Midwest
Power restored at Indiana BP refinery after outage forced temporary shutdown
Power has been restored to BP’s sprawling oil refinery in northwest Indiana following an outage that prompted the company to temporarily shut down the complex and evacuate workers, BP said Friday.
BP spokesperson Christina Audisho said in a statement that power was back on Friday at the refinery following Thursday’s outage, and the refinery’s office buildings and nearby roads had reopened.
CLEANUP CONTINUES AFTER FIRE-SUPPRESSION FOAM LEAK AT HOUSTON’S BUSH AIRPORT
She said that “operations have been stabilized at the refinery.” But Audisho did not immediately reply to an email from The Associated Press asking for BP to elaborate on the situation at the refinery, including whether refining had resumed and if the outage’s cause had been determined.
The BP Whiting refinery is photographed in East Chicago, Indiana, on Sept. 21, 2017. (DroneBase via AP, File)
Audisho said all refinery staff were accounted for and no injuries were reported following the outage at the refinery, located along Lake Michigan about 15 miles southeast of Chicago.
The city of Whiting said Thursday that the refinery was flaring its stacks in response to the outage “to burn off the extra product” in what was described as a “normal process” following such an event.
Audisho said in Friday’s statement that air monitoring continues around the refinery “and no elevated readings have been recorded.”
The city of Whiting said air monitoring conducted at multiple location by both BP and Lake County had determined that “there was no danger to the public.”
The refinery is the biggest in the U.S. Midwest and sixth-largest nationally, processing about 440,000 barrels of crude oil daily, making a variety of liquid fuels and asphalt.
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Michigan
Tarik Skubal’s final hurdle for Tigers could be rehab start at West Michigan
Detroit Tigers sweep first-place Tampa Bay Rays after rough May
The Tigers beat the Rays, 7-2, on Wednesday as Detroit scored 25 runs with 10 homers in the three-game series.
Detroit — Tarik Skubal has been through this before.
When he was coming back from flexor tendon surgery in 2023, he made two rehab starts with High-A West Michigan. One of those starts came against the Dayton Dragons, the same team he will face Sunday in what may be his one and only rehab start this year.
“Oh yeah,” he said. “I have some history with them (smiles). I pitched two innings and they swung at every pitch. I got through in like eight pitches and I was like, ‘Guys, this does nothing for anybody involved.’”
The reason Skubal is making the start in Grand Rapids is because the weather forecast for both Triple- A Toledo in Iowa and for Double-A Erie in Richmond, Virginia, is bad.
“I’m excited I get to go compete again,” Skubal said. “It’s been about a month or so and when you don’t get to play, it sucks. I’m excited to compete. I don’t really care about what level it’s at. Ideally, it would be Triple A, but with the weather there, it doesn’t seem like it’d be smart to send me there to potentially not throw.”
It’s quite remarkable, actually, that Skubal is at this point this quickly. He had a loose body in his elbow removed by a relatively new arthroscopic procedure using a smaller, less invasive needle on May 6.
Through a couple of live bullpen sessions, he’s built himself to four innings and 60-plus pitches. The goal for Sunday will be five innings, or at least five ups, and between 75-80 pitches.
If that goes well and he recovers well, the Tigers could activate him for the series in Cleveland that starts June 12.
“We were thinking it was going to be three months to recover and when we learned it could be four to six weeks, it felt like a very positive thing,” Skubal said. “To be back and competing again right now is special. Not just for me but for the future of guys who have this injury.”
It’s a positive thing for the Tigers, too, who within a couple of weeks could get Skubal, Justin Verlander (hip) and Casey Mize (groin) back off the injured list. Verlander and Mize will throw bullpens Saturday at Comerica Park.
Manager AJ Hinch said a decision will be made on whether to activate Verlander after that session. He said Mize will need to make at least one rehab start.
Reliever Kenley Jansen (pelvic inflammation) threw a bullpen Friday. He will be eligible to return on June 12, as well. Hinch indicated Jansen also will make a rehab appearance before being cleared.
“It gives us a performance boost more than anything,” manager AJ Hinch said. “Our guys have been grinding quite a bit. I don’t know how to accurately describe that energy. But there’s a ton of energy when you get Gleyber (Torres) and Carp (Kerry Carpenter) back. And these guys are watching those pitchers do their work to get back.
“It’s not anything against the guys we have. We have to try to win tonight’s game without those (pitchers). There’s a lot going on behind the scenes to get ready to play the game. But the lineup looks at little better.”
It was a compelling juxtaposition Friday afternoon, Skubal addressing the media flanked by the empty lockers of Mize and Verlander along the same back wall of the clubhouse.
