Cleveland, OH
Cleveland Resident Hits $50,000 Jackpot in Pick 5 Drawing
CLEVELAND, OH—A local man has won a substantial prize of $50,000 in the Ohio Lottery’s Pick 5 midday drawing held on Tuesday, June 4. The winning numbers for this particular draw were 5-0-3-4-3.
The lucky ticket was purchased at Sam’s Food Mart, situated at 6632 Saint Clair Avenue in Cleveland. After deductions for mandatory state and federal taxes, totaling 28 percent, the winner will take home approximately $36,000.
This win adds to the excitement surrounding the Ohio Lottery, encouraging other players to participate in hopes of their own big win.
-
Police Search for Missing Teen in Queens
Queens, NY — The New York City Police Department is seeking the public’s assistance in locating a missing person from the 104 Precinct.
The missing individual is identified as Lucia Rivera-Tapia, a 13-year-old Hispanic female last seen in the area of Cypress Hills Street. She was last seen leaving her home on Wednesday, June 26, at approximately 11:00 a.m.
Lucia is described as having a light complexion, standing 5’1″ tall, and weighing approximately 110 pounds.
Anyone with information on her whereabouts is urged to contact the NYPD.
-
Video of President Biden Allegedly Passing Over Black Woman Goes Viral
WASHINGTON, DC— A video showing President Joe Biden appearing to pass over a Black woman during a public event has gone viral, igniting a wave of controversy and discussion on social media. The footage, which surfaced on Tuesday, shows the President interacting with a crowd but seemingly overlooking a Black woman who was attempting to engage with him.
Many people are already posting the clip of Biden ignoring this black woman, but her mistreatment by the Karen on her left needs to be seen as well. Here is the longer version.
I honestly feel bad for her. Please share, comment and retweet… pic.twitter.com/cqB2UizuDj
— Amanda Larreni (@AmandaLarreni) July 7, 2024
The incident occurred during a recent visit to a community event, where President Biden was greeting attendees and shaking hands. The video clip, widely shared and viewed millions of times, captures the moment when Biden moves past the woman despite her apparent effort to catch his attention. Critics have seized on the footage as an example of perceived racial insensitivity, while supporters argue it was an unintentional oversight in a crowded and chaotic environment.
Social media platforms have been abuzz with reactions. Hashtags such as #BidenIgnoresBlackWoman and #ViralVideo have trended as users weigh in on the incident. Some commentators expressed disappointment and frustration, interpreting the action as a slight against the Black community. Others defended the President, suggesting that the video might not tell the full story and emphasizing his long-standing commitment to civil rights and racial equality.
The video is what White House Press Secretary Karine Jean Pierre would call a ‘cheap fake’ as a full video was later released showing the President engaging the woman.
People can just go watch the full Madison Wisconsin rally instead of posting snippets to act like Biden ignored a black woman.
He literally hugged her in the beginning. If you watch the video he interacted with most everyone.
Full videohttps://t.co/OnreBDsfoJ pic.twitter.com/Mvb92d3Rgz
— Top (@Tops_opinion) July 6, 2024
-
Choir Teacher Sentenced for Receiving Lewd Images of Children
McALLEN, TX – A 33-year-old Mexican citizen has been sentenced for receiving Lewd Images of Children, announced U.S. Attorney Alamdar S. Hamdani.
Orlando Diaz-Ramirez pleaded guilty on September 8, 2023, admitting to receiving 300 videos of Lewd Images of Children from Israel Flores, 22, of Los Fresnos. Chief U.S. District Judge Randy Crane has now sentenced Diaz to 97 months in federal prison. The court noted that Diaz had an additional eight gigabytes of child pornography on his Dropbox account and was employed as a choir teacher at a local middle school at the time of the offense. The court emphasized that Diaz’s actions contributed to the market for child pornography and the potential victimization of future children.
Flores was previously sentenced to 97 months in prison. Diaz and Flores are required to pay $24,000 and $21,000, respectively, to known victims. Both men will be ordered to register as sex offenders and serve five years of supervised release, which includes numerous restrictions on their access to children and the internet. As Diaz is not a U.S. citizen, he is expected to face removal proceedings following his sentence.
