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Tag: Little Rock

  • Head Of Bill And Hillary Clinton Airport Shot In The Head

    Head Of Bill And Hillary Clinton Airport Shot In The Head

    Source YouTube: MSNBC, New York Post

    Bryan Malinowski, the executive director of the Bill and Hillary Clinton Airport in Little Rock, Arkansas, was shot in the head by federal agents on Tuesday after he opened fire on them. 

    Clinton Airport Executive Director Shot

    Daily Mail reported that Malinowski, 53, was injured at his west Little Rock home at around 6 a.m. after he opened fire on agents with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. The agents were attempting to serve a warrant when someone inside the house began shooting at them.

    The ATF, state police and federal prosecutors all refused to reveal what the agents were looking for because the investigation is still ongoing. Agents returned fire and ultimately injured Malinowski, who was treated at the scene before being taken to a local hospital.

    Officials said that an unidentified agent was also shot in the exchange of gunfire, but thankfully the agent’s injuries were not life-threatening. The case will now go to prosecutors, who will determine whether deadly force was used consistent within state law, according to The New York Post.

    Related: Report: Shotgun Found 30 Feet From Body of Epstein-Linked Clinton Aid Whose Death Was Ruled a Suicide

    Malinowski’s Brother And Neighbors Speak Out

    Malinowski’s condition is not known at the time of this writing, but a source claimed to the Arkansas Times that he is on life support.

    “We don’t know if he’s going to make it in the next 24 hours,” Malinowski’s brother Matthew told NBC News on Wednesday. “He was shot in the head.”

    Malinowski went on to say that doctors haven’t performed surgery “because they don’t think he’s gonna make it.”

    Neighbors described Malinowski as a gun enthusiast who enjoys buying and trading firearms. Shea De Bruyn, a neighbor of Malinowski’s, told KARK that she was woken up early Tuesday morning by a series of loud bangs.

    “My heart was racing, and the dogs were barking,” she recalled. “I’m just really curious as to what was going on just a few houses down.”

    Related: Report: Bill Clinton Appears Over 50 Times In Jeffrey Epstein Files

    Malinowski’s History

    Malinowski has worked in the airline industry for over thirty years, previously working at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, El Paso International Airport in Texas and Lehigh Valley International Airport in Pennsylvania.

    Malinowski began working at Clinton National in 2008 as director of properties, planning and development before being promoted to deputy director in 2009. He went on to take over as executive director of the airport in 2019.

    “Today’s incident saddens us, and we pray for everyone involved,” Clinton National Airport, Airport Commission Chairman Bill Walker told Fox News. “As the chairman of the Little Rock Municipal Airport Commission, I have named Tom Clarke, the airport’s deputy executive director, as acting executive director. The airport’s day-to-day operations continue as normal.”

    The airport was renamed after Bill and Hillary Clinton back in 2012. The Clinton family has long had ties to Arkansas, where Bill was governor from 1979 to 1981, and again from 1983 to 1992.

    Over the years, many people with ties to the Clintons have died under mysterious circumstances. While there is no evidence that Malinowski had direct ties to the Clintons, it seems somewhat ironic that the head of the airport named after them has been shot in the head by federal agents.

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    James Conrad

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  • 7 Awesome Little Rock Suburbs to Live in 2024

    7 Awesome Little Rock Suburbs to Live in 2024

    Often called “the Rock,” Little Rock, AR, is an iconic Southern city. There are countless things to do in the city whether you visit historic places like Little Rock Central High School National Historic Site and Clinton Presidential Library, check out Riverfront Park and Pinnacle Mountain State Park, and tour the Arkansas Arts Center. No wonder 202,000 people are living in Little Rock. If you’re moving to or living in Little Rock, know that the median home sale price is $215,000 and the average rent in Little Rock is about $1,048. 

