Man whose daughter is battling cancer arrested by ICE

By Chris Hoffman

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    SEWICKLEY, Pennsylvania (KDKA) — A Sewickley man whose daughter is battling cancer was arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Family representatives said Bruno Guedes da Silva was arrested Sunday morning while on his way to work at the corner of Beaver Road and Orchard Street in Glen Osborne. They said a black SUV pulled him over and agents in green vests took him without asking for any documentation.

In a statement, ICE said Guedes da Silva was wanted on a warrant for felony charges of sale or transfer of firearms and unsworn falsification to authorities. Congressman Chris Deluzio said Guedes da Silva had a work authorization, but ICE said that employment authorization doesn’t confer any legal status.

Family representatives said he and his wife were seeking asylum from Brazil. ICE said he came to the United States in 2022.

“This is the last thing somebody in that position needs, to have their life interrupted in that way, unilaterally with very little options,” said immigration attorney Joseph Murphy, who is not working with Guedes da Silva.

This is the latest ICE arrest in the Pittsburgh region. Last month, Oakmont father Jose Flores was arrested while getting ready to take his daughter to school. He was released days later.

Murphy believes the idea is to arrest fathers and cut off income to the family.

“I believe the thinking is to send dad back and maybe they will follow him back home. It also has the convenient effect of avoiding the kids in cages problem because you don’t have to detain the family,” Murphy said.

Murphy says the administration appears to be trying to turn back the clock and detain people now when they should have been detained at the border.

“From a sociological perspective, it’s chaos,” Murphy said.

Guedes da Silva is at a detention facility in West Virginia. A family representative said he last spoke with his wife while he was still in Pittsburgh. His wife is now taking care of the couple’s children, including a daughter battling Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

Murphy said it’s becoming hard to give clients advice on what they should be doing to prevent being detained.

“The laws seem to change every couple of weeks,” Murphy said. “Advice I gave people three months ago is no longer good. This is a big problem.”

Sewickley Borough Council has a meeting on Tuesday night, and people plan to attend to voice their concerns on the situation.

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NICU patient heads home after 285 days – decades after her mother was born at same hospital

By Natasha Brown, Nate Sylves

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    VOORHEES TOWNSHIP, New Jersey (KYW) — A celebration months in the making unfolded Tuesday for Baby Myla in South Jersey. After spending more than nine months in the neonatal intensive care unit at Virtua Voorhees Hospital, Myla was discharged and headed home with her mother.

“She came at 24 weeks on the dot, she was 1 pound. This was the hardest thing I’ve ever in my life been through, it’s very, very challenging,” Myla’s mother Chi Obidike said.

Obidike was also born prematurely at the same hospital more than 30 years ago and cared for by some of the same doctors who helped save her daughter’s life.

“I was born here 31 years ago by the same doctor, Dr. Goldsmith, so it was an honor for him to also take care of my baby girl as well,” Obidike said.

“I took care of mom 30 years ago, and now I’m taking care of mom’s baby, so technically that would make her my grand patient,” neonatologist Dr. Leonard Goldsmith said.

Myla was born prematurely and faced significant health challenges, including lung disease and a congenital heart defect. Her road to recovery was lengthy and required extreme care.

Myla became such a member of the Virtua NICU family that doctors say there was a line of people on any given day waiting to give her cuddles.

“Two hundred and eighty-five days, that’s nine months, and as a mom myself, you know, you think about how much happens in those first nine months, and she had to do all of that here,” NICU social worker Kasey Hewitt said.

“She is going home oxygen-free, she is going home without a feeding tube, it’s a really big day and an important day in her life, in her family’s life and in our lives in the NICU,” said Renee Smith, the hospital’s NICU nursing director.

Myla left the hospital with all the love and fanfare she deserves. She’s a happy, healthy, unforgettable baby who’s inspired and touched many.

“I appreciate it so much,” Obidike said. “I think it’s beautiful to see the amount of love everyone pours into her. Sometimes it overwhelmes me because I’m like, I hope I can give her that amount of love at home.”

