Albany man arrested for DWI, drug possession
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 08:07:57 GMT
WESTERLO, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- On Sunday evening, an Albany man was taken into custody following a welfare check at the Basic Creek Reservoir. According to the police, Deweyun D. Mccall, 39, was found slumped over and lethargic in the driver's seat of a vehicle. Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! Police say Mccall was uncooperative and tried to consume and destroy a controlled substance. EMS evaluated Mccall before he was transported to police barracks for processing. Mccall recorded a 0.19% BAC.Mccall was charged with Tampering with Physical Evidence, Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance in the Seventh Degree, Obstructing Governmental Administration in the Second Degree, Aggravated Driving While Intoxicated, and other Vehicle and Traffic Law violations. He was arraigned at the Westerlo Town Court and remanded to the Albany County Correctional Facility without bail.Albany Dutchmen down Dragons 13-2
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 08:07:57 GMT
ALTAMONT, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- The Perfect Game Collegiate Baseball League season is underway. The Albany Dutchmen (2-2) and Glens Falls Dragons (1-1) entered their meeting on Monday with .500 records in the young season. Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! The Dragons struck first in the top of the first after an RBI base hit from Mechanicville native Jack Griffin. The Dutchmen responded in the bottom of the frame. The Dutchmen scored their first 4 runs without a hit thanks to walks, an error, and three batters hit by pitches. A two-RBI double from Mike Talavera made it 6-1 Albany after one. The Dutchmen ran away with it from there, winning 13-2 to improve to 3-2 on the season. The Dragons dropped to 1-2 on the year.Cardinals dead last in NL again, a spot they haven't finished in a century-plus
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 08:07:57 GMT
ARLINGTON, Tex. - The St. Louis Cardinals once again find themselves in the basement of the National League. The Cardinals fell to 25-36 on Monday after their fourth consecutive loss and their seventh defeat in their last nine games. The Cardinals briefly escaped the misfortune of the National League's worst record in mid-May, but dug themselves into that hole again after being swept by the Pittsburgh Pirates on Sunday. A walkoff loss Monday to the Texas Rangers set them back even more. With more than one-third of the Major League Baseball season complete, only the Kansas City Royals (18-42) and the Oakland Athletics (12-50) has worse records in all of baseball. Missouri governor denies clemency for man facing execution today Throughout franchise history, it's not too often the Cardinals find themselves at the bottom of the National League this deep into a season. It's even rarer that it leads to the Cardinals finishing a campaign dead last in the NL. The Cardinals are risking s...Queens of the Stone Age to play Saint Louis Music Park in September
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 08:07:57 GMT
ST. LOUIS - The Queens of the Stone Age are coming to St. Louis this September, and tickets for the late-summer concert go on sale this Friday morning.The California-based hard rock band formed in 1996 but hit it big with their third studio album, "Songs for the Deaf," featuring the singles "No One Knows," "Go with the Flow," and "First It Giveth." The band embarks on a world tour beginning June 16, coinciding with the release of its eighth album, "In Times New Roman."The group comes to the Saint Louis Music Park on Saturday, Sept. 23, with special guests the Viagra Boys and Jehnny Beth.Tickets for the show go on sale at 10 a.m. on June 9 at the Saint Louis Music Park Box Office or online at Ticketmaster.com.Boulder district is changing how students receive language services, keeping English learners in the classroom
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 08:07:57 GMT
In Susan Tran’s first grade class in the Boulder Valley School District this past school year, she and a fellow teacher worked as a team — helping students focus on the language of math, breaking apart word problems and using words to compare, contrast, and describe different shapes.The two-teacher arrangement is part of changes the Boulder school district is rolling out in how students identified as English learners receive language services in elementary schools.Related ArticlesEducation | “Fearless” leader Jennifer Ho working to make systemic change at CU Boulder Education | Denver school board considering whether to rescind 2020 policy barring police on campuses Education | Denver school board set to revisit 2020 ban on armed police in schools Education | CU Boulder students look to slain Chicano activists as inspiration for ongoing equity fight Education | Former DPS superintendent Susa...Aurora police searching for missing 5-year-old find bag of charred remains in mother’s apartment
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 08:07:57 GMT
