Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo took the stand Monday in the trial of Derek Chauvin, the fired police officer charged in George Floyd’s death. 

Under questioning by prosecutor Steve Schleicher, Arradondo emphasized that the department values treating others with dignity and respect. When asked to explain the department’s goal of “serving with compassion,” Arradondo said: “It means to understand and authentically accept that we see our neighbors as ourselves.”

“We value one another,” he said. “We see our community as necessary for our existence.”    

Arradondo was also asked to described the department’s approach to de-escalation, which he said is about “time, options and resources so we can stabilize a situation safely and peacefully.” He read from the department’s de-escalation policy, which requires officers to seek to minimize the use of physical force.

Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo testifies in the trial of Derek Chauvin on Monday, April 5, 2021.

Court TV/pool via WCCO


Arradondo had not yet been asked about Chauvin’s actions before court recessed for a lunch break, but he is expected to testify that Chauvin’s use of force against Floyd was excessive. 

In opening statements last week, prosecutor Jerry Blackwell said Arradondo will “not mince any words.”

“He’s very clear, he’ll be very decisive that this was excessive force,” Blackwell said.

Testimony resumed for a second week Monday morning with testimony from an emergency doctor who tried to save Floyd’s life.  

Two other members of the department took the stand last week and criticized Chauvin’s use of force. Chauvin’s supervising sergeant said force should have ended as soon as Floyd stopped resisting, and the high-ranking lieutenant who heads the homicide unit called Chauvin’s knee on Floyd’s neck “totally unnecessary” and “just uncalled for.” 


Lieutenant: Force against Floyd “uncalled for…

01:23

Chauvin, who was seen in disturbing videos kneeling on Floyd’s neck for more than nine minutes, is charged with second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. He has pleaded not guilty.  

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/live-updates/derek-chauvin-trial-george-floyd-death-2021-04-05/

The U.S. Capitol Police are struggling.

One officer was killed and another injured when a driver slammed into them at a barricade Friday afternoon. The attack comes after officers were overrun and injured when a violent mob overran the Capitol on Jan. 6, breaking through insufficient barriers and pushing their way to within steps of lawmakers. One officer died and another killed himself.

Scores of officers are considering early retirement, top leaders have resigned and those in office face increasing criticism. Security concerns over the events of the past four months may alter not only how the department operates, but also whether the historically public grounds can remain open.

CAPITOL POLICE IDENTIFY OFFICER KILLED IN ATTACK 

The head of the Capitol Police union said officers are “reeling” following the death on Friday of Officer Billy Evans, who was on the force for 18 years. He was struck at a Capitol entrance by a man who, according to investigators, suffered from delusions and suicidal thoughts.

Evans’ death comes after Officer Brian Sicknick, who was among hundreds of officers trying to fight off rioters without the necessary equipment or planning, died following the Jan. 6 riot. Officer Howard Liebengood died by suicide shortly afterward.

With the U.S. Capitol in the background, U.S. Capitol Police officers salute as procession carries the remains of a U.S. Capitol Police officer who was killed after a man rammed a car into two officers at a barricade outside the Capitol in Washington, Friday, April 2, 2021. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

Hundreds of officers are considering retirement or finding jobs elsewhere, union chair Gus Papathanasiou said in a statement. “They continue to work even as we rapidly approach a crisis in morale and force numbers,” he said, noting that officers are dealing with “massive amounts of forced overtime.”

Dozens of officers were injured on Jan. 6 and others have been held out of work during an internal investigation into the department’s response, including the officer who fatally shot a 35-year-old woman attempting to climb through a broken window as she and others massed at a barricaded doorway. That’s further depleted a force that has more than 200 vacant positions, roughly 10% of its authorized force level.

In the months since the insurrection, many officers have routinely worked 12-hour days or longer to protect the building during Biden’s Jan. 20 inauguration and impeachment proceedings against former President Donald Trump.

CAPITOL SEES SECOND DEADLY ATTACK IN THREE MONTHS ADDING TO BUILDING’S GROWING LIST OF VIOLENT EVENTS 

“This rips the scab off and continues to provide a level of uncertainty and worry about the workplace and what’s happening there,” said Rep. Tim Ryan, an Ohio Democrat who chairs a subcommittee overseeing Capitol Police funding. “And I think this is very personal for so many of us who have come to really love and respect the Capitol Police even more than we already had, because of what they did on Jan. 6, and then immediately turning it around to make sure that the inauguration was safe.”

