We are just a week away from the 6-month anniversary of the May 26 storm, something that devastated several communities in our area. People in Rogers certainly remember the violent storm on Memorial Day weekend. Some are hoping a new sculpture will help the community heal in the long run. The sculpture is known as “Tornado Town.” It depicts the tornado that tore through Rogers on May 26 and the aftermath that followed. It’s a vision that started almost immediately after the storm. “Because our power was out for 5 days, and I had to drive around every morning, looking for coffee,” found object metal sculptor Tom Flynn said. “And every day, I’d have to drive by this trampoline wrapped around a power pole, and it just got me to thinking.” That led to a social media post, asking for trampoline spring donations. In all, 475 springs were collected to create the 9-foot tall tornado replica. It hangs from part of a scrapped, shortwave antenna as it bears down on Rogers. “Usually, in a museum when you have something hanging, it’s hanging from the ceiling,” wood mixed-media metal sculpture artist Michael Pantzer said. “So, since we didn’t know where this might be in the future, we had to come up with ok, it has to have its own structure.”The tornado replica actually weighs about 200 pounds, even though it may not look like it. The entire display, including the tornado and the aftermath, weighs nearly 500 pounds. Flynn and Pantzer say they spent about 500 hours constructing it. “Each spring had to be soaked in a vinegar to get the galvanize off of it and then stretched in a forge and shaped to fit this,” Flynn said. “That’s about 500 hours.” Leaf rakes were used to display downed trees. Actual damaged property was used to build the structures seen in the display. The focus now shifts to finding a permanent home for the tornado sculpture. A place where people can reflect on the lasting impact of what happened on May 26. “We have climbed up there,” Pantzer said. “We have shook on it, just to make sure if it is in public place, it actually is able to hold up to some person who has a crazy idea on it.”As soon as a location for the sculpture is announced, 40/29 News will update you.
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BATON ROUGE A Baton Rouge man was arrested Tuesday on multiple drug charges following two search warrants executed by East Baton Rouge deputies.
Kerri-Anne Donaldson, a Britain’s Got Talent star and renowned dancer, tragically passed away at 38, with her death confirmed as hanging. Tributes poured in from loved ones and the dance community, honoring her talent and kind spirit.
The fire started spreading like coming up the train track and I told her we need to get out cause theres a lot of dry leaves on the ground and I was like I dont want that fire to come to the building, said Edna Vargas, who lives in building right next to the warehouse.
Dog owner Tina Khowaylo assured Newsweek readers the vet is “a very kind man” despite her pup’s nerves.
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Gonzaga Bulldogs handle business against San Diego State with a decisive 80-67 victory, avenging last year’s home loss.
A teenager originally accused of attempted murder of a police officer following an incident involving an ATV in Plaquemines Parish has entered a guilty plea in the case. The teen, Reginald Hamilton, will not be serving any jail time. Hamilton admitted he was wrong when he drove his ATV away from police in June 2022. The police chase made national headlines when Plaquemines Parish Sheriff’s deputies pursued him on a highway. It has been two years since the incident, and the case is officially closed. “Ultimately we got the outcome we wanted which is no jail time. We never thought what took place and what they alleged added up,” said Dr. Ashonta Wyatt. Wyatt is the spokesperson for Hamilton and his family.”We never thought what he did deserved jail time,” said Wyatt. “The outcome we got is the outcome we should have had on the front end,” said Wyatt.Hamilton was 18 at the time and lived in Algiers. He was fishing with friends when Plaquemines Parish deputies saw him improperly riding an ATV on the highway. When deputies began pursuing him, he didn’t stop. The entire incident was captured on dashcam footage. After Hamilton crashed into the deputy, who was trying to lay spikes out on the highway, he was arrested and accused of attempted murder.”We will not stand for this type of behavior in Plaquemines,” said Sheriff Jerry Turlich during a 2022 media briefing.The family held numerous rallies and protests, claiming the charges were an overreach.Years later, a grand jury agreed, formally charging Hamilton with a lesser charge of aggravated battery.A judge granted a change of venue before a trial was set to start, but the case never made it to the courtroom. Hamilton pleaded guilty as charged to the crime, received 18 months house arrest and a three-year probation sentence. “Everybody had to compromise, I don’t think the attorneys for Reginald Hamilton wanted this to end with felony probation – but the alternative was prison and we did not want the child to go to prison,” said Wyatt.District Attorney Charles Ballay says the injured deputy was always involved in the process and was well aware of the plea deal.Ballay said the officer was understanding, feeling this was the best disposition of the case.Hamilton is a new father and is raising his child at home while on house arrest.PPSO declined comment and referred WDSU Investigates to the district attorney’s office.
