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Morning 4: Winning Mega Millions ticket worth $2 million sold in Michigan — and other news

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Morning 4: Winning Mega Millions ticket worth $2 million sold in Michigan — and other news


Morning 4 is a quick roundup of stories we think you should know about to start your day. So, let’s get to the news.


$2 million winning Mega Millions ticket sold in Michigan

A Mega Millions ticket worth $2 million was purchased in Michigan.

The Mega Millions jackpot climbed to an estimated $1.55 billion after no ticket matched all six numbers drawn Friday, Aug. 4, 2023, night. If those estimates are correct, it would be the largest jackpot in the game’s history and comes with a cash option of $757.2 million.

Read more here.

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Detroit police seek information on man seen assaulting woman before forcing her into his car

The Detroit Police Department is seeking information about a person of interest that was involved in assaulting a woman and forcing her to get into the passenger side of his vehicle before leaving the scene.

The incident occurred Monday (July 31) at approximately 5:49 p.m. in the area of Ilene Street and Buena Vista Avenue when the unknown woman was walking down the street before the unidentified man pulled up in his black Chevy Impala, exiting the vehicle and assaulting her.

Read more here.


Warren couple forced to pay to retrieve more than $1K worth of stolen items

A couple who had their things stolen in a home burglary is being forced to pay up to get their stuff back.

Ricky Lewis came home July 24 to find thieves ransacking his house in Warren. The suspects made it out the door with a laundry basket full of valuables.

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A few days later, Warren police arrested the suspects, tying them to a string of alleged burglaries.

Read more here.


2 Ohio men bound over for trial in murder of unidentified man found dead in 1997

Two Ohio men will face trial on murder charges in the death of a man found decapitated in Lenawee County nearly 26 years ago. The victim still hasn’t been identified.

Richardo Sepulveda, 51 of Cincinnati, Ohio, and Michael Sepulveda, 49 of Toledo, Ohio, were arrested on Jan. 24 by the United States Marshalls Service. They are facing several charges in the murder of the unidentified man.

Read more here.

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Weather: Clouds to start the weekend before thunderstorms arrive for Sunday — Here’s what to expect

The 4Warn Weather Team is tracking the latest forecast in Metro Detroit and Southeast Michigan. Get the most updated information here: https://www.clickondetroit.com/weather/


Copyright 2023 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.



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State canvassers finalize Michigan’s U.S. Senate and U.S. House races • Michigan Advance

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State canvassers finalize Michigan’s U.S. Senate and U.S. House races • Michigan Advance


The race for the Democratic nomination for Michigan’s soon-to-be-open U.S. Senate seat is now officially down to just two candidates after the Michigan Board of State Canvassers on Friday formally rejected the petitions of Dearborn businessman Nasser Beydoun.

The decision leaves actor Hill Harper and U.S. Rep. Elissa Slotkin (D-Holly) to battle each other for the opportunity to succeed U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Lansing) who is retiring.

The board, made up of two Democrats and two Republicans, accepted a staff report issued last week that said Beydoun improperly used a post office box on all 2,924 petition sheets, which require a street address. Thus, staff invalidated all of his sample signatures and said he was ineligible for the ballot.

Michigan State Board of Canvassers meeting. May 31, 2024. Screenshot.

Beydoun argued to the board that while the petition forms supplied by the Secretary of State made clear a P.O. Box could not be used by those who circulate or sign the petition, but it doesn’t specify that the header of the petition itself cannot have a post office box in it. 

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“For you to remove us from the ballot because of an issue on an address that has no material bearing whatsoever on the outcome of the petitions, I find that unjust and does not support democracy and allowing the citizens of the State of Michigan to choose when the primary comes on August 6th,” said Beydoun.

Michigan Elections Director Jonathan Brater pointed out that state law requires a residential address, which has been supported in past court decisions. 

“Just to clarify, it’s not us putting it on the form. This is in the Michigan election law,” Brater said. “This is the language that the Michigan Legislature requires us to put on the form, and that that language, street address, has been interpreted by a court to mean not a P.O. Box. So, it’s not a definition that we’re providing. It’s a definition that’s in the law that we are obligated to follow.”

Michigan Elections Director Jonathan Brater at the Michigan State Board of Canvassers meeting. May 31, 2024. Screenshot.

Several board members also expressed regret for Beydoun’s circumstance, but said their duty was to follow the law, and unanimously rejected his petitions.

A separate challenge against Slotkin made by the Harper campaign was rejected, with her petitions approved.

