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Home Based Business

Spain’s rental nightmare laid bare: How up to 85 families are forced to ‘audition’ for homes in the hottest markets – with demand surging in Barcelona, Malaga, Alicante and elsewhere [Video]

SPAINS growing rental nightmare has been laid bare by the latest statistics from the second quarter of 2024. According to property portal

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Home Based Business

Porch pirate ring in High Point, Davidson County, Guilford County [Video]

WELL TALK MORE ABOUT THAT COMING UP, LAINEY. THANK YOU. 12 INVESTIGATES. NOW, POLICE SAY BAD GUYS HAVE TAKEN HUNDREDS OF CELL PHONES RIGHT FROM PEOPLES FRONT PORCHES. AND THIS HAS BEEN GOING ON SINCE MAY. WXII 12 SARAH SOWERS SPOKE WITH INVESTIGATORS AND A VICTIM AND SARAH, WHAT IS SHE SAYING ABOUT THESE CRIMES? FOR HER, ITS NOT SO MUCH ABOUT WHAT WAS STOLEN, BUT WHY THIS PERSISTENT PROBLEM HASNT STOPPED. HER STORY IS JUST ONE PART OF WHAT INVESTIGATORS THINK IS A RING OF THEFTS. WENDY BLACK CAUGHT SOMEONE STEALING TWO AT&T IPHONES FROM HER SECLUDED HICKS WOULD FRONT PORCH IN MAY ON HER RING DOORBELL CAMERA AFTER POSTING ON NEIGHBOR NEXT DOOR, SHE REALIZED SHE WASNT THE ONLY ONE WHO HAD PACKAGES STOLEN. THE FACT THAT I WAS HOME ALONE AND THEY WALKED UP MY 300 FOOT DRIVEWAY AND WERE BRAZEN ENOUGH TO COME UP ONTO THE PORCH AND TAKE MY PACKAGES. IF I HAD THE GARAGE DOOR UP, WHAT COULD HAVE HAPPENED? YOU KNOW, COULD THEY HAVE COME INTO MY HOME? SHE SAYS A FEDEX DRIVER DROPPED OFF THE PACKAGE AND NEARLY 45 MINUTES LATER, SOMEONE BACKED INTO HER DRIVEWAY, JUMPED OUT OF THEIR CAR AND STOLE THE PHONES. AS OF THIS MONTH, DAVIDSON AND GUILFORD COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE AND HIGH POINT POLICE ARE INVESTIGATING 16 CASES IN AUGUST AND SEPTEMBER THAT INVOLVED CELL PHONE PACKAGES, STOLEN CELL PHONES WERE BEING PICKED UP AFTER THE INDIVIDUALS ARE ABLE TO OBTAIN A TRACKING NUMBER AND WITH THAT TRACKING NUMBER, ALL YOUR INFORMATION ON THERE, YOUR ADDRESS AND THINGS. SO THESE CRIMINALS ARE PRETTY MUCH STAKING OUT YOUR HOUSE, WAITING FOR YOUR PACKAGES. LAST MONTH, THE DAVIDSON COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE ARRESTED THREE PEOPLE THEY BELIEVE WERE INVOLVED IN A RING OF THEFTS. THEY HAVE IDENTIFIED ONE SUSPECT. THEYRE STILL LOOKING FOR. THE SHERIFFS OFFICE SAYS NORTH CAROLINA ISNT ALONE AS OTHER STATES ARE EXPERIENCING SIMILAR REPORTS TO BEST PROTECT YOURSELF. SHERIFF RICHIE SIMMONS SAYS DONT BE AN OPEN TARGET. PUT IT IN A HAND OR HAVE IT IN A SECURE PLACE THAT IT CAN BE DELIVERED OR TO A BUSINESS WHERE IT CAN BE HANDED OFF. IF YOU LEAVE THESE PACKAGES LIKE ANY OTHER PACKAGES, IF YOU LEAVE THEM UNSECURED AT YOUR RESIDENCE IN THIS DAY AND TIME, THEYRE NOT GOING TO BE THERE WHEN YOU GET HOME. AS FOR WENDYS CASE, HIGH POINT POLICE HAVENT MADE ANY ARRESTS. WE REACHED OUT TO FEDEX ABOUT THE THEFTS. IT SAYS SECURITY IS A TOP PRIORITY IN TRACKING AND SHIPPING PACKAGES. THEY ENCOURAGE ANYONE WHO BELIEVES THEIR PACKAGES WERE STOLEN TO CONTACT LAW ENFORCEMENT. YOU CAN READ THE COMPANYS FULL STATEMENT. IN THIS STORY ON WXII 12.COM.

