Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill discusses motions before the court Monday. He denied the defense request to question jurors again after a fatal police shooting Sunday and immediately sequester them in the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin.

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Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill discusses motions before the court Monday. He denied the defense request to question jurors again after a fatal police shooting Sunday and immediately sequester them in the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin.

Court TV/Pool via AP

After a fatal police shooting near Minneapolis on Sunday, former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin’s attorney expressed concern that jurors in his murder trial could be swayed by the events. Judge Peter Cahill denied the request to re-question jurors and immediately sequester them.

Cahill said the jury would be fully sequestered beginning next Monday when closing arguments are expected to start.

Defense attorney Eric Nelson asked that jurors be questioned on what they had heard about the police shooting of 20-year-old Daunte Wright in Brooklyn Center, a nearby city in Hennepin County. Unrest followed the shooting: Police deployed tear gas and flash-bang grenades to clear protesters who had gathered outside the Brooklyn Center Police Department.

One of the jurors lives in Brooklyn Center, and others have ties to the city, Nelson said. He said jurors should have already been sequestered due to the high-profile nature of the case and its tendency to evoke strong emotions. Nelson asked that jurors be warned at the beginning of each day to avoid all media.

Nelson also expressed concern that jurors might be made nervous to deliver a verdict with which the public does not agree.

Prosecutor Steve Schleicher countered that he didn’t believe jury sequestration would be effective. It used to be that avoiding media meant not reading newspapers or watching television, he said, but now media are omnipresent.

The judge ruled against the motion to question the jurors about what they had heard about Sunday’s shooting on the basis that it a totally separate case. He worried that such questioning might lead jurors to believe there were new threats to their safety. It would be different, Cahill said, if the civil unrest had followed a verdict.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/trial-over-killing-of-george-floyd/2021/04/12/986444151/chauvin-trial-judge-denies-request-for-jury-sequestration-after-police-shooting

At one point during the encounter, Gutierrez pepper-sprayed Nazario several times, which caused “substantial and immediate pain, choking and blinding him, causing his lungs and throat face and skin to burn,” the lawsuit says. Nazario’s dog, who was in the back seat, was also hit by the substance and began choking, according to the complaint.

Source Article from https://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/ny-caron-nazario-windsor-virginia-cop-fired-pepper-sprayed-black-army-lieutenant-20210412-xxhquztx2fbnxi6hydgqdenwaq-story.html

President Biden vowed to bridge the partisan political divide but, struggling to garner Republican support for major bills, his administration appears to be changing the narrative by redefinining what “bipartisan” means.

First, Biden’s $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package passed without a single GOP vote, and now his massive infrastructure package is facing strong Republican opposition in Washington. Biden insists he does enjoy support from both parties, however, pointing to Republican voters and officials outside the Beltway.

REPUBLICANS SENATORS LINE UP AGAINST BIDEN’S MASSIVE $2T SPENDING BILL: ‘FAR CRY’ FROM INFRASTRUCTURE

“If you looked up ‘bipartisan’ in the dictionary, I think it would say support from Republicans and Democrats,” senior Biden adviser Anita Dunn told the Washington Post. “It doesn’t say the Republicans have to be in Congress.”

Biden senior adviser Mike Donilon pointed to the president’s new definition of “bipartisan” as “an agenda that unifies the country and appeals across the political spectrum.”

“I think it’s a pretty good definition to say you’re pursuing an agenda that will unite the country, that will bring Democrats and Republicans together across the country,” Donilon told the Post. “Presumably, if you have an agenda that is broadly popular with Democrats and Republicans across the country, then you should have elected representatives reflecting that.”

Former Obama chief of staff Rahm Emanuel remarked on the shift, telling the newspaper, “What’s become crystal clear is that Biden has redefined bipartisan.” The former Chicago mayor explained that, “it isn’t how many Republicans I’ve got,” but “about how many Republican voters or mayors and governors can I get to support my stuff.”

GRANHOLM ARGUES ‘INFRASTRUCTURE’ MEANING IS OUT OF DATE, DESPITE MOCKERY FROM REPUBLICANS

“And Washington is slow to catch up to the Biden definition,” he added.

Biden acknowledged the shift toward the public and away from Republican officials when discussing his American Jobs Plan in Pittsburgh at the end of March.

