brian: investigators recovered a body, but won t be able to make a positive i.d. until dna can confirm it. this is one of the worst fire scenes i ve seen as far as the victim. brian: dearborn county coroner steve calahan and his chief deputy coroner cameron mccreary say just getting to the victim among the unstable remains of the burnt home was extremely dangerous. we wanted to get in there, get the body and get out as quick as we can. brian: now, investigators begin to figure out how it all started. among those at the scene, dearborn county prosecutor aaron negangard, along with detectives from his office, the fire marshal s and aurora police all closing in on a cause. all after a fire that left one dead and lots of questions. at least five agencies are involved in this investigation, but they have one problem. ll probably have to take at least some of it down before brian hamick, wlwt news 5. sheree: also happening this afternoon, a teenager hit walking along a set o
USDA has launched a new initiative to get more of the fruits and vegetables into the marketplace and is taking comments on how to support to the industry.
Tim Hearden
The record 784,000-ton walnut harvest in California in 2020 continued a 10-year trend of increasing crop sizes. Industry leaders remarks kick off first-ever Walnut Conference.
The walnut industry’s unprecedented dual challenge of increasing acreage and production coupled with growing global competition underscores the importance of investing in research and promotion, industry leaders said as they opened the first-ever Walnut Conference on Tuesday, March 2.
“In order not to lose momentum, we have to continue to invest,” said Michelle Connelly, the California Walnut Board’s executive director. Under a marketing agreement, the 69-year-old board handles production research and domestic marketing, while the California Walnut Commission undertakes international marketing and health research.