Acting Chief Yogananda Pittman received a vote of no confidence from the union in February, reflecting widespread distrust among the rank and file. Pittman was assistant chief in charge of intelligence during the riot and has admitted she did not see an FBI assessment the day before warning of “war” at the Capitol.

Steven Sund, who resigned in January as the agency’s chief amid scrutiny over whether the police force was adequately prepared for the riot, told The Associated Press that officers he had spoken to were “on edge.”

U.S. Capitol Police officers investigate near a car that crashed into a barrier on Capitol Hill near the Senate side of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Friday, April 2, 2021. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

The grief and crises that have engulfed the Capitol Police are also part of broader social forces that have tested the country, Sund said.

“There’s the impact of the pandemic on the American psyche,” Sund said. “There’s a lot of stuff in social media and a lot of action in reference to the actions of law enforcement. Law enforcement have been attacked in cities around the country. So there’s just a lot of things gearing up that make 2020, 2021 a little unique.”

The Capitol Police are not a typical law enforcement agency. The roughly 2,000 officers are responsible solely for protecting Congress — its members, visitors and facilities, an area of about 16 acres.

The department dates back to the early 1800s, after President John Quincy Adams asked that a police force be established to help protect the building following incidents there. Now they have an operating budget of $460 million.

The driver in Friday’s incident, 25-year-old Noah Green, was shot by officers shortly after emerging from the vehicle wielding a knife, authorities said. Green died later at a hospital. There is no known connection between the insurrection and Green, who described himself in online posts as being under government thought control and being watched.

New concrete barriers are in place around the checkpoint where Evans and a colleague were standing guard north of the Capitol. But the attack underscores that the Capitol will always be a target, said retired Lt. Gen. Russel Honoré, who chaired a task force that made several security recommendations following the insurrection.

Acting chief of the U.S. Capitol Police Yogananda Pittman listens during a news conference after a car crashed into a barrier on Capitol Hill near the Senate side of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Friday, April 2, 2021.(AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

“It is the most important building in America, because it’s the seat of our democracy,” Honoré told ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday. “If that building and the people in it don’t function, we no longer have democracy. And whatever price we have to pay to protect it, we need to do it.”

The task force called for a renewed push to fill the 233 open positions on the force and for Congress to fund 350 new jobs and new fencing systems and other infrastructure. The task force also wants Congress to give the Capitol Police chief new authority to seek National Guard support in a crisis. Sund has alleged that leaders on the three-member Capitol Police Board delayed his calls for Guard help on Jan. 6, which former members of the board have denied.

Papathanasiou, the union chair, said he supported Honoré’s recommendations and had met with him and his team Thursday, the day before Evans’ death.

“As I explained to him, these improvements are critical, but our first priority has to be retaining our existing officers,” Papathanasiou said. “There are immediate steps Congress can take to address this.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Rep. Jennifer Wexton, a Virginia Democrat, has been in touch with Liebengood’s family since his death. She called for a program to encourage “peer-to-peer” discussions between officers about the trauma they had incurred separate from mental health professionals called in to meet with officers.

“I just want to make sure we’re taking care of the Capitol Police officers, because that’s the one constant in all of this,” she said. “Whatever we do, the first order of business is not some physical structure, it’s making sure we’re taking care of the officers.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/latest-attack-pushes-us-capitol-police-further-toward-crisis

The report said businesses reopening should use a number of strategies to prevent virus transmission, including enforcement of masking, maintaining 6 feet of physical distancing between people, reducing indoor occupancy, prioritizing outdoor seating, improving building ventilation and staying home when ill.

Source Article from https://www.chicagotribune.com/coronavirus/ct-coronavirus-cdc-bar-illinois-covid-outbreak-20210405-uqztgztv6fhdtjrb275uw7ulpy-story.html

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis gestures as he stands with state and local officials during a news conference Sunday at the Manatee County Emergency Management office in Palmetto, Fla.

Chris O’Meara/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Chris O’Meara/AP

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis gestures as he stands with state and local officials during a news conference Sunday at the Manatee County Emergency Management office in Palmetto, Fla.

Chris O’Meara/AP

Manatee County in Florida was under a state of emergency over the weekend and more than 300 homes were ordered evacuated because of a leak at a wastewater reservoir.

