Georgia police arrest mother of 7-year-old girl whose body was found decaying in closet
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 13:49:22 GMT
ATLANTA (AP) — Police in Georgia have arrested the mother of a 7-year-old girl whose body was found decaying in the closet of a vacant apartment. Alondra Hobbs, 27, was charged with felony murder and cruelty in the second degree, DeKalb County police said on Facebook. It was not immediately clear whether she had an attorney.A police spokeswoman, Officer Elise Wells, said Hobbs was at a hospital Friday. She was charged on Thursday, according to police. They identified her daughter as Alivia Hobbs-Jordan.An officer discovered the girl’s body Sunday at an apartment complex outside Atlanta after someone called to report a dead child in the closet, according to a police report.A neighbor told the officer the tenant had moved out and she had not seen her for a couple of months. The officer said he saw what appeared to be a full head of hair and a decaying arm and leg in the closet.Another officer found a piece of mail with the name Alondra Hobbs on it, according to the report.Police...S&P/TSX composite closes out trading week on winning streak
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 13:49:22 GMT
TORONTO — Canada’s main stock index closed out the first half of the year on a buoyant note, posting triple-digit gains heading into the three-day weekend while U.S. stock markets also moved higher. The S&P/TSX composite index was up 242.12 points at 20,155.29.In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average was up 285.18 points at 34,407.60. The S&P 500 index was up 53.94 points at 4,450.38, while the Nasdaq composite was up 196.59 points at 13,787.92.The Canadian dollar traded for 75.53 cents US compared with 75.44 cents US on Thursday.The August crude oil contract was up 78 cents at US$70.64 per barrel and the August natural gas contract was up almost 10 cents at US$2.80 per mmBTU.The August gold contract was up US$11.50 at US$1,929.40 an ounce and the September copper contract was up six cents at US$3.76 a pound.This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 30, 2023.Companies in this story: (TSX:GSPTSE, TSX:CADUSD=X)The Canadian PressPrince Harry seeks over $550,000 in phone hacking lawsuit against British tabloid publisher
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 13:49:22 GMT
LONDON (AP) — Prince Harry’s lawyer put a price tag Friday on the prince’s lawsuit accusing the publisher of the Daily Mirror of hacking his phone and using other unlawful means to dig up dirt on the early years of his royal life: 440,000 pounds ($558,000).The Duke of Sussex’s lawyer submitted the proposed legal award at the conclusion of courtroom proceedings in the first of Harry’s cases against the British tabloid press to go to trial. If he managed to win the entire sum, it would be a massive award in the broader phone hacking scandal that has plagued several tabloid publishers.Attorney David Sherborne said in closing arguments this week that there was “hard evidence” Mirror Group Newspapers employed journalists who eavesdropped on voicemails and hired private investigators to use deception and unlawful means to learn about Harry and other celebrities.“These methods were the tried and tested tools of the tabloid trade,” Sherborne said.Mirror Group Newspap...Unlicensed Hong Kong radio station that hosted pro-democracy guests goes off the air after 18 years
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 13:49:22 GMT
HONG KONG (AP) — An unlicensed pro-democracy radio station in Hong Kong shut down Friday after 18 years on the air. The closure of Citizens’ Radio came on the eve of the 26th anniversary of Hong Kong’s handover to China’s rule. Since its launch in 2005, the station had hosted prominent democracy advocates, including former lawmakers Szeto Wah, Emily Lau, Albert Ho and Lee Cheuk-yan. But its founder, Bull Tsang. said it was becoming increasingly difficult to invite guests following the enactment of a Beijing-imposed law that jailed or silenced many activists. Coupled with banking problems and limited resources, Tsang said he had no choice but to say goodbye. “It’s hard to let go. It’s like my third son,” Tsang, 67, told reporters before he hosted his last show on Friday night. The closure reflects the collapse of the city’s pro-democracy movement under the national security law that followed massive protests in Hong Kong in 2019. After the law’s enactmen...Longtime Toronto broadcaster Bob McCown hospitalized with serious health issue
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 13:49:22 GMT
Longtime Toronto sports broadcaster Bob McCowan is off the air dealing with a serious health issue. The former Sportsnet 590 The FAN personality said Friday he is recovering in hospital after having “two strokes over the last couple of weeks.”“Can’t walk or talk but am getting better very slowly!” the 71-year-old said in a tweet. “Hope to get home and back on the podcast as quick as possible!”I guess I should let you know that I have had two strokes over the last couple of weeks and have been in hospital since. Can’t walk or talk but am getting better very slowly!Hope to get home and back on the podcast as quick as possible!— Bob McCown (@FadooBobcat) June 30, 2023McCown is best known as the former host of Prime Time Sports, which he fronted from 1989 until 2019. He is currently host of his own podcast, which airs on his YouTube channel and is broadcast weekdays on Sirius XM.A native of Columbus, Ohio, McCown began his radio career in 1975. ...Father speaking out about Islamophobic incident at Brampton high school
