2 men reportedly wearing cable company vests broke in, threatened family in Independence home

By Krista Tatschl

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    INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (KETV) — An Independence, Missouri, family said their home was invaded and they were threatened by masked intruders with a gun.

A 78-year-old resident of the home said he heard pounding on the door of his home around midnight Sunday into Monday.

When he opened the door, two men wearing bandanas on their faces and Spectrum vests rushed in, pistol-whipping the man in the face, the family said.

The masked intruders allegedly kicked down the door to his adult daughter’s bedroom and put a gun to her head, demanding money. When the intruders saw her husband, who ran in when he heard the commotion, the men allegedly began shooting.

Fortunately, no one was shot, the family said. The intruders got away with credit cards and have not yet been caught.

The Independence Police Department confirmed an incident occurred but said a full report with more specific details was not yet available.

“At this time, we have no indication that Spectrum employees were involved,” Spectrum said in a statement.

Anyone with information on this incident is asked to report it to the Independence Police Department.

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‘All hands on board’: Fire department steps up to help firefighter with brain cancer

By Pete Cuddihy

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    OMAHA, Nebraska (KETV) — Matthew McDonnell, 39, has served the metro with the Omaha Fire Department for 17 years. Now he’s facing a bigger fight, an aggressive form of brain cancer called glioblastoma.

Everything changed for the McDonnell family when they found out Matthew had brain cancer. But as their world shifted, the Omaha Fire Department stepped into action. They say being there for each other during hard times is the expectation.

“I could not survive what he is going through without them,” said Matthew’s wife, Staci McDonnell.

In his greatest time of need, Matthew McDonnell’s coworkers came to his family’s side.

“Situation like this, it’s all hands-on board and everybody comes to help out no matter what it is,” said OFD firefighter Jeff Driscoll.

The 39-year-old Omaha firefighter was diagnosed with brain cancer back in June.

“They found the mass on his brain. It was five centimeters big on the back of his brain,” said Staci McDonnell.

McDonnell went through surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy.

He began to recover, but a cavity from where the tumor was removed filled with fluid and shifted his brain.

“The brain had shifted so much that now is where he’s having problems with the right side of his body and with his speech and with his hearing,” said Staci McDonnell.

As things have become more difficult for the McDonnell family, his buddies from the Omaha Fire Department have stepped up to help carry the load.

“Every single day, they’re asking what they can do. They mow my lawn. They come to the hospital, they hang out with him, they take him to appointments,” said Staci McDonnell.

“He’d be the first one to show up if it was somebody else,” said Driscoll.

Now the fire department looks to raise money for the McDonnells’ medical expenses by holding a spaghetti and meatball feed with auctions and raffles.

And with time, family and friends hope he’ll make a full recovery.

“Who knows, he might get back on the job. So we’re hoping,” said Matthew’s uncle, Bob McDonnell.

The Omaha Fire Department will be hosting that spaghetti feed on November 23rd at the Omaha Firefighters Hall.

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Spotted lanternfly back in Ohio, Hamilton County placed under quarantine by ag. department

By Fletcher Keel

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    CINCINNATI (WLWT) — At least 18 counties in Ohio, including Hamilton County, are under quarantine as the spotted lanternfly reaches its peak visibility.

Under quarantine, plants and trees in the county should be inspected before being shipped out of the area.

The insects are currently in their fully grown and most visible stages and they’re spreading rapidly.

Spotted lanternflies have black spots and vibrant red under-wings. They’re not a danger to people but they can stress trees and kill some garden vegetables.

“They’re not going to fly at you,” Joe Boggs, an entomologist with the OSU Extension in Hamilton County, told WLWT earlier this year. “But just the sheer numbers make them a nuisance pest.”

Officials encourage you to squash them and their eggs, and report them.

Experts in Ohio discourage using pesticides, saying it kills other pests that could eat them.

The lanternflies will likely be around through late November.

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Whooping cough cases rapidly rise in Louisiana, leading to two deaths

By Jasmine Franklin

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    NEW ORLEANS (WDSU) — There are two infant deaths linked to whooping cough in Louisiana. The fatalities of two babies are why parents say it’s now more important than ever to use caution.

