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Small Business Tips & Strategies

Mass. woman shares EEE survival story, lingering effects years later [Video]

LONG TERM CONSEQUENCES. THESE ARE TWO OF MY GREAT GRANDCHILDREN. IN 1962, SHIRLEY BARLOW WAS LIVING IN MILTON, NEAR A HORSE RANCH. AND SHE SAYS THATS PROBABLY HOW SHE CAME IN CONTACT WITH A MOSQUITO CARRYING A VIRUS. THAT LITTLE STINKING MOSQUITO BIT THE HORSE. GOT ME FOR THREE DAYS. BARLOW COULDNT GET OUT OF BED. THEN, WITH A TEMPERATURE OF 104, HER MOTHER TOOK HER TO THE HOSPITAL, WHERE DOCTORS SAID SHE HAD EASTERN EQUINE ENCEPHALITIS THAT WAS CAUSING HER BRAIN TO SWELL AND THAT THERE WAS NOTHING THEY COULD DO. PEOPLE WERE COMING AND SAYING GOODBYE TO ME. THATS. YEAH, BECAUSE THEIR LAST GOODBYES. THERE WAS NO YEAH, THERE WAS REALLY NO HOPE FOR ME. THERE IS A VACCINE TO PROTECT HORSES AGAINST TRIPLE E, BUT NONE HAS EVER BEEN APPROVED FOR HUMANS. SAME GOES FOR ANTIVIRAL MEDICATIONS. PART OF THE PROBLEM AGAIN, IS BECAUSE ITS SUCH A RARE INFECTION, WHICH IS FORTUNATE WE DONT HAVE AN OPPORTUNITY REALLY TO TEST ANTIVIRALS. EVERYONE SURPRISED A FEW MONTHS AFTER BARLOW GOT SICK, SHE GOT WELL ENOUGH TO GET MARRIED. SHE WENT ON TO RAISE TWO SONS AND TRAVEL THE WORLD, BUT STILL TAKES MEDICATION FOR HEADACHES. STARTS IN THE BACK. AND ITS LIKE YOU CANT SEE. ALMOST MAKES YOU BLIND. AND BARLOW CONTINUES TO WARN EVERYONE SHE CAN ABOUT THE DANGERS OF TRIPLE E. SO WHEN I SEE THESE THINGS, THE TRIPLE E AND OXFORD NOT FAR FROM US, I HAVE MY FAMILY LIVING THERE AND I TELL THEM, DONT GET OUT. SOME EXPERTS BELIEVE THAT CATCHING TRIPLE E MIGHT MAKE PEOPLE IMMUNE TO THE DISEASE. FOR THE REST OF THEIR LIVES, BUT SHIRLEY BARLOW IS NOT TAKING ANY CHANCES. SHE US

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Small Business Tips & Strategies

Grief counselors at school after boy, 10, killed in Route 1 crash [Video]

WILL BE OFFERED FOR AS LONG AS NECESSARY. RIGHT NOW, WHAT I WILL SAY THAT I SAW INSIDE IS MANY OF JALENS TEACHERS ACTUALLY COMING TOGETHER. YOU KNOW, ITS BEFORE THE SCHOOL YEAR STARTS AND THEY VOLUNTARILY CAME OUT TO SUPPORT ONE ANOTHER TO SUPPORT ANYONE WHO COMES IN THE DOWNEY COMMUNITY SCHOOL IN BROCKTON IS WHERE TEN YEAR OLD JALEN BUSH, VICTORIAN WOULD HAVE STARTED FIFTH GRADE ONE WEEK FROM TODAY. INSTEAD, GRIEF COUNSELORS ARE INSIDE THE SCHOOL, COMFORTING HIS TEACHERS, CLASSMATES AND FRIENDS. JALEN WAS KILLED SATURDAY WHEN THIS STOLEN JEEP CRASHED INTO THE NISSAN ALTIMA THAT JALEN AND HIS PARENTS AND THREE SIBLINGS WERE RIDING IN ON ROUTE ONE IN PLAINVILLE. THE MAN WHO WAS ACCUSED OF CAUSING THE DEADLY CRASH, MICHAEL ASCOLESE, IS SEEN HERE IN COURT EARLIER THIS WEEK. HES BEING HELD ON $100,000 CASH BAIL ON CHARGES THAT INCLUDE MOTOR VEHICLE MANSLAUGHTER AND O.U.I. LIQUOR. SECOND OFFENSE. BUT INSIDE THE DOWNEY SCHOOL, THE FOCUS IS ON HOW JALEN LIVED AND HELPING PEOPLE STRUGGLING TO COPE WITH HIS DEATH. TODAY WE HAVE SCHOOL SOCIAL WORKERS THAT WILL BE MEETING WITH STUDENTS INDIVIDUALLY, FACULTY INDIVIDUALLY. SO THATS AN OPTION. AND ALSO THE OTHER OPTION IS TO MEET TOGETHER COLLECTIVELY TO LEAN ON ONE ANOTHER AND TALK ABOUT SOME FOND MEMORIES OF JALEN. HE WAS AN AMAZINGLY SWEET, KIND, THOUGHTFUL, YOUNG MAN AND A LIGHT FOR THIS COMMUNITY AND FOR THIS SCHOOL. AS PART OF THE GRIEF COUNSELING TODAY, WERE TOLD THAT STUDENTS WERE MAKING CONDOLENCE CARDS THAT WILL BE DELIVERED TO THE FAMILY. JALENS MOTHER IS EMPLOYED BY THE BROCKTON PUBLIC SCHOOL SYSTEM AND THAT SHE TOO, WILL RECEIVE THE SUPPORT SHE NEEDS AS BOTH A PARENT AND AN EMPLOYEE. REPORTING LI

