Somerton residents weigh in on park changes

Adrik Vargas

SOMERTON, Ariz. (KYMA) – The City of Somerton is asking residents to help shape the future of local parks and programs by sharing their input on accessibility.

Officials recently held a community forum as part of their ADA transition plan. The meeting gave people a chance to talk about barriers they’ve noticed in parks, city buildings, and public programs.

Parks and Recreation Director James Jones says the city is trying to better understand what residents feel is missing or hard to access.

He says that feedback will help guide what improvements come first and how future projects are planned.

City leaders say they plan to keep gathering input as they work through the accessibility plan moving forward.

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Firefighters train along Colorado River ahead of busy water season

Adrik Vargas

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA) – As summer approaches, the Yuma Fire Department is training along the Colorado River to prepare for water-related emergencies.

Firefighters are going through hands-on training meant to simulate real-life rescue situations they may face during the busy season.

Each May, more than 120 firefighters spend six days training in water rescue operations. This includes responding to medical emergencies, performing CPR, and practicing different types of river rescues.

Even training with equipment like floating rope systems designed to reach people in the water and help pull them to safety.

Officials say the river’s GPS-linked mile markers from mile marker eight near the Gila River down to zero near the Cocopah RV Resort, also play an important role in training and real emergencies. Helping responders quickly locate people in distress.

Fire officials say the goal of the training is to make sure crews are ready for anything once the river becomes more active this summer.

They also say training doesn’t stop with firefighters.

The Greater Yuma Water Safety Alliance also provides CPR training, workshops, and safety tips for the public.

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Woman seriously injured in Cole County crash

Marie Moyer

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Waynesville woman was airlifted to MU Hospital on Friday evening after being seriously injured in a Cole County crash.

According to a Missouri State Highway Patrol crash report, shortly before 6:30 p.m., a 57-year-old woman was driving east on U.S. 50 in a 2021 GMC Yukon when she hit the back of a 2025 Honda CR-V at Gray Road.

The Yukon then went off the right side of the road and hit a tree, the report says. Both vehicles were totaled.

A 37-year-old Ozark woman in the Honda was taken by ambulance to Capital Region Medical Center with minor injuries. The driver, a 50-year-old Ozark man, was not reported to have been hurt. All involved were wearing seatbelts, according to the report.

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Bay Area teen’s ReCap Project targets medical plastic waste for recycling

By Molly McCrea

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    SAN FRANCISCO, California (KPIX) — At the Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital at Stanford University, an incredible collaboration is taking place between a 16-year-old high school student and the medical staff.

The ReCap Project, founded by Brandon Lin in 2023, was formed to keep certain medical plastics out of landfills and incinerators.

“So far, I’ve saved over 2,100 pounds of plastic out of the landfills,” said Lin. “And that’s the equivalent to over 1 million actual, like, pieces of plastic.”

Medical plastic waste is a massive, growing problem, generating microplastics and toxins. A 2025 study found there are 2.1 million metric tons of single-use plastics used every year in healthcare across North America and Europe, with less than 5% recycled, resulting in 9.3 million metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions annually.

“It gives me nightmares,” said Karen Ceresnak, pediatric ICU nurse at Packard Hospital and a founder of the hospital’s Eco-Green team. “There is a lot of plastic waste here in every hospital.”

Some medical waste is necessary to keep things sterile and prevent the spread of infections. Lin collects uncontaminated plastics which include needle and medication caps, as well as plastic containers.

“It hasn’t touched anybody. It’s not a biohazard, and it’s really clean, and frankly ideal for recycling,” said Lin’s father, Dr. Ken Lin, pediatrician at Sutter Health San Carlos.

Lin’s collaboration with Packard Hospital is key. Instead of throwing away the “safe” plastics, the staff now puts them into recycle bags found in each patient’s room. There are also recycled plastic containers in supply rooms that serve as receptables for used plastic tips and medication caps. When they are full, the Lin family picks them up.

The collaboration has raised awareness within the hospital community.

“It’s been very rewarding since we started working with him,” said Ceresnak.

Once the boxes are loaded into the car, they head back to the Lin home where the entire family helps to sort the plastic by size, type, and color.

“Because each type of plastic needs to be processed a little bit differently because of its different properties,” explained Lin.

The sorted plastics are brought to a local plastic recycler Peninsula Precious Plastics, where they’re shredded and made into things like combs and clipboards.

