Hutchins officials push back on rumors of immigration detention center near I-45


KTVT

By Erin Jones

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    TEXAS (KTVT) — After rumors started swirling that a massive building off I-45 near I-20 could become an immigration detention center, Hutchins resident Paul James started digging and documenting what he found on social media.

“Finding out who is the realty company that’s involved, who is the owner of the current property, and whether or not there is such a thing going on,” he said.

Monday night, he brought his concerns to the City Council meeting, where Mayor Mario Vasquez addressed residents directly.

“I know we’re all here and you have a lot of questions,” he said.

Vasquez said the city has not been contacted by the federal government. There have been no applications, building permits, or certificates of occupancy filed.

“So in other words, we haven’t had no communication with nobody,” he said.

Last week, a spokesperson for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement told CBS News Texas that while the agency is actively working to expand detention space nationwide, there are no new detention centers to announce at this time.

During the meeting, Vasquez directed everyone’s attention to a new billboard campaign: “A city on the rise.”

“We’re building a community here, and this doesn’t match what we’re trying to do here, so if you think that anybody up here is on board with it, you’re in the wrong building,” he said.

Several residents told him that’s exactly what they wanted to hear.

“It’s crazy what’s going on in this world,” one resident said. “I got four kids, I don’t want my kids having to go to school and deal with this in our city.”

The mayor said that when the city does receive new information, the citizens will be the first to know.

He also suggested hosting a town hall to provide updates and reminded residents that the city council will meet with the city attorney on Wednesday to further discuss the building.

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.

Hutchins officials push back on rumors of immigration detention center near I-45

By Erin Jones

Click here for updates on this story

    TEXAS (KTVT) — After rumors started swirling that a massive building off I-45 near I-20 could become an immigration detention center, Hutchins resident Paul James started digging and documenting what he found on social media.

“Finding out who is the realty company that’s involved, who is the owner of the current property, and whether or not there is such a thing going on,” he said.

Monday night, he brought his concerns to the City Council meeting, where Mayor Mario Vasquez addressed residents directly.

“I know we’re all here and you have a lot of questions,” he said.

Vasquez said the city has not been contacted by the federal government. There have been no applications, building permits, or certificates of occupancy filed.

“So in other words, we haven’t had no communication with nobody,” he said.

Last week, a spokesperson for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement told CBS News Texas that while the agency is actively working to expand detention space nationwide, there are no new detention centers to announce at this time.

During the meeting, Vasquez directed everyone’s attention to a new billboard campaign: “A city on the rise.”

“We’re building a community here, and this doesn’t match what we’re trying to do here, so if you think that anybody up here is on board with it, you’re in the wrong building,” he said.

Several residents told him that’s exactly what they wanted to hear.

“It’s crazy what’s going on in this world,” one resident said. “I got four kids, I don’t want my kids having to go to school and deal with this in our city.”

The mayor said that when the city does receive new information, the citizens will be the first to know.

He also suggested hosting a town hall to provide updates and reminded residents that the city council will meet with the city attorney on Wednesday to further discuss the building.

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.

Nurse due in court on charges of giving fake Ozempic to Chicago patients


WBBM

By Adam Harrington, Jessica Popowcer

Click here for updates on this story

    CHICAGO (WBBM) — A nurse was expected back in court on Tuesday after she was charged with giving fake Ozempic to patients in Chicago.

Prosecutors said Sharon Charitine Sackman, 52, gave the counterfeit weight loss drugs to three people in Chicago in 2023.

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 previously pleaded not guilty to 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’s status hearing is set for 11 a.m. at the Dirksen Federal Courthouse.

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.

Nurse due in court on charges of giving fake Ozempic to Chicago patients

By Adam Harrington, Jessica Popowcer

Click here for updates on this story

    CHICAGO (WBBM) — A nurse was expected back in court on Tuesday after she was charged with giving fake Ozempic to patients in Chicago.

Prosecutors said Sharon Charitine Sackman, 52, gave the counterfeit weight loss drugs to three people in Chicago in 2023.

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 previously pleaded not guilty to 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’s status hearing is set for 11 a.m. at the Dirksen Federal Courthouse.

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.

Man plans to sue Department of Homeland Security after encounter with ICE agents

By Ronnie Parrillo

Click here for updates on this story

    SCARBOROUGH, Maine (WMTW) — A Maine man has filed a notice of claim to inform the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) that he plans to sue the agency for $7.5 million.

South Portland resident Robert Peck and his attorney said they have a case because they claim Peck’s First Amendment rights were violated and that he suffered emotional trauma. The legal action is one of the first to come from the enhanced U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operation in Maine that was known as “Operation Catch of the Day.”

