LONGMONT Wednesday • 10:38 a.m. Officers were dispatched to the 1200 block of Main Street for a theft. • 3:48 p.m. Police ...
For more audio journalism and storytelling, download New York Times Audio, a new iOS app available for news subscribers. Hosted by Andrew Ross Sorkin Produced by Evan Roberts Original music by Dan ...
After it was spotted for the first time in public, BYD’s new electric sports car looks ready to take on the Porsche 911. With influence from former Lamborghini and Audi designer Wolfgang Egger ...
Police were alerted to a mass shooting at a private school in Wisconsin on Monday because a second grade teacher called 911 while it was in progress, not a second grade student, which authorities ...
Police identified the shooter as a 15-year-old girl, who died of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound Scott Olson/Getty A second grader did not call 911 when gunfire broke out at the Abundant ...
Is Ken Jennings still hosting Jeopardy? The show made a big announcement about his fate in the franchise. On Monday, December 16, Jeopardy! shared a post on the show’s official Instagram page ...
Corrections & Clarifications: This story was updated to correct inaccurate information provided by police about who called 911. Wisconsin authorities said Tuesday that a second-grade teacher ...
Barnes said that a second-grade student, who would generally be aged seven or eight years old, called 911 to report the shooting. 'Let that soak in for a minute,' Barnes said. The tragedy marks ...
IT DID NOT COME FROM A SECOND GRADER. IT READ SECON Madison Police Chief Shon Barnes issued a correction, stating that the 911 call during the school shooting was made by a teacher. Madison Police ...
When Peak Design CEO Peter Dering identified a backpack linked to Luigi Mangione, the suspected shooter of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, he contacted police in a move he called instinctive. But ...
According to a police spokesperson, they received a 911 call at around 3:30 a.m. on Saturday, December 14. The call was from a teen reporting that he'd killed his entire family in their home.
Ken Leech, the former co-chief investment officer at Western Asset Management Co., was granted $10 million bail on federal charges that he improperly allocated trades to favored clients.