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York County Chamber launches business mentorship program with access to new office space – Daily Press

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With the aim to support new businesses and help established ones grow, the York County Chamber of Commerce recently began a mentorship program in a new office.

The chamber’s new office located on the U.S. 17 business corridor is three times the size of the previous office. The move was made to accommodate the mentorship program and the 15 board members who meet monthly, Executive Administrator Tracy Harsey said in an email.

“We needed a professional office building that would allow the chamber to better support the business community and project a positive image,” she said. “When the new office space at Mid-Atlantic Commercial Real Estate became available, we knew this would fit our needs to support the business community and help new businesses get started.”

Set to start in autumn, the mentorship program is for startup businesses and existing businesses who want to expand. It is a partnership between the chamber and Artinspired, owned by chamber board member Marilen Crump, who has over 23 years of experience in business development and marketing strategies.

There are few requirements, but the most important is commitment, Crump said.

“Perseverance and commitment are important attributes for any business owner,” Crump said. “There will be times of struggle when you are in your entrepreneurial journey but they can be overcome if you are willing to see it through.”

There are two pricing options. For $75 a month, participants receive coaching, business plan preparation, workshops and access to an online platform. For $150 a month, participants also receive a desk, full access of the chamber building and internet.

York County Chamber of Commerce recently moved into the Mid-Atlantic Commercial Real Estate building to accommodate a business mentorship program. (Courtesy of Stacy Whiting)

The price is affordable, Crump said. Typically, such a service could cost between $375 and up to $1,000. There is no limit as to how long a participant can stay in the mentorship program.

The mentorship program can help keep participants accountable for their progress, Crump said. When she coaches a business owner or entrepreneur, she works with them to set goals and achieve them.

Businesses do not need to be located in York County to be a member of the chamber or participate in the mentorship program. York County Chamber President James “Snap” Troeschel said more than 50% of chamber members have businesses outside of the county. The chamber, which grew by 20% last year, has a strong commitment to small businesses, he added.

The chamber also introduced public service awards last year with its Heroes Awards, which are displayed on a wall. Several times a year, an award is given to an outstanding member of law enforcement, the fire department, education, nursing or military at the chamber evening networking events.

The new office is located at 110 Mid Atlantic Place. For more information, visit yorkcountychamberva.org.

York County Chamber of Commerce recently moved into the Mid-Atlantic Commercial Real Estate building to accommodate a business mentorship program. (Courtesy of Stacy Whiting)
York County Chamber of Commerce recently moved into the Mid-Atlantic Commercial Real Estate building to accommodate a business mentorship program. (Courtesy of Stacy Whiting)

 

 

Chesapeake eyes new advanced facility for more efficient recycling, waste services – Daily Press

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CHESAPEAKE — As city leaders work to expand drop-off recycling sites for residents, they are also discussing the development of an advanced sorting and processing facility as a long-term solution for recycling services.

Last year, Chesapeake ended its contract with TFC Recycling, which provided curbside recycling services for residents, as a cost-saving measure to fund other priorities, such as pay raises for public safety workers. Since then, the city has provided eight drop-off sites scattered throughout the city, and some subscription-based vendors set up shop in the city as well.

Since the nixing of curbside services, some council members have expressed an appetite for restoring them. But staff are exploring what they believe will be the future of recycling for the city.

In an Aug. 15 work session with City Council members, Public Works Director Earl Sorey said an integrated materials recovery facility would use advanced technology like artificial intelligence to more efficiently sort and process both solid waste and recyclables in a “single bin system.” Such a facility, he said, would eliminate redundant truck trips as materials would be transported via a single fleet of vehicles.

Additionally, it’s estimated such a facility would see a 50% recovery rate — defined as the amount of materials recycled out of everything collected through trash and recycling services. By contrast, city staff say traditional curbside services in Chesapeake deliver a recovery rate between 5% and 7%.

Sorey said a city team visited such a site in South Carolina earlier this year and that others are scattered throughout the U.S.

“The best way I can describe a facility of this nature is it’s an all-in-one solution,” Sorey said. “There is some human manpower involved. But it all leads to greater operational efficiencies and significantly higher processing capacities.”

City Manager Chris Price told council members the integrated materials recovery facility would meet all of the desired outcomes they’ve identified: reduced costs, improved quality of the recycling stream, additional choices for residents, convenience and preserving space in the landfill.

