‘Find purpose in sorrow’: Rexburg family helping others process grief with children’s book

By Erik Nielsen

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    REXBURG (eastidahonews.com) — Halfway through Emily Miller’s pregnancy, she and her husband, David, learned news no parent ever wants to hear — that their long-awaited second son would not survive after birth.

Over the years, David channeled that grief into a poem, which has since been adapted into an illustrated children’s book. His hope is that the book can provide comfort and hope to anyone who has lost a loved one.

The book, “Twice as Well,” is self-published and available.

Baby Daniel had been eagerly anticipated by the Millers and their first son, Charlie, who is now 19 years old. Charlie was born after years of trying to conceive; Daniel came several years later.

But that anticipation quickly turned to sorrow when the family learned Daniel had a lethal form of dwarfism.

“There were already a lot of big feelings around it,” David said. “And then when we got the news of his condition, it just felt like a very significant period in our lives.”

From that moment on, the family lived with what grief counselors often call “anticipatory grief” — the weight of knowing what was coming without being able to stop it.

“We were told by the nurses and grief counselors that this was something that could either bring us together as a family or pull us apart,” David said.

“I knew it would be a significant period in our lives, (and) that we would feel the effects of for the rest of our lives,” he said. “So, I began taking notes. I would carry around 3-by-5 cards in my pocket — in my shirt pocket or my pants pocket.

“And I would journal on these cards. I would write down thoughts that were motivational and inspirational, things that came to me in conversations with Charlie when he was 4 (years old), or with Emily, or with other people. I really started to compile a lot of thoughts because I understood this was going to be an important time.”

At first, David had no ambition beyond helping himself and his family process their grief and remember Daniel in a way that also allowed them to move forward. As the Millers searched for resources to help Charlie, they found many lacking.

“They did a really good job acknowledging sadness and disappointment,” Emily said. “But we felt like they would actually make him feel worse, not better.”

“That’s when we started wishing for something different,” she said, “something that acknowledged the sadness but also helped build forward.”

Over time, David began sharing his writings with his family, reading them to his children and occasionally sharing them with others facing similar losses.

“People really connected with it,” he said. “Especially other fathers.”

Eventually, David realized the writing could be helpful to others in book form.

“This was never about turning it into a profit machine,” he said. “It was something that was useful for us as a family.”

David chose to self-publish the book, which allowed him to preserve its spiritual message.

“I think we all long for the idea that there’s more than this life,” he said. “That’s a pretty universal feeling.”

The illustrations, which have a soft, whimsical quality, were created by Shana Keegan, an artist the Millers discovered at BYU–Idaho.

“When approaching such a tender subject, I relied on David and Emily’s thoughtful input on what they wanted to see depicted,” Keegan said. “I tried my best to create warm and inviting imagery so readers could feel happy and hopeful. I also really enjoyed illustrating elements that were meaningful to the family, like the colorful hot air balloons, which are a symbol of hope. It was an honor to work on this story.”

Keegan visited the Millers’ home, met the children and incorporated subtle details from their lives. The family depicted in the book does not represent the Millers exactly, allowing as many families as possible to see themselves in the story.

For the Millers’ children, “Twice as Well” is more than a book; it’s a shared language for remembering their brother.

“Before every basketball game, I kind of think, ‘Whatever I do tonight is for Daniel,’” said Samuel, 12.

Daughter Ada, 9, described moments when she feels protected — times she believes her brother is still watching over her. “I think he’s like our guardian angel,” she said.

David hopes the book will provide encouragement to families as they move through the grief process.

“Even though you may be going through something really hard and tragic,” he said, “it doesn’t have to destroy the rest of your life.”

Instead, the book encourages families to honor the people they’ve lost by continuing to live fully.

“You can find purpose in sorrow,” he said. “You can honor the person you’re missing by continuing to live a full life.”

“This isn’t something we’re trying to make money from,” Emily said. “The hope is just that it can comfort people, freely.”

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.

Colorado teacher arrested, accused of making children pretend to be hypnotized in sexually explicit videos

By Sadie Buggle

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    BOULDER COUNTY, Colo. (KRDO) — A Colorado teacher who worked at multiple schools along the Front Range is now behind bars, accused of persuading multiple juveniles to act as if they were under hypnosis before directing them to perform sexually explicit acts on camera. Investigators say he sold the content online until a series of online safety alerts exposed the scheme.

