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People in 9/11 Pic ID'd

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The power of social media has reconnected a man with a photo that was once sitting on his desk on the 77th floor of the World Trade Center.

A friend of Elizabeth Stringer Keefe found the photo at ground zero, just a few weeks after 9/11.

Keefe, an assistant professor at the Graduate School of Education at Lesley University, and a PhD candidate at Boston College, posted the photo to Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram on the anniversary of the attacks for years, hoping to find the people in the picture alive and well.

Each year, the photo got more shares, more retweets, and more likes.

"Every year I go dig it out," Keefe told the Boston Globe over the phone on Friday. "I've been posting it for years, and it's literally never gone anywhere."

By Friday night, the day after the 13th anniversary of 9/11, the people in the wedding party were identified, and none of them were victims of the attacks, like Keefe feared.

The man on the far left of the photo, Fred Mahe, contacted Keefe. The picture belonged to the former New York City resident. He said the photo was taken in Aspen, Colorado, in 2001.

"The picture was at my desk in the World Trade Center, Tower Two, on the 77th floor," said Mahe in a Facebook message to Boston Magazine. "The picture has been kept safe by [Keefe] for the last 13 years."

Mahe said he was not at work on 9/11, telling Boston Magazine he "thankfully never got a chance to go up to my office."

Hundreds of thousands of people shared the photo. 



Photo Credit: Boston Globe

LifeStar Responds to Dirt Bike Crash in Killingworth

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A LifeStar medical helicopter was called to the Killingworth-Clinton town line Friday night to airlift the victim of a dirt bike crash, according to agency.

Valley Shore Dispatch said fire crews from Clinton and Killingworth are both responding to the scene.

The condition of the victim is unknown. No additional information was immediately available.

Check back for updates.

Teen Pleads Guilty in Crash That Killed RHAM Student

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The teen accused of driving drunk, then crashing and killing a fellow student at RHAM High School last August has pleaded guilty to manslaughter, according to the court.

Connor McKee, who was 17 at the time of the crash and is 18 now, appeared in court Friday and pleaded guilty to one count of second-degree manslaughter with a motor vehicle.

Authorities said Paige Houston, a cheerleader from the Amston section of Hebron, was riding in McKee's pickup truck when it struck a tree on Aug. 6, 2013 on West Street. Houston was thrown from the car and died at the scene. McKee had reportedly been drinking at a party earlier in the evening.

She would have been a senior at RHAM High School that year.

Police said the teens had attended an underage drinking party in Marlborough prior to the crash. Two other teens were in the car with McKee and Houston.

According to police, McKee was driving well above the posted speed limit of 35 mph, ignored a stop sign and lost control of the truck.

He will be sentenced Jan. 8, 2015 and could face up to seven years in prison.



Photo Credit: NBCConnecticut/Submitted Photo

Silver Alert Issued for Missing Westbrook Man, 63

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A Silver Alert has been issued for a 63-year-old Westbrook man.

Daniel Farrar, 63, was last seen on Sept. 11 wearing blue jeans and a grey sweatshirt. Police said that "he walks with a limp" and "may have made his way to New Haven."

Farrar is described as a white man with grey hair and hazel eyes, police said. He is 5-foot-8 and weighs 230 pounds.

Connecticut State Police at Troop F in Westbrook ask anyone with information to call 860-399-2100.



Photo Credit: Connecticut State Police

Silver Alert Issued for Southington Woman, 76

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Southington police are looking for a missing 76-year-old woman and a Silver Alert was issued Saturday.

Betty Long, 76, of Southington, was last seen on Friday, Sept. 12 driving a black 2003 Subaru Forester in Saratoga, New York. The car has Connecticut license plates, listed as 480-WRD, according to police.

Police described her as a white woman with blue eyes and grey hair. She is 5-foot-7 and weighs 190 pounds, police said. A photo of her and clothing description was not available.

Southington police ask anyone with information to contact the department at 860-478-1600.



Photo Credit: Connecticut State Police

Enterovirus Cases Suspected in Connecticut

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Two Connecticut hospitals, including the Connecticut Children's Medical Center in Hartford, are treating suspected cases Enterovirus D68, the mysterious respiratory illness that has hospitalized children in a dozen states, according to a spokesperson for the hospital.

