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Page 5 - Miguel Rangel News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Abilene Police Looking for Fugitive Shooting Suspect

Abilene Police Looking for Fugitive Shooting Suspect   ABILENE, TX – Abilene Police are looking for 21-year-old Miguel Rangel and need help finding him. On Sunday, a shooting took place on the 300 block of Orange St. and police found a vehicle with bullet holes in it. One male victim was transported to Hendrick Hospital with minor injuries. Now police say Miguel Rangel has an Aggravated Assault Charge from this shooting. If you have any information regarding Miguel Rangel, please call the Abilene Police Department at 673-8331 and reference the case number 21-022734. To remain anonymous call 676-8477 (TIPS) and you’ll be eligible for a cash reward.

So far, 57 people confirmed to have died from Texas freeze, early report says

Diana Martinez Rangel was the epitome of strength, resilience and kindness to her family. She d learned to navigate the world without her hearing, raised six children, persevered through multiple heart attacks and stuck to a strict dialysis regimen for the past seven years. Inside her Manor home, weeks after the mid-February winter storm, her son Miguel Rangel said he was still in shock that she had died.  “It just hurts because she wasn’t supposed to go this way,” Rangel said.   In stage 4 kidney failure, Martinez Rangel needed dialysis treatments three times a week. After the freeze left millions across the state without electricity or water, the dialysis center she depended on had to shutter. The day before they reopened, she died.

Family says Texas to blame for state failures ultimately resulting in grandmother s death

As covid fills ICUs, chronically ill patients suffer ripple effect of delayed surgeries

Los Angeles Times AP   TribLIVE s Daily and Weekly email newsletters deliver the news you want and information you need, right to your inbox. LOS ANGELES In the early years of his illness, as his kidneys began to shrink and toxins coursed through his blood, the same four words often floated through Miguel Rangel’s mind: “I’m going to die.” Although some people live much longer, the average life expectancy of dialysis patients is five to 10 years, and Rangel, who has last-stage chronic kidney disease, lives with constant pain and for the last decade has gotten dialysis nightly via a catheter into his abdomen. Still, the 43-year-old electrician, who lives in San Fernando, has trained his mind to linger on hope.

Coronavirus Today: A different kind of double jeopardy

Amina Khan, and it’s Friday, Feb. 5. Here’s the latest on what’s happening with the coronavirus, plus ways to spend your weekend and a look at some of the week’s best stories. Newsletter Get our free Coronavirus Today newsletter Sign up for the latest news, best stories and what they mean for you, plus answers to your questions. Enter email address You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times. At a time when public officials are practically begging residents to not leave their homes because of COVID-19, the Los Angeles County Superior Court system the largest in the country is still requiring people to venture forth for

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