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at other students.The student, a 12-year-old at Westridge Middle School, was arrested by Overland Park police on Sept. 18.Dave Smith, spokesperson for the Shawnee Mission School District, would only comment on the matter by email saying, "I want to be very clear: The arrest of this student was wholly unrelated to any district policy," said Dave Smith, a spokesperson for the Shawnee Mission School District. "It was a municipal police department decision, and our policies don't impact police department decisions," The Overland Park Police Department did not make officials available to discuss the matter on camera.Overland Park police said in an email they were made aware of the threat through the school district's online reporting portal.School officials and a school resource officer questioned two students about the incident. The interviews corroborated the account of the potential threat.The resource officer arrested the student and took her back to an "appropriate facility," police said.The Johnson County District Attorney's Office then filed charges."Ensuring the safety of everyone in a school, or community, is a top priority and requires constant vigilance, parents reminding their children of proper behavior in school and an understanding by the public that each case is thoroughly investigated before any arrest is made and a charge filed," police said.This story was originally published by Jessica McMaster on 1439
last week -- he wanted to see his beloved dog one last time. Veteran John Vincent was recently admitted to a VA hospice center in New Mexico, according to a post by Albuquerque Animal Welfare.The agency said Vincent has no family in New Mexico, so he had to surrender his dog named Patch to the shelter.The group said Vincent wanted to see Patch a final time, so workers brought the pint-sized pooch to his hospice room so he could see his furry friend.Workers at the Albuquerque Animal Welfare said the final reunion was a heartwarming moment for both John and Patch. They were both happy to see each other and say their goodbyes.And if you are wondering about Patch's future, the shelter says that the dog already has someone interested in adopting him. This story was originally published by Scott Sutton at WPTV. 825
With the revolving-door slate of deals making it tough to keep track of what's coming and going to Netflix each month, we're here to help you catch some movies and shows you may have had on your list before they leave the service and become a lot harder to find.A colossal loss for sitcom fans is in store when the beloved mockumentary series "The Office" departs on New Year's Day. The show will pop up on Peacock. The first day of 2021 is also the curtain call for the entire "Indiana Jones" series, as well as the guilty pleasure drama "Gossip Girl."Here are the shows and films leaving Netflix in January, courtesy of What's on Netflix:January 1A Good Wife (Season 1)Airplane! (1980)An Education (2009)An Innocent Mistake (Season 1)Anna Karenina (2012)Baby Mama (2008)Back to the Future (1985)Back to the Future Part II (1989)Back to the Future Part III (1990)Bad Teacher (2011)Barbershop (2002)Being John Malkovich (1999)Cape Fear (1991)Case Closed (Season 1)Casper (1995)Charlie St. Cloud (2010)Coneheads (1993)Definitely, Maybe (2008)Dennis the Menace (1993)Doomsday Preppers (Season 1)Drugs, Inc. (Season 6)Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)Ex-Boyfriend (Season 1)Fargo (1996)For Love or Money (1993)Frida (2002)Gossip Girl (Seasons 1-6)Grant Hotel (Seasons 1-3)Happy 300 Days (Season 1)Her (2013)How the Grinch Stole Christmas (2000)In Between (Season 1)Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008)Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984)Knights of Sidonia (Seasons 1-2)Lego Friends (5 Seasons)Lego Friends: Girls on a Mission (Season 1)Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events (2004)Nacho Libre (2006)Not Another Teen Movie (2001)Mars (Seasons 1-2)Mr. Young (Seasons 1-2)Octonauts (Seasons 1-3)Poltergeist (1982)Pride & Prejudice (2005)Reckoning (Limited Series)Session 9 (2001)Splice (2009)Starsky & Hutch (2004)Superman Returns (2006)The Dukes of Hazzard (2005)The Inbetweeners (Seasons 1-3)The Interview (2014)The Notebook (2004)The Office (Seasons 1-9)The Story of God with Morgan Freeman (Seasons 1-3)The Story of Us with Morgan Freeman (Season 1)The Town (2010)The Witches (1990)Troy (2004)WarGames (1983)What is Love? (Season 1)Who’s the One (Season 1)January 8Battlefield Recovery (Season 1)The Tudors (Seasons 1-4)January 9Disney's Mary Poppins Returns (2019)Phil Villarreal TwitterPhil Villarreal FacebookPhil Villarreal Amazon Author PagePhil Villarreal Rotten Tomatoes 2532
