Woman charged in Boston police officer’s death due back in court
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 06:37:08 GMT
A woman accused of killing her Boston police officer boyfriend will be back in court on Tuesday afternoon.Karen Read has maintained her innocence and her attorneys claim that she is being framed for second-degree murder.Prosecutors allege she backed over her boyfriend, office John O’Keefe, after a night of drinking and left him to die in the snow.This is a developing news story; stay with 7NEWS on-air and online for the latest details.Heating Up!
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 06:37:08 GMT
The warm and humid air is back for more today. This summer has been the summer of humidity, not so much the summer of heat. That’ll change later this week. Today is not about the heat, though. We’ll climb to the middle 80s with muggy and sticky air back for more. You’ll probably notice a touch more humidity today than what it felt yesterday. We’ll also see a few storms pop up this afternoon and evening.The storms we see later today will be scattered and it won’t storm everywhere nor will it storm all afternoon and evening long. It will be on and off, probably more off than on. That said, with the humidity and warm air in place, that’ll be enough storm fuel to produce a few strong or severe storms. I think our main threat will simply be downpours and lightning. Lightning can be plenty dangerous and you should head inside if you hear thunder or see lightning, but it’s not enough for a storm to be classified as severe. The severe component of t...Inside the Brunson League, the summer basketball circuit ‘where you get your name known in Baltimore’
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 06:37:08 GMT
Navigate the crowded entryway into the Under Armour House at Fayette each summer Sunday and you find the gym morphing into a living, breathing Baltimore hoops museum.Games tip off at 11 a.m., only to later ignore sunset and run well into the night. Fans pack in, hovering over the court’s out-of-bounds lines. Smiles radiate in this sacred space, known locally as the Melo Center, when fans confidently name players past and present.“Watch out for him in this next game,” they’ll advise, like you’re being ushered into the next exhibition.It’s an environment unique to summer basketball. It’s the Brunson League.“This atmosphere is like no other,” said Quinn Cook, a DeMatha Catholic High School graduate and two-time NBA champion. “No disrespect to any other league, but you can’t get this nowhere else. You got pros, you got local legends and All-Americans coming up. [Fans] are on the floor, they can talk trash and yell at you....Patriots training camp 2023 preview: Bold predictions, breakout players and cut candidates
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 06:37:08 GMT
Welcome back, football.The Patriots open training camp Wednesday with the first of three consecutive practices starting at 9:30 a.m.The team faces its lowest expectations locally in perhaps decades, projected to finish fourth in a loaded AFC East. During camp, the Pats will determine whether Mac Jones is primed for a bounce-back season, which rookies could make an early impact and much more. As Patriots players and coaches work through all of that, here’s what to know and how to follow the most important developments from training camp.Top position battleOffensive tackleAfter the 2023 NFL Draft concluded without the Patriots taking an offensive tackle, there didn’t seem to be much of a competition to be had at the position this offseason. Left tackle Trent Brown remained on the roster, and prospective right tackle Riley Reiff signed a starting-caliber salary in free agency.The spring provided more questions than answers, however, and clouded the situation. Brown was on t...Patriots training camp countdown No. 1: What will Bill O’Brien’s offense look like?