“When I wrote it, everybody said I had no bipartisan support. We’re overwhelming bipartisan support with Republican – registered Republican voters,” Biden said. “And ask around. If you live in a town with a Republican mayor, a Republican county executive, or a Republican governor, ask them how many would rather get rid of the plan. Ask them if it helped them at all.”

The president then added: “I hope Republicans in Congress will join this effort.”

The changing definition of “bipartisan” comes at a time when Democrats have been justifying the substance of the infrastructure bill by redefining the meaning of “infrastructure.”

Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., was the first to draw attention when she tweeted, “Paid leave is infrastructure. Child care is infrastructure. Caregiving is infrastructure.”

This led to a chorus of criticism and mockery from lawmakers  and pundits from both sides of the political spectrum.

“Abortion is infrastructure. Gun control is infrastructure. Forced unionization is infrastructure. Whatever the Left wants is infrastructure. You know what’s not? Roads & bridges.,” Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, tweeted, stating that only 5% of the infrastructure bill actually dealt with roads and bridges.

Keith Olbermann, the liberal former MSNBC host, said that while he agrees the issues Gillibrand listed are important, they are decidedly not infrastructure.

“[W]hen you drain a word of it’s meaning, you damage its impact, your cause, and the value of language,” Olbermann said.

Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm continued the trend on Sunday, telling ABC’s “This Week” that lawmakers need to rethink the meaning of infrastructure.

“It’s not static. In 1990 we wouldn’t have thought that broadband was infrastructure because it wasn’t on the scene yet, but of course we have broadband in every pocket of the nation,” Granholm said. She then added that “we don’t want to use past definitions of ‘infrastructure’ when we are moving into the future.”

The same day, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., told CBS’ “Face the Nation” that Democrats would not limit the infrastructure bill to cover roads, bridges and waterways “because infrastructure is – it’s about education, about getting children healthily in school with separation, sanitation, ventilation. It’s about investments in housing as well.”

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Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg told NBC’s “Meet the Press” last week that the Biden administration would like to have bipartisan legislative support for the infrastructure bill, but indicated that a lack of it would not stop them.

“We can’t let politics slow this down to where it doesn’t actually happen,” he said.

Fox News’ Peter Aitken contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/biden-redefine-bipartisan-dems-push-spending-bill-without-gop-votes

Wess Mitchell, who served as the Trump administration’s top State Department official overseeing European and Eurasian affairs, noted that the Javelins and other lethal weapons are designed not for first use but to deter Moscow from encroaching on Ukrainian territory.

But while Washington urges Kyiv to use the Javelins only for defensive purposes and requires that the weapons be stored in a secure facility away from the conflict, there are no geographic restrictions on the actual deployment of the missiles, U.S. officials said, which means that Ukrainian forces can transport, distribute and use them at any time.

“Javelins are defensive weapons and the United States expects Ukraine to deploy them responsibly and strategically when needed for defensive purposes,” said Pentagon spokesperson Mike Howard.

If the Javelins were to be moved, it doesn’t necessarily mean they’d be used — in Kyiv’s estimation, the threshold for actually firing the weapons has not yet been met, according to two Ukrainians familiar with the discussions. The red line, they said, would be if Russian tanks crossed over into Ukrainian territory.

The current Russian movement in Eastern Europe is exactly the kind of scenario the Javelin sale was designed to counter, said two former senior U.S. defense officials familiar with the agreement.

“I’m sure there is a discussion going on,” the person said. “It’s a no-brainer.”

An official close to Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky said that any discussions about moving the Javelins had not reached the presidential level and that no decisions have been made on whether to deploy them. Zelensky is eager to de-escalate tensions, so he would not be naturally inclined to move the weapons east, said another person close to the Ukrainian president.

U.S. officials said they were not aware of any decisions to deploy the Javelins.

Senior Ukrainian officials are not yet convinced that the troop buildup means that Russia is planning an invasion — the fact that the troop movements have been so public and dragged on in the open for more than two weeks, suggests to Kyiv that Moscow may just be saber-rattling to try to create leverage with the new Biden administration.

But Ukrainian officials are still nervous that the conflict could escalate dramatically and with little notice. At least seven Ukrainian soldiers have been killed since late last month amid a spike in violence in the Donbass region, where Ukrainian government forces have been battling Russia-backed separatists since 2014.