A significant leak was discovered Friday at the wastewater pond located at Piney Point, a former phosphate plant.

Officials had warned about the potential for the reservoir’s collapse, flooding nearby areas.

Manatee’s Public Safety Department alerted residents Friday and Saturday, urging them to leave immediately.

Authorities are now working to drain water from the reservoir and empty it into the bay at Port Manatee to lessen the risks of a collapse.

Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency over the county Saturday. He said in a press conference Sunday that the water being dumped wasn’t radioactive and that it’s primarily salt water “mixed with legacy process water and stormwater runoff.”

The Florida Department of Environmental Protection said the water “meets water quality standards for marine waters with the exception of pH, total phosphorus, total nitrogen and total ammonia nitrogen. It is slightly acidic, but not at a level that is expected to be a concern.”

DeSantis said officials are working to bring in additional pumps to drain the reservoir and are pumping out 33 million gallons per day.

As The Associated Press noted, the ponds “sit in stacks of phosphogypsum, a solid radioactive byproduct from manufacturing fertilizer.”

Officials are working to prevent a collapse but Scott Hopes, Manatee’s acting county administrator, said attempts to plug the leak with rocks and other earth materials have failed.

The issue with the plant isn’t new. According to Hopes, “As you know, this issue has been ongoing for a couple of decades.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/04/04/984301265/state-of-emergency-evacuations-in-florida-county-over-wastewater-pond-leak

The country is also a key Western ally, and reports of Prince Hamzah’s detention raised fears that the wider region could be destabilised. However, regional powers and Western allies, including the US and UK, have all voiced support for the king.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-56637430

On March 11, Delta Air Lines dedicated a building at its Atlanta headquarters to Andrew Young, the civil rights leader and former mayor. At the ceremony, Mr. Young spoke of the restrictive voting rights bill that Republicans were rushing through the Georgia state legislature. Then, after the speeches, Mr. Young’s daughter, Andrea, a prominent activist herself, cornered Delta’s chief executive, Ed Bastian.

“I told him how important it was to oppose this law,” she said.

For Mr. Bastian, it was an early warning that the issue of voting rights might soon ensnare Delta in another national dispute. Over the past five years, corporations have taken political stands like never before, often in response to the extreme policies of former President Donald J. Trump.

After Mr. Trump’s equivocating response to the white nationalist violence in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017, Ken Frazier, the Black chief executive of Merck, resigned from a presidential advisory group, prompting dozens of other top executives to distance themselves from the president. Last year, after the killing of George Floyd, hundreds of companies expressed solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement.

But for corporations, the dispute over voting rights is different. An issue that both political parties see as a priority is not easily addressed with statements of solidarity and donations. Taking a stand on voting rights legislation thrusts companies into partisan politics and pits them against Republicans who have proven willing to raise taxes and enact onerous regulations on companies that cross them politically.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/05/business/voting-rights-ceos.html

Then Sen.-elect Joe Biden and his first wife, Neilia, cut his 30th-birthday cake at a party in Wilmington, Del., in 1972 as their sons, Beau (left) and Hunter, look on. Neilia and their daughter, Naomi, died in a car crash that year. Beau and Hunter were seriously injured but survived.

Bettmann Archive


hide caption

toggle caption

Bettmann Archive

Then Sen.-elect Joe Biden and his first wife, Neilia, cut his 30th-birthday cake at a party in Wilmington, Del., in 1972 as their sons, Beau (left) and Hunter, look on. Neilia and their daughter, Naomi, died in a car crash that year. Beau and Hunter were seriously injured but survived.

Bettmann Archive

At its heart, Hunter Biden’s new memoir, Beautiful Things, is a story of addiction.

Biden, the 51-year-old son of the president, writes that he first bought crack cocaine at age 18. He first fell in love with alcohol in high school and started drinking heavily after work in his 20s. “I always could drink five times more than anyone else,” he writes.

He has been in and out of rehab numerous times over the last two decades and has had long periods of sobriety between relapses.

It’s also a story about a family’s love and loss. Biden was 2 years old when his mother and sister died in a car crash. Hunter and his brother, Beau, were seriously injured but survived.

