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Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost claims that the social media giant lied to the public about the harm its products caused to its users, which led to $3 million in losses in losses for the Ohio Public Employee Retirement System.
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Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost's attacks on the credibility of a 10-year-old rape victim is going to be make it even less likely that victims of rape and sexual assault will report the crimes, abortion rights activists say.
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The Ohio Democratic Party is the latest group to blast Attorney General Dave Yost, a Republican, over the comments he made about a story involving a 10-year-old pregnant girl who had been raped and went to Indiana to get an abortion.
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Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost has ignored calls to apologize for his public remarks about the 10-year-old rape victim who traveled from her home in Ohio to get an abortion in Indiana. We'll discuss reactions to the case and more on today's Weekly Reporter Roundtable.
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Politicians who support abortion rights pointed to the case of a 10-year-old pregnant girl who was raped as an example that abortion bans are too extreme, while Republicans blamed the media and abortion rights advocates for fabricating a story that turned out to be true.
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Tim Ryan, the Democratic nominee for U.S. Senate, touts endorsements from abortion rights groups while Republican U.S. Senate nominee J.D. Vance has the support of anti-abortion organizations.
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After the Indianapolis Star reported on a 10-year-old Ohio rape survivor who had to travel to Indiana for an abortion, politicians didn't waste time politicizing the story. In this week's episode of Snollygoster, Ohio's politics podcast from WOSU, hosts Mike Thompson and Steve Brown talk about how many Republicans were quick to call the story "fake news."
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Attorney General Dave Yost asked for the hold on the law to be lifted immediately since the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health says there's no constitutional right to abortion.
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The Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation is gaining quick access to ATF’s library of 4.5 million pieces of ballistic evidence, the only automated interstate ballistic imaging network in the U.S.
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Jury declines to indict Springfield police officer who drove over man waiting for emergency servicesA Clark County grand jury has declined to indict a Springfield police officer who caused the death of Eric Cole in June 2021. Cole was waiting on emergency services after being shot when he was run over by the officer. An autopsy showed that blunt force trauma and not the gunshot wound killed him.