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An American Airlines mechanic has been charged with damaging an aircraft in July as he was allegedly “upset” over stalled union contract negotiations.

The plane, with 150 people on board, was scheduled to fly from Miami to Nassau in the Bahamas on 17 July.

But it aborted take-off after the pilots received an error message about the flight computer.

Upon inspection, a piece of foam was found glued inside a navigation system part which stopped it from functioning.

Suspect Abdul-Majeed Marouf Ahmed Alani told police he had tampered with the system to cause a delay or have the flight cancelled so that he would get overtime work, according to a criminal complaint filed in a Miami court.

He did not intend to cause any harm to either the plane or the passengers, he is quoted as saying in an affidavit included in the complaint.

According to the complaint filed on Thursday, Mr Alani glued the foam inside the tube leading from the outside of the plane to its air data module, a system that reports aircraft speed, pitch and other critical flight data, the Miami Herald reports.

He was upset at the stalled contract dispute between the union and American Airlines, which he said had affected him financially, according to the complaint.

The mechanics’ union has been trying to secure a new contract with the airline as the company outsources more maintenance jobs in a bid to curb costs.

A federal court last month issued a permanent injunction against the union to stop it from interfering in the airline’s operations.

American accuses the mechanics of undertaking illegal work slowdowns over the summer period which led to flights being cancelled.

Mr Alani is expected to appear in federal court in Miami on Friday.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-49607684

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Thirty-four people died after a diving boat caught fire off Santa Cruz Island in California.
USA TODAY

Victims in the tragic dive boat fire likely died of smoke inhalation, not burns, Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown said Friday.

All the passengers and one crew member had been sleeping in tight quarters beneath the deck, and all had signs of smoke inhalation. A preliminary examination shows they died before being burned.

Just four days after the Labor Day tragedy that left 34 people dead, the Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office also released the names of nine victims.

Authorities said Friday they had located next of kin for all 34 people who died aboard the Conception. So far they have publicly released the names of these victims who died: 

  • Raymond Scott Chan, 59, of Los Altos
  • Justin Carroll Dignam, 58, of Anaheim
  • Daniel Garcia, 46, of Berkeley  
  • Marybeth Guiney, 51, of Santa Monica
  • Yulia Krashennaya, 40, of Berkeley
  • Alexandra Kurtz, 25, of Santa Barbara
  • Caroline McLaughlin, 35, of Oakland
  • Ted Strom, 62, of Germantown, Tennessee
  • Wei Tan, 26, of Goleta
  • Kendra Chan, 26, of Oxnard
  • Angela Rose Quitasol, 28, of Stockton
  • Evan Michel Quitasol, 37, of Stockton
  • Nicole Storm Quitasol, 31, of Imperial Beach
  • Michael Quitasol, 62, of Stockton
  • Carol Diana Adamic, 60, of Santa Cruz
  • Andrew Fritz, 40, of Sacramento
  • Charles McIlvain, 44, of Santa Monica
  • Steven Salika, 55, of Santa Cruz
  • Tia Salika-Adamic, 17, of Santa Cruz
  • Neal Gustav Baltz, 42, of Phoenix, Arizona
  • Patricia Ann Beitzinger, 48, of Chandler, Arizona
  • Veidehi Campbell, 41, of Felton

Identifications require DNA analysis because of the fire’s intensity, Brown said. Since  pathologists are convinced smoke inhalation is the primary cause of death there are no plans to conduct traditional autopsies, Brown said, but medical examiners will a final determination.

Brown told reporters the families of all 34 victims have been contacted to collect DNA samples. He said there is no criminal probe at this point, but multiple investigations are underway into different aspects of the fire.

The FBI helped with the effort across the U.S. and internationally. Brown said one relative was a mother in Japan, another was in Singapore and another flew in from India.

Teacher, biologist, nurse: These are some of the victims of the California boat fire

Salvage operations have begun on the boat that burned and sunk off Santa Cruz Island, and the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives has joined the investigation.

The Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office said Truth Aquatics, the owner of the nearly 80-foot boat, contracted Global Diving and Salvage to conduct the salvage operation under Coast Guard oversight.

Once the vessel is raised, it will be transferred to a crane barge and escorted by law enforcement to a secure location.

Environmental concerns will be mitigated in coordination with various agencies.

Although authorities have yet to release the names of all of the boat’s passengers, many of the victims’ families and friends spoke to local news outlets and took to social media to mourn the passing of their loved ones. The victims include a teacher, biologist, nurse, high school students and more.

What happened on the Conception?

A predawn fire erupted Monday on the boat as it was filled with scuba enthusiasts on a three-day excursion. Five crew members escaped, but 34 people — 33 passengers and one crew member — are presumed dead, apparently after being trapped by the fire in the bunk area below deck.

Authorities say 33 of the bodies have been recovered. Crews are utilizing a range of equipment including remote-operated vessels and side-scan sonar to assist with efforts to find the last body.  

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The Coast Guard released helicopter footage of the California boat fire that killed dozens of people.
USA TODAY

Meanwhile, members from the ATF’s National Response Team, along with special agents from the agency’s Los Angeles field division were activated Thursday to join the investigation into the fire.

Experts are due to arrive Friday and soon will process the scene to determine the cause and origin of the fire, the agency said in a news release.

Conception dive boat fire: Salvage begins as ATF joins investigation

Special agents and other experts are joining the investigation at the request of the Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office and will be working with the agency and the Coast Guard.

“ATF is committed to working alongside local law enforcement its national partners by bringing its resources to determine the origin and cause of this fire that resulted in the tragic loss of 34 people,” Carlos A. Canino, special agent in charge of ATF’s Los Angeles field division, said in a news release. “ATF will provide whatever is necessary to thoroughly investigate and provide answers to the victims’ families.”

When requested, the National Response Team works with other investigators to reconstruct a scene, identify the source of a blast or origin of a fire and determine the cause of an incident. In the case of bombings and arson cases, team members gather evidence to support criminal prosecutions.

The team is generally broken down into two components — a group that processes the scene and an investigative-lead element. In the course of the overall investigation, both components coordinate daily.

The National Transportation Safety Board is also conducting an investigation.

Contributing: Ventura County Star staff, Associated Press

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/09/06/california-dive-boat-fire-conception-victims-identified/2233466001/

In a letter to Mr. Trump on Wednesday, some of the nation’s most distinguished retired military officers implored the president to reconsider the cuts, taking up the national security argument that Mr. Mattis made when he was at the Pentagon. They called the refugee program a “critical lifeline” to people who help American troops, diplomats and intelligence officials abroad, and warned that cutting it off risked greater instability and conflict.

“We urge you to protect this vital program and ensure that the refugee admissions goal is robust, in line with decades-long precedent, and commensurate with today’s urgent global needs,” wrote the military brass, including Admiral William H. McRaven, the former commander of United States Special Operations; General Martin E. Dempsey, the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; and Lt. General Mark P. Hertling, the former commanding general of Army forces in Europe.

They said that even the current ceiling of 30,000 was “leaving thousands in harm’s way.”

Gen. Joseph L. Votel, who retired this year after overseeing the American military’s command that runs operations in the Middle East, also signed the letter. In an interview, he noted that the flows of refugees leaving war-torn countries like Syria was one of the driving forces of instability in the region.

