Detroit, MI
2 organ transplant recipients, healthcare worker inspire each other to run Detroit Free Press Marathon

DETROIT – Thousands of people will cross the Ambassador Bridge on foot Sunday during the Detroit Free Press Marathon. Among those runners will be two organ transplant recipients and one of the healthcare workers who helped them recover.
The Ambassador Bridge can be seen from miles away, including from the windows of Henry Ford Hospital, and for two liver transplant recipients recovering, it became a beacon of hope.
Jeff Muller and Dave Galbenski can strive for greatness because of someone else’s generosity.
“I’m a grateful recipient of a living donor liver transplant almost four years now from my brother-in-law, Mark Davis,” said Galbenski.
That’s not the only thing they have in common, as they were both patients of Karen Ostrwski at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit.
“I’ve seen both of them near death, and to see them like this healthy skin, good paler, you know, happy is such an incredible, incredible reward,” said Transplant Surgery Nurse Practitioner Karen Ostrowski at Henry Ford Health.
Ostrowski connected the two after Muller’s stay went from weeks to months.
“I kept thinking of Dave is a runner,” Ostrowski said. “Jeff was a runner. Jeff thinks he will never run again. Dave will talk him into being a runner.”
The two men exchanged numbers, and Galbenski visited Muller in the hospital.
“I was very weak and couldn’t even get out of bed,” Muller said. “But Dave, being the optimist that he is, looked out my hospital window at the Detroit skyline, pointed out the Ambassador Bridge, and said, ‘Someday when you’re healthy enough, you and I are going to run across that bridge together’ and I thought my running days are over. You’re crazy. There’s no way.”
But less than a year later, Muller started running again.
“Because of my brother-in-law Mark, I get a chance to pay it forward, and I don’t take that for granted,” Galbenski said. “And that’s why you take those moments when you connect with other people, and you set a vision, and then you just go out and do it.”
“I think it’s rare in life to really see the human spirit pick itself up and push itself forward in everyday people,” Ostrowski said.
Running across the finish line for both men will be a full-circle moment well-earned.
“I’ve already got that vision of us right on the top of that Ambassador bridge because I can see it clearly from the first time we pointed it out to Karen and to Jeff, that sun coming up over the Detroit River, Belle Isle, even if it’s rainy or cloudy,” Galbenski said. “It’s going to be sunny in our mind, and we’re just going to have that moment to gather.”
Copyright 2023 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.

Detroit, MI
Family of girl whose throat was slashed in Detroit park files $50M lawsuit

