Woman accused of impersonating doctor, performing illegal cosmetic surgery

By Jamy Pombo Sesselman

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    BOSTON (WCVB) — A Newton woman is accused of impersonating a doctor and performing an illegal cosmetic surgery on a victim in the Allston neighborhood, leaving her permanently scarred.

Dingrui Wang, 34, is charged with four counts of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, one count of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon causing serious injury, one count of kidnapping and two counts of larceny over $1,200 by false pretense.

She is also charged with unauthorized practice of medicine and improper use of the title of physician and receiving payment for a surgical procedure based on that misrepresentation.

Officials allege that in January 2020, Wang, while not holding a Massachusetts physician registration, represented herself as a licensed physician and performed double eyelid blepharoplasty surgery on a 22-year-old victim at an unlicensed clinic at 57A Brighton Ave. in Allston. During the surgery, Wang injected local anesthetic into the patient’s eyelids, as well as non-Food and Drug Administration-approved dermal fillers, resulting in permanent scarring.

After Wang completed surgery on the first eyelid, the victim, in extreme pain, attempted to leave the facility, but Wang pushed her back onto the table and prevented her from leaving until the surgery was completed, officials said.

Wang also misrepresented herself as holding current aesthetician, massage therapist and hair salon licenses on a loan application to the American Lending Center. Wang received a $37,379 loan while the licenses were suspended, officials said.

Wang is scheduled to be arraigned Thursday in Suffolk Superior Court.

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Teens rescued after leaving home with man they met on Roblox

By Rachael Perry

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    STUART, Florida (WPBF) — Two young girls from Indiantown were abducted by a man they met through the online game Roblox, according to Martin County Sheriff John Budensiek, who warned parents about the dangers of online communication.

The sheriff explained that the girls were moved from Roblox to Snapchat by the suspect, Hser Mu Lah Say, who began sending gifts like food to their home, which Budensiek described as indicative of a grooming process.

The situation escalated when Say left Omaha, Nebraska, and drove 22-23 hours straight to Indiantown, arriving on January 31 at 10 a.m.

A 911 call from the family of the 12 and 15-year-old sisters reported them missing, leading the sheriff to believe they were dealing with a type of abduction. “I know these girls went willingly, but their age suggested that they had been taken and were probably being removed from our area,” Budensiek said.

The sheriff’s office went into full crisis mode, and several hours later, officials in Georgia spotted the suspect’s vehicle on I-75, finding the girls safely inside. Budensiek emphasized the seriousness of the situation, saying, “These are young, impressionable girls who might have thought this would just be something fun to do. But again, we’re dealing with a grown man that drove all the way from another state, an individual they never met in person, pick them up, and we really don’t know what he was going to do.”

Say was arrested on kidnapping charges, and Sheriff Budensiek issued a warning to parents: “If you can communicate with somebody away from your house, and the quiet of your own room, it could be a problem. So parents have to be vigilant.”

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World War II veterans’ cross paths 82 years after fighting together in Battle of Luzon

By Noel Brennan

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    CHICAGO (WBBM) — Of the 16.4 million Americans who served in World War II, less than half a percent of those veterans are still with us and continue to share their stories.

After all these years, some of them are just getting to know each other.

Sit down next to anyone, and you can find something in common.

“That’s me in the service,” said Robert Miller.

“I always considered myself kind of a nerd, but I look pretty good there,” Willard Smith said jokingly.

Smith and Miller are finding a lot in common. They recently moved into the Tabor Hills Healthcare Facility in Naperville. Eighty-two years and more than 8,000 miles away from where their paths first crossed.

“And that’s where he was up there, too, and he might’ve gone through the same system probably,” Smith said.

As teenagers, they fought in the Pacific Theater of World War II, both in the Battle of Luzon.

“They said, ‘You look too young to fight this war,’ and it probably was true,” Miller said.

“Eighteen years old,” Smith said. “Now, I’m 100 years old… oh, man. Didn’t think I’d make it that far.”

