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Brush fire burning five acres at Pocahontas State Park contained

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CHESTERFIELD COUNTY, Va. (WRIC) – A brush fire at Pocahontas State Park is under control after crews battled for almost two hours to contain the blaze, officials said.

The fire occurred between the Smith Forest Trail and Dale Memorial Cemetery. The blaze spanned five acres.

Fire officials say two engine companies and a tanker were called to assist with the blaze, in addition to about 20 firefighters.

The Virginia Department of Forestry was also called to the scene.

Chesterfield County Fire Department said no one was injured and the heavy response was due to the high winds.

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School bus carrying Henrico students struck by tree; no injuries

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HENRICO COUNTY, Va. (WRIC) — No students were injured after a tree fell on a school bus in Henrico County Friday afternoon.

School officials told 8News the school bus was carrying 11 students from Elko Middle School when a falling tree struck the bus on Meadow Road in the Sandston area of the county.

There are no reported injuries and parents have been notified.

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Texting 911: push for statewide service passes General Assembly

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — In an emergency, most people dial 9-1-1 for help.

But more emergency centers are taking ‘calls’ via text.

Now, lawmakers are backing a push to expand the service across the Commonwealth.

While it isn’t meant to replace phone calls, it is meant to give people another way to reach out for help when safety concerns or disabilities make calling difficult.

It’s called Text-to-9-1-1.

It’s something Hanover County Emergency Communications has been doing since 2015.

“It’s really very similar to a voice call,” said Cheryl Buchanan, manager of the center. “We’re just typing back and forth to one another.”

She said to remember this phrase — Call if you can. Text if you can’t.

Buchanan said people with speech and hearing difficulties have benefited from the service. She said there are additional situations where texting can be better than calling.

“If your home is being broken into, you don’t want to give away your location. Text would certainly be appropriate in that instance. We’ve had some other localities that have mentioned a lot of active shooter situations,” she said.

Right now, 31 of Virginia’s emergency centers process texts, according to VITA. Another 11 — including Richmond, Chesterfield and Henrico — plan to start soon.

But a bill that just passed through the House and the Senate would make it mandatory for all public safety answering points to give people the option to text by July 1, 2020.

It might cost localities to upgrade their system, but there is grant funding available.

Buchanan said since Hanover implemented Text-to-9-1-1, they have not been flooded with texts. Most requests for service still come by phone call, as expected.

There were 75 texts in 2016 and 90 in 2017.


How to Text 9-1-1:

1. Enter “911” in the “To” or “Recipient” field of your text message (no dashes in 911).
2. Text in simple words – no photos, videos, abbreviations or slang.
3. The first text should be short to include the location of the emergency and who you need: police, fire or ambulance.
4. Be as specific as possible when providing your location. Provide as much of the following information as possible:

  • Exact address to include unit/apartment number and city
  • Business name
  • The names of both streets at the nearest intersection
  • Landmarks
  • Push the send button
  • Answer questions and follow instructions from the 9-1-1 call taker

This bill would pave the way for another future change to 9-1-1 service in the commonwealth.

SB513, which also passed the House and Senate, establishes requirements for the implementation of next generation 9-1-1 (NG9-1-1) service.

By July 1, 2023, the 9-1-1 Services Board would be required to develop and implement NG9-1-1 transition plans to migrate public service answering points and originating service providers from E-911 to NG9-1-1.

Both bills now head to the governor’s desk.

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StormTracker 8 named Central Virginia’s most accurate weather forecast

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — The StormTracker 8 weather team is proud to own Central Virginia’s most accurate forecast.

A recent analysis conducted by WeatheRate shows that StormTracker 8 offered the most accurate forecast in the  Richmond market, which includes all television news stations in Central Virginia.

WeatheRate is an independent weather forecast verification company, and the only one in the United States. It’s patented weather software compares local television weather forecasts with observed conditions to reveal who’s the most accurate.

“This is a credit to the hard work done 24/7 by the entire team,” StormTracker 8 Chief Meteorologist John Bernier said. “The key to this is paying constant attention to what is going on with the weather and a full understanding of how the forecasting process works.

“Add to that, the intimate knowledge of the area and the quirks of the forecast here that come from years of experience in the area by our staff”

You can stay up to the date with the weather where you live by downloading the StormTracker 8 weather app or following the StormTracker 8 team’s daily forecast here.

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Man dies after being trapped inside Henrico County house fire

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HENRICO COUNTY, Va. (WRIC) — Investigators in Henrico County are working to determine what caused a house fire that took a man’s life Friday afternoon.

Firefighters responded to the home, located in the 7400 block of Fairway Avenue, at noon and found heavy flames coming from the structure.

One adult male was trapped inside and pulled from the home, but he was pronounced dead at the scene. Authorities have not yet released his identity.

Investigators are still working to determine if high winds helped accelerate the fire as the work to narrow down an exact cause.

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High winds snarl traffic, down trees in Virginia

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — Strong winds have caused thousands to lose power, along with multiple traffic crashes and school closings Friday.

According to Dominion Energy, more than 54,000 customers in the Richmond Metro area are without power. Henrico, Richmond City, Chesterfield, New Kent and Hanover have reported the most outages.

