Three men arrested in $1 million Lego heist

By Dean Fioresi

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    KERN COUNTY, California (KCAL, KCBS) — Three Southern California men were arrested for their alleged part in a $1 million Lego heist in the Inland Empire, according to authorities.

Deputies with the Kern County Sheriff’s Office Mojave Substation were called to the 400 block of Silver Queen Road on Wednesday, April 8, after learning of suspicious vehicles in the area, according to a news release shared by the department on social media.

“When deputies arrived, two box trucks were seen fleeing the area,” the release said.

Traffic stops were conducted on both vehicles, and deputies were able to identify the suspects as 37-year-old San Bernardino man Jose Lopez, 25-year-old Los Angeles man Ruben Lopez Flores and 35-year-old Chino man Freddy Hernandez Polinar.

Deputies searched both of the box trucks and discovered a large amount of Lego products, and upon searching the surrounding area, found two freight trailers.

“A thorough investigation, deputies discovered the trailers were stolen while in transit from Fort Worth, Texas to Moreno Valley, California,” the release said. “The loss was reported to be approximately $1,000,000 worth of Lego products.”

All three of the suspects were arrested for possession of a stolen vehicle, cargo theft and conspiracy. It’s unclear where they were booked.

Deputies said that the stolen freight trailers and the stolen Legos were recovered.

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More than 300 pigeons rescued from hoarding situation, wildlife center says

By Madeline Bartos

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    WILKES-BARRE, Pennsylvania (KDKA) — More than 300 pigeons were rescued from a hoarding situation in Pennsylvania, a wildlife rehabilitation center said.

The Pocono Wildlife Rehabilitation and Education Center said in a Facebook post on Tuesday that it was called by Wilkes-Barre animal control to help with “a sad and devastating hoarding situation.”

They were told there were between 170 and 200 pigeons, but the wildlife center said in an update that there ended up being 318. Twelve of them had to be euthanized. The rescue said the pigeons were injured, emaciated and infested with mites and bird lice.

“We know there will be the inevitable comment of ‘they’re only pigeons’ and wondering why we bother,” the center said in a Facebook post. “But saving wildlife isn’t about only rescuing the fluffy or majestic animals we share this world with. As often as not, it is about loving the unloved, and giving them the attention, dignity, and care they deserve like all the rest.”

In a Facebook comment, the center explained that they can’t just release the birds because pigeons are incredibly intelligent animals with strong homing instincts that will try to find their way home, “often exhausting themselves or flying straight into danger.” Many of the pigeons rescued are also suffering from neurological disease, healing from injuries or have become too used to humans to survive on their own.

The rescue hopes to have them all adopted in the next two weeks so they can focus on the hundreds of wildlife babies already in their care.

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Former UFC champion uses MMA skills to patrol the South Florida streets as a police officer

By Joan Murray

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    CORAL SPRINGS, Florida (WFOR) — Marlon Moraes spent most of his life in the ring, passionate about the sport near and dear to his heart: mixed martial arts. Moraes says he was only nine years old when a friend approached him about learning the sport in his native Brazil, where he says he grew up in poverty.

He was hooked after that, pursuing a lifelong dream of getting to the top. Moraes won a championship title for his weight class division nearly a decade ago, and soon after joined the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) organization.

Regarded as one of the best mixed martial artists to ever step into the ring, Moraes decided a couple of years ago to pursue a career in law enforcement. He was sworn in as a Coral Springs police officer and now patrols the streets on the night shift.

“Every time I go to work, I want to help someone,” he says. “When the call comes, I want to be the one”.

That community spirit impressed Coral Springs Deputy Chief Ryan Gallagher, who interviewed and ultimately hired Moraes.

“I found a professional, compassionate, charismatic individual who wants to serve the community,” Gallagher said.

Part of that service is passing along everything Moraes has learned to the next generation of would-be fighters at his Coral Springs studio.

Moraes says his wife and kids keep him grounded. His sport remains the center of everything: “the friendship, to be a good teammate, to be a good son, father, husband. It’s everything—you bring the whole circle.”

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Nonprofit uses aviation program to support girls coping with loss

By La’Tasha Givens

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    ATLANTA (WUPA) — While most students are spending their spring break relaxing, a group of young women in metro Atlanta is gathered in a classroom for a different kind of lesson, one that serves as both an education and social therapy.

This week marks the 5th annual Youth Aviation Exploration Week, a flagship program hosted by the Motherless Daughters Foundation. Rassalyn Uter created the nonprofit to provide support for young girls and teens navigating life after the loss of their mothers.