President Joe Biden and Zelensky spoke for the first time this month amid the escalating tensions. A White House readout of the conversation said Biden “reaffirmed the United States’ unwavering support for Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity in the face of Russia’s ongoing aggression in the [Donbass] and Crimea.”

The U.S. has provided Ukraine $2 billion in security assistance since 2014, including two tranches of Javelin missiles as well as other military equipment. Biden, who pushed unsuccessfully to provide lethal aid to Kyiv during the Obama administration, also recently approved an additional $125 million worth of lethal aid to help the country defend its borders, including two armed patrol boats and counter-artillery radar.

Still, the Javelins are an incomplete solution to Russia’s aggression. Jim Townsend, a Pentagon official during the Obama administration, said that while the deployment of missiles in itself would not be escalatory, they would be of limited use if the Russians are not planning on mounting a conventional attack with armored vehicles.

“If the Russians are up to something, and that ‘something’ doesn’t involve armor, then the Javelins won’t matter,” said Townsend, who went on to refer to Russia’s paramilitary forces that invaded Crimea in 2014. “For instance, Javelins aren’t useful if the Russians are using ‘little green men’ to infiltrate Ukrainian lines.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/04/12/ukraine-us-missile-weapons-russia-480985

Biden will also nominate Ur Jaddou, the former general counsel of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, to lead the agency, which is responsible for running the country’s legal immigration system. Other selections include Jon Meyer, a former DHS and Department of Justice attorney, to be DHS general counsel, and John Tien, a National Security Council adviser to President Barack Obama, as deputy DHS Secretary. The picks were first reported by the New York Times.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/chris-magnus-cbp/2021/04/12/69d59694-9b8f-11eb-8a83-3bc1fa69c2e8_story.html

A Brooklyn Center police officer fatally shot a man during a traffic stop Sunday afternoon, inflaming already raw tensions between police and community members in the midst of the Derek Chauvin trial.

Relatives of Daunte Wright, 20, who is Black, told a tense crowd gathered at the scene in the northern Minneapolis suburb Sunday afternoon that Wright drove for a short distance after he was shot, crashed his car, and died at the scene.

Protesters later walked to the Brooklyn Center police headquarters near N. 67th Avenue and N. Humboldt Avenue and were locked in a standoff with police in riot gear late Sunday night. Officers repeatedly ordered the crowd of about 500 to disperse as protesters chanted Wright’s name and climbed atop the police headquarters sign, by then covered in graffiti. Police used tear gas, flash bangs and rubber bullets on the crowd.

National Guard troops arrived just before midnight as looters targeted the Brooklyn Center Walmart and nearby shopping mall. Several businesses around the Walmart were completely destroyed, including Foot Locker, T Mobile, and a New York men’s clothing store.

Looting was widespread late Sunday into early Monday, spilling into north and south Minneapolis. Reports said that stores in Uptown and along Lake Street were also being looted.

Brooklyn Center Mayor Mike Elliott issued a curfew order until 6 a.m. Monday. Precautions were being taken into Monday, with Brooklyn Center canceling or closing all school buildings, programs and activities.

Sunday’s fresh outrage came as Twin Cities officials and law enforcement are already on edge as Chauvin, a former Minneapolis police officer, stands trial on murder and manslaughter charges in the death of George Floyd.

Floyd’s death 10 months ago sparked waves of protests and violent demonstrations across the cities, which seriously damaged hundreds of buildings.

Law enforcement has already been bracing for unrest once the jury reaches a verdict, erecting barricades and marshaling an intense police presence at the Hennepin County Government Center, where the trial resumes Monday.

The trial, which is being livestreamed, has drawn international attention.

Gov. Tim Walz tweeted that he was “closely monitoring the situation” and “praying for Daunte Wright’s family as our state mourns another life of a Black man taken by law enforcement.”

Elliott also tweeted, urging protesters to remain peaceful. According to Teddy Tschann, the governor’s spokesman, Walz and Elliott spoke Sunday night.

The multi-agency security plan called Operation Safety Net, put in place for the Chauvin trial, held a news conference early Monday morning to provide an update on actions being taken in the aftermath of the shooting.

Department of Public Safety Commissioner John Harrington said Minneapolis will wake up to more National Guard stationed around the city due to reports of looting and shots fired. About 20 Brooklyn Center businesses were looted, he said, but crowds largely dispersed.

