According to the warning, the scam begins when the scammer sends an anonymous letter claiming to have uncovered evidence that the recipient of the letter has committed acts of adultery
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LOS ANGELES (CBSLA/AP) – A representative for Demi Lovato says she is awake and recovering with her family after the pop singer was reportedly hospitalized Tuesday for an overdose. “Demi is awake and with her family who want to express thanks to everyone for the love, prayers and support,” Lovato’s representative said in a statement Tuesday evening. “Some of the information being reported is incorrect and they respectfully ask for privacy and not speculation as her health and recovery is the most important thing right now.” The statement, which did not provide any details on what led to the singer’s hospitalization, follows conflicting reports about what kind of overdose Lovato had. The Los Angeles Fire Department confirmed that they transported a 25-year-old woman after responding to a medical call at a home on 8000 block of Laurel View Drive, at 11:22 a.m. Tuesday. Lovato owns a home on that block, and Entertainment Tonight reports she was in stable condition after being transported for a drug overdose. Last month, Lovato released a song called “Sober,” with lyrics appearing to reference struggles with her six-year sobriety . She co-owns a Los Angeles rehab facility where she sought treatment in 2011. Lovato is currently on tour, where she has been open about living with bipolar disorder , for which she received a diagnosis in 2010. Celebrities expressed support for Lovato on social media. i love u @ddlovato — Ariana Grande (@ArianaGrande) July 24, 2018 Poor beautiful spirit @ddlovato I hope she’s ok, and that she makes a full recovery soon. — LILY ALLEN (@lilyallen) July 24, 2018 I love @DDLovato so much. It breaks my heart that she is going through this. She is a light in this world, and I am sending my love to her and her family. — Ellen DeGeneres (@TheEllenShow) July 24, 2018 Lovato was slated to perform in Atlantic City on Thursday, but according to Variety the show has been cancelled. (© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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Pop Star Demi Lovato Recovering From Apparent Drug Overdose
Heartstopping Video Shows Quick-Thinking Cop Warn Man In Path Of Oncoming Train
PERTH AMBOY, N.J. (CBSNewYork) – A police officer in New Jersey is being credited with saving a life after a man on railroad tracks who was unaware an oncoming train was about to hit him. Perth Amboy officer Kyle L. Savoia’s body camera recorded him racing to intercept a man in a red shirt laying face down on the tracks, unaware of a train barreling towards him last week. Savoia waved to stop the train while shouting at the dazed man, who got up and jumped out of the way at the last moment as the train rolled to an abrupt stop. “Where’d you come from?” the man says afterwards. “Thank you, oh my God, thank you so much.” The 22-year-old Savoia was dispatched for a welfare check at the Perth Amboy station Thursday around 8 a.m. The officer says when he got the call he knew there’d be a man on the tracks, but he didn’t realized there would be an oncoming train. Once he saw it bearing down, he knew he’d have to act fast. “In a split second I decided to start running,” he told CBS2. “In that situation, your training takes over.” It turns out he man was homeless, and after being taken to Raritan Bay Medical Center treatment he showed up at police headquarters to thank Savoia again. “He said I’m a true hero to him,” Savoia said. “That he had a two-year-old, that he had a family to go home to.” Savoia lost his own father, a longtime sergeant with the Perth Amboy Police Department, just two years ago. “What I thought of was his father, how proud his father would be in heaven looking down on his son,” Perth Amboy Chief Roman McKeon said. Ask Savoia, whose own career started only seven years ago, and he’ll tell you he was just doing his job.
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Heartstopping Video Shows Quick-Thinking Cop Warn Man In Path Of Oncoming Train
Heartstopping Video Shows Quick-Thinking Cop Warn Man In Path Of Oncoming Train
PERTH AMBOY, N.J. (CBSNewYork) – A police officer in New Jersey is being credited with saving a life after a man on railroad tracks who was unaware an oncoming train was about to hit him. Perth Amboy officer Kyle L. Savoia’s body camera recorded him racing to intercept a man in a red shirt laying face down on the tracks, unaware of a train barreling towards him last week. Savoia waved to stop the train while shouting at the dazed man, who got up and jumped out of the way at the last moment as the train rolled to an abrupt stop. “Where’d you come from?” the man says afterwards. “Thank you, oh my God, thank you so much.” The 22-year-old Savoia was dispatched for a welfare check at the Perth Amboy station Thursday around 8 a.m. The officer says when he got the call he knew there’d be a man on the tracks, but he didn’t realized there would be an oncoming train. Once he saw it bearing down, he knew he’d have to act fast. “In a split second I decided to start running,” he told CBS2. “In that situation, your training takes over.” It turns out he man was homeless, and after being taken to Raritan Bay Medical Center treatment he showed up at police headquarters to thank Savoia again. “He said I’m a true hero to him,” Savoia said. “That he had a two-year-old, that he had a family to go home to.” Savoia lost his own father, a longtime sergeant with the Perth Amboy Police Department, just two years ago. “What I thought of was his father, how proud his father would be in heaven looking down on his son,” Perth Amboy Chief Roman McKeon said. Ask Savoia, whose own career started only seven years ago, and he’ll tell you he was just doing his job.