    If you’re unsure about living in the heart of Little Rock, don’t worry, we’ve got towns for you to check out. At Redfin, we’ve collected 7 of the best Little Rock suburbs to consider moving to. And the best part is that they’re all less than 26 miles away from the city center. Let’s jump in.

    #1: Jacksonville

    Median home price: $130,798 
    Average sale price per square foot: $106 
    Distance from Little Rock: 16 miles
    Jacksonville, AR homes for sale 
    Jacksonville, AR apartments for rent 

    With a median home sale price of $130,798, Jacksonville is the first Little Rock suburb on our list. Just about a 16 mile drive away from Little Rock, you won’t miss out on what the city has to offer. If you’re considering moving to this area make sure to check out Reed’s Bridge Battlefield Heritage Park, camp at one of the campgrounds, and see the exhibits at the Jacksonville Museum of Military History.

    #2: East End

    Median home price: $149,950 
    Average sale price per square foot: $118 
    Distance from Little Rock: 18 miles
    East End, AR homes for sale 
    East End, AR apartments for rent 

    Taking the second spot on our list is East End. About an 18 mile drive away from downtown Little Rock, you can tour the Arkansas Arts Center in just a quick drive. Some popular things to do in East End include exploring the Lorance Creek Natural Area, a nature preserve just outside of town. When living in this suburb of 7,100 people, you can also spend the day checking out the charming downtown.

    Little Rock, Arkansas. at night with river

    #3: North Little Rock

    Median home price: $169,950 
    Average sale price per square foot: $107 
    Average rent for an apartment: $1,022 
    Distance from Little Rock: 2 miles
    North Little Rock, AR homes for sale 
    North Little Rock, AR apartments for rent 

    With a median home sale price of $169,950 and only a 2 mile drive away, North Little Rock is the third Little Rock suburb on our list. There’s plenty of picturesque and outdoorsy activities to take part in when living in North Little Rock. If you find yourself moving to this suburb, explore the Argenta Historic District, known for its historic architecture, art galleries, and local shops, see a show at Simmons Bank Arena, and take a stroll along the North Shore Riverwalk, a scenic trail along the Arkansas River with views of downtown Little Rock. 

    #4: Sherwood

    Median home price: $195,000 
    Average sale price per square foot: $125 
    Average rent for an apartment: $1,261 
    Distance from Little Rock: 11 miles
    Sherwood, AR homes for sale 
    Sherwood, AR apartments for rent 

    Only slightly more expensive than North Little Rock is the suburb of Sherwood. With roughly 32,700 residents in this Little Rock suburb, make sure to golf at one of the courses, and check out green spaces like Don Hughes Park.

    #5: Benton

    Median home price: $211,000 
    Average sale price per square foot: $141 
    Average rent for an apartment: $1,433 
    Distance from Little Rock: 26 miles
    Benton, AR homes for sale
    Benton, AR apartments for rent

    Drive 26 miles outside of Little Rock and you’ll find the suburb of Benton, another great area to add to your list. With 35,000 residents, moving to this suburb can keep you close enough to Little Rock, without paying the premium for a home there. Living in Benton, you can check out the downtown Benton area, spend time outside at Tyndall Park, and golf at Longhills Golf Course.

    pinnacle mountain state park near little rock

    #6: Maumelle

    Median home price: $265,000 
    Average sale price per square foot: $153 
    Average rent for an apartment: $1,442 
    Distance from Little Rock: 17 miles
    Maumelle, AR homes for sale 
    Maumelle, AR apartments for rent 

    Sixth on the list is another well-known Little Rock suburb, Maumelle, where the median home sale price is $265,000. Home to roughly 19,300 people, Maumelle is a great suburb to consider moving to. Whether you enjoy the views of Willastein Lake at Lake Willastein Park or grab a coffee at a local café, there are many activities to do and see in this suburb. 

