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SARASOTA, Fla. — A Sarasota, Florida, man found a priceless necklace containing a mother's ashes inside a pendant on Siesta Key and is hoping social media will help him find its owner.Shawn Rauch told ABC Action News he was metal detecting the beach, as he often does, when he found the silver necklace with the word "Mom" on it."I found it in neck-deep water at Siesta Key on Sunday night," Rauch said. "I was in front of the red lifeguard tower."Rauch shared his discovery on his Facebook page and on the 519
Rockland County, a suburb of New York City, is taking a big step when it comes to vaccination. Effective Wednesday, any unvaccinated child is banned from public places. Their parents could even face jail time. "Anyone who is under 18 years of age and is unvaccinated against the measles will be barred from public places until the declaration expires in 30 days,” announced Ed Day, a Rockland County executive. A state of emergency was declared in the county, following what officials say is the worst measles outbreak there in decades. As of this week, there have been 153 confirmed cases. "We have now the worst outbreak in the nation,” said Day. “The time has come to do something." Minors, excluding those with medical exemptions, are now barred from schools, churches and stores. Although police won't be patrolling vaccination records, leaders say parents could face jail time and fines. "If you have threats of being arrested and put in jail for 6 months because you choose not to inject your child with a pharmaceutical product, that’s the definition of fascism," argues Philip Silberman, an anti-vaxxer. The health choice advocate says this move is all part of a political agenda. "The agenda is to always just kind of eat away at our freedoms little by little by little," Silberman says. New York health officials don’t agree, saying this is a crisis that needs to be contained. "This is the law,” Day says in a public announcement. “It’s important for you to be part of the solution" 1510

Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Michigan) says a controversy surrounding her fellow Muslim congresswoman is distracting from "real issues."Tlaib was asked about the feud between Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minnesota) and President Donald Trump Monday night during an event at the University of Detroit Mercy Law School."We have people that are continuing to target us, to use fear-mongering, hate rhetoric to divert from real issues around healthcare, around immigration reform that need to be addressed," Tlaib said.The controversy surrounding Omar stems from a a speech she delivered at a recent Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) in March. While describing why CAIR had been founded, Omar cited the September 11 attacks."Far too long we have lived with the discomfort of being a second-class citizen, and frankly, I'm tired of it, and every single Muslim in this country should be tired of it," Omar said, according to CBS News. "CAIR was founded after 9/11 because they recognized that some people did something and that all of us were starting to lose access to our civil liberties." CAIR was in fact founded in 1994. Omar's opponents have also called the comments insensitvie to the survivors of the attack.Over the weekend, Trump tweeted a video of Omar's comments along with images from the attack, along wih the caption "WE WILL NEVER FORGET!" Trump also called Omar "ungrateful" during a trip to her home state of Minnesota on Monday.Omar says she has seen an increase in death threats against her since Trump tweeted the video of the weekend. 1556
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Monday blocked efforts by his Democratic counterpart to pass via unanimous consent a resolution to make public special counsel Robert Mueller's report, the second time Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer has tried to do so.McConnell objected this time saying he wants to give Attorney General William Barr and Mueller time to complete their investigations and because Barr has committed to make as much of the report public, but he shouldn't be rushed."It's not unreasonable to give the special counsel and the Justice Department just a little time to complete their review in a professional and responsible manner," McConnell said on the Senate floor. "Remember, as I said earlier, we're likely dealing here with potential other prosecutions, classified information, damaging people's reputation. There's no evidence that the attorney general is not going to produce as much information as possible for all of us, and that's why I objected. I think it's a reasonable thing to do."Schumer criticized McConnell's objections, saying Republicans support the language in his resolution."This language was good enough for every Republican in the Senate as well as every Democrat," Schumer said following McConnell remarks. "The President himself says it should be released. It's hard to understand why the majority leader should stand alone with objections no one else found to be reasonable or sustainable and oppose this resolution. The report should be made public and the Senate should resolve that it should be."This same resolution 1588
Rapid City, S.D. — South Dakota has a meth problem, and it wants you to know about it.The state came out with a new slogan last week, and it's got people buzzing. “It’s everywhere, it’s in Rapid City, it’s in small-town South Dakota. It’s in Belle Fourche, it’s in Buffalo," said Bryan Hentkowski, who is recovering from his meth addiction. “It touches everybody, in one way or the other,” said Tim Kelly, who lives in Rapid City, South Dakota. “Your neighbors are doing it, people’s parents are doing it, it’s everywhere,” Hentkowski said.Hentkowski lives in Rapid City, South Dakota. He is in rehab recovering from his meth addiction — and he’s far from the only one. Meth arrests in South Dakota have tripled since 2013. But the state's not ignoring the problem. In fact, they’re on it. The state's new slogan show's people saying, "I'm on meth," and, "I'm on meth too." There’s no doubt the state's new campaign is effective. people are buzzing about it from coast to coast. “It did in 24 hours what we’ve been trying to do for several years and that is, raise awareness of the methamphetamine crisis in South Dakota,” said Kevin Thom, the sheriff in Pennington County. He likes the campaign. "You know some of it is kind of mean spirited, the comments, frankly there’s some pretty hilarious and creative memes that are out there on the internet. I think it’s clearly a net positive,” Thom said. “It’s free, it’s free when people are talking about you on social media and advertising cost a lot of money,” said Vicki Lane, a professor of marketing at University of Colorado Denver. She says the state is using a controversial slogan to get people talking about the problem. “Controversy in particular has a risk that it will backfire. Because it is controversial that people will have a negative perception or negative reaction or negative attitude and maybe even a negative emotion,” Lane said. And there's definitely some of that to be found in Rapid City. “Do you want my honest opinion? I think it's stupid," Hentkowski said. “The PR man ... he was probably on meth when he did it,” said Joe Utter, who lives in Rapid City. “Could be a stroke of genius to get people talking about it, but on the other hand, it’s gonna make us look a little stupid," Kelly said. “Initially, I thought it was pretty ridiculous, it does stop and make you think. There is a meth problem in South Dakota,” said Kristin Kirsch, from Spearfish, South Dakota. Broadhead, the company that created the campaign for the state, said in a statement, “We are proud of this work, and as far as we’re concerned, the campaign is doing its job. It’s generating conversation, it’s soliciting all kinds of reactions and, yes, it’s making people uncomfortable.” While the conversation might be getting started for people at home, it’s been the reality for a while for Pennington County Deputy Dustin Meyer. “We’re going to go serve some warrants on some subjects that are felony drug charges, specifically possession of methamphetamine,” Meyer said. The Pennington County sheriff's department averaged 23 meth arrests a week last year, a third of the total arrests in the state. Thom appreciates the hard work of his deputies, but he knows it’s not the answer. “A stronger focus on the prevention, a stronger focus on the treatment," Thom said. "I mean, you have to have vigorous enforcement, and we’ve done a good job because we’re arresting people in record numbers, but it hasn’t put a dent in the problem.” 3505
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