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Heartstopping Video Shows Quick-Thinking Cop Warn Man In Path Of Oncoming Train
Tuesday’s winning numbers are 1, 2, 4, 19 and 29 and the Mega Ball number is 20
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Mega Millions winning numbers announced for $522M jackpot
LONG BEACH (CBSLA) — It’s been three days since the murder of Corie Taft’s father Fred. The 57-year-old truck driver was shot to death in a public restroom Saturday during a family reunion at Pan American Park in Long Beach. The park is surrounded by churches, schools and homes. Long Beach police have no motive and no suspect. Fred Taft’s only child wears a t-shirt with a photo of her and her dad. Corie Taft is scared because the gunman is on the loose. She says she’s also worried that her father may have been targeted because of his race. After the killing, a coach shared with the family that his softball players have been harassed at the park. According to police the gunman is a white man in his 50s and detectives have not uncovered any evidence at this point to indicate a hate crime. “My family never saw this coming,” said Taft. “We just want closure. My dad didn’t deserve this.”
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Father Shot To Death At Long Beach Park
Item found at representative’s field office was apparently labeled with “anthrax,” according to the Los Angeles Fire Department
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Police respond to suspicious package at Maxine Waters’ L.A. office
Democrats have said changing demographics have turned Republican stronghold into a swing state
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Trump-supported Brian Kemp wins GOP nomination for Ga. governor
Brock Turner, Former Stanford Student Found Guilty Of Attempted Rape, Tries To Get Conviction Overturned
STUDIO CITY (CBSLA) — A former Stanford University student who made national headlines for receiving a months-long jail sentence after being convicted of attempted rape is appealing the verdict. A lawyer for Brock Turner told a California Court of Appeals panel Tuesday that Turner never intended to rape the partially dressed, unconscious woman he was found on top of outside a fraternity party in January 2015. According to the Associated Press, Justice Franklin D. Elia appeared skeptical, telling attorney Eric Malthaup, “I absolutely don’t understand what you are talking about.” He said the law “requires the jury verdict to be honored.” Turner was found guilty of assault with intent to commit rape, sexual penetration of an intoxicated person with a foreign object, and sexual penetration of an unconscious person with a foreign object. During the incident, two Swedish graduate students stopped the assault. “She was unconscious. The entire time. I checked her and she didn’t move at all,” Carl-Fredrik Arndt told CBS News in 2016, adding they saw Turner “aggressively thrusting his hips into her.” The case received national attention after the 23-year-old victim read a statement to Turner in court. In it she wrote, “You took away my worth, my privacy, my energy, my time, my safety, my intimacy, my confidence, my own voice, until today.[…] I don’t want my body anymore. I was terrified of it.” Stoking the online rage was a tone-deaf statement from Turner’s father, who said his son, a one-time Olympic swimming hopeful, didn’t deserve jail time for his crime. “His life will never be the one that he dreamed about and worked so hard to achieve,” Dan Turner told Judge Aaron Persky in a letter. “That is a steep price to pay for 20 minutes of action out of his 20 plus years of life.” As evidence of Turner’s “devastation,” he cited his son’s loss of appetite, including for “a big ribeye steak” which the father said he used to be “excited to buy.” The letter was one of dozens sent to Persky in defense of Turner, who could have been incarcerated for up to 14 years. However, Persky sentenced Turner to six months in jail and three years probation in 2016. Advocates for victims of sexual abuse who believed the sentence was too lenient started a petition to get Persky off the bench, leading to a recall vote this past June. Fellow judges and legal experts criticized the blowback against Persky, some saying that, even if they didn’t agree with the sentence, they believed he did nothing wrong. Persky was eventually recalled by a nearly 2-to-1 margin. In the wake of the verdict, California. Gov. Jerry brown signed a mandatory minimum sentence law for people found guilty of rape, requiring them to serve prison time instead of being held in jail, as in Turner’s case. A second law allows victims to say in court they were raped, even if a sexual assault doesn’t meet the technical definition of rape under state law. (© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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Brock Turner, Former Stanford Student Found Guilty Of Attempted Rape, Tries To Get Conviction Overturned
Issuing readouts is a well-established practice of past administrations
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White House to stop issuing public summaries of calls with foreign leaders
Kristie Baeumert recently found a vintage slide projector at Goodwill, along with a family’s old photos. It became her mission to find the people in the images. CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann has an update to the mystery.
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Mystery behind decades-old family photos finally solved
Here are some common snack foods that have recently been recalled due to possible salmonella contamination, and that should be avoided.
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6 snacks at risk of salmonella
The U.S. Department of Agriculture introduced a $12 billion plan to help farmers taking a hit from China’s retaliatory tariffs. But Nebraska Republican Sen. Ben Sasse, who represents many of the farmers, says they don’t want more bailouts. CBS News White House correspondent Weijia Jiang reports.
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GOP Sen. Ben Sasse blasts aid for farmers amid trade war
After battling the Ferguson Fire for nearly two weeks, authorities are warning people in nearby Yosemite National Park. Part of the park where visitors can view landmarks will be closed for several days, while crews try to get a handle on the fire. CBS News correspondent Dean Reynolds reports.
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Parts of Yosemite National Park to close amid wildfire danger

