Boston drag queen Jujubee has lead role in RuPaul’s upcoming movie “Stop! That! Train!”

By Courtney Cole

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    BOSTON, Massachusetts (WBZ) — This summer, a Boston-based performer will hit the big screen in a movie that’s bound to make you laugh. Jujubee is one of the leads in “Stop! That! Train!” starring RuPaul. The cast is made up of famous queens like Latrice Royale, Symone, and more.

Jujubee is a four-time competitor on RuPaul’s Drag Race.

“RuPaul is a great human, a great businessman, a fabulous drag queen, and builds the best kinds of worlds for not just the queer audience, but everybody out there,” Jujubee said.

Behind the drag makeup and persona of Jujubee is Airline Inthyrath, a musician and performer who grew up in Lowell. They explained that “Lowell is a really loving place and very accepting. And I always felt like I was at home there.”

Airline first dressed in drag during a Halloween party and it changed his life.

“I thought that it was the coolest thing ever, and I finally felt beautiful for the first time.”

Now, he’s thrilled to take on the challenge of acting.

“It’s a very interesting layer for me. So I’m Airline dressed up as Juju, and then Juju’s acting as whatever character that I’m given. So in ‘Stop! That! Train!,’ it’s Airline playing Juju, playing Dee Dee,” Airline said.

It took just 19 days to film the movie, and Airline explained that it is just one big satire.

“So if you can imagine ‘Airplane,’ but it’s on a train and there’s drag queens. You’re gonna find that your favorite drag queens aren’t just great drag performers or makeup artists. You’re gonna see us actually dig in and act. We’re not just queens. We’re actors. So for people in towns that may have never experienced drag queens, what I want them to take away from this is that queer art is so important and visibility matters so much because I want that person in small town USA to see me and say to themselves, If Juju can do this, so can I,” Airline said.

“Stop! That! Train!” hits theaters nationwide on June 12th.

Airline is also preparing to release an EP of original music called “Mess For You,” and he’ll be in a “Wicked” parody in Provincetown in July.

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Houston Chronicle Endorses James Talarico for U.S. Senate: A Democracy-Supportive Call for Texas to Choose Service Over Scandal

By Francis Page Jr.

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    June 1, 2026 (Houston Style Magazine) — HOUSTON — In a Texas political season already hotter than a July sidewalk and louder than a Friday night stadium, the Houston Chronicle Editorial Board has made its choice for U.S. Senate — and its message is as clear as a church bell on Sunday morning: Texas needs servant leadership, not self-serving spectacle.

The Chronicle endorsed James Talarico for U.S. Senate, framing the contest as a defining choice between integrity and chaos, public service and political self-preservation, democratic responsibility and partisan performance. In its endorsement, the editorial board presented Talarico as a leader focused on coalition-building, education, accountability, working families, and the moral courage required to govern a state as powerful and diverse as Texas.

For Houston Style Magazine readers, this endorsement is more than another campaign headline. It is a civic alarm clock. It reminds Texans that elections are not entertainment, public office is not a personal shield, and the U.S. Senate is no place for leaders who treat government like a courtroom escape hatch or a cable-news audition.

Talarico, a former public school teacher, Presbyterian seminarian, and Texas state representative, has built a political identity around decency, faith-informed service, and practical reform. That matters in a moment when many Texans are exhausted by political shouting matches that generate heat but very little light. The Chronicle’s endorsement praised him as someone who can speak across party lines while still standing firmly for public education, economic opportunity, government transparency, and democracy itself.

That is especially important in Houston, where democracy is not an abstract classroom word. Democracy is whether Third Ward, Sunnyside, Acres Homes, Fifth Ward, Alief, Fort Bend, Katy, Pasadena, Pearland, and every corner of Harris County has a voice that counts. Democracy is whether public schools are strengthened, whether workers have opportunity, whether seniors are protected, whether small businesses can thrive, and whether communities of color are treated as partners in progress rather than afterthoughts at election time.

