No injuries reported after an overnight house fire in Gaston County
GASTON COUNTY, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — Officials are investigating after a fire broke out at a home in Gaston County.
Crews responded to reports of a house fire in the 1000 block of St. Marks Church Road in Crouse at 3:18 a.m.
The rear of the structure had already collapsed by the time crews arrived.
The fire was brought under control by 4:14 a.m.
Thankfully, there were no injuries to civilians or firefighters.
The property damage is estimated at $100,000.
The cause of the fire remains under investigation by the Office of Emergency Management and Fire Services.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBS News
29 minutes ago
- CBS News
Thousands of students in limbo as Trump administration seeks to shut down Job Corps centers
Emily Scott is a Job Corps student in Los Angeles who is also a caretaker for her disabled mother. She is four months away from graduating from the Job Corps program as a licensed nurse. Andrea Watts of Las Vegas was homeless before finding her way to a Job Corps center in L.A. for an opportunity to obtain her high school diploma and eventually become a pharmacy technician. Both are students who are undergoing training at Job Corps, but whose careers are in limbo as the centers were abruptly shut down last week. On May 29, the Labor Department announced a "phased pause" in operations at 99 contractor-operated Job Corps centers nationwide. These are federally-funded centers that offer career training, housing and career assistance to more than 25,000 young people ages 16 to 24. The Labor Department program was funded by Congress in 1964 and has generally received bipartisan support. However, Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer said in a news release that the program was "no longer achieving the intended outcomes that students deserve" as evidenced by "a startling number of serious incident reports and our in-depth fiscal analysis." U.S. Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer during a Senate Appropriations subcommittee hearing in Washington, D.C., on May 22, 2025. Annabelle Gordon/Bloomberg via Getty Images On Wednesday, U.S District Judge Andrew Carter in Manhattan temporarily blocked the Trump administration from eliminating the Job Corps program while the case plays out. The temporary restraining order was issued after Job Corps contractors sued the Trump administration Tuesday arguing the Labor Department violated federal law by shutting down the Job Corps centers, arguing the White House does not have the power to dismantle a program established and funded by Congress. A hearing is set for June 17. CBS News has reached out to the Labor Department and Job Corps for comment on the ruling. Job Corps officials told CBS News that even before the Labor Department paused operations last week, it had halted their ability to conduct background checks, effectively freezing the enrollment process. Though it was initially communicated as a pause, staff had been given dates for their last date of employment, they said. Prior to Carter's ruling, a stop in operations at all contractor-operated Job Corps centers was slated to occur by June 30. A transparency report released in April by the Labor Department found that the average graduation rate for the program was under 40%. The yearly average cost per student was $80,000 and there were over 14,000 serious incident infractions, including inappropriate sexual behavior, sexual assaults and reported drug use. The decision to pause operations aligned with President Trump's 2026 budget proposal, according to the Labor Department, and the administration's commitment to "ensure federal workforce investments deliver meaningful results for both students and taxpayers," the agency said last week when it announced the pause. According to Michelle Matthews, who helps lead the L.A. Job Corps centers, the Labor Department's findings were "unbelievable" given that students are under strict rules and are drug tested in order to qualify. "All of the numbers presented were inflated, deflated lies and their intent was clear from the start," said Matthews, adding that news of the centers' closure was communicated to students last Friday. "That was a day I will never forget," Matthews told CBS News in tears. "To see what they were going through and to know that the impact was going to be devastating." Students were required to abandon their dorms, but more than 50 students in the L.A. centers had nowhere to go. Matthews says she is part of the staff still working around the clock to find them housing. It was not immediately clear whether Wednesday's ruling will allow it to immediately reopen to students. Both Republican and Democratic lawmakers have denounced the Trump administration's move to suspend Job Corps operations, a move they say is illegal. "We funded the program through fiscal year 2025 and they are cutting these slots and shutting things down that Congress has already funded," said Democratic Rep. Jimmy Gomez of California in a phone interview with CBS News. "The money is already there, so they should use it to help these kids finish out their degrees and certifications and then we can have a debate on what the future of Job Corps looks like." Gomez added that he has personally witnessed the success of the program as his two siblings are Job Corps graduates. "The kids are in the pipeline, don't take this away from them because they don't have many opportunities as it is," Gomez said. In May, Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, sent a letter to Chavez-DeRemer requesting information on Job Corps contracts, background check processing and evaluation plans. "I strongly oppose the Department of Labor's directive to pause operations at Job Corps centers in Maine and across the country," Collins said in a statement. "Serving nearly 500 students in Maine, the Loring Job Corps Center and the Penobscot Job Corps Center have become important pillars of support for some of our most disadvantaged young adults." Scott, who has autism, was forced to drop out of college at the age of 19 to care for her disabled mother. "I watched my whole life get put on pause and our circumstances never improved," Scott said. The nursing student says she's unable to pay for her training on her own if Job Corps is effectively shut down. "My future, I don't see it, I don't see anything being different than how I started," Scott said. For Watts, leaving Job Corps would mean returning to Las Vegas — where she doesn't have a home — without achieving her initial hopes of becoming a pharmacy technician. "I wanted to set an example for my future self, and I enrolled into Job Corps thinking that I would come out with a career, with my high school diploma," Watts said. "But that was all just taken from me in a short amount of time."
