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for allegedly slamming a child to the ground during the national anthem at a county fair.Witnesses say Curt Brockway grabbed, picked up and slammed the boy on the ground at the Mineral County Fair because he did not remove his hat during the national anthem.The parents say the child was bleeding from his ear for nearly six hours after the incident.The 13-year-old boy suffered temporal skull fractures from the incident. He was flown to Spokane, Washington for medical care.“It’s just a lot of pain in my head. I don’t remember anything – the rodeo – the helicopter – nothing,” the boy said. His identity has been withheld because he is a minor.The boy has been released from the hospital and is back home where he will continue healing, according to the parents.Brockway was arrested on Saturday night and made his initial court appearance on Monday in Mineral County.The state requested a 0,000 bond for Brockway. However, the judge ruled Brockway released on his own recognizance. Brockway had not been released as of 5 p.m. local time on Monday.Brockway pleaded guilty to an assault with a weapon charge that occurred in 2011. This story was originally published by Kent Luetzen on 1198
on Friday afternoon, leaving customers without access to online accounts or support.The bank said on Twitter it was experiencing technical issues with its online services.“We are working as quickly as possible to restore service for our affected customers, and we apologize for the inconvenience," the bank wrote Friday afternoon.It is unclear when the network will be back online. A Fifth Third spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 464

defended the sign. One woman wrote: “I doubt she meant the threats, but geeze (sic) dog owners clean up after your dog.” Neighbors said they are worried about their animals or worse, that a child will get hurt. “I think that there has got to be a civil solution, some sort of happy medium where she can put up a small wire fence or maybe a more polite sign," said Zynger. 373
defended the sign. One woman wrote: “I doubt she meant the threats, but geeze (sic) dog owners clean up after your dog.” Neighbors said they are worried about their animals or worse, that a child will get hurt. “I think that there has got to be a civil solution, some sort of happy medium where she can put up a small wire fence or maybe a more polite sign," said Zynger. 373
You see a dog enter a restaurant with a vest that says "service dog."How do you, or the restaurant, know if the dog is actually a trained service dog?It's a problem that has prompted more than a dozen states to crack down on people trying to pass off their pet as a service animal."They make me angry, they really do," said Colleen Belanger.Belanger has a service dog and she is upset people are using fake service dogs.She said it is a growing concern as more and more people are taking advantage of the system.Some dog owners buy service costumes online so they can take their untrained dogs into places they don't belong.Belanger said it's not right because her dog Madison is much more than a pet."This is a medical device to me. It's the same as having a wheelchair, cane or oxygen," Belanger said.For Madison to become a service dog, she had to be put through rigorous training and documentation.Belanger said having Madison with her is a matter of life or death.Belanger has asthma and a severe allergy, which is something Madison has been taught to detect and prevent.Michigan State University Professor David Favre said phony service dogs could be dangerous."The non-service dog animals are not really trained. They are no level near the amount of training real service dogs are. So you will have problems of noise and barking and possible biting. You just never know what these untrained dogs will do," Favre said.Favre said Michigan recently passed a law that made fake service animals illegal."It's a misdemeanor, a low level crime. Possibly 90 days in jail and a fine," Favre said.As for Belanger, she said fake service animals could potentially ruin the good reputations of so many life saving animals. She hopes striker laws are put in place."Those of us who are disabled, we need this. So we can go out and enjoy life just like other people do," Belanger said.While Michigan passed a law making it illegal to lie about a service animal, Favre said there is no state or federal law requiring a person to prove to a business their service animal is legitimate. 2082
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