New radiation therapy in New Jersey is showing promise in treating cancer in pets


KYW

By Stephanie Stahl, Casey Kuhn

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    ROBBINSVILLE, New Jersey (KYW) — A new type of radiation therapy is showing promise in treating cancer in pets.

The new kind of treatment places radiation directly into cancerous tumors, so there’s limited damage to nearby tissue.

Anu is the Donnelly family’s beloved bulldog, who has the most common form of canine skin cancer. After surgery and medications, she recently had a new kind of radiation therapy.

“It’s like very concentrated and doesn’t go all over the place,” Terrie Donnelly, Anu’s owner, said. “It just sounded good.”

They went to NorthStar VETS in Robbinsville, New Jersey, for the isoPet treatment that uses something called radio-gel.

Veterinary oncologist Diana Sanchez said the gel contains a radioactive isotope that’s placed directly inside the treatment area to destroy cancerous tumors.

“The type of radiation, it’s a high-energy type of radiation, but it travels a very short distance,” Sanchez said. “It’s delivering the radiation in a way that you can make it safe for the surrounding tissue.”

Sanchez said it’s safer and less invasive than traditional external-beam radiation.

For the treatment, Anu first got some light sedation, and then the radioactive gel was injected directly into the cancer tumors.

Sanchez said it’s usually a one-time shot with the pet up and out, with limited side effects.

“To have the ability to have a medication that can be safe, and that can be easy, and that can be affordable and accessible for the owners, it’s amazing,” Sanchez said.

Sanchez said while it’s still a new treatment, early indications are promising.

Donnelly is hoping this will be Anu’s last, best treatment.

“We just love her,” she said. “She’s part of the family. I don’t know what I’d do without her.”

The maker of radio-gel is working to get FDA approval to begin human trials, which they hope will eventually become a new targeted radiation option.

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.

New radiation therapy in New Jersey is showing promise in treating cancer in pets

By Stephanie Stahl, Casey Kuhn

Click here for updates on this story

    ROBBINSVILLE, New Jersey (KYW) — A new type of radiation therapy is showing promise in treating cancer in pets.

The new kind of treatment places radiation directly into cancerous tumors, so there’s limited damage to nearby tissue.

Anu is the Donnelly family’s beloved bulldog, who has the most common form of canine skin cancer. After surgery and medications, she recently had a new kind of radiation therapy.

“It’s like very concentrated and doesn’t go all over the place,” Terrie Donnelly, Anu’s owner, said. “It just sounded good.”

They went to NorthStar VETS in Robbinsville, New Jersey, for the isoPet treatment that uses something called radio-gel.

Veterinary oncologist Diana Sanchez said the gel contains a radioactive isotope that’s placed directly inside the treatment area to destroy cancerous tumors.

“The type of radiation, it’s a high-energy type of radiation, but it travels a very short distance,” Sanchez said. “It’s delivering the radiation in a way that you can make it safe for the surrounding tissue.”

Sanchez said it’s safer and less invasive than traditional external-beam radiation.

For the treatment, Anu first got some light sedation, and then the radioactive gel was injected directly into the cancer tumors.

Sanchez said it’s usually a one-time shot with the pet up and out, with limited side effects.

“To have the ability to have a medication that can be safe, and that can be easy, and that can be affordable and accessible for the owners, it’s amazing,” Sanchez said.

Sanchez said while it’s still a new treatment, early indications are promising.

Donnelly is hoping this will be Anu’s last, best treatment.

“We just love her,” she said. “She’s part of the family. I don’t know what I’d do without her.”

The maker of radio-gel is working to get FDA approval to begin human trials, which they hope will eventually become a new targeted radiation option.

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.

Rare cuckoo bird draws “crazy viral birder insanity” to town


WCBS

By Jennifer McLogan

Click here for updates on this story

    RIVERHEAD, Long Island (WCBS) — Birders are going cuckoo for a rare sight on Long Island. The common cuckoo bird has been spotted only four times in U.S. history in the lower 48 states, experts say. Now, it’s in Riverhead.

Hundreds of people have traveled from dozens of states, hoping for a glimpse of the bird that is native to Europe and was blown off course.

“We started a crazy viral birder insanity,” said Roy William Gardner, the eagle-eyed golfer who first saw the cuckoo.

Gardner said he was in a golfcart moving between holes when he spotted “an unusual bird going post to post.” He texted photos of the bird to his nephew, an ornithologist from Cornell and now a bird biologist at UCLA.

“It’s pretty amazing that my uncle, who’s a non-birder, can send a text message across the country,” said nephew Christopher Sayers.

Within minutes, the bird species was identified by UCLA and Cornell.