State leaders describe it as the worst whooping cough outbreak in the past 30 years.

“I’m genuinely shocked, I didn’t know that was happening or going on,” said Munira Schofield.

Parents are stunned to learn of more than 360 confirmed cases of the infection.

Some cases are becoming more severe, even causing two infants to die in Louisiana.

“It’s kind of scary to know something as small as a cough that people can brush off can evolve into something bigger,” said Schofield.

Doctors say a cough is just one of the symptoms.

“It’s just that parents have become more skeptical about vaccinations, especially with infants,” said Dr. Veronica Lewis

Pediatrician Veronica Lewis tells me, infants are most vulnerable to getting infected, and it’s important for parents not to ignore the signs.

“You know some parents might brush off that runny nose, cough, or congestion, but if they notice a more harsh or rhythmic cough, especially to the point where the child is forcibly coughing,” said Lewis.

The rise in cases is prompting parents like Schofield to take more precautions to keep her little one safe.

“If I can prevent my child from having to go to the hospital because of something as catastrophic as potentially dying from whooping cough, I will do the necessary preventative measures to take care of that,” said Schofield.

Sen. Bill Cassidy, sharing concerns over the historic outbreak, in a statement he says in part, “No child in Louisiana should die from a vaccine-preventable disease. Please protect your children with a vaccine.”

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Cardiac arrest sent an athlete to the hospital last April. He’s back on the field this football season.

By Pepper Purpura

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    CRESTON, Iowa (KCCI) — Five months after collapsing at a spring track meet, 15-year-old Nate Bentley is back under the Friday night lights — this time with a personalized plan and a heart monitor helping make it possible.

In April, the then-freshman football player, wrestler, and runner had just handed off the baton to his teammate at the Glenwood track meet when he suddenly went into cardiac arrest.

Bentley, a three-sport athlete whose mother says “football was his first love,” went into cardiac arrest in April after handing off the baton in the sprint medley at Glenwood. A coach quickly retrieved the school’s automated external defibrillator (AED) and delivered a shock to the teenager to help revive him before he was rushed to Children’s Nebraska in Omaha.

“When I got there, I realized it was a lot worse than I had imagined,” Bentley’s mother, Erin Wallace, said.

Doctors later diagnosed Bentley with catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia, or CPVT — a rare, genetic heart rhythm disorder.

“It’s relatively uncommon and can be hard to diagnose because the heart is structurally normal,” said Dr. Ben Hale, a pediatric electrophysiologist at the University of Iowa. “Often the first symptom of CPVT can be cardiac arrest.”

People with CPVT are typically told to avoid strenuous exercise and especially contact sports, such as football. But getting back to his “first love” was a huge priority for Bentley because being an athlete was a part of his identity.

Hale designed a cautious, step-by-step return-to-play plan, starting with monitored exercise testing.

“We can recreate some of the triggers of CPVT-related arrhythmias in a very controlled and safe environment,” he said.

But the emotion and adrenaline of a live sporting event like football can have an additional impact on the heart that Hale said he couldn’t recreate at the hospital.

To better gauge how practicing sports affected Bentley’s heart, Hale placed a special heart monitor in his chest, called a loop recorder, to track Bentley’s heart rhythm during real drills and sporting events, along with medication and strict safety protocols.

Through the summer, Bentley trained and kept his conditioning up, even joining cross-country when he wasn’t yet cleared for full-contact pads. By early September, Hale allowed a limited return to football practice.

After a week of normal readings at practice, Bentley returned to Glenwood Stadium on Sept. 13. This time, he walked off the field after the final whistle.

To keep him safe, Hale requires an AED on hand and a second person with Bentley anytime he exercises or competes. Data from the loop recorder will contribute to research on CPVT—including rare, real-world measurements captured during a contact sport.

Hale credits Bentley’s survival and recovery to the immediate use of CPR and the AED at the track meet — a reminder, he said, that preparation saves lives.

Wallace is accepting donations to offset the cost of medical expenses and trips to Iowa City. Those contributions can be made to @erin-wallace-103 on Venmo.