Whether a mother is absent due to death, incarceration, mental illness, or emotional detachment, the foundation steps in to provide the guidance typically found at home.

“Losing a mother is very hard. So imagine losing her so young,” Uter said.

The program caters to the unique needs of each girl, offering everything from grief therapy and career counseling to getting them ready for prom.

Hailey Buggs joined the foundation in 2022 following the loss of her mother. The grief, she says, led to a brief depression that made it difficult to focus on school or her future.

“I was honestly thinking about what my life would be,” Hailey shared. “It made me feel like, why did she have to go so early? Why did that happen?”

Recognizing her grief and her potential, the foundation’s mentors worked to help Hailey find her voice. When she expressed a desire to overcome her shyness, they enrolled her in Toastmasters. The result was a newfound confidence that would prove integral to her success in the air and on the ground.

This week, that support system took Hailey and her peers to Hartsfield-Jackson International, Atlanta Regional/Falcon Field, and Fulton County Airport/Charlie Brown Field.

The girls received personal training from a fleet of industry professionals, including pilots, aerospace engineers, and air traffic controllers. avionic technicians and more.

The highlight of the experience was the Discovery Flight, where the students moved beyond the hangar and into the pilot’s seat.

“They’re actually flying the plane with a licensed certified flight instructor,” Uter said. “It’s so exciting for them and all of us.”

For Hailey, the experience has been a powerful reminder that she doesn’t have to navigate life’s turbulence alone. She says her “mother mentors” consistently motivate her to pursue her goals, proving that her past losses do not define her future.

“That push made me want to strive harder,” Hailey said. “I may fall, this is not the end for me.”

As the week concludes, these young women will walk off the tarmac with more than just a new perspective; each will receive a special aviation certification for students, a tangible reminder that, for them, the sky is truly the limit.

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.

Months after arrest, woman says she received birthday card signed by Wisconsin State Patrol; agency says they didn’t send it

By Kathryn Merck

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    MILWAUKEE (WDJT) — A birthday card is bringing anything but celebration for a Milwaukee 19-year-old and her mother.

Essence Barrow-Lee says she was pulled over on Milwaukee’s northwest side by an officer with the Wisconsin State Patrol on Feb. 2. Through her own video of the arrest she sent to CBS 58, an officer asked Barrow-Lee to step out of her vehicle. When she refused, the officer broke through her window to remove Barrow-Lee from the vehicle, according to Barrow-Lee.

“I was scared,” Barrow-Lee said. “I already have bad anxiety, so it just worsens everything.”

Online court records show Barrow-Lee was ticketed for excessive speeding and lacking vehicle registration. The WisDOT Office of Public Affairs said the Wisconsin State Patrol arrested her for obstruction.

Barrow-Lee and her mother, Jennifer Lee, say they believe the force used by the officer was excessive given the two tickets she ended up receiving.

“I really want him to have some type of consequence,” Barlow-Lee said.

Lee filed a complaint with the Wisconsin State Patrol about the arrest. The Wisconsin Department of Transportation (WisDOT) Office of Public Affairs said they are investigating the complaint.

Of all the things Barrow-Lee was expecting in the mail after the arrest, what she ended up receiving was not one of them: a birthday card signed by “Wisconsin State Patrol.”

“It had confetti all through the card, so when you opened it, it was nothing but a mess,” Barrow-Lee said. “It was a joke.”

“It doesn’t make any sense,” Barrow-Lee’s mother, Jennifer Lee said.

The WisDOT Office of Public Affairs said Wisconsin State Patrol did not send the individual a birthday card. The agency told CBS 58 it believes the card came from somewhere outside of Wisconsin State Patrol.

The entire situation is frightening Barrow-Lee.

“I am scared. I feel like I’m being followed. Every time I leave the house, I’m checking up and down the street to make sure cars are not just sitting and doing unusual things,” Barrow-Lee said. “I’m just more cautious now.”

Lee says she is reaching out to other agencies to help figure out where the card came from and bring some sense of justice to her daughter.

“I don’t know where to go with this and I don’t know what to do with it,” Lee said.

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Norfolk sailor says he found a dead rat in his Monster Energy drink

By WTKR Web Staff

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    NORFOLK, Virginia (WTKR) — A Norfolk Navy sailor says he got a sickening surprise when drinking a Monster Energy drink this week.

John Witt, 29, said he bought a pack of Monsters a few days ago at a Norfolk 7-Eleven. But Thursday morning when he finished drinking one, he realized the can wasn’t empty.