“We don’t do anything alone,” General Votel said of American military operations overseas, which are regularly helped by Iraqi citizens who become persecuted refugees. “This is not just the price we pay but an obligation.”

Mr. Mattis privately made the same arguments in 2018 and 2019 as he tried to fight back efforts by Mr. Miller to cut the refugee cap, which had already been reduced to 50,000 by Mr. Trump’s travel ban executive order.

Joined by Rex W. Tillerson, who was then the secretary of state, and Nikki R. Haley, the United Nations ambassador at the time, Mr. Mattis succeeded in keeping the cap at 45,000 for 2018. The next year, Mr. Miller tried to persuade Mr. Mattis to support a lower number by promising to ensure the program for the Iraqi and Afghans would not be affected. But Mr. Mattis refused, pushing for the program to remain at 45,000 refugees. But with Mr. Tillerson gone, Mr. Miller succeeded in persuading the president to drop the ceiling to 30,000.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/06/us/politics/trump-refugees-united-states.html

FREEPORT, Bahamas — Hurricane Dorian‘s wrath along the Bahamas was too gut-wrenching to ignore for workers and guests on the cruise ship the Celebrity Equinox. Instead of continuing on their regularly scheduled itinerary for a seven-day Caribbean cruise, the massive vessel set sail on a new mission: helping survivors of the storm.

On Friday, the ship’s kitchen staff prepared some 10,000 meals, while guests volunteered to plate and pack them. The ship was a hive of activity as the crew pulled double-duty. Even children — tasked with writing personalized cards to cheer up the victims — pitched in.

Celebrity Equinox kitchen staff work overtime to prepare over 10,000 meals that will be brought to people in need in Freeport, Bahamas. The cruise ship has been rerouted from Nassau to provide relief to the island hit by Hurricane Dorian.Mariana Henninger / NBC News

The Celebrity Equinox, which left Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on Saturday morning to crisscross the Caribbean, was supposed to dock at the nation’s capital of Nassau for the tail end of its excursion. But the ship was diverted Friday to Freeport on Grand Bahama Island, which was partially decimated by the storm.

“We have a little army of cooks making food and a little navy of life boats and tug boats bringing it ashore,” said Rob Zeiger, a spokesman for Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd., the parent company of Celebrity Cruises.

Zeiger said the ship has about 3,000 guests — and more than enough food to help whip up thousands of extra meals.

In a letter to guests, the cruise line explained that it would compensate them for missing the intended port with an onboard credit. The decision to extend aid, they added, was rooted in a deeper purpose.

“The Bahamas hold a special place in our hearts as a treasured place for our guests, and home to more than 500 of our colleagues,” the letter said. “Now, in the aftermath of Hurricane Dorian, we are rolling up our sleeves to help our friends.”

Guests who spoke with NBC News said they understood the decision to reroute and wished they could do more.

“If we can go and give meals, that’s the least that we can do,” said Jessica Russell, of Fort Worth, Texas.

“Surely it’s great to be in the Bahamas, but what we’re doing for these people — their whole lives, everything they’ve ever had is gone,” she added.

Dorian was a Category 5 hurricane with 185 mph winds — one of the strongest Atlantic storms ever recorded — when it made landfall Sunday in the northern Bahamas. The death toll has grown to at least 30 people with thousands listed as missing, and officials from the archipelago, normally a magnet for tourists, have asked for humanitarian relief for their hardest-hit islands.

Other cruise operators, including The Walt Disney Co. and Carnival Corp., said they will donate money or supplies as part of the relief and recovery efforts.

Celebrity Cruises has been operating in the Caribbean for almost 30 years and Royal Caribbean for about 50 years, Zeiger said, and some of their employees have been personally affected.

Guests of the Celebrity Equinox help to pack meals to be delivered to survivors of Hurricane Dorian in Freeport, Bahamas.Mariana Henninger / NBC News

A rotation of the company’s cruise ships will be passing through Freeport to help provide meals and other items, including lawn chairs for sleeping, pillows, bedding, towels and medical supplies. Guests and crews also donated at least 10 boxes of clothing that will be distributed with the help of charities already on the ground.

For food, the Celebrity Equinox acquired more resources during a previous port stop, and was stocked with enough for eight to 10 days, said Alexander Capello, an executive chef.

The ship was carrying more than 5,400 pounds of food — for the makings of cold cut sandwiches to hot dishes, such as chicken, rice and beans. In addition, more than 300,000 bottles of water were being handed out by the cruise operator’s ships. In the coming days, the company is looking to establish a field kitchen on land to continue providing meals.

Crew of the Celebrity Equinox prepares pallets of bottled water for distribution in Freeport, Bahamas, on Sept. 5, 2019Mariana Henninger / NBC News

This isn’t the first time Celebrity Cruises has diverted course for a humanitarian cause: In 2010, when airspace was closed because of the eruption of an Icelandic volcano, one of its ships helped to pluck 2,000 British tourists stranded in Spain.

Following Hurricane Dorian, Zeiger said, the cruise line is working with the Bahamian government to identify evacuees who want to go from Freeport to Nassau.

“In a disaster, you stitch together a response system,” he added. “And the response all around has been amazing.”

Mariana Henninger reported from Freeport, and Erik Ortiz from New York.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/after-hurricane-dorian-celebrity-cruise-ship-bahamas-reroutes-deliver-food-n1050796

U.S. health officials are again urging people to stop vaping until experts figure out why some are coming down with serious respiratory illnesses.

Richard Vogel/AP


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U.S. health officials are again urging people to stop vaping until experts figure out why some are coming down with serious respiratory illnesses.

Richard Vogel/AP

Updated at 3:35 p.m. ET

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday that the number of possible cases of severe respiratory illnesses among people who vaped nicotine or cannabis-related products has more than doubled, to 450 in 33 states.

“Although more investigation is needed to determine the vaping agent or agents responsible, there is clearly an epidemic that begs for an urgent response,” David Christiani of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health writes in an editorial published Friday in The New England Journal of Medicine.

In a media briefing Friday, the CDC suggested people should avoid using e-cigarettes.

“While this investigation is ongoing, people should consider not using e-cigarette products,” says Dr. Dana Meaney-Delman, incident manager of the CDC’s response to the vaping-related lung injuries. “People who do use e-cigarette products should monitor themselves for symptoms, for example, cough, shortness of breath, chest pain, nausea and vomiting — and promptly seek medical attention for any health concerns.”

Late last month, the CDC said the number of reported vaping-related cases stood at 215. Three people have died — in Illinois, Oregon and Indiana — and a fourth death is under investigation, according to the CDC.

Many, though not all, of the patients who have fallen ill had used cannabis-derived vaping products, and some had also used nicotine-containing products. A smaller group reported using nicotine only.

No infectious causes have been identified, and the CDC told reporters that the “lung illnesses are likely associated with a chemical exposure.” But it is too early to pinpoint a single product or substance that is common to all cases, the CDC said, based on preliminary research also published Friday.

In those studies, officials in Illinois and Wisconsin detailed 53 cases they’ve investigated, 28 in Wisconsin and 25 in Illinois. They described the vaping history of 41 patients where complete information was available.