Yahoo
43 minutes ago
- Yahoo
British man posed as billionaire, tricked Portlander in $1.9 million online romance scheme
PORTLAND, Ore. () — A British man was sentenced to prison Wednesday after posing as a billionaire online, tricking a Portland resident, then stealing nearly $1.9 million from them in a romance fraud scheme. Oscar Peters, 65, was sentenced to more than three years in prison after pleading guilty to one count of wire fraud, the U.S. Department of Justice said. Is Senator Merkley running for re-election in 2026? Following his indictment by a federal grand jury in Portland in 2019, Peters was arrested in the United Kingdom in 2020 and then extradited from the U.K. to the United States in 2023. The charge stems from a fraudulent, long-distance romance Peters began with his victim through the online dating site Millionaire Match Maker, court documents say. Peters claimed to be a billionaire living in Denmark, seeking long-term commitment and convincing his victim in Portland of the legitimacy of the romance via online communications and over the phone. '(The) defendant engaged in daily romantic emails and phone calls with his victim and ingratiated himself with promises of marriage. Defendant then concocted elaborate lies about why he needed financial assistance – ranging from his soon-to-be ex-wife had frozen his assets or needed money to complete business obligations for their future together,' the U.S. DOJ said in a press release. 'With (the) defendant's calculated promises to repay the money and move to Portland, over about two years he convinced his victim to send him nearly $1.9 million.' Peters was sentenced to 37 months in federal prison, 3 years supervised release, and ordered to pay $1,892,439 in restitution to his victim. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


CBS News
44 minutes ago
- CBS News
1 teen wanted, another teen arrested in connection with fatal shooting in Norristown, Pennsylvania
One teen was arrested, another teen has an active arrest warrant and a third suspect is on the run in connection with the fatal shooting of a man near his home in Norristown, Pennsylvania, in May, Montgomery County District Attorney Kevin Steele and Norristown Acting Police Chief James Angelucci announced. Tahaj Harrison, 20, was shot and killed close to his home on Corson Street in Norristown on May 23. The Office of the District Attorney of Montgomery County said Norristown Police received a ShotSpotter notification of multiple gunshots fired in the area of the 600 block of Corson Street. Harrison was pronounced dead at the scene after police found him in the backyard of his home. The release said his home was a few houses from the shooting, where he had staggered before collapsing. Kaleem Roland was arrested on Wednesday on charges of first-degree murder, third-degree murder, conspiracy to commit murder, firearms not to be possessed by a minor and possession of a firearm without a license, officials said in the release. There is an active arrest warrant for Naseem Worrell, 17, in connection with the shooting. A $5,000 reward is being offered for information leading to his arrest. The DA describes Worrell as 5-foot-10 and weighing 150 pounds. He's considered armed and dangerous. In a joint investigation with Montgomery County Detectives and Norristown Police, they found video surveillance from the 600 block of Corson Street that showed three males walking on Corson Street shooting at Harrison, the DA said. The release continued, saying the detectives found Harrison's cellphone, six fired cartridge casings and two live rounds of 9mm ammo. "Ballistic testing found that the fired cartridge casings came from three different firearms," the DA said. Further investigation revealed that Harrison was targeted due to feuding groups, the Grimy Boys/6's, which the DA said Harrison belonged to, and the rival group All Black Bandits/300s, which Worrell belonged to. The release said that police are well aware of both groups. Instagram messages hours before the shooting were found by detectives between Harrison and Worrell about the ongoing feud, as well as an IG post by Harrison that Worrell thought was disrespectful about the killing of a member, the DA said in the release. The DA said the investigation also revealed that Roland, Worrell and a third shooter left the scene and went to a home on Oak Street, then went to another home in Norristown, then headed to Delaware County by an Uber that Roland ordered. Roland, who will be turning 16 Thursday, is lodged at the Montgomery County Youth Detention Center with a preliminary hearing for June 13 on no bail. Anyone with information about the third suspect, the shooting or Worrell is urged to call Montgomery County Detectives at 610-278-3386 or Norristown Police at 610-270-0977.