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Woman flies 6,000 miles for a second date and now they're in love in Italy

Woman flies 6,000 miles for a second date and now they're in love in Italy

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Fort Myers woman faces animal cruelty charges after authorities find 13 neglected puppies
Fort Myers woman faces animal cruelty charges after authorities find 13 neglected puppies

Yahoo

time32 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Fort Myers woman faces animal cruelty charges after authorities find 13 neglected puppies

Reports of what sounded like puppies whining throughout the day inside a garage led to the arrest of a Fort Myers woman on animal cruelty charges. Ayana Lee Constantine, 37, faces 13 counts of misdemeanor animal cruelty. On June 13, Lee County sheriff's deputies responded to Constantine's home on Maytree Circle following reports of suspected animal neglect. Jail assault: Accused killer assaulted inmate during his sleep, resulting in possible loss of eye The sheriff's office said authorities learned concerned neighbors had been hearing multiple puppies from inside the home's garage. Deputies discovered 13 puppies covered in dirt and feces, with no access to food, water or ventilation, the sheriff's office said. Authorities recorded the temperature inside the garage at 104 degrees. During the investigation, the sheriff's office said, Constantine arrived at the home, where authorities detained her. Authorities also found two adult female dogs inside the home. One of the puppies, who the sheriff's office said appeared to have an injured leg, was taken to Gulf Coast Humane Society for veterinary evaluation and is in stable condition. Constantine was released June 14 on $130,000 bond. Her arraignment is July 1. Tomas Rodriguez is a Breaking/Live News Reporter for the Naples Daily News and The News-Press. You can reach Tomas at TRodriguez@ or 772-333-5501. Connect with him on Threads @tomasfrobeltran, Instagram @tomasfrobeltran, Facebook @tomasrodrigueznews and Bluesky @tomasfrodriguez. This article originally appeared on Fort Myers News-Press: Lee County Sheriff: Fort Myers woman accused of neglecting 13 puppies

Mike Lee Draws Outrage for Posts Blaming Assassination on the Far Left
Mike Lee Draws Outrage for Posts Blaming Assassination on the Far Left

New York Times

time32 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Mike Lee Draws Outrage for Posts Blaming Assassination on the Far Left

Scarcely 24 hours after a Democratic lawmaker in Minnesota was assassinated in her home, Senator Mike Lee, Republican of Utah, posted a pair of politically charged messages mocking the attack. 'This is what happens When Marxists don't get their way,' Mr. Lee wrote on Sunday on his personal X account, a message accompanied by photographs of the suspect released by law enforcement officials. An hour later, in a second post showing the suspect, Mr. Lee wrote: 'Nightmare on Waltz Street,' in an apparent reference the Democratic governor of the state, Tim Walz. By the afternoon, amid outraged responses to his postings, Mr. Lee issued a very different message on his official Senate account in which he hit all of the sober notes one would expect from an elected official reacting to a political assassination. 'These hateful attacks have no place in Utah, Minnesota, or anywhere in America,' Mr. Lee wrote on X. 'Please join me in condemning this senseless violence, and praying for the victims and their families.' But that standard-issue statement came long after his initial derisive posts, in which he appeared to lay responsibility for the shooting at the feet of Democrats and the political left. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Officers who cover their faces could be charged with a misdemeanor under California proposal
Officers who cover their faces could be charged with a misdemeanor under California proposal

Yahoo

time38 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Officers who cover their faces could be charged with a misdemeanor under California proposal

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Local, state, and federal law enforcement officers who cover their faces while conducting official business could face a misdemeanor in California under a new proposal announced Monday. The bill would require all law enforcement officials show their faces and be identifiable by their uniform, which should carry their name or other identifier. It would not apply to the National Guard or other troops and it exempts SWAT teams and officers responding to natural disasters. State Sen. Scott Wiener, a Democrat representing San Francisco, and State Sen. Jesse Arreguin, a Democrat representing Berkeley and Oakland, said the proposal seeks to boost transparency and public trust in law enforcement. 'We are seeing more and more law enforcement officers, particularly at the federal level, covering their faces entirely, not identifying themselves at all and, at times, even wearing army fatigues where we can't tell if these are law enforcement officers or a vigilante militia,' Wiener said. 'They are grabbing people off our streets and disappearing people, and it's terrifying,' he added. The state senators said that in recent months, federal officers have conducted raids while covering their faces, and at times their badges and names, in Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Concord, Downey and Montebello. 'Law enforcement officers are public servants and people should be able to see their faces, see who they are, know who they are. Otherwise, there is no transparency and no accountability,' Wiener said. Some videos of raids showing masked officers using unmarked vehicles and grabbing people off the streets have circulated on social media in recent weeks.

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