IN THE NEWS » 3rd-grader gets finger on trigger of officer's gun; judge to consider woman's move to medically sterilize herself; police standoff with stuffed tiger

Joe Sheeran, a spokesman for Maplewood, Minn., said police are re-examining the design of holsters issued to officers after a third-grader at a school got his finger on the trigger of a school liaison officer's holstered gun, causing it to fire a bullet into the floor.

Summer Creel, 34, who relinquished parental rights to six of her seven children after being convicted in federal court in Oklahoma City of writing a counterfeit check, had herself medically sterilized after the judge hearing the case said he would consider it during her sentencing.

George Cordiner, a Scottish police inspector, said "every option has to be considered" after police, called by a farmer who thought a big cat had invaded his cow shed, had a 45-minute standoff with what turned out to be a large, stuffed toy tiger.

Paul Barker, a Boston restaurant owner, said he's had some "very interested" people but no takers for his Valentine's Day special where patrons, for $3,000, can order a burger that comes with a diamond engagement ring nestled in the bun.

Flavio Uribe, an orthodontics professor at the University of Connecticut dental school, was reprimanded after a selfie photo was shared in a private group chat showing him and several students with two severed heads used for medical research.

Gerald Spies, 34, of Wasilla, Alaska, charged with robbing an Anchorage restaurant, tried to evade police by burying a black, hooded jacket he wore during the caper in fresh snow about three blocks away but was caught when officers spotted a man "not dressed for the snowy weather."

Latarsha Sanders, 43, of Brockton, Mass., pleaded innocent to murder charges after police told a judge she used a kitchen knife to stab her two sons, ages 8 and 5, to death and later told investigators it was part of a failed voodoo ritual.

Trevor Lane, 18, of Ooltewah, Tenn., was charged with improperly using 911 by calling to report a house fire when what he really wanted was help using the fire department's "big ladders" to get his cat down from a tree where it had been stuck overnight, authorities said.

Alyssa Salgado, 19, complained to state day care regulators after her 2-year-old toddler's thick eyebrows were waxed without permission at a day care in Pasco, Wash., saying workers "took it upon themselves to correct the way my daughter should look."

A Section on 02/08/2018

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