Erie man accused of supplying drugs in Millcreek fatal overdose

Millcreek Township police accuse an 18-year-old Erie man of supplying drugs that caused a 27-year-old man's fatal overdose in the township in February.

USA TODAY

Moquoy G. McLaurin was arraigned May 7 by Greene Township District Judge Susan Strohmeyer on felony counts of drug delivery resulting in death, possession with intent to deliver, criminal attempt at possession with intent to deliver and criminal use of a communication facility, along with misdemeanor charges including involuntary manslaughter.

Strohmeyer set McLaurin's bond at $50,000 and tentatively scheduled his preliminary hearing for May 12, according to court records.

McLaurin turned himself in once he learned of the charges, his lawyer, Gene Placidi, said May 7. Placidi declined further comment at this time.

What is he accused of?

Millcreek police drug investigators, in a criminal complaint filed April 27, accuse McLaurin of supplying drugs to a man who was found Feb. 15 in cardiac arrest at a Partridge Drive residence in the township. The man was taken to AHN Saint Vincent, where he was pronounced dead, police reported.

The man's death was the result of combined drug toxicity primarily involving fentanyl, Erie County Coroner Lyell Cook said May 7.

Advertisement

Investigators wrote in the complaint's affidavit that a portion of a plastic bag containing white powder was found near the man. They also found the man's cellphone and located messages between the man and a phone number that investigators said showed evidence of multiple drug transactions, most recently on the evening of Feb. 14, according to information in the affidavit.

More:Bond revoked for Erie man charged in 2024 drug death in Millcreek

On Feb. 17, according to the affidavit, police said they identified the person using the phone number as McLaurin and contacted him at the number to set up an undercover purchase of fentanyl. Surveillance was set up outside the victim's house, and investigators saw a black Lincoln MKX pull up. Police surrounded the car and found McLaurin in the back seat, investigators wrote in the affidavit.

Police said they took McLaurin into custody and found the corner of a plastic bag containing a white powder on him. When police tested the power in the bags found with the victim and on McLaurin, both tested positive for containing fentanyl, investigators wrote.

Millcreek police initially charged McLaurin Feb. 18 with drug charges including felony possession with intent to deliver related to the incident. Those charges were withdrawn when the new charges were filed April 27, according to court records.

Contact Tim Hahn atthahn@usatodayco.com.

This article originally appeared on Erie Times-News:Millcreek police accuse Erie man of supplying drugs in fatal overdose

Erie man accused of supplying drugs in Millcreek fatal overdose

Millcreek Township police accuse an 18-year-old Erie man of supplying drugs that caused a 27-year-old man's fatal overdose in the t...
Rick Rosinski rescinds resignation as Green Bay Preble boys basketball coach

The question of whetherRick Rosinski resignedas the Green Bay Preble boys basketball coach or essentially was forced out has been answered.

USA TODAY

Green Bay School Board members received an email from Rosinski on May 11, telling them he was rescinding his resignation.

It came four days after Preble athletic director Tim Flood sent an email to parents and players informing them that Rosinski had stepped down after three seasons.

The email sent from Rosinski to the Board was confirmed by Board member Alex Mineau.

Rosinski said he was not prepared to comment about the situation, while Mineau did not provide further comment.

Flood and Superintendent Vicki Bayer did not respond to messages asking whether Rosinski was given an ultimatum to either step down or be dismissed, and whether he would be welcomed back if he wanted to return.

Rosinski’s fate is not in the hands of the School Board. His situation is not subject to Board approval, and because the school accepted his resignation, there are no indications the administration plans to offer him a coaching contract for next season.

This does not impact his teaching job at Green Bay East.

Longtime high school basketball coach Rick Rosinski rescinded his resignation from the Green Bay Preble boys team May 11.

Green Bay Preble parents, coaches speak out in support of Rick Rosinski

It doesn’t meanthose supportingRosinski will walk away quietly, including the ones who attended a Green Bay School Board meeting May 11 to speak on behalf of the veteran coach.

“He’s done a wonderful job the last few years educating the players on how to be better men,” said Steve Komp, whose son, Elliot, was a sophomore in the basketball program this season. “As a father, there are limits to what I can do. There are other influences in life. Coach [Brad] Boockmeier on the football side and Coach Rosinski on the basketball side, my son has two amazing people that are role models for him to be a better man.

