Courtney Clenney, 25, who goes by the name Courtney Tailor on Instagram, is under investigation for the fatal stabbing of her boyfriend in Miami on April 3, 2022.
Instagram
-Instagram
Courtney Clenney, the OnlyFans and Instagram model who fatally stabbed her boyfriend to death in Miami in April, has been arrested on a murder charge, the Miami Herald has learned.
The 26-year-old Clenney was taken into custody on Wednesday in Hawaii, and will eventually be extradited to Miami-Dade County to face trial. She’s being charged with second-degree murder with a deadly weapon for the April 3 stabbing of Christian “Toby” Obumseli.
Her arrest was confirmed Wednesday afternoon by her Miami defense lawyer, Frank Prieto, who said she’d been in Hawaii while in rehabilitation for substance abuse and post-traumatic stress disorder.
“I’m completely shocked, especially since we were cooperating with the investigation and offered to voluntarily surrender her if she were charged,” Prieto said. “We look forward to clearing her name in court.”
The Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office, in a press release on Wednesday evening, said the arrest warrant remained sealed. State Attorney Katherine Fernandez, along with City Police Chief Manuel Morales and South Florida US Marshal Gadyaces Serralta, will detail the arrest at a press conference on Thursday afternoon.
A Hawaii jail booking mugshot of Courtney Clenney, 26, who is facing a murder charge for the killing of her boyfriend in Miami. -HawaiiPolice
The arrest caps a four-month investigation by Miami police homicide detectives and prosecutors into Clenney, whose killing of her boyfriend during a domestic dispute in a luxury Edgewater apartment garnered headlines across the world. Clenney’s defense attorney insisted that she acted in self-defense and the killing was justified.
But in the days after his death, Obumseli’s relatives called for Clenney’s arrest, saying they did not believe he was ever a threat.
Obumseli worked in cryptocurrency. Known as Courtney Tailor on her social-media platforms, Clenney boasted over two million followers on her social-media platforms.
She and Obumseli had been dating less than two years, and their relationship had been plagued by domestic strife — she’d once been arrested for domestic battery in Las Vegas, and police had been called to their home in Austin, Texas, on several occasions .
The two had only lived in Miami for a few months at the One Paraiso building, 3131 NE 7th Ave., where staff members had documented numerous domestic disturbance complaints about the couple and had even moved to evict them.
Clenney and Obumseli had broken up several times, although investigators believe that he’d moved back into the apartment by the first day of April. The Miami Herald earlier reported that Miami police responded to the apartment on April 1, two days before the stabbing, over another domestic disturbance call.
Finally on the evening of April 3, just before 5 pm, Clenney frantically called 911 to report Obumseli had been stabbed.
Instagram model Courtney Clenney fatally stabbed Christian “Toby” Obumseli on April 3, 2022 in Miami. Police and prosecutors are still determining whether she acted in self-defense. -Instagram and Facebook
This story was originally published August 10, 2022 3:59 PM.
David Ovalle covers crime and courts in Miami. A native of San Diego, I graduated from the University of Southern California and joined the Herald in 2002 as a sports reporter.
More Adelaide office workers chose to work from home last month as South Australia’s COVID-19 cases peaked, with office occupancy in the CBD dropping to below two-thirds.
Photo: Kelly Barnes/AAP
Data from the Property Council of Australia’s monthly “Office Occupancy Survey” shows Adelaide’s office occupancy rate dropped from 71 per cent in June to 64 per cent in July.
The CBD’s average monthly occupancy rate also sits at 54 per cent this year, according to the data, well below the 67 per cent average rate recorded in 2021.
The figures represent a percentage of pre-COVID occupancy levels, estimated to be around 90 per cent.
Despite Adelaide’s drop, the 64 per cent occupancy rate is still the second highest of the six capital cities measured in the Property Council’s July report. Only Perth ranked higher at 71 per cent.
Adelaide is also substantially higher than the July occupancy rates recorded in Melbourne (38 per cent) and Sydney (52 per cent), both of which endured long COVID-19 lockdowns last year.
Brisbane’s CBD also recorded an occupancy drop from 64 per cent to 53 per cent last month.
City by city office occupancy rates up to July 2022. Graph: Property Council
SA Property Council executive director Daniel Gannon said South Australia’s latest COVID-19 wave had impacted an otherwise “steady increase in the number of workers returning to workplaces”.
“A wave of Omicron and flu infections has caused office occupancy rates across most major cities to go backwards in July, including Adelaide,” he said.
“The latest monthly results are obviously disappointing for return-to-office momentum, but unsurprising due to the rise in case numbers.”
South Australia’s third wave of COVID-19 prompted health authorities last month to recommend businesses and universities consider work from home arrangements and mask requirements.
The wave, driven by the more transmissible BA.4 and BA.5 Omicron subvariants, peaked on July 18 at 5038 daily cases.
“Looking ahead, we are encouraged by the fact that this Omicron wave seems to have peaked and that spring is now just around the corner,” Gannon said.
“Hopefully, this means Adelaide’s workplace recovery momentum can summarize.”
Peak day and low day occupancy levels in CBD offices. Graph: Property Council
A state government work from home order during South Australia’s first Omicron wave has contributed to this year’s lower office occupancy rates, which bottomed out at 11 per cent in January 2022.
