Breaking: Justice Center guard being held hostage
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 15:26:55 GMT
ST. LOUIS - Police have confirmed that prisoners have taken a 70-year-old guard hostage at the city Justice Center.Officers say there is no riot happening. It's unknown if anyone has been injured. The guard was unarmed. East St. Louis man gets shocking bill, calls FOX 2 to investigate Several police vehicles are on scene. Tucker is currently closed between Market and Clark, between the Justice Center and City Hall.FOX 2 will update this story with more information as it becomes available.Woman stabbed to death in West End neighborhood
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 15:26:55 GMT
ST. LOUIS - A woman was stabbed to death in the West End neighborhood of St. Louis.Officers made a quick arrest in the case. That attack happened Monday just before 3:00 p.m. on Goodfellow Boulevard at Delmar Boulevard. Missouri updates timetable for implementing new 235 area code She was taken to a nearby hospital, where she later died. The police did not reveal how the man they arrested was connected to the woman.Man shot in Gravois Park neighborhood overnight
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 15:26:55 GMT
ST. LOUIS - One man was injured overnight in a shooting in the Gravois Park neighborhood of south St. Louis.That shooting happened just before midnight on Iowa Avenue near Cherokee Street. Police said that the victim was shot several times but was alert when taken to the hospital. Missouri updates timetable for implementing new 235 area code No word on any arrests. FOX 2 will update this story with more information as it becomes available.“The Bitter Past” and two other mystery novels to read right now
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 15:26:55 GMT
“The Bitter Past,” by Bruce Borgos (Minotaur Books)“The Bitter Past,” by Bruce Borgos (Minotaur Books)As sheriff of a small Nevada town near Las Vegas, Porter Beck spends most of his time on trivial crimes — until a retired FBI agent is found tortured and murdered. Within hours, a gorgeous (of course) female FBI agent shows up and confides that the dead man had been gathering information on a KGB spy who stole secrets from a Nevada test site 60 years earlier. It seems the Russian, who was supposedly killed in a nuclear accident, may not be dead after all, and he’s living in Beck’s jurisdiction.So Beck has to find the aging Russian before the assassin does. He’s aided not only by the glamorous FBI woman but also his sister, a crack shot, and his father, the former sheriff, who is suffering from dementia. Beck’s suffering from his own ailment, an eye disease that makes it hard for him to see at night.“The Bitter Past” is the first in a series featuring ...From art galleries to yoga studios, Denver’s small businesses struggling to pay rent
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 15:26:55 GMT
Many small business around Denver are struggling to make rent each month in an economy that, despite producing low unemployment, faces uncertainty with still-high inflation and the prospect of interest rates rising even higher.Finding a way to pay the monthly bills is forcing small-business owners to consider all options: from cutting back staff and hours of operation, to changing a business’ focus and raising prices, to moving into a smaller space, and even to making the difficult decision of closing up shop.The historic Denver neighborhood of Bonnie Brae is an example of a retail area noticeably impacted by the strain of rising rents on small businesses.The Saucy Noodle, an iconic Italian joint established in 1964 at 727 S. University Blvd., shuttered its doors for good in August 2022. At the time, co-owner Erin Markham told The Denver Post that the family business was struggling to make rent under its new landlord, Otto Petty of Endurance Real Estate Partners, and was ̶...Airline close calls happen far more often than previously known
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 15:26:55 GMT
By Sydney Ember and Emily Steel, The New York TimesOn the afternoon of July 2, a Southwest Airlines pilot had to abort a landing at Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport. A Delta Air Lines 737 was preparing to take off on the same runway. The sudden maneuver avoided a possible collision by seconds.Nine days later, in San Francisco, an American Airlines jet was accelerating down the runway at more than 160 mph when it narrowly missed a Frontier Airlines plane whose nose had almost jutted into its path. Moments later, the same thing happened as a German airliner was taking off. In both cases, the planes came so close to hitting the Frontier aircraft that the Federal Aviation Administration, in internal records reviewed by The New York Times, described the encounters as “skin to skin.”And 2 1/2 weeks after that, an American flight to Dallas was traveling at more than 500 mph when a collision warning blared in the cockpit. An air traffic controller had mistakenly directed a ...Fall begins when pumpkin beers arrive in August | Opinion