The Chronicle’s endorsement also drew a sharp contrast with Republican nominee Ken Paxton, whose political career has been clouded by years of controversy, ethics questions, impeachment drama, and criticism from both sides of the aisle. While Paxton’s supporters describe him as a fighter, the deeper question for Texas voters is this: fighting for whom?

Fighting for democracy is different from fighting for personal survival. Fighting for families is different from fighting for headlines. Fighting for Texas is different from fighting to keep political power at any cost.

Talarico’s message, as reflected in the endorsement, is not rooted in rage. It is rooted in repair. He has spoken about banning congressional stock trading, pushing back against gerrymandering, protecting public schools, and building an energy future that respects Texas’ oil-and-gas foundation while embracing renewable innovation and job creation. For Houston — the energy capital of the world — that balance is essential.

Our city understands energy. We understand industry. We understand labor, technology, ports, pipelines, petrochemicals, innovation, and environmental justice. A serious Texas senator must understand that the future cannot be built by ignoring either workers or communities. The future must include both.

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At its core, the Chronicle’s endorsement is a challenge to Texas voters: choose character over controversy, unity over division, and public service over political revenge.

The 2026 Texas U.S. Senate race may become one of the most watched contests in America. But for Houstonians, the question is beautifully simple: who will fight for the people when the cameras turn off?

Democracy does not defend itself. It must be protected at the ballot box, strengthened in our neighborhoods, taught in our schools, and renewed by citizens who refuse to let cynicism win.

The Chronicle has made its choice.

Now Texas must make history.

For more info or to make a donation, go to: jamestalarico.com

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Kierra Lee
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Harris Health Earns NIH Praise for Turning Compassion Into a Clinical Care Comeback Story

By Francis Page Jr.

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    June 1, 2026 (Houston Style Magazine) — HOUSTON — In a city that knows how to fight through storms, Harris Health is earning national recognition for helping patients weather one of America’s most heartbreaking public health crises: opioid and substance use addiction.

With five national sites participating in a clinical study designed to improve substance use disorder treatment in primary care, the National Institutes of Health recently commended Harris Health for successfully recruiting nearly one-third of the study’s 300 participants. Harris Health enrolled 87 participants in the study led by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, a division of NIH, while also receiving praise for its outpatient treatment program as a model for helping patients battling opioid and stimulant addiction.

That is not just impressive paperwork. That is Houston-style public health leadership—where compassion puts on comfortable shoes, walks into clinics, reaches out to shelters, makes phone calls, prints flyers, listens without judgment, and helps people find a path back to themselves.

“Harris Health shares a vision to provide patients with the most effective care available,” said Matthew Schlueter, PhD, RN, chief nursing officer for Ambulatory Care Services at Harris Health. “Having our patients included in the national benchmarking research will only help all communities around the country.”

The timing could not be more urgent. The opioid crisis remains a national emergency, even as recent data finally show signs of progress. CDC data show U.S. drug overdose deaths fell to 79,384 in 2024, with 54,045 involving opioids. The CDC also reported that overdose deaths involving synthetic opioids other than methadone dropped sharply from 2023 to 2024.

For Harris County families, those numbers are more than statistics. They are empty chairs at dinner tables, parents praying late into the night, children waiting for a loved one to come home whole, and communities asking healthcare systems to do more than diagnose. They are asking them to heal.

Harris Health’s Office Based Addiction Treatment program—known as OBAT—is answering that call with a practical, patient-centered model rooted in primary care. Under the leadership of Jennifer LaHue, MBA, RN, project manager, site principal investigator and director of OBAT, the team has recruited participants through physician and staff referrals, word-of-mouth, in-person outreach, virtual connections, community events, shelters, flyers and information booths.

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“We are meeting people where they are and making it easy for them to connect to services and treatment that can help them overcome their substance abuse disorders,” LaHue said.

That sentence deserves to be framed in every clinic lobby in America.