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Video shows plow driver blast man with snow. He believes it was intentional.

By Ross DiMattei

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    PHILADELPHIA (KYW) — A man in Philadelphia’s Fishtown neighborhood said a snowplow driver deliberately dropped his blade and blasted him with snow and ice while he was shoveling before work Monday morning.

Jeff Hart, a longtime Fishtown resident, said he believes the act was intentional and is speaking out because he fears someone could be seriously hurt.

Hart said he woke up early to shovel a path connecting the office building where he works to York Street. As he cleared snow along the sidewalk shortly before 9 a.m., a plow truck approached.

“I got to right about here, and I just started shoveling back,” Hart said. “I turned a little bit this way, and that’s when I just heard boom! And it just plowed me with snow.”

Hart said he wasn’t hurt, but chunks of ice struck him with force.

“I guess I got lucky because I felt the chunks hit me,” he said. “It definitely felt like getting punched, because it was big blocks, chunks of ice.”

Hart reviewed footage from multiple surveillance cameras and said it shows the plow blade was raised as the truck approached, then lowered just before it reached him.

“His plow stays up in the air — no snow, no slush is moving — until he gets kind of where we’re standing, like two cars before it, and then the plow goes down,” Hart said. “And right after he passes me, the plow goes back up again.”

About a block away, Hart said he saw the same truck spray snow and ice onto an elderly man carrying bags on the opposite side of the street. That changed his reaction to the incident.

“I didn’t mind so much when it happened to me because me and my friends thought it was hilarious,” Hart said. “For me, luckily, I didn’t get hurt. But seeing what he did to that guy, it’s like, ‘That’s dangerous,’ especially because I know it was ice and snow.”

Using surveillance video, Hart isolated a freeze-frame image of the unmarked truck. He believes it may belong to a private plow driver and wants the person responsible held accountable.

“To hit someone that I’m pretty certain was a senior citizen, that’s just not right,” Hart said. “At that point, you’ve got to be held accountable for something like that. That’s not a joke anymore.”

Hart said he is considering filing a police report.

Philadelphia police said they have not received other reports of similar behavior. A spokesperson said if investigators can prove the act was intentional, it could be considered a crime.

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Man set multiple fires around his home because he “needed to kill the spiders,” police say

By Joe Brandt

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    POCONO PINES, Pennsylvania (KYW) — Police in Pennsylvania’s Pocono Mountains region are looking for a man who allegedly burned down his home and his neighbors’ homes in an effort to avoid spiders.

Sean McDermott, 36, of Pocono Pines, is wanted on charges of felony arson and aggravated arson, as well as other offenses, according to the Pocono Mountain Regional Police Department.

Authorities were called out to the residences near the Pinecrest Lake Golf and Country Club around 6 p.m. on Monday, Feb. 23, for a report of a fire.

The fire started in one townhome on Uncus Lane, but spread to and consumed three other homes connected to it, according to police.

Fire crews battled the blaze for about eight hours, braving high winds, ice and frigid temperatures before bringing it under control, according to the Tobyhanna Township Volunteer Fire Company. At least seven neighboring fire companies assisted in the response.

An unidentified witness told officers they saw McDermott setting multiple fires in his home throughout the day, and that he had a smoldering fire going on the floor of his home. He then put a loveseat on top of the fire, the witness said.

“McDermott stated that he needed to kill the spiders within the residence,” the police report stated.

The witness said he kept putting out the fires, but McDermott kept re-lighting them. The two eventually left McDermott’s home and returned to find it engulfed in flames, according to police.

McDermott then fled the area in a U-Haul truck and has not yet been located. He is considered a fugitive, and anyone with knowledge of his location should call 911 or contact Pocono Mountain Regional Police.

