PORTLAND, Ore. (TND) — Doctors are among the most trusted professionals we have, but what happens when a physician crosses the line to sexually abuse or assault a patient? **WARNING: THIS ARTICLE CONTAINS GRAPHIC CONTENT RELATED TO SEXUAL ASSAULT**
High-profile cases have recently grabbed the headlines, from USA Gymnastics Doctor Larry Nassar, who was sent to prison for sexually abusing his patients to Doctor George Tyndall, a University of Southern California gynecologist, facing dozens of charges involving sexual misconduct.
CLEARFIELD - A Clearfield County boy diagnosed with rare medical conditions met his idol on Sunday.
Owen Zelinski, 12, of Clearfield, had Lady Gaga sing to him at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia.
Owen suffers from a rare form of epilepsy called Dravet syndrome, which causes him to experience frequent catastrophic seizures. He's also been diagnosed with dysgenisis of the corpus callosum, which means the left and right sides of his brain can't communicate with each other.
CURWENSVILLE – A 35-year-old Clearfield County man faces multiple charges after he was seen walking naked through downtown and was taken into custody.
State police in Clearfield said they received a report of a man throwing items out a window Monday afternoon at a house on the corner of State and Thompson streets.
Police later received several calls about the man walking naked on State Street.
Before police arrived, they said the man entered several businesses and damaged personal property.
Newly released body camera video shows the moment Indiana State Police (ISP) unknowingly pulled over the man accused of killing four University of Idaho students as he drove from Washington to Pennsylvania weeks after the murders.
Bryan Kohberger, 28, was a doctoral student and teaching assistant at Washington State University when the four students were killed on Nov. 13 at an off-campus home near the university. Kohberger was arrested on Dec.
Blair Co., PA (WJAC) — The Way of Truth Ministries, from Altoona, will be having its second Pennsylvania Bible Reading Marathon, on May 20th through the 24th, on the steps of the state capitol building.
Volunteers are needed to fill in 360 15-minute time slots so that the bible can be read continuously for 24 hours a day over the period.
Organizers say that they decided to have the event at the state capitol to show lawmakers their commitment to God’s word and hope that they will include themselves in the same commitment.