Two men arrested on grand larceny charges in Forrest Co. Steven Freeman, 30, (left) and Kelsey Herrin Jr, 50, (right) are facing charges of grand larceny after stealing items around the Forrest County area. (Source: Forrest County Sheriff s Office) By Renaldo Hopkins | May 2, 2021 at 9:03 PM CDT - Updated May 2 at 9:05 PM
FORREST COUNTY, Miss. (WDAM) - Authorities in Forrest County managed to arrest two men on felony charges after being caught stealing items from a citizen’s property Sunday.
According to the Forrest County Sheriff’s Office, just before noon, a citizen who lives on Luther Carter Road looked at his home security cameras recording evidence of two men stealing items from his property and leaving in a white pickup truck pulling a utility trailer.
May 1, 2021
AMES – Favorable weather in the forecast has farm equipment and motorists back on Iowa’s roadways, and with that combination comes the need for patience and caution.
“Every year there are thousands of collisions between motor vehicles and farm machinery on our rural roads,” said Steven Freeman, professor in agricultural and biosystems engineering at Iowa State University.
The most common incidents occur when an approaching motorist hits a farm vehicle from behind or when a passing motorist hits a farm vehicle that is attempting to make a wide left turn, according to Freeman, who authored a handy guide called “Sharing Rural Roads.”
There are several reasons why a player’s year-by-year production might improve: health, a change of scenery or simply that player’s own growth. Here are a group of WNBA players we expect to take their games to the next level in 2021.
Experts: Antisemitic incidents in CT drop during pandemic
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Stamford, Conn., police said swastikas were found on sidewalks in downtown on Nov. 8, 2018.Stamford Police Department / Contributed Photo
There has been an overall reduction in antisemitic incidents in Connecticut according to experts, though online harassment is an increasingly worrisome trend, according to one organization.
“Here in Connecticut and nationally, since the COVID-19 crisis hit the U.S. in early 2020, we have seen some shifts, including a reduction in incidents on the college campus and in schools, and an increase in Zoom-bombing of synagogue and Jewish communal events and other attempts to hijack online events to spread hate,” said Steve Ginsburg, Connecticut’s regional director for the ADL.