran prosecution as a political betrayal, because Bonta endorsed Gascón four years ago. But it’s unclear what, if any, impact the controversy will have on the race.

    The district attorney’s office and the Sheriff’s Department did not immediately offer comment.

    The 15-page affidavit signed by Special Agent Tony Baca of the state Department of Justice traces the investigation into Teran back to a traffic stop involving a different district attorney’s official three years ago.

    The affidavit doesn’t identify that official, but the details line up with the December 2021 arrest of Gascón’s chief of staff, Joseph Iniguez.

    As The Times previously reported, Azusa police pulled over Iniguez’s fiance after he allegedly made an illegal U-turn into a McDonald’s drive-through. Police said Iniguez tried to interfere with the stop, and arrested him on suspicion of public intoxication.

    The police union later alleged that Iniguez threatened to have the arresting officer’s name added to the district attorney’s so-called Brady List, which contains officers with problematic disciplinary histories. The name is a reference to a landmark 1963 U.S. Supreme Court decision that requires prosecutors to turn over any evidence favorable to a defendant — including evidence of police misconduct.

    Given the potential conflict of interest, the case against Iniguez was turned over to the California Department of Justice. But state prosecutors never pursued charges, and Iniguez eventually sued the Azusa Police Department in a case that was settled last year.

    According to Baca’s affidavit, the state’s investigation somehow led officials to Teran, who had responsibility for the district attorney’s Brady database. The Department of Justice has not offered further explanation.

    Spertus said previously he believed the investigation into his client was sparked by a complaint from former Sheriff Alex Villanueva, who said in 2019 he alerted the FBI and the state Department of Justice about a “massive data breach” involving Teran. At the time, neither agency agreed to take on the case.

    When Teran worked at the Sheriff’s Department under Villanueva’s predecessor, part of her usual duties included accessing confidential deputy records and internal affairs investigations. According to Baca’s affidavit, the department’s secret tracking software logged all of her searches starting in 2018.

    When she joined the district attorney’s office in 2021, Teran allegedly began suggesting the names of deputies who should be added to the Brady list — a practice two prosecutors told Baca was not usual. Then in April 2021, the affidavit says, Teran sent a list of 33 names to another prosecutor for possible inclusion in the databases.

    The affidavit says that several of those names were deputies whose files she’d accessed while working at the Sheriff’s Department, and that she “would not have identified so many of these deputy sheriffs” otherwise. The affidavit also alleges that some of the documents Teran sent along with the names appeared to have been “scanned, copied, or taken directly from the LASD data files.”

    The 11 charges, Baca wrote, reflected the 11 of those 33 deputies whose names did “not appear in either public records request responses or media articles.”

    Susan Seager, the attorney who fought for the record’s release, questioned that reasoning.

    “This is a ridiculously narrow and inaccurate way of determining whether their disciplinary files are confidential,” she wrote in an emailed statement.

    Seager went on to call it “stunning” that Bonta would describe the 11 deputies’ records as confidential, pointing out that two names — Liza Gonzalez and Thomas Negron — were not redacted in the released affidavit.

    “Bonta’s office doesn’t explain why it unsealed those two names,” Seager wrote, “but perhaps that’s because there are two California court of appeal decisions dated 2014 and 2015 that discuss in great detail the disciplinary files of deputies Gonzalez and Negron and how they were fired for dishonesty in in 2010 and 2011, respectively.”

    Other legal experts who reviewed the affidavit were similarly critical.

    “I think it raises more questions than it answers — partly because there are still redactions,” said police oversight expert Michael Gennaco, adding it was “interesting” that the investigator who authored the affidavit didn’t appear to have done a case of this nature before.

    Cristine Soto DeBerry, executive director of the Prosecutors Alliance, panned the “absurdity” of the case.

    “A prosecutor earnestly trying to do her job and track important information should be applauded not punished,” she said in an emailed statement.

    Fakhoury, the attorney with a background in computer crimes, pointed out that state prosecutors don’t appear to be claiming that any of the information Teran flagged for inclusion in the Brady database was incorrect or didn’t belong there.

