Long Island architect charged in deaths of 3 women in connection with Gilgo Beach serial killings
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:26:44 GMT
RIVERHEAD, NY (AP) — A Long Island architect has been charged with murder in the deaths of three of the 11 victims in a long-unsolved string of killings known as the Gilgo Beach murders.Rex Heuermann, who has lived for decades across a bay from where the remains were found, is charged with killing Melissa Barthelemy, Megan Waterman and Amber Costello. He is also considered the prime suspect in another killing, authorities said.Heuermann, 59, was arrested late Thursday in Massapequa amid a renewed investigation that tied him to a pickup truck that a witness reported seeing when one of the victims disappeared in 2010. Detectives eventually recovered his DNA and matched it to genetic material recovered from the bodies, which were bound up and hidden in thick underbrush along a remote beach highway.In recent months, authorities said, Heuermann sought to keep tabs on the probe, conducting hundreds of internet searches for the names of women he’s accused of killing, as well as podca...19-year-old firefighter who died in B.C. is identified by her brother
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:26:44 GMT
A 19-year-old B.C. firefighter who police say was killed by a falling tree near Revelstoke on Thursday has been identified by her brother as Devyn Gale.Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and B.C. Premier David Eby say her death is “heartbreaking.”Nolan Gale says in an Instagram post that his sister was “kind and thoughtful,” and he’s grateful to have grown up alongside her.Revelstoke RCMP say in a news release that does not name Gale that the firefighter was working on brush-clearing in a remote area where a fire had started.They say her team found her pinned under a fallen tree and began first aid, but she succumbed to her injuries after being airlifted to a hospital in Revelstoke.Her death comes as B.C. battles more than 360 fires across the province.This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 14, 2023.The Canadian PressCourt grants temporary injunction to end Winnipeg landfill blockade
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:26:44 GMT
WINNIPEG — A Manitoba judge has granted a temporary injunction to end a blockade at a Winnipeg landfill, where dozens of protesters have blocked the main road demanding a search of a different landfill north of the city for the remains of two slain Indigenous women. “The city needs to operate its facility in the manner that it’s authorized to do so without interruption,” Justice Sheldon Lanchbery said Friday. The judge said demonstrators can continue to protest at the Brady Road landfill, but they cannot block the road. They can hand out materials and talk with people passing by, he said. The blockade began last week after Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson said the province would not support a search of the other landfill, Prairie Green, pointing to a study that said it could cost up to $184 million and expose workers to toxic chemicals and asbestos. The city filed an application Tuesday to the Court of King’s Bench seeking the removal of protesters.Lawyers for the demo...Stock market today: Wall Street turns mixed after profit reports, heads for another winning week
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:26:44 GMT
NEW YORK (AP) — Stocks turned mixed Friday following profit reports from several big U.S. companies that topped expectations, but Wall Street remained on pace for another winning week.The S&P 500 fell 0.1% in afternoon trading after giving up small gains earlier in the day. It is coming off its highest close since April 2022. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 147 points, or 0.4%, at 34,539, as of 2:34 p.m. Eastern time, and the Nasdaq composite was 0.1% lower.Insurance giant UnitedHealth Group rallied 7.8% after it said profit growth during the spring was better than feared. It also raised the bottom end of its forecast for earnings for the full year.JPMorgan Chase gained 0.4% after it said its profit during the spring grew by more than expected thanks in part to its acquisition of the troubled First Republic Bank. Wells Fargo fell 0.3% despite also reporting stronger profit for the second quarter than expected. On the losing end was State Street, which fell 10.7% after re...Jesse Jackson is stepping down as head of civil rights organization Rainbow PUSH
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:26:44 GMT
CHICAGO (AP) — The Rev. Jesse Jackson plans to step down from leading the Chicago civil rights organization Rainbow PUSH Coalition he founded in 1971, his son’s congressional office said Friday. A spokesperson for U.S. Rep. Jonathan Jackson confirmed the long-time civil rights leader would be retiring from the organization.The elder Jackson, a civil rights leader and two-time presidential candidate, plans to announce his plan on Sunday during the organization’s annual convention, Rep. Jackson told the Chicago Sun-Times.Jonathan Jackson, an Illinois Democrat, said his father “has forever been on the scene of justice and has never stopped fighting for civil rights” and that will be “his mark upon history.”The Rev. Jesse Jackson, who will turn 82 in October, has remained active in civil rights in recent years despite health setbacks. He announced in 2017 that he had begun outpatient care for Parkinson’s disease two years earlier. In early 2021, he had gallbladder surgery and late...Police investigate road shooting in Maryland suburb of Washington, D.C.