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 15:26:55 GMT
Editor’s note: This is part of The Know’s series, Staff Favorites. Each week, we offer our opinions on the best that Colorado has to offer for dining, shopping, entertainment, outdoor activities and more. (We’ll also let you in on some hidden gems).Pumpkin beers first got popular a couple of decades ago, when some breweries, both big and small — like Coors-owned Blue Moon and Buffalo Bill’s Brewery in Hayward, Calif. — released them as a way to celebrate the fleeting flavors of the fall.One of the first (and most popular) pumpkin beers in Colorado was Venetucci Pumpkin Ale, which Bristol Brewing in Colorado Springs first made as a fundraiser in 2007 with real pumpkins from a local farm and released in October. People would line up around the block to get a few bottles back in the early and mid-2000s, and the beer is still highly sought after today.These days, there are dozens and dozens (and dozens) of Colorado pumpkin beers available at craft breweries and liquor ...Top reasons you should try gravel biking in Colorado
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 15:26:55 GMT
Colorado is a playground for cyclists, with paved roads and paths, bumpy mountain trails and dirt farm, ranch and forest routes to explore. According to the nonprofit Bicycle Colorado, 73% of Coloradans own at least one bike and a whopping 41% of residents call themselves recreational cyclists. That’s a lot of pedaling going on in the Centennial State.Different types of bikes are designed to handle specific terrain — skinny, smooth-tire road bikes for pavement and knobby, fat-tire mountain bikes for off-road. But what if you want the best of both worlds, or maybe just a little bit of the best of both? This is a job best suited for the “Goldilocks” of bikes, the gravel bike.When Carol Busch, the marketing and customer communications manager for ExperiencePlus! Bicycle Tours in Fort Collins, switched from hard-core mountain biker to gravel biker three years ago, she was looking to continue “riding dirt” but her body needed a break from the jarring physicality of mountain biking....Airbnb sues Boulder over taxation of guest “service fee”
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 15:26:55 GMT
Airbnb wants Boulder tax collectors to stay away from the service fee.The San Francisco-based short-term rental marketplace sued the city on Thursday, arguing that the fee — which Airbnb charges to both guests and hosts — should not have been taxed by the city in recent years.The lawsuit filed in Boulder District Court essentially asks a judge to overturn a Boulder Municipal Court ruling last month, which found that the money collected from the fee is taxable. The municipal court ordered Airbnb to pay $415,000 — with about $150,000 of that in interest and penalties — for unpaid taxes on fees collected in 2018 and 2019.A spokesperson for Boulder declined to comment.As part of a deal between Airbnb and the city reached in late 2016 — when the short-term rental industry was still nascent — Airbnb agreed to collect taxes on transactions made through its site and pass that money along to the city.Airbnb isn’t disputing that taxes are owed on the “nightly rental charge,”...Power outage forces critical condition patients from Los Angeles hospital
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 15:26:55 GMT
Hundreds of patients, including some in critical condition, had to be moved when the power went out in a tower at White Memorial Hospital in Boyle Heights neighborhood of Los Angeles Monday night.The outage was reported shortly after 11 p.m. at the hospital located in the 1700 block of East Cesar E. Chavez Avenue.The Specialty Care Center was affected by the power outage, according to an alert from the Los Angeles Fire Department. Around 200 non-critical patients were moved to another building that was not impacted by the outage.Officials say 17 critical condition patients required transportation by ambulance to other hospitals and more were being prepared for transport. “At the point of the power outage their main power and emergency power was completely off, completely out,” Los Angeles Fire Department Capt. Cody Weireter said. Weireter said the cause of the power outage was still under investigation. The incident seemed to be stabilizing as of 5 a.m. Tuesday but several ambu...Latest news
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