NYSP: Vermont man arrested for burglary in progress in Granville

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:14:53 GMT

NYSP: Vermont man arrested for burglary in progress in Granville GRANVILLE, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- On Tuesday afternoon, New York State Police Troopers responded to a burglary in progress at a residence in Granville. Troopers located the suspect, Dylan S. Drost, 32, of Poultney, Vermont, on the property. Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! According to the police, Drost caused damage while trying to get inside the home and disturbed items inside. No one was home at that time. Drost was arrested for second-degree burglary and turned over to the Washington County Correctional Facility to await arraignment.

Adirondack town: Do rental homes need governance?

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:14:53 GMT

Adirondack town: Do rental homes need governance? CHESTERTOWN, N.Y. (NEWS10) - A southern Adirondack community with many short-term rental properties to its name is looking for community input on the rental homes among its houses. This week, the Town of Chester, containing the hamlet of Chestertown, has put out a call for public input on whether rental properties need to be regulated. Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! A new survey gives residents and visitors the chance to sound off on how they see the situation regarding rental properties. The survey asks applicants to clarify whether they themselves operate short-term rentals, and whether they think such properties should be regulated, including a requirement to confirm New York State Building Code compliance. Multiple options are available for the airing of concerns regarding rentals.Short-term rental dwelling units are defined as a space that may be inhabited by a given occupant or set of occupants for a period of less t...

Environmental Conservation Officers issue tickets for illegally caught fish

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:14:53 GMT

Environmental Conservation Officers issue tickets for illegally caught fish ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- Over the last few weeks, Environmental Conservation Officers conducted fishing compliance checks in Nassau, Suffolk, and Albany Counties. ECOs handed out tickets on multiple occasions and seized illegally caught fish. Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! On May 2, ECOs Pabes and DeRose and K9 Cramer conducted striped-bass details at bridges throughout Nassau County. Over the course of two days, the officers seized 27 illegally caught fish. Tickets were issued to anglers for taking and possessing undersized and excess striped bass, failure to obtain marine fishing registries and unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle.On May 7, ECO Zullock conducted fishing compliance checks on vessels at a boat launch in Southold. One captain was ticketed for possessing over-the-limit weakfish. The captain also had a black sea bass, which is out of season in New York State. The fish were seized and donated to the Quogue ...

Franklin County man added to FBI's Ten Most Wanted list

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:14:53 GMT

Franklin County man added to FBI's Ten Most Wanted list FRANKLIN COUNTY, Mo. - The Federal Bureau of Investigation has added a Franklin County, Missouri, man to its list of the Ten Most Wanted Fugitives in the nation.Donald Eugene Fields II, 59, is accused of child sex trafficking and child rape in state and federal court.On Dec. 8, 2022, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Missouri issued a federal arrest warrant for Fields. He was indicted the day prior on one count of child sex trafficking.Authorities claim Fields and a co-defendant, identified as Theodore “Ted” Sartori Sr., attempted to recruit, entice, provide, and patronize at least one underage girl into engaging in commercial sex acts, from January 2013 to June 2017.Sartori, 62, was indicted and arrested on the same charge. Sartori appeared in federal court in December 2022 pleaded not guilty. Close Thanks for signing up! Watch for us in your inbox. Subscribe Now Breaking News ...

Spire acquires two Missouri pipeline systems

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:14:53 GMT

Spire acquires two Missouri pipeline systems ST. LOUIS - Spire Inc. will acquire two Missouri pipeline systems as part of an agreement announced Thursday. The St. Louis-based energy company will acquire MoGas Pipeline (MoGas), an interstate natural gas pipeline, and Omega Pipeline (Omega), a connected gas distribution system, from CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust, Inc. for $175 million. Trending -- Former ‘Basketball Wives’ star from St. Louis admits multiple frauds MoGas owns and operates around 260 miles of interstate natural gas pipelines, primarily in Missouri. MoGas interconnects with Spire STL Pipeline and other regional pipelines to deliver gas in parts of St. Louis, St. Charles and Franklin counties. Omega owns and operates around 75 miles of interstate natural gas pipelines within the Fort Leonard Wood in south-central Missouri area. It is also interconnected with the MoGas system. Close Thanks for signing up! Watch for us in your inbox. Subscribe Now Daily New...

