'Crazy brain' sharks high on cocaine, experts say

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 03:18:30 GMT

'Crazy brain' sharks high on cocaine, experts say Animals hopped up on cocaine is not a new concept; the February film “Cocaine Bear” loosely chronicled the bizarre true story of when a 175-pound black bear ingested cocaine that was thrown out of a drug smuggling plane in 1985. However, with Discovery Channel’s Shark Week right around the corner, scientists have revealed the possible discovery of sharks in the Atlantic Ocean that have ingested cocaine. Experts say that sharks may be gobbling up bales of drugs that were dumped into the water off the coast by smugglers.   Hungry bear seen rummaging through trash in Monrovia Biologists studying the phenomenon reported seeing a hammerhead shark swimming into discarded packages and biting into them. After ingesting the drugs, the sharks were observed to be behaving erratically, causing what scientists call "crazy brain."A documentary focusing on sharks on cocaine is set to premiere during Shark Week, which begins on Sunday. 

Infant Dead, 2 Hurt in Pedestrian Crash on King Road [San Jose, CA]

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 03:18:30 GMT

Infant Dead, 2 Hurt in Pedestrian Crash on King Road [San Jose, CA] Pedestrian Collision on Havana Drive Left 2 Injured, 1 Infant KilledSAN JOSE, CA (July 22, 2023) – On Tuesday evening, a pedestrian crash on King Road left an infant killed and two injured.The incident happened on July 18th, at around 11:40 p.m. when a car southbound on King Road beat a green light and struck a woman and two children.According to reports a male individual was driving southbound on King Road in his 2004 Chevy Tahoe when he came upon a green light at Havana Drive and collided with a mother and two children who were crossing westbound on King Road outside of an unauthorized intersection.Emergency crews arrived at the scene shortly after and rushed them to a nearby hospital.Medics then pronounced the infant dead at the scene.It is currently unclear whether the driver was treated at the scene or taken to a hospital.Investigators state that neither drugs nor alcohol were factors in the collision.The Sweet James team sends their warm and sincerest sympathies out to t...

United Airlines flight returns to San Francisco due to ‘disruptive passenger’

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 03:18:30 GMT

United Airlines flight returns to San Francisco due to ‘disruptive passenger’ A United Airlines flight traveling to Taiwan from San Francisco International Airport returned to the Bay Area Thursday night due to what the airline referred to as a “disruptive passenger”.United Flight 871 returned to SFO due to the passenger. The aircraft landed safely and the passenger was removed. The flight is expected to depart from SFO late Thursday evening.Related ArticlesCrime and Public Safety | 4 money moves to make if your flight is canceled or delayed Crime and Public Safety | These 10 airports are the most chaotic in Europe this summer Crime and Public Safety | Travel Troubleshooter: I paid twice for my checked luggage on Avianca. I want a refund! Crime and Public Safety | One dead, another critically injured after plane crash at San Rafael Airport Crime and Public Safety | Plane crashes into Lake Tahoe, boaters rescue two people “United Flight 871 returned to San Francis...

Yale study: How OxyContin marketing led to death, disease years later

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 03:18:30 GMT

Yale study: How OxyContin marketing led to death, disease years later That OxyContin is highly addictive is well known, as is that Purdue Pharma’s intensive marketing of the opioid painkiller led to thousands of overdose deaths and the company’s bankruptcy in 2013.But a new study in the July 19 issue of Health Affairs, led by researchers at the Yale School of Public Health, shows that the marketing of OxyContin also brought a rise in infectious diseases and fatal heart infections.Authors Julia Dennett, a postdoctoral associate, and Gregg Gonsalves, associate professor of epidemiology, say in the study that marketing of OxyContin, the Purdue Pharma brand name for extended-release oxycodone, led to an increase in hepatitis and deaths from infective endocarditis, a bacterial infection of the heart valves. “By comparing U.S. states that saw heavier OxyContin promotion with states that experienced less, the Yale study shows for the first time that this marketing caused long-term rises not only in overdose deaths but also in hepatitis diagnoses and deaths f...

Swifties: Friendship bracelets are okay at Levi’s after all

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 03:18:30 GMT

Swifties: Friendship bracelets are okay at Levi’s after all Friendship bracelets will be permitted at Levi’s Stadium for Taylor Swift’s “Eras Tour” stop in Santa Clara, Levi’s Stadium stadium officials announced Friday morning on Twitter, retracting a tweet sent out yesterday that sparked a social media storm from outraged Swifties.The news that the popular homemade bracelets wouldn’t be allowed came on the heels of stadium officials’ announcement that tailgating — or Taylgating, as fans call it — would also not be allowed outside the venue or even in the parking lot for the July 28 and July 29 concerts. Many fans both with and without the pricey tickets, had planned to do just that.Related ArticlesEntertainment | Levi’s Stadium sets off Swifties, bans tailgating — and now friendship bracelets too? Entertainment | Santa Clara makes Taylor Swift honorary mayor, renames the city ‘Swiftie Clara’ Entertainment | Why Taylor Swi...