“He said, ‘what you have there is called a lifer.’ He goes, ‘people go their whole lifetime and not see this,'” Gardner said.

Soon, bird lovers started arriving by ferry, plane and car.

“This is an amazing find,” one person said.

“He lives in Europe and he winters in Africa, so for him to be this far off course,” another marveled.

Was the cuckoo bird possibly blown into New York on the wings of the recent nor’easter?

Farms and golf courses have been allowing the visitors onto their properties to spot the cuckoo. The local Riverhead Times reported 225 sightings in two days.

“It does have a classic cuckoo song, but this is going to be a migrating individual,” Sayers explained.

It’s too young to be vocalizing, but it’s showing off its plumage, gray and white body and long tail.

“If you want to go see it, you’ve gotta go find it!” said Gardner.

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.

Rare cuckoo bird draws “crazy viral birder insanity” to town

By Jennifer McLogan

Click here for updates on this story

    RIVERHEAD, Long Island (WCBS) — Birders are going cuckoo for a rare sight on Long Island. The common cuckoo bird has been spotted only four times in U.S. history in the lower 48 states, experts say. Now, it’s in Riverhead.

Hundreds of people have traveled from dozens of states, hoping for a glimpse of the bird that is native to Europe and was blown off course.

“We started a crazy viral birder insanity,” said Roy William Gardner, the eagle-eyed golfer who first saw the cuckoo.

Gardner said he was in a golfcart moving between holes when he spotted “an unusual bird going post to post.” He texted photos of the bird to his nephew, an ornithologist from Cornell and now a bird biologist at UCLA.

“It’s pretty amazing that my uncle, who’s a non-birder, can send a text message across the country,” said nephew Christopher Sayers.

Within minutes, the bird species was identified by UCLA and Cornell.

“He said, ‘what you have there is called a lifer.’ He goes, ‘people go their whole lifetime and not see this,'” Gardner said.

Soon, bird lovers started arriving by ferry, plane and car.

“This is an amazing find,” one person said.

“He lives in Europe and he winters in Africa, so for him to be this far off course,” another marveled.

Was the cuckoo bird possibly blown into New York on the wings of the recent nor’easter?

Farms and golf courses have been allowing the visitors onto their properties to spot the cuckoo. The local Riverhead Times reported 225 sightings in two days.

“It does have a classic cuckoo song, but this is going to be a migrating individual,” Sayers explained.

It’s too young to be vocalizing, but it’s showing off its plumage, gray and white body and long tail.

“If you want to go see it, you’ve gotta go find it!” said Gardner.

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.

Attorney turns legal success into mission to mentor kids and build trust with police

By Tania Francois

Click here for updates on this story

    MIAMI (WFOR) — He makes his living as a lawyer, but what he lives for is the opportunity to give back. For 15 years, Miami attorney Larry Handfield has picked up the tab at Joe’s Stone Crab for more than a hundred kids, many from his old neighborhood. Police officers are invited too.

The goal is to build trust before anyone meets in a courtroom.

“I don’t want these individuals to be my clients,” Handfield said. “I take money out of my pocket because the cases I deal with are big cases. If I can avoid seeing them in court, I’m much happier.”

Handfield is the lawyer high-profile clients call when the stakes are at their highest. Over a 40-year career, he has tried more than 600 cases in state and federal courts.

“I am a true trial lawyer,” he said. “I’m at my best in the courtroom, relating to jurors and making sure my client gets the best representation possible.”

His path started far from the bench. Growing up on Wilmington Street in Opa-locka, Handfield dreamed of being a medical doctor when a TV icon nudged him toward a juris doctorate instead.

“Perry Mason was this white lawyer who never lost a case,” he said. “Watching that, I told myself, if he can do that, I can do that.”

A proud graduate of Miami Carol City Senior High and Bethune-Cookman University, Handfield learned service early. His philanthropy now includes two buildings named after him at Bethune-Cookman, a symbol of years of giving. Asked to estimate his contributions, he said, “Millions. Millions.”

Beyond the courtroom, Handfield has chaired several boards, including the Miami-Dade Public Health Trust, which oversees Jackson Memorial Hospital.

Miami-Dade County Commissioner Kionne McGhee calls him a mentor and a door-opener. McGhee once waited six hours to meet Handfield. He left with a job offer.

“From that couch, I became a trial lawyer, a state representative, and now vice chair of the county commission,” McGhee said.

For Handfield, the win column is measured in people, not verdicts.

“I love this community,” he said. “We are not perfect, but with all it has blessed me with, the least I can do is make it a better place for others and keep making this one of the best cities in the country.”

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.

