Woman who went missing on Valentine’s Day has been reunited with her husband

By Miya Payton

Click here for updates on this story

    ABBEVILLE, South Carolina (WYFF) — In Abbeville County, a woman who went missing on Valentine’s Day is now back with her family just in time for her birthday. Annie B. Tisdale has dementia and was found after several days of searching.

Annie’s husband, James Tisdale Jr., said she left home on Valentine’s Day to pick up food but never returned. He recalled his thought process when she first went missing.

“Are we going find her in time, that you know, she would be still alive?” James said. “I was concerned that she was she’s missing medication.”

Considering his wife has dementia, James asked police to start a search right away. On Sunday, Feb. 15, they tracked her pick-up truck using traffic cameras.

“She had been tracked leaving Abbeville, going to Calhoun Falls, coming back from Calhoun Falls, going to Greenwood, coming back from Greenwood, going back to Calhoun Falls,” James said.

Investigators told the family the last traffic camera spotted Annie in Lavonia, Georgia. On Monday, their son, Jarrett Tisdale, flew into town.

“I was preparing myself for, you know, both outcomes, dead or alive,” Jarrett said.

Jarret shared the posts on social media about her disappearance and navigated search teams.

“We were getting nervous,” Jarrett said.

Annie and James are pillars in the community through their careers in education. Their son says it was no surprise when past students, neighbors, and even strangers joined the search. Yet another day passed with no new leads.

“You’re disappointed and desperate,” Jarrett said.

“Was I sleeping? Well, no. I was just mainly praying,” James said. “Praying that someway, somehow, she would be found.”

Then on Wednesday, Feb. 18, Annie’s truck was spotted on the side of the road in Toccoa.

“She didn’t even know she was lost,” Jarrett said. “She just thought she ran out of gas. She was like, ‘I’ve been here a long time, I just want to go home,'”

A love that disappeared on Valentine’s Day found its way back home, just two days before her birthday.

“It feels like the day we got married,” James said. “We’ve been married 55 years, and we’ve been on this road a long time together, and I want more. I would like for us to be on this road as long as we can.”

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.

Cheer competition unites deaf community

By KETV Staff

Click here for updates on this story

    COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (KETV) — From New Mexico to New York, teams took to the mat for the National Deaf Cheer Competition.

After months of perfecting their routines, 12 teams were ready to showcase their talent.

“Make sure we hit all of our moves, all of our stunts. We have so much creativity,” Kaitlyn Johns, senior cheerleader at Iowa School for the Deaf, said.

Despite competitive spirits, NDCC leaders say Saturday was about community.

“It’s best that we’re together. We get fired up, your spirit is lifted,” Levi Mathis said. “It’s just so much better in person.”

“It’s all about bringing the community together,” Jennifer Alka said.

It was helping bring each cheerleader closer to their teammates, even in times of hardship. The Iowa Bobcats had to rework their routine weeks before competition after senior Kailani Mefy got injured and is now out for the season.

“If anyone makes a mistake, we learn, we try our best, we don’t give up,” junior Amiya Wood said. “If one is missing or something happens, we still continue. We don’t give up.”

These competitions also give the schools a chance to show off their sport.

“I like doing the stunts, I like flying, that’s my favorite thing,” Mefy said. “I feel like I am flying in the air, you know?”

Each athlete also took the time to support their competitors.

“I want other schools for the deaf to have this experience too,” Wood said. “If they win, that’s great. We can show that they invest very much into it.”

“When the students are sitting here and the kids come out on the floor to perform, they really go all out for them,” Mathis said.

Mathis and Alka said the most important part is giving the kids a place to shine.

“They’re grown with their confidence and feeling like, ‘Yes, it’s about me!’ Their confidence grows so much every time they leave,” Alka said.

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.

Boy keeping snowballs in the freezer for July

By Leanna Scachetti

Click here for updates on this story

    LEOMINSTER, Massachusetts (WCVB) — Cooper and his grandmother are thinking ahead — way ahead — and preparing for a special snowball fight in July.

The 4-year-old from Leominster has been playing NewsCenter 5 with his grandmother since he was 2, assigning family members to broadcast various scenarios, from construction to sports.

Inspired by the nor’easter, they have been stockpiling snowballs and storing them in the freezer.

They plan to have a snowball fight in July and call NewsCenter 5 to cover it.

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.

