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Unsolved Mysteries inquiry about 2010 killing of Louisiana couple leads to arrest

Representative-elect, Dr. Julia Letlow, discusses her win and her late husband who passed away from coronavirus last year. An inquiry to Louisiana authorities by the Netflix series Unsolved Mysteries jump-started two dormant murder investigations into the slayings of a pair of married couples and led to an arrest last week.  The Kenner Police Department said Dernell Nelson, 35, of LaPlace, is charged with first-degree murder in the slayings of Hermania Ellsworth and Charles Davis. Investigators said he may also be connected to the slaying of another married couple found dead three weeks after the death of the first couple.  The first killings occurred on June 17, 2010, when authorities found Ellsworth and Davis dead from multiple gunshot wounds inside her vehicle, which had crashed into a tree. Their 3-year-old son was in the backseat but had not been shot. He sustained other injuries, police said. 

JPSO searching for missing person last seen at lakefront

JPSO searching for missing person last seen at lakefront Share Updated: 4:56 PM CDT Apr 7, 2021 WDSU Digital Team Share Updated: 4:56 PM CDT Apr 7, 2021 WDSU Digital Team The Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office is asking for the public’s help locating a missing person.Precious Jackson, who also goes by the first name “Arikayden”, was last seen around 7 a.m. Monday morning in the 4400 block of Hearst Avenue in Metairie. JPSO investigators believe that Jackson’s last location was at the Lake Ponchartrain lakefront around an hour later. Jackson has not been in contact with any family members. Jackson was last seen wearing a dark blue polo shirt and a pair of shorts, according to JPSO. Anyone with information regarding the location of Precious Jackson is asked to call our Missing Persons Section at 504-364-5300 or contact Crimestoppers.

Termites Around the World

© Tryfonov | AdobeStock Jay Nixon travels around the world doing work on behalf of American Pest in the Washington, D.C., area. A notable client, the U.S. State Department, requests his expertise when embassies, consulates and other properties within their purview experience pest issues beyond the scope of local pest management operators. “In many parts of the world, in less developed countries in particular, truly knowledgeable pest management contractors are scarce,” Nixon explains. “When a historic building an ambassador’s residence, for example becomes infested with termites or wood-boring beetles, the officials at the State Department don’t want to take chances. They ask me to do an assessment and recommend a treatment plan to keep damage to a minimum, maximize safety and ensure the preservation of these properties.”

Scientist Discovers New Bee Species on Bayer Partner Farm in Brazil

  The new bee species was first identified by Favizia Freitas de Oliveira, a research scientist with the Institute of Biology at Brazil’s Federal University of Bahia and Hebert Luiz Pereira, a Bayer consultant who’s firm, HP Agroconsultoria focuses on bee production and conservation. In 2017, both began working with Henrique Fiorese, whose family owns the Nossa Senhora Aparecida Farm, where the discovery was made. Details surrounding the discovery were featured in the December 23, 2020 edition of ZooKeys Journal, an international science publication.   Through Bayer’s ForwardFarm initiative, the company collaborates with independent farmers like Fiorese in locations throughout the world to share knowledge about modern and sustainable agriculture through first-hand experiences. Pereira and Freitas de Oliveira noticed the new species, which is a solitary bee that does not live in colonies, while studying other bees that were building their nests inside insect hotels that had

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