Wilmington Police arrest suspect following police pursuit, car crash, escape from scene
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:09:00 GMT
A Tewksbury man is under arrest following a dramatic series of events early Friday morning across multiple jurisdictions.Ron Jeremiah Bell Jr., 24, is facing multiple charges, including assault with a dangerous weapon, carrying a firearm without a license, resisting arrest, and posession of a class B substance.Around 1:30 Friday morning officers initiated a traffic stop on a vehicle operating erratically. The driver fled south on I-93 in the vehicle, out of authorities’ sight. A short time later the car was seen on Lowell Street in Wilmington, where it attempted to ram a police cruiser twice.Officers then pursued the vehicle north on I-93; it exited the highway at Exit 35 and soon crashed on Andover Street before 2 a.m. The driver, believed to be Bell, fled into a wooded area, leaving behind the female passenger of his car. She was transported to Lahey Hospital with serious but non-life threatening injuries.Bell was located at 7 a.m. after an hours long search conducted by Wil...Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour first ever to hit $1B mark
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:09:00 GMT
LOS ANGELES — Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour is the first tour to cross the billion-dollar mark, according to Pollstar’s 2023 year-end charts.Not only was Swift’s landmark Eras Tour the No. 1 tour both worldwide and in North America, but she also brought in a whopping $1.04 billion with 4.35 million tickets sold across 60 tour dates, the concert trade publication found.Pollstar data is pulled from box office reports, venue capacity estimates, historical Pollstar venue ticket sales data, and other undefined research, collected from Nov. 17, 2022 to Nov. 15, 2023.Representatives for the publication did not immediately clarify if they adjusted past tour data to match 2023 inflation in naming Swift the first to break the billion-dollar threshold.Pollstar also found that Swift brought in approximately $200 million in merch sales and her blockbuster film adaptation of the tour, “Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour,” has reportedly earned approximately $250 million in sales...How a local museum helped 100-plus Chicago Bears employees tell their stories through sneakers in the NFL’s My Cause, My Cleats campaign
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:09:00 GMT
When Sneakerhead University first opened its doors on State Street in fall 2022, co-founders Shay Belvin and Mykol Branch had one room with three tables, a bucket of 12 paints and a desire to preserve sneaker history and tell stories using sneakers.While students at North Carolina Central, a historically Black university in Durham, N.C., Belvin and Branch came up with the idea to sell Black empowerment T-shirts through their now-defunct label “HBCU Made.” It was during that time they also had the idea to create a sneaker museum.“We wanted a creative way to tell the Black story of different topics and the movement of America,” Belvin told the Tribune. “Selfie museums were really huge (at the time).”The two studied marketing in college, and after graduation Belvin, a Detroit native, came to Chicago to start a museum while Branch initially returned home to Baltimore to open one. They chose Chicago, they said, because they could list brands and people...IOC confirms Russian athletes can compete at Paris Olympics with approved neutral status
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:09:00 GMT
By GRAHAM DUNBAR (AP Sports Writer)GENEVA (AP) — Some Russian athletes will be allowed to compete at the 2024 Paris Olympics, the IOC said Friday, in a decision that removed the option of a blanket ban due to the invasion of Ukraine.The International Olympic Committee decision confirmed moves it started one year ago to reintegrate Russia and its military ally Belarus into global sports, and nine months after it urged sports governing bodies to look at ways to let individual athletes compete.Though the IOC’s official position was expected, the timing surprised some Olympic watchers after reports last week in Paris suggested the long-promised decision would come in March. It is still up to each sport’s governing body, which run their own Olympic competitions, to assess and enforce neutral status for individual athletes who have not actively supported the war and are not contracted to military or state security agencies. The IOC said on Friday eight Russians and three...Man killed in Ramona shooting identified: SDSO
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:09:00 GMT
RAMONA, Calif. — The victim in a shooting on State Route 78 through Ramona earlier this week was identified by authorities on Friday.Angel Jauregui, a 35-year-old Ramona resident, was named by the San Diego County Sheriff's Department as the decedent in the incident.The shooting was reported just before 11:30 p.m. after multiple gunshots were heard in the area near the intersection of SR-78 and Haverford Road. According to SDSO, responding deputies located a red Ford F150 at the scene and Jauregui with multiple gunshot wounds.Paramedics transported Jauregui to a nearby hospital for treatment, but he later succumbed to his injuries and was pronounced dead by medical staff around 12:15 a.m. on Wednesday. 76-year-old woman pleads not guilty in deadly North Park hit-and-run The circumstances surrounding the shooting remain under investigation, according to SDSO. No suspect information has been provided at this time.Homicide investigators remained on the scene for hours Wednesday. Evid...Vessel owner pleads guilty in plot to smuggle workers, drugs from Honduras to Louisiana
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:09:00 GMT
