Off-duty pilot accused of trying to cut the engines on a jet midflight charged with attempted murder
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:53:58 GMT
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Oregon prosecutors on Tuesday charged an off-duty pilot accused of trying to cut the engines on a Horizon Air jet in mid-air with 83 counts of attempted murder.The Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office in Portland filed the charges just before Alaska Airlines pilot Joseph David Emerson, 44, was due to appear in court for an arraignment.THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — An off-duty commercial pilot riding in an extra cockpit seat on a Horizon Air flight said “I’m not OK” just before trying to cut the engines midflight and later told police he had recently taken psychedelic mushrooms as his mental health worsened, according to a federal complaint made public Tuesday.It was not immediately clear from the court document if 44-year-old Joseph David Emerson was high on mushrooms when he was on the plane; in a written statement, Alaska Airlines, which owns Horizon, said neither the gate agents nor flight crew ...Man accused of punching elderly tourist in Miami Beach, threatening bystanders with a knife
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:53:58 GMT
A 47-year-old man was arrested after allegedly punching a 73-year-old Brazilian tourist in the nose in Miami Beach.According to the arrest report, officers responded to a disturbance in the 100 block of Lincoln Road on Monday, Oct. 23 after reports of a man, identified as Buck Jones, who is homeless, wearing a pink shirt and riding a gray bike with a wheeled cart, yelling at bystanders and blocking the sidewalk. The victim and his son, who were witnesses, reported that they attempted to walk around Jones. However, Jones followed them, crossed their path, and allegedly punched the elderly victim in the nose without apparent provocation. Subsequently, Jones fled the scene southbound on Collins Avenue, prompting a BOLO alert.While officers were conducting a canvas of the area, dispatch alerted them to another disturbance at 324 Lincoln Road, where a man matching Jones’ description was reportedly threatening bystanders with a knife. Officers detained the individual, and the victim...Massive search effort for Gardner man wanted in connection with wife’s death continues in heavily-wooded area
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:53:58 GMT
State and local police continued to pour through a heavily-wooded area between Gardner and Ashburnham on Tuesday as the search for a suspect wanted in connection with his wife’s death continues.For a third day, authorities looked for Aaron Pennington, who is being sought in connection with the homicide death of his wife, Breanne.Heavily-armed officers and police dogs could be seen operating in the area of Camp Collier on Tuesday, where Pennington’s vehicle was found the night before.“We are operating under the assumption that Mr. Pennington is still alive and on the run,” Gardner Police Chief Eric McAvene told reporters during a news conference.The 33-year-old has been missing since Sunday morning, when police responded to a home on Cherry Street and found Breanne Pennington, 30, dead in the couple’s house, having suffered a gunshot wound to the face.Authorities were first notified after the couple’s children ran to a nearby home, leading to a nei...Gloucester woman speaks out after police identify mother found dead in Florida in 1984
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:53:58 GMT
DNA technology has allowed police in Florida to identify a woman killed four decades ago. The victim’s daughter is from Gloucester and met with police on Tuesday. Now, Maehgan Smith will get to lay her mother to rest.“I think the feeling of even picking up her remains thinking ‘I probably haven’t touched any part of her in 41 years’ is a little surreal feeling,” Smith said. Smith’s mother, Lori Kearsey, was found dead in a canal in Davie, Florida in February of 1984. Kearsey’s body had gone unidentified for decades until local police reopened the cold case. As their investigation continued, Davie Police Sgt. Kevin Urbaez said authorities were able to locate Smith using DNA from bone fragments. “I was so overwhelmed because I resigned myself to the fact that I thought I would probably never know what happened to her,” Smith said. Smith was a small child when Kearsey went missing. Her parents were divorced at the time and she said Kearsey, then 23, had re...End of Week Warm Up
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:53:58 GMT
If you were up and about before sunrise this morning, it was chilly! Temperatures fell to the 30s in spots and where you get below 35°, some frost was possible. The only location to actually freeze, however, was Jaffrey. For most of us, the wait for the first fall freeze continues.Today was a typical October day, but the difference from yesterday was all about the wind. While temperatures were similar, we had a brisk northwest wind yesterday versus a warmer southwest wind today. And that southwest wind will start to usher in warmer air as soon as tonight. You’ll notice that tomorrow morning isn’t even close to as cool as this morning was.Tomorrow is the beginning of our warm stretch with temperatures heading to the lower 70s.And it gets even warmer! The 70s will stick with us through the first half of the weekend before heading back to reality on Sunday.After the Maui fire, some Hawaiians rethink aloha spirit. Is it for tourists, family, everyone?