Peck said after he saw ICE activity outside of his South Portland apartment on Jan. 22, he decided to drive down to the Scarborough ICE facility. Once he was there, he started to follow an ICE vehicle that pulled out of the parking lot. Peck claims he did it to “observe the officers,” but officers disagreed. After the ICE SUV pulled over, Peck pulled off the road, as well, and officers approached his vehicle.

“We had this interaction. I tried to film, I tried to watch their hands. I tried to be careful, and I tried in every way not to antagonize them or be confrontational,” said Peck.

The ICE officers said Peck was violating 18 U.S.C. § 111, which, in part, makes it illegal to impede or interfere with federal law enforcement while they are engaged in or involved in their official capacity. They threatened to arrest Peck if he did not stop following their vehicle.

Peck’s attorney, David Webbert, said he filed a notice of claim against ICE for violating Peck’s First and Fourth Amendment rights, in addition to emotional trauma.

“This is the first time in my lifetime, in a very long time, that the executive branch has taken the FBI, U.S. attorneys, law enforcement and turned them into whatever he wants including lawless behavior,” Webbert said.

The U.S. government now has six months to respond to the notice of claim.

Maine’s Total Coverage contacted DHS with a request for comment on this case and on Peck’s conduct, but has not heard back.

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.

Jury selected in wrongful raid trial of Southwest Side family by Chicago police in 2018


WBBM

By Dave Savini

Click here for updates on this story

    CHICAGO (WBBM) — The civil rights trial of a wrongful Chicago police raid on an innocent family began on Monday.

The case involves a Chicago grandmother, her daughter, and her four grandchildren, who all said police pointed guns at them. It’s a case CBS Chicago first exposed years ago.

The botched raid happened back in 2018. The family said they’ve been living with trauma from it ever since. On Monday in a packed courtroom, they sat behind the officers involved as a jury was selected.

Attorney: “How did you feel when all this happened?

Lakai’ya: Scared.

Attorney: Why were you scared?

Lakai’ya: Because I didn’t know what was going on.”

Lakai’ya Booth and her siblings answered questions during a pre-trial deposition as part of their federal civil rights lawsuit against the city. She was just four years old when CPD officers wrongly raided her family’s home.

She’s one of dozens of children documented over the last eight years who said police pointed guns at them during similar raids.

Attorney: What do you remember happening that day?

La’niya: A big boom sound.

Her older sister, Laniya, was 11 at the time of the raid.

“A lot of like five to 10 police officers rushing in with these big guns,” she said.

One after another, they relived that moment in 2018 when officers burst into their family’s home in the Back of the Yards neighborhood.

Attorney: Why do you think you felt afraid when the guns were pointed at you?

E’Monie: Because there’s weapons pointed at a 13-year-old.

Now, over seven years after the raid, they will testify against the officers involved, accusing them of excessive force, pointing guns at them, and leaving them traumatized.

Their mother and grandmother were also there when police raided the home looking for a gang member and a handgun, but an investigation by CBS News Chicago found they were in the wrong house.

They took the word of a paid informant and didn’t properly vet the information.

“I’m like, oh my god. Please don’t let him shoot my baby,” Cynthia Eason said in 2018.

The CBS News Chicago investigators have spent years exposing how innocent people are treated by officers during these raids, especially children.

Some of the children from other wrongful raid cases are also expected to testify as part of the trial. Attorneys for the family will work to prove that CPD engages in a pattern of pointing guns and using excessive force against children.

“What are you doing, pointing guns at innocent young children? Wake up,” said Attorney Al Hofeld Jr.

Hofeld is the family’s attorney and said the jury will also hear the traumatic impact on the adults who were in the home at the time of the raid, like Eason, the children’s grandmother, who was in her underwear when officers burst into the home.

Eason said police forced her outside in a state of undress in front of her neighbors.

“When I was sitting there, one officer was laughing at me,” she said.

She said she kept asking for clothes but was denied.

“I looked at him, he’s laughing, and imagine how that feels,” she said.

Data shows the cities already spent $600,000 on legal fees for private law firms to defend the officers involved, and that number is expected to increase as the trial is expected to last a month.

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.

Jury selected in wrongful raid trial of Southwest Side family by Chicago police in 2018

By Dave Savini

Click here for updates on this story

    CHICAGO (WBBM) — The civil rights trial of a wrongful Chicago police raid on an innocent family began on Monday.

The case involves a Chicago grandmother, her daughter, and her four grandchildren, who all said police pointed guns at them. It’s a case CBS Chicago first exposed years ago.

