Wisconsin woman allegedly attempted to kill husband with animal euthanasia drugs: reports

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A Monroe, Wisconsin, woman was charged with attempted first-degree murder after being accused of poisoning her husband, who works as a veterinarian, with animal euthanasia drugs several times, according to reports.

Amanda Chapin, 50, was arrested by the Lafayette County Sheriff’s Office and charged on Dec. 28, the Associated Press reported, after authorities said she poisoned her 70-year-old husband Gary Chapin, three times by putting barbiturates in his coffee, between July and August.

The couple was married in March, after which Amanda Chapin forged one of Gary’s children’s signatures on a power-of-attorney document, according to a criminal complaint.

WI MAN GETS LIFE PLUS 120 YEARS FOR RELATIVE’S AX MURDER

The complaint then says she demanded her husband change the deed of the house so if he died, she would get the home. Less than three weeks after the deed was changed, the complaint reads, she poisoned her husband for the first time.

Gary Chapin fell into a coma after Amanda’s third attempt to poison him with barbiturate-enhanced coffee, which lasted for four days, and the complaint says blood work exhibited that the drugs were the same type he used to put animals down.

In August, Gary Chapin’s son filed a restraining order against Amanda Chapin on his father’s behalf and in September he began the process for divorcing his wife, according to court documents.

FORMER NEW YORK PROFESSOR CONVICTED OF 1982 AX MURDER OF FIRST WIFE

AP reported that according to the criminal complaint, Amanda Chapin violated the restraining order by sending her husband a suicide note in an email.

In the note, Amanda Chapin said she decided to kill herself because his children were going to destroy her.

“The only thing I am guilty of is loving you SOOOOOOOOOO MUCH,” the note, which was included in the complaint, said.

Paramedics responded to her house and took her to a local hospital, and the next day Gary Chapin filed for divorce.

 

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Goldman Sachs reveals 7 under-the-radar global stocks to buy this year

US Top News and Analysis 

Many under-the-radar stocks are key to a green energy transition, according to Goldman Sachs — and it expects them to take off in 2023. The Wall Street bank said investor focus on large renewable energy and energy efficiency stocks in previous years means that companies further down the supply chain have been overlooked. “There is growing recognition that ESG [environmental, social and governance] fund assets are highly concentrated in market-weight positions in market bellwethers and overweight positions in obvious thematic winners,” said Goldman Sachs analysts in a note to clients on Jan. 3. The decade-long trend is likely to reverse this year, the bank said, as focus turns to companies in sectors such as semiconductors, electricity transmission, and cybersecurity which “provide critical components” needed for a transition toward clean energy. “We have received positive feedback that investors will look for discovery value and broaden to other sectors important in the supply chain of achieving environmental/social goals,” the analysts added. Despite much talk of a transition away from burning highly polluting energy sources, the world’s fossil fuel dependency continues . However, Goldman said there was a “growing urgency to accomplish key Sustainable Development goals,” given the pressure on energy supplies following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. As such, the bank identified the following buy-rated stocks in the Europe, Middle East, and Asia regions it expects to benefit: ASML Heavy engineering firms such as SSAB , Vinci , Siemens , and chip toolmaker ASML — which all appear on Goldman’s list — are expected to see their shares rise by more than 10% over the next year, according to the median average of analyst price targets compiled by FactSet. Shares of ASML are expected to rise the most by 29.3% to 700 euros ($742), the data shows. The stock has fallen by 23% over the past year and was trading at around 570 euros on Thursday. The company, which produces photolithography machines used to make chips, is key to the proliferation of electric vehicles as they’re dependent on a large number of semiconductors to operate. The US-traded Dutch company is also buy-rated by UBS and Bank of America. Both banks see the firm as the “most preferred” stock in the semiconductor sector for 2023.