About 80% of those patients had used products containing THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, and 61% used nicotine products. Some 7% used cannabidiol, or CBD, products. Most of the patients are male, with an average age of 19, and all were previously healthy. They were sick for several days prior to being hospitalized, with respiratory symptoms being most common, followed by fever, fatigue, weight loss and gastrointestinal symptoms.

In some of these cases, officials said, patients either used only THC products or only nicotine. Patients reported using 14 different brands of THC products and 13 brands of nicotine products in a wide range of flavors.

It is because no single product or substance has been definitively tied to the respiratory illnesses, the CDC said, that people should consider not using e-cigarettes, particularly those purchased from sources other than authorized retailers, such as dispensaries in states where the drug is legal.

Adult smokers who vape nicotine in order to quit smoking should consult with their health care provider and use proven treatments, the CDC says, not e-cigarettes.

On Thursday, New York state health officials said lab tests found vitamin E acetate in a number of cannabis-containing vaping cartridges submitted by people who fell ill and that it is now a “key focus” of their investigation.

Mitch Zeller, director of the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products, said in Friday’s briefing that the agency now had 120 samples of e-cigarettes available for testing and that “no one substance or compound, including vitamin E acetate, has been identified in all the samples tested.”

Zeller said the FDA is analyzing samples for a broad range of substances, including nicotine, THC and other cannabinoids, along with cutting agents, diluents, additives, pesticides, opioids, poisons and toxins.

“With these increasing reports,” Zeller said, “if you’re thinking of purchasing one of these products off the street, out of the back of a car, out of a trunk, in an alley — or if you are then going to go home and make modifications to the product yourself using something that you purchased from some third party or got from a friend — think twice.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2019/09/06/758337583/cdc-says-number-of-possible-cases-of-vaping-related-lung-illness-has-doubled

— A weakened but still dangerous Hurricane Dorian bombarded North Carolina with pounding winds and drenching rain on Friday, causing severe storm surges and flooding in the Outer Banks.

After devastating the Bahamas and strafing parts of the southeastern United States this week, Dorian made landfall Friday morning in North Carolina when its eye scraped across Cape Hatteras. The storm knocked out power, blocked roads and transformed streets into rivers.

By the early afternoon, the storm’s core was 90 miles northeast of Cape Hatteras and had left the Outer Banks. The National Hurricane Center said Dorian’s center will keep moving away from the state’s coast on Friday, but forecasters warned that the situation would remain perilous.

“Life-threatening storm surge and dangerous winds will continue along portions of the North Carolina coast, portions of southeast Virginia and the southern Chesapeake Bay for the next several hours,” the National Hurricane Center said late Friday morning.

Early reports suggest that hundreds of people are trapped on Outer Banks without power and amid rapidly rising waters, according to the state’s director of emergency management Mike Sprayberry.

Videos from the area showed water that stretched up trees and swamped roadways. The storm drove a seven-foot surge into the Outer Banks, south of Nags Head. A gauge on idyllic Hatteras Island recorded inundation that topped five feet, more than enough to be considered major flooding.

Dorian delivered a marathon assault on the Bahamas before slowly rumbling north, tracking a path that ran essentially parallel to the United States coastline while keeping its eye just offshore. Even with that, the storm still rattled eastern parts of Florida, Georgia and South Carolina on its way north before crossing over the Tar Heel State.

Emergency officials urged area residents to get to the highest points in their houses. With the bridges to the islands impassable, first responders will likely need to use helicopters to transport food and supplies to hard-hit communities and to get victims of the hurricane out.

Still, the damage in most of the state was “not as bad as feared,” Gov. Roy Cooper (D) said in a news briefing Friday morning.

No deaths have been reported, though Cooper has attributed the death of a man who fell preparing for Dorian’s arrival to the storm. As of Friday morning, 75 roads were closed as the storm lashed the coastline — compared with the 750 road closures reported at the same time during Hurricane Florence last year.

Communities in the southeastern part of the state, many of which are still recovering from severe flooding during that storm, breathed a sigh of relief, even as Dorian’s onslaught continued.

“We have to remember,” Cooper cautioned Friday. “This storm is still raging.”

More than 200,000 North Carolina residents were without power Friday morning, and some 4,500 people had sought refuge from the storm in shelters. Cooper urged those who had evacuated to hold off rushing back to their homes; downed power lines and potential flash floods remain deadly threats.

Authorities said that on Ocracoke Island, historic water levels were reported. Emergency personnel outside the island could not immediately reach Ocracoke, where the water was five to six feet above ground, Hyde County spokeswoman Donnie Shumate said Friday morning.

What flooded Ocracoke was an abrupt surge coming from Pamlico Sound, according to The Washington Post’s Capital Weather Gang.

Transportation officials said that with all of Ocracoke Island experiencing severe flooding, they had closed North Carolina Highway 12, which runs through the Outer Banks. Power outages were also reported to affect all of Hatteras and Ocracoke islands.

On Ocracoke, hundreds of people who remained on the island are trying to get to higher ground after a sudden, massive storm surge roared through the tiny village.

“We have an absolute major disaster,” Peter Vankevich, who runs the Ocracoke Observer, the island’s main news source. “It’s unbelievable. I cannot overemphasize the impact here. I hear up in Hatteras things are actually worse.”

Vankevich said waters from Pamlico Sound came rushing into the village of roughly 600 year-round residents around 7:30 a.m. on Friday.

“This storm surge came in amazingly quick,” he said.

Vankevich said people throughout the village are reporting similar conditions. He expects almost everyone on the island has lost their cars and said that several homes, including his, were damaged by falling trees.

Ocracoke Island is the southernmost inhabited island of the Outer Banks and most of it is part of the Cape Hatteras National Seashore. The village is a cluster of homes and shops along Silver Lake, a protective harbor at its southern tip.

Some other areas felt they had been spared the worst of Dorian’s wrath. In Onslow County, further inland in eastern North Carolina, Emergency Services Director Norman Bryson said Friday morning that the Dorian left “minimal damage” and that officials received far fewer emergency calls overnight than on a normal weeknight.

A swiftwater rescue team that mobilized overnight to save people from dangerous floodwaters during Hurricane Florence stayed put as hurricane force winds struck the county early Friday morning.

When they drove around in trucks to survey flood-prone areas, all they found were a few knocked-over trees, some standing water in grass, and a bent mailbox. One sedan was submerged in the shoulder of a road with foot-deep water, but the occupants apparently escaped unscathed.

“This is light compared to some of the damage I’ve seen, this ain’t nothing,” said Thomas Goff of Onslow Fire and Rescue. “I’ve seen pop-up thunderstorms do more damage.”

Other areas that had watched Dorian’s path felt similarly spared. In southeast North Carolina, where Dorian passed overnight, minimal damage was initially reported. A spokeswoman for New Hanover County, which includes Wilmington, called the area relatively lucky, just with trees down and minor flooding, although crews are just going out to fully assess the area.

About 120,000 people lacked power in coastal North Carolina on Friday morning, according to Duke Energy, the main power provider, and thousands of crews fanned out to restore that.

Some rushed back when the storm had passed, and roadways reopened. As soon as the bridge to Carolina Beach and Kure Beach opened at 9 a.m., motorists flooded across the river to get to their homes, businesses and the ocean.

