Milwaukee woman killed after bullet flies into home; family seeking answers

By Rheya Spigner

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    MILWAUKEE (WISN) — Four months after 64-year-old Sharon Price was fatally shot in her Milwaukee home, her family remains desperate for answers and justice as police continue to investigate the incident that occurred in September near 29th and Roosevelt in the Garden Homes neighborhood.

Nora Nimmer, Price’s sister, expressed disbelief over the situation, saying, “It doesn’t seem real to me that someone can be in their own home and they’re shot dead.”

Nimmer discovered her sister’s body in her home, which is located right behind her own. She is left with sorrow and many questions, unsure if the shooting was random or intentional.

“We don’t know if it’s a random shot that hit her or intentional, either way that shouldn’t… my sister should be here,” she said.

The circumstances surrounding Price’s death are unusual.

“I was trying to clean the blood up off the floor, and I was trying to look into the adjacent window, and I’m hearing birds, and I’m like, what’s that sound, is that a hole in that window?” Nimmer recalled.

Initially, police on the scene dismissed the hole in the window, ruling Price’s cause of death as a fall. Nimmer, however, was certain that was not the case.

“They took her body out as a fall victim, not until the next day, we requested an autopsy report,” she said. “The autopsy report came back early in the morning to let us know there was a bullet in my sister’s head.”

The medical examiner later confirmed that Price’s cause of death was a gunshot wound, as stated on her death certificate.

“I really miss her because I miss seeing her every day, saying hi to her, checking on her, and she was always the person who checked on me. So now I don’t feel like I don’t have that.”

Nimmer is now seeking answers and justice, urging the person responsible to come forward.

Nimmer also shared that her sister’s husband died from cancer just a month after the shooting.

Police are still investigating the case, but Nimmer has not received any updates in months and hopes to hear from someone soon.

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 in ICU after throwing daughter out of burning apartment

By TJ Dysart

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    MILWAUKEE (WISN) — A fire at a Milwaukee apartment building near Loomis and Fardale on Friday morning left five people injured, including a mother who threw her 9-year-old daughter to safety from a second-story window in the Southpoint neighborhood.

“It has been rough, man. I am trying to keep it together for my daughter,” Luis Ramirez, the father of the 9-year-old, said.

The fire occurred near Loomis and Fardale, and Ramirez’s daughter, Ni’lah, and her mother, Kessy, were inside the building.

“Her mother was like please catch her and then boom, my heart, and it could be my nieces or nephew, so I had to catch her,” said a neighbor who caught Ni’lah.

Ramirez expressed his gratitude, saying, “If it wasn’t for him, I don’t know what other injuries she could have sustained.”

Ni’lah was released from the hospital with only a scratch on her leg and minor smoke inhalation, but Kessy remains in the ICU under heavy sedation and on breathing tubes.

“We are 50/50 right now,” Ramirez said regarding Kessy’s recovery prospects.

Milwaukee police announced the arrest of a 43-year-old man in connection with the arson.

“Shame on you, first and foremost — God says forgive so I got to forgive, but it is going to be a process,” Ramirez said when asked about the suspect.

Ramirez has set up a GoFundMe to support his family as he works to move them forward while Kessy remains hospitalized.

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.

Firefighters save dog from frozen pond in Ohio

By Rachel Whelan

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    MONROE TOWNSHIP, Ohio (WLWT) — Monroe Township firefighters rescued a dog named Bullet after the dog fell through the ice on a frozen pond, reuniting the pet with its owner over the weekend.

“He jumped off the porch up here, up here at the house and been up there for the last hour and a half, two hours trying to chase him down,” said Anthony Layton, Bullet’s owner.

The chase led Bullet to a frozen pond, where he fell through the ice. Layton immediately called 911, prompting Monroe Township firefighters to rush to the scene.

“The young guy just walked out right through the lake, was busting through the ice with his elbows,” Layton said. “And he comes right out with him.”

Firefighter Austin Caldwell, who was too humble to go on camera, braved the freezing conditions to rescue Bullet, earning praise as a hero.

“He’s strong dog. He’s never done nothing like that before,” Layton said.

Layton expressed his gratitude to those who helped save Bullet’s life.

“Thank you so much, brother. I appreciate you, man so much. Thank you for everything y’all do,” he said.

Firefighters commended Layton for calling 911 instead of attempting the rescue himself, warning that ice can be deceptive and emphasizing their preference to respond to one emergency rather than two.

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Police: Suspect flees through yards, abandons car after overnight chase

By Giacomo Luca

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    CINCINNATI (WLWT) — A police chase through the West Side early Tuesday morning ended with the driver abandoning the vehicle, according to Lt. Jerome Herring with the Cincinnati Police Department.