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A Pennsylvania man described by authorities as the lead defendant in a drug distribution and human smuggling case has pleaded guilty to federal crimes in Louisiana.Court records show that Carl Allison, 47, of Pittsburgh pleaded guilty Thursday before U.S. District Judge Eldon Fallon in New Orleans. Sentencing was scheduled for March 28. The U.S. Justice Department said in a statement that Allison, the fourth person to plead guilty in the case, faces a possible life sentence. Prosecutors said Allison was the president and owner of a company that supplied immigrant labor for factories in the U.S. But, according to an indictment, Allison was involved in illegally smuggling Honduran nationals into the country to work illegally as part of a seagoing operation that also involved transporting cocaine.Authorities found 23 Honduran nationals and about 24 kilograms (53 pounds) of cocaine aboard after a vessel owned by Allison became disabled last year in the Gulf of Mexico ...Local New Hampshire newspaper publisher found guilty of political advertisement omissions
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:09:00 GMT
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — A judge has found the New Hampshire publisher of a weekly community newspaper guilty of five misdemeanor charges that she ran advertisements for local races without properly marking them as political advertising. The judge acquitted Debra Paul, publisher of the Londonderry Times, of a sixth misdemeanor charge on Thursday following a bench trial in November. She is scheduled to be sentenced on Dec. 20. Each charge carries a maximum penalty of up to a year in jail and a $2,000 fine.The New Hampshire attorney general’s office charged Paul last year, saying she failed to identify the ads with “appropriate language” indicating that they were ads and saying who paid for them as required by state law. The office said it had warned her in 2019 and 2021. Last year, it received more complaints and reviewed the February and March issues of the paper. Two political ads leading up to a local election in March did not contain the “paid for” language and a third had no “...Pregnant woman in Kentucky sues for the right to get an abortion
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:09:00 GMT
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — A pregnant woman in Kentucky filed a lawsuit Friday demanding the right to an abortion, the second legal challenge in days to sweeping abortion bans that have taken hold in more than a dozen U.S. states since Roe v. Wade was overturned last year.The suit, filed in state court in Louisville, says Kentucky’s near-total prohibition against abortion violates the plaintiff’s rights to privacy and self-determination under the state constitution.The plaintiff, identified as Jane Doe, is about eight weeks pregnant and she wants to have an abortion in Kentucky but cannot legally do so because of the state’s ban, the suit said. She is seeking class-action status to include other Kentuckians who are or will become pregnant and want to have an abortion.“This is my decision — not the government’s or any other person’s,” the plaintiff said in a news release Friday issued by the American Civil Liberties Union, one of the groups backing her challenge. “I am ...Toronto Black Farmers in Downsview fighting food insecurity by teaching locals to grow food
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:09:00 GMT
In the north end of Toronto, the neighbourhood of Downsview is best known for its urban park. Nestled in this expansive green space is the Toronto Black Farmers and Food Growers Collective, which is fighting for food justice by teaching its members how to farm.For the past decade, co-founder Jacqueline Dwyer and other collective members have fed local residents by empowering racialized farmers.“It’s a platform created to empower black farmers, black growers, black gardeners, black food entrepreneurs in a space [as well as] other racialized people who want to join us, because not everybody is down with our cause to actually have a space that references culture in [a] food space by us and for us,” Dwyer said.The Toronto Black Farmers and Food Growers Collective’s welcome sign outside their greenhouse in Downsview Park. (Julia Lawrence/The Green Line)Sarah Ali is a member of The Collective Group, a resident-led organization representing over 30 neighbourhoods in ...Canada dusts off sanctions law on corrupt officials, joins allies to target 7 abroad
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:09:00 GMT
OTTAWA — Canada is using a rarely invoked sanctions law that targets corrupt office holders to join peer countries in taking aim against officials in Russia, Iran and Myanmar.The sanctions target officials whom Canada, the U.S. and the U.K. accuse of having a role in long-standing human-rights violations.Those listed for sanctions include two senior Iranian officials accused of overseeing the torture of Iranian-Canadian photojournalist Zahra Kazemi, who died in custody in 2003.Canada has also joined its allies in sanctioning four Russians accused of helping a violent anti-gay crackdown in Chechnya, such as by overseeing the kidnapping and torture of LGBTQ+ people.Those sanctioned also include Myanmar’s commander-in-chief, who oversaw a coup d’état against a democratically elected government in 2021.The new sanctions come under the Magnitsky Act, legislation aimed at punishing corrupt officials that has only been used twice since its passage 2018.Senators have argued that...Latest news
- What we’ve learned about Patriots’ rookies so far in training camp
- Pope announces World Youth Day to return to Asia in 2027, urges young people ‘not to be afraid’
- Train derailment kills at least 15, injures 50 in southern Pakistan, officials say
- Overnight airstrikes kill three in Ukraine as Moscow airport halts flights after foiled drone attack
- Liberals lag on invitation to join global group that crafts vaccines for world’s poor
- 'Eternally grateful': City of Kyle's mayor praises firefighters, others as Oak Grove Fire progress halted
- Prototype program aims to keep Minnesotans employed during health setbacks
- Readers and Writers: Novels set in Pakistan and St. Paul
- Literary pick for week of August 6
- One Book/One Minnesota book club pick: ‘In the Night of Memory’