Saida Mashrah said her sleep is still filled with nightmares and she’s fearful when strangers walk past her house more than a year after police said a strange man slashed her throat while she played in a Detroit park.
“Sometimes (at school) I get scared and have to take a break with a teacher,” the soft-spoken 8-year-old said Wednesday.
Saida joined attorneys for her family during a press conference where they announced the recent filing of a $50 million civil suit against the suspect, 74-year-old Gary Lansky.
“We don’t know what types of assets … (Lansky) may have but I can assure you for every dollar that he has we want to take that away from him,” said Nabih Ayad, counsel for Saida’s family. “This person deserves to rot in hell and rot in jail.”
Authorities said that Saida and four other children were playing in Ryan Park, near the Dearborn border in east Detroit, on Oct. 8, 2024. Lansky, of Detroit, allegedly approached Saida, grabbed her head, tilted it back and slashed her throat. Saida kicked him and escaped.
While she has fully recovered from the physical injuries, Ayad said the young girl will likely always carry with her the trauma she endured that day.
“Forever she will be haunted by this, traumatized by this and is currently seeking therapy and probably will for the rest of her life,” he said.
Lansky has been charged with assault with intent to murder and assault with a dangerous weapon. Ayad said Lansky is currently in the process of being evaluated for competency to stand trial. Online records show he remains behind bars at the Wayne County Jail, held on a $2 million bond.
An attorney for Lansky did not immediately return a call seeking comment.
Following the alleged attack last year, advocates called on state and federal authorities to prosecute the case as a hate crime. Ayad believes Lansky, who is White, specifically targeted Saida based on her race. She was the only Arab American girl in the park that day, he said; all other children were Black.
After Saida ran away from her attacker, Lansky then approached the girl’s grandmother, who was in the park with her, Ayad said. The older woman was wearing a hijab, making her a target for a hate-based attack, advocates said. Lansky allegedly fled the scene after Saida and other children began to scream.
“My daughter still smiles sometimes but it’s not the same smile. It’s the kind of smile that hides tears,” Saida’s mother, Amirah Sharan, said in a statement read by attorney William Savage during Wednesday’s press conference. “… As a mother, it’s the worst pain imaginable to see your child hurt and know there’s nothing you can do about it.”
mreinhart@detroitnews.com
@max_detroitnews
Detroit, MI
NFC NORTH: Where all four teams stand heading into Week 8
MINNESOTA
Week 7 result: Philadelphia 28, Minnesota 22
Offensive rank: 20th (318.7)
Scoring offense: 15th (24.2)
Defensive rank: 9th (301.7)
Scoring defense: 10th (20.8)
Star performer: Wide receiver Justin Jefferson recorded five receptions for 79 yards in Minnesota’s loss Sunday. Jefferson has 529 career receptions and surpassed DeAndre Hopkins (528 receptions) for the second-most receptions by a player in his first six seasons in NFL history. Only Jarvis Landry (564 receptions) has more. Jefferson has 34 receptions on the season for 528 receiving yards.
Quotable: “The main issue was in the red zone today, just hurting ourselves and causing us to go backwards instead of forward,” Jefferson told vikings.com of their 1-for-6 performance in the red zone vs. Philadelphia Sunday. “We’ve got to execute our plays to the fullest, take one play at a time, and when the opportunity comes, make those plays.
“One of those red zone drives is, that’s me dropping the touchdown and not pulling the ball all way the in. I’m always critical of myself and always, especially, my opportunities are very, very slim, so those opportunities, I’ve got to make the most of them.”
Twentyman: Sunday was a good test for the Vikings squaring off against the defending Super Bowl champs. Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts maxed out his NFL passer rating (158.3) by completing 19 of 23 passes for 326 yards and three touchdowns. Scoring in the red zone (1-for-6) and allowing big plays on defense lead to Minnesota’s downfall Sunday. The red zone has been an issue for the Vikings all season (ranked 20th). It’s something they must clean up in an ultra-competitive division like the North.
Next up: at Los Angeles Chargers (4-3), Thurs., Oct. 23, 8:15 p.m.
Detroit, MI
Why did officials go to monitor twice in Lions vs. Bucs? Pool report offers explanation

Sometimes, all it takes is a week for the pendulum to swing.
After being on the wrong end of some controversial officiating in a loss at the Kansas City Chiefs in Week 6, the Detroit Lions benefitted from a rather confusing sequence involving the referees in their 24-9 win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Monday.
The play in question came with 11:36 remaining in the fourth quarter. Bucs quarterback Baker Mayfield dropped back to pass on fourth-and-medium and found tight end Cade Otton over the middle of the field. Otton, covered by linebacker Alex Anzalone, extended for the line to gain. The ball came loose, and the Bucs recovered. A fumble on fourth down can’t be advanced by the offense unless it’s collected by the player who fumbled. Otton didn’t get on top of the ball, but the referees’ initial ruling was Otton had gained enough yards for a first down.
Lions head coach Dan Campbell threw the challenge flag. Confusion first arose because it was announced in the stadium that the Lions were challenging whether Otton completed the process of the catch. In the postgame pool report, however, NFL vice president of instant replay Mark Butterworth said Campbell specified he was challenging the line to gain. Regardless, “all reviewable aspects of the play are under review” during a challenge, according to Butterworth, no matter what the challenge is for.
Also drawing some controversy was the replay review itself. Officials made their way to the monitor and initially upheld the call on the field, giving the Bucs, trailing by 15 points and near midfield, a first down. The referees then went back to the monitor for what appeared to be a second look at the replay. They returned with a different ruling, this time saying Otton was short of the first down. Also of note: Otton was down before he fumbled.
Butterworth explained the second review was triggered because there was access gained to a camera angle that was not available when they first went to the monitor.
“Later in the process we received an enhanced view from broadcast that showed that when the knee was down, the ball was short of the line to gain,” Butterworth said. “We were having issues with the referee’s O2O (official-to-official communication system), which is why he (the referee on the field) was brought back to the monitor. We did not show him anything on the screen at that point, it was simply to communicate to clean up the ruling on the field.”
Mayfield said after the game he was “still pretty damn confused about the double review.”
“A lot of things in that game that were a little questionable, but a lot of frustration at the end of that (game),” Mayfield said. “It might be displaced onto (NFL official) John Hussey in the moment, but it’s — I work my ass off and I put a lot into this game, so when things that I don’t see are deemed fair, I’m going to let somebody know.”
rsilva@detroitnews.com
@rich_silva18
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