Nurse charged with giving patients fake Ozempic in Chicago

By Adam Harrington

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    CHICAGO (WBBM) — Federal prosecutors announced Wednesday that they have charged a registered nurse to giving counterfeit Ozempic to patients in Chicago.

Sharon Charitine Sackman, 52, was charged with distributing the counterfeit drugs to three people in Chicago in 2023, according to a criminal complaint filed Dec. 5 in U.S. District Court.

The drugs were labeled as Ozempic, but were not manufactured by Ozempic maker Novo Nordisk, and did not even contain semaglutide, the active ingredient in the weight loss drug, prosecutors said.

Meanwhile, prosecutors Sackman was a registered professional nurse, but did not have a license to prescribe, administer, dispense, or sell Ozempic.

Sackman, who now lives in Playa de Carmen, Mexico, was charged with one count of distributing misbranded drugs and three counts of dispensing counterfeit drugs, prosecutors said. Each count could result in a year in federal prison upon conviction.

Sackman was arraigned on Tuesday of this week in U.S. District Court in Chicago, and pleaded not guilty, prosecutors said. She is to return to court for a status hearing before U.S. Magistrate Judge Laura K. McNally on Feb. 3.

Ozempic is a weight-loss injection drug that suppresses users’ appetites, helping them lose weight. It is designed for adults with Type 2 diabetes and helps adults lower blood sugar, and it also has been shown to reduce heart and kidney problems.

Mary Cunningham contributed to this report.

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Mother gives birth to baby with fatal birth defect to donate organs

By Julie Salomone

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    TAMPA, Florida (WFTS) — A Tampa couple is grieving the loss of their daughter who was born with a rare but fatal birth defect.

Catherine Mornhineway and Andrew Ford said they got the devastating diagnosis at a 14-week ultrasound.

Catherine recalls being able to see her baby kick and move on the ultrasound, but the ultrasound technologist went quiet.

She said they were moved to another room.

“A doctor came in and told us that, you know, the baby had anencephaly, which you know, is fatal. Our hearts dropped and you didn’t really know really what to do or say next,” said Catherine.

Anencephaly is a birth defect where a baby is born without parts of the brain and skull at birth. Researchers estimate that about 1 in every 4,762 babies is born with anencephaly in the United States, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The Tampa couple made the decision not to terminate the pregnancy. Instead, Catherine wanted to carry the baby to term.

“I was randomly scrolling on Instagram. I came across the Grey’s Anatomy clip of the character that ended up being pregnant with the baby with anencephaly, and she decided to go to term and donate the organs, and [the idea] felt really special to me and maybe something we could do,” said Catherine.

She hoped she could donate her baby’s organs.

In December, she gave birth to a six-pound baby at HCA Florida Brandon Hospital. The couple named their daughter Haven.

“We looked it up and as you know, the definition was a safe place, and it just seemed perfect for her,” said Andrew Ford.

The couple spent time with their daughter before taking her off life support. They brought her outside.

“She got to feel, you know, feel the breeze and sunshine and it was a just a really special moment with her to be able to do that,” said Catherine.

Doctors, nurses and hospital staff lined the hallway for an honor walk. During surgery, doctors retrieved a partial heart. The valves from Haven’s heart could be used to help young patients. The placenta was also donated and may be used for skin grafts.

The couple said they are at peace with their decision.

“Being in her presence, you could just feel her soul was gentle and kind,” said Andrew.

“I think she’ll always be our little Christmas miracle, always celebrate her in a good way,” said Catherine.

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Mom files $150M suit over 2024 death of special needs son kept in ‘makeshift prison’ at school

By Noah Kim , Erin Holly

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    VIRGINIA BEACH (WTKR) — A Virginia Beach mother has filed a $150 million lawsuit alleging that a “makeshift prison” in a classroom contributed to the death of her 11-year-old son, who had special needs, at Pembroke Elementary School in Virginia Beach in November 2024, according to a complaint obtained by News 3 on Wednesday.

This lawsuit, which names the mother Julie Xirau as the plaintiff, ties the death of her son, Joshua Sikes, on Nov. 3 to an incident at his classroom on Oct. 31.

