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A grower in California has set the state record in the state by growing a pumpkin that weighs 2,175 pounds, according to officials from the Safeway World Championship Pumpkin Weigh Off. The pumpkin was one of nine that weighed in over 1,000 pounds this week at the event in California. The pumpkin was also one of two that weighed more than 1 ton. The grower was Leonardo Urena of Napa. Urena cashed in a ,225 prize, and his pumpkin will be featured at this weekend's Half Moon Bay Art & Pumpkin Festival. This year's pumpkin tops last year's heaviest pumpkin, which weighed 2,170 pounds. The pumpkin nearly topped a gourd grown in New England, which weighed in at 2,294 pounds last week. 708
Some people see the landmark decision out of Oklahoma as a turning point in the nation's fight against opioids.A judge is ordering drug maker Johnson & Johnson to pay over half a billion dollars for its role in the crisis.One emergency room doctor hopes their unique program combined with court battles against drug companies might finally help fix the crisis.“Nationally this is a huge epidemic,” says Dr. Ashley Curry, an emergency psychiatrist with Denver Health.It's estimated that over 130 people die every single day from an opioid overdose. And even for those who recognize they may have a problem, it can take months to get help and a prescription for the medication they might need to help them.Curry is part of the team of doctors at Denver Health's "Treatment on Demand" program.“We recognized that there was really a gap in when people were ready to start treatment and how quickly they could access that treatment, so we were trying to fill that gap,” Curry says.Their solution? Same day treatment.“Day or night, 24/7, our emergency room is open and people can come in and start on medication-assisted treatment,” Curry says.About 300 patients so far have used the hospital's emergency department for treatment, and about 70 percent have continued with clinic follow-ups.Curry hopes that Monday’s verdict against drug maker Johnson & Johnson means the tide might finally be turning.“I think that verdict really helps represent like the collective consciousness about how problematic opioid use has become for our country,” Curry says. “We are recognizing this is a major problem and it's a public health crisis. 1645

A 4-year-old girl and four family members are recovering after a bobcat attack on Mt. Graham. Two campgrounds are closed with Arizona Game and Fish trying to catch and kill the cat they suspect has rabies. Has more on what officials are calling an extreme and bizarre animal attack. Game and Fish says they won't know for sure until they catch and test the animal, but this is simply not the behavior of a healthy bobcat. They say it needs to be destroyed. “The behavior is extreme by any reasonable standard. This is not someone coming across a bobcat and quickly being bit and the bobcat running off, this is sustained attacks on human beings,” said Arizona Game and Fish Spokesperson Mark Hart. The Family camping on Mt. Graham survived a traumatic experience Sunday. “A year-old girl ran behind the tent, her mother heard screaming, and they came around the tent to see she was being attacked by a bobcat, on the ground bitten at least once in the head.”The girl's father, two uncles, and a teenage girl came to her aid and the bobcat attacked them too. Hart says mountain lions can target children, but a healthy bobcat never would. “A bobcat is going to be more interested in an antelope squirrel or a rodent, not a human being it’s too big, the child was bigger than the bobcat.”The girl was treated for rabies exposure at a nearby hospital. Her family needed to go to two other hospitals to get the vaccine. All have been released. “Once symptoms onset rabies is almost always fatal. If you are exhibiting symptoms the vaccine won't work but if you get it before symptoms onset your life will be saved.”Shannon and Snow Flat campgrounds have been closed to the public. “We are on scene today setting traps and using predator calls in an attempt to lure the bobcat in, it has to be destroyed.”Hart says rabies are more common in foxes, bats, and skunks but the disease can be spread to other animals. He says to stay away from dead animal remains because it can be passed that way also. 2006
A hunt for five inmates who escaped Monday night from the jail in Nash County, North Carolina, is expected to continue through the night, Nash County Sheriff Keith Stone said during a news conference.The inmates escaped by pulling at a fence in the exercise yard that was already weakened and had been worked on months before, Stone said.A camera monitoring the inmates was facing a different direction and Stone believes the inmates found a blind spot in the yard to escape.The inmates were identified as:David Ruffin Jr., charged with possession of heroin. Being held under ,000 bond.David Viverette, charged with robbery and possession of a stolen vehicle. Being held on bond in excess of 0,000. Last seen wearing a white T-shirt and black shorts.Keonte Murphy, charged with assault by strangulation, other misdemeanor assault charges and armed robbery. Being held on ,000 bond.Raheem Horne, charged with first-degree burglary, larceny and numerous misdemeanor charges. Being held on ,500 bond. Last seen wearing a green T-shirt and black shorts, according to the sheriff.Laquaris Battle, charged with possession of a stolen vehicle, simple assault and violation of the impact program through Nash County. No bond. Last seen wearing white long johns."We do have a manpower issue at this time," Stone said. "Obviously if we got the manpower you can put manpower in these pod systems where you actually got human eyes there."There is a 0 reward for each inmate. Stone said he believes there is an outside accomplice in this incident.Stone wants the public to know, "Lock your cars. lock your doors, and if you see anything out of the way or you see a strange person walking around notify us immediately."Nashville, the county seat, is about 45 miles east of Raleigh. 1794
A 7-month-old baby in Ohio was hospitalized earlier this week with a blood alcohol level three times the limit of what an adult could drive with after she was left with a family member while her mother was working, according to a Cleveland police report.On Sunday, Cleveland police responded to University Hospitals of Cleveland Medical Center when a woman arrived with an infant who was unresponsive and limp, the report states.Hospital workers did a drug panel and then administered naloxone, believing the child may have overdosed, the report stated. Test results later indicated that the girl had a BAC of 0.25, which is over three times the legal limit for an adult behind the wheel.The mother told police that she left the child with a family member while she went to work. When the mother picked up her daughter, she noticed that the baby “was very tired and not acting herself” and she was getting worse.Police were told a family member might have put liquor in a bottle to get the child to stop crying and fall asleep, according to the report.Cleveland police detectives are investigating the case. 1119
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