Tragic deaths, sports probes among top 2018 stories in Ohio
2018 saw Tragic deaths, sports and church probes
Associated Press
COLUMBUS
An investigation into alleged sexual misconduct by an Ohio State team doctor, the death of a 16-year-old boy while trapped in his family minivan, and a mass shooting at a Cincinnati bank are among the top stories in 2018 as selected by The Associated Press.
E-SCHOOL’S DOWNFALL
One of the nation’s largest online charter schools, the Columbus-based Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow, abruptly closed Jan. 19 amid a legal dispute over student participation totals used to determine its state funding.
FERTILITY CLINIC FAILURE
Hundreds of women and couples were stunned and heartbroken when a storage tank malfunction on the weekend of March 3 at a fertility clinic near Cleveland destroyed more than 4,000 eggs and embryos.
OHIO STATE TEAM DOCTOR
After an investigation was opened April 5, scores of former athletes and other men came forward to accuse now-deceased Ohio State University team doctor Richard Strauss of sexual misconduct against students throughout his two decades there.
TRAPPED STUDENT DEATH
The desperate last words of a 16-year-old boy who told a 911 operator “I’m going to die here” continue to hang over Cincinnati, eight months after the death of Kyle Plush on April 10 after he was trapped in the family minivan.
STATEHOUSE UPHEAVAL
Ohio House Speaker Cliff Rosenberger announced his resignation April 10 amid what would later be revealed as an FBI investigation into potential bribes and kickbacks surrounding payday lending legislation.
IMMIGRATION RAIDS
The debate over immigration landed squarely in Ohio in June when authorities carried out two of the largest workplace immigration raids yet under the Trump administration.
LEBRON LEAVES AGAIN
LeBron James left Cleveland again, but this time it didn’t sting quite so much. A season after leading the Cavaliers to an NBA title in 2016 and ending Cleveland’s 52-year championship drought, James announced July 1 he was signing with the Los Angeles Lakers.
CINCINNATI BANK SHOOTING
The scourge of mass shootings across the nation hit Ohio on Sept. 6, when a 29-year-old man walked into Cincinnati’s downtown Fifth Third Bank building and opened fire. He killed three people and wounded two before Cincinnati police fatally shot him.
CLERGY ABUSE
Three of Ohio’s six Roman Catholic dioceses said in September they will release new lists of priests who have been removed from parishes because of sexual abuse and misconduct allegations.
GOP SWEEP
Attorney General Mike DeWine led a Republican sweep of statewide executive offices in the Nov. 6 election, despite Democrats fielding one of their strongest slates in years. The GOP also maintained its 12-4 congressional majority and control of both chambers of the General Assembly.
OHIO FAMILY KILLED
Authorities arrested a family of four Nov. 13 in the gruesome 2016 slayings of eight people from another family in rural Ohio, a crime that prosecutors suggested stemmed from a custody dispute.
AUTO JOBS LOST
General Motors announced Nov. 26 it will cut up to 14,000 workers in North America and put five plants – including Lordstown – up for possible closure as it abandons many of its car models and restructures to focus more on autonomous and electric vehicles.
HORRIFIC HOUSE FIRE
An anguished mother banged on the door of the house across the street and screamed for help in a fruitless plea to save her five children as a fire late in the evening of Dec. 9 swallowed their home in Youngstown.