More than 3,000 restoration workers have been deployed across the state to assess the damage and repair equipment and downed power lines.

An additional 500 out-of-state restoration workers are expected to be on-site tomorrow. Dominion Energy plans on working around the clock as quickly and safely as possible.

Of the 621,000 customers that lost service, about 233,000 have been restored, according to Dominion Energy.

As of 4:30 p.m. more than 388,000 customers remain without power.

Rappahannock Electric Cooperative said more than 40,000 REC members remain without power as high winds continue to pummel REC’s 22 county service territory.

REC cautions that outages may extend beyond the weekend and into next week.

Courtesy of Rappahannock Electric Cooperative

REC officials say 75 linemen from South Carolina and Kentucky will come to Virginia to assist REC’s crew.

Also, REC’s dispatch center and contact center will be staffed 24 hours.

Meteorologist Matt DiNardo says winds will stay extremely strong Friday with gusts potentially reaching 50 to 60 mph.

Strong winds are expected to continue Friday evening and into Saturday.

Several traffic crashes and downed power lines were reported overnight into Friday morning.

The gusty winds also caused downed trees, with two falling into homes. A 6-year old boy has died after a tree fell on his Chesterfield home. A tree also crashed into a Hanover home, trapping four children in their bedroom.

Crews were able to rescue those four children and get them out of the home safely.

VDOT has also restricted truck traffic on Route 30 from crossing the Eltham Bridge over Pamunkey River between New Kent and the Town of West Point due to the sustained high winds.

Passenger vehicles are still permitted to cross the Eltham Bridge.

Pouncey Tract Road was closed for several hours after a power pole caught fire and forced hundreds in Henrico to lose power.

Stay with 8News for updates.

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‘He just kept screaming’: Children rescued hours after tree crashes into Hanover home

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HANOVER COUNTY, Va. (WRIC) — Seven children are lucky to be alive after a massive tree came crashing into their Hanover County home, trapping them inside.

8News reporter Talya Cunningham spoke with the parents of the children, who recalled the terrifying moments they couldn’t reach their children and feared the worst.

“I ran to the end of the hall to find my daughters and there was nothing but a tree and I panicked,” the children’s father, Lance Anderson, said. “I couldn’t do anything. The firefighters wouldn’t let me get inside. I was trying to go through that window to get my kids.”

Lance and Christy Anderson woke up to their children, ages 3-17, screaming for help.

“He just kept screaming that he couldn’t move,” C. Anderson recalled.

“I just ran to the end of the hall to find my daughters and there wasn’t anything but tree,” L. Anderson added.

After nearly two hours, Hanover Fire and EMS crews were able to rescue the children and get them out of the home with only bruises and scratches.

C. Anderson says she owes the safety of her children to Hanover County Fire and EMS crews.

“The fire people said they could see his arm and leg from the bedroom on the complete opposite side,” she said. “I didn’t even know what to think.”

Now, all that’s left of the place they once called home is scattered bikes, broken toys and lost memories. The family is temporarily staying at a hotel to figure out their next step.

“I don’t know where to begin,” C. Anderson said. “I have to find another home for them.”

Anyone who would like to donate clothing or supplies is asked to call 804-205-4855. A GoFundMe page has also been created for the family.

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Local tribe’s fight for state recognition halted again

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — The Wolf Creek Cherokee Indians thought they had finally drummed up enough support to be recognized as an official Virginia Indian tribe.

Last year, the tribe first shared their struggle to earn the state status.

“We felt like the Wolf Creek Cherokee tribe had a very good chance of achieving state recognition this year,” said Annette Price whose husband is Chief of the Wolf Creek Cherokee Tribe. 

A bill to give them that state status passed unanimously in the Senate, but was blocked in the House.

“One of the questions that was asked is have you filled out your application?” Price told 8News. Problem is, no application exists.

In 2016, the General Assembly passed legislation to create an Indian Advisory Board.

“I think the legislature thought it would make sense to put a process in place,” said Secretary of the Commonwealth Kelly Thomasson.

Thomasson’s office oversees the board. She told 8News the board consisting of historians and other tribe members was to create criteria for recognition and an application for those seeking the honor.

A year and a half later, the application still hasn’t been created.

“The board is very close to finalizing the criteria, the process, I expect it will be done in the next month or so,” said Thomasson.

The Secretary says it takes time to put a board together and find the right people.

“This is something that is important, it’s important to the Wolf Creek, it is important to Virginia’s history,” Thomasson explained.

Yet, stuck waiting and caught in the middle of it all is The Wolf Creek Cherokee Tribe.

“Once you fill out the application, what are the time restraints, on how long it will take to look the application over?” asks Price.

“It is a little bit aggravating to say the least,” said Councilman Jeffrey Ladd, a member of Wolf Creek Cherokee Tribe.

“Our history is here in Virginia, we have always been a part of Virginia,” says Ladd.

The tribe has a museum on Osborne Turnpike filled with relics and artifacts dating back some 12,000 years.

“We know that we had people who were Cherokee, who lived to the falls of the river. They lived in Petersburg area,” explains Price.