During the standoff with police, he said, “rocks and other objects” were thrown at law enforcement.

Harrington says he can’t comment on the shooting but he said the Brooklyn Center Police Department does have bodycams, so there is likely video.

After the shooting, Brooklyn Center police said officers pulled over a vehicle for a traffic violation shortly before 2 p.m. in the 6300 block of Orchard Avenue.

The driver, who had a warrant, got back into the vehicle as officers were trying to take him into custody. That’s when an officer discharged a weapon, striking the driver, police said. The vehicle traveled several blocks before crashing into another vehicle.

Officers and medical personnel performed lifesaving measures but the driver was pronounced dead at the scene, police said. A female passenger was taken to the hospital with injuries that weren’t life-threatening.

Wright was identified by family members, not by authorities.

His family had said earlier that the shooting occurred in Plymouth but it had not.

The Bureau of Criminal Apprehension was on the scene and will conduct an independent investigation.

Brooklyn Center officers wear body cameras and the Police Department said Sunday that it believes the body cameras and dash cameras were on during the incident.

Wright’s mother, Katie Wright, tearfully pleaded near the scene Sunday afternoon for more information and for her son’s body to be moved from the street. She also urged the protesters to remain peaceful.

“All he did was have air fresheners in the car and they told him to get out of the car,” Wright said, explaining that her son called her when he was getting pulled over. During the call, she said she heard scuffling and then someone saying “Daunte, don’t run” before the phone call ended. When she called back, her son’s girlfriend answered and said Daunte had been shot.

“He got out of the car, and his girlfriend said they shot him,” she said. “He got back in the car, and he drove away and crashed and now he’s dead on the ground since 1:47. … Nobody will tell us anything. Nobody will talk to us. … I said please take my son off the ground.”

A woman who lives near the crash scene, Carolyn Hanson, said she saw officers pull a man out of a car and perform CPR. A passenger who got out of the vehicle was covered in blood, she said.

Within hours of the shooting, a couple hundred people had gathered near the scene, where emotions were running high.

Protesters pushed past police tape and confronted officers donning riot gear. Around 7:15 p.m., the crowd broke the windshields of two squad cars and police fired nonlethal rounds to try to disperse the crowd.

By 8:30 p.m., the remaining crowd gathered to light candles, burn sage and write messages in chalk on the street near the scene.

Staff writers Liz Sawyer and Andy Mannix contributed to this report.

mara.klecker@startribune.com • 612-673-4440

kim.hyatt@startribune.com • 612-673-4751

Source Article from https://www.startribune.com/brooklyn-center-minnesota-police-fatally-shoot-black-man-during-traffic-stop/600044821/

“Once Israeli officials are quoted, it requires the Iranians to take revenge,” Danny Yatom, a former head of the Mossad, said in an interview Monday with a radio station run by the Israeli Army. “There are actions that must remain in the dark,” he added.

In the days before the attack, Israel asked the United States for assistance in protecting an Israeli-owned cargo ship that is currently in the Arabian Sea, an American official said.

Israeli officials expressed concern that the Hyperion Ray could be targeted by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps following last week’s apparent mine attack by Israel on an Iranian military vessel in the Red Sea, the U.S. official said. The Israeli government declined to comment.

The Helios Ray, a second ship owned by the same Israeli company, was attacked in February, and Israel blamed Iran.

But some analysts expressed the feeling that Iran would be unwilling to escalate further while there was still a chance that America might pare back sanctions on the Iranian economy in exchange for Iran’s scaling back its nuclear program.

Chuck Freilich, a former deputy national security adviser in Israel, said: “I don’t think the Iranians want a major confrontation at this point — I think they want a deal. And that doesn’t need a confrontation.”

In Israel, some also questioned whether the attack served a domestic purpose for Mr. Netanyahu, rather than just a foreign policy objective.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/12/world/middleeast/iran-israel-nuclear-site.html

India overtook Brazil as the second worst-infected country behind the United States after data showed that Covid-19 cases continued to surge.

The South Asian nation reported more than 168,000 new cases over a 24-hour period on Monday, according to health ministry data. Around 83% of the new infections were reported in 10 states, including the western state of Maharashtra, which is home to India’s financial capital Mumbai.

