Beverly Hills residents concerned by “palm tree tourists” stopping in street to take selfies with city’s landscape

By Web Staff

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    BEVERLY HILLS, California (KCAL/KCBS) — Local News Beverly Hills residents concerned by “palm tree tourists” stopping in street to take selfies with city’s landscape losangeles By Gio Insignares, September 17, 2025 / 10:57 PM PDT / KCAL News

Though Beverly Hills is well-known for having some of the world’s most iconic palm tree-lined streets, residents are beginning to grow tired of “palm tree tourists” stopping in the street to snap photos of the city’s iconic landscapes.

They say that the concerning trend really took off thanks to social media and influencers, with groups of people flooding popular streets like Rodeo Drive, Beverly Drive and Cañon Drive.

“It’s definitely taking a risk,” said Jeremiah Cox, a Beverly Hills resident. “Because I drive through there all the time, and sometimes people are in the middle of the street, and you have to honk.”

Visitors say that with so many iconic locations, it’s hard to pass up on a perfect photo.

“Pictures with the palms and the streets; it is iconic,” said two tourists. “Every spot that you have here, it’s like, ‘Okay, I need to take a photo because it’s so beautiful.'”

City leaders say that there has always been a presence of people taking pictures, but that they’re taking the sudden spike in popularity, and the safety concerns associated with it, very seriously.

“At the end of the day, this is a hazard for everyone involved — the pedestrians in the street and the drivers as well,” said Beverly Hills City Manager Keith Sterling.

He says that police have stepped up their patrols in popular areas, stopping visitors from entering the roads and having them move to a safer place. While they continue trying to find ways to address the concerns, city leaders also say that police are using cameras and drones to monitor trouble spots.

So far, Sterling said that they’re making sure that people are educated and aware of the dangers, but that citations are a real possibility if the behavior continues.

“We hope it doesn’t get to that, but if we need to go there, we will,” Sterling said.

In August, the Beverly Hills City Council debated creating a designated photo island, but was concerned that it would lead to even larger crowds and more chaos.

“It’s kind of a way of life in Beverly Hills, but it can’t be at the expense of public safety, not only for the people in the streets, but for our residents,” Sterling said.

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Bodycam video shows Bristol, Pa. officer rescue man from burning apartment building — on his 24th birthday

By Joe Brandt

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    BRISTOL, Pennsylvania (KYW) — Another angle of Wednesday’s Bristol, Pennsylvania, fire is visible in newly released body camera video showing a police officer helping residents out of a burning apartment building.

Crews were called to the Levittown Trace Apartments on Ford Road around 5:30 a.m. Wednesday and found heavy fire coming from a unit on the second floor. First responders worked to get people out while firefighters battled the flames, which eventually spread to a total of 12 units and left them uninhabitable.

No one was seriously injured, but two firefighters and a resident were taken to area hospitals for treatment.

In the video, the officer runs up to the burning building and sees a man’s legs hanging out of a window.

“Hanging, hanging from the window,” another officer shouts as the officer helps the man.

“My phone, my phone,” the resident says. “Your phone? Don’t worry about your phone, man,” the officer says.

The video begins with the officer knocking on doors and alerting people to get out. He takes breaks to go outside for fresh air due to the smoke filling the building.

At one point, the officer helps firefighters drag out hoses to get water on the flames.

The Bristol Township police chief said the officer was working on his 24th birthday when he sprang into action.

The cause of the fire is still under investigation. The American Red Cross said it was working with about 40 residents who are displaced.

Matt Cavallo contributed to this report.

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Teen convicted of working with extremist groups to carry out terrorist attacks in Philadelphia area

By Tom Dougherty

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    PHILADELPHIA (KYW) — A teenager has been convicted of working with extremist groups in Syria with the intent of carrying out terrorist attacks in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and New Jersey, specifically targeting the Philly Pride Parade, the Army-Navy game and other events in the city.

Muhyyee-Ud-din Abdul-Rahman, 19, was found guilty in a jury trial on Wednesday of attempting to possess weapons of mass destruction and risking a catastrophe, among other charges, District Attorney Larry Krasner announced in a press conference.

“The evidence in the case indicated that a Philadelphian, 17 years of age, in our opinion, self-radicalized or was radicalized, and wanted to be a bomb maker for terrorists,” Krasner said. “His desire to be a bomb maker for terrorists resulted in multiple tests of actual bombs. Resulted in a search for potential targets for what we believe was a terrorist bombing in the Philadelphia area and within the United States.”