Mar-a-Lago trespassing incidents highlight mental health crises and legal outcomes

By Malcolm Shields

Click here for updates on this story

    PALM BEACH, Florida (WPBF) — Mar-a-Lago, the Florida residence of President Donald Trump, has been the location of several trespassing incidents since he became the president in 2017.

Sunday’s recent apparent trespassing and deadly shooting adds to the list of trespass incident at the resort on Palm Beach.

Here’s a look back at some incidents:

Kelly Weidman – 2017

A then resident of Clearwater, Weidman was arrested on Jan. 20, 2017, on accusations she snuck into Mar-a-Lago, smeared bananas on cars and left explicit messages on a computer inside the resort.

This incident occurred hours before Trump was sworn in as president during his first term as president.

Court documents note that on April 30, 2018, the trespassing charge was dropped by the state attorney’s office after Weidman completed a diversion program.

LU JING – 2019

A Chinese national was found not guilty of trespassing, but guilty of resisting arrest from a Dec. 18, 2019, incident at the resort.

The woman, who does not speak English, said during trial she was dropped off at the property by a tour guide and did not see anything to indicate that she was not allowed on the property.

After security guards told her to leave the property, she was found on Worth Avenue in Palm Beach by Palm Beach Police Department Officers and taken into custody.

Hannah Roemhild – 2020

Two Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office deputies shot at an SUV operated by Hannah Roemhild from Connecticut after she sped past a checkpoint outside Mar-a-Lago.

Roemhild reportedly had a mental health crisis when she sped through the checkpoint on Jan. 31, 2020.

Roemhild was not hurt during the shooting. The deputies who shot at Roemhild were cleared of any wrongdoing in 2023.

On Jan. 18, 2022, in Palm Beach County, Roemhild was found not guilty on two counts of aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer with a deadly weapon, fleeing of attempting to elude at a high speed and reckless and resist officer without violence charges by reason of insanity.

She was also found not guilty because of insanity on Aug. 26, 2021, in federal court in South Florida.

Donald W. Cleveland – 2022

He was arrested on June 29, 2022, for trespassing after warning.

The Palm Beach Police Department told the Secret Service that the man had been on the property at least the night before. The man said he wanted to talk to then-President Trump.

Police searched the man’s vehicle and discovered a black battery pack with multiple wires sticking out, a white pillowcase with cables and unknown items wrapped in duct tape and multiple baking sheets.

The Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office Bomb Squad and K-9 dogs were called to the scene. Cleveland was Baker acted.

According to Palm Beach County court documents, Cleveland did not appear for his July 20, 2022, court hearing and an arrest warrant remains active.

Jeffrey D. Olson – 2025

According to a federal complaint, Olson jumped over the north wall of Mar-a-Lago and entered the restricted area. He moved to the East lawn of the property where he was detained by U.S. Secret Service personnel.

Olson told law enforcement that he entered the property to contact President Donald Trump.

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.

New online form for Oahu residents to report flood damage

By Kayli Pascal-Martinez

Click here for updates on this story

    HONOLULU (KITV) — The City and County of Honolulu have launched an online form for Oahu residents to report damage from recent flash flooding.

According to officials, the form aims to gather information to help county officials and partners understand the extent of the damage and its impact on the community.

Residents can access the form HERE. The tool is not an application for relief services but a way to assess residential damage.

The city advises against using the form for immediate, life-threatening needs, urging residents to call 911 in such cases. Reporting damage is voluntary and shouldn’t replace contacting insurance or guarantee disaster relief assistance.

Officials request one survey submission per affected household or roommate on Oahu.

This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. KITV 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.

Man arrested after falling into stranger’s pool

By Madison Monroe Adams

Click here for updates on this story

    PORT CHARLOTTE, Florida (WBBH) — The Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office arrested a man after he fell into a stranger’s pool in Port Charlotte.

Charlotte County deputies reported that Christopher Zubrycky, 43, claimed to be a CIA agent after reportedly drinking vodka on Thursday afternoon and forgetting where he lived, leading him to a stranger’s home on Monet Avenue instead of his own on Winsom Avenue.

A couple living on Monet Ave. said a stranger knocked on their door asking to stay for a few days. They told him to go bother someone else, but Zubrycky is accused of making his way inside their lanai.

Rusty Simplex, a resident, remarked, “I would shove my boot so far up his [expletive] he would be tasting leather.”