    #7: Bryant

    Median home price: $298,000 
    Average sale price per square foot: $138 
    Average rent for an apartment: $1,567 
    Distance from Little Rock: 19 miles
    Bryant, AR homes for sale
    Bryant, AR apartments for rent 

    Rounding out our list of Little Rock suburbs is none other than Bryant. With a population of about 20,700, living in Bryant is a great alternative to Little Rock’s hustle and bustle. If you’re going to call this suburb home, plan to spend time at Mills Park and check out the local shops and restaurants.

    Methodology: Whether a suburb is a 26-mile drive from downtown Little Rock. Median home sale price data and average rent price from the Redfin Data Center during December 2023. Population data sourced from the United States Census Bureau.

    Alison Bentley

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  • Communities face major destruction after large tornadoes tear through the South and Midwest, leaving at least 24 dead | CNN

    Communities face major destruction after large tornadoes tear through the South and Midwest, leaving at least 24 dead | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Devastated communities across the American South and Midwest are digging through debris Sunday after ferocious storms and tornadoes this weekend left at least 24 people dead and leveled neighborhoods, as parts of the Southern Plains brace for the possibility of their own round of severe weather later in the afternoon.

    The outbreak that walloped the country Friday spawned more than 50 tornado reports in at least seven states, where tornadoes crushed homes and businesses, ripped roofs off buildings, splintered trees and sent vehicles flying.

    Deaths have been confirmed across a wide swath of states, with multiple victims reported in Arkansas, Tennessee and Indiana, where the death toll rose after the Indiana Department of Natural Resources confirmed in a news release that two people had died at a campground in McCormick’s Creek State Park in Owen County.

    At least four people are dead in Wynne, Arkansas – a community about 50 miles west of the state’s border with Tennessee – where the storm peeled the turf off a high school’s football field. At least seven people died after two back-to-back lines of storms hit McNairy County, Tennessee, where the storm “crossed our county completely from one side to the other,” Sheriff Guy Buck told CNN Saturday evening as authorities continued to search collapsed buildings.

    Among the other deaths were four people killed in Illinois, including one person who died after the roof of the Apollo Theatre in Belvidere collapsed Friday while more than 200 people were inside, injuring more than two dozen others, according to the city’s fire chief. Three more people were reported dead in Crawford County, Illinois, in the collapse of a residential structure, according to the Illinois Emergency Management Agency.

    Elswhere, three people were reported dead near Sullivan, Indiana, per state police. State and local officials also reported one person dead in each of the following places: North Little Rock, Arkansas; Madison County, Alabama; and Pontotoc County, Mississippi. Finally, the storm system left another person dead in Delaware’s Sussex County after a structure collapsed, according to the county’s emergency operations center.

    The latest spate of damaging weather across the South and Midwest comes just a week after a severe tornado-spawning storm walloped the Southeast, killing at least another 26 people and destroying much of Rolling Fork, Mississippi.

    On Sunday, the threat will shift to the Southern Plains, where nearly 13 million people in north Texas, including the Dallas-Fort Worth area, face an enhanced – or level 3 of 5 – risk for severe weather in the later afternoon or early evening hours, according to the Storm Prediction Center.

    “Several tornadoes are possible, a couple of which may be strong,” the center said in an update Sunday, adding there was a 10 percent or greater probability of tornadoes between EF-2 and EF-5 strength within 25 miles around the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area.

    Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected across central to northeast Texas between 2 p.m. and 11 p.m. CT, the Storm Prediction Center said. Hail the size of golf balls or larger could also pose a threat.

    The governors of Indiana, Iowa, Illinois and Arkansas all announced emergency or disaster declarations in their states to help free up immediate assistance for impacted counties, and on Sunday, President Joe Biden issued a major disaster declaration for Arkansas.

    The federal declaration frees up federal resources, per the White House, to aid those impacted in Cross County, Lonoke County and Pulaski County, which encompasses the city of Little Rock, where heavy damage but no fatalities had been reported as of Saturday afternoon.

