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    Domino’s debuts pizza-shaped engagement ring worth ‘more than $9,000’

    Domino’s Pizza is hoping to make 2020 the year that pizza and love finally come together.

    The pizza chain just revealed a one-of-a-kind slice of pizza that, while gorgeous, you probably don’t want to take a bite out of.

    OLD BAY DEBUTS HOT SAUCE, SELLS OUT IN AN HOUR

    On Monday, Domino’s Australia debuted the design for a diamond-encrusted, pizza-shaped engagement ring on its Twitter page, and promised one “lucky pizza lover” the opportunity to pop the big question and profess their love for pizza at the same time.

    The pizza chain also revealed details of the ring, which they say is worth more than $9,000.

    According to their website, fans can enter to win the ring by submitting a 30-second video “detailing how you will involve pizza in your proposal.” That said, it’s probably not a good idea to try and hide the ring inside the pizza, as it’s encrusted with diamonds, and that could really hurt if someone bit into it.

    “Think you’ve found your slice of heaven and are ready to say, ‘I cheese you’?” writes Domino’s of the contest. “We’re giving one lucky pizza lover the chance to make a truly dough-mantic proposal this Valentine’s Day.”

    Those wishing to participate can provide their information on the official contest page.

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    The eventual Domino’s-themed proposal will mark yet another feel-good moment for the chain, following news of a delivery driver who got a huge tip earlier this year.

    In January, college student Nyles Harris was out on a delivery for a Domino’s in Pennsylvania when he earned more from one tip than most would earn in several weeks. Harris, a student at Northampton Community College, received a $2,020 tip from YouTube vlogger Gabi DeMartino, who filmed herself giving Harris the massive tip and later shared the footage on her channel.

    “I didn’t really believe it until I got back to my car,” Harris told the news outlet. Fortunately for Harris, his boss told him he was allowed to keep the tip, which he says he put to good use.

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    “I used it to pay off some debts, pay off some bills and I had to give some to my mom,” he explained. “She was hugging me and all kinds of stuff and she was like, ‘Why would you do this for me?’ and I was like, ‘You know I got you.’”

    Glowing, bright blue phenomenon off Australia’s coast seen in stunning images

    A photographer captured some gorgeous, otherworldly photographs of bioluminescent algae in Jervis Bay, Australia.

    The rare event — occurring when very tiny organisms sometimes called “sea sparkle” start to glow when they’re disturbed —  happens only once or twice a year.

    Jordan Robin, 26, was fortunate enough to catch the wonder of nature, which can be seen in images released by SWNS.

    ANTARCTICA’S ‘DOOMSDAY GLACIER’ REVEALS ALARMING NEW TRAIT TO SCIENTISTS

    The gorgeous natural phenomenon took place at Plantation Point in Jervis Bay, Australia.

    The gorgeous natural phenomenon took place at Plantation Point in Jervis Bay, Australia.
    (Jordan Robins/SWNS)

    “The video shows me moving my hand through the water causing the algae to glow a very bright blue,” Robin told SWNS.

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    “What can be seen as a red tide during the day, the microalgae Noctiluca scintillans produces a bright blue glow at night,” he explained.

    Coronavirus outbreak strands 100 Australian school children in Wuhan: report

    At least 100 Australian school children are reportedly stranded in Wuhan, China, amid a deadly outbreak of novel coronavirus that’s claimed more than 80 lives and sickened thousands.

    Australian Health Minister Greg Hunt said the country is working to bring the children and any other Australians stuck in the city — the epicenter of the outbreak — home.

    DR. OZ ON CORONAVIRUS OUTBREAK: CHINESE LEADERS’ NEW COMMENTS ‘ALARMING’

    “We know at this point that the Chinese authorities have closed the Wuhan city as well as other cities within Hubei province,” Hunt told ABC Radio on Monday morning, according to The Guardian.  “We are working to make sure that there is support for those Australians and we are also working on, as are other countries, trying to secure their ability to return to Australia. At this point in time, the foreign minister is working around the clock on that.”

    It’s not clear why the school children were in Wuhan in the first place.

