Ohio
Ohio Attorney General: “If it’s one child that’s missing, that’s one child too many.”
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – Ohio’s ‘Top Cop’ is speaking up about the number of missing children in Northeast Ohio.
This comes as investigators continue to search for Keshaun Williams, who’s been missing for almost 6 months.
Saturday December 9 was his 16th birthday and the teen should be celebrating but he’s still missing.
His mother and family members are heartbroken.
“I miss your smile, I want to hear your voice. Keshaun if you see this, please come home,” said Sherice Snowden, Keshaun’s mother.
Family members of Keshaun Williams held a press conference last month.
The U.S. Marshals and an anonymous community member have pledged even more reward money for information leading to the whereabouts of missing teen Keshaun Williams.
The reward money is now at $22,500.
The 15-year-old Cleveland boy was last seen June 17 after attending a party on Gertrude Avenue in the city’s Broadway Slavic Village neighborhood.
Keshaun’s case has now become Ohio’s longest active Amber Alert.
Williams is 5 feet, 7 inches with black hair in braids and brown eyes.
On the day he went missing, he was wearing black jogging pants and a t-shirt with red and gray Jordan sneakers.
Investigators are convinced somebody out there knows something that can help bring him home.
In the meantime, Attorney General Yost says all parents need to be more involved.
“You’ve got to know what’s going on with them. Particularly with their social media because that’s where the danger lies. It isn’t lurking in the shrubs, the danger is in the cell phone, it’s in the tablet, it’s on their computer. You’ve got to know what’s going on with them,” said Yost.
If you have information that could help locate Williams, please contact Cleveland Police at 216-623-5400 or 911.
You can also call the Northern Ohio Violent Fugitive Task Force at 1-866-4-WANTED.
Copyright 2023 WOIO. All rights reserved.
Ohio
VASJ sophomore D’Angelo White picks up an offer from Ohio State football
It’s not often that an athlete gets a full-ride football scholarship from his dream school before playing his first down of varsity football.
D’Angelo White is one of the rare exceptions.
A 6-foot-5, 221-pound rising sophomore at Villa Angela-St. Joseph, White picked up an offer from Ohio State recently. In two months, he said he will earn his first varsity playing time, yet he has already gained an offer from the school he’s grown up watching.
Coach Ryan Day’s Buckeyes.
“This has always been my dream school,” White said. “This one means a lot.”
White used the words “this one” regarding his college offers because Ohio State isn’t the first to offer him a scholarship. In fact, 11 others offered White a scholarship before Ohio State did.
Not bad for a kid who has yet to play his first varsity down.
“I was Ohio State for a camp and I got a chance to talk with (tight ends) coach Keenan Bailey, and he offered me a chance to come play at Ohio State,” White said. “Coach Day said he was going to do it, but Coach Bailey said he wanted to get to me first. … I was shocked. I couldn’t believe it. I had a goal to someday get an offer from Ohio State, so when I did, it felt so good.”
Other schools that have offered include Bowling Green, Cincinnati, Illinois, Indiana, Kent State, Kentucky, Miami (Ohio), Michigan, Purdue and West Virginia. Kentucky was the first school to offer White a scholarship back when he was in eighth grade.
“D’Angelo earned an SEC offer as an eighth-grader. That says it all,” said VASJ coach Jeff Rotsky of the Kentucky offer. “The greatest thing about D’Angelo is the WANTS to be great. He works so hard. When he’s at his peak and playing fast. there’s no stopping him.”
White is the latest VASJ football player to get headlines with college news. All-Ohio running back Bo Jackson has committed to Ohio State, receiver/tight end Brian Kortovich has committed to Purdue, and offensive lineman Robert Smith has committed to Boston College.
Rotsky said White’s emergence this season will benefit VASJ’s offense greatly. With he and Kortovich at tight end and/or receiver, Jackson in the backfield and others — such as speedy Christian Chase — on the field, VASJ could be difficult to defend.
“In our one-back sets, (Kortovich and White) will be playing in 12-personnel,” Rotsky said of the two-tight end sets. “With Bo in the backfield and other talented backs we have, we’ve got a chance.
“We’re blessed with the group we have here at VASJ. The kids work so hard. Nobody takes anything for granted. They genuinely like playing football with each other.”
White said he has no plans on resting on the laurels of having so many college offers. He’s been a mainstay in the VASJ weight room, with personal bests of 280 pounds in the bench press and 435 pounds in the squat rack while running a 4.7 in the 40.
“I think my strengths are I can do both, catch passes or block,” he said.
He is in no hurry to make a choice on his college future. After all, he has three years of varsity ball yet in front of him. For that matter, he has his first varsity down yet in front of him.
“This Ohio State offer has given me even more energy,” White said. “I can’t wait for this season. I’ve got our playbook down. I’m ready for everything this year.”
Ohio
Struthers hopes to temporarily reduce thoroughfare traffic
STRUTHERS, Ohio (WKBN) – City officials are asking drivers who don’t have business or destinations downtown to avoid driving through it.
For the next week or so, Aqua and Team Fishel will be working on ongoing projects, and reducing traffic will help expedite the work.
Patrons of restaurants, offices, businesses and other downtown destinations are encouraged to come downtown, it’s the thoroughfare traffic that city leaders hope to reduce.
While these total projects will take a few months, it’s only the next week or so when the work being done will be expedited by reducing traffic.
Ohio
Ohio has abortion rights in the constitution. Yet as abortions are on the rise, hospitals have not increased services.
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Ohio voters enshrined reproductive rights in the state constitution last year, but smaller clinics continue to provide most of the abortions in the state as Ohio’s hospitals are not increasing services or wading into the abortion debate.
Abortion clinics report seeing increasing numbers of patients, including many from states outside Ohio, where women no longer have abortion rights, according to estimates, though state data won’t be available until later this year. When out-of-state patients arrive in Ohio, they’re often too far along for a medication abortion and need more involved surgical abortions. Clinics say they’re hiring doctors and staff, challenging laws they believe are unconstitutional with the new amendment, and looking for other ways to expand to accommodate the need.
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