Sikes was enrolled at Pembroke where he received services from Southeastern Cooperative Educational Program (SECEP). SECEP and four of its employees — Theresa Renvyle, Carole Parker, Nicole Smrz, and Katherine Wynne — were named in the lawsuit. The four employees were assigned to Sikes’ classroom at the time.

The complaint states Wynne used “unauthorized restraint devices and furniture” to confine Sikes. Renvyle and Smrz helped construct the “makeshift prison” in an attempt to restrict his movement in the classroom. Corresponding evidence shows classroom furniture strapped together to create the confined space.

Prior to the Oct. 31 incident, the lawsuit alleges Sikes would come home bruised and injured, which was not explained by the defendants. Parker later told investigators that Sikes had been injured when Renvyle and Smrz pinned him between the walls of the “makeshift prison,” the complaint states.

The complaint states there is no padding on the walls or floor within the constricted space; the corresponding photos — which were submitted as evidence — corroborate this claim.

It is directly alleged in the complaint that the defendants “did not want to calm” Sikes when they put him in the confined space on Oct. 31. It goes on to say the defendants wanted Sikes “to continue to feel scared, agitated, and frightened” as a reason to have him removed permanently from the classroom.

Sikes spent hours in the “makeshift prison” on Oct. 31, according to the complaint. He would repeatedly strike his head on the floor during this time. The defendants later told Sikes’ mother that he was misbehaving and needed to be picked up; she was never told about the injuries his head suffered while in the space.

The lawsuit furthers alleges Sikes was “increasingly lethargic and withdrawn” the following day on Nov. 1. Xirau took him to the emergency room on Nov. 2 after seeing his condition worsen. She at this point alleges was still unaware of her child’s head trauma.

It is also stated in the lawsuit that Sikes had “limited verbal skills,” which did not allow him to properly communicate his injuries.

The complaint states Sikes was discharged from the emergency room after being told to make an appointment with a pediatric neurologist; however, the appointment couldn’t be made because Sikes died in his sleep on Nov. 3.

Xirau later notified SECEP officials about Sikes’ death, which prompted the four defendants to text each other.

Sikes received assistance based on an Individualized Education Program (IEP) and a Behavior Intervention Plan (BIP). The defendants were aware of Sikes’ IEP and BIP, as well as how his medical conditions affected the educational support he received.

The lawsuit was filed Friday in Norfolk Circuit Court.

News 3 reached out to SECEP for a response to this lawsuit. We’ll update this story when we hear back.

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Registration for Los Angeles 2028 Olympics tickets is now open

By Austin Turner, Laurie Perez, Dean Fioresi

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    LOS ANGELES (KCAL, KCBS) — Registration for the Los Angeles 2028 Summer Olympics ticket draw opened on Wednesday, and many Southern California residents could have a chance to secure their tickets early.

According to LA28, those who register for the draw and are selected will receive an email later, providing them with a randomized time slot to purchase their tickets.

There were some initial hiccups to the process when registration opened at 7 a.m., although they were quickly ironed out and wait times decreased, SVP of Games Delivery Revenue LA28 Allison Katz-Mayfield said.

“The excitement around this morning was just so high,” she said.

Registration is open until March 18, and registering early doesn’t alter your chances of snagging tickets..

Anyone across the globe can register, although local LA-area residents with billing postal codes in LA, Ventura, San Bernardino, Riverside or Orange counties will also be entered into a draw for a local presale, which runs from April 2-6. To receive eligibility for the presale, entrants must register by March 18.

Oklahoma City-area residents can also register for canoe slalom and softball events, as they’ll be held there.

Local presale registration does not guarantee a time slot.

A group of hundreds of Olympic and Paralympic athletes helped promote the registration window’s launch at the LA Memorial Coliseum on Tuesday, including legends like Apolo Ohno, Bart Conner, Nadia Comaneci and Janet Evans.

“With ticket registration opening tomorrow, the LA28 fan experience officially begins and believe me, this is just the start,” Evans, who is now LA28’s Chief Athlete Officer, said at the event.

Organizers said that roughly one million tickets will be just $28, while a third of all tickets will be under $100.

