Schooners set sail for Great Chesapeake Bay race that started with a beer bet

By Linnea Hoover

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    BALTIMORE (WMAR) — What began as a friendly wager between two captains has grown into a beloved Chesapeake Bay tradition that raises hundreds of thousands of dollars for local nonprofits while celebrating the region’s maritime heritage.

The Great Chesapeake Bay Schooner Race will launch Thursday from Baltimore, featuring 23 boats racing 118 nautical miles from where the Key Bridge once stood to Norfolk, Virginia.

“We’re just going to race down the bay, drag race. It’s going to be very epic,” said Kayden Lewis, who is crewing his first race aboard the Sultana.

The race traces its origins to a simple challenge between two ship captains 36 years ago.

“Father challenged the captain, Captain John Miles, to a race down the bay with the Norfolk Rebel and the Pride of Baltimore too. Winner had to buy a beer, and it was, you know, just a fun challenge,” said Stephen Briggs, whose father started the tradition.

That friendly competition has since raised over $350,000 for nonprofit organizations throughout the Chesapeake Bay region, including the Downtown Sailing Center, Chesapeake Bay Foundation and oyster recovery projects.

“Throughout the year it’s not just a one time a year event. There’s a lot of stuff going on throughout the year,” Briggs said.

Beyond fundraising, the race serves as a platform for sharing the love, history and tradition of Chesapeake Bay watercraft. Briggs said his father, who lived and worked on the water, was passionate about sail training and working with children.

“It started out as a fundraiser and then it morphed into more of an educational, an awareness of the Chesapeake and everything else,” Briggs said.

For Lewis, that educational mission resonates deeply. The Sultana holds special significance as the first schooner he ever sailed on as a fifth-grader.

“They taught us everything about the boat itself and the history of the Chesapeake and what the boat originally did,” Lewis said.

The race showcases traditional schooners like the Pride of Baltimore 2, connecting participants and spectators to the maritime heritage that has shaped the Chesapeake Bay region for centuries.

This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. WMAR verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

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Dueling protests clash over school board member’s comments on Charlie Kirk

By Joel Lopez

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    PALM BEACH COUNTY, Florida (WPTV) — In a tumultuous turn of events at the School District of Palm Beach County, two protests emerged surrounding the controversial remarks made by School District of Palm Beach County School Board Member Edwin Ferguson about conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

The situation reflects a growing nationwide divide over freedom of speech and its implications within educational settings.

On one side of the entrance to the school district headquarters, supporters waving flags, driving trucks, and rallying for Charlie Kirk have called for Edwin Ferguson’s removal from his position.

Conversely, a smaller group gathered with a sign reading “Freedom of Speech For All,” advocating for Ferguson’s right to express his views.

Members of the NAACP held a prayer outside the school board meeting chambers, emphasizing their support for Ferguson to maintain his job while advocating for the free speech rights of all educators.

“This is not a Democratic thing, a Republican thing, this is not party, this is a moral issue,” Pastor Rae Whitely from Faith in Florida stated.

The uproar stems from controversial comments made by Edwin Ferguson, who previously drew backlash for calling Kirk a racist bigot and comparing Charlie Kirk to Adolf Hitler.

In the school board meeting, Ferguson cautioned teachers regarding the public expression of their opinions about the conservative figure.

Supporters of Charlie Kirk are adamant that Ferguson should no longer hold his seat, insisting that he has a significant influence on students.

“I saw the video over and over again and I said, ‘I can’t believe what this man said,'” supporter Willy Guardiola said. “I don’t care if he’s black, white, purple, or if he’s my twin brother, the thing is nobody should be able to get away with something like that that’s just so vicious and despicable.”

Guardiola, along with other advocates for Kirk, has been attempting to connect with state leaders for the past month, demanding Ferguson’s removal but reports no response thus far.

“He thinks OK this is just going to be a little slap on the wrist. No. We need to either convert his heart or remove him,” Guardiola added.

When asked in an interview with WPTV last month about possible repercussions for his comments, Ferguson doubled down.

“I’m not racist. I don’t promote racist ideologies or anything like that so based on my understanding on the groundwork, the rules of the road I should say, no I’m not too worried about that,” he said.

He asserts that his track record on the board has been commendable.

“Being a racist is not a protected group of people,” he said.

Dedrick Straghn of the South Palm Beach County NAACP voiced the sentiment of many in support of Ferguson.

“We’re here today to let the school board know that not only are we not going to stand for it, but we’re going to challenge them to stand up and stand up with their fellow board member,” he said.

Ferguson plans to run for reelection as the District 7 board member.

The protests escalated when the Freedom of Speech for All activists confronted the Kirk supporters, which lead to yelling and shoving prompting police intervention to separate the groups.

WPTV documented a heated exchange as well as the moment Alfred Fields, president of the West Palm Beach NAACP, and Guardiola exchanged words.