Makayla White, 25, was one of them, with her surfer husband and 7-month-old baby Mila. While dad joined the dozen surfers already on the waves, mother and daughter played in the sand.

“Dorian spared us,” White said. “[Hurricane] Florence was a lot worse.”

Richard Lang, 68, of Kure Beach came to the ocean to check out the waves after getting his morning coffee. Once a surfer himself, he said he quit “once I got old and decrepit.”

“We get 100-year storms about every other year now,” he observed. “I could just about predict what would happen with this one. When they start bouncing off Florida, we get them every time. That big hook of Cape Fear sticks out right there and catches them.”

Kaplan and Berman reported in Washington. Jason Samenow in Washington; Patricia Sullivan in Wilmington, N.C.; Kirk Ross in New Bern, N.C.; and Reis Thebault in Myrtle Beach, S.C., contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/hurricane-dorian-crashes-into-outer-banks-in-north-carolina/2019/09/06/75a7936c-d0b3-11e9-87fa-8501a456c003_story.html

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The owners of the dive boat where 34 people perished in a fire off Southern California filed a lawsuit Thursday to head off potentially costly litigation, a move condemned by some observers as disrespectful to the families of the dead.

Truth Aquatics Inc., which owned the Conception, filed the action in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles under a pre-Civil War provision of maritime law that allows it to limit its liability.

Investigators are still searching for what caused the blaze that wrecked the boat, which remains upside down at the bottom of the sea near the Channel Islands.

The time-tested legal maneuver has been successfully employed by owners of the Titanic and countless other crafts — some as small as Jet Skis — and was widely anticipated by maritime law experts. Still, the fact it was filed just three days after the deadly inferno Monday came as a surprise to legal observers.

Families of the deceased, who are not named in the complaint, will be served with notice that they have a limited time to challenge the company’s effort to clear itself of negligence or limit its liability to the value of the remains of the boat, which is a total loss.

RELATED: Dozens killed after boat catches fire off California coast

JJ Lambert, 38, and his fiancee, Jenna Marsala, 33, hang up a dive flag in remembrance of the victims of the Conception boat fire at a memorial site on Monday, Sept. 2, 2019, in Santa Barbara, Calif. A fire raged through the boat carrying recreational scuba divers anchored near an island off the Southern California coast early Monday, leaving multiple people dead and hope diminishing that any of the more than two dozen people still missing would be found alive. (AP Photo/Stefanie Dazio)




“They’re forcing these people to bring their claims and bring them now,” said attorney Charles Naylor, who represents victims in maritime law cases. “They have six months to do this. They could let these people bury their kids. This is shocking.”

Professor Martin J. Davies, the maritime law director at Tulane University, said the cases always follow accidents at sea and always look bad, but they are usually initiated by insurance companies to limit losses.

“It seems like a pretty heartless thing to do, but that’s what always happens. They’re just protecting their position,” Davies said. “It produces very unpleasant results in dramatic cases like this one. … The optics are awful.”

The U.S. law dates to 1851, but it has its origins in 18th century England, Davies said. It was designed to encourage the shipping business. Every country with a shipping industry has something similar on the books.

In order to prevail, the company and owners Glen and Dana Fritzler have to show they were not at fault in the disaster.

They asserted in the lawsuit that they “used reasonable care to make the Conception seaworthy, and she was, at all relevant times, tight, staunch, and strong, fully and properly manned, equipped and supplied and in all respects seaworthy and fit for the service in which she was engaged.”

Even if the captain or crew are found at fault, the Fritzler’s and their insurance company could avoid paying a dime under the law, experts said.

All of those who died were in a bunkroom below the main deck. Officials have said the 33 passengers and one crewmember had no ability to escape the flames.

Crew members told investigators they made several attempts to rescue the people who were trapped before abandoning ship, the National Transportation Safety Board said. None of the survivors has spoken publicly.

The court filing not only seeks to protect the boat owners from legal exposure, but also will require any lawsuits to be filed in the same federal court.

A judge will hold a non-jury trial to see if the company can successfully show it wasn’t at fault. If that’s the case, any claimants would only be entitled to the value of the remains of the ship, which the suit said is a total loss with zero value.

There’s a long history of ship owners successfully asserting this protection. The case involving the White Star Line, the owners of the Titanic, went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, which held that a foreign owner could assert protection of the Limitation Act, attorney James Mercante said.

In that case, plaintiffs eventually withdrew their lawsuits and filed them in England, where the company was based. British law, even though it also limited damages, provided a bigger payout than the value of the remaining lifeboats.

While the law can shield owners from damages, over 90% of cases where injury and death are involved are settled before trial, Mercante said.

Attorney A. Barry Cappello, who is in discussions with another firm to represent family members of the Conception victims in court, said there’s a strong case to show negligence in the boat fire and that good lawyers can find a way around the admiralty law in federal court.

“The law is so antiquated and so skewed in favor of the ship owners that damages for wrongful death type cases is very limited unless one can prove exceptions,” Cappello said.

Cappello recently prevailed in a case in which a company that rented a paddleboard to a man who drowned in Santa Barbara Harbor had asserted the liability protection. A judge ruled the admiralty law didn’t extend to such crafts, though the company has appealed.

Davies said from what he’s heard of the disaster, there’s a realistic prospect the owner might prevail if the boat was properly equipped and the cause of the fire remains mysterious.

If the owner loses, there’s the potential of unlimited liability.

“That’s why the fight is always about limitation because if you’ve got unlimited liability, well, … 30 dead people is a whole lot of money,” Davies said.

Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/09/06/boat-owners-seek-to-head-off-lawsuits-after-34-die-in-fire/23808026/

Trump’s move to put military money toward border wall could hurt…

Sens. McSally, Gardner and Tillis, facing competitive 2020 elections, will have to defend their votes not to stop Trump from diverting military funds.

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Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/09/06/doj-launches-antitrust-probe-over-auto-emissions-deal-with-california-wsj-reports.html

She said that 98 percent were hospitalized, half required admission to the intensive care unit, and a third required ventilation. The majority, Dr. Layden said, vaped a product including T.H.C., the high-inducing chemical in marijuana, but a majority also used a “nicotine-based product,” noting that there were “a range of products and devices.”

“The focus of our investigation is narrowing but is still faced with complex questions,” said Ileana Arias, the C.D.C.’s acting deputy director for noninfectious diseases.She added: “We are working tirelessly and relentlessly.”

Dr. Mitch Zeller said particular concern is developing around products that are jury-rigged by vaping retailers, or tampered with or mixed by consumers themselves. “Think twice,” he said, urging consumers to avoid vaping products purchased off the street or purchasing informally mixed or made devices.

Public health officials have underscored one fundamental point: that the surge in illnesses is a new phenomenon and not merely a recognition of a syndrome that may have been developing for years.

Before health officials in Indiana confirmed the third death from a severe lung illness linked to vaping, two other people — one in Illinois, the other in Oregon, both of whom were adults — have died from what appears to be the same type of illness, health officials in those states have said. State and federal health officials are scrambling to find a cause, possibly a particular chemical or adulterant contained in some vaping products.

What looked like a few scattered cases in mid-June has become a full-fledged and widespread public health scare, leaving some otherwise healthy teenagers and young adults so severely ill that they have been placed on ventilators.