Since the beginning of April, India has reported more than 1.37 million cases, bringing the country’s total number of infections since last January to over 13.5 million; cases began rising since February after reaching a peak in September.

Though Maharashtra has been the hardest-hit state in the second wave, cases in other areas — including the populous state of Uttar Pradesh — are going up.

Daily reported death rate is also climbing as hospitals face pressure over supplies, including the number of beds available. Still, compared to other countries including the U.S., India’s Covid-related deaths are relatively low.

Health Minister Harsh Vardhan has reportedly blamed the second wave of infections on people’s lack of commitment toward wearing masks and practicing social distancing.

But in recent weeks, politicians, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party, as well as other political parties held election rallies in states like West Bengal where large crowds gathered — most of them without wearing masks. There were also a string of religious gatherings that took place in various parts of the country.

Vaccination program underway

India’s health ministry says that more than 100 million doses of vaccines have been administered since the government began an ambitious inoculation program in January. Since April 1, anyone over 45 years old is eligible for their shots.

Media reports say that some states, including Maharashtra, are facing a severe vaccine shortage. The Indian government, in response, accused those states of diverting attention away from their failure to control the virus.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/04/12/coronavirus-india-becomes-second-worst-hit-country-as-covid-cases-surge.html

Matt Gaetz and a spokesman for Donald Trump reacted angrily late on Sunday after CNN reported that the scandal-hit Florida Republican congressman sought a meeting with the former US president when allegations of sex-trafficking and illegal drug use were first reported – and was rebuffed.

CNN cited two anonymous sources who “said Gaetz tried to schedule a visit with Trump after it was first revealed that he was being investigated”. It said “the request was rejected by aides close to the former president”.

The New York Times first reported federal investigations of Gaetz on 30 March. Since then, multiple reports have linked the congressman to an ally in Florida indicted for sex trafficking and other crimes but reported to be close to a deal with prosecutors.

Gaetz is reported to be under investigation for possible sex trafficking of a 17-year-old girl; for allegedly paying for sex; for alleged use of illegal drugs; and for allegedly showing House members nude pictures of women.

He denies all accusations. The Times has also reported that towards the end of Trump’s time in power, Gaetz sought a blanket pre-emptive pardon. Trump denied receiving such a request.

In response to the CNN report, Trump’s spokesman, Jason Miller, tweeted: “This story is complete fake news. No such scheduling or meeting request was ever made, and therefore, it could never have been declined. Take note that this story has zero on-the-record sources. It’s literally made-up. We are demanding a full retraction.”

Trump and his aides and supporters regularly complain about stories in which anonymous sources are used – a common practice in US media.

This weekend saw Republicans and donors gather for events in Florida. According to reports of Trump’s remarks at Mar-a-Lago on Saturday night, he did not mention Gaetz when he thanked supporters including the Florida governor, Ron DeSantis.

Gaetz spoke at a Trump golf course on Friday. Telling a pro-Trump women’s group “truth will prevail”, he added: “I know this. Firebrands don’t retreat, especially when the battle for the soul of our country calls.”

On Twitter, Gaetz called the CNN report “a total lie. I am on a pre-planned vacation with my fiancée. I was welcomed at Trump Doral days ago. No such meeting was denied nor sought.”

But the CNN report said Gaetz had sought a meeting “after it was first revealed that he was being investigated”. It also quoted an anonymous source who said aides to the former president “were under the impression that Gaetz went down [to Florida this weekend] to try and run into Trump or people around him”.

Leading Republicans continue to keep their distance from Gaetz, one consultant even saying “a 10ft pole is not long enough” for Trump.

On Sunday Liz Cheney, a member of House Republican leadership and a target of attacks by Gaetz, told CBS the allegations were “sickening” but did not call for Gaetz to resign. The House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat, told the same network she preferred to let a House ethics investigation continue.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/12/matt-gaetz-trump-meeting-rebuffed-denial

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The woman arrested on suspicion of killing her three young children at her Los Angeles apartment had been involved in a custody dispute with their father, according to a newspaper report Sunday.

Liliana Carrillo, 30, was arrested Saturday in Tulare County after fleeing the gruesome scene and leading law enforcement officers on a long-distance chase, authorities said.

The Los Angeles Times cites family court documents that show Eric Denton sought custody of the children — ages 3, 2 and 6 months — on March 1.