“No one else has gone through such a process,” says Ladd.

Councilman Ladd is correct. The 11 other State recognized tribes did not have to apply for the status.
In fact, records show six tribes earned the title back in 1983 with just one sentence written about their heritage.

“I think it is a prejudiced idea,” says Price.

Once the application is ready and the advisory board reviews it, they can only make a recommendation for state recognition.

So even if the advisory board recommends the state status for the Wolf Creek Cherokee Tribe, the final say still must come from the General Assembly.

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Gov. Northam declares State of Emergency due to severe weather

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — Governor Ralph Northam has declared a state of emergency on Friday afternoon to address the severe weather impacting Virginia.

The order is to assist the Commonwealth’s efforts to mitigate the damage caused by high winds.

Strong winds have caused thousands to lose power, along with multiple traffic crashes and school closings Friday.

The Executive Order will remain in effect until June 2, 2018, unless further extended or sooner amended by the governor.

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Sleeping 6-year-old killed after tree crashes through Chester home

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CHESTERFIELD COUNTY, Va. (WRIC) — A 6-year-old boy has died after a tree fell onto his family’s home in Chester while he was sleeping early Friday morning.

The 6-year-old boy, who has been identified as Anthony Hamilton, was sleeping on the top bunk of his bunk bed when the tree came crashing down on top of his Cliffside Drive home at around 2 a.m. The tree crashed through the roof and landed on the sleeping child.

Hamilton was transported to VCU Medical where doctors told his mother that his organs were failing. “Doctors say we have to let him go,” the devastated mother told 8News reporter Kristin Smith.

“Doctors say we have to let him go.”

Friends say Hamilton had a special charm, a vibrant personality that grabbed your attention.

Neighbor Renee Moore rushed outside to find a rescue crew frantically trying to free the little boy, who was trapped in his bed with the weight of the three on top of him.

“It seemed like forever, I guess, because everyone was scared,” Moore recalled. “The mom, she had her kids in the SUV. She didn’t want them to go to another trailer at the time and were just waiting for the little one to get out.”

Scott Mills sold the mobile home to Anthony’s mom in August. He insists that he complained to the property manager about the stability of the tree and many others over the past 10 years.

“One of the reasons I had to get out is something was going to happen, and now a baby’s dead,” Mills said. “Somebody needs to be held responsible.”

Chesterfield Fire and EMS crews, as well as their technical rescue team, responded to the scene. Crews had to use special equipment to stabilize the tree. Once it was stabilized, crews used saws to cut the bunk bed to get the boy out.

A GoFundMe page has been created for Anthony Hamilton and family.

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This week in odd news: Expensive mistake and meatball theft

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FLORIDA PYTHON DEVOURS DEER THAT WEIGHS NEARLY 4 LBS. MORE

NAPLES, Fla. (AP) — Researchers studying invasive Burmese pythons in Florida came upon something they’d never seen before: an 11-foot-long python had consumed an entire deer that weighed more than the snake itself.

The wildlife biologists tracking the slithery creatures stumbled upon bloated snake in Collier Seminole State Park, and when they moved the creature it began regurgitating a white-tailed deer fawn.

Biologist Ian Bartoszek told the Naples Daily News that the fawn weighed 35 pounds; the snake 31.5.

“We were sitting there just trying to process that an animal this size could get its head around what turned out to be a deer,” Bartoszek said. “It’s surreal to see that in the field.”

Bartoszek said it was the largest python-to-prey weight difference he had measured.

Burmese pythons, which can grow nearly 20-feet long, were brought to South Florida as pets in the late 1970s. They were released into the wild, and have become a problematic invasive species.

White-tailed deer are an important food source for Florida’s endangered panthers, so the researchers are concerned the pervasive snakes could also impact the health of the big cats.

If the snake had been left in the wild, it would have digested the entire deer, Bartoszek said.

He called the predator-to-prey size ratio stunned his team.

“It showed my team and myself what we were actually dealing with out there, what this python is capable of,” he told the newspaper.

FRONT-END LOADER USED TO FLIPPED-OVER TRUCK DOWN HIGHWAY

OSSIPEE, N.H. (AP) — Police say a New Hampshire man is facing charges for using a front-end loader to push a pickup truck down a highway in the town of Ossipee.

Officials say a family dispute boiled over when 55-year-old Edward Evans used his company’s construction equipment to flip the truck on its side and push it 1,000 feet down Route 16.

He deposited it at an auto repair shop.

Ossipee Police Sgt. Anthony Castaldo said the incident started with a report of an assault on Feb. 22. Evans faces charges including assault and reckless operation.

Evans is free on $5,000 personal recognizance bail. He said Saturday from his Wolfeboro home that it “wouldn’t be a good idea” to comment on pending criminal charges.

CLASH WITH OVERPASS LEAVES LUXURY CARS DAMAGED IN DELAWARE

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) — A tractor-trailer driver transporting privately owned luxury cars may have made an expensive mistake when he got trapped under a Delaware overpass.

The News Journal cites a Wilmington police report that says the driver erroneously thought he could clear the bridge Wednesday, but got stuck. The damage extended to several of the Porsches, Maseratis, Bentleys and other cars that were being transported in an enclosed, climate-controlled environment from Florida to Delaware.