Lin donates the combs to Samaritan House in San Mateo. He also brought some of the clipboards to Packard’s pediatric ICU as a “thank you.”

Registered nurse Clayton VanLiere picked the purple and white model, which was made from the ubiquitous Super Sani-Cloth germicidal disposable wipe containers found in hospitals.

“These are from the purple wipes,” said VanLiere, marveling, “These things are sick.”

Pediatric ICU nurse Uriel Contreras selected a bright orange clipboard, made from the tops of insulin caps.

“To see it just come to life like in a clipboard, it’s just crazy that we can recycle them and put it to a good use,” Contreras said.

It’s a good prescription for a healthier planet Earth.

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.

Suitcase stuffed with marijuana bursts open on flight, leading to arrest at Dallas Love Field, police say

By Doug Myers

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    DALLAS, Texas (KTVT) — A suitcase that broke open onboard a flight from Las Vegas to Dallas Love Field exposed a significant stash of marijuana, prompting an investigation that led to the arrest of a 25‑year‑old woman, authorities said Friday.

Jennifer Manzanares‑Herrera was arrested before she left the airport and charged with possession of marijuana between 50 and 2,000 pounds, a second‑degree felony, according to the Dallas Police Department.

Airline staff alerted officers on Thursday Police said the department’s Narcotics Unit maintains a presence at Love Field to prevent drug trafficking through the airport.

Officers were alerted Thursday when airline staff reported that a suitcase on the Las Vegas flight had broken open, revealing a large quantity of marijuana.

Two more suitcases discovered Narcotics detectives later found two additional suitcases containing vacuum‑sealed packages of the drug.

In total, detectives recovered 75 pounds of marijuana, police said.

CBS News Texas will provide updates should additional information become available.

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Woman attacked by accused killer of CPD officer shares story of beating at Family Dollar store

By Jermont Terry

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    ALBANY PARK, Illinois (WBBM) — The woman who was pistol-whipped during an armed robbery at a Family Dollar store in Albany Park last weekend said she was horrified to learn one of the two men who were arrested was also accused of later shooting two Chicago police officers, killing one of them.

Maria Velezquez was still badly bruised nearly one week after the attack, but despite her physical scars, she was speaking out, because she wants people to hear what she endured while simply working at her job; a job she’s terrified of returning to now.

Velezquez was working at the Family Dollar store at the corner of Lawrence and Sawyer avenues on April 25, when two men robbed the store. One of them hit her three times in the face with a gun, breaking her nose.

Her bruises are undeniable.

“My physical is not good; and me and the health, it’s too much pain,” she said.

The pain is much deeper than the scars. Velezquez said, right after opening the store, two men walked in, one of them armed with a gun, and demanded money from the safe and registers.

When she told them she didn’t have keys for the safe, one of the men immediately hit her in the face with a gun.

The man accused of beating her – 26-year-old Alphanso Talley – is the same man police said was spotted on scooters with his accomplice soon after the attack and robbery.

Talley was arrested and claimed to have ingested drugs, so police took him to Swedish Hospital. While there, investigators said when police removed his handcuffs for a medical scan, Talley pulled out a concealed gun, and shot and killed Officer John Bartholomew, and critically wounded his partner.

“He no have heart … for police, for mine, because I have family,” Velezquez said.

As Velezquez recovers from her own injuries, she was horrified to learn Talley was on electronic monitoring at the time of the robbery and his alleged accomplice, Jeron Tate, was on parole following an earlier conviction for multiple robberies when he was a juvenile.

“It’s crazy. I’m sorry, but it’s crazy,” Velezquez said.

She said she doesn’t buy Talley’s family’s defense that he has mental health issues. Yet she’s in disbelief a judge refused to keep Talley behind bars despite his history of repeatedly violating electronic monitoring.

“If they didn’t let him out or let him free, the cops wouldn’t be in that situation, and neither would I,” she said through a Spanish interpreter

For 13, years the single mother of three worked at Family Dollar to care for her children, but now she’ll be out at least two months as she recovers. Her family has set up a GoFundMe to help with medical bills until she feels safe going back to work.

Velezquez said she’s scared to leave the house, reflecting on what happened to the officers, and thankful she survived her attack. She said, every time she closes her eyes, she sees her two attackers.

Despite the robbers wearing face coverings, she said she was able to identify Talley from his large size. It’s that same size investigators believe helped him hide the weapon he used to shoot Bartholomew and his partner.

