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State Representative Kelly Townsend says she's troubled by video that shows Chandler, Arizona, police officers with guns drawn, forcing their way into a family's home. The officers were there for a 2-year-old boy who was believed to have an extremely high fever. Townsend, a Republican in District 16, played a big role in getting legislation passed requiring the Arizona Department of Child Safety to get a search warrant to remove children from their home in a non-emergency situation. Townsend says she never thought this would be the result."The doctor chose to use DCS to remove the child and DCS chose to use the police and the police chose to use the SWAT team," said Townsend. "That is not the country that I recognize."Townsend says this all started back in February when the parents took the 2-year-old-boy, who isn't vaccinated, to a naturopathic doctor for a fever of about 105. The doctor instructed the parents to take the infant to the emergency room but after the doctor's visit the child's fever broke, so they never went.After finding that out, the doctor called DCS which then called Chandler police to check on the child. After the father refused to let police into the home to check on the boy, police came back later with a search warrant and forced their way into the home after the family didn't respond."All because of a fever. A fever! It's absolutely ridiculous," said Nicholas Boca, the family's attorney. "That type of kicking your door in, with guns drawn... it should be reserved for violent criminals.""At that point who now owns control over the child?" asked Townsend. "And it seems like we've given that now to the doctor and the parent no longer has the say or they risk the SWAT team taking all of your children and potentially the newborn."Townsend says she can see both sides on this story: a concerned doctor and protective parents, but she's questioning how it was done and the amount of force used."We need to admit that this situation was a mistake," said Townsend. "There are other situations where there is neglect, there is abuse and that's what we need to focus on."DCS said it's not able to comment on the case specifically because of privacy laws.Townsend said the child actually had an upper respiratory infection, not meningitis like the doctor had feared.The Chandler Police Department says DCS obtained a search warrant and asked for their assistance entering the home, but says they used regular officers and not SWAT officers.The parents are fighting to get their kids back. "They have a good family. And this is a waste of state resources," said Boca. 2619
Revenge is sweet. But Mark Rober's glitter bomb trap for package thieves proves it can be a bit messy, too.Rober is clearly a smart guy; a former NASA engineer, he worked on the Mars Curiosity rover.But for anyone who's gotten a package stolen off a doorstep, he's now a hero."Something needs to be done to take a stance against dishonest punks like this," Rober said in a now-viral YouTube video.After having a package stolen from his doorstep, Rober decided to use his engineering background to serve up some retribution on would-be thieves."If anyone was going to make a revenge bait package and over-engineer the crap out of it, it was going to be me," he said.The package would contain a pound of fine glitter plus some potent fart spray. The glitter would burst out when opened; the latter would spray five times, every 30 seconds.But Robert went one step further -- including four phones recording the thieves' reactions. A GPS tracker in the phones would let him know where a package ultimately ended up.If he couldn't recover the package, the video would at least automatically upload to the cloud.Once completed, he slapped a packing label addressed from the "Home Alone" character Kevin McCallister to movie villains Harry and Marv -- a nice, figurative bow on the present.Then Rober just needed to wait and let the package rain pain.In the YouTube video, some "victims" opened packages in their cars, with glitter being tossed into every nook and cranny. Others opened packages in their houses; one even was even filmed trying to vacuum the mess up.Still, package thieves remain a problem; click 1620

shout out to alex velez for reppin' gran varones today at the philadelphia pride kick-off event. thanks @PhillyLGBTgov for inviting gv! ???? pic.twitter.com/bSk4TJ9y5k— quarantinx (@GranVarones) June 9, 2017 220
Roger Stone, a longtime political strategist and friend of President Donald Trump, was sentenced to 40 months in prison on Thursday.Stone was also ordered to serve two years probation, pay a ,000 fine and complete 250 hours of community service.Stone's sentencing comes amid controversy in the Justice Department about Trump's public reactions to the case and the president's push for a light sentence.Late last year, Stone was 443
Prosecutors who dropped felony charges against actor Jussie Smollett over his report of a hate crime attack "have fundamentally misled the public on the law and circumstances surrounding the dismissal," an Illinois lawyers group said.The way Cook County State's Attorney Kim Foxx and her office resolved the case also was "abnormal and unfamiliar to those who practice law," wrote the Illinois Prosecutors Bar Association.The scathing statement, issued Thursday, follows claims by Foxx and her top deputy, Joe Magats, that "alternative prosecution," like the resolution brokered in Smollett's case, is not uncommon and is available to all defendants, celebrity or not. Smollet, 36, agreed to forfeit ,000 bail and complete community service in exchange for the dismissal of 16 charges alleging he'd orchestrated a fake racist, anti-gay attack on himself.Further, Foxx and her office "falsely informed the public" that sealing the criminal case was "mandatory," the prosecutors' organization said. And a special prosecutor should have been appointed when Foxx, citing familiarity with a potential witness, recused herself from the case, the group insisted.Meantime, Chicago's corporation counsel on Thursday asked Smollett to pay 0,106.15 to cover the cost of the investigation into his claims of an attack.Calls for an investigation growSmollett, who is black and gay, told police two men attacked him on January 29, yelling racist and homophobic slurs while striking him, police said. Smollett said the incident ended with a noose placed around his neck and bleach poured on him, police said.Chicago police investigated the case as a possible hate crime, then later said they believed the attack was staged by Smollett to bolster his profile and career. A grand jury indicted Smollett in March on 16 counts of disorderly conduct.Following the charges' sudden dismissal this week, officials from the statehouse to the White House have demanded investigations and additional consequences for Smollett.A state lawmaker said he'll introduce legislation to 2071
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