"We can confirm that we are treating children with respiratory illnesses at Connecticut Children's who have exhibited symptoms of Enterovirus D68," said hospital spokesman Bob Fraleigh, in a statement Friday night. "At this point it is important to note they are possible cases, not confirmed cases. We will not know anything further until the CDC has had the opportunity to run their tests and then communicate those results back to us."

Hospital officials at Connecticut Children's said lately they've seen an unusual increase in the number of children being rushed to the emergency room with respiratory symptoms and that 8-10 children may have contracted the virus.

Enteroviruses "circulate every single year around this time" and are "fairly common," according to Dr. Ulysses Wu, chief of infectious diseases for St. Francis Hospital. The D-68 strain is affecting kids across the country.

"They're not that big of a deal. I think it's catching a lot of attention because it produces a different type of illness in the sense taht it's not just a summer cold. A lot of these children have been coming in wheezing," Wu said.

Enterovirus 68 could be particularly dangerous for kids who have asthma and/or other respiratory illnesses, but Wu said not to panic because most cases are mild and resolve quickly.

"Similar to the common cold, you would give supportive treatment, symptomatic treatment," wu said. "The problem is that in some kids, especially asthmatic, they may have what we call low oxygen levels in their blood."

Enterovirus 68 presents like a bad cold or flu, according to doctors. Symptoms include high fever, runny nose, sneezing, couging, wheezing and difficulty breathing, according to the CDC. No fatalities have been linked to Enterovirus 68.

Children exhibiting symptoms of the virus have been tested for Enterovirus D68 and will receive the results on Monday, according to Connecticut Children's.

"In some cases, it would require oxygen, and it would require hospitalization and breathing treatments," said Dr. Juan Salazar of Connecticut Children's.

Bill Gerrish, of the state Department of Public Health, said Connecticut Children's isn't the only hospital treating possible cases of Enterovirus.

"The Connecticut Department of Public Health (DPH) has received reports from two hospitals in different parts of the state of clusters of severe respiratory illness among young children that could be due to enterovirus D68," Gerrish said in a statement Friday, adding that the DPH is facilitating tests to make specific diagnoses.

There is no known vaccine for the illness, which was first identified in California in 1962, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A total of 97 confirmed cases have been reported around the country from mid-August to Sept. 12, according to Gerrish. Affected states include Colorado, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky and Missouri.

The disease most commonly affects children and teenagers, especially those with asthma. It's spread through saliva and mucus, and officials say schools can serve as incubators.

"The DPH has asked clinicians to consider laboratory testing of respiratory specimens for enteroviruses when the cause of infection in severely ill patients is unclear, and to report clusters of severe respiratory illnesses to their local public health agency and DPH," Gerrish said.

Salazar advises parents to contact their child's primary care doctor if their child has difficulty breathing or a high fever and they have concerns.

"This is the beginning of an epidemic and everyone has to be mindful of that," Salazar said.

More information on the virus is available through the CDC and the Association of School Nurses of Connecticut.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Police Raise $800 for Autistic Man Robbed of Birthday Money

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Just days after a 27-year-old autistic man was robbed of his birthday money in Stamford, police have pitched in to raise $800 for the victim and will deliver it to his family next week.

Police said the man was approached near Veterans Park on Tuesday afternoon.

The suspect tricked him into handing over the money, then pretended to put it back in the victim's pocket but instead ran away with $100 cash, according to police.

Stamford police officers and members of the local police union have banded together to collect money for the victim and plan to surprise him with it on Monday, according to the police department.

The family is "overwhelmed by the community's generosity and support" and police said they will only accept donations until Monday, Sept. 15 at the department to respect the family's wishes, according to a news release from the department.

Meanwhile police are still searching for the robber and are asking for the public's help in tracking him down.

Police said he was wearing a dark hooded sweatshirt with a white rectangular design on the front and black pants with white stripes down the sides.

Surveillance footage shows him running from the scene.

Stamford police said that they have already received several tips and have leads thanks to several members of the public who shared and viewed the video police released.

Anyone with information is urged to call Stamford police detectives at 203-977-4417.



