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Wheels stolen from DC woman’s car for third time in recent months

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Wheels stolen from DC woman’s car for third time in recent months

Not as soon as, not twice, however THREE TIMES. 

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A D.C. lady says the wheels had been stolen from her Honda three completely different occasions in 9 months within the Hill East neighborhood of Southeast D.C. 

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“I’m simply dissatisfied in society. It’s – you could have these experiences the place issues restore your religion in humanity and this taking place time and again, it’s simply disappointing. What a horrible human being to be so extremely egocentric,” Kelly Roark advised FOX 5 over Zoom on Wednesday. 

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In surveillance video captured by a neighbor, you’ll be able to hear Roark’s Honda hit the bottom after one suspect lowers the automotive onto yellow crates. One other suspect is seen nonetheless rolling one among Roark’s tires right into a silver-colored sedan double parked simply behind Roark’s car.

The incident occurred at round 3:30 a.m. Tuesday morning close to nineteenth St. SE close to the D.C. Armory. 

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Roark’s Honda Civic was additionally focused in March 2022 and October 2021. The earlier incidents additionally happened across the similar early morning time.

PAST COVERAGE: Automotive rim and wheel thefts are rising throughout DC

On this newest incident, surveillance video additionally exhibits a silver sedan, just like the one seen as the 2 suspects labored on Roark’s wheels, driving round, showing to scope out the realm.

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Roark says every time her automotive was focused pressured her to name out of labor, canceling appointments as a pediatric speech pathologist. There are additionally insurance coverage deductibles that should be paid. Hill East residents really feel they and the Capitol Hill neighborhoods are always focused.  

“Each single day I drive by a automotive that’s on crates. That’s not regular,” stated Roark. 

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D.C. Police inform FOX 5 it is a city-wide difficulty. In line with their newest out there stats, police say wheel and rim thefts went from 54 thefts reported throughout a sure interval final yr (January 1 – April 27, 2021) to 201 thefts reported in the identical stretch this yr. 

That’s a 272% improve. 

“Why?” is the massive query.

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D.C. police are wanting into whether or not scrapyards are shopping for the steel rims.

“Whereas there is no such thing as a particular proof that that is occurring or has occurred, it’s actually inside the realm of risk,” an MPD Spokesperson wrote in an emailed response. “Our detectives have labored diligently to try to determine the explanations that these explicit merchandise could also be of curiosity or worth to thieves.  It’s completely doable that the wheels could be bought on-line however, sadly, they’re extraordinarily exhausting to trace and attribute to a selected theft or proprietor, because of the lack of serial numbers or different distinctive figuring out options.”

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FOX 5 spoke to an space tow firm proprietor concerning the difficulty. 

Ibrahim Aburish, who goes by “@BeeboDC” on Twitter, has been monitoring these incidents on each Twitter and TikTok.

“After we used to have our tow truck elements stolen, beacon lights and stuff, again within the day, we used to have to start out marking them with VINs and etching codes in them to point out that they had been ours as a result of they don’t include it,” Aburish stated. “So, individuals are going to must cease monitoring their stuff or air tagging it, or simply attempt to do some figuring out marks inside your rims in case, however that’s clearly not going to cease any person from stealing it … until they get caught.”

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Aburish advised FOX 5 he obtained a name on Wednesday morning relating to a Honda with each the entire tire and doorways stolen.  

Roark is hoping neighbors can hold an eye fixed out for the suspect’s silver sedan seen on her neighbor’s surveillance video. She and neighbors imagine the car is an Infinity however D.C. Police had been unable to verify the car make or mannequin. 

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Roark additionally famous some sort of after-market blue mild that may be seen when the suspect opens the driver-side door. 

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Bumble & the trap of modern dating; plus, living ethically in COVID's aftermath : It's Been a Minute

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Bumble & the trap of modern dating; plus, living ethically in COVID's aftermath : It's Been a Minute

Bumble pickleball ad. COVID masks.

Charley Gallay/Getty Images; Miguel Medina/AFP/Getty Images


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Charley Gallay/Getty Images; Miguel Medina/AFP/Getty Images


Bumble pickleball ad. COVID masks.

Charley Gallay/Getty Images; Miguel Medina/AFP/Getty Images

This week, the dating app Bumble could not stay out of the news. First, the company launched an anti-celibacy advertising campaign mocking abstinence and suggesting women shouldn’t give up on dating apps. Then, at a tech summit, Bumble’s founder suggested artificial intelligence might be the future of dating. Both efforts were met with backlash, and during a time when everyone seems irritated with dating – where can people turn? Shani Silver, author of the Cheaper Than Therapy substack, and KCRW’s Myisha Battle, dating coach and host of How’s Your Sex Life? join the show to make sense of the mess.

