‘Tough time for our city:’ Louisville to hold shooting vigil

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 09:45:32 GMT

‘Tough time for our city:’ Louisville to hold shooting vigil LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — An interfaith vigil is planned Wednesday evening in downtown Louisville to remember victims of a mass shooting at a bank, allowing the public to offer prayers for the injured and to begin work toward a more peaceful city, Mayor Craig Greenberg said.The event at the Muhammad Ali Center is just a few blocks away from Old National Bank, where a gunman killed five and injured eight others on Monday.“This is a very tough time for our city, and we were not meant to go through tough times alone,” Greenberg said in a statement.On Tuesday, police released body camera video that showed the chaotic moments when officers arrived at the bank as the shooter, who they couldn’t see, rained bullets down on them.The videos, taken from two wounded officers’ lapels, offer a rare perspective of police officers responding to a massacre. One, a rookie officer, was shot in the head within minutes of arriving at the scene. His partner was grazed by a bullet and sought cove...

Indiana recycling plant fire forces evacuation orders for thousands as it emits toxic smoke, officials say. And it could burn for days

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 09:45:32 GMT

Indiana recycling plant fire forces evacuation orders for thousands as it emits toxic smoke, officials say. And it could burn for days (CNN) — A fire that started Tuesday afternoon at a recycling plant in the eastern Indiana city of Richmond was emitting toxic smoke and has forced evacuation orders for about 2,000 people as it is expected to burn for days, officials said.Early air monitoring results are expected early Wednesday, Wayne County officials said. Plastics were among the items burning at the plant, and the smoke — a thick, black column rose from the site Tuesday — is “definitely toxic,” Indiana State Fire Marshal Steve Jones said in a news briefing.“There is a host of different chemicals that plastics give off when they’re on fire, and it’s concerning,” Jones said Tuesday evening, adding he expects the fire to burn for days.An evacuation order was put in place for residents within a half-mile of the fire, and authorities could change the order if the direction of the wind shifts, Jones said. Residents downwind of the evacuation zone — to the east...

Hialeah detectives arrest 2 involved in drug trafficking

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 09:45:32 GMT

Hialeah detectives arrest 2 involved in drug trafficking The Hialeah Police Special Investigation detectives conducted a search warrant that led to two arrests after synthetic drugs were found within a business.Authorities arrived at a smoke shop, located at 4775 Palm Avenue, and arrested Delby Ham and Nancy Diaz-Galeas after detectives found 30 pounds of packaged synthetic cannabinoids.The two were charged with trafficking and selling synthetic cannabinoids within 1,000 feet of a school and park.Ham and Diaz-Galeas submitted bonds, but have yet to appear in court. They are being held in the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center.

China’s Hamburg port deal in doubt after German security assessment

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 09:45:32 GMT

China’s Hamburg port deal in doubt after German security assessment BERLIN — German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s controversial plan to sell parts of a Hamburg container terminal to China has been thrown into uncertainty after the country’s security authorities declared the facility as “critical infrastructure.”Ahead of a state visit to Beijing last year, Scholz had strongly pushed for Chinese state company Cosco to be allowed to buy a minority stake in the Tollerort terminal in the Hamburg port, overruling concerns and objections from several ministers from his own government. However, a sudden classification of the terminal as “critical infrastructure” by Germany’s Federal Office for Information Security means that Berlin has to reassess the deal, and might end up banning it. A joint investigation by German public broadcasters WDR and NDR as well as daily Süddeutsche Zeitung first reported the new security assessment.“Since the prerequisites have changed, we … are examining the effects on the overal...

FBI warns consumers not to use public phone charging stations

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 09:45:32 GMT

FBI warns consumers not to use public phone charging stations (CNN) — The FBI is warning consumers against using public phone charging stations in order to avoid exposing their devices to malicious software.Public USB stations like the kind found at malls and airports are being used by bad actors to spread malware and monitoring software, according to a tweet last week from the FBI’s Denver branch. The agency did not provide any specific examples.“Carry your own charger and USB cord and use an electrical outlet instead,” the agency advised in the tweet.While public charging stations are attractive to many when devices are running critically low on battery, security experts have for years raised concerns about the risk. In 2011, researchers coined the term “juice jacking” to describe the problem.“Just by plugging your phone into a [compromised] power strip or charger, your device is now infected, and that compromises all your data,” Drew Paik, formerly of security firm Authentic8, e...

