![Man pleads guilty to killing Vanessa Marcotte, Google employee who went missing while jogging near her mother's home in 2016](https://assets1.cbsnewsstatic.com/hub/i/r/2017/04/15/34607611-82a7-45c6-a5b7-f9e41f947947/thumbnail/1200x630g2/7d61829c89f8e0588d59bef38209ecbf/google16n-1-web.jpg)
Man pleads guilty to killing Vanessa Marcotte, Google employee who went missing while jogging near her mother's home in 2016
CBSN
A delivery driver charged with killing a Google employee from New York who went missing while out for a run near her mother's Massachusetts home six years ago pleaded guilty to second-degree murder on Wednesday.
Angelo Colon-Ortiz had originally pleaded not guilty to murder in the death of Vanessa Marcotte, 27, whose body was found Aug. 7, 2016, in a wooded area about a half-mile from her mother's house in the small town of Princeton, about 40 miles west of Boston.
Under an agreement that also included a guilty plea to a charge of unarmed robbery, the 36-year-old will not be eligible for parole for 45 years, according to the office of Worcester District Attorney Joseph Early Jr.
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As vaccination rates decline, widespread outbreaks of diseases like measles and polio could reemerge
Health officials in western Texas are trying to contain a measles outbreak among mostly school-aged children, with at least 15 confirmed cases. It's the latest outbreak of a disease that had been virtually eliminated in the U.S., and it comes as vaccination rates are declining — jeopardizing the country's herd immunity from widespread outbreaks.