Authorities say the roadway was blocked for nine hours, until police and a towing company were able to partially disassemble the trailer to free it. The overpass did not sustain any damage.

The driver was cited for inattentive driving.

RED FACED: MAN WITH SAUCE ON HIS FACE AND CLOTHES CHARGED WITH MEATBALL THEFT

HAZLE TOWNSHIP, Pa. (AP) — Police say a damning clue led to the arrest of a Pennsylvania man charged with stealing a pot of meatballs — red sauce smeared on his face and clothes.

Authorities in Luzerne County have charged 48-year-old Leahman Glenn Robert Potter with burglary, criminal trespass and theft by unlawful taking for allegedly swiping a pot of meatballs from a man’s garage on Monday.

Police say the victim reported his meatballs missing and told officers at around 2:30 p.m. Monday that he saw Potter standing in front of his house with red sauce on his face and clothes. The pot was found on the street.

It’s unclear if Potter washed the sauce off before he was arrested a short time later.

Potter’s attorney did not immediately respond to a voicemail seeking comment.

UBER EXPENSIVE: DRUNK MAN TAKES $1600 UBER FROM WEST VIRGINIA TO NEW JERSEY

GLOUCESTER COUNTY, N.J. (AP) — A New Jersey man who got drunk in West Virginia and mistakenly ordered a $1,635 Uber ride back to his home state says the experience was “crazy.”

Nj.com on Wednesday reported that Kenny Bachman thought he was taking an Uber to where he was staying near West Virginia University’s campus.

But when his driver woke him up two hours into the more than 300-mile journey to New Jersey, Bachman says he didn’t know what was happening or who the driver was.

The trip was made more expensive because Bachman gave the driver money for tolls and ordered an UberXL, which can hold up to six passengers.

He says he tried to challenge the fare with Uber but ended up paying it.

Bachman gave his driver five stars.

OVERHAULING: MAN CHARGED WITH ELUDING POLICE IN STOLEN U-HAUL — AGAIN

STANDISH, Maine (AP) — A Maine man has been arrested for the second time in a year on charges he led police on a chase in a stolen U-Haul truck.

The Portland Press Herald reports a Cumberland County Sheriff’s deputy tried to stop a U-Haul driven at high speeds by 41-year-old William Wyman in Standish Sunday night. Police say Wyman and the stolen truck were later found.

Authorities say the Portland man had minor injuries and the vehicle sustained minor damage.

Wyman faces multiple charges including theft of a motor vehicle and failure to stop for a police officer. He is being held on bail.

He was previously charged with eluding officers and reckless conduct after police say he crashed into two vehicles last Halloween while driving a stolen U-Haul truck before he was apprehended.

DOUBLE COUPLES: 2 SETS OF IDENTICAL TWINS TO MARRY

GREEN BAY, Va. (AP) — A set of identical twin sisters will fulfill their dream when they marry a set of identical twin brothers in a joint wedding this summer.

The Lynchburg News & Advance reports Jeremy and Josh Salyers proposed to Briana and Brittany Deane on Feb. 2 at Virginia’s aptly named Twin Lakes State Park. The engagements came six months after the pairs met at the Twin Days Festival, which bills itself as the world’s largest annual gathering of twins and other multiples, in Twinsburg, Ohio.

The 31-year-old Deanes had visited the festival, which Brittany calls “a magical place,” since their first year of law school, the first time they had been apart. The Salyers made their first festival visit in 2017 and “lucked out on (their) first attempt,” as Josh puts it.

FENCED: SUSPECTS ON THE RUN SCALE FENCE, LAND IN POLICE LOT, CUSTODY

PHOENIX (AP) — Two shoplifting suspects running from police scaled a fence to get away from officers and landed in a secure parking lot of a police station — and in custody.

Officials tell KTAR-FM that officers were called to a gas station for possible shoplifting at 6 p.m. Friday. Authorities say as officers arrived, the suspects, 28-year-old Marwan Al Ebadi and 29-year-old Salma Hourieh, took off running.

The pair ran along the side of a building and jumped a fence, despite a sign for “Peoria Police” above the door.

Security video shows Hourieh trying to hide under a bench before being placed in custody. Al Ebadi climbed back over the fence and was arrested on the street.

Al Ebadi and Hourieh face charges of shoplifting, trespassing in a critical public safety building and drug charges.

It wasn’t immediately known if either is represented by a lawyer.

JURY DUTY ANYONE? NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY FINDS FEW TAKERS

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) — The judges, deputies and clerks showed up for court, but one key element was missing: No one had invited any jurors.

The Winston-Salem Journal reports that North Carolina’s fourth-largest county failed to mail notices to the 1,700 or so prospective jurors needed to hear cases this week.

After no one showed up for jury duty Monday, Forsyth County officials made a plea through local television station WXII for any volunteers willing to fulfill their civic duty.

But only 19 people showed up Tuesday. One judge in the county of 370,000 residents even sent deputies to a mall to seek volunteers, but found no other takers.

