Body camera video shows aftermath of crash involving City Councilor Kendra Lara
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 10:19:17 GMT
Boston police body camera video recently obtained by 7NEWS shows the aftermath of the crash involving City Councilor Kendra Lara last month in Jamaica Plain. The crash happened on June 30 on Centre Street. Video now shows what was said to officers responding to the scene where Lara crashed through a fence and into a home.In one body camera video, Lara is sitting in an ambulance as her son is put in the back on a stretcher. Police blurred the video showing the inside of the ambulance for the privacy of Lara’s son who was hurt.An officer, at one point, is heard asking Lara what happened. “This car just pulled out right in front of me,” Lara said. “He did not check his freaking mirrors to see if anybody was coming down the street. He pulled out in front of me. I’m driving down the street and I swerved to swerve out of the way to not hit him.”A different officer interviewed the other driver who was parked along the curb and trying to pull onto...Healey helps launch fundraiser to aid farms
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 10:19:17 GMT
Skeptical about the timeline for federal aid, the Healey administration on Thursday backed an effort to raise private donations to help farmers who sustained major damage in a series of flood-inducing storms.The administration and United Way of Central Massachusetts on Thursday launched a fundraiser campaign, dubbed the “Massachusetts Farm Resiliency Fund,” that will distribute grants to Bay State farmers to offset recovery costs in the wake of downpours that inundated fields and rendered crops unusable.Speaking from Mountain View Farm in Easthampton, Healey said she is “not holding my breath” waiting for federal aid and instead wants to focus on bringing in donations to steer more immediate grants to those affected.State officials will pursue federal disaster relief funds, and Healey said those dollars will be especially needed to fix damaged dams, bridges and culverts.“But when it comes to our farms, the reason we set this up is because we need people...Boston Licensing Board holds meeting to discuss liquor license of North End restaurant owner who is on the run
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 10:19:17 GMT
The liquor license of Monica’s in the North End may be in jeopardy but no decision has been made yet by the Boston Licensing Board, which held a meeting Thursday focused on the conduct of the restaurant owner Patrick Mendoza.Mendoza is being sought on a warrant bringing charges including assault to murder, assault with a dangerous weapon (gun), unlawful possession of a firearm, discharging a firearm within 500 feet of a dwelling, and witness intimidation after a shooting last week in front of Modern Pastry on Hanover Street in the North End, according to Boston police.The licensing board met to review the behavior of Mendoza, whose name is on Monica’s liquor license. The lawyer representing the family said they are working to switch who is in charge of the license, while Mendoza’s wife sat behind the attorney during the hearing.The attorney representing the restaurant said this is a family business and has had the license for years. They also say Mendoza has not been present at the ...Dan Rodricks: Now translating for the Orioles, 23-year-old Brandon Quinones | COMMENTARY
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 10:19:17 GMT
Going into the important series this weekend with the Tampa Bay Rays, Anthony Santander, right fielder of the Baltimore Orioles, had a batting average of .272, with 17 home runs, 54 runs batted in and an increasingly solid command of English. In fact, in a recent postgame interview on MASN, the native Venezuelan answered all questions without the assistance of translator Brandon Quinones.Quinones was at the slugger’s side, of course, but only as a backup.“Oh, man, I’m so proud of him,” the 23-year-old Quinones says of the 29-year-old Santander. “His English since last season has been great. He’s always been more than capable of speaking English, though the thing with him was he was always a bit … maybe shy. So he would always like having me around for [on-camera] interviews. When we arrived this year for spring training, he immediately just started doing interviews in English, and I can’t be more proud of him because I think he’s...Tornado damage at Pfizer plant may hit drug supply
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 10:19:17 GMT
The fallout from a Pfizer factory being damaged by a tornado could put even more pressure on already-strained drug supplies at U.S. hospitals, experts say.Wednesday’s tornado touched down near Rocky Mount, North Carolina, and ripped up the roof of a Pfizer factory that makes nearly 25% of Pfizer’s sterile injectable medicines used in U.S. hospitals, according to the drugmaker.Pfizer said all employees were safely evacuated and accounted for, and no serious injuries were reported. The drugmaker is still assessing damage.The North Carolina plant produces drugs that are injected or through an IV.The plant makes drugs for anesthesia, medicines that treat infections and drugs needed for surgeries. The latter are used in surgeries or intensive care units for patients who are placed on ventilators, said Mike Ganio, who studies drug shortages at the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists.Pfizer bought the eastern North Carolina factory in 2015 as part of its acquisition o...Red Sox notebook: Does a pitching reunion at trade deadline make sense?
