gvogrin@tribtoday.com
WARREN Local authorities are looking for a Warren man wanted on a secret indictment in connection to the Aug. 2, 2020, fatal shooting of a 24-year-old man who was driving a car on Summit Street NW.
Cameron Tillis, 35, of Palmyra Road SW, is currently at large, according to Trumbull County Assistant Prosecutor Christopher Becker. Tillis is being sought by the Youngstown office of the U.S. Marshals Service office.
A secret indictment was unsealed Thursday in Common Pleas Court charging Tillis with aggravated murder, which carries a gun specification, tampering with evidence and having a firearm under restrictions.
Tillis is the second man charged in the shooting death of Delquan Ware, 2951 Linda Drive NW, who was pronounced dead at Trumbull Regional Medical Center shortly after the shooting that happened about 11 a.m. on Summit Street NW near Tod Avenue NW.
gvogrin@tribtoday.com
WARREN A former Warren G. Harding girls basketball coach is requesting parole from his 15-years-to-life sentence after his conviction in the strangulation death of his wife, Deana, at their Warren home in May 2004.
David Jenkins, 58, who is housed at Marion Correctional Institution, is scheduled for his first hearing before the Ohio Parole Board this month, and assistant Trumbull County Prosecutor Christopher Becker wrote a letter advising the board about his office’s opposition to Jenkins’ release.
In his letter, Becker states facts of the case were very straightforward. It was well known in the community that Jenkins and his wife were having marital problems, and Deana had told a number of close friends by May 2004 she was leaving her husband.
WARREN A former Warren G. Harding girls basketball coach is requesting parole from his 15-years-to-life sentence after his conviction in the strangulation death of his wife Deana at their Warren home in May 2004.
David Jenkins, 58, who is housed at Marion Correctional Institution, is scheduled for his first hearing before the Ohio Parole Board this month, and assistant Trumbull County Prosecutor Christopher Becker wrote a letter advising the board about his office’s opposition to Jenkins’ release.
In his letter, Becker states facts of the case were very straightforward. It was well known in the community that Jenkins and his wife were having marital problems and Deana had told a number of close friends by May 2004 she was leaving her husband.
Man sentenced in case involving woman body-slammed, given brain injury
and last updated 2020-12-31 11:06:08-05
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. â A man has been sentenced in a case involving a woman being âbody-slammedâ due to road rage in a Starbucks parking lot earlier this year, Kent County Prosecutor Christopher Becker said.
Eric Anthony Alvarez was sentenced Wednesday to 321 days in Kent County Jail, five years of probation and restitution for Samantha Sutherlinâs medical expenses.
Those expenses amount to about $391,000, according to Becker.
On Thursday, Feb. 13, police were called to a fight happening in the Starbucks parking lot off of Alpine Avenue in Walker. Police say some sort of crash may have happened prior to the fight.
What’s in a Disease Name?
New study finds medical namesakes are losing their prominence in neurology, replaced by increasing reliance on clear, descriptive labels.
Lou Gehrig’s disease or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis?
Bell’s palsy or idiopathic facial paralysis?
Machado-Joseph disease or spinocerebellar ataxia type III?
A new study finds neurologists are starting to prefer the latter, descriptive option when referring to a disease as opposed to the version named after a person.
“In medicine we often use unnecessarily complicated language,” says lead author Christopher Becker, M.D., a resident physician in the Department of Neurology at Michigan Medicine. “Neurologists are particularly guilty of this, and eponyms are a great example. Our intuition was that the use of eponyms was decreasing, and that’s exactly what we found.”