“From the beginning, we’ve been clear about something else: access to these games belong to everyone,” said Casey Wasserman, Chairman of LA 2028 and the CEO of the Wasserman sports and entertainment agency. “These games have to be affordable and inclusive.”

The schedule for the 2028 Summer Olympics events can be found here. Ticket sales for the 2028 Paralympic Games will begin in 2027.

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Combat veteran killed by police during domestic violence call described as suffering from mental illness

By Kaylee Olivas

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    EUCLID, Ohio (WEWS) — Northeast Ohio veterans are mourning one of their own after a call to Euclid police for domestic violence ended in gunfire Sunday night.

The shooting happened at a home in the 1400 block of East 219th Street just before 10:30 p.m. Sunday, after a woman called 911 to report being assaulted.

According to Euclid Police, when officers arrived at the house, the caller was outside the home and had visible injuries. She told police that her 3-year-old child was inside with a man who had access to several guns.

Euclid Police said the man, now identified as 37-year-old Robert Riddlebarger, refused to come out when ordered, and officers then went inside the home to get the child.

“During the encounter, officers were confronted by a male suspect, who was armed with a loaded rifle,” Euclid Police said in a news release. “An officer discharged their firearm, striking the suspect.”

After the shooting, officers rendered first aid until EMS arrived and took Riddlebarger to a nearby hospital, where he later died, police said.

Body camera footage of the shooting was released on Tuesday.

The video the department released appears to be several clips edited together and is redacted with blurs, bleeps and a freeze-frame when it appears the suspect is shot.

RELATED: Body camera footage shows man confronting Euclid police with rifle prior to being fatally shot by officer

“I feel so bad for the officers involved here. Not only does our heart break for Robbie and his family and his, you know, his girl that’s all beat up, and she’s not just beat up, she has broken stuff going on, and now he’s got a 3-year-old daughter that won’t have her daddy. But like the officers involved, you know, we don’t fault them. They did what they’re supposed to do. You can’t raise a weapon at the officers,” Abigail Edwards told me Tuesday night.

Edwards said she has known and been friends with Riddlebarger for eight years.

The pair met through Cincinnati Patriots, an organization for veterans.

“He came from hours away and made that effort to come be in the community. He was, you know, struggling with isolation and just feeling a little bit lost and needing buddies like we all do. I was really proud of him for making that effort to drive hours in, and with time, he started bringing his family,” Edwards told me.

Edwards said Riddlebarger was a combat engineer, jumpmaster, paratrooper and ranger.

“He served with the Twenty-seventh Engineer Battalion, which is located at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, home of the Airborne Rangers and Special Operations Forces,” she added.

He also studied with the 57th Sapper Company “Rough Terrain” and jumped with the Nevada Red Horse Squadron as a sapper, which is an elite military combat engineer specializing in mobility, counter mobility, and survivability.

According to Edwards, Riddlebarger was deployed to combat zones in Afghanistan, the Congo, and Haiti.

Edwards said he helped with disaster relief as well.

Since leaving the service, Edwards told me Riddlebarger faced challenges, which she thinks may have amplified Sunday night’s incident.

“I know he struggled with his anger and PTSD,” she said. “He was inebriated to the maximum, drunk on alcohol, and he takes psych meds, which you’re not supposed to drink on them because it makes you black out. I also know that Robbie has had previous engagements with the police and in other cities where they swatted his house, took weapons, so he had this predisposition in his head that they were out to get him.”

According to the National Library of Medicine, U.S. military veterans are a known high-risk group for adverse psychiatric outcomes, such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), substance use disorders, and suicide.

Edwards believes that, as a result, his decision-making skills were skewed.

“What I think is that in that moment when they showed up, he knew he’d screwed up bad beating up [his baby mama]. He knew he’d screwed up bad. He knew the police were there because he’d done wrong, and he knew they were there and they were going to take his daughter,” she said. “When he held that rifle up, it wasn’t necessarily to hurt the officers in his brain. He was defending his daughter. Not at all making excuses, just rationalizing what I think happened in his sick mind at that time.”

Edwards described Riddlebarger as “not a bad guy. He was a sick guy.”

