Couple married for 75 years shares their secret

By Nick Caloway

Click here for updates on this story

    NORWOOD, New Jersey (WCBS) — A Norwood, New Jersey couple is celebrating a big milestone: 75 years of marriage.

They say it all started with one little lie.

Stanley, 97, and Leatrice Dvoskin, 94, like to keep things light.

“Her favorite meal to make is reservations,” Stanley said. “You’ve got to laugh at some things, because things get rough at times. So a sense of humor helps.”

The two met at a dance at City College in Manhattan in 1949. Stanley, from Brooklyn, gave Leatrice a ride home to the Bronx.

“And I called and told him I lost a pair of earrings in his car, which was not true,” Leatrice said.

“It’s called entrapment,” Stanley said.

“So he said he’d look for the earrings and call me back. Then he called me back and said he didn’t find the earrings. And that was the beginning of our relationship,” Leatrice said.

A year later, they were married. They recently celebrated their 75th wedding anniversary.

They now live in an apartment building for seniors in North Jersey, where shelves and walls are filled with pictures of their three daughters, five grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.

Seventy fire years of marriage is an incredibly rare milestone to reach. So what’s their secret?

“We have happy hour every night at 5 p.m.,” Leatrice said.

“I’m the bartender,” Stanley said.

A little alone time doesn’t hurt either. Every day, Stanley heads out and goes for a drive. He takes his Pontiac on a 10-minute trip over the New York border to his favorite gym, where he’s the oldest member.

“They call me the mayor,” Stanley said.

“When he comes home, it’s something else to talk about. I don’t know them, but instead of just talking about this hurts and that hurts, it gives me something else to talk about with him,” Leatrice said.

After decades together, there are plenty of aches and pains, but more laughs to come.

“Listen to what they say, and then tell them where they’re wrong,” Stanley said.

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.

Older brother of two children in Pontiac child torture case facing charges


WWJ

By DeJanay Booth-Singleton

Click here for updates on this story

    DETROIT (WWJ) — The older brother of two Pontiac, Michigan, children, who authorities say were starved and tortured, has been arrested and charged.

According to the Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office, 24-year-old Carlos Bazan-Hernandez was charged with two counts of first-degree child abuse and two counts of torture. He is expected to be arraigned on Friday.

Prosecutors charged Bazan-Hernandez, along with 43-year-old Auturo Bazan-Perez and 42-year-old Ducle Bazan, on Tuesday, Nov. 25. Bazan-Hernandez was arrested a day later, at about 2:15 p.m. on Wednesday, according to the Oakland County Sheriff’s Office.

Prosecutors say Bazan-Hernandez and the two children, ages 11 and 9, are Auturo Bazan-Perez’s sons.

“Thanks for the good work and diligence of our team,” Sheriff Michael Bouchard said in a statement. “The third suspect in this horrific case has now been taken into custody and will be facing the full force of the judicial accountability that he deserves.”

Authorities allege that Bazan-Hernandez acted as a “disciplinarian” for the children, who were not allowed to leave their rooms. The sheriff’s office says the boys were taken out of school in September and were only given “sporadic meals of rice.”

Prosecutors say that on Nov. 17, the 9-year-old child was taken to a hospital for a medical condition. The sheriff’s office says the child suffered from liver failure, weighed about 33 pounds and had bruises on his body. He also suffered a cardiac arrest due to malnutrition, the prosecutor’s office says.

The sheriff’s office was notified by hospital staff of the 9-year-old’s condition, and further investigation revealed that the child’s 11-year-old sibling was “severely malnourished,” weighing about 43 pounds. Both boys are now in a hospital and are in stable condition, according to the sheriff’s office.

Investigators found two other children, ages 1 and 4, living in the home and appearing healthy. Those children were removed from the home by Child Protective Services.

This case comes less than a month after 31-year-old Pontiac mother Teriomas Tremice Johnson was charged with allegedly leaving her three children unattended in an apartment without running water and littered with rotten food and human waste. Another mother from Pontiac, 34-year-old Kelli Bryant, is accused of abandoning her children after they were found in February living in what investigators call “deplorable shape.”