    The news comes after the Chinese government last week quarantined the city of Wuhan in an effort to contain the outbreak, shutting down airports and public transportation such as buses, ferries and more.

    Hunt would not confirm if the Australian government plans to charter a plane to evacuate any of its citizens from Wuhan. The U.S. government reportedly has plans to evacuate citizens and diplomats by using a charter plane. 

    CHINA EXTENDS LUNAR NEW YEAR HOLIDAY TO CONTAIN CORONAVIRUS AS DEATH TOLL RISES

    However, Marise Payne, Australia’s foreign affairs minister, is working with Chinese officials “on all options to secure the Australians,” Hunt said.

    There have been at least four confirmed cases of coronavirus in Australia, while a fifth and “highly probable” case is working to be confirmed. Hunt told ABC Radio that officials suspect there will be more.

    3 American firefighters killed in C-130 crash while battling Australian wildfires

    28 people killed in Australia wildfires

    The death toll from the Australia bushfires climbs to at least 28 people, experts say the wildfires could threaten the global food supply; Anna Kooiman reports from Sydney.

    Three American firefighters died in a water tanker plane crash Thursday while battling wildfires in Australia, New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklian confirmed.

    Rural Fire Service officials said they had located the plane, a C-130 Hercules, that crashed in the Snowy Monaro region of New South Wales state.

    Coulson Aviation in the U.S. state of Oregon said in a statement that one of its C-130 Lockheed large air tankers was lost after it left Richmond in New South Wales with retardant for a firebombing mission. It said the accident was “extensive” but had few other details.

    “Our thoughts and prayers and heartfelt condolences go to their families,” Berejiklian told reporters on Thursday, according to BBC.

    The victims have not been identified.

    “The only thing I have from the field reports are that the plane came down, it’s crashed and there was a large fireball associated with that crash,” said Rural Fire Service Commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons. He confirmed that all three were U.S. residents.

    “Unfortunately, all we’ve been able to do is locate the wreckage and the crash site and we have not been able to locate any survivors,” he said.

    There were few other initial details about the plane or the search.

    Also Thursday, Canberra Airport closed because of nearby wildfires, and residents south of Australia’s capital were told to seek shelter.

    The blaze started Wednesday but strong winds and high temperatures caused conditions in Canberra to deteriorate. A second fire near the airport that started on Thursday morning is at the “watch and act” level.

    Firefighters battle the Morton Fire as it consumes a home near Bundanoon, New South Wales, Australia, Thursday, Jan. 23, 2020. (AP Photo (AP Photo/Noah Berger)

    Firefighters battle the Morton Fire as it consumes a home near Bundanoon, New South Wales, Australia, Thursday, Jan. 23, 2020. (AP Photo (AP Photo/Noah Berger)

    “Arrivals and departures are affected due to aviation firefighting operations,” the airport authority said in a tweet.

    Another tweet from traffic police said “the fire is moving fast and there are multiple road closures in the area. Please avoid the area. Local road blocks in place.”

    Residents in some Canberra suburbs were advised to seek shelter and others to leave immediately.

    “The defense force is both assisting to a degree and looking to whether that needs to be reinforced,” Defense Minister Angus Campbell told reporters.

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    “I have people who are both involved as persons who need to be moved from areas and office buildings that are potentially in danger, and also those persons who are part of the (Operation) Bushfire Assist effort,” he said.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

    Italian restaurant makes 330-foot pizza to raise money for Australia firefighters

    That’s a tasty fundraiser.

    An Italian restaurant in Australia is cooking up something big for firefighters battling the extreme bushfires: a 338-foot Margherita pizza.

    YOUTUBER TIPS DOMINO’S DRIVER $2,020 ON $22 ORDER

    The three-hundred-plus-foot pizza took four hours to create and was then cooked using a conveyor oven.

    The three-hundred-plus-foot pizza took four hours to create and was then cooked using a conveyor oven.
    (INSTAGRAM/@ISSAC_EATSALOT via REUTERS)

    Pellegrini’s restaurant in New South Wales created the giant pie using several roughly 3-foot-long sheets of dough that were then pieced together and covered with tomato sauce and mozzarella, Reuters reported.

