logo
Moore PD hosts ‘Cola with a Cop' May 31

Moore PD hosts ‘Cola with a Cop' May 31

Yahoo6 days ago

MOORE, Okla. (KFOR) – The Moore Police Department is preparing to host 'Cola with A Cop' highlighting community outreach through conversation and cola within the Hispanic community on May 31.
According to Moore PD, Hispanic officers from the Moore Police Department will be on-site to answer any police-related questions residents may have.
Oklahoma State Fair announces 2025 concert lineup
DETAILS:
Location: Supermercados Morelos
Address: 621 N. Moore Ave., Moore, OK 73160
Time: 11:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.
The event is free.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Navy Sailor, 21, Suddenly Disappears After She Was Last Seen at Station Barracks
Navy Sailor, 21, Suddenly Disappears After She Was Last Seen at Station Barracks

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Navy Sailor, 21, Suddenly Disappears After She Was Last Seen at Station Barracks

Angelina Petra Resendiz, a 21-year-old Navy sailor from Texas, has disappeared, according to family and authorities Virginia State Police said the woman was last seen at her barracks in Norfolk on May 29 'She's spent no money, made no calls. She just stopped. She disappeared," her mother, Esmerelda Castle saidA Navy sailor has suddenly disappeared, and her family is desperate to find her. The Virginia State Police (VSP) announced on Tuesday, June 3, that a 'critically missing adult alert' has been issued for 21-year-old Angelina Petra Resendiz. Resendiz was last seen 'at her barracks in Miller Hall at Naval Station Norfolk' at 10 a.m. local time on Thursday, May 29, according to state police. She is described as a 5-foot-tall white/Hispanic woman with brown eyes and black hair, and weighing about 110 lbs. "She's very kind. She's very loving," said her mother, Esmeralda Castle, according to ABC affiliate WVEC. Castle lives in Texas, where Resendiz grew up, according to the report. She said her daughter goes by the nickname 'Angie' and is a culinary specialist with the Navy. Before her disappearance, Resendiz would talk to a family member or friend 'every single day,' Castle told WVEC. "Her and my sister have a 400-day streak on Snapchat,' she added. Last week, friends and family stopped hearing from Resendiz, and the Navy sailor missed work, according to Castle. She reached out to the Navy after she was unable to reach her daughter. "She just stopped existing Thursday,' the mom explained. 'She's spent no money, made no calls. She just stopped. She disappeared.' State police said Resendiz's disappearance 'poses a credible threat' to her health and safety. Castle told CBS affiliate WTKR that her daughter wouldn't leave work 'unauthorized' or 'without permission.' 'Angie's too scared to miss work; she wouldn't do that,' the mom explained. She said she is going to Virginia herself 'to find out what I can.' Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Anyone with information about Resendiz's whereabouts is asked to contact the Naval Criminal Investigative Service at (877) 579-3648. Castle told WVEC that her daughter does not drive. Family described her as a fun and kind woman. "This isn't like Angie. I just want to find her," the mom said. Read the original article on People

Queens great-grandma beaten by unhinged woman on NYC subway train can't shake feeling attacker is still ‘behind' her: ‘I heard ‘bop!'
Queens great-grandma beaten by unhinged woman on NYC subway train can't shake feeling attacker is still ‘behind' her: ‘I heard ‘bop!'

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Queens great-grandma beaten by unhinged woman on NYC subway train can't shake feeling attacker is still ‘behind' her: ‘I heard ‘bop!'

