Connect with us

Maine

Maine state trooper injured after cruiser rear-ended, hits vehicle he pulled over during traffic stop

Published

on

Maine state trooper injured after cruiser rear-ended, hits vehicle he pulled over during traffic stop



7/20: CBS Weekend News

20:51

A Maine state trooper is recovering after he was rear-ended by another vehicle during a highway traffic stop on Saturday night, authorities said.

Advertisement

The cruiser that Trooper Patrick Flanagan was in spun around and hit the vehicle he had pulled over. Flanagan and the two other drivers suffered non-life-threatening injuries, Maine State Police said in a news release.

Flanagan’s emergency lights were activated on the southbound Maine Turnpike in Biddeford when his cruiser was struck, police said.

Maine Trooper Injured-Crash
This photo shows a Maine State Police trooper’s cruiser rear-ended at a traffic stop on the state turnpike in Biddeford on July 20.

Maine State Police via AP


Flanagan and the 25-year-old driver of the vehicle that struck his were taken to hospitals. The driver was issued a summons.

Advertisement

The circumstances that led up to the crash are under investigation, police said.

It was the third vehicle crash into a state police cruiser within 48 hours, according to police reports.

The other two crashes happened in Gardiner and Gouldsboro, CBS affiliate WGME reported. There were no injuries in the other two.



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Maine

Teen shot by homeowner after targeting Maine house in ding-dong-ditch prank: authorities

Published

on

Teen shot by homeowner after targeting Maine house in ding-dong-ditch prank: authorities


A teen was shot and wounded after a group of pals pulled a prank on a gun-toting Maine homeowner pre-dawn Saturday, according to authorities.

Vincent Martin, 30, allegedly opened fire on the teens after they targeted his house in a game of ding-dong-ditch, at around 1 a.m., the Cumberland County Sheriff’s Office said, according to reports.

After the teens knocked on the door of his Waterford Road house and fled, Martin opened the door and rattled off several shots, striking one of the pranksters in the right calf, the sheriff’s office said, according to News Center Maine.

Vincent Martin, 30, is facing multiple charges for the shooting. Cumberland County Sheriff

The teenager, whose age and gender were not released by officials, walked into the hospital in stable condition.

Advertisement

When authorities arrived at the scene, deputies found a trail of blood on the roadway and arrested Martin.

He’s facing felony charges of elevated aggravated assault and aggravated reckless conduct, as well as two misdemeanor counts of discharging a firearm, the station reported.


Martin opened the door and rattled off several shots at the group who played the prank on his home.
Martin opened the door and rattled off several shots at the group who played the prank on his home. Alicia Devine/Tallahassee Democrat / USA TODAY NETWORK

A new take on ding-dong-ditch has become an ongoing TikTok trend where teens bang or kick a door and run away in what they call the “Door Knock” challenge.

A Texas police department warned youngsters earlier this year not to partake in the social media craze because a homeowner could confuse the prank with a burglary and start shooting. 



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Maine

Tumbling for cheese at Belfast’s Maine Celtic Celebration Cheese Roll Championship

Published

on

Tumbling for cheese at Belfast’s Maine Celtic Celebration Cheese Roll Championship


BANGOR, Maine (WABI) – The Maine Celtic Celebration Cheese Roll Championship took place Sunday at 2 p.m. in Belfast.

The championship featured age group rounds ranging from young children to people over 60-years-old.

Each cheese roll championship is made up of 10 contestants lined up at the top of the hill. The cheese championship begins with a selected official rolling a cheese wheel down the hill. The goal of each contestant is to run down the wheel first. The contestant who comes up with the cheese, usually out of pile, wins! If there are more than ten contestants, contestants must race up the hill and the first ten to find an open chair positioned in the hill moves on to the cheese roll chasing.

The winners of the cheese roll championships were each awarded with the cheese wheel they ran down, and a box of artisan cheeses.

Advertisement

Two young cheese champions spoke about what was going through their minds as they were chasing the cheese.

“It feels amazing. 13–17-year-old boys champion Brady Winslow said. “I was just running after the cheese, I saw someone drop the cheese, and I went, ‘ok’, and I dived right for it.”

“CHEESE, CHEESE, CHEESE!” 8–12-year-old girls champion Scarlett Wagner said.

The Maine Celtic Celebration is run entirely by volunteer staff. The cheese roll championships always draw an enthusiastic crowd.