The highest level of worker activity in the Adelaide CBD during the pandemic was recorded in June 2021 at 80 per cent.
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The national Property Council survey found the preference for greater working flexibility was the most common reason for the current occupancy levels, followed by health concerns about returning to work.
The survey was conducted between July 25 and August 1.
Office occupancy rate change from June to July (lowest to highest)
Melbourne: 49 per cent to 38 per cent
Sydney: 55 per cent to 52 per cent
Brisbane: 64 per cent to 53 per cent
Canberra: 53 per cent to 61 per cent
Adelaide: 71 per cent to 64 per cent
Perth: 65 per cent to 71 per cent
Local News Matters
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An Australian mum has shared her simple two-ingredient cleaning hack that left her oven sparkling without using harsh chemicals.
The Brisbane makeup artist showed how she cleaned her oven using a homemade mix of dishwashing liquid and bicarbonate of soda in a video posted to TikTok.
The mum-to-be mixed the two household ingredients together to make a paste then coated the inside of the oven in the solution and left it to eat away at the grime.
Scroll down for video
An Australian mum-to-be has shared a ‘genius’ hack online for cleaning her oven using a homemade mix of dishwashing liquid and bicarbonate of soda
She then scrubbed the surface with a scourer and wiped the excess paste away with a damp cloth.
‘When you’re on mat leave and all you do is watch cleaning hacks,’ she wrote in the clip’s caption.
The clip quickly racked up more than 146,700 views on the platform and many in the comments were wowed by the ‘genius’ hack.
She mixed the two household ingredients together to make a paste, coated the inside of oven in the solution and left it to eat away at the grime then scrubbed it away
‘Omg why didn’t I see this the other day,’ one user wrote while another said: ‘This is genius, thank you’.
Others shared their own tips and tricks for making the notoriously hard-to-clean appliance look like new.
‘Your oven looks amazing! Next time around, google how to remove your oven door. Makes oven cleaning 1000x easier!’ one person suggested.
‘Dishwashing liquid and vinegar works really well. Far less mess,’ another replied.
Previously a TikTok-famous professional cleaner shared her ‘no chemical’ method for cleaning dirty ovens in a viral video.
Kacie from The Big Clean Co in Melbourne used boiling water, white vinegar, dishwashing liquid, Bunnings scrapers, kitchen scourers and ‘the power of steam’.
Previously TikTok-famous professional cleaner Kacie (pictured) shared her method for cleaning dirty ovens in a viral video
In a TikTok video Kacie from The Big Clean Co in Melbourne used boiling water, white vinegar, dishwashing liquid, scrapers, kitchen scourers and ‘the power of steam’
The cleaning hack ensures no toxic, harsh chemicals are used and will make the appliance look brand new.
‘I’m a professional cleaner and I’ve got a non-toxic way to clean your oven using the power of steam,’ she said in the video.
‘You’ll need dishwashing liquid, vinegar, some scrapers and scourers.’
In the short clip, Kacie explained how steam can help remove the tough food stains and residue at the bottom of the oven.
‘I’m a professional cleaner and I’ve got a non-toxic way to clean your oven using the power of steam,’ she said in the video
‘Now when that charcoal is cold it is rock solid, so here’s what you’re going to do. Add one cup of boiling water and one cup of vinegar to a tray,’ she said.
‘Put it in a hot oven and let it do its thing for about 20 minutes.
‘You’ll be left with this big mushy mess that scraps right off.
She then used the scraper to remove the tough food build-up with ease.
Kacie then poured dishwashing liquid onto the glass oven door and used a scour to remove any remaining grease and ‘make it shine’.
In the short clip, Kacie explained how steam can help remove the tough food stains and residue at the bottom of the oven
‘Don’t forget to let your oven cool a little so you don’t burn yourself,’ she said.
She also used a scour to clean the oven racks over the sink and used the sharp blade for tough food stains.
The cleaning tip left the oven looking sparkling clean as if it had never been used before.
After 24 hours the video was viewed more than 105,000 times, and TikTok users seemed impressed with the transformation.
‘I’ve been trying to find a way to do this naturally, I always worry the chemicals will stay in the oven and affect food,’ one woman wrote.
Another TikTok users recommended using the Scrub Daddy sponge rather than steel wool to clean the oven.
Others dubbed the cleaning tips as ‘awesome’.
How to clean an oven without using chemicals:
What you’ll need:
white vinegar
Toilet
kitchen scours
Dishwashing liquid
Bunnings scrapers
Method:
Add one cup of boiling water and one cup of vinegar to a tray
Place in a hot oven and leave to steam for 20 minutes
Remove the tray and scrape the food stains using the scraper and scour
Clean the oven and dish racks using the dishwashing liquid
It starts with Pollard getting a late-night message from Wallabies forward coach Dan McKellar.
“It was 12.30pm and I thought he was gonna get me up for still being up, that he’d seen I was active on WhatsApp,” Pollard said. “I didn’t want to reply at first but I said ‘yeah I am up’. He gave me a call and gave me the news.”