Because the future of addiction care is not about forcing patients to navigate a maze while carrying trauma, withdrawal, shame and fear on their backs. It is about building doors where walls used to be.

The NIH HEAL Initiative, launched to accelerate scientific solutions to the opioid and pain public health crises, continues to support research aimed at improving prevention and treatment strategies for opioid misuse and addiction. NIDA leads HEAL research connected to opioid use disorder and overdose, making Harris Health’s successful participation part of a much larger national movement to make recovery more accessible and evidence-based.

In other words, recovery is not a solo act. It is a choir. One anonymous OBAT participant shared that when they started, they were struggling with cocaine, alcohol and opioids. After their first visit, they received appointments, medications and support. They later found work, improved their health and began managing life again as a productive member of society.

That is the kind of success story Houston understands. Not polished. Not perfect. But powerful.

Mohammad Zare, MD, medical director of OBAT, assistant chief of staff for Ambulatory Care Services at Harris Health, and professor and vice chair of Family Medicine at UTHealth Houston, credits the program’s success to a holistic team approach.

“Patients are the center of our focus,” Dr. Zare said. “They come to us needing help to overcome their addictions and we’re here to help them in the process.”

For Houston Style Magazine readers, this recognition is not merely a healthcare headline. It is a community headline. Harris Health’s work reminds us that safety-net medicine is not second-class care. At its best, it is frontline innovation—delivered in real neighborhoods, to real families, with real consequences.

As Harris Health celebrates 60 years of service to Houston and Harris County, its NIH commendation offers a timely reminder: public healthcare, when fueled by science, dignity and determination, can become a bridge from crisis to recovery.

And in Houston, we know a thing or two about building bridges.

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.

Kierra Lee
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4096658446

Women Professionals in Government Sets the Stage for “An Evening of Elegance and Excellence” in Houston

By Francis Page Jr.

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    June 1, 2026 (Houston Style Magazine) — Houston, prepare for an evening where elegance meets impact, where white attire becomes a statement of unity, and where the business of good government gets a well-earned spotlight. Women Professionals in Government, widely known as WPG, will host “An Evening of Elegance and Excellence” on Thursday, June 4, 2026, at 6:00 PM CT, bringing together civic leaders, public servants, community advocates, professionals, and friends for a signature Summer Social designed to raise funds for scholarships, community service grants, and WPG’s continued mission-driven work.

The 2026 Summer Social will feature Harris County Administrator Erica Lee Carter as guest speaker—an especially fitting voice for an organization dedicated to advancing women in government and public policy. In February 2026, Harris County Commissioners Court appointed Carter as County Administrator, making her the first African American woman to hold the position; she officially assumed the role on March 9, 2026, overseeing county operations, strategic-plan implementation, and coordination across departments.

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For Houston Style Magazine readers, this is more than a social event. It is a celebration of leadership, legacy, mentorship, and the bright future of women shaping public service in Harris County. Founded in 1981 by Mary Dipboye, a University of Houston graduate with a master’s degree in public administration, WPG was created to build a network where women in government could gain knowledge, sharpen skills, and support one another’s career growth.

Today, that mission continues with purpose and polish. WPG describes itself as a nonprofit, politically nonpartisan organization organized for charitable, educational, and social welfare purposes. Its mission includes building support networks for people interested in government and public policy, providing career-growth knowledge and skills, offering scholarships to young women pursuing government and public-policy degrees, and supporting agencies serving women and children.

That mission comes alive through WPG’s year-round work. The organization meets monthly from September through May, excluding January, creating a forum where city, county, state, and federal professional women—and men who work in or with government—can gather, network, and hear from community leaders. WPG also provides two scholarship opportunities annually for young women pursuing degrees in government and public policy, while also offering grant funding to other charities serving women and children in Harris County.

The 2026 Summer Social carries that tradition forward with style. Guests are encouraged to wear white, giving the evening a crisp, celebratory feel worthy of the Harris County Ceremonial Courtroom. Admission is $50 for members and $60 for non-members, with sponsorship and donation opportunities helping strengthen WPG’s scholarship fund, community-service grants, and operating support.