Advertisement

“We elected to allow a few rogue parents that are disgruntled about how Coach Rosinski was handling the basketball program, force him to make an emotional decision and resign. Folks in this room were part of that meeting. I would advocate for the Board to examine how things were handled. You have a hall of fame coach that does nothing but advocate for the players, the students of the school. We are forcing him out because of a handful of disgruntled parents.

“The board needs to hold the people in the administration who handled this accountable. I’m hearing the Board may not be able to bring Coach back, that it might be out of their purview, but you can hold the people in this room and the people in this administration accountable for the decisions they made in forcing Coach Rosinski to leave. My son is at a disadvantage tomorrow because Coach Rosinski is not the basketball coach.”

Longtime assistant coach Jim Hayes, who has worked under Rosinski during 20 years at East and three years at Preble, also spoke.

He told the board that Rosinski is everything good about high school sports.

“The people who have been harassing him for the last two years are what is disgusting and what’s terrible about high school sports,” Hayes said. “By basically forcing Rick to resign, you’ve rewarded the actions of these rogue parents and took away something that Rick lives for. I’ve known Rick since he was 13 years old. He’s a great person. He is a great father. He is a great coach. More than anything else, he is a great mentor and role model to the boys at Preble High School, and before that to the boys at East High School.

“It literally makes me ill that Rick is being forced to give up his job. ...

“Rick has coached in this district as a head varsity coach for 23 years, and this is how he’s being thanked? By being forced out by a group of parents who are vengeful, and I want to even say, hateful toward him. They have harassed him for two years, and our athletic director was well-aware of this and really did nothing to support him. The last two months have been hell on Rick Rosinski. He has hardly been able to sleep. Hardly been able to eat. This is the result of this. These parents acting this way, and now they are being rewarded by their terrible conduct. All we ever wanted to do was coach basketball.”

Mathew Dornbush, who is the dean of the Cofrin School of Business at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, was the final person to speak to the board.

His son, Will, was one of the Hornets’ best players this season as a junior.

“While I’m incredibly upset about this situation, as is my son, I think it’s also a significant risk for the district,” Dornbush said. “To think about what it looks like to our community, when there is no show of support or backing for these sorts of individuals. It sends a very, very negative message to the community."

This article originally appeared on Green Bay Press-Gazette:Rick Rosinski rescinds resignation as Preble boys basketball coach

Rick Rosinski rescinds resignation as Green Bay Preble boys basketball coach

The question of whetherRick Rosinski resignedas the Green Bay Preble boys basketball coach or essentially was forced out has been answe...
Govs. Wes Moore and Sarah Huckabee Sanders highlight maternal health investments

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore and Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders on Thursday highlighted the importance of investing in maternal health initiatives aimed at supporting mothers before and after they give birth.

NBC Universal

Sanders, who has three children, said she raised alarm bells about maternal health in Arkansas after she became governor because the state consistently ranked among the worst in maternal mortality rates.

“If we can see these women and help them and support them from the very beginning of their pregnancy all the way through, then we can help address some of these problems and we can change maternal health,” Sanders, a Republican, told NBC News’ “Meet the Press” in an interview alongside Moore, a Democrat, and philanthropist Olivia Walton, which aired Sunday. “Not just in our state, but across the country.”

Sarah Huckabee speaking at a lectern with a man standing in soft focus behind her. (Andrew Harnik / Getty Images file)

Sanders said she conveneda strategic working groupto identify ways to improve maternal health outcomes throughout the state and was “pleasantly shocked by how many people showed up.”

“People that I know actively campaigned against me were some of the most helpful people in developing our strategic plan on how we were going to address this problem in Arkansas,” the governor added. “It is something that breaks down a lot of walls. Everybody knows a mom. Everybody has a mom.”

The working group led Sanders to introduce the Healthy Moms, Healthy Babies Act and other initiatives, includingthe Proactive Postpartum Call Centerrun through the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, which calls women in their first six weeks postpartum to ask and answer questions about physical and mental health.

Walton, the founder of Healthy Moms, Healthy Babies America, highlighted the need to focus on postpartum care just as much as prenatal services.

“We’ve got to start doing postpartum care because we don’t really do it in America,” she said. “In the postpartum space ... it’s a continuum. And I firmly believe this, because two-thirds of maternal mortality happens after the baby is born, after mom has left the hospital. Forty percent of moms don’t go back for any checkup.”

Advertisement

“Sixty percent of Medicaid moms don’t go back for any checkup,” Walton added. “The gold standard here is home visits by a nurse within the first two weeks. There are pockets of that happening around the country. Gov. Sanders has an incredible solution in Arkansas with the postpartum call center.”

