
Articles
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1 week ago |
wcrz.com | Jeremy Fenech
A recent high-speed police chase began in Fenton but led officers down the well-traveled U.S. 23 into Livingston County. Police began pursuing a vehicle reported stolen last Thursday. The Fenton Police Department noticed the stolen vehicle and attempted to have the driver pull over. READ MORE: Teens Led High-Speed Police Chase Spans Two Michigan Counties However, 42-year-old Ypsilanti resident Jeremy Nelson chose to flee police and took off down southbound U.S. 23.
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1 week ago |
wcrz.com | Jeremy Fenech
A major grocery store chain with 120 locations across 82 Michigan cities, and many more across the country, has been ordered to pay $75 million in damages. A jury in Oakland County awarded an HVAC tech and pipefitter with the largest liability verdict in Michigan history. In 2020, 37-year-old Brian Mierendorf was working on a refrigeration system at a grocery store in Bloomfield Township when his world was changed forever.
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1 week ago |
wcrz.com | Jeremy Fenech
Search and rescue crews across the country often face unusual challenges in their efforts to save lives. However, on Sunday night, the Oakland County Search and Rescue Team received a different kind of report on Lake Louise in Brandon Township. Calls came in from residents on Glass Road near the lake with reports of what they thought was a crane in some sort of distress. Deputies responded and search boats were launched.
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1 week ago |
wcrz.com | Jeremy Fenech
It was 72 years ago this month that one of the most devastating weather events in Michigan history injured or killed close to 1,000, and continues to affect the lives of thousands right here in Mid-Michigan. For witnesses and survivors, it doesn't seem like this cataclysmic event took place more than half a century ago. It feels like yesterday, as one survivor says. When storm sirens go off today, it takes them right back to that horrific day.
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1 week ago |
wgrd.com | Jeremy Fenech
WXYZ-TV Detroit | Channel 7 via YouTubeShare on FacebookShare on TwitterA volunteer at a Michigan public library was sorting through donated books when they discovered an old photo tucked inside one. Fortunately, the back of the photo was labeled: “Frank and Josephine Ruggirello, Nana-Nono.” The library posted the image and inscription on social media, hoping to return it to the family. Thanks to the internet, the Ruggirellos' love story lives on.
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