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 06:37:08 GMT
Welcome to 7 Patriots training camp questions!Each day leading up to the start of camp, the Herald has explored one of the biggest questions facing the Pats this summer. Several pertained to the offense, which welcomed back Bill O’Brien this offseason and added JuJu Smith-Schuster and Mike Gesicki. Others covered the defense and special teams, units that might rely heavily on rookies and must overcome the loss of longtime captain Devin McCourty.Once the Patriots hit the practice field, here’s the No. 1 question they must answer before opening their season on Sept. 10 against the Eagles.No. 7: Can Mac Jones return to form?No. 6: How will the Patriots replace Devin McCourty?No. 5: Who will make a Year 2 leap?No. 4: Will the special teams be fixed?No. 3: Does the offense have enough at offensive tackle?No. 2: Can Christian Gonzalez start right away?No. 1: What will Bill O’Brien’s offense look like?Related ArticlesNew England Patriots | Patriots traini...Patriots 53-man roster projection: Pats keep just five receivers
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 06:37:08 GMT
The NFL is switching things up on cutdown day this year.In years past, the NFL staggered cuts by requiring teams to trim their roster from 90 players to 85, then 80, then all the way down to 53. This season, there’s just one cutdown date on Aug. 29, when teams must trim their rosters from 90 players to 53.Related ArticlesNew England Patriots | Patriots training camp countdown No. 1: What will Bill O’Brien’s offense look like? New England Patriots | Patriots sign WR Jalen Hurd, ex-Navy LB Diego Fagot to fill out roster New England Patriots | Patriots 2023 training camp: The top 5 position battles in Foxboro New England Patriots | Patriots training camp countdown No. 2: Can Christian Gonzalez start? New England Patriots | Patriots training camp countdown No. 3: Can the offense succeed with these offensive tackles? We’re getting out ahead of things by projecting what the PatriotsR...Sleek and shiny torch for Paris Olympics unveiled with carbon footprint in mind and a year to go
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 06:37:08 GMT
PARIS (AP) — The torch that will be used to carry the Olympic flame around France and on its final leg at the opening ceremony of the 2024 Paris Games next July is a sleek silver-colored cylinder of recycled steel that is gracefully tapered at both ends and is being made in limited numbers to save resources.Paris organizers unveiled French designer Mathieu Lehanneur’s torch design Tuesday — part of a week of activities that mark the year-to-go countdown to the July 26 opening.Organizers said 2,000 torches — five times fewer than for some previous editions of the Olympics — are being produced from recycled steel.Each one weighs 1.5 kilograms (3.3 pounds) and is 70 centimeters (27.5 inches) tall.Paris is using the same torch design for both the Olympics and Paralympic Games.Once lit in Ancient Olympia, Greece, the flame will be transported by boat to the southern French city of Marseille.The torch relay will start from there on May 8, with 10,000 torchbearers taking turns to car...UN: Operation to siphon oil out of rusting tanker moored off Yemen begins to ‘avoid Catastrophe’
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 06:37:08 GMT
CAIRO (AP) — An international team began siphoning oil out of a decrepit oil tanker off the coast of Yemen on Tuesday, the United Nations chief said, a crucial step in a complex salvage operation aiming to prevent a potential environmental disaster.For years, many organizations have warned that the neglected vessel, known as SOF Safer, may cause a major oil spill or even explode.“The ship-to-ship transfer of oil which has started today is the critical next step in avoiding an environmental and humanitarian catastrophe on a colossal scale,” Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in a statement.More than 1.1 million barrels of oil stored in the rusting tanker were being moved to another vessel the U.N. purchased, he said.The oil transfer operation came after months of on-site preparatory work and was scheduled to be completed in less than three weeks, the U.N. said.The Safter tanker was built in the 1970s and sold to the Yemeni government in the 1980s to store up to 3 million barrels...US pilot accused of illegally training Chinese aviators postpones Sydney extradition hearing
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 06:37:08 GMT
CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — A former United States military pilot’s Sydney extradition hearing on U.S. charges, including that he illegally trained Chinese aviators, was postponed Tuesday while authorities investigate the role of an Australian spy agency in his arrest.Boston-born Dan Duggan, 54, was arrested by Australian police in October near his home, in Orange, New South Wales, and has been fighting extradition to the United States. The former U.S. Marine Corps major and flying instructor maintains he has done nothing wrong and is an innocent victim of a worsening power struggle between Washington and Beijing.“This is a signal, signal sending. It has nothing to do with me personally,” Duggan told the Australian Broadcasting Corp. in a telephone call from maximum-security prison.“It’s more to do with the signal that they want to send in a geopolitical sense,” he added in an interview broadcast on Monday.His lawyers successfully applied Tuesday in Sydney’s Downing Centre Local Cour...Asia-Pacific needs disaster warning systems to counter rising climate change risks, report says
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 06:37:08 GMT
BANGKOK (AP) — Countries in the Asia-Pacific region need to drastically increase their investments in disaster warning systems and other tools to counter rising risks from climate change, a United Nations report said Tuesday. The report issued Tuesday by the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, or ESCAP, says nearly $145 billion is needed to set up systems to minimize deaths and damage from floods, earthquakes, drought and other disasters. Artificial intelligence, satellites, remote sensing and other technologies can aid in forecasting, notifying the public in times of emergency and providing other services, but telecommunications systems must be fortified to ensure that vulnerable communities will get that information, said the report, which was released to mark the U.N.’s Disaster Resilience Week. Most countries have failed to spend even 10% of what is needed, the report said. Half of all countries lack early warning systems and even fewer have systems that are...Latest news
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