Cleveland, OH
City of Cleveland seizes vicious ‘wolf-hybrid’ that woman said attacked her
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – A spokeswoman for the City of Cleveland confirmed the Division of Animal Control Services seized the vicious, “wolf-hybrid” dog living in the Mt. Pleasant neighborhood.
This action after repeated requests from 19 News on the status of a Division of Animal Care and Control investigation into a dog attack.
Laeann Amos-Reed was attacked on July 31st by a loose dog as she was walking on East 147th Street near Kinsman.
“When the dog bit me, I screamed from the top of my lungs. It’s like kind of an out of body experience, like I screamed and screamed and screamed,” said Amos-Reed.
She said a good Samaritan called 911 and helped get the dog away from her body.
An ambulance rushed her to the hospital with serious injuries to both her legs and hands.
She was there for four days.
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City of Cleveland Animal Control officers came out to investigate, and Amos-Reed said they were trying to identify the dog, which could be a ‘wolf-hybrid,’ which angers her.
An animal control officer told her in an email that the dog is considered a “Level 2 Threat.”
“They went out to the house three times and I was still told, it’s still there and it’s doing a 10-day quarantine to make sure it doesn’t have rabies, so my response was, let me remind them of how bad this is,” said Amos-Reed before it was seized.
After a 10-day home quarantine, the animal was supposed to be seized by Friday, August 11 but that didn’t happen.
Animal Control policy is to pick up dangerous animals.
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Neighbors told a 19 News crew that the dog owner put a stack of bricks and rocks in front of a gate to stop the dog from getting out.
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Amos-Reed has been worried about the safety of others and wants the dog put down.
“I am so displeased. I feel so let down because right now it seems like you’re telling me that a wild animal, or any animal at this point, life is more important than human beings,” she said. “That could’ve been my child, that could’ve been anyone’s child and for that reason, I refuse to shut up about it,” said Amos-Reed.
A spokeswoman for the City of Cleveland tells 19 News criminal charges have been filed against the owner of the dog.
This story is developing and will be updated.
Copyright 2023 WOIO. All rights reserved.

Cleveland, OH
Obituary for AARON LEE BOHLAR at Ripepi Funeral Home

Cleveland, OH
Cleveland Job Corps will begin a ‘phased pause in operations’

CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – The Trump Administration announced that Job Corps centers will begin a “phased pause in operations,” including the Job Corps center in Cleveland, according to Congresswoman Shontel Brown (OH-11)
The Department of Labor stated that their decision “aligns with the President’s FY 2026 budget proposal,” which calls for eliminating Job Corps. (page 28)
“This decision is a betrayal of young people in Cleveland who rely on Job Corps to take control of their own future,” said Congresswoman Shontel Brown. “For 60 years, Job Corps has provided low-income youth with the skills, training, and support they need to stand on their own two feet. In Cleveland, that legacy runs deep through our trades, our hospitals, and our regional workforce. Instead of abruptly closing this center and others across the country, the Trump Administration should work to improve the program so that we continue to invest in workforce development.”
The Job Corps is a federal job training and education program designed to serve low-income youth between the ages of 16 and 24 who face barriers to education and employment, founded by the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964.
The Cleveland Job Corps Center has played a pivotal role in Northeast Ohio since its inception in 1965.
The Cleveland center serves nearly 400 students each year, giving them opportunities to complete high school coursework, receive technical training, and prepare for careers in industries that support our regional economy.
Copyright 2025 WOIO. All rights reserved.
Cleveland, OH
AC/DC fans take over the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Wednesday ahead of the band's Cleveland concert

CLEVELAND — On any given day, four out of five visitors to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame are from out of town; on Wednesday, that number was much higher as the north coast of Cleveland became home to fans of a band from the east coast of Australia, AC/DC.
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame hosted a special day for fans ahead of the 2003 inductees’ final North American stop of their “Power Up Tour” at Huntington Bank Field. A concert bringing many of them here for the first time to see the rock legends for the first time.
Count Scott McColery and his friends from Omaha, Nebraska, among them.
“We all decided to get together and see one of the greatest rock bands that’s ever been around and come and enjoy this beautiful city that you all have here and just live it up for a little while,” McColery said.
He got the tickets when the tour was first announced. So did Brian Hendrix of Atlanta and his 12-year-old son Atticus.
“It was actually part of his Christmas present,” Hendrix said. “Big AC/DC fans and since they weren’t coming to Atlanta or at least at the time they hadn’t done any dates for Atlanta, we decided we’re going to make a trip of it, come to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and check out the city.”
So, how does a 12-year-old come to list “Back in Black” as his favorite album? Thank Dad.
“When I was little, he would listen to it I would be like, ‘Oh, what band is this?’ He’s like, ‘AC/DC’ and I’d be like, ‘Okay, can we listen to more?’” Atticus said.
At least for them, it was a straight flight to Cleveland.
Doug came from Moose Factory, Ontario, in the far north of Canada. He had to take a five-hour train from Moose Factory, Ontario, in far northern Canada, down to Cochin, Ontario. From there, they drove to meet up with friends in Toronto, and then they flew to Cleveland.
“Altogether probably 13, 14 hours I guess,” Jeffries said. It’s his first AC/DC concert, though he did come close once.
“We passed up a show quite a few years ago. It was between a hockey tournament for our son or a concert, so the hockey tournament won out back then.”
This is AC/DC’s first Cleveland concert since a stop at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse in 2016, and it’s their first outdoor concert in Cleveland since the summer of 1979, when they were part of the famed World Series of Rock concert at the old Municipal Stadium.
Being back there on Wednesday night, on that particular piece of real estate, carries special meaning for Browns fans. Back in the 80s, it was the music of AC/DC that served as the motivational soundtrack for the Browns in their run to three AFC Championship games.
“Oh, there was never a game that was played that ‘Back in Black’ and AC/DC that was not played,” recalled former Browns Quarterback Bernie Kosar. “‘Hells Bells’ by AC/DC, back in the 80s, that was our song and my song that got me motivated.”
He remembered specifically playing the Steelers in Pittsburgh in 1986, when the Browns were riding a 16-year losing streak in Three Rivers Stadium, when Hells Bells came over the stadium speakers.
“They made the fatal mistake of playing that song during one of their timeouts to intimidate us,” he recalled, adding it only fired them up. “Our motivation got us those couple of first downs and the ‘W,’” he said.
Stewart Dean of West Virginia remembers those days at Municipal Stadium. He was sporting a Hells Bells t-shirt Wednesday.
“When I went back to the Browns games in the late 80s, you know Bernie Kosar, Byner and Slaughter and all of them. You know they did play it at the stadium,” he said of the AC/DC song, which also got the fans going. “Oh yeah, the place rocked.”
As it will again this night. For many, it’s a bucket list moment and an opportunity that Doug Jeffries of Moose Factory, Ontario, knows he may not get a shot at again.
“Yeah, that’s what I was thinking, they’re on the old side now,” Jeffries said.
But as Scott McColery will tell you, if you’ve followed the band since the early 70s, we all are.
“You never know where a day may take you so enjoy them,” McColery said.
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