Smith just had his party. Robert’s is next month.

“I’m looking forward to it to a certain degree,” Miller said.

The two veterans are almost the same age, both fought in World War II in the same area, and are now sitting next to each other.

“Yeah, isn’t that something?” Smith said.

The two also started families and became teachers — one in science and the other in art.

“I think I taught every kind of art there ever was,” Smith said.

They’ve changed in some ways. In others, not so much as Smith tries on his hat.

“And of course, you wanted to wear it jauntily, you know, so you’re looking sharp,” he said.

It took a long time to get here, but these vets are fast friends.

“And it brings back a lot of good memories,” Miller said.

“We had a good run, I think, for a couple of soldiers,” Smith said.

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Former principal avoids jail in teen house party case

By Greg Fox

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    BREVARD COUNTY, Florida (WESH) — Elizabeth Hill-Brodigan and her attorneys offered no comment as they left the courthouse in Viera on Monday following the judge’s acceptance of her plea agreement with the State.

This should never have happened but it did happen, prosecutor Julia Lynch told the court.

Hill-Brodigan, the former Roosevelt Elementary School principal, pleaded no contest to three misdemeanors, which could have resulted in jail time if she elected to go to trial, and was convicted.

The three charges are, hosting an open house party in which alcohol was being consumed by minors, and two counts of contributing to the delinquency of minors.

It stems from the Jan.19, 2025, party at her Cocoa Beach home, that officers say was attended by roughly 100 teens, some of them telling police both alcohol and marijuana were on hand. One teen was found vomiting and shaking on the front lawn and treated for alcohol poisoning. Another was arrested for DUI.

Hill-Brodigan’s agreement comes with two years supervised probation, requires no unsupervised contact with minors and prohibits her from hosting parties with alcohol or marijuana present with anyone under 21.

While neither Hill-Brodigan, nor her attorneys, Kepler Funk and Keith Szachacz, would comment, the prosecutor said the punishment will serve its purpose.

Lynch added, “The probation will make sure that she has no contact with children so it’s going to limit her ability to have these types of parties again, at least for two years.”

Also arrested with Hill-Brodigan last year, was school teacher Karly Anderson.

On body camera video from Cocoa Beach police, Anderson appeared intoxicated and told an officer, “Well you know I’m a teacher who the f**** did you put… who got put in that car?”

Anderson was convicted of disorderly conduct, and resisting arrest without violence, and sentenced to probation. She’s appealing her conviction.

The 17-year-old girl who was arrested and charged with driving under the influence of alcohol after she left the house party, attained an agreement with the State in October.

She was allowed to plead to a less charge of careless driving and was directed to attend DUI driver school.

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Good Samaritan honored for stopping knife attack on child

By Tony Atkins

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    DELAND, Florida (WESH) — A DeLand man who intervened during a violent confrontation and saved a child from an alleged knife-wielding attacker was honored this week with a Distinguished Citizen Service Award.

Police Chief Jason Umberger presented the award to Joseph Wells, calling his actions extraordinary and unlike anything he has seen in more than 30 years in law enforcement.

The incident happened Jan. 20 on Clear Lake Drive, where investigators say a young boy was waiting for his school bus when he waved at 36-year-old Christopher Schwable. Authorities say Schwable became angry, grabbed the child and began assaulting him.

Wells, who was driving by at the time, saw what was happening, made a U-turn and intervened. Police say he restrained Schwable until officers arrived, preventing further harm to the child.

When officers got to the scene, Wells was holding Schwable on the ground, according to investigators.

Umberger said while police typically discourage civilians from putting themselves in danger, Wells’ actions likely prevented a much more serious outcome.

“It’s difficult to say where that would’ve ended,” Umberger said. “But it certainly was a violent assault on a young man, and if Joseph wouldn’t have stopped it, I think we’d be talking about a much different situation.”

Schwable was arrested and remains in jail without bond. He is scheduled to return to court next week.