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 13:49:22 GMT
A Brampton father is speaking out after he says his son in high school was the target of an Islamophobic conversation in a Peel District School Board (PDSB) classroom.Rahim Kassam tells Omni News his 16-year-old son’s teacher showed controversial cartoons from the French satirical magazine, Charlie Hebdo, during his Grade 11 French Class at Harold M Brathwaite Secondary School.The incident happened in January. “There is an Islamophobia in it, anti Semitism, Anti-Black Racism,” Kassam said.The cartoons featured controversial imagery of the Prophet Muhamad that many around the world have chosen not to publish due to its Islamophobic tone. The teacher not only shared it with the class, but allegedly sparked a very uncomfortable conversation.“He approached him and asked him if he found these photos, these cartoons, offensive. He replied he did. He was offended. And then she followed up with that: ‘Do you condone the criminal acts that took place regarding t...Rare lizard found in major US oil patch proposed as endangered species
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 13:49:22 GMT
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — U.S. wildlife managers on Friday proposed federal protections for a rare lizard found only in parts of one of the world’s most lucrative oil and natural gas basins.The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said the dunes sagebrush lizard should be listed as an endangered species due to the ongoing threats of energy development, mining and climate change in southeastern New Mexico and West Texas. The agency will be collecting public comments on the proposed listing through Sept. 1.Environmentalists have been pushing for protections for the reptile for decades, resulting in petitions and lawsuits. There have also been conservation agreements, but some groups have criticized them for not doing enough to protect the lizard’s habitat.The Center for Biological Diversity sued in 2022, accusing the agency of stalling on issuing a decision. The Fish and Wildlife Service, as part of a court-approved agreement, faced a June 29 deadline for making a determination o...First smoke, now aphids. New Yorkers deal with their latest natural invasion
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 13:49:22 GMT
NEW YORK (AP) — By the time Martin DuPain got back home from a short walk Thursday afternoon, he was covered with a smattering of tiny flying critters. They were in his hair, on his shirt and in his nose.When he sneezed, the bugs came flying out.As if the smoke and haze sweeping in from wildfires in Canada weren’t enough, New York City has been invaded in recent days with plumes of flying insects that have become both a nuisance and a source of fascination — what were they, where’d they come from and will they ever go away? Another unwanted Canadian export?At first, DuPain, who lives in Queens, thought it might have been wind-driven ash, but he soon found out otherwise. Some were alive and flying. He quickly jumped in the shower.The startling scene was nothing short of a “gnatural disaster,” quipped a post on Twitter, which has been abuzz with reports of swarms in some neighborhoods, while others remain bug-free.As they entered clouds of bugs, some people tried to ...Biden pushing ahead with new student debt relief plan after Supreme Court ruling
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 13:49:22 GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration is moving forward on a new student debt relief plan after the Supreme Court struck down his original initiative to provide relief to 43 million borrowers.President Joe Biden insisted Friday that “this fight is not over” and blamed Republican opposition for the demise of his original plan.The plan would have helped the president keep a campaign promise and is seen as key to helping win over young voters in next year’s presidential race — a vital demographic to his reelection bid.The White House said Biden’s chief of staff, Jeff Zients, has been holding meetings about once a week to prepare for the Supreme Court ruling, and administration officials also have met and spoken with dozens of advocates and allies in the congressional community,, so they would have a fully formed response once the court had ruled.Biden was briefed after Friday’s ruling and met with senior staff to push ahead with an alternative plan given its implications, the Whit...Geraldo Rivera salutes affirmative action in final Fox News appearance
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 13:49:22 GMT
(The Hill) – Geraldo Rivera used his final appearance on Fox News to praise affirmative action, which was struck down by the Supreme Court as it relates to college admissions this week. Noting the court's decision was "a very controversial decision that will impact many people of color," Rivera said, "I was a product of affirmative action over a half a century ago." "When the Ford Foundation and Columbia Journalism School got together to integrate the local news teams in New York, there were no black reporters, no Hispanic reporters, no women. And it was shocking. And that was as late as 1968, '69," Rivera, 79, said Friday during an appearance on "Fox and Friends," the network's flagship morning talk program. "So I was selected, I was making news representing a group of Puerto Rican activists, the Young Lords, who had taken over some buildings up in the Spanish Harlem, and I was their lawyer and their negotiator," he continued. "And I made a lot of news as their spokesperson. And so...Latest news
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