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Jeremy Renner ‘completely crushed’ under snowplow and ‘bleeding heavily from his head’: 911 call log reveals

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Jeremy Renner was “completely crushed” underneath a snowcat and had difficulty “breathing” after he was involved in a snowplow accident on New Year’s Day, according to a 911 call log obtained by Fox News Digital.

Renner was airlifted to a local hospital and had surgery after suffering blunt chest trauma and orthopedic injuries. He was reportedly the “only involved party in the incident” near his home in Lake Tahoe.

Dispatch reported a subject was “moaning loudly in the background” of a call at 8:58 a.m. where “serious bleeding” was recorded. Seconds later dispatch wrote, “subject is bleeding heavily from his head and other unknown injuries.”

It was also noted the caller wasn’t sure “where all the blood is coming from.” Additionally, the log stated that it’s believed Renner’s “right side of his chest is collapsed” and “upper torso is crushed.”

Deputies responded to reports of a traumatic injury near Mt. Rose Highway, located near the California/Nevada state line on Sunday, Jan. 1.

JEREMY RENNER SHARES ‘ICU SPA MOMENT AFTER SNOWPLOWING ACCIDENT: ’THANK YOU MAMA’

Washoe County Sheriff Darin Balaam shared in a press conference Tuesday that deputies responded to a 911 call at 8:55 a.m. Sunday. 

“Jeremy is making positive progress and is awake, talking and in good spirits,” Renner’s representative told Fox News Digital Tuesday. “He remains in ICU in critical but stable condition. He is overwhelmed by the showing of love and support. The family asks for your continued thoughts while he heals with his close loved ones.”

JEREMY RENNER SHARES PHOTO FROM HOSPITAL BED AFTER SNOWPLOW ACCIDENT: ‘THANK YOU FOR ALL YOUR KIND WORDS’

The Avenger’s star shared a selfie on Instagram following a traumatic injury after an accident on New Year’s Day.

“Thank you all for your kind words,” he wrote. “Im too messed up now to type. But I send love to you all.”

 

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Extreme California storm causes deadly flooding affecting elderly communities, local businesses

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

As the bomb cylcone continues to batter Central California, coastal areas up and down the state are facing forced evacuations, closed roadways, and severe property damage.

The storm was powered by two overlapping immense weather systems- an airborne stream of dense moisture flowing off the ocean called an atmospheric river, and a sprawling, hurricane-force low-pressure system known as a bomb cyclone.

Santa Cruz County has taken a particular hard beating from the “atmospheric storm”, with a mandatory evacuation order from county officials lifting on Thursday afternoon after the storm pummeled neighborhoods bringing major flooding to residents’ homes as well as torrential downpours. 

SEE SOME OF THE MOST CATASTROPHIC ATMOSPHERIC RIVERS AND FLOODING IN CALIFORNIA HISTORY

“It came out of nowhere – we have a small creek, and it just was five feet over flood stage within a matter of an hour because of the runoff. It was devastating because people were sitting in their homes.” Mayor of the City of Watsonville, Ari Parker told Fox News Digital. “They had no prior knowledge of what happened, and they had people call them. We looked outside and water is covering their car in the street and water is streaming into their homes.”

Many of Santa Cruz County’s senior population lives in Watsonville, where flooding was especially catastrophic.

WHAT WILL INSURANCE POLICIES COVER AS LIFE-THREATENING BOMB CYCLONE, ‘PINEAPPLE EXPRESS’ IMPACTS CALIFORNIA?

“I work with a very fragile population in my day-to-day work, and I understand when an emergency like this happens, especially for people that are seniors and are medically fragile, that this is a major issue because some of these people cannot move.” Watsonville City Councilman Casey Clark told Fox News Digital. Clark also manages adult mental health inpatient facilities locally. “When I got the phone call that the flooding was happening, myself and a group of my friends, we just dropped everything and drove through knee-high water to get to people and start sandbagging their houses and seeing if anybody needed any help to get out or to get to their loved ones.”