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Neighbors help family the moment they needed it the most

By Britt Leoni

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    LEE COUNTY, Florida (WBBH) — They say home is where the heart is. For Jackie and David Vinson, that is on Pine Island.

“People are always doing that. They go above and beyond for their neighbors,” said Jackie.

That support is felt every day. It’s felt in the small gestures like a wave hello and in the heavier moments, when the family needs it the most.

A month ago, David and their 3-year-old son, Heath, took their daily trip to the Publix off Pine Island Road when David passed out in the parking lot.

“I think I remember taking a couple of steps and then I was waking up in the emergency room,” said David. “I was waking up, looking around like, ‘Oh, I’m in the emergency room.'”

When Jackie received the news, she just hoped David and her son were OK.

“I was just … I had no idea what happened,” said Jackie.

“I have four kids, so I know what it’s like,” said Publix store manager Jon Peralto. “As a parent, it’s very heart-wrenching.”

Peralto watched as his employees, first responders and people on the street took care of the family.

“Employees were there sitting on the ground with Heath, playing with toys,” said Jackie. “Police officers were like, ‘Can we help with anything?’ I didn’t even ask; they just started unloading the bags from his truck into my car. It was so comforting. I just felt like I had all the help in the world, which was really nice.”

In a world where we often focus on the bad in place of the good, this community proves there is still a lot of good to see if we choose.

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‘The Klan Whisperer’: Author befriends KKK members, convinces them to quit

By Breana Ross

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    SILVER SPRING, Maryland (WBAL) — A collection of Ku Klux Klan hoods, robes and regalia sit in Daryl Davis’ Silver Spring home, each with its own story.

“He was the grand dragon of Baltimore,” said Davis as he showed one of the robes to WBAL-TV 11 News. “His day job when he was trying to bomb the synagogue? Baltimore City police officer.”

As a Black man, Davis has never worn any of the KKK items he now owns. He disagrees with all they stand for, but the items belong to former Klan members, people Davis befriended.

The KKK hoods, robes and regalia now serve as symbols of Davis’ ability to change minds.

“A Klansman or Klanswoman, or a neo-Nazi is not born with that robe and hood or that swastika,” Davis told WBAL-TV 11 News. “That is acquired. It’s learned behavior, learned ideology. What can be learned can be unlearned.”

Davis first learned about racism when he was 10 years old, when he said he was attacked by white spectators as the only Black Cub Scout marching in a parade in Massachusetts in 1968.

“At that age, I formed a question in my mind, which was, ‘How can you hate me when you don’t even know me?'” Davis said.

Decades later, after meeting a member of the KKK who was impressed by his piano performance, the question returned to Davis’ mind.

“Who better to ask that question of than someone who would go so far as to join an organization with an over 100-year history of practicing hating people who don’t look like them, or who don’t believe as they believe? Get back in contact with that Klansman and get him to fix you up with the Klan leader from Maryland. Start in Maryland, then go up north. Go down south. Go to the Midwest. Go to the West and interview other Klan leaders and members and write a book,” Davis told WBAL-TV 11 News.

Davis asked the Klan member he met to connect him with the grand dragon of the Klan in Maryland, Roger Kelly.

“He warned me. He said, ‘Darryl, do not fool with him. He will kill you.’ And, I’m like, ‘Well, that’s why I need to see him. Why would he kill me just because of the color of my skin? All this makes no sense. This is what I’m trying to understand,'” Davis told WBAL-TV 11 News.

Davis had his assistant set up an in-person meeting with Kelly and his bodyguard in 1990, but his assistant never mentioned Davis is Black.

“When they came into the room and saw me, they, like, freaked. They froze,” Davis told WBAL-TV 11 News.

But Davis said Kelly stayed and talked to him, marking the beginning of an unlikely friendship.

“If you spend five minutes with your worst adversary, you’re going to find something in common and that gap is going to narrow,” Davis said. “What’s happening is, it’s causing a cognitive dissonance in their brain because, at this point, they have found so much more in common with you than they have in contrast, because all the beliefs and myths that they had believed are getting dispelled, right?”