Police responded to reports of shots fired in Price Hill around midnight, before giving chase to a driver along Beekman Street who was suspected of being involved, Herring said.

No injuries were reported during the shooting incident.

The suspect drove through yards and crashed into a vehicle during the chase as police deployed stop sticks in an effort to stop the fleeing driver. Officers eventually called off the pursuit after losing sight of the vehicle, Herring said.

Hours later, around 2 a.m., officials managed to track down the vehicle, abandoned with a damaged rear end, at an apartment complex just over a mile from where the pursuit started along Westwood Northern Boulevard.

The vehicle has since been towed away from the scene. Cincinnati police are still working to identify and locate the male suspect.

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Major I-5 connector in Sacramento blocked by jackknifed big rig

By Cecilio Padilla

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    SACRAMENTO, California (KOVR) — Traffic is backing up along eastbound Highway 50 in Sacramento due to a crash Tuesday morning.

The incident happened just before 8:30 a.m. California Highway Patrol says a big rig jackknifed, blocking traffic on the Highway 50 to northbound Interstate 5 connector ramp.

Exactly what led up to the big rig jackknifing is unclear, but the connector was blocked.

No estimated time of reopening has been given yet.

CHP and Caltrans are warning drivers to expect delays for the time being.

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California sees 150,000+ sign-ups for new data broker deletion request tool

By Cecilio Padilla

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    SACRAMENTO, California (KCAL, KCBS) — Tens of thousands of Californians have already signed up for the state’s new tool to try and stop their data from being sold by brokers, officials say.

Gov. Gavin Newsom is touting the rollout of the Delete Request and Opt-out Platform, DROP, which went live on Jan. 1.

“Your data should belong to you, and DROP will make that happen in one simple step,” Newsom said in a statement.

The tool, which does not cost anything, simplifies the process of trying to stop data brokers from sharing and selling information. Only Californians can use the tool, with the first step being verifying the user’s residence.

After California residency is verified, users create a profile and then submit the DROP request. The one request will be sent to more than 500 registered data brokers.

Starting Aug. 1, data brokers have 90 days from getting the request to delete data.

Gov. Newsom cited the Delete Act (SB 362) he signed back in 2023 with helping make the tool possible.

“I wrote this bill to give people real control over their personal information and protect them from scams, identity theft, and spam emails. And I’m grateful to see that it’s being called the toughest privacy protection law in the country,” said California State Sen. Josh Becker.

As of Jan. 20, state officials say more than 155,000 Californians have used the tool.

Information data brokers often collect includes names, email addresses, buying history, web browsing history, and location data.

Officials say the new law should help with unwanted texts, calls, or emails and also decrease the risk of identity theft and data leaks.

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Harlem Globetrotters bring smiles to Blank Children’s Hospital

By KCCI staff

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    DES MOINES, Iowa (KCCI) — A member of the Harlem Globetrotters visited kids at Blank Children’s Hospital on Monday in Des Moines.

Forward Zeus McClurkin is a Guinness World Records record-holder for the most basketball slam dunks in one minute.

McClurkin’s visit is part of the team’s Smile Patrol Initiative, with a goal to make young patients and their families happy.

“It means a lot to me now that I have children as well,” McClurkin said. “My son spent a night in a children’s hospital in Columbus, Ohio, and everybody that comes into the room (needs) something from you or they’re delivering bad news. And I like that I get to be that person that, like, I don’t want anything from you. I just want you to be happy.”

The Harlem Globetrotters will be taking over Casey’s Center next month as part of their 100 Year Tour, with a performance scheduled for 7 p.m. Feb. 12.

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Community gathers to honor 16-year-old killed by stray bullet with scholarship concert

By Zoe Blair

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    BIRMINGHAM, Alabama (WVTM) — Friends and family gathered in Birmingham for the second annual ‘Watch Me Soar’ scholarship concert to honor Yasmine Wright, who was killed by a stray bullet in 2022 at age 16 while in a car with her aunt.

Janice Wright, who adopted her niece Yasmine and her brother, said the day began with difficulty, as it was once a day of celebration.

Despite the pain, she is using the concert and scholarship to bring joy, kindness and hope to the community in Yasmine’s memory. The event featured songs, prayers and messages of hope, with a preacher affirming, “Her life, her legacy, will continue to live on.”

Janice Wright said the concert was a fitting tribute to her niece.

“What you saw in this room was Yasmine,” she said. “She just exuded so much joy, so much love, so much kindness. She was just the life of the party.”