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Home Based Business

A 9/11 anniversary tradition is handed down to a new generation [Video]

A poignant phrase echoes when 9/11 victims’ relatives gather each year to remember the loved ones they lost in the terror attacks.”I never got to meet you.”Video above: See clips of the 23rd 9/11 Remembrance Ceremony in New YorkIt is the sound of generational change at ground zero, where relatives read out victims’ names on every anniversary of the attacks. Nearly 3,000 people were killed when al-Qaida hijackers crashed four jetliners into the twin towers, the Pentagon and a field in southwest Pennsylvania on Sept. 11, 2001.Some names are read out by children or young adults who were born after the strikes. Last year’s observance featured 28 such young people among more than 140 readers. Young people are expected again at this year’s ceremony Wednesday.Some are the children of victims whose partners were pregnant. More of the young readers are victims’ nieces, nephews or grandchildren. They have inherited stories, photos, and a sense of solemn responsibility.Being a “9/11 family” reverberates through generations, and commemorating and understanding the Sept. 11 attacks one day will be up to a world with no first-hand memory of them.”It’s like you’re passing the torch on,” says Allan Aldycki, 13.He read the names of his grandfather and several other people the last two years, and plans to do so on on Wednesday. Aldycki keeps mementoes in his room from his grandfather Allan Tarasiewicz, a firefighter.The teen told the audience last year that he’s heard so much about his grandfather that it feels like he knew him, “but still, I wish I had a chance to really know you,” he added.Allan volunteered to be a reader because it makes him feel closer to his grandfather, and he hopes to have children who’ll participate.”It’s an honor to be able to teach them because you can let them know their heritage and what to never forget,” he said by phone from central New York. He said he already finds himself teaching peers who know little or nothing about 9/11.When it comes time for the ceremony, he looks up information about the lives of each person whose name he’s assigned to read.”He reflects on everything and understands the importance of what it means to somebody,” his mother, Melissa Tarasiewicz, said.Reciting the names of the dead is a tradition that extends beyond ground zero. War memorials honor fallen military members by speaking their names aloud. Some Jewish organizations host readings of Holocaust victims’ names on the international day of remembrance, Yom Hashoah.The names of the 168 people killed in the 1995 bombing of a federal building in Oklahoma City are read annually at the memorial there.On Sept. 11 anniversaries, the Pentagon’s ceremony includes military members or officials reading the names of the 184 people killed there. The Flight 93 National Memorial has victims’ relatives and friends read the list of the 40 passengers and crew members whose lives ended at the rural site near Shanksville, Pennsylvania.The hourslong observance at the 9/11 Memorial in New York is almost exclusively dedicated to the names of the 2,977 victims at all three sites, plus the six people killed in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. All are read by relatives who volunteer and are chosen by lottery.Each is given a subset of names to render aloud. Readers also generally speak briefly about their own lost kin, frequently in touching detail.”I think often about how, if you were still here, you would be one of my best friends, looking at colleges with me, getting me out of trouble with Mom and Dad, hanging out at the Jersey Shore,” Capri Yarosz said last year of her slain uncle, New York firefighter Christopher Michael Mozzillo.Now 17, she grew up with a homemade baby book about him and a family that still mentions him in everyday conversation.”Chris would have loved that” is a phrase often heard around the house.She has read twice at the trade center ceremony.”It means a lot to me that I can kind of keep alive my uncle’s name and just keep reading everybody else’s name, so that more of the upcoming generations will know,” she said by phone from her family’s home in central New Jersey. “I feel good that I can pass down the importance of what happened.”Her two younger sisters also have read names, and one is preparing to do so again Wednesday. Their mother, Pamela Yarosz, has never been able to steel herself to sign up.”I don’t have that strength. It’s too hard for me,” says Pamela Yarosz, who is Mozzillo’s sister. “They’re braver.”Callaway Treble, 18, says his generation of 9/11 families needs to carry forward the victims’ memory. He lost his aunt Gabriela Silvina Waisman, a software company office manager.”We use the term ‘never forget’ for 9/11 all the time, but keeping that in practice and making sure we actually don’t forget that thousands of people died in an attack on our country, that’s extremely important. So I feel like it’s our responsibility to do that,” said Treble, who has read names multiple times since he was 13.By now, many of the children of 9/11 victims such as Melissa Tarasiewicz, who was just out of high school when her father died have long since grown up. But about 100 were born after the attacks killed one of their parents, and are now young adults.”Though we never met, I am honored to carry your name and legacy with me. I thank you for giving me this life and family,” Manuel DaMota Jr. said of his father, a woodworker and project manager, during last year’s ceremony.One young reader after another at the event commemorated aunts, uncles, great-uncles, grandfathers and grandmothers whom the children have missed throughout their lives.”My whole life, my dad has said I reminded him of you.””I wish you got to take me fishing.””I wish I had more of you than just a picture on a frame.””Even though I never got to meet you, I will never forget you.”