Tere Bina Mein Nahi Episode 15 | Promo | Sonya Hussain | Shehzad Sheikh | Aiza Awan | ARY Digital

Ramazan Timings Alert!
Watch Tere Bina Mein Nahi Every Friday at 9:30 PM, on ARY Digital.

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Love has the magic that can blind you for a while.

Tere Bina Mein Nahi is an original story that talks about taking right decisions at the right time and keeping yourself grounded even when you are flying high.

Writer: Maha Malik

Director: Ali Masud Saeed

Cast:
Shahzad Sheikh,
Sonya Hussyn,
Aiza Awan,
Babar Ali,
Bushra Ansari,
Shizza Khan,
Zahir Lehri,
Khaled Anum,
Munazza Arif and others.

#TereBinaMeinNahi #sonyahussyn #ShahzadSheikh #AizaAwan #BushraAnsari #arydrama

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Watch Tere Bina Mein Nahi Every Friday at 9:30 PM, on ARY Digital.

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UKRAINE-KRIEG: Jetzt lässt Putin die Muskeln spielen! Manöver mit mobilen Interkontinentalraketen

UKRAINE-KRIEG: Jetzt lässt Putin die Muskeln spielen! Manöver mit mobilen Interkontinentalraketen

Russland beginnt Militärmanöver mit dem Interkontinentalraketen-System Yars. Die Übungen mit dem mobilen Yars-System werden in drei russischen Regionen durchgeführt, teilt das russische Verteidigungsministerium mit, ohne die Regionen zu benennen. “Außerdem werden die strategischen Raketenträger in Zusammenarbeit mit Formationen und Einheiten des Zentralen Militärbezirks und der Luftstreitkräfte eine Reihe von Maßnahmen zur Tarnung und Abwehr moderner Luftaufklärungsmittel durchführen.” Es sind nur wenige taktische und technische Merkmale des neuen russischen Systems bekannt. Berichten zufolge haben die Flugkörper eine Reichweite von 12.000 Kilometern. Nach Angaben von Militärbloggern kann Yars mehrere unabhängig voneinander ansteuerbare nukleare Sprengköpfe tragen und auf einem Lastwagen montiert oder in Silos stationiert werden.

#russland #ukraine #krieg #weltnachrichtensender

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In eigener Sache: Wegen des hohen Aufkommens unsachlicher und beleidigender Beiträge können wir zurzeit keine Kommentare mehr zulassen.

Danke für Eurer Verständnis – das WELT-Team

Video 2023 erstellt

The Pitfalls Of Business Blogging

The Pitfalls Of Business Blogging

Whether you are conscious of it or not, your clients, possible customers, company rivals, workers and also partners are currently involved in organization blog writing. Blog writing obtains you referenced and also saw, desirable or not, in your market’s discussions. Service blog writing has its advantages however, alas, it likewise has its share of challenges.

A service blog site can assist develop your business’s online reputation as well as integrity in your particular niche service location. A well-executed blog site can increase search engine positions hence increasing possibilities of possible consumers seeing your website as well as inevitably creating sales.

You ought to be conscious of the challenges or dangers that go along with organization blog writing. If you have actually ultimately identified just how blog writing can benefit your target audience, after that, seriously think about the technological mistakes of developing a blog site that may befall you particularly if you are a beginner in the area of blog writing.

Prior to beginning on blog writing, you should have checked out as well as check out some even more blog sites to acquaint on your own with the blogosphere specifically your particular niche. Checking out various other blog sites can stimulate concepts for blogging subjects. What is the objective of your blog site?

A blog writing device goes to excellent discomforts to make sure that your blog site will certainly look excellent, the message appearance lovely as well as the html code it produces adhere to internet criteria. It will certainly be to your company benefit if you recognize just how the innovative as well as substantial attributes function to enhance your blog site’s opportunity of being located on the Internet.

Not enhancing search phrases, classifications, registrations will certainly make it hard for visitors to locate your blog site. If you are composing a blog site message that you desire to be reviewed, bear in mind that viewers will certainly make use of keyword phrases to locate your blog site entrance. Not making regular messages makes visitors shed passion in your blog site as there is absolutely nothing brand-new to browse.

