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New Orleans community hopes to find rescue dog with a knack for escaping in time for Thanksgiving
New Orleans — A scraggly white Terrier named Scrim has captivated the hearts of many in New Orleans hoping to help him back to a safer, easier life in the Big Easy.
Scrim, already twice rescued this year, doesn’t seem to know what’s good for him. His knack for escaping helping hands and his catch-me-if-you-can elusiveness has led the doggo to go viral.
Michelle Cheramie, with Zeus’ Rescues, first saved Scrim from a life on the streets earlier this year — but in April, he broke loose.
For months following his spring escape, Cheramie and many New Orleans neighbors searched for Scrim relentlessly to no avail. Hundreds of people commented and posted on social media with photos of his whereabouts and words of encouragement for the people trying to help the lost dog.
“He was shot twice during those six months that he was on the street, so yeah, humans are pretty scary to him,” Cheramie said.
It had seemed as though Scrim was more tricky to track down than Bigfoot, but finally in October, Scrim was found.
Once again, he found himself with a roof over his head. He received medical treatment for his wounds and he was even recognized by the New Orleans City Council.
But his life inside didn’t last long.
“We were just trying to teach him that human hands are actually good, and not all human hands hit you, and not all human feet kick you, and it took us the first couple of months that we had to convince him of that, and he had finally come around,” Cheramie said. “He’s just in that flight mode again where humans are scary.”
On Nov. 13, he jumped 13 feet out of a second-story screened window in Cheramie’s home.
“He actually broke out of the screen,” according to Cheramie, who said Scrim also managed to squeeze through a small gap in her front yard fence to complete his escape.
Now Cheramie’s back to searching the city streets, and dozens of people have called in to report Scrim sightings. This map has been tracking Scrim’s movements over the last 11 days.
Cheramie drives the streets daily in her rescue van in search of Scrim.
“Everything we need to rescue Scrim when we get a sighting,” Cheramie said. “I have a dart rifle, we have net guns… it shoots out and it encapsulates him, and then we can jump on him.”
Cheramie has also been placing cameras in different locations where Scrim has been spotted.
One night, a camera captured him chowing down on some food left out for him, so Cheramie is comforted knowing he’s still alive and well.
Now she’s hoping to get Scrim home permanently — ideally just in time for a proper Thanksgiving feast.
“I’m pretty sure he’s cold wherever he is,” Cheramie said. “He’s smart enough that he probably is under a house somewhere and getting some heat that way, but no one knows for sure at this point.”
CBS News
Stowaway caught after getting aboard Delta flight from New York City to Paris
A stowaway somehow made it onto a Delta Air Lines flight Tuesday from New York City to Paris without a boarding pass, officials confirmed.
The woman boarded Delta Flight No. 264 from John F. Kennedy International Airport to Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport, CBS News learned. She was discovered while the plane was in midair and was taken into custody in Paris.
In a social media video posted by a passenger, the captain can be heard over the plane’s intercom — after the plane landed in Paris — telling flyers that “we’re just waiting for the police to come on board, they may be here now, and they’ve directed us to keep everyone on the airplane until we sort out the extra passenger that’s on the plane.”
The circumstances of how she was found were unclear, and her name was not immediately released.
A Transportation Security Administration source told CBS News that the woman went through an advanced imaging technology body scanner at a checkpoint in JFK Airport after somehow bypassing the document and ID check portion of the TSA process.
In a statement provided to CBS News, a TSA spokesperson said that it could “confirm that an individual without a boarding pass completed the airport security screening without any prohibited items. The individual bypassed two identity verification and boarding status stations and was able to board the aircraft.”
In order to be present at an airline departure gate for boarding, an individual must have cleared a TSA security checkpoint.
After getting through TSA security, it’s unclear how exactly the woman boarded the Boeing 767-400ER without showing a boarding pass or passport to Delta staff.
“Nothing is of greater importance than matters of safety and security,” Delta said in a statement. “That’s why Delta is conducting an exhaustive investigation of what may have occurred and will work collaboratively with other aviation stakeholders and law enforcement to that end.”
French law enforcement and the TSA are separately investigating. The woman could be subject to a civil penalty or fine for bypassing the document check process.
There is new technology known as e-gates that are being rolled out at airports which involves using biometrics to check travel documents as part of the international departure boarding process. Such technology would have caught the stowaway.
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New Orleans community hoping to find escaped rescue dog before Thanksgiving
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