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Missouri K-9 officer dies after being left inside hot car overnight: 'Tremendous loss'

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Missouri K-9 officer dies after being left inside hot car overnight: 'Tremendous loss'

A beloved Missouri K-9 officer died after reportedly being left in a hot car overnight following the end of his shift in Savannah. 

The Savannah Police Department confirmed to Fox News Digital that K-9 Horus died on Thursday after completing his overnight shift.

“On Thursday, June 20, the Savannah Police Department and the entire community suffered a tremendous loss,” Police Chief David Vincent said in a statement. 

K-9 Horus had served as a member of the Savannah Police Department for over three years, according to FOX 4.

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HERO SOUTH CAROLINA POLICE K-9 DIES SAVING HUMAN TEAMMATES IN SHOOTOUT WITH FUGITIVE SUSPECT, AUTHORITIES SAY

Officers in a small Missouri town in Andrew County are mourning the death of their K-9 companion, Horus. (FOX 4/Savannah Missouri Police Department )

“Horus’s death is currently being investigated,” Savannah Chief of Police David Vincent said in a statement to Fox News Digital. “Due to this being an open investigation, there will be no further information released until the investigation is completed. The entire department would appreciate your thoughts and prayers, as we deal with the loss of our partner, Horus.”

Andrew County Prosecuting Attorney Monica J. Morrey told Fox News Digital that their office is currently investigating this case.

“The Andrew County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office is deeply saddened to learn of K-9 Horus’ passing. We are grateful to him for his service to our community. I have requested a special investigation through the Missouri State Highway Patrol. I will await the results of this investigation prior to making any determination of necessary action,” Morrey said. 

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The name of the law enforcement officer responsible for K-9 Horus’ death has not been released as it is an ongoing investigation.

YOUNGKIN MOURNS K-9 DOG STABBED TO DEATH BY ‘BARBARIC’ MS-13 GANG MEMBERS: ‘WILL BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE’

The Savannah Police Chief confirmed the death of K-9 officer as an investigation into his death continues.  (Savannah Missouri Police Department)

It is also not known what consequences the caretaker of K-9 Horus will face or if the death will be ruled intentional or an accident. 

FOX 4 reported that the maximum temperature on Thursday was 90 degrees, with the low being 70 degrees outside.  

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According to the American Veterinary Medical Association, research indicates that the temperature inside a vehicle can go over 100 degrees in a half-hour, even if it’s only 70 degrees outside.

In May, Republican state Sen. Tony Luetkemeyer’s Bill 754, also referred to as “Max’s Law” passed the Missouri House of Representatives. The bill increases penalties for injuring and killing animals in law enforcement.

FLORIDA K-9 DIES AFTER BEING SHOT WHILE PROTECTING DEPUTIES FROM ‘ARMED CRIMINAL’: SHERIFF

Sen. Tony Luetkemeyer listens in 2023 as St. Joseph Police Officer Lucas Winder testifies in support of Max’s Law. Officer Winder was Max’s K-9 handler when the police dog was killed in the line of duty. (Senate.mo.gov)

“I am happy to see this priority legislation make it across the finish line,” Luetkemeyer said when the bill passed. “This bill protects our diligent K-9 officers and the public they help protect.”

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If signed by Governor Parson, Luetkemeyer said he hopes for Max’s Law to go into effect within the next few months.

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“These heroic animals put their lives on the line every day to protect the public and their human partners,” Luetkemeyer said in a previous statement. “The law should protect them.”

It is unclear if this law would come into play in the case of K-9 Horus’ death.

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Illinois

Where Route 66 begins: A tale of boom, bust, baseball, and a ‘big house’

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Where Route 66 begins: A tale of boom, bust, baseball, and a ‘big house’


Editor’s note: This story is part of the Monitor’s summerlong series following old U.S. Route 66 from Chicago to Santa Monica, California.

Just a few blocks from the Old Joliet Prison, Johnny Williams is standing outside a tire shop, waiting for a repair.

He’s a lifelong resident of the Joliet area, a father of six and grandfather of 10, and he remembers back in the day when the prison was part of the economic engine that made Joliet run.

Why We Wrote This

Route 66 courses through American cities that once flourished before their economies faded or were forced to change. The story of Joliet, Illinois, reflects the high times, the hardships and the reinvention found along the century-old road.

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“I remember when people used to sit out there visiting their people — on the buses, you know?” Mr. Williams says. “I have plenty of people whose parents and uncles worked there.” He gestures toward the 25-foot limestone walls, still topped with razor wire. “And as a child, I would always wonder — what’s behind that wall?”

So, he still marvels at how the once imposing former state penitentiary has been transformed over the past decade. Today, the people walking through its front gate are not prisoners or staff, but tourists and Americana-lovers there to have fun and celebrate the centennial of Route 66. The iconic roadway, noted in hundreds of anthems about America, passed right by the prison until 1940, when it was rerouted a few blocks away.

The prison once housed such infamous criminals as Richard Speck, James Earl Ray, and John Wayne Gacy. But since its closing in 2002, it has become a site for concerts, film viewings, and today, an event dubbed “The Big House Ballgame.”



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Indiana

Rapid Reaction: Indiana stomps Northwestern 9-2 at Wrigley Field

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Rapid Reaction: Indiana stomps Northwestern 9-2 at Wrigley Field


Northwestern baseball’s cherished tradition of playing at Wrigley Field filled the dugout and the stands with joy and humility. But it did not deliver a win this year, as Indiana (21-25, 7-15 B1G) used two offensive spurts and stifling pitching to outlast the Wildcats (17-25-1, 5-17 B1G) 9-2 on Friday night.



