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WBAL – Baltimore Videos
Former youth pastor charged in sexual assault from 30 years ago, police say
A man is in Baltimore County Police custody tonight after a woman told investigators her former youth pastor sexually assaulted her when she was a child. Police aren’t saying if the suspect, 56-year-old Don Martin, was still working at a church or as a youth pastor at the time of his arrest on Monday.
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Axios
153 Houston Methodist staff who refused to get COVID vaccine have been fired or resigned
153 health care workers who refused to comply with a COVID-19 vaccine mandate have resigned or been fired, the Houston Methodist Hospital confirmed Tuesday.Why it matters: The Texas hospital was one of the first in the U.S. to announce such requirement, and it suspended 178 employees without pay for 14 days for failing to comply with the rule. Get market news worthy of your time with Axios Markets. Subscribe for free.A federal judge on June 13 dismissed a lawsuit brought by 117 staff challenging
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Autoblog
No interest in Prime Day? Check out these great deals from anyone but Amazon
Unfortunately, though, regardless of your feelings toward Amazon, Prime Day still offers some undeniably great savings. If you’re feeling some FOMO because of the Prime Day sales, though, here are some items you can pick up at similarly great discounts, and not a single one is from Amazon. If you’re in the market for some new tires, Tire Rack has some great deals going on not only through Prime Day, but even for a bit afterward.
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BGR
These 12 new iOS 15 features will make your iPhone so much better
Apple earlier this month officially unveiled iOS 15, the next-gen iteration of its mobile operating system for the iPhone. And if you happened to miss the keynote, or even if you simply got overwhelmed by a whirlwind event that saw Apple engineers run through a seemingly endless number of new features for two hours straight, …
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Reuters
Federal court closes Dakota Access case, but allows for fresh challenges
A U.S. district court closed a long-running case against the Dakota Access oil pipeline on Tuesday, but allowed for Native American tribes and other opponents of the line to file additional actions against it, court documents showed. The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia in May denied a request by the Standing Rock Sioux and other adversaries of the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) to shut the pipeline, saying the tribes had failed to prove the line’s continued operation would cause irreversible harm. The decision allowed the 570,000 barrel-per-day (bpd) pipeline out of North Dakota’s Bakken shale basin to continue operating at least until an environmental review of the line is completed, a process that is expected to take until March 2022.
Former Houston megachurch pastor Kirbyjon Caldwell reports to prison
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