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    The three-hundred-plus-foot pizza was then cooked using a conveyor oven before being topped with classic Margherita fixings like basil leaves, oregano and olive oil.

    The feet of continuous pizza reportedly took about four hours to create, the restaurant shared.

    Pellegrini’s debuted the massive meal at a fair that the restaurant put on to celebrate the record-breaking event and raise money for the New South Wales Rural Fire Service. All proceeds reportedly went to the fire service.

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    Images of the incredible Italian favorite quickly went viral on social media with people both praising the restaurant’s philanthropic efforts – as well as the pizza.

    “Such a great cause. Good work guys and gals,” one person wrote on Instagram.

    “Crazy,” another simply commented.

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    “Lawdy lawd,” another wrote, surely referencing the pizza’s side.

    Fires set stage for irreversible forest losses in Australia

    This 2010 photo provided by Sebastian Pfautsch shows an alpine ash forest that burned during 2009 wildfires with early signs of regrowth in Victoria, Australia. Heat waves and drought are fueling bigger and more frequent fires in Australia and there are worries some stands of trees won’t return. (Sebastian Pfautsch via AP)

    This 2010 photo provided by Sebastian Pfautsch shows an alpine ash forest that burned during 2009 wildfires with early signs of regrowth in Victoria, Australia. Heat waves and drought are fueling bigger and more frequent fires in Australia and there are worries some stands of trees won’t return. (Sebastian Pfautsch via AP)

    Australia’s forests are burning at a rate unmatched in modern times and scientists say the landscape is being permanently altered as a warming climate brings profound changes to the island continent.

    Heat waves and drought have fueled bigger and more frequent fires in parts of Australia, so far this season torching some 40,000 square miles (104,000 square kilometers), an area about as big as Ohio.

    With blazes still raging in the country’s southeast, government officials are drawing up plans to reseed burned areas to speed up forest recovery that could otherwise take decades or even centuries.

    But some scientists and forestry experts doubt that reseeding and other intervention efforts can match the scope of the destruction. The fires since September have killed 28 people and burned more than 2,600 houses.

    Before the recent wildfires, ecologists divided up Australia’s native vegetation into two categories: fire-adapted landscapes that burn periodically, and those that don’t burn. In the recent fires, that distinction lost meaning — even rainforests and peat swamps caught fire, likely changing them forever.

    This 2009 photo provided by Sebastian Pfautsch shows a eucalyptus forest that burned during a 2009 wildfire in Victoria, Australia. As of early 2020, fires have consumed some 40,000 square miles of Australia this fire season and scientists say the effects on the nation’s forests could be long-lasting. (Sebastian Pfautsch via AP)

    This 2009 photo provided by Sebastian Pfautsch shows a eucalyptus forest that burned during a 2009 wildfire in Victoria, Australia. As of early 2020, fires have consumed some 40,000 square miles of Australia this fire season and scientists say the effects on the nation’s forests could be long-lasting. (Sebastian Pfautsch via AP)

    Flames have blazed through jungles dried out by drought, such as Eungella National Park, where shrouds of mist have been replaced by smoke.

    “Anybody would have said these forests don’t burn, that there’s not enough material and they are wet. Well they did,” said forest restoration expert Sebastian Pfautsch, a research fellow at Western Sydney University.

    “Climate change is happening now, and we are seeing the effects of it,” he said.

    High temperatures, drought and more frequent wildfires — all linked to climate change — may make it impossible for even fire-adapted forests to be fully restored, scientists say.

    “The normal processes of recovery are going to be less effective, going to take longer,” said Roger Kitching, an ecologist at Griffith University in Queensland. “Instead of an ecosystem taking a decade, it may take a century or more to recover, all assuming we don’t get another fire season of this magnitude soon.”

    Young stands of mountain ash trees — which are not expected to burn because they have minimal foliage — have burned in the Australian Alps, the highest mountain range on the continent. Fire this year wiped out stands reseeded following fires in 2013.

    Mountain ash, the world’s tallest flowering trees, reach heights of almost 90 meters (300 feet) and live hundreds of years. They’re an iconic presence in southeast Australia, comparable to the redwoods of Northern California, and are highly valued by the timber industry.