A great-grandmother from Queens who was badly beaten by an unhinged woman in a Midtown subway station last month is frightened to ride the rails after the harrowing unprovoked beating, she told The Post. Aurore Gonzalez, 73 — who was allegedly pummeled by Marie McWilliams, 36, May 1 — said she can't shake the terrifying feeling that her attacker is still right 'behind' her. 'She hit me as I was stepping off the train and I heard 'bop!'' she told The Post Tuesday, the same day McWilliams was arrested for assault. 'Then I started falling backwards and sliding, and I fell into homeless person's belongings covered in feces,' she said. Weeks after the nightmarish ordeal, Gonzalez said she still suffers from sleeplessness and anxiety. 'I still take the subway and I look around now,' said Gonzalez, who has five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. '[I'm] looking behind my head all the time. I'm looking for her.' Gonzalez was riding the Manhattan-bound E train to her job cleaning law offices at around 4:30 p.m when she allegedly heard McWilliams jabbering racist comments to herself. 'She was just talking loud to herself about Puerto Ricans and blacks and saying that they're no good and that they shouldn't be here!' said Gonzalez. Gonzalez, who is Hispanic, said she turned around and asked the erratic straphanger, 'Are you talking to me?!' McWilliams 'didn't say anything' but followed her as she stepped off the train at the Fifth Avenue-53rd Street station — and then she pounced, repeatedly punching her, she said. 'When I was stepping off the train she hit me in the back of the head,' she said. 'She grabbed my bun…and she started scratching me with a blade on my face,' said Gonzalez, who still had two black eyes from the assault Tuesday. 'I [was] bleeding and I fell into a homeless person's crap and I had to go to my job,' she said. Gonzalez said she now suffers from kidney trouble due to the fall, along with scarring near her eye and migraine headaches. 'This just isn't right. I'm in pain. I have to be on painkillers,' said Gonzalez. 'I couldn't sleep for two weeks. The anxiety, I couldn't eat. At night on my job I would just cry,' said Gonzalez. Asked about her attacker's arrest, Gonzalez said she's 'relieved.' 'I am so happy to hear this. I will testify! She should not have done that. She should keep her hands to herself!' Gonzalez said. 'Have some respect for older people!' McWilliams was arraigned in Manhattan Criminal Court Tuesday and granted supervised release by Judge Marva Brown over prosecutors' request for $10,000 cash bail or $30,000 bond.

Readers sound off on teaching trades, the Boulder attack and Charles Rangel
Readers sound off on teaching trades, the Boulder attack and Charles Rangel

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Readers sound off on teaching trades, the Boulder attack and Charles Rangel