Carter’s presence adds a powerful contemporary note. Her public-service résumé includes experience across local, state, and federal government, nonprofit work, service as an elected Harris County Department of Education trustee, and a term representing Texas’s 18th Congressional District in the U.S. House of Representatives from 2024 to 2025. Harris County’s announcement also noted her work on economic opportunity, voting access, budget management, afterschool programming, the CROWN Act as county employee policy, and support for minority- and women-owned businesses.

In a city where public service often requires both grit and grace, WPG’s Summer Social reminds Houston that government is not just buildings, budgets, and board meetings—it is people. It is the professionals who keep services moving, policies improving, communities connected, and doors opening for the next generation.

And yes, this is also a networking event. Bring the business cards, bring the confidence, and bring the white outfit that says, “I came to support excellence—and I understood the assignment.”

Event Details Event: Women Professionals in Government Summer Social — “An Evening of Elegance and Excellence” Date & Time: Thursday, June 4, 2026, at 6:00 PM CT Location: Harris County Ceremonial Courtroom, 201 Caroline Street, Houston, Texas 77002 Attire: Members and guests are encouraged to wear white Admission: Members $50; Non-Members $60 More Information & Tickets: Visit WPG Houston online at wpghouston.com

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Why Houston Should Attend Attend because scholarships matter. Attend because women in public service deserve support. Attend because mentorship changes careers. Attend because grants to organizations serving women and children strengthen Harris County. Attend because an evening in white can help create a brighter future.

From monthly luncheons to scholarship opportunities, from leadership development to community giving, WPG has spent more than four decades building a civic table where women are not simply invited—they lead. Since 1981, WPG has played a role in advancing women professionals through networking, skill-building, and knowledge-sharing, while also supporting women students committed to public-service careers.

Houston, this is the kind of evening where elegance is not just what guests wear—it is what the organization represents: excellence in service, dignity in leadership, and a commitment to lifting women and children across Harris County.

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.

Kierra Lee
KIELEESTYLE@GMAIL.COM
4096658446

Fishing event honoring Fletcher Merkel brings hundreds of kids together, raises funds for Annunciation scholarship

By Conor Wight

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    MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — On the Lake Harriet shoreline in Minneapolis Saturday evening, dozens of children picked up a fishing rod for the first time.

It’s a skill that 8-year-old Fletcher Merkel taught his own friends. It made for the perfect premise for a new annual event, Fishing For Fletcher, that’s designed to bring people together and help further education at Annunciation Catholic School.

Fletcher Merkel lost his life there last August in a shooting that also claimed the life of 10-year-old Harper Moyski. Dozens of others, primarily children, were injured.

It’s a tragedy that Mollie and Jesse Merkel will not allow to define their son, a boy who adored nature and making friends. That kind of shared joy was on full display on Saturday as kids learned to fish; of the 250 registered children, about 150 of them had never done it before, according to organizers.

“He [Fletcher] included all the kids in his class. He never liked for anyone to be sitting out or not feel like they were part of the community,” Mollie Merkel said, “I think he’s watching us and is joyful that his people, his community are here.”

Off the water, children played in a bounce house and ran across the grass as adults entered a silent auction, raising more than $42,000 as of Saturday evening. Organizers said that proceeds will go to the Fletcher Merkel Memorial Endowment Fund through the Catholic Community Foundation of Minnesota. His parents say they now have enough to give two children a full-ride through 8th grade at the school.

“We’re just doing our best to combat what happened to us with joy and kindness. And set an example to prove that good can overcome evil,” Jesse Merkel said.

The couple said they were “overwhelmed” by the support from fellow Annunciation families as well as total strangers from across Minnesota.

They said that some days are much harder than others. The end of the school year proved particularly difficult, they said, as they see how other children have grown over the course of the school year.

