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TAMPA, Fla. — Children in Florida are being criminally charged with prostitution — even after the state passed a law designed to protect kids sold for sex, 168
SANTA FE, N.M. — Building a business takes time.It’s a step-by-step, day-by-day process. “I tell my customers, garments come in sizes, people come in shapes, so I connect them,” says Laura Hermosillo. She started her alterations business in Santa Fe, New Mexico, in 2008 at a time when many people might have given up. She came to the United States in 2004 with her husband and her four children. She didn't speak English or a have a job. Then she says she became the victim of domestic violence.“I decided to take my children with me and go out with nothing except a backpack,” she says. She ended up without any place to live. “That’s not what I wanted,” she says. "I can’t stay here, I want something for myself.”In a homeless shelter, Hermosillo started working to create her business that became her shop Alterations and More. “Everything you see around is new. It's new in the beginning of my new life,” Hermosillo says. Her business has grown to be multiple rooms and employs multiple people. “This is a great city. I love Santa Fe,” Hermosillo says. “I’ve lived here 40 years,” Marie Longserre says. "I do know from reading history all the way back to the early West that women had to be self-sufficient.”Longserre is the head of the 1259

Rep. Devin Nunes (R-California) has filed a 0 million lawsuit against Twitter, a former RNC staffer and two parody accounts that impersonated his mother and one of his cows.In the lawsuit, filed Monday in Henrico County court in Virginia, Nunes claims that Twitter neglected to abide by its terms of service by not removing the parody accounts or taking down tweets that he felt were defamatory.The lawsuit names Twitter, Liz Mair, a former online communications director with the RNC and current political consultant, and two Twitter accounts — @DevinNunesMom and @DevinCow.Nunes' lawsuit lists specific tweets that he felt violated Twitter's terms of service. In the case of Mair, Nunes lists multiple tweets in which she links to negative news stories published about the Congressman. 802
Professional parachute demonstrator Larry Lemaster, an Army veteran with more than 3,000 jumps, died doing what he loved, his wife, Anna Elkins, wrote on Facebook Saturday.Lemaster was among eleven people killed Friday when authorities said a small plane crashed during a skydiving excursion in Hawaii and erupted into flames. The Hawaii Department of Transportation on Saturday updated the number of fatalities."I don't have an explanation for the utter tragedy that has happened," Elkins wrote."But Larry Lemaster would never want one person to waste a single minute of their life mourning his. He was doing what he loved. We spoke about this on many occasions."The Beechcraft BE65 twin-engine plane crashed during taking off Friday evening at Dillingham Airfield on Oahu's North Shore, the Federal Aviation Administration said.The names of the passengers have not been formally released by authorities.Elkins said her "heart also goes out to" the Oahu Parachute Center and the loved ones of friends who perished in the crash."Today is the worst day of my life. My son has lost his father... He wants you to celebrate his life and your own. Love who you love with great intensity. Do what makes you happy. Be the person you want to be because obviously tomorrow is not guaranteed," she wrote.John Hart, a founding member of the Ohio-based 1354
Scientists have long warned of the effects of global warming and the possibility of more intense wildfires that burn for longer periods of time. Now, a new team of researchers is hoping to get a better understanding of how the smoke travels and what the tiniest particles could be doing to our lungs. "There's many things we’re still struggling to understand about smoke,” explains Joshua Schwarz, a physicist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The group of researchers includes meteorologists and weather modelers, in addition to scientists. “All together, we are deciding which fires to target," Schwarz says. Amber Soja, with NASA, describes herself as the “fire person” of the group. Every day for the next couple of weeks, this group will create a flight plan, opening the door for another group of scientists inside this flying laboratory. “We've got tremendous range, and we're carrying a tremendous payload of information,” Soja says.This lab was once an Italian passenger airliner. It flies straight into the smoke of fires. "We'll have to look at what's the altitude of the smoke we want to be in, which direction is the smoke going, how far can we track that smoke," Schwarz says.Intake tubes on the outside of the lab bring in smoke particles that will be studied. Researchers are interested in learning how the smoke travels and what it does to our bodies when it’s inhaled. Pete Lahm, with the U.S. Forest Service, says studying the smoke is important because it impacts both public health and safety. “This info will help us make in the long run [make] better decisions on when we ignite fire and how we consider smoke impacts, and that's absolutely critical to our mission,” Lahm says. Watch the video above to learn more. 1787
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