Those afflicted typically show up in emergency rooms with shortness of breath after several days of flulike symptoms, including high fever.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/06/health/third-death-vaping-related-disease.html

An aerial view shows damage after Hurricane Dorian on Great Abaco Island, Bahamas.

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An aerial view shows damage after Hurricane Dorian on Great Abaco Island, Bahamas.

Jose Jimenez/Getty Images

President Trump has promised to help the Bahamas recover from Hurricane Dorian, the devastating storm that has decimated parts of the island nation.

The United States is not only concerned about the Bahamian people, but also the national security implications if China steps in to help fill the country’s vast needs, according to current and former U.S. officials.

Parts of the Bahamas are only about 50 miles off the coast of Florida, raising concerns about the potential for such a powerful economic and political adversary to gain a greater foothold in such proximity.

The Trump administration officially says it is focused right now on the Bahamas’ immediate recovery. But U.S. officials tell NPR on background that they’re also concerned about the long-term impact, including security implications, of China’s presence in the region. Former officials echo those concerns.

The concern is reflective of the administration’s broader anxiety around China’s influence on the U.S. and the world, from the economy and trade to surveillance.

“There are certainly concerns about the Chinese having full access to the region,” said Fernando Cutz, who served as senior director at the National Security Council in the Trump administration until last year. “You could imagine a situation where they would develop intelligence capabilities, intelligence gathering capabilities.”

He added: “And, of course, they could potentially one day have a base, a naval base or some sort of Chinese military base, that close to our shore that would pose a very significant national security issue for the United States.”

The concerns were first reported by Axios.

Emergency teams from the United States have been sent to help in the Bahamas, where tens of thousands of people need food. Thirty people have been confirmed dead, but the numbers are expected to rise as recovery efforts continue. The administration is encouraging donations via the Center for International Disaster Information website.

“This is part of a broader international response effort that includes Caribbean partners, the United Kingdom, and Canada, so that the government of the Bahamas can provide lifesaving and life sustaining care to their people,” said National Security Council spokesman Garrett Marquis.

The Chinese have made no secret of their interest in expanding their influence in Latin America.

After Trump was elected and vowed to withdraw from the 12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnership, Chinese President Xi Jinping declared to Latin American business leaders at a summit in Peru that China was ready to deal.

“China will not shut the door to the outside world, but will open it even wider,” Xi told leaders.

The communist government, using its massive resources and ability to move cash quickly, has already become a force in Latin America unlike what many considered possible even a decade or two ago.

The Chinese moved aggressively into the region following the last financial crisis, when there was an incentive for Latin American countries to sell their minerals and commodities to the rapidly growing Asian power.

They have spent billions building roads and telecommunications networks.

More recently, they have extended their reach into the cultural and political arenas, such as blocking U.S. efforts at the United Nations to put more pressure on Venezuela.

John Dermody, who served as a deputy legal adviser at the National Security Council until June, said parts of the administration will be focused on the disaster effort and committed to the people of the islands. But others will be committed to looking at more long-term security concerns.

“The administration will see this as part of a broader concern about China investing in countries as a threat to make potentially those countries beholden to China or indebted to China and to diminish the United States’s influence in the Western Hemisphere,” said Dermody, who is now at the law firm of O’Melveny & Myers. “And I would say that the concern is particularly acute where the investment is going to be in information technology. And in light of the catastrophic damage of the Bahamas, I think that is going to be an issue.”

José Cárdenas, who served in the National Security Council under George W. Bush and regularly speaks with Trump administration officials, called the situation complicated.

It’s very likely that the Chinese will have some role in the reconstruction of the Bahamas and the United States does not want to be critical of any foreign government offering aid to the Bahamas. But he said the concerns are real. What’s important, he said, is that the United States continue its campaign speaking to the broader region that the Chinese presence isn’t “all sweetness and light.”

“The temptation is so great to take advantage of Chinese largesse,” he said. “But to the peoples of the hemisphere, the United States ought to be very clear in a public diplomacy campaign that the Chinese government largesse comes with a lot of baggage. It comes with a lot of strings attached, and it has implications for democratic institutions and rule of law.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/09/06/758107009/as-bahamas-turn-to-recovery-u-s-worries-about-china-stepping-in-to-help


President Donald Trump speaks at a February 2018 Republican National Committee meeting. | Olivier Douliery-Pool/Getty Images

2020 Elections

The moves, which critics called undemocratic, are the latest illustration of the president’s total takeover of the GOP apparatus.

09/06/2019 05:00 AM EDT

Updated 09/06/2019 11:14 AM EDT


Four states are poised to cancel their 2020 GOP presidential primaries and caucuses, a move that would cut off oxygen to Donald Trump’s long-shot primary challengers.

Republican parties in South Carolina, Nevada, Arizona and Kansas are expected to finalize the cancellations in meetings this weekend, according to three GOP officials who are familiar with the plans.

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The moves are the latest illustration of Trump’s takeover of the entire Republican Party apparatus. They underscore the extent to which his allies are determined to snuff out any potential nuisance en route to his renomination — or even to deny Republican critics a platform to embarrass him.

Trump advisers are quick to point out that parties of an incumbent president seeking reelection have a long history of canceling primaries and note it will save state parties money. But the president’s primary opponents, who have struggled to gain traction, are crying foul, calling it part of a broader effort to rig the contest in Trump’s favor.

“Trump and his allies and the Republican National Committee are doing whatever they can do to eliminate primaries in certain states and make it very difficult for primary challengers to get on the ballot in a number of states,” said former Rep. Joe Walsh (R-Ill.), who recently launched his primary campaign against the president. “It’s wrong, the RNC should be ashamed of itself, and I think it does show that Trump is afraid of a serious primary challenge because he knows his support is very soft.”

“Primary elections are important, competition within parties is good, and we intend to be on the ballot in every single state no matter what the RNC and Trump allies try to do,” Walsh added. “We also intend to loudly call out this undemocratic bull on a regular basis.”

Former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld said in a statement, “We don’t elect presidents by acclamation in America. Donald Trump is doing his best to make the Republican Party his own personal club. Republicans deserve better.”

RNC officials said they played no role in the decisions.

The cancellations stem in part from months of behind-the-scenes maneuvering by the Trump campaign. Aides have worked to ensure total control of the party machinery, installing staunch loyalists at state parties while eliminating potential detractors. The aim, Trump officials have long said, is to smooth the path to the president’s renomination and ensure he doesn’t face the kind of internal opposition that hampered former President George H.W. Bush in his failed 1992 reelection campaign.

Trump aides said they supported the cancellations but stressed that each case was initiated by state party officials.

The shutdowns aren’t without precedent. Some of the states forgoing Republican nomination contests have done so during the reelection bids of previous presidents. Arizona, GOP officials there recalled, did not hold a Democratic presidential primary in 2012, when Barack Obama was seeking a second term, or in 1996, when Bill Clinton was running for reelection. Kansas did not have a Democratic primary in 1996, and Republican officials in the state pointed out that they have long chosen to forgo primaries during a sitting incumbent’s reelection year.

South Carolina GOP Chairman Drew McKissick noted that his state decided not to hold Republican presidential primaries in 1984, when Ronald Reagan was running for reelection, or in 2004, when George W. Bush was seeking a second term. South Carolina, he added, also skipped its 1996 and 2012 Democratic contests.