The couple called 911, and moments later, they heard a splash as the stranger fell through their pool cover into the water. An affidavit said he then climbed out of the pool and knocked on the back door, asking for French fries and a towel.

Simplex questioned, “Was he the naked? No, no. No, thank God, you don’t want to be seeing them peckers there in your backyard.”

Deputies found Zubrycky sitting on a chair by the pool. They said he told them he held his breath underwater for three minutes.

They arrested Zubrycky for trespassing, disorderly intoxication, and resisting a deputy without violence.

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.

New Bob Hall Pier designed to withstand hurricanes with innovative engineering

By Drew Bishop

Click here for updates on this story

    PADRE ISLAND, Texas (KRIS) — The new Bob Hall Pier on Padre Island incorporates cutting-edge “windstorm engineering” designed to survive future hurricanes that destroyed its predecessor.

James Maddalone, owner of Maddalone Development and the local contractor responsible for the pier’s decking and handrails, explained how the structure is built to do battle with Mother Nature and win.

“And so for man to try and do war against the water is really crazy. Ultimately, the question is: Who’s going to win?” Maddalone said.

When hurricanes Hanna and Harvey went to war against the old Bob Hall Pier, Mother Nature was the resounding winner. Maddalone set out to solve this problem using lessons learned from windstorm engineering principles.

“I remember after Harvey I spent two years in Port Aransas rebuilding. I was standing in a house that was built to windstorm requirements. Nailing patterns, steel, Simpson brackets. I was standing in a house that was just blown apart but was still together,” Maddalone said.

Those same principles were applied to the specially treated lumber that thousands of visitors will soon be walking on.

The pier features 200 “pop-off panels” designed to detach during storm surge, allowing the concrete and steel foundation to absorb the force while remaining intact.

“When the water surges up… these panels we’re looking at will actually come free. It allows the pier itself to stand, which is the concrete and the steel in the bed of the ocean. That allows the pier to take the force,” Maddalone said.

In short, the new Bob Hall Pier is designed to be easily repaired even after extreme weather events.

“You might lose portions of the wood structure…. but the concrete is staying,” Maddalone said.

The pier includes over 3,000 linear feet of ADA-compliant handrails.

Everything is designed through the lens of doing battle with the next hurricane and winning.

“What failed and how it failed… you study that and then develop new methods of construction so things can better withstand when the devastation happens, when the hurricane takes place, when the flood takes place,” Maddalone said.

When asked about rod holders on the pier, Maddalone said it wasn’t in the engineering specifications but he’s “pretty certain” it will be an add-on in the future.

This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. KRIS 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.

Man arrested for stabbing roommate to death in Howard County

By JT Moodee Lockman

Click here for updates on this story

    BALTIMORE (WJZ) — A man was arrested Sunday after Howard County police said he fatally stabbed his roommate during an overnight altercation in Columbia.

Donavan Townsend, 23, will face charges in connection with the murder of 25-year-old Jaelon Minor, officers said.

Police responded to the incident around 1:40 a.m. at an apartment in the 7600 block of Woodpark Lane.

Officers arrived to find Minor, who was pronounced dead on the scene. An investigation revealed that Minor was involved in an altercation with his roommate, Townsend, according to police.

According to police, Townsend stabbed Minor and fled the area. He was found arrested shortly after.

In 2025, Howard County reported a total of 12 homicides, up nearly 9% from 11 cases in 2024, according to data from county police.

In early February, a Howard County man was charged with fatally stabbing his estranged wife. Alexander Stephenson, 53, was charged with murder and assault after he turned himself in.

Police said Alexander Stephenson killed Amethyst Stephenson at a home in the 3400 block of Huntsman Run in Ellicott City. Amethyst Stephenson’s son called the police after he awoke to “a commotion and yelling’ from his mother’s room, according to officials.

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.

Plow truck driver nearly impaled by falling tree branch during Massachusetts blizzard

By Matt Schooley

Click here for updates on this story

    BOSTON (WBZ) — A snow plow driver in Kingston, Massachusetts narrowly avoided being impaled by a falling tree branch Monday while clearing snow during a blizzard.

The Kingston Police Department shared photos showing a branch that came crashing down. The limb pierced the windshield of the pickup truck.

Police said the branch, which was about six inches in diameter and several feet long, landed between the driver’s legs, “missing impaling him by inches.”

