Trapper removes gator found floating in Weston family’s swimming pool
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:49:54 GMT
A Weston family woke up to find a sneaky intruder in their swimming pool.Pictures showed an alligator, seemingly unbothered, floating in the water, Monday morning.Speaking with 7News on Thursday, the homeowner said he thinks the large reptile crawled into the pool area through a hole in the mesh screen enclosure.The homeowner said he didn’t know what to do, so he called 911.A professional trapper came and, after some resistance from the unwelcome guest, was able to remove the gator from the residence.US Navy detected an implosion Sunday and relayed information to Titanic-bound submersible search efforts, official says
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:49:54 GMT
(CNN) — The US Navy detected an acoustic signature consistent with an implosion on Sunday in the general area where the Titanic-bound submersible was diving when it lost communication with its mother ship, a senior Navy official told CNN Thursday.The Navy then immediately relayed that information to the on-scene commanders leading the search effort, and it was used to narrow down the area of the search, the official said.But the sound of the implosion was determined to be “not definitive,” the official said, and the multinational efforts to find the submersible continued as a search and rescue effort. “Any chance of saving a life is worth continuing the mission,” the official said. The Wall Street Journal was first to report about the acoustic signature picked up by the Navy.That insight comes the same day the US Coast Guard announced the submersible suffered a “catastrophic implosion,” killing all five people on board.The tail cone and other debri...Live updates | US Navy acoustic system detected ‘anomaly’ that was likely implosion, official says
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:49:54 GMT
By The Associated PressFollow along for live updates on the submersible that vanished while taking five people down to the wreck of the Titanic.___US NAVY ACOUSTIC SYSTEM DETECTED ‘ANOMALY’ THAT WAS LIKELY IMPLOSION, OFFICIAL SAYSA U.S. Navy acoustic system detected an ‘anomaly’ Sunday that was likely the Titan’s fatal implosion, according to a senior military official.The Navy went back and analyzed its acoustic data after the Titan submersible was reported missing Sunday. Coast Guard officials on Thursday announced that the craft suffered a catastrophic implosion, killing all five aboard.That anomaly was “consistent with an implosion or explosion in the general vicinity of where the TITAN submersible was operating when communications were lost,” according to a senior Navy official.The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive acoustic detection system.The Navy passed on the information to the Coast Guard, which contin...Ticker: US safety agency to require automatic emergency braking on heavy trucks
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:49:54 GMT
The government will require heavy trucks and buses to include automatic emergency braking equipment within five years, the federal traffic safety agency said Thursday, estimating it will prevent nearly 20,000 crashes and save at least 155 lives a year.The announcement by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration follows a similar move last month for all new passenger cars and light trucks. The actions represent the traffic safety agency’s latest efforts to regulate electronic systems that take on certain tasks that drivers themselves have normally handled. NHTSA has been reluctant in the past to impose such regulations, saying the technology would change during the time it took to enact new rules.Sinema cites bill targeting leaders of failed banks after criticism of her Wall Street tieArizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, the Democratic defector turned independent who’s been criticized as too closely aligned with Wall Street interests, took credit Thursday for helping broker l...Judge blocks Wyoming’s 1st-in-the-nation abortion pill ban while court decides lawsuit
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:49:54 GMT
By MEAD GRUVER (Associated Press)CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — Abortion pills will remain legal in Wyoming for now, after a judge ruled Thursday that the state’s first-in-the-nation law to ban them won’t take effect July 1 as planned while a lawsuit proceeds.Attorneys for Wyoming failed to show that the ban wouldn’t harm the plaintiffs before their lawsuit is resolved, Teton County Judge Melissa Owens ruled after hearing arguments from both sides. Meanwhile, those plaintiffs “have clearly showed probable success on the merits,” Owens said.While other states have instituted de facto bans on the medication by broadly prohibiting abortion, only Wyoming has specifically banned abortion pills. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in April that access to one of the two pills, mifepristone, may continue while litigants seek to overturn the Food and Drug Administration’s approval of it.Wyoming’s pill ban is being challenged by four women, including two obstet...Man without a driver’s license drove through crowd headed to Chicago White Sox game, prosecutors say
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:49:54 GMT
