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发布时间: 2025-05-25 03:30:54北京青年报社官方账号
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VANCOUVER, Wash. – Police in Vancouver, Washington, said Wednesday a missing teenager was killed by a man after he learned she was transgender.The family of 17-year-old Nikki Kuhnhausen reported her missing in June, telling police they hadn't heard from her since June 5.This month, investigators say, a person walking in the heavily wooded area of Larch Mountain near Vancouver found a skull, and searches by the Clark County Sheriff's Office and Clark County Search and Rescue yielded more human remains. Forensic analysis confirmed the remains belonged to Kuhnhausen.Investigators said Kuhnhausen had been strangled.Wednesday, investigators announced David Bogdanov, 25, has been charged with second-degree murder.Bogdanov's attorney, Erin Bradley McAleer, said his client has a January 2nd court date. It is both a bail hearing and arraignment."My client intends to plead not guilty at that time, " McAleer told CNN.Social media and phone records helped lead them to Bogdanov, after investigators discovered the two were messaging each other on Snapchat and met on the day of her disappearance.They obtained a search warrant for Bogdanov's cell phone records in July, police Lt. Tom Ryan said in a news conference Wednesday.Bogdanov said he picked up Kuhnhausen that morning, according to Ryan."David and Nikki went to a residence in the county and at that time (Nikki) confirmed to him that she was biologically male. David gave a statement saying that made him really, really uncomfortable and disturbed him, and he asked Nikki to get out of his van and she walked away," Ryan said.Prosecutors are reviewing the case.Bogdanov had his first court appearance Wednesday. He did not speak in court. Court documents were not immediately availableHe is being held without bail, 1790

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Two days after the American Academy of Pediatrics urged the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission to recall Fisher-Price Rock ‘n Play Sleepers, the CPSC announced the recall of all 4.7 million of the units on Friday.According to the CPSC, more than 30 infant fatalities have occurred in Rock ‘n Play Sleepers since 2009, after the infants rolled over while unrestrained, or under other circumstances. The announcement comes after an investigation by Consumer Reports indicated that 32 deaths were tied to the rockers. The report came following a CPSC warning last week that tied 10 fatalities to the rockers. The CPSC previously recommended consumers stop using the product by three months of age, or as soon as an infant exhibits rollover capabilities.The CPSC now urges consumers to immediately stop using the product and contact Fisher-Price for a refund or voucher.The recall is for all Fisher-Price Rock ‘n Play Sleepers. The sleepers were sold at major retailers throughout the United States for approximately to 9.“We cannot put any more children’s lives at risk by keeping these dangerous products on the shelves,” Rachel Moon, MD, FAAP, chair of the AAP Task Force on SIDS, said earlier in the week. “The Rock ‘n Play inclined sleeper should be removed from the market immediately. It does not meet the AAP’s recommendations for a safe sleep environment for any baby. Infants should always sleep on their back, on a separate, flat and firm sleep surface without any bumpers or bedding.” 1516

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When 9-year-old William McLeod went to his Utah public school on Wednesday, he knew some of his classmates might ask him about the ashen cross he wore on his forehead for Ash Wednesday.He didn't think his teacher would tell him it was inappropriate and make him wash it off."It was really bad," William told CNN by phone Friday. "I went to the office and I was crying and I felt like I was in trouble."William's teacher has been placed on administrative leave while the Davis School District investigates, officials said in a statement, calling the teacher's actions "unacceptable."The teacher told him his ashes were 'inappropriate,' grandmother saysWilliam's grandmother, Karen Fisher, said he went to school after an Ash Wednesday Mass at their Catholic church.During the service, William, like legions of faithful all over the world, had an ash cross placed on his forehead to mark the beginning of Lent, a season of prayer and penance that Christians observe ahead of Easter.Fisher told her grandson he didn't have to get the ashes if he didn't want to. And if he went to school with them, she told him, people would probably ask him about what the symbol meant."People are going to look at you like you've got dirt on your head," she explained to him, "and that's OK. You explain this is Ash Wednesday and you're a Catholic. And he goes, 'OK, I want to wear them.'"It was his first time getting ashes on his forehead for Ash Wednesday, William told CNN.But hours later, Fisher got a call from the school's principal, who told her that William's teacher had asked him what was on his forehead, and he told her it was an ash cross for Ash Wednesday. She told him it was "inappropriate," Fisher said, "so take it off."The teacher handed William an antiseptic wipe and made him remove the ashes in front of his peers, Fisher said."I was furious," she told CNN. "This is who we are. This is part of our life as Catholics."Fisher noted there's a large Mormon population in Utah, but she said she's lived there for decades, and nothing like this has ever happened to her."I was just kind of shocked," she said.The school district and teacher apologizeWilliam went to the school counselor, who made it clear he was not in trouble and had done nothing wrong, the boy told CNN.The Davis School District has 2315

