Man killed in officer-involved shooting near Plantation hotel, family seeks answers from police

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 09:35:07 GMT

Man killed in officer-involved shooting near Plantation hotel, family seeks answers from police A family is demanding answers after, investigators said, a police officer opened fire near a hotel in Plantation, killing a man.Plantation Police units responded to the scene of the shooting near the Plantation Inn Hotel & Lounge, located off North State Road 7, Saturday afternoon.Detectives said the man, who was later identified as Homea Spence, was shot by the officer and would not survive. Spence’s cousin identified herself as Valerie and said she awaited answers regarding the circumstances of the shooting.“What happened? That’s what we want to know; the cops are not giving us any answers,” she said. “We want justice, that’s what we want. We want justice for my cousin. His mother’s not here to fight for him, but I want justice for him.”Witnesses said that when they saw his body, he was still in handcuffs, but police have not confirmed this information.“I seen him in handcuffs when I came out,” said a witness.Police o...

WET WEATHER RETURNS

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 09:35:07 GMT

WET WEATHER RETURNS Happy Monday, South Florida!Hopefully everyone had a great weekend. After plenty of sunshine and lots of dry time, rain and thunderstorms moved across our area and left portions of South Florida flooded. The rain and thunderstorms popped up as a weak  front moved into our area. That same front continues to sag southward across our area, trapping moisture over us and keeping us quite cloudy this morning. We even saw showers moving in across our metro and coastal areas as the morning progressed. The good news is that this morning South Florida woke up to comfortable temperatures in the upper 60s and lower 70s.  The bad news is that showers will once again return to the forecast today.As mentioned above, showers will once again be a big part of our forecast today. The front that has taken its time to clear South Florida will eventually stall just south of our area.  And as winds veer off the water later today (out of the Northeast), we will see a better chance for rain as those winds ...

No injuries reported after firefighters extinguish blaze in Miami home

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 09:35:07 GMT

No injuries reported after firefighters extinguish blaze in Miami home The City of Miami Department of Fire-Rescue was dispatched to a house fire after reports of a person inside the building, but according to the resident, he and his wife were not home when the fire started and confirmed the house was not occupied.Around 7 p.m. on Sunday, firefighters arrived at the area of Northwest 64 Street and Eighth Avenue where they rushed into the smoke-filled structure. According to fire rescue reports, the entire house was packed with storage boxes from floor to ceiling.The combustible items found inside the home contributed to the blaze, which extended into the attic. No injuries were reported and the couple did not require the help of the Red Cross.Fire crews contained the flames to the house and no adjacent homes were affected.The cause of the fire is under investigation.

Moose on the loose feasts on lobby plants inside Alaska hospital

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 09:35:07 GMT

Moose on the loose feasts on lobby plants inside Alaska hospital A moose on the loose wandered into an Anchorage, Alaska hospital on Thursday and helped himself to the lobby plants. Officials say the moose set off the motion sensors on the front door of Providence Alaska and let himself in. “We received a call from one of our tenants advising that a moose had just walked into the building, and my security team and myself ended up heading over there to make sure we kept everyone safe,” said Randy Hughes, head of security at the hospital. Hughes said people inside the hospital were mostly intrigued and amused by the sight of the massive mammal.“It seemed like it was a magnet for people to come and see it,” Hughes said. “It’s not every day you get a moose walking into a building.”With the help of a few guards, the moose was guided toward the front of the building. After his meal, he went out the way he came in.“I think he had enough of everybody watching him eat,” Hughes said.Even after having hi...

Transit Police: 64-year-old sex offender arrested after allegedly ripping backs off Red Line seats, kicking train window

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 09:35:07 GMT

Transit Police: 64-year-old sex offender arrested after allegedly ripping backs off Red Line seats, kicking train window A 64-year-old Middleborough man was arrested Saturday night for allegedly ripping the backs off several Red Line seats and kicking the train window, according to MBTA Transit Police. Officers located the suspect on the platform at the Alewife station and took him into custody according to police. Police say the suspect also had a warrant for failure to register as a sex offender. No additional information has been released. https://twitter.com/MBTATransitPD/status/1645398121910763521

Sen. Blumenthal says femur surgery was ‘completely successful’