for officers who have been suspended for pushing a 75-year protester. Instead, they say they resigned because they don't feel they have legal protection from the city of Buffalo.On Friday, all 57 members of the Buffalo Police Department's Emergency Response Team resigned after two of its members, Robert McCabe and Aaron Torgalski, were suspended without pay after bystander video showed officers shoving a 75-year-old man to the ground during a peaceful protest.McCabe and Torgalski have since been charged with second-degree assault. The 57 officers who resigned only left their roles on the Emergency Response Team and are still with the department.Following the mass resignation, the Buffalo Police Benevolent Association (PBA) released a statement asserting it was a "show of support" with the McCabe and Torgalski. But two of those who resigned — who were granted anonymity for this story — say that's not the case."I don't understand why the union said it's a thing of solidarity. I think it sends the wrong message that 'we're backing our own', and that's not the case," one of the officers said."We quit because our union said [they] aren't legally backing us anymore. So, why would we stand on a line for the city with no legal backing if something [were to] happen? Has nothing to do with us supporting," said a second officer.One officer said that it's likely that many did resign as a show of support, but for many others, "that's not true.""The city, (Erie County District Attorney John Flynn), they're not representing those guys at all. They have to find their own lawyers; they have to come out of pocket."PBA president John Evans was not immediately available for comment, but in an email to PBA members provided to Scripps station WKBW, Evans said that the union would not provide legal defense to officers in any charges linked to the ongoing unrest."In light of this, in order to maintain the sound financial structure of the PBA it will be my opinion the PBA NOT to pay for any ERT or SWAT members legal defense related to these protests going forward," Evans' email read. "This Admin in conjunction with DA John Flynn and or JP Kennedy could put a serious dent in the PBA's funds."Officers say they're hesitant to put themselves in the line of duty during protests without proper legal backing."You can't ask people to do something, and then when they do it and it goes bad, then you just say they're on their own," one officer said.To read more on how Buffalo and Erie County elected officials responded to the ERT resignations, click 2562
after video shows police pepper-spraying what appears to be a non-violent protester and firing a now-lethal weapon toward him. The video, which circulated on social media, showed a man a protest in Grand Rapids on Saturday night near the intersection of Fulton St. and Division Ave. Ven Johnson, a police brutality attorney, called the video "unacceptable.""It's despicable; this young man is clearly walking towards the officers. Lets even give them the benefit of the doubt," Johnson said. "We don't have any video of what happened before that. Who knows what they've been told. Who knows what happened before. But he's walking toward the officer in a relatively non-threatening manner. Clearly has nothing in his hands except maybe a cigarette."At the end of the video, the man appears to be hit by some sort of blast by officers."It looks like he got shot with a projectile," Johnson said. "Whether it hit him or not I don't know."That is horrible, tragic. We want to know why things are escalating? This is a perfect example where the police could have stayed back, stayed in line, said nothing, which they're trained to do. They're trained to de-escalate. Not escalate," Johnson said.Witnesses claim protests were peaceful, outside of a few fireworks which were not aimed at police."Some people were lighting fireworks, that were just going straight up, because we have a point to make," witness James Curley said. "Black Lives Matter. Police brutality needs to stop."Curley said the video was recorded by his friend Dakota Spoelman. The two do not know the man shown in the video."(He) walked up to the line of police, to express his freedom of speech," Curley said. "The cop stepped up to him and pepper-sprayed him. Completely no threat after that. Don't know what's going on. They shot him; it looked like they shot him, from the chest to the head with some type of flash grenade."Curley says the police's action is the exact reason he's protesting."After that, that's when things started escalating," Curley said. "Police started shooting off more of those flash grenades at everybody there. That's when they started rioting."This story was originally published by Julie Dunmire on 2195