The botched raid happened back in 2018. The family said they’ve been living with trauma from it ever since. On Monday in a packed courtroom, they sat behind the officers involved as a jury was selected.

Attorney: “How did you feel when all this happened?

Lakai’ya: Scared.

Attorney: Why were you scared?

Lakai’ya: Because I didn’t know what was going on.”

Lakai’ya Booth and her siblings answered questions during a pre-trial deposition as part of their federal civil rights lawsuit against the city. She was just four years old when CPD officers wrongly raided her family’s home.

She’s one of dozens of children documented over the last eight years who said police pointed guns at them during similar raids.

Attorney: What do you remember happening that day?

La’niya: A big boom sound.

Her older sister, Laniya, was 11 at the time of the raid.

“A lot of like five to 10 police officers rushing in with these big guns,” she said.

One after another, they relived that moment in 2018 when officers burst into their family’s home in the Back of the Yards neighborhood.

Attorney: Why do you think you felt afraid when the guns were pointed at you?

E’Monie: Because there’s weapons pointed at a 13-year-old.

Now, over seven years after the raid, they will testify against the officers involved, accusing them of excessive force, pointing guns at them, and leaving them traumatized.

Their mother and grandmother were also there when police raided the home looking for a gang member and a handgun, but an investigation by CBS News Chicago found they were in the wrong house.

They took the word of a paid informant and didn’t properly vet the information.

“I’m like, oh my god. Please don’t let him shoot my baby,” Cynthia Eason said in 2018.

The CBS News Chicago investigators have spent years exposing how innocent people are treated by officers during these raids, especially children.

Some of the children from other wrongful raid cases are also expected to testify as part of the trial. Attorneys for the family will work to prove that CPD engages in a pattern of pointing guns and using excessive force against children.

“What are you doing, pointing guns at innocent young children? Wake up,” said Attorney Al Hofeld Jr.

Hofeld is the family’s attorney and said the jury will also hear the traumatic impact on the adults who were in the home at the time of the raid, like Eason, the children’s grandmother, who was in her underwear when officers burst into the home.

Eason said police forced her outside in a state of undress in front of her neighbors.

“When I was sitting there, one officer was laughing at me,” she said.

She said she kept asking for clothes but was denied.

“I looked at him, he’s laughing, and imagine how that feels,” she said.

Data shows the cities already spent $600,000 on legal fees for private law firms to defend the officers involved, and that number is expected to increase as the trial is expected to last a month.

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.

Witnesses describe scene near fire, explosion in Nashua

By Alanna Flood

Click here for updates on this story

    NASHUA, New Hampshire (WMUR) — People near a Nashua commercial building said Monday’s natural gas explosion was so loud it shook the ground.

The blast was felt by many in homes and businesses along Amherst Street, including William Closs, who was working nearby.

“Real loud. It shook a lot,” Closs said.

When he saw the emergency alert on his phone, Closs said he was already trying to evacuate the building he was in.

“We were trying to figure out how to get people out, as it was the building right next to us,” Closs said.

First responders assisted in the evacuation.

“They were quick, efficient, thorough,” Closs said.

Closs said he left the scene on foot to meet friends and family, leaving his car behind.

“Again, I didn’t know that if a roof had collapsed, or what was going on, but as soon as we saw the building next door was on fire, we were like, ‘What do we do now? Here we go,'” he said.

Another resident, John, described hearing the explosion from his Amherst Street home.

“All of a sudden I just heard a big, like, boom and the whole house just shook, just rattled,” he said. “It was like a sonic boom or something that went off. You could feel the pressure wave or something and the house shaking.”

Those nearby were forced to leave the smoky area, carrying what they could.

Fire trucks and crews from surrounding communities, including Hollis, Merrimack and Manchester, responded with supplies.

“We can’t get down the street with the cars because there are a lot of water lines across the street, and it looks like it’s going to be like that for a while, so we are just going to walk home,” John said.

Some students at the Academy of Science and Design were stuck in the parking lot due to the street closure.

“The school sent emails and said they are on lockdown, and they are not even if the parents come, they cannot take the kids out, so I felt very safe hearing that from the school,” said mother Vitaye Bashyam.

Police have since reopened Amherst Street to traffic.

The cause of the explosion remains under investigation.

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 warns of TikTok trend involving Needoh cubes that left her 9-year-old son with severe burns


WBBM

By Marissa Sulek

Click here for updates on this story

    CHICAGO (WBBM) — A Plainfield mom is warning parents and kids about the danger of a popular toy that burned half of her son’s face.

In the last couple of months, Loyola Medicine says they have had four patients come in with burns from a Needoh cube — a sensory toy filled with gelatinous material.