According to the Boulder County Sheriff’s Office, 39-year-old Patricio Alejandro Illanes was arrested on Jan. 5 after a months-long investigation into tips from Meta, Inc., reporting that an account he owned and operated was creating and selling sexually explicit content.

Those tips led Boulder detectives to search Illanes’ personal cell phone, which revealed multiple sexually explicit videos involving apparent juveniles that had been shared on various messaging applications and paid subscription pornography sites.

The sheriff’s office said an investigation into that content revealed that Illanes had instructed juveniles to “perform a script” in front of a green screen while pretending to be in a hypnotic state. The sessions escalated to victims removing clothing and engaging in explicit acts at Illanes’ direction. Illanes allegedly filmed and photographed these sessions before editing the content “for sexual gratification” and selling it online.

Boulder officials say they’ve already identified four out-of-state individuals who were involved in these “hypnotic role-play sessions” as juveniles.

Illanes now faces 50 charges, including dozens of Class 3 felony counts related to sexual exploitation of a child – covering the creation, production, possession, and distribution of explicit material – as well as 10 misdemeanor counts of unlawful practice of an occupation or profession.

Detectives said they also recovered additional “hypnosis-like” photographs that appear to depict clothed students in a school setting, further raising concerns about Illanes’ access to minors through his multiple professional roles across the state.

At the time of his arrest, Illanes was an English teacher at Arvada Senior High School. The sheriff’s office confirmed that after administration was notified of the investigation, they swiftly placed him on administrative leave before terminating him.

However, authorities say Illanes had access to students for up to 10 years before that role in positions he held in schools, libraries, and youth programs across Longmont, Boulder, Lafayette, Denver, Erie and Arvada, including:

2010-2015: City of Longmont Children and Youth Services 2013-2017: New Meridian Alternative High School in Longmont 2015-2021: Longmont Library – Children and Teens Section 2017-2019: Centaurus High School in Lafayette 2019-2020: Mapleton School District in Denver 2019-2023: Erie Middle School & Erie High School 2024-2025: Arvada Senior High School Investigators are now asking for any current or former students and co-workers of Illanes who may have additional information related to this investigation to come forward.

Anyone who believes they or their child may have been a victim of Illanes is encouraged to contact the law enforcement agency where the incident occurred, the Boulder County Sheriff’s Office said.

The investigation involved assistance from multiple local, state, and federal agencies, including the FBI and law enforcement departments across Colorado, Oregon and Ohio.

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Wedding barn restrictions take effect in 2026, but some lawmakers want to ease new permit law

By A.J. Bayatpour

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    MILWAUKEE (WDJT) — For farm owners who rent out their barns for special events, including weddings, 2026 is ringing in a new state law that is forcing them to make a difficult choice.

Back in 2023, legislative leaders did some last-minute maneuvering to tuck new language into a broader bill that updates Wisconsin’s alcohol laws. That measure primarily allowed breweries to start making canned cocktails and seltzers while also allowing wineries to extend their hours.

Late in the process, leaders added language that regulated the wedding barn industry. Those restrictions, which took effect at the start of this year, require barn operators to either get a liquor license or a special non-sale event permit.

The new permits require barns to have a licensed bartender serving alcohol on the property, and the venues can only host a maximum of six events per year. Renters are only allowed to serve beer and wine.

A bipartisan group of lawmakers is circulating a bill that would loosen those restrictions.

“What the previous legislation is really trying to do is to force more venues to operate as bars that don’t want to,” State Sen. Andre Jacque (R-New Franken) said in an interview Friday, Jan. 2. “And this really isn’t making any sort of changes in terms of liability. This is simply preserving that consumer choice.”

The new proposal would allow wedding barns without a liquor license to host as many as 36 events in a year.

Renters would still be required to have a licensed bartender serving drinks, but they’d also be allowed to have liquor at their events.

“You ought to be able to serve a Wisconsin Old Fashioned at your wedding,” State Sen. Mark Spreitzer (D-Beloit) said. “And right now, even with those six events, you can’t do that.”

Afton Krysiak, co-owner of The Gathering Barn in Fort Atkinson, said she’s in the process of getting a liquor license for her venue. Hosting events throughout wedding season was part of the plan when they bought the land, so she said there was no real alternative.

“We, financially, would not be able to survive, seeing that we just bought the venue in 2022,” Krysiak said. “We wouldn’t have been able to survive on six [events] alone.”

Krysiak said the process of meeting liquor license requirements has proven costly. She said it cost about $30,000 to install necessary refrigeration equipment.

She added getting all of her questions answered about the licensing process has also been maddening.

