Bgcv An Icelandic volcano is erupting for the 4th time since December
A 25-year-old man is facing years in federal prison for threatening to shoot up Portsmouth High School in Maine.Kyle Hendrickson was arrested on April 13, one day after authorities say he was outside the school with a handgun. He reportedly posted a video to Snapchat with overlay text that said, imma shoot up the school. Hendrickson was indicted on two charges, possessing a firearm in a school zone and interstate threatening communications, in September. He pleaded guilty to both charges on Monday.SEE MORE: Maine mass shooter was alive for most of search, autopsy suggestsProsecutors said they had surveillance footage that showed Hendrickson s vehicle outside of the high school at the time the Snapchat video was recorded. They also noted that law enforcement recovered an AR-15 rife, a shotgun, body amour and numerous rounds of ammunition after they searched Hendrickson s ve
stanley cup hicle.The handgun that Hendrickson featured in his Snapchat video was reportedly recovered near a motel where he had been staying.The DOJ says each charge can include a sentence of up to five years in prison, up to three years of supervised release, and a fine of up to $250,000. In total, that means Hendrick
stanley cup son could face up to a decade behind bars, six years of supervised probation and a fine of $500,000.He is scheduled to be sentenced on March 15, 2024.Trending stories at ScrippsnewsStudent searches for woman
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A new study suggests partisan political rhetoric can influence compliance with emergency orders in natural disaster situations.The study, done by researchers at UCLA, found a level of hurricane skepticism among those who voted for President Donald Trump during evacuation warnings for Hurricane Irma in Florida during September 2017. Irma reached a Category 5 status, with sustained winds of 180 mph.Researchers point to a moment when conservative commentator Rush Limbaugh made comments just weeks after Hurricane Harvey hit, and about 12 days before Irma, that hurricane warnings and safety precautions were being blown out of proportion. [T]here is a desire to advance this climate change agenda, and hurricanes are one of the fastest and best ways to do it, Limbaugh is quoted in the study, These storms, once they actually hit, are never as strong as theyre reported. The research waspublished this month in Science Advances. It compares evacuation reactions during Hurricane Matthew in 2016, Harvey in August 2017 and Irma in September 2017. They used cell phone data for the geography and movement of people, an
stanley becher d precinct voting information to estimate neighborhood political preference. Likely Trump-voting Florida residents were 10 to 11 percentage points less likely to evacuate Hurricane Irma than Clinton voters 34% versus 45% , a gap not present in prior hurricanes, the s
stanley hrnek tudys authors wrote.Following Limbaughs comme
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