Biden writes that his addictions entered a particularly dark phase after Beau died of brain cancer in 2015. It got to the point where in an intervention in early 2019, his father held him in a bear hug, saying, “I don’t know what to do.”

Hunter Biden says his wife, Melissa, got his life under control shortly after they met later that year.

Hunter Biden, at the time serving as board chairman of World Food Program USA, with then-Vice President Joe Biden in 2016. Hunter Biden says his addictions worsened after his brother Beau’s death in 2015.

Teresa Kroeger/Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Teresa Kroeger/Getty Images

Hunter Biden, at the time serving as board chairman of World Food Program USA, with then-Vice President Joe Biden in 2016. Hunter Biden says his addictions worsened after his brother Beau’s death in 2015.

Teresa Kroeger/Getty Images

In an interview with NPR’s Scott Simon airing on Morning Edition, Biden credits his family’s unflinching love for his survival.

There was “never a moment that they weren’t trying to save me,” Biden says.

He also addresses his well-paid work for the Ukrainian gas company Burisma, which began in 2014 while this father, Joe Biden, was vice president. Former President Donald Trump portrayed it as a corrupt deal that involved Joe Biden. Trump’s effort to pressure Ukraine to investigate the Bidens led to Trump’s first impeachment.

An investigation led by Senate Republicans found that Hunter Biden’s position on the company’s board raised concerns about a possible conflict of interest but concluded “the extent to which” his role “affected U.S. policy toward Ukraine is not clear.” Biden says he did nothing unethical.

He tells NPR that it “was certainly not wise in this political environment to create that perception” of corruption “and that’s why I would not do it again.”

Here are excerpts from the interview:

Can you tell us some of those things that you tell yourself when you were drinking?

One of the things about being stuck in your addiction — there wasn’t much that I think any alcoholic, when they’re drinking, is rationally thinking. And that’s the reason why it’s such a hard thing to pull yourself out of.

I talk about this in the book when my dad and my mom asked me to come down. And I was staying in a motel room somewhere in Connecticut, and I walk into the house and there they are with my daughters, Naomi, Finnegan and Maisy, and my niece and nephew, Natalie and Hunter, and two counselors. You know, my immediate reaction was to run. My dad grabbed me and he held onto me and put me in a bear hug and just said, “I don’t know what to do.” And even with all of that love, the feeling that overcame that love was my need for another hit, which is a hard thing to live with.

But that’s what recovery is about — is getting honest with yourself and understanding the power of that drug or power of the addiction.

Your father said to you when that happened, in your recollection in the book, he says, “I don’t know what else to do. I’m so scared. Tell me what to do.”

Yeah, I think there’s so many people that love someone that’s struggling with addiction. I mean, we are struggling with two pandemics right now, the coronavirus but also a pandemic of addiction, which ultimately I hope we start to talk about as a mental health issue rather than just a criminal justice issue.

You were on the board of a Ukrainian energy company while your father was involved in making U.S. policy toward Ukraine. Now, an investigation by Senate Republicans didn’t find any wrongdoing or improper influence, but was it a wise thing to do?

I was on about a dozen boards before I joined the board of Burisma. I had an expertise in corporate governance. I was a lawyer for Boies Schiller Flexner, which is one of the best law firms in the world. That’s how I came to the job.

But even you note your last name helped.

Oh, I think that in every instance it is important for me to make that clear and to be honest about that. But, you know, I worked hard to graduate Yale Law School. I had a business. And at the end of the day, the question was whether it was wise. Well, what I know now is that it was certainly not wise in this political environment to create that perception, and that’s why I would not do it again.

May I ask how much you got paid?

I think it’s reported. I was paid handsomely. I don’t want to say the exact number right now because I don’t want to get it wrong, but I was paid very well.

Because there are sections in the book when you describe that you would be ensconced for weeks in hotel suites, cooking and doing crack, while your dealers would clear out the minibar, order room service all on your tab. How did you afford that?

Well, I had a successful business beyond Burisma. And the fact of the matter is that addiction hits hard and fast. And if I hadn’t of pulled out of my tailspin, I wouldn’t have been able to continue. But it wasn’t just hotel suites. I spent a lot more time in $39-a-night motel rooms up and down I-95.

Do you worry about falling back?

Constantly. I have a healthy fear of relapse. It’s too much a part of my story. I’m only one choice away from being back exactly where I was. And that’s the conundrum for everyone that’s in recovery. It never goes away. It only hides.