But since it’d take around two or more years to be up and running, Price said staff in the meantime will continue to expand and rely on drop-off sites, as it’s still a “cost-effective” option that improves the recycling stream.

“We recognize that that’s not likely the future,” Price said. “That’s to bridge the gap between now and what the future is.”

Council member Amanda Newins, however, said her concern with pursuing the integrated facility is the time it would take to build and be in operation. She’s a proponent of bringing back curbside services, which she called “essential” for residents. Newins said she wants more feedback from the public on the integrated facility.

But to restore the old system of curbside recycling, Price said City Council would have to enact a 4-cent hike in the real estate tax or levy a $7 monthly fee. If it did so as part of the 2024-25 fiscal budget next year, Price said there’d still be a turnaround time of nearly a year or more. A short-term contract would be more costly as well.

Price said use of the advanced facility would effectively restore curbside services without a tax or fee hike.

City staff say the switch from curbside service to using eight drop-off locations has exceeded expectations. Though a lower volume has been collected, the contamination rate has dropped to 10%, making the stream cleaner. More than 3,000 tons have been collected through drop-off sites between July 2022 and June, with 2,733 tons recycled. By contrast, 12,389 tons of recyclables were collected through curbside in fiscal 2022, with only 58%, or 7,185 tons, of that ultimately recyclable.

Sorey said the switch to the drop-off sites has saved the city about $2.2 million.

Sorey said among the lessons learned is that recycling subscription vendors haven’t been successful in Chesapeake. Recyclops is now the only subscription vendor still providing services, Sorey said. City staff say Happy Planet has cancelled all Chesapeake subscriber agreements and is no longer providing services. TFC Recycling ceased subscription services for Chesapeake residents in July.

“I think we should be looking at putting our efforts and our resources into what’s going to be the future, not a part-time solution,” said Mayor Rick West, who added that he visited the site in South Carolina and “knows that it works.”

Sorey said the free drop-off sites will cost the city around $2.2 million, apart from roughly $252,000 spent one-time to prepare the sites. By contrast, the city’s previous contract for curbside services was about $4.5 million, and Sorey noted that price would’ve increased by 5% in November had the city kept the contract.

Sorey said Total Fiber Recovery, an $80 million recycling paper and cardboard plant, is scheduled to open by the end of 2023 off Bainbridge Boulevard. Sorey said the city is working to haul paper products collected at the city’s drop-off sites directly to the facility, reducing transportation and handling costs for the city. It will be able to process up to 450,000 tons annually, he said.

Natalie Anderson, 757-732-1133, [email protected] 

Another overdose record – Daily Press

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Chalk up another unwanted record for Hampton Roads: The number of people killed by drug overdoses here was at a new high last year, a record 617 deaths.

Hampton Roads communities and Virginia as a whole have been battling this deadly trend, but people keep dying, tragically and senselessly. We know the numbers, we know the reasons, and we have been trying to do what’s needed. We must try harder, must do more.

The overdose death toll in the Hampton Roads region for 2022 is an increase of 3.7% over 2021. That may not seem like a huge jump, but it’s part of an alarming increase over the past decade, when drug overdose deaths have nearly tripled.

When everything is evaluated, in fact, the 2022 overdose death toll across the commonwealth is expected to be about 2,600, down slightly from the previous year,. fatality figures are down a little in some cities, including Norfolk, from the record highs of the year before.

A slight dip doesn’t mean we’re getting the problem under control. More likely, it means that the major spike in overdose deaths in 2021, linked to the isolation and disruption of COVID, has leveled off. It’s obvious that the massive problem is still very much with us.

Consider this: Drug overdoses are the No. 1 cause of unnatural deaths in Virginia, killing more people than gunshot wounds and car crashes combined.

And Hampton Roads is one of the hardest hit areas. Portsmouth, with 98 overdose deaths last year, was the deadliest city in the region per capita, fourth in the state behind Petersburg, Richmond and Roanoke in fatal overdoses per 100,000 people. For sheer numbers, Norfolk, with 120 overdose deaths, was worst in the region, followed closely by Virginia Beach’s 117.

Why are there so many fatal overdoses? We know the answer; it’s well documented. There are many reasons why people misuse powerful, usually illegally obtained, drugs. But the overwhelming reason so many of those die is fentanyl.

