Virginia
Wesley Harris Joins Best Virginia’s 2024 Roster
Best Virginia, West Virginia University alumni basketball team, announced on Wednesday that former Mountaineer Wesley Harris will join their roster for the 2024 TBT.
šØ NEW SIGNING šØ
Wesley Harris joins Best Virginia for @thetournament July 19-23 in Pittsburgh! Tix: https://t.co/vFXQtI5rLi.
“Wesley has been known for his defense, but has developed into an all around player,” @chaseharler4 said. “His toughness and offensive ability will be⦠pic.twitter.com/APJrs6s0iC
ā Final Fourcast Podcast + Best Virginiaā¢ļø (@finalfourcast) June 19, 2024
Harris transferred from Lawson State CC to West Virginia in 2017. He spent two years in Morgantown appearing in 59 games (54 starts) and averaged 6.3 points, 3.9 rebounds, and 0.6 steals per game while shooting 37% from the field and 32% from three-point range. The combination of his size and length allowed him to guard 1-4, providing tough matchups for opposing teams.
In February of 2019, Harris was dismissed from the team along with Esa Ahmad for violating athletics department policies. He finished up his collegiate career at Tennessee State where he 11.6 points and 6.2 boards per game. Since turning pro, Harris has played for Etha Engomi Nicosia (Cyprus), CS Valcea 1924 (Romania), and SpiŔskà Rytieri (Slovakia).
Harris becomes the fourth player to be publicly announced joining Taz Sherman, Esa Ahmad, and Jon Holton.
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Virginia
Hitachi Energy contacts Virginia DEQ after dealing with small oil spill
SOUTH BOSTON, Va. (WSET) ā A manufacturing company in South Boston is now in contact with the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality after an oil spill this week.
A Hitachi Energy spokesperson says that because of heavy rainfall and a pump failure, a small amount of transformer mineral oil spilled.
The manufacturing company makes power transformers. The spokesperson told ABC 13 that an employee noticed oil in a secondary containment area.
SEE ALSO: Virginia measles cases climb as outbreak hits Buckingham County, officials say
The company says the material was tested and found to be non-toxic. They say the oil stayed on company property with no harm to the community or environment.
ABC 13 reached out to the Department of Environmental Quality, and we are waiting to hear back.
Virginia
Kratom product sales to be regulated in Virginia
Virginia
Spotsylvania’s top prosecutor tells why he won’t enforce tighter gun laws
New Virginia laws banning the sale and transfer of assault weapons go into effect in about five weeks. But at least five conservative prosecutors say they wonāt enforce them.
Spotsylvania County Commonwealthās Attorney Ryan Mehaffey said he believes the laws violate the Constitution.
āThe Second Amendment is alive and well in Spotsylvania County,ā he told News4.
The commonwealth will ban the sale and manufacture of certain semi-automatic weapons, shifting gun laws to more closely align with states such as California and Illinois. But as Virginia teeters from purple to blue and back again, some elected officials are making clear that the new laws won’t be enforced in their counties.
Attorney General Jay Jones said in a statement: āCommonwealthās Attorneys are elected to enforce our laws, which is what we expect them to do when these laws take effect on July 1.ā
The law will make it a misdemeanor, punishable by up to a year in jail and a $2,500 fine for people to buy, sell, transfer, import, or manufacture an assault firearm.
Mehaffey said the law is in direct conflict with the Second Amendment.
āItās fundamentally opposed to a free society, a society where liberty reigns. And this is the moment in time where the Second Amendment was drafted and enacted, where the government couldn’t take the right of the people to defend themselves away,ā he said.
Eleven other states and D.C. already have versions of their own assault weapons ban. The details and laws vary and they’ve been challenged in the courts. In fact, several lawsuits have already been filed against Virginia’s new ban.
āEvery assault weapons ban that has gone before a federal court in this country has been upheld, including, most importantly, Maryland’s,ā said Mary Kenah of Everytown for Gun Safety.
She said Maryland’s ban is considered more restrictive than Virginia’s and was upheld by the same court that presides over Virginia. The U.S. Supreme Court declined to take up this case, so Maryland’s assault weapon ban remains in place.
āThe people of Virginia showed that their priority is gun-violence prevention. They elected a former Moms Demand Action volunteer as their governor,ā Kenah said.
In places such a Spotsylvania County, they’ve elected Mehaffey as their prosecutor. Itās a county that surprised a lot of people in November when it voted blue, in favor of Gov. Abigail Spanberger.
Despite that shift, Mehaffey said he’s confident that his position against the new assault weapons ban is what his constituents want.
Other prosecutors who have said they wonāt enforce Virginiaās assault weapons ban are from Powhatan, Pulaski, Scott and Smyth counties.
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