  

What's more relaxing than a healthy dose of pilates ... and puppies?A pilates studio in central New York is now offering 'Puppy Pilates', a class where for , you can do pilates while playing with puppies.While exercising with furry friends should be enough for most animal lovers, this unique pilates class comes with a good cause. All of the proceeds will be going to Clear Path for Veterans' Canine Program. The program trains dogs to become service animals for veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).Terri Todd, the owner of Precision Pilates in Fayetteville, and a mother of three, said the response has been "fantastic." The studio will hold two sessions on October 27.Her own son, Ryan Woodruff, is a US Marine Corps veteran and the Canine Program director at Clear Path for Veterans. He said the overall cost to raise and properly train a puppy to become a service dog is at least ,000."You will never find a soldier that can afford that kind of investment," Todd told CNN. Clear Path for Veterans covers all costs to train the dogs, however, they rely on donations to keep the program running.Woodruff, an infantry rifleman who was deployed to Iraq twice before being honorably discharged in 2009, said his program's focus is training service dogs. These dogs are trained to aid veterans with PTSD, traumatic brain injuries or military sexual trauma."We have done scientific research showing that our training model significantly reduces symptoms associated with PTSD, decreases stress, increases self-compassion, and improves their overall quality of life," Woodruff said.The Canine Program is currently training eight dogs and will receive five more in February. Once the dogs become certified service animals, they are matched with veterans who adopt them when they're around 18 months old.Veterans also have the option to train their own dogs for 6 to 12 months with the Canine Program. However, not every one of those dogs become service dogs.Woodruff says he was inspired to work with service dogs for veterans because of his own dog, Harley."She changed my life and helped me discover my passion for dog training," Woodruff said. "She lost her life in a terrible accident and I continue to do the work I do in honor of her and what she taught me." 2293

  

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — No one likes to talk about bunions, but they probably affect more people than you think. Doctors said millions of people have them, and there are more than 500,000 surgeries on them every year. Dr. Bradley Lamm with the Paley Institute in West Palm Beach, Florida has spent the last five years inventing an internal device and step-by-step technique.The device just came out this month, and he has completed 10 surgeries, including one on a Vero Beach woman who had heard the horror stories of trauma and pain from bunion surgeries."It has not been the case at all with this (surgery)," said the patient from Vero Beach.Lamm created an internal device called a mini bunion by crossroads."The reason this is so successful and lasts forever is that it corrects the bone alignment and soft tissue alignment all in one surgery through a small incision," Lamm said.A bunion is simply a bump on the inside of the big toe, which causes the big toe to drift towards the second toe and sometimes overlap. The pain caused by them can be extreme. Lamm described this as a minimally-invasive surgery where a device is entered through a tiny incision. "You get better motion and quicker recovery, back on their feet and regular shoes in one month," Lamm said.Now the burdensome bunion could be a thing of the past, especially for a once active woman, who loved walking and swimming. "I'm hoping to be able to get back into it again and that's very exciting for me because I gave up so much that I loved," said the patient from Vero Beach.This story was original published by 1598

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