Reflecting on the tragic day of Jan. 8, 2022, when Yasmine was killed, Janice Wright said, “It never ends. I have my good days and I have my bad days… She died at only 16. She had only a short life. She didn’t touch many people. She didn’t get to go to college.”

Through the scholarship concert, Janice Wright aims to give other children the opportunities Yasmine never had. “When we give the scholarships to different children, they can think about, ‘I got this money due to Yasmine. It was a tragic thing that happened, but still she blessed me. Even gone to heaven, she’s blessing me,'” she said.

Yasmine was an active student at Wenonah High School, and the scholarship funds will support students like her.

“She started off playing the saxophone and then she did the saxophone one year and the next year she became a dancer, so we decided to bless someone that plays the saxophone, someone that danced and just a regular band member,” her aunt said.

The concert raised more than $800, and Wright sent a heartfelt message to Yasmine on her birthday: “I love you and will be watching from heaven above and I am always, always, always in your heart.”

This spring, three Wenonah High School students will receive scholarships in Yasmine’s honor. Efforts to obtain an update on Yasmine’s case from the Birmingham Police Department have not been successful.

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.

Seven months later, calls to free wife and children of accused Boulder attacker

By Alan Gionet

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    COLORADO SPRINGS, Colorado (KCNC) — Supporters gathered in Colorado Springs, calling for the release of a mother and five children held in an ICE detention facility for seven months after the father of the family was charged with the Boulder terror attack.

Hayam El-Gamal and her children, ranging in ages from 5 to 18, remain at the South Texas Family Residential Center in Dilley, Texas. They have been there since soon after the June 1, 2025, attack on the Pearl Street Mall. The family is in the United States illegally, after overstaying visas, the government says.

The father of the family is Mohamed Soliman. Soliman remains accused of committing the firebombing attack on both state and federal charges. Specifically, he’s accused of throwing Molotov cocktails at marchers who were demonstrating in support of Israeli hostages in Gaza. One person, 82-year-old Karen Diamond, died. More than a dozen others were hurt.

After the attack, the White House posted on social media that the family had been arrested.

“They could be deported as early as tonight,” read a June 3, 2025, post on X.

Homeland Security Secretary Krisi Noem posted a video and wrote, “We are taking the family of alleged Boulder, Colorado terrorist and illegal alien Mohamed into ICE custody.”

“We are investigating to what extent his family knew about this heinous attack, if they had knowledge of it, or if they provided support to it,” Noem continued.

“We condemn the June 1st terrorist attack in Boulder. And we offer condolences for the victim’s family,” Alisha Oliveras said at the Monday news conference. “And we want to state clearly, we support the release of Hayam El-Gamal and her five children, ages five to 18.”

Oliveras considers herself a friend of the family whose child was friends with the oldest daughter, Habiba Soliman.

Habiba Soliman graduated from high school in Colorado Springs last year. She was honored by a local newspaper as one of the best and brightest graduates and was honored with an article that described her academic excellence and devotion to helping others.

“I was instantly impressed when I met Habiba,” Elizabeth Reinhold, a former teacher of Habiba’s and her siblings, said at the news conference. “She exuded a humble confidence and a quiet determination to learn and succeed in school. From the beginning, she told me she wanted to become a doctor in order to help people and make a difference in the world.”

The family’s youngest children are twins who were 4 years old and not yet in K-12 school at the time they were taken into custody.

The FBI declined to talk about its findings in its investigation into the family’s prior knowledge of the attack, telling CBS News Colorado that the only information being released in the case would have to come through the District Attorney’s Office or the court.

In the court case against Mohamed Soliman, an FBI agent was asked by an attorney, “They (the family) had no inkling at all that he was planning to do this or even thinking about doing anything like this?”

“That’s correct,” replied an FBI agent identified only as “Chan.”

From custody, Habiba recently wrote and shared a lengthy letter about the family’s situation. “We are six innocent people,” she wrote on Jan. 6. “Including 5-year-old twins—-trapped in a nightmare we didn’t create and punished for our father’s actions.”

The letter also raises complaints about the ICE facility run by contractor Core Civic and also shares what Habiba Soliman believes are injustices in their treatment.

“They chose not to investigate. They chose to ignore the results of the FBI investigation that shows we did not know anything,” Habiba wrote.

In a phone conversation from inside the detention center with CBS Colorado, Habiba said, “My father was the quietest person that you’d ever met. He speaks very, very few words. He’s a man of few words. My mother has always tried to get him to open up more.”

But she said he did not. He worked as a driver and slept in his car many nights, coming home about once a week. He would sleep a lot when home, she said.