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:26:44 GMT
BLADENSBURG, Md. (AP) — Police are investigating a shooting Friday in a Maryland suburb of the nation’s capital that shut down area roads. Images from the scene showed a heavy police presence on a bridge that crosses the Anacostia River in Bladensburg, about a mile east of the Maryland line with Washington, D.C. Bladensburg police announced plans for an afternoon news conference to discuss the shooting, But authorities did not release any details about how many people were shot, the seriousness of their injuries or the circumstances surrounding the shooting. Officials with the neighboring Edmonston Police Department said they were assisting with the investigation. They said the shooting was an isolated incident and didn’t pose an ongoing threat to public safety.The Associated PressVermonters rush to dry out flooded homes and businesses with more storms on the horizon
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:26:44 GMT
Vermonters worked Friday to dry out homes and businesses damaged by historic flooding but kept a wary eye on the horizon, with another round of storms forecast for the weekend.Parts of the state got more rain on Thursday and about 14,000 customers at the height of the storm. More rain is expected on Sunday, and further out, next Tuesday.“We don’t know the extent of some of these storms,” Gov. Phil Scott said at a news conference. Storms dumped up to two months’ worth of rain in a couple of days in parts of the region this week, surpassing the amount that fell when Tropical Storm Irene blew through in 2011 and caused major flooding. Officials called this week’s flooding the state’s worst natural disaster since floods in 1927. The flooding has been blamed for one death — a man who drowned in his home in Barre, a city of about 8,500 people in central Vermont. Stephen Davoll, 63, died Wednesday, said Vermont Emergency Management spokesman Mark Bosma, who urged Vermonte...Security Council gives UN chief 30 days to come up with options on how to fight Haiti’s armed gangs
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:26:44 GMT
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The U.N. Security Council asked the secretary-general on Friday to come up with options to help combat Haiti’s armed gangs, including a possible U.N. peacekeeping force and a non-U.N. multinational force.A resolution adopted unanimously by the council asks U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to report back on “a full range” of options within 30 days to improve the security situation, including additional training for the Haitian National Police and providing support to combat illegal arms trafficking to the impoverished Caribbean nation. It also authorizes up to 70 U.N. police and corrections advisers to scale up support and training for Haiti’s understaffed and underfunded national police force. And it “encourages” countries, especially in the Caribbean region, to respond to appeals from Haiti’s prime minister and from Guterres for the deployment of an international specialized force.Haiti’s Prime Minister Ariel Henry sent an urgent appeal last October for...UPS to train nonunion employees as talks stall with union for 340,000 workers and deadline nears
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:26:44 GMT
A little more than a week after contract talks between UPS and the union representing 340,000 of its workers broke down, UPS said it will begin training nonunion employees in the U.S. to step in should there be a strike, which the union has vowed to do if no agreement is reached by the end of this month.UPS said Friday that the training is a temporary plan that has no impact on current operations.“While we have made great progress and are close to reaching an agreement, we have a responsibility as an essential service provider to take steps to help ensure we can deliver our customers’ packages if the Teamsters choose to strike,” UPS said. Last week both sides blamed the other for walking away from talks, which now appear to be at a stalemate with a July 31 deadline approaching fast. Teamster-represented UPS workers voted for a strike authorization last month and union chief Sean O’Brien previously said that a strike was imminent. On Friday, O’Brien joined union workers in a pi...Hollywood strikes bring uncertainty to local businesses as TIFF nears
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:26:44 GMT
TORONTO — The Toronto International Film Festival is still more than a month away, but a pair of U.S. entertainment worker strikes have Hollywood North worried the annual event won’t offer the usual boost for local businesses.When the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists walked off the job at midnight Thursday, joining the Writers Guild of America on the picket line, the labour action halted scores of international productions and immediately stopped the promotional work actors carry out for already completed films.That means TIFF, which is scheduled from Sept. 7 to 17, could see bare red carpets and far fewer stars as SAG members skip premieres, panels and press junkets while they seekbetter wages and protections from artificial intelligence.But the strikes could also spell potential trouble for local businesses, which help ferry, feed and fete the bevy of stars that fly in for TIFF and often count on the event to carry their companies throu...Latest news
- Predominately Black charter school to open new campus in Manor
- Did the Frito Pie actually originate in Texas?
- Altamont Fair diverting traffic amid busy closing weekend
- Innovation or risk? Missouri's top education leader questions value of four-day school weeks
- Nonprofit spends $860K to increase police patrols in downtown St. Louis
- Saints tight end Jimmy Graham detained by police in Southern California
- 49ers put Taco Charlton on season-ending injury list; running back waived
- Stockpile of thousands of illegal weapons seized from East Bay knife shop, owner arrested
- Urias become first Red Sox ro hit grand slams on consective pitches, Boston beat Yankees 8-1
- Malen scores after canceled substitution for Dortmund to start Bundesliga with win over Cologne