Adora Namigadde
Former ReporterAdora Namigadde was a reporter for 89.7 NPR News. She joined WOSU News in February 2017. A Michigan native, she graduated from Wayne State University with a B.A. in Broadcast Journalism and a minor in French.
Before moving to Columbus, Adora reported for 9&10 News, a television station in Traverse City, MI. She was an international election observer in Ghana during the 2012 presidential race and interned at the Embassy of France in the U.S.
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Columbus City Council presented short- and long-term strategies to increase neighborhood safety and police accountability on Wednesday.
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OSU is working with Anomaly Group to help student athletes learn to navigate calculating and maximizing their image, name and likeness.
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Schools nationwide are experiencing a shortage in bus drivers, and Columbus City Schools is no exception to the trend. That’s why transportation officials in the district proposed busing high schoolers on COTA buses and K-8th grade students on school buses in the fall.
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Columbus Special Prosecutor Kathleen Garber and independent investigator Rick Wozniak announced that they have charged three Columbus Division of Police officers for misconduct during the 2020 summer protests in Columbus sparked by the murder of George Floyd.
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Franklin County Prosecutor Gary Tyack appointed two special prosecutors to investigate Casey Goodson Jr.'s death and other cases involving police use of force.
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Chloe Green is the youngest home owner in Canal Winchester and may be the youngest homeowner in Central Ohio.
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Elaine Bryant, currently the deputy chief of the Detroit Police, will be the next chief of the Columbus Division of Police. She will be Columbus’ first police chief selected from outside the department, and the first Black female police chief in the city.
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According to another finalist's post on Twitter, Detroit Deputy Chief Elaine Bryant is the new Columbus Division of Police chief.
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Trinity Baptist Church and the Franklin County Chiefs Association are concluding a series of roundtables aimed at finding solutions to a spike in youth violence in Central Ohio.
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People who live near the scene of Monday's mass shooting say the incident shocked the normally quiet village.