Photo Credit: Stamford Police Department

Police Recover Stolen Gun During Drug Search

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New Haven police recovered a stolen gun while issuing a search and seizure warrant for a narcotics investigation.

Narcotics Enforcement Unit officers searched Harvey Fair's 673 Winchester Avenue third-floor unit in New Haven Friday night on two warrants for Fair in a sale of controlled substances case and saw him throw a handgun from a third-floor window.

Police identified the gun as a Walther P122 handgun reported stolen in Torrington and took Fair into custody.

Officers seized the gun, 27.8 grams of marijuana and $1,100 cash.

Police charged Fair with multiple "drug and weapons crimes" and theft of the handgun, police said.



Photo Credit: New Haven Police Department

Neighbor on Squalid Mass. Home

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A neighbor of a woman who is accused of concealing the death of three infants in her vermin-infested home in Blackstone, Massachusetts, said she had seen children outside the house always underdressed for the weather and piles of trash in the backyard.

"I don't know how many times I've seen those children outside no shoes, no clothes on, eating out of a cracker box and drinking soda. This was 6:30, 7 o'clock in the morning," Marie White told NECN in an exclusive interview. White and her husband moved to Florida two years ago after living in their Blackstone home for a decade. The couple still rents out their house, located next-door to 23 St. Paul Street.

Erika Murray, 31, was arrested Thursday night after detectives investigating a case of reckless endangerment of children found the bodies of three infants at the home infested with vermin and littered with soiled diapers. Four other children, ages 13, 10, 3 and 6 months old, were removed from the house on Aug. 28 after a neighbor notified police about their living conditions.

Murray was arrested on charges including fetal death concealment, witness intimidation and permitting substantial injury to a child. Not guilty pleas were entered Friday on her behalf and she is being held without bail.

Her attorney, Keith Halpern, suggested that Murray struggled with mental illness, The Associated Press reported.

White says she never saw the infants, but she did see piles of dirty diapers among other trash out in the backyard.

She said she called the Board of Health in Blackstone to see if the trash could be removed.

“Maybe a week or two went by when I saw a dumpster in that yard and they were loading it," White said.

But soon after, White said the trash in the backyard piled up again.

One day, she said she observed something odd through a tattered piece of cloth hanging over the home's basement window.

"I saw that man, which I thought was her husband, didn't know it was the boyfriend, but he lived there with her all the years I've been there, rocking on a rocking chair, banging his head on the wall," White recalled.

White said that for the most part, she minded her own business, but after becoming upset with the smell of dog feces from her neighbor's backyard, she called the animal control officer. The odor became so bad that she had to keep her windows closed.

"The smell behind there was so bad, that it almost knocked me off my feet," White said.

She said she assumed it was a dead “dog or a human.”

Blackstone Police said skeletal remains of several animals, including cats and a dog, were also found inside the home. During the investigation, police and crews have been wearing hazardous material suits while they sift through the small home.

White says she regrets never putting her complaint to the Department of Health in writing.

"I went to the town hall, asked for the health department," she said. "I told them the situation and they said 'write it up.' Unfortunately, I never wrote it up and that's one thing I regret."

NECN was unable to reach both the animal control officer and Department of Health for comment on Friday.

White said she is haunted by the fact that investigators have not disclosed information about the woman's alleged boyfriend's whereabouts or involvement.

Copyright Associated Press / NBC Connecticut

Norwalk Police Investigate Robbery

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Norwalk police are investigating an armed robbery at Hudson City Savings.

The robbery happened at 12:24 p.m. at the 596 Westport Avenue bank. The suspect displayed a handgun and fled the scene on a bicycle.

No one was injured.

The robbery remains under investigation.



Photo Credit: Shutterstock

Men Rob Club Patron Who Bought Them Drinks: Cops

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Two men robbed a 57-year-old man in a club parking lot in Sterling early Saturday morning after drinking with him.

Jason White, 37, of Killingly, and Christopher Simmons, 37, of Kingsman, Arizona, "lured" an intoxicated man into the parking lot of Foresters Club, "knocked him to the ground" and stole his wallet, State Police said. The man, 53, had been drinking with them inside and bought them "rounds of drinks," according to State Police.

The incident happened at about 1:30 a.m. on Saturday. It's unclear if the victim knew the suspects before what State Police are calling a "strong armed robbery."