“Coming off a really good series in Tampa,” he said. “Flipping the script on that road trip gave everyone in the room a ton of confidence. And now, obviously, we got some help coming back. And frankly, there needs to be a sense of urgency with this group if we want to make a push to be in it for the rest of the year.”
It goes without saying, of course, that making a push likely will be the only thing that keeps Skubal, a free agent in the offseason, off the trade block in late July and early August.
“We’ve dug ourselves a hole and it’s got to be up to us to get ourselves out of it,” he said. “Getting some talent back is going to help. But until we get that talent back, we’ve got to win tonight’s game. That should be the focus. It shouldn’t be when are we going to get this wall back, it should be let’s win today and we’ll get those guys back when we get them.”
Mariners at Tigers
First pitch: 1:10 p.m. Saturday, Comerica Park, Detroit
TV/radio: Detroit Sports Net, 97.1/107.9 FM
Scouting report
▶ RHP Bryce Miller (1-0, 1.71), Mariners: The start of his season was delayed by a left oblique strain, but he’s wasted no time getting back in a groove. In four games (three starts), he’s allowed four earned runs with 20 strikeouts and four walks in 21 innings, while holding hitters to a .200 average, .320 slug and a 25% hard-hit rate. His four-seam fastball has ticked up, from 94.8 mph on average last season to 96.7. He’s splitter is also 2 mph firmer. And in case that’s not enough, he mixes sliders, cutters, sweepers (to righties) and knuckle-curves (to lefties).
▶ RHP Keider Montero (2-3, 3.69), Tigers: He’s coming off a gem against the White Sox (six, two-hit, shutout innings in 65 pitches). His improvement against left-handed hitters has taken his game up a level. In his career, lefties have a .449 slug and .771 OPS against him. This season, he’s neutralized them, .378 slug, .644 OPS. Lefties are 18 for 105 (.171) against his four-seam, changeup and slider combo.
Chris.McCosky@detroitnews.com
@cmccosky
Minnesota
Man fatally stabbed St. Paul barbershop owner after becoming
A 24-year-old man is accused of fatally stabbing a St. Paul, Minnesota, barbershop owner on the city’s east side late last month, according to a criminal complaint filed on Friday.
Omar Andres Ramos Castro, from St. Paul, is charged with one count of second-degree murder.
During the morning of May 25, officers responded to the 1400 block of Case Avenue for a report of a body lying by train tracks. They found a man, later identified by investigators as Gabriel Arrazola Perez, dead with several lacerations on his body, the complaint said.
Arrazola Perez’s family told law enforcement he had left a gathering on May 24 around 4 p.m. and that he said he would be back, according to the court document. Around three hours later, video from security cameras at the scene showed two men walking onto the railroad track.
Investigators found Arrazola Perez’s phone at the scene on May 26. The court document said they obtained data from his phone, which showed he called a number four times in the hours before his death that law enforcement later linked to Castro. He was arrested on Thursday.
Castro, through a Spanish-speaking translator, admitted while talking to investigators that he stabbed Arrazola Perez during an encounter at the train tracks, according to the complaint. Castro said Arrazola Perez “made unwanted sexual advances toward him” and grabbed his body despite Castro’s “protestations,” the court document said.
Castro then became “filled with rage” and felt he had to defend himself, the complaint said. He allegedly stabbed Arrazola Perez and told investigators he couldn’t recall how many times because “he was so overwhelmed by anger.”
If convicted, Castro faces up to 40 years in prison.
Missouri
Crews to demolish Kansas City, Missouri, Broadway Family Dollar store after deadly 2025 collapse
KSHB 41 reporter Alyssa Jackson covers Kansas City, Missouri. Share your story idea with Alyssa.
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The Family Dollar store on Broadway Boulevard in Kansas City, Missouri, that was the scene of a deadly building collapse last year, will be demolished.
KSHB 41 News reporter Alyssa Jackson reports that KCMO city officials are set to issue a demolition permit for the former store at 3726 Broadway once the building’s owner or contractor submits payment for the permit.
On Friday, K&S Associates, Inc., listed as the demolition contractor for the project, told KSHB 41 News that they would likely wait until after the FIFA World Cup 2026 matches were completed this summer and were targeting to start demolition around the beginning of August.
Around 2:45 p.m. on Sunday, July 27, first responders raced to the store on reports of a building collapse. When crews arrived, they found that parts of the building’s parapet wall and façade had collapsed.
The collapse killed Larry Banks and injured three other people.
In March, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration fined Family Dollar more than $11,000 in connection with the circumstances in the lead-up and during the collapse.
In OSHA’s citation, inspectors wrote, “The employer did not furnish employment and a place of employment which were free from recognized hazards that were causing or likely to cause death or serious physical harm to employees.”
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