Moore highlighted an initiative in Maryland called the Bridge Program, which seeks to provide low-income mothers with direct monetary assistance.

2024 Democratic National Convention: Day 3 (Andrew Harnik / Getty Images file)

“It is something that’s going to focus on providing cash assistance to mothers who are both prenatal and then postnatal mothers,” the Maryland governor said. “To be able to provide cash assistance for them to be able to have additional measurements of support. It’s going to happen for 150 families in the areas of Maryland that you’ve had concentrated poverty being a long-term challenge.”

He added that better maternal care can also help curb childhood poverty.

“And so we know that if you want to better help children and address the issue of childhood poverty, it means support their families and support their moms. And so maternal health becomes a huge part of all this,” Moore said.

The two governors, who are in opposing political parties, also spoke about how their views on abortion impact how they approach issues of maternal health.

“I’m unapologetically pro-life. I think that we have to protect life at every stage, at every level,” Sanders said, adding: “I’m proud that Arkansas is one of the most pro-life states in the country. I want to continue to elevate that. But so often we stop the conversation after the baby is born, and I think that it can’t just be if we’re pro-life. We have to be whole-life.”

Moore agreed with Sanders on the need to support services for children like adoption and foster care, but added, “I do respectfully disagree on the Roe v. Wade decision.”

“I think this was something that was law of the land literally for decades that was about how are we making sure that women have a choice, and how are we making sure that women are the ones who are the driving deciders as to what happens with their health care,” the Maryland governor said, noting he supported Marylandersenshrining the right to abortion accessin the state constitution last year.

Govs. Wes Moore and Sarah Huckabee Sanders highlight maternal health investments

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore and Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders on Thursday highlighted the importance of investing in maternal health...
The small team taking on war criminals with a laptop and the help of AI

When reports emerged that hundreds of people had been killed in an attack on aprimary schoolin southern Iran, a small team of investigators rushed to social media.

The Independent US The digital investigations team is made up of eight people (Human Rights Watch)

It was the first day of the joint US-Israeli strikes, and misinformation began to spread online. Restrictions imposed by Iranian authorities made it dangerous for people who witnessed the strike to speak out.

That left the Human Rights Watch’s digital investigation team with the critical task of uncovering the facts and establishing the truth surrounding the attack.

The team of eight, which investigateswar crimesworldwide, immediately got to work, painstakingly analysing every piece of digital evidence to reconstruct the events of what has been one of the deadliest incidents in the ongoing war in theMiddle East.

From their offices in London, Berlin, Geneva, and California, they scoured social media for any footage or information they could find.

The digital investigations team analysed the attack on a primary school in southern Iran (Human Rights Watch)

Over the next week, they spent hours verifying and analysing scores of videos and photographs recorded immediately after the strike or during search-and-rescue operations, as well as from funerals.

Satellite images from the past 25 years were reviewed by the team and compared to those captured following the attack. They showed both the site and the nearby cemetery where victims were apparently buried.

They revealed that at least eight structures across the compound had been directly struck by munitions, including at least one that had been hit and severely damaged the school.

Sophia Jones, who is part of the team, said: “A prompt and thorough investigation is needed into this attack, including if those responsible should have known that a school was there and that it would be full of children and their teachers before midday.”

A report was published a week later, which called for the US and Israel to immediately assess their responsibility and prosecute anyone responsible for war crimes.

The team investigated Israel's displacement of Palestinians in the West Bank (Human Rights Watch)

What is the digital investigations lab?

The case is one of many for the team, whose work ranges from tracking down suspected criminals to analysing immigrant deportation patterns, using technology to investigate conflict violations and human rights abuses worldwide.

Dubbed the team’s digital investigations lab, the team uses social media,artificial intelligence, and satellite imagery to identify and hold perpetrators to account by documenting crimes and abuses.

Their work spans protests in Europe and conflicts in the Middle East to deaths in custody in El Salvador, as well as violence in countries including Burkina Faso, Sudan, and Myanmar.

​The team was established a decade ago and investigations can take anywhere from days to years. Their findings are published reports, which expose wrongdoing and aim to put pressure on governments and policymakers to act.

Sam Dubberley, who directs the organisation’s technology, rights and investigations division, said the work is essential at a time of rapid misinformation.

​“It's definitely becoming a much faster space where human rights defenders are under a lot more pressure than they ever used to be,” he toldThe Independent.

