Sleepy owl found resting among items on a New York antique store shelf

posted in: All news | 0

DURHAM, N.Y. (AP) — Shoppers in upstate New York earlier this month turned up a rare find while perusing a local antique store this month: tucked next to a cookie jar made in the shape of a chicken was a live owl resting peacefully on a shelf.

Related Articles


Federal prosecutors won’t appeal ruling barring death penalty in Luigi Mangione case


Neil Sedaka, the singer-songwriter behind dozens of hits of the 1960s and ’70s, dies at age 86


DHS says deported Babson student skipped flight. Her lawyers say agents wanted to detain her


Despite recent gains, tribal citizens descended from slaves face disparate treatment


US offers $10 million for capture of brothers said to lead Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel in Tijuana

The state Department of Environmental Conservation said Friday that the incident happened on Feb. 21 in the hamlet of East Durham, about 127 miles north of Manhattan.

The agency said customers at The Market Place had spotted “something extremely lifelike” on one of the shelves and alerted store staff.

Environmental conservation police officers arrived to find a brown-and-white owl perched on a shelf with its eyes firmly shut.

The department said officers gently cradled the sleeping owl to remove it from the store, and then released it into a wooded area, where it flew into a nearby tree.

The bird, an eastern screech owl, is nocturnal and typically nests in tree cavities.

It is not immediately clear how it got inside the store. An email was sent to the store’s owners on Friday.

Los Angeles school superintendent placed on paid leave amid federal probe

posted in: All news | 0

By JAIMIE DING and JULIE WATSON

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Los Angeles schools superintendent Alberto Carvalho was put on paid leave Friday while he is part of a federal investigation, two days after the FBI served search warrants at his home and the district’s headquarters.

Related Articles


Federal prosecutors won’t appeal ruling barring death penalty in Luigi Mangione case


Neil Sedaka, the singer-songwriter behind dozens of hits of the 1960s and ’70s, dies at age 86


DHS says deported Babson student skipped flight. Her lawyers say agents wanted to detain her


Despite recent gains, tribal citizens descended from slaves face disparate treatment


US offers $10 million for capture of brothers said to lead Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel in Tijuana

Authorities have not provided details of the nature of the investigation involving the nation’s second-largest school district, which serves more than 500,000 students, nor have they accused Carvalho of any wrongdoing.

The move by the Los Angeles Unified School District Board of Education came after two days of deliberation behind closed doors.

Carvalho became superintendent in 2022. He previously led the public schools in Miami.

Andres Chait, the chief of school operations, will take over the helm while Carvalho is on leave, the district said.

Carvalho has not responded to a request for comment. The FBI on Wednesday also searched a third location near Miami. The Miami Herald reported the Florida property belonged to Debra Kerr, who previously worked with AllHere, an education technology company that had a contract with Los Angeles schools before it collapsed and its leader was indicted for fraud. She could not be reached for comment Thursday.

In 2024, Carvalho heavily touted a deal with AllHere for an AI chatbot named “Ed” designed to help students. But about three months after unveiling the technology and paying the company $3 million, the district dropped its dealings with AllHere, which collapsed into bankruptcy. Months later, founder Joanna Smith-Griffin was charged with securities and wire fraud, along with identity theft.

The school district said in a statement Wednesday that it “is cooperating with the investigation and we do not have further information at this time.”

Carvalho denied personal involvement in the selection of AllHere, according to the Los Angeles Times. After Smith-Griffin was indicted, Carvalho said he would appoint a task force to examine what went wrong with the LA school district’s project, but there have been no public announcements about it since.

Kerr, an education technology salesperson who connects companies with schools, said she was never paid her $630,000 commission for her work in closing the AllHere deal with the LA district, according to a news organization, The 74, that covered the company’s bankruptcy hearings in 2024.

The 74 reported that Kerr had longstanding ties with Carvalho from when he oversaw the Florida district and that her son who worked for AllHere pitched the technology to LA school leaders after he took over the helm there. The Associated Press was unable to reach Kerr for comment.

Over the past five years in Los Angeles, Carvalho has been lauded for the district’s improvements to academic performance. He won similar praise while overseeing Miami-Dade County Public Schools, Florida’s largest school district, where the national superintendents association named him Superintendent of the Year in 2014.

Spain knighted the Portugal-born administrator in 2021 for his work in expanding Spanish-language programs for Miami-Dade County schools.

