Woman arrested in double scissor stabbing in Dupont Circle
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 08:30:43 GMT
Police have arrested a woman who randomly attacked two men with scissors in Dupont Circle on Friday night.D.C. police announced Monday that they had 35-year-old Mary Nelson Kennedy in custody and had charged her with assault with a dangerous weapon for the attack.Around 7:30 p.m. on Friday night, Nelson Kennedy allegedly stabbed one of the men in the back of the neck.According to a police report obtained by WTOP, the first victim said he was walking in the 2100 block of P Street when he felt a “heavy punch” in the back of his neck.The first victim said he then saw Nelson Kennedy approach a man sitting at a bus stop and stab him in the neck before taking off running. The second victim was transported to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.Police said she was later arrested by a Secret Service officer.WTOP’s Kate Corliss contributed to this report.SourceDenver man hit by trailer thieves for a second time
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 08:30:43 GMT
DENVER (KDVR) — A southwest Denver man said he is the victim of a stolen trailer — for a second time.Rick, who did not want to give out his last name, said both his Ford F-550 and deck-over trailer were stolen from outside his Zenobia Street home on July 11. Photos: Boat catches fire on the water at Chatfield Reservoir “I woke up, looked at the (security) cameras and noticed my truck wasn’t there,” he said. “I thought maybe I was still sleeping.”Surveillance video shows the thieves breaking into the truck. Rick said they even cut through an anti-theft device, known as "the club." Authorities have since recovered the truck.Rick said he had another trailer stolen, from in front of the same house, back in 2018.That trailer was never recovered. ‘Where’s Moochi?’: 900-pound water buffalo missing in Colorado A landscaper, Rick said his most recent trailer is essential to his livelihood. A landscaper's trailer was stolen from outside his Denver home on Zenobia Street.“It’s kinda hard ...Denver weather: Good chances for rain to reduce the heat
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 08:30:43 GMT
DENVER (KDVR) — Denver's weather added another 90-degree day to start the work week. At 2:17 p.m., the National Weather Service reported a record-breaking high temperature. The hottest Aug. 21 temperature on record was 97 degrees in 2007. Monday, 99 degrees was recorded at Denver International Airport, according to NWS.It will stay hot, dry and breezy for a few more days. That will be followed by a good chance for rain by the end of the week and into the weekend, according to Pinpoint Weather, Colorado's Most Accurate Forecast.Possible rain totals from Friday through Sunday across ColoradoWeather tonight: Warm and breezySkies will remain mostly clear across Colorado during the overnight hours. It will also stay breezy with southerly winds between 10-20 mph at times. Denver will have another warm night. The average overnight low in the city is in the upper 50s. The temperature will be about 10 degrees warmer, with forecast lows in the upper 60s.Overnight forecast lows by Tuesday...Watch: Rare sighting of mountain lion swimming across Eagle River
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 08:30:43 GMT
DENVER (KDVR) -- Mountain lion sightings are rare, but a Jeep tour company based in Vail recently got that experience.People rarely catch more than a brief glimpse of a mountain lion in the wild as they tend to live in remote areas, like mountain subdivisions where deer and elk are abundant, according to Colorado Parks and Wildlife. Why bears in Colorado like trash Not only did Vail 4x4 Tours watch as the mountain lion swam across the Eagle River, but they caught it on video and shared the sighting with FOX31 so viewers could see it too.Ben Hilley, the owner of Vail 4x4 Tours, told FOX31 they see all kinds of wildlife on tours as they often go through the most remote trails in the Vail Valley. He said they see elk, mule deer, black bears, bighorn sheep and more in the wild, but rarely do they see a mountain lion."Over the past 15 years and thousands of hours on trail, I've seen two. I even tell our guests, they are there but we won't see them. This sighting was truly a once-in-a-l...Pembroke Pines town hall meeting held to discuss garbage incineration as landfills become major issue in city
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 08:30:43 GMT
Dozens of Pembroke Pines residents weighed in during a town hall meeting on Monday, worried about perceived plans for a new garbage incinerator in Broward County, despite there being no plans in place yet to build one.City officials and county officials said there is a big issue of garbage in the county, in which millions of pounds of trash are sent to landfills. A questions and answer session occasionally turned heated as Pembroke Pines residents wanted to know if a garbage incinerator is coming to their city, specifically near U.S. 27 and Sheridan Street. “When I got the notice for this my reaction was, ‘What incinerator project?'” said Assistant County Administrator Kevin Kelleher. That’s because officials said there is no plan, at least not yet. But they do need to figure out a way to deal with the county’s annual four million tons of garbage added to landfills.“Twelve million gallons of garbage juice every year that comes out of the landfill,...Trump says he will turn himself in to prosecutors in Atlanta on Thursday