“We’re still a little lost on what it is that we have to have,” Krysiak said. “Talking to the Department of Health, and the Department of Health says it’s the [Wisconsin] Department of Revenue, so we’ve gone back and forth a lot.”

For Jean Bahn, who owns the Farmview Event Barn near Oshkosh, getting a liquor license was never really an option.

“At my age, I do not want to start another business,” Bahn told CBS 58 Friday. “I have no experience whatsoever running a retail operation of any kind, especially alcohol.”

Bahn argued it was unfair to apply liquor licensing standards to farm owners who are only renting out their barns to private parties.

“We simply rent space,” she said. “This is no different than a group going to a city park and renting the pavilion and bringing in their food and drink.”

Others, including the Tavern League of Wisconsin, see it differently. Supporters of the law have argued it’s unfair for barns to rent out space for events where alcohol is served while avoiding the regulations other venues face.

Spreitzer said he believes the bill he and Jacque are now circulating represents a good compromise. He hoped to move forward with the bill before the current two-year legislative session wraps up in March, when lawmakers shift into campaign mode.

Since legislative leaders, including Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu, approved adding the wedding barn language to the 2023 bill, it’s highly unlikely this bill would get a vote in the Senate.

Spreitzer said the bill’s supporters might try to get their bill in through the backdoor, adding their own language to a different bill as an amendment.

“For a lot of these venues, their wedding season starts in May,” Spreitzer said. “We still have time to fix this, but we don’t have a lot of time.”

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The Krumbah family speaks out after court grants supervised release to son’s killer

By Dan Hanson

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    RICHLAND, Wash. (KAPP) — A Benton County judge has granted supervised community release to the man found not guilty by reason of insanity in the killing of a Richland Instacart driver, allowing him outings from a state mental hospital despite strong objections from prosecutors and the victim’s family.

Aaron Kelly, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia, will now be permitted supervised outings with hospital staff and unescorted movement on the grounds of Eastern State Hospital in Centralia, where he has been confined since being found not guilty by reason of insanity in February 2024.

On Dec. 31, Benton County Superior Court Judge Jackie Stam granted Kelly’s request for “limited conditional release,” nearly three years after he shot and killed Justin Krumbah while the victim was working as an Instacart delivery driver at the Richland Fred Meyer on Feb. 7, 2022. Kelly also seriously wounded store employee Mark Hill in the random shooting.

The decision has reopened wounds for Krumbah’s family and reignited community safety concerns about the random nature of the violence that shocked the Tri-Cities area.

“We’ve always been taught to be responsible for our own actions and to be punished if we do something wrong, and I don’t feel like he’s being punished,” said Karen Mullins, Krumbah’s mother. “We no longer have Justin, and he gets to do basically whatever he wants.”

Krumbah’s sister, Krista Schaaf, remembered her brother as energetic and loving.

“ADHD in a bottle, but fun. He was all over the place. He was the best brother, the best uncle, the best friend. He was amazing, there’s just no other way to put it. You can ask anybody,” Schaaf said. Schaaf also sent Apple Valley News Now a statement she wrote with the support of her family:

“In our opinion, we have felt very unheard and felt we did not get the best representation we could have gotten through this process. The whole prosecution team was slowly phased out with job changes and retirement, as well as never having the same judge two hearings in a row; possibly overlooking crucial information as they “briefed” the case ahead of time. While Kelly was at Eastern State Hospital, he had multiple evaluations done, one in which Dr Yocum made a note that the hospital described Kelly as an “escape risk” due to the “very intricate maps” he previously drew of the hospital’s grounds, including the “surrounding hills, landscape, and where [patients] and staff congregate.” This was noted at a high-level security hospital, where Kelly was transferred to Western State Hospital and then again to Maple Lane. Maple Lane, which, according to their website, “[e]ntrances and exits are controlled by staff. The outdoor spaces for the residents are enclosed by fencing.” Not a highly secure facility, which I feel this individual needs.