Are you afraid of hurting your father?

I’ve never been afraid of hurting my dad in the sense that any mistakes that I’ve made would rupture his love for me. But I still am constantly aware of how much pain I caused. …

This is the reason I wrote the book, truly the reason I wrote the book, is that it’ll give hopefully some people hope. Give them some hope that they don’t have to remain locked in that prison. And I don’t just mean the people that are stuck at the bottom of the well like I was, but the people that stand at the top of that well and realize unless we go down with the lantern, he’s never going to find his way out. But that’s a dark and dangerous journey for them. And it was for my family. But their light was never not seeking me out. Never a moment, never a moment that they weren’t trying to save me.

Samantha Balaban and Ed McNulty produced and edited the audio interview.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/04/05/983385027/hunter-biden-says-his-family-never-gave-up-on-him

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg on Sunday defended the breadth of President Joe Biden‘s American Jobs Plan, a $2.2 trillion bill that aims to improve U.S. infrastructure and revitalize the economy as it works to recover from COVID-19.

The proposal, which Biden unveiled last week, was met with criticism from Republican and some Democratic lawmakers over its size. While conservatives, such as Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, argued against the plan because of its spending goals, progressives, such as New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, suggested that additional funds are necessary to truly realize the bill’s intended impacts.

Speaking to ABC News host George Stephanopoulos during an appearance on the network’s This Week program, Buttigieg acknowledged the emerging partisan divide. A Democrat and former presidential candidate, Buttigieg served as mayor of South Bend, Indiana, for eight years before assuming his leadership role at the Department of Transportation under Biden’s administration.

“There are obviously a lot of people on the other side of the aisle saying, ‘This is too big, too bold.’ And then, some of our friends on our side of the aisle are saying, ‘It should be even bolder,'” said Buttigieg, referencing the competing critiques from prominent congressional figures in both major parties.

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg responded to criticisms of President Joe Biden’s infrastructure bill on Sunday. Above, Buttigieg speaks during an event titled “Transforming Rail in Virginia” at the Amtrak-VRE station in Alexandria, Virginia, on March 30, 2021.
Win McNamee/Getty Images

“Again, that’s a natural part of this conversation and this process,” he continued. “But let me stress, this is the biggest investment in American job creation proposed or, if achieved, since World War II. This is a huge deal.”

Buttigieg pointed out that the American Jobs Plan seeks to better various overarching elements of national infrastructure, beyond the traditional conception of the term. In addition to rebuilding roads and bridges, the legislative proposal outlines federal objectives to improve broadband access, ensure drinking water supplies are uncontaminated, expand workforce development efforts, further an ongoing transition toward clean energy, and revamp ports, waterways and airports.

“What it would mean to have 10,000 bridges around America replaced, what it would mean — or improved — what it would mean to get broadband out to every single American, what it would mean to have zero lead pipes remaining in those water service lines is absolutely enormous, as is that 19 million job figure,” the transportation secretary said.

Ocasio-Cortez has urged an expansion of Biden’s infrastructure bill on more than one occasion since its recent unveiling. Her critiques have predominantly focused on the cost, noting that more funding might allow the proposal to achieve its goals.

“If we’re looking at ideals and what we think is the actual investment that can create tens of millions of good union jobs in this country, that can shore up our health care, our infrastructure, our housing—and doing it in a way that draws down our carbon emissions, to help us get in line with the IPCC standards—we’re talking about, realistically, $10 trillion over 10 years,” the congresswoman said during a Wednesday interview with MSNBC political commentator Rachel Maddow.

This is not nearly enough. The important context here is that it’s $2.25T spread out over 10 years.

For context, the COVID package was $1.9T for this year *alone,* with some provisions lasting 2 years.

Needs to be way bigger. https://t.co/eTQ7cxuTzF

— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) March 30, 2021

She highlighted similar concerns about the bill on Twitter the previous day, suggesting that its logistical strategies were “not nearly enough” to support the changes it summarized.

“This is not nearly enough. The important context here is that it’s $2.25T spread out over 10 years,” the representative wrote. “For context, the COVID package was $1.9T for this year *alone,* with some provisions lasting 2 years. Needs to be way bigger.”

Newsweek reached out to Ocasio-Cortez’s office for further comment, but did not receive a reply in time for publication.