In October 2020, authorities identified an individual uploadingLewd Images of Children to a Dropbox account and linked the associated IP address to Diaz’s residence in Donna. In April 2021, authorities executed a federal search warrant at Diaz’s residence, where he admitted to downloading Lewd Images of Children via Kik and uploading it to his Dropbox account. Diaz also disclosed that he possessed a USB drive containing child pornography received from Flores.
The investigation highlights the collaborative efforts of law enforcement to address and combat the distribution ofLewd Images of Children, underscoring the serious consequences for those involved in such activities.
Cleveland, OH
Union Pacific Big Boy locomotive No. 4014 to stop in Northeast Ohio apart of cross-country tour
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – The largest operating steam locomotive is traveling the East Coast this summer and will stop in the Cleveland area starting Monday.
The Union Pacific’s Big Boy No. 4014 is touring the country as part of its “Coast-to-Coast” tour honoring the nation’s 250th anniversary.
The tour will mark a first for Ohio: it will be the first time the locomotive stops in the state.
The tour spans two months and started May 25.
Stops are expected to last between 15 and 30 minutes.
The following whistle-stops are scheduled in Ohio on June 8:
- Lorain: Near West 11th Street and Reid Avenue — 11:15 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
- Euclid: Chardon Road crossing, north of Euclid Avenue — 1:30 p.m. to 2 p.m.
✏️ Inline Revision
The second round of whistle-stops in Northeast Ohio will happen on July 13, when the locomotive stops in Rocky River near 19060 Depot Street from 1 p.m. to 1:30 p.m.
The locomotives were first commissioned in 1941 for the Union Pacific Railroad.
The company originally built 25 locomotives to haul heavy equipment for military purposes.
They are 133 feet long and weigh 1.2 million pounds.
The locomotives were retired in December 1961 but returned to service in May 2019.
The railroad company said seven Big Boys remain in the country.
A free-admission Fourth of July celebration stop will be in Philadelphia at Intrepid Avenue and League Island Boulevard from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Union Pacific encourages visitors to stay at least 25 feet from the tracks and not trespass on private property.
It also asks visitors to expect a train, never pace one, and be aware of their surroundings.
A full listing of stops on the eastern leg of the tour is available on Union Pacific’s website.
The stops are also streaming on their website.
Copyright 2026 WOIO. All rights reserved.
Cleveland, OH
Diane J. Scharnhorst Obituary – Mayfield Heights, OH
Diane J. Scharnhorst
OBITUARY
DIANE J. SCHARNHORST (nee Lastoria), age 92 of Mayfield Hts., OH, passed away peacefully on May 30, 2026 surrounded by her loved ones.Beloved wife to the late Don Scharnhorst; dearest mother of David Lastoria (Philly), Danny Lastoria (Debbie Ohly, former daughter-in-law), Denise DeLauro (C.J.), and Darlene Lastoria; loving grandmother of Nicole Butler (Alex), Brandon Chamberlin (Meghan), Brittani Shipek (Tommy), Daniel Lastoria (Erica), Mallory DeLauro, Grace DeLauro (Josiah Kenniv), and Eve DeLauro and great-grandmother of Alaina, Brody, Skyler, Addy, Daylen, Trace, Neve, and Desmond; dear sister of Karen Willes; aunt of many nieces and nephews.Diane was born In New York City to the late Al and Sally Russell who were Vaudeville entertainers. In her early childhood she was raised by her loving grandparents in Canada where she went to school and made wonderful memories. Diane returned to the states when her sister, Karen, was born and settled in the Cleveland area.There is no one better to testify of Diane’s legacy than her four children. Diane cultivated a home full of security, comfort, and unconditional love. Her impact was not just on her own children but also on their friends who considered the Lastoria home a safe place to hang out, and also to talk to and confide in Diane.When her children were young, they describe their childhood as being full of innocence, wonder, and freedom to play and explore. They didn’t need to worry because their mom took care of everything and never placed a burden onto them. As they grew, Diane became a best friend who was always there to talk and to offer words of encouragement.Diane waited until her children were mostly graduated from high school before she moved to California where her parents, and sister lived. It was there that she was able to pursue her own