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Watch: Videos you may have missed this week

From four California residents being arrested after faking a bear attack for an insurance payout to a couple returning home to find a koala in their bed, here are some of the videos you may have missed this week:Four California residents arrested after faking a bear attack for insurance payoutFour Los Angeles residents were arrested for an insurance fraud scheme after they claimed a bear damaged their vehicles but video showed it was a person in a bear costume.The California Department of Insurance said the four men claimed a bear entered their 2010 Rolls Royce Ghost and damaged the interior while at Lake Arrowhead on Jan. 28. They provided surveillance footage to their insurance company as proof. But the video proved their story false.Watch the video in the player above.Couple comes home to find koala in bedKoalas are normally found in eucalyptus trees, but one couple came home in Australia on Wednesday and were shocked to find one in their bedroom.Video showed the koala scurrying around the house, presumably looking for a way out, as Rufino, the homeowner, screamed frantically in the background. Koalas rarely attack people and are most often seen at the tops of trees, lazily chewing eucalyptus leaves.Rufino said her husband later used a blanket to shoo the koala away and it then found its way to the door.Massive dust storm reduces visibility, causes vehicle pileup on central California highwayA powerful dust storm known as a haboob caused a vehicle pile-up on a central California highway, sending several people to hospitals with minor injuries, authorities said.An enormous rolling cloud of dust reduced visibility Monday afternoon on State Route 152 in Madera County, causing motorists to crash into one another, according to the California Highway Patrol.Pit Bull gives birth to green puppy named FionaA Mississippi couple’s pet Pit Bull welcomed a new litter of puppies into the world last weekend, but one of the puppies doesn’t look like the others.Pearl and Harley are the names of their two American Pit Bulls who had a new litter of puppies on Sunday.The only oddity is the firstborn was a different color than the rest. She was green.

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Home Based Business

‘Major frustration’: E-scooter company hopes parking restrictions loosen in Mississauga [Video]

A Mississauga resident was initially excited to rent a Lime scooter for a late-night ride home from the City Centre a few weeks ago, but ended up in a predicament when he couldn’t find an approved parking spot close to his intended destination

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Home Based Business

Grandview World War II veteran returns to the ship he calls home [Video]

When 99-year-old Ben Teevan tells a story, it’s a part of living history. The Grandview WWII veteran served for nearly two years aboard the USS Alabama battleship in the war. He was a first loader on the ship that played an integral part in the Pacific Theater. “To this day, I can still hear the casings flying out of the back of the mount and bouncing around,” Teevan said, recalling vivid details from his time aboard the ship 80 years ago.Teevan often tells these stories when he has a special visitor, Grandview Fire Chief Rodney Baldwin. “Knowing what the guys went through back then, its something we forget,” Baldwin said. “We forget how lucky we are.”Teevan, who has been active in the Grandview community for years, has struck up a strong friendship with Baldwin over the past few years, partly because they’re both veterans. Baldwin served in the U.S. Army and knows how important these stories are.”The greatest generation, you know, its going away quick,” he said. “Theres not many of them left, and theres something we can learn from them.”Those stories often revolve around Teevan’s time aboard the USS Alabama, a ship he still considers his home, even though he hasn’t seen it in years.”She’s a dandy, believe me,” he said.The USS Alabama, now, is a museum and a memorial for the thousands like Teevan who served on it. And a few weeks ago, he returned home to a hero’s welcome.As dozens gathered to cheer his arrival on the ship in Mobile, Teevan had trouble holding back tears.”I made it,” he said. “It’s good to be home.”One reason Teevan wanted to make this journey to the ship, is because it recently underwent more than $8 million in renovations to restore the deck to its former glory. He wanted to walk on the deck one final time.”It’s good to see,” he said. “I know this trip will be my last.”And for those aboard the USS Alabama, it might be the last time they see a crewman here.”I never thought Id actually physically see another crewman on this ship,” Bill Tunnell, USS Alabama Battleship Commissioner, said. Out of the more than 6,000 who served aboard this ship during WWII, Teevan is one of just three still alive and the only one who is able to travel to Mobile.”This is such a special day in our lives and in his life, too,” Tunnell said. “He will be the representative as probably the last living crewman to be able to visit the ship.”That is history that Baldwin had to see for himself, which is why he helped bring Teevan all the way here from Grandview.”Hes 20 years younger today,” Baldwin said as he smiled. “He’s got the energy to walk the deck. Hes got good color in his face, hes got a good sense of purpose in his step.”While Teevan had planned on this being his final visit to his ship, he started to reconsider just moments before he left.”You know, I might just squeeze out another one,” he said while laughing.That visit will probably happen, because you can never count out the determination of our Greatest Generation.