    The National Weather Service reported that an EF-3 tornado had roared through Pulaski and Lonoke counties in Arkansas with estimated peak winds of 165 mph.

    Efforts are now focused on recovery and rebuilding, Little Rock Mayor Frank Scott Jr. said. Nearly 2,600 structures in Little Rock were impacted and around 50 people were sent to hospitals, according to the mayor.

    “It’s unbelievable anytime that you see, literally, vehicles flying across the air, structures being flattened,” the mayor said. “Many people were not at their homes. If they were, it would have been a massacre,” Scott Jr. told CNN.

    An aerial view of destroyed homes in the aftermath of a tornado in Little Rock, Arkansas, Saturday.

    In addition to leaving trails of destruction, storms have also knocked out power to battered communities. More than 30,000 customers in Arkansas remained impacted by outages as of Sunday morning, according to PowerOutage.US, with hundreds of thousands more without power across the South and Northeast, including 120,000 in Pennsylvania and 73,000 in Ohio.

    The severe weather left Wynne, Arkansas, “basically cut in half by damage from east to west,” said Mayor Jennifer Hobbs, who watched the twister as it approached from a distance.

    “I don’t know how to put it into words. It was devastating. It’s much different seeing it firsthand than it is when you see it on TV hit other communities,” Hobbs said.

    Some houses in Wynne – home to about 8,000 residents – were completely crushed into piles of wood while others had their roofs ripped off, exposing the interiors of homes littered with storm debris, drone footage provided to CNN shows.

    “We have a lot of families that are completely devastated. Have no home at all, no belongings survived,” the mayor added.

    Janice Pieterick and her husband, Donald Lepczyk, were in their RV in Hohenwald, Tennessee, when they got the alert of an incoming tornado and rushed to her daughter’s home across the yard, CNN affiliate WTVF reported. The tornado hit minutes later.

    The family hurried into the bathroom where they huddled together as the storm roared outside.

    “We made her and the kids get into the bathtub because that’s supposed to be the safest place. And we just all hunkered down because all the doors blew out. Double doors in the front, double doors in the back, all the glass in the windows. It all blew out at once,” Pieterick said.

    Pieterick said the whole house shook. “You can literally feel it moving. Lifting up. That’s when we thought we were going, too,” she said.

    In nearby McNairy County, Sheriff Buck said the death toll could have been much higher if residents had not heeded early warnings and sought out proper shelter.

    “Had they not, looking at the devastation that we had, our death toll could have been in the hundreds,” Buck said. “The power of mother nature is something not to be underestimated.”

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  • At least 5 killed and dozens others are hospitalized as tornadoes tear through the South and Midwest | CNN

    At least 5 killed and dozens others are hospitalized as tornadoes tear through the South and Midwest | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Devastating storms and tornadoes scraped the South and Midwest Friday into early Saturday, killing at least five people, injuring dozens more, trapping others in their homes, and damaging businesses and critical infrastructure – with the threat of more severe weather looming into Saturday afternoon.

    More than 50 preliminary tornado reports were made Friday in at least six states, including in Arkansas, where storms killed three people – two in the small city of Wynne and another person in North Little Rock, local officials said.

    Two people were killed in Indiana by a storm Friday night that damaged homes and a volunteer fire department near Sullivan, a city about a 95-mile drive southwest of Indianapolis, State Police Sgt. Matt Ames said.

    At least 50 people were sent to hospitals in Arkansas’ Pulaski County, where a tornado roared through the Little Rock area Friday, county spokesperson Madeline Roberts said. Five others were hospitalized after a tornado touched down Friday in Covington, Tennessee, according to a spokesperson for Baptist Memorial Health Care.

    Preliminary information shows at least 22 tornadoes were reported in Illinois, eight in Iowa, four in Tennessee, five in Wisconsin and a couple in Mississippi.

    In Arkansas, at least a dozen tornadoes were reported, including in the Little Rock area. Twisters in that state left homes nearly leveled, and roads were covered with what once was the roofs and walls of buildings.