Aurora police investigating the disappearance of 5-year-old Maha Li Hobbs have concluded that her mother kept her in a closed room, and then tried to keep police from finding out about her death by lying about an adoption and burning her child’s remains, according to court documents.The police found charred remains in a plastic bag within a large shopping bag in a utility closet last week in the mother’s apartment at 1056 S. Elkhart Way, an 18th Judicial District affidavit states. Arapahoe County Coroner investigators on Tuesday had not identified the remains, but Aurora’s interim Police Chief Art Acevedo has said he is “highly confident” they will match to Maha Li.Maha Li’s mother Alexus Nelson, 27, was being held in the Arapahoe County Detention Center on Tuesday with no option to bond out, court authorities said. She was arrested on May 30 on charges of making false statements and now also faces charges of child abuse resulting in death, tampering wi...Unruly passenger incidents on airplanes up 47% last year worldwide
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 08:07:57 GMT
Terry Castleman | Los Angeles Times (TNS)With air travel recovering from the pandemic, a new study found that bad behavior among airline passengers has continued to rise.A new analysis by the International Air Transport Association shows that unruly passenger incidents on airplanes increased 47% from 2021 to 2022, from one incident per 835 flights to one incident per 568 flights.Though incidents of physical abuse often draw the most attention, the most common types of incidents were “non-compliance, verbal abuse and intoxication,” according to the report. Other misdeeds included bringing outside alcoholic drinks into the cabin, failing to wear a seat belt and packing too much baggage.Physical abuse incidents occurred on 1 in every 17,200 flights, a small fraction, but still an increase of 61% over the prior year. By comparison, the odds of a person being struck by lightning in their lifetime are 1 in 15,300, according to the National Weather Service.The rise of incidents...Editorial: Let Jor’Dell Richardson’s family see the video of Aurora police shooting the 14-year-old
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 08:07:57 GMT
Aurora’s interim police chief, Art Acevedo, should immediately invite the grieving family of Jor’Dell Da’Shawn Richardson into the police department to view the video recordings showing the events before, during and after an Aurora police officer shot and killed the 14-year-old.Acevedo’s attempt to describe the incident in a public briefing has left everyone confused about what transpired, and while video evidence isn’t guaranteed to offer clarity in the shooting, often the video helps a family move forward from such a devastating loss.Members of Richardson’s family visited police headquarters Monday to demand to see the video from both security cameras in the area and police officers’ body cameras, the latter of which is required by state law to be recorded during police responses and also required to be released. Police refused.Acevedo said that Richardson was part of a group of teens who robbed a small store that sold vape nicotine cartridges near Dayton and 8th Avenue in Aurora....More than 5,300 postal workers attacked by dogs while delivering mail in 2022: USPS
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 08:07:57 GMT
David Matthews | New York Daily News (TNS)More than 5,300 employees of the U.S. Postal Service were attacked by dogs while delivering mail in 2022, the agency said.The number represented a slight drop from 2021 when more than 5,400, and 2020 when more than 5,800 were attacked. Dog bites remain one of the chief occupational hazards for letter carriers.Dog bites can lead to a number of other health effects, including dangerous infections.The figures were announced as part of the agency’s annual National Dog Bite Awareness Week public service campaign, which runs from June 4 to June 10.“When letter carriers deliver mail in our communities, dogs that are not secured or leashed can become a nemesis and unpredictable and attack,” Leeann Theriault, USPS employee safety and health awareness manager, said. “Help us deliver your mail safely by keeping your dog secure and out of the way before your carrier arrives.”The theme of this year’s campaign: “Even good dogs have bad days.”The agency st...The Arctic will have ice-free summers as soon as the 2030s
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 08:07:57 GMT
By Danielle Bochove, BloombergEven in a best-case scenario, the Arctic will begin to experience summer months with no sea ice sometime around the middle of the century — sooner than leading climate scientists had predicted, new research finds.The United Nations-sponsored Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change suggested in its most recent landmark report that the region would start to see Septembers without sea ice around 2050 if humans continue to emit greenhouse gases at high or moderate levels. However, the new study, published Tuesday in Nature Communications, says this will happen even in a low-emissions scenario. Higher emissions will result in ice-free Septembers by 2030 to 2040.“We basically are saying that it has become too late to save the Arctic summer sea ice,” said Dirk Notz, an oceanographer at the University of Hamburg in Germany who specializes in sea ice and is one of the authors of the study, as well as an IPCC report author. “There’s nothing really we can ...Latest news
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