career goals, married the love of her life, and bought the house of her dreams. As a lover of animals, her new home in the desert was a safe haven to dozens of cats as well as several beloved dogs, and one pot bellied pig!After the death of her husband, Diane returned to Ohio where she got to be more present in the lives of her children, grandchildren, and 8 great grandchildren! Even as she declined in health, Diane maintained the optimism she was known for, and continued to be generous with her time, words of affirmation, and love.In lieu of flowers, the family would appreciate contributions in memory of Diane to The Cleveland Animal Protective League, 1729 Willey Ave #1, Cleveland, OH 44113.Memorial Service WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 2026 at 6 p.m. at the SCHULTE & MAHON-MURPHY FUNERAL HOME, 5252 MAYFIELD RD., LYNDHURST (BETWEEN RICHMOND AND BRAINARD). Interment private, Knollwood Cemetery. The family will receive friends at the funeral home Wednesday, June 10 FROM 4 P.M. UNTIL THE TIME OF SERVICE. Order flowers and sign Tribute Wall at:www.murphyfamilyfuneralhome.com
Cleveland, OH
Cleveland Browns News and Rumors June 7, 2026: Ohio Against the World
CLEVELAND, Ohio (TheOBR.com) – Good morning, Cleveland Browns fans!
The Cleveland Browns have a young roster, built around two consecutive power draft classes in 2025 and 2026. The young team heads towards a 2027 off-season, which is hoped to push them over the top with the final piece: quarterback. The team is also headed towards the 2029 debut of a magnificent roofed stadium in Brook Park. If everything goes right, the Browns will have a highly competitive club by that date.
After the Browns traded Myles Garrett to the Los Angeles Rams on Monday, every veteran with a pulse and an expensive contract becomes part of the next question. Who is still here? Who wants to be here? Who is quietly wondering whether the moving truck should be backed into the driveway before training camp?
Denzel Ward answered his part of that Saturday down the road from me in Eastlake, at his inaugural celebrity softball game, which is about as pleasant a setting as possible for a sunny day of casual sports.
“I definitely still want to be here,” Ward said, according to ESPN’s Daniel Oyefusi. “Myles is a good friend of mine, a great teammate, but things aren’t lost. It’s Ohio against the world. So people could doubt us, but we’re going out there still trying to play our best ball and bring wins to the city.”
“Ohio against the world”. That is more than a quote. That is a veteran planting his feet.
And, boy, do the Browns need a few of those right now. Or at least one. This one.
Ward is 29 years old, which in normal human society means you are still young enough to make bad decisions and recover by lunch. In NFL roster society, it means you are the guy younger players are watching when things get weird. And they often get weird in this town, with this franchise.
Ward is local. He is from Nordonia. He played at Ohio State. He understands what it means when a player says, “It’s Ohio against the world,” because that line is not just T-shirt copy around here. It is the regional operating system. It is what you say when everybody outside the state is laughing and pointing fingers, and everybody inside it is deciding whether to laugh, swear, or shovel the driveway again.
With Garrett gone, Ward becomes the Browns’ longest-tenured player. ESPN noted he was the No. 4 pick in the 2018 draft, which means he has lived through Hue Jackson, Freddie Kitchens, Kevin Stefanski’s 11-win debut, the pandemic season, playoff heartbreak, quarterback roulette, Deshaun Watson drama, the 2023 Flacco fever dream, the 2025 wreckage, and now the franchise trading away perhaps the best defensive player it has ever had.
Ward has also been excellent through most of it. Five Pro Bowls. A five-year, $100 million extension was signed in April 2022. Two years left on that deal, but — and this is why the trade chatter exists — no guaranteed salary remaining, per ESPN. Plus, ongoing concern about injuries, particularly concussions.
So, yes, people are going to ask whether he is next. That is not paranoia. That is simple pattern recognition.
The Browns, for their part, have pushed back. ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler and others reported after the Garrett deal that the Browns are not making Ward available. Andrew Berry said Tuesday that Ward is “a big part of the team, and we like him a lot,” adding, “He’s still playing at a really high level. That doesn’t change with this transaction.”
