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Michigan officials found additional bodies, raising fatal victim count to four

admin - Latest News - September 29, 2025
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Michigan officials say additional bodies were discovered in the church, raising the total to four fatal victims, plus the suspect, Thomas Jacob Sanford, as the fifth deceased, according to Grand Blanc Township Police Chief William Renye. The investigation into the shooting at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is still ongoing as officials continue to clear the church.



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Sept. 28, 2025, 8:08 PM EDT / Updated Sept. 28, 2025, 8:09 PM EDTBy Andrew GreifThe notion that the New York Giants would switch quarterbacks this season had appeared to be a matter of when, not if, since April. Trading up in the NFL draft to select a quarterback in the first round has a way of starting a clock on such decisions.That change, officially, came in Week 4, and the timing was inauspicious. The Giants, winless and struggling, were hosting the 3-0 Los Angeles Chargers, who had staked their claim to be discussed as a potential Super Bowl contender. In a game in which each team suffered a significant loss, it was Dart who gave the Giants two things they had been lacking most the season. A win, plus some hope.Starting with an opening-drive touchdown capped by a designed run by Dart — the Giants’ first first-quarter touchdown this season — New York beat the Chargers 21-18 in Dart’s first career start. Dart threw for 111 yards and a touchdown but was sacked five times. He also ran for 54 yards. At one point he was evaluated for a concussion but returned to the game. One week after home fans booed starter Russell Wilson as the Giants mustered one touchdown in a loss to Kansas City, Dart drew massive applause for bouncing off tacklers after his quarterback sneak appeared to have been stuffed in the fourth quarter, only for him to stay upright and scramble for a first down.Giants coach Brian Daboll, whose firing some fans had called for after the 0-3 start, pulled Dart in for an embrace at the final whistle. “Happy we got him,” Daboll said.New York may have solved its quarterback issue, but it now has a wide receiver problem after star wideout Malik Nabers left the game with what was reportedly a feared ACL tear in his knee, after it buckled while he was leaping for a second-quarter target. Nabers caught two passes for 20 yards before he left.The Chargers (3-1) could also face a longer-term absence. Offensive lineman Joe Alt, a first-round pick in 2024, was carted off with an ankle injury in the first quarter. The team’s Super Bowl ambitions hinge on the production of quarterback Justin Herbert, but playing behind a patchwork offensive line that already lost one starter, Rashawn Slater, to injury in the preseason — an injury that shifted Alt to left tackle — Herbert had been blitzed 39 times, second-most in the league, through Week 3 and faced the sixth-most pressures. The hits Herbert took Sunday were “very concerning,” Chargers coach Jim Harbaugh said.Alt’s injury also comes on the heels of other injuries that have depleted the team’s depth cart, including running back Najee Harris.Andrew GreifAndrew Greif is a sports reporter for NBC News Digital. 
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Nov. 12, 2025, 1:14 PM EST / Updated Nov. 12, 2025, 2:15 PM ESTBy Corky SiemaszkoThe penny dropped.The U.S. Mint struck the final 1-cent coin that will be used as legal tender on Wednesday, six months after the Trump administration announced that it would stop producing pennies because the cost of making them is almost four times more than they’re worth.From now on, the only new pennies the Mint releases will be collector versions that aren’t currency and will be produced “in limited quantities,” the agency said in a statement. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Treasurer Brandon Beach were at the U.S. Mint in Philadelphia when the coin press punched out the historic final penny, the agency confirmed.There are still an estimated 250 billion pennies in circulation, the American Bankers Association said in October.But back in February, President Donald Trump said it made no fiscal sense to keep producing cents.“For far too long the United States has minted pennies which literally cost us more than 2 cents,” Trump wrote in an online post. “This is so wasteful! I have instructed my Secretary of the U.S. Treasury to stop producing new pennies.”Officially known as the cent, the first penny was struck in 1787 and had a sundial design that was dreamt up by Benjamin Franklin, one of the Founding Fathers.The U.S. Mint took over penny production in 1793, a year after Congress passed the Coinage Act.Like its predecessor, this penny was also made of copper. But it was slightly bigger and came to be known as the “Flowing Hair” cent because it had a woman representing liberty on one side and 15 chain links on the other side.It wasn’t until 1909 that the woman was replaced by President Abraham Lincoln in profile to mark what would have been his 100th birthday.The Mint said that ending penny production will save taxpayers about $56 million annually. And it will continue to be legal tender for as long as its around.That said, the penny is not worth much. You can’t even buy penny candy, which made its debut in 1896, with just a penny.But its cultural value is incalculable.Stingy people still “pinch pennies.” An unexpected windfall is still referred to as “pennies from heaven.” And a fiscal planner who is “penny wise and pound foolish” should be avoided.But after Wednesday, the penny once saved and cherished will be the penny spurned, rather than earned.Corky SiemaszkoCorky Siemaszko is a senior reporter for NBC News Digital.
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