Fentanyl is a powerful synthetic opioid that started as a prescription drug used mainly to ease severe pain, often in terminally ill patients. Its potency gives an intense high quickly.

It’s also cheaper and easier to produce than natural opioids such as heroin. The fentanyl produced in illegal labs, many of them in China, finds its way into the hands of drug traffickers who sell it to dealers eager to cash in on people’s weaknesses.

Dealers lace other drugs with fentanyl because it’s relatively cheap and powerful. Recently, some addicts specifically look for fentanyl. In either case, it’s a dangerous proposition: A slight miscalculation in the drug mixing, a tiny bit too much fentanyl, and a user can be struggling to breathe. Death can come quickly.

Community and state leaders have made battling this tragedy a priority.  Gov. Glenn Youngkin in May signed executive orders ramping up strategies against fentanyl abuse through public safety, prevention, education and treatment. His administration is spreading the word that “One Pill Can Kill.” It’s promoting training so that people will recognize overdose symptoms, have available and quickly use naloxone, a medication available over the counter that can counter symptoms until first responders arrive.

The General Assembly passed several bills this year mainly designed to get tougher on drug traffickers and dealers.

Obviously, it’s vitally important to stop those who are pushing deadly fentanyl in Hampton Roads and across Virginia. Reining that trafficking in will take much time and effort, though, and will probably never be complete.

We must work from the other direction, too, strengthening existing efforts and devising new ones to address the problems that cause people to turn to drugs that can so easily kill them. Much of that is something we know, too: hopelessness, isolation, depression, stress and related mental and emotional illnesses. In Virginia, researchers have noticed a particular spike in drug overdose deaths among Black males, who face discrimination in many areas of life.

We cannot wait while people are needlessly dying.

California man suspected in slayings of 4 Tijuana sex workers faces femicide charge – Daily Press

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A man whom Mexican authorities have likened to notorious serial killer Ted Bundy is suspected of slaying three Tijuana sex workers in 2021 and 2022 and now has been linked to the killing of a fourth woman, according to prosecutors in the border city.

Bryant “Eduardo” Rivera, 30, was arrested July 6 by FBI agents and U.S. marshals outside his elderly parents’ home in Downey, a suburb southeast of Los Angeles, in connection with the strangulation death of Ángela Carolina Acosta Flores. He faces a charge of femicide, a hate crime defined as the intentional killing of women or girls because they are female.

“We will apply all the legal and technological instruments necessary to find those responsible for any crime, particularly those considered for gender reasons,” former Baja California Attorney General Ricardo Iván Carpio Sánchez said in a statement prior to his abrupt resignation last week amid a violent crime wave plaguing the state. “So with a strong hand, we will seek to bring all those criminals to justice, even when they try to evade it by hiding in another country.”

Rivera remains in custody pending extradition to Mexico, where authorities there plan to present evidence to charge him with the slayings of Acosta and two other sex workers.

Deputy Federal Public Defender J. Alejandro Barrientos argued unsuccessfully last month that Rivera should be granted bail and be placed on home incarceration with a location ankle monitor because he has no prior criminal record and financially assists his parents through his job as a delivery driver.

“He is also a devoted and caring son to his parents,” Barrientos said in a court motion. “There is no evidence that Mr. Rivera poses an immediate danger to anyone in the Central District of California, or the United States more broadly, as Mr. Rivera has peacefully resided in the Los Angeles area for three decades.”

Last week, Carpio Sánchez told reporters Rivera is under investigation for another murder case but provided no details or the date of the slaying, according to The Associated Press. “It’s the same hotel, the victim is a woman and there are similarities to the deaths of the other victims,” he said.

The investigation into Acosta’s slaying began around noon on Jan. 25, 2022, after employees at the Hotel Cascadas discovered her naked, lifeless body in the bathroom of Room 404, according to a criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles.

Surveillance video captured Bryant “Eduardo” Rivera and sex worker Ángela Carolina Acosta Flores shortly before Acosta was slain on the night of Jan. 24, 2022, in her room at the Hotel Cascadas in Tijuana, Mexico. (Courtesy of U.S. Department of Justice)

The hotel is directly above the Hong Kong Gentlemen’s Club in Tijuana’s red light district, where Acosta had worked since September 2021 as a dancer and occasional sex worker.