According to Santa Cruz County, the storm caused at least $10 million in damages to roads and infrastructure. The county says the damage estimate could rise as they continue to assess damage.

Businesses in California have also suffered tremendously from the “atmospheric storm” and bomb cyclone with many businesses reporting extensive property damage.

BOMB CYCLONE, ‘PINEAPPLE EXPRESS’ TRACKER: LATEST DATA ON STORM’S PATH ACROSS CALIFORNIA

“This has been a challenge for everybody; a bigger challenge for some than others. But we’re all doing, I think, the best we can.” Ted Burke, owner of Shadowbrook Restaurant in Capitola told Fox News Digital. “We will all recover from this. Coming storms don’t last forever and the sun will shine again this summer.”

Authorities have reported at least two weather-related deaths from the latest storm this week. 

A tree crashed onto a home overnight killed a 1-year-old baby boy, and a 19-year-old woman died when her car skidded off a partially flooded road into a utility pole on Wednesday.

Over New Year’s weekend, four other deaths were reported, with three flood victims found in or near their cars and an elderly man found dead under a fallen tree.

As many as 130,000 homes and businesses were without power on Thursday evening, according to Poweroutage.us.

 

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Maker of OXO and Osprey is laying off 10% of staff


New York
CNN
 — 

Helen of Troy, which owns OXO and Osprey among other consumer goods and beauty brands, is laying off 10% of its staff, in the face of sluggish demand and economic uncertainty.

“The new structure will reduce the size of our global workforce with impact across all business segments, departments and shared services,” said COO Noel Geoffroy during an analyst call Thursday. “We did not take this decision lightly.”

Most of the layoffs will be completed by March 1, the company said, with the remainder by the end of fiscal year 2024. They are part of an effort to streamline the organization and reach $75 to $85 million in annualized savings in the coming years.

The company joins several others that have recently announced workforce reductions. Amazon said Wednesday it plans to lay off more than 18,000 employees. Salesforce is planning to cut about 10% of staff and reduce its real estate footprint.

An employee secures a pallet of merchandise at Helen of Troy distribution center in Olive Branch, Mississippi, in March 2014.

For consumer goods makers like Helen of Troy, reduced demand from people cutting back on spending because of inflation and other pressures has been a challenge. In November, US consumer confidence fell to the lowest level since July.

Net consolidated sales at Helen of Troy dropped 10.6% in the three months ending November 30, compared to the same period the year before, the company said Thursday. Shares fell about 6% Thursday.

“During the third quarter, consumers continued to tighten their purchasing patterns in some categories in response to high inflation and higher interest rates,” said CEO Julien Mininberg during the call.

The slowing demand has impacted retailers, who are trying to manage their stock.

“As consumption slowed, some retailers continued their conservative repurchase patterns to further reduce their inventory,” Mininberg said, adding that “the holiday season started off slower than expected with discretionary categories generally under pressure from these trends.”

Helen of Troy’s brands include Hydro Flask and Osprey, as well as a number of health and wellness brands like Honeywell and Pur. In the beauty segment, it owns Drybar and Hot Tools, which sells curling irons and other hair tools.

Correction: An earlier version of this story and photo caption incorrectly listed some brands Helen of Troy licenses but does not own, which are unaffected by these layoffs.

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Leon Cooperman says new bull market isn't coming anytime soon, but he's finding cheap stocks to buy

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Starting 2023 SAFE and strong

Just In | The Hill 

While year-end headlines painted a pessimistic picture for the future of federal cannabis reform following the failure of the 117th Congress to pass the SAFE Banking Act, like every new year (and new Congress) there are new opportunities presented.

To be clear, congressional inaction on SAFE – after so many promising steps forward and with so much at stake from both a public safety and economic standpoint – was gravely disappointing.

Given almost half of the states have legalized adult use, this continued lack of equal access to banking and traditional financial services for thousands of state legal businesses is devastating.