    This January 2008 photo provided by Sebastian Pfautsch shows new shoots emerging from the bark of a eucalyptus tree following a wildfire near Mansfield, Victoria, Australia. Many of Australia’s forests are adapted to fire, but more frequent blazes due to climate change can slow or halt their recovery. (Sebastian Pfautsch via AP)

    This January 2008 photo provided by Sebastian Pfautsch shows new shoots emerging from the bark of a eucalyptus tree following a wildfire near Mansfield, Victoria, Australia. Many of Australia’s forests are adapted to fire, but more frequent blazes due to climate change can slow or halt their recovery. (Sebastian Pfautsch via AP)

    “I’m expecting major areas of (tree) loss this year, mainly because we will not have sufficient seed to sow them,” said Owen Bassett of Forest Solutions, a private company that works with government agencies to reseed forests by helicopter following fires.

    Bassett plans to send out teams to climb trees in parts of Victoria that did not burn to harvest seed pods. But he expects to get at most a ton of seeds this year, about one-tenth of what he said is needed.

    Fire is a normal part of an ash forest life cycle, clearing out older stands to make way for new growth. But the extent and intensity of this year’s fires left few surviving trees in many areas.

    Already ash forests in parts of Victoria had been hit by wildfire every four to five years, allowing less marketable tree species to take over or meadows to form.

    “If a young ash forest is burned and killed and we can’t resow it, then it is lost,” Bassett said.

    The changing landscape has major implications for Australia’s diverse wildlife. The fires in Eungella National Park, for example, threaten “frogs and reptiles that don’t live anywhere else,” said University of Queensland ecologist Diana Fisher.

    Fires typically burn through the forest in a patchwork pattern, leaving unburned refuges from which plant and animal species can spread. However, megafires are consuming everything in their path and leaving little room for that kind of recovery, said Griffith University’s Kitching.

    In both Australia and western North America, climate experts say, fires will continue burning with increased frequency as warming temperatures and drier weather transform ecosystems .

    The catastrophic scale of blazes in so many places offers the “clearest signal yet” that climate change is driving fire activity, said Leroy Westerling, a fire science professor at the University of Alberta.

    “It’s in Canada, California, Greece, Portugal, Australia,” Westerling said. “This portends what we can expect — a new reality. I prefer not to use the term ‘new normal’… This is more like a downward spiral.”

    Forests can shift locations over time. However, that typically unfolds over thousands of years, not the decades over which the climate has been warming.

    Most of the nearly 25,000 square miles (64,000 square kilometers) that have burned in Victoria and New South Wales has been forest, according to scientists in New South Wales and the Victorian government.

    By comparison, an average of about 1,600 square miles (4,100 square kilometers) of forest burned annually in Australia dating to 2002, according to data compiled by NASA research scientist Niels Andela and University of Maryland research professor Louis Giglio.

    Unlike grasslands, which see the vast majority of Australia’s huge annual wildfire damage, forests are unable to regenerate in a couple of years. “For forests, we’re talking about decades, particularly in more arid climates,” Andela said.

    Most forested areas can be expected to eventually regenerate, said Owen Price, a senior research fellow at the University of Wollongong specializing in bushfire risk management. But he said repeated fires will make it more likely that some will become grasslands or open woodlands.

    Price and others have started thinking up creative ways to combat the changes, such as installing sprinkler systems in rainforests to help protect them against drought and fire, or shutting down forested areas to all visitors during times of high fire danger to prevent accidental ignitions.

    Officials may also need to radically rethink accepted forest management practices,. said Pfautsch, the researcher from Western Sydney.

    That could involve planting trees in areas where they might not be suitable now but would be in 50 years as climate change progresses.

    “We cannot expect species will move 200 kilometers (125 miles) to reach a cooler climate,” said Pfautsch. “It’s not looking like there’s a reversal trend in any of this. It’s only accelerating.”

    Leonardo DiCaprio to donate $3M for Australia wildfire relief

    Leonardo DiCaprio is coming through in a huge way for wildfire relief efforts in Australia by donating $3 million toward the cause.