At 10:12 p.m. on Jan. 24, Acosta allegedly sent her mother a text stating that she was going to Room 404 at the Hotel Cascadas with a customer for 30 minutes.

After the woman was unable to reach her daughter by phone or text at 10:45 p.m. and 11:15 p.m., she went to the Hong Kong Gentlemen’s Club to ask about her, but the manager told her Acosta was “probably still busy,” according to the complaint.

Acosta’s boyfriend went to the club around 3 a.m. on Jan. 25 but couldn’t locate her. However, a woman at the club told him she had seen Acosta with a “gringo” named Bryant Rivera, the complaint says.

After Flores was found dead at the Hotel Cascadas, her mother tracked her cellphone to an address in Riverside.

Surveillance video shows Rivera and Acosta entering Room 404 at 10:13 p.m. on Jan. 24 and Rivera leaving alone about 90 minutes later.

Then, 13 minutes later, video captured Rivera on foot crossing the San Ysidro Point of Entry between Tijuana and San Diego, according to the criminal complaint.

Bryant "Eduardo" Rivera is seen on surveillance video at the San Ysidro Point of Entry about 13 minutes after leaving a room at the Hotel Cascadas in Tijuana, Mexico where sex worker Ángela Carolina Acosta was slain. (Courtesy of the U.S. Department of Justice)
Bryant “Eduardo” Rivera is seen on surveillance video at the San Ysidro Point of Entry about 13 minutes after leaving a room at the Hotel Cascadas in Tijuana, Mexico, where sex worker Ángela Carolina Acosta was slain. (Courtesy of the U.S. Department of Justice)

Information was not immediately available regarding when Rivera might be extradited to Mexico.

Biden says federal government will help Maui ‘for as long as it takes’ to recover from wildfire – Daily Press

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By SEUNG MIN KIM (Associated Press)

LAHAINA, Hawaii, (AP) — President Joe Biden on Monday told survivors of Hawaii’s wildfires that the nation “grieves with you” and promised that the federal government will help Maui “for as long as it takes” to recover after touring damage caused by the deadliest wildfire in the United States in more than a century.

Biden arrived in Maui 13 days after the wildfires that have taken at least 114 lives ravaged the western part of the island. Standing near a burned, but still standing, 150-year-old Banyon tree, the president acknowledged the “overwhelming” devastation but said that Maui would persevere through the tragedy.

“Today it’s burned but it’s still standing,” Biden said of the tree. “The tree survived for a reason. I believe it’s a very powerful symbol of what we can and will do to get through this crisis.”

Biden and first lady Jill Biden got a close look at the devastation wrought by the flames that ripped through the western part of the Hawaiian island, seeing for themselves the hollowed homes, structures, charred cars and singed trees left in the wake of the blaze.

The Bidens lingered briefly on the tarmac after arriving at Kahului Airport to console Hawaii Gov. Josh Green and his wife Jaime Green as well as members of Hawaii’s congressional delegation who came to the airport to greet them. The president and first lady embraced each of their greeters before boarding Marine One for an aerial tour of the devastation caused by the fires.

They spent most of their visit in Lahaina, a historic town of 13,000 people that was virtually destroyed by the flames. His motorcade wound through the community of block upon block of hollowed out homes and structures, palm trees burnt to a crisp and endless debris.

The Bidens also met with first responders and were briefed by state and local officials about the ongoing response. They also took part in a blessing by island elders of his visit.

The Bidens interrupted a weeklong vacation in the Lake Tahoe area for the five-hour flight to Lahaina.

The White House announced Monday that Biden has named Bob Fenton, a regional leader at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, to be the chief federal response coordinator for the Maui wildfires, ensuring that someone from his administration will be responsible for long-term recovery efforts. It will take years to rebuild Lahaina, where just about every building was obliterated.

President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden walk with Hawaii Gov. Josh Green and his wife Jaime Green and Federal Emergency Management Agency administrator Deanne Criswell, left, as they visit areas devastated by the Maui wildfires, Monday, Aug. 21, 2023, in Lahaina, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

“We’re going to rebuild the way the people of Maui want to rebuild,” said Biden, adding that his administration would be focused on respecting sacred lands, cultures and traditions.