“I looked inside and found a rat,” he said, which had him immediately vomiting — several times. The dead rat seemed pretty large, Witt told News 3 Thursday morning. “It’s a full-size rat, and it’s a big rat.”

Witt then went to the Portsmouth Naval Hospital to get looked over. He said they confirmed a rat was in the can he ingested and they ran some tests.

“They told me they’ve never experienced a case like this and that more that likely with the chemicals that are in Monster, that it should be OK,” Witt said. “My antibodies should be able to fight it off.”

For now, Witt, who said he loved drinking Monsters in the past, says he’s not going to be drinking them again.

“I’m definitely not going to be able to drink anything from a closed can,” he said. “I’m never going to be able to drink anything that I can’t see again.”

Witt has now reached out to the Food and Drug Administration to file a report, and WTKR News 3 have reached to Monster Energy for a comment. We’ll update this story when we hear back.

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‘I just started stabbing him:’ Army ROTC cadets who killed ODU shooter speak publicly for the first time

By Sarah Hagen, Jay Greene

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    NORFOLK, Virginia (WTKR) — The group of Army ROTC cadets who subdued and killed Old Dominion University shooter Mohamed Bailor Jalloh after he opened fire on the class on March 12 say several of them wrestled him to the ground and stabbed him to death.

Several of the students appeared in a 17-minute video posted to the Army ROTC’s YouTube page Wednesday night — the first time any of them have spoken publicly about what the FBI called a terrorist attack in Constant Hall.

Their instructor, Lt. Col. Brandon Shah, was killed in the shooting, and two others were injured.

Louis Ancheta, one of the cadets who earned a purple heart for his actions during the shooting, said it was just a normal day of presentations in class.

“It was probably the one day we stayed the entire class period,” cadet Oshea Bego said.

Their instructor, Lt. Col Brandon Shah, was about to let them out of class when Jalloh walked into the room and asked if it was an ROTC class or a seminar.

“Someone came in, just some random Joe,” Ancheta said. “I wasn’t thinking about what that question really meant.”

Samuel Reineberg said Jalloh sounded nervous. After no one spoke up, he asked again. A cadet said it was, and Shah nodded.

“He reached down into his waistbelt… and shouted Allahu akbar and began shooting in the direction of Lt. Col. Shah,” Reineberg said.

Taking cover Most of the cadets said they hit the ground as soon as they heard gunshots, with some hiding under their desks. But Ancheta said he pulled out his pocket knife and ran towards Jalloh immediately, who was wrestling with Lt. Col. Shah.

“With my pocket knife, I open it, I run up and as I’m running up, Colonel Shah lunges at the guy, and starts wrestling with him upright,” Ancheta said.

Jalloh shot a stray over Ancheta’s shoulder, and then shot him, but he said barely felt it.

“It really didn’t feel like it hit me. It felt like a graze. After that, I’m like I can keep on going,” Ancheta said. “I just go in there, I just start stabbing him. As I’m stabbing him, other cadets jump in.”

Jeremy Rawlinson said as he was getting up from the ground, he saw one cadet jump over a table to help Ancheta and Shah, and Rawlinson knew he had to help.

“I said to myself, ‘Well if he’s going, I gotta back him,'” Rawlinson said.

Multiple cadets joined him, according to Reineberg. Some stabbed Jalloh, some punched him, some wrestled with his gun. Reineberg got the gun away from Jalloh and dropped an empty magazine.

Ancheta said he started to feel some pain once he put his pocket knife away.

“I’m like, “Guys, can you get off me? I think I’ve been shot'”, Ancheta said.

Reineberg immediately started performing first aid, and Ancheta pulled out his phone and told him to call his mom. That was when they noticed Shah was injured.

He fell onto the wall, and Reineberg caught him on the way down. He had a gunshot on his right thigh, and the cadets made a tourniquet with a belt. One cadet called the ODU’s chief of police, and another led rounds of law enforcement to the room.

SWAT arrives SWAT officers took over first aid on Shah once they arrived, and put a chest seal on Ancheta. Both went into surgery once they arrived at the hospital, and the other cadets were interviewed at the police station.

Cecilia Osso said they knew someone had died, but did not know who. She only found out it was Shah after calling an academy member. Other cadets said they found out once they got back home.

“He’s a hero. He lunged at him, just wrestled with him, tried to save us,” Ancheta said.

Multiple cadets said that Shah’s guidance was the reason they were able do what they did in the moment.

Jah-ire Urtarte, who was sitting in the front row right near the door, said he would not be alive if it weren’t for Shah.

