Three young men attempt world-record train ride to show Atlanta’s transit is reliable

By Kaley Fedko

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    ATLANTA (WUPA) — For three young public transit enthusiasts from Chicago, Thursday wasn’t just about chasing a Guinness World Record — it was about proving something bigger: that MARTA is reliable, safe, and worth riding.

Joabe Barbosa, Matthew Plese and Omar Yousaf spent the day riding the entire MARTA rail system in an attempt to complete the full route in roughly three hours. Their goal? Demonstrate that Atlanta’s transit system can hold its own while encouraging more people to give it a try.

Barbosa said he was impressed with how clean and comfortable the system felt throughout their ride.

“I think it was really clean. Everything was fine. It smelled great — maybe because we were there,” he joked.

The trio has a shared passion for transit systems across the country, but for 20-year-old Omar Yousaf, the mission is personal. His family moved to Atlanta five years ago, and he has seen firsthand how conversations about MARTA often focus on criticism rather than potential.

Their world-record attempt has sparked renewed interest in the city’s transit system, something Yousaf believes is positive

“It’s not only to say, ‘here’s our world record, look at this,’ but to make people try the transportation because it’s reliable,” Yousaf said. “You have it literally on the corner.”

Despite the enthusiasm, the group acknowledged the system isn’t perfect. They fell about 20 minutes short of their three-hour goal due to train wait times — delays they say could be improved with more precise scheduling.

“There are countries in Asia, like Japan, which have trains scheduled by the second,” Barbosa said. “If we’re gonna get a world record, we’re gonna need trains that are scheduled by the second.”

Still, the riders said the experience was overwhelmingly positive, especially when it came to safety — an issue often raised by hesitant commuters.

“Yeah, we felt safe,” Barbosa said. “And we hope people in Atlanta feel safe enough to not just hear about things and say, ‘oh we don’t want to ride MARTA,’ but you should. Because at the end of the day, you’re not gonna stop riding planes if a plane falls down. It doesn’t mean it’s unsafe.”

The group started their journey at North Springs Station early Thursday morning and wrapped up just after 6 p.m. at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport — tired, a few minutes shy of breaking the record, but proud of what they set out to show.

Their message to Atlanta riders is simple: give MARTA a chance.

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

Cold cap helped mom keep hair during chemo. Now she is trying to help others get access to treatment.

By Juli McDonald

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    BOSTON (WBZ) — A Massachusetts mother who is battling cancer is pushing health insurance companies to cover a treatment that is often overlooked.

Exactly one year ago this week, it seemed like all the pieces were falling into place for Emily Sutliff. New year, new baby, and finding her footing as a mom of two.

“Right when my son was three months, I think it was January 3, [her doctor] called, it was late in the day, and they said we’re so sorry to tell you but it’s actually breast cancer,” Emily recalled of the life-changing moment.

Surgery revealed a potentially invasive cancer, requiring a more aggressive treatment plan.

“Hearing I had to go through chemo, you just feel a sense of losing control. It was very scary,” she said.

There was one thing Emily wanted to try to control: to keep looking like the mom her toddler daughter knew. Dozens and dozens of hours of cold capping helped Emily keep her hair throughout 12 rounds of chemotherapy.

But the feat came at a painful price, both physically and financially. Scalp cooling therapy cost her thousands of dollars.

“I just thought, ‘what about another mother like me who wants to do the same but doesn’t have access to maybe pay for it?’ It really bothered me,” Emily said.

This year, New York will become the first U.S. state to require private insurance companies to cover scalp cooling for chemo patients. Now, Emily is working with her state senator to make Massachusetts next.

“The best legislation generally comes from individuals who are having an experience and wondering why something isn’t as it should be. She’s the epitome of that case,” said Massachusetts Senator Michael Rush. “Based on her courage, her sacrifice, her story, I’m committed, and I know colleagues in the legislature are to get this bill to become law.”

