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Donald Gray Triplett, the first person diagnosed with autism symptoms, died Thursday, according to his longtime employer. Triplett was 89.
Triplett started working at the Bank of Forest in 1958 and was remembered as a “fixture” at the small Mississippi city bank that sits about 40 miles east of Jackson.
“Every employee that has come through our doors since then, has fond stories and memories of him that we will treasure – looking enviously at his travel photos, having your picture taken by him as a new employee, a collection of trinkets & post cards given through the years, a nickname or number given when he met you, or even being shot by a rubber band,” the Bank of Forest said in a statement on Facebook. | |
Submitted at 06-19-2023, 06:52 PM by Forensic | |
0 Comments | |
Hamish Harding, who went to space last year, is thought to be among those on a dive to the famous shipwreck. | |
Submitted at 06-19-2023, 06:51 PM by Forensic | |
Rescuers are searching for a submersible used to take tourists and experts to view the famous shipwreck. | |
Submitted at 06-19-2023, 03:21 PM by John Holmes Boxxyfucker | |
New to science, this stink bug is the size of a pea and has huge curved horns and bright yellow tusks. | |
Submitted at 06-19-2023, 04:27 AM by sleeppoor | |
At least 23 people were shot, and one was killed, near southwest suburban Willowbrook early Sunday morning, officials said. | |
Submitted at 06-19-2023, 04:35 AM by sleeppoor | |
Four hundred and fifty-five miles of Interstate 80 run through Nebraska. But one 24-mile stretch has become nationally known – or notorious – for a type of traffic stop that sends millions to a single Nebraska county and its sheriff’s department. | |
Submitted at 06-18-2023, 10:46 PM by Wreckard | |
The private club, which has included Reagan and Nixon among its members, is accused of failing to pay overtime and not giving breaks
(but I'm sure they have no judicial connections to leverage) | |
Submitted at 06-18-2023, 01:33 PM by OldBoringGuy | |
A 21-year-old farm worker from Wisconsin who was caught having sex with a female donkey is headed to jail -- after asking a judge to revoke his more lenient initial sentence.
Gideon Swartzentruber was originally only ordered to spend a year on probation, undergo counseling and pay a $443 fine after confessing to the sordid sexual encounter at a barn in Neillsville in September, according to the Marshfield News Herald. | |
Submitted at 06-18-2023, 04:23 AM by Grief Bacon | |
Last week, the Department of Justice announced the arrest of a teenager in Massachusetts on allegations of providing financial support to the Islamic State group.
A flurry of reports picked up on the arrest of Mateo Ventura, an 18-year-old resident of the sleepy town of Wakefield, echoing government claims that an international terrorist financier and ISIS supporter had just been busted in the United States. The Department of Justice’s own press release on the case likewise trumpeted Ventura’s arrest for “knowingly concealing the source of material support or resources that he intended to go to a foreign terrorist organization.”
The only “terrorist” he is accused of ever being in contact with was an undercover FBI agent who befriended him online as a 16-year-old.
The only problem with the case and how it has been described, however, is that according to the government’s own criminal complaint, Ventura had never actually funded any terrorist group. The only “terrorist” he is accused of ever being in contact with was an undercover FBI agent who befriended him online as a 16-year-old, solicited small cash donations in the form of gift cards, and directed him not to tell anyone else about their intimate online relationship, including his family. | |
Submitted at 06-17-2023, 10:15 PM by Grief Bacon | |
When they asked the woman why she was wearing only a towel, she reportedly answered, “I was too lazy to put clothes on.” | |
Submitted at 06-17-2023, 07:37 PM by Nibbles | |
Social media spying by the Army’s Protective Services Battalion is supposed to keep an eye on embarrassing posts about generals. | |
Submitted at 06-17-2023, 07:22 PM by sleeppoor | |
She rarely gets more than 500 views per clip, but Dean’s “case study” videos are compelling: She mounts an argument, case by case, that the review ecosystem is filled with enough deceit that it negates any benefits of using Yelp. And it goes beyond Yelp: She’s made videos about posts she believes to be fake on Google Reviews, Trustpilot, Healthgrade and the Better Business Bureau. | |
Submitted at 06-17-2023, 07:21 PM by Nibbles | |
It’s been dubbed “DNA Drive Day.” Get a free DNA test to learn more about your ancestry and to whom you are related. The caveat: Those genetic matches may help police identify human remains or link a distant relative to a crime.