For one, companies that enable misstatements– deceptive or defective info to show up on their blog sites can develop a public calamity. Some company firms keen to establish one-to-one web links with clients, established up personality blog sites. As component of its advertising launch for its brand-new anti-aging lotion, Vichy’s marketing group developed a blog site including a fraudulent writer called Claire that ceaselessly grumbled concerning the woes of aging making use of the very same phrasings as the Vichy print advertisement.

Kryptonite, a lock manufacturer business did not react rapidly to a blog site remark and also cost them millions of bucks. Engadget, a very trafficked blog site released a video clip documents revealing exactly how a Bic round pen can quickly open up a Kryptonite lock. Blog writers berated Kryptonite as well as triggered hefty website traffic to the Engadget blog website.

Service blog writing can reveal your firm to lawful issues that can trigger significant damages to your organization credibility. Ellen Simonetti, A Delta Air Lines staff member was terminated for publishing unacceptable photos of herself in attire on her blog site. Business need to enlighten its workers concerning the service and also lawful dangers entailed with blog writing.

In a nutshell, do not blog for the purpose of blog writing. See to it that your blog site shows your firm’s preferred photo.

An organization blog site can assist construct your business’s online reputation and also trustworthiness in your particular niche organization location. It will certainly be to your service benefit if you recognize exactly how the innovative and also large attributes function to enhance your blog site’s possibility of being discovered on the Internet. If you are composing a blog site message that you desire to be checked out, bear in mind that visitors will certainly make use of search phrases to locate your blog site access. For one, organizations that enable misstatements– deceptive or malfunctioning details to show up on their blog sites can develop a public catastrophe. Some company firms keen to create one-to-one web links with clients, established up personality blog sites.

Allanan cinco grandes bancos franceses por sospechas de fraude fiscal

Las entidades financieras habrían incurrido en una práctica para eludir el pago de impuestos sobre dividendos de acciones. Por esta vía, el fisco francés habría perdido unos 140 mil millones de euros durante 20 años.

Fuerzas ucranianas resisten en Bajmut, pero ¿a qué precio?

Para ambos bandos Bajmut sigue teniendo una gran importancia simbólica. Sin embargo, críticos sostienen que su defensa ya no vale el precio en vidas que está pagando Ucrania.

In rural America, deadly costs of opioids outweigh the dollars tagged to address them | Salon.com

Tim Buck knows by heart how many people died from drug overdoses in his North Carolina county last year: 10. The year before it was 12 — an all-time high.

Those losses reverberate deeply in rural Pamlico County, a tightknit community of 12,000 on the state’s eastern shore. Over the past decade, it’s had the highest rate of opioid overdose deaths in North Carolina.

“Most folks know these individuals or know somebody who knows them,” said Buck, the county manager and a lifelong resident, who will proudly tell anyone that four generations of his family have called the area home. “We all feel it and we hate it when our folks hurt.”

Now, the county is receiving money from national settlements with opioid manufacturers and distributors to address the crisis. But by the time those billions of dollars are divided among states and localities, using formulas partially based on population, what trickles down to hard-hit places like Pamlico County can be a trifling sum.

Out of one multibillion-dollar national settlement, Pamlico County is set to receive about $773,000 over nearly two decades. By contrast, Wake County, home to the capital city of Raleigh, is set to receive $36 million during the same period, even though its opioid overdose death rate for the past decade ranked 87th in the state.

Buck said his county’s share “is not a lot of funds per year. But I’m glad we have something to try to reduce that overdose number.”

Rural communities across America were harbingers of the opioid crisis. In the 1990s, misleading marketing by opioid companies helped drive up prescription rates, particularly in coal, lumber, and manufacturing towns across Appalachia and Maine. As painkillers flooded communities, some residents became addicted. Over time, they started using heroin and fentanyl, and the deadly epidemic spilled into suburbs and cities across the nation.

State and local governments filed thousands of lawsuits against drug companies and wholesalers accused of fueling the crisis, resulting in a plethora of settlement deals. The largest to date is a $26 billion settlement that began paying out this year.

As the funds arrive, some people say it’s reasonable for densely populated cities and counties to receive more, as they serve a greater number of residents. But others worry such an approach misses an opportunity to use that money to make a difference in rural communities that have been disproportionately affected for decades.