“Do we all agree that the First Amendment applies to everyone that is legally in this country?” asked Fields.

“No doubt about it,” replied Guardiola.

Fields pressed further, asking if Ferguson does not have the right to express himself.

“Not to speak about somebody that was assassinated and he didn’t know anything about,” Guardiola responded.

Both factions have condemned threats of violence against Kirk and Ferguson acknowledging that Ferguson has faced threats following his remarks.

For the last month, WPTV has reached out to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ office and the Florida Department of Education for further information regarding any potential consequences for Ferguson and has not gotten any comment.

The School District of Palm Beach County issued the following statement:

“The School District operates under the governance of the School Board as a whole. For this reason, it is the practice of the District not to comment on the statements of individual Board members. Our focus remains on our mission to educate, affirm, and inspire every student.”

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Report: Woman tells police she expected PlayStation for turning in drugs

By Erin Rosas

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    GEORGETOWN, Kentucky (WLEX) — A Scott County woman faces drug trafficking charges after telling police she thought she would receive a PlayStation gaming console for bringing drugs to the sheriff’s office.

A citation revealed that 38-year-old Jennifer Elizabeth Ney was arrested Oct. 13 following reports of erratic driving on Interstate 75 near Georgetown. According to the citation, Scott County 911 received around four calls about a black passenger car driving “all over the roadway” at an unsafe slow speed in a 70 mph zone.

Georgetown police pulled over Ney on Monday night on Interstate 75. During the traffic stop an officers reportedly noticed Ney moving her hands inside her sweater pocket. When ordered to remove her hands, officers allegedly found two clear plastic bags containing light brown powder tied at the top inside her pocket.

A probable cause search of the vehicle revealed additional evidence including a large amount of cash in multiple denominations, bags containing gray and pink powder substances, three cell phones and pills identified as Xanax, according to the citation.

Ney, the citation detailed, was arrested for driving under the influence based on her driving conduct, slurred speech, constricted pupils and general confusion.

Ney reportedly told an officer she was taking the suspected drugs to the sheriff’s office because she believed she would receive a PlayStation from law enforcement in return for turning in the substances. However, officers noted she was driving in the opposite direction from the Scott County Sheriff’s office when arrested.

The citation reported that Ney has been charged with first-degree trafficking in controlled substances; first-degree possession of controlled substances, operating a motor vehicle under the influence, first-degree promoting contraband, tampering with physical evidence, reckless driving, no registration plates, failure to maintain required insurance and prescription controlled substance not in proper container.

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Parents gripe about smell of “skunk” at cheer gym next to smoke shop


KDKA

By Ricky Sayer

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    PERRYOPOLIS, Pennsylvania (KDKA) — The owner of a gym in Perryopolis says the smell from a neighboring smoke shop has made its way into the place where kids learn about gymnastics and cheer.

Parents say they smell marijuana inside ROCKNROLLS, which sits directly next to Tobacco Land.

“It smells like a skunk,” said one parent

“The only thing that separates us is about 3 inches of drywall,” said Jordan Adams, a coach and the gym’s co-owner. “A lot of the kids come up to me and say, ‘Coach, it stinks here in the gym, my head hurts a little bit, I don’t like it.'”

He describes the smell inside the cheer gym as that of “cigarettes, vape or marijuana.” On Wednesday, a KDKA crew went to the gym and could smell something inside it that smelled similar to the inside of the smoke shop, but not marijuana specifically.

Both parents and Adam said it was far more potent on Monday, with the smell dissipating since then

“We’ve had people take their kids home because they’re like, I don’t want my kid in this environment. And it’s terrible for business,” Adams said. “It’s terrible for us.”

“I think it’s completely inappropriate, not only for the little ones who really don’t understand it, but we have teenage girls in here. They know exactly what that is, and it’s not OK,” parent Amanda Cargill said.

Adams said he believes the owners and customers at the shop are smoking marijuana inside the store.

“Nobody’s smoking inside my facility,” Tobacco Land co-owner Sam Said told KDKA in a phone interview on Wednesday. “We don’t have delta-8 or delta-CBD. … You can search the store from the bottom to the top.”

Adams said he’s tried calling the police multiple times, but they haven’t been able to do anything.

“I literally feel trapped,” Adams said. “I feel terrorized in our own gym. We cannot do anything whatsoever.”

He’s now hoping local rules are changed with the intention of preventing businesses like the smoke shop from opening next to places like his gym, which is full of kids.

The building is at least partially owned by the smoke shop owners, they said, complicating things for the gym.

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Parents gripe about smell of “skunk” at cheer gym next to smoke shop

By Ricky Sayer

Click here for updates on this story

    PERRYOPOLIS, Pennsylvania (KDKA) — The owner of a gym in Perryopolis says the smell from a neighboring smoke shop has made its way into the place where kids learn about gymnastics and cheer.