MSPCA caring for Goldendoodle struck by car before finding him a forever home

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 09:45:32 GMT

MSPCA caring for Goldendoodle struck by car before finding him a forever home The MSPCA caring for a three-year-old Goldendoodle who escaped his home through a fence and was struck by a car, the organization said Wednesday. Teddy was a typical happy young dog when tragedy struck, the MSPCA said. His owners brought him to Angell Animal Medical Center following the accident last month, where veterinarians confirmed Teddy’s front right leg was fractured and he had a deep wound on his front left leg – injuries that could take months to heal.“Teddy’s case is complex,” said MSPCA-Angell Director of Adoption Centers and Programs Mike Keiley . “When we discussed it with [his owners] and detailed Teddy’s expected recovery process, they decided it would be best to surrender, so we could rehome him.”“We understand and respect the owners’ decision, and are hopeful that we can give Teddy the care he needs that will allow us to find him a new family to help with the final stages of his recovery,” he added. Teddy’s injuries have left unanswered questions for his...

Meet pocket-sized Pearl, the world’s shortest dog

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 09:45:32 GMT

Meet pocket-sized Pearl, the world’s shortest dog (CNN) — Pearl is no ordinary handbag dog. She’s so tiny, her owner can just slip her into her pocket.The two-year-old chihuahua, who measures around the same length as a dollar bill, has been named the world’s shortest dog by Guinness World Records.Born in Florida on September 1 2020, Pearl is shorter than a Popsicle stick at just 3.59 inches tall. She is 5 inches long — around the same as a dollar bill — and weighs a tiny 1.22 pounds, a huge gain on the less than one ounce that she weighed at birth.Pearl is related to previous record holder Miracle Milly, who measured 3.8 inches tall. She died in 2020, before Pearl was born. Pearl’s mother is one of Milly’s identical sisters, according to Guinness World Records.Pearl is smaller than every day objects such as this remote control. Credit: Guinness World RecordsHer owner Vanesa Semler, who was also the owner of Miracle Milly, told Guinness World Records: “We’re bless...

Stocks tick higher after inflation cools more than forecast

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 09:45:32 GMT

Stocks tick higher after inflation cools more than forecast By STAN CHOE (AP Business Writer)NEW YOR (AP) — Stocks are ticking higher Wednesday, and Wall Street is relaxing a bit after a report showed inflation is cooling faster than expected.The S&P 500 was 0.5% higher in morning trading. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 174 points, or 0.5%, at 33,858, as of 10:30 a.m. Eastern time, while the Nasdaq composite was 0.4% higher. The main focus on Wall Street for more than a year has been high inflation and how much painful medicine the Federal Reserve will have to dole out to contain it. A report Wednesday morning showed that prices at the consumer level were 5% higher last month than a year earlier. That’s still well above the Federal Reserve’s comfort level, keeping a check on financial markets. But it was better than the 5.2% that economists expected, and it marked a continued slowdown from inflation’s peak last summer. That had the majority of stocks on Wall Street rising, including seven out of every 10...

Palace: Prince Harry to attend his father’s May 6 coronation; Meghan to stay home

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 09:45:32 GMT

Palace: Prince Harry to attend his father’s May 6 coronation; Meghan to stay home By DANICA KIRKA (Associated Press)LONDON (AP) — Prince Harry will attend the coronation of his father, King Charles III, at Westminster Abbey on May 6, Buckingham Palace said Wednesday, ending months of speculation about his presence.Harry’s wife Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, will remain in California with the couple’s two children, Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet, the palace said. The coronation date coincides with their eldest son’s birthday.Harry’s attendance comes despite the rift within the House of Windsor prompted by Harry’s decision to reveal family secrets in his bestselling book, “Spare.”The revelations included details of private conversations with his father — and his elder brother, Prince William. The disclosures fanned tensions between Harry and his family, which had become public when he and his wife moved to North America in 2020.

Police investigate discovery of ‘possible infant remains’ found in Revere

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 09:45:32 GMT

Police investigate discovery of ‘possible infant remains’ found in Revere Authorities are investigating what they describe as the discovery of the “possible remains of an infant” outside an apartment building in a community north of Boston, state police said.Revere police responded to the building in the city at about 6:30 p.m. Tuesday after a man found the possible remains outside, state police said in a statement.According to broadcast reports, the remains were found inside a trash bag near some trash cans.State police assigned to the Suffolk district attorney’s office also responded to the scene.The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner was expected to take custody of the possible remains for further forensic examination, state police said.No additional information was released.Massachusetts has a baby “safe haven” law, that allows parents to surrender infants up to 7 days old at a hospital, police station, or staffed fire station without facing criminal prosecution.