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 09:35:07 GMT

Sen. Blumenthal says femur surgery was ‘completely successful’ (CNN) — Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal said Sunday evening that surgery to repair a fracture in his femur was “completely successful” and that he’s planning to return to the Senate for votes “next week.”The Connecticut Democrat fractured his femur at a University of Connecticut men’s basketball victory parade held in honor of their NCAA championship win last week.“I just got out of surgery to repair the minor fracture to my upper femur. The surgery was completely successful and the staff, docs, and everyone here at Stamford Hospital has been magnificent,” Blumenthal tweeted, adding that he’s already started physical therapy.He had tweeted about his injury Saturday evening, replying to Sen. Chris Murphy, a fellow Connecticut Democrat who was also at the parade and tweeted that his colleague “FINISHED THE PARADE” after breaking his femur. “Most Dick Blumenthal thing ever,” Murph...

Cannabis company Phoena will wind down business under creditor protection

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 09:35:07 GMT

Cannabis company Phoena will wind down business under creditor protection Phoena Holdings Inc. plans to wind down its business and has obtained creditor protection for a second time.Documents filed with a Toronto court show the Vaughan, Ont. cannabis company previously called CannTrust Holdings Inc. is insolvent and plans to liquidate its assets. Ontario Superior Court Chief Justice Geoffrey Morawetz granted the company creditor protection last week.The company sought creditor protection because it needs the “breathing room and stability” offered by a Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act proceeding, interim chief executive Cornelis Pieter Melissen said in an affidavit.It is pursuing a wind down because it has been unable to revive its business and generate a profit since emerging from creditor protection in March 2022, after receiving $17 million in financing from a subsidiary of Netherlands-based private equity investment firm Kenzoll B.V. Melissen founded Kenzoll and took the helm of Phoena when former chief executive Greg Guyatt stepp...

English doctors’ strike could be catastrophic, official says

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 09:35:07 GMT

English doctors’ strike could be catastrophic, official says LONDON (AP) — Britain is bracing for a four-day walkout by tens of thousands of doctors at the state-funded health care system that one official warned Monday could be “catastrophic” and postpone up to 350,000 appointments.The strike due to start Tuesday by National Health Service doctors early in their careers comes amid walkouts by public workers across many sectors demanding pay hikes during a cost-of-living crisis. A three-day doctors’ strike last month crippled the system that has been trying to dig out of an appointment backlog that predates the pandemic and has led to longer waiting times to see a doctor.“These strikes are going to have a catastrophic impact on the capacity of the NHS to recover,” Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation, told Sky News. “The health service has to meet high levels of demand at the same time as making inroads into that huge backlog. … That’s a tough thing to do at the best of times — it’s impossible to do when ...

Will your kids fight in the ‘water wars’?

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 09:35:07 GMT

Will your kids fight in the ‘water wars’? In today’s Big Story podcast, a recent report found that by 2030 demand for water will outstrip the world’s supply by 40 per cent. In the United States, the Colorado River and other major sources of water are drying up. The number of droughts worldwide is skyrocketing. And Canada has a lot of water that other nations will someday soon not just want but badly need. Does this mean that wars over water are inevitable? Maybe not.The Big Story is joined today by Dr. Jay Famiglietti, a hydrologist, Global Futures Professor at Arizona State University, former Executive Director Emeritus of the Global Institute for Water Security at the University of Saskatchewan and the host of the What About Water podcast. He joins us to discuss all the things that make him feel anxious and optimistic about the future supply of potable on Earth.“Every nation wants to have its own food security and its own water security,” he said, “those political boundaries create a whole new set of constrain...

Academic coaches help students finish community college

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 09:35:07 GMT

Academic coaches help students finish community college PHENIX CITY, Ala. (AP) — A decade after dropping out, Briana Mathis, a 30-year-old mother of two, is navigating her first year back at Wallace Community College. She was recruited back to the school in Dothan, Alabama, by the staff at a new student support center. The same adviser has kept her on track by helping her appeal a financial aid decision and checking in regularly on her progress. “I definitely needed the guidance, and I probably wouldn’t have gotten this far without the guidance,” Mathis said.Two-year community colleges, which serve many of the students who need the most support, have the lowest completion rates of any kind of university or college. The availability of advisers, students say, is often a deciding factor in who succeeds. In Alabama, a number of community colleges have sought new ways to help students through whatever life and academic challenges come up until they graduate. ___EDITOR’S NOTE: This story is part of Saving the College Dream, a collaboration be...