“You could really diminish what is effectively generational, more than 20 years of harm in rural areas,” said Robert Pack, co-director of East Tennessee State University’s Addiction Science Center.

Just because rural areas are less populated doesn’t mean it’s cheaper to provide health services there. Research suggests the per-person cost can be greater when counties can’t capitalize on economies of scale.

In West Virginia, Attorney General Patrick Morrisey has rejected several national opioid settlements because of their distribution methods and pursued separate lawsuits instead, saying the state needs a deal that reflects the severity of its crisis, not the size of its population.

Allocations from the $26 billion national settlement were determined by each state’s population and the portion of overdose deaths, residents with opioid use disorders, and prescription painkillers it contributed to the nation’s total. Many states used similar formulas to distribute funds among their cities and counties.

Although the goal was to reflect the severity of each area’s crisis, those statistics tend to scale up by population. Further, some experts say wealthier communities with higher rates of prescription drug use may benefit while poorer communities affected by heroin and fentanyl may lose out.

Pennsylvania took a different route, devising its own formula to distribute funds among 67 counties — taking into account opioid-related hospitalizations and first responders’ administration of naloxone, an overdose reversal medication. When that formula left 11 rural counties without “enough money to make an impact,” the state decided each county would receive a minimum of $1 million over the 18-year settlement period, said Glenn Sterner, an assistant professor at Penn State who helped develop the state formula and co-authored a paper on it.

In other parts of the country without guaranteed minimums, some local officials say their share of the settlement funds won’t cover one psychologist’s salary, let alone the creation of treatment facilities.

But medical treatment — among the most expensive interventions — is just one piece of the puzzle, said Nidhi Sachdeva, who leads health and opioid initiatives for the North Carolina Association of County Commissioners. She recommends that rural counties explore lower-cost, evidence-based options like distributing naloxone, funding syringe service programs, or connecting people to housing or employment.

Another option is to pool resources among counties. In eastern North Carolina, Martin, Tyrrell, and Washington counties plan to funnel their settlement dollars into a long-standing regional health department, said David Clegg, manager and attorney for Tyrrell County. With a combined population of 36,000, the three counties have used a similar approach in combating covid-19 and sexually transmitted infections.

When it comes to funding, “we’re always the caboose of the train,” Clegg said of his county. “We couldn’t function if we didn’t partner for lots of different services.”

In Colorado, pooling funds is built into the state’s model for managing opioid settlement money. The lion’s share of funds is going to 19 newly formed regions, about half of which comprise multiple counties.

Regions 18 and 19 together have a population of less than 300,000 spread across an area in southeastern Colorado bigger than Connecticut, New Jersey, and Vermont combined. Since 2016, residents of those regions have landed in the emergency room for opioid overdoses at rates higher than those elsewhere in the state. And in the past decade, people in Regions 18 and 19 have died of opioid overdoses at rates rivaled only by Denver. But combined they are receiving only about 9% of all funds being distributed to the regions.

“It is what it is,” said Wendy Buxton-Andrade, a Prowers County, Colorado, commissioner and chair of the opioid settlement board for Region 19. “We get what we get, we don’t throw a fit, and you just figure out ways to make it work.”

Region 18 was allocated less than $500,000 for six southern Colorado counties for the first year. Lori Laske, an Alamosa County commissioner and chair of the region’s opioid settlement committee, said its members hope to recruit private entities to fill in gaps the funding won’t cover. For example, as of mid-November, her county was in the process of selling a building behind the sheriff’s office to an organization with plans to turn it into a 30-bed recovery center.

“Nobody has paid any attention to our rural areas and this problem for years,” Laske said. The money “is never enough, but it’s more than we had, and it’s a start.”

The state has set aside 10% of its opioid settlement dollars for what it’s dubbed “infrastructure,” which can include workforce training, telehealth expansion, and transportation to treatment. Any region can apply for that money. The idea “is to provide additional funds for those areas of the state that are hardest hit,” said Lawrence Pacheco, a spokesperson for the Colorado attorney general.