“We don’t have enough jurors,” Judge Stuart Albright said in court Tuesday afternoon before dismissing the few who had shown up.

New notices were sent asking hundreds of prospective jurors to be there Thursday, while other trials were postponed until next week.

Normally, a county printing office makes the notices and sends them. That happens after a jury clerk determines how many prospective panelists are needed and uses a system to select them at random, Forsyth County Clerk of Court Susan Frye said in an email.

But this time, the notices weren’t mailed because of an error by someone in the county print shop, said Kirby Robinson, the county’s property manager.

“It’s an unfortunate thing, and we sincerely apologize to the people who were inconvenienced,” he told the newspaper.

Frye said this is the only time this kind of error has happened during her eight years as clerk of court. She said she’s working with the county to ensure the mistake “does not occur again.”

ELVIS PRESLEY RUNNING FOR AN ARKANSAS CONGRESSIONAL SEAT

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Elvis Presley is officially running for a congressional seat in Arkansas. But don’t confuse him with the rock ‘n’ roll icon, unless he’s performing.

Elvis D. Presley performs shows as the late superstar Elvis A. Presley, but he’s also now filed to run as the Libertarian nominee challenging Arkansas Republican Rep. Rick Crawford.

Both men filed paperwork Monday to run for the 1st Congressional District in eastern Arkansas. Crawford has represented the area for four terms.

Presley has previously run for Arkansas governor, land commissioner and the state Legislature. The Libertarian Party selected its nominees at a convention over the weekend.

NO COURSE FOR A HORSE: MAN RIDES ONTO CALIFORNIA FREEWAY

LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) — Authorities say a drunken man rode his horse onto a California freeway.

Los Angeles news station KABC-TV reports that the California Highway Patrol stopped the man early Saturday on State Route 91 in Long Beach.

Officers administered field sobriety tests, which registered blood-alcohol levels of 0.21 percent and 0.19 percent — more than double the legal limit.

The man was arrested and booked for riding a horse while under the influence. The white horse, Guera, wasn’t hurt and was released to the man’s mother.

The California Highway Patrol offered a message to the public on Twitter: “No, you may not ride your horse on the freeway, and certainly not while intoxicated.”

BREAD TO BREW: MAINE FRIARS CLOSING BAKERY TO OPEN TAPROOM

BUCKSPORT, Maine (AP) — Two Maine friars say they are closing down their iconic bakery to open up a brewery.

The Bangor Daily News reports Friar’s Bakehouse in Bangor will close Friday after more than 18 years. Franciscan Brothers Donald Paul and Kenneth Leo say they plan to open their new venture, the Friar’s Brewhouse Tap Room, this month.

The brew house will be located in Bucksport, much closer to the brothers’ monastery. Paul says the 40-minute commute to Bangor was a big strain for the two.

The two began selling their homebrew beer in 2013, and had been considering opening a separate business to highlight their brews for the past six years.

ROCKY ROAD: MICHIGAN BUSINESS OFFERS FREE ICE CREAM AS RELIEF FROM POTHOLES

FRANKLIN, Mich. (AP) — A suburban Detroit business is offering a treat for those who have had their driving disrupted by potholes in recent weeks.

The Detroit Free Press reports Farmhouse Coffee & Ice Cream in Franklin is offering a free scoop of Ashby Sterling Ice Cream’s “Michigan Pothole” for those who have replaced a tire or fixed other damage due to a pothole.

The newspaper says to get a scoop bring in a receipt from Feb. 1 and beyond detailing the repair. The promotion runs until March 25. The ice cream flavor is described as “thick black tar fudge and chocolate ice cream with chunky chocolate cookie asphalt pieces.”

Road crews in Michigan have stepped up efforts to patch potholes that have become damaging and dangerous amid fluctuating winter temperatures.

POLICE: SUSPECTED THIEF TRACKED VIA FOOTPRINTS IN THE SNOW

HUDSON FALLS, N.Y. (AP) — Police in upstate New York say a woman charged with theft took a shower before speaking with authorities in an attempt to make it seem like she hadn’t robbed someone.

The Washington County Sheriff’s Office says the 29-year-old woman got a ride to her home in Hudson Falls by another woman she did not know Thursday afternoon. Kingsbury police say the woman stole the victim’s purse after a struggle and fled to her home on foot.

Responding officers say they followed the suspect’s footprints to her home, where police say she had taken a shower to attempt to throw off police. The purse was recovered at the suspect’s home and she was arrested.

The woman faces robbery and larceny charges.

INDIANA LAWMAKERS APPROVE BILL BANNING EYEBALL TATTOOING

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The Indiana Legislature has approved a bill to effectively ban the practice of eyeball tattooing.

The measure comes after a flurry of news reports last fall about a Canadian model who had major complications from getting her eyes tattooed purple.

Under the Indiana proposal, tattooists would be prohibited from coloring the whites of an individual’s eyes. An exception would be made for procedures done by licensed health care professionals. The bill imposes a fine of up to $10,000 per violation.

The bill is sponsored by Republican Sen. John Ruckelshaus of Indianapolis. He says he’s not aware of any problems in Indiana. Oklahoma is the only other state with a similar law.

