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Hiker missing for 2 weeks found alive in Kentucky’s Red River Gorge after rescuers hear cry for help: “Truly a miracle”
Rescue teams found a man who had been reported missing more than two weeks ago in the Red River Gorge, a wilderness area full of steep cliffs and jagged terrain in eastern Kentucky. The rescue team called it “truly a miracle” that the hiker survived so long without food or water.
Searchers found 48-year-old Scott A. Hern Saturday afternoon near a cliff line after hearing someone calling for help, according to the Wolfe County Search and Rescue Team, which responds to emergencies in the area. Hern had been hiking in the area to look for waterfalls, his family told searchers.
Hern was hoisted out of the rugged area by helicopter after Wolfe County rescuers contacted Kentucky State Police for assistance. The rescue team posted video and images of the rescue operation on social media.
Search crews began an intense search for Hern, who is from Ohio, early last week, using dogs and drawing on information from a diary Hern wrote in about locations he wanted to explore in the Red River Gorge.
The rescue team wrote in a social media post that Hern’s car had been parked at the Gorge since July 6 and family had not seen him since July 5.
Search crews doubled back to an area they had looked at on Saturday and decided to head further north along a creek. They found a shoe print and evidence of a walking stick in an area that is not frequently traveled by hikers, Wolfe County rescue said.
“We were persistent in our search, but hope was fading,” the search team wrote.
In a social media post Sunday, rescue team member Eric Wolterman conceded that after not finding Hern after so many days, the team “pretty much with the thought that this was going to be a recovery mission.”
But when the team stopped to regroup, someone “heard a very faint noise,” Wolterman said.
“We paused and we shouted ‘who is that?’ Thinking it was another search team. I then heard “help.” We took off in the direction. As we got closer asked what his name was and he “Scott Hern” I have never moved faster up hill in my entire life,” her said.
Wolterman said he was the first one to get to Hern and he reassured the hiker that he was safe.
“He looked at me and said ‘thank you so much. Will you give me a hug.’ I got teary eyed, and gave him a big hug,” Wolterman said. “I think it was the best hug of both of our lives.”
The post said Hern was in need of medical attention upon his rescue but no information on his health was available Sunday afternoon.
“It is truly a miracle that Mr. Hern was found after 14 days and 12 days without any food or water,” the rescue team said.
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Ex-Sen. Bob Menendez seeks new trial, citing evidence prosecutors said was inadvertently provided to jury
Washington — Former New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez asked a federal court in New York on Wednesday to throw out his conviction in a sprawling bribery scheme and grant him a new trial after prosecutors disclosed that the jury was inadvertently provided information during deliberations that it should not have been given.
The request from Menendez’s lawyers came in response to a letter prosecutors sent to the court on Nov. 13 revealing they had unintentionally loaded onto a laptop given to the jury during deliberations the incorrect versions of nine exhibits. Prosecutors said neither they nor Menendez’s lawyers, who inspected the exhibits on the laptop, noticed the error at the time.
Government lawyers told U.S. District Judge Sidney Stein that they did not believe the inclusion of the nine exhibits warranted upsetting Menendez’s guilty verdict, in part because “there is no reasonable likelihood any juror ever saw any of the erroneously less-redacted versions.” But Menendez’s lawyers told Stein in a separate filing that the improper disclosure was a “serious breach” by prosecutors and said a new trial was “unavoidable.”
The exhibits, they said, “exposed the jury to a theory of criminality that the government was barred from presenting under the Speech or Debate Clause — namely, that Senator Menendez made specific decisions with respect to military sales to Egypt in exchange for bribes.”
Under the Speech or Debate Clause of the Constitution, senators or House members “shall not be questioned” for “any speech or debate” in either chamber of Congress. Stein had ruled that certain material referencing arms sales and military aid to Egypt were legislative acts shielded by the clause.
Menendez’s defense team said the information disclosed to the jury contained the only evidence that tied him to the provision of military aid to Egypt, which was at the center of the bribery scheme the New Jersey Democrat was accused of engaging in.
They also lambasted prosecutors for attempting to “shift the blame,” calling it “factually and legally outrageous.”
Prosecutors said the court had “expressly prohibited” evidence of past legislative activity, including actions Menendez allegedly took as a senator about foreign aid to Egypt, and said the evidence at issue “squarely crossed that line … and allowed the jury to infer bribery from Senator Menendez’s legislative acts — exactly what the Speech or Debate Clause is meant to prevent.”
Prosecutors claimed that Menendez helped orchestrate a corrupt agreement through which he would work to secretly benefit the Egyptian government in exchange for lavish gifts including cash, gold bars, a Mercedes-Benz convertible, furniture and mortgage payments from three New Jersey businessmen.
He was convicted on 16 felony counts in July, including bribery, fraud and acting as a foreign agent.
Menendez’s two co-defendants in the case, Fred Daibes and Wael Hana, also separately asked the court to grant them new trials and toss out their convictions.
Menendez faced immense pressure to resign after he was indicted on federal bribery charges last year but resisted doing so until he was convicted. He stepped down from the Senate in August, a stunning capstone to a lengthy career in the upper chamber that included a position atop the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
The former senator is set to be sentenced Jan. 29.
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