WELCOME
to the house of Harry Plopper
"We're like a family. We're very fortunate because this is
"We're like a family. We're very fortunate because this is a lot easier for us than we thought it would be," said Ogans-Recess.
Ogans-Recess, who suffers from bipolar disorder and is currently undergoing counseling and treatment, said she is "not going to lie, I don't think that I would leave it up to my kids to do this. My kids would go to school with me, but maybe not all the way."
After her accident, Ogans-Recess and her husband, Jeff, were both hospitalized for two days. They have since been reunited, but Ogans-Recess said she is still trying to get better.
"I don't know what my options are for when I get home," she said.
The family is asking for the Lifeline to help.
A memorial will be held at the Oklahoma Department of Transportation on Oct. 7.
Ogans-Recess said she was diagnosed with bipolar disorder last November and is currently in rehabilitation and has been on the system for 18 months.
"I was pretty overwhelmed. I was really sick. I was having a bad night."
To get information or to donate, click here."The greatest mistake is always to get out of the house," said one of its members, referring to the city hall building where the group is gathering to mark the 100th anniversary of the death of Al Martin.
The group did not respond to repeated questions about the group's location and which group they belong to. But after a brief visit last night to a residence on the third floor of the building in the North Building neighborhood on the site of an ongoing crime spree in the 1960s, the group returned to a house they had once owned.
A resident of that home, Paul Evers, said he saw the group at the house of his son-in-law and the Rev. Al Martin.
A representative for the group did not return messages seeking comment. A police spokesman said Martin's death was not connected to the group's activities, although the group has since been identified as the "Red Cross of Baltimore."
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