“If he didn’t lunge at him, you know, I wouldn’t be here right now,” Urtate said. “There’s a possibility he could have turned his gun, and I could’ve been next.”

Terrorist attack investigation The FBI held a press conference hours after the shooting where the Norfolk field office was investigating it as a terrorist attack.

Jalloh had previously been convicted of giving material support to ISIS, known as ISIL at the time, and served about eight years of an 11-year sentence, court records show.

Court documents from his 2016 conviction showed Jalloh sent money to people affiliated with ISIL, and shared information to a confidential informant about his desire to commit an attack like the 2009 shooting at Fort Hood.

Jalloh was released from jail two-and-a-half years early and enrolled as a student at ODU in the summer of 2025 — seven months before he attacked the classroom in Constant Hall.

The aftermath In the weeks after the shooting, the ODU Faculty Senate — which had previously expressed its feelings about President Brian Hemphill in a vote of no confidence — has raised concerns about safety matters at Constant Hall and on campus.

The senate resurfaced a 2024 email from an instructor who wrote to Hemphill about safety concerns in Constant Hall, the building that houses the Strome School of Business.

The instructor said they feared a shooter would have no barrier to accessing their classrooms.

In response, the ODU Board of Visitors issued a strong rebuke, suggesting the Senate was trying to use a terrorist attack to further its political motives against President Hemphill.

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Teen survives crash that killed two friends, calls survival a miracle

By Dan Rascon

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    SALT LAKE CITY (KSL, KSL TV) — A Utah teen who survived a horrific crash that killed his two close friends is speaking publicly for the first time, surrounded by the families of the teens who lost their lives.

Fifteen-year-old Corey Wayman said he still doesn’t understand how he survived the crash that took the lives of 15-year-old Xander Hover and 17-year-old Ava Olivares.

“I don’t know how. It’s a miracle that I’m here today,” Corey said.

The three friends were traveling in a pickup truck Thursday night in Juab County on Weiss Highway when the vehicle left the road and crashed. Investigators said speed was a factor. Ava was driving. None of the teens were wearing seatbelts, and all three were thrown from the truck. Corey was the sole survivor.

“There’s a reason I lived,” he said. “I don’t know what it is yet.”

Corey described his injuries, which included a broken collarbone, a broken nose, 18 stitches in his hand, and internal bleeding. Despite the trauma, doctors expect him to make a full recovery. He is scheduled to return to the hospital for nose surgery later this week.

The three teens shared a close bond and spent nearly every day together.

“We were just inseparable,” Corey said.

Family and friends gathered at Draper Park to support Corey and to honor Ava and Xander.

Aaron Olivares, Ava’s father, called the loss unimaginable. Olivares is also battling stage 4 cancer.

“It’s the worst nightmare you could ever go through,” he said. “She was a fierce competitor. On one hand, she was so good to people. She treated people so well and just had a genuine love.”

He said the teens were simply driving as the sun was setting when Ava missed a corner.

Xander’s father, Jessie Hover, remembered his son as someone who loved everyone and stood out to those around him.

“He was an extraordinary kid,” Hover said. “He just loved everybody.”

All three teens were accomplished junior drag racers. Ava had recently won a 2025 championship in Las Vegas. Xander was known for his entrepreneurial spirit and love for the outdoors, even making his own duck-calling whistles.

Corey said he plans to carry on the bond he shared with his friends and honor their lives moving forward.

“I think it’s probably just to carry on for any of us,” he said.

The families said seatbelt use was always emphasized and hope this tragedy serves as a reminder to drivers everywhere.

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Elderly man and woman rescued from partially submerged car

By Audra Schroeder

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    PORT ST. LUCIE, Florida (WPTV) — An elderly man and woman were rescued from a vehicle that had rolled into a pond in Port St. Lucie early Wednesday morning.

Port St. Lucie police say a single-vehicle crash was reported just after 4:30 a.m., near the intersection of East Caribbean and Cam De Entrada.

Investigators say the driver, an elderly woman, made a wrong turn and attempted to reverse back onto the road when the car slid down an embankment and into a pond.

Officers arrived and found the car submerged up to its windows. They were able to remove the driver and the passenger, and elderly man, and transport them to St. Lucie Medical Center. The driver and passenger are said to be OK.

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Millions of Californians still have money on inflation relief debit cards — they expire April 30

By Stephanie Sierra and Renee Koury

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    SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — You’d think it would be easy to give away billions of dollars for disaster relief, but hundreds of thousands of people in California still haven’t taken their share.