The legislation was sent to Gov. Eric Holcomb’s desk on Thursday following an 82-11 House vote. It was previously approved by the Senate.

BANDIT WHO SAW BANK ROBBERY AS HIS JOB HEADS TO PRISON AGAIN

HONOLULU (AP) — A 64-year-old bandit who said during his sentencing that he views robbing banks as “going to work” must spend more than 15 years in federal prison.

Wallace Silva went on a crime spree that included robbing 10 Hawaii banks of about $30,000 in 2016, U.S. prosecutors said Monday.

In a deal with prosecutors, he pleaded guilty to four robberies and must pay restitution for all 10 holdups.

Silva was sentenced in 1997 to about nine years for robbing a bank. Five days after completing that sentence, he began robbing more banks and was sentenced to more than 12 years in prison in 2007 for four holdups, prosecutors say.

Four months after completing that sentence, he committed the robberies for which he was sentenced this month.

He said during his hearing that robbing banks was like “going to work.”

During some of the 2016 robberies, he gave the teller a note saying he had a weapon and demanded cash. “I don’t want to take it out,” he told one teller about a weapon, according to his plea agreement.

The court document doesn’t indicate if he actually had a weapon.

Tellers told authorities the bandit wore an aloha shirt and walked with a waddle.

HOG WILD: PIGS OUTNUMBER PEOPLE IN DENMARK, NO. 1 IN EUROPE

BERLIN (AP) — Statistics show pigs are hogging the market in Europe as the largest livestock category and outnumber people in Denmark by more than two-to-one.

European statistical agency Eurostat said Thursday that with a population of about 150 million in the European Union, pigs far outnumber cattle and other bovines, the second-largest livestock category with 89 million head.

Eurostat says 40 percent of the EU’s pigs are in Spain and Germany, with significant numbers also in France, Denmark, Netherlands and Poland.

Denmark is the only country where pigs outnumber people , with 215 pigs to every 100 residents. Not coincidentally, it’s also a country known in Europe for its quality bacon.

The Netherlands is next with 70 pigs per 100 people, Spain with 63 to 100, and Belgium with 54 to 100.

FIRE BREAKS OUT — IN SAME BUILDING AS FIRE HEADQUARTERS

BALTIMORE (AP) — Baltimore firefighters probably made record time arriving at the scene of a recent fire. That’s because it broke out in the building housing the fire department’s headquarters.

Fire department spokeswoman Blair Skinner told The Baltimore Sun that an electrical fire Thursday triggered the evacuation of the 85,000-square-foot downtown building the fire department shares with the city’s finance and information technology departments.

Skinner says firefighters responded in a matter of minutes, in addition to the fire chiefs already in the building.

She says the smoke appeared to have originated on one of the floors above the fire department’s offices.

No one was injured. The exact origin is still under investigation.

JAZZ HALL’S SIGNATURE SOUSAPHONE STOLEN IN NEW ORLEANS

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Be on the lookout for a wraparound tuba: Someone has stolen the signature sousaphone belonging to Preservation Hall in New Orleans.

Creative director and musician Ben Jaffe wrote about it on the traditional jazz venue’s Facebook page, saying he bought it after Hurricane Katrina to replace one lost to the 2005 storm.

A photo shows him playing the brass sousaphone, which has “Preservation Hall, New Orleans” painted on the bell.

He says it was taken Saturday, after a performance at New Orleans Airlift .

Jeanette Jaffe said Thursday they’ve received multiple calls since the message was posted Wednesday, but none led to recovery of the instrument. She says some callers even offered their own instruments.

There’s a reward.

Sousaphones can cost up to $13,000.

THE NAME GAME: ZOO TAKES VOTES ON NEW NAME FOR BABY GIRAFFE

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The zoo in New Orleans is taking votes whether to name its baby giraffe T’Challa, the given name of the comic book and movie superhero Black Panther, or Zulu, a southern African ethnic group and popular Mardi Gras parade krewe.

The Audubon Nature Institute created the poll Monday on Facebook. By Tuesday morning, nearly 2,000 people had voted.

Those who also posted comments seemed to favor Zulu.

Some of those for T’Challa noted that the Audubon Zoo had already named an animal Zulu. King Zulu the white Bengal tiger was euthanized last year at age 20.

The giraffe was born Jan. 9 at the Audubon Species Survival Center on New Orleans’ west bank. The zoo says he’s doing well and has joined the rest of the herd of reticulated giraffes.

NATIONALS MANAGER CALLS IN CAMELS TO GET TEAM OVER PLAYOFF HUMP

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Hump day had a more tangible meaning for the Washington Nationals.

New manager Dave Martinez had a trio of camels brought to spring training camp Wednesday, four-legged visual aids to help players launch a journey aimed at getting over the franchise’s playoff hump.

“I don’t know if it’s so much as embrace it, but just not worry about it because so much as been made about it,” first baseman Ryan Zimmerman said. “It’s fair for people to write about it, but making the playoffs every year, winning divisions every year to me is already over the hump. We used to lose 90 games every year. People forget that.”

The Nationals have reached the playoffs in four of the last six seasons but have not won a postseason series since relocating to Washington ahead of the 2005 season.

