InvestigateTV+: Lulu’s Law could help alerts for shark attacks

As millions visit America’s beaches, InvestigateTV+ finds there’s no standard warning system when a shark attacks a human.
Published: Jun. 10, 2026 at 8:12 AM CDT|Updated: 2 hours ago

(InvestigateTV) — As millions visit America’s beaches, InvestigateTV+ finds there’s no standard warning system when a shark attacks a human.

We speak with a young survivor who says her encounter could’ve been prevented and hear about her mission to ensure safety along America’s coasts.

Then, a generation brought up with the internet at their fingertips develops new health challenges. We explore real-life strategies to detox from devices.

Lulu’s Law: An alert system to warn beachgoers

Lulu Gribbin was 15 years old when she lost her left hand and right leg following a shark attack.

The attack happened in June 2024 on a mother-daughter beach trip to Florida’s Gulf Coast. Gribbin was swimming with friends when she heard someone scream “shark.”

She later learned that there had been another shark attack just a few miles away about 90 minutes before her attack.

Now the Gribbin family advocates for a law that could help alert beachgoers of shark attacks.

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How Texas mom helps family manage screen time

About half of children and teens ages 12 to 17 logged four or more hours of daily screen time between July 2021 and December 2023, according to the National Center for Health Statistics.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention links that level of use to poor sleep, fatigue, anxiety and depression.

Tabetha Koerth, a mother of two in Valley Mills, Texas, said she found a way to step back from technology that works for her whole family.

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Teachers revive woman who collapsed while running

Several teachers and students at Parkway North High School were commended for their quick actions that helped save the life of a woman in 2025.

Every Tuesday, Alison Bourey, 78, runs on the track at Parkway North High School. Over the last 50 years, she has run countless marathons and was training for the Honolulu Marathon in December when she began feeling dizzy.

“I felt myself starting to get dizzy and fall,” she said. “The next thing I knew, I was sitting up in an ambulance.”

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Artist transforms paper towels into flowers

Inside the café at Powell’s City of Books, visitors can find handmade paper petals and the occasional magic trick from an artist who sees opportunity in what most people throw away.

Arnold Drake World, known as the “Portland Flower Guy,” creates flowers from paper towels for café-goers and book lovers who visit the iconic bookstore.

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