Covid 19 coronavirus: French nun Sister Andre, 116, survives virus
9 Feb, 2021 05:16 PM
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The Chapel of Notre-Dame-du-Cap-Falcon at the far end of the Cap Brun headland in Toulon, France. Photo / Andia, Universal Images Group via Getty Images
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Whether it was the power of her prayers or her T-cells that did it, 116-year-old French nun Lucile Randon has survived Covid-19.
The nun, whose religious name is Sister Andre, is the second-oldest known living person in the world, according to the Gerontology Research Group, which validates details of people believed to be aged 110 or older.
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French media report that the nun tested positive for the virus in mid-January in the southern French city of Toulon. But just three weeks later she is fit as a fiddle albeit in in her regular wheelchair. She is even healthy enough to look forward to her 117th birthday on Thursday.
Crime scene investigator, 42, is sentenced to 16 years in prison for beating camgirl wife to death with a bottle - after phone s health app proved he d taken 18 steps when he said he was fast asleep
William Jeffrey West, 47, was sentenced on Monday over the 2018 death of his 42-year-old wife Kathleen Dawn West
West will get credit for the three years he has spent in jail since his arrest
In November, Jeff West was convicted of reckless manslaughter
The former Birmingham-Southern College campus police officer was facing a maximum of 20 years in prison
Kathleen was found dead on the street outside the couple s home in 2018
Kat West’s husband, Jeff West, sentenced to 16 years in wife’s death
Updated Feb 09, 2021;
Shelby County Judge William Bostick III on Monday ordered 47-year-old Jeff West to serve 16 years in prison for the death of his wife, Kat West.
In November, Jeff West was convicted of reckless manslaughter in the death of 42-year-old Kat West, a Calera mother and online exhibitionist.
Kat West died from a blow to the head from a Lucid Absinthe bottle wielded by her husband, a jury deemed. He has maintained his innocence for more than three years, contending she died as the result of a drunken, accident fall.
Working with metal is in Richard Brenner s blood, like sawdust in the veins of a furniture maker or ink for a journalist.
That s why the former chief executive of Amarr Garage Doors seized the opportunity to expand his ownership stake in a Lexington company, Image Wizards LLC, that prints high-resolution photography and digital images on aluminum.
Image Wizards was founded in 2003 by Roger Laudy, who sold his share of the company to co-owner Brenner late in 2020 before entering retirement while serving as a consultant. The company, with 10 employees, is based at 105 Rogers Road in Lexington.
Brenner met Laudy in 2015 and had opted to take a half-ownership stake in 2016 with the potential of acquiring all of the company at some point.
Billy Clardy III Act would leave wiretapping approval for drug investigations up to the state
Billy Clardy III Act would leave wiretapping approval for drug investigations up to the state By Caroline Klapp | February 4, 2021 at 9:53 PM CST - Updated February 4 at 10:34 PM
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (WAFF) - A bill aimed at protecting the badge has taken a step forward in Alabama legislature.
House Bill 17 would make it to where officers could get permission on the state level instead of having to go through the federal government to use wire taping technology in drug trafficking investigations.
The bill is named after the STAC Agent, Billy Clardy III.