Pollard was told he would be flying the next afternoon and went to sleep. However, not willing to risk him arriving five hours before the first Test, the Wallabies found a ‘better’ itinerary. But, now he needed to catch a 6am flight, Pollard couldn’t be roused.
Brumbies teammates living nearby were called until flanker Luke Reimer answered. At 4am, he drove to Pollard’s place and broke through his back door.
“I packed two shirts and two pairs of shorts and that was it. I thought I packed more,” Pollard said.
He missed that flight to Sydney, but the next one to San Francisco was delayed, so the 22,328km journey began. Crammed up the back of the bus, I slogged from Sydney to San Francisco to Houston to Santiago and then into Mendoza.
Brumbies hooker Billy Pollard had an epic journey to Argentina.Credit:Lachlan Lawson/Brumbies
“I left home at 4am on Thursday morning and got there, in Aussie time, at Friday 11pm,” he said. “I hate plans and I can’t sleep on them, so I was struggling. But it was a good experience.”
A shortage of team kit meant players and staff had to donate bits and pieces to Pollard, who has been carrying around his boots in a cotton sack. But, as per that smile, Pollard couldn’t care less.
Hello… Michael Cheika is speaking Spanish at all possible opportunites.Credit:Getty
“I am very excited. It is still surreal, being around guys like James O’Connor, growing up watching those guys play. I haven’t said much to them,” he said.
Cheika’s challenge
He deserves huge credit for giving it a go but it seems some of the Argentinian players and press are still coming to grips with Michael Cheika’s developing Spanish. The multilingual coach, who speaks Italian, French and Arabic, talks in Spanish to the team and to media in press conferences.
One newspaper article said it was occasionally hard to understand his “strained mix of English, Spanish and Italian” and locals say players rely on assistant coach Felipe Contepomi to do a bit of on-the-fly clarification work.
Road trip of peace canceled
How did the trans-Tasman road trip of peace, between Andy Marinos and his NZR counterpart Mark Robinson go? The one where the two chief executives were due to drive back to London together after the Commonwealth Games sevens in Coventry?
Turns out it didn’t go ahead. Plans changed due to Robinson, who has a few issues on his plate currently, having an early morning meeting in London. I have caught a train instead.
Douglas claims rugby club’s biggest honour.
Giant Manly and NSW forward Max Douglas was a popular winner of the prestigious Ken Catchpole Medal on Wednesday night.
Douglas, who has played nine games for the Waratahs since his debut in 2021, starred for the Marlins with his high defensive work rate and dominant lineout work. He was the first Manly winner of the Ken Catchpole medal since Peter Hewat in 2006.
The winners. (From left) Scott Coleman, Max Douglas, Conor Hickey and Sean Hedger.Credit:Karen Watson
Scott Coleman (Hunter Wildfires) and Sean Hedger (Sydney Uni) shared the coach of the year award, while Warringah’s Conor Hickey was the rookie of the year.
Shute Shield qualifying finals
SATURDAY
Norths v Manly, North Sydney Oval, 3.05pm.
Sydney Uni v Randwick, Sydney University Football Ground, 3.20pm.
Eastwood v Eastern Suburbs, Eric Tweedale Stadium, 3:30 p.m.
SUNDAY
Warringah v Gordon, Pittwater Rugby Park, 3.05pm
With the finals starting this week, Douglas will be a leader for Manly when they take on Norths at North Sydney Oval on Saturday.
Elsewhere, the Students will host Randwick, while Eastwood and Easts will do battle at Eric Tweedale Stadium. On Sunday, the Rats host Gordon.
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Turf war over Waratahs’ next gen The unveiling of NSW’s Gen Blue U16 squad ruffled feathers last week when word spread that almost half of the backline players named had contracts with NRL clubs.
Zach Fittler, son of NRL great and Blues coach Brad, was among the names, as was Tom Farr-Jones, nephew of World Cup-winning former Wallabies captain Nick.
Talent-scouting sources told the Cauliflower that while none of the players’ contracts extended beyond the end of high school (as per NRL rules??), it was curious to see NSW Rugby bothering with players many believe will inevitably end up in the 13 -player game.
RA chairman Hamish McLennan put the NRL on notice that rugby would come for league’s top talent with rugby pedigree in the lead-up to the home 2027 World Cup, but the 15-player code has not had much success on that front in recent years. Kalyn Ponga comes to mind, as does Joseph Suaali’i.
Watch every match of The Rugby Championship on the Home of Rugby, Stan Sport. Continue this weekend with South Africa v All Blacks (Sunday 12.30am AEST) and Argentina v Wallabies (Sunday 4.45am AEST). All matches streaming ad-free, live and on demand on Stan Sport.
Urgent action needs to be taken to eliminate the “unacceptable” backlog of veterans’ compensation claims, with almost 42,000 awaiting processing at the end of May, a royal commission has warned, saying the situation may lead to suicides.
Key points:
Thirteen recommendations have been made in the interim report, with five of them focusing on the DVA’s claims process and staffing levels
The commissioners identified 50 previous reports and more than 750 recommendations on these issues in the past 22 years
More current and former ADF members have died by suicide than in combat in the Afghan and Iraq wars, the government says
The Royal Commission into Defense and Veteran Suicide handed down its interim report this morning, calling for an end to the backlog and for a simplification of the claims system to make it easier for veterans.
