A Colorado jury on Friday found two paramedics guilty of criminally negligent homicide in the death of Elijah McClain near his home in Aurora. The 23-year-old Black man was walking home in 2019 when he was confronted by police officers who forcibly restrained him and then the Aurora Fire Rescue paramedics -- Jeremy Cooper and Peter Cichuniec -- who injected him with ketamine.
Cooper and Cichuniec were both convicted on charges of criminally negligent homicide. As for the counts of second-degree assault, Cooper was acquitted of those charges. Cichuniec was found guilty of second-degree assault-unlawful administration of drugs and found not guilty on the other second-degree assault charge.
The coroner's office in Adams County couldn't determine how McClain died, but after social justice protests drew attention to the case, a medical examiner ultimately found that he died from complications of ketamine following forcible restraint. That led to a 2021 indictment of three police officers -- Randy Roedema, Jason Rosenblatt and Nathan Woodyard -- and the two paramedics.
This was the third and final trial for the five first responders who were charged in McClain's death. Three officers from the Aurora Police Department have been tried in connection to McClain's death. Two were acquitted, and a third was found guilty.
A jury found Randy Roedema guilty of criminally negligent homicide and third-degree assault, while Jason Rosenblatt was found not guilty of manslaughter and assault back in October. Sentencing for Roedema is scheduled for Jan. 5 at 1:30 p.m. in Adams County Court.
TSA makes every effort to reunite passengers with items left behind at the airport checkpoint. Lost and found items retained by TSA for a minimum of thirty (30) days, and if not claimed, are either destroyed, turned over to a state agency for surplus property, or sold by TSA as excess property. The state may dispose of the items through sales, destruction, donations or charities. The state keeps any money from sales, not TSA. At a number of locations, lost and found items are turned over to the airport at the end of each day.
Please bring the pet to our shelter (511 W 3900 S) if you found the pet in: Bluffdale, Brighton, Emigration Canyon, Copperton, Holladay, Kearns, Magna, Midvale, Millcreek, Murray, Salt Lake City, White City, or any other Salt Lake County Metro Township.
After you file your report, it is important that you also take a moment to check our Shelter Services page and look at the animals in our shelter as well as those which have been reported to Animal Services as found by members of the community. Because no one knows your pet better than you, please don't rely solely on others to match these animals with your lost report.
Please call or email as soon as possible to report a lost item on the bus. All items are collected from buses at the end of the service day and are not available for pick-up until the next business day after 8:30 am. Before visiting the lost and found office in-person, please verify with Metro staff that your item has been found.
Found property (Unclaimed/Abandoned) shall remain in the custody of the UTMB Police Department property custodian. The property custodian will store found property inside Room 2.728 in the Rebecca Sealy building. After a minimum period of 30 days, but not to exceed 60 days, UTMB PD will release unclaimed found property to the UTMB Institutional Property Manager.
Trans-vaccenic acid (TVA), a long-chain fatty acid found in meat and dairy products from grazing animals such as cows and sheep, improves the ability of CD8+ T cells to infiltrate tumors and kill cancer cells, according to a new study by researchers from the University of Chicago.
If you can keep the pet while looking for the owner but need pet food or other supplies, indicate this on the found report. If you are unable to keep the animal while looking for its owner, submit a found pet report to make arrangements to bring the pet to us. Our shelter is closed to walk-in visitors. Please do not bring the pet to us without contacting us first.
Found reports are kept on file for approximately four (4) weeks and are not returned to the reporting party. Information about animals cared for by their finder is not posted on our website and is only available by calling the shelter to review found reports.
*Use the same websites to look for possible matches to the pet you found. Pet owners are referred to the same resources, so watch to see if an owner has posted searching for their pet.
**Be cautious about potential scams. Do not reply to messages asking for verification codes and do not post your address online. Have possible owner verify ownership with photos, vet records, or other proof of ownership documents.
The information desk at the UA Student Center, library circulation desks, and front desks at the University Recreation Center and residence halls accept found items and forward them to UAPD. Personal items that are left in athletic venues are typically turned over to UAPD within 1-2 days after the athletic event.
