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EXCLUSIVE New Jersey town that's ground zero for terrifying wave of child deaths is a warning for every parent: 'Where's the baby?'

EXCLUSIVE New Jersey town that's ground zero for terrifying wave of child deaths is a warning for every parent: 'Where's the baby?'

Daily Mail​24-06-2025
Moshe Ehrlich was engrossed in Torah studies at his college one afternoon when he was told his wife was calling on the school's emergency line.
Frantic, she wanted to know why he hadn't dropped off the youngest of their six kids at the babysitter's that morning.
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Too much moose meat was factor in plane crash that killed Alaska lawmaker's husband
Too much moose meat was factor in plane crash that killed Alaska lawmaker's husband

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Too much moose meat was factor in plane crash that killed Alaska lawmaker's husband

Antlers strapped to a wing and too much moose meat on board caused a small plane crash that killed the husband of then Alaska Democratic congresswoman Mary Peltola in 2023, according to a US national transportation safety board (NTSB) report that was recently released. Though the report doesn't name him, Eugene 'Buzzy' Peltola Jr was the pilot and lone person on the Piper PA-18 plane involved in the deadly wreck, which occurred near St Mary's, Alaska, on 12 September 2023, officials had previously said. Peltola Jr, 57, had taken some hunters to a remote wilderness area where they killed a moose, said the NTSB report published Tuesday. When the crash that ended his life happened, the report said, he was flying alone while carrying enough moose meat to push the plane past 'its maximum certified gross weight' by nearly 120lbs. The doomed pilot had also installed 'an unapproved external load' – in his case, antlers tied to the right wing strut – at the time the plane went down. Peltola Jr ultimately ended 'degraded takeoff performance and flight characteristics', leading to his losing control of the plane, shortly before the fatal wreck, NTSB investigators said. As the NTSB recounted, it was his second trip flying moose meat that day. Peltola and the hunters had loaded an initial batch of meat on the plane that afternoon, and he had uneventfully ferried it to a local airport. He flew back to the hunters about four hours for what was supposed to be a second and final load of moose meat. The group strapped into the rear passenger seat as well as packed it into the airplane's belly pod, 'which did not have tie-down provision', the 16-page NTSB report noted. Peltola Jr then tied moose antlers to the right wing strut, the report said, leaving them 'cupped upward and perpendicular to the direction of flight'. The report said the pilot had weighed the cargo with scales, and it turned out the plane was 117lbs – roughly 6% – over its maximum takeoff weight. Investigators wrote that the hunters watched Peltola Jr as he evidently struggled to take off and were relieved at first to see his plane become airborne, watching it vanish from view behind a ridge. But the plane did not reappear from behind the ridge and 'had crashed just beyond their view in the opposite direction of takeoff,' the NTSB report recounted. Two hunters provided first aid to Peltola Jr, who the NTSB said initially survived the crash. However, he died from his injuries within hours, according to the agency. Peltola Jr was the former Alaska regional director for the Bureau of Indian Affairs. He had also spent more than three decades working for the US Fish and Wildlife Service, and he served as vice-mayor and council member for the city of Bethel, Alaska. Shortly after her husband's death, Mary Peltola's chief of staff at the time, Anton McParland, said in a media statement that Eugene was 'completely devoted' to his family. 'And he simply adored Mary,' McParland's statement said. Peltola became the first Alaska Native in Congress when she won her US House seat in a special election and then retained it in the 2022 midterm elections, twice beating the former governor and Republican vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin. She lost her November 2024 re-election bid to Republican opponent Nick Begich III and is now the senior director of Alaska affairs at the Holland & Hart law firm.

Unsafe play equipment removed from Castletown park
Unsafe play equipment removed from Castletown park

BBC News

time21 hours ago

  • BBC News

Unsafe play equipment removed from Castletown park

Play equipment deemed "unsafe and unacceptable" by a local authority in the south of the Isle of Man has been removed from a Commissioners have taken down the damaged swings from the children's play area in Poulsom Park in the a statement the board, which was elected in April, said it had inherited a "frustrating situation" where some of the equipment had been allowed to deteriorate in recent chairman Tony Brown said he understood the disappointment that would be felt by many children and their families but "their safety was paramount". The authority said new swings have been ordered so children could "continue to safely enjoy playing" in the space in of the board said they believed rusting and other issues were due to "wear and tear" and said it should have been dealt with previously. The commissioners also separately confirmed another children's play area at the Bowling Green in the town would not be reopening over the summer.A £50,000 revamp of the site had not progressed as planned, the authority said: "We can't have equipment that they may injure themselves on because it is deficient.""We're not dismantling children's play areas, we see the provision of play equipment for children as being very important, because it's needed for learning skills and having fun," he board were taking actions to resolve the issues in both parks "as soon as possible", he added. Read more stories from the Isle of Man on the BBC, watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer and follow BBC Isle of Man on Facebook and X.

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