Corrie
Cowlay-Saunders
WILLIAMSPORT A city woman has been charged in the death of her five-month-old baby girl and alleged stabbing of her estranged boyfriend, both of whom were the infant’s parents, city police said.
The deceased girl’s mother, Corrie Shanikah Cowlay-Saunders, 22, of 344 Adams St. has been charged with criminal homicide along with attempted homicide for allegedly stabbing her estranged boyfriend, Cordell Faltz, in the neck and jaw, after allegedly killing Cailania Faltz, the baby, Thursday night, according to an arrest affidavit by city Police Agent Laura Kitko.
Lycoming County Coroner Charles E. Kiessing Jr. said the girl was pronounced dead by one of his deputy coroners and an autopsy was scheduled for today at Lehigh Valley Medical Center in Allentown.
mmaroney@sungazette.com
A city woman has been charged in the death of her five-month-old baby girl and alleged stabbing of her estranged boyfriend, both of whom were the infant’s parents, city police said.
The deceased girl’s mother, Corrie Shanikah Cowlay-Saunders, 22, of 344 Adams St. has been charged with criminal homicide along with attempted homicide for allegedly stabbing her estranged boyfriend, Cordell Faltz, in the neck and jaw, after allegedly killing Cailania Faltz, the baby, Thursday night, according to an arrest affidavit by city Police Agent Laura Kitko.
Lycoming County Coroner Charles E. Kiessing Jr. said the girl was pronounced dead by one of his deputy coroners and an autopsy was scheduled for today at Lehigh Valley Medical Center in Allentown.
Invisible scars: 7 business owners, execs talk about pain of COVID-19, hopes for 2021
Updated Dec 29, 2020;
Posted Dec 24, 2020
Lynn Le is the founder of Society Nine, which makes boxing equipment and martial arts-inspired apparel for women. Portland Business Journal
Facebook Share
By Portland Business Journal
Oregon newsrooms have partnered to share content to highlight the human toll of the 2010 pandemic. Our hope is this collaboration captures this historic nature of the COVID-19 crisis.
This article is contributed by the
The latter began on Feb. 28, when the first COVID-19 case in Oregon was reported.
On March 12, Gov. Kate Brown ordered that no events with more than 250 people could be held for four weeks. The next day, Oregon schools closed for two weeks. An avalanche of stay-at-home orders, social distancing requirements, business closures, layoffs, eviction moratoriums, health care worker shortages and more crashed down upon us on a daily basis.
Small businesses speak out on pain, opportunities of 2020
CEOs, founders turn companies in directions they couldn t have imagined 12 months ago
Editor s note: Oregon newsrooms have partnered to share content to highlight the human toll of the pandemic. Our hope is this collaboration captures this historic nature of the COVID-19 crisis.
There s the calendar year. The fiscal year. And for the first, and hopefully only, time ever, the pandemic year.
The latter began on Feb. 28, when the first Covid-19 case in Oregon was reported.
On March 12, Gov. Kate Brown ordered that no events with more than 250 people could be held for four weeks. The next day, Oregon schools closed for two weeks. An avalanche of stay-at-home orders, social distancing requirements, business closures, layoffs, eviction moratoriums, health care worker shortages and more crashed down upon us on a daily basis.