    William Williams, who told CNN affiliate KATV he’s an employee at a Kroger supermarket in Little Rock, said he’s “thankful to be alive” after a tornado rolled near the area while he was working Friday afternoon. He’d taken shelter inside the store, and went outside afterward to see people injured, including a woman he said had a severe leg injury.

    “Everything happened in like five seconds. It came – boom,” Williams told KATV. “You could hear a lot of commotion and stuff. … I go outside, and it is crazy. People had blood all over their faces. … I’m just thankful that I’m alive.”

    About 100 miles east of Little Rock, the city of Wynne was “basically cut in half by damage from east to west,” Mayor Jennifer Hobbs told CNN Friday evening.

    “We are still in triage mode,” Hobbs said, adding that crews were trying to determine the severity of the damage and any potential injuries.

    In northern Illinois, more than 200 people were inside the Apollo Theatre in Belvidere for an event when its roof collapsed Friday night, leaving one person dead and dozens injured, the city fire chief said. The collapse came as a line of storms packing 50 mph winds and dumping hail moved through the area, according to officials and the National Weather Service. It wasn’t immediately clear whether the storm caused the theater’s roof to crumble.

    Twenty-eight people were taken to hospitals as a result of the collapse, Belvidere Fire Chief Shawn Schadle said.

    Friday’s severe storms came a week after severe weather walloped the Southeast and killed at least 26 people. An overnight tornado, which makes people most prone to extensive damages, leveled much of Rolling Fork, Mississippi, where estimated maximum winds of 170 mph roared.

    A team from Summit Energy say a prayer together before investigating a burst gas line in Cammack Village, Arkansas, near Little Rock, after a tornado swept through the area Friday.

    Tornadoes still could happen in southeastern Indiana, western Ohio and northern Kentucky on Saturday through 5 a.m. ET, according to the Storm Prediction Center. The area, which includes the cities of Dayton and Cincinnati, was under a tornado watch that warned of wind gusts up to 70 mph along with large hail.

    For Saturday, about 55 million people are under a slight risk of severe weather – a Level 2 of 5 – in parts of the Ohio Valley, the Northeast, including New York City and Philadelphia, and parts of the Southeast, according the Storm Prediction Center.

    Scattered strong to severe thunderstorms could happen in these areas, and hail and few tornadoes are possible, the center said.

    On Friday, large hail proved to be a dangerous when it bombarded northern Illinois, cracking and denting cars’ windshields, according to a Facebook post from the Fulton County Emergency Services and Disaster Agency.

    Police and firefighters get help from volunteers clearing downed trees on Keihl Avenue after storms ripped through the area on Friday in Sherwood, Arkansas.

    About 78 miles southeast of there, several businesses were “basically destroyed,” Sheriff Jack Campbell told CNN, and up to 40 homes were damaged around Sherman, less than 10 miles north of Springfield.

    Nearly 300,000 homes and businesses were in the dark early Saturday across Indiana, Illinois, Arkansas and Tennessee, with about one-third of the outages reported in Indiana, according to the tracking website PowerOutage.us.

    In Arkansas, Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders declared a state of emergency, noting the state will “spare no resource” in responding and recovering from the storm and activated the state’s National Guard.

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  • 5 killed after small plane crashes in Arkansas

    5 killed after small plane crashes in Arkansas

    5 killed after small plane crashes in Arkansas – CBS News


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    Officials in Little Rock, Arkansas, are investigating the cause of a plane crash that killed all five people on board. Those killed all worked for the same consulting firm.

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  • Little Rock turns back NAIA-member Arkansas Baptist 71-60

    Little Rock turns back NAIA-member Arkansas Baptist 71-60

    LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Nigel John had 16 points, DeAntoni Gordon scored 14 and Myron Gardner added a double-double as Little Rock turned back NAIA-member Arkansas Baptist 71-60 on Thursday.

