Republished August 01, 2021 - 6:20 PM
Original Publication Date July 31, 2021 - 10:21 PM
DETROIT CANAL DEATH
Authorities: Teenager died while swimming in a Detroit canal
DETROIT (AP) — Authorities say a 15-year-old boy has died while swimming in a Detroit canal. Detroit police say officers were called Saturday evening and the department's dive team, the Detroit Fire Department and Coast Guard aided in the search for the boy. The teen's body was recovered and he was pronounced dead due to accidental drowning. Witnesses told police the teen was visiting people he knew and was helping with yard work when he asked if could go for a swim. Detroit police spokesman Rudy Harper says the boy went swimming but did not resurface.
DETROIT GREENWAY-DENNIS ARCHER
Detroit greenway named in honor of former Mayor Archer
DETROIT (AP) — A 1.2-mile recreational biking and walking path connecting some eastside Detroit neighborhoods to the city’s riverfront has been named in honor of former Mayor Dennis Archer. The city says work on the Mayor Dennis W. Archer Greenway is expected to be completed later this year. It will connect the popular Detroit Riverwalk north to Vernor Highway. Parts of the $4.9 million greenway opened last year to the public. Construction began in October on the final phase. Federal grants and road bonds are paying for the work. An attorney, Archer served as Detroit mayor from 1994 to 2001 and was on the Michigan Supreme Court from 1986 to 1990.
PARKING TICKETS-TIRES
Parking tickets hit the docket of federal appeals court
SAGINAW, Mich. (AP) — A federal appeals court has heard arguments in a challenge to a Michigan city’s practice of marking tires to catch people who ignore time limits on parking. Alison Taylor is appealing a decision that went in favor of Saginaw. Her attorney argues that chalking tires violates the Fourth Amendment’s protection against unreasonable searches. The case made headlines in 2019 when the same appeals court said marking tires could be illegal without a warrant in some circumstances. The court sent the lawsuit back to a federal judge in Michigan, but he eventually ruled against Taylor again. A different three-judge panel at the appeals court heard arguments Thursday.
FATHER SLAIN-ARREST
Son arrested in Kalamazoo in the death of his father, 82
PORTAGE, Mich. (AP) — Police say a man wanted in the killing of his 82-year-old father whose body was found last week in his Kalamazoo-area home is now in custody. The Portage Department of Public Safety says 56-year-old Scott Sterffy was arrested Saturday in Kalamazoo and is expected to be arraigned Monday. Steffry was wanted on an open murder charge and a charge of disinterment or mutilation of a dead body in the death of his father, Dr. Thomas Aye, a retired oral surgeon who practiced for about 30 years in the Kalamazoo area. He was found dead in his Portage home on July 25 by one of his daughters.
SOLDIER'S REMAINS IDENTIFIED
Remains of Michigan soldier who died in Korean War head home
LESLIE, Mich. (AP) — The remains of a mid-Michigan soldier killed in combat during the Korean War will be returned to his hometown for burial after military scientists identified them seven decades after his death. The remains of U.S. Army Sgt. William Cavender of Leslie, Michigan, were among more than 55 boxes of remains of U.S. servicemembers North Korea turned over to the U.S. in 2018. The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency says Cavender's remains were identified in May 2020 through mitochondrial DNA analysis. He was 20 when he was reported missing in action in November 1950, after his unit was attacked by enemy forces in North Korea.
VIRUS OUTBREAK-MICHIGAN
University of Michigan, Michigan State mandating vaccines
LANSING, Mich. (AP) — The University of Michigan and Michigan State University will require all students, faculty and staff to be vaccinated against COVID-19 by the fall semester. Both university presidents said Friday the action is being taken due to the spread of the more infectious delta variant. The state reports 2,250 additional coronavirus cases over three days. The seven-day average, 573, is up from 219 two weeks ago. Michigan’s case rate is lower than in all but a few states. Vaccine mandates are gaining momentum in Michigan. Earlier this week, more large hospital systems announced that they would require all employees and affiliated physicians to get vaccinated.
COMMON CARP DEATHS-LAKE
State investigating common carp deaths in Michigan lake
LAKE ORION, Mich. (AP) — State officials are investigating the deaths of hundreds of adult common carp at an Oakland County lake. Michigan’s Department of Natural Resources says between 250 and 500 of the fish have been found dead since mid-July in Lake Orion, northwest of Detroit. DNR fisheries division staff collected samples July 23 for analysis at the Aquatic Animal Health Laboratory at Michigan State University. Some initial findings are expected next week. A complete set of results should be available in early September. DNR fisheries division research program manager Gary Whelan says single-species mortality events typically are caused by a specific fish pathogen that is often a virus.
ARETHA FRANKLIN-DETROIT EXHIBIT
Aretha's handprints to be unveiled outside Detroit museum
DETROIT (AP) — The “Queen of Soul’s” handprints are to be unveiled outside the Detroit Historical Society Museum in advance of the release of a new film on Aretha Franklin’s life and career. Sunday’s unveiling on Legends Plaza will coincide with the opening of a new, temporary museum exhibit on the legendary singer, songwriter and icon. The historical society says Franklin cast her handprints in concrete for installation on the plaza in 2017 at the Detroit Music Hall's celebration of the dedication of Aretha Franklin Way in the city. They are being placed on permanent display in conjunction with the upcoming release of “Respect,” a new film on Franklin's life and career.
JAIL-JUDGE
Michigan Supreme Court judge gives pep talk to jail inmates
FLINT, Mich. (AP) — Inmates at a Flint-area jail got a pep talk from an unlikely visitor: a Michigan Supreme Court justice. Richard Bernstein recently shook the hands of 24 people enrolled in an education program at the Genesee County jail. It's intended to help them succeed when they’re released. Bernstein was upbeat, telling inmates, “I am counting on you.” Bernstein comes from a wealthy Detroit-area family that has been successful in law. But he explained how he must overcome challenges each day as a blind person. Bernstein has run two dozen marathons and spent weeks hospitalized while recovering from injuries when a bicyclist struck him in 2012.
VIRUS OUTBREAK-JOBLESS AID
Michigan: 350K who got unemployment aid won't have to repay
LANSING, Mich. (AP) — About 350,000 Michigan residents who received federal unemployment aid will not have to repay benefits even though the state told them that some reasons for eligibility it approved at the start of the pandemic were not OK. The Unemployment Insurance Agency said Friday it will give waivers to the group, many who may no longer be collecting benefits. They are among nearly 600,000 claimants whom were asked last month to requalify for the federal assistance, which is $300 a week on top of maximum state benefits of $362.
News from © The Associated Press, 2021