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WINTER HAVEN, Fla. — A 17-year-old girl is lucky to be alive after a plane crashed through the roof of her home and pinned her against a wall, the Polk County Sheriff's Office said. "This was a day of miracles," Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd said in a press conference. 283
WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 11: Retired Fire Department of New York Lieutenant and 9/11 responder Michael O'Connelll, left, FealGood Foundation co-founder John Feal, center, and former Daily Show Host Jon Stewart, right, applaud following testimony from Retired New York Police Department detective and 9/11 responder Luis Alvarez during a House Judiciary Committee hearing on reauthorization of the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund on Capitol Hill on June 11, 2019 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Zach Gibson/Getty Images) 535

Twelve-year-old William Burton wasn’t just winded when he collapsed Tuesday during Little League practice in Grayson, Kentucky. He was having a heart attack, and none of his teammates knew about the life-saving device in his backpack. Serendipity in the form of a nearby ambulance likely saved his life. His parents don’t want to have to count on it twice.“We were fortunate enough to have the emergency crew or the ambulance close enough to get there in time, but most people are not that lucky,” his mother, Amy Burton, said Thursday. William has a heart condition called long QT syndrome, which makes him prone to irregular heartbeats and sudden cardiac arrest. He keeps an automated external defibrillator (AED) with him at all times to ensure his safety, his mother said.As the family learned Tuesday, that only helps when the people around him are aware of it. His baseball team, which he had joined only a short time before, wasn’t. They attempted CPR while William gasped for air and his pulse faded.Then it stopped. Amy Burton doesn’t like to think of what would have happened if paramedics hadn’t arrived and resuscitated him with their own defibrillator.William would be airlifted to Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, where he spent the next two days sedated and recovering in intensive care. His family still wasn’t sure whether or not he would survive.He came off his ventilator for the first time Thursday."He asked me what happened, and I said 'You collapsed at the ballfield at baseball practice,’” his mother said. “He said 'Well, did I catch the ball?’”Although Amy Burton said she was grateful for the quick response of paramedics and Children’s Hospital, William still has weeks of recovery ahead.She hopes the incident will remind other teams and schools of the importance of keeping AEDs on hand and ensuring anyone in a leadership position — a coach, a teacher, a principal — knows how to use one in an emergency.“When they’re a permanent fixture there, all sports coaches, all faculty and staff are going to know it’s there and grab it immediately,” she said. “It’s important because CPR can keep the blood pumping, but an AED can actually restart the electric system of the heart.”As for William, she said: “He has been a miracle, an absolute miracle. They cannot believe how quickly he has recovered. Literally yesterday he was fighting for his life. We didn’t know if he would make it.”The family anticipates significant medical costs as a result of William's prolonged hospitalization. Anyone interested in making a contribution 2592
Two brothers who authorities said took part in a staged attack on actor Jussie Smollett were "betrayed" by the celebrity, their attorney told CNN on Monday."I believe my clients were betrayed," Gloria Schmidt said on CNN's "AC 360," referring to brothers Olabinjo and Abimbola Osundairo. "You have to look at what kind of relationship they had with Mr. Smollett. He's a celebrity. This is somebody who is in a position of power over my clients."She added: "We've seen a lot of stories in the news where celebrities think they might be above the law. It's just not the case."Smollett reported to police in January that he had been attacked in Chicago in an incident that ended with a noose around his neck. Police initially investigated the case as a possible hate crime.Mark Geragos, Smollett's attorney, spoke with Anderson Cooper on Friday and said Smollett refused to sign a police complaint after the incident because "he could not believe it.""I haven't' seen one piece of evidence and they don't have one piece of evidence that they've turned over that links Jussie to this," Geragos said, referring to allegations that the attack was orchestrated.Smollett, an actor on the Fox drama "Empire," was recently indicted on 16 felony counts of disorderly conduct by a Cook County grand jury.The counts in the indictment obtained by CNN say Smollett gave statements to a Chicago police officer after the incident and to a detective. Details in some of those statements were different, the indictment says.The indictment says Smollett told police he was attacked by two men who used racial and homophobic slurs during an encounter at 2 a.m.After police detained the two brothers, who were described as "persons of interest" in mid-February, police sources revealed that authorities suspected Smollett knew the men and had paid them ,500 to stage the attack. The men were released without being charged.Smollett has denied any involvement in orchestrating an attack.Schmidt, the attorney for the brothers, said her law firm did its own investigation."We were able to fish it out, if you will, and tell the commander there's something that doesn't match with the narrative that had been put out by Mr. Smollett," she said.She said the brothers and Smollett met through a working relationship."They were (fitness) trainers; they were training him," she said.She said the younger brother had known Smollett "a couple years" before this incident.Schmidt sidestepped answering direct questions from Cooper about the ,500."The training ... was something that was pre-discussed prior to January 29. It was cashed; it was deposited. ... These are details that came out with my clients fully cooperating with the police," she said.When asked if the check had anything to do with the attack, Schmidt said it's not a "clear-cut answer.""You have to look at they were friends and the money did include services for training, but you have to look at it within the context of 'I'm this star and you're someone who I can help and I would like to pay you for something and oh, can you do me this favor.' So was it for training? Was it not for training? I think it's a little bit of both," she said.She said her clients are remorseful for their role in the situation and they hope it opens dialogue for people in minority communities and those that have suffered hate crimes."They feel regretful that they put their trust in the wrong person," she said. 3451
Twelve-year old Luke Martinez spends most weekends fielding grounders between first and second base. He plays for San Antonio's Alamo Drillers. The top baseball team for those 12 and under in America. “It’s on a different level,” says Luke’s dad, Jerry Martinez. “It’s on an elite level." The Martinez family spends most weekends on the road traveling to tournaments across the country."To go from Houston to Dallas to Lake Charles, Louisiana, Sulphur, Louisiana, Beaumont Texas," Jerry says. Meals, hotels, and gas can make those trips cost between 0-0 a weekend, and it is money they don't always have."Some of the sacrifices I have to do is be late on a payment, or on the car, home, cell phone," Jerry says. "That's basically what we have to do.” Luke’s mother, Nalone, says it’s worth the sacrifice to see her son happy and doing what he loves.“I figured because we have everything we need--we have food on the table, clothes on their back, we have vehicles to drive, we have a roof over our head--we can go ahead and be behind on some bills," Nalone says. "That's what he loves to do, and as a mom I’m going to do everything I can to make him happy," she says.Those financial decisions may sound extreme, but in today's world, youth sports can rack up quite the tab. A 1293
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