“We’re all kind of crazy. You gotta be kind of crazy to have these jobs, but that’s what makes it beautiful. At the same time, you’re taught to be tough and resilient. I’m going to always miss him. He was a true friend. I mean, he’d do anything for you. You want Robbie on your team. One thing I know for certain is that Robbie’s made it into heaven. He was a God-fearing man, and he may have gotten a talking to from God when he got there, but I know he made it there to heaven, and the angels are helping his soul right now with the Lord,” Edwards said.

While she knows Riddlebarger was seen at least once a month by a psychiatrist, she wishes he had reached out for more help.

She now hopes his story will serve as a tale of caution to other veterans.

“For the vets, please use the VA resources. Please. It’s not being coward, it’s being brave to heal,” Edwards said.

The Northeast Ohio VA Healthcare System provides comprehensive health care services in 18 locations.

Those services include access to same-day emergency mental health care, cutting-edge PTSD treatments and more.

Veterans can make an appointment or register for care HERE.

Additionally, VA offers 24/7 confidential crisis support for Veterans and their loved ones.

You don’t have to be enrolled in VA benefits or health care to connect.

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Merced County man accused of killing friend’s dog, making him bury it

By Gabe Ferris, KFSN Staff

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    MERCED COUNTY, Calif. (KFSN) — A Winton man was arrested following an alleged animal cruelty incident, according to the Merced County Sheriff’s Office.

On Monday, the Merced County Sheriff’s Office Animal Services Division received a report of an incident on Nicholas Drive in Winton.

The man who called law enforcement told deputies that while he was visiting a friend, that friend shot and killed his dog and then forced him, at gunpoint, to bury the animal.

Investigators identified 57-year-old James Charles Morales of Winton as the suspect.

According to authorities, the incident began after Morales became upset during what initially appeared to be joking between the two individuals.

Morales then allegedly pulled out a handgun, threatened to shoot the dog and then fired multiple rounds at the animal.

The victim told deputies Morales then pointed the gun at him and forced him to dig a shallow grave and bury the dog.

Deputies obtained a search warrant for Morales’ home in Winton. Prior to serving the warrant, Morales was seen leaving the house in a vehicle.

Deputies conducted a traffic stop a short time later and were able to detain Morales without incident.

During the search of the home, investigators found several spent bullet casings in the backyard as well as a handgun inside the house.

Authorities also discovered the remains of a recently deceased dog buried along the side of the property.

Morales was booked into the Merced County Jail on animal cruelty, kidnapping, felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition, and assault with a firearm.

Anyone with information on this incident is urged to contact the Merced County Sheriff’s Office.

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Trent Cares: Teen turns lifelong passion into nonprofit to help kids help others

By Cameron Polom

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    ARIZONA (KNXV) — By four years old, Trent Carson understood that not everyone has a place to call home, and he couldn’t stand the idea of anyone going hungry.

Instead of toys, the Christmas Eve baby began asking for grocery gift cards, turning birthdays and holiday celebrations into opportunities to personally hand out sack meals to people on the streets.

Trent, who is now 14, has grown that childhood instinct into a nonprofit called Trent Cares, focused on feeding the homeless and inspiring other young people to help.

ABC15’s Cameron Polom spent the day with Trent and his mom as they distributed sandwiches, sharing how a kid with a big heart turned compassion into a community-wide movement.

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Jet skids 300 yards off a runway during landing at Telluride Regional Airport

By Jesse Sarles

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    TELLURIDE, Colorado (KCNC) — Three people who were on a mid-sized business jet that was landing at a western Colorado airport are unharmed after the plane skidded 300 yards off the runway. It happened at 12:15 p.m. at the Telluride Regional Airport, according to the San Miguel County Sheriff’s Office.

The plane is a Cessna Citation X, and the three people onboard were two pilots and a passenger.

One of the pilots told investigators a strong crosswind gusted right when the plane was landing and it blew the plane off the runway. The jet’s left main landing gear then “collapsed,” according to the sheriff’s office. One of the plane’s wings and a wheel were damaged during the slide.

Photos from the sheriff’s office show the Cessna in a snowy, grassy area near one of the runways with one wing damaged and touching the ground.

Federal agents from the National Transportation Safety Board and the Federal Aviation Administration will be investigating the incident.

The airport’s runways were closed after the incident.