“Paperwork error” disqualifies high school soccer team from postseason


WBZ

By Logan Hall

Click here for updates on this story

    EASTON, Massachusetts (WBZ) — A “paperwork error” is disqualifying teams from eight vocational high schools from a post season tournament in Massachusetts. Some parents are furious that this is how their students’ sports experience will end.

Becky DeOliveira’s son Vinny is a senior on the Southeastern Regional Vocational Technical High School boys’ soccer team. They had a great season with a 13-1-1 record, but they won’t get to play in the Massachusetts Vocational Athletic Directors Association (MVADA) tournament because of a scheduling oversight.

“They live for this, my son’s been on the team for four years,” DeOliveira said. “The kids themselves have put in a lot of dedication, a lot of teamwork, a lot of effort.”

Teams in the league were required to leave a placeholder game on their schedule, listing it as TBD (to be determined) to reserve a spot in the tournament. Southeastern and seven other schools didn’t do that. They were all ruled ineligible for the postseason.

DeOliveira said the ruling is especially painful for the team’s 10 seniors, many of whom won’t play competitively after high school.

“After this, this is it. Some of them might not go to college because it’s a voc-tech school. They are going out in the real world, like let them be kids,” DeOliveira said.

While many players have taken the news with grace, DeOliveira said it’s been harder for parents to accept.

“I went to my son and was like, ‘Hey, how you feeling?’ and he goes ‘it is what it is.’ I think most of the team’s like that. They are so good, they are so humble. I think the coach has really tried to instill in them that we have tried everything we can. But me, as a parent, I’m looking at it as like, I feel like there’s another choice.”

The MVADA did not respond to requests for comment Monday.

“We believe it is deeply unfair to remove student-athletes from postseason play because of a paperwork error, especially one that many schools struggled to interpret,” Southeastern Regional School District Superintendent Holly McClanan said in a statement.

DeOliveira is holding out hope that a solution can be found and her son will get to take the field with his team one last time.

“I’m always looking on the positive side,” she said. “And I feel like for a clerical error, for this to just happen the way it’s happening I feel like there has to be a better outcome.”

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.

“Paperwork error” disqualifies high school soccer team from postseason

By Logan Hall

Click here for updates on this story

    EASTON, Massachusetts (WBZ) — A “paperwork error” is disqualifying teams from eight vocational high schools from a post season tournament in Massachusetts. Some parents are furious that this is how their students’ sports experience will end.

Becky DeOliveira’s son Vinny is a senior on the Southeastern Regional Vocational Technical High School boys’ soccer team. They had a great season with a 13-1-1 record, but they won’t get to play in the Massachusetts Vocational Athletic Directors Association (MVADA) tournament because of a scheduling oversight.

“They live for this, my son’s been on the team for four years,” DeOliveira said. “The kids themselves have put in a lot of dedication, a lot of teamwork, a lot of effort.”

Teams in the league were required to leave a placeholder game on their schedule, listing it as TBD (to be determined) to reserve a spot in the tournament. Southeastern and seven other schools didn’t do that. They were all ruled ineligible for the postseason.

DeOliveira said the ruling is especially painful for the team’s 10 seniors, many of whom won’t play competitively after high school.

“After this, this is it. Some of them might not go to college because it’s a voc-tech school. They are going out in the real world, like let them be kids,” DeOliveira said.

While many players have taken the news with grace, DeOliveira said it’s been harder for parents to accept.

“I went to my son and was like, ‘Hey, how you feeling?’ and he goes ‘it is what it is.’ I think most of the team’s like that. They are so good, they are so humble. I think the coach has really tried to instill in them that we have tried everything we can. But me, as a parent, I’m looking at it as like, I feel like there’s another choice.”

The MVADA did not respond to requests for comment Monday.

“We believe it is deeply unfair to remove student-athletes from postseason play because of a paperwork error, especially one that many schools struggled to interpret,” Southeastern Regional School District Superintendent Holly McClanan said in a statement.

DeOliveira is holding out hope that a solution can be found and her son will get to take the field with his team one last time.

“I’m always looking on the positive side,” she said. “And I feel like for a clerical error, for this to just happen the way it’s happening I feel like there has to be a better outcome.”

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.

Artists help prisoners express themselves through creativity

By Cameron Polom

Click here for updates on this story

    TEMPE, Arizona (KNXV) — In a place defined by bars and boundaries, one Tempe writer is helping inmates break free through art.

Jeff Kronenfeld, a former inmate turned published author and screenwriter, is returning behind prison walls, this time with purpose.

He’s leading comic-making workshops inside California’s Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility, helping incarcerated artists turn their own stories into illustrated journeys of redemption.