“How tall would Fletcher be? How many new pairs of shoes would I have had to buy him this year? What sports, like what would he be doing right now?” Mollie Merkel pondered.

They’re painful questions that they’ll never have answers to, but they have a clear answer when it comes to the kind of impact Fletcher Merkel had on his classmates and his community. Smiles, laughter and live music punctuated the inaugural Fishing for Fletcher event.

It was months in the making. Lance Kramer, a father at Annunciation who lives near the Merkels, said that he began thinking about a fishing event to honor Fletcher Merkel within weeks of the shooting.

“What kept running through my mind was that she [Mollie Merkel] said ‘I don’t want people to forget Fletcher. I don’t want them to remember him for what happened, I want them to remember him for who he was,'” Kramer said. “He was a little 8-year-old boy that just lived life to it’s fullest. He tore through sneakers in like a week or two. He loved sports, he loved people.”

That shared love brought in so many volunteers that at a certain point, Kramer and other organizers needed to kindly turn people away.

Fishing for Fletcher brought in familiar faces from across town, including cheerleaders with the Minnesota Vikings.

For the Merkels, they hope to keep bringing new faces to Annunciation through their fundraising efforts. It’s the kind of welcoming spirit that they say Fletcher Merkel extended to others just about everyday.

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.

Emergency fish salvage in place at reservoir on Colorado’s Eastern Plains

By Jesse Sarles

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    Colorado (KCNC) — Officials from Colorado Parks and Wildlife are encouraging everyone with a valid Colorado fishing license to come and catch fish at Nee Noshe Reservoir in Kiowa County.

Monday marks the start of an emergency fish salvage due to the reservoir drying up.

CPW says they’re making the move due to the ongoing drought and reduced reservoir operations. Jim Ramsay, CPW Aquatic Biologist, said the “reservoir is unlikely to refill in the foreseeable future.”

The reservoir is located within Queens State Wildlife Area about 21 miles north of Lamar and 12 miles south of Eads.

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Boy’s lemonade stand helps veteran recover from surgery

By Ta’Niyah Jordan

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    BURTON, Michigan (WJRT) — A 7-year-old boy is raising money through a lemonade stand to help a local veteran pay his utility bill while he recovers from surgery.

Elijah Putnum-Vogal set up his stand at Zerka’s in Burton, selling lemonade for $2 to support the veteran who will be out of work for four months.

“He has no power right now,” Putnum-Vogal said.

Elijah’s aunt, Monique Kusky, organized the fundraiser after learning about the veteran’s situation. She said the veteran works part time at Dollar General and receives a disability check, but it hasn’t been enough to cover his expenses.

“There is a vet that’s worked at Dollar General for quite a while actually and he’s been sick,” Kusky said. “And you would never know by seeing this man. You walk in there, he greets you with a smile every day.”

Kusky said the veteran had no power even before his surgery. When she learned about his circumstances, she knew she had to help.

“So when I found out where he was standing and the situation he had going on, I couldn’t just let that go,” Kusky said.

All donations from the lemonade stand will go directly to helping the veteran. Putnum-Vogal said that helping his neighbor is more important than buying toys and ice cream.

“Him needs help and I feel bad for him,” Putnum-Vogal said.

Community members stopped by throughout the day to donate, buy lemonade and show their support. Organizers said the event not only raised money but also brought the community together to help a neighbor in need.

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.

Pittsburgh-area Lyft driver stabbed in the neck during fight with passenger, Pennsylvania State Police say

By Mike Darnay

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    Pennsylvania (KDKA) — Pennsylvania State Police said that a Lyft driver was stabbed in the neck late Sunday night during a fight with a passenger.

State Police said in a release early Monday morning that Saul Baxin, 31, was arrested and charged with aggravated assault in connection with the stabbing.

According to the release, State Police troopers were called to the area near the Neville Island exit of Interstate 79 just after 11 p.m. Sunday for what they called an “assault incident.”