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How Negro Leagues star Mahlon Duckett’s legacy is being kept alive on Pennsylvania Turnpike

By Kim Hudson

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    BUCKS COUNTY, Pennsylvania (KYW) — Drivers might not realize it while heading down the Pennsylvania Turnpike, but local Black history and sports history are being celebrated just off the highway, with the tip of an unusual baseball hat.

In an unassuming building by the Pennsylvania Turnpike tolls in Bensalem, Bucks County, 33-year Turnpike Commission veteran Eric Paul settles in every day with that hat on display over his shoulder.

“I have to keep it close,” said Paul, the commission’s regional facilities operations manager.

Meanwhile, at the commission offices in King of Prussia, Montgomery County, retired coworker, 73-year-old Ronald Duckett, pored over memories of his late dad.

“Pictures in here that I love,” Duckett said. “It’s a legacy.”

Paul and Duckett bonded over their work for the turnpike and that same hat. The white letter G on the red cap stands for Grays, as in the Homestead Grays Negro Leagues baseball team out of Pittsburgh. Paul sees it to remember Duckett’s father, Mahlon Duckett.

Ronald Duckett said the hat speaks to the team where his dad ended his career after starting with the Philadelphia Stars in 1940.

“He played for the Stars,” Ronald Duckett said. “He actually played for 10 years in the league, and he played for nine years with the Stars. His last year was with the Grays.”

After Ronald Duckett shared memories of his father, Paul said he rushed to get the hat.

“I went instantaneously online and purchased it,” Paul said.

What did Paul learn about the player? Thanks to a documentary by the Philadelphia Phillies, fans could hear from Mahlon Duckett himself.

“My father was for it, but my mother wasn’t,” Mahlon Duckett said in an interview for the documentary titled “They Said We Couldn’t Play.” “Because at that time in 1940, we had a lot of problems in the South. She knew a lot of the games would be played there.”

But the second baseman bravely played for the Stars despite fears he would be assaulted when Negro League teams sometimes played White teams.

“They would sharpen their spikes,” Mahlon said. “You had to know how to get that ball and make the double play and get out of the way. Like I said, I have a couple scars on my knee now.”

Rob Holiday, director of amateur scouting administration for the Phillies, which held a ceremonious Negro Leagues draft in 2008, said Mahlon Duckett’s famous speed would have made the player a perfect fit in today’s major league team.

“I could see him being a good utility infielder playing all around the infield and coming in and steal a base at the end of the game and helping the Phillies win,” Holiday said.

Playing through it all is what inspired Paul to tell anyone who would listen about Mahlon Duckett, even after the player died in 2015 at 92 years old.

“Just bring notice to them that because of those men that did sacrifice, I am where I am now,” Paul said.

And to think, this story lives on with the passing on of this baseball cap.

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Hunter College professor under fire for offensive comments caught on hot mic during Zoom meeting

By Adi Guajardo

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    NEW YORK (WCBS) — A Hunter College professor is under fire for comments caught on a hot mic during a Zoom meeting.

Some parents and students are calling the remarks racist.

We want to warn you the comments are offensive.

During a Feb. 10 New York City community education council meeting, District 3 Interim Acting Superintendent Reginald Higgins highlighted scholar Carter G. Woodson, known as the father of Black history.

“Carter G. Woodson said, ‘When you can’t control a man’s thinking, you do not have to send him to the back door. He will go without being told,'” Higgins says.

Allyson Friedman, a Hunter College associate professor, can then be heard speaking.

“They’re just, they’re too dumb to know they’re in a bad school. Apparently, Martin Luther King said it like, if you train a Black person well enough, they’ll know to use the back. You don’t have to tell them anymore,” she says.

Another individual in the meeting then jumps in to let Friedman know her mic wasn’t muted.

“Allyson Friedman, what you are saying is absolutely hearable here. You gotta stop,” the individual says.

CBS News New York reached out to Friedman for comment, and she shared a link to a Substack article titled “Lost in Translation,” where Friedman said she was trying to “explain the concept of systemic racism by referencing a historical example” and went on to say, “I take full responsibility for the impact, and I am deeply sorry.”