Nearly one million Californians never cashed in the inflation relief debit cards the state gave out four years ago. The cards are still loaded with $400 million. And if they’re not cashed by April 30, all that money goes back to the state.

If that’s you, time is running out to cash in — or that money will be gone forever.

The state’s Franchise Tax Board (FTB), which oversees the relief funds, said it’s tried to alert residents that they have money available.

“The FTB does not have knowledge as to why some cardholders are not activating their cards, but we worked to engage them with letter campaigns and social media campaigns reminding them to activate and spend,” the agency wrote in an email to ABC7 Eyewitness News.

The payments were meant as emergency inflation relief four years ago as the state was emerging from the pandemic. Prices were surging at gas stations and grocery stores.

In response, California lawmakers tapped its then-healthy budget surplus and handed $9.2 billion to struggling residents. About $4 million was directly deposited into bank accounts of 7.2 million taxpayers. The remaining $5.2 billion was mailed out on debit cards.

Governor Gavin Newsom announced the program on social media.

“Millions and millions of Californians are now getting up to $1,050,” Newsom said in a YouTube post in 2022. “It’s called the Middle Class Tax Refund, and it’s our way of getting money back into your pockets to help with everyday expenses. So look out for a debit card in your mailbox or a direct deposit.”

Debit cards loaded with hundreds of dollars each were mailed to 9.6 million Californians beginning in October 2022.

But four years later, statistics show nearly one million Californians — roughly 960,000 — never activated their debit cards. And 4.5 million still have money left on their cards, totaling about $260 million. So why haven’t folks cashed in?

Cardholders like David Kennedy of Daly City tell us they didn’t need emergency funds in spite of the surging prices.

“It was nice to have the debit card, but I didn’t need it. I figured I’d keep it as an emergency in case something happens,” Kennedy said.

He just found his card stashed in a drawer, still loaded with $350.

“I just happened to stumble on it, and I said, ‘Oh, shoot, it’s going to expire,'” Kennedy said.

Jennifer Gee of Concord also didn’t need extra cash back then. She just found her debit card stored in a basket among her collection of coupons. It’s still loaded with $500.

“Gosh, I don’t even remember when it was, but I just set it aside and kind of forgot about it,” Gee said.

Both realized they better use the cards or lose the money.

But it was surprisingly difficult to finally use their cards.

“I took the card and went to Safeway to try to buy some groceries, and it got rejected. Then I went to an ATM, put in the card, then entered the PIN, and it said, ‘Denied by the bank,'” Gee said.

“I tried to get gas with it, did not work,” Kennedy said. “Then I went on Amazon.com to buy groceries. It got denied. I thought, ‘This is a Visa. It should be accepted.’ Then I thought, ‘OK, maybe it’s too good to be true.”

Both tried calling the debit card company, Money Network, to find out what was wrong.

“It’s completely an automated number. You cannot talk to anybody,” Kennedy said.

“The recording said I have $500 on it and I can use it. That’s what made me angry, because it didn’t give me the opportunity to talk to someone to find out what was wrong,” Gee said.

“This is not OK,” Kennedy said. “The government says I have this money, and yet they don’t want to release it.”

Officials at the Franchise Tax Board said the bank likely deactivated those cards to prevent fraudsters from getting the money.

The debit cards were meant to help low and middle-income residents get through the pandemic when prices spiked for everyday goods. Those earning up to $250,000 a year qualified for payments ranging from $200 to $350 per person. Families could receive up to $1,050.

There were problems from the start. Many people tossed out the cards thinking they were junk mail or scams. Others were skeptical about having any account at an unknown bank. Money Network is based in New York.

Others reported hackers had drained the funds from their cards before they received them.

Now that they’re expiring, it may be hard to get the unclaimed money since Money Network has deactivated dormant accounts.

“And that’s why I contacted 7 On Your Side,” Gee said.

“Thank goodness I reached out to ABC News,” Kennedy said.

After 7 On Your Side stepped in, Money Network reactivated Kennedy’s card. Gee says she finally reached someone at Money Network and got her card reactivated too.

And both used the cards, ironically, just as inflation and gas prices are surging again.

“I cashed out, and I just put it right into my Wells Fargo account,” Kennedy said.

“I went to Sam’s Club and used it to buy some gift cards,” Gee said.

If your debit card doesn’t work, officials say contact Money Network at 1-800-240-0223 and follow the prompts to activate your card.

If you have trouble getting through to Money Network, contact 7 On Your Side and we can help get through. If you lost your card or threw it out by mistake, which many people did, let us know about it. We can help.

And remember, time is running out. That money disappears April 30, 2026.

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.