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 A teenager has lost one of her hands and a leg after one of multiple shark attacks that struck an area along Florida s panhandle Friday. Lulu Gribbin was among at least five of her friends, all visiting Rosemary Beach with their mothers from Birmingham, Alabama, looking for sand dollars on a sandbar when the tragedy struck, her mother Ann Blair Gribbin wrote o stanley flask n CaringBridge. Recounting the story after her surgeries, the 15-year-old told her water bottle stanley  mother that the shark first bit her hand then her leg before attacking her friend s foot. Lulu said that a man pulled her out of the waist stanley france -high water by her other arm and carried her to shore with the help of a younger man. Once she was on shore, two doctors and a nurse put tourniquets on the teen s wounds, which her mom believes  was crucial  to saving her daughter s life. Lulu was then airlifted to a Pensacola hotel, where doctors later told Ann Blair that the shark had bitten off Lulu s left hand and that they had to amputate her right leg  halfway up from her knee to her hip,  the mother wrote on CaringBridge. She also said Lulu lost two-thirds of her body s blood in the incident. Of course, no one wants that for your child, but she is alive,  Ann Blair wrote. This was Ann Blair s first mother-daughter beach trip with her twins, Lulu and Ellie. She was heading back to the beach from lunch when she noticed a group of people surrounding someone on the ground, and Ellie  found her to say it was Lulu.  I saw her wounds on her leg and start Jxzi Racine police officer shoots, kills gunman following pursuit, chief says
 MADISON, Wis. 鈥?A bipartisan bill intr stanley thermoskannen odu stanley cup ced in the Wisconsin Legislature would lighten penalties for marijuana possession in many parts of the state and increase fines in a few of the states largest communities.Under the plan sponsored by Republican Rep. Shae Sortwell and Democratic Sen. Sylvia Ortiz-Velez, the state penalty for possessing up to 14 grams of marijuana would be reduced to a $100 civil forfeiture. Current state law makes first-time marijuana possession a misdemeanor with a maximum penalty of a $1,000 fine and six months in jail. Local governments are currently allowed to establish their own penalties for possessing small amounts of cannabis. The new proposal would require communities to enforce fines between $100 and $250, along with up to 40 hours of community stanley thermobecher  service. Report a typo or error // Submit a news tip