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Mar. 16, 2025

After Flood Rips 3-Year-Old from Mom's Arms, She Is Charged with Negligence: 'a Very Dear Penalty'

Photo: Dufferin OPPIt was late February and the ice surrounding the Canadian township of Amaranth was melting quickly and causing massive flooding through the area.Shortly before 1 a.m. on Feb. 21, Michelle Hanson allegedly failed to stop her minivan at a road closure. Her 3-year-old son was also inside the vehicle, which was swept into the Grand River, according to officials.Hanson, 35, held onto her son, Kaden Young, but the rapids were too strong.

Mar. 16, 2025

After Food Fight at Conn. School, Numerous Students Arrested as Teacher, School Officer Are Injured

Photo: Google Maps A chaotic food fight has led to the arrests of several high school students — and left both a school resource officer and a teacher injured. The Stamford Police Department revealed in a Facebook post that “numerous juveniles” were arrested last week at a Connecticut high school for their alleged roles in the food-flinging incident. The statement from police alleges that on April 12 at about 1:30 p.

Mar. 16, 2025

After Fyre Fest, Ja Rule Has a Message to 'Haters' About His New Festival: 'Get Your Tickets!'

PEOPLE Nowairs live, Monday through Friday, from the Meredith offices in New York City. source: people.com

Mar. 16, 2025

After Gaining 100 Lbs. Through 3 Pregnancies, This Mom Was Inspired to Lose Half Her Size

For years, Ann Wulff knew that she was overweight, but thought that it was a lost cause. Afterthree straight pregnancies, her weight had gone up and up — eventually hitting 360 lbs. — and she had just accepted that she wouldn’t lose weight. “When I got married, I got pregnant right away and gained a significant amount of weight — 60 lbs. I felt like pregnancy was permission to just eat whatever I wanted,” Wulff, 39, tells PEOPLE for the2021 Half Their Size issue.

Mar. 16, 2025

After Genealogy Website Changes Privacy Rules, Police Say Cold Cases Might Be Harder to Solve

Photo: Getty “Ethically, it is a better option,” GEDmatch co-founder Curtis Rogerstold ABC News, declining to cite a specific reason for the change. “It’s the right thing to do.” The website, where people are able to research their family trees, is the “main database” that police use for genealogy information, BuzzFeed reported. The science allows police to potentially identify an unknown suspect’s DNA through family members who have submitted their information to the website.