White and Simmons fled the scene, according to State Police. State troopers followed up on a lead at a Plainfield house where the men turned to to be located and they both ran when State Police arrived, according to police. A State Police K9 named Elvis tracked the men behind the home and found White hiding behind tree about 100 yards away. Troopers found Simmons hiding under a Sterling Hill Road bridge nearby.

Both men resisted arrest, but State Police took them into custody and brought them to Troop D in Danielson, State Police said.

State Police charged White with second-degree robbery, third-degree assault and unlawful restraint and Simmons with criminal impersonation and six counts of second-degree failure to appear in court. Both men were also charged with conspiracy to commit second-degree robbery, interfering with a police officer and sixth-degree larceny.

State Police held both White and Simmons in custody on $100,000 and $525,000 cash bonds, respectively. Both men are due in Danielson Superior Court on Sept. 15.

Two People Shot Outside Bridgeport Night Club

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Bridgeport detectives are investigating an overnight shooting at a night club that wounded two people.

Police responded to the back of 737 East Main Street at 4:18 a.m. to investigate a report of a shooting.

An argument and fight broke out as people were leaving  "an after-hours club" at closing time  and shots were fired, injuring two people, police said.

An ambulance transported Christian Roque, 33, to Bridgeport Hospital to be treated for multiple gunshot wounds, according to police. Luis Santiago, 23, "arrived at Bridgeport Hospital in a car" with gunshot wounds, as well, police said.

Roque and Santiago are listed in stable condition, according to police.

Police have not said how many people fired shots and how many rounds were fired.

Detectives are investigating the circumstances of the shooting.

More information will be provided when it becomes available.



Photo Credit: NBCConnecticut.com

Decision 2014: The Q-Poll

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This week’s episode of "Decision 2014" focuses on the first Quinnipiac poll of the general election.

According to the poll, GOP challenger Tom Foley leads Dan Malloy 46 percent to 40 percent in the race for governor, but the biggest surprise may be that unaffiliated candidate Joseph Visconti received 7 percent.

Visconti joins George Colli in the studio to talk about where his support is coming from and where he stands on issues other than guns and education. He also debuts his newest web advertisement.

Also, CTNewsJunkie’s Christine Stuart breaks down the poll and what it all means with Max Reiss.

Todd Piro discusses the legality of campaign ads and why the governor was able to use video from an NBC Connecticut broadcast without the station’s consent.

Finally, we introduce you to GOP Treasurer hopeful Tim Herbst of Trumbull.

Episode 10 – The Q-Poll: What’s it all mean?

  • WATCH: Unaffiliated candidate for governor Joseph Visconti, of West Hartford, reacts to his unexpectedly strong showing in the first poll of the campaign.
  • WATCH: CTNewsJunkie.com’s Christine Stuart breaks down Q-poll and what it all means.
  • WATCH: Todd Piro explores the legalities surrounding campaign advertising.
  • WATCH: Meet GOP candidate for treasurer Tim Herbst.

You can watch "Decision 2014" every Sunday at 10 a.m. on NBC Connecticut.



Photo Credit: NBC Connecticut

Ebola Patient Eats Ice Cream

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The Massachusetts doctor who contracted Ebola in Africa is steadily improving, and doctors have Ben & Jerry's Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough ice cream to thank.

Rick Sacra is getting his appetite back, according to health officials at the Biocontainment Unit at The Nebraska Medical Center.

“He really wanted some ice cream,” Sacra’s wife Debbie said in a statement released by the hospital on Friday. “He’d tried a few different kinds over the last several days, and none of them were all that appetizing to him. But we finally found something in the hospital convenience store that really hit the spot — a pint of Ben & Jerry’s Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough.”

The Holden resident was able to consume an entire pint of the ice cream. As patients lose fluids to vomitting and diarrhea, Rick Sacra's doctors wanted him to consume 1,000 calories a day.

Debbie Sacra says the ice cream has helped him exceed those orders.

Rick Sacra was flown to Nebraska from Liberia last week for treatment.

Navy Suspends Search for Pilot

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The Navy has suspended its search for a pilot missing after two U.S. fighter jets collided and crashed into the west Pacific Ocean, NBC News reported Saturday.