“After the first of now three terrible child abuse cases that we’ve had in recent history, I asked the legislature to pass a bill that would close a loophole. Have someone verify what happened to a child that’s been unenrolled, or they want to unenroll before you just unenroll them and then move on,” Bouchard told CBS News Detroit on Tuesday.

Auturo Bazan and Ducle Bazan, who were denied bond, are due back in court on Dec. 4.

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate partner and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.

Older brother of two children in Pontiac child torture case facing charges

By DeJanay Booth-Singleton

Click here for updates on this story

    DETROIT (WWJ) — The older brother of two Pontiac, Michigan, children, who authorities say were starved and tortured, has been arrested and charged.

According to the Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office, 24-year-old Carlos Bazan-Hernandez was charged with two counts of first-degree child abuse and two counts of torture. He is expected to be arraigned on Friday.

Prosecutors charged Bazan-Hernandez, along with 43-year-old Auturo Bazan-Perez and 42-year-old Ducle Bazan, on Tuesday, Nov. 25. Bazan-Hernandez was arrested a day later, at about 2:15 p.m. on Wednesday, according to the Oakland County Sheriff’s Office.

Prosecutors say Bazan-Hernandez and the two children, ages 11 and 9, are Auturo Bazan-Perez’s sons.

“Thanks for the good work and diligence of our team,” Sheriff Michael Bouchard said in a statement. “The third suspect in this horrific case has now been taken into custody and will be facing the full force of the judicial accountability that he deserves.”

Authorities allege that Bazan-Hernandez acted as a “disciplinarian” for the children, who were not allowed to leave their rooms. The sheriff’s office says the boys were taken out of school in September and were only given “sporadic meals of rice.”

Prosecutors say that on Nov. 17, the 9-year-old child was taken to a hospital for a medical condition. The sheriff’s office says the child suffered from liver failure, weighed about 33 pounds and had bruises on his body. He also suffered a cardiac arrest due to malnutrition, the prosecutor’s office says.

The sheriff’s office was notified by hospital staff of the 9-year-old’s condition, and further investigation revealed that the child’s 11-year-old sibling was “severely malnourished,” weighing about 43 pounds. Both boys are now in a hospital and are in stable condition, according to the sheriff’s office.

Investigators found two other children, ages 1 and 4, living in the home and appearing healthy. Those children were removed from the home by Child Protective Services.

This case comes less than a month after 31-year-old Pontiac mother Teriomas Tremice Johnson was charged with allegedly leaving her three children unattended in an apartment without running water and littered with rotten food and human waste. Another mother from Pontiac, 34-year-old Kelli Bryant, is accused of abandoning her children after they were found in February living in what investigators call “deplorable shape.”

“After the first of now three terrible child abuse cases that we’ve had in recent history, I asked the legislature to pass a bill that would close a loophole. Have someone verify what happened to a child that’s been unenrolled, or they want to unenroll before you just unenroll them and then move on,” Bouchard told CBS News Detroit on Tuesday.

Auturo Bazan and Ducle Bazan, who were denied bond, are due back in court on Dec. 4.

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate partner and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.

Teenagers’ website helps New Yorkers navigate difficult world of affordable housing


WCBS

By Adi Guajardo

Click here for updates on this story

    NEW YORK (WCBS) — Two 17-year-olds are trying to make it easier for New Yorkers to find affordable housing, a problem city leaders have long struggled to solve.

The innovative teens continue their work on a website called Realer Estate, which is designed to help make a difference for renters who feel priced out.

The website has consumed every moment outside of class for friends Beckett Zahedi and Derrick Webster Jr. Both say they gave up basketball and their last two summers to help tackle the city’s housing crisis.

“[It’s] a platform trying to make, you know, affordable units and rent-stabilized units more accessible to everyday New Yorkers,” Zahedi said.