Dozens gathered on the streets of Lahaina to watch Biden’s motorcade wind its way through the streets. Some greeted the president enthusiastically, but others appeared to be waving their middle fingers at the motorcade. Other island residents held up signs urging Biden “to listen to the people of Lahaina” and to send more aid to the island.

Biden has faced criticism from Republicans, including 2024 Republican frontrunner Donald Trump, for saying too little during the first days after the catastrophe. The White House, however, has pushed back against the criticism, saying the president kept in close touch with the governor and other emergency officials throughout the unfolding crisis.

Sen. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii, said that as of Sunday about 85% of the affected area had been searched and nearly 2,000 people remained without power and 10,000 were without telecom connectivity. Water in parts of west Maui is not safe to drink.

Photo gallery: A week after Maui wildfire, islanders survey aftermath and look ahead to recovery

While immediate aid such as water, food and blankets has been readily distributed to residents, Schatz said cellphones, ID and other documents that people would need to help them enroll in longer-term aid programs were burned in the fires, adding more challenges to the application process.

Green said Sunday on CBS’ “Face the Nation” that “an army of search and rescue teams” with 41 dogs had blanketed the affected area.

Maui County Mayor Richard Bissen said in a social media post Sunday that 27 victims had been identified and 11 families were notified of the losses. The FBI and the Maui County medical examiner and coroner’s office are working together to identify the recovered remains.

Bissen said 850 names were on a list of missing people, taking hope from the fact that the initial list contained more than 2,000 names.

“We are both saddened and relieved about these numbers as we continue the recovery process,” Bissen said. “The number of identified will rise, and the number of missing may decrease.”

More than 1,000 federal officials remain on the ground to respond to the wildfires in Hawaii, according to the White House. The administration has distributed more than $8.5 million in aid to some 8,000 affected families, including $3.6 million in rental assistance, said FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell.

Schatz, who joined Biden on Monday, stressed that officials were “still responding to the disaster” and “we are not yet in a recovery phase.”

“As bad as this looks, it’s actually worse,” he said in a phone interview on Sunday. “What you can’t see is the damage to utility infrastructure. What you can’t see is the thousands of kids who are trying to figure out how to go to school this fall. What you can’t see is the first responders who went into the flames without regard for their own safety and had their own homes burned down.”

While vacationing in Lake Tahoe, Biden has been on the phone regularly with officials to get briefed on updates to the wildfire response, the White House said.

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Associated Press writer Claire Rush in Portland, Ore., contributed to this report.

Sam Howell plays effectively in first half as Commanders end Ravens’ NFL-record 24-game preseason win streak – Daily Press

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LANDOVER, Md. – After ending Baltimore’s all-time NFL-record preseason winning streak at 24 games and seeing plenty of encouraging play from Sam Howell, the Washington Commanders hope they’re starting to leave the Dan Snyder era behind.

Virginia Tech product Joey Slye kicked a 49-yard field goal with 14 seconds remaining Monday night, sending the Commanders past the Ravens 29-28 in a nationally televised game at FedEx Field. ESPN cameras captured Josh Harris, the team’s new majority owner, high-fiving people along the Washington sideline near the end of the game – the Ravens’ first preseason defeat since 2015.

Led by Howell, the Commanders took a 17-14 lead into halftime. The newly named starting quarterback proved why much of the Washington personnel and fan base believes in him, completing 19 of 25 passes for 188 yards and two touchdowns. Both of his touchdowns came after the two-minute warning, one to Antonio Gibson and the other to Dyami Brown, Howell’s former North Carolina teammate.

Washington coach Ron Rivera said of Howell, “There’s a lot of pressure, obviously, and we know how important the quarterback position is in the league and how important it is in this area. We’ve been looking for one and we have an opportunity to have a guy that has a chance to be a really good football player for us.”

Brown (concussion) and fellow receiver Terry McLaurin (toe), incurred injuries. Brown was cleared to return, and Rivera said X-rays on McLaurin’s toe were negative. McLaurin is day-to-day, Rivera said.

New offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy’s unit seemed ready for the regular season. The starting defense didn’t play, though the backups at times struggled to contain a Baltimore offense that was lacking Lamar Jackson. The star quarterback was watching from the sidelines.

The Commanders, 2-0 in the preseason, will close their exhibition schedule with a 6:05 p.m. Saturday home game against the Cincinnati Bengals.