Advertisement

3D model of likely Saudi border guard posts and patrol roads near fences identified with satellite imagery (Human Rights Watch)

​How are they using technology?

The team is constantly across social media platforms, hunting for photos, videos, or audio of attacks, which they verify and fact-check.

​They investigate military units, alleged perpetrators, or victims to determine who they are, what they have posted online, and whether there is evidence they were involved in a crime.

​“People post videos that you think they never would, often in spaces where they think it's not so public, like smaller Telegram groups,” Mr Dubberley explained.

​One of their main tools is satellite imagery analysis, which is used to track the destruction of villages or sites. They painstrakingly reconstruct areas of attacks using 3D models to provide clear evidence of the before-and-after effects.

​Artificial Intelligence is an essential part of their operations, helping them gather data from foreign government websites or mine data sets for patterns in arrest rates.

​Earlier this month, they published a two-year-long report into civilian killings in Burkina Faso. The team used AI to uncover essential information and analyse nearly 40,000 posts, which exposed the activities of perpetrators at a scale that would have been impossible to cover otherwise.

​Where are they working?

Digital tools have made it possible for the team to investigate alleged crimes everywhere, including in countries where they can’t enter, such as Russia, Iran, or Myanmar.

Mr Dubberley said: “Technology allows us to look over those walls that are being built, even in places like China. Looking over the Great Firewall, it's very hard, it's very difficult, it requires brave people, but it’s possible.”

Iran’s internet blackout has made it difficult for them to obtain and verify information, but they are still able to reach sources via WhatsApp, Telegram, and other social media. “People know technology is key for them to have their stories told,” Mr Dubberley added.

“We know that capturing their stories and verifying them is a really important way for us to do our work, and for us to achieve accountability and prevention.

​“It's important, of course, to investigate what's going on in the Middle East right now. It's important to investigate what’s going on in Ukraine, and we do that.

​“But it's also really important to make sure that we have the resources to investigate situations that are forgotten.”

What have they achieved?

One of their biggest achievements, Mr Dubberley said, was a 2023 report that found that Saudi border guards had killed hundreds of Ethiopian migrants and asylum seekers who tried to cross the Yemen-Saudi border between 2022 and 2023.

The organisation was able to map the route used to cross the border thanks to geospatial and open-source researchers from the digital investigations team, who verified videos and images recorded by migrants and border residents.

Analysis of satellite imagery allowed them to assess the development of security infrastructure on the border and identify burial sites near migrant camps, which had grown considerably.

Following the report, the German Justice Ministry suspended its training programme for Saudi Arabian border guards.

“We got so many media hits, that was part of the strategy, to embarrass Saudi Arabia as much as anything else, to see if we could get the killings to at least slow down, and for a while at least, they did,” Mr Dubberley concluded.

The small team taking on war criminals with a laptop and the help of AI

When reports emerged that hundreds of people had been killed in an attack on aprimary schoolin southern Iran, a small team of investiga...
TSSAA boys soccer region tournament brackets, schedules, scores for Jackson area

The Tennessee high school boys soccer playoffs in the Jackson area have kicked off.

USA TODAY

Follow the TSSAA boys soccer region tournaments here with scores and schedules, which are subject to change.

Region tournaments and sectionals will be updated with schedules and scores as more information becomes available. Submit your school's results and Top Performers to:cvantuyl@usatodayco.com

Region 7-AA

Tuesday, May 12

Haywood at Crockett County

South Gibson at Lakeland Prep

Thursday, May 14

Haywood/Crockett County winner at South Gibson/Lakeland Prep winner

Region 6-AA

Tuesday, May 12

Sycamore at North Side

Lexington at Fairview

Thursday, May 14

Advertisement

Lexington/Fairview winner at Sycamore/North Side winner

More:Jackson area spring sports top performers for Week 9 of the 2026 season

Region 7-A

Tuesday, May 12

JCM at Riverside

Adamsville at Madison

Thursday, May 14

JCM/Riverside winner at Adamsville/Madison winner

Region 6-A

Tuesday, May 12

Hickman County at Westview

Huntingdon at Cheatham County

Thursday, May 14

Huntingdon/Cheatham County winner at Hickman County/Westview winner

This article originally appeared on Jackson Sun:2026 TSSAA boys soccer region tournament brackets, scores for Jackson

TSSAA boys soccer region tournament brackets, schedules, scores for Jackson area

The Tennessee high school boys soccer playoffs in the Jackson area have kicked off. Follow the TSSAA boys soccer region tournamen...

 

MON SEVEN © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com