Denton requested a temporary emergency visitation order from the court on March 4 and petitioned for a mental health evaluation of Carrillo, according to the newspaper. Orders were drawn up at a March 26 hearing. Another hearing in the case was scheduled for April 14.

In response, Carrillo sought a temporary domestic violence restraining order against Denton on March 12 in Los Angeles County Superior Court, documents show.

In a brief interview with the Times, Denton confirmed he was the father of the three children — two girls and a boy — and said he’d been in a custody battle with Carrillo after she began acting mentally unstable.

Denton said he tried to get local authorities to intervene, but “in L.A. they wouldn’t help. The LAPD would not get involved.” He said Carrillo was supposed to turn over the kids to him on Sunday.

The children’s grandmother returned home from work Saturday morning and found the bodies and the mother missing, Los Angeles police Lt. Raul Jovel said.

Police said initial reports suggested the children had been stabbed to death, but no official cause of death has been released.

Los Angeles police initially received reports Carrillo was driving her car and heading north on Interstate 5 when she got in an altercation in the Bakersfield area. She abandoned her car and carjacked another vehicle, Jovel said.

Carrillo was detained in the Ponderosa area of Tulare County, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) north of Bakersfield, police said.

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/liliana-carrillo-arrested-death-of-her-3-kids-california-9e05ca3e92211a3eca572dd0995c0ee8

Police in a Minneapolis suburb say an officer fatally shot a driver Sunday, leading to clashes between protesters and law enforcement, CBS Minnesota reports. The death of the man, identified by family as Daunte Wright, and ensuing unrest came in the midst of the Derek Chauvin trial for the killing of George Floyd. 

Police said officers in the city of Brooklyn Center pulled over a driver they’d determined had an outstanding warrant just before 2 p.m. Police said when they tried to arrest him, he got back in his vehicle and drove away. An officer fired at the vehicle, hitting the driver. Police said the vehicle traveled several blocks before hitting another one. No one in that second vehicle was hurt.

The driver of the first vehicle was pronounced dead at the scene. Police said officers were believed to be wearing activated body cameras at the time of the shooting.

A crowd began to gather at the crash scene later in the afternoon. Just after 6 p.m., protesters tore down crime scene tape, with the crowd and the victim’s family demanding answers from law enforcement.

A woman who said she’s the driver’s mother, Katie Wright, told the crowd her son — 20-year-old Daunte Wright — was the man who was shot. She said Wright’s girlfriend was in the car with him during the traffic stop. Police said the woman suffered non-life threatening injuries in the crash and was taken to a hospital.

Authorities said the Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office will release the name of the man who was killed after a preliminary autopsy and notification of his family.

Protesters later gathered at Brooklyn Center Police headquarters. Law enforcement formed a human chain to protect the building and started using flashbangs and tear gas to try to disperse the crowd, according to CBS Minnesota reporters at the scene.

Duante Wright, 20, is the man shot and killed by police in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota on April 11, 2021, according to his mother, Katie Wright.

Katie Wright / CBS Minnesota


Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/live-updates/brooklyn-center-shooting-protests-minneapolis-suburb/

A Windsor, Va., police officer who pepper-sprayed an Army officer during a traffic stop last year has been fired, the Windsor Police Department announced on Sunday.

Joe Gutierrez was one of the two Windsor police officers caught on camera pointing their guns at Caron Nazario, a second lieutenant in the Army, at a traffic stop at a gas station in December.

In body camera video shared online by The Associated Press, Gutierrez is also seen pepper-spraying Nazario multiple times, after one of the officers attempted to open his car door.

In a statement released on Sunday, the Windsor Police Department said it conducted an investigation into Gutierrez’s use of force, which determined that department policy “was not followed.”

“At the conclusion of this investigation, it was determined that Windsor Police Department policy was not followed,” the department wrote in a statement.

“This resulted in disciplinary action, and department-wide requirements for additional training were implemented beginning in January and continue up to the present. Since that time, Officer Gutierrez was also terminated from his employment,” the department added.

Earlier this month, Nazario filed a lawsuit arguing that the officers violated his constitutional rights during a traffic stop in the southeastern town of Windsor, located about 46 miles west of Virginia Beach.

In the statement, the Windsor Police Department said it has “openly provided documents and related video to attorneys for Lt. Nazario.”

