
Hackers change number on Minnesota plumbing company's Google listing: "I feel helpless."
A Minnesota family-run business for 60 years, said hackers changed the phone number on their Google listing in order to scam potential customers.
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Jonah Kaplan is an award-winning journalist who has built a strong reputation for his balanced reporting, thoughtful interviews, and deeply researched coverage of high-impact issues affecting the community. His work appears on all of WCCO's newscasts and is often featured on CBS News' programs and platforms, including the CBS Evening News, CBS Mornings and CBS 24/7.
There isn't much Jonah hasn't covered in his 20+ year career: he's interviewed U.S. Presidents, flown with the U.S. Air Force into the eye of a major hurricane, and was hit with confetti at the NBA Finals, among other memorable assignments. At WCCO/CBS News Minnesota, Jonah's earned the trust of military and public safety leaders to tell their important stories, including the Minnesota National Guard's recent deployments to the Middle East, and the shooting death of three Burnsville first responders. In 2023, Jonah was the first U.S.-based reporter to visit Canada's central hub for wildfire operations, and his special five-part "Summer of Smoke" series helped viewers across the Midwest better understand the impact of climate change on the region's ecosystems. His investigative work often digs into crime, politics, health care, and education, among other concerns on viewers' minds.
Jonah has received dozens of national and regional awards for his work, including an Emmy for Best Reporter, and he's twice been named TV News Reporter of the Year award by the Radio Television Digital News Association (RTDNA) of the Carolinas. Other accolades include being a lead reporter on a team that won the Edward R. Murrow award for Best Newscast, while also sweeping the top prizes for Spot News from the Missouri Broadcasters Association and Kansas City Press Club. In 2013, he won the Wilbur Award from the Religion Communicators Council for his series Journey to Jerusalem.
Originally from Philadelphia, Jonah actually started in sports working behind the scenes with TV crews at YES Network and ESPN, but later made the switch to news in part to watch the games instead of work them. His professional journey includes stops at stations most recently in Raleigh, NC, and before that Milwaukee, WI, Springfield, MO and Wichita Falls, TX. Jonah also interned on Capitol Hill and at NBC News' London Bureau before graduating with honors from Boston University's College of Communication.
Outside the newsroom, you can find Jonah still cheering on his hometown Philadelphia sports teams, playing tennis and ice hockey, or chanting and song leading with his guitar at area synagogues (he's a son of two rabbis!). Jonah lives in the Minneapolis area with his wife and three daughters.
A Minnesota family-run business for 60 years, said hackers changed the phone number on their Google listing in order to scam potential customers.
Mills Church and Habitat for Humanity are pushing for more affordable housing in Minnetonka, but the City Council doesn't appear to be on board.
A salon in the west metro is open again after two deer came charging through the window on Wednesday morning.
Mills Church and Habitat for Humanity have submitted a new proposal for more affordable housing units on the church's property.
More than 100 cats were removed from a home in Crosby this week due to unsafe conditions, and now the humane society in the area is hoping they'll be adopted and find their forever home.
There is a new campaign encouraging the city of Minneapolis to drop its contract with ShotSpotter, the technology spread across the city that picks up the sound of gunfire.
Day two of the trial for the deadly stabbing on the Apple River in Wisconsin was held Tuesday morning.
The trial for a 54-year-old Prior Lake man accused of killing a teen and stabbing four others on the Apple River in Wisconsin nearly two years ago began on Monday.
Metro Transit is showing renewed confidence in its safety and security action plan, ending overtime contracts with two local police departments in favor of its own separate initiatives.
In the 2007 tragedy, 13 people lost their lives after the bridge suddenly collapsed into the Mississippi River, and 145 more people were injured. The bridge was under construction at the time of the crash, but the moment of failure happened at the height of the afternoon rush hour.
The American Heart Association recommends taking breaks while shoveling, as well as pushing snow, as opposed to lifting it.
The Minnesota National Guard met its recruiting goal for the first time in four years in 2023 and they hope to boost enlistment in 2024 by hosting multiple "Mission Day" events.
One of the suspects accused of gunning down a teenager at Mall of America in 2022 pleaded guilty on Thursday — but did so after rejecting a plea deal offered by prosecutors.
The Minnesota House with broad bipartisan support on Monday approved a bill clarifying use-of-force standards for school resource officers.
For a century, the U.S. Government-owned the largest helium reserve in the country, but the biggest exporters now are in Russia, Qatar and Tanzania. With this new discovery, Minnesota could be joining that list.