British nurse Lucy Letby imprisoned for life in murders of 7 babies and attempted murders of 6 – Daily Press

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By BRIAN MELLEY and DANICA KIRKA (Associated Press)

LONDON (AP) — A former neonatal nurse convicted of murdering seven babies in her care and trying to kill six others at a hospital in northern England was sentenced Monday to life in prison with no chance of release by a judge who said she was cruel, cunning and callous, and acted with “malevolence bordering sadism.”

Lucy Letby, who refused to appear in court for sentencing or to face an outpouring of anger and anguish from grieving parents, was given the most severe punishment possible under British law, which does not allow the death penalty.

Justice James Goss said the number of killings and attempts and the nature of the murders by a nurse entrusted with caring for the most fragile infants provided the “exceptional circumstances” required to impose a rare “whole-life order.” Only three other women have received such a harsh sentence in the U.K.

“There was a deep malevolence bordering on sadism in your actions,” Goss said, addressing the absent defendant, who will be given a transcript of the proceedings. “During the course of this trial, you have coldly denied any responsibility for your wrongdoing. You have no remorse. There are no mitigating factors.”

A Manchester Crown Court jury that deliberated 22 days convicted Letby, 33, of murdering the seven babies over a yearlong period that saw her prey on the vulnerabilities of sick newborns and their anxious parents. Eight jurors showed up to watch the sentencing.

Letby sickened babies by injecting intravenous lines with air, poisoning some with insulin and force-feeding others milk. After killing them, she sometimes sobbed in grief, made keepsakes for parents and bathed the little bodies and dressed them for burial.

The victims, who were given anonymity and listed only by letters, such as Child A and Child B, died in the neonatal unit at the Countess of Chester Hospital in northwest England between June 2015 and June 2016.

“I don’t think we will ever get over the fact that our daughter was tortured till she had no fight left in her and everything she went through over her short life was deliberately done by someone who was supposed to protect her and help her come home where she belonged,” the mother of a girl identified as Child I said in a statement read in court.

The judge said no one but Letby knows what drove her, though some parents ventured theories: she wanted to play god; she needed attention, drama and sympathy in her life; or she wanted to be remembered.

Prosecutor Nicholas Johnson said Letby deserved a “whole-life tariff” for “sadistic conduct” and premeditated crimes.

Defense lawyer Ben Myers said Letby maintained her innocence and that there was nothing he could add that would be able to reduce her sentence.

A mother who conceived her twin boys through in vitro fertilization said there were “no children in the world more wanted than them” and didn’t know if she would have others. Letby killed one, Child E, and left Child F with learning deficiencies his mother attributes to insulin poisoning.

She became emotional as she described the regret she has every day for letting Letby spend the final moments of Child E’s life bathing and clothing the boy in a woolen gown.

“He was buried in that gown, a gift from the unit chosen by Lucy,” she said.

Other families also suffered multiple tragedies since Letby targeted three sets of twins and a set of triplets.

Another mother of twins was left to grieve the loss of a son and blame herself when her family members — who had been vigilant to watch over the second infant after the first one’s death — let their guard down and Letby struck again, harming the boy’s sister, who survived.

“Little did we know you were waiting for us to leave so you could attack the one thing that gave us a reason to carry on in life,” the mother said.

The parents of triplets lost two of their babies, and the third survived after being transferred to another hospital. The couple said in a video played in court that Letby had ruined their lives.

“The anger and the hatred I have towards her will never go away,” the father said. “It has destroyed me as a man and as a father.”

One father called Letby “the devil” and said she had tried to kill his daughter twice. The nurse didn’t succeed but the girl was left blind, with brain damage and having to be fed through a tube.

“Every day I would sit there and pray. I would pray for God to save her,” the father of Child G said. “He did. He saved her, but the devil found her.”

Letby’s absence, which is allowed in British courts during sentencing, fueled anger from the families of the victims, who wanted her to listen to statements about the devastation caused by her crimes.

Politicians and victim advocates have called for changes in the law to force criminals to appear for sentencing after several high-profile convicts chose not to face their victims in recent months.

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who called the crimes “shocking and harrowing,” said his government would bring forward in “due course” a plan to require convicts to attend their sentencing hearings.