Middlesex District Attorney Marian Ryan is co-hosting the first-of-its-kind event in the state on Saturday in the parking lot at Newton City Hall, where people can take a free FamilyTreeDNA test from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. The goal is to get people — particularly those with missing family members — to understand they can “take some concrete action” to try to help police solve missing and unidentified persons cases by sharing their genealogy test results, she said.
At the same time, Ryan said, participants will be told that their DNA matches could help lead police to a suspect in a violent crime.
The DNA drive comes as investigators have been making enormous strides in solving cases through investigative genetic genealogy — essentially identifying victims and suspects by uploading their DNA profiles to genealogy databases and searching for relatives. | |
Submitted at 06-17-2023, 07:13 PM by sleeppoor | |
A near-supermajority of California voters want Sen. Dianne Feinstein to resign from office, and her approval rating has fallen off a cliff, according to polling out Monday from Emerson College.
The poll, conducted from June 4 to June 7 among 1,056 California voters, shows that 63% of respondents believe Feinstein should step aside, compared to 37% who believe she should finish her term through 2024, when she’d be 91 years old. Her approval rating is at just 22%, compared to 48% disapproval and 31% no opinion. The poll has a 2.9% margin of error.
| |
Submitted at 06-17-2023, 06:57 PM by sleeppoor | |
Could the opportunity for the public to bet on the Special Olympics World Games this week ignite a movement of added exposure to the event or will it lead to controversy? | |
Submitted at 06-17-2023, 12:57 PM by John Holmes Boxxyfucker | |
Press freedom and civil liberties groups nationwide expressed their disappointment at the conviction by a jury of Asheville Blade journalists Matilda Bliss and Veronica Coit for violating a park curfew by recording police evicting a homeless encampment on Christmas night of 2021.
“We don’t have secret police in the United States,” said Seth Stern, Director of Advocacy at Freedom of the Press Foundation. “Officers are not entitled to operate without press and public scrutiny just because it’s dark out. The Constitution requires that journalists be given sufficient access to public land to report the news, no matter the time.”
The judge reportedly instructed the jury not to consider the constitutionality of the charges against Coit and Bliss. He orally denied their motion to dismiss on First Amendment grounds (a written ruling will follow). He was wrong, as the Department of Justice made clear the same day as the verdict in its report on its investigation of the Minneapolis Police Department: “Blanket enforcement of dispersal orders and curfews against press violates [the First Amendment] because they foreclose the press from reporting.” | |
Submitted at 06-17-2023, 02:21 AM by sleeppoor | |
Submitted at 06-17-2023, 02:19 AM by sleeppoor | |
One of the men recently worked for a local government, a city manager told Raw Story. | |
Submitted at 06-16-2023, 08:27 PM by sleeppoor | |
Water quality leaders are discussing ways to prevent manatees from dying. Right now statistics show manatees are dying at an unusual rate. | |
Submitted at 06-16-2023, 08:28 PM by sleeppoor | |
Submitted at 06-16-2023, 09:22 PM by Forensic | |

Donald Gray Triplett, the first person diagnosed with autism symptoms, died Thursday, according to his longtime employer. Triplett was 89.
Triplett started working at the Bank of Forest in 1958 and was remembered as a “fixture” at the small Mississippi city bank that sits about 40 miles east of Jackson.
“Every employee that has come through our doors since then, has fond stories and memories of him that we will treasure – looking enviously at his travel photos, having your picture taken by him as a new employee, a collection of trinkets & post cards given through the years, a nickname or number given when he met you, or even being shot by a rubber band,” the Bank of Forest said in a statement on Facebook.
Hamish Harding, who went to space last year, is thought to be among those on a dive to the famous shipwreck.
Rescuers are searching for a submersible used to take tourists and experts to view the famous shipwreck.
New to science, this stink bug is the size of a pea and has huge curved horns and bright yellow tusks.
At least 23 people were shot, and one was killed, near southwest suburban Willowbrook early Sunday morning, officials said.
Four hundred and fifty-five miles of Interstate 80 run through Nebraska. But one 24-mile stretch has become nationally known – or notorious – for a type of traffic stop that sends millions to a single Nebraska county and its sheriff’s department.
The private club, which has included Reagan and Nixon among its members, is accused of failing to pay overtime and not giving breaks
(but I'm sure they have no judicial connections to leverage)
A 21-year-old farm worker from Wisconsin who was caught having sex with a female donkey is headed to jail -- after asking a judge to revoke his more lenient initial sentence.
