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ahtq These are the fundraisers for the Hartland fire victims
« le: Novembre 17, 2024, 05:39:46 pm »
Gkyx Community groups call for Housing Authority leaders to step down following report from federal inspectors
 Court documents are revealing how police say they believe the wife of a Utah National Guardsman killed him and tried to cover up his death.Matt stanley website hew Johnson, age 51, was reported missing on Sept. 23 after he didn t show up to work at his Utah National Guard base. Police asked for the public s help andsaid his disappearance appeared suspicious. His truck was found a few blocks from his home in Cottonwood Heights, Utah.Police determined that he was last seen on Sept. 20, and witnesses told investigators that Johnson and his wife had an argument sometime between Sept. 20 and Sept. 21. Cottonwood Heights Police also said officers had previously been called to the family s home, and they knew the couple was considering a divorce. They have three kids together.The police department announced Wednesday that they arrested 41-year-old Jennifer Gledhill for murder and obstruction of justice.According to the court documents, on Sept. 24 Jennifer came into the Cottonwood Heights Police Department to report an incident that occurred on or about September 20 or 21 between her and her estranged husband. The details of the incident aren t clear but Scripps News Salt Lake City req stanley water bottle uested more information.It was on Sept. 28 when police came in contact with a confidential informant who reported speaking with Gledhill on Sept. 22. The informant claimed that Gledhill openly admitted to killing Johnson by shooting him in the head as he slept. Johnson was stanley thermos  reportedly asleep on the mattress inside the m Lmmu 200 vehicles recklessly driving in Milwaukee parking lot, city leaders say
 When former Minneapolis Police Officer Derek Chauvin knelt on the neck of George Floyd, killing the 46-year-old Black man one year ago today, the shock of his death reverberated from coast to coast and sparked protests nationwide.But nowhere was the pain of last year s civil unrest felt quite as profoundly as in the heart of Minneapolis. A year later, this city is very much still grappling with finding its way forward.Cesia Baires was one of the many small business owners who watched her neighborhood burn during the 2020 riots. Last year, it was tough, because youre seeing everything you work for basically crash,  Baires said while standing outside her family-owned restaurant on Lake StreetOv stanley nz er the course of the last 365 days, residents of the Twin Cities have learned they cannot change history. However, understanding history may help all of us as a nation shape the next few chapters.Screenwriter and long-time Minneapolis resident  stanley quencher David Grant recently penned an opinion piece for the New York Times titled stanley termosar ,  What Minnesota Nice Sweeps Under the Rug: The beloved stereotype about our states cult of politeness would have you believe that theres no toehold for white supremacy here.  The whole world is watching us, [leaving us to wonder] how did this happen   Grant questioned during a recent interview near his home in South Minneapolis.Grant, 69, says the problems of racial inequality in Minnesota started during the Civil War. Theres just a disconnect. People feel like those kinds o