If you have lost an item, check the Lost and Found website to see if the item has been found. All recovered or lost and found property is kept up to 90 days and then disposed of according to state statute.
The Lost and Found Department is located just off the main lobby of the Notre Dame Police Department in Hammes Mowbray Hall, Notre Dame IN 46556-5675. You may inquire in person or you can phone at 574-634-2149 for lost or found items. Correspondence can be sent via e-mail to lo...@nd.edu or through standard mail to Lost and Found, Hammes Mowbray Hall, Notre Dame IN 46556-5675.
Each academic building on campus, has its own Lost and Found, located in the dean's office. During the school year, regular pickups for transfer of lost and found items to Hammes Mowbray Hall are scheduled twice a month.
Lost and found items, which are accepted by the Police Department, either turned in by a member of the community or found by an officer, are logged in on a daily basis during the week (Monday through Friday) and are stored at the Department of Public Safety for thirty days. After thirty days the items and their contents are donated to local charity. In order to claim a lost item, you must bring a photo identification card.
You can either visit or call the office. We recommend checking with us once a month for your missing item(s), as sometimes they take their time getting to us. Here is a list of temporary lost and found areas outside of Barton Hall.
Please bring found items as soon as possible, regardless of perceived value, to the main Barton Hall Lost and Found Office. All items are held, by law, for a minimum of three months beginning from the date they are received by Lost and Found.
NYS PERSONAL PROPERTY LAW, Article 7-B, SEC. 252, requires that all items found on campus with a value of over $20.00 be turned over to the main Lost and Found at G-8 BARTON HALL within 10 DAYS of being found. By making the return of property to the appropriate agency a legal issue, this law expedites the return of property to the rightful owner.
After a thorough, transparent, and data-driven investigation of eight companies across the four countries, Commerce preliminarily found that four of the eight companies being investigated are attempting to bypass U.S. duties by doing minor processing in one of the Southeast Asian countries before shipping to the United States.
Information found on this website can be provided in an alternative format upon request. Please contact Customer Service at 510-891-4777 to speak to a representative or to submit your request in writing click here. AC Transit will do its best to provide the requested alternative format within a reasonable time.
For comparison, a 2018 Boston University study of 164 brains of men and women donated to the Framingham Heart Study found that only 1 of 164 (0.6 percent) had CTE. The lone CTE case was a former college football player. The extremely low population rate of CTE is in line with similar studies from brain banks in Austria, Australia and Brazil.
1. Retrace your steps. Many buildings and classrooms have their own forms of lost & founds, whether it is a bin at the main desk, a bin at the front of a room, or a bin out in the open (i.e. 2nd floor of Williams), so make sure to go back and check.
4. Did you find something, but are unsure what you should do with it? All found property must be brought to the Office of Public Safety and we will take it from there. If you think someone might come back for an item, leave a note for the owner to let them know that their item is safe at OPS.
All unofficial lost and found collection spots on-campus may receive found property, but are then required to contact Public Safety (607-274-3333) as soon as possible to make arrangements for the item(s) to be picked up or delivered to their office.
The New York Personal Property Law 252 requires that all found items with a value over $20.00 be turned in to the Office of Public Safety within ten days of finding the item. However, we encourage any item, regardless of perceived value, be turned in to our office as soon as possible.
Rose was lost but is now found after 6 1/2 years of living in the woods. Neighbors told rescuers they'd been feeding the stray terrier for years, not knowing that Rose was a fugitive, having run away from home in England just 24 hours after a family adopted her. An animal rescue service set up cameras to track her and baited a cage with chicken to lure her. Sadly, her adoptive family can't take care of her anymore, but the rescue service will.
If you've lost something, call the Evidence and Property Technician at (919) 684-5754, and provide a detailed description of the item to see if it's in the lost and found items turned in to the Duke Police. Please note that any found property is only retained for 30 days. If you've found an item, call Duke police at (919) 684-2444.
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