Emily wouldn’t benefit from the bill. But she wants to make it right for other families. And after another Christmas with hers, as they count down until the end of treatment in April, she knows she has everything she needs.

“For me it was just how lucky I was to be surrounded by the people who got me through what I felt like a really impossible difficult year. Overall, I feel very grateful,” she added.

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

Mother released from ICE detention, still faces battle to prove U.S. citizenship

By Mike Hellgren

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    BALTIMORE (WJZ) — A Baltimore mother is back home with her family in Maryland, 25 days after Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents detained her in the city.

Dulce Consuelo Diaz Morales, 22, said she was born in the United States, and her lawyers presented her birth certificate and immunization records as proof. But the government has yet to back down, and the case remains open. Diaz Morales spent the holidays in ICE facilities across the country, including in Maryland, Louisiana, Texas, and New Jersey.

On Wednesday, her lawyers finally got the call they had been seeking.

“Dulce is being released. We’ve been driving, actually, for about 2 and a half hours because we suspected it was going to happen, and we wanted to be there to make sure that she was processed correctly and actually got out,” her lawyer, Victoria Slatton, said in a TikTok video.

Slatton’s law firm later posted a picture of Diaz Morales smiling after her release from a government facility in Elizabeth, New Jersey.

“I’m one of the attorneys who has been working with her most while she was detained. I’ve been the most in direct communication with her,” lawyer Zachary Perez told WJZ Investigator Mike Hellgren. “I can definitely say that there is a palpable sense of relief, but there’s a lot of apprehension as well because the situation has not been resolved.”

Perez told Hellgren his client has always been “firm in her truth” about her U.S. citizenship.

“Hearing her emphatically state her truth, ‘I was born here. I know I was born here. I was born in Laurel, Maryland.’ She knew that. That should’ve been enough to prevent the situation. It clearly was not,” Perez said.

The ordeal began after agents pulled over Diaz Morales as she left a Baltimore Taco Bell in December with her family.

She said she told agents she was a U.S. citizen but did not have any documentation with her.

Her legal team later produced her Maryland birth certificate and immunization records.

“If people are afraid of living in a ‘show-your-papers’ society, they need to know this is what it looks like,” Perez said. “It looks like four unmarked cars coming up on three young women and someone getting taken away while her sister shouts, ‘She was born here! She was born here.'”

Perez added, “They came to us desperate for help. They didn’t know where she was. She had been disappeared into the black hole of the detention system. I want to emphasize that she was transferred five times over less than five weeks.”

In a prior statement to WJZ, a Department of Homeland Security official insisted Diaz Morales’ birth certificate is not valid and that Diaz Morales provided no other proof of citizenship.

The Trump Administration alleged she entered the country illegally in the border town of Lukeville, Arizona in 2023 and claimed Mexican citizenship when questioned by border patrol at the time.

WJZ reached out to DHS for an updated statement following Diaz Morales’ release but did not hear back from the agency.

Her lawyers said she “entered the United States during an emergency without access to documentation and was mistakenly processed as a noncitizen, assigned an A number, and placed into removal proceedings. That administrative error did not and cannot change her constitutional status.”

“All of a sudden, the government thinks they can just shift all of this to people in these proceedings and expect them to solve all of this while they’re in this black hole of the detention system,” Perez said. That is absolutely terrifying, and I sincerely hope more people start to take notice of that.”

Her lawyers hired an expert at Johns Hopkins University to authenticate her documents.

There are no court hearings set at this point, but Diaz Morales will have to check in with immigration next week in Baltimore.

“Dulce Consuelo Diaz Morales is a United States citizen by birth. She was born in Maryland on October 18, 2003, a fact established by a certified Maryland birth certificate, contemporaneous hospital records from Laurel Regional Hospital, medical affidavits, and Maryland public health immunization records beginning in infancy. These are primary, government-created records generated at the time of birth by United States medical providers and state authorities. A medical expert conducted an extensive and thorough review of these records and confirmed, “Overall, the documents reviewed not only suggest Ms. Diaz Morales’s continuity of care as an infant, but they also substantially support her claim of being a U.S. citizen born in Maryland.”