The New York City Board of Education released the following statement:

“NYC Public Schools does not tolerate discrimination. We take these matters very seriously and the superintendent as well as our Office of Family and Community Empowerment are providing support to the district in response to this incident. Citywide and Community Education Councils are independent bodies, and their meetings are intended to be respectful spaces for students, families, and staff, and we are dedicated to supporting them in upholding that expectation.”

Schools Chancellor Kamar Samuels also released a statement:

“The comments made were abhorrent and have no place in our school communities. New York City Public Schools does not tolerate racism or discrimination of any kind, period. We take these matters very seriously and the superintendent as well as our Office of Family and Community Empowerment are responding to this incident comprehensively. Citywide and Community Education Councils are independent bodies, and their meetings are expected to be respectful spaces for students, families, and staff. What happened at the meeting was a complete violation of those expectations, and we are providing support to the district to repair the harm done.

A Hunter College spokesperson released the following statement:

“Hunter College is aware of an incident during a recent virtual meeting of the New York City School District 3 Community Education Council in which abhorrent remarks were heard coming from a district parent who also is a Hunter employee. Even as these remarks were made in the individual’s role as a private citizen and we understand that the district is conducting an investigation into the matter, Hunter College is reviewing the situation under the university’s applicable conduct and nondiscrimination policies.

“In service to Hunter College, we expect our community members’ actions and words to comport with our institutional identity, values, and policies. We stand firm in our enduring commitment to sustain an inclusive educational environment that is free of discrimination of any kind, in which people of all identities will feel welcome and can thrive.”

Parents, advocates and elected leaders held a press conference Tuesday to address what they described as racist remarks.

“It’s unacceptable. She has no business being an educator,” said one person who attended the meeting.

Ayana Roman, a Hunter College student, said she learned of the incident on social media.

“I interpreted what she said as racist,” she said.

Despite Friedman’s apology, some students are calling for action.

“I just feel like racism needs to be called out and you need to be let go, but it’s up for Hunter to decide, ultimately,” Roman said.

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Grandfather can keep his “PB4WEGO” license plate, N.Y. Gov. Kathy Hochul says

By Jesse Zanger

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    NEW YORK (WCBS) — Gov. Kathy Hochul has a message for one Long Island grandfather: you’re in luck.

Seth Bykofsky’s #1 fight since January has been to keep his custom license plate, which reads “PB4WEGO.”

On Jan. 23, Bykofsky posted on social media the New York state Department of Motor Vehicles had pulled his custom plate, calling it “objectionable.” A letter he shared from the DMV said he “must destroy your old plates” and replace them with new, standard plates the state provided.

Bykofsky had a wee objection to the plate being called objectionable.

“Is this simple plea … an incitement to riot? Have we inflamed the very soul of toddlers everywhere, struggling, against all odds, to hold it in? Other than to evoke a smile, a passing thumbs up, or a wink and a nod from motorists and pedestrians alike, where is the groundswell of objection to the public display of benign jest?” Bykofksy wrote on social media.

His story did not whizz past Hochul, who intervened on his behalf. She called his plate “a public service.”

Hochul had to go give Bykofsky a call to give him the good news.

“I read about your plight in the news, that the DMV took away you’re hilarious plate. I loved it,” Hochul said. “Well, I’m going to get it back for you. I think everyone should be reminded to pee before you go, I have kids and grandkids, and I support the effort wholeheartedly.”

“Well done, I’m sorry for the inconvenience, and I’m glad we can put things right again,” she added.

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Making friends as an adult isn’t easy, but local mom is helping to change that

By Erika Gonzalez

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    MIAMI (WFOR) — Research shows that having social connections is one of the most reliable predictors of a long, healthy, and satisfying life.

But making friends as an adult can be difficult. Between work, family, and packed schedules, finding meaningful connections can feel out of reach.

Health experts say the lack of social connection can have serious consequences. About one in three adults in the U.S. report feeling lonely.