Parents say they smell marijuana inside ROCKNROLLS, which sits directly next to Tobacco Land.

“It smells like a skunk,” said one parent

“The only thing that separates us is about 3 inches of drywall,” said Jordan Adams, a coach and the gym’s co-owner. “A lot of the kids come up to me and say, ‘Coach, it stinks here in the gym, my head hurts a little bit, I don’t like it.'”

He describes the smell inside the cheer gym as that of “cigarettes, vape or marijuana.” On Wednesday, a KDKA crew went to the gym and could smell something inside it that smelled similar to the inside of the smoke shop, but not marijuana specifically.

Both parents and Adam said it was far more potent on Monday, with the smell dissipating since then

“We’ve had people take their kids home because they’re like, I don’t want my kid in this environment. And it’s terrible for business,” Adams said. “It’s terrible for us.”

“I think it’s completely inappropriate, not only for the little ones who really don’t understand it, but we have teenage girls in here. They know exactly what that is, and it’s not OK,” parent Amanda Cargill said.

Adams said he believes the owners and customers at the shop are smoking marijuana inside the store.

“Nobody’s smoking inside my facility,” Tobacco Land co-owner Sam Said told KDKA in a phone interview on Wednesday. “We don’t have delta-8 or delta-CBD. … You can search the store from the bottom to the top.”

Adams said he’s tried calling the police multiple times, but they haven’t been able to do anything.

“I literally feel trapped,” Adams said. “I feel terrorized in our own gym. We cannot do anything whatsoever.”

He’s now hoping local rules are changed with the intention of preventing businesses like the smoke shop from opening next to places like his gym, which is full of kids.

The building is at least partially owned by the smoke shop owners, they said, complicating things for the gym.

Please note: This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

“Womb Bus” connects expecting moms to doulas, maternal health care resources


WCBS

By Lisa Rozner

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    NEW YORK (WCBS) — The Bronx has one of the highest maternal mortality rates, and now, expecting moms in need of resources are getting access to outreach on wheels.

The “Womb Bus” is a mobile wellness clinic that brings the services of the Birthing Place Foundation to under-represented communities in the Bronx. It is not a birth center, but a place to connect the community with doulas.

Myla Flores is a doula, and founder of the Birthing Place and co-founder of the Womb Bus and the Maryam Reproductive Health and Wellness Clinic.

“It’s very well known that the Bronx is a maternal health care desert,” Flores said. “In New York, we have just a couple birth centers, and zero are midwifery- or BIPOC-led.”

New York City’s Health Department cites studies that show, compared to white and non-Hispanic women, Black women are four times more likely to die of pregnancy complications and six times more likely to die of a pregnancy-related cause, like postpartum suicide or overdose.

“One of the things that we know is that cultural congruent care helps make an impact on the outcomes,” Flores said.

Flores said she’s seen maternal health care inequities firsthand.

“It has been very much a part of our regular engagement, is with families who’ve experienced some type of hardship, be it actual loss,” she said.

The Womb Bus offers an opportunity for new and expecting moms to form a special bond.

Mom Rajhean Patterson found the support she was looking for thanks to the outreach.

“It’s my first time exclusively breastfeeding,” she said. “Definitely challenges as far as feeling like I’m not doing it good enough, and just having that affirmation that I am doing it good enough.”

Expecting mom Courtney Harris Burnett also stopped by the Womb Bus. She met Flores back in 2020 through virtual classes she held on how to prepare for giving birth.

“I feel fortunate enough to kind of break that generational cycle of traumatic births,” Harris Burnett said.

Flores said the Womb Bus is one of several innovative ways they’re trying to reach the community, but the goal is to have a birth center to reach even more people.

Please note: This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

“Womb Bus” connects expecting moms to doulas, maternal health care resources

By Lisa Rozner

Click here for updates on this story

    NEW YORK (WCBS) — The Bronx has one of the highest maternal mortality rates, and now, expecting moms in need of resources are getting access to outreach on wheels.

The “Womb Bus” is a mobile wellness clinic that brings the services of the Birthing Place Foundation to under-represented communities in the Bronx. It is not a birth center, but a place to connect the community with doulas.

Myla Flores is a doula, and founder of the Birthing Place and co-founder of the Womb Bus and the Maryam Reproductive Health and Wellness Clinic.

“It’s very well known that the Bronx is a maternal health care desert,” Flores said. “In New York, we have just a couple birth centers, and zero are midwifery- or BIPOC-led.”

New York City’s Health Department cites studies that show, compared to white and non-Hispanic women, Black women are four times more likely to die of pregnancy complications and six times more likely to die of a pregnancy-related cause, like postpartum suicide or overdose.

“One of the things that we know is that cultural congruent care helps make an impact on the outcomes,” Flores said.