One pilot was rescued soon after the F/A-18 Hornet crash Thursday night about 250 miles west of Wake Island, approximately 2,300 miles west of Honolulu.

After an extensive search, Navy officials announced an end to their rescue efforts Saturday after officials said there was no sign of the pilot or the jets in the water. The missing pilot has been presumed dead, the Navy said.

"This is an exceptionally difficult time for the friends and family of the missing pilot and the Navy community," said Rear Adm. Christopher Grady, Commander, Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group. "We are extremely grateful for the outpouring of support from the community. Our thoughts and prayers are with everyone affected by this tragedy."

The search for the missing pilot, whose name has not been released, involved the guided-missile cruiser USS Bunker Hill, the guided-missile destroyer USS Gridley, the USS Sperett, the USS Dewey and two helicopter squadrons.

Both jets involved in the collision were assigned to Carrier Air Wing 17 and assigned to the San Diego-based Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group. The public affairs officer for Navy Regional SW said the jets involved in the crash are based out of Lemoore Naval Air Station near Fresno, California.

The aircraft have not been recovered.

Navy Cmdr. Jeannie Groeneveld, of San Diego, said she couldn't release details of the crash, but told NBC News an investigation is under way.

Navy officials said the jets had "launched from the flight deck and were in the process of proceeding to their initial stations when they apparently collided approximately seven miles from the ship."

The rescued pilot remained in fair condition Saturday in the medical department of the Carl Vinson, the Navy confirmed.

The Carl Vinson strike group team departed San Diego on Aug. 22 for a 9-month deployment.
 

Copyright Associated Press / NBC Connecticut



Photo Credit: AP

Cops Visited Home With Dead Babies

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As the investigation at a home in Blackstone, Massachusetts, where three infants were found dead earlier this week continues, NECN has learned that police have responded to the home in the past.

Thirty-one-year-old Erika Murray was arrested Thursday on charges that included fetal death concealment after the disturbing discovery. She is currently being held without bail.

According to police documents, officers have been called to 23 St. Paul Street in the past for various issues, including several reports of animal abuse.

In December of 2012, a caller reported seeing a dog on the back porch so cold that it could not sit down.

In a 2007 incident, officers responded to the house after an unnamed woman who lived there told Murray that she wanted to hurt herself.

The report states Murray didn't live at the home in 2007, but down the road at 3 St. Paul Street.

Officers responding to that call said they saw two children, ages 4 and 7 at the time, sleeping on couches - the room littered with dirty clothes. A report was filed with the Department of Social Services.

The report also said the unnamed woman bit a Blackstone rescue officer, but no charges were filed.

Residents of the town still can't believe what police say was going on inside the home.

"In Blackstone, we are a very loving, caring family," neighbor Le-Anne Defaut told NECN. "And I'm just blown away by this."

A former neighbor described the odor of dog feces behind the home in an exclusive interview with NECN.

"The smell behind there was so bad that it almost knocked me off my feet," said Marie White, who moved to Florida two years ago.

The Massachusetts Department of Children and Families removed four children from the home two weeks ago, but didn't find the infant bodies until this week.

Copyright Associated Press / NBC Connecticut



Photo Credit: NECN

Waterford Police Investigate Vandalism

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Waterford police are asking for the public’s help in investigating several cases of vandalism.

Police say Friday night several vehicles in the area of Fog Plain Road, Rockwood Road and Mackenzie Road were covered in blue and pink paint. A similar incident occurred in August.

During the August incident a homeowner reported seeing what are believed to be several juvenile suspects flee into the Devonshire Drive neighborhood, according to police.

Police say they found several paint cans, which still displayed the paint match bar codes. One can had been marked “James’ Room” with a date of 2002.

Anyone with information is encouraged to call Waterford police at 860-442-9451, or privately message the police department’s facebook page.
 

SoCal Fire Likely Started in Yard

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Fire officials believe the Silverado Fire, which has burned an estimated 1,500 acres and caused mandatory evacuations in Orange County, began in someone's backyard.

Details about the origin of the fire were limited.

"The fire got started off the forest, and because of the terrain and the fuels and because of the prevailing winds, it took the fire into the forest," said Chon Bribiescas of the Incident Command Team for the U.S. Forest Service. "Right now we don’t know what activity caused that."