Martinez joined players for the team’s daily “Circle of Trust” meeting on the turf infield outside the clubhouse at 9:30 a.m. Not long into the meeting, first base coach Tim Bogar and third base coach Bob Henley rode camels onto the field.

“I thought it was a great idea,” said Bogar, who’s first foray into camel riding came on a cow named Blondie. “I thought it was something just to make sure they cleared their minds and they had fun with it. We embraced it. I thought the guys reacted to it real well. From what I could see everybody was having a good time with it.”

Wearing a Washington Nationals floppy hat with a red and white checkered towel flowing from underneath, Henley repeatedly yelled “Hump Day!” — a reference both to a famous television commercial and a common nickname for Wednesday — while atop a camel named Lawrence. Bogar and Henley parked their camels on each side of the walkway that leads from the meeting area to the practice fields, and players walked between.

“It was fun,” reliever Ryan Madsen said. “It’s fun. It’s nice to have a camp loose. It’s nice to have the courtesy to have a loose camp when you have a good team.”

Unlike many of his teammates, Madsen has some familiarity with camels. A camel named Hoover lives near his Arizona home, and Madsen frequently takes his daughters on bike rides to visit the camel.

“He got a little overweight, so he just lays down a lot now,” Madsen said. “They’ve got him on a diet.”

There was some concern that the Florida camels might have smelled Hoover on Madsen.

“The one was looking at me funny,” Madsen said, sticking out his lower jaw for emphasis. “It was showing its tooth at me and he had that kind of crazy look in his eye, so maybe it was his long lost cousin.”

After the players walked the camel gauntlet, Bogar and Henley rode Blondie and Lawrence to the practice field. No one rode the third camel, named Brown. He only made the trip, according to Bogar, because Blondie refuses to go anywhere without Brown.

When not motivating professional baseball team, the camels reside at a petting zoo in nearby Jupiter.

In his first season as the Nationals manager, Martinez spent 10 years as Joe Maddon’s bench coach with the Chicago Cubs and Tampa. Maddon is well known for his spring training stunts designed to keep players loose.

The camels exited the Ballpark of the Palm Beaches well before the Nationals returned to the clubhouse following the workout. Washington played Miami in Jupiter later Wednesday.

“All I’ve got to ask you guys is, Can you still smell me?” said Bogar before boarding the bus.

Man under arrest for Chesterfield thefts

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC)- Police make an arrest overnight after a string of thefts from cars in a Chesterfield neighborhood.

Steven Barton was arrested early Saturday morning.

Police say the thefts happened in the Woodland Pond neighborhood throughout 2017 and early 2018.

Barton faces charges including Larceny and Possession of Marijuana.

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Tillmans’ 18 points, 13 boards power VCU past Fordham, 83-58

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NEW YORK (AP) – Justin Tillman posted his 16th double-double of the season and VCU closed out its regular season the same way it started the Atlantic 10 season, with a win over Fordham – this one an 83-58 victory Saturday afternoon.

With the win, VCU finishes in the middle of a muddled field where they could land as high as the No. 5 tournament seed or as low as the No. 8 seed.

Tillman has the most double-doubles since Bernard Hopkins posted 18 in 1995-96. Tillman came into the final game of the regular season looking to become the first A-10 player to average 20 points and 10 rebounds per game since the 2002-03 season, and he accomplished half that feat. He came in averaging 19.8 points per game, but managed just 18 against the Rams. He entered the game averaging 10.6 rebounds per game and pulled down 13 in the finale.

VCU (17-14, 9-9), which opened the conference season by beating Fordham, built an 11-point lead by intermission and pulled away over the final 20 minutes to complete the season sweep.

Sean Mobley added 16 points and De’Riante Jenkins contributed 14.

Joseph Chartouny scored 16 points and grabbed eight rebounds to lead Fordham (9-21, 4-14). Prokop Slanina and Will Tavares added 14 and 13 points, respectively.

Thousands still without power Saturday across Central Virginia

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) – Thousands of Richmond-area power customers are without power as severe weather and high-winds continue to affect the region.

As of 10 a.m. Saturday morning, Dominion Energy’s outage map reported more than 22,000 customers in the dark in the Richmond and Tri-Cities areas.

The hardest hit communities are found in the City of Richmond, Henrico, New Kent and Chesterfield.

Dominion Energy continues to update customers on social media, asking for patience as crews work to restore power to these areas. Dominion says more than 3,000 workers are responding to downed power lines, snapped power poles, and tangled power lines. Some crews come from as far as Florida to assist customers throughout Virginia and North Carolina. 500 additional out-of-state workers join these crews Saturday morning as efforts increase across the Commonwealth.

Northern Neck Electric Cooperative (NNEC) says it also had crews working overnight to restore power to customers. As of 8:15 a.m. Saturday, NNEC says more than 4,000 customers are still in the dark with the hardest hit areas found in Lewisetta, Edwardsville, Naomi Grove and Tidwells.

Just as Dominion is being assisted by crews from other states, NNEC says crews from Kentucky are assisting in its efforts.

With widespread outages in the area, first responders and police urge travelers to use caution and treat any intersection without traffic signals as a four-way stop.

