Kirksville man convicted of 2nd-degree murder stemming from 2019 shooting
Kirksville Daily Express
A Kirksville man was convicted of second-degree murder and armed criminal action in Adair County Circuit Court Thursday, the county’s first jury trial in over a year due to the pandemic.
Andrew Head, 20, was convicted of those two charges by a jury following his role in the 2019 shooting death of Izaiha J. McFarland, 17. Head was the accomplice of Drake Zanoni, who the state alleges fired the killing shot.
Because Head was the accomplice to the crime, getting a second-degree murder charge was a difficult hurdle for Adair County Prosecutor Matt Wilson. But the jury believed that was an accurate charge following two days of trial and about two and a half hours of deliberation on Thursday.
Expected to be done by November 2022, the project will include four rectangular fields, two picnic pavilions, a splash pad, an inclusive playground and nearly two miles of trails.
CT medical board fines two doctors $5,000
Lisa Backus, Conn. Health I-Team Writer
May 18, 2021
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Female medical personnel scrubs hands and arms with disinfectant soap during the COVID-19 outbreak. She is dressed in blue scrubs with a stethoscope around her neck.Getty Images
The state Medical Examining Board on Tuesday issued $5,000 fines to two physicians, including one who failed to further evaluate a lesion found by an MRI in the vertebra of a patient; and slightly loosened the restrictions placed on a Torrington doctor who successfully completed a five-year probationary period.
Gabriel Abella, a doctor practicing physical medicine and pain management, provided care to a patient from August to October 2017, state Department of Public Health documents show. During that time, the patient received an MRI which showed a suspicious lesion within the vertebrae, the DPH said. But Abella did not acknowledge the radiologist’s report that indicated there was a les
CT medical board fines two doctors $5,000
Lisa Backus, Conn. Health I-Team Writer
May 18, 2021
FacebookTwitterEmail
Female medical personnel scrubs hands and arms with disinfectant soap during the COVID-19 outbreak. She is dressed in blue scrubs with a stethoscope around her neck.Getty Images
The state Medical Examining Board on Tuesday issued $5,000 fines to two physicians, including one who failed to further evaluate a lesion found by an MRI in the vertebra of a patient; and slightly loosened the restrictions placed on a Torrington doctor who successfully completed a five-year probationary period.
Gabriel Abella, a doctor practicing physical medicine and pain management, provided care to a patient from August to October 2017, state Department of Public Health documents show. During that time, the patient received an MRI which showed a suspicious lesion within the vertebrae, the DPH said. But Abella did not acknowledge the radiologist’s report that indicated there was a les