Abdul-Rahman plotted to attack events in Philadelphia, including the city’s Pride parade and the Army-Navy football game, a Black university, the Valley Forge Military Academy in Delaware County and nuclear power plants in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, Krasner’s office said in a news release.

Abdul-Rahman was arrested in August 2023 when he was 17. Announcing Abdul-Rahman’s arrest, Krasner called the teen “an aspiring terrorist.”

Law enforcement said Abdul-Rahman had communicated with Katibat al Tawhid wal Jihad, or KTJ, and Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, which are designated global terrorism groups by the U.S. government.

First Assistant District Attorney Robert Listenbee said Wednesday that the teen acquired a passport and planned on going to Syria, never to return to the U.S.

“He said he was not planning to target any place in the United States, but every indication that we have was that he was,” Listenbee said.

The teen sent and received media containing terrorism propaganda and guidance on committing criminal attacks, including how to make a bomb, the FBI previously said.

“The specific type of bombs that he was in the process of creating included TATP, which is one of the most volatile and destructive weapons imaginable,” Listenbee said.

Listenbee said Abdul-Rahman attempted to make a TATP in his backyard but “didn’t get the ingredients right.” The assistant first district attorney added that Abdul-Rahman had between 12 and 20 attempts of trying to make bombs.

Investigators found that Abdul-Rahman was searching online for potential targets in the Philadelphia area and evidence of hatred for the LGBTQ+ community, prosecutors said. Listenbee and Krasner said Wednesday there were 8,000 searches.

“This individual had a grievance, a grievance against homosexuality. He asked the questions in one of his searches, ‘What is the punishment for homosexuality in Sharia Law?’ Which is the Muslim law, as I understand it,” Listenbee said. “He then also indicated in a statement that he felt that the homosexual agenda in the United States was too extensive, along with some of the conservative agendas of the Proud Boys and others. He indicated all along that he wanted to become a bomber, no question about it.”

Customs and Border Protection records showed 14 international shipments of military and tactical gear shipped to the teen’s West Philadelphia address.

Prosecutors said Abdul-Rahman was being held on $5 million bond. Krasner said prosecutors will be back in court Wednesday afternoon to determine Abdul-Rahman’s bail status.

Stephanie Ballesteros and Dan Snyder contributed to this report.

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Colorado student injured in Evergreen High School shooting “still fighting for his life,” relative says

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    JEFFERSON COUNTY, Colorado (KCNC) — The uncle of Matthew Silverstone, one of the students shot by a fellow student at Evergreen High School in Colorado last week, talked about the teenager’s recovery one week after the shooting. At 12:24 p.m. Sept. 10, a 16-year-old student began shooting inside and outside the school, injuring two students before he turned the gun on himself and died.

Matthew was critically injured in the shooting and has what his family has called “a long road” ahead for his recovery.

“There’s so much more to Matthew than that. So much life. So much love,” said his uncle.

The comments came in a video of Kris Koehler was released by the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office on Wednesday afternoon that showed him talking about his nephew and describing what kind of person he is, along with what remains to be a long road of recovery for the 18-year-old.

“He’s still fighting for his life every day, and we have glimmers of hope. We take every little baby step in the right direction and celebrate it,” said Koehler. “But to see him, to see him there, it’s great when he will squeeze a hand, but at the same time, it’s so painful to see that anyone, especially a kid, but anyone, would have to endure that.”

Koehler said in the video that he’s one of four proud uncles and said that he was talking on behalf of Matthew’s mom, his uncles, his sisters and the rest of the family.

Matthew’s uncle described the teen as an “ordinary teenage boy” who “loves his friends” and is at the skate park almost every day, until he’s told to go home.” He also said that Matthew would go out of his way to help anyone who needed it.

His uncle said that Matthew’s mother adopted him when he was just about six months old and that she hasn’t left his bedside at the hospital since the shooting.

“She has had this feeling of she failed him by not being there to protect him. To guard him from letting this happen,” said Kris Koehler.

Matthew is one of three children in a single parent family. All are adopted. Matthew was about six months old when his mother gained custody of him and his uncle says Matthew had been in an abusive situation.

“To know that history, to know that that’s the start he had, makes all of this just a bit even more unfair,” Koehler shared.

“She just has so much love, so much love to share with everybody, and that, really, Matthew, really has absorbed that that’s made him the person that he is. She’s the living example of that,” said Koehler.

