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The Well CDC Set to Rehab and Restore 60 Homes in 48 Months, a Year Ahead of Schedule

The Well CDC Set to Rehab and Restore 60 Homes in 48 Months, a Year Ahead of Schedule
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Stark County loses pathologists, can t do own autopsies

Murder investigations could be delayed. Insurers may postpone life insurance payments. The Stark County Coroner s Office says this could happen because it has been unable to perform autopsies. Its sole forensic pathologist who did the autopsies, Daniel Brown, resigned in September to become a freelance pathologist. The former Akron police officer worked for Stark County for about nine months. He had replaced the prior pathologist, Renée Robinson, a Hoover High School graduate. She had stepped down in February 2019 after about three and a half years. What are pathologists? Pathologists are medical doctors who specialize in the study of bodily tissues and fluids.  They often do a five-year residency after medical school. Forensic pathologists are pathologists who do an additional year of fellowship training. They perform in-depth internal and external examinations of bodies, known as autopsies, to help determine cause and manner of death.

Ohio hospital won t release names of officers in shooting

COLUMBUS (AP) The names of the hospital officers involved in the fatal shooting of a man in an Ohio emergency room last month won’t be released by a private health system, with officials arguing that that information isn’t subject to the state open records law. Columbus and suburban Westerville police officers, along with security officers from Mount Carmel St. Ann’s Hospital, also in Westerville, all had roles in events leading to the April 12 death of Miles Jackson. Both Columbus and St. Ann’s officers fired their weapons. Columbus released the names of its officers and their personnel files within 48 hours of the shooting. Westerville also released records about its officers who did not fire their guns and their interactions with Jackson before the shooting.

Tues 11 a m : Ohio hospital won t release names of officers in shooting | News, Sports, Jobs

May 4, 2021 FILE - In this April 12, 2021 file photo, Columbus Sgt. James Fuqua and Columbus Officer Jonathan Pabis leave Saint Ann s hospital in Westerville, Ohio where police shot and killed Miles Jackson in the emergency room after an exchange of gunfire, authorities said. The Columbus-based Mount Carmel private health system said they won t release the names of the hospital officers involved in the fatal shooting of Jackson, with officials arguing that that information isn’t subject to the state open records law. (Doral Chenoweth III/Columbus Dispatch via AP, File) COLUMBUS (AP) The names of the hospital officers involved in the fatal shooting of a man in an Ohio emergency room last month won’t be released by a private health system, with officials arguing that that information isn’t subject to the state open records law.

Westerville hospital won t release names of officers in shooting

Westerville hospital won’t release names of officers in shooting By Andrew Welsh-Huggins - Associated Press COLUMBUS The names of the hospital officers involved in the fatal shooting of a man in an Ohio emergency room last month won’t be released by a private health system, with officials arguing that that information isn’t subject to the state open records law. Columbus and suburban Westerville police officers, along with security officers from Mount Carmel St. Ann’s Hospital, also in Westerville, all had roles in events leading to the April 12 death of Miles Jackson. Both Columbus and St. Ann’s officers fired their weapons.

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