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With Halloween happening today, police are especially concerned after they found ecstasy pills that may be circulating in Beeville, Texas, area."I want to make sure that parents are aware of the potential that their children might be given this intentionally or maybe just by accident," Beeville Police Chief Robert Bridge said.Two people were arrested Tuesday afternoon after police executed a search warrant on the 1500 block of North Avenue E in Beeville."This residence has come onto our radar in the last two weeks," Bridge said.Helen Cantu, 31, and Trey Worley, 27, were arrested for manufacture and delivery of a controlled substance — over four grams and under 200 grams — which is a first degree felony.Bridge said they also recovered a semi-automatic handgun which resulted in additional weapon charges.There was a 2-year-old child inside the residence, which led to a child endangerment charge since drugs were all over the home, Bridge said."The drugs that we seized were field tested and positive for methamphetamine," he said.Police also seized marijuana that was in several packets and was being ready to be distributed. Bridge said there was also an 18-year-old that was identified and released as a family friend.Bridge said what is concerning to him, is that the pills that were seized were multi-colored and had different emblems printed on them related to superheroes."They were small, they looked like either vitamins or maybe some sort of a SweeTart type of candy," he said.Bridge said he immediately 1523
Years before becoming an influential conservative voice, the native Missourian spent her days homeschooling her children and writing her motherhood blog called Mamalogues. 171
With rainfall expected to increase throughout the day, Santa Barbara County officials issued a storm update and “Aware and Prepare” alert to its residents at about 5:20 a.m. 173
When it was completed, Falcon would pretend like he wanted to get in. Instead, as the empty balloon took flight, Falcon would go hide in the basement for half an hour. Richard, faking concern, would call the FAA and report the runaway balloon and tell authorities he thought his son was inside.The plan was to wait a little while and then have Falcon appear from the basement. Everything would be filmed, and the Heene parents hoped their story would go viral. They wanted to gain attention for a science-based reality show that they had pitched to producers who filmed the couple's appearance on ABC's "Wife Swap" show in 2008, Sanchez wrote in the story.But instead, Falcon hid in the attic of the home's garage. And then he fell asleep. Various emergency personnel arrived at the home and followed the balloon for 50 miles as it whizzed through the air. The flight was broadcast across the country. It eventually landed in a farm field. When authorities reached it, there was no boy inside. Falcon was found soon after at the Heenes' home."At some point I really believe Richard and Mayumi thought that Falcon had been taken by the balloon … because he was nowhere to be found," Sanchez said. "And that's why it appeared so real when they saw the reunification with the parents."The parents left their plan in the hands of a 6-year-old who didn't follow it to the letter, he said.Suspicions arose when Falcon looked up to his dad during a CNN interview and said, "You had said that we did this for the show." Authorities, both locally and on the federal level, spent at least ,000 pursuing the balloon and searching for the boy. "There is absolutely no doubt in our mind that this was, in fact, a hoax," then-Larimer County undersheriff Ernie Hudson said after an investigation and search of the Heene house.Richard would go on to claim the Larimer County Sheriff's Office lied during the investigation, which the office refuted.In court, Richard denied the hoax (and still does), though he agreed to plead guilty to attempting to influence a public servant, which is a felony, to prevent Mayumi from being deported. Mayumi, who allegedly confessed the whole thing was a stunt, pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of false reporting.Richard served 90 days in prison beginning on Jan. 11, 2010. Mayumi served 20 days after his sentence ended. When Richard reported to jail, he choked back tears and said he was sorry, particularly to the rescue workers who chased down the balloon, fearing there may be a child inside, according to the AP."I think people felt betrayed because they really set their emotions out there for this family — for these people they didn't know — and maybe that's the lesson: You can't believe what you see," Sanchez said.It became a silly story, but at the time, was very serious, he said.Sanchez met with Lee Christian, Mayumi's attorney, in Fort Collins and with his client's approval, Christian showed Sanchez "at least 1,000 pages of investigative files, reports, and unreleased discovery," Sanchez wrote. A series of notes, which were written by Mayumi, showed a detailed plan leading up to the incident. 3144
You’re about as free as you’re ever going to be if you don’t have kids, pets, mortgage payments or a salaried job. So Ballou suggests using this time and some of your earnings to travel. “You’ll never ever get an employer who will tell you, ‘You know what, I think you deserve a gap year,’’’ she says. 301