Now there is a new challenge for Matthew and his family.

“Matthew is still fighting. My sister is going to do everything she can to help him in that fight. You know, as a single mother of three, she is the rock of our family. It’s now our turn to get as much support for her as we possibly can.”

Koehler also read some of the cards the family has received, some from students and others from the community, calling Matthew a hero for what he did the day of the shooting, “telling people to get away when they were coming back from lunch,” and to “please get better soon.”

Evergreen High School students do not have school this week with school officials informing students and families about the return to school process on Sunday, after all students have had the chance to take a school-wide survey.

In the meantime, Matthew remains in a hospital bed. So far, an online fundraising campaign has raised about half the goal.

“I want to people to know that Matthew is still fighting. It’s going to be a long road. We are coming to grips with what could potentially be a life-long recovery. And all of the needs and extra burdens that’s going to put on my sister.”

But his nephew remains an inspiration.

“Matthew is not only my nephew, but he’s now my hero,” said Koehler.

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Colorado family fights for access to lifesaving drug for infant with Barth syndrome

By Karen Morfitt

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    COLORADO (KCNC) — A Colorado family is in a race against time to secure access to an experimental drug that’s keeping their infant son alive.

Gilbert Dryden was born with Barth syndrome — an ultra-rare genetic condition that affects only one in 300,000 births, almost exclusively boys.

The disease compromises the mitochondria — the energy-producing structures in nearly every cell — and can lead to heart failure, even in infancy.

For Gilbert’s mom Madison Dryden, the condition is one she feared. Her brother, Ben, died from heart failure as a baby — a tragedy that left the family without answers for decades.

“His heart basically turned … it was turning into scar tissue, kind of like turning into stone,” Madison’s mother, Jeanne Eiss said, “There was nothing we could do.”

When Gilbert was admitted to the NICU shortly after birth, Madison’s thoughts went immediately to her late brother.

“Once we were admitted to the NICU, that was immediately where my mind went — to my brother Ben,” said Madison Dryden.

“I think it would be worse for her because she has hope,” Eiss said through tears as she thought back to losing her son.

At Children’s Hospital Colorado, pediatric cardiologist Dr. Kathryn Chatfield helped identify Gilbert’s condition.

“It’s so rare that in any given state there may be only one or two patients diagnosed,” Chatfield said. “When the mitochondria can’t produce enough energy, the heart muscle weakens. If that dysfunction progresses, the heart can fail — and ultimately, patients may die or require a transplant.”

The drug, elamipretide, is not yet FDA approved. But for critically ill patients like Gilbert, the FDA has made it available under emergency use authorization.

Dr. Brian Stauffer, a cardiologist and researcher at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, worked with Chatfield and others on initial research into the drug starting in 2015.

“When we treated hearts with elamipretide, we saw significant improvement in mitochondrial function. More energy production, which we believe improves heart function,” said Stauffer.

For the Dryden family, the results were immediate and dramatic.

“Within a month of being on elamipretide, he got his NG tube out. The next month, he came home,” Madison said.

Despite a recommendation from an FDA advisory panel last October, final approval was delayed and then rejected in May. The agency cited the small trial size — and requested more data.

“We don’t have the luxury of waiting many more months or years,” said Chatfield. “Companies must eventually turn a profit to stay in business. If this stalls too long, they may have to stop production entirely.”

Rep. Jason Crow, who represents Colorado’s 6th Congressional District, is now leading a bipartisan push for action, with almost all of Colorado’s congressional delegation signing on to a letter urging the FDA to make a timely decision.

“If this is the only drug keeping your child alive — give people the damn drug,” Crow said in a Zoom interview. “We understand there’s a process, but make government work.”

In August, the FDA agreed to reconsider and a new drug application was resubmitted under an accelerated pathway. A final decision is now expected Sept. 26.

In the meantime, the Dryden family is counting every remaining vial in their refrigerator.

“We get a three-month supply,” Madison said. “We are talking end of October.”

“We had to sit down with our daughters and say: ‘We’re working hard on this because if Gilbert doesn’t get his medicine, his heart might stop working. And if his heart stops working, he will die,'” she said.

The FDA did not respond to a request for comment when contacted for this story. CBS Colorado will provide updates as more information becomes available.