Partnering with Project Paint, Jeff hopes the power of storytelling can inspire transformation and prove that sometimes the boldest lines drawn are the ones that define a new path forward.

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Progress made on paving project in north Colorado Springs but frustration remains for drivers

Scott Harrison

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) — It’s happening four years later than expected, but we’re finally seeing progress on a paving project at a major intersection east of the Air Force Academy (AFA).

Many drivers have often complained to KRDO 13’s The Road Warrior about poor road conditions at the intersection of North Gate Boulevard (in city jurisdiction) and Struthers Road (in El Paso County jurisdiction).

Within the past month, the city has repaved the eastbound lanes of North Gate between the Interstate 25 northbound exit ramp and the bridge over Smith Creek, and also filled numerous potholes at the intersection.

The improvements are part of a redesigned entrance to the Western Museum of Mining and Industry that organizers celebrated earlier this month.

However, the city won’t pave the westbound lanes of North Gate until the county starts and completes a major drainage project along Struthers, on the east side of a hill between the intersection and a new roundabout at the top of the hill.

“The county project will be resuming, or will be happening, in 2026, next year,” said Ryan Hershberger, the city’s project manager for the North Gate paving. “So, we’ll likely see city streets in the 2C program do their overlay follow the county project.”

It’s unclear when the county drainage project will be finished; The Road Warrior is waiting for an update from county officials on the matter.

Douglas Jenkins, a viewer who contacted The Road Warrior for last summer’s story, said that another reason for delays appears to be the interest or involvement of several entities.

“The county has said that the city is involved, the Air Force Academy is involved, CDOT (Colorado Department of Transportation) is involved — and all of that involves coordination of all these different projects,” he explained.

Several weeks ago, a crew was working on Gleneagle Drive, east of the Struthers roundabout, but information on the nature of that work and its relation to the drainage project is unavailable.

According to the county website, the drainage project will cost $4.8 million.

Drivers told The Road Warrior that while they’re glad to finally see some paving done, they’re frustrated that the work is taking so long, and they don’t know how much longer they’ll have to wait.

“In the meantime, the bad parts of the road just keep getting worse,” Dave Hardin told The Road Warrior. “I’ve lived in this location for about eight years, and it’s probably been within the last two years that it’s gotten really bad. And that’s been the frustrating thing, is that it’s just been bad for a long time.”

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‘I wasn’t showing off’: Man says Tempe PD arrested him because of his loud Ferrari

By Nicole Grigg

Click here for updates on this story

    TEMPE, Arizona (KNXV) — An Arizona man was on his way to get food at a Tempe restaurant last year when police pulled him over in his expensive Ferrari.

According to police, Eli Landry, was “trying to test the physical endurance of the vehicle” — a silver 812 — that he said often attracts attention to people on the roads.

The 24-year-old was driving near Rural Road and Apache Boulevard. He had a friend driving behind him in a Dodge Charger.

“Obviously, our cars are loud,” said Landry. “Can’t control that.”

Body camera footage shows officers handcuffing Landry for exhibition of speed and reckless driving after he was parked in a parking garage.

“What was I doing?” Landry asked the arresting officer in body camera video. “I wasn’t showing off.”

The Tempe Police Department has been cracking down on street racing, as ABC15 has covered in the past. The department has received more than half a million dollars in grant funding to target street racing and other unsafe driving behaviors since 2023.

In a statement, a Tempe spokesperson said that reckless and dangerous driving is one of the community’s top concerns.

The ABC15 Investigators reviewed nearly 400 exhibition of speed citations from Tempe police. Our review found that citations increased by more than 700% from 2020 to 2024.

In 2024, 228 people were cited, the most issued in a single year since 2020.

“Most of my clients for this are by themselves on the roadway,” said attorney Zachary Ansell, who represents Landry.

Landry was arrested by police on charges of reckless driving and exhibition of speed. He was later acquitted. He decided to share his story, knowing that not everyone can take a case to trial.

He wants to warn other drivers to be cautious in Tempe.

“Be careful. Be very careful,” Landry said.

According to the police report, Tempe Officer Gavin Young wrote that Landry’s car appeared to be “testing the physical endurance of the vehicle.” The officer estimated Landry was driving 60 mph in a 35 mph zone, though he admitted this was only a visual guess without radar confirmation.

“There’s no video of what they say happened,” Landry added. “They don’t have dash cameras. No radar, no dash cameras. Nothing other than the cop’s word versus my word.”

The body camera video shows that Landry’s loud car was part of why he was stopped.

“Dude, the obnoxious noise and just the grinding of the tires,” Young said on the video.