“Dulce later entered the United States during an emergency without access to documentation and was mistakenly processed as a noncitizen, assigned an A number, and placed into removal proceedings. That administrative error did not and cannot change her constitutional status.”

“Despite this evidence, Dulce was held in immigration detention for twenty-five days. During that time, she was transferred five times between facilities, separated from family, denied access to counsel, and confined in conditions that were deeply troubling and inappropriate for any person, let alone a United States citizen. She experienced prolonged detention, instability, and uncertainty as she was moved repeatedly through the system. Her confinement was not the result of any criminal conduct, but of bureaucratic error compounded by institutional inertia. No United States citizen should be subjected to weeks of detention, repeated transfers, and degrading conditions simply to establish what the government already had the means and resources to confirm.”

“This case also raises profound concerns about precedent. By requiring Dulce and her legal team to produce extraordinary volumes of proof to secure her release, the government has effectively shifted the burden onto United States citizens to affirmatively prove their citizenship while incarcerated. That inversion of responsibility is dangerous. Citizenship, and the rights conferred upon citizens, should not depend on a person’s ability to assemble records from behind detention walls, nor should liberty hinge on how much documentation a citizen can marshal under duress. If this becomes normalized, any citizen who lacks immediate access to paperwork and professional counsel becomes vulnerable to incarceration first and verification later.”

“Although Dulce has been released from custody, her case is far from over. She remains under ICE supervision and, because DHS opposed counsel’s motion and has refused to terminate, she still faces the threat of deportation. Until her proceedings are formally corrected and safeguards are enforced, Dulce’s freedom remains conditional, and the risk that this could happen again to her or to others remains very real. While we will continue to fight for her despite alienage being DHS’s burden to prove, we are deeply troubled that the fight has been prolonged.”

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

Warm winter weather causes water supply concerns

Par Kermani

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — Warm winter weather is reshaping Idaho’s snowpack and raising concerns about water supplies for farmers, especially in the state’s southern basins.

If the lack of a white Christmas was not troubling enough, the latest precipitation numbers aren’t going to be enough to save farmers from using reservoirs in parts of the state.

While this year is not a traditional drought year in terms of precipitation, temperatures have been so warm that much of that moisture is falling as rain instead of snow at lower and middle elevations.

“We haven’t seen a winter this warm in quite a while,” said David Hoekema a Hydrologist at Idaho Dept. of Water Resources. “From a precipitation perspective, we’re leaning more pluvial — the opposite of drought — but the way that moisture is stored is the real issue.”

In the Boise basin, precipitation is about average, In the Upper Snake the snow pack is above average, but the situation is most troubling along Idaho’s southern border basins — including areas south of Twin Falls, Goose Creek and Salmon Falls Creek — where warm temperatures and a forecast for a warm January point to a “really rough year” unless weather patterns change dramatically.

If warm temperatures continue and spring arrives early, runoff could come sooner and weaker than usual, leaving farmers with water shortages. How severe those shortages become will depend on storms and temperatures over the next several weeks.

Farmers there are expected to rely heavily on whatever water is already in reservoirs, plus minimal runoff if conditions do not improve.

In the Upper Snake region, which includes irrigators from the Henry’s Fork down to Milner Dam, the outlook is “dicey.” Reservoir storage is roughly 500,000 acre-feet below normal, and an early warm spring could trigger an early and weaker runoff than current snowpack indices suggest.

“We’ll probably see some water shortages,” Hoekema said “How serious those are depends on what happens from here on out.”

State and federal water managers plan to dig deeper into the data at a water supply meeting scheduled for Jan. 15. Analysts will compare SNOTEL measurements with modeling tools that estimate snowpack across entire basins at fine elevation intervals.