Davis spent time with Kelly, even attending KKK rallies with him and earning his respect. At a KKK rally filmed by CNN, Kelly spoke about Davis saying, “I would follow that man to hell and back because I believe in what he stands for and he believes in what I stand for. A lot of times, we don’t agree with everything, but at least he respects me to sit down and listen to me and I listen to him.”

After years of listening, one day, Kelly surprised Davis.

“He goes, ‘I’m leaving the Klan. I’m shutting it down,'” Davis told WBAL-TV 11 News. “He wasn’t handing it off to his second in command. He was shutting down his chapters, and he had, like, 13 of them in 13 different states. I was totally shocked.”

Kelly is not the only one Davis has convinced to leave the Klan. Davis documents his experiences with Klan members across the country in his two books, “Klan-destine Relationships” and “The Klan Whisperer.” He has befriended many Klan members, leading many to leave the group and give him their robes, which now serve as symbols of his ability to change minds.

“I know that over 200 have left,” Davis told WBAL-TV 11 News.

When asked how he thinks his approach of building understanding with people who think differently than him could build understanding among people with differing views today, Davis said: “I can tell you this. Every human being on this planet wants these five core values in their lives. Everyone wants to be loved. Everyone wants to be respected. We all want to be heard. We all want to be treated fairly and truthfully, and we all want the same things for our family, as anybody else would want for their family. And, if we can learn to apply those five core values when we find ourselves in an adversarial situation, or in a culture or society in which we are unfamiliar or uncomfortable, I’ll guarantee you that your navigation of that situation, that culture, that society will be much more smooth, much more positive, and much more productive.”

Davis said he would like to open his own museum with all the robes and regalia he has collected over the years. He will play the piano at a performance at The Birchmere in Alexandria, Virginia, on Feb. 22. The show is called “Thanks for the Memories,” and it honors artists who died in 2025.

Davis will also be speaking at New Spire Arts in Frederick on March 14.

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Channel League wrap-up: Dons 3-Peat, Royals claim second.

Mike Klan

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) –

Santa Barbara 71, Rio Mesa 46: The Dons wrapped up their third straight Channel League crown. They finish league 13-1 and head into next week’s CIF playoffs with a 19-8 record.

San Marcos 67, Pacifica 46: Junior Aidan Conlan scored 18 points and senior Koji Hefner added 14 points as the Royals finish 12-2 in league, good for second place. Before the game the Royals honored seven seniors.

(Conlan and the Royals finish the regular season 21-6 and riding a 9-game win streak. Entenza Design).

Oxnard 54, Ventura 47: Dom Angell scored 20 points for the Yellowjackets who claim third place at 9-4 in league and 20-8 overall.

Dos Pueblos 59, Buena 56: The Chargers sent their seniors off on a high-note. Senior Evan Pinsker scored a game-high 21 points and fellow senior Coulter Jay added 14 points as DP finished an injury-filled season at 13-15.

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‘Steamroller’ Patches, formerly 40-pound fat cat, nears weight loss goal after breaking pantry door

By WTVR CBS 6 Web Staff

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    HANOVER COUNTY, Virginia (WTVR) — Patches, the once 42-pound cat Kay Ford adopted from Richmond Animal Care and Control nearly three years ago, is closing in on his next weight loss goal after losing nearly 24 pounds.

The white and gray Domestic Shorthair weighed in at 18.48 pounds on Wednesday morning, Ford wrote on Facebook. He is now about 2.5 pounds away from his goal of 16 pounds.

Ford noted that Patches, who reached his first weight-loss goal of 20 pounds in late July, has become more and more mobile — and obsessed — since slimming down.

In fact, Ford said the 8-year-old feline “has become a steamroller” and recently used brute force to try to access food.

“Patches finally broke the door to the pantry (it can be fixed) by muscling his way in when I was sure it was secure,” Ford explained that the cat’s “constant headbutting” loosened the door.

