IRONTON — Ohio Investigative Unit agents visited Boomers Sports Bar in Ironton on Feb. 6 and issued a citation after witnessing violations, according to a news release.
COLUMBUS, Ohio â Ohio can expect to see more doses of the coronavirus vaccine that itâs receiving from both Pfizer and Moderna in the coming weeks, Gov. Mike DeWine announced Thursday.
Ohio currently receives about 73,000 doses a week from each company, with Moderna expected to increase that amount to about 105,000 next week, the governor said. Pfizer officials have told DeWine that its own weekly supply of 73,000 should grow by about 40% by the middle of February and double by the end of March.
That good news was tempered by a notice from the governor that he repeated again Thursday: Once Ohio begins providing vaccines next week to everyone 65 and older, the state will hold at that level for several weeks because that age group is so large, at about 2 million.
Today
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The sealed drug indictments will be made public once the individuals are arrested, he said.
In other cases:
Beckett Anthony Riley Sites, 19, of Private Drive 2482, South Point, was indicted on a charge of vehicular assault.
Robert A. Stevens, 42, of Private Drive 3082, Ironton, was indicted on charges of aggravated possession of 4.5 grams of meth, improper handling of a firearm in a motor vehicle and having weapons while under disability (being a felon in possession of a firearm.
Christopher S. Carrell, 32, of Louisville, Kentucky, was indicted on charges of failure to comply with the order or signal of a police officer and assault on a peace officer.