The teens launched the site last summer, following countless hours of podcasts, YouTube videos, and AI consultations.

Realer Estate combines public data with real estate listings, and helps New York renters easily identify rent-stabilized apartments and units below market value.

The teens said their site streamlines a cumbersome and time-consuming process for renters.

“We had very little clue what we were doing at first, and with so little coding experience. And so, when I started, it took about two months just to get two neighborhoods on the platform. And every single time I just like write some code, it’d be like some syntax error and I just see a big red, like, crash deployment on my screen,” Zahedi said.

While Zahedi coded, Webster tackled increasing their outreach.

“I knew our site wasn’t enough, [so I] built an email automation that alerts users whenever our algorithm finds a property and matches with their preferences,” Webster said.

Zahedi said his parents’ divorce — and watching his dad move out — exposed him to the housing problem, and in their 11th grade economics class at Brooklyn Friends School, they learned about the gravity of the crisis.

“Through the process of trying to help him find, you know, a more affordable apartment, I just noticed how difficult the whole process was,” Zahedi said.

So far, the site has garnered 27,000 visitors, and the teens estimate between 4,000 and 5,000 state listings are on it.

The problem-solving teens say they’re exploring additional features, including government assistance programs for homeowners.

Every day brings a new challenge, but they say they’re focused on helping as many New Yorkers as they can.

“I’ve always loved helping people,” Webster said.

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.

Teenagers’ website helps New Yorkers navigate difficult world of affordable housing

By Adi Guajardo

Click here for updates on this story

    NEW YORK (WCBS) — Two 17-year-olds are trying to make it easier for New Yorkers to find affordable housing, a problem city leaders have long struggled to solve.

The innovative teens continue their work on a website called Realer Estate, which is designed to help make a difference for renters who feel priced out.

The website has consumed every moment outside of class for friends Beckett Zahedi and Derrick Webster Jr. Both say they gave up basketball and their last two summers to help tackle the city’s housing crisis.

“[It’s] a platform trying to make, you know, affordable units and rent-stabilized units more accessible to everyday New Yorkers,” Zahedi said.

The teens launched the site last summer, following countless hours of podcasts, YouTube videos, and AI consultations.

Realer Estate combines public data with real estate listings, and helps New York renters easily identify rent-stabilized apartments and units below market value.

The teens said their site streamlines a cumbersome and time-consuming process for renters.

“We had very little clue what we were doing at first, and with so little coding experience. And so, when I started, it took about two months just to get two neighborhoods on the platform. And every single time I just like write some code, it’d be like some syntax error and I just see a big red, like, crash deployment on my screen,” Zahedi said.

While Zahedi coded, Webster tackled increasing their outreach.

“I knew our site wasn’t enough, [so I] built an email automation that alerts users whenever our algorithm finds a property and matches with their preferences,” Webster said.

Zahedi said his parents’ divorce — and watching his dad move out — exposed him to the housing problem, and in their 11th grade economics class at Brooklyn Friends School, they learned about the gravity of the crisis.

“Through the process of trying to help him find, you know, a more affordable apartment, I just noticed how difficult the whole process was,” Zahedi said.

So far, the site has garnered 27,000 visitors, and the teens estimate between 4,000 and 5,000 state listings are on it.

The problem-solving teens say they’re exploring additional features, including government assistance programs for homeowners.

Every day brings a new challenge, but they say they’re focused on helping as many New Yorkers as they can.

“I’ve always loved helping people,” Webster said.

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.

Argument over money ends in stabbing at restaurant, officials say


WFOR

By Anna McAllister

Click here for updates on this story

    MIAMI (WFOR) — An argument between two women inside a restaurant on Northwest 119th Street ended in a stabbing on Wednesday afternoon, according to Miami-Dade deputies.

Miami-Dade deputies said the incident happened at Fritanga Pinolandia on Northwest 119th Street.

Investigators said the suspect approached the victim, asking for money. When the victim declined, the woman allegedly followed her inside, got physical, and stabbed her.