Their goal is to determine how much area lies below the current snow line and how much snow might be missing from the official record before making firmer projections about irrigation supplies for the coming growing season.

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Two injured after fire at mobile home in Desert Edge

Jesus Reyes

DESERT EDGE, Calif. (KESQ) – Two people were injured after a structure fire at a mobile home park in the unincorporated community of Desert Edge Thursday night.

The fire was reported just before 7 p.m. at the Joshua Springs Mobile Home Park on the 18000 block of Langlois Road.

The fire was contained by 8 p.m. So Cal Edison and So Cal Gas were requested, according to CAL FIRE.

Battalion Chief Ricky Harvey confirmed there were two patients. One was transported to the hospital for smoke-related injuries. The other was evaluated and released at the scene.

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THE COST OF BRAVERY: Court unseals Planned Parenthood arrest records, officer injuries disclosed

Heather Skold

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) — Newly unsealed court documents have revealed the toll of law enforcement bravery during the chaos of the Planned Parenthood shooting ten years ago.

Months ago, KRDO13 put forth a motion to have the original probable cause documents of confessed shooter, Robert Dear, who passed away on Nov. 22, unsealed.  They were sealed shortly after the incident to preserve the investigation; this week, the court ruled in KRDO13’s favor to unseal the records despite objections from the defendant’s former counsel. 

At three pages, the document is brief, but it lists the names of the law enforcement personnel who were shot and survived the hail of gunfire on Black Friday, 2015:

Colorado Springs Police Officer Michael Zamonas was shot in the left hand; CSPD Tactical Officer Dan Carter was shot in the left leg; CSPD Tactical Officer Robert Wolf was shot in the left hand and left upper arm area; CSPD Officer John Ford was shot in the upper left arm.  

El Paso County Sergeant Jason Hess was shot in the right lower leg. 

UCCS Officer, Garrett Swasey, was shot and killed.

Before this point in time, their stories and bravery have been kept in the shadows, pending the legal proceedings of the case.

According to a federal indictment, Robert Dear had four SKS rifles, five handguns, two additional rifles, a shotgun, and more than 500 rounds of ammunition.  

Upon his surrender, Dear told police that he brought propane tanks with him, shooting them in the hopes they would explode. They did not.  

He surrendered to tactical officers, and upon being placed into a patrol car, he “yelled out a statement about the killing of babies,” according to the court document.

Dear at age 67, died in federal custody due to heart failure, five days prior to the tenth anniversary of the deadly shooting. 

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Families of slain University of Idaho students sue Washington State University

Stephanie Lucas

BOISE, IDAHO (KIFI) – The Bryan Kohberger murder case has taken another unexpected turn.

All four families of the murdered University of Idaho students are suing Washington State University, according to the Idaho Statesman.

The lawsuit maintains the University remained “idle,” despite knowing about what the lawsuit claims were “repeated instances of discrimination, sexual harassment, and stalking by Kohberger in its educational program.”

Kohberger was a teaching assistant at Washington State University while he was pursuing his P.h.D in criminology at the time of the murders.

The families claim WSU’s inaction on previous complaints that Kohberger was harassing women “ultimately culminated in Kohberger stalking and murdering the decedents.”

The Statesman got the 126-page complaint from Skagit County Superior Court in Washington. It seeks unspecified monetary damages. 

All four University of Idaho students – Ethan Chapin, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle, and Madison Mogen – were murdered in an off-campus home in Moscow in November 2022.

Bryan Kohberger took a plea deal on four counts of first-degree murder earlier this year.

He is serving four life terms plus ten years at the Idaho maximum security institution. 

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Destination Rehab launches free Walking Soccer program for individuals with Parkinson’s Disease 

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Destination Rehab says it is excited to announce the launch of its Walking Soccer for Parkinson’s program, a nine-week indoor program designed specifically for individuals living with Parkinson’s Disease.

