Virginia
Benny’s Pizza is joining Virginia Tech for game days
BLACKSBURG. Va. – Virginia Tech football returns this weekend for a sold-out season opener and Lane Stadium is adding an exciting new item to their concessions this fall — Benny Marzano’s Pizza.
“The first thing that [Virginia] Tech said to us was, ‘This makes sense, this partnership makes sense,’” said Kristen Bowen, head of business and franchise development for Benny’s Pizza.
If you are planning on going to a Virginia Tech football game this season, keep an eye out for the massive slices of pizza!
“All hands are on deck this week nothing matters but getting lane ready,” said Bowen.
The restaurant just secured a deal to serve up the iconic Virginia slice on game days.
Bowen said it’s a big moment as Benny’s Blacksburg roots are coming full circle.
“This weekend happens to be Marzano’s birthday,” said Bowen. “We opened in 2011 on the exact same day that it will be on Saturday, and it wasn’t planned that way it just happened, so it’s even better.”
The entire crew is excited to serve slices of cheese and pepperoni to as many Hokie fans as possible.
“To see all this build-out take place in four weeks, every time we see this it gets more and more exciting,” said Bowen.
With 30 stores across six states, university leaders said it was an obvious pick.
“Virginia Tech football is about community,” said Virginia Tech spokesperson, Mark Owczarski. “It brings students, faculty, staff, alumni, and the whole greater community together. Benny’s is a local restaurateur who is valued in our community.”
Both the school and the restaurant are preparing for large crowds ahead of the return home on Saturday.
“We’re ready to see 65,000 Hokie fans,” said Bowen. “We’re ready to see Benny’s slices jumping during Enter Sandman.”
If you do come out to the game, you can find the massive slices at the east entrance gate by the iconic turkey legs.
Copyright 2023 by WSLS 10 – All rights reserved.
Virginia
Biden pardons Virginia House Speaker Don Scott for 1994 drug offense
President Joe Biden issued a pardon Sunday of Virginia House Speaker Don Scott for a 1994 non-violent drug offense for which he served almost eight years in prison.
“America is a country built on the promise of second chances,” Biden said in a statement, as he issued multiple pardons and sentence commutations.
Scott, a trial lawyer and Navy veteran, was elected to the Virginia legislature in 2019. In January 2024, he became the first Black speaker.
“I am deeply humbled to share that I have received a Presidential Pardon from President Joe Biden for a mistake I made in 1994 — one that changed the course of my life and taught me the true power of redemption,” Scott said in a statement.
He continued: “This moment is not just about me. It’s about demonstrating that our nation can embrace the potential for change, for justice, and for redemption. It’s about what happens when we refuse to give up on each other.”
Biden has set the presidential record for most individual pardons and commutations issued. He announced Friday he was commuting the sentences of almost 2,500 people convicted of nonviolent drug offenses. He also gave a broad pardon for his son Hunter, who was prosecuted for gun and tax crimes.
A pardon relieves a person of guilt and punishment. A commutation reduces or eliminates the punishment but doesn’t exonerate the wrongdoing.
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Biden framed the commutations and pardons as in keeping with the “sacred covenant of our nation.”
Speaking to the Royal Missionary Baptist Church in South Carolina, he said when people “we love fall and make mistakes,” Americans pick them back up.
“We don’t turn on each other. We lean into each other. That’s the sacred covenant of our nation,” he said. “We pledge an allegiance, not just to an idea, but to each other.”
Virginia
January 18, 2025 – Virginia Attorney General Miyares Condemns President Biden’s Last Minute Clemency for Cop Killer and Accomplice
Commonwealth of Virginia
Office of the Attorney General
Jason S. Miyares
Attorney General
202 North 9th Street
Richmond, Virginia 23219
804-786-2071
FAX 804-786-1991
Virginia Relay Service
800-828-1120
For media inquiries only, contact:
Shaun Kenney
Virginia Attorney General Miyares Condemns President Biden’s Last Minute Clemency for Cop Killer and Accomplice
RICHMOND, VA – Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares today issued the following statement after President Joe Biden announced clemency for Ferrone Claiborne and Terence Richardson – the “Waverly Two” whose criminal acts caused the death of Officer Allen Gibson in 1998.
“I am absolutely outraged by what has happened. My heart is shattered knowing that the men that killed my father are going to be released from prison and can walk the streets freely,” stated Officer Gibson’s daughter, Crissana Gibson. “This is a huge miscarriage of justice, and I am completely disgusted by the outgoing administration. The Virginia Attorney General’s office has worked tirelessly to keep these murderers behind bars, and I am forever grateful for their dedication and hard work. I am so disappointed that the disgraceful Biden administration has failed my family, my father, and the entire law enforcement community. Neither my family nor I have ever supported the release of Richardson or Claiborne, and we denounce this decision by the outgoing failed presidency of Joe Biden and the Democratic Party’s abuse of the justice system.”
“If the Democrats intend to build their vision of social justice on a pile of dead law enforcement officers, they could send no stronger message than the one they sent today,” said Attorney General Jason Miyares. “The decision not to pardon but merely commute the sentence of Terence Richardson only supports our position that he is in fact guilty of manslaughter. This office will continue to exhaust itself in seeking justice for the family of Officer Allen Gibson and ensuring that those involved are held to account.”
On April 25, 1998, 25-year-old Officer Allen Gibson woke up and went to work as a Waverly police officer. He put on his bulletproof vest and said goodbye to his eight-year-old daughter Crissana. Officer Gibson found Terence Richardson and Ferrone Claiborne engaged in a drug deal behind an apartment building. The men attacked Officer Gibson, and Richardson disarmed Officer Gibson and fatally shot him in the stomach right below his bulletproof vest.
Terence Richardson pleaded guilty in Virginia court to involuntary manslaughter, and Ferrone Claiborne pleaded guilty to being an accessory after the fact. A federal appeals court held in 2002 that Richardson “intentionally shot Gibson,” and that the facts “amply support the finding” that Richardson and Claiborne “murdered Gibson.”
Not only did President Obama deny clemency to Ferrone Claiborne and Terence Richardson, but the Biden White House was recently advised by the U.S. Attorney General not to commute the sentences of certain violent offenders.
“Yesterday, Joe Biden woke up and decided that these two violent criminals deserve clemency,” said Miyares. “Joe Biden should be ashamed, but we know that he probably doesn’t even know what he signed. Biden and his staff deserve scorn, shame, and derision for this despicable act. Shame on you, Joe Biden and your enabling staff.
“May the memory of Officer Allen Gibson and his family haunt each of you forever.”
# # #
Virginia
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