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Iowa

Republicans running for governor lay out conservative credentials

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Republicans running for governor lay out conservative credentials


The five candidates vying for the Republican Party nomination for governor each went before conservative activists in the Des Moines area Friday night to ask for their support in the upcoming primary election.

The fundraiser for the Iowa Faith and Freedom Coalition, an influential evangelical political group, was the first event of the campaign season where all five candidates were present in person.

More than 1,000 people attended the fundraiser at an event center in Clive where Gov. Kim Reynolds and Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, also looked to unify support for Republicans in the upcoming midterms.

Lucius Pham/Iowa Public Radio

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Republican Zach Lahn addresses the Iowa Faith and Freedom Coalition on Friday. Lahn said if he became governor, he would act to revoke the licenses of teachers who push political ideology in their classrooms.

Feenstra and rivals appeal to conservative activists

The candidates took turns answering questions from Republican Party of Iowa Chair Jeff Kaufmann, who prompted them to share their views on key conservative issues: abortion, eminent domain, school choice and religious freedom.

All five candidates oppose abortion rights. Adam Steen, former director of the Iowa Department of Administrative Services, said as governor he would push for restrictions beyond the state’s current law — which bans most abortions at about six weeks of pregnancy.

“We have to be pro-life. We have to be life at conception. It’s fundamental,” Steen said. “And I’ll say this right now — with those abortion pills that are being sent into the state of Iowa right now, we have to stop those first and foremost. Get those out of there and ensure that life is protected at conception.”

The Iowa House passed a bill Friday that includes a measure requiring medial providers to only dispense abortion-inducing drugs directly to the patient in a health care setting. It is not clear whether the bill has enough support to pass in the state Senate.

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Also on Friday, a panel of the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals issued a ruling temporarily blocking the mailing of the abortion pill mifepristone, requiring that it be distributed only in person in medical settings. The ruling is expected to be appealed to the Supreme Court.

Republican gubernatorial candidate Rep. Eddie Andrews make his pitches to conservative activists at fundraiser for the Iowa Faith & Freedom Coalition. Andrews says Iowa should expand its education savings account program and other forms of school choice.

Lucius Pham/Iowa Public Radio

Republican gubernatorial candidate Rep. Eddie Andrews makes his pitches to conservative activists at a fundraiser for the Iowa Faith and Freedom Coalition. Andrews says Iowa should expand its education savings account program and other forms of school choice.

Businessman Zach Lahn of Belle Plaine said the conservative movement should look beyond abortion. For instance, Lahn said, conservatives should advocate to reverse declines in life expectancy.

“We have to make sure that we are fighting for healthy food, for less medication, for our children, for clean water, for cancer,” said Lahn, who was endorsed by MAHA Action, an advocacy group related to the Make America Healthy Again movement.

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Reynolds vetoed a measure that would have put some limits on eminent domain, but the candidates all said they oppose the use of eminent domain for private-sector projects.

Fourth District Rep. Randy Feenstra said he would protect landowners’ property rights.

“The property belongs to the American farmer, the Iowa farmer, belongs to each of us and not anything else,” Feenstra said. “And if somebody wants to run a pipeline, or whatever it might be, then it’s negotiated between the private property owner and the business. And if the private property owner says, ‘no,’ that’s it.”

Former state Rep. Brad Sherman agreed.

“A private company who’s not a common carrier for a product that’s not a public utility should never, ever get to use eminent domain,” Sherman said. “It’s just that simple.”

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The GOP candidates for governor are supporters of school choice measures passed in recent years. That includes Iowa’s education savings accounts (ESAs) program, which this year gave around $8,000 in public funding per student to help families pay for tuition at private schools.

Steen called the ESA law “one of the greatest pieces of legislation” passed under Republican control in the Legislature. Current state Rep. Eddie Andrews, R-Johnston, said he would like to see the state expand school choice.

“It didn’t just start with ESAs. I led the push for just regular district-to-district school choice. Then we added public charter school choice,” Andrews said. “I understood that parents need to be in charge of their kids’ education.”

If no candidate wins at least 35% of the primary vote on June 2, the nomination will be decided at a party convention.

Sen. Ted Cruz addresses a crowd of conservative activists in Iowa.

Lucius Pham

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Iowa Public Radio

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, warns conservative activists in Iowa that the state will be a target for Democrats as they try to regain seats in the U.S. House and Senate.

Reynolds says election will affect GOP achievements

Reynolds told activists at the fundraiser she plans to be on the campaign trail supporting the person chosen as the GOP nominee for governor. She said the results of the election in November will have implications for landmark conservative policies put in place under her leadership.

Reynolds listed what she considers some of Republicans’ greatest accomplishments in the Statehouse in her time as governor, including cuts to income tax rates, a broad state government reorganization and one of the most restrictive abortion laws in the United States.

“I would put our record up against anyone,” Reynolds said. “It’s what’s driven more Iowa voters to register as Republicans. In 2018, Republicans held just a 10,800 voter registration advantage. Today, we have an advantage of over 198,000.”

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But Republicans should not take their advantage among active registered voters for granted, Reynolds said. Democrats, she said, are united, well-funded and motivated to win back the governor’s office.

“We have the record. We have the numbers,” Reynolds said. “So the only way that we see a Rob Sand win is if we don’t show up. If we show up, we win.”





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