The toy itself has no problems, but there’s a TikTok trend going around that encourages kids to put the gel toys in the microwave — causing them to explode and leading to significant burns.

It’s the flexible jelly-like toys that are causing concern for parents after a TikTok trend is pushing kids to stick the Needoh cube toy in the microwave to make them more pliable, since they firm up over time.

“Him and a friend, through conversation, were talking about it at school, and then he, i guess, just got the idea to try it,” said mother Whitney Grubb.

She said her 9-year-old son Caleb Chabolla put one of his Needoh cubes in the microwave a few weeks ago as they were getting ready for school.

“I heard him scream and I saw him take off running towards one of our bathrooms and that stuff had popped on his face,” she said.

Grubb said when Caleb opened the microwave, it exploded all over his face, causing second-degree burns on one side and his hands. Whitney drove him to the emergency room.

“By the time, you know, we were settled in at Loyola, his eye was completely swollen shut, so I was immediately worried about his eye,” she said.

“Because it’s so viscous, it sticks, and it stays hot longer, it’s going to cause a more significant burn,” said Kelly McElligott.

McElligott with Loyola Medicine’s burn center said once Caleb got to the hospital, they washed the burns, cut away dead skin, and applied ointment. They also had an ophthalmologist check on Caleb’s eye and found his vision was thankfully unimpaired by the accident.

Doctors said Caleb is not the only patient falling for the trend.

“A child who heated it up in the microwave, then put her finger on it and her finger went through, and it burned her finger,” McElligott said.

She said Caleb spent two days in the hospital and did not need skin grafts, but may develop scars.

Both she and Whitney now want families to be cautious.

“Do not heat these up in any way, shape, or form. Whether it’s the microwave, hot water, those things can really be dangerous,” McElligott said.

“Just talk with your kids, make sure they understand the safety of the things,” Grubb said.

CBS Chicago did reach out to the company, Schylling, that manufactures Needoh, but did not hear back.

There are warning labels on the product that tell users not to heat them.

As for Caleb, he has a follow-up appointment at the burn clinic tomorrow morning and goes back to school later this week.

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 warns of TikTok trend involving Needoh cubes that left her 9-year-old son with severe burns

By Marissa Sulek

Click here for updates on this story

    CHICAGO (WBBM) — A Plainfield mom is warning parents and kids about the danger of a popular toy that burned half of her son’s face.

In the last couple of months, Loyola Medicine says they have had four patients come in with burns from a Needoh cube — a sensory toy filled with gelatinous material.

The toy itself has no problems, but there’s a TikTok trend going around that encourages kids to put the gel toys in the microwave — causing them to explode and leading to significant burns.

It’s the flexible jelly-like toys that are causing concern for parents after a TikTok trend is pushing kids to stick the Needoh cube toy in the microwave to make them more pliable, since they firm up over time.

“Him and a friend, through conversation, were talking about it at school, and then he, i guess, just got the idea to try it,” said mother Whitney Grubb.

She said her 9-year-old son Caleb Chabolla put one of his Needoh cubes in the microwave a few weeks ago as they were getting ready for school.

“I heard him scream and I saw him take off running towards one of our bathrooms and that stuff had popped on his face,” she said.

Grubb said when Caleb opened the microwave, it exploded all over his face, causing second-degree burns on one side and his hands. Whitney drove him to the emergency room.

“By the time, you know, we were settled in at Loyola, his eye was completely swollen shut, so I was immediately worried about his eye,” she said.

“Because it’s so viscous, it sticks, and it stays hot longer, it’s going to cause a more significant burn,” said Kelly McElligott.

McElligott with Loyola Medicine’s burn center said once Caleb got to the hospital, they washed the burns, cut away dead skin, and applied ointment. They also had an ophthalmologist check on Caleb’s eye and found his vision was thankfully unimpaired by the accident.

Doctors said Caleb is not the only patient falling for the trend.

“A child who heated it up in the microwave, then put her finger on it and her finger went through, and it burned her finger,” McElligott said.

She said Caleb spent two days in the hospital and did not need skin grafts, but may develop scars.

Both she and Whitney now want families to be cautious.

“Do not heat these up in any way, shape, or form. Whether it’s the microwave, hot water, those things can really be dangerous,” McElligott said.

“Just talk with your kids, make sure they understand the safety of the things,” Grubb said.

CBS Chicago did reach out to the company, Schylling, that manufactures Needoh, but did not hear back.

There are warning labels on the product that tell users not to heat them.

As for Caleb, he has a follow-up appointment at the burn clinic tomorrow morning and goes back to school later this week.

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.