Meanwhile, the board rejected a request by Democrats to investigate claims of “apparent fraud” in GOP Senate petitions, noting the requests by the Michigan Democratic Party and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee were filed past the challenge deadline and did not sufficiently refute the petition sampling procedure used by the Board of Elections staff. 

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Republican board member Tony Daunt questioned Brater about that process.

“I think it’s clear that the fraud has been happening across the board,” said Daunt. “With random sampling, how confident are we that random sampling is able to catch the fraud that’s in these petitions?”

Commissioner Tony Daunt at the Michigan State Board of Canvassers meeting. May 31, 2024. Screenshot.

“100% confident,” responded Brater, who noted that while third-party claims about the U.S. Senate petitions were “completely irrelevant” to their determination of whether they have 15,000 valid signatures, that doesn’t mean the issues aren’t being looked at.

“We’re reviewing these letters, and as we did two years ago, we’ll refer anything suspicious for law enforcement investigation, but it has no impact on our projection of validity of these candidates,” said Brater, referencing an 2022 incident of a signature fraud scandal that  resulted in five Republican gubernatorial candidates in Michigan being kicked off the August 2022 primary ballot

This year, questions about fraudulent signatures have resulted in derailing the candidacy of former Democratic state Sen. Adam Hollier of Detroit, whose candidacy for the 13th Congressional District was challenged by incumbent U.S. Rep. Shri Thanedar (D-Detroit). 

The canvassers’ decision to reject the Democrats request cleared four GOP candidates to be on the ballot: former U.S. Rep. Mike Rogers (R-White Lake), former U.S. Rep. Justin Amash (I-Cascade Twp.), businessman Sandy Pensler and physician Sherry O’Donnell.

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Congressional candidate challenges

The board also heard from representatives of 10 Congressional campaigns that had challenges lodged against their nominating petitions.

Former state Sen. Curtis Hertel (D-East Lansing) had his candidate petitions for the 7th Congressional District challenged for not correctly listing the office he is seeking. Because Hertel wrote “U.S. Congress” instead of the U.S. House, former canvassers board member Norm Shinkle, a Republican, filed to have Hertel disqualified. 

Shinkle recalled past instances that the board rejected petitions for what were seemingly minor errors, but still in violation of the law.

“Everything we’ve done today is under the notion of strict compliance,” said Shinkle. “We got rid of a fake Tea Party because they didn’t use the word ‘the’ correctly. That was strict compliance. And strict compliance should be used today. This petition should be disallowed.”

Board Vice Chair Richard Houskamp, a Republican, pointed out that when Shinkle was on the board in 2022, he voted to approve a number of petitions for Congress, including U.S. Rep. Lisa McClain (R-Bruce Twp.) who listed “U.S. Congress.” When Shinkle said that was because those weren’t challenged, Houskamp was skeptical.

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“Even though they weren’t challenged, they were no issue for you,” he replied.

Brater agreed.

“In this case, with all due respect to our esteemed former board member, we did not find that Congress was inappropriate here. It is clear what office is being referred to,” he said.

The board agreed and unanimously approved Hertel’s petitions. He is now the lone Democrat seeking the nomination, and is expected to face off against former state Sen. Tom Barrett (R-Charlotte) for the 7th Congressional District seat being left open by Slotkin due to her Senate run.

For 8th District Republican candidate Nikki Snyder, who currently serves on the State Board of Education, the board unanimously accepted the staff recommendation that she lacked the required valid petition signatures for a variety of reasons, including invalid dates by the signer, the signers submitted signatures for other candidates, were not registered at the address they indicated on the petition, or had illegible signatures.

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Snyder had joined the 8th District field late, dropping out of the race for U.S. Senate on March 22 to seek the GOP nomination. Other Republicans running are Paul Junge, who lost to Kildee in the 2022 election; former Dow Chemical executive Mary Draves; and trucking company owner Anthony Hudson.

Democrats in the race are Board of Education President Pamela Pugh, state Sen. Kristen McDonald Rivet (D-Bay City) and former Flint Mayor and Obama administration appointee Matt Collier.

In the 12th District, three candidate petitions were determined to have insufficient valid signatures, including that of Democrat Ryan Foster, the only challenger for the nomination faced by incumbent U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Detroit). 

Foster pleaded his case, noting he didn’t pay for circulators to gather his signatures, which he turned in March 17, but wasn’t challenged by Tlaib’s campaign until May 2nd.

“I did this myself in two months in the snow, in the rain, walking around,” said Foster. “I did everything the right way. In America, this system is falling apart because the only time you can run for a race is if you have money, or you have name recognition, or you are the right color. I did everything right. And then I have some incumbent with a lot of money to pay somebody to challenge my signatures? It makes me very upset’’

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When told that a representative from the Tlaib campaign was present via Zoom, Foster addressed him directly.