For Dominion Energy customers to report a downed power line, call 1-866-366-4357. NNEC customers can report downed lines by calling 1-866-663-2688.

NNEC says it hopes to have all power back on by Monday morning.

Dominion says it is still too early to give a timeline for full-restoration due to the extent of the damage in the region. On Twitter, the power company says it has already restored power to more than 400,000 of its customers since the beginning of the storm on Thursday.

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Police search for man suspected of sexually assaulting child in Norfolk Walmart

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NORFOLK, Va. (WAVY) — Detectives are asking for the public’s help to identify a man wanted in connection to a sexual assault of an 11-year-old girl inside a Norfolk Walmart.

Police say the child’s parents notified police about the assault on Feb. 23, which happened inside a Walmart located at 7530 Tidewater Drive.

The girl’s parents told detectives the suspect walked past the child and inappropriately touched her.

The suspect is said to be in his late 20s or early 30s. Police ask anyone with information about the man’s identity to call the Norfolk Crime Line at 1-888-LOCK-U-UP or submit a tip through the P3 Tips mobile app.

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Man charged in connection with fatal shooting in Petersburg

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PETERSBURG, Va. (WRIC) – A 47-year-old Colonial Heights man was killed Saturday morning and police have arrested a Petersburg man in connection with his murder.

The incident occurred about 7:35 a.m. in the 1000 block of S. Crater Road, police said.

Authorities arrived at the scene and found a man suffering from multiple gunshot wounds. He was pronounced dead at the scene. The victim has been identified as Dwayne E. Parson.

Police have arrested Deandre A. Tucker, 33, of Petersburg, who is charged with first-degree homicide, use of a firearm in the commission of a felony and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.

Tucker is being held at Riverside Regional Jail.

Anyone with information on the shooting may contact the Petersburg/Dinwiddie Crime Solvers at ( 804) 861-1212

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Man dead after shooting himself outside White House

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WASHINGTON D.C. (WRIC) – Authorities say the man who shot himself outside of the White House Saturday has died.

CNN reports the incident occurred outside the north fence line. The victim suffered a single gunshot wound and Secret Service personnel did not fire any shots, according to Secret Service spokeswoman Cathy Milhoan.

A statement released Saturday afternoon by the Secret Service said the unidentified man approached the vicinity of the White House, removed a concealed handgun and fired several shots.

None of the shots were apparently directed at the White House, the statement read.

“Secret Service personnel are responding to reports of a person who allegedly suffered a self-inflicted gunshot wound along the north fence line of @WhiteHouse,” the Secret Service tweeted.

There are no other injuries relating to the shooting, the Secret Service added. Pedestrian and vehicular traffic around the White House has been affected by the incident.

President Donald Trump was not at the White House at the time of the incident.

The investigation is ongoing.

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This is a developing story. Stay with 8News online and on air for the latest updates.

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Strong winds slam Central Virginia, leaves death and destruction

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) – Powerful winds caused destruction throughout much of Central Virginia on Friday.

The nor’easter winds battered the area, with wind gusts reaching speeds up to 60 miles per hour.

Trees toppled homes and covered roads.

In Chesterfield County, dangerous winds caused a tree to fall on a mobile home.

The tree pinned a six-year-old boy while he slept in his bunk bed.

Neighbor Renee Moore said she was half-asleep when she realized what happened.

“Firemen were going inside, you could hear the saws trying to cut through the tree to get to the kid,” Moore said.

The kid, Anthony Hamilton, died at VCU Medical Center.

“I would never want to go through something like that,” Moore said, echoing similar feelings by other neighbors who learned about the tragedy.

Disaster struck residents living in Hanover County as well.

Lance and Christy Anderson were awaken by a tree falling onto their home, trapping seven of their children inside.

“I was going to the bathroom back by the back room and it just…everything crashed,” Christy Anderson said.

“I just ran to the end of the hall to find my daughters and there wasn’t nothing but tree and outside and I was just..I panicked because I couldn’t do anything,” Lance Anderson said, describing how he rescued some of his children.

The family considers itself fortunate, but admit it’ll be hard rebuilding what Mother Nature tore apart.

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Driver charged with D.U.I after head-on crash in Chesterfield

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CHESTERFIELD COUNTY, Va. (WRIC) — A head-on crash has closed Jessup Road in Chesterfield. Police tell 8News one of the drivers was drinking and driving.

Chesterfield Police say it happened on the 5900 block of Jessup Road, off of Chippenham Parkway near Iron Bridge Road.

Two people were taken to the hospital for evaluation, and one of the drivers was charged with driving under the influence.

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Chesterfield fire claims life of family dog

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CHESTERFIELD COUNTY, Va.  (WRIC) – A family dog is dead after a house in Chesterfield County caught fire early Saturday morning.

Chesterfield County Fire Department were called to a home on Lady Ashley Lane at 1:35 am Saturday morning.

Crews noticed the fire started on the front porch and flames spread to other parts of the house.

The fire department said at least four people were living in the home. They made it out of of the house safely.

Crews were able to rescue two dogs. One dog died. The other was taken to an animal hospital and is recovering.

 

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