    Gardner finished with 11 points and 13 rebounds for the Trojans (1-1). Freshman Chris Walker came off the bench to score 12.

    Kendric Robinson paced the Buffaloes with 16 points and eight rebounds. Brandon Williams and Joshua Williams both scored 10.

    Little Rock had a 52-39 edge in rebounds and made seven more foul shots than the Buffaloes.

    ——

    More AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball and https://twitter.com/AP—Top25

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  • Deadly year could imperil Little Rock mayor’s reelection bid

    Deadly year could imperil Little Rock mayor’s reelection bid

    LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Frank Scott became Little Rock’s first popularly elected Black mayor four years ago on campaign promises to unite a city long divided along racial lines.

    But a deadly year in Arkansas’ capital, criticism of his management and attacks from Republicans are threatening reelection chances for Scott, a rare high-profile Democrat in this solidly red state. His reelection bid is one of the few competitive races on the ballot in Arkansas, where Republicans are heavily favored in statewide and congressional matchups.

    “This race is very simple: do you want to go backward to a horrid past, or do you want to continue growing forward?” Scott told supporters before he cast his ballot during early voting.

    Scott’s election in 2018 was a landmark for a city long known for the 1957 desegregation of Little Rock Central High School, when nine Black students were escorted into the school in front of an angry white mob. The city remains racially divided, with whites making up about half of Little Rock’s population.

    Little Rock’s mayoral race is nonpartisan. But Scott is running in a midterm election where violent crime has become a pivotal issue nationwide, with Republicans eager to paint Democratic mayors as unable to protect their cities.

    In neighboring Texas, the top elected official in reliably Democratic Harris County — home to Houston — also faces such criticism. Crime dominates advertising by GOP candidates in some of the most competitive Senate and governor’s races across the country.

    Scott’s chief rival in the race is Steve Landers, a retired car dealer who regularly cites the city’s spiraling homicide rate in campaign appearances and materials. Little Rock so far this year has reported at least 71 homicides, surpassing the record the city reached in 1993.

    “People want a change in our city. Our city is dangerous,” Landers said.

    Landers calls himself an independent who’s voted for Democrats and Republicans. Federal Election Commission records show he’s donated to several Republican candidates and the state GOP in recent years, but also to some Democrats. He’s outspent Scott’s campaign, and loaned $400,000 to his bid, according to fundraising reports filed last week.

    The other candidates running are Greg Henderson, a local businessman who publishes a food blog, and Glen Schwarz, a longtime marijuana legalization advocate. All three challengers are white.

    Scott, a former member of the state highway commission, became Little Rock’s first elected Black mayor in a runoff election. Little Rock previously had two Black mayors, but they were chosen for the job by fellow city board members and not by voters.

    Scott had the backing of Democratic and Republican figures four years ago when he led a campaign that sought to bridge the city’s biggest divides: race, income and geography.

    The homicide rate and some stumbles at City Hall, however, have since drawn the involvement of Republican-backed groups. They include one campaign that’s been supported by former Gov. Mike Huckabee’s political action committee.

    Crime in Little Rock is also factoring into other races in the state.

    An ad by Republican gubernatorial hopeful Sarah Sanders — the former White House press secretary and Huckabee’s daughter — mentions the city’s violent crime.

    Scott has blasted the former governor’s involvement in the race, with one mailer warning voters, “do not let Mike Huckabee bring Donald Trump policies to Little Rock.”

    Political observers say the Republican attacks could backfire.

    “This adds a new dimension to it, this has in essence become a partisan race and there are a lot of Democrats in Little Rock,” said Skip Rutherford, a former chairman of the state Democratic Party.

    Since the GOP-backed groups’ involvement, Scott’s campaign has rolled out endorsements from high profile Democrats and groups, such as retired Gen. Wesley Clark and Planned Parenthood Great Plains Votes. He’s also been endorsed by some of the Black students who integrated Central High.