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Woman’s quilt to be featured in Smithsonian’s state fair exhibit

By Kayla James

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    DES MOINES, Iowa (KCCI) — An Iowa woman is getting the chance to see one of her creations hanging in the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s newest exhibit, State Fairs: Growing American Craft.

The exhibit is described as a culmination of five years of work and research dedicated to artists’ crafts at state fairs across the nation. There are more than 240 works on display, with each gallery looking at “personal stories of craft found in different areas of the fairgrounds, from the art exhibits and heritage villages to the parades, dairy barns, and rodeos.”

One of Mary Shotwell’s many blue ribbon-winning quilts, called My Millefiori, will be displayed in the exhibit.

“Millefiori is actually the name of a style of quilting that goes back quite some years to British quilting, where it was all done by hand,” said Shotwell. “What you would do is you’d take a small piece of fabric and wrap it around some cardboard. Then you would stitch that so you could hardly see the stitches to the piece right next to it, and you’d keep doing that until gradually you built blocks.”

For the next year, the exhibit is up in the Smithsonian’s Renwick Gallery.

“The Smithsonian is an institution I’ve been to several times, and I’ve always been in awe,” said Shotwell.

Shotwell began working on the quilt in the late 2010s. She remembers finishing it in 2022 and then showing it at the Iowa State Fair and in the Des Moines Quilter’s Guild show in 2023.

“The fact that it got a special award at the Iowa State Fair for handwork also meant a lot to me, because English paper piecing is a very time-consuming but relaxing kind of activity,” said Shotwell.

By November, she received a letter from the curator of the Smithsonian Renwick Gallery.

“It was telling me that they had seen my quilt at the State Fair and they had selected it to be part of a state fairs special exhibit,” said Shotwell, who said the curator was asking for permission to display the quilt. “I won blue ribbons, that sort of thing, but this was beyond my wildest dreams.”

Quilting is something Shotwell is passionate about, but she’ll be the first to tell you it didn’t come too easily to her.

“When I first started, frankly, I wasn’t any good at it at all,” said Shotwell.

However, nearly 30 years later, something she says she wasn’t good at is now taking her to D.C. for the exhibit’s gala opening.

“The more I learned and the more I got into it, the more I loved it,” said Shotwell. “I’ve been very fortunate. I’ve had very good teachers. I’ve had very good friends who encourage me.”

The exhibit began Aug. 22 and goes on until Sept. 7, 2026.

Iowa’s iconic State Fair butter cow is also part of the year-long exhibition.

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Georgia Southern unveils statue honoring beloved bald eagle mascot, Freedom

By Frank Sulkowski

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    STATESBORO, Georgia (WJCL) — Gone – but certainly never forgotten.

“It’s bittersweet, but more than anything, I’m just touched by being part of Eagle Nation and the embrace of Eagle Nation,” said Steve Hein, executive director of the Center for Wildlife Education at Georgia Southern University.

Hein has felt that embrace since the spring.

Back in late March, Freedom, the beloved live bald eagle mascot of Georgia Southern passed away at the age of 21.

Rescued as a nestling in Florida in 2004 with a permanently injured beak, Freedom became a symbol of strength and pride, inspiring the community through appearances at sporting events, commencements, and various community engagements. His passing was mourned by the university and Eagle Nation.

But as a new football season kicks off in Statesboro, Freedom will now continue to soar.

Georgia Southern unveiled a bronze statue Friday evening honoring Freedom.

The ceremony, held outside Bishop Field House, brought together university leaders, state officials, donors, alumni and fans to celebrate Freedom’s enduring legacy.

“Freedom wasn’t just a mascot. He was a symbol of strength, unity and that True Blue pride that defines Georgia Southern,” said Georgia Southern President Dr. Kyle Marrero.

Hundreds were on hand for the statues unveiling – a gift made possible through the generosity of Mitch and Tonya Kincaid.

The Freedom statue now a permanent reminder of this feathered friends place among Georgia Southern legends – right there beside the statue of legendary coach Erk Russell – and soon, three more Eagle greats.