“Alarming upward trend” as this year’s hit-and-run crashes outpace 2022 crashes

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:14:53 GMT

“Alarming upward trend” as this year’s hit-and-run crashes outpace 2022 crashes Hit-and-run crashes this year are so far outpacing crashes in 2022, an “alarming upward trend,” the Colorado State Patrol said in a Wednesday news release.The CSP has seen a 22% increase in hit-and-run crashes in the first quarter of 2023 compared to the same time frame in 2022. This year in January, the month that saw the sharpest increase, there were 260 hit-and-run crashes. January 2022 saw 192 crashes.“If you hit a vehicle, a person, or another piece of property, don’t panic,” Colorado State Patrol Chief Matthew C. Packard said. “Operating out of fear will only worsen this situation. Stay at the scene, check to make sure (whether) you and anyone are injured and call 9-1-1 to report the collision.”Leaving the scene of a crash can lead to multiple criminal charges, including felonies, that pile onto any charges associated with the crash. For example, if an uninsured motorist stayed at a property crash scene, they could be charged with careless driving and no proof of i...

Hard Rock Cafe’s 16th Street Mall lease is coming to an end this year

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:14:53 GMT

Hard Rock Cafe’s 16th Street Mall lease is coming to an end this year Hard Rock Cafe, a mainstay of Denver’s 16th Street Mall, is getting ready to play its last show.The Florida-based chain of rock ’n’ roll-themed restaurants made its debut at 500 16th St. Mall in downtown Denver when the Denver Pavilions first opened in 1998. But the Hard Rock Cafe’s lease is ending this fall. So, will the Hard Rock Cafe close for good?Well, Mark Sidell, president of Gart Properties, which owns the Denver Pavilions, confirmed that a possible closure “is not inconsistent with the previous discussions we’ve had with the company.”Hard Rock Cafe did not respond to a request for comment.If the tourist attraction, popular for its burgers, rock ‘n’ roll memorabilia and a 20-foot neon guitar sign, does close before the end of the year, this will be the first time that the 11,736-square-foot space, which sits in a prime spot on the 16th Street Mall, will be available for lease.In 2021, Hard Rock Cafe filed a lawsuit against landlord G...

22-year-old woman fatally hit while walking across I-70 in Aurora

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:14:53 GMT

22-year-old woman fatally hit while walking across I-70 in Aurora A 22-year-old woman who died after walking across Interstate 70 may have been hit by several vehicles, and Aurora police investigating the death on Thursday appealed for help from the public.A BMW 330xi moving west on I-70 between Pena Boulevard and Chambers Road struck the woman late Wednesday, around 11:20 p.m., Aurora police said. “Investigators believe it is possible the pedestrian was hit by several vehicles” and that the drivers of those vehicles “do not know they were involved,” police spokeswoman Sydney Edwards said.Related ArticlesColorado News | Man dies in Colorado River when thrown out of raft in Garfield County Colorado News | Trinidad police fatally shoot man during warrants call; another man injured Colorado News | Denver police investigating homicide that left 1 dead, 1 seriously injured Colorado News | Fountain police shoot suspect, dog while responding to domestic violence call ...

Colorado woman hit by train while trapped in police car says memory loss should block criminal case against her

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:14:53 GMT

Colorado woman hit by train while trapped in police car says memory loss should block criminal case against her The Colorado woman who was hit by a train after police officers locked her inside a patrol vehicle that was parked on railroad tracks in Weld County says the memory loss she suffered in the crash should block the criminal case against her.Yareni Rios-Gonzalez, 21, was stopped by Fort Lupton and Platteville police officers on Sept. 16 after a 911 caller told dispatchers that she’d flashed a gun at him during a road rage incident. Officers took Rios-Gonzalez into custody and then locked her in the back of a police vehicle that was parked on train tracks near U.S. 85 and Weld County Road 38.The officers then failed to move the police SUV or help Rios-Gonzalez as a train bore down on the vehicle, horn blaring, and as Rios-Gonzalez screamed for help. The train hit the SUV with Rios-Gonzalez inside. She suffered significant injuries that included broken ribs, broken and dislocated wrists, a punctured lung, a broken leg, a traumatic brain injury and amnesia, according to the 28-page ...

Charges against Aurora parents in co-sleeping death of 2-day-old baby draw condemnation from pregnancy justice groups

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:14:53 GMT

Charges against Aurora parents in co-sleeping death of 2-day-old baby draw condemnation from pregnancy justice groups The criminal case of an Aurora couple charged in the co-sleeping death of their 2-day-old baby has spurred outcry from state reproductive justice groups who describe the prosecution as part of a growing trend across the country in which pregnant and postpartum people are facing more criminalization.Brittany Diekneit, 27, and her husband Sean Byrne, 26, are each facing a felony charge of child abuse resulting in death. Diekneit and baby Walker returned home from the hospital on Sept. 22, and Walker died sometime that night or early morning. In April, three months after the autopsy was completed, arrest warrants were issued for the pair. The Aurora police arrest affidavits allege that the couple was drinking alcohol before sharing a bed with the baby and “ignored the substantial and unjustifiable risk of co-sleeping with Walker while being incapacitated and they were thus unable to check on him.”The 18th Judicial District Attorney’s Office also upped the detective...