    The outspoken actor, through his environmental organization Earth Alliance, has created the Australia Wildfire Fund in a concerted effort to bring relief to the emblazoned continent and to help with the “international response to the catastrophic bushfires” currently scorching large parts of the country.

    The Academy Award-winning actor co-chairs the organization, which was launched last year to combat climate change and biodiversity loss.

    SINGER PINK DONATES $500G TO HELP FIGHT AUSTRALIA WILDFIRES

    The wildfires have scorched an area twice the size of the U.S. state of Maryland. The blazes have killed 25 people and destroyed at least 2,000 homes. The fires, fueled by drought and the country’s hottest and driest year on record, have been raging since September, months earlier than is typical for Australia’s annual wildfire season.

    CHRIS HEMSWORTH DONATES $1M TO AUSTRALIA WILDFIRE RELIEF EFFORTS

    The fund will work with local Australian partner organizations including Aussie Ark, Bush Heritage and Wires Wildlife Rescue.

    All funds will go to assist firefighting efforts in New South Wales and aid other communities affected by the wildfires.

    AUSTRALIAN INSTAGRAM STAR SLAMMED FOR POSTING INAPPROPRIATE PHOTO DURING AUSTRALIA BUSHFIRES

    KYLIE JENNER DONATES $1M TO AUSTRALIA WILDFIRE RELIEF EFFORTS AMID SOCIAL MEDIA POST BACKLASH

    DiCaprio joins a growing list of other celebrities who have rallied to donate big bucks.

    Australian actor Chris Hemsworth and Elton John each offered $1 million earlier this week.

    Nicole Kidman, Keith Urban and Pink have donated, as well, in addition to Kylie Jenner, who also pledged $1 million toward relief efforts.

    KIM KARDASHIAN SLAMS CLAIM SHE HASN’T DONATED TO AUSTRALIA WILDFIRE-RELIEF EFFORTS

    Metallica said they will donate $750,000 to a firefighting agency and emergency services agency in Victoria. Phoebe Waller-Bridge said she would auction off her Golden Globes outfit and have the proceeds go to firefighter relief.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Australia’s bushfire crisis seen from space

    You don’t have permission to access “http://www.foxnews.com/science/australias-bushfire-crisis-seen-from-space” on this server.

    Reference #18.4a93817.1578077981.f178d358

    Barr: By the time Trump took office, it was clear there was ‘no basis’ to George Papadopoulos, Carter Page allegations

    Attorney General William Barr told “The Story with Martha MacCallum” Wednesday that by the time Trump was inaugurated in January 2017, it had become clear that allegations raised against former Trump campaign associate George Papadopoulos as a result of the FBI’s Russia investigation were largely baseless.

    Papadopoulos – who pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI in 2017 and served 12 days in jail – has said he still questions the series of events that led to him meeting with Australian diplomat Alexander Downer in London in 2016. Papadopoulos allegedly told Downer that Russia had dirt on Hillary Clinton, prompting the diplomat to alert the FBI and trigger the counterintelligence investigation.

    BARR WARNS AGAINST ‘POLITICAL’ IMPEACHMENT, HITS BACK AT COMEY

    Papadopoulos has denied telling Downer that Russia would release “damaging” material about Clinton in the run-up to the 2016 election but has said he was told by Maltese academic Joseph Mifsud weeks before meeting Downer that Moscow had “dirt” on Clinton.

    Barr told Martha MacCallum on “The Story” that the claims allegedly made by Papadopoulos in that conversation with Downer were already being bandied about in the press and inside the Beltway.

    “At the time of the comment made by Papadopoulos that the Russians might have something that they would drop in the public that was adverse to Hillary [Clinton], that was during a period of rampant speculation in the media and political circles,” he said.

    PAPADOPOULOS CONSIDERING LAWSUIT AGAINST FEDS AFTER HOROWITZ REPORT

    Barr said many people were wondering at the time about whether Russian actors had hacked Clinton’s private server that was stored inside her Westchester County, N.Y. home, and gotten hold of sensitive emails and other information that they could “drop” to hurt her campaign.