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/pete-buttigieg-responds-aoc-calling-22t-biden-infrastructure-plan-not-nearly-enough-1580974

The trial of former cop Derek Chauvin for the murder of George Floyd has left Minneapolis “on edge,” Rep. Ilhan Omar said Sunday.

During an appearance on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Omar, the city’s congressional representative, told host Jake Tapper that the trial’s start has re-opened the emotional wound from Floyd’s Memorial Day 2020 death.

“It’s been re-traumatizing,” said Omar, a Democrat. “It’s been really hard. I’ve tried to avoid watching. I know a lot of us here in Minneapolis have done that. … You also want to know the details and hear from the witnesses.

“I think the one part that’s stayed with me is the fact that everyone who took the witness stand said they felt helpless.”

Floyd, 46, was stopped by police after allegedly passing a bogus $20 bill at a Minneapolis store.

While attempting to arrest Floyd, who was black, one of the responding officers, Derek Chauvin, who is white, knelt on Floyd’s neck for over nine minutes, even as he gasped that he could not breathe, pleaded for his life and eventually became unresponsive.

Floyd’s caught-on-video death launched coast-to-coast protests — and, sometimes, violent unrest — against police brutality and racial injustice.

A poster with George Floyd’s picture and a sign reads that “I can’t Breathe” hang from a security fence outside the Hennepin County Government Center on March 30, 2021.

KEREM YUCEL/AFP via Getty Images

Posters of George Floyd are zip tied to the security fence around the heavily secured Hennepin County Courthouse during the trial of Derek Chauvin.

Glen Stubbe, Star Tribune via Getty Images

Floyd died while being taken into Minneapolis Police custody.

Facebook

3

View Slideshow

Nearly a year later, the ongoing trial of the since-fired Chauvin, 45, on charges of murder and manslaughter has revived tension in the city, Omar said.

“The community is on edge,” she said Sunday when asked about the possibility of Chauvin not being convicted. “We have seen justice not delivered in our community for many years.

“I think that there is a lot of confidence in [Minnesota] Attorney General Keith Ellison and the prosecutors in this case, but we are all eagerly awaiting to see how this trial shakes out,” Omar added.

Derek Chauvin knelt on Floyd’s neck for over nine minutes, even as he gasped that he could not breathe, pleaded for his life and eventually became unresponsive.

Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office via AP, File

Derek Chauvin knelt on Floyd’s neck for over nine minutes, even as he gasped that he could not breathe, pleaded for his life and eventually became unresponsive.

© Darnella Frazier/Courtesy Facebook via ZUMA Wire

The Hennepin County Government Center is seen the day before open statements in the trial of former police Derek Chauvin.

REUTERS/Nicholas Pfosi

3

View Slideshow

The lawmaker, however, accused Chauvin’s defense of attacking Floyd’s character in the trial’s first week.

“It’s been really horrendous to watch the defense put George Floyd on trial instead of the former police officer who’s charged with his murder,” she said.

The trial kicked off last Monday and is expected to last several more weeks.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/04/04/derek-chauvin-trial-has-minneapolis-on-edge-says-ilhan-omar/

Johnson & Johnson will oversee all aspects of vaccine production at the Emergent BioSolutions facility in Baltimore. The Biden administration and the Department of Health and Human Services facilitated the change in management.

Stephen Zenner/Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Stephen Zenner/Getty Images

Johnson & Johnson will oversee all aspects of vaccine production at the Emergent BioSolutions facility in Baltimore. The Biden administration and the Department of Health and Human Services facilitated the change in management.

Stephen Zenner/Getty Images

The Biden administration has facilitated for Johnson & Johnson to assume “full responsibility” of a production plant after a mishap botched likely millions of doses-worth of COVID-19 vaccine.

The company has pledged to deliver 100 million doses by the end of May. But on March 31, J&J announced its quality control process had detected one batch of ingredients for its single-dose vaccine, produced by Janssen Pharmaceuticals, did not meet the necessary standards at the Emergent BioSolutions facility in Baltimore.

The facility had been working to produce ingredients for both the Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca vaccines and had mixed up ingredients from the two vaccines, according to The New York Times and The Washington Post. The papers reported the mix-up ruined a batch equivalent to about 15 million doses.

A senior government health official said the Department of Health and Human Services and the Food and Drug Administration have now determined it is “most appropriate” for the facility to produce only one vaccine.