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:53:58 GMT
Jenny Jarvie | (TNS) Los Angeles TimesLAHAINA, Hawaii — Paele Kiakona is not ready to go back to work. Still reeling after August wildfires ravaged his hometown of Lahaina, he doesn’t want to serve tourists, pouring brut champagne or topping their mai tais with honey-liliko’i foam.“I’ve seen people dead on the street,” Kiakona said. “My grandma’s house is gone. My whole town died.”The 28-year-old Hawaii native who worked as a bartender at a farm-to-table restaurant north of Lahaina is wary of fielding questions, including what he says is now the ultimate dreaded icebreaker: “Did you lose your house in the fire?”In this moment, he said, visitors aren’t the ones who need his care.“Our aloha is reserved for our family right now,” Kiakona said. “It’s not just endless aloha.”Hawaii is famous for its “aloha spirit,” a concept rooted in Native Hawaiian culture that long ago was commo...Abortion coverage is limited or unavailable at a quarter of large workplaces
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:53:58 GMT
By Rachana Pradhan, KFF Health NewsAbout a quarter of large U.S. employers heavily restrict coverage of legal abortions or don’t cover them at all under health plans for their workers, according to the latest employer health benefits survey by KFF.The findings demonstrate another realm, beyond state laws, in which access to abortion care varies widely across America since the Supreme Court overturned the constitutional right to abortion last year in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization.More than ever, where someone works and the constraints of their health insurance can determine whether an abortion is possible. Workers without coverage are left to pay out-of-pocket for abortion care and related costs.In 2021, the median costs for people paying out-of-pocket in the first trimester were $568 for a medication abortion and $625 for an abortion procedure, according to a report from Advancing New Standards in Reproductive Health at the University of California-San Francisco. By t...Health care ‘game-changer’? Feds boost care for homeless Americans
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:53:58 GMT
By Angela Hart, KFF Health NewsThe Biden administration is making it easier for doctors and nurses to treat homeless people wherever they find them, from creekside encampments to freeway underpasses, marking a fundamental shift in how — and where — health care is delivered.As of Oct. 1, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services began allowing public and private insurers to pay “street medicine” providers for medical services they deliver anyplace homeless people might be staying.Previously, these providers weren’t getting paid by most Medicaid programs, which serve low-income people, because the services weren’t delivered in traditional medical facilities, such as hospitals and clinics.The change comes in response to the swelling number of homeless people across the country, and the skyrocketing number of people who need intensive addiction and mental health treatment — in addition to medical care for wounds, pregnancy, and chronic diseases like diabetes.“It’s a game-changer....What to know about the Chicago Bulls roster — and the expectations for the 2023-24 NBA season
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:53:58 GMT
The Chicago Bulls open the 2023-24 NBA season Wednesday against the Oklahoma City Thunder at the United Center (7 p.m., NBCSCH).After losing their second play-in tournament game to miss the playoffs last season, the Bulls have set a goal to advance past the first round of the postseason. That would be a critical milestone to reach in their third season centered around Zach LaVine, Nikola Vučević and DeMar DeRozan.Here’s what to know about the roster and expectations for this season’s team.What should fans expect from the 2023-24 season?Starting lineupCoby White, point guardZach LaVine, shooting guardDeMar DeRozan, small forwardPatrick Williams, power forwardNikola Vučević, centerAreas of improvementThe Bulls have targeted three areas of their offense to improve — 3-point volume, free-throw attempts and offensive rebounds — all of which hinge on their ability to get into the paint. They were a bottom-five team in all three categories last s...‘The Royal Hotel’ review: In this triumph of tension, check in at your peril
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 16:53:58 GMT
Michael Phillips | Chicago TribuneIn “The Royal Hotel,” director Kitty Green’s gripping, grubby Australian Outback noir, the Royal Hotel is a comically unregal place lit by the dead glare of fluorescent lights, dotted with predatory eyes lurking in the shadows.The eyes belong to the men working for the local mining company. At this remote, two-story dump in the middle of nowhere — part saloon, part boarding house for temporary workers — two American women arrive to make some quick money behind the bar. Sensible and wary Hanna, played by Julia Garner, and her more reckless, up-for-anything friend Liv, played by Jessica Henwick, (both superb) realize very quickly that they’ll be putting up with trash talk, harassment, uncertain pay schedules and worse.They’re expected by the owner of the Royal, the frequently drunk Billy (Hugo Weaving, a long, shaggy way from “The Matrix”), to perform the usual female paradox while they’re there and the customers are thirsty: Shut up, take it and smil...Latest news
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