Another important fact was another evaluation by Dr Brooke England states, “Mr. Kelly denied substance use, and this was confirmed by his friend, who reported only occasional experimentation with marijuana in college and no evidence of significant use before his arrest.” If this is the extent of his substance abuse, why such a need for treatment, which is off campus, to the hospital where he is placed? This supposedly is one of the needs for off-ground privileges?! In the last evaluation done by Dr. Wendi Wachsmuth before the final competency hearing, she states, “his greatest asset, intelligence, is also a liability for him and his success in treatment. There is a high likelihood that he will convince not only himself, but anyone untrained, of the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness and violent behavior, that he no longer needs treatment. Given the nature of his delusional belief system and his ability to mask his disorder from others, should he discontinue treatment, his likelihood of repeating similar acts is greatly increased from what is already considered high.” I don’t believe either doctor who evaluated him lately has worked with violent offenders, like those in the prison system, which I felt should be an extra priority, given prior information. Given these obvious factors, we believe the current prosecutors have effectively thrown in the towel and have denied the information and pro bono assistance Andy Miller offered to help get the case to trial, rather than agreeing to the insanity plea. It has made it especially difficult to navigate this process, trying to do what’s most important: getting justice for Justin. We believe that, given Eisinger’s lack of experience, he is not fit for the position and should resign to protect the community from individuals like Kelly.” – Krista Shaaf with support of her family.

Kelly applied for the conditional release on Feb. 20, 2024, about a year after his insanity verdict. Under the court’s order, Kelly can now visit restaurants and businesses with a staff escort from Eastern State Hospital and move freely around the hospital grounds without supervision.

The release comes with strict conditions tied to his ongoing mental health treatment and public safety. Kelly must remain in the care of the Department of Social and Health Services, adhere to his treatment plan, and attend therapy. He must remain in sight during supervised outings and requires court and hospital permission to leave Washington state. His release privileges may be revoked for noncompliance with hospital rules or for posing a safety risk.

Benton County Prosecutor Eric Eisinger opposed the release, arguing Kelly had not spent sufficient time in treatment and expressing concerns about public safety.

“With a staff escort from Eastern State Hospital, he can go into restaurants and businesses and engage with the public. I’ve had a lot of concerns about whether that would be safe to do throughout this litigation. As you remember it was only in February of 2024 he was found to be not guilty by reason of insanity,” Eisinger said.

However, multiple state agencies and independent mental health experts supported Kelly’s request, determining his likelihood of reoffending was “relatively low.” After an independent evaluation called a risk review board backed the recommendation, Eisinger said he had limited legal options.

“The law requires me to come forward with an expert that says it’s not appropriate, and here’s why, and after everybody weighed in and we had two separately hired experts that we paid for out of our county budget, we simply weren’t able to put on that kind of testimony,” Eisinger said.

The case has heightened community safety concerns due to the random nature of the violence. Kelly had no prior interaction with Krumbah and no known interaction with Hill. The shooting occurred in an everyday public setting, creating a sense of vulnerability among residents.

Community anxiety was further fueled by Kelly’s history of concerning behavior that had not led to significant legal intervention before the shooting. This included a previous burglary charge that was dismissed and a denied protection order request from a former roommate who accused him of unlawful harassment.

The victim’s family has criticized the prosecutor’s handling of the case. Schaaf questioned why Eisinger, a newly elected prosecutor, didn’t seek additional help with such a significant case.

“Why deny the help you obviously needed and could’ve used to fight your first huge case, especially a murder case like this?” Schaaf asked.

Eisinger defended his office’s efforts, saying they opposed the release as strongly as possible within legal constraints.

“I think the family is grieving. I think they’re upset, and I understand. I understand that they’re upset because this was terrible. At the same time, we developed our case and have opposed this as strongly as we could have,” Eisinger said.

For Krumbah’s family, each court proceeding reopens their trauma.

“It’s a new normal…something we just have to deal with. I mean, there’s no rule book, there’s no…we go…it’s day by day, and just about the time we heal or start to heal, then another court thing comes up and rips off the band-aid, and we start all over again,” Mullins said.

Under Washington state law, individuals found not guilty by reason of insanity are committed to secure mental health facilities rather than prison. The prosecutor’s office must be informed if Kelly requests greater freedom in the future.

Kelly remains in state custody and cannot leave Washington without court approval. The court noted that future reviews could further adjust those privileges, meaning the case could return to court if concerns are raised by hospital staff or prosecutors.

The Feb. 7, 2022, shooting shocked the Tri-Cities community when Kelly walked into the Fred Meyer store and opened fire. Kelly was found not guilty by reason of insanity on Feb. 12, 2024, and was immediately committed to Eastern State Hospital, where he has remained under supervision in a locked facility until this recent court decision.

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.

Suspect in 1997 cold case murder of elderly woman arrested in Oregon

By Tim Fang

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    SAN FRANCISCO (KPIX) — Nearly 30 years after an elderly woman was found dead in her East San Jose apartment, authorities in the South Bay have arrested and charged a man with murder.