Video from inside the restaurant shows the confrontation that led to the stabbing. Aerial footage captured the scene shortly after the attack around 2:30 p.m.

The restaurant manager told CBS News Miami the women had been arguing outside for days before the fight moved inside, frightening staff and customers.

Bernardo Ruiz, the restaurant manager, said the women were arguing outside before entering the restaurant.

“One of the lady – the skinny white lady – she came with scissors in her hands, and she start to hurt the other lady four times on the head inside of my business. So all the customers and our staff was scared to see that, you know?” Ruiz said.

“They running out. They was scared to see the lady with the scissors and blood coming out,” he added.

Deputies said the suspect fled after the stabbing, leaving staff and customers terrified. They quickly captured her nearby. Both the restaurant and a portion of NW 118th Street were taped off as investigators searched for evidence.

Ruiz said the women had been fighting outside his business for days, and Wednesday’s violence forced the restaurant to close for about four hours.

“This is a problem that been happening in Miami-Dade. We have a huge problem with the homeless and the police doesn’t do anything. We need help. Our business is getting worse with the situation that we have in Florida,” Ruiz said.

Deputies said the victim was taken to the hospital and is in stable condition. Authorities have not released the identities of either woman.

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.

Argument over money ends in stabbing at restaurant, officials say

By Anna McAllister

Click here for updates on this story

    MIAMI (WFOR) — An argument between two women inside a restaurant on Northwest 119th Street ended in a stabbing on Wednesday afternoon, according to Miami-Dade deputies.

Miami-Dade deputies said the incident happened at Fritanga Pinolandia on Northwest 119th Street.

Investigators said the suspect approached the victim, asking for money. When the victim declined, the woman allegedly followed her inside, got physical, and stabbed her.

Video from inside the restaurant shows the confrontation that led to the stabbing. Aerial footage captured the scene shortly after the attack around 2:30 p.m.

The restaurant manager told CBS News Miami the women had been arguing outside for days before the fight moved inside, frightening staff and customers.

Bernardo Ruiz, the restaurant manager, said the women were arguing outside before entering the restaurant.

“One of the lady – the skinny white lady – she came with scissors in her hands, and she start to hurt the other lady four times on the head inside of my business. So all the customers and our staff was scared to see that, you know?” Ruiz said.

“They running out. They was scared to see the lady with the scissors and blood coming out,” he added.

Deputies said the suspect fled after the stabbing, leaving staff and customers terrified. They quickly captured her nearby. Both the restaurant and a portion of NW 118th Street were taped off as investigators searched for evidence.

Ruiz said the women had been fighting outside his business for days, and Wednesday’s violence forced the restaurant to close for about four hours.

“This is a problem that been happening in Miami-Dade. We have a huge problem with the homeless and the police doesn’t do anything. We need help. Our business is getting worse with the situation that we have in Florida,” Ruiz said.

Deputies said the victim was taken to the hospital and is in stable condition. Authorities have not released the identities of either woman.

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.

Tattoo artist inks 6-year-old’s design on himself after boy wins shop contest

By Donald Fountain

Click here for updates on this story

    ATLANTA (WUPA) — Inside the Iron Palm Tattoo Studio, artist Marlon Blake says he lives by one simple rule: “Wake up every day and do exactly what you love to do.”

For Blake, that’s been true for the past 12 years.

“I literally get the opportunity to wake up, come to work, draw on people,” he said.

When he inks his passion onto others, he says the work never feels like work.

“That’s when the job becomes less of a job and more just fun.”

Blake has seen countless designs come across his station, but these were different.

“It absolutely blew me away,” he said.

The drawings appeared simple for an experienced artist. Especially coming from someone like Sage Williams.

“I’m only like 6 years old. I’m only still a kid,” Sage said.

“Yeah! He’s only 6 years old,” Blake added.

Blake discovered Sage through his annual tattoo drawing competition, where the winner’s design gets used in the shop. Sage was the clear standout.

“What he submitted was like, okay, this can’t be real,” Blake said.

