Your next eight hours puts us at 62 weather and by 11. We will have some rain. Lets take a look at the big stories we are following. Breaking news out of the east bay. Three Police Officers to get to the hospital after they get sick from toxic fumes. We will go live in personal disparate with details of the story. Good morning, well. Reporter good morning, james. It happened right here in the parking lot at a Shopping Complex off of a be in weight. The freeway is right next to me. They were called to the scene late last night to check out this pickup truck. Let me show you the video. There was a pickup truck in the parking lot. Inside that pickup truck, 5 gallons of each, 7 pints of ammonia ended accidentally spilled inside the pickup truck call the Police Officers did not know that and they didnt go the gravity of the situation, so when they checked out the pickup truck, he got a little too close, briefed in all the fumes that the two chemicals combined when they created with combined
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CLARKSBURG There is still the possibility of more lawsuits against the Louis A. Johnson Veteran s Affairs Medical Center (VAMC) for deaths allegedly caused by serial killer Reta Mays.
The deadline for lawsuits to be filed against VAMC is August, which is the two-year anniversary of the investigation into mysterial deaths at the VAMC going public, according to the Associated Press.
Mays was a nursing assistant at the VAMC and admitted she killed veterans by giving them fatal shots of insulin.
Mays was recently moved to a low-security women s prison in Alabama. She was sentenced to seven consecutive life sentences plus 20 years for the deaths of seven veterans that she admitted to injecting with unnecessary insulin. Mays was moved to FCI Aliceville.
bdunlap@newsandsentinel.com
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Assistant U.S. Attorney Jarod Douglas speaks at a press conference following the sentencing of Reta Mays who was sentenced to seven consecutive life sentences for the murder of veterans at the Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center in Clarksburg.
CLARKSBURG – A Harrison County woman who worked as an aide at the Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center in Clarksburg was sentenced Tuesday to seven consecutive life sentences for the murder of veterans at the facility.
Reta Mays, 46, was sentenced Tuesday by U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Kleeh in the United States District Court for the Northern District of West Virginia to seven consecutive life sentences for the murder of veterans at the facility as well as another 20 years on a charge of assault with attempt to murder for an eighth victim.
For The Times Leader
CLARKSBURG – A Harrison County woman who worked as an aide at the Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center in Clarksburg was sentenced Tuesday to seven consecutive life sentences for the murder of veterans at the facility.
Reta Mays, 46, was sentenced Tuesday by U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Kleeh in the United States District Court for the Northern District of West Virginia to seven consecutive life sentences for the murder of veterans at the facility as well as another 20 years on a charge of assault with attempt to murder for an eighth victim.
She originally pleaded guilty on July 14, 2020.