Companies are downsizing rather than planning for growth. Entrepreneurs once poised for a new opportunity are now unable to enter this emerging industry. Many in business are forced to shutter operations altogether. And the entire remaining industry, its employees, and its consumers and patients remain at high-risk of criminal activity as they have no option but to operate in cash-heavy transactions.

It is for all these reasons and more that the SAFE Banking Act must move forward expeditiously in the new Congress before more harm is caused by further inaction.

The good news is we are not starting from zero. In fact, we are starting off 2023 stronger than ever given the progress made in the final weeks of 2022. Most importantly, we reflected on what went right and wrong, because the true failure would be if we don’t take the lessons learned and keep pushing forward.

The broad consensus was that inaction on SAFE came down to Senate leadership. The willingness of a handful of opponents in the minority to use their power in a 50/50 Senate to be obstructionists towards SAFE’s inclusion in a bipartisan package was underestimated by both Democrat and Republican negotiators. Undoubtedly, majority leadership should have moved SAFE earlier in the year when there was still time on the calendar to advance as a standalone bill. This highlights the importance of starting this process in the Senate early, while also appreciating that having a true majority for procedural purposes and the retirement of some key opponents should mitigate some of the challenges of the previous Congress.

These shifts in dynamics should also be helpful when looking at another lesson learned regarding the importance of regular order. Had SAFE gone through the committee hearing and markup process, many of the last-minute concerns raised would have already been settled. Furthermore, it’s impossible to count votes on a hypothetical package. The fact that the text of a compromise package was never put forward created excessive challenges when it came to bolstering support and addressing concerns of something undefined. It is welcome news that given the many discussions at the end of the year, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) has signaled his support for negotiated language and his willingness to hold a hearing on it in the new Congress. Across the Capitol, incoming House Financial Services Committee Chairman Patrick McHenry (R-N.C.) has also pledged to have an “open process” on SAFE Banking even though he has not previously supported the bipartisan bill.

Lastly, it became clear to cannabis advocates during our many SAFE conversations on the Hill that while 37 states now have some form of legal cannabis program and there are many champions in Congress, there remains a lack of understanding among some lawmakers of the complexities and sophistication in which this unique industry operates. There is no more effective mechanism for industry to address this educational learning curve than by moving SAFE through regular order. This allows for expert testimony opportunities and input on needed changes. Additionally, Congress is witnessing a generational shift (including the election of the first Gen Z member of Congress), which we have also seen correlate with a growing understanding of and support for federal cannabis reform — not just among lawmakers but also the general public. With new champions like Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) to help educate his colleagues and more states establishing or expanding programs where constituents will educate their representatives, Congress as a whole will become more informed on this growing industry, the opportunities it presents, and the barriers holding it back.

We continue to push for federal cannabis reform in the 118th Congress, bolstered by the progress made through bipartisan negotiations at the end of 2022 and with the continued support of the united and diverse cannabis alliances that came together and worked so hard to try to get SAFE across the finish line last year. We all agree that more comprehensive reform is needed to include righting the wrongs caused by prohibition, access to capital markets, and ultimately, federal legalization. But we cannot move forward until a first step is taken.

And to any members of the House or Senate who would oppose this public safety measure, a reminder that federal cannabis reform is supported by a majority of Americans – including 73 percent of Republicans who agree that legal state-sanctioned cannabis businesses should be entitled to the same rights as other legal businesses. Our door is open to any members of the 118th Congress who would like to better understand the importance of passing the SAFE Banking without delay

Saphira Galoob serves as executive director of the National Cannabis Roundtable, an alliance of cannabis companies and ancillary services and solutions providers, that seek cannabis reform that nurtures the nascent domestic industry, protects consumers, and advances social equity.