    “It also appears to me that there’s no allegation that she didn’t have computer access to the records at least when she was employed by the Sheriff’s Department,” he said. “So the unauthorized access is that she took the information she was allowed to have and used it after she left the Sheriff’s Department.”

    Fakhoury said federal prosecutors have tried to argue the theory that “unauthorized access” would include cases akin to Teran’s, in which someone accessed data for a permitted purpose and later used it for a different purpose. But the U.S. Supreme Court has rejected that theory, he said, and California’s Supreme Court has not weighed in on how broadly the state statute should be interpreted.

    “It’s an odd case,” he said. “I think it’s kind of bunk, frankly.”

    Legally, he said, it might not matter whether the records were already public —though that could raise larger questions about the decision to prosecute Teran.

    He wondered whether it might have a “chilling effect” on other prosecutors focused on police accountability: “Is this what we really want this kind of statute and this kind of investigation to go after?”

    Times staff writers James Queally and Richard Winton contributed to this report.

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    Keri Blakinger

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  • San Francisco’s record high vacancy rate, showing signs of stabilization

    San Francisco’s record high vacancy rate, showing signs of stabilization

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    San Francisco’s office market is looking emptier than ever before. New data from real estate firm CBRE shows last quarter’s vacancy rate of 36.6% moved up to a record high 37% in the second quarter of 2024—the highest of any major market in the country.

    But the incremental increases of just .4% between the two quarters indicates the market is beginning to stabilize, according to CBRE experts. In comparison, in 2023 there was a 6.8% increase between the first quarter’s (24.8%) and the second quarter’s (31.6%) office vacancy rate.

    “We’re finally starting to see signs that the office market is stabilizing where the amount of vacant space coming onto market has slowed down pretty significantly,” said CBRE’s executive director of Tech Insights Center, Colin Yasukochi.

    But the office market has been struggling for years and vacancy rates have been unticking quarter after quarter.

    Yasukochi said despite the climb, another positive sign is the rising tenant demand of 6.9 million square feet— it is almost back to the 7 million square feet average demand of 2019. Driven by discounted rents and other concessions, more leases were completed this year than in the previous quarter, according to CBRE’s report.

    “So the amount of space that tenants have signed leases for has increased by about 25% through the first half of this year compared to last year. So, we’re expecting again to see more companies acquire office space for their employees this year than they did last year,” Yasukochi said.

    CBRE says AI companies are the driving force behind the demand. The top lease this past quarter was acquired by Scale AI, followed by the city of San Francisco, HR management company Rippling, and global law firms Orrick and Jones Day.

    Average rents declined about 30 cents to $68.25 quarter-over-quarter.

    Yasukochi said the city is still always off from achieving net positive office absorption again, but they’re very optimistic about AI companies as a catalyst for growth in the future considering San Francisco is a leader in artificial intelligence.

    CBRE’s report also revealed that San Francisco is still very oversupplied.

    This is all part of a long process, that experts say, is going to take years for city vacancy rates to fall under double digits, as it was before the pandemic, when office vacancy rates were considered relatively healthy.

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    Hilda Gutierrez

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  • Customers left looking for vehicles after car repair shop abruptly closes

    Customers left looking for vehicles after car repair shop abruptly closes

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    DENVER — The case of Nekia Johnson’s missing 1988 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme led her to a private residence in north Denver.

    Last summer, Johnson took her vehicle to Harley’s Garage in Aurora for an engine replacement. Not long after, multiple customers told Denver7 Investigates that the business owners closed up shop and disappeared with their cars.

    “We just wanted a simple engine rebuild for my husband’s old-school car for his birthday,” Johnson said. “It’s been a horrible experience.”

    Johnson said she and her husband tried to track down the car for quite some time, despite not hearing from the business, but then she received a call from a homeowner in north Denver.

    Denver7

    Their car was in the backyard, along with roughly a dozen others from Harley’s Garage. The homeowners were trying to find the rightful owners of the cars.