J&J confirmed over the weekend that it will take a more hands-on approach at the Baltimore facility, and will increase “the number of manufacturing, quality and technical operations personnel to work with the Company specialists already at Emergent.”

The Emergent facility has been producing one substance that goes into the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, but the facility has not yet received authorization from the FDA. No vaccine it has produced has been used in U.S. vaccination efforts so far.

Had this portion of ingredients been approved it would have contributed to vaccine production. Instead, the batch was disposed of.

Emergent was also producing a substance for AstraZeneca’s vaccine — a vaccine that so far has not been authorized for use in the U.S. But following the incident, it will no longer use the facility to produce ingredients for the AstraZeneca vaccine. The government is working with AstraZeneca to relocate that production.

“J&J continues to work through manufacturing issues with the FDA, and no product will come out of the Baltimore facility without authorization by FDA,” a senior health official told NPR. “This is a critical part of ensuring quality and safety of vaccine product.”

Emergent said the quality control systems in place worked as planned and it will continue to work toward FDA approval.

“There are rigorous quality checks throughout our vaccine manufacturing processes, and through these checks a single batch of drug substance was identified that did not meet specifications and our rigorous quality standards,” an Emergent statement said. “Discarding a batch of bulk drug substance, while disappointing, does occasionally happen during vaccine manufacturing, which is a complex and multi-step biological process.”

Since it was granted emergency use authorization on Feb. 27, Johnson & Johnson has delivered 8.6 million doses of its vaccine, of which more than 4 million have been administered, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Unlike the other vaccines, it is a single-shot and requires standard refrigeration temperatures instead of hyper-cold storage.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/04/04/984274691/johnson-johnson-to-oversee-vaccine-production-at-baltimore-facility

The trial of former cop Derek Chauvin for the murder of George Floyd has left Minneapolis “on edge,” Rep. Ilhan Omar said Sunday.

During an appearance on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Omar, the city’s congressional representative, told host Jake Tapper that the trial’s start has re-opened the emotional wound from Floyd’s Memorial Day 2020 death.

“It’s been re-traumatizing,” said Omar, a Democrat. “It’s been really hard. I’ve tried to avoid watching. I know a lot of us here in Minneapolis have done that. … You also want to know the details and hear from the witnesses.

“I think the one part that’s stayed with me is the fact that everyone who took the witness stand said they felt helpless.”

Floyd, 46, was stopped by police after allegedly passing a bogus $20 bill at a Minneapolis store.

While attempting to arrest Floyd, who was black, one of the responding officers, Derek Chauvin, who is white, knelt on Floyd’s neck for over nine minutes, even as he gasped that he could not breathe, pleaded for his life and eventually became unresponsive.

Floyd’s caught-on-video death launched coast-to-coast protests — and, sometimes, violent unrest — against police brutality and racial injustice.

A poster with George Floyd’s picture and a sign reads that “I can’t Breathe” hang from a security fence outside the Hennepin County Government Center on March 30, 2021.

KEREM YUCEL/AFP via Getty Images

Posters of George Floyd are zip tied to the security fence around the heavily secured Hennepin County Courthouse during the trial of Derek Chauvin.

Glen Stubbe, Star Tribune via Getty Images

Floyd died while being taken into Minneapolis Police custody.

Facebook

3

View Slideshow

Nearly a year later, the ongoing trial of the since-fired Chauvin, 45, on charges of murder and manslaughter has revived tension in the city, Omar said.

“The community is on edge,” she said Sunday when asked about the possibility of Chauvin not being convicted. “We have seen justice not delivered in our community for many years.

“I think that there is a lot of confidence in [Minnesota] Attorney General Keith Ellison and the prosecutors in this case, but we are all eagerly awaiting to see how this trial shakes out,” Omar added.

Derek Chauvin knelt on Floyd’s neck for over nine minutes, even as he gasped that he could not breathe, pleaded for his life and eventually became unresponsive.

Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office via AP, File

Derek Chauvin knelt on Floyd’s neck for over nine minutes, even as he gasped that he could not breathe, pleaded for his life and eventually became unresponsive.

© Darnella Frazier/Courtesy Facebook via ZUMA Wire

The Hennepin County Government Center is seen the day before open statements in the trial of former police Derek Chauvin