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Lake Tahoe neighbors protest California plan to euthanize mother bear Hope after home break-ins

By Ashley Sharp

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    LAKE TAHOE, California (KPIX) — A mother black bear and her cub are causing quite the stir in South Lake Tahoe, as some neighbors are now rallying community support for the duo.

It comes as the California Department of Fish and Wildlife confirmed to CBS Sacramento on Wednesday that they are monitoring the bears and plan to euthanize the mother, which is identified by its tag number as bear number 753.

“CDFW had determined that the bear is ‘habituated’ – meaning it has learned to associate people, homes and neighborhoods as sources of food and has become completely reliant and dependent on those human food sources. Consequently, CDFW has determined that management action is required, and bear 753 has been approved for lethal removal,” a spokesperson for the agency told CBS Sacramento in a statement.

On both Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, Tahoe’s nonprofit BEAR League and south shore neighbors teamed up to call attention to the plans and send a message that bears should not be killed. They hosted a roadside protest near the Tahoe Keys Marina.

The Tahoe community has lovingly named the mother, Hope, and her playful cub, Bounce.

“We want to evolve. We want to coexist,” said Staci Baker at the roadside rally Wednesday night.

Baker is a veterinarian of 30 years in the greater Tahoe region.

“We can be kinder and smarter. We can do this as a community. We don’t want CDFW trapping and slaughtering anymore,” Baker said.

The CDFW said the approved “lethal removal” follows a series of more than a dozen home break-ins by the bears this summer.

“This sow and now its dependent cub have repeatedly broken into homes, including occupied homes and including situations that were no fault of the property owners. Obviously, this creates an unsafe situation when an adult bear is actively looking to break into homes and other buildings. From our long experience in the Tahoe Basin and other parts of the state, this conflict behavior is likely to continue and escalate over time as the bears persist in seeking out human food sources. While this bear has not shown aggressive behavior toward people, that is too often the outcome in situations such as this, once a bear has lost its natural fear of people,” a spokesperson for the agency told CBS Sacramento.

Kathi Zollinger, a volunteer team leader for the BEAR League, says she has been working round-the-clock daily to humanely ‘haze’ the bears with paintball guns, vehicles and other non-lethal options to help push the bears back to the wild where they belong.

“People call and we will go haze her out of mainly the keys, sometimes up to 9 hours a day,” said Zollinger, describing the work as a full-time job.

She says now it feels like time is running out since CDFW confirmed its plans to euthanize the mother.

“I cry regularly about it. It’s awful they think the only thing they can do is kill the bear,” Zollinger said. “She’s not the only one doing this. There are six moms in the area we are aware of. What are they going to do? Kill them all? That is ridiculous.”

Zollinger says the BEAR League would rather see the animals relocated and even offered to pay for it.

“It’s not the perfect answer but it’s better than her being dead,” Zollinger said. “You can’t kill your way out of this. That doesn’t solve the problem.”

CBS Sacramento asked CDFW what will happen to ‘Bounce’ the cub if its mother is euthanized.

“The cub will be evaluated if and when we are able to catch it. Our goal was to get the cub into a permitted wildlife rehabilitation facility – to break this generational pattern of human conflict and home invasions – and return it to the wild in the spring when it is big enough and old enough to care for itself and when there are a lot of natural resources on the landscape to support its transition to being a wild bear,” a spokesperson for CDFW responded.

The agency clarified it is not actively setting traps for any bears in this area at this time.

BEAR League advocates disagree with CDFW’s approach and say human error can be at least partly to blame for the “break-ins.”

Zollinger says in several cases their group believes home doors were left unlocked or windows were left open, which allowed the bears easy entry and says they cannot be blamed for searching for food to survive in bear country, where the loss of habitat is threatening their kind.

“We do want people to learn how to coexist with the bears. We do that through education. We want people to wire their homes now,” Zollinger said.

She says electric wiring homes in the Tahoe region, which will administer a non-lethal shock when the bears get too close, is the best way to save the animals and protect property.

They also advocate that Tahoe neighbors keep their doors and windows shut and locked, properly secure and dispose of garbage, clean up fallen fruit from trees in their yards and actively work to scare away any bears near a home so they do not get too comfortable.

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Vandalism against a Trump banner turns to gunfire at a Nantahala Gorge business

By Elijah Skipper

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    SWAIN COUNTY, North Carolina (WLOS) — What began as vandalism outside a rafting company in the Nantahala Gorge escalated into gunfire, according to the Swain County Sheriff’s Office and the business owner who caught the incident on camera.