    Homeowner Jayne Tucker said people from the business rented space in their yard, which they had been renting out for vehicle storage for extra money. But she said the cars just sat there.

    “There was always some reason why they weren’t coming by,” Tucker said.

    Harley's garage 3.jpg

    Denver7

    Both Tucker and Johnson said they mainly dealt with Jack Truex. In a phone call Monday, Truex identified himself to Denver7 Investigates as the general manager of Harley’s Garage.

    He said that the company was locked out of its computer system after the closure, but that the owner, who is currently in rehab, is committed to getting people their money back.

    Digging into Truex’s background, Denver7 Investigates found Truex has a lengthy rap sheet, including guilty pleas for felony vehicle theft in 2014 and 2016.

    Truex declined an on-camera interview for this story. He said his past charges were unrelated to this current situation and reiterated that he does not own the company.

    “(The owner) is adamant that he wants to make sure all these customers get their money back,” Truex said.

    Harley's garage 2.jpg

    Denver7

    Meanwhile, Tucker said she is in the process of evicting Harley’s Garage from her property but is still trying to find as many owners as possible.

    “We have been opening up the cars to kind of look for registrations, proof of insurance, anything like that,” she said. “I have paid for a license plate reverse search service just to try and find people.”

    Truex promised refunds to customers. Johnson said she paid a $1,000 deposit for the engine replacement, but no work was ever done. After recovering the car, Johnson and her husband took it to another auto shop.

    “Hopefully we can get our money back and move on with life,” Johnson said.

    Anyone else trying to locate their car from Harley’s Garage should reach out to Jaclyn Allen at investigates@denver7.com.

    Customers left looking for vehicles after car repair shop abruptly closes


    investigates-banner.png

    Denver7

    Got a tip? Send it to the Denver7 Investigates team

    Use the form below to send us a comment or story idea you’d like the Denver7 Investigates team to check out. You can also email investigates@Denver7.com or call our newsroom at 303-832-0200.

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    Jaclyn Allen

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  • NTSB updates Colonie plane crash

    NTSB updates Colonie plane crash

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    COLONIE, N.Y. (NEWS10) — We have new information about the plane that crashed Monday morning near the William K. Sanford town library in Colonie. NEWS10 reporter James De La Fuente attended a press conference on Tuesday June 18 when the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) and local officials gave a brief update into the crash.

    “Before we begin, I would like to express my most sincere condolences to the family and friends of our deceased pilot,” started Lynn Spencer, Air Safety Investigator with the NTSB.

    Spencer says they are not identifying the sole occupant and victim at this time other than to say that she is a Canadian woman.  Spencer says the twin engine personal aircraft was headed to Canada and had made it about a mile and a half from the airport before she says the plane seemed to struggle to gain altitude. “We will be looking at pilot qualifications, the training, the airframe itself and environmental factors,” stated Spencer.

    Spencer also said that because the plane was destroyed by a post-crash explosion her team will be relying on the community for some help in identifying what may have gone tragically wrong. “Of note was that the airplane seemed to have difficulty gaining altitude and then went nearly straight up to about 800 feet and did a loop and then turned left, did at least one roll, and then another left hand turn to the final impact.” She went on to explain how control could have been lost. “When a pilot is struggling to maintain control of the airplane, you often see what looks like acrobatic flying. And it’s simply the pilot’s attempt to deal with everything from an engine failure to a control failure to an environmental event. Anything that upsets the normal flight trajectory.”

    Spencer says she has received a number of reports from the community and eyewitness accounts. “This kind of flight path is typical of an extreme loss of control situation in the cockpit and a pilot attempting to regain control of the airplane. The aircraft struggle was noted by the air traffic controller who canceled the takeoff clearance for the following aircraft because he could see that the departing aircraft was having difficulty.”

    She says the rest of the plane will be packed up and shipped for further investigation. “And later tonight [Tuesday] [the airplane] will be going to Massachusetts to a secure facility there where we will start a full layout, and examination of the airframe and the engines.” Preliminary reports will be completed in the next few weeks and a final report in 18-24 months.