Then Berry, wisely, said it was appropriate for Ward to speak for himself.
Ward did.
Let’s be clear about something: a player saying he wants to stay is not a blood oath, a constitutional amendment, or even a guarantee that somebody in an NFL front office won’t get a phone call and start doing math on a legal pad.
Football is football. Contracts are contracts. Cap charts are where romance goes to be placed on injured reserve.
But right now, Ward’s words matter because of the room around him.
This is a young roster, and it is suddenly younger in the emotional sense, too. Jared Verse is talented and may become a monster in Cleveland’s defense, but he has not lived this franchise. The rookie receivers, young defenders, developing linemen, and whichever quarterback survives the summer carnival are walking into a building that just watched its most famous player get shipped west.
Somebody has to tell them what Cleveland is.
Ward can do that.
Have a good one! GO BROWNS!
Newswire Bloviation Archive
OBR GOODIES
OBR ARTICLES
- Cleveland Browns News and Rumors June 6, 2026: The Power of Process
FROM THE FORUMS
ASK THE INSIDERS (VIP)
RUMOR CENTRAL (VIP)
INSIDER DISCUSSION (VIP)
- Cleveland Browns News and Rumors June 6, 2026: The Power of Process
THE WATERCOOLER
THE LIFT
Positive news from the world of sports and beyond…
We pause our regularly scheduled football angst for a different sort of elder-statesman tribute: Steve Jobs, fifteen years after his final WWDC appearance.
I’m an unabashed fan of Apple products (when I can afford them), in no small part due to Jobs’ vision for the company: polished software and hardware, developed in tandem, designed to simply fit into the hectic lives of their users.
AppleInsider’s William Gallagher looks back at June 6, 2011, when Jobs — visibly diminished by illness, but still very much Jobs — walked onstage and helped introduce iCloud. The line that sticks with me is the old one: “If the hardware is the brain and the sinew of our products, the software in them is their soul.”
That was Jobs. Even when his body was failing him, he was still talking about the soul of the thing.
We toss around “visionary” too much, usually for people who invented a new way to put ads in your face while you are trying to read about the Browns. Jobs earned the word. The iMac, iPod, iPhone, iPad, and iCloud did not just make Apple richer than Croesus with better packaging. They changed the way normal people interact with technology every hour of every day.
Years after his death, Jobs is still bending the shape of our daily lives — including mine, as I sit here typing this morning’s football gibberish on a machine descended from a philosophy he helped force into the world: make powerful things feel human.
That is a heck of a legacy. He and I are/were very different people, in many ways, but he remains an inspiration, even as he pondered his own mortality.
WRAPPING UP
When not wondering whether his laptop has a soul or just a lot of browser tabs begging for mercy, Barry McBride is the Publisher and Founder of the OBR and bloviates this nonsense every morning. You can follow him on Twitter @barrymcbride or write him at barry@theobr.com if you are so compelled.
SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES
CONTACT Barry to sponsor the OBR. We have plans for nearly any budget!
OBR Across the Internet
OBR on BlueSky
OBR on Threads
OBR on LinkedIN
OBR on Youtube
OBR on Twitch
OBR on Facebook
If you have made it this far, you must subscribe to the OBR. Them’s the rules.
Subscribe to the OBR
Copyright 2026 WOIO via TheOBR.com. All rights reserved.
-
San Francisco, CA3 seconds ago
These are California’s treasured views: Stunning scenic spots to visit
-
Dallas, TX6 minutes agoOne World One Game: A Cultural Preview for FIFA 2026 – Dallas Weekly
-
Miami, FL13 minutes agoWPLG Local 10 Becomes the Home of the Miami HEAT
-
Boston, MA16 minutes agoWorld Cup 2026 travel guide: Boston
-
Denver, CO21 minutes agoDenver Ventures says ‘far-fetched’ lawsuit ‘nothing more than a smear campaign’
-
Seattle, WA28 minutes agoPublic Art Plays the Long Game for the World Cup in Seattle
-
San Diego, CA31 minutes agoThere’s a better way to fund push for more filming in San Diego region
-
Milwaukee, WI36 minutes agoMilwaukee Common Council hearing on public safety Monday


