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Guelph man facing indecent act charge
Guelph man facing indecent act charge

CTV News

time07-07-2025

  • CTV News

Guelph man facing indecent act charge

A Guelph man was charged following an incident at a group home. Guelph Police were called to a group home in the north-end on Friday afternoon. A woman who lived there told police she was sitting outside when another resident sat closely next to her and began to allegedly masturbate white staring at her. After finding the 43-year-old man inside the home with his pants down, officers arrested him. He was charged with committing an indecent act.

Amherstburg councillor calling for more signage reminding of golf cart ban in Lakewood Beach area
Amherstburg councillor calling for more signage reminding of golf cart ban in Lakewood Beach area

CTV News

time15-06-2025

  • CTV News

Amherstburg councillor calling for more signage reminding of golf cart ban in Lakewood Beach area

Amherstburg councillor Diane Pouget has called for an expedited report that will outline steps on the installation of signage in the Lakewood Beach area to remind residents that use of golf carts is prohibited. Pouget said she has received complaints from residents stating people have been cutting through private property on golf carts and doing unsafe activity, such as spinouts on the beach. 'In fact, pictures were sent to us, and they showed children as young as 12 driving these golf carts, along with young children that appear to be no more than five years old on the back of them,' Pouget said. Pouget said this initiative is all about safety. 'We don't have sidewalks in that area, and we have a group home, and these people want to walk, they get their exercise by walking, and some of these golf carts have gone quite close to the residents and we just want to keep people safe,' she said. She said the town already has the signs in their possession. 'We just need to understand what the costs of these signs will be to install, and we're just asking that it be done quite quickly because we fear for the safety of these young people,' Pouget said. Pouget said she hopes council receives the report back by June 24. - Written by Dustin Coffman and Rob Hindi/AM800 News.

Chilling video of girl, 14, who went missing from her group home... then was found dumped by the side of the road
Chilling video of girl, 14, who went missing from her group home... then was found dumped by the side of the road

Daily Mail​

time04-06-2025

  • General
  • Daily Mail​

Chilling video of girl, 14, who went missing from her group home... then was found dumped by the side of the road

Chilling police bodycam footage showed the moment an Arizona teen was found by the side of a road on one of the times she fled her group home before she was brutally murdered earlier this year. Emily Pike, 14, was seen in the newly-released video running away in September 2023, one of at least four instances she went AWOL as she 'hated' her foster home. The clip showed her being approached by a cop as she walked along the street, and she initially denied being the missing girl before telling the cop: 'I just want to see my mom.' The then-13-year-old cried as she told the officer her group home is 'not her home', and repeatedly said she wanted to speak to her family. 'I'm not going to go to that f***ing group home,' she said in the footage from ABC15. 'I hate it there.' The teenager eventually got into the car with the officer, and authorities said on each of the times she left her home officers either took her back to the group home or to a behavioral health center. Emily ran away for the final time on January 27, 2025, when she broke a door to her group home and walked out on foot, before her dismembered body was found almost three weeks later. No arrests have been made and no suspects named in her case, with authorities releasing the new bodycam footage as Arizona lawmakers opened an investigation into her murder and alleged issues in the foster group home. Although Emily lived at the group home due to mental health issues, her family lived nearby on the San Carlos Apache reservation. She had run away from the home on at least four occasions, with the final time coming in January when she was brutally murdered by an at-large killer. Authorities are offering a reward of $175,000 for information leading to her killer, with the FBI and the San Carlos Apache Tribe contributing to the fund. What exactly happened to Emily when she left for the final time remains a mystery, with her dismembered body found three weeks later almost 100 miles from the group home. Her remains were hidden in a forest off US 60 near Globe, Arizona, and investigators said her body parts were stuffed in several contractor garbage bags. Her head and torso were in one bag and her legs in another, with the teenager's arms and hands still missing. Alongside the release of the footage from September 2023, authorities also revealed footage from when she was reported missing for the final time. The bodycam footage showed an officer asking a staffer at her group home, operated by Sacred Journey Inc., if Emily had run away before. 'Yeah, she had a while back,' the staffer said. 'She's got a pink and gray striped long-sleeved shirt,' they continued. 'That's what one of the girls here at the group home said she had. 'I looked outside. The gate was open. The screen door, the screen window was kicked out.' The bodycams were shown as a legislative hearing last month opened an investigation into Emily's murder and protocols at Sacred Journey Inc. The group home does not have a contract with the state, but the Department of Child Safety told lawmakers Emily was in the care of Tribal Social Services as her native tribe placed her in the care of the home. The teen's family say they are told investigators are looking at three potential suspects, as her mother Steff Dosela described her as a 'very happy and kind person' San Carlos Apache Attorney General Alex Richie defended the home as he said Emily's repeat attempts to run away from the home led them to not be 'convinced based on what they were saying that the child was actually missing.' The teen's family say they are told investigators are looking at three potential suspects, but no names have been released and Emily's murder remains a mystery. 'She was just an innocent… she was a baby,' her mother Steff Dosela told WCJB. 'She was a very happy and kind person.'

Sheriff Grady Judd: 'Violent death' at group home prompts murder investigation
Sheriff Grady Judd: 'Violent death' at group home prompts murder investigation

Yahoo

time19-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Sheriff Grady Judd: 'Violent death' at group home prompts murder investigation

The Brief Sheriff Grady Judd says that a "violent death" at a group home has prompted a murder investigation in Bartow. First responders found the victim, an 81-year-old white man, dead this morning at an independent group living home owned by ET Care. Judd says they will release more information on Monday. BARTOW, Fla. - Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd says that his office is helping the Bartow Police Department investigate what they are calling a "violent death." What we know First responders found the victim, an 81-year-old white man, dead this morning at an independent group living home. Three other people lived in the group home that is owned by ET Care. Judd says that the man was last seen on Saturday evening. READ: Riverview High School teacher arrested for having sexual relations with student: HCSO What we don't know No other information has been released and Sheriff Grady Judd says they will release more information on Monday. CLICK HERE:>>>Follow FOX 13 on YouTube The Source Information for this story was provided by Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd. STAY CONNECTED WITH FOX 13 TAMPA: Download the FOX Local app for your smart TV Download FOX Local mobile app: Apple | Android Download the FOX 13 News app for breaking news alerts, latest headlines Download the SkyTower Radar app Sign up for FOX 13's daily newsletter

D.C. housemates turn to older means of connection: a print magazine
D.C. housemates turn to older means of connection: a print magazine

Washington Post

time16-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Washington Post

D.C. housemates turn to older means of connection: a print magazine

They tried a lot of things to find community in Washington: recreational kickball, trivia night and other rites of social passage for young people in the busy city. None of it really stuck. So, this group home of five 20-somethings in D.C.'s Adams Morgan neighborhood found something else that embodies the classic spirit of District residents — an off-hours activity that combines whimsy and work.

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