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Samsung Electronics flags lowest quarterly profit in 8 years on demand slump

US Top News and Analysis 

People walk past the Samsung logo displayed on a glass door at the company’s Seocho building in Seoul on Oct. 27, 2022.
Jung Yeon-je | AFP | Getty Images

Samsung Electronics reported on Friday a likely 69% plunge in December-quarter operating profit to an eight-year low, as a global economic downturn saps demand for electronic devices and clouds the memory-chip industry outlook.

The world’s largest memory chip, smartphone and TV maker estimated its profit slumped to 4.3 trillion won ($3.37 billion) in October-December from 13.87 trillion won a year earlier.

It was Samsung’s smallest quarterly profit since the third quarter of 2014 and fell short of a 5.9 trillion won Refinitiv SmartEstimate, which is weighted toward forecasts from analysts who are more consistently accurate.

“For the memory business, the decline in fourth-quarter demand was greater than expected as customers adjusted inventories in their effort to further tighten finances, spurred by concerns over deteriorating consumer sentiment caused by continued high global interest rates and weak economic outlooks,” Samsung said in a statement.

Revenue likely fell 9% from the same period a year earlier to 70 trillion won, Samsung said in the short preliminary earnings release.

Samsung said that memory chip prices also declined throughout the quarter due to increased inventory at memory suppliers, leading to a greater-than-expected drop in chip prices.

Its mobile business profit declined in the fourth quarter as smartphone sales and revenue decreased due to weak demand resulting from prolonged macroeconomic issues, Samsung added.

Asia’s fourth-biggest company by market value is due to release detailed earnings later this month.

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Vince McMahon plotting return to WWE, intends to sell company: report

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

The retirement of Vince McMahon doesn’t seem to be lasting very long as he is reportedly plotting his way back into WWE

McMahon announced this summer that he was resigning, and in turn retiring, after a slew of misconduct allegations. Now, McMahon is hoping that upon his return a sale of the company can occur, the Wall Street Journal reports, despite legal demands from two women who are alleging sexual misconduct.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

WWE is entering a critical juncture in its history with the upcoming media rights negotiations coinciding with increased industry-wide demand for quality content and live events and with more companies seeking to own the intellectual property on their platforms,” McMahon said in a statement. “The only way for WWE to fully capitalize on this opportunity is for me to return as Executive Chairman and support the management team in the negotiations for our media rights and to combine that with a review of strategic alternatives. My return will allow WWE, as well as any transaction counterparties, to engage in these processes knowing they will have the support of the controlling shareholder.”

WWE’s live rights for “Raw” and “SmackDown” are a large source of revenue for the business, and they are set to expire in 2024. McMahon sees now as the right time to sell because of that.

The Journal reported earlier that McMahon paid millions in “hush money” to several former WWE employees for the alleged sexual misconduct.

VINCE MCMAHON EYES POTENTIAL WWE COMEBACK AMID NEW LEGAL DEMANDS FROM TWO ALLEGED ASSAULT VICTIMS: REPORT

McMahon reportedly received a letter from former wrestling referee Rita Chatterton on Nov. 3 demanding $11.75 million in damages following a three-decade-old accusation that McMahon had raped her in a limo.

Then, another email to McMahon’s attorneys accused him of assaulting a former spa manager in 2011 at a California hotel. She alleged McMahon assaulted her while at a WWE event in town. 

McMahon reportedly refuses to pay settlements to the two women.

The Journal also noted in an earlier report that McMahon was under investigation by the WWE board for an alleged $3 million payment to a former employee he was allegedly having an affair with. The investigation began in April.

VINCE MCMAHON ANNOUNCES RETIREMENT FROM WWE AMID SCANDAL

Since he’s announced his retirement, McMahon’s daughter, Stephanie, and WWE President Nick Khan took over as co-CEO. Paul Levesque, more commonly known by his ring name “Triple H,” was moved to director of creative.

In order for McMahon to return to the company, three members of the board would need position changes.

The 77-year-old McMahon still owns a majority of the company’s voting shares.

Fox News Digital’s Paulina Dedaj contributed to this report.

 

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