Twcs Remains found by New Hampshire hunter in 1996 identified as man who left home to go for a walk and never returned
A Black man who was led
stanley cup by a rope by two white officers on horseback has sued a southeast Texas city and its police department for $1 million, saying he suffered humiliation
stanley cup and fear during his arrest. A lawsuit filed last week in Galveston County district court on behalf of Donald Neely, 44, alleged the officers conduct was extreme and outrageous and injured Neely and caused him emotional distress, news outlets reported, citing the court documents.Neely is seeking a jury trial, reports CBS Houston affiliate KHOU-TV. Photos of the August 2019 encounter showed Neely being led by the officers on a rope linked to handcuffs mdash; reminiscent of pictures showing slaves in chains. Neely, who was homeless at the time, was sleeping on a sidewalk when he was arrested for criminal trespass and led around the block to a mounted patrol staging area. In body camera video, one officer could be heard twice saying that leading Neely by rope down city streets would look bad. The lawsuit accused the city and the department of negligence, and stated that the officers should have known Neely would consider it offensive to be led on the rope as though he was a slave. Neely felt as though he was put on display as slaves once were, the lawsuit stated. In a statement at the time, Police Chief Vernon Hale called th
stanley cup e tactic a trained technique and best practice in some scenarios. However, he said he believed his officers showed poor judgme Ekeg N.J. Gov. Christie takes to Twitter to defend Ebola policies
Emergency workers in Hawaii are racing to protect a geothermal power plant near the Kilauea Volcano. Slow-moving molten rock entered the site and is just a few hundred yards from the wells. There is concern lava could trigger the release of deadly hydrogen sulfide gas, reports CBS News Mark Strassmann.Lava from Hawaii volcano oozes into ocean, creating new toxic hazardLava continued its steady advance toward the Puna Geothermal Venture Plant before stalling late Monday. The facility is shut down, but the wells there still present a risk if overrun with the molten rock. It s not easy to predict where it s going to go, and when it s going to get there, said Tom Travis, of Hawaii Emergency Manageme
air max nt. Flammable liquids have already been removed and the wells have been filled with cold water, but won t be plugged until today. A worst-case scenario could be catastrophic. T
air max here s a steam release, many chemicals, but primarily hydrogen sulfide, a very deadly gas, Travis said.
ugg New fissures bursting with lava remind Big Island of volcano s menace 01:59 Meanwhile lava continued to burst from the area s active fissures Monday. Not one but two flows of lava now pour into the Pacific Ocean. Their three-mile journey over land left behind lava mounds that in some ca