Ohio
Ohio man held on $2M bond in deadly Rochester Hills motel shooting
A 21-year-old Ohio man is being held on a $2 million bond in connection with a deadly shooting at a Rochester Hills motel on Labor Day.
Calvin Roger Jones Jr., of Cincinnati, was arraigned on one count of assault with intent to murder, one count of carrying a concealed weapon and two counts of felony firearm, according to the Oakland County Sheriff’s Office. If convicted on the charge of assault with intent to murder, Jones faces up to life in prison.
Deputies say an altercation started in the parking lot of the Fairfield Inn on South Rochester Road in Rochester Hills involving at least three people. During the confrontation, authorities said two people were shot. One man died, and a second victim suffered non-life-threatening injuries.
The sheriff’s office said no one was seriously injured in a car crash on South Boulevard that was connected to the shooting.
An investigation continues.
Ohio
Drugs sneaked into Ohio prison soaked into the pages of JD Vance’s ‘Hillbilly Elegy’
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Vice President JD Vance’s memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy,” has a storied history as a New York Times bestseller, as the then-31-year-old’s introduction to the nation as a “Trump whisperer,” as a divisive subject among Appalachian scholars, and, eventually, as a Ron Howard-directed movie.
Its latest role? Secretly transporting drugs into an Ohio prison.
The book was one of three items whose pages 30-year-old Austin Siebert, of Maumee southwest of Toledo, has been convicted of spraying with narcotics and then shipping to Grafton Correctional Institution disguised as Amazon orders. The others were a 2019 GRE Handbook and a separate piece of paper, according to court documents.
On Nov. 18, US District Judge Donald C. Nugent sentenced Siebert to more than a decade in prison for his role in the drug trafficking scheme.
Siebert and an inmate at the prison were caught in a recorded conversation discussing the shipment. He either didn’t know or didn’t care that a central theme of “Hillbilly Elegy” is the impacts of narcotics addiction on Vance’s family and the broader culture.
“Is it Hillbilly?” the inmate asks.
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Siebert replies, momentarily confused. Then, suddenly remembering, he says, “Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. That’s the book, the book I’m reading. (Expletive) romance novel.”
Ohio
Ohio bill targeting abortion pill could impact other prescriptions
A Republican-backed bill aimed at reducing access to abortion pills could make it harder to buy other prescription drugs, too
Abortion drug under scrutiny by RFK Jr.
USA TODAY wellness reporter Alyssa Goldberg covers why the abortion pill mifepristone is being reviewed by the FDA.
A Republican-backed bill aimed at reducing access to abortion pills in Ohio could make it harder to buy other prescription drugs, too.
House Bill 324, which passed the Ohio House 59-28 on Nov. 19, would require an in-person visit and follow-up appointment for prescribed drugs with “severe adverse effects” in more than 5% of cases. Doctors couldn’t prescribe these medications via a virtual appointment using telehealth.
“Many Ohioans are receiving medications from providers they may never meet face-to-face,” said Rep. Adam Mathews, R-Lebanon, who called the proposed law “life-saving.”
If the bill becomes law, the Ohio Department of Health would be required to create a list of dangerous drugs with a certain percentage of “severe adverse effects.” Severe adverse effects are defined as death, infection or hemorrhaging requiring hospitalization, organ failure or sepsis.
The bill is aimed at mifepristone, a drug used in medication abortions. The Center for Christian Virtue, Ohio Right to Life and Catholic Conference of Ohio support the change, which they say will protect women and children from risky medications.
Planned Parenthood Advocates of Ohio called the bill a medically unnecessary barrier to a safe and effective medication. Ohioans voted in 2023 to protect access to abortion and other reproductive decisions in the state constitution.
“House Bill 324 is in direct conflict with the Ohio Constitution because it seeks to use junk science to override widely accepted, evidence-based standards of care,” said Jaime Miracle, deputy director of Abortion Forward, which helped pass the 2023 measure.
“It is very clear that it doesn’t matter what the people of Ohio stand and fight for,” said Rep. Desiree Tims, D-Dayton, before voting against the bill. “There are just so many lawmakers who are obsessed with a woman and her vagina.”
However, the bill could also make it more difficult to access prescription medications that the Ohio Department of Health deems too dangerous, from antidepressants to Amoxicillin, said Rep. Rachel Baker, D-Cincinnati. “It really could spill over to anything.”
The Ohio Council of Retail Merchants initially opposed the bill because of restrictions placed on pharmacists, but changes to the bill now put the onus on doctors to check if a drug is on the state health department’s list.
The Ohio Senate must review the bill before it heads to Gov. Mike DeWine.
State government reporter Jessie Balmert can be reached at jbalmert@gannett.com or @jbalmert on X.
Tell us what you think
Ohio
Unsolved Ohio: Man arrested five years after wife found stabbed to death
COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) — Homicide detectives have made an arrest in connection with the 2020 fatal stabbing of a woman found in a truck on the Southeast Side.
According to court documents, Dominique Edwards was arrested Wednesday and charged in the murder his wife, Infhon’e Edwards, who was found in a pickup truck parked at the Columbus Park Apartments complex in the Milbrook area on Dec. 14, 2020.
A years long investigation placed Infhon’e Edwards and her husband, Dominique Edwards, at the apartment complex the morning of Dec. 11 based on phone records. Video surveillance from the complex showed Infhon’e Edwards pull into a parking space at about 5 a.m. and after about an hour, an unidentified man exited the driver’s side door and walked away from the scene.
Infhon’e’s mother, Rosemarie Dickerson, previously told NBC4 that she recognized the man by his physical appearance, but police had not named any suspect publicly.
“I [recognize] his body build,” Dickerson said. “You couldn’t see his face when he got out, he had a white towel over his face.”
Edwards was stabbed three times on the left side of her chest and twice in her face. Her remains were then placed in the trunk of her Chevrolet Avalanche.
Her body was discovered on Dec. 14, two days after her husband, Dominique, called police to report her missing. For a previous report on this story view the video player above.
Dickerson told NBC4 that Dominique Edwards called her to say that Infhon’e Edwards had not come home the night of Dec. 10 and asked if she had stayed with a friend.
“When I kept calling her phone and there was no answer, it was like it was off,” Dickerson said. “I [told her husband] ‘report her missing’ then I went onto Facebook, and I just asked everybody ‘has anybody seen Infhon’e, we can’t find her.’”
Police noted that interviews with friends and family revealed that the victim “always wore rings on her fingers,” and she was reportedly wearing the jewelry on the night of Dec. 10. But when her body was discovered, she had no jewelry on.
It was eventually discovered that a ring Infhon’e Edwards was wearing on Dec. 10 was later “disposed of” by Dominique Edwards after her death.
An arrest warrant was issued for Dominique Edwards on Nov. 13 and he was arrested Wednesday. A Franklin County Municipal Court judge issued him a $1 million bond on Thursday and scheduled a preliminary hearing for Nov. 26.
-
Business1 week ago
Fire survivors can use this new portal to rebuild faster and save money
-
World7 days agoFrance and Germany support simplification push for digital rules
-
News1 week agoCourt documents shed light on Indiana shooting that sparked stand-your-ground debate
-
World1 week agoSinclair Snaps Up 8% Stake in Scripps in Advance of Potential Merger
-
World1 week agoCalls for answers grow over Canada’s interrogation of Israel critic
-
Science3 days agoWashington state resident dies of new H5N5 form of bird flu
-
World1 week ago2% of Russian global oil supply affected following Ukrainian attack
-
Politics1 week agoDuckworth fires staffer who claimed to be attorney for detained illegal immigrant with criminal history