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Man dead after drowning in Lake of the Ozarks

Haley Swaino

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A 55-year-old man from Imperial, MO., is dead after drowning in the Lake of the Ozarks.

According to a Missouri State Highway Patrol drowning report, the man was last seen at the 10 mile marker on the Big Niangua River in Camden County. He is believed to have entered the water by an unknown means and not to have resurfaced.

His body was recovered by state troopers around 10:45 Friday night and taken to Allee Holman-Howe Funeral Home. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

MSHP does not release names of victims in its reports. Next of kin have been notified.

This is Troop F’s first drowning in May and third in the year.

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‘Lacerations all over’: Woman injured after being attacked by stray dogs in Stockton

By Jeremiah Martinez, Andres Valle

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    STOCKTON, California (KCRA) — A Stockton woman is recovering after being attacked by a pack of stray dogs during a routine walk near a levee, according to her family and Stockton police.

Stockton police said officers and animal services officials responded April 23 to a dog attack along the levee near the 800 block of Carrie Street. Police said the woman was taken to a hospital with significant but non-life-threatening injuries.

The woman’s daughter, Rhenell Schiller, said her mother, Dorrie Reyes, had been out on a routine walk when the attack happened.

Schiller said her mother first noticed stray dogs approaching and began recording them on her cellphone.

“She started recording on her phone just to kind of say like, ‘Hey, there’s these stray dogs out here,’” Schiller said.

According to Schiller, the situation quickly turned violent.

“They fully just started to attack her,” Schiller said. “She was attacked to the point where she couldn’t walk.”

Schiller said her mother tried to defend herself and call for help as the dogs attacked.

“She was trying to hold herself up. She tried to fight off with her bag. She was yelling for help,” Schiller said.

Schiller said the dogs dragged her mother down the embankment along the levee before nearby neighbors came to help. She credited that couple with saving her mother’s life.

“We are so thankful for that couple who helped her because if it were not for her, she would not be here at all,” Schiller said.

The family said Reyes suffered between 150 and 200 lacerations and puncture wounds across her body, including injuries to her head, neck, face, arms, legs and torso. Schiller said her mother lost a significant amount of blood and underwent a six-hour surgery after being taken to the hospital.

“Really crazy lacerations all over her face,” Schiller said. “They got literally everywhere on her body, including her face, her neck, the back of her head, every extremity on her arms, legs, and their back.”

The family said Reyes spent five days in the hospital and is now focused on both physical and emotional recovery. A GoFundMe page launched by the family said she is making progress in her recovery.

“She is making great progress every single day,” Schiller said. “And she’s very strong-willed, and she knows that everybody around her loves her.”

Police said two of the dogs involved in the attack have been captured, but officers are still searching for the remaining animals as part of an active investigation. Police said they are looking for about five to six more dogs.

Authorities are urging the public not to approach the dogs and to report any sightings to Animal Services immediately.

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Boy trapped inside ice cream shop claw machine rescued safely

By Mariana La Roche

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    MADISON, Wisconsin (WISN) — A 2-year-old boy was safely rescued after getting stuck inside a claw machine. The rescue happened at an ice cream shop in Madison.

Two-year-old Lohan Gutierrez squeezed through an opening in the machine, climbing up to the stuffed animals before realizing he was trapped.

His father, Jefrin Gutierrez Gamez, recorded the rescue and posted the video on TikTok, where it has gained more than a million views.

“I think it did leave us with the message as parents, and to all the people who see the video, things happen in a split second and it isn’t the parents’ fault,” Gutierrez Gamez said.

The fire department stated it was a routine call and the boy was not hurt. While he is now scared of claw machines, the toddler did get to take plush toys home.

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UAB completes Alabama’s first bone marrow transplant using deceased donor

By Shannon Delcambre

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    BIRMINGHAM, Alabama (WVTM) — Doctors at UAB have completed Alabama’s first bone marrow transplant using preserved stem cells from a deceased donor, marking a major breakthrough in the treatment of life-threatening blood cancers.

Experts said one of the biggest challenges has been finding a matching donor in time.

This new approach allows doctors to use preserved stem cells, cutting delays and giving more patients a chance at life-saving treatment.

“This advancement reflects our commitment to ensuring more patients have access to curative therapies when they need them most,” Omer Jamy of the UAB O’Neal Cancer Center said. “Expanding the donor pool helps us reach patients who may not otherwise have a viable donor option.”

Jamy encourages younger patients from all racial and ethnic backgrounds to join the registry to improve match rates and save lives.

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