Pack, the expert from East Tennessee State University, said partnering with private companies can help sustain programs after settlement funds run out. For example, a county could build a treatment facility, then find a local hospital to staff it. Or it could partner with local banks and real estate developers to find unused buildings to renovate as recovery houses.

“We need to be creative and make a good business case for those kinds of partnerships,” Pack said.

For counties that aren’t sure where to start, Samantha Karon, who oversees substance use disorder programs for the National Association of Counties, suggested analyzing data and interviewing community members to identify and prioritize gaps in services.

Surry County in northwestern North Carolina, along the Virginia border, undertook this process last year. County staffers and volunteers conducted 55 in-depth interviews, gathered more than 700 responses to an online survey, and reviewed national, state, and local data. They cross-referenced the results with a list of allowable uses for the $9 million in settlement funds they’ll receive over 18 years to create a priority grid.

“It’s a graphic representation of where we should go first,” said Mark Willis, director of the county’s Office of Substance Abuse Recovery.

To his surprise, residents’ top priority wasn’t simply more treatment facilities, but rather a continuum of services to prevent addiction, treat it, and help people in recovery lead stable and successful lives. As a result, his office is considering creating a community recovery center or funding more peer support specialists. The county also plans to continue the assessment process in coming years and shift efforts accordingly.

Meanwhile, in Pamlico County, Buck said he and other leaders are open to all ideas to decrease the overdose deaths that have racked their community.

Although building a treatment center is unrealistic, they’re looking at low-cost programs that can deliver more bang for the buck. They’re also considering investing other county funds into a project early on and reimbursing themselves with settlement payouts in later years, if the agreement allows that.

“We don’t want anybody to die a tragic death,” Buck said. “Our challenge is figuring out what role we can play in preventing that with the funds we have.”

For North Carolina counties, the rates of opioid deaths were calculated by dividing the sum of opioid deaths from 2010 to 2020 by the sum of the annual population estimates from 2010 to 2020. Counts of “illicit opioid deaths” came from the state health department’s Opioid and Substance Use Action Plan Data Dashboard. Deaths involve heroin, fentanyl, fentanyl analogues, or prescription opioids. Data is based on the county of residence, which may differ from where the death occurred. Population estimates came from national Census Bureau data.

Funding estimates for each county come from the North Carolina Opioid Settlements data dashboard and reflect funds from the settlement with Johnson & Johnson and the “Big Three” drug distributors (AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health, and McKesson).

For Colorado, regional rates for opioid deaths were calculated by dividing the sum of opioid deaths from 2010 to 2020 by the sum of annual population estimates from 2010 to 2020. Deaths came from Colorado’s Vital Statistics Program, with cause of death listed as “drug overdose involving any opioid (prescription or illicit, including heroin).”

Regional rates for opioid-related emergency department visits were calculated by dividing the sum of such visits from 2016 to 2021 by the sum of annual population estimates from 2016 to 2021. Emergency department visit counts come from the Colorado health department’s drug overdose dashboard and are for drug overdoses with “any opioid (includes prescription sources, fentanyl and heroin).” They are provided by the patient’s county of residence and were originally compiled by the Colorado Hospital Association.

For both the death rate and emergency department visit rate, regional populations were calculated by adding up the Census Bureau’s annual county totals for member counties. The regions are defined in Exhibit C of Colorado’s Memorandum of Understanding. Regional funding estimates come from the Colorado attorney general’s opioid settlement dashboard and reflect funds from settlements with McKinsey & Co., Johnson & Johnson, and the “Big Three” drug distributors (AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health, and McKesson).

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.

Subscribe to KHN’s free Morning Briefing.

[상클 2교시] 심은우 “제2 연진이 낙인 힘들어”…’학폭 논란’ 연예인들 근황은? / JTBC News

0:00 배우 심은우 “제2의 연진이 낙인 힘들어”
3:44 ‘학폭 논란’ 배우 지수, 근황은?
4:42 ‘학폭 의혹’ 배우 박혜수 ‘부국제’로 복귀

#학폭논란 #심은우 #지수 #박혜수 #상클2교시 #박정선기자

본방 후 유튜브에서 앵커들과 더 가까이!
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방송사 : JTBC (https://jtbc.co.kr)

Crime reports from south, southwest suburban police blotter

The following items were taken from police reports and news releases. An arrest does not constitute a finding of guilt.