The Biden administration on Monday imposed sanctions on Israels largest settlement development organization as part of the latest U.S. actions targeting those fomenting instability in the occupied West Bank.The administration has issued a number of rounds of sanctions after President Joe Biden issued an executive order in February allowing sanctions on those undermining peace, security, and stability in the West Bank. The latest action comes amid a push from Democrats for Biden to act in his final months in office to impose sanctions on two far-right Israeli ministers Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben-Gvir for their roles in inciting settler violence in the West Bank and as frustration grows from within Bidens own party about his administrations seeming unwillingness to penalize the Israeli government.President-elect Donald Trump is unlikely to take any punitive actions against Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank instead, his policies are likely to embrace them. His pick for U.S. Ambassador to Israel, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, is staunchly pro-Israel and has voiced support for Israeli occupation in the Palestinian territory.The sanctions from the U.S. Treasury Department Monday hit Amana, the largest organization involved in settlement and illegal outpost development in the West Bank that has established dozens of illegal settler outposts and directly engaged in dispossession of private land owned by Palestinians in its support of settlers, according to the State Department.The organization maintains ties to various persons previously sanctioned by the U.S. government and its partners for perpetrating violence in the West Bank, the Treasury Department said in a press release. The Treasury Department also sanctioned Amanas subsidiary Binyanei Bar Amana Ltd., a construction and development company that builds and sells homes in settlements and outposts in the West Bank.In a concurrent action, the U.S. State Department imposed sanctions on three companies and three people for their roles in violence targeting civilians or in the destruction or dispossession of property.A group of nearly 90 congressional Democrats urged Biden in a late October letter to impose sanctions on Smotrich and Ben Gvir. They publicly released the letter last week in order to increase pressure on the administration. The letter had also pushed for sanctions on Amana, which was sanctioned Monday.
The suspect ran off when the teenager started yelling, and she was not harmed.
A Sacramento County family and their pets were able to escape a house fire, which likely started in the garage, according to Sacramento Metro Fire.
Related video above: ‘How did this happen?’ Two Canadian men learn they were switched at birthBeing switched at birth is something you rarely hear about, but a Texas woman said it happened to her almost 50 years ago. Melissa Brewton said what happened to her as a child was nothing short of horrific.”My mom worked three jobs most of the time,” she said. “I practically raised myself. I had an uncle in the family that did horrible things to me. I had another family member do some horrible things to me. I would never want that childhood for anyone.” Now, at the age of 49, she said she’s learned all of it could have been prevented. She only came to this realization after her adult daughter took a DNA test.”She just wanted to know the ethnicity, where we came from, where our families came from,” she said. Her daughter told her she learned she had a sister. “I figured my dad had a child out there and she was like, ‘do you want her information?'” Brewton said. “I said ‘Yeah, of course.’ When I saw her picture, I said, ‘Oh my God, I finally look like somebody in my family.'”When the two eventually got in touch, the surprises continued. Brewton said she told her the sister she grew up with has DNA links to the Brewton family.”She was as like, ‘Okay when were you born?’ and I said, ‘April 25, 1975,’ and she said, ‘Okay what hospital?'” Brewton recounted. “I said, ‘Grapevine Memorial.’ She said, ‘Okay, the sister I grew up with was born April 24, 1975 at Grapevine Memorial.'” All this leads them to believe they were switched at birth, going home to the wrong families. “It’s just… it’s been a lot,” Brewton said. Last year, she met the man believed to be her biological dad.”My dad is an amazing, amazing man and loving and caring and I didn’t grow up with anything like that, so it’s been anger, sadness, joy, lots and lots of different feelings,” she said. She said her biological mom passed away in 2019 so sadly, they never met.Now, Brewton has hired an attorney. Earlier this month, they sued Baylor Scott & White, the hospital system that purchased Grapevine Memorial six years after Brewton was born. “My understanding is they have taken on the liabilities of that previous hospital,” attorney Jonathan Wharton said. “This error occurred in 1975. That is the same year that the Texas legislature first started passing a bunch of limitations on medical malpractice cases. One of those limitations put a two-year statute of limitations for everyone’s medical malpractice cases regardless of whether the case was undiscoverable or against a minor.” However, Wharton said technically the mix-up at the hospital happened one month before the law came into effect, so he thinks they have a case. “What happened to me as a child was horrible, and the fact that I was given to the wrong family was absolutely horrible and unacceptable,” Brewton said. She wants accountability. In a statement to CBS News Texas, a spokesperson for Baylor Scott & White said, “It is important to note that Baylor Scott & White Health did not own, operate or manage the hospital until 1981.”