A Butler County Grand Jury has declined to issue an indictment in the January standoff that ended with an armed man being shot four times by an officer.
On January 11, the Butler County Regional SWAT team responded to a 911 call from a resident living in the 6800 block of Yoakum Court at Lakota Pointe Townhomes near Liberty Junior High School.
The caller said someone she knew broke through her front door and had a pistol.
By the time SWAT arrived, the caller was able to get out of the apartment. The man who broke in, Junius Thomas III, 31, was still inside, according to officials.
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Historic D-Day aircraft visits area
Former U.S. Army 101st Airborne paratrooper Ron Tucker of Cincinnati grasps the “hook-up” cable inside historic C-47
That’s All Brother just as he did while a paratrooper in the famed 101st Airborne, and inside the same aircraft that some 16 paratroopers jumped behind German lines on 6 June 1944 over Normandy
Mike Ullery | Miami Valley Today
C-47
That’s All Brother painted exactly as she looked as she led 800 other C-47 aircraft as the spearhead of the 12,000+ troop parachute drop of 101st and 82nd Airborne troops behind enemy lines over Normandy on D-Day.
Mike Ullery | Miami Valley Today
Historic D-Day aircraft visits area
Former U.S. Army 101st Airborne paratrooper Ron Tucker of Cincinnati grasps the “hook-up” cable inside historic C-47
That’s All Brother just as he did while a paratrooper in the famed 101st Airborne, and inside the same aircraft that some 16 paratroopers jumped behind German lines on 6 June 1944 over Normandy
Mike Ullery | Miami Valley Today
C-47
That’s All Brother painted exactly as she looked as she led 800 other C-47 aircraft as the spearhead of the 12,000+ troop parachute drop of 101st and 82nd Airborne troops behind enemy lines over Normandy on D-Day.
Mike Ullery | Miami Valley Today
D-Day plane touches down at NMUSAF
By London Bishop - lbishop@aimmediamidwest.com
Submitted photo That’s All, Brother is a Douglas C-47 that led the airborne invasion of Normandy during World War II. The plane will visit the NMUSAF April 20-22.
RIVERSIDE An aircraft that flew during the invasion of Normandy will be visiting the National Museum of the United States Air Force next week. That’s All, Brother, a Douglas C-47 will stop at the museum from April 20-22, the museum announced Tuesday. The plane will also stop in Xenia over the weekend.
That’s All, Brother, piloted by Lt. Col. John Donalson, was a lead aircraft for the airborne invasion of Normandy on D-Day, which took place on June 6, 1944. The night before the invasion, That’s All, Brother led more than 800 C-47s dropping more than 13,000 paratroopers behind enemy lines in Normandy.