Yuma Sun

Odd News At A Glance

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tion.

The couple’s attorney says they are seeking up to $6 million in damages.

Police: Michigan woman applies for job, then steals cash

ALPENA, Mich. — Authoritie­s say it didn’t take long for them to catch a woman suspected of stealing cash from a northern Michigan restaurant, since she’d just filled out a job applicatio­n at the eatery.

Michigan State Police were told a 47-year-old Alpena woman filled out the applicatio­n at Mandarin Garden in Alpena County this week, and then took money out of the cash register. WHSB-FM reports she was confronted by employees and fled, but police say they quickly found her at home.

She was arrested and is expected to face charges including larceny. The stolen money was recovered and returned to the restaurant.

Man tries to open beer with pepper spray; it doesn’t go well

BERLIN — It’s legal to drink beer in German mov- ie theaters — but it’s probably not a good idea to try to open your beer bottle with a pepper spray canister.

However, that’s exactly what a thirsty moviegoer tried doing at a cinema Monday night in the northweste­rn German town of Osnabrueck.

Instead of opening his beer, the 29-year-old man broke his pepper spray container and some 200 people had to quickly leave the theater in tears.

The cinema’s manager told the German news agency dpa on Wednesday that it was “chaos.” Still, he kept his head, calling police, offering beverages to moviegoers and opening the windows. He says the movie was restarted after 30 minutes.

Police say so far no moviegoers have complained about eye or breathing problems.

Fishy story: Headless 400-pound tuna found in woods

GLOUCESTER, Mass. — Spotting a 400-pound tuna in the Massachuse­tts seaport of Gloucester, known as America’s oldest seaport, is not unusual. But finding a headless tuna in the woods is a bit odd.

State Environmen­tal Police and federal fisheries regulators are trying to figure out who dumped the headless fish, which had to be hauled out of the trees by a tow truck.

Authoritie­s won’t say exactly when the tuna was found or who tipped them off.

But Ally Rogers, a spokeswoma­n for the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion Fisheries Office for Law Enforcemen­t, tells the Gloucester Daily Times that the fish was illegally harvested.

The tuna season runs from early June to November.

Maj. Patrick Moran of the Environmen­tal Police says he’s never before had to investigat­e a tuna in the woods.

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