Downtown law firm Lerner, Sampson & Rothfuss to close - Cincinnati Business Courier bizjournals.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bizjournals.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Temporary eviction protections are now in place in Cincinnati, but council voted against a proposal Wednesday to make the change permanent. Council Member Greg Landsman introduced both ordinances after the Hamilton County Municipal Court decided to no longer enforce a national eviction moratorium.
The measure with temporary pay to stay protections will be in effect only as long as Ohio s pandemic state of emergency is active. It allows tenants facing a lack-of-payment eviction to halt proceedings if they can pay all back rent and fees. This is obviously one of the most significant things we can do to protect our children, to protect our families, to protect our neighborhoods, and ultimately ensure that landlords are made whole, Landsman said.
âNo food, no clothes, no diaper, no chanceâ: Police help baby after momâs arrest Spending his own personal money, Springdale Police Corporal Kellen Lyons bought diapers, food and clothes a baby after the infant s mother was arrested on multiple drug charges Monday. (Source: Springdale Police Department Facebook page) By Jennifer Edwards Baker | April 27, 2021 at 5:04 AM EDT - Updated April 27 at 9:41 AM
SPRINGDALE, Ohio (FOX19) - A police official in a suburban Cincinnati department helped a baby in need after the infantâs mother was arrested on multiple drug charges Monday.
Spending his own personal money, Corporal Kellen Lyons bought diapers, food and clothes for the baby, 1.
No food, no clothes, no diaper, no chance : Police help baby after mom s arrest fox19.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from fox19.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A 29-year veteran of the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office has been arrested on child pornography charges.
The charges against Ronald Vest, a deputy who works in the sheriff s jail services division, are pandering sexually oriented matter involving a minor and pandering obscenity involving a minor or impaired person, Hamilton County Municipal Court records show.
A news release from the sheriff s office said the investigation of Vest, 51, is ongoing and that anyone with information about the case should contact the sheriff s Regional Electronics & Computer Investigations section at 513-946-8338.
The Regional Electronics & Computer Investigations task force consists of investigators with the sheriff s office and the Cincinnati Police Department who focus on investigating individuals and groups who use the internet to commit crimes against children, the release said.