5 things to know this Tuesday, April 9
Albany Police are searching for a missing 10-year-old boy, and are seeking the public's help. Also, Troy Police are investigating after a man was found dead outside of his apartment. These stories, a shots fired incident, a car crashing into an Albany CVS, and North Country businesses seeing a boost because of Monday's eclipse are all covered in your five things to know this Tuesday morning.
ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- Happy Tuesday! We hope everyone enjoyed yesterday's solar eclipse wherever you may have been viewing! Per Meteorologist Kevin Appleby, we can expect the warmest day since last October with high temps reaching the low to mid 70s.
Albany Police are searching for a missing 10-year-old boy, and are seeking the public's help. Also, Troy Police are investigating after a man was found dead outside of his apartment. These stories, a shots fired incident, a car crashing into an Albany CVS, and North Country businesses seeing a boost because of Monday's eclipse are all covered in your five things to know this Tuesday morning.
1. Albany PD searching for missing 10-year-old
The Albany Police Department is looking for the public’s help in finding a 10-year-old boy. Jaiyden Abear was last seen Monday afternoon.
2. Man found dead outside apartment, police investigating
Police are investigating after a man was found dead outside of his Troy apartment shortly after 11 a.m. Monday. Police have not released the man’s name at this time.
3. Suspect flees, victim crashes in Troy shots fired investigation
Troy Police responded to Mann Avenue near Francis Street early Tuesday morning around 1:15 for reports of shots fired. Police say the victim in the incident crashed his car nearby while the suspect fled before their arrival.
4. Car crashes into CVS in Albany
A car has crashed into the CVS on the corner of New Scotland Avenue and Myrtle Avenue in Albany. Police say this is a result of a two-car crash causing one car to hit the building.
5. Lake George businesses see uptick from eclipse
Many people spent Monday in Lake George, not only to see the near total eclipse coverage, but to take in some of the shops and restaurants the village had to offer.