State Police said that through their investigation, they leanred that a Lyft driver had been stabbed in the right side of his neck after a fight with a passenger.

The suspect in the stabbing, identified as Saul Baxin, 31, left the Lyft vehicle on foot towards the area of Coraopolis Road, State Police said.

State Police said Baxin was hit by a passing vehicle while in the area of State Road, where he was taken into custody by officers from the Robinson Township Police Department.

The Lyft driver who was stabbed was last said to be in stable condition.

Court documents show that Baxin is awaiting arraignment on aggravated assault, simple assault, and criminal mischief charges.

In a statement, a spokesperson for Lyft said that “violence like this has no place in the Lyft community or in our society.”

“The driver’s well-being is our priority, and we have been in contact to offer support,” the statement read. “The ride requester has been permanently removed from the Lyft platform, and we stand ready to assist law enforcement with their investigation.”

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Macy’s worker retires after 50 years on the job

By Morgan Kirsch

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    SAGINAW, Michigan (WJRT) — A Saginaw Macy’s employee is retiring after 50 years with the same department store location.

Jeanette Voelker, along with her friends, family and colleagues, gathered at G’s Pizzeria in Saginaw on Sunday to celebrate her five decades at Macy’s. ABC12 was there to capture the celebration.

“When I went through my first Christmas, and I did all those returns at Christmas, I said, ‘Well, I’m never doing that again, and then here I am. 50 years later, I’ve been doing it all this time,” Voelker said.

When Voelker was just 17, her father gave her the application after she got out of high school.

“My dad gave me the application when I got out of high school and said, ‘You’re not going to sit around here all summer. You’re going to have to go to work,'” Voelker said.

She said she was at the same department store location at the Fashion Square Mall through its transitions from Hudson’s to Marshall Field’s and later to Macy’s.

Voelker most recently worked in returns. She said there were many factors that kept her at the store.

“I love the customers. I love the employees and the friends that I’ve made. They’ll be my friends forever. It helped me raise two great kids, bought a house,” Voelker said.

Guests poured their hearts out in thank you cards and hugs. Voelker’s longtime coworker, Michelle Trombly, said she’s irreplaceable.

“She’s definitely part of the reason that work is enjoyable, always looking forward to working with someone that you consider a friend as well as a co-worker, so that’s going to be a big, big empty hole,” Trombly said.

Voelker said the end of her long career also marks a new beginning.

“It’s been a ride, but I’m ready to get off and start spending some time with my family,” Voelker said.

Voelker’s last official day is June 5. She plans on coming back to the store for her 50-year work anniversary on July 15, when she said her sons will visit to do her final ring-ups.

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.

Woman who banned herself from Pennsylvania casinos for life gets escorted out after winning jackpot

By Madeline Bartos

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    Pennsylvania (KDKA) — A woman who was banned from Pennsylvania casinos for life was escorted out by police after she hit the jackpot in Dauphin County.

According to a public information release from the Pennsylvania State Police, troopers were contacted shortly after 3:30 p.m. on Sunday about a woman who was at the Hollywood Casino at Penn National in East Hanover Township.

Police said the woman had been identified as someone who was self-excluded from casinos after she won a slot machine jackpot.

After reviewing information, troopers said they confirmed that the 69-year-old woman from Asbury, New Jersey, had given herself a self-imposed lifetime ban from casinos in 2019. Police escorted her off the property and told her a non-traffic citation for trespassing would be filed against her.

Troopers didn’t say whether she got to keep the jackpot.

In Pennsylvania, people who are struggling with a gambling addiction can voluntarily ban themselves from casinos. According to the Council of Compulsive Gambling of Pennsylvania, people can put themselves on a self-exclusion list for one year, five years or a lifetime. The self-exclusions don’t expire.

After someone puts themself on an exclusion list for casinos, the council said licensed facilities must refuse their wagers and deny them gaming privileges. The council also said self-excluded gamblers are prohibited from collecting any winnings.

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.