Manhattan: If President Trump wants to 'Make America Great Again,' he should do the following: Build a 'big, beautiful' trade school in the Bronx, Queens or Brooklyn. Call it the Trump Vocational High School for the Trades and make it a private school. Any graduate from a middle school can apply to the lottery for admittance. The cost should be $60,000 a year. The beautiful upper-class child will pay that. Beautiful children with little family money will be offered a scholarship based on need. This is not affirmative action, which is now illegal. This beautiful private high school with Trump's blessing would teach all the trades and have all the equipment to do it. It would be state-of-the-art and would cost a lot of money to operate, but it would be worth it. The cost of prosecuting and incarcerating each criminal in New York is more than $500,000 a year. One in four Black children born in the U.S. will face time in jail, and one in six Hispanic children will. I am willing to bet that a student entering this school will not commit any crime. They will thrive, prosper and learn a trade that will keep them out of harm's way for the rest of their lives. I don't have to list all the trades, like electrical, construction, masonry, woodworking, plumbing, car mechanics, cooking etc. The school should also offer classes in the arts, which will probably develop more character in each student. It should not involve memorizing facts, but focus on exploring the beauty of art, music, theater, dance, science and nature. What better place than NYC to explore this? Leonard Smoke Manhattan: With business slow because of a decline in tourism, dishwashers and busboys not showing up for work due to fear of ICE agent raids, combined with increased prices of supplies due to tariffs, I am not sure how much longer I can keep my restaurant going during Trump's 'Make America Great Again' administration. Mahatma Kane Jeeves Henderson, Nev.: Even after being found at fault, I'm surprised that Rep. Maxine Waters' campaign committee has agreed to pay $68,000 for campaign violations. I'm surprised, mainly because whenever Trump does something she doesn't agree with, she's always among the first to say nasty things about him. Maybe now people will start to realize that Maxine is hardly an angel. David Tulanian Lynchburg, Tenn.: It seems like the pro-Trumpers can never let Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden enjoy their retirements, as witnessed by their endless disparaging of Clinton and Biden to distract Americans from the complete and utter disaster the second Trump administration has become. From Voicer Jim Newton, everyone is reminded about the alleged 'cover-up' of Biden's mental health and 'Hillary Clinton's Benghazi mess,' which resulted in the deaths of four Americans. Mental decline and needless deaths of Americans are politically acceptable as long as they are on full public display from a president whose political ideology aligns with yours — for example, Trump's incoherent, rambling, ludicrous efforts during his first term to hoodwink the American public into believing that COVID would miraculously disappear while refrigerator trucks had to be used in hospital parking lots to store the thousands of corpses funeral homes could not accommodate on a daily basis. Godfrey Daniel Jr. Bronx: Trump is blaming Biden's open borders for the attack on the people in Boulder, Colo., but according to Trump, Biden was executed in 2020. How can a dead man be blamed? Richie Nagan Bedford, N.Y.: Re 'Colo. fiend wanted to 'kill Zionists' ' (June 3): Violence against any peaceful protest should always be condemned. However, the media is ignoring the reason for the rising antisemitism in the U.S. and throughout the world. While Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has failed to find and rescue all the Oct. 7 hostages, he has managed the slaughter of 70,000 people, including 17,000 babies and children, some burned alive in hospitals, press tents, in vans transporting humanitarian aid or in emergency food distribution areas 'strategically' designated by the Israeli government. Netanyahu and his disproportionate response to the Hamas attack are responsible for making Israel the world's pariah, and has made innocent Jews the target of hatred and violence. This will not end until Netanyahu ceases his war on children and is tried and convicted for war crimes. Céline Secada Fort Lauderdale, Fla.: As antisemitism is growing globally, here at home it is growing daily. Are people aligning themselves with Hitler's antisemitic objectives through the process of elimination, or do they detest the Jewish state of Israel so deeply that they shoot and kill any Jew randomly just to satisfy the hate they carry inside? The Nazi extermination plan was a complete failure! Every innocent Jew was killed in vain because of antisemitic beliefs, just as innocent Jews are being struck down today for those same beliefs. It proved nothing then and it proves nothing now because the Jew was never the enemy in the first place. The real enemy is the hate that lives within one's thoughts. Roberta Chaleff Canton, N.Y.: The Daily News seems mystified as to why anti-Jewish sentiment is on the rise. It's of course obvious to anyone who isn't deeply compromised by AIPAC and Israel's lobbyists. When we wake up daily for months to the news that Israel has killed more Palestinian refugees — people driven from their homeland decades ago by Zionist settlers — with American-made weapons, it should be obvious. Greg Todd Peters Township, Pa.: It is ironic and tragic that as he welcomes white immigrants who claim to have been persecuted in South Africa, our dictator president has slammed the door on those hailing from other countries, including Haiti, Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua and Afghanistan. People being readied for deportation include those who've been here legally under humanitarian provisions, those who've been promised resettlement here and those who risked their lives to aid our ill-fated occupation of Afghanistan. Many face persecution, arrest, torture, and/or death if they're forced to return to their home countries. An administration that has turned its back on human rights could not care less. The word of the U.S. is no longer its bond. The new Trump America is a cold and cruel place that seeks to purge our country of immigrants of color, bully the rest of the free world into submission and believes the U.S. can exist and thrive with no alliances. Oren Spiegler Lynbrook, L.I.: I read the article by Leonard Greene highlighting the accomplishments of Charles Rangel ('Young lion to political giant,' column, June 1), however, two important pieces were missing. Rangel was able to get apartments that he was well-qualified for that were probably intended for those who had limited resources who needed a decent place to live with their family. How did the former congressman qualify? He didn't need affordable housing (my opinion). In 1972, Patrolman Phil Cardillo was shot (later died). Rangel was able to go to the crime scene and told the NYPD that he would bring those responsible to the 28th Precinct the next day. That never happened. Why? We'll never know, but we can think he should have never been able to use his status to interfere with an active police investigation. Rangel should have been arrested and charged with interfering with the arrest of those involved. Larry Lombardo Brooklyn: June 3 marked the 100th birthday of the beloved actor Tony Curtis. He worked in films as real-life people: David O. Selznick, the Great Imposter, Sam Giancana, Lepke, the Boston Strangler, Houdini and Ira Hayes, the Marine who planted the flag on Iwo Jima. Curtis worked in films with Cary Grant, Gregory Peck, Henry Fonda, Dean Martin, Kirk Douglas, Sidney Poitier, Ernest Borgnine, Yul Brynner, Frank Sinatra, Burt Lancaster, Jack Lemmon, Laurence Olivier and Jerry Lewis. His leading ladies were Janet Leigh, Marilyn Monroe, Debbie Reynolds and Natalie Wood. Curtis never shot a boring scene. Mike Getz

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store