Gideon Swartzentruber was originally only ordered to spend a year on probation, undergo counseling and pay a $443 fine after confessing to the sordid sexual encounter at a barn in Neillsville in September, according to the Marshfield News Herald.
Last week, the Department of Justice announced the arrest of a teenager in Massachusetts on allegations of providing financial support to the Islamic State group.
A flurry of reports picked up on the arrest of Mateo Ventura, an 18-year-old resident of the sleepy town of Wakefield, echoing government claims that an international terrorist financier and ISIS supporter had just been busted in the United States. The Department of Justice’s own press release on the case likewise trumpeted Ventura’s arrest for “knowingly concealing the source of material support or resources that he intended to go to a foreign terrorist organization.”
The only “terrorist” he is accused of ever being in contact with was an undercover FBI agent who befriended him online as a 16-year-old.
The only problem with the case and how it has been described, however, is that according to the government’s own criminal complaint, Ventura had never actually funded any terrorist group. The only “terrorist” he is accused of ever being in contact with was an undercover FBI agent who befriended him online as a 16-year-old, solicited small cash donations in the form of gift cards, and directed him not to tell anyone else about their intimate online relationship, including his family.
When they asked the woman why she was wearing only a towel, she reportedly answered, “I was too lazy to put clothes on.”
Social media spying by the Army’s Protective Services Battalion is supposed to keep an eye on embarrassing posts about generals.
She rarely gets more than 500 views per clip, but Dean’s “case study” videos are compelling: She mounts an argument, case by case, that the review ecosystem is filled with enough deceit that it negates any benefits of using Yelp. And it goes beyond Yelp: She’s made videos about posts she believes to be fake on Google Reviews, Trustpilot, Healthgrade and the Better Business Bureau.
It’s been dubbed “DNA Drive Day.” Get a free DNA test to learn more about your ancestry and to whom you are related. The caveat: Those genetic matches may help police identify human remains or link a distant relative to a crime.
Middlesex District Attorney Marian Ryan is co-hosting the first-of-its-kind event in the state on Saturday in the parking lot at Newton City Hall, where people can take a free FamilyTreeDNA test from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. The goal is to get people — particularly those with missing family members — to understand they can “take some concrete action” to try to help police solve missing and unidentified persons cases by sharing their genealogy test results, she said.
At the same time, Ryan said, participants will be told that their DNA matches could help lead police to a suspect in a violent crime.
The DNA drive comes as investigators have been making enormous strides in solving cases through investigative genetic genealogy — essentially identifying victims and suspects by uploading their DNA profiles to genealogy databases and searching for relatives.
A near-supermajority of California voters want Sen. Dianne Feinstein to resign from office, and her approval rating has fallen off a cliff, according to polling out Monday from Emerson College.
The poll, conducted from June 4 to June 7 among 1,056 California voters, shows that 63% of respondents believe Feinstein should step aside, compared to 37% who believe she should finish her term through 2024, when she’d be 91 years old. Her approval rating is at just 22%, compared to 48% disapproval and 31% no opinion. The poll has a 2.9% margin of error.
Could the opportunity for the public to bet on the Special Olympics World Games this week ignite a movement of added exposure to the event or will it lead to controversy?
Press freedom and civil liberties groups nationwide expressed their disappointment at the conviction by a jury of Asheville Blade journalists Matilda Bliss and Veronica Coit for violating a park curfew by recording police evicting a homeless encampment on Christmas night of 2021.
“We don’t have secret police in the United States,” said Seth Stern, Director of Advocacy at Freedom of the Press Foundation. “Officers are not entitled to operate without press and public scrutiny just because it’s dark out. The Constitution requires that journalists be given sufficient access to public land to report the news, no matter the time.”
The judge reportedly instructed the jury not to consider the constitutionality of the charges against Coit and Bliss. He orally denied their motion to dismiss on First Amendment grounds (a written ruling will follow). He was wrong, as the Department of Justice made clear the same day as the verdict in its report on its investigation of the Minneapolis Police Department: “Blanket enforcement of dispersal orders and curfews against press violates [the First Amendment] because they foreclose the press from reporting.”
One of the men recently worked for a local government, a city manager told Raw Story.
Water quality leaders are discussing ways to prevent manatees from dying. Right now statistics show manatees are dying at an unusual rate.