Pittsburg, PA
Armed man shot, killed by police after opening fire on agents in Whitehall

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Pittsburg, PA
Nick Bonino joining Pittsburgh Penguins coaching staff

Former Pittsburgh Penguins player Nick Bonino is hanging up his skates and coming back to the organization as a member of the coaching staff.
Bonino, 37, was playing professionally overseas in Slovenia and announced he was retiring to join the coaching staff of new Penguins head coach Dan Muse.
“I just wanted to officially announce I’ll be retiring from professional hockey,” Bonino said in a video recorded and posted to social media. “I had a really unique opportunity to coach the Pittsburgh Penguins, something we thought was the best move for our family at this time.”
Bonino spent the 2015-16 and 2016-17 seasons with the Penguins and won two Stanley Cup titles while playing in Pittsburgh as a member of the infamous ‘HBK Line’ alongside Carl Hagelin and Phil Kessel.
After winning the Stanley Cup in 2017, Bonino left the organization as a free agent and spent several years playing for the Nashville Predators before playing in Minnesota, San Jose, a brief stint back in Pittsburgh, and in New York with the Rangers.
It’s unclear what role on Muse’s coaching staff Bonino is expected to fill.
Pittsburg, PA
MISSING CHILD: Pittsburgh police searching for missing 11-year-old girl
Pittsburgh police are asking for the public’s help finding a missing 11-year-old girl.
Darayia Preston was last seen on Sunday around 4:30 p.m. in the 7100 block of Race Street in Homewood.
She is described as 5 feet, 6 inches tall, 120 pounds, with brown eyes and black hair.
Darayia is known to frequent Northview Heights, Rhine Place and the Pressley High Rise.
Anyone with information on her whereabouts is asked to call 412-323-7141 or 911.
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Pittsburg, PA
Pittsburgh airport workers recover missing diamond from traveler’s engagement ring

Friday the 13th lived up to its reputation for one woman passing through Pittsburgh International Airport. She lost the diamond from her engagement ring, but she wasn’t unlucky for long.
After a stressful 17 days of work around downtown Los Angeles, April Schmitt was making the flight on June 12 to come back home to Pittsburgh.
Schmitt had to deal with a series of flight delays, missed connections and an overnight stay in an airport hotel, but she finally made it back to Pittsburgh on Friday, June 13.
Woman loses diamond in baggage carousel
However, that was just the start of some bad luck. While standing at carousel B, Schmitt reached for her suitcase, but her hand got stuck.
“As I went to retrieve my bag from the carousel, my hand got stuck between the suitcase and the edge of the carousel. It pinched my hand, so I pulled my hand back really quickly,” she said.
In a state of shock, she walked away with her suitcase, but about 30 minutes later, when she was almost home, her ring finger felt different.
“I looked down and my ring was without a diamond,” she said.
There were four empty prongs where the center diamond of her engagement ring should be.
“It was devastating. I mean, I literally felt sick to my stomach as soon as I realized,” she said.
She drove back to the airport and began looking.
“I came in and I immediately started looking all around here, on the floor,” Schmitt said.
Airport workers join the search
Shortly after, four airport authority employees from the maintenance department joined in the search.
Stationary engineer Tom Riordan said the baggage carousel is “a labyrinth of steel.”
They all spent 90 minutes searching and crawling everywhere, even on the baggage carousel. They even pulled up some panels to look inside.
“Yeah, typical day,” said electrician Steve Turkaly with a laugh.
Despite their best efforts, Schmitt left for home again, still heartbroken.
Multiple flights arrived that day, and there were lots of suitcases for those passengers, but the airport employees didn’t give up. Four hours later, Schmitt got the call, telling her they found the one-and-a-quarter carat diamond.
“Two paint sticks taped together, scraping dirt from underneath the carousel, that’s how they actually found it,” Riordan said.
“Literally, my jaw dropped. I was ecstatic. I just couldn’t get to the airport quickly enough,” said Schmitt.
“It really felt good, I mean to see the expression on her face n’at, it made it all worth it,” Turkaly said.
“It restored my faith in humanity.”
It’s a diamond with 34 years of meaning to Schmitt. Her husband proposed to her with it on Friday, March 13, and they got married on Friday, Nov. 13, 1992. Now, after Friday, June 13, 2025, she’s counting the unluckiest day as her luckiest of all.
“It restored my faith in humanity, honestly,” she said.
“These men didn’t know me at all. They knew nothing about how long I’ve been married. They knew nothing about my husband or the stone or the sentimental value or the economic value, but that didn’t matter; they were just committed to doing the right thing,” she added.
If you also lose something at Pittsburgh International Airport, call customer service, which catalogs what’s lost and found, at 412-472-3525.
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