    Papadopoulos’ statement, he said, “had very little probative value.”

    “To lead to the conclusion that it showed knowledge of a later hack into the DNC was a pretty aggressive conclusion,” he added. “I just think that by the time the president entered office — around that time — it was becoming clear that there was no basis to these allegations — not just the [Steele] dossier falling apart, but the information that they were relying [on] as to Page and to Papadopoulos.”

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    However, Barr warned that he did not intend to suggest any potential outcome to Connecticut U.S. Attorney John Durham’s independent investigation into the origins of the Russia investigation.

    Barr said he has not asked Durham about his probe, adding he did not personally know the longtime prosecutor before he assigned him to the case but tapped him based on his reputation and recommendation.

    Fox News’ Dave Montanaro contributed to this report.

    Couple finds 10-foot python hiding in Christmas tree

    A woman in Australia was in for a real ssssssurprise upon arriving home from work.

    Leanne Chapman, a resident of Brisbane, said she and her partner came home from their jobs and noticed some strange activity outside on their balcony.

    AIRPORT CREATES CHRISTMAS TREE OUT OF CONFISCATED ITEMS TO ‘SEND AN EDUCATIONAL MESSAGE’ TO PASSENGERS

    “We came home from work and there’s a couple of butcher birds that visit every day and they were just kicking off on the balcony, going crazy,” she told 7NEWS.com.au.

    Chapman said her partner went outside to videotape the birds when he turned around and noticed there was a nearly 10-foot python wrapped around the couple’s Christmas tree.

    “It was a bit of a shock to begin with,” Chapman said. “You don’t really expect to see a snake in your Christmas tree.”

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    The woman said the pair left the snake alone and went back inside, where they watched it from the window. Eventually, the snake slithered away around 10:30 p.m., 7NEWS reported.

    The couple were shocked to make the discovery, but said they left the snake alone and it eventually slithered off by itself around 10:30 p.m.

    The couple were shocked to make the discovery, but said they left the snake alone and it eventually slithered off by itself around 10:30 p.m.
    (iStock)

    “It was big, really big,” Chapman said, calling the large reptile “really beautiful.”

    “It was actually quite nice to see it that close up because I’ve never seen anything like it before.”

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    Oddly enough, the pair wasn’t the only couple to find out they were harboring a large, festive reptile in their Christmas decorations: Over in the U.K., a man claims he was terrified to discover a dead snake trapped inside his family’s Christmas wreath.

    Karl Gaskell, 43, and his wife Nicki, 40, bought the holiday decoration from a supermarket and brought it home before they noticed grey scales poking out the back, along with a foul odor.

    Karl Gaskell, 43, and his wife Nicki, 40, bought the holiday decoration from a supermarket and brought it home before they noticed grey scales poking out the back, along with a foul odor.
    (SWNS)

    Karl Gaskell, 43, and his wife Nicki, 40, bought the holiday decoration from a supermarket and brought it home before they noticed grey scales poking out the back, along with a foul odor.

    The father of two investigated the cause and realized it was a dead snake. The find caused him to “panic,” as he wondered if it could possibly be a poisonous snake. “Poisonous snakes remain poisonous long after they’ve died,” he told SWNS.

    The Gaskells think the snake was hibernating in the straw before the stalks were picked to make the wreath.

    The Gaskells think the snake was hibernating in the straw before the stalks were picked to make the wreath.
    (SWNS)

    The quick-thinking dad checked with the Natural History Museum, who confirmed to him it was a dead grass snake, which is a non-venomous snake known to hibernate in straw piles.

    The Gaskells think the snake was hibernating in the straw before the stalks were picked to make the wreath.

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    Karl complained to the store where he purchased the low-cost wreath. The store apologized for the incident, and are said to be investigating the matter.

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    Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation arrests former daycare employee in 30-year-old ‘Baby Doe’ case

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation announced on Friday that it has made an arrest in a 30-year-old 'Baby Doe' case involving a baby who was murdered in 1993.Meaonia Michelle Allen, 53, turned herself in to … Read Full Report about Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation arrests former daycare employee in 30-year-old ‘Baby Doe’ case

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