    Maxwell Road between Albany Shaker Road and Old Niskayuna Road have now been reopened to the public.

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    James De La Fuente

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  • Ohio explosion caused by cut gas line thought to be turned off, investigators say

    Ohio explosion caused by cut gas line thought to be turned off, investigators say

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    A crew working in the basement area of an Ohio building intentionally cut a gas line not knowing it was pressurized before a deadly explosion this week, the National Transportation Safety Board said Friday.NTSB board member Tom Chapman said preliminary investigation shows workers were in the basement to clear out piping and other outdated infrastructure and debris from the basement and vault area — which extends underneath the sidewalk next to the building — in anticipation of a city project to fill in the area and replace the sidewalks. A crew of five people and a supervisor had been on site that day and four of the workers were there when it happened, he said.“It was an apparently abandoned service line coming off the main, which ran parallel to the street,” Chapman said.He said workers smelled no gas before they started cutting the pipe and knew there was a problem when they made the third cut.At that point, workers pulled the fire alarm and alerted residents and bank employees to evacuate. Chapman said the explosion happened six minutes later. He also said all indications are that it was accidental.Investigators will try to determine why the pipe was pressurized and how long it had been that way.Chapman said the investigation would continue without access to the inside of the building until engineers can determine if the building is safe to enter. He said the NTSB has gotten security video from inside the bank and other video evidence.The explosion Tuesday afternoon blew out much of the ground floor of Realty Tower, killing a bank employee and injuring several others. It collapsed part of the ground floor into its basement and sent the façade across the street. Bricks, glass and other debris littered the sidewalk outside the 13-story building, which had a Chase Bank branch at street level and apartments in upper floors.Investigators are also trying to discern whether people in the bank heard the fire alarm.Youngstown Mayor Jamael Tito Brown said in a news release Friday that the city had contracted with a construction company called GreenHeart to perform private utility relocation in the basement of the Realty Tower. He said “there is no evidence” that cutting the gas line the NTSB mentioned was necessary to complete that work.Greenheart did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday evening.The bank employee, 27-year-old Akil Drake, had been seen inside the building just before the blast, police have said. Firefighters rescued others as they cleared the building.Seven injured people were taken to a Youngstown hospital. One woman remained hospitalized as of Thursday in critical condition, but her name and further details on her injuries have not been disclosed. Three others were in stable condition, and the other three were released.

    A crew working in the basement area of an Ohio building intentionally cut a gas line not knowing it was pressurized before a deadly explosion this week, the National Transportation Safety Board said Friday.

    NTSB board member Tom Chapman said preliminary investigation shows workers were in the basement to clear out piping and other outdated infrastructure and debris from the basement and vault area — which extends underneath the sidewalk next to the building — in anticipation of a city project to fill in the area and replace the sidewalks. A crew of five people and a supervisor had been on site that day and four of the workers were there when it happened, he said.

    “It was an apparently abandoned service line coming off the main, which ran parallel to the street,” Chapman said.

    He said workers smelled no gas before they started cutting the pipe and knew there was a problem when they made the third cut.

    At that point, workers pulled the fire alarm and alerted residents and bank employees to evacuate. Chapman said the explosion happened six minutes later. He also said all indications are that it was accidental.

    Investigators will try to determine why the pipe was pressurized and how long it had been that way.

    Chapman said the investigation would continue without access to the inside of the building until engineers can determine if the building is safe to enter. He said the NTSB has gotten security video from inside the bank and other video evidence.

    The explosion Tuesday afternoon blew out much of the ground floor of Realty Tower, killing a bank employee and injuring several others. It collapsed part of the ground floor into its basement and sent the façade across the street. Bricks, glass and other debris littered the sidewalk outside the 13-story building, which had a Chase Bank branch at street level and apartments in upper floors.

    Investigators are also trying to discern whether people in the bank heard the fire alarm.

