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Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page A5
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Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page A5

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Detroit, Michigan
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Page:
A5
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Reward doubles to $30K for info leading to WSU cop killer DETROIT POLICE Crime Stoppers released photos of gloves and a flashlight, below, police say belong to the killer. The reward for information leading to the arrest of the person who killed a Wayne State University police officer has been doubled to $30,000, Detroit Police announced Friday. Collin Rose, 29, was thought to be investigating a man on a bicycle southwest of the midtown Detroit campus on the night of Nov. 22. Rose was shot in the head and died the next day.

think this is a great opportunity for someone who knows something to say Chief James Craig said, as he announced that DTE Energy was contributing $15,000 to raise the reward to $30,000. Hours after the shooting, police arrested the wrong man, DeAngelo Davis, who was released from jail Wednesday after the Wayne County Office withdrew charges. Craig said Friday that Davis had, at some point, used the same bicycle that the suspected killer used. know that the bike has been handled, if you will, by several Craig said at the afternoon news conference, which the department live-streamed on Face- book. Police also released photos Friday of a blue Magna trail bike thought to have been used by the killer.

They also put out photos of a flashlight and a pair of black gloves they said belong to the killer. Anyone with information can call 888-ATF-TIPS or 888283-8477. Contact Jim Schaefer: 313-223-4542 or Follow him on Twitter DETROIT POLICE Astill image from a video clip shows a new suspect in the fatal shooting of Wayne State University Police Sgt. Collin Rose in November. By Jim Schaefer Detroit Free Press Police Officer Collin Rose The Detroit Mass Mob will wraps up its third year filling the pews at historic Detroit churches on Sunday with an 11 a.m.

mass at St. of Redford. The organization, which has helped raise more than $350,000 for Detroit churches, is hoping to help the parish make up a $14,000 shortfall in its annual budget. The 173-year-old parish started out as a wilderness mission, founded on Nov. 3, 1843, according to the web- site.

of Redford was established in 1843 as a mission parish to serve what was, at the time, a rural area. For the first decade, the parish was led by visiting priests and it was not until 1857 that the parish had a full-time pastor. The original church and rectory were destroyed by fire, on separate occasions, in 1857 and both cases were believed to be arson. A second church was built in according to an article by Mark Nemecekon the detroitchurchblog website. Plans were drawn for the current church and the groundbreaking ceremonies took place on May 1, 1925.

The firm of as the general contractors. The vice-president, George F. Talbot, took a personal interest in the new church as Father Cook and he were once classmates at what was then the University of Detroit. Construction progressed smoothly and the church was ready for occupancy by the fall of 1926. The granite church was dedicated by BishopJoseph Plagens on Oct.

12, 1927. The Rev. Gerard at St. of Red- ford, was one of two priests recently named bishops of the Archdiocese of Detroit by Pope Francis and he will serve as celebrant for the Detroit Mass Mob XXIX on Sunday. The church is at 16098 Grand River, Detroit.

PHOTOS BY JESSICA J. FREE PRESS The altar at St. of Redford Catholic Church in Detroit. The parish was founded in 1843 and this church building was dedicated in 1927. MASS MOB FINISHES YEAR AT ST.

OF REDFORD Detroit Free Press staff The Detroit Mass Mob will wrap up its third year with an 11 a.m. mass at St. of Redford Catholic Church in Detroit. Drivers in Oakland County can take a ride this weekend on the first stretch of new pavement completed as part of the massive I-75 reconstruction and widening project. After road crews completed some work Friday morning, northbound I-75 traffic was being redirected to a stretch of reconstructed roadway on the northbound lanes from Coolidge Highway in Troy to Squirrel Road in Bloomfield Township, according to the Michigan Department of Transportation.

Abarrier wall was still being moved Friday afternoon, but two lanes are now open on the new driving surface, according to MDOT spokeswoman Diane Cross. That should equal almost 2 miles of new pavement. More work is needed to finish up for the end of the construction season, but that is also drawing to a close. Today, beginning at 6 a.m., southbound I-75 is to be reduced to one lane for a realignment, and the eastbound I-75 business Lake Road ramp to southbound I-75 is to be closed. Later on in the day, two lanes of traffic are to be open southbound again, with one lane on the ramp.