Nearly one in four say they lack social or emotional support according to a recent survey by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“Loneliness is an epidemic here in the U.S.,” said relationship expert Shari Leid.

Leid says strong friendships aren’t just nice to have, they’re essential.

“What we want in the end is relationships. That’s what matters,” she said.

Her advice is simple, be intentional.

“We tend to neglect our social life a lot, but prioritize it,” Leid said.

That message resonates with Miami mom Sharon Feiereisen.

After moving to South Florida, Feiereisen found herself starting over, without friends, family nearby, or a built-in support system.

“I moved alone with both of my kids and I had no mom friends, and it was very hard,” she said.

Looking for a connection, Feiereisen decided to create it herself.

She launched “The Mom Club,” a community that brings together moms, dads, and families through small, in-person events focused on health, wellness, and conversation.

The group hosts meetups almost monthly, giving parents a chance to connect beyond school drop-offs and playdates.

“These events are intentionally kept small so you can come here alone and it’s not awkward,” Feiereisen said. “Everyone’s looking for somebody to complain to and get it out.”

What started as a way to meet people has turned into lasting friendships.

“There are people who I’ve told the most insane things. And I can’t even believe we’ve only known each other a year-and-a-half,” she said.

Experts say fear is one of the biggest barriers to making friends as an adult , worrying about how we’ll be perceived.

Leid encourages people to shift their focus.

“Make the first move,” she said. “Everyone’s a little nervous when you first meet somebody. It gets easier over time.”

For Feiereisen, taking that first step changed everything.

“I wouldn’t have had any community,” she said.

Now, through The Mom Club, she’s helping others find the same sense of belonging she once searched for herself.

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2 men charged with murder of man found dead near Michigan boat launch

By Paula Wethington

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    OAKLAND COUNTY, Michigan (WWJ) — Two men are facing open murder charges in the fatal shooting of a man who was found dead at the Proud Lake boat launch in Oakland County, Michigan.

Dshaun Omar Hatton-Street, 19, of Romulus, and Stephan Larryl Shaw, 19, of Taylor, were both arrested Thursday by the Oakland County Sheriff’s Office Fugitive Apprehension Team on open murder and felony firearms charges over the death of Andre Sontay Avant Jr., 19, of Inkster, the Oakland County Sheriff’s Office said.

Arraignments took place on Wednesday at the 52-1 District Court in Novi, deputies said. Bond was denied. A probable cause conference is scheduled for March 11, and a preliminary exam is set for March 18.

A third person was also taken into custody, but was later released, deputies said.

“From the moment this young man was discovered, our team was committed to uncovering the truth,” Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard said. “In just over a week, our team developed the information needed to make these arrests. I am proud of their work and their dedication to ensuring those responsible are brought before the court and held accountable.”

The suspects and the victim all knew each other, deputies said, but none of them had a known connection to the lake where a park visitor found Avant’s body on Feb. 16.

The boat launch is along Wixom Road in Commerce Township.

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67-year-old bicyclist dies after being struck by Arlington ISD bus, police say

By Briauna Brown

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    ARLINGTON, Texas (KTVT) — A 67-year-old man has died from injuries he suffered after being hit by an Arlington ISD bus while riding his bicycle last week, police said.

According to the Arlington Police Department, around 2:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 18, officers responded to the incident at the intersection of Treecrest Drive and the I-20 frontage road.

When officers arrived, they found the victim, later identified as William Roberts, lying in the road. Roberts was taken to a hospital where he later died.

Investigators said the collision happened as the school bus was attempting to make a right turn from Treecrest onto the I-20 frontage road as Roberts approached the intersection while cycling eastbound along the I-20 frontage road.

After Roberts was struck, the bus driver immediately stopped, called 911 and tried to help Roberts. Police said there were also four students on the bus at the time of the incident, and they were not injured.

Police said no criminal charges have been filed in the case, but the crash remains under investigation.

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