Georgia Southern President Dr. Kyle Marrero, sharing with WJCL 22 News, that in the works are three more additions to the plaza just outside Paulson Stadium.

Sculptures of College Football Hall of Fame members Paul Johnson, Tracy Ham and Adrian Peterson should be installed by the 2026 football season.

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Hellcat used in street racing, valued at $100K, crushed at impound lot

By Alex Suckow

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    LOUISVILLE, Kentucky (WLKY) — A 2021 Dodge Durango Hellcat, valued at $100K, was pancaked on Wednesday in Louisville.

Louisville officials said it was seized as part of the city’s street racing ordinance, which has been in effect since 2022.

LMPD said the car was confiscated last year during the Street Rod Nationals, and described it as a “Frankenstein” vehicle — because many of its parts had been stolen.

Normally, the seized cars are auctioned or used by LMPD, but police said this one poses too many liability and cost concerns.

They crushed the car publicly as a message to street racers that seized cars may get destroyed.

Earlier this year, Mayor Craig Greenberg said in 2024, the city seized more cars than any year prior in the Louisville’s history.

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Police warn about ‘alarming uptick’ in carfentanil overdoses

By Imani Fleming

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    MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (WMUR) — Manchester police are warning the public about what they call an “alarming uptick” in carfentanil-related deaths.

According to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, carfentanil is a synthetic opioid that is 10,000 times more potent than morphine and 100 times more potent than fentanyl. The drug is meant to be used as an animal tranquilizer.

“It is not meant for humans, so it’s typically used on elephants, lions, giraffes, things of that nature,” said Christopher Stawasz with American Medical Response.

According to the state medical examiner, carfentanil has contributed to 10 deaths in New Hampshire so far this year, including three in Manchester. That’s up from seven deaths statewide in 2024.

“A tiny, tiny gram, grain if you will, can literally kill you. We like to say that the first time you use carfentanil is generally the last time you use carfentanil. There’s no way that you can tell that carfentanil is in a product you’re using,” Stawasz said.

First responders said unlike heroin or fentanyl, overdose reversal drugs such as naloxone are generally ineffective when it comes to carfentanil.

“In some cases, it’s not able to be reversed. It will instantaneously put you down, knock you out, stop you from breathing and by the time someone figures out that you need help, unfortunately it’s too late,” Stawasz told News 9.

While carfentanil overdoses are up, Manchester police said overdoses from other drugs, like methamphetamine and fentanyl, are down.

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911 call shows fear, concern from couple trapped in car sinking in canal

By Ari Hait

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    MARTIN COUNTY, Florida (WPBF) — A 911 call released Tuesday shows how frantic a couple was as they were trapped inside a car sinking in a Martin County canal.

The Martin County Sheriff’s Office released the call Tuesday afternoon.

Investigators said the couple was driving on Rte. 714 in a remote section of northwestern Martin County when they were hit by another car, sending them off the road where they landed upside down in the canal.

The other car kept on going.

Fortunately, the woman in the car was able to get to her phone and call 911.

“Please! We need you!” she said to the dispatcher.

The woman, whose name has not been released, explains the situation to the dispatcher who asks if the car is sinking.

“Yes!” the woman replied. “That’s what it feels like. The car is sinking, sir.”

“Where’s the water now?” the dispatcher asked.

“We’re in the ditch outside,” she said.

“Is the water in the car and how high is it?” the dispatcher asked.

“It’s up to my stomach,” she said. “We don’t know how much time we have!”

The woman explained to the dispatcher that the power in the vehicle was out, and they could not open the doors nor the windows.

“How far in the water are you?” the dispatcher asked.

“We’re deep in the water!”

“And there’s no way to get that window down?”

“No. We tried everything! We’re scared!”

After about 10 minutes, the call appears to drop.

“You still there, sir? Ma’am?” the dispatcher asked.

There was no reply.

Fortunately, deputies arrived a short time later and were able to bust out the cars’ windows and pull the couple to safety.

Both victims were injured, but investigators said both are expected to fully recover.

The sheriff’s office said they are still looking for the other car involved in this crash.

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