“As a general rule, when either party has an incumbent president in the White House, there’s no rationale to hold a primary,” McKissick said.

Perhaps the closest comparison to the present day is 1992, when George H.W. Bush was facing a primary challenge from conservative commentator Pat Buchanan. Several states that year effectively ditched their Republican contests, including Iowa, which has long cast the first votes of the presidential nomination battles.

Buchanan said in an interview that the cancellations overall played little role in his eventual defeat, adding that Bush won renomination “fair and square.”

But Buchanan said he was rankled by what he described as a concerted and ultimately successful GOP-led effort to prevent him from appearing on the South Dakota ballot. Buchanan said he felt confident that he could perform strongly in the conservative state, whose contest came just days after a New Hampshire primary that he performed surprisingly well in.

Not being able to compete there crushed him, Buchanan said.

“If you think you can’t fight city hall, try overthrowing the president of the United States,” Buchanan said.

Officials in several states said in statements provided by the Trump campaign that they were driven by the cost savings. State parties in Nevada and Kansas foot the bill to put on caucuses.

“It would be malpractice on my part to waste money on a caucus to come to the inevitable conclusion that President Trump will be getting all our delegates in Charlotte,” said Nevada GOP Chairman Michael McDonald. “We should be spending those funds to get all our candidates across the finish line instead.”

Kansas GOP Chairman Michael Kuckelman estimated it would cost his party $250,000 to hold the caucus, money he said can be deployed to win races.

Trump aides have long said they aren’t worried about a primary challenge and laughed off his Republican challengers. But the president’s political team has pored over past primary results and is mindful that unexpected things can transpire — such as in 2012, when a federal inmate received 41 percent of the vote against Obama in the West Virginia Democratic primary.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/story/2019/09/06/republicans-cancel-primaries-trump-challengers-1483126

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In the Bahamas, people are desperately trying to escape Great Abaco Island, days after Hurricane Dorian demolished homes and obliterated infrastructure there. Faced with no running water, no electricity and with food stores running out, residents say there’s nothing left for them.

“You can’t stay here,” Sharona Etienne-Cole of Great Abaco tells NPR.

At least 30 people are confirmed dead, but that number is expected to rise as rescue and recovery efforts continue on the Abaco islands and Grand Bahama, two of the hardest hit areas.

Evacuee Samazio Rolle and his dog, Logan, sit in the shade next to an airplane in the afternoon heat at a landing strip on Abaco, in hopes of catching a flight to Nassau. The pair survived Hurricane Dorian’s punishing strike on the Bahamas — and now they want to leave Abaco.

Cheryl Diaz Meyer for NPR


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Cheryl Diaz Meyer for NPR

Evacuee Samazio Rolle and his dog, Logan, sit in the shade next to an airplane in the afternoon heat at a landing strip on Abaco, in hopes of catching a flight to Nassau. The pair survived Hurricane Dorian’s punishing strike on the Bahamas — and now they want to leave Abaco.

Cheryl Diaz Meyer for NPR

Before-and-after satellite imagery shows just how staggering the devastation is across the Bahamas. Those photos show homes reduced to wooden piles of rubble, and entire neighborhoods drowning in floodwaters.

“There’s a lot of contamination in the water,” Etienne-Cole says. “A lot of dead bodies and sewage, and the electrical company is wiped out. The banks are gone. It’s no use staying here.”

As Etienne-Cole waited in the hopes of catching a flight off the island, she said she doesn’t plan on coming back to the Bahamas. Like many other residents, she’s desperate to get out and start over somewhere else.

Getting a seat on a small plane is one of the only ways off Great Abaco Island right now. Leonard M. Thompson International Airport, which was under 6 feet of water, is still closed to most planes. The marina in Marsh Harbour was also ravaged, impeding rescue missions and the ability to get aid and supplies to the islands.

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People have been lining up at a small airstrip in Abaco waiting to get off the island after the monster storm leveled homes and turned hundreds of Bahamians into refugees, as NPR’s Jason Beaubien reports. On Friday, small planes continued to pick up the most vulnerable, as many more people waited on the tiny airstrip in Sandy Point trying to catch a flight to take them anywhere but here.

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The U.S. Coast Guard says it rescued more than 200 people on Thursday and that those efforts are continuing as hundreds more remain missing. Rescue workers are struggling just to access areas because runways are ruined and harbors are unnavigable, the Coast Guard says.

On top of immediate relief efforts, providing survivors with long-term mental health support “will be the challenge moving forward,” Marvin Dames, the Bahamas’ minister of national security, tells Here & Now.

“When folks come to the reality that they no longer have a roof over their head or a loved one who’s gone, never to return again, it’s really tough,” Dames says. “So these places will certainly need a tremendous amount of support, and we’re working to provide avenues for that to happen.”

Dorian continues to travel northeast after it made landfall on Cape Hatteras on North Carolina’s Outer Banks Friday morning. The storm has been downgraded to a Category 1, and officials say it won’t stick around wreaking havoc the way it did on the Bahamas.

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When the storm slammed into the Bahamas as a Category 5 on Sunday, Regina Parotti-Kennedy tells NPR that the sound of the wind in Marsh Harbour was “unbelievable.”

“It wasn’t pounding. It was howling like demons from hell,” she says. “I have nothing else to compare it to. My ears hurt so bad. I still can’t hear properly out of one.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/09/06/758282750/you-can-t-stay-here-dorian-leaves-parts-of-the-bahamas-uninhabitable

ELIZABETH CITY, N.C. – Hurricane Dorian howled over North Carolina’s Outer Banks on Friday, lashing the low-lying barrier islands as a weakened Category 1 storm and making landfall over Cape Hatteras.

The storm’s powerful winds still knocked out power at almost 200,000 homes and businesses across the state as massive waves threatened buildings along the coast.

Water in some streets was up to cars’ bumpers here, pelting the area with wind and rain Friday morning.

Dare County, which includes North Carolina’s Outer Banks, remained under curfew, with access to the coastal county restricted. Meanwhile, further north, a round of evacuations were also ordered for Virginians in harm’s way. 

“Dorian should remain a powerful hurricane as it moves near or along the coast of North Carolina during the next several hours,” the National Hurricane Center said.

How will Dorian affect your state?Here’s a look at the fury facing communities

Around 9 a.m. EDT, the agency said Dorian’s center made landfall over Cape Hatteras and was moving 14 mph northeast with winds up to 90 mph.

A National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association weather station at Cape Lookout, located inside the western eyewall of Dorian, reported sustained hurricane-force winds of 74 mph, the hurricane center reported early Friday.

Wilmington saw heavy rainfall with as much as 15 inches forecast that could cause dangerous flash floods. Trees bent in the wind and traffic lights swayed.

Up to 7 feet of storm surge was possible from Salter Path to Duck, and parts of southeastern Virginia could see up to 4 feet of storm surge, the hurricane center says.

About 150 evacuees were camped out at Charlotte Motor Speedway in North Carolina, speedway spokesman Scott Cooper said.