Kingston Fire and Emergency Management also posted a photo from inside the truck that shows the branch wedged underneath the steering wheel.

“Please stay off the roadways. Even those who are trying to keep the roads clear and safe are having difficulties. Luckily there was no injury to the plow operator,” the fire department said.

Police said roads are being plowed, but then become messy immediately as the snow covers them. In addition, winds are blowing branches onto power lines and into the roads.

“There is no sugar-coating this. It’s bad out here. The worst in years and it’s not over yet,” Kingston police said.

Monday’s punishing storm officially was declared a blizzard for many areas in the state. “Considerable falling and/or blowing snow which reduces visibility to less than ¼ mile for 3+ hours AND sustained winds or frequent gusts 35 mph or greater in that same timeframe” is the official criteria of a blizzard.

Several hundred thousand people in Massachusetts are without power during the storm. Some parts of the state have already reported two feet of snow.

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.

A South Fulton STEM-agriculture teacher’s hands-on approach boosts student confidence, reduces discipline

By Alexa Liacko

Click here for updates on this story

    ATLANTA (WUPA) — Grab a backpack — and maybe a pair of garden gloves — and head to homeroom at Oakley Elementary School, where learning often looks more like a farm than a traditional classroom.

Chickens cluck as students rush to collect eggs. Butter churns as children chant encouragement. Sometimes, there isn’t a classroom at all — just fresh air, soil under fingernails, and lessons rooted in real life.

At the center of it all is Tomanekka Irving, the school’s STEM-agriculture teacher, whose class has become so popular that administrators say families have moved into the district specifically to enroll their children.

“Everybody wants to be a part of her class at some point,” said Uche Ngoddy, the school’s principal. “She is a child whisperer. You don’t deal with discipline in her class because the kids love to be here.”

Irving’s approach blends science, agriculture, and hands-on discovery. Students garden, keep bees, and care for animals, learning through trial and error as much as through success.

“They’re learning success, but they’re also learning failure,” Irving said. “We plant things and they don’t grow. They’re like, ‘What happened?’ So they’re learning to keep going, keep persevering.”

Irving began her career in education, but at one point left the classroom to become a flight attendant. It didn’t take long for her to realize she belonged back with students.

“I instantly missed it,” she said. “I missed reading the stories. I missed seeing the smiley faces. I missed seeing the light bulb. And I came right back because this is where I belong.”

Today, she’s firmly planted at Oakley Elementary, teaching in Union City, with the help of a scaly sidekick, Charlie, a bearded dragon who often joins lessons.

“This is the class where magic happens,” Irving said.

For 10-year-old Caleah Boyd, the magic is practical and meaningful.

“My favorite part about my agriculture class is going outside and picking plants and fruits for the community, and also getting eggs to give to people,” she said.

The energy is contagious. Students shout encouragement while shaking jars of cream into butter.

Throughout the school year, students learn skills they can carry into adulthood, and Irving says that access matters, especially at a Title I school where all students qualify for free or reduced lunch.

“It’s really, really important that they get this opportunity,” Irving said. “This is bigger than me. It’s bigger than the program. This is about our children.”

Ngoddy said the impact of Irving’s program extends beyond the garden beds and chicken coops and into schoolwide behavior.

“Our discipline has decreased at least 30% over the past four years,” Ngoddy said. “And I can say it’s attributed to the kids wanting to come to school. This program is a program that children want to be a part of.”

Beyond agriculture and science, students say Irving cultivates something just as important: confidence.

“She makes me happy when I’m mad or sad,” said Kameron Christion, a student.

“She really actually cares about us,” added Chase Johnson.

A’nilah Wright, 7, said Irving taught her to be brave when she’s scared to try something new.

Irving says caring for students is as essential as any lesson plan.

“I hug each and every last one of my babies, and I tell them that I love them every day,” she said. “I enjoy being the light. I enjoy being the person that they can come talk to in the middle of the day.”

Ngoddy said Irving’s enthusiasm is what makes the difference.

“She’s an excited learner,” Ngoddy said. “And when you’re an excited learner, a lifelong learner, you’re going to pour that into somebody else’s child.”

For Irving, noticing small details, a mood shift, a quiet win, a moment of growth is intentional.

“That’s the difference between the end and the beginning,” she said.

And in her classroom, where children are watered with encouragement and planted in possibility, Irving believes the harvest is clear: confident, kind students growing into future leaders who give back to their communities.

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.