The commission made 13 recommendations, with five focused on the Department of Veterans’ Affairs’ claims processes and staffing levels.
Another eight are intended to make it easier for witnesses to appear before the commission and allow it to more easily access documents.
The commissioners also said they were “dismayed” at the “limited” ways the federal government had reacted to previous reports relevant to the topics of suicide and suicidality among serving and ex-serving defense force members.
“We have identified over 50 previous reports, and more than 750 recommendations [since the year 2000],” the report said.
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‘There’s nothing else left’: Jacqui Lambie makes emotional plea for veterans to speak to royal commission
‘Lives depend on’ clearing claims backlog
Commission chair Nick Kaldas said the Department of Veterans’ Affairs’ (DVA) claims backlog was “unacceptable” and could lead to suicide and suicidality in some cases.
“Behind each claim is a veteran who needs support, and it is seriously important that this assistance is provided as quickly as possible — lives and livelihoods depend on it,” he said.
The commission has recommended the department be given until March 2024 to eliminate the claims backlog, and called on the government to streamline processes and ensure DVA had the necessary resources to do so.
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Veteran Gavin Tunstall on lack of training to deal with traumatic scenes
The report found Australia’s veteran compensation and rehabilitation system was “so complicated that it adversely affects the mental health of some veterans” and it recommended the federal government introduce legislative reforms by the end of the year.
“Previous reports and inquiries … have called for legislative simplification and harmonization,” the report said.
“We recognize that making change will not be easy, but the difficulties of reform provide no justification to delay any further.”
Witness calls department ‘cruel and inhumane’
Widow Madonna Paul told the commission she struggled to access support after the death of her husband by suicide.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)
The commission has heard wide-ranging accounts of horrific abuse and trauma since public hearings began in November last year.
At the Tasmanian hearings, which wrapped up on Wednesday, the commission heard from Senator Jacqui Lambie, who said a back injury that resulted in her being medically discharged began a six-year battle with the Department of Veterans’ Affairs for compensation, as well as debilitating pain and depression.
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Jacqui Lambie says a department spied on her from a bush behind her house for weeks.
She said the department put her under surveillance after becoming suspicious she was faking her injuries, and representatives from the rehabilitation service spied on her from a bush near her back fence.
The widow of an ex-serviceman also spoke out about her struggles with the “cruel and inhumane” Department of Veterans’ Affairs.
She said she struggled to access support following her husband’s suicide.
And a former soldier spoke of his trauma after seeing the bodies of two boys killed in combat in Afghanistan.
Australia has lost more serving members to suicide than recent combat: Minister
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Veterans’ Affairs Minister Matt Keogh said the federal government was committed to a better future for Australia’s current and ex-service personnel and would look into implementing the report’s recommendations.
“Unfortunately, the rate of veterans’ suicide in Australia is a national tragedy,” he said.
“It’s devastating that Australia has lost more serving and former serving personnel to suicide than it has lost through operations over the last 20 years in Afghanistan and Iraq.”
Governor-General David Hurley receives the interim report from commissioner Nick Kaldas this morning.(AAP: Mick Tsikas)
Mr Keogh said it was important the recommendations were “addressed as a priority” and the government had already started hiring 500 additional staff to help the Department of Veterans’ Affairs clear its claims backlog.
He also said it had been made clear to the defense force and government departments that “the royal commission must be assisted in any way possible to ensure that it can make the most effective recommendations on how to address the scourge of suicide that has plagued our defense personnel, veterans and families.
Mr Keogh said he was “deeply sorry” if there had been failings in the way the defense force and the Department of Veterans’ Affairs had operated.
‘We’ve had silence for long enough’
Julie-Ann Finney called for the royal commission after the death of her son.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)
Julie-Ann Finney, the mother of a veteran who took his own life, said it was “uplifting” to know that people were finally talking about the high rates of suicidality among current and former defense force personnel.
Ms Finney became a high-profile campaigner for the commission to be established after her son, Petty Officer David Finney, took his own life in 2019.
She has attended hearings all over the country, carrying a photo of David with her each day.
Ms Finney said the hearings were confronting, but incredibly important.
“It’s frustration, anger and trauma associated with all this listening, but the alternative is silence, and we’ve had silence for long enough,” she said.
“Unfortunately, I was quite naive before my own son took his life but I don’t find myself naive anymore. I need to keep learning, keep listening to people.
Ms Finney called on the federal government to immediately act on the interim report’s recommendations, but she said she was more confident than ever that change would occur.
“I don’t want to speak to another mother who has recently lost her child, or a father or a partner,” she said.
“We need to look at why this is happening and find solutions, and I feel at the moment that that is coming out.
“We will just keep fighting. I’ve said it from the beginning that I didn’t bury my son to walk away — and there are hundreds like me.”
Ms Finney said she wanted to see the creation of an independent body where service personnel could report concerns about their mental health and unacceptable behaviour, and she also wanted the Department of Veterans’ Affairs to immediately clear its claims backlog.
Surge in compensation cases sees backlog grow six times in size
The commissioners said many people who had participated in the royal commission so far had spoken about their “frustration and disappointment” with the processing of compensation claims and “an unhelpful and negative attitude” from the Department of Veterans’ Affairs staff.