Then, it’s been four years since the start of the COVID pandemic. So much has changed – especially attitudes towards public health. Brittany talks to, Dr. Keisha S. Ray, a bioethicist, to hear how public health clashed with American culture – how we’re supposed to live among people with different risk tolerance – and what all this means for the next pandemic.

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This episode was produced by Barton Girdwood and Liam McBain. It was edited by Jessica Placzek. Engineering support came from Becky Brown. Our executive producer is Veralyn Williams. Our VP of programming is Yolanda Sangweni.

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TMZ TV Hot Takes: Taylor Swift & Kim Kardashian, DeMarco Morgan, Patriots Video

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TMZ TV Hot Takes: Taylor Swift & Kim Kardashian, DeMarco Morgan, Patriots Video

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'IF' only! These imaginary friends are sweet, but could have been so much more

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'IF' only! These imaginary friends are sweet, but could have been so much more

Bea (Cailey Fleming) and Blue (voiced by Steve Carell) in IF.

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Bea (Cailey Fleming) and Blue (voiced by Steve Carell) in IF.

Paramount Pictures

The third installment in John Krasinski’s blockbuster horror franchise A Quiet Place will soon employ noise-triggered monsters to scare audiences shoutless. But the filmmaker is starting the summer with sweeter monsters — the sweetest, really — in IF.

Which doesn’t mean they don’t cause 12-year-old Bea (Walking Dead’s Cailey Fleming) to faint right away the first time she sees them — though in fairness, she’s got a lot on her mind. Having already lost her mom to cancer, she’s moving in with her grandma for a bit while her dad’s in the hospital awaiting surgery.

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Still, when wouldn’t encountering a giant plush critter in the apartment upstairs be startling, even if he turns out to be a sweetheart voiced by Steve Carell? It’s an imaginary friend (an “IF,” in his parlance) of a kid who’s long forgotten about him — and who, being colorblind, named him “Blue” even though he’s purple.

Also up there is Blossom (voiced by Phoebe Waller-Bridge), a life-size ballerina doll, and the apartment’s harried resident, Cal (Ryan Reynolds), the only person besides Bea who seems able to see IFs.

Bea has been trying to be very grown up for her dad, played by director Krasinski. When she visits him at the hospital, he starts dancing with his I.V. pole and cracking jokes, and she has to tell him to dial things back a bit. As the film goes on, you may be tempted to echo that with regard to his directing, but things are certainly lively as the IFs explain that they’ve started a matchmaking agency to help fellow imaginary friends find new kids. Bea volunteers to help, and is soon introduced to a whole lot of critters – unicorns, dragons, even a flaming marshmallow — at an IF retirement home in Coney Island.

All of which gives Krasinski an excuse to call in an army of digital animators, first to bring life to imaginary critters voiced by his A-list Hollywood buds, including George Clooney, Awkwafina, Matt Damon, Emily Blunt, Jon Stewart, Steve Carell, and the late Lou Gossett Jr. in a warmly avuncular turn as a supervising teddy bear. And then to make the walls and floors of the retirement home morph and flip as if they’re just so many pixels.

At which point, if you’re like me, you may start wanting something a little more solid to hold onto — like, say, a plot that holds up, or even that just holds still. This one jumps around as much as the IFs themselves, at first linking them to new kids, then to their now-grown-up original kids, with little logic, and less explanation.

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Along the way, some intriguing issues are raised — about wanting to return to childhood, about growing out of childhood, and about dealing with loss.

But mostly the filmmakers detour, decorate and digitize their story rather than telling it, and that doesn’t mesh well with the real-world stuff — dad’s surgery, for instance, and Bea’s wandering all over Brooklyn without her grandma seeming to notice. And yes, I know: IF is a kid-flick, but it still needs grounding. We’re in Brooklyn, not Willy Wonkaland.

Also, star voices and digital wizardry notwithstanding, IF‘s IFs feel generic, especially when they’re stealing focus from the live performers. Grandma, for instance. No filmmaker who has actress Fiona Shaw on screen needs special effects.

Krasinski, in fact, clearly knows that. He’s crafted a lovely moment where Bea puts a ballet record – the “Adagio of Spartacus and Phrygia” — on the turntable, and Grandma stands listening to it, bathed in twilight at a window, with her back to the camera. She’s remembering the dancer she was as a child, and as the music rises, her right hand does too … just so. And in that lovely, unforced gesture, you realize all the other things Krasinski’s sweet little kid flick might have been … IF only.

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