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 10:19:17 GMT
If the Red Sox decide to be buyers at the upcoming trade deadline, starting pitching is their most obvious need.Between the beginning and end of June, they placed Chris Sale, Tanner Houck, and Garrett Whitlock on the injured list. Corey Kluber was demoted to the bullpen before he, too, joined the ranks on the sidelines.In their absence, the Red Sox have made do with a skeleton crew. James Paxton, Brayan Bello, and Kutter Crawford comprise the current rotation; the rest of the games are being handled by the bullpen, anchored by Nick Pivetta, who’s thriving in a long relief role.But with no guarantee as to what they’ll get from Sale, Houck, and Whitlock at such times as they are able to return to action, if the Red Sox decide to make a genuine push for the playoffs, they’ll need to add another arm to the rotation.Perhaps an old friend?A homegrown (sort of) champion whose name is all over the trade rumors?Eduardo Rodriguez?It’s been nearly a decade since the Red...Florida rulings ease concerns about drag performers at Pride parades, drag queen story hours
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 10:19:17 GMT
By MIKE SCHNEIDER (Associated Press)ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Librarians who feared fines for hosting drag queen story hours and Pride parade organizers who worried about citations for including drag performers can breathe easier now that a judge has ruled that his injunction blocking Florida’s anti-drag law extends to all Florida venues, an attorney who is helping challenge the law said Thursday.A pair of orders that U.S. District Judge Gregory Presnell issued in the past month makes clear that drag performances in themselves are not lewd or lascivious behavior, said Gary Israel, one of the attorneys for an Orlando restaurant that filed a lawsuit challenging the new Florida law championed by Gov. Ron DeSantis as unconstitutional.“The state has a very weak hand in this litigation,” Israel said.In his first order last month, the Orlando judge granted a preliminary injunction temporarily halting enforcement of the law until a trial is held to determine its constitut...EPA loses Massachusetts court bid to toss lawsuit about stormwater pollution in the Charles, Mystic, and Neponset rivers
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 10:19:17 GMT
The EPA has lost its bid to toss a lawsuit about the federal environmental agency allegedly failing to protect three Boston-area rivers from stormwater pollution.A judge in U.S. District Court this week denied the Environmental Protection Agency’s motion to dismiss a suit filed by Charles River Watershed Association and Conservation Law Foundation — which aims to hold the EPA accountable for implementing stormwater runoff protections in the Charles, Mystic, and Neponset rivers.The groups sued the EPA last fall, accusing the feds of failing to regulate dangerous stormwater runoff in the three Boston-area rivers. The lawsuit seeks to curb stormwater pollution from commercial, industrial, and institutional properties.“Stormwater pollution is one of the greatest threats to urban rivers, including the Charles — polluted runoff degrades the river ecosystem and can cause rampant invasive species growth, toxic cyanobacteria blooms, and even fish kills,” said Ze...Serious crimes unit takes over case of two missing B.C. children named in Amber Alert
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 10:19:17 GMT
SURREY, B.C. — Police have released more information about the woman alleged to have abducted her two children, who are the subject of an Amber Alert.RCMP say Verity Bolton was spotted by closed-circuit TV emerging from a grocery store with a loaded cart in Kamloops two days before she was expected to give her children, who are from Surrey, back to their father after a vacation. Surrey RCMP say in a news release that its serious crimes unit has taken over conduct of the investigation. The woman was supposed to return her children, eight-year-old Aurora and 10-year-old Joshuah Bolton, on July 17 to their father, who has primary custody. Police issued an Amber Alert on Wednesday saying they have concerns about the mother’s mental health and are worried about the well-being of the children.A photo released by RCMP shows a blue 2012 Dodge Ram 2500 pickup, towing a white horse trailer, that the woman is believed to be driving, and anyone who sees the vehicle or the Boltons is ur...In a nod to Oppenheimer’s legacy, US officials vow to prioritize cleanup at nuclear lab
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 10:19:17 GMT
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — The price tag for cleaning up waste from the once top-secret Manhattan Project and subsequent Cold War-era nuclear research at Los Alamos National Laboratory has more than doubled in the last seven years, and independent federal investigators say federal officials will have to do better to track costs and progress.The Government Accountability Office in a report issued Wednesday said while some improvements have been made, the U.S. Energy Department hasn’t taken a comprehensive approach to prioritizing cleanup activities at the New Mexico lab.The report came as federal officials hosted a forum Thursday in Los Alamos to talk about cleaning up contaminated soil and groundwater and handling hazardous waste generated by decades of research that started with development of the atomic bomb during the 1940s.Ike White, who heads DOE’s Office of Environmental Management, said the release this week of the “Oppenheimer” film makes it a good time to talk about the...Latest news
- DNA: Woman was on famed 17th century Swedish warship
- Geneva appeals court upholds conviction of Israeli tycoon
- Firefighter dies after battling house fire on Chicago's South Side
- Election Day 2023: Chicago voters set to pick new mayor Tuesday
- Seymour Stein, record executive who signed Madonna, dies at 80
- How do you move and release a long-captive orca? 'Free Willy' star offers sad lesson
- Bluebonnets, ice storm could mean more snake sightings
- Texas drops effort to punish Harris County over its law enforcement spending
- 28-year-old Round Rock man found
- Donald Trump set to be arraigned Tuesday afternoon in historic court moment