Chicago Ridge

CRIMINAL DAMAGE: Raymond Greene, 54, of Oak Lawn, was arrested and accused of domestic-related criminal damage to property after breaking out the window of a car parked in the 10500 block of Lyman Avenue Dec. 5, police said.

NO LICENSE: Ibrahim Alkurdi, 21, of Chicago Ridge, was arrested and accused of driving without a valid license, improper lane usage and no insurance Dec. 5 in the 10000 block of South Harlem Avenue, police said.

NO LICENSE: Carlos Martinez, 34, of Crestwood, was arrested and accused of driving without a valid license and failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident Dec. 6 in the 6300 block of West 111th Street, police said.

NO LICENSE: Ahmad Khawajeh, 36, of Worth, was arrested and accused of driving without a valid license and expired registration Dec. 6 in the 7100 block of West 99th Street, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Henry Mendoza, 18, of Chicago, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license and expired registration Dec. 6 in the 9300 block of South Ridgeland Avenue, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Waldemar Gluch, 61, of Worth, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license, expired registration and no insurance Dec. 10 in the 10800 block of South Ridgeland Avenue, police said.

Orland Park

NO LICENSE: Jayla Tyms, 18, of the 500 block of Illinois Street, Park Forest, was arrested and accused of driving without a license, no insurance and using a cellphone while driving Nov. 26 on Orland Square Drive, police said.

CRIMINAL DAMAGE: Seaundre McMillan, 22, of Harvey, was arrested and accused of criminal damage to a vehicle after police said he intentionally damaged a vehicle outside of LongHorn Steakhouse, 15531 LaGrange Road, during an argument on Nov. 26, police said.

RETAIL THEFT: Alfonso Trujillo, 41, of the 3200 block of 53rd Court, Cicero, was arrested and accused of retail theft after stealing two pairs of glasses frames valued at $470 from LensCrafters in Orland Square Mall on Nov. 27, police said.

RETAIL THEFT: Jonathan Green, 30, of the 1400 block of Emerald Avenue, Chicago Heights, was arrested and accused of retail theft after stealing merchandise from Hollister in Orland Square Mall Nov. 28, police said.

RETAIL THEFT: Duran Moreno, 33, of the 1300 block of 49th Court, Cicero, was arrested and accused of retail theft after stealing merchandise from Home Depot, 7300 W. 159th ST., on Nov. 30, police said.

RETAIL THEFT: Sara Shuaibi, 27, of the 7400 block of 153rd Street, Orland Park, was arrested and accused of retail theft after stealing $700 worth of merchandise from Von Maur in Orland Square Mall Nov. 30, police said.

NO LICENSE: Ivan Hernandez Lopez, 24, of Blue Island, was arrested and accused of driving without a valid license and using a cellphone while driving Nov. 30 in the 14300 block of LaGrange Road, police said.

Oak Forest

CRIMINAL DAMAGE: Arthur Roberts, 55, of the 9100 block of South Lowe, Chicago, was arrested and accused of criminal damage to property, resisting a peace officer and failure to yield to a pedestrian Dec. 4 in the 5000 block of West 159th Street, police said.

DRUG ARREST: Darrion Johnson, 30, of the 15400 block of Hickory Lane, Oak Forest, was arrested and accused of manufacture/delivery of a controlled substance within 500 feet of a school zone and armed habitual criminal following a joint investigation by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives Dec. 9, police said. While executing a search warrant at the residence, police discovered a loaded 9 mm handgun on a bathroom sink. A second man, Cordero Miller, 30, of the same address, was arrested on an outstanding warrant for murder from Lake County, Indiana. The address is within 500 feet of the Fierke Educational Center, 6535 West Victoria Drive, according to a police report.

Palos Hills

THEFT: Police said someone stole two outgoing checks from a mailbox in the 9800 block of 81st Avenue on Nov. 30.

WEAPONS ARREST: Reno McMahan, 22, of Lansing, was arrested and accused of unlawful use of a weapon Nov. 30 in the 7300 block of 105th Street, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Charles Scott, 31, of Justice, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license Dec. 1 in the 9700 block of 88th Avenue, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Hasan Surkhi, 19, of Hickory Hills, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license Dec. 4 in the 7900 block of 103rd Street, police said.