“Nobody should ever experience what they experienced,” she said in the phone conversation about the alleged victims in the attack. “Nobody should ever go through what they went through. Violence is never justified. We don’t agree with violence at all for any reason. And we condemn all people that are violent. Even including my father.”

As the family has remained in ICE custody, there have been court appearances before an immigration judge. In September, a judge ordered the family released on bond, awaiting further proceedings. The judge deemed the mother and children as neither a flight risk nor a danger to the community. ICE has appealed and refuses to release the family while they appeal.

The family has roots in Egypt, but Habiba and her two sisters and two brothers were raised in Kuwait, where they were born. Then the family came to the United States on a visa, Habiba explained over the phone. She said they believed that if they applied for asylum, they could stay after seeing they had the right to file on a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services website.

“So we thought that, because of this, we are staying here legally. I mean, we got the work permits and the social security numbers. We thought that everything was legal. We would never, ever have stayed here if we had known that we were breaking the law or that was wrong or anything.”

But they did.

Supporters of the family are upset that the government continues to hold the mother and children.

“I have faith in the justice system of America,” Reinhold said. “I have faith that Habiba will be allowed to pursue her dream as a doctor, somehow, somewhere. I ask that these children be treated as innocent until proven guilty.”

In an interview with CBS Colorado, Brandon Rattiner, senior director of the Jewish Community Relations Council of Colorado, said, “Anti-semetism often takes the form of collective blaming. So this is something our community understands really well, which is why we remain committed to making sure that everybody has a fair process. That rules like due process and civil liberties are respected all throughout the justice system.”

Rattiner added, “One of the reasons that I wanted to do this interview is to make that point clear that our community is nuanced enough to understand that we were victims of pain. But that doesn’t change the way that anybody should be treated under American law.”

The family has another bond hearing in immigration court scheduled for Wednesday, Jan. 21.

CBS Colorado reached out to ICE multiple times over the past week and a half, asking for comment on the custody situation for Hayam El-Gamal and her children, but has not received a reply.

Core Civic, the contractor that runs the Dilley Immigration Processing Center in Dilley, Texas, said all questions about the facility should be directed to ICE, but did say, “It is important to know that all of our facilities, including DIPC, are subject to multiple layers of oversight and are monitored very closely by our government partners to ensure full compliance with policies and procedures, including any applicable detention standards.”

Habiba had hopes of attending Harvard Medical School. Right now, she and her mother and siblings wait.

“It’s just very, very hard, and what makes it harder is that we don’t know when the truth is going to come out. We believe that it will come out. We believe that we’re innocent. We have nothing to fear from the law. It’s just a matter of time, but unfortunately, it’s taking forever, and it’s affecting us every day,” she said. “We still believe that the truth will come out. That we will be treated fairly.”

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.

Youngest Freedom Rider given formal apology from city of Jackson

By Angela Williams

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    JACKSON, Mississippi (WAPT) — Hezekiah Watkins was just 13 years old when he was arrested in Jackson in 1961 along with dozens of other civil rights activists. On Martin Luther King Jr. Day in 2026, Watkins received an official apology.

Mayor John Horhn delivered the formal apology on behalf of the city during a prayer breakfast at Greater Bethlehem Temple Church.

“Today, the city of Jackson publicly acknowledges that what happened to Mr. Hezekiah Watkins was wrong,” Horhn said. “He should never have been treated as a criminal for walking into a bus station in his own city, and he should never have carried the fear and humiliation that came with being sent to Parchman at 13 years old. Yet instead of allowing that trauma to harden his heart, Mr. Watkins turned his pain into purpose. Jackson is a better city because he chose to tell the truth, to teach our young people, and to keep believing in the possibility of a more just Mississippi.”

The teenager, who was on summer break, went against his mother’s wishes to see the peaceful protest. Watkins was arrested at the Greyhound Bus Station when the Freedom Riders arrived in Jackson. They were charged with “breach of peace.” Watkins, the youngest Freedom Rider, spent five days in a cell on Mississippi’s death row.

The event 65 years ago pointed Watkins toward a lifetime of fighting for civil rights as a businessman and neighborhood leader. Last year, Horhn declared “Hezekiah Watkins Day” in honor of his courage, work and decades of community service in Jackson.

“I cannot forget what happened to me as a young boy, but I have never let it stop me from loving this city or from telling my story,” Watkins said. “To receive this apology in my lifetime means a great deal, not just for me, but for every child who has ever felt that the system was stacked against them. My prayer is that Jackson will keep moving toward truth, toward justice, and toward a future where no young person has to go through what I went through.”

Watkins and the others who were arrested that day are included in an exhibit at the Two Mississippi Museums.

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