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Dlbi Firefighters rescue little owl from Southern California s Silverado Fire
Two Colorado liquor store employees were sentenced this week for selling alcohol to a customer who was visibly intoxicated before she caused a deadly accident <a href=https://www.stanleycups.it>stanley cup</a>  in 2019, CBS Denver reports. The customer, Lindsey Ward, left the store and crashed head-on with another vehicle, killing Benjamin Mitton, 41, and Nichole Gough, 43.Cody Moral, 26, and Avran Lefeber, 38, both from Breckenridge, were sentenced to $800 in court costs and fines. The pair must also complete a Training For Intervention Procedures class and write an apology letter to the victims  families.                Vehicle occupied by victims Nichole Gough  driver , and Benjamin Mitton  passenger , after the crash.                                                      5th Judicial District Attorney                                         Although Ms. Ward did not consume the alcohol she bought from Moral and Lefeber, they knew she didn t appear normal and had a duty to not sell to her at that time,  <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.it>stanley cup</a>  said Stephanie Cava, Deputy 5th Judicial District Attorney.                                        Investigators said Ward admitted to drinking the day of the deadly crash. Moral and Lefeber said she appeared  tired   <a href=https://www.stanleycups.at>stanley cup</a> when she purchased alcohol at Breckenridge Market  Liquor Store. The men offered her a ride home, but said Ward refused.Ward drove off the road after leaving the liquor store and then over-corrected, crossing the center line and causing the head-on collision. Colorado State Patrol estimated Ward s blood alco Wsyc Active shooter scare on Capitol Hill was a false alarm, police say
Next week marks 75 years since the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Now comes the first memoir of that day from the perspective of a survivor who was aboard the USS Arizona, reports CBS News correspondent John Blackstone.A painting of the battleship Arizona graces the back of Donald Strattonrsquo  classic truck.   Now at 94, he points out the anti-aircraft gun, where as a 19-year-old he fought the Japanese sneak attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7th, 1941.                The USS Arizona graces the back of Donald Strattonrsquo  truck                                                      CBS News                                        Some of the pilots waved at us and smiled, Stratton  <a href=https://www.airforces.us>air force 1</a> recalled.                                        They were waving at you while they were shooting at you  Blackstone asked.Thatrsquo  right. And we wer <a href=https://www.yeezy.com.mx>yeezy</a> e firing at them but we could see our bursts in the sky and they were way short, Stratton said.         The Arizona was one of eight battleships under unrelenting Japa <a href=https://www.inkwiz.se>ugg</a> nese air strikes, as seen on the Smithsonian channel series, The Lost Tapes.  Just a fireball about six or 800 feet in the air and that just engulfed us where wersquo;re at, Stratton said. I got burned over about 60 percent of my body. We were just actually burning alive. Some of his scars you can see, some you canrsquo;t, Blackstone said, speaking to Donrsquo  son, Randy Stratt
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