Additionally, the city officials said they requested an investigation of the event by Virginia State Police.

Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam (D) announced earlier Sunday that he is directing Virginia State Police to conduct an independent investigation into the traffic stop and use of force.

Video from The AP shows Nazario, who is Black and Latino, sitting in his parked car at a gas station, dressed in uniform, with his hands up, as the two officers point their guns at him.

The officers were captured on video ordering Nazario to exit his vehicle, to which he responds “I’m honestly afraid to get out.”

“Yeah, you should be, get out!” one of the officers can be heard responding.

The other officer, Daniel Crocker had radioed the station earlier saying he was trying to pull over a vehicle with tinted windows that appeared to not have a rear license plate, according to the AP. He called the situation a “high-risk traffic stop,” and said the driver was “eluding police.”

Nazario, however, said he was not trying to escape the officer on his drive home from his duty station, but instead wanted to stop in a well-lit area “for officer safety and out of respect for the officers.”

In the lawsuit, Nazario said that once the officers arrived at the gas station his rear license plate was clearly visible, but the officers still immediately drew their guns and pointed them at Nazario.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/547624-virginia-officer-who-pepper-sprayed-army-officer-fired

Updated 7:52 AM ET, Mon April 12, 2021

On the front lines in eastern Ukraine (CNN)Ankle-deep in thick black sludge, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky moves stealthily with his troops in single file through the warren of trenches and tunnels that form the tense front lines in the east of his country.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/04/12/europe/ukraine-zelensky-front-lines/index.html

    Under House Democrats’ proposal, these savings are redirected to expand Medicare to cover costs for dental, vision and hearing coverage through Medicare, while also limiting yearly out-of-pocket spending on prescriptions to $2,000, said Alex Lawson, executive director of the advocacy group Social Security Works, which supports the prescription drug reform.

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/us-policy/2021/04/12/sanders-pelosi-biden-obamacare-medicare/

    RESEDA (CBSLA) – This evening Erik Denton, the father of three children slain in Reseda on Saturday, arrived at the apartment complex where the crime occurred.

    Mr. Denton contributed several star-shaped balloons, a bubble machine, some toys and portraits of each of his children to the growing memorial outside the apartment complex. He also took off, folded and left behind the plaid shirt he was wearing because it matched the shirt he wore in some of the photos.

    Mr. Denton was too distraught to speak, but CBSLA spoke to his cousin, Dr. Teri Miller, earlier.

    “I mean, we’re completely destroyed,” she said. “Those kids were everything. I mean, his whole being and essence just revolves around those kids. He had his heart set on seeing the kids because he was supposed to pick the kids up today and have them for the week.”

    Liliana Carillo, the 30-year-old woman suspected of killing her and Denton’s three small children, is in custody following a chase into Kern County, where she’s also accused of a carjacking during a run from police.

    The events unfolded Saturday morning at an apartment in the San Fernando Valley neighborhood of Reseda.

    An undated photo of Liliana Carrillo, a suspect in the killings of her three children in Reseda, Calif., on April 10, 2021. (LAPD)

    Los Angeles police confirmed to CBSLA that the stabbings were reported by the children’s grandmother at 9:30 a.m. at an apartment in the 8000 block of Reseda Boulevard.

    The children, 3 year old Joanna, 2 year old Terry and 6-month old Sierra, were pronounced dead at the scene.

    Denton was in a custody battle with Carrillo for his kids.

    His family said that Carrillo and the kids had been staying with her mother in the small Reseda apartment after taking the children from their home in Northern California.

    Erik Denton and his three children. (Source: Erik Denton)

    Dr. Miller, who’s trained in emergency medicine, said Carrillo has never received a psychological evaluation, but that the family noticed she hadn’t been well since giving birth to her second child. According to the family, things got even worse after her third pregnancy and reports of new COVID-19 strains.

    “She believed that the city they were living in was unsafe and that there was a sex-trafficking ring and that most of the city was involved in it.” Miller also said Carrillo believed her children were being pulled into the sex-trafficking ring.”

    While the coroner’s office is working to confirm the exact cause of the children’s death, the police are still unclear on a motive for the killings.

    A GoFundMe Campaign has been setup to help raise funds for the children’s funeral expenses.

     

    Source Article from https://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2021/04/11/reseda-children-fatally-father-appears-at-memorial/