Firefighters doubled the number of personnel fighting the Silverado Fire Saturday morning in anticipation of the triple-digit heat that could further spread the flames.

A smoke advisory was issued throughout Orange and Riverside counties, including Irvine to the west, Corona to the north, Lake Elsinore to the east, and San Clemente to the south.

The fire broke out around 10:30 a.m. Friday in the 30500 block of Silverado Canyon Road in a remote part of the Cleveland National Forest, about 20 miles east of Santa Ana, officials said.

By Saturday morning, firefighters said the blaze was about 10 percent contained. The fire acreage estimate fluctuated between 1,500 and 1,600 acres.

Mandatory evacuations had been issued at 6 p.m. Friday for residents living from 30500 Silverado Canyon Road east to the end of the canyon, according to the Orange County Sheriff’s Department. Evacuations remained in effect through Saturday night.

Fire officials counted 217 homes in the canyon. Those living in the lower canyon were allowed to return home Friday night. The uppermost 30 homes were subject to mandatory evacuation.

"I’m just going to pack up and go and be on the safe side," resident Melissa Maddy Jacobs said. "We’ll feel a little bit safer being on a different part of town."

An evacuation center was set up at El Modena High School at 3920 E. Spring St. in Orange.

The blaze was initially reported at about 15 acres, burning in Silverado Canyon near the Orange/Riverside County border, but grew to more than 1,000 acres by the afternoon, according to the U.S. Forest Service, which was leading the firefight.

The fire had stopped at 1,600 acres Friday night thanks in part to a change in humidity and the arrival of a down canyon wind. For the most part, the fire had been burning uphill during the day.

Because of the triple-digit heat expected Saturday, firefighters planned to nearly double the number of people fighting the fire. As of Friday night, 280 personnel were helping fight the blaze.

Three firefighters were hospitalized with heat-related injuries overnight, but all were expected to be battling the blaze Saturday.

"Tomorrow morning we’re going to be gearing up early, we’ll have aircraft up at first light – that includes fixed wing and rotary wing. The goal is to hit it hard and as quickly as we can in the morning, and hopefully get as much line constructed before it really warms up in the afternoon,” a fire official said.

Temperatures started off in the upper 60s in Orange County Saturday morning, but temperatures were expected to heat up later in the day.

"By this afternoon we are going to be in the triple-digit territory," NBC4 meteorologist Elita Loresca said.

Firefighters were expected to be helped by a lack of Santa Ana winds, Loresca said.

Norwalk Police Seek Bank Robbery Suspect

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Norwalk police are seeking public assistance to identify the suspect in an armed bank robbery Saturday afternoon.

Police say at 12:21 p.m. the suspect walked into the Hudson Bank at 596 Westport Ave and displayed a black semi-automatic handgun. He fled the scene on a black BMX style bicycle.

The suspect is described as a thin male, 5'6-5'8, who was wearing a gray jacket with a white shirt underneath. The suspect also wore a black ski mask.



Photo Credit: Norwalk Police Department

"Despicable": Dog Left in Dumpster

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A resident at a mobile home park in Riverside County noticed something disturbing inside a dumpster when throwing out their trash Saturday morning: an abandoned Chihuahua with big brown eyes staring up from inside.

The resident notified a manager at the mobile home park in the 6000 block of Mission Boulevard in Jurupa Valley. Riverside County Animal Services was called to the scene.

The 3-year-old Chihuahua mix was taken to a nearby shelter, and aside from a slightly high temperature, was deemed healthy by veterinary team members. Officials said the small dog appeared to have a “pleasant temperament.”

Animal service officials believe the black-and-brown furred pet was likely put in the dumpster overnight. The mobile home park manager said the trashed is picked up every day except on Saturdays and Sundays.

"It is a sick act to treat any animal in this manner," Riverside County Animal Services Director Robert Miller said in a statement. "A dog is a living creature. It is not trash. We can always work with pet owners to rehome their pet. To do something like this to a dog is despicable."

Anyone with information about the abandoned dog is asked to email the Riverside County Animal Services at shelterinfo@rcdas.org.



Photo Credit: Riverside County Animal Services
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