The winter 2026 session will run from January 28 through March 18, offering a fun, supportive, and engaging way to improve balance, coordination, and overall health. This is a part of their successful Parkinson’s Programs that are supported by the Parkinson’s Foundation and is free for those with Parkinson’s Disease and their caregivers.  

Here’s the rest of their news release:

Walking Soccer for Parkinson’s is a modified soccer program that removes running from the game and emphasizes walking, skill-building, strategy, and teamwork. Coached by a neurologic physical therapist alongside experienced soccer coaches, participants are challenged both physically and cognitively as they learn soccer skills and progress into walking soccer games. 

One program participant shared, “Everyone running the day was awesome… (they) adjust drills when needed and help make everyone at ease with participating. It was nice to have leaders who really knew the game and had the skills to keep the activity moving.” 

The program is open to individuals with Parkinson’s Disease who are able to walk without assistance and have been cleared for exercise by their physician. Sessions will take place every Wednesday from 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. at Bend FC Futsal Courts. We will also offer outdoor sessions in the Spring!  

Thanks to generous support from the Parkinson’s Foundation, participation in the Walking Soccer for Parkinson’s: Winter 2026 program is completely free for individuals with Parkinson’s Disease and their caregivers. Destination Rehab also extends sincere thanks to Bend FC for providing the space to host this program and for their continued community support. 

Registration is now open. For more information or to sign up, visit our website or reach out to audrey@destinationrehab.org or call 541-241-6463.  

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Riverside County to get over $1M in settlement of suit against Verizon Wireless

City News Service

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (KESQ) – Settlement of a civil suit against Verizon Wireless stemming from alleged environmental violations will net Riverside County more than $1 million in penalties and fees, it was announced today.   

According to the District Attorney’s Office, a lawsuit filed following a years-long investigation that began in 2019 was resolved pretrial, culminating in Verizon Wireless, which is under the proprietorship of Bedminster, New Jersey-based Cellco Partnership, agreeing to a $7.7 million payout to the plaintiffs. Along with the Riverside County D.A.’s office, those in Imperial, Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino, San Diego and Ventura counties joined in the action, as well as the Office of the City Attorney for Los Angeles.

The case was heard in Orange County Superior Court, where the settlement was formally signed by a judge on Jan. 2.   

The civil complaint alleged that Verizon Wireless was negligent and deficient in its management of lead acid batteries and petroleum products required for operation of emergency generators and related systems to power equipment at sites throughout the region.

The company did not respond to calls for comment Thursday afternoon.   

“The complaint alleges that Verizon repeatedly failed to submit complete and accurate `Hazardous Materials Business Plans’ to the California Environmental Reporting System,” according to the Riverside County District Attorney’s Office. “Verizon also failed to maintain copies of these plans onsite as required, and failed to provide adequate employee training for responding to hazardous material releases.”

Prosecutors further alleged that public inspections of facilities were stymied, and that the defendant “failed to pay required permit fees that support local oversight of hazardous materials.”

“These requirements exist to ensure that first responders, environmental regulators and public safety officials have accurate information about hazardous materials stored at commercial sites in the event of an emergency,” according to the plaintiffs.

Verizon Wireless has since rectified its policies and practices, prosecutors said.

The settlement will result in $827,191 being paid to the D.A.’s office to cover costs and penalties, while $318,375 will be going to the county Department of Environmental Health for similar reasons, according to prosecutors.

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Serán Bioscience holds topping-out ceremony for new NE Bend manufacturing facility

KTVZ

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) – Serán Bioscience, LLC,  in collaboration with leading developer and design-builder Mortenson, hosted a topping-out ceremony on Thursday to celebrate the construction progress of a new commercial-scale cGMP pharmaceutical and biotech manufacturing facility in northeast Bend.