Palos Heights

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Monica Frasher, 42, of the 900 block of State Street, Lemont, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license Dec. 6 in the 7200 block of West 127th Street, police said.

AGGRAVATED SPEEDING: Madeline Betouni, 19, of Romeoville, was arrested and accused of aggravated speeding Dec. 9 in the 12300 block of Harlem Avenue, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Melissa Brown, 23, of the 100 block of East 145th Street, Harvey, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license Dec. 10 in the 12400 block of South Ridgeland Avenue, police said.

NO LICENSE: Luis Pacheco, 22, of Bolingbrook, was arrested and accused of driving without a valid license, no insurance and no valid registration Dec. 10 in the 6300 block of Carol Lane, police said.

DUI ARREST: Maurice Williams, 39, of the 6600 block of 174th Street, Tinley Park, was arrested and accused of drunken driving, unsafe equipment and two counts of aggravated unlawful use of a weapon after police discovered two loaded handguns in his car during a Dec. 11 stop in the 13400 block of South Ridgeland Avenue, police said.

THEFT: A woman told police someone stole items from her car while she was pumping gas at the Power Mart, 6400 block of West 127th St., on Dec. 11, police said.

STOLEN CAR: Police said someone stole a car parked in a lot in the 7800 block of West College Drive Dec. 11, police said.

New Lenox

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Rylee Masek, 20, of the 100 block of South Prairie Road, New Lenox, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license Dec. 3 in the 400 block of U.S. 30, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Justin Erickson, 26, of the 100 block of South Prairie Road, New Lenox, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license Dec. 5 in the 1800 block of U.S. 30, police said.

RETAIL THEFT: Nicole Stano, 32, of Bradley, was arrested and accused of retail theft after stealing $500 worth of merchandise from Walmart, 501 E. U.S. 30, on Dec. 6, police said.

RETAIL THEFT: Sheila Cruz, 42, of Kankakee, was arrested and accused of retail theft after stealing $270 worth of merchandise from Walmart, 501 E. U.S. 30, on Dec. 6, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Tiffany Dougherty, 41, of Joliet, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license Dec. 8 at Marley Road and U.S. 30, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Julia Pruett, 37, of Chicago, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license at U.S. 30 and Interstate 80 Dec. 9, police said.

Will County

BURGLARY: Police said someone stole a 2004 Chevy 3500 pickup truck, a 16-foot trailer flatbed, a Polaris Ranger UTV, a Kubota tractor, a Bobcat 773, two Bobcat edge buckets, a lawn mower, a handmade go-cart and four Polaris Ranger tires from the 8700 block of West St. Francis Road in Frankfort Township Nov. 30, police said. The truck had been left unlocked with the keys inside.

AGGRAVATED ROBBERY: Keith Bonner, 54, of the 7300 block of West Hickory Creek Drive, Frankfort, was arrested and accused of aggravated robbery, felony possession of a firearm and two counts of aggravated unlawful use of a weapon Dec. 2. In the 20000 block of South Oak Lane in Frankfort Township, police said. Police said they were called to the intersection of North and Oak Avenues after receiving reports of a man acting erratically and waving a silver handgun. The man told police he thought someone was breaking into his home and he fired his handgun four or five times to scare them away. A nearby resident called police in the same time frame to report Bonner had knocked on his door, pointed a handgun at them and demanded the victim’s cellphone so he could call the police. The victim handed over his cellphone and then called the police himself.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Gregory Randall, 48, of Dolton, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license Dec. 4 at Highland and West Pauling in Monee, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Brandi Picket Hence, 37, 17100 block of Appletree Drive, Country Club Hills, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license and disregarding a do-not-enter sign Nov. 27 at 171st Place and Wildewoode Way, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Toni L. Smith, 34, 2200 block of Windsor Lane, Country Club Hills, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license and no insurance Dec. 1 at 175th Street and Pulaski Road, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Cetrina Jones, 24, Lansing, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license and violating seat belt law Dec. 1 in the 17400 block of Halsted Street, police said.