Newly discovered sponge named after Monterey Bay National Marine Sancturary

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 03:18:30 GMT

Newly discovered sponge named after Monterey Bay National Marine Sancturary By Toby Roca | Bay City NewsResearchers have published the scientific description of a newly discovered sponge, Megaciella sanctuarium, which they named in honor of Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary off the Central Coast of California.Professor Tom Turner, a sponge expert from the University of California Santa Barbara, discovered Megaciella sanctuarium and 11 other previously-unknown species of sponges in the fall of 2021 during a research cruise in the Carmel Pinnacles StateMarine Reserve, which is nestled within the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary.Turner named all 12 new species, several of which are considered rare or have very restricted distributions, as they were not found in similar undersea areas outside of Carmel Bay.Aside from Megaciella sanctuarium being named after the sanctuary, Turner named one sponge species after the indigenous Rumsen people of Monterey, one after the town of Carmel, and one after nearby Point Lobos.Turner had explored the area with Stev...

Mom of U.S. teen accused of trying to join Islamic State blames FBI ‘encouragement’

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 03:18:30 GMT

Mom of U.S. teen accused of trying to join Islamic State blames FBI ‘encouragement’ By COLLEEN SLEVIN | Associated PressDENVER  — The mother of an 18-year-old who is accused of trying to become a fighter for the Islamic State group says her son has never had the motivation to follow through with things.Deanna Meyer testified Thursday that she does not think her son, Devin Meyer, would have taken action to travel to the Middle East were it not for the support of people he recently met who shared his views. That included FBI informants posing as Islamic State facilitators.“I bet my life he would never do that without that encouragement,” Deanna Meyer said in federal court in an unsuccessful attempt to convince a judge to allow her son to stay with her while he is being prosecuted. He was arrested Friday as he tried to board a plane to Turkey and has been charged with attempting to provide material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization.Deanna Meyer was responding to a question from Magistrate Judge N. Reid Neureiter about whether her son, who has auti...

San Franciscans urged to play (or sing) 'I Left My Heart in San Francisco' Friday

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 03:18:30 GMT

San Franciscans urged to play (or sing) 'I Left My Heart in San Francisco' Friday SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) -- As the world -- and San Francisco in particular -- mourns the sad passing of Tony Bennett, the organizer of an event commemorating Bennett's greatest hit is planning a new tribute. In 2020, for the 50th anniversary of Bennett's iconic, "I Left My Heart in San Francisco," David Perry coordinated the #SingOutSF event. SF restaurant named among most ‘legendary’ in the world The event, which occurred at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, saw social media users come together across the city of San Francisco to join together in singing the song. With Bennett himself participating, appearing on social media wearing a Giants jersey and urging San Franciscans to join in, the event became a viral moment that brought people together at a time they were being asked to remain apart."I am proud to see San Francisco come together and make a difference during this uncertain time," Bennett tweeted at the time. "Today at 12pm, we'll sing I Left My Heart in San Francisco to...

Key Scientist in Covid Origin Controversy Misled Congress on Status of $8.9 Million NIH Grant

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 03:18:30 GMT

Key Scientist in Covid Origin Controversy Misled Congress on Status of $8.9 Million NIH Grant Key researchers who testified before the House subcommittee investigating the origin of Covid-19 virus last week misled Congress about the nature of a multimillion-dollar grant that was pending at the time they joined a critical conference with Drs. Francis Collins and Anthony Fauci in February 2020, according to National Institutes of Health documents. The debate over the origin of the novel coronavirus has also evolved into a meta-debate over how the narrative supporting a natural emergence was initially crafted in the winter and spring of 2020. That inquiry focuses on a group of scientists who spoke confidentially with Collins and Fauci — then the heads of the National Institutes for Health and its sub-agency National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, respectively — in February and quickly began writing a paper that would set the tone for public understanding of the virus’s origin for a year or more. On the call, the scientists suggested they leaned toward a lab ...

A retired Canadian policeman has been charged with helping China intimidate someone

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 03:18:30 GMT

A retired Canadian policeman has been charged with helping China intimidate someone OTTAWA, Ontario (AP) — A former member of Canada’s national police force has been charged with conspiracy over allegations that he helped China’s government intimidate a person, police said Friday. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police said in a news release that retired Mountie William Majcher is accused of helping the Chinese government identify the person targeted in the intimidation. They said that Majcher, 60, used his network of Canadian contacts to get intelligence or services that benefited China.The police agency described Majcher as being “from Hong Kong,” but did not immediately clarify whether that meant he currently resided in the Chinese territory. Police have not said who was the target of Beijing’s alleged intimidation campaign. Majcher is charged with conspiracy and preparatory acts for the benefit of a foreign entity, police said.The Chinese embassy in Ottawa didn’t immediately return a message seeking comment. Earlier this year the Canadian governmen...