5 p.m. Friday, Dec. 16, all lanes will open to traffic with each direction in its proper alignment. All associated ramps, bridges (including the Squirrel Road overpass) and local roads will be fully open. This is expected to conclude the 2016 portion of the MDOT said in a news release.

This is the first year of the more than 17-mile, $1-billion reconstruction and widening project. The work is being split into phases, and the entire project should be completed sometime after 2030. Contact Eric D. Lawrence: Follow him on Twitter: I-75 work unveils 2 miles of fresh road By Eric D. Lawrence Detroit Free Press SATURDAY, DEC.10,2016 WWW.FREEP.COM 5A METRO Region FARMINGTON HILLS Reward in disappearance grows to $120K The reward for information about Danielle disappearance now exceeds $120,000 as authorities investigate the whereabouts of the 28-year-old, who has now been missing for a week, police said Friday.

Stislicki of Farmington Hills was last seen about 5 p.m. Dec. 2when she left work, Farmington Hills police say. She left in her vehicle, which was later found at the Independence Green Apartments in Farmington Hills, where she lived. Stislicki, who is 5-foot-5 and 123 pounds, was last seen wearing jeans, burgundy boots, a black zip-up shirt and a blue Eddie Bauer coat, Farmington Hills police said.

Anyone with information may call police at 248-871-2610. LIVINGSTON COUNTY 2victims of pileup are identified Authorities have identified two of the three victims of massive I-96 pileup as a husband and wife from Ann Arbor, Homer Tew, 69, and Theresa nor Tew, 62. The third victim has been identified as a 28- year-old man from Hollywood, but his name is not being released pending notification of the family. Two Howell-area firefighters were injured as they tended to patients at the pileup. One firefighter dislocated his knee as he climbed over the guardrail while bringing extrication tools to the scene.

The second tore his rotator cuff as he jumped from the bed of a tractor-trailer. Authorities now say 53 vehicles were in the pileup caused by icy conditions. WEST BLOOMFIELD Body found in burned vehicle Authorities say the body of a woman has been found inside a burned vehicle behind a vacant school in suburban Detroit. Police responded to the area behind Pine Lake Elementary about 1:30 a.m. Friday following a report of a vehicle fire.

They say the remains were found once the fire was extinguished. Her identity immediately released, but police say they believe they know her name. Police say interviewing two people of interest. Michigan LANSING Snyder wants flags lowered to honor Glenn Gov. Rick Snyder is asking Michigan residents, businesses, schools, local governments and other organizations to lower flags to half-staff to honor the memory of former astronaut and statesman John Glenn.

Snyder said Friday that flags should remain lowered until sunset on the day of burial. Compiled from reports by Matt Helms, Livingston Daily and Associated Press Danielle Stislicki Michael Banerian knew this presidential election would be divisive, if not downright brutal. He never expected to receive death threats over the results. Banerian, 22, a Bloomfield Township resident, is youth vice chair for the Michigan Republican Party. also one of 16 Electoral College voters who will cast a vote Dec.

19 for President-elect Donald Trump. While a pretty straightforward process, as Michigan electors are required by law to vote for the winner of the popular vote, Banerian said he has received numerous threats from people who want him to switch his vote to Democrat Hillary Clinton. On Dec. 1, he responded to the threats by filing a police report in Bloomfield Township. began receiving threatening messages a couple of days before the election and they trickled in the weeks following said Banerian, about to graduate from Oakland University with a degree in political science.

of these threats, death wishes and generally angry messages were a direct response to my support for Donald Trump and being a Republican in Bloomfield Township police declined to comment on the case Wednesday, saying still under investigation. Banerian said hundreds of people left intimidating messages on his Facebook page since the election and healso has received an average of six to seven angry post-election letters to his home each day. Nobody has threatened him in person. one of the threats I received was from a student I went to high school Banerian said. know him well then and I spoken to him in four The Electoral College vote is under a microscope after Clinton won the popular vote, while Trump won the 270 electoral votes necessary to win the presidency.

a similar scenario to the 2000 presidential election, in which Al Gore won the popular vote and George W. Bush won the Electoral College vote. Banerian said the Electoral College is still a sound system for presidential elections, since it gives a voice to the smaller states. He also expects Trump to deliver on his major promises once formally elected as the 45th president. Contact Jay Grossman: Mich.

elector gets death threats over Trump vote By Jay Grossman hometownlife.com Michael Banerian.

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