RETAIL THEFT: Aaliyah Terrett-Cash, 20, 13900 block of Indiana Avenue, Riverdale, was arrested and accused of retail theft Dec. 2 at Kohl’s, 17620 Halsted St., after stealing merchandise selling for $1,115, police said.

RESISTING ARREST: Benjamin Levert, 36, Chicago, was arrested and accused of resisting a peace officer, disorderly conduct and trespassing Dec. 2 at Walgreens, 820 183rd St., while being taken into custody by officers summoned because Levert had exposed himself to employees and customers, police said. Levert was rearrested two days later and accused of trespassing and resisting arrest after grappling with officers after he returned to the store, police said.

DUI: Vertis Ellison, 26, 100 block of Tenth Street, Chicago Heights, was arrested and accused of drunken driving and improperly transporting adult-use cannabis in a motor vehicle Dec. 5 in the 18300 block of Dixie Highway, police said.

DUI: Rayshawn Hampton, 27, 300 block of Center Street, Glenwood, was arrested and accused of drunken driving with a blood-alcohol concentration above the legal limit and illegally transporting alcohol Dec. 5 in the 18200 block of Halsted Street, police said.

Oak Lawn

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Brande Mijarez, 42, undisclosed block of Normandy Avenue, Burbank, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license and also served with a Kendall County warrant for drunken driving Nov. 22 at 99th Street and Cook Avenue, police said.

STOLEN CAR: Waldetrudi Zayas, 50, Chicago, was charged with possessing a stolen motor vehicle and accused of illegally possessing a controlled substance during a Nov. 22 stop at Southwest Highway and Cicero Avenue after he was found to be driving a car stolen from Chicago and to have a suspected “crack” cocaine rock, police said. An officer stopped the vehicle Zayas was driving in response to a computerized message that it was stolen and then observed the steering column had been “peeled,” police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Marketta Y. Cook, 40, Chicago, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license and expired registration Nov. 23 at 95th Street and Kildare Avenue, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Maurice S. Daniels, 27, undisclosed block of Harlem Avenue, Oak Lawn, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license, no insurance, illegally tinted windows, no front registration plate and violating seat belt law, and additionally accused of improperly transporting adult-use cannabis in a motor vehicle after an officer discovered a bag containing 16 grams of cannabis Nov. 23 at 97th Street and Austin Avenue, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Jonathan J. Frazier, 25, undisclosed block of Central Avenue, Alsip, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license, speeding and expired registration Nov. 23 at 95th Street and Cicero Avenue, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Danielle L. Manning, 29, undisclosed block of Southwest Highway, Worth, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license, no insurance and disregarding a traffic-control device Nov. 23 at 90th Street and Central Avenue after making an illegal left turn, police said.

NO LICENSE: Delonte J. Upshaw, 23, Chicago, was arrested and accused of driving without a valid license Nov. 23 at Southwest Highway and Sproat Avenue after an officer determined he had only a learner’s permit issued in 2017, police said.

STOLEN CAR: Janise A. Villegas, 30, Chicago, was charged with illegally possessing a motor vehicle and accused of driving on a suspended license Nov. 23 at Southwest Highway and Keating Avenue after a computerized message indicated the Jeep Compass she was driving had been stolen out of Chicago on Oct. 31, police said.

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SUSPENDED LICENSE: Maricello T. Davis, 40, Chicago, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license and driving without headlights when required Nov. 24 at 95th Street and Cicero Avenue, police said.

BATTERY: Lavandis K. Hartley, 31, undisclosed block of Country Club Drive, Evergreen Park, was arrested and accused of two counts of battery Nov. 24 at Walgreens, 4740 95th St., after hitting an employee in the face with a thrown box of pizza rolls and putting his hands on a responding officer, police said. Hartley was also accused of criminally damaging property in connection with the damaged pizza-roll box and with trespassing after he refused to leave, police said.

RETAIL THEFT: Victor J. Hughes, 64, Calumet City, was arrested and accused of retail theft Nov. 25 at Walgreens, 4740 95th St., after stealing merchandise selling for $169.88, police said.

NO LICENSE: Douglas M. Botts, 33, undisclosed block of Harlem Avenue, Bridgeview, was arrested and accused of driving without a valid license and expired registration Nov. 26 at 95th Street and Menard Avenue, police said.