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Harris and Walz are kicking off a 2-day bus tour in Georgia that will culminate in Savannah rally [Video]

WASHINGTON (AP) Vice President Kamala Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, are kicking off a two-day bus tour in Georgia that will snake through rural areas in the southern part of the state before culminating in a big rally in the coastal city of Savannah. The Democratic ticket will meet with

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Small Business Tips & Strategies

Idaho murder suspect wants trial moved after survey results say town will burn the courthouse down if hes acquitted [Video]

A hearing on Thursday is set to determine whether the trial of Bryan Kohberger, the man accused of killing four University of Idaho students in 2022, will be moved out of Latah County, a location his attorneys argued would be unable to provide an unbiased jury for the long-awaited trial.The hearing is the latest update in a grinding two-year legal battle to get Kohbergers case before a jury, which has seen numerous pretrial hearings and complaints of slowness from the victims families. The trial, which could see Kohberger face the death penalty, is currently set for June 2025.Kohberger has pleaded not guilty to four counts of first-degree murder.Attorneys for Kohberger, 29, argued in a court filing the trial should be moved out of Latah County due to a mob mentality threatening the safety of their client and the courthouse. Theyre hoping to move the trial more than 300 miles away to Ada County, home of Boise, the states capital and largest city.The traumatized town of Moscow is understandably filled with deeply held prejudgment opinions of guilt, the defense wrote.The defense states anonymous residents of Latah County, where the killings took place, told defense experts in telephone surveys if Kohberger is not convicted: Theyd burn the courthouse down. Outrage would be a mild description. They would probably find and kill him. There would likely be a riot and he wouldnt last long outside because someone would do the good ole boy justice.His defense argued the prosecution recognizes an enormous venue problem exists and Kohberger has a Constitutional right to a fair trial with an impartial jury.Latah Countys media coverage of the case is the highest in the state and the coverage is often inaccurate and inflammatory, the defenses filing stated.His attorneys said the survey found the more media accounts a potential juror knew of, the higher the prejudgment for guilt.The defenses argument is based on survey work conducted by defense expert Bryan Edelman of the consulting firm Trial Innovations in four Idaho counties, including Latah, where the Moscow killings took place and Ada County.Edelman surveyed 400 residents in Latah County about their knowledge and prejudicial opinions of the case. Truescope, a media monitoring company, also looked at media coverage available to residents in Moscow and Boise but could not determine the amount of untraceable media reaching Idaho citizens in those cities from YouTube, TikTok, Facebook, or podcasts.The filing noted while respondents in Latah County said there would be outrage from the community if Kohberger was not convicted, respondents in Ada County said community members would go on with life as always and take it well.The defense also argued Moscow does not have the proper facilities to accommodate an intensely publicized three-month trial and cited the changing of venue to Ada County in high-profile cases like the murder trials of Lori Vallow and Chad Daybell. Vallow was sentenced to life in prison and her husband, Daybell, to death for murdering Vallows two children and Daybells first wife.Prosecutors, on the other hand, have argued a fair and impartial trial can be held in Moscow, and intense media coverage of the case extends beyond Latah County. They criticized the survey findings,arguing they show Latah County residents who have heard about the case were, overall, statistically less likely to prejudge the Defendant. Additionally, other strategies could be used to ensure a fair and impartial trial, like convening a large jury pool and thoroughly screening them, say prosecutors.Moving the trial hundreds of miles away would be inconvenient for witnesses as well as the victims families, according to prosecutors.Four college students killed in the nightThe case stems from the murders on the morning of Sunday, November 13, 2022. Police in Moscow, Idaho, were called to a home near the University of Idaho and inside found the bodies of four students: Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Madison Mogen, 21; Ethan Chapin, 20; and Xana Kernodle, 20. All four had been stabbed to death.The slayings and the ensuing manhunt for a suspect rattled the small college town of Moscow, prompting fears about students safety and subsequent attacks.Kohberger, then a graduate student at Washington State Universitys Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, was arrested at his parents home in Monroe County, Pennsylvania on Dec. 30, a little over a month after the killings.Law enforcement zeroed in on Kohberger partially through linking him to a white Hyundai Elantra seen in the immediate area of the killings. His DNA also matched DNA recovered from a tan leather knife sheath found laying on the bed of one of the victims, according to court documents.