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Homicide investigation in Marigny after Thursday morning shooting
Homicide investigation in Marigny after Thursday morning shooting

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Homicide investigation in Marigny after Thursday morning shooting

NEW ORLEANS (WGNO) — A man is dead following a shooting in the Marigny area on Thursday morning, Aug. 14. Around 3:10 a.m., New Orleans Police Department officers were alerted of a medical emergency at the corner of Frenchmen and Decatur streets. New Orleans police officer arrested in connection with LSP investigation involving prostitution Responding officers arrived to find an unresponsive man lying on the ground suffering from multiple gunshot wounds. He was declared dead on the scene by EMS and the incident was reclassified as a homicide investigation. No further details are available at this time. The NOPD is in the process of gathering evidence and information to determine a possible suspect and motive. Teenager is one of two victims killed in Seventh Ward shooting The Orleans Parish Coroners Office will release the victim's identity after an autopsy is done and the family is notified. Anyone with information on the incident can call NOPD Homicide Section detectives at 504-658-5300 or Crimestoppers at Posts Precautionary boil water advisory issued for parts of St. Bernard Parish Hurricane Erin to strengthen in Atlantic as Gulf system diminishes New Orleans mayor indicted in federal investigation 2025 Range Rover Sport PHEV Sets Longest Luxury EV Range Houma woman accused of defrauding $83K from Medicaid Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Dallas cuts delay to get blood to trauma victims, allowing paramedics to start transfusions in field
Dallas cuts delay to get blood to trauma victims, allowing paramedics to start transfusions in field

CBS News

time14-02-2025

  • Health
  • CBS News

Dallas cuts delay to get blood to trauma victims, allowing paramedics to start transfusions in field

DALLAS – When a neighbor's dog bit down on 7-year-old Marigny Wilson-Martin's legs, its teeth pierced her femoral artery. "They had estimated she lost three-quarters of her blood," said her mother, Gretchen Wilson-Martin. "I was drenched in blood. My entire T-shirt was just saturated with blood." In her family's hometown of New Orleans, though, ambulances are stocked with packed red blood cells, which allowed paramedics to begin a transfusion as soon as they reached Marigny. "She was purple and so gray and just didn't look well. And then just seeing her come back," recalls her mother, Mickie Wilson-Martin. "It really did and truly save her life," said Gretchen. Dallas Fire Rescue, which operates ambulances in the city of Dallas, has been working for a year and a half to get this very same capability. This week, it launched a pilot program, positioning military-grade coolers containing packed red blood cells in vehicles at Fire Station 32 in Pleasant Grove and Fire Station 42 near Love Field, locations where it found it could quickly dispatch to areas where it receives the most calls for gunshot wounds, stabbings, and other traumas. Whether it's the result of violence, a car crash, or a household accident, blood loss, according to a Dallas Fire Rescue presentation on the program, is the leading cause of death for Americans under the age of 46 involved in a major trauma. A study of patients Dallas paramedics treated in 2023 found as many as 674 could have benefited from blood transfusions en route to the hospital. The city of Frisco was the first in North Texas to begin carrying blood in 2018 after a construction accident required an in-field amputation. Last year, Frisco reported it provided blood transfusions to 20 patients. With a limited supply of blood available, though, there has been some caution in moving forward with programs like these. "It's important that we walk before we run on the project so that we can demonstrate to the American Red Cross, to Parkland, and to other regulatory agencies that we're good stewards of the blood supply," Dallas Fire Rescue Medical Director Dr. Marshal Isaacs told the city's public safety committee last month. Meanwhile, four years after the attack on Marigny, she barely notices the scars on her legs. "Other people notice it but me, not really," she said. And her mothers? They've become regular blood donors, grateful for the gift of life their daughter once received. "She has survived and is thriving," said Mickie.

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