STOLEN CAR: Dezarai L. Drake, 22, undisclosed block of Stanton Street, Park Forest, was charged with possessing a stolen vehicle and Djamone D. Truell, 24, and Laquandus W. Truell, 26, both of Sauk Village, were accused of vehicular trespass Nov. 26 in an undisclosed block of 95th Street after officers stopped a car believed to be stolen out of Chicago, police said. In a related action, Djamone D. Truell was accused of obstructing identification after initially providing an alias and served with a Chicago arrest warrant for manufacturing/delivering fentanyl, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Yahshua S. Gladden, 30, Chicago, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license, improperly using a cellphone while driving and disregarding a stop sign Nov. 26 in an undisclosed block of 99th Street, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE: Yousef A. Yasin, 23, undisclosed block of Harlem Avenue, Worth, was arrested and accused of driving on a suspended license, no insurance and driving without headlights when required Nov. 26 in the 5400 block of 95th Street, police said.

Funniest Videos 2023 😂 Funny Cats 🐱 and Dogs 🐶 Part 66

Funniest Videos 2023 😂 Funny Cats 🐱 and Dogs 🐶 Part 66
https://youtu.be/wjhwKsklDO0

Diego Pacheco halts Jack Cullen in four rounds

Diego Pacheco entered his main event matchup with Jack Cullen as a prospect on the cusp of contender status. The just-turned 22-year-old super middleweight was a Prospect of the Year contender after scoring four KOs in 2022; and he’s already in the WBO’s top 10 (No. 9).

Pacheco (18-0, 15 KOs) will likely move up the sanctioning body’s rankings by picking up their vacant “international” title with a patient-but-brutal fourth-round stoppage of Cullen (21-4-1, 9 KOs) on Saturday at Echo Arena in Liverpool, England.

This kid can fight! ✨
@realdpacheco gets Cullen out of there in the fourth 🧨#PachecoCullen | @DAZNBoxing pic.twitter.com/pt0x6jEhNq

— Matchroom Boxing (@MatchroomBoxing) March 11, 2023

Who knows? Pacheco’s systematic breakdown of the 29-year-old British fringe contender might be enough to prompt the Ring Ratings Panel to vote him into the publication’s super middleweight top 10, displacing the more-experienced likes of Ali Akmedov (No. 10), Zach Parker (No. 9) or Vladimir Shishkin (No. 8). If not, he’s definitely put himself in position to be the next man in.

The Californian felt no pressure in stepping up to the main event of the Matchroom Boxing show when original headliner Callum Smith had to withdraw from his fight with Pawel Stepien due to training injury. Pacheco took his time to “feel out” his battle-tested opponent in the opening round and Cullen took advantage of the slow pace by outjabbing the younger man.

However, Pacheco took command of the bout during the final minute of Round 2 when he landed a one-two combination that stunned Cullen, who gamely fought back in the final seconds before the bell. Cullen, who is almost as tall and rangy as the 6-foot-4 Los Angeles native, took the fight to the up-and-comer in Round 3, but Pacheco calmly picked his heavier shots to Lancashire man’s head and rib cage.

A right hand stunned Cullen again at the start of Round 4 and a left to the hip put the Englishman down. Cullen bravely beat the count but a one-two combo staggered him back into the ropes where Pacheco landed a pair of flush right hands that prompted referee Steve Gray to stop the fight 47 seconds into the round.

“It’s my job to deliver and I think I did that tonight,” Pacheco said during his post-fight interview on DAZN, which streamed the bout live. “It doesn’t matter where I fight, my job is to put on a great performance.”

Pacheco was asked about popular New York Puerto Rican super middleweight Edgar Berlanga, who recently signed with Matchroom Boxing.

“I feel ready for anyone in the division,” Pacheco said. “(Berlanga) is a fight that’s definitely going to happen down the line.”

Email Fischer at . Follow him on Twitter and IG at @dougiefischer, and join him, Tom Loeffler, Coach Schwartz and friends via Tom’s or Doug’s IG Live most Sundays.

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The post Diego Pacheco halts Jack Cullen in four rounds appeared first on The Ring.

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