WARREN To oversee incubator programs, business processes and maintain its Courthouse Square offices, BRITE Energy Innovators has brought on Joe Paloski as operations manager.
Paloski serves as a Canfield Township trustee and is the township’s representative in the Cardinal Joint Fire District. Paloski also serves on the Mahoning County HAZMAT Advisory Board. He earned his bachelor’s degree in political science and master’s degree in history from Youngstown State University.
Paloski’s role at BRITE Energy will include overseeing staff and project management for the incubator and its programs, monitoring performance indicators for business processes and managing tenant relationships and the co-working space.
CANFIELD Detectives with the Mahoning County Sheriff’s office know who put a kitten into a garbage receptacle in Canfield Township in November, but have not filed charges against him.
The reason is that detectives sent the kitten to a state laboratory to have a necropsy conducted to determine what caused its death. Detectives are waiting for the results, said detective Patrick Mondora.
The sheriff’s office released a surveillance video to the public showing the man who put the kitten into the trash receptacle behind Youngstown Tile, at the corner of U.S. Route 224 and Palmyra Road on Nov. 29. The next day, employees found the kitten in the trash, but it died.
Jan 19, 2021
CANFIELD Detectives with the Mahoning County Sheriff’s office know who put a kitten into a garbage receptacle in Canfield Township in November, but have not filed charges against him.
The reason is that detectives sent the kitten to a state laboratory to have a necropsy conducted to determine what caused its death. Detectives are waiting for the results, said detective Patrick Mondora.
The sheriff’s office released a surveillance video to the public showing the man who put the kitten into the trash receptacle behind Youngstown Tile, at the corner of U.S. Route 224 and Palmyra Road Nov. 29. The next day, employees found the kitten in the trash, but it died.
Justin Herdman
As United States attorney for the Northern Ohio District, Justin Herdman said his chief priority was to focus on saving lives.
Herdman took some time last week to look back on his four years as the top federal cop in northern Ohio, at what he did right and what he could have improved upon.
“What we did best in this office was to put deserving people in jail and take their money,” Herdman said. “That was our core competency being in the law enforcement business.”
Friday was the Ohio native’s last day on the job. He handed the office reins over to his first assistant, U.S. Attorney Bridget Brennan.
A document filed Monday in the U.S. Northern Ohio District Court, Cleveland, on behalf of a Canfield man charged with a gun offense seeks to suppress evidence in the case.
It was filed to suppress evidence seized as authorities searched a home at 3440 Orchard Hill Drive in Canfield Township in August.
Michael Soles, 48, of Canfield, was indicted on a charge of possession of a machine gun. He has pleaded not guilty.
In the indictment, it is stated that Soles knowingly had an unregistered machine gun in his possession, which is a violation of federal law.
The motion to suppress evidence may delay the trial that is scheduled for Feb. 1 in front of Judge Solomon Oliver Jr.