Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Dozens of tires dumped in Dayton alley


WDTN

Dozens of tires dumped in Dayton alley

DAYTON, Ohio (WDTN) – Dayton police are looking for two men accused of dumping tires in an alley.


Police were called to the alley in the 1800 block of Huffman Avenue Monday afternoon.


Tires dumped in alley along Huffman Avenue in Dayton.  (WDTN Photo/Paul Rodzinka)Tires dumped in alley along Huffman Avenue in Dayton. (WDTN Photo/Paul Rodzinka)

The caller told officers he saw a black Chevy Silverado pickup truck pull into the alley.


The police report says two men dumped 50 to 60 tires in the alley along with tire debris and plywood.


The report says the truck is most likely a 1990s model and it had a hubcap missing from the front driver’s side.


Police called to have the tires removed.



Israeli leader thanks US, Obama for aid, warns about Iran

WASHINGTON (AP) – In a speech that stirred political intrigue in two countries, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told Congress on Tuesday that negotiations underway between Iran and the United States would “all but guarantee” that Tehran will get nuclear weapons, a step that the world must avoid at all costs.


“Iran has proven time and again that it cannot be trusted,” no matter what it says about permitting verification of the terms of any accord designed to prevent it from getting such weapons, he said.


“The greatest danger facing our world is the marriage of militant Islam with nuclear weapons,” he said in remarks before a packed House chamber.


Netanyahu spoke shortly after Secretary of State John Kerry met for more than two hours in Switzerland with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif in hopes of completing an international framework agreement later this month to curb Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.


The Israeli leader’s appeal also came two weeks before elections in which he is seeking a new term — and after the invitation to address Congress extended by House Speaker John Boehner, a Republican, triggered a political furor in the United States. More than four dozen House and Senate Democrats said in advance they would not attend the event, a highly unusual move given historically close ties between the two allies.


The White House expressed its displeasure with the appearance by word and deed, dispatching Vice President Joe Biden on an overseas trip that meant he did not fill his customary seat behind the House rostrum during the speech. Nor did Netanyahu meet at the White House with Obama on his trip to the United States.


Ohio Governor John Kasich made the trip to Washington, D.C. to see the speech firsthand.




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