San Jose Police announced Wednesday that 75-year-old Joe Contreras of Dallas, Oregon was arrested Dec. 19 in the 1997 killing of 84-year-old Alice Sharitz. Contreras was extradited from Oregon to California and was booked into the Santa Clara County Main Jail.

“Time does not erase responsibility,” Police Chief Paul Joseph said in a statement. “And thanks to the relentless work of our Homicide Unit and the District Attorney’s Cold Case Unit, it never will.”

According to officers, Sharitz was found dead in her home on North Jackson Avenue on the afternoon of Oct. 6, 1997 by a neighbor who was delivering a card.

An autopsy revealed Sharitz had two stab wounds to the chest, multiple fractures, neck injuries and numerous facial abrasions. The coroner at the time determined the case of death to be multiple traumatic injuries. Despite what was described by police as “exhaustive investigative efforts”, the case went cold for more than 20 years.

A male DNA profile developed from DNA collected from the crime scene was submitted for advanced forensic genetic genealogy analysis in 2021. In Oct. 2024, police said the sample identified Contreras as a potential source of DNA.

Two months later, a DNA sample was collected from Contreras with the help of Oregon authorities. In February of last year, the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office crime lab confirmed the DNA from the crime scene matched Contreras’ DNA.

Detectives and an investigator from the DA’s office Cold Case Unit traveled to Oregon and interviewed Contreras. An arrest warrant was later obtained and the suspect was safely taken into custody.

“Justice for Alice Sharitz and her loved ones was long in coming, but it is here. It took DNA. It took genealogy. And it took the mindset of the SJPD and the DA’s Cold Case Unit to never give up on a victim, ever,” said District Attorney Jeff Rosen. Jail records show Contreras is being held without bail. He is scheduled to appear in court Wednesday afternoon.

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ICE entered hospital without warrant, handcuffed patient to bed, community organizers say

By Jason Rantala

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    MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — Community organizers and health care workers are expressing outrage after they say U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were allowed inside a Minneapolis hospital for more than 24 hours. They claim agents handcuffed a patient to their bed, all without a judicial warrant.

ICE was allowed to stay by that patient’s bedside for more than 24 hours, according to a spokesperson for Unidos MN.

Over the holiday, ICE agents got into HCMC’s emergency department without a judicial warrant, according to the organization. Agents were given access to staff-only areas, like break rooms and parking lots, they said.

ICE was confronted and removed from HCMC, but that was more than 24 hours later, according to Unidos MN.

“Our Hennepin County commissioners worked with leadership of the hospital, including the leadership of security, established that there was no judicial warrant, and told them that they had to leave and they left,” said Rep. Aisha Gomez, DFL-Minneapolis.

“This is an individual with a high medical risk that that individual, if he was detained, he could have lost his life,” said Rep. Mohamud Noor, DFL-Minneapolis.

In a written statement online, Hennepin Healthcare acknowledged the incident.

“We can confirm that any federal agents arriving with a patient presented appropriate identification, adhered to our established processes, and left after Security asked for documentation to support their continued presence. Our security, legal and leadership teams worked together throughout, with a focus on providing care and support for the patient and our team,” the statement read.

Unidos MN is demanding hospitals like HCMC adopt clear protocols when it comes to ICE.

“Our current processes are largely aligned with the guidance proposed by Unidos, and like all our processes, we routinely review them in the interest of safety and care of our patients, employees and visitors,” Hennepin Healthcare said.

The Department of Homeland Security has not responded to WCCO’s request for comment on the incident.

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Firefighters, animal hospital save kitten trapped in metal sewer grate

By Gregg Montgomery

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    INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — Firefighters and an animal hospital rescued a kitten stuck in a metal sewer grate, Indianapolis Fire Department said Tuesday night.

A person near a gas station at Emerson Avenue and Thompson Road saw the trapped kitten, and the firefighters were called to help about 1:30 p.m. Tuesday.

The firefighters removed the grate along with kitten, which had its head stuck in the drain cover, and took it to Noah’s Stop 11 Animal Hospital Veterinary Specialty & Emergency Care South. That’s where the sedated kitten and the grate were separated in about 20 minutes.

The 5-month-old kitten on Tuesday night remained at the animal hospital, and its operators hope to find a home for the fortunate feline.

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Passengers recount terrifying landing after tires blow during landing

By Cody Alcorn, Reeves Jackson, Donesha Aldridge

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    ATLANTA (WXIA) — The tires on an aircraft blew out while attempting to land at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on Tuesday evening, according to airport officials.

