2 killed, several hurt in Mission Bay crash
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 16:39:48 GMT
SAN DIEGO — Two people were killed and four others were injured Thursday after a crash in the Mission Bay area, officials confirmed.The crash happened shortly before 9 a.m. near Quivira Avenue and West Mission Bay Drive, according to the San Diego Fire-Rescue Department.According to police, a motorcyclist was traveling over 100 miles per hour, driving in the bike lane to avoid other vehicles, when the motorcycle collided with a Toyota Prius making a right turn on a green light.The motorcyclist was ejected from their vehicle and died from their injuries.The Prius had five people inside the vehicle at the time of the crash. One of the passengers, who police say was may have been a minor, was killed in the crash.The other four occupants were transported to nearby hospitals with varying injuries, including an infant who did not suffer major injuries, according to officials. Man accused of killing 2 sisters on Mother’s Day pleads not guilty According to police, the five people inside t...Ex-wife of D.C. sniper raising awareness of connection between mass shooting and domestic violence
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 16:39:48 GMT
Mildred Muhammad escaped a years-long abusive relationship with her ex-husband John Huhammad before he became notoriously known as the D.C. sniper, the gunman was behind the random shooting deaths of 17 people in the Washington, D.C. in the fall of 2002.“Law enforcement didn’t tell the public that I was the intended target although the theory was that he was killing innocent people to cover up murder so he could come in as the grieving father and gain custody of our children … a domestic violence child custody issue,” said Muhammad.Now, Muhammad is raising awareness of the connection between domestic violence and mass shootings.The man behind the Pulse Nightclub shooting in Orlando that killed 49 people was accused of repeatedly assaulting his wife before the rampage.And an inquiry into the Nova Scotia mass shooting showed the gunman had a long history of domestic violence in his family, going back generations.“Most mass shootings start at home with terrorizing the family and ...Wounded Warriers offering new support to families of first responders
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 16:39:48 GMT
For the fifth time in nine months, an Ontario police officer was laid to rest on Thursday, a tragedy that leaves behind unspeakable grief.And now the wives of first responders are speaking out about the trauma of losing their loved ones and the support system that has essentially saved their lives.“I felt like I was re-living the day he died almost every day,” said Sarah Routhier, whose husband was an Ontario Provinical Police officer.Sylvain, who was a 14-year veteran in Ottawa with OPP began to struggle with mental health and died by suicide.Routhier said the sudden death of her beloved husband and adoring father to their three children left a gaping hole filled with grief and sadness. “I would go through the motions of the day and then at nighttime, when I was alone, I would cry and have a very hard time sleeping,” Routhier told CityNews.Elizabeth Hargrave also knows those feelings all too well. Her husband James lost his life while battling a wildfire in ...Meet D’Arcy Drollinger, a drag queen who’s now the first drag laureate in the US
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 16:39:48 GMT
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Anti-trans legislation is roiling the nation. Bills prohibiting drag performances are cropping up in statehouses. Violence and vitriol are turning children’s drag story hour events into headline-news protests.San Francisco is fighting back Thursday by naming the nation’s first drag laureate, an ambassador-style position designed to represent the city’s famous LGBTQ+ community at a time when rights are under attack.In a city known for its support of LGBTQ+ rights, San Francisco Mayor London Breed says it was a natural step to create a position that not only embraces drag culture but puts government resources toward it. D’Arcy Drollinger, a well-known drag performer and nightclub owner, will receive a $55,000 stipend in her 18-month role as the city’s inaugural drag laureate.“My goals are to make San Francisco sparkle. I think drag performers bring a lot of sparkle and humor and glamor and silliness to the world. I think that is part of why drag is so ...New Mexico authorities describe caregivers’ torture of disabled woman who died
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 16:39:48 GMT
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — “Torture” is how New Mexico’s top prosecutor describes the treatment a 38-year-old developmentally disabled woman endured before her death at the hands of her caregivers, who he said were paid thousands of dollars a month through a special program meant to offer an alternative to institutional care.Attorney General Raúl Torrez detailed the woman’s injuries during a news conference Thursday, saying she died after being found in the back of a van as the caregivers tried to take her to Mexico so her wounds could be treated.“The abuse and neglect that she endured was horrific and the injuries she sustained are among the worst I have seen in my career as a prosecutor,” Torrez said. “This was torture. There’s really no other word for it.”Three people were arrested and charged Wednesday with abuse and neglect following an investigation that began with the stop at the U.S.-Mexico border in April. The case spurred a statewide review of New Mexico’s entire...FDA advisers back RSV vaccine for pregnant women that protects their newborns