Earlier, Dorian devastated the Bahamas with 185-mph winds, leaving at least 30 people dead, after its slow trek through the Caribbean. At one point, the threat of a major hurricane making landfall along Florida’s east coast loomed, but the storm lurched north instead, staying 60 to 80 miles offshore as it passed by.

In South Carolina, the storm created tornadoes Thursday that ripped off roofs and flipped trailers. A quarter of a million homes and businesses were left without power.

“People have to realize it’s not just about the center” of the storm, said Ken Graham, director of the hurricane center. “You have to look at the whole storm.”

However, from the Lowcountry to the Grand Strand, there was a sigh of relief as potentially historic flash floods did not overwhelm.

Historic downtown Charleston did see up to a foot of water on some streets Thursday, and gusts reached up to 80 mph in some areas. But Mayor John Tecklenburg said in a tweet that during the city’s recovery efforts, “I’m counting our blessings.”

The fears of seawater overtopping the walls of The Battery and torrential rainfall leaving the city underwater proved unfounded, as water in the streets leveled off Friday morning.

It was a similar scene in Myrtle Beach. Palmetto limbs snapped Thursday and littered the sidewalks in this tourist town on Friday morning.

Consider this: Dorian is cranking up tornadoes along the Carolina coasts

At least four deaths have been attributed to Dorian in the mainland U.S., which all involved men who died in falls or were electrocuted while preparing for the storm in Florida and North Carolina.

In the Bahamas, Dorian decimated much of Grand Bahama and Abaco islands over the weekend when the storm stalled a Category 5 hurricane. Homes were leveled, cars were flipped, trees were uprooted and, horrifically, children were swept aware in the storm surge. 

Prime Minister Hubert Minnis said the death toll was expected to rise as storm rescue workers scour islands.

You’re alive. You’re alive.’ ‘How one family hunted for loved ones amid Dorian’s wreckage

The Bahamian government sent hundreds of police and marines into the stricken islands, along with doctors, nurses and other health care workers. The U.S. Coast Guard, Britain’s Royal Navy and relief organizations, including the United Nations and the Red Cross, joined the growing effort to rush food and medicine to survivors and lift the most desperate people to safety by helicopter.

Contributing: John Bacon, Trevor Hughes and Joey Garrison, USA TODAY; Brian Gordon, Asheville Citizen Times; Eric Connor and Carol Motsinger, The Greenville News; The Associated Press.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/09/06/hurricane-dorian-lashes-north-carolina-south-carolina-category-1-storm/2229924001/

Within days of his announcement, Mr. Schultz was the subject of protests in his hometown, Seattle, the city where he built a modest coffee-bean retailer into a global behemoth and grew his wealth into the billions.

Mr. Schultz had long been a Democrat — an economically conservative, socially liberal businessman who worried aloud that the party had moved too far left. As he tested the waters on his book tour, he spoke of what he saw as a broken two-party system and a sizable chunk of moderate voters exhausted by political extremes.

“When I hear people espousing free government-paid college, free government-paid health care and a free government job for everyone — on top of a $21 trillion debt — the question is, how are we paying for all this and not bankrupting the country?” Mr. Schultz said.

Though Mr. Schultz insisted that there was no party for a candidate with conservative fiscal instincts and liberal social values like himself, several Democrats with more moderate views have entered the race, including Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, Senator Michael Bennet of Colorado, Gov. Steve Bullock of Montana and former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.

Running as an independent was likely to only complicate Mr. Schultz’s path. Since 1860, only four minor-party candidates have won at least 10 percent of the vote.

In his letter on Friday, Mr. Schultz said that if he moved forward with a run, it was possible that his name would appear on ballots even if a moderate Democrat won the nomination — “not a risk I am willing to take,” he wrote.

Mr. Schultz also suffered a back injury in April, which he cited in his letter as another factor in his decision.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/06/us/politics/howard-schultz-drops-out-2020.html


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A Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department Super Puma helicopter arrives in Santa Barbara as part of the Conception dive boat response. (John Palminteri/KEYT.com)




SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – The investigation into one of the worst boating tragedies in the history of the Santa Barbara Channel is above and below the surface by Santa Cruz Island where the dive boat Conception caught on fire Monday morning.

34 on board died. 33 bodies have been recovered.

Dive teams from several agencies in Southern California, along with the FBI, are combining their efforts with a salvage crew to secure what’s left of the vessel, which had a massive loss of its structure and sunk in 65 feet of water about four hours after the fire started.

They have been using underwater cameras in very difficult conditions to retrieve the victims and preserve the vessel.

“That documentation is occurring with side-scan sonar, so that they are mapping the wreckage before it is moved. We want as much video and digital images as we can get before that vessel is moved.  We are hopeful that will be able to be raised soon. We understand there are efforts underway to salvage it,” said Jennifer Homendy with the National Transportation Safety Board.

The Los Angeles Port Authority has also sent in a large vessel, equipped with underwater cameras, to join allied agencies.

On shore at the Sea Landing dock, investigators are taking a close look at the Vision boat  – which is normally docked next to Conception.

“Vision is a similar vessel, it is not a sister vessel. It is not the exact replica, but it is a similar vessel to Conception in, what that means is, that some things may be arranged differently but it is pretty close and I wanted to lay eyes on the vessel and get a sense of the layout,” Homendy said.

Nearby, there is a special area with tents and equipment that will be used in the operation.  

A portion of the harbor parking lot has been secured for this work which will take several days under the coordination of the NTSB, the FBI, the Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Department, U.S. Coast Guard and allied agencies.

With 33 bodies recovered, the Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Coroner’s office is using additional equipment including a special large refrigeration truck from Los Angeles for the number of victims involved.

A vigil for the victims of the Conception tragedy is planned for Friday at Chase Palm Park. 


Watch Wednesday’s NTSB Press Conference

Source Article from https://www.keyt.com/news/fire/conception-salvage-plans-include-underwater-video-evidence/1117458178

Self-help author Marianne Williamson is either leading or tied with two United States congressmen, the mayor of New York City, and a Democratic power-playing billionaire in the polling average for the Democratic primary. She’s a stone’s throw away from Sen. Amy Klobuchar, and her unique donor count has surpassed another senator and a governor.

She’s running a long-shot bid, one widely mocked as dead-on-arrival at the outset and a pie-in-the-sky vanity project. Yet, her persistent grassroots support tells a different story: Williamson has tapped into a void of representation in the Democratic Party.

Williamson has suffered any number of slights. Vogue left her out of a photo shoot of the female presidential candidates. She has received general hostility from cable news shows. This only highlights the cultural Left’s disdain for her focus on the power of love and prayer.

But none distilled the divide more than the news cycle centered on her tweets about Hurricane Dorian, the category 5 storm hugging the southeastern seaboard and threatening millions of American homes.

“The Bahamas, Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas…may all be in our prayers now, ” Williamson wrote in a since-deleted tweet. “Millions of us seeing Dorian turn away from land is not a wacky idea; it is a creative use of the power of the mind. Two minutes of prayer, visualization, meditation for those in the way of the storm.”

Progressives pounced.

Williamson’s questionable tweets entertaining the pseudoscience of anti-vaccination aside, her call to prayer wasn’t worthy of the Left’s contempt or derision. Sure, prayer may not literally push the path of a hurricane, but like hundreds of millions of religious Americans, Williamson understands that prayer posits a kind of power — certainly, it is at least as powerful as cursing a storm or publicly calling (praying?) for the passage of legislation on Twitter.