Months later, Carvalho took the job in California and became a harsh critic of the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration crackdown, especially following raids in Los Angeles last year.

Carvalho arrived in Los Angeles at a critical moment, as the district found itself flush with funding from state and federal COVID-19 relief money but still struggling with the impacts of the pandemic, including learning losses and declining enrollment. He previously sparred with Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis over his order that schools not require masks during the pandemic.

The Miami-Dade school system said in a statement that it was aware of the investigation involving Carvalho but did not have any comment at this time.

Watson reported from San Diego.

Minneapolis man gets 40-year prison sentence for trafficking, sexually assaulting teen and woman at Mahtomedi apartment

posted in: All news | 0

A Minneapolis man was sentenced to 40 years in prison Friday for bringing a 14-year-old girl and a 20-year-old woman to his accomplice’s Mahtomedi apartment where they were given drugs and sexually assaulted.

Billy Ray Wiley (Courtesy of the Washington County Sheriff’s Office)

A Washington County jury in November found 52-year-old Billy Ray Wiley guilty of two counts of sex trafficking and one count each of first- and third-degree criminal sexual conduct in connection with the June incidents, which led to a multi-agency investigation led by the East Metro Human Trafficking Task Force.

Jurors had answered yes to all four questions on a verdict form, allowing the prosecution to argue for an upward departure from state sentencing guidelines.

Judge Juanita Freeman gave Wiley, of Minneapolis, consecutive sentences on three of the counts, noting that there were multiple victims and that they were particularly vulnerable.

“The trauma that these young ladies experienced at Mr. Wiley’s hands is considerable,” Freeman said.

Wiley looked for women and girls in the Twin Cities area, often approaching them near grocery stores or in the street in Minneapolis and St. Paul, prosecutors said. He would offer them rides, drugs or money in exchange for sex before bringing them to an apartment in Mahtomedi.

A presentence psychosexual report concluded that Wiley has a “complete nonunderstanding of the power dynamics of exchanging drugs for sex with highly vulnerable minor females,” Assistant Washington County Attorney Scott Haldeman told the court. “And that’s what he did. He preyed on the most vulnerable victims.”

In January, co-defendant Michael Lewis, 69, was sentenced to 15 years of probation after pleading guilty to third-degree criminal sexual conduct in connection with assaulting the teen in June.

Teen was ‘clearly intoxicated’

According to the criminal complaints, officers were called to the Piccadilly Square Apartments, an age 62-plus housing community near Wildwood and Stillwater roads, on June 30 on a report of a teenager dancing in the parking lot and screaming, “No, no, no.” The person who called said an unknown man dropped her off about four hours earlier.

A man identified as Lewis stepped out the front door of the apartment building. The teen pointed to Lewis and said she was with him and one of his friends. Officers spoke with Lewis, who said he did not know the teen.

EMS took the teen to the hospital. East Metro Human Trafficking Task Force investigators met with her and asked how she knew the man who brought her to the apartment. She said he was a “friend,” who she referred to as “Billy,” and she said he often drove around her neighborhood.

Officers identified “Billy” as Wiley. Surveillance footage showed he arrived at the apartment, where Lewis lived, with the teen.

“Watching a child following a 52-year-old man into that apartment, and knowing what was going to happen to her … makes you sick to your stomach,” Haldeman said at sentencing.

Video later showed the teen run out of the building “clearly intoxicated,” the judge said, before handing down the sentence. “She is beside herself. She is yelling. She is screaming. She is not well kept. She doesn’t have underwear on.”

The teen told investigators in a follow-up interview several days later that “when Wiley picked her up, she knew she would be expected to engage in sexual acts in exchange for money and drugs,” the complaints said. She said Wiley had given her crack cocaine and brought her to the apartment, where she was sexually and physically assaulted by Wiley and the other man. She identified Lewis as the man inside the apartment after looking at a photo.

Michael Lewis (Courtesy of the Washington County Sheriff’s Office)

Earlier assault

Earlier, on June 13, a 20-year-old woman reported to St. Paul police that a man, later identified as Wiley, picked her up while she was waiting for a bus on Lake Street in Minneapolis. She said he brought her to an apartment, where he physically and sexually assaulted her.

After the assault, Wiley drove her to downtown St. Paul. Once she got out of the car, she asked people on the street for help and they flagged down an officer.

