Connecticut
Valuable Vintage Halloween Decorations Found In Connecticut
One of many enjoyable issues about Halloween rising up was the decorations. To today, I’ll gawk at somebody’s yard who has a number of skeletons or ghosts or zombies in it this time of 12 months.
We discovered a YouTube video of a pair that finds stuff and re-sells that stuff. They name themselves, Coastal Resale Remedy, and so they discover cool stuff and promote that cool stuff to make a dwelling. Feels like a variety of enjoyable to me, particularly once you encounter some unbelievable finds that yield some good income. I generally will promote stuff on eBay and I do know precisely the way it works, however these of us have perfected it.
Let’s take a look at a number of the objects “Amy” discovered throughout her journey to Connecticut to her sister’s child bathe.
Invaluable Classic Halloween Decorations In Nice Situation Discovered In Connecticut
Thanks for hanging out with me and for extra unbelievably superb articles by yours really, you’ll be able to faucet or click on proper right here. Writing about stuff on a regular basis together with the place to go in order for you a great scare this Halloween season, see you all once more actual quickly.
Listed here are 5 Connecticut amusement parks that not exist.
5 Deserted Amusement Parks In Connecticut
We’ll check out 5 amusement parks that not exist within the State of Connecticut. They’re, in no explicit order, Savin Rock Amusement Park in West Haven, Suburban Park in Unionville, Wildwood Park in Dayville, East Lyme’s Golden Spur Park, and Roton Level Park positioned in Rowayton. All, at one time a thriving, well-patronized a part of Connecticut’s amusement park business.
Connecticut Common Hospital for the Insane Cemetery
The Connecticut Valley Hospital Cemetery is positioned in Middletown and the odd, distinctive factor about it’s, that there aren’t any names on the gravestones, solely numbers.
10 Skilled Wrestlers That Are Billed From or From Connecticut
Connecticut
Connecticut man dies after being struck by SUV while crossing busy N.J. highway, police say
A 64-year-old Connecticut man died this week after he was struck by a car while crossing a busy Monmouth County roadway earlier this month, authorities said.
The man, identified Friday as Niantic resident Michael Losacano, was hit shortly after 6:30 p.m. on Nov. 9 on State Highway 35 in Wall Township near Wall Church Road, according to a statement from the Wall Township Police Department.
Losacano was taken to Jersey Shore University Medical Center by local EMS where he died on Monday, the department said.
Connecticut
Tractor-trailer carrying thousands of gallons of fuel catches fire on I-91 in Wethersfield
A tractor-trailer hauling thousands of gallons of fuel caught fire on Interstate 91 North in Wethersfield on Friday morning.
State police said state troopers responded to I-91 North near exit 24 around 7:42 a.m. and found the cab of a tractor- trailer carrying 7,500 gallons of fuel on fire.
The driver was able to get out of the truck and was not injured, according to state police.
The fire departments from Wethersfield and Rocky Hill responded to the scene to extinguish the fire and troopers shut down I-91 North and South as well as oncoming traffic from Route 3 to I-91 South.
Because the truck was hauling fuel, troopers worked to move drivers who were nearby, state police said.
I-91 South reopened shortly after the fire was out.
The left two lanes of I-91 North have been reopened and the state police Fire & Explosives Investigation Unit is also responding to assist with the investigation.
State police said the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection later responded to the scene.
Connecticut
Connecticut couple charged in alleged Lululemon theft spree that netted up to $1 million
A Connecticut couple has been charged in connection with an elaborate two-month theft spree at Lululemon stores across the country that an investigator with the retailer estimates netted about $1 million worth of product.
Jadion Richards, 44, and Akwele Lawes-Richards, 45, were arrested on Nov. 14 in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul, Minnesota suburb of Woodbury. The couple, from Danbury, Connecticut, were charged with organized retail theft after a Lululemon retail crime investigator contacted local authorities in Minnesota.
But Lululemon’s investigator said evidence shows their crimes go back to September and took place in states like Utah, Colorado, New York and Connecticut, according to the criminal complaint.
Attorneys representing Richards and Lawes-Richards did not immediately respond to USA TODAY’s request for comment Thursday.
Richards claimed he was racially profiled, complaint says
Richards and Lawes-Richards were stopped after exiting the Lululemon store in Roseville, Minnesota, on Nov. 14 when the security alarm went off, according to the criminal complaint. Richards allegedly claimed store employees racially profiled him and the two were allowed to leave afterward.
The Lululemon investigator later alleged the two visited the store the day before on Nov. 13 with an unidentified man and stole 45 item valued at nearly $5,000. That same day, the pair had allegedly conducted four other thefts in Minneapolis, Edina and Minnetonka.
Officers arrested the couple at the Lululemon in Woodbury. The two denied any involvement in the theft, with Lawes-Richards allegedly claiming they were staying with her aunt and had only been in Minnesota for a day.
Officers found several credit and debit cards on the couple, as well as an access card to a Marriott hotel room. Using a search warrant, officers found 12 suitcases in their room, including three filled with Lululemon clothing with tags attached worth over $50,000, according to the complaint.
In all, the company investigator estimated the couple has taken up to $1 million in stolen product, according to the complaint, which does not detail how he arrived at the high figure.
Couple blocked cameras among other tactics: Investigator
The Lululemon investigator said one of the couple’s alleged tactics was for one of them to distract associates while another stuffed product in the clothes they were wearing, according to the complaint.
Another technique involved the two strategically exiting the store, with one of them holding a cheap item they had bought and the other carrying more expensive products that had sensors, according to the complaint. When the alarm would sound off, only the person with the cheap, purchased item would stay behind and show a receipt, while the other would keep walking with the stolen product, the complaint says.
The pair are accused in eight Colorado theft incidents between Oct. 29 and 30, and seven thefts in Utah on Nov. 6 and 7, according to the complaint.
The pair are currently being held at the Ramsey County jail in Minnesota, court records show. Their next court appearance is set for Dec. 16.
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