    Youngstown Mayor Jamael Tito Brown said in a news release Friday that the city had contracted with a construction company called GreenHeart to perform private utility relocation in the basement of the Realty Tower. He said “there is no evidence” that cutting the gas line the NTSB mentioned was necessary to complete that work.

    Greenheart did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday evening.

    The bank employee, 27-year-old Akil Drake, had been seen inside the building just before the blast, police have said. Firefighters rescued others as they cleared the building.

    Seven injured people were taken to a Youngstown hospital. One woman remained hospitalized as of Thursday in critical condition, but her name and further details on her injuries have not been disclosed. Three others were in stable condition, and the other three were released.

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  • Former DuPage County prosecutor accused of threatening state lawmakers on X

    Former DuPage County prosecutor accused of threatening state lawmakers on X

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    CHICAGO — A former DuPage County prosecutor accused of making threats against state lawmakers and the Illinois Attorney General over social media has been charged.

    30-year-old Samuel Cundari, who was an Assistant State’s Attorney in DuPage County, has been charged with transmitting in interstate commerce a threat to injure another person, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Central District of Illinois.

    Prosecutors say authorities were initially contacted by two Illinois State Representatives on March 17, after they were allegedly tagged in a threatening post on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter.

    The post allegedly stated “Our patience grows short with you. The day we put your kids’ feet first into a woodchipper so we can enjoy their last few screams is coming.”

    Five other people or groups were also allegedly tagged in the post, including the Illinois Attorney General, and as a result, the FBI began an investigation. 

    Prosecutors say a couple of days prior, on May 15, a tip came into the FBI’s National Threat Operations Center regarding another post on X that appeared to be in response to an advertisement about the Springfield PrideFest, which took place on May 18.

    Prosecutors say the post allegedly stated “I sure hope NOBODY leaves a pressure cooker filled with bail bearings, glass, and nails, filled with diesel fuel and fertilizer, with the over pressure safety valve disabled, near a natural gas line line [sic]. That would be VERY sad and VERY unfortunate.”

    According to prosecutors, authorities were able to trace back the two social media posts to Cundari.

    Cundari was subsequently arrested and charged. 

    If convicted, Cundari could face up to five years in prison, three years of supervised release and a possible fine of up to $250,000.

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    Gabriel Castillo

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  • CHP investigates hit-and-run crash that killed motorcyclist, seeking assistance

    CHP investigates hit-and-run crash that killed motorcyclist, seeking assistance

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    (FOX40.COM) — The California Highway Patrol Auburn division is asking for the public’s assistance to find the driver responsible for a hit-and-run crash that killed a motorcyclist on May 14.

    At around 6:24 p.m., a crash between a red Cadillac and a red Harley Davidson motorcycle on Douglas Boulevard at the intersection of Kingsgate Drive in Granite Bay fatally injured a motorcyclist, according to CHP. Police said that numerous passerby’s stopped to offer aid to the involved parties, but did not witness the collision.

    The Auburn CHP office said it’s looking for people who may have seen the crash, have video footage, or any home surveillance footage from the time of the incident. CHP advised anyone with information to contact Auburn CHP at (916) 663-3344 or 1-800-Tell CHP.

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    Veronica Catlin

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  • Body of missing 3-year-old boy found in Rocky Ford canal

    Body of missing 3-year-old boy found in Rocky Ford canal

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    The body of a 3-year-old boy with special needs who was reported missing Saturday morning from Rocky Ford was found in a canal, according to the Colorado Bureau of Investigation.

    Amari Galan was last seen around 4 a.m. Saturday. Officials believed he left his home near the 900 block of Washington Street on foot wearing only a diaper, according to a CBI endangered missing person alert posted around 3:30 p.m. Saturday.

    Officials searched the Catlin irrigation canal, which runs directly behind the child’s home, on foot. Amari’s body was found in the canal several miles downstream from his home around 5 p.m. Sunday, according to an update.

    Sign up to get more crime news sent straight to your inbox each day.

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    Julianna O'Clair

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