Tuesday, June 18 2013 6:03 PM EDT2013-06-18 22:03:22 GMT
A woman on Huntington's south side had a close encounter with a man who walked right up to the door of the home she was watching and insisted that he had to come inside to fix something, according to police.
A woman on Huntington's south side had a close encounter with a man who walked right up to the door of the home she was watching and insisted that he had to come inside to fix something, according to police.
Tuesday, June 18 2013 5:11 PM EDT2013-06-18 21:11:14 GMT
Pine Creek where people saw the body. Photo Courtesy: Chris Holtzapfel, Photojournalist
A woman's body is now being examined by a coroner after being found in a creek in Scioto County.
A woman's body is now being examined by a coroner after being found in a creek in Scioto County.
The Humane Society of the United States wants to join Ohio in defending a lawsuit that challenges a new state law regulating dangerous wildlife.
The lawsuit filed earlier this month in Columbus federal court by four owners of exotic animals maintain that the restrictions threaten their First Amendment and property rights.
The Humane Society asked Judge George Smith on Tuesday to allow the organization to intervene in the lawsuit.
The organization stated it has an interest in defending the law that it strongly supported, as well as an interest in the lawsuit's outcome since the organization is pushing similar laws nationwide.
Ohio's law followed the 2011 mass killings of dozens of escaped wild animals that had been released by their suicidal owner in eastern Ohio.