She told police Wiley recorded the sexual assault on his phone, and investigators later recovered the video and identified the location as Lewis’ apartment.

Law enforcement obtained a tracking warrant and arrested Wiley on July 8 when he drove by the Piccadilly apartments. Law enforcement also arrested Lewis, and drug paraphernalia was found in his apartment.

Related Articles


Ex-Oakdale officer sentenced for omitting information in 2022 police report


Colin Gray testifies in trial after his son was accused of Georgia high school shooting


A nearly blind refugee is found dead after Border Patrol agents drop him at Buffalo doughnut shop


Park Rapids man accused of threats against lawmaker, state Capitol


Lakeville teen charged with robbery at school allegedly had gun, though no weapon found

A 17-year-old girl was in the car with Wiley. She said that earlier in the day, in the area of Dale Street and University Avenue in St. Paul, Wiley “pulled up right next to her and asked her what she needed. He then gave her a cigarette and asked if she wanted to go for a ride,” the complaints said.

She said they drove around for several hours, and he “told her that she was pretty and had a nice body,” the complaints said. She said she told Wiley several times to drop her off, but he kept driving.

The teen also told officers “that many girls who are struggling with addiction hang around Dale and University” and “said that Wiley is known to pick up a lot of girls in the area,” the complaints said.

Victims testified

Haldeman told the court that it “took a whole community” to stop the sex trafficking, starting with residents of the Mahtomedi apartment building reporting what they saw. They also testified at Wiley’s trial.

But the “most important acts of bravery,” Haldeman said, were the testimony of the two victims during Wiley’s trial, where he represented himself without an attorney.

“They walked down this aisle, sat in that chair and told us what happened to them,” Haldeman said, “knowing full well that Mr. Wiley sex trafficked them, sexually assaulted them, and eventually would cross-examine them.”

The victims “stared down” Wiley, Haldeman said, “and were the ones left standing.”

 

Treasury Department terminates union contracts for IRS and Bureau of the Fiscal Service workers

posted in: All news | 0

By FATIMA HUSSEIN

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Treasury Department has terminated its collective bargaining agreement with unionized workers employed at the Internal Revenue Service, the agency said Friday, in an escalation of President Donald Trump ’s push to exert more control over the federal workforce.

Related Articles


Pentagon to cut ties with Columbia, Yale, Brown and others Hegseth accuses of ‘wokeness’


2 trans men sue Kansas over a law invalidating their driver’s licenses and about 1,700 others


Trump raises the possibility of a ‘friendly takeover of Cuba’ coming out of talks with Havana


Biden flies commercial from Reagan National Airport and winds up stuck in delays like everyone else


AIPAC faces test of its power in Illinois primary as Democrats debate future of Israel relationship

The union contract for the Bureau of the Fiscal Service was also terminated this week, according to two people familiar with the decision. The people spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak with the media.

Workers at the IRS and the fiscal service bureau, which processes payments for the government, are represented by the National Treasury Employees Union. They were informed by agency leadership that Treasury terminated their collective bargaining agreements, using an executive order President Donald Trump signed last March as the authority for the terminations.

In a letter to IRS workers Friday, viewed by The Associated Press, IRS Chief Human Capital Officer Alex Kweskin told employees the move “deepens our commitment of operating as one IRS, a collaborative team focused on serving American taxpayers.”

The contract terminations come after Scott Kupor, director of the Office of Personnel Management, issued a memo this month to agency heads calling on them to comply with Trump’s March order and notify labor unions “that they are terminating any applicable CBAs (collective bargaining agreements), whether represented by the National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU) or another labor union.”

The union had sued the federal government last year over Trump’s executive order.

And while a D.C. court issued a preliminary injunction against the government, that was stayed pending an appeal. Meanwhile, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit issued a decision in a separate case Thursday that cleared the way for the implementation of Trump’s executive order.

Doreen Greenwald, president of the Treasury employees union, said in a statement Friday that the IRS “cannot unilaterally end” its contract with the labor union. She said the federal sector labor statute requires the IRS to have a collective bargaining agreement “with the exclusive representative of its bargaining unit employees,” she said.

The National Treasury Employees Union represents roughly 150,000 employees in 37 departments and agencies.

Associated Press writer Jonathan J. Cooper contributed to this report.