Flores said she’s seen maternal health care inequities firsthand.

“It has been very much a part of our regular engagement, is with families who’ve experienced some type of hardship, be it actual loss,” she said.

The Womb Bus offers an opportunity for new and expecting moms to form a special bond.

Mom Rajhean Patterson found the support she was looking for thanks to the outreach.

“It’s my first time exclusively breastfeeding,” she said. “Definitely challenges as far as feeling like I’m not doing it good enough, and just having that affirmation that I am doing it good enough.”

Expecting mom Courtney Harris Burnett also stopped by the Womb Bus. She met Flores back in 2020 through virtual classes she held on how to prepare for giving birth.

“I feel fortunate enough to kind of break that generational cycle of traumatic births,” Harris Burnett said.

Flores said the Womb Bus is one of several innovative ways they’re trying to reach the community, but the goal is to have a birth center to reach even more people.

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Surveillance video shows dogs charging at man mauled by dogs

By Ted Scouten

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    BROWARD COUNTY, Florida (WFOR) — Crime scene investigators returned to the Lauderdale Lakes neighborhood after two dogs attacked an man on Tuesday morning, according to the Broward Sheriff’s Office.

Surveillance video captured the dogs charging the victim, identified by BSO as Claude LaFort.

In the video, a deputy can be heard firing during the incident. Authorities said the deputy has been on the force for a year and a half.

“The police jumped out of the car and rushed to him, and must have fired something to frightening them away, the two dogs,” said Garfield Gordon, who witnessed the attack.

Photos obtained by CBS News Miami show one of the dogs appearing to be grazed. Broward County Animal Care said both animals were euthanized because of the severity of LaFort’s injuries.

As of Wednesday evening, the extent of LaFort’s injuries were not known.

Gordon told reporters he had encountered the same dogs before.

“I was coming and they lose just the same way and they rush me. I have to grab a stone and they stop,” he said.

Gordon added that when the dogs were out, he and his family were afraid to come outside.

“I spoke to him once before. I told him attacked me one night when I was coming in. I told him that they got to be careful. The dogs bite,” Gordon said.

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Man indicted in theft of Beyoncé’s unreleased music hard drives during Atlanta tour stop

By Christopher Harris

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    ATLANTA (WUPA) — A Georgia man has been indicted in connection with the theft of hard drives containing unreleased Beyoncé music, which were stolen from a rental car during the singer’s “Cowboy Carter” tour stop in Atlanta this summer.

Fulton County prosecutors confirmed Thursday that the case against Kelvin Lanier Evans, 40, has moved forward with a grand jury indictment. A previously scheduled preliminary hearing was canceled following the indictment, which includes charges of entering an automobile with intent to commit theft and criminal trespass.

Court documents allege Evans broke into a 2024 Jeep Wagoneer belonging to Beyoncé’s choreographer, Christopher Grant, on July 8, 2025, damaging a window and stealing two suitcases from the vehicle.

According to police reports, Grant and fellow dancer Diandre Blue parked their rental vehicle in a parking deck on Krog Street around 8:09 p.m. When they returned less than an hour later, they found the rear window shattered and their luggage missing.

Among the stolen items were two MacBook laptops, Apple headphones, luxury clothing and accessories, and hard drives reportedly containing unreleased Beyoncé material.

Grant told police that “he was also carrying some personal sensitive information for the musician Beyoncé,” according to the incident report.

Authorities said surveillance footage captured the break-in and identified a red 2025 Hyundai Elantra as a possible suspect vehicle. Investigators collected light fingerprints from the scene, but none of the stolen items have been recovered.

Evans was arrested by Hapeville Police on Aug. 26 and booked into the Fulton County Jail. His indictment lists both felony and misdemeanor charges: entering an automobile and criminal trespass for causing less than $500 in damage.

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79-year-old retired attorney finds new passion as a blacksmith


WBZ

By Chris Tanaka

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    BOSTON (WBZ) — A retired attorney has found a new passion forging superheated iron as a blacksmith in Boston.

Andy Good is one of the many artists working at the Humphreys Street Studios in Dorchester.

“There are two stone carvers, there are lots of painters and then there’s a whole lot of people who, in one way or another, are making clothing,” Good said.

He’s been pounding out masterful creations for 15 years after falling into it by accident.

“The truth is my wife, when I was lawyering, said, ‘All you do is work and work out. You’re a bore, find something else to do,” he said.

Good attended an adult education class in Framingham and fell in love with the craft.

“The idea of hitting something hard with a hammer when you’re defending criminal cases, that’s therapeutic,” the 79-year-old retired attorney told WBZ-TV.

He’s made all sorts of steel sculptures, from tools to intricate flower petals.

While the steelwork is born of fire, the passion was born of curiosity and having the studio space to make it flourish.

“The whole point is to do the mental and physical challenges that are completely and utterly different,” he said.

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