By Casey Nelson
Mar 8, 2021 10:33 AM
GREEN BAY, WI (WTAQ-WLUK) – The suspect arrested but not yet charged in connection with the body of a woman found in a burned-out car on the Menominee Indian Reservation appeared in Brown County Monday on unrelated charges.
Emerson Reed appeared in Brown County court Monday on a variety of charges, including burglary and theft, dating back to 2019. No attorney has been appointed yet to represent him, so the case was rescheduled for April 9.
Meanwhile, federal authorities continue to review possible charges against him in connection with the death of Stephanie Greenspon. No mention of the case was made during Monday’s hearing.
Suspect in Death Investigation Appears in Court on Unrelated Charges wtaq.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wtaq.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Photo by Sebastian Evans
This year, a week of Honoring Black History will take place from Feb. 21 – 27. Several diversity organizations led by All is One! Empowering Young Women of Color (AIO) will come together to host events featuring speakers centered around Blackness and the theme of unity.
In previous years, People of Color (POC) Empowerment Week was celebrated in the last week of February and served as a time for diversity organizations to celebrate their groups. According to Black Student Union President, junior Sarah Navy, the change in name and emphasis on Black history took place because Lawrence had limited programming for Black History Month in the past.
Feb 1, 2021
When Juan Carlos Guerra got the call on Jan. 12 that his county would receive 300 COVID-19 vaccine doses the following day, he went straight to work.
Guerra, the top elected official in rural Jim Hogg County, Texas, got together with local school superintendent Susana Garza, who was helping him lead vaccination planning. They called hundreds of vaccine-eligible residents to schedule appointments, in stark contrast to big cities, where locals report struggling through maddening online registration processes.
Guerra, who has spent his whole life in Jim Hogg, said he knew almost everyone he called, and they trusted him.
The next day, he and his staff staged a makeshift clinic at a local pavilion normally used for livestock shows a plan they had hatched days earlier. Garza donated staff to help register patients, while a local home care company volunteered to screen everyone for fever.
INSIGHT-Personal touch, word of mouth: How U.S. rural communities succeed getting COVID-19 shots into arms Reuters 1/29/2021
By Tina Bellon, Nick Brown and Lisa Baertlein
Jan 29 (Reuters) - When Juan Carlos Guerra got the call on Jan. 12 that his county would receive 300 COVID-19 vaccine doses the following day, he went straight to work.
Guerra, the top elected official in rural Jim Hogg County, Texas, got together with local school superintendent Susana Garza, who was helping him lead vaccination planning. They called hundreds of vaccine-eligible residents to schedule appointments, in stark contrast to big cities, where locals report struggling through maddening online registration processes.