He said he was drowsy, and his eyes were really red, he said. He was just down. I mean, he didn t die or anything. But it was just having to go through that type of sickness.I don t think I m ready.
Contracting COVID-19 early in the pandemic, Ellis said he is not completely ruling out the vaccine but wants to see how other inmates react before making a decision. He said he is still dealing with lingering side effects from the virus, such as shortness of breath after going up a flight of stairs. Maybe not everybody is going to react to it that way, so I ll just wait and see, he said.
And Wagoner was sickened after traveling. When he first started having symptoms of COVID, I said, how does Mick Wagoner from Toledo, Ohio, come down with a virus from China? his son says.
Credit: Wagoner family
Mick Wagoner started feeling symptoms after returning from a vacation in Florida.
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine sounded the alarm on March 9, announcing the first three cases of COVID-19 and declaring a state of emergency.
Days later, the governor gathered the state s big-city mayors on a conference call and hammered home the storm that was about to sweep into the state. He told the mayors that they were now at war with an unseen enemy.
Former U.S. Attorney Justin Herdman joins fight to free Ohio inmate convicted of three slayings
Updated Mar 04, 2021;
Posted Mar 04, 2021
Then-U.S. Attorney Justin Herdman, middle, speaks at a news conference at Euclid City Hall in 2019. He is surrounded by (from left) Cleveland Police Cmdr. Sammy Morris, DEA Resident Agent in Charge Keith Martin and Euclid Police Chief Scott Meyer.
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CLEVELAND, Ohio Justin Herdman, the former federal prosecutor who made his name fighting violent crime, is now working to free a man convicted in the slayings of three people.
Within weeks of leaving the U.S. attorney’s office, Herdman has joined lawyers representing Kevin Keith, who was convicted in 1994 in Bucyrus, about 100 miles southwest of Cleveland.
As more people in Marion County and central Ohio receive the coronavirus vaccine, teachers and other school employees are next in line to get their shot.
Marion City Schools Superintendent Ronald Iarussi announced during a school board meeting Tuesday that employees will receive the vaccine through OhioHealth. The clinic will take place Feb. 24 at the Marion Medical Clinic, confirmed OhioHealth Communications and Media Relations Manager Jill Fazekas. We are very pleased and excited to have OhioHealth as our partner, Iarussi said. They have been outstanding leading us through this process.
Employees will receive the Pfizer vaccine, with the superintendent projecting that more than 70% of staff members will get the shot. The second dose of the vaccine will arrive the week of March 15.