“It’s cowardly that people who commit such horrendous crimes do not face their victims and hear first-hand the impact that their crimes have had on them and their families and loved ones,” Sunak said.

Also planned is an independent inquiry into what happened at the Countess of Chester Hospital and how staff and management responded to the spike in neonatal unit deaths. However, there are calls for a more formal inquiry led by a judge, who could order people to testify.

During Letby’s 10-month trial, prosecutors said the hospital started to see in 2015 a significant rise in the number of babies who were dying or suffering sudden declines in their health for no apparent reason.

Some suffered “serious catastrophic collapses” but survived after getting help from medical personnel.

Letby was on duty in all of the cases, with prosecutors describing her as a “constant malevolent presence” in the neonatal unit when the children experienced medical distress or died. The nurse harmed babies in ways that were difficult to detect, and she persuaded colleagues that their collapses and deaths were normal, they said.

Senior doctors said over the weekend that they had raised concerns about Letby as early as October 2015 and that children might have been saved if managers had taken their concerns seriously.

Dr. Stephen Brearey, the head consultant at the Countess of Chester Hospital’s neonatal unit, told the Guardian newspaper that deaths could arguably have been avoided as early as February 2016 if executives had “responded appropriately” to an urgent meeting request from concerned doctors.

Letby was finally removed from front-line duties in late June 2016. She was arrested at her home in July 2018.

Police found records she had taken home from the hospital on babies who had collapsed. Investigators learned Letby had performed thousands of searches online for information about the parents after the killings.

They also found a note in her house that served as a chilling confession: “I killed them on purpose because I’m not good enough to care for them,” she wrote. “I am a horrible evil person.”

The mother of Child C wept on the witness stand as she spoke of the loss of her firstborn, a “feisty” and “defenseless baby boy.”

She had worn her son’s hand and foot prints around her neck to remember him. The later realization that the person who took those prints — Letby — was the same person who took his life tainted the memory, she said.

“There is no sentence that will ever compare to the excruciating agony that we have suffered as a consequence of your actions,” she said. “At least now there is no debate that, in your own words, you killed them on purpose. You are evil. You did this.”

Virginia names Monmouth transfer Tony Muskett its starting QB – Daily Press

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COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Monmouth transfer named UVA’s top QB

Virginia coach Tony Elliott named Tony Muskett the Cavaliers’ starting quarterback, likely surprising very few observers.

Muskett, a transfer from Monmouth, beat freshman Anthony Colandrea for the job. Muskett, who amassed more than 5,600 passing yards and 51 touchdowns in 23 starts for Monmouth, will lead the Cavaliers against Tennessee in less than two weeks in Nashville.

**Meanwhile, the Cavaliers got a weekend commitment from tight end Trevor Ladd of La Costa Canyon High in Encinitas, California. That made him UVA’s 16th football commitment for the class of 2024.

At 6-foot-3 and 225 pounds, the 3-star prospect is ranked as the No. 105 tight end in the country by 247Sports and the No. 232 overall prospect in California.

As a junior, Ladd had 35 receptions for 605 yards and eight touchdowns, earning all-league honors. According to reporter Jerry Ratcliffe, Ladd had offers from Air Force, San Jose State, Nevada, Montana State, Idaho, Columbia and Penn.

CNU picked second in conference

Christopher Newport was predicted second to Salisbury in the coaches’ poll in the seven-team New Jersey Athletic Conference poll.

CNU is coming off a 7-3 year and second-place finish to Salisbury, which has won the last four NJAC titles and is ranked 25th nationally in the d3football.com preseason poll. The Captains were 5-1 in the conference, while the Sea Gulls were 6-0.

Rowan, Kean, The College of New Jersey, Montclair State and William Paterson were chosen third through seventh, respectively.

CNU, paced by two-time NJAC Offensive Player of the Year Matt Dzierski at quarterback, will open its season at 5 p.m. Sept. 2 at home against Southern Virginia.

COLLEGE FIELD HOCKEY

Cavaliers predicted as ACC runners-up

Virginia was picked second to North Carolina in the coaches’ poll in the seven-team ACC. The Cavaliers got three first-place votes.

UVA sophomore midfielder Daniela Mendez-Trendler, who had eight goals and 19 points in her first season, was named to the Preseason All-ACC team.