    Scott has defended his handling of crime, noting that Little Rock’s overall violent crime rate is down compared to the same period last year.

    The mayor and police have said this year’s homicide spike, unlike what the city saw in the early 1990s, isn’t driven by gang activity but by domestic violence or crime between acquaintances. In a statement over the weekend, he said the city has put social workers in the field, funded conflict resolution programs for at-risk youth and targeted patrols in high-crime areas of the city.

    Scott’s woes are compounded by criticism of his management of City Hall, including an art and music festival he championed that was abruptly canceled days before it was to take place. The city’s manager canceled Little Rock’s contract with an outside firm that was organizing the festival following questions about the financial arrangement with the firm.

    The city’s police chief, who Scott hired, retired in May after a rocky three years marked by lawsuits and clashes with officers. Little Rock also faces criticism about a lack of transparency, prompting the local prosecutor to vent frustration last week about the number of Freedom of Information Act complaints he’s received about the city.

    In his reelection bid, Scott has touted the city landing economic development deals, including an Amazon delivery station and warehouse.

    “Little Rock has an opportunity to be a catalyst for the new South,” Scott told The Associated Press in an interview earlier this year.

    Rachel Luckett, who cast a ballot for Scott during early voting, said she is concerned about crime but want to give the mayor another chance.

    “I think he’s handled it just as well as any other mayor that’s come through,” Luckett said. “It won’t change overnight.”

    ___

    Follow AP’s coverage of the elections at: https://apnews.com/hub/2022-midterm-elections.

    Check out https://apnews.com/hub/explaining-the-elections to learn more about the issues and factors at play in the 2022 midterm elections.

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  • Biker with backpack full of gasoline ignites when Arkansas trooper uses Taser during traffic stop

    Biker with backpack full of gasoline ignites when Arkansas trooper uses Taser during traffic stop

    An Arkansas motorcyclist carrying a gasoline-filled backpack was expected to survive after he was engulfed by a fireball when a state trooper used a Taser on him during a traffic stop, authorities said.

    The Oct. 13 traffic stop was captured on dramatic dashcam video provided Thursday to The Associated Press by Arkansas State Police.

    The video shows a trooper attempting to pull over a motorcycle driven by Christopher Gaylor, 38, of Alexander, Arkansas, because no license plate was visible on the motorcycle. A chase ensued with speeds approaching 100 mph until Gaylor jumped from his motorcycle in a residential area of North Little Rock, state police said.

    A second state trooper used a Taser on Gaylor and a fire immediately erupted. State police said they later learned that Gaylor was carrying about 1 gallon of gasoline in his backpack.

    The video shows troopers extinguishing the blaze and providing medical care to Gaylor, who remains hospitalized but is expected to recover, state police said.

    He faces charges of felony fleeing, failure to register a vehicle, no liability insurance, driving with a suspended license and reckless driving. It was unclear whether he had an attorney to speak on his behalf.

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  • Suspect in Arkansas hospital shooting pleads not guilty

    Suspect in Arkansas hospital shooting pleads not guilty

    LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — An Arkansas man charged with fatally shooting a man visiting a patient at a Little Rock-area hospital pleaded not guilty Thursday to capital murder and aggravated assault.

    A judge set bond at $500,000 for Raymond Lovett, 24, during a brief video arraignment. Lovett was arrested Wednesday in the shooting death of Leighton Whitfield at CHI St. Vincent North in Sherwood, a city of about 33,000 people northeast of Little Rock.

    The hospital was placed on lockdown as authorities responded to the shooting, and Whitfield was found shot dead on the fourth floor of the facility. Lovett was arrested a little over an hour later at a gas station in Little Rock, about 15 miles away from the hospital.

    Police have said the men knew each other and that Whitfield was visiting a patient at the hospital. Lovett’s next court appearance is set for Nov. 8.

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