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 16:39:48 GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — A first-of-its-kind RSV vaccine for pregnant women guards their newborns against the scary respiratory virus -– and federal health advisers on Thursday backed Pfizer’s shot despite some lingering questions.RSV fills hospitals with wheezing babies each fall and winter, and the virus struck earlier than usual and especially hard in the U.S. this past year.If the vaccine pans out, “many infants and their parents will breathe easier in the coming years,” said Dr. Jay Portnoy, a member of the Food and Drug Administration advisory panel from Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, Missouri.The idea: Give women a single injection late in pregnancy, between 24 weeks and 36 weeks, so they develop RSV-fighting antibodies that pass through the placenta — just like they pass protection against other bugs to their babies.In Pfizer’s international study of nearly 7,400 pregnant women, maternal vaccination proved 82% effective at preventing severe RSV during babies’...White House vows more federal aid to reduce homelessness in 5 cities and California
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 16:39:48 GMT
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Five major U.S. cities and the state of California will receive federal help to get unsheltered residents into permanent housing under a new plan launched Thursday as part of the Biden administration’s larger goal to reduce homelessness 25% by 2025.The All Inside initiative will partner the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness and its 19 federal member agencies with state officials in California and local governments in Los Angeles, Chicago, Dallas, Seattle and the Phoenix metro area. The goal is for the federal government to provide “knowledge, resources and elbow grease” to population centers where nearly half the nation’s unhoused residents live, said Susan Rice, President Joe Biden’s domestic policy advisor. The administration will offer “tailored support” for two years to improve efforts toward housing unsheltered people in the participating communities, including embedding a federal official in each area, officials said.In addition, tea...Lawsuit: FBI failed to protect man slain amid Tennessee political scandal decades ago
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 16:39:48 GMT
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — The son of a key federal witness who authorities say was killed decades ago with the help of a former Tennessee governor’s administration during the state’s largest political scandal is suing the FBI, saying it failed to protect his father. Marrell Graham filed the federal lawsuit this week claiming that the United States’ actions led to the deprivation of “the loss of income, services, protection, care, assistance … counsel, and advice of his father.”Details surrounding the movie-like case were first revealed in 2021 after law enforcement officials spent more than 40 years chipping away at the case of Samuel Pettyjohn’s killing. Ultimately, officials unveiled a wild scandal showing that Pettyjohn, an ally of union boss Jimmy Hoffa, was gunned down in 1979 in downtown Chattanooga after testifying about corrupt officials selling prison pardons. The slaying took place during the early phases of Tennessee’s notorious “cash-for-cleme...Videos show gunman saying ‘kill me’ to rushing officers in New Mexico rampage that killed 3
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 16:39:48 GMT
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — Videos released by police Thursday of this week’s deadly rampage in New Mexico recorded a voice said to be the shooter urging police to “kill me” and officers rushing toward the 18-year-old gunman before fatally shooting him outside a church. “He is yelling on the Ring footage, ‘Come kill me,'” Farmington Police Chief Steve Hebbe said of Beau Wilson, the high school senior who authorities say killed three older women during the attack.“He’s making a stand, he has opportunities to run off, he does not use those opportunities,” Hebbe said. “So yes it’s my belief that ultimately in his head, he has made the decision that he is going to stand and fight it out until he is killed.”At least six other people were wounded in Monday’s shootings, which sent waves of grief rippling through Farmington, a community of 50,000 people in the state’s northwest. The wounded included two police officers, who have been released from medical care as they recover. S...Mexico’s Supreme Court rules tourist train, other projects are not issues of national security
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 16:39:48 GMT
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico’s Supreme Court ruled Thursday the government cannot simply decree that tourist trains or other public work projects are issues of “national security,” because that violates the public’s right to information. The ruling is the latest in a string of setbacks for President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who has sought to broaden the discretionary powers of the presidency.López Obrador has tried to rush through his Maya Train tourism project by exempting it from normal permitting and public reporting, claiming it is vital to national security.It is unclear whether Thursday’s ruling only affects the public’s right to get information on spending, costs and other data on such projects, or whether it also repeals the fast-track permitting process. López Obrador is already angry at the court for throwing out some of his planned electoral reforms, and has called for a change to make the Supreme Court an elected body. At present, slates of potential justices are sugges...Latest news
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