The Cavaliers advanced to the ACC final last season, losing 3-2 to UNC. This year’s ACC Tournament will be in Charlottesville from Oct. 31-Nov. 3.

COLLEGE WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL

CNU chosen second to Mary Washington

Defending champion Mary Washington was named the Coast-to-Coast Athletic Conference favorite in a poll of coaches, while Christopher Newport was chosen second and UC Santa Cruz was third.

Salisbury, Pratt of New York, Mount Mary of Wisconsin and Warren Wilson of North Carolina were fourth through seventh, respectively.

CNU has been to 15 consecutive NCAA Division III championship tournaments; the Captains reached a region final last year before losing to eventual national champion Juniata. UMW, UC Santa Cruz and Salisbury also reached the 64-team championship field last year.

COLLEGE WOMEN’S SOCCER

Tribe back gains CAA honor

William & Mary sophomore center back Nora Green-Orset was named the Coastal Athletic Association Defensive Player of the Week. Playing 176 of a possible 180 minutes, she netted a header in a 4-0 victory over Temple and was part of a scoreless draw versus Saint Joseph’s.

COLLEGE BASEBALL

ODU’s Finwood hires ex-Alabama assistant

Old Dominion coach Chris Finwood added Ryan Fineman to his staff. Fineman started at catcher for Indiana from 2016-19, during which the Hoosiers made three NCAA Tournaments, briefly played in Tampa Bay’s minor league system and most recently was Alabama’s director of player personnel.

Inmate at Virginia Beach Correctional Center dies after medical emergency, sheriff’s office says – Daily Press

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VIRGINIA BEACH — An inmate at the Virginia Beach Correctional Center died Monday morning after a medical emergency, according to the Virginia Beach Sheriff’s Office.

Kevin Lorenzo Jones, 36, was declared dead after inmates alerted staff around 4:20 a.m. that Jones wasn’t moving.

According to the sheriff’s office, a deputy immediately responded, began CPR and called for assistance. Jail medical staff, the city’s fire department and Virginia Beach EMS also responded. Jones was declared dead at 4:43 a.m.

The incident is being investigated by the city’s police department and the sheriff’s office. The death was also reported to the Virginia Dept. of Corrections.

No foul play is suspected, according to the sheriff’s office.

Jones was arrested and booked into the jail on Sunday on one misdemeanor charge of failure to appear. He was provided a medical and mental health screening, and no signs of medical distress were found at that time, according to the sheriff’s office.

The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Norfolk will determine the cause and manner of death.

High school scoreboard | Catholic Field Hockey Stuns No. 5 Cape Henry, Granby’s Boys Volleyball Dominates – Daily Press

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Field Hockey

757Teamz Top 15

Catholic 3, #5 Cape Henry 1

G-C- Large, Sunderland, Stavrides.

G-CH-Ruby.

Lila Large, Brooke Sunderland, and Sophia Stavrides scored in the game. Lila Large and Brooke Sunderland also provided assists.

Eastern District

Maury 6, Norview 0

M-G-Topping 3, Chance, Wilson, Branum.

Annabelle Topping scored three goals for the Commodores.

Boys Volleyball

Non-district

Granby def. Norfolk Christian 3-0 

(25-10, 25-10, 25-15)

AJ Angeles had 31 assists, Percy Gordon led the Comets with 8 kills, and Gabe Sol and Alijah Lamp each had 5 aces.

Girls Volleyball

757Teamz Top 15

#9 StoneBridge def. Currituck 3-0 

(25-19, 25-13, 25-18)

Amelia Matson had 16 kills, Ava Baker had 10 kills, Nattie Plumlee had 11 digs, and Emily Hinton had 32 assists.

Non-district

Norfolk Christian, def. Granby, 3-0 

(25-11, 25-4, 25-19)

Nia Beverly had 4 kills, 3 blocks, and 6 digs. Natalie Duckworth had 8 assists, 2 kills, and 1 block. Julia Bibbo had 4 aces and 3 kills.

Golf

Southeastern District

Grassfield 309, Hickory 333

Jackson Fannon earned the medalist title by shooting a score of 74.

Lakeland 356, Kings Fork 518 

Carter Gorham was the medalist after shooting an 86.

Non-district

Landstown High School 351, Nansemond River 356, Churchland 458

Nick Conboy was the medalist after shooting a 77.