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Two South Florida men charged in Sunrise mail theft after CBS News Miami report leads to tip-offs
Two South Florida men charged in Sunrise mail theft after CBS News Miami report leads to tip-offs

CBS News

time10-06-2025

  • CBS News

Two South Florida men charged in Sunrise mail theft after CBS News Miami report leads to tip-offs

Two men from Hialeah have been federally charged with mail theft after surveillance video broadcast by CBS News Miami led to their identification and arrest, the Department of Justice announced Monday. Wilfredo Rivero, 31, and Fernando Bernabe Rodriguez, 28, were captured on surveillance video breaking into mailboxes at the Sunrise Lakes III apartment complex on Sunrise Lakes Boulevard, authorities said. According to federal prosecutors, Rivero was first seen on April 26 using a screwdriver-like tool to pry open a cluster of mailboxes and steal their contents. Clear images from the video reportedly showed him looking directly into the camera. Rivero returned to the same complex around 10:30 p.m. on April 28, this time with Rodriguez. Both men were seen again opening mailboxes and removing mail. CBS News Miami video helped identify Sunrise mail theft suspects The U.S. Postal Inspection Service (USPIS) received several tips after CBS News Miami aired the footage on May 9 as part of an exclusive report. Officials credit the public's response to the broadcast with helping to solve the case. Rodriguez appeared in federal court Monday. Both men are charged with mail theft, a federal offense. U.S. Attorney Hayden P. O'Byrne of the Southern District of Florida and Acting Inspector in Charge Bladismir Rojo of USPIS announced the charges. USPIS led the investigation, with support from the Sunrise and Hialeah police departments. Assistant U.S. Attorney Christopher Killoran is prosecuting the case. The Justice Department said a reward of up to $100,000 had been offered in the case, though it remains unclear if anyone will collect it. Officials also said it's not yet known if the suspects have committed similar crimes elsewhere.

Meet the men who cleaned 240,000 pounds of trash off Oregon's highways
Meet the men who cleaned 240,000 pounds of trash off Oregon's highways

Yahoo

time28-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Meet the men who cleaned 240,000 pounds of trash off Oregon's highways

Interstate Business Solutions is an Indiana-based company that contracts with transportation departments across the U.S., including Oregon's, to provide highway cleanup services. About 50% of its staff consists of formerly incarcerated individuals, alongside others with resume gaps. (Courtesy of Interstate Business Solutions) May 31 marks one year since Fernando Rodriguez was released from prison. Now 25, he spent seven years in an Idaho prison for a drug possession conviction from when he was a teenager. After his release, he moved to Oregon and secured a full-time job cleaning litter from Oregon's highways — a job that gives him financial stability and helps provide for his family. However, it's unclear whether he'll still have this job after June 2025. With no long-term funding plan yet approved by the Oregon Legislature, the Oregon Department of Transportation is facing significant budget shortfalls driven by declining tax revenue, inflation and spending restrictions. The department estimates it needs $1.8 billion more each year to pay for road maintenance and repairs. Without new ways of adding revenue, the department could scale back essential services like road maintenance, snow removal, customer support and highway and graffiti cleanup. Rodriguez works at Interstate Business Solutions, an Indiana-based company that primarily hires formerly incarcerated individuals, veterans and people facing homelessness for jobs cleaning highway litter. The company has contracts with state departments in several states — including Indiana, Ohio, Missouri and Kansas — and began contracting with the Oregon Department of Transportation in April 2024. Since then, workers like Rodriguez have cleaned nearly 240,000 pounds of litter off sections of Interstates 5, 84 and 205 and U.S Highway 26. Most of the litter comes from homeless encampments on the highway, Rodriguez said. 'For years, those encampments have been neglected and trash has developed from people living on the side of the highway. The daily garbage you'd find in the garbage can in your house is all over the highways in piles,' Rodriguez told the Capital Chronicle, adding that his supervisor has to pick up used needles they regularly find. Interstate Business Solutions has received $4 million from the Oregon Department of Transportation to clean state highways. Using a contractor to clean litter off the highways allows the Oregon Department of Transportation to increase litter service removal without adding more tasks for maintenance employees, department spokesperson Katherine Benenati told the Capital Chronicle. The Oregon Department of Transportation spends about $250,000 each month in all of Clackamas, Multnomah and Hood River Counties and eastern Washington County, Benenati said. Highway litter causes environmental degradation and motor vehicle accidents and negatively impacts tourism and a business' decision to move to a city, Interstate Business Solutions spokesperson Morgan Johnston told the Capital Chronicle. However, the company sees its work as more than just cleaning up highways. 'Our mission is to not only keep Oregon clean and beautiful but to change the lives of our employees for the better,' Johnston said. Formerly incarcerated individuals make up 50% of the company's workforce. Without the company's services, the Portland metro area would see a significant increase in litter on the more than 500 miles its staff regularly cleans, Johnston said. The job helps employee Eric Gamble provide for his daughter and granddaughter. Gamble was released from an Oregon prison in 2020 for a gun offense, and he worked at gas stations before joining the cleanup crew. Dante Patton, another crew member, has achieved sobriety, steady income and job security since joining the highway cleanup crew. 'People used to love to come to Oregon, and they would say how beautiful it was,' Interstate Business Solutions Field Supervisor Dale Schultz told the Capital Chronicle. 'You don't get that much anymore because of the way the highway was looking, but now people are starting to look again and say 'Wow, they're cleaning it up.'' SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