The LATAM Airlines flight was coming from Peru, officials said. Passengers on the aircraft are being deplaned. The passengers were aboard LATAM Airlines flight 2482 from Lima, Peru, to Atlanta. The plane, a Boeing 767, departed Lima at 12:14 p.m. and landed in Atlanta at 7:38 p.m.

Several passengers aboard the plane told 11Alive’s Cody Alcorn exactly what happened on the harrowing experience at the Atlanta airport.

A woman who is a passenger on the plane said that after the landing, bathroom doors broke inside the plane, panels broke, insulation was coming from the ceiling and that passengers were still stuck on the plane as of 9:10 p.m. She told 11Alive’s Cody Alcorn they were off the flight by 9:40 p.m.

She talked about how there was a lot of turbulence coming into Hartsfield-Jackson on landing and the touch down was extremely rough before the tires blew. Once she was off the plane, she said the tires looked like they were halfway melted. The passenger was able to grab a photo of the busted tires when deplaning.

Another passenger said the plane felt like it was continuing at high speeds once it touched down, and as the plane tried to come to a halt at what felt like faster than normal speeds, the tires blew on the plane.

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Strangers join together to help dog walker recover lost rent money

By Kemberly Richardson

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    NEW YORK (WABC) — Strangers in Inwood joined together to help a dog walker who lost part of her rent money at a neighborhood bagel store.

In what could be dubbed the Miracle on 207th Street, JJ Cerillo has been reminded there is goodness and generosity out there.

“There are nice things happening around communities, especially Inwood, Inwood is a very tight community,” Cerillo said.

While she was inside Inwood Bagels on Dec. 30, Cerillo had three $100 bills in her wallet mixed in with other money. When she paid, she didn’t realize until she got home that some money had fallen out.

“I’m freaking out, almost had a panic attack, so I called them and was like did you happen to find $300,” Cerillo said.

Manager Deja Hamad got the call.

“She said to look for the $300 and I came all the way here to check and I told her no, nothing,” Hamad said.

Cerillo went back and looked for the money that was for part of her rent but had no luck. So she posted about it on the neighborhood group chat and acknowledged it was a long shot, but asked if anyone had found the $300.

One of the first to reply, a neighbor named Drew, proposed that if two people joined him, he would put $10 toward replacing the lost money.

And within 24 hours, Cerillo said she had the $300.

She immediately let everyone know, calling it a win-win as others commented that it was a beautiful outcome for the community and good neighborly news.

Drew said he wanted to help because he’s been in her shoes before when several years ago he lost $600.

As for the lost cash, Cerillo said the person must have needed it more and there are no hard feelings.

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Cancer survivor chairs luncheon to give back to center that saved her life

By Reba Hollingsworth

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    RICHMOND, Virginia (WTVR) — Farrah Massenburg says there’s so much to be excited about as she prepares to chair the 31st annual Women and Wellness luncheon next month.

“We’re excited by the 31st year. Excited about being the chair of the Women and Wellness luncheon,” Massenburg said.

The excitement also comes from where her journey has taken her and where it’s leading her now.

“I’m a walking testimony. I’m a billboard of hope,” Massenburg said.

In 2019, Massenburg discovered a lump in her breast while breastfeeding her baby. The wife and mother of four would undergo aggressive chemo treatments, the loss of her hair and a double mastectomy.

“There were moments I was told I was dying, or, ‘Your organs are about to shut down,'” Massenburg said.

After her long road to recovery, Massenburg wanted to give back to the cancer center that saved her life.

“It was just that comfort. It was that care. Allowing us to be who we are and not feeling like a patient,” Massenberg said.

Part of her way of giving back includes serving on the Women and Wellness Committee. She’s the chair of next month’s signature luncheon at the Jefferson Hotel. The annual event has raised over $5 million for research and programs at VCU Massey Comprehensive Cancer Center.

“The thing we’re focusing on is taking it back to the ‘we’ in wellness because it takes a community. Everybody sees hope differently. But the fact we all see hope is inspiration,” Massenburg said. Olympic hurdler and breast cancer survivor Chaunte Lowe will deliver words of inspiration as the luncheon’s keynote speaker.

“It’s a lot of metaphors there. There’s jumping over the hurdle, jumping over life, jumping over obstacles and winning,” Massenburg said.

The Women and Wellness luncheon is Tuesday, Feb. 3 at the Jefferson Hotel.

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