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Milwaukee father charged with locking 6 kids in storage testifies at his own trial

By CBS 58 Newsroom

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    MILWAUKEE (WDJT) — The third day of a jury trial continued Wednesday, Jan. 14, for a Milwaukee man charged with locking his six children in a storage unit. Charles Dupriest took the stand in his own trial, sharing his love for his children while on the stand.

Dupriest, 33, is charged with eight counts of child neglect: five felonies and three misdemeanors. He also faces a felony for possessing a firearm.

On the stand, Dupriest said his family fell on hard times when their lease expired and had to stay with family members multiple nights a week. He said finding stable housing was his family’s primary concern at the time they were living inside the storage unit at the StorSafe near 27th and Silver Spring.

When police found them in the early morning hours of Sept. 16, his six children — ages 2 months, 2, 3, 5, 7, and 9 — were locked in the storage unit while Dupriest and the mother of the children were sleeping in a car with their dog.

Dupriest said his family didn’t enjoy the situation they were in but doesn’t believe he was neglecting his children.

“I believe I was doing everything within my ability to make sure they didn’t have to sleep outside or in the truck with a broken back window at night, exposed to the elements,” said Dupriest.

Wednesday morning, the prosecution rested its case after calling up its final witnesses.

Prosecutors argue this family had other options besides living in the storage unit — calling up doctors, police officers, and area housing directors.

Witnesses said the mother of the children didn’t respond to efforts to help their family find housing.

Closing arguments are expected Wednesday afternoon.

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At least 6 Minnesota federal prosecutors resign amid pressure to treat Renee Good killing as assault on ICE agent

By Aki Nace, Caroline Cummings, Jonah Kaplan, Sarah N. Lynch, Michael Kaplan

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    MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — At least six career prosecutors in the Minneapolis U.S. Attorney’s office — including Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson — have resigned as the office continues to face pressure to treat the investigation of the fatal shooting of a Minneapolis woman by an ICE officer as an assault on a federal officer case.

Thompson also previously served as the acting U.S. attorney for Minnesota; he was appointed by President Trump in June and served in the position until October. He resigned from the attorney’s office along with Harry Jacobs, Melinda Williams, Thomas Calhoun-Lopez, Ruth Schneider and Tom Hollenhurst.

Two sources familiar with the matter tell CBS News the resignations stemmed from concern over a request to probe Good’s widow — who was with her when they encountered the ICE agents — as well as the way that the case is being treated as an assault on a federal officer as opposed to a civil rights case.

Thompson was the lead prosecutor in the Feeding Our Future case, a COVID-era $250 million scheme which targeted programs that were meant to feed schoolchildren. Since then he’s charged defendants for allegedly defrauding housing and autism service programs, claiming that fraud in Minnesota has topped $9 billion, a figure which Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz has pushed back on.

The New York Times reported Tuesday that a number of people familiar with Thompson’s decision said he also objected to federal investigators refusing to cooperate with Minnesota state agencies in investigating Good’s killing.

Doug Kelley, a former assistant U.S. attorney for Minnesota, says the move is a major blow to the credibility of the office moving forward.

“I’ve been practicing federal criminal law in this state for 51 years and this is the darkest day in 51 years as far as I can see for the rule of law in Minnesota,” Kelley said. “If they feel the need to resign because of orders they have gotten that will violate their consciouses, to me it’s a great statement on their part that this is not tolerable by them.”

Since the massive fraud scandal, Mr. Trump has lashed out at Minnesota’s large Somali-American community, as many of the Feeding Our Future defendants are of Somali descent. His administration cited the fraud scandal as impetus for deploying thousands of federal immigration agents to the Minneapolis area.

Walz called Thompson’s resignation a “huge loss for our state.”

“It’s also the latest sign Trump is pushing nonpartisan career professionals out of the justice department, replacing them with his sycophants,” Walz said on X.

Sen. Amy Klobuchar said on X that “these career public servants have served our state through multiple tragedies and critical investigations. We cannot allow prosecutors to be driven by politics. The family and loved ones of Renee Good deserve justice, not political attacks.”

Thompson also filed charges against Vance Boelter, the man accused of killing former House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark, as well as shooting state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife Yvette, who survived.

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