Mount Joy man charged with ethnic intimidation after attempting to burn down man s home: police lancasteronline.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lancasteronline.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
He is scheduled to be sentenced March 26.
Credit: Attorney General s Office Author: 13 ON YOUR SIDE Staff Published: 7:35 PM EST February 26, 2021 Updated: 7:35 PM EST February 26, 2021
OSCEOLA COUNTY, Mich. A former Osceola County sheriff’s deputy pleaded guilty Friday to multiple felony drug charges and possessing child sexually abusive material, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel announced.
Andrew Wernette, 39, of Reed City, entered the plea today in Osceola County 49th Circuit Court before Judge Scott Hill-Kennedy.
Wernette pleaded guilty to the following charges:
Two counts of aggravated child sexually abusive activity, a 25-year felony;
Using a computer to commit a crime, a 20-year felony;
The Tuscaloosa News
In only 21 short months, at the close of 2022, Alabama will lose the greatest senator in our state’s history. Those of us who are political historians will acknowledge Richard Shelby as Alabama’s most pronounced political emissary in Washington.
In my 2015 book, Six Decades of Alabama Political History, I have a chapter, “Alabama’s Three Greatest Senators,” which features Lister Hill, John Sparkman and Shelby. Hill and Sparkman were icons but, if were writing that chapter today, Shelby would be alone as the premier “Giant of Alabama.”
Hill served in the Senate for 30 years and Sparkman for 32 years. Shelby eclipsed Sparkman’s record two years ago and at the end of his term will set the bar at 36 years. It should also be noted that Sens. Shelby, Hill and Sparkman all also served nearly a decade or more in the U.S. House of Representatives. Shelby is now in his 43rd year in Washington.
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Colo. Judge Says Mine Suit Decades Too Late
Law360 (January 27, 2021, 2:23 PM EST) A Colorado magistrate judge has recommended dismissal of a suit accusing an Arch Resources-owned coal mine of violating environmental law, finding that an expansion project can t restart the clock on claims stemming from the initial construction of the mine decades ago.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Scott T. Varholak said Tuesday the suit, brought by WildEarth Guardians, the Sierra Club, the Center for Biological Diversity, and High Country Conservation Advocates against Arch Resources Inc., didn t adequately allege the West Elk coal mine expansion qualified as a major change or that it would cause a significant uptick in the mine s emissions, so claims it.