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 08:30:43 GMT
Former President Donald Trump will turn himself in to prosecutors in Atlanta on Thursday, he said on Monday, after he was indicted by a Georgia grand jury last week on racketeering charges related to his efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election in that state.“I’ll be going to Atlanta, Georgia, on Thursday to be ARRESTED,” Trump wrote on Truth Social on Monday night, calling the case a “WITCH HUNT” and attacking Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, who led the investigation into Trump and his allies.Willis indicated last week that all 19 defendants charged in the indictment had until Friday to surrender to prosecutors for booking. Former Trump lawyer John Eastman is slated to be booked on Wednesday, according to court filings in his California disbarment proceedings.The Fulton County district attorney’s office did not immediately respond to a request to confirm the timing of Trump’s booking.Earlier on Monday, Trump’s attorneys signed an order setting his bond a...Facing threat of Trump’s return, Ukrainians ramp up homegrown arms industry
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 08:30:43 GMT
KYIV — Ukraine’s long-range Beaver drones seem to be making successful kamikaze strikes in the heart of Moscow, but Serhiy Prytula is coy about how much he knows.“We are not sure whether we are involved in this,” he says with a charming but inscrutable smile, when asked about these mysterious new weapons. Prytula rose to fame — just like President Volodymyr Zelenskyy — as an actor, TV star and comedian, but is now best known for his contribution to the war, running a foundation that acquires components, helps support domestic arms production and supplies front-line forces. Tracking down parts for drones has proved to be one of his fortes. Whether or not Prytula played any role in finding parts for the Beaver, it has now joined the ranks of other homegrown creations such as the Shark, Leleka and Valkyrie.From the outside, his foundation looks like any other nondescript five-story apartment block in the quiet side streets of Kyiv. Inside, it is a chaoti...Editorial: Boston polls high for safety – now to keep it that way
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 08:30:43 GMT
Boston is a world-class city, with a rich history, thriving food scene, top-tier museums, great attractions, shopping and entertainment in an eminently accessible 48 square miles.It’s no wonder we play host to some 22.7 million visitors a year (that’s how many visited in 2019, according to the Greater Boston Convention and Visitors Bureau).We’ve got something else going for us: a new Gallup poll finds Americans consider Boston a safe place to live in or visit (a whopping 72%).We need to keep it that way, or else we could wind up like Chicago, which a mere 27% consider safe.The Boston that visitors see, in general, are the parts that make the postcards: the North End, Back Bay, Public Garden, the well-kept streets from Beacon Hill and the bustle of the Seaport.Neighborhoods plagued by gun violence and drug addiction aren’t on the walking tours.If they polled residents that live in fear of street shootings, or businesses along Mass and Cass, we’re sure th...Arcuri: The IRS shouldn’t prepare our taxes
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 08:30:43 GMT
As a former member of Congress who always made protecting Main Street’s interests a priority, I couldn’t be more concerned with the Internal Revenue Service’s recent launch of Direct File. This pilot program will have the agency preparing the taxes of select Americans making under $125,000.Over the years, the legislative branch has subjected the IRS to significant budget cuts. Despite modest increases in the last few years, the agency’s congressional credit line has remained nearly 20% below where it was in 2010 when adjusted for inflation.The IRS promised Congress it would begin going after wealthy tax evaders if it upped this funding allotment. Congress obliged, providing the agency with $80 billion in funding in the Inflation Reduction Act.But now, with the launch of Direct File, the IRS again finds itself focusing on low- and middle-income Americans. This is disappointing but not surprising. For decades, the IRS has favored targeting Main Street.A Syracuse University study of 2...Rickey Hill’s MLB dream hits the big screen
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 08:30:43 GMT
Rickey Hill traveled a rocky road before he could see his childhood dream become a big-screen reality.As his story is told in Friday’s “The Hill,” being dirt poor in Texas was the least of the obstacles this athletic prodigy had to overcome before he could play Major League Baseball.“The Hill” stars Dennis Quaid as Rickey’s devout preacher dad, Scott Glenn as the influential baseball scout who decides Rickey’s fate and Colin Ford is teenage Rickey.Hill’s first hurdle was being born with a degenerative spinal disease; he could only walk with heavy leg braces. Then his dad, spectacularly unsupportive of his son’s most cherished dream, never attending any of his baseball games, decreed that Rickey would become a minister just like him.Rickey’s uncanny gift as a hitter derailed that plan. “At nine years old I’d never owned a ball,” Hill, 67, said in a phone interview. His brother would pitch a rock and Rickey hit it with a stick.“I just took my braces off. I was done with those t...Latest news
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