“I hope you’re proud of yourself, that you’ve helped a candidate that got people chanting ‘Death to America’ to get another person that loves America off the ballot,” said Foster as he gathered his papers and left.

The reference was to an April rally in Dearborn in which the chant arose from the crowd, a video of which went viral, and was denounced later by Dearborn’s mayor and other leaders. Tlaib was not present at the rally. 

Tlaib will now run unopposed for the Democratic nomination. The board also voted that insufficient valid petition signatures were turned in by two Republican candidates for the 12th District: Steven Elliott and Hassan Nehme, leaving two Republicans in the race for the GOP nomination: James Hooper and Linda Sawyer.

In the 1st District, the board unanimously accepted the staff report that Republican candidate JD Wilson had insufficient signatures because he did not use petition forms that met state election law requirements including improper formatting and language errors.

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Fellow GOP candidate Josh Saul, however, proved to be a more difficult decision. All of his 1,221 signatures were recommended to be invalidated because each of the petition sheets stated the title of the office as “House of Representatives,” and the district line as “1st,” potentially confusing signers that he was running for state House.

But in discussion, Saul argued no one could reasonably conclude he was running for anything other than for the U.S. House as the two districts don’t overlap, which seemed to have an impact on board members. Brater then offered to have staff review the petitions, which several hours later produced a result that put Saul over the top for required valid signatures. The board then voted unanimously to reject the original staff report and approve Saul’s inclusion on the primary ballot, where he will run against Incumbent U.S. Rep. Jack Bergman (R-Watersmeet) for the GOP nomination. Two Democrats, Callie Barr and Bob Lorinser, will battle it out to take on the winner in November.

And finally, in the 10th District, the board concurred with staff recommendations that two Democrats were found to have insufficient valid signatures: Anil Kumar, a member of the Wayne State Board of Governors, and Rhonda Powell. 

Staff found “clear indications of fraud” on at least 47 of Kumar’s petition sheets. As they did with Saul, they tabled a vote to allow elections staff time to do a review. However, that second look failed to provide enough valid signatures and the board voted to accept the staff recommendation and invalidate his petitions, as they did for Powell, who rejected as immaterial her claim that a supplemental submission turned in by consultant Londell Thomas gave her enough signatures, especially since elections staff said there was no record of such a submission.

Thomas was also at the center of the petition scandal that disqualified Hollier, who admitted the signatures Thomas turned in on his behalf appeared to have been forged. 

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Thomas’ name is one of 22 listed by bureau staff as circulating petition sheets with “clear indications of fraud,” all of which are being referred for further investigation. 

Other Democrats running in the 10th District are Emily Busch, Carl Marlinga, Tiffany Tilley and Diane Young. They all seek to replace the incumbent, U.S. Rep. John James (R-Shelby Twp.), who is running unopposed for the GOP nomination.



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Hey Hondo! Answering Your Michigan State Football Questions: Smith, Tucker, Cousins

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Hey Hondo!  Answering Your Michigan State Football Questions:  Smith, Tucker, Cousins


The Spartan Nation is fortunate to have one of the most storied college football programs.

With multiple national titles and single-handedly breaking the color barrier, along with a lineage of players who are genuinely the who’s who of the sport, the heritage is fantastic.

So today, I set out to answer some of your questions regarding the football program.

Hondo, I remember watching the Michigan State basketball game (I think it was Indiana), and shortly after, you broke that the Spartans had hired Mel Tucker.  You said he was at least the fifth choice. Can you tell us what happened?  Cory B.  Mason, Mi

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Michigan State’s then-AD Bill Beekman essentially hired a search firm to help select the next coach. I can understand a firm doing background checks since that is private, but to hand the process over the way they did was a joke, in my opinion. If an AD needs that much assistance at one of his most important jobs, get a new one. 

By the way, I am not blaming Beekman; I am squarely blaming the MSU leadership above him.  Beekman was put in an impossible position.

Pat Narduzzi, former DC at Michigan State and now Pittsburgh Panthers coach, was offered the job twice—yes, twice, before and after signing day. He turned it down twice; additionally, others were considered and could have had the job. 

Michigan State was woefully unprepared for the lack of interest in the job and overpaid to finally get a yes; from what I saw, it was an unprepared candidate. 

Additionally, it was an Illinois game in Champaign, and I was in the press room when I broke it.

