Cleveland, OH
Cleveland residents wait for results after workers leave big mess in front yard
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – After being promised a clear avenue, neighbors on Cleveland’s West Aspect are nonetheless ready for a landlord to maintain up their finish of the cut price.
It’s been nearly a month since roof employees left a mountain of trash in entrance of a home being renovated on West 59th Road.
Louis Rivera advised 19 Information nobody lives in the home, however he has seen folks come by, however nobody has cleaned up the mess.
“I’m getting mad as a result of I at all times preserve all the pieces clear at my home,” stated Rivera.
“I’ve known as the town a bunch of occasions,” complained one other 19 Information viewer who didn’t need to give their identify.
Earlier this month, our Troubleshooter staff known as the town to see who owned the property and if there was something they might do, however nobody responded.
A employee on the residence advised our staff earlier this month the trash could be cleaned up by April 14.
Our staff went again to the house on April 14 and noticed the entrance yard was cleaned up, however there’s nonetheless trash within the driveway.
An individual working inside the house promised to have all the pieces cleaned up by the weekend.
19 Information will likely be checking again.
Copyright 2022 WOIO. All rights reserved.
Cleveland, OH
Northern Ohio Braces for Cold Front and Potential First Snowfall Thursday
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Cleveland, OH – A cold front will sweep through Northern Ohio on Wednesday, bringing cooler temperatures, rain, and gusty winds. Many areas may see their first snowflakes by Thursday.
According to the National Weather Service in Cleveland, rain chances will peak Wednesday afternoon, with precipitation forecasts exceeding 80% in cities like Cleveland, Akron, and Canton. Winds will gust between 30 and 35 mph, enhancing the chill.
By Thursday, colder air will settle across the region, potentially creating conditions for the season’s first snow. Areas along Lake Erie, including Ashtabula and Erie, have higher snow chances. Rain will taper off, but breezy conditions will persist.
Travelers should plan for slick roads and reduced visibility during rain and potential snow periods. Forecasters advise staying updated as conditions evolve.
This weather marks a shift to a wintry pattern, with temperatures expected to drop below seasonal norms for several days.
Stay prepared for changing conditions as Northern Ohio transitions to winter.
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Cleveland, OH
Judge orders maximum sentence for teen driver of stolen Kia in deadly crash
CLEVELAND — A Cuyahoga County judge hopes to set an example by imposing a maximum sentence for a teen labeled as a “Kia Boy.”
Tuesday, Judge Nancy Margaret Russo ordered a 16-year prison sentence and lifetime driver’s license revocation for Monroe Larkin, III.
The 17-year-old pleaded guilty to vehicular homicide and felonious assault for his role in an August 2023 crash that killed one woman and critically injured another.
“She was full of life, laughter and love, the kind of person who could light up a room without even trying,” Leslie Reyes Figueroa said of her younger sister during Tuesday’s sentencing hearing.
Her other sister, Gardenia Calderon, added, “A lot of things in this life are not for certain. But this, growing old with my sisters, I was sure of.”
Janet Reyes was riding in a car with her friend in August 2023 when a stolen Kia Optima hit the pair.
Woman dies after police say stolen KIA crashes into car in Old Brooklyn
Woman dies after police say stolen KIA crashes into car in Old Brooklyn
The 21-year-old was killed on impact, and her friend driving suffered a traumatic brain injury and lost an eye. The friend was unable to attend Tuesday’s hearing because of her ongoing recovery from the crash.
“My incredible sister, who had her whole life ahead of her, [was] taken by boys who call themselves ‘Kia Boys’ – running around our neighborhoods, causing trouble, causing harm to our communities and now causing death to my sister and badly injuring her friend,” Calderon said.
Larkin was driving the stolen Kia. Surveillance video showed the car reaching 88mph on Pearl Road before colliding with the other vehicle at State Road.
“You caused this. You caused their pain. You caused the death of another human being, you interrupted whatever life that person was supposed to have. That’s a heavy burden you’re going to have to carry,” Judge Russo told Larkin from the bench.
Reyes’ family begged for a sentence long enough to teach a lesson. Larkin’s defense attorney asked the judge to consider his client’s age and troubled home life.
Reyes was the second person killed in a crash with a stolen Kia in less than a month. The judge noted the trend of young people stealing cars plaguing Northeast Ohio.
“I hear a lot of people talking to me of – ‘Oh, the person is 17, the person is 16.’ But you knew exactly what you were doing,” Russo told Larkin. “Everybody in this room knows about the terror that’s going on in this community from people who use their age as some kind of shield for committing criminal acts.”
When Larkin’s case was bound over from juvenile court to the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas, he was facing nearly a dozen charges, including murder.
He accepted a plea deal to reduce the charges to one count each of felonious assault and vehicular homicide. Before sentencing, he briefly apologized to the Reyes family and told them he accepted full responsibility for his actions.
The judge ordered two consecutive eight-year sentences for each charge and told him he would lose his driver’s license indefinitely.
Reyes’ family said they were satisfied with the sentence and hoped it would prevent other families from experiencing their grief.
“The truth is there are many more kids like you in the streets,” Calderon told Larkin in court. “And if we continue letting them get away with horrific crimes, how can our communities get any better?”
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Cleveland, OH
Ohio House Speaker Jason Stephens ends bid to keep gavel in 2025
COLUMBUS, Ohio—Ohio House Speaker Jason Stephens announced Monday he will not seek another two years as speaker, bringing an abrupt end to his months-long, behind-the-scenes leadership fight with outgoing Ohio Senate President Matt Huffman.
The decision by Stephens, a Lawrence County Republican, makes it far more likely that Huffman, a Lima Republican, will be elected next January as speaker, a job that brings enormous power to determine which bills pass the legislature and which fail.
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