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EXCLUSIVE: We just revealed the cover and title of the brand new @Scholastic "Hunger Games" book - "The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes"! https://t.co/LUKfafEEKb pic.twitter.com/Gr3ZrRoFMu— Good Morning America (@GMA) October 4, 2019 244
DENVER -- To many, it is simply unthinkable. The reality of body brokers profiting from the sale of body parts has made national and international headlines following government raids in Arizona and Colorado in recent years."I've had nightmares about it," said Fredericka "Freddie" Hancock. "It's not something that can be fixed."Hancock was notified by the FBI that her husband's body parts had been sold without her consent. "He had been dismembered. His head and his arms from his elbows to his fingers, his legs from his knees to his toes, had been removed from his body and they had been sold," she said.Hancock's story started after her husband, Thomas, passed away. She signed a contract with a Montrose funeral home to have his body cremated. But she never consented to her husband's dismembering.Montrose Funeral Home shut downHancock is one of more than five dozen family members currently suing the family that operated the now shut-down Sunset Mesa Funeral Home in Montrose. In February of 2018, Colorado regulators shut down the funeral home at the same time the 1088
Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee said Wednesday that they will investigate President Donald Trump's proposal to hold next year's Group of Seven summit with world leaders at his Trump National Doral resort in Miami.In a statement, committee Chairman Jerry Nadler of New York and Rep. Steve Cohen of Tennessee, who chairs the Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, said they would schedule a September hearing to examine the plan."The President's personal financial interests are clearly shaping decisions about official U.S. government activities, and this is precisely the type of risk that the Constitution's Emoluments Clauses were intended to prevent," the lawmakers wrote. "This week's revelation about efforts to select the Trump National Doral Miami as the site of the 46th G7 summit is only the latest in a troubling pattern of corruption and self-dealing by the President."Nadler and Cohen said the move would improperly benefit Trump, as foreign governments would have to pay his private business, the resort, in order to participate in the summit."The Constitution demands that President Trump's private interests and official conduct remain separate, and this latest announcement demands scrutiny by Congress," they added, promising to look into the matter as part of the Judiciary Committee's ongoing impeachment investigation.Trump has promoted the idea publicly since the 45th G7 summit ended earlier this week, saying on Monday that his aides "went to places all over the country" before coming back from his Miami resort and telling him, "This is where we'd like it to be.""It's not about me. It's about getting the right location," he said of choosing the Doral. "I think it's very important."But the administration has not made a final decision on the location, according to a White House official, and officials are also considering potential sites in several other states, including California, Colorado, Michigan and Hawaii.Republicans, meanwhile, don't share Democrats' ethical concerns about the prospect. "I'm not sure it's profits-driven," Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida told reporters at the Capitol on Tuesday."I think it's a great idea," he added -- although he did raise fears about traffic jams that could result. 2291
Crazy weather conditions in the downhill in Val d’Isère ?????? @LeTour #TDF2019 #TDF pic.twitter.com/Dv6TcYbr9a— Wanty-Gobert Cycling Team (@TeamWantyGobert) July 26, 2019 183
DETROIT — A Melvindale, Michigan, couple passed away on the same day after 56 years of marriage in a true tale of everlasting love.Judy and Will Webb, both 77 years old, died just hours apart while holding hands on March 6, 2019. They spent their final hours together in hospice care after both battling a series of health complications. The Webbs were parents to three daughters and loved their five grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. A service for the couple happened in early March at the Michigan Memorial Funeral Home in Huron Township.Watch their heartwarming love story in the video player above. 624