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Hondo, I’m glad you’re answering MSU questions now.  I know you broke the Mel Tucker story, but you said it was a bad hire at the time.  What did you see?  Sam W.  Detroit, MI

He had a losing record as only a one-year coach. Certain schools, MSU being one, are not where guys go to learn how to be a head coach.  He moved around consistently, and what I heard when making calls was far from impressive.  What I learned in a few phone calls was certainly what a prepared Michigan State should have gotten.

Hondo, my man, can’t say enough to have you answering the q and a of Spartan Nation.  Mad props dog.  Great to see your career skyrocket, and when you Tweeted out your love for Jonathan Smith and all the repping you did on Twitter, I knew he was our guy.  Tell me what you think of the new guy so far.  Jesse T.

Jonathan Smith was not the most prominent name available, but he was, in my opinion, and I said before they hired him, the best coach.  He is a great man, teacher, coach, leader, and guy.  MSU hit a homerun by hiring him, and he is the best hire since Nick Saban.  Unfortunately, college football is not the same game it was then, and other things hamper and foster winning than just that.  Coaching in college and Michigan State at this time is significantly more complicated than it was for Nick, and I believe he would tell you that.

Are you buying or selling on MSU football and Smith using the Las Vegas term Hondo?  Larry N.

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I’m buying for sure, but as mentioned above, college football is dramatically different now.  As one head coach told me, “It used to matter that you were a good coach, had good facilities, and could recruit.  Now, bad coaches, bad facilities, and the ability to recruit don’t matter as much.”  I want Smith to succeed, and he is good enough.  The biggest question is if Spartan Nation wants to be a dominant program.

Hondo, I know you have been an outspoken supporter of Jonathan Smith; what will be the biggest key to his success in East Lansing?  Shawn B.  Grand Rapids, MI

Money for NIL.  Great man with excellent facilities and a terrific staff.  He has already proven he can get and develop players.  Once they emerge, keeping them will hinge on NIL paying them.  He can do all the right things, but he has to have the NIL to keep them here; if not, he becomes the minor leagues for teams with money to let him develop them, and then they swoop in and buy them.

Hondo, what do you think of the Spartans’ new QB?  Is he the real deal?  Samantha K.  Midland, MI

Aidan Chiles is the absolute real deal.  He can do it all, and most importantly, he can run it Smith’s way.  MSU is fortunate to have him, a terrific player and a better young man.

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Hondo, my friends, and I have argued this for years, and you are just the man to settle it. In your opinion, would MSU have done better with Kirk Cousins at quarterback with the Connor Cook teams? Like winning a national title?  Kenny L.

No.  I respect and love Kirk.  Connor had the personality and mental makeup that was needed.  I do not think Kirk would have done some of the intangibles that made Cook great for that team. 

If I had been an NFL team selecting either, I would have taken Kirk every time, but on those teams no.  In my opinion, the Spartans won despite their offensive coaching leadership, not because of it.  Cook overcame them. Kirk, more talented, wouldn’t have taken some risks like Cook and would have adhered more.

Hondo, I love listening to you on the Radio. Now that you are taking MSU football questions, this one is about the Big Ten. Because of NIL or other issues, what team is not being talked about in the Big Ten?  Jan A.

No doubt, Nebraska.  Great coaching, and they will be an NIL giant in the coming years.

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If you have a question regarding Michigan State football, basketball, or the athletic program in general, please send it to, and when you do, put in the subject line MSU Q & A

Don’t forget to follow the official Spartan Nation Page on Facebook Spartan Nation WHEN YOU CLICK RIGHT HERE, and be a part of our vibrant community group Go Green Go White as well WHEN YOU CLICK RIGHT HERE.



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Here’s what’s next for Donald Trump in Michigan after guilty verdict

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Here’s what’s next for Donald Trump in Michigan after guilty verdict


As former President Donald Trump heads toward sentencing on July 11, several factors are at play as an appeal is all but sure.

Appeals, which are an uphill slog, also take time.

“There is a distinct possibility that there may be some stay of the sentence,” said Thomas Cranmer, Principal at Miller Canfield. “The Court of Appeals might be asked to intervene on the theory that if he is sentenced on July 11 what he might be given would actually be served before the appeal could be heard.”

With polling suggesting the race between the current and former president is tight here there’s no question the verdict galvanizes Trump’s base of support in Michigan but what about those voters who are less than charmed with both major party candidates.

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“I can’t imagine this is going to cut Trump’s way,” said University of Michigan political science professor Dr. Ken Kollman.

In a state where it certainly appears each of the candidates is going to need every last vote to win, Kollman likens the situation to a tie ballgame.

“The little things at the end are going to matter this is the first one of these events and I think in a tied election like this, I think this is a very momentous event that happened today,” Kollman said.

Copyright 2024 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.



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