41 suspected drunk drivers arrested in Harris County Pct. 4 over Memorial Day weekend
41 suspected drunk drivers arrested in Harris County Pct. 4 over Memorial Day weekend

Yahoo

time28-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

41 suspected drunk drivers arrested in Harris County Pct. 4 over Memorial Day weekend

The Brief 41 people were arrested and charged with DWI in Harris County Pct. 4, according to county officials. Deputies say tests were administered on each person, and law enforcement discovered they were all intoxicated, according to Harris County Pct. 4. Nine of the 41 had at least one prior conviction for DWI. HOUSTON - Over Memorial Day weekend, Harris County deputies conducted an impaired driver initiative to proactively reduce the number of DWI-related offenses and fatal crashes within the Precinct 4 boundaries. Big picture view Over the long weekend, 41 people were arrested on charges of DWI. Deputies say the suspects were each stopped for traffic violations and each displayed several signs of intoxication. Deputies say tests were administered on each person, and law enforcement discovered they were all intoxicated, according to Harris County Pct. 4. Five of the 41 people arrested have been charged with DWI Third Offense: Paula Bruner, Armando Dehuma, Fernando Rodriguez, Daniel Tam and Rayumond Mazon. Charles Zayadeth, Cory Jackson, Adam Frank and Nashon Ondiek were charged with DWI 2nd offense. Kayla Wilson and Joshua Rivas were also charged with unlawful carry of a weapon. Ryan Hon was also charged with possession of a controlled substance. What they're saying "All suspects were arrested and booked into the Harris County Jail and charged with driving while intoxicated. Drinking and driving is not tolerated in Precinct 4. If you choose to drive drunk, you choose to go to jail," said Constable Mark Herman in a news release., The Source Information in this article is from the Harris County Constable Precinct 4 office.

A Conservative Judge Blocks Trump
A Conservative Judge Blocks Trump

Wall Street Journal

time06-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Wall Street Journal

A Conservative Judge Blocks Trump

An introduction is in order. After graduating from the University of Texas Law School, Fernando Rodriguez Jr. clerked for Texas Supreme Court Justice Nathan L. Hecht , who has been described as 'the godfather of the conservative judicial movement in Texas.' Mr. Rodriguez then practiced law for more than a decade with Baker Botts, a conservative-leaning Texas firm whose partners and employees have included Justice Amy Coney Barrett , Sen. Ted Cruz , and the staunchly antiabortion Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk of the Northern District of Texas. Mr. Rodriguez then joined the International Justice Mission, a faith-based nonprofit whose employees are required to be practicing Christians. He was a field office director, first in Bolivia and then in the Dominican Republic, helping these countries' local and national governments investigate and prosecute perpetrators of child sexual assault and human trafficking.

Donald Trump's use of Alien Enemies Act to deport gang suspects is illegal, judge rules
Donald Trump's use of Alien Enemies Act to deport gang suspects is illegal, judge rules

Irish Independent

time02-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Irish Independent

Donald Trump's use of Alien Enemies Act to deport gang suspects is illegal, judge rules

US president had sought to remove Venezuelans under 18th-century law ©UK Independent Today at 21:30 The Trump administration's use of the Alien Enemies Act to summarily deport Venezuelan immigrants accused of being gang members 'exceeds' the scope of the law and runs 'contrary to the plain, ordinary meaning' of the wartime statute. Texas District Judge Fernando Rodriguez, who was appointed by Mr Trump himself, ruled yesterday that the administration cannot rely on the 18th-century law to detain and deport alleged Tren de Aragua members, which is 'unlawful'. Register for free to read this story Register and create a profile to get access to our free stories. You'll also unlock more free stories each week.

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