Landry responded that the grinding of the tires is from the tires rubbing from a body kit that is on there.

“That is the tire doing that, I can’t control that,” he told the officer.

Young responded that “it’s reckless.”

Landry said he thinks the loud Ferrari played a role in his stop and arrest.

A spokesperson for the Tempe Police Department said in an email that with increased resources and targeted operations in recent years, they have been able to identify and stop more dangerous drivers. They added, “that enforcement is not based on the type of car or driver.”

The officer wrote in the report that when Landry turned eastbound on Apache Boulevard, the rear tires fishtailed slightly, “the Ferrari then stopped and did a burnout with its rear tires.”

Landry said in an interview with ABC15 that there was no evidence to show any of Officer Young’s account, as there was no smoke and there were no tire remains.

“He didn’t have smoke. And obviously there’s no tire remains,” Landry considered it “lies in the police report.”

Tempe police responded by email that Officer Young testified under oath related to his observations and actions in this case, “Allegations that an officer falsified information are taken seriously and would be thoroughly investigated if supported by credible evidence; however, no such evidence existed in the case.”

Landry hired an attorney and took his case to a jury trial in August inside a Tempe municipal courtroom.

Ansell, his attorney, said, “It’s rare to take any case to a jury trial. It’s a roll of the dice,” he said.

Ansell said this is a unique case because of Landry’s car with custom upgrades and believes the officer didn’t understand this Ferrari.

Arizona’s street racing law prohibits drivers from participating in races, speed competitions, drag races, testing physical endurance or “exhibition of speed.”

Ansell considers the law vague.

“The statute basically just says exhibition of speed,” Ansell said. “But at the end of the day, it’s showing off your vehicle’s quality to be fast. And what does that mean? That could be anything.”

The city prosecutor alleged in the trial that Landry showed off the “power and capabilities of this powerful sports car.”

However, Landry denies that.

Landry told ABC15 that his car could go 0 to 60 in around 3 seconds.

”If I really wanted to, yeah, I could show off the car pretty easily and just put my foot down and pedal to the metal,” he said, “But again, I wasn’t.”

Officer Young was called to the stand during cross-examination and compared Landry’s driving to a “performance.”

“Extremely loud as they were traveling in tandem. Kind of like Cirque Du Soleil style. Like they were performing an act somewhat,” said Young.

Ansell asked Young in cross-examination if he ever saw the two vehicles racing.

Young replied, “I did not,” but referenced how Landry and his friend were riding extremely close in tandem.

At trial, Ansell played body camera footage that showed two officers had muted their cameras, unaware a third officer was still recording nearby.

An officer can be heard asking Young, “Do we have anything criminal here?” and the video shows Young shaking his head no.

Ansell asked Officer Young about this exchange in the trial.

“What I just heard there is, ‘Do we have anything criminal and you shaking your head and stating no,’” Ansell said.

Young responded that the officer who asked him was talking about Landry’s friend in the Dodge Charger, not Landry.

“If those questions are being asked, we probably shouldn’t have been in a jury trial in the first place,” Ansell told ABC15.

After deliberation, the jury found Landry not guilty on all charges.

“Oh, it was so relieving,” Landry said. “My parents cried. I think they were more relieved than anyone, knowing that these cops didn’t get away with lies.”

Landry, an entrepreneur, has a love for supercars. He said he has found success in his businesses as well as investing.

TEMPE’S FULL STATEMENT:

“The Tempe Police Department is committed to public safety and responding to one of our community’s top concerns —reckless and dangerous driving. Exhibition of speed and other laws exist to deter those behaviors and help keep everyone on the road safe.

“Officers gather facts and enforce laws when those facts meet the elements of crimes; enforcement is not based on the type of car or driver. Safety is our top priority, and all drivers are held to the same standards under the law.

“With increased resources and targeted operations in recent years, we’ve been able to identify and stop more dangerous drivers. In 2024 alone, three operations focused on speed and street racing, which led to fewer collisions. During one operation, there were zero fatalities and a 50% drop in crashes. These results show that enforcement plays a significant role in traffic safety, and our officers are doing their jobs to protect the community.

“We respect the independent role the courts play within the justice system. Officer Gavin Young testified under oath related to his observations and actions in this case, providing clarification related to this incident and his investigation. Allegations that an officer falsified information are taken seriously and would be thoroughly investigated if supported by credible evidence; however, no such evidence existed in the case.

“Our officers will continue to enforce valid Arizona laws with professionalism and integrity, trusting the process to deliver fair and impartial decisions. Our focus remains on preventing crashes, protecting the public, and deterring reckless driving in Tempe.”

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.