The topping-out ceremony marks the transition from structural construction to interior build-out. Slated to open in the second quarter, the facility on NE Triton Place is the third building and the centerpiece of Serán’s new 100,000-square-foot commercial manufacturing campus, the company said in a news release that continues in full below:

The campus positions Bend as a growing hub for advanced pharmaceutical development while supporting flexible end-to-end solutions for complex medicines and helping pharmaceutical partners accelerate their pipelines.

The expansion marks a significant milestone in Serán’s mission to provide fully integrated support starting with drug discovery and pre-clinical services, to first-in-human (FiH) trials, and ultimately  to commercial-scale production of small-molecule therapeutics.

Adjacent to the manufacturing facility, Serán last fall completed two new warehouse and light manufacturing buildings totaling 50,000 square feet. These spaces support critical materials handling, packaging, labeling and logistics functions, helping ensure efficient scale-up and dependable supply chain execution.

“Our clients are bringing forward increasingly sophisticated pharmaceuticals which demands equally sophisticated development and manufacturing capabilities,” said Dan Smithey, CEO of Serán BioScience. “Serán is a partner that can solve challenges early and then reliably carry those solutions through to commercial production, and this investment in our campus strengthens our ability to do exactly that. We appreciate the close collaboration with our development and construction partner, Mortenson, as we bring this next phase of Serán’s growth to life.”

“Serán’s project reflects the level of technical complexity and quality standards we see driving growth in life sciences manufacturing today,” said Pat Clemons, project executive with Mortenson. “Our team is proud to support a facility that is purpose-built for advanced pharmaceutical production while contributing to the long-term economic strength of the Bend region.” 

Located just minutes from Serán’s existing 90,000-square-foot clinical development and manufacturing campus, the new commercial site will operate as a seamless extension of the company’s established clinical operations and is expected to add as many as 150 employees as manufacturing expands.

Serán’s Bend-based workforce currently includes more than 190 highly skilled professionals across 10 specialized buildings, equipped with advanced technologies such as nano milling, micronization, dry and wet granulation, single and multi-layer tableting, aqueous and organic solvent coating, encapsulation, spray-dried dispersions, powder for inhalation and twin-screw melt extrusion.

Together, these capabilities support oral solid dose programs from early formulation through commercial manufacturing, packaging and labeling.

Founded in Bend in 2016, Serán is a leading contract development and manufacturing organization providing a comprehensive suite of development, analytical and clinical manufacturing services to pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies.

Serán’s deep experience and expertise in materials science, formulation development, particle and process engineering and pharmaceutical manufacturing enables optimum solutions for their customers’ most difficult drug development challenges. 

“We’re proud to support Serán’s continued investment in Bend and its commitment to serving both emerging biotechnology companies and global pharmaceutical organizations,” said Mike Clifford, Vice President and General Manager at Mortenson. “This is a significant life sciences project for Central Oregon. By delivering flexible, science-driven facilities, we’re helping translate innovation into commercially viable therapies while contributing to the continued growth of the region’s life sciences market.”

About Serán BioScience

Serán BioScience partners with pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies to accelerate the development and production of complex, patient-centric medicines. The Bend facility reflects the company’s long-term investment in innovation, workforce growth, and collaboration, enhancing Serán’s ability to support the next generation of pharmaceutical solutions while strengthening the regional life sciences ecosystem.

About Mortenson

Mortenson is a U.S.-based, top-20 builder, developer, and engineering services provider serving the commercial, institutional, and energy sectors. Mortenson’s expanding portfolio of integrated services helps its customers move their strategies forward, ensuring their investments result in high-performing assets. The result is a turnkey partner, fully invested in the business success of its customers. Founded in 1954, Mortenson has operations across the U.S. with offices in Chicago, Denver, Fargo, Iowa City, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Nashville, Phoenix, Portland, Salt Lake City, San Antonio, Seattle, and Washington, D.C. For additional information, visit www.mortenson.com.

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