Northeast
Woman faces charges in New Jersey for attacking 10-year-old boy in motel pool, biting cop
A woman was charged in New Jersey after she allegedly acted “out of control” at a motel pool, including attacking a 10-year-old boy and his father and biting a police officer, according to police.
Police responded Monday afternoon to a fight reported at a motel in the 6200 block of Ocean Avenue in Wildwood Crest, police stated in a press release.
When officers arrived, witnesses said a highly intoxicated woman, later identified as 43-year-old Fallan Turner, was acting “out of control” in the pool, according to police.
NEW JERSEY COUPLE JUST SITTING IN THEIR BACKYARD WHEN MASSIVE OBJECT FALLS FROM SKY ‘OUT OF NOWHERE’
A New Jersey woman was charged after she was acting “out of control” at a motel pool. (Getty Images)
Officers found that Turner grabbed a 10-year-old boy, then swung him around in the pool and shoved him underwater. When the child’s father attempted to stop her, the woman jumped on his back and grabbed him inappropriately.
Police say that as officers were speaking with Turner, she became belligerent, leading to her arrest. When officers were attempting to put her in handcuffs, she resisted arrest by pushing the arresting officer in the face.
After arriving at Wildwood Crest Police headquarters for processing, the woman continued to be “highly uncooperative and combative” and bit an officer’s hand, police said.
TWO POLICE OFFICERS, INCLUDING NYPD, SHOT, SUSPECT KILLED WHILE EXCHANGING GUNFIRE AT NEW JERSEY HOTEL
After arriving at police headquarters for processing, the woman continued to be “highly uncooperative and combative” and bit an officer’s hand. (Larry W. Smith/Getty Images)
Neither officer that the woman attacked sustained significant injuries, police said.
Turner’s charges include endangering the welfare of children, aggravated assault on law enforcement, resisting arrest with force, criminal sexual contact, failure to allow fingerprinting, harassment and disorderly conduct.
She was booked into Cape May County Correctional Facility.
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New York
How Tony Danza Spends a Day Playing a Villain and Frank Sinatra
Tony Danza is making up for lost time.
“One of the things I most regret about my life is that I didn’t take advantage of my youth,” said Mr. Danza, 75. “I had a great time, but nobody handed me an instrument and said, ‘Try this.’”
Now he is learning how to speak Spanish, play the piano and a cornet.
Mr. Danza, best known for his leading roles in the television series “Who’s the Boss?” and “Taxi,” has been entertainment’s jack-of-all-trades for decades. Yet he’s still striving to be the best singer, dancer and actor he can be.
“What I am is a guy with finite time who wants to get in as much as he can while he can,” he said.
Mr. Danza spent a Friday with The New York Times as he got ready for two performances, including a one-man show at Café Carlyle.
Boston, MA
Red Sox win series opener, ending rough stretch against Yankees – The Boston Globe
There isn’t a whole lot of heat in this version of the rivalry, but this one felt — and mostly looked — good. The Sox started with a former Yankee, Gray, who matched his season-high with 6⅓ innings, and closed with a former Yankee, Aroldis Chapman, who worked around a pair of walks in the ninth inning to record the save.
Willson Contreras and Andruw Monasterio hit home runs off lefthander Ryan Weathers (six innings, five runs). Contreras added another hit and RBI, and Monasterio snared Anthony Volpe’s line drive up the middle for a rally-killing unassisted double play in the fourth.
“Just a great game all around,” said interim manager Chad Tracy, who visited the current Yankee Stadium for the first time in any capacity.
Gray said: “There was definitely some juice.”
Chapman limped around the mound a bit in pursuit of the save because he has been dealing with a minor hamstring issue for about a week, Tracy said. But he has managed it and was able to pitch in the series opener, albeit wildly.
“We’re keeping an eye on it, but he’s grinding,” Tracy said. “He did a nice job. He obviously didn’t have his command the first couple of hitters, but then, like he always does, bears down and got it done.”
In his return to Yankee Stadium, a personal house of horrors through the years, including his 2017-18 stint with the Yankees, Gray limited the damage to three runs and eight hits. Ben Rice and Trent Grisham tagged him for home runs, but Gray was relieved that they were solo shots — acceptable on a night when he had “not even close” to his sharpest repertoire, he said.
He lowered his ERA in the Bronx to 5.95.
Gray’s outing featured virtually no pushback from the announced crowd of 43,750 (not a sellout).
In December, upon joining the Red Sox via trade with the Cardinals, Gray said that he “never wanted to go [to the Yankees] in the first place” and that it “feels good to me to go to a place now where, you know what, it’s easy to hate the Yankees.” His comments triggered an outrage cycle in New York.
Six months later, New York fans seemed indifferent about it. Gray garnered only a smattering of boos during pregame introductions, when the stands were not even half-full, and no discernable crowd reaction during the game.
Gray wondered if heightened emotion on his side led to his not being in top form.
“I’ll learn from it and be able to control my emotions and my energy and be able to just make pitches,” he said. “Felt really good, but I felt like my stuff just stayed up … It was fun. I’ve been back here and pitched, but first time with the Red Sox. But I’m glad we came away with a win.”
The Sox (27-35) took the lead for good in the third, when Contreras’s two-out check swing resulted in a soft bouncer to the third-base side of the mound. He beat it out for a single.
In the fifth, after the Yankees (37-26) had cut the deficit back to one, Contreras opened it up again with a two-run shot into the second deck in left field.
Lefthander Danny Coulombe relieved Gray in the seventh and got the final two outs of the inning. The last one was harder, though, because Contreras and Monasterio collided and dropped a foul pop from Rice. Monasterio said neither called for it.
Coulombe struck Rice out swinging on the eighth pitch of the at-bat.
“Next time, I’m going to call it,” Monasterio said. “I promise.”
Tim Healey can be reached at timothy.healey@globe.com. Follow him @timbhealey.
Pittsburg, PA
Pittsburg State Track and Field’s Blakelee Winn named National Women’s Field Athlete of the Year
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