On Sept. 6, deputies were dispatched around 5:52 p.m. to the Paddle Inn Rafting Company on Highway 19 West for reports of shots fired. Sheriff Brian Kirkland said a deputy responded but did not see the suspect vehicle at the scene. Days later, investigators became aware of a video of the confrontation that was published on YouTube.

Owner Mark Thomas told News 13 he was watching his CCTV cameras when he saw a Jeep slam on its brakes and back up near his property. He said the driver got out, walked across the road, and tore down a Trump banner belonging to his 87-year-old mother.

“I got it up the screen and I’m like, okay, what’s this clown doing?” Thomas said. “And when he got a grip on it that first time he pulled the sign, I was like, I shouldn’t have waited. I could have saved mom’s sign.”

Thomas said he stepped onto his porch with a rifle but did not aim at the suspect. “I don’t want to kill anybody. My life has got to be in threat. I fired two shots in the air,” he added.

According to Thomas, the man in the Jeep fired back several rounds from the road. At one point, Thomas said he heard at least five or six more shots while he was on the phone with 911.

“Who in the world would be psycho enough to come back to a Trump supporter on a porch with a rifle?” Thomas said.

Despite what happened, Thomas said he is not looking for revenge.

“I don’t want to see him get 20 years in jail, but I want him to have some time to think a mark that he carries with him that reminds him I did some stupid stuff when I was young, and the opportunity to make it right, to live a normal life, be a productive citizen,” Thomas said.

Sheriff Kirkland confirmed to News 13 that the vehicle involved has been identified. “We are currently conducting a criminal investigation regarding this incident,” Kirkland said. “The vehicle involved has been identified, and we are coordinating with multiple law enforcement agencies to effectively bring this investigation to a close.”

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Ice cream shop tests new cocoa as shortage drives up costs

By Maria Sarrouh

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    CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I. (CTV Network) — The global cocoa shortage has hit a Prince Edward Island ice-cream shop, jeopardizing a fan favourite.

Holman’s Ice Cream Parlour in Summerside, P.E.I. is testing new cocoa powders after its go-to was taken off the shelves amid a global shortage, owner Daniel Meister says.

The shop has backup batches in the freezer while it searches for the right replacement with similar fat content, pH and colour. Alternatives exist, but some cost up to four times more than before.

“We wouldn’t dare take chocolate ice cream out of the lineup. It’s a very, very popular flavour,” Meister said. “It’s a staple… it’s not really something we can take off the menu.”

Holman’s previously paid $9.99 for 700 grams. Over the last couple of years, that rose to $20. But the shop needs much bigger quantities. One product they’re testing goes for $600 for a 20-kilogram bag. Meister says that bag might cover five or six batches.

“It makes a significant difference in our cost,” he said. “Can we find something that matches the quality that we’re expecting while also not bankrupting ourselves or having to pass on that cost to our customers?”

Holman’s isn’t alone, Meister says. Recently, another business in the area couldn’t find cocoa and posted on social media asking for a supplier. The Holman’s team ran over with a few packages they had in store to tide them over.The math matters even more for small businesses managing their margins. Holman’s raised prices by $1 across the board earlier this year and hopes to keep them steady next.

Cocoa costs have surged since late 2023 due to production challenges in countries including Ghana and the Ivory Coast, which experts link to climate change.

Some companies have cut cocoa-related products altogether, says food expert Sylvain Charlebois, a visiting scholar at McGill University’s Faculty of Agriculture.

“They knew they couldn’t sell some of these products at a higher price, essentially. So, they stopped carrying some of these products,” Charlebois said.

His advice to businesses and manufacturers across the Maritimes and the country is not to rely on a single source. Instead, he said it’s safer to have a few suppliers for important ingredients.

“I wish I could say that there is some good news, but it’s quite problematic,” Charlebois said. “The same is happening with coffee…prices are way up.”

Holman’s is known for making more than 100 handcrafted flavours, with 16 on the daily rotation. The shop says that while some recipes may shift, the standard won’t.

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What Prime Minister Mark Carney’s meeting with Mexico’s president could mean for North American trade

By Judy Trinh

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    OTTAWA (CTV Network) — Prime Minister Mark Carney is embarking on a pivotal meeting with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum on Thursday, just as the United States officially launches the process to review the North American trade agreement.

The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative will seek public comments on the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) over 45 days and has scheduled a public hearing in November.