Later in the day, Williamson rightly slammed her critics.

You can privately believe that prayer constitutes nothing but hocus-pocus poppycock, but Williamson is 100% correct. More than 3 out of every 4 Americans believe in a religious faith, the overwhelming majority of whom practice one of the three major monotheistic religions. Mocking people for praying in times of hardship, be it for illness or hurricanes or gun violence, may fly in the hallways of the Ivy League philosophy departments, but the Left’s instinct to write off faith will leave them in the electoral dust.

It’s a moral failure, but also a strategic one. Joe Biden, who has been vocal about his Catholic faith and made the politics of empathy central to his campaign, is dominating the Democratic field, in large part due to his support from black voters, who tend to be more religious than average. Demanding action on issues like climate change matters to Democratic voters, but a lot of them see through the mockery of “thoughts and prayers.”

Williamson gets it. The question is whether her competitors will.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/dont-mock-marianne-williamsons-emphasis-on-the-power-of-prayer

The New York State Department of Health said Thursday that it is looking at vitamin E acetate as a potential cause of severe pulmonary illness cases in the state that have been associated with vaping.

Daniel Becerril/Reuters


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The New York State Department of Health said Thursday that it is looking at vitamin E acetate as a potential cause of severe pulmonary illness cases in the state that have been associated with vaping.

Daniel Becerril/Reuters

It’s still a mystery — what’s causing the cluster of severe respiratory illnesses among people who’ve used e-cigarettes? The FDA says there have been at least 215 reported cases in 25 states.

Nearly three dozen of those cases are in New York state, and investigators there say they are now zeroing in on vitamin E as a possible culprit. Health officials say state lab tests detected high levels of vitamin E in cartridges of cannabis vaping products used by people who vaped and suffered serious lung damage.

“At least one vitamin E acetate containing vape product has been linked to each patient who submitted a product for testing,” according to a statement from the New York State Department of Health.

Vitamin E is usually safe as a dietary supplement or cream, but vaping it could be harmful, according to state health Commissioner Howard Zucker.

When it is “inhaled deep in the lung, [it] can cause problems,” Zucker tells NPR. He says the lab has found very high amounts of vitamin E in 13 of the patient-submitted cartridges they’ve analyzed. “As high as even 50 percent of the liquid that is in the vaping [cartridge].”

It was not found in cartridges from patients that contained only nicotine. It’s not clear whether some patients vaped both cannabis and nicotine products.

Zucker also notes that they haven’t ruled out other substances, and the Food and Drug Administration says it isn’t convinced that vitamin E is to blame.

“More information is needed to better understand whether there’s a relationship between any specific products or substances and the reported illnesses,” FDA senior adviser Michael Felberbaum says in an emailed statement Thursday.

“The number of samples we have received continues to increase and we now have over 100 samples for testing,” Felberbaum says. “The FDA is analyzing samples submitted by the states for the presence of a broad range of chemicals, including nicotine, THC and other cannabinoids along with cutting agents/diluents and other additives, pesticides, opioids, poisons and toxins. No one substance, including Vitamin E acetate, has been identified in all of the samples.”

Vitamin E is not an approved additive for vape products approved by New York’s medical marijuana program, and Zucker says the cartridges they tested appear to be “black-market” products purchased off the street — not in medical dispensaries.

“This is a situation of people buying products that have been laced with markedly elevated amounts of vitamin E,” Zucker says.

“We urge the public to be vigilant about any vaping products that they or any family members may be using and to immediately contact their health care provider if they develop any unusual symptoms” he says in the health department statement. “In general, vaping of unknown substances is dangerous, and we continue to explore all options to combat this public health issue.”

Zucker says the number of cases of vaping-associated pulmonary illnesses has been rising, and that people who vape should be warned not to buy unregulated products purchase off the street. “These unregulated products are not tested and may contain harmful substances,” the department warns.

On Wednesday, Oregon officials reported that a middle-aged adult who died of a severe pulmonary illness in late July had used a cannabis product purchased from one of Oregon’s state-regulated marijuana stores. That case is under investigation. The death of a second person was reported in Illinois in late August.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2019/09/05/758005409/vitamin-e-suspected-in-serious-lung-problems-among-people-who-vaped-cannabis

Los Angeles (CNN)Crew members of the dive boat that was consumed in flames off the California coast on Labor Day told investigators they tried to rescue the 34 people who were still on board in the inferno, the National Transportation Board said Thursday.

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    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/09/05/us/california-boat-fire-thursday/index.html

    September 5 at 8:30 PM

    Vice President Pence and his extensive security detail raised eyebrows on Wednesday as they traveled through the capital city of Iceland, a famously peaceful country where its president travels alone on private errands.

    Pence was the first U.S. vice president to visit Iceland since George H.W. Bush went to Reykjavik in 1983, similarly causing a stir with his “attendant paraphernalia of Air Force Two, bulletproof limousines and White House telecommunication equipment,” The Washington Post reported at the time.

    Weeks before Pence’s visit, Secret Service personnel were seen in the city scouting out locations, the Associated Press reported. Bomb-sniffing dogs were given special clearance to enter the country, and police officers from outside the capital were sent in to help the Reykjavik police meet security standards set by the United States. During the visit Wednesday, U.S. security personnel — who had to be given special permission to bear arms — trailed the vice president through the city. When Pence met with Icelandic officials, snipers were seen perched on the rooftops of nearby buildings, the AP wrote.

    “The scale of Pence’s visit, not least the security arrangements, are greater than ever seen in Iceland before,” added RUV, the country’s national broadcasting service.

    It is not uncommon for U.S. leaders to travel with a large security detail — President Barack Obama’s 2015 visit to New Delhi reportedly sent it into a lockdown — but such visits can be particularly challenging for smaller countries.

    Iceland, a country of 350,000 people, has a remarkably small police force, the majority of which is armed only with batons and pepper spray. The country’s president, Gudni Thorlacius Johannesson, has been spotted, among other things, visiting a popular geothermal bath and “plogging” (picking up rubbish while jogging) around the presidential residence on his own.

    Ahead of the visit, local news outlets worked to warn residents of the major road closures that were expected to cause traffic delays. According to the Reykjavik Grapevine, a magazine, police were urging residents to show “patience and understanding.”

    Police say that traffic delays can be expected around the city, especially in the afternoon, and are asking the general public to show patience and understanding. As Pence will only be in the country for seven hours, and is expected to meet with Prime Minister Katrín Jakobsdóttir, this delay will be mercifully temporary.

    The vice president’s trip was surrounded by several controversies.

    It was initially reported that Prime Minister Katrin Jakobsdottir would not be in town during Pence’s visit, sparking applause from critics of the administration who saw the move as a deliberate snub (Jakobsdottir said it was not, and wound up meeting him on Wednesday.) When the vice president, a conservative Christian and an opponent of same-sex marriage, arrived on the island, he was met with a flurry of rainbow flags, an oft-used symbol of LGBTQ pride.

    Johannesson and his wife Eliza Reid also reportedly wore rainbow bracelets during their meeting with Pence.

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2019/09/06/pences-security-detail-raises-eyebrows-peaceful-iceland/