The Mechanicsville woman has taken extreme measures to avoid caving to the demands of her five pets.

“On more than one occasion, I’ve left the house to go sit in the car when they started their begging before their meal times,” Ford admitted.

Ford has previously credited Patches’ strict diet and veterinary care since his adoption in late April 2023 with helping him lose more than half his body weight.

“My amazing vet, Dr. Meaghan, is extremely passionate about cat nutrition,” Ford previously told the national outlet, The Dodo. “She helped me create a plan. She was able to give me a calorie count and what kind of food would be best for him.”

Ford said she is proud of his progress and grateful for all the support.

More than 54,000 people are following Patches’ weight-loss journey on the Patches Journey Facebook page.

“We are overwhelmed by the number of people who share with us both publicly on the page and privately how much light following Patches’ Journey page brings to you. Patches’ Journey continues,” Ford wrote.

Ford told The Dodo that when she first adopted Patches, he could only “take two or three steps and then he’d have to lie down.”

“The size of him took my breath away,” she said. “I don’t know what his backstory is, but he is too sweet of a cat to not have been loved.”

Ford said the feline’s “personality was completely encased in his obesity.”

“In the very beginning, he would only lie down on the floor and eat,” she said. “So I made a commitment to get him moving by committing myself to doing at least 10 minutes of time, five times a day of play, whether it was a stick toy or a laser pointer; any kind of movement whatsoever was necessary.”

The household’s latest addition is a 10-year-old calico named Sumi. She joined the clowder, which includes three other cats, in August.

Ford adopted a 25-pound cat named Remy from an animal shelter in Ohio in September 2024. That cat is also on a similar weight loss journey as Patches.

She also fostered an orange cat named Tigger, who weighed nearly 23 pounds in late March 2025. That cat has now been adopted and “is doing so well.”

Ford also has another cat, Wellesley, who has similar coloring to Patches and Remy. She also has a 6-pound dog named Bella.

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Woman trapped by ice misses critical heart appointments

By Taylor Locke

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    RICHMOND, Virginia (WTVR) — For some in Central Virginia, the seemingly never melting ice has been frustrating but manageable. For others, like Sarah Noonkester, who lives in South Richmond, it’s been life-altering.

The Richmond woman says she hasn’t been able to leave her house in more than a week, missing critical doctor appointments because of icy roads.

Noonkester says she’s felt forgotten and trapped inside her Richmond home, like many across the city with health or mobility issues, after days of ice left streets impassable.

“If anything was wrong with my health, real seriously, the paramedics wouldn’t be able to get to me. So, with these streets not being clean out here, it’s not a good thing and it’s like we don’t exist,” Noonkester, who lives with tachycardia, an abnormally fast resting heart rate, said.

Her condition requires frequent doctor visits. But because of the ice, she hasn’t been able to go.

While some roads may turn to slush during the day, Noonkester’s condition prevents her from shoveling or navigating the ice herself. And she’s not alone.

Across the city, others are facing the same dangerous reality some even canceling chemo and dialysis treatments because roads still haven’t been cleared.

“I’ve talked to a number of residents over the course of last few days, of folks who are caretakers, who have young kids, who are missing doctor’s appointments. And again, I just want to say this is a difficult time. It’s a challenging time. The ice that has come is a unique time,” Richmond Mayor Dr. Danny Avula said during a weekend press conference. “I would really just encourage people to change appointments, to go virtual when they can, and to and if you are in a place where mobility is a challenge, to try to stay hold up at home until we can get the streets clear.”

Noonkester says she can no longer wait.

“We are still stuck. We are really still stuck,” she said. “How are we going to get there? How are we supposed to just, are we just supposed to get out there and slide like we are sliding on a sliding board to the bus stop?”

Noonkester says she can’t afford to miss another appointment. She’s rescheduled all of them for Tuesday and hopes family members can help get her out of her house and to the doctor safely.

This story was initially reported by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. WTVR verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

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.