Public consultation is required by law and is a clear sign that the Trump administration is preparing to renegotiate, not just review, the trilateral agreement, says Eric Miller, president of Rideau Potomac Strategy Group.

“They’re trying to get stakeholders a list of all the things they have concerns about. It doesn’t mean all of them become priorities, but they’re starting with a big list and are going to shrink it down to a smaller list,” said Miller, whose client list includes Canadian exporters.

Under the current agreement, Canada’s trade with the U.S. is 85 per cent tariff free, but that could change when CUSMA expires next June.

“Donald Trump doesn’t have a commitment to a bigger vision of North American collaboration,” Miller said.

Diversifying trade with Mexico

Squeezed by Trump’s sectoral tariffs on steel, aluminum and autos, Canada’s GDP shrunk by 1.6 per cent in the second quarter of 2025.

It’s under this pressure that Carney is meeting with Sheinbaum to strengthen their bilateral relationship and increase trade.

Mexico is Canada’s third biggest trading partner and last year, the two countries did $56 billion in imports and exports.

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand and Minister Dominic LeBlanc, the government’s point person for U.S. trade negotiations, will also be part of the meetings in Mexico City.

Ahead of the prime minister’s 36-hour whirlwind trip, senior government officials told reporters in a briefing that Carney and Sheinbaum will hold one-on-one meetings, followed by a working lunch with their cabinet ministers and secretaries.

A new strategic partnership will be signed that would include commitments for more frequent high-level contact between the two governments.

Other than in June, when Carney met with Sheinbaum on the margins of the G7, the last time there was an official meeting between the leaders of Canada and Mexico without the U.S. was in 2017.

The prime minister will also visit a train terminal to watch Canadian Pacific Railway offload a delivery of Canadian wheat, and host a reception to connect business leaders from both countries.

‘Aligning’ interests Goldy Hyder, CEO of the Business Council of Canada, says the government needs to use the meeting to better position itself for the CUSMA review by working “in tandem with Mexico to align” interests.

Hyder says Canada also needs to pitch itself as an “investment destination” for mining and energy, as well as for developing port infrastructure.

According to John Boscariol, who leads the International Trade and Investment Law Group at McCarthy Tetrault, Canada only represents five per cent of Mexico’s international trade.

As Canada looks to diversify its trade, Boscariol says Mexico is the “natural next best trading partner to the United States.”

Boscariol sees an opportunity for Canada to sell more auto parts to Mexico, along with agricultural products such as potash.

Co-operation vs. competition

But the two countries cannot replace the U.S. with each other.

Duncan Wood, with Washington-based Hurst International Consulting, has researched Mexican trade and supply chains. Wood says as CUSMA negotiations progress, tensions between the two smaller partners could increase.

“I find it very difficult to imagine how the two countries are going to find a lot of common ground. There’s so much pressure right now pushing them away from each other as each one tries to secure preferential treatment from Washington.”

Wood says Carney and Sheinbaum need to discuss aligning their policies on China if they want a stronger position when CUSMA is renegotiated.

“The big thing that matters in Washington is if you can show how Mexico and Canada can help with the United States’ geopolitical competition with China.”

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Mother of child raped, beaten arrested; boyfriend already behind bars

By Web Staff

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    SHREVEPORT, Louisiana (KTBS) — The mother of a young child who investigators say was raped and beaten nearly to death last month is now behind bars — along with her boyfriend who was previously accused in the crime.

Caddo Parish sheriff’s investigators arrested Shea Upshaw, 31, Wednesday on charges of accessory after the fact and obstruction of justice. She was arrested in Bossier Parish and booked into the Caddo Correctional Center. No bond is set.

Already in custody is Lucas Logan, 31, of Stonewall. He’s held in CCC on charges of first-degree rape, attempted first-murder, 16 counts of production of pornography involving juveniles and molestation of a juvenile.

Logan was arrested on Aug. 2 after deputies, who responded to a sexual assault complaint, found a nearly lifeless six-year-old child in a home on Farmridge Road in Keithville.

Deputies said the child had been sexually assaulted and suffered what was described as life-threatening injuries.

Logan was identified as the suspect in the child’s injuries.

Upshaw was interviewed multiple times during the investigation. She confessed to lying to protect Lucas, the sheriff’s office said, by cleaning and removing evidence related to the crime.

Caddo District Judge Chris Victory signed an arrest warrant for Upshaw on Sept. 10.

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