Sage has a passion for painting, and one of his pieces now hangs proudly in the studio.

“I worked very hard for this,” Sage said. “You just have to practice a lot.”

His dad helps guide him, but Sage insists he brings something special.

“I’m just very intelligent,” he said.

The two artists share more similarities than expected.

“Around that age is when I realized that I had the talent as an artist,” Blake said. “Seeing that in that kid, I would like to be a part of his life.”

Or maybe, Blake admitted, it’s the other way around.

No one used Sage’s winning design, so Blake made the artwork a permanent part of his own life, tattooing it onto himself.

“This is me begging you, Sage, to take your art serious, follow through with it, don’t look nowhere else,” Blake told him.

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.

Jury awards Iowa woman $19.8 million for “botched” Mayo Clinic surgery, attorneys say

By Stephen Swanson, Aki Nace

Click here for updates on this story

    MINNESOTA (WCCO) — A jury has awarded an Iowa woman a $19.8 million verdict against Mayo Clinic and a colorectal surgeon in a lawsuit brought in Minnesota courts, according to her attorneys.

The Iowa-based Hixson & Brown Law Firm represented patient Linette Nelson, of Fort Dodge, Iowa. They alleged in a June 2018 procedure — the second in a series of three surgeries — Dr. Amy Lightner was supposed to move her entire rectum, but “botched a multi-stage operation” and “left 5-7 cm of diseased rectum inside her body.”

The suit alleged Lightner dismissed a CT scan that showed “a long rectal cuff” remained inside Nelson and “pushed ahead with the third surgery anyway,” according to attorneys.

A month later, Nelson was informed by Mayo that Lightner “is gone and we’re not sure if she’ll be back,” according to the law firm. The chief of colorectal surgery for Mayo, Dr. David Larson, then examined her and determined the surgeries needed to be redone, a process that took more than a year to complete.

The firm said the actions of Lightner, who now works in California, “left [Nelson] with permanent disfigurement, pelvic floor disorder, fibromyalgia, PTSD, and lifelong chronic pain.”

Court records show the verdict includes $3.7 million for pain and emotional distress, with another $12.1 million for her future emotional distress. The law firm said the monetary award for Nelson, a mother of two, “is expected to exceed $27 million” when adding in interest.

“The jury’s verdict speaks truth and justice: world-class reputations don’t excuse life-altering medical negligence,” said attorney LaMar Jost. “This verdict is a step toward accountability for a wife and mother who will suffer for the rest of her life because of medical negligence.”

A Mayo Clinic spokesperson gave this statement to WCCO on Wednesday morning: “Mayo Clinic respects the jury’s time and the judicial process but is disappointed in the verdict. The organization will evaluate next steps while remaining steadfast in its commitment to providing the highest standards of care and patient outcomes.”

U.S. News and World Report recently named Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, as one of the best hospitals in the country, and also named it best hospital for diabetes, endocrinology, gastroenterology and GI surgery.

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate partner and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.

Car speeds off during traffic stop, runs over officer’s foot on Chicago’s South Side

By Adam Harrington

Click here for updates on this story

    CHICAGO (WBBM) — An officer’s foot was run over when a car sped off during a traffic stop in Chicago’s Washington Park neighborhood.

Police said at 8:24 p.m., officers in a marked squad car saw the driver of a gray sedan commit an unspecified traffic violation near 57th and State streets. The officers pulled over the car and approached.

The car, driven by a woman with a man as a passenger, sped off north on State Street and hit an officer on the foot, police said.

The officer was taken to a nearby hospital, where he was listed in fair condition, police said.

The offending vehicle sped off, but ended up rear-ending a black sport-utility vehicle about four miles to the near 26th and State streets, police said. The crash flipped over the SUV and left it upside-down.

The woman was taken into police custody, and was also taken to Insight Hospital and Medical Center in fair condition, police said. The passenger who had been with her was also taken into custody, police said.

Citations and charges were pending Thursday morning.

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate partner and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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.