Advertisement



Source link

Continue Reading

Maine

Ask Maine Audubon: Digital photography allows for closer study of rare birds

Published

on

Ask Maine Audubon: Digital photography allows for closer study of rare birds


The ferruginous hawk seen in Auburn last week was a rare bird sighting that was on nobody’s radar. The open habitats of the grasslands and deserts of the west are ideal for the ferruginous hawk. Photo by Gary Jarvis

Summer is not when we typically think of rare birds showing up in Maine. This newspaper has given great coverage to many of the vagrant birds that have strayed to Maine over the years, but most of those are tied with migrations in the spring or fall, or sometimes after storms. Among the list of rarities, Maine has hosted a few raptors in recent years that have attracted large crowds, notably the Steller’s sea eagle over the winters of 2022 and 2023, and the great black hawk that frequented Deering Oaks Park in Portland in 2018. A western marsh harrier found on North Haven in August 2022 was another bird not on anyone’s radar, so while no one would have ever guessed, it feels like we shouldn’t have been surprised when a ferruginous hawk was found in Auburn last week – the first record for New England.

With the Steller’s sea eagle coming from eastern Siberia, the black hawk from central America, and the marsh harrier from Europe, perhaps we were due for a rare North American raptor, albeit one from the grasslands and deserts of the west, that rarely strays east of the Mississippi. These open habitats are ideal for ferruginous hawks, which would explain its attraction to the Auburn-Lewiston airport where it was found by local birders Christine Murray, Gary Jarvis, and Camden Martin.

One of the coolest trends with modern birding, which has really come thanks to advances in digital photography, is the ability to match photos of known individuals between locations. When a rare bird is seen in two different areas, historically we would have only been able to guess that it was one individual, or would have assumed they were two different birds. Our detection rate of rare birds must be incredibly low. After all, what are the odds of an out-of-range bird being seen by someone, that person knowing that it’s a rare bird, or even taking a photo, and then reaching out to a state bird records committee or local Audubon. It must be well below 1% of all the vagrants that occur.

Advertisement

Now, with really good digital cameras becoming more prevalent, we often end up with hundreds of photos of a single rare bird, capturing all angles and many feather details. For example, there are 2,241 photos of the Steller’s sea eagle in the Macaulay Library database (tied to Cornell’s eBird records) from that one bird’s time in Maine. With these photos, we can start matching unique feather patterns to other nearby sightings and sometimes we get a match. The Steller’s sea eagle had unique markings on its wings that matched it to a long string of records across the country before getting here. Our great black hawk was matched with photos from Texas (officially the first time the species had been detected in the United States), four months before being found in Maine.

All this leads me to point out that the unique markings on groups of underwing coverts (the little feathers that give the wing shape) on the ferruginous hawk’s wings, seen in Auburn, match perfectly with one that was seen in southern Ontario, on the shore of Lake Erie in early May. Where has this bird been since then? Why is it here? We may never know.

I do want to acknowledge the identification challenges with these birds. After rare bird sightings hit the news or social media, we always receive a bunch of reports, almost always of similar-looking species. The ferruginous hawk is similar to our abundant red-tailed hawks, though larger (15-20%), and the Auburn individual is one of the light color morphs, so it shows a very pale head and almost entirely unmarked white chest and belly, unlike the darker red-tails. I encourage anyone who thinks they see a rare bird to get a photo and send it to naturalist@maineaudubon.org.

These are some fascinating examples of rare raptors that have shown up in Maine, all coming from vastly different places. That’s one of the fun aspects of this hobby. We are constantly learning new things from these birds. Advances in technology through photography allow us to get high quality images and social networks spread the word out to observers quickly. Following the path of a bird well outside its typical range leads us to wonder how it got here and why, and that’s where the fun comes in.

Have you got a nature or wildlife question of your own? It doesn’t have to be about birds! Email questions to ask@maineaudubon.org and visit www.maineaudubon.org to learn more about birding, native plants, and programs and events focusing on Maine wildlife and habitat. Doug and other naturalists lead free bird walks on Thursday mornings, 7 to 9 am, at Maine Audubon’s Gilsland Farm Audubon Sanctuary in Falmouth.

Advertisement

« Previous

Canoeing in Maine: Plenty of outdoor adventure available at Burnt Meadow Pond



Source link

Continue Reading

Trending