Prosecutors on Thursday said that a 20-year-old man who was never issued a driver’s license and was once accused of fleeing police at a traffic stop plowed through a crowd of people crossing the street to head into Guaranteed Rate Field.Condelarious Garcia faces four counts of aggravated reckless driving, along with misdemeanor driving on a suspended license and three traffic citations for the Tuesday night collision steps from the stadium in the 300 block of West 35th Street.Authorities said Garcia was behind the wheel of the silver Acura sedan that severely injured four pedestrians crossing 35th Street to the park entrance around 6:30 p.m. A 64-year-old man, was tossed headfirst into the Acura’s sunroof, prosecutors said.“(Garcia) displays a wanton disregard for other individuals. The fact that his flight was more important than the safety of the individual lodged in his sunroof, or the safety of the people in the car with him,” said Judge Charles Beach II ...Accused Cape Verdean killer tried to renew US passport while on the run, feds say
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:49:54 GMT
A Brockton man faces up to a decade in prison as feds say he applied for a new U.S. passport at an overseas embassy while he was on the run for murder charges in Cape Verde, but lying that he had lost it during Christmas dinner.Johnny Brandao, 40, a dual citizen of the U.S. and Cape Verde, was indicted on one count of passport fraud this week after having previously been charged with criminal complaint for the same offense on May 7, for which he was arrested two days later. He will appear in federal court in Boston on the charge at an unscheduled date.“It is alleged that on March 27, 2014, together with another defendant, Brandao shot an individual in the head using a .45 caliber revolver, took one million and five hundred thousand Cape Verdean Escudo, and then dumped the victim’s body on the side of the road,” Special Agent Daniel Starr of the Department of State’s Diplomatic Security Service wrote in a May 7 affidavit supporting the charges.“It is further alleged that on July 26, ...Serial thief gets 7 years for robbing Hyde Park bank with BB gun
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:49:54 GMT
A Hyde Park man with a significant history of robbery will spend seven years in prison for robbing a neighborhood bank of about $13,600 with just a BB gun.Paul Whooten, 59, pleaded guilty in federal court in Boston to one count of armed bank robbery back in January and on Wednesday was sentenced to seven years in prison to be followed by five years of supervised release.“Give me all your money,” Whooten allegedly told a Hyde Park Rockland Trust Bank four days before Christmas in 2019. He carried what appeared to be an assault-style rifle and was decked out in a distinctive outfit of a long, cark coat over a yellow and black reflective jacket with a bright yellow hood, as well as sunglasses, a black knit cap, a mask and gloves.Whooten walked out of the bank with $13,603 from the till. A Boston Police officer stationed inside the bank broadcasted Whooten’s description and the direction he fled, and he was soon — mere “minutes later” according to the defense’s sentencing memo — found b...Big names in fashion, tech, entertainment rub shoulders at White House dinner for India’s Modi
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:49:54 GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — Titans of business, fashion, entertainment and more made the guest list for Thursday’s big White House dinner in honor of India’s Narendra Modi, with the likes of designer Ralph Lauren, filmmaker M. Night Shyamalan and tennis legend Billie Jean King rubbing shoulders with tech leaders from Apple, Google and Microsoft.Shyamalan powered past reporters as he arrived, declaring it “lovely” to be at the White House. Lauren, who paired his tuxedo with gray New Balance sneakers, revealed he’d designed first lady Jill Biden’s off-shoulder green gown, calling her style “chic and elegant.” And violinist Joshua Bell, part of the after-dinner entertainment, said the evening was a “little different than anything I’ve done before.”“I’ll skip out and practice for half an hour” during dinner, Bell said. He said he wished he could perform first and then have some wine. Saris — some thoroughly modern and including a Barbiecore hot pink one — and sequins were prominent am...2.5M Genworth policyholders and 769K retired California workers and beneficiaries affected by hack
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 13:49:54 GMT
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — The country’s largest public pension fund says the personal information of about 769,000 retired California employees and other beneficiaries — including Social Security numbers — was among data stolen by Russian cybercriminals in the breach of a popular file-transfer application.It blamed the breach on a third-party vendor that verifies deaths. The same vendor, PBI Research Services/Berwyn Group, also lost the personal data of at least 2.5 million Genworth Financial policyholders, including Social Security numbers, to the same criminal gang, according to the Fortune 500 insurer.The California Public Employees Reitrement system said they were offering affected members two years of free credit monitoring. Genworth said in a statement posted online it would offer credit monitoring and ID theft protection.The breach of the MOVEit file-transfer program, discovered last month, is estimated by cybersecurity experts to have compromised hundreds of organizati...Latest news
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