“Negative engagement with DVA staff regarding claims and entitlements was pervasive,” the report said.
“Long waiting times to action and pursue claims produced considerable frustration for ex-serving members.
“Many said that they dealt with simultaneous injuries, mental ill health and complex socioeconomic pressures.”
The report also found veterans were not given accurate information about claims processing and wait times, which it said could cause “considerable distress.”
The report found the backlog of undetermined claims — both allocated claims that had yet to be processed and those that had not yet been allocated — had multiplied by almost six times in the past five years.
It found the backlog was partly caused by “a significant surge” in the number of DVA claims received since 2016.
The department had expected the number of veterans receiving assistance to drop to just over 150,000 by June this year, but it had instead grown to 240,000.
Further hearings to come, full report in 2024
The report said the commission intended to make recommendations that resulted in “effective, long-lasting and compassionate change.”
“The prevalence of suicide and suicidality among serving and ex-serving Australian Defense Force members is something that should concern us all,” the report said.
“Each death by suicide, each life lost, has profound effects on family, friends, colleagues and the wider community.”
The commission has held six hearings around the country since it was established in July 2021.
It will hold further hearings in Darwin and Wagga Wagga this year, with a full report to be handed down in June 2024.
Mr Kaldas said the interim report did not touch on a number of issues, but he promised they would be examined in the final report.
The interim report is available for download on the Federal Parliament website.
Three people died after a house explosion in the 1000 block of North Weinbach Avenue in Evansville, the county coroner’s office confirmed. Multiple units from the Evansville police and Evansville Fire Department were responding.
Police have shut down most streets in the area around where the explosion happened, and a department spokeswoman said that part of Weinbach Avenue will likely be closed for several hours.
Here’s what we else know so far:
6:06 p.m.: Some homes ‘uninhabitable’
At least 11 of the 39 homes damaged in the explosion are “uninhabitable,” Evansville Fire Department Chief Mike Connelly said.
5:10 pm: ‘There could be other victims’
One other person has been hospitalized after the blast, Connelly said in an update from the scene. But the search for any additional victims, as well as the removal of debris, has been temporarily paused so the ATF can run a “blast analysis.”
“There could be other victims,” he said. “We have not yet completed our search.”
CenterPoint was restoring gas and power to area homes. As of now, Connelly said, “I don’t think evacuation (of the neighborhood) will be necessary.”
Many surrounding roads, however, will remain closed. Weinbach will be blocked from East Columbia Street to Oak Hill Road all night.
4:13 pm Coroner’s office says 3 dead
An email from the Vanderburgh County Coroner’s Office:
“At this time, there are 3 deaths reported to us that are a result of the explosion on N. Weinbach Ave. Notifications to next of kin are in the process. When next of kin have been notified and there are more details this office will issue a news release.”
3:45 pm: Update from Evansville PD spokeswoman Anna Gray and Evansville Fire Chief Mike Connelly
EPD spokeswoman Sgt. Anna Gray said two people were injured in the house that exploded. The third injury was in a neighboring house. There is no update on their conditions. And it’s unclear how many people will be displaced by the damage.
Evansville Fire Department Chief Mike Connelly said, in total, 39 houses were damaged by the Wednesday afternoon explosion.
The EFD has not confirmed if all of those houses were unoccupied at the time of the blast because “some were too unstable to enter.”
The ATF is now on scene investigating. Connelly said they are experts in explosion investigations.
Residents who live in the area are being let through by EPD so long as their house is in a safe area.
More:Here’s where to get help if you were affected by the Evansville house explosion
2:58 pm: Knight Township Trustee office damaged
The Knight Township Trustee office sustained damage and will be closed “for the foreseeable future,” Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke said on social media.
Knight Township Trustee Kathryn Martin told the Courier & Press the explosion was at a property next to her office, which is located at 1116 N. Weinbach Ave.
Martin said she wasn’t there when it happened, as she was returning from a meeting. She confirmed her staff is OK but she’s “very worried” for neighbors.
Where was the house explosion in Evansville?
The explosion was reported at 12:58 pm
A photo Mayor Lloyd Winnecke posted to social media showed the addresses of the homes involved. 1010 N. Weinbach Ave. appeared to be completely destroyed and gone, while 1008 and 1012 N. Weinbach suffered heavy damage.
Two of the homes are rentals, according to the Vanderburgh County Assessor’s website. The third is owned.
Are there power outages due to the explosion?
Police said there is damage to surrounding homes and buildings, but all fires have been extinguished. CenterPoint was reporting 162 power outages in the area of the explosion as of 2:53 pm The number had been as high as 1,000 earlier.
Evansville Fire Department Chief Mike Connelly said the explosion had a 100-foot blast radius. There is no word yet on what caused it.
What roads are closed in Evansville?
North Weinbach Avenue between Morgan and Vogel avenues is closed. North Hercules between Columbia Street and Vogel Avenue is closed.
About four blocks south, Jasmine Vickers said the explosion happened during nap time for the 12 kids at Future Leaders Childcare. Amazingly the blast only woke up one, “but the building shook, and we looked outside and saw everyone running.” She said she woke everyone up and evacuated the building immediately.
Leslie Lawrence, who works for Award World Trophies in the 700 block of North Weinbach Avenue, said when the explosion happened, “Everybody jumped. We thought a tree had fallen on us, or a car crashed into the building.”
Video shot by Bri Watson on scene and shared with the Courier & Press shows widespread destruction. At least one house was gutted, while multiple others suffered serious damage. Shrapnel from the explosion covered parts of North Weinbach Avenue.
Have there been other house explosions in Evansville in recent years?
This is the second time in the past five years that there has been a house explosion in this area. On June 27, 2017, a house explosion at 1717 Hercules Ave. killed Sharon Mand and Kathleen Woolems. He injured three others.
In June 2021, Vanderburgh Circuit Court Judge David Kiely dismissed a lawsuit against CenterPoint (previously known as Vectren) from the surviving victims of the 2017 explosion citing CenterPoint’s investigation found nothing indicating it was at fault.
On April 3, 2004, a natural gas explosion leveled a house at 3307 Lincoln Ave., killing 89-year-old owner Daisy Pauline Hardy. A visitor to the home, Josie Williams, died later from burn injuries at Vanderbilt Hospital in Nashville.
The blast also injured Vectren employee Mark Rexing, who was preparing to relight the pilot light. An Evansville Fire Department investigator said that a gas leak occurred after city water department employees mistook the gas line to Hardy’s house for a water line.
What has CenterPoint said?
CenterPoint spokeswoman Erin Merris issued a statement to the Courier & Press Wednesday afternoon.
“CenterPoint Energy crews responded to an explosion this afternoon at a home on N. Weinbach Ave. in Evansville and worked with first responders to secure the area,” the statement read. “CenterPoint Energy is working closely with the Evansville Fire Department, State Fire Marshal and other agencies as the investigation of this incident continues.”
A string of celebrities dazzled at a glamorous runway show hosted by Australian retailer David Jones on Wednesday night.
But while former foreign minister Julie Bishop’s “revenge” dress turned heads at the Sydney event, she wasn’t the only famous face who went all-out in the fashion stakes.
Model Natalie Roser “got dressed up” for the superstore’s Spring Summer fashion show, wearing a skin-tight black dress from Australian designer Effie Kats.
The $299 “Gia Mia Dress” is made from a “wet-look jersey” that clung to Natalie’s body, prompting a wave of comments on social media.
“Unsure if I was made for the dress or the dress was made for me…” the 32-year-old wrote on Instagram.
“Sizzling,” one user wrote in response, while another said: “Spectacular.”
“In both cases dress is yours,” another added.
While one described Natalie as looking like “catwoman”.
Fashion designer Pip Edwards was also at the event, wearing a pair of white wide-leg pants with a backless black top and sparkly Prada heels.
The former girlfriend of cricket star Michael Clarke posed alongside two of her PE Nation employees Claire Tregoning and Luke Morrell.
Pip later stopped for a snap with Julie Bishop, who was wearing a $3,750 metallic jacquard long-sleeved mini dress designed by French luxury fashion house Balmain.
The 66-year-old politician turned fashion icon finished her look with a chic black clutch and matching heels at the runway show, her first public appearance since her break-up with longtime boyfriend David Panton last month.
Former Miss World Australia Erin Holland looked sensational in a “liquid gold” dress from luxury Italian fashion designer Fendi.
She teamed her outfit with a bag from the same brand and a pair of gold Tony Bianco heels.
The catwalk showcased an array of spring and summer fashion from the best of Australian and international designers.
NRL star Bryce Cartwright has fronted a Sydney court after police took out a restraining order to protect his anti-vaxxer wife.
The 27-year-old Parramatta Eels forward split from his former wife Shanelle early last year, after the couple caused controversy over their views on vaccinations.
Cartwright walked away from a $450,000-a-season contract with the Gold Coast Titans and returned to NSW in September 2020 with his then-wife and two children.
Months later, the pair split up following their three-year marriage.
It was revealed this week that police have now sought an apprehended violence order (AVO) against Cartwright on behalf of his ex-wife.
He fronted Waverley Local Court on Thursday but the matter was quickly adjourned.
Cartwright will have to face court again on August 25. He has not been charged with any criminal offence.
An interim order prevents the 27-year-old from assaulting, threatening, stalking, harassing or intimidating Shanelle.
Standard conditions of the interim order state he also must not damage her property or harm any animal she owns.
Neither the Parramatta Eels or NSW Police have commented on the matter.
The former couple received heavy criticism in 2020 after they expressed their beliefs about vaccinations widely on social media.
Cartwright and his ex-wife said they chose not to vaccinate their children, which was condemned by medical experts.
They called themselves “pro-choice” rather than “anti-vax”.
Both Shanelle and Cartwright were sent a number of threats due to the controversial stance.
More than 5,000 NSW Corrective Services officers will strike for 24 hours on Friday in response to one of their colleagues facing an upgraded murder charge over the fatal shooting of an inmate in 2019.
Key points:
The corrective services officer allegedly shot Dwayne Johnstone outside Lismore hospital in 2019
Mr Johnstone was trying to escape custody
The Public Service Association says the weapons carried by corrections staff are not “for show”
WARNING: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this article contains the image of a person who has died.
Indigenous man Dwayne Johnstone, 43, had received treatment and was leaving Lismore Base Hospital while shackled in March 2019 when he attempted to escape custody.
A Corrective Services officer fired three shots, with Mr Johnstone dying from a single bullet wound, despite receiving medical care, an inquest has previously heard.
The officer, who cannot be named due to a court suppression order, was previously charged with a manslaughter.
“All the available evidence in this matter, including newly subpoenaed material, has been reviewed in preparation for the upcoming trial,” a spokesperson for the NSW Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions said.
“The Director has determined that the appropriate charge is one of murder.”
Dwayne Johnstone was shot and killed by a corrective services officer.
Public Service Association General Secretary Stewart Little said members would strike from 6am on Friday, affecting all areas of the correctional system and “very, very limited movements of inmates.”
Mr Little said a duty of care will be provided to inmates, with commissioned officers still deployed on sites and critical legal visits allowed.
“There is a huge degree of anger at this charge being brought,” he said.
Mr Little said both the original and upgraded charge came as “a shock” and the officer had an “impeccable record”.
“Every day, our members look after over 12,000 inmates across the prison system,” he said.
“When they have to take those inmates into the community, their job is to protect the community from those people.”
Mr Little said the events had caused members to question how they will deploy their weapons in the future.
He also called on the state government to support the “very difficult and dangerous job” they perform.
Mr Little said weapons carried by Corrective Services officers were not there “for show”.
“Inmates are under absolutely no illusion, when they’re on escort, they are told unequivocally if you try to escape that weapon can and will be deployed to prevent you escaping.”
The officer was granted bail last year when a magistrate requested he surrender his passport and not travel outside Australia.
Mr Johnstone’s mother, Kerry Crawford-Shanahan had traveled from Sydney to Lismore for the hearing, only to be told it would take place in a closed court.
As Democrats prepare to cast their final vote on President Biden’s economic agenda, some party lawmakers are steeling themselves for the next fight: trying to persuade voters to let them finish what they started.
The bill that is expected to be approved in the House on Friday clinches only some of Democrats’ long-delayed plans. It aims to combat climate change, lower health-care costs, revise the tax code and reduce the deficit, after party leaders jettisoned earlier, more ambitious spending proposals in pursuit of a deal that could win over moderates in their ranks.
The political trade-offs have informed Democrats’ retooled pitch to voters this week, as they fan out across the country fresh off a successful Senate vote. With control of Congress on the line in November’s midterm elections, party lawmakers have tried to strike a political balance, eagerly touting their early victories while signaling they are committed to making another run at the ideas they had to abandon.
“The fact that we can show we’re actually getting something done, that people care about, that doesn’t take difficult explanation,” Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (DN.Y.) said in a recent interview, describing the bill as “one of the most significant pieces of legislation passed in decades.”
But Schumer said their work isn’t finished, especially if Democrats “pick up a few more seats” in the midterm elections. Only months ago, the majority leader had tried to move a more sprawling package that aimed to expand Medicare, invest in affordable housing, improve child care, offer free prekindergarten and provide a host of new benefits to low-income Americans. That push ultimately faltered after Sen. Joe Manchin III (DW.Va.) raised concerns about its price tag and policy scope, though he and Schumer eventually worked out a compromise.
“If we win, we’re going to have to do a reconciliation bill that will take care of a lot of the things that we couldn’t do,” Schumer said, referring to the legislative process that allowshis party to override Republican opposition.
Senate approves Inflation Reduction Act, clinching long-delayed health and climate bill
For Democrats, the Inflation Reduction Act amounts to a major political achievement in its own right. The bill delivers the largest-ever single burst of federal spending to tackle global warming — roughly $370 billion — with new programs to cut back on greenhouse gas emissions and boost clean-energy technologies including electric vehicles.
With it, Democrats also delivered new initiatives to cap and cut drug costs for seniors on Medicare and spare about 13 million low- and middle-income Americans from insurance premium spikes next year. Lawmakers paid for their package — while generating new money for deficit reduction — through proposals that target some billion-dollar corporations and tax cheats.
Democrats forged the measure in the Senate, after months of tumultuous negotiations between Schumer and Manchin, the party’s chief moderate holdout. Talks at one point last month appeared on the verge of full collapse, after Manchin grew concerned over Democrats’ proposed spending as inflation threatened the economy.
But the duo continued to toil, largely out of sight of their party’s members, before brokering a surprise summer deal. After another round of tweaks — this time to satisfy Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), another key moderate — Democrats shepherded the bill through a marathon overnight debate and adopted it Sunday over unanimous Republican opposition.
The two-week scramble that saved Democrats’ climate agenda
The successful outcome has teed up the bill for the House, where lawmakers set in motion a plan to bring it to the floor Friday. A final vote would then send the bill to Biden’s desk, solidifying a package more than a year in the making.
To prevail, Democrats must stay almost completely united — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (Calif.) has only four votes to spare in the narrowly divided chamber. And they must weather an intensifying barrage of stall tactics and political attacks from Republicans, who have argued that the bill would worsen families’ finances.
“This is going to mean higher taxes for hard-working families and higher costs due to more inflation,” said Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.), the House minority whip.
In the coming weeks, Scalise said, Republicans would be “rolling out an [economic] agenda that will reverse it,” referring to the Inflation Reduction Act. But for now, he said, GOP lawmakers aim to focus on “letting the country know every dirty, rotten piece of this bill.”
Even before the House debate began, many Democrats in the chamber had started touting the bill’s benefits to voters. For some in the party, the electoral map is a difficult one amid conflicting economic indicators and mixed opinion polling on their majority and Biden’s popularity. But Schumer in recent days has cast the package as a set of “things Americans have longed for and couldn’t get done,” one that offers contrast with Republicans, who voted against it.
In Virginia, for example, Rep. Abigail Spanberger touted a new program that would cap seniors’ yearly drug costs and allow Medicare to negotiate the price of some medicines.
Those provisions wouldn’t take effect for some time, with Medicare negotiation in particular only beginning in 2026. But Spanberger, a member of the moderate Blue Dog Coalition who is running in a competitive race, said passing the bill would help her “look a retire in the face and say we are capping your out-of-pocket costs,” even if the benefits aren’t immediate.
I think [it] is understood that is not fast,” she said.
Sanders grapples with missed opportunity in Democrats’ economic plan
The expected House vote comes about nine months after Manchin’s opposition scuttled the larger, roughly $2 trillion Build Back Better Act that Democrats in the chamber adopted in November. When the bill faltered last year, some lawmakers were flustered and furious, fearing they had squandered a rare opportunity to deliver on their agenda.
But their mood has shifted considerably in recent days, as party leaders implore them to savor their current success — and start to set their sights on the future.
“As I say to the members, you cannot judge a bill for what it does not do,” Pelosi said Tuesday on MSNBC. “You respect it for what it does. And what this bill does do is remarkable.”
“Do we want more? Of course,” she added. “Will we continue to work for more? Of course.”
Speaking from her home state of Washington, Rep. Pramila Jayapal said she had already started touting some provisions on climate change to local voters, stressing the fact that the spending could reduce emissions by 40 percent below 2005 levels by 2030.
Jayapal had been a major force in crafting the original Build Back Better Act on behalf of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, a powerful bloc of nearly 100 left-leaning lawmakers. The group had pushed Manchin repeatedly to back a bigger bill, at times blasting him for obstructing the will of most of his own party.
But Jayapal said liberals are ready to back the new bill, since it allows Democrats to achieve some of what they hoped for — and positions them to try again if they preserve their majorities.
“We made the case to the country about the need for universal child care, universal pre-K, investments in housing, expanding Medicare,” she said. “All we need to do is get a couple more Democrats in the Senate and ideally expand our majority in the House and we can get the other pieces done.”
“We really could pass a reconciliation bill that has all the rest of it within the first few months of getting an expanded Senate majority,” she said. “That’s the pitch we’re making to voters, that I’m making to voters.”
Reflecting on his own work, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), the leader of the tax-focused Finance Committee, said his panel had secured the sort of significant policy changes he’s pursued for years. Along with drug pricing, Wyden and his aides deél cobbled together the proposals to fund the bill, reduce the deficit and help deliver the climate-related spending.
This week, Wyden hit the road to out the package in Oregon. Appearing at events in Wilsonville and Portland on Tuesday with Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm, the senator said, he spoke with voters about the “transformational” spending Democrats approved on climate and health care.
But Wyden and Democratic leaders could not achieve everything they had hoped, including a more sweeping overhaul of the US tax code that might have raised rates on wealthy individuals and corporations. The push, which aimed to unwind the tax cuts implemented under President Donald Trump in 2017, faltered along with a slew of other proposals as a result of Sinema’s opposition.
Wyden acknowledged the omission — and other cuts in areas like child care — as a reflection of “how challenging a 50-50 Senate is.” Still, the senator stressed in an interview: “There’s a lot to do; I’m not minimizing it. But when you thread the needle on big issues, it’s something to build on.”
In the face of those changes, one lawmaker—Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) — labored to expand the Inflation Reduction Act in the final hours of debate. Targeting prescription drugs, climate change and a long-sought push to expand tax credits for parents with children, Sanders offered a series of amendments that would have restored some of the provisions trimmedto win Manchin’s support.
But Sanders repeatedly failed, stymied by opposition — from Republicans and even Democrats who felt they had to protect their delicate deal at all costs. The series of votes, in which Sanders found himself the lone aye in the chamber, often came after his Democratic peers promised to continue working on the policies they reluctantly cut.
Other key provisions did not survive debate as a result of rulings from the Senate’s parliamentarian, who was tasked with reviewing the legislation to ensure it complied with the rules of budget reconciliation — a process that allowed Democrats to advance their bill over GOP objections this weekend. The casualties included a proposal that would have penalized drug manufacturers that raise prices for patients covered by private insurance faster than the rate of inflation.
The cuts dismayed some Democrats, but many appeared emboldened anyway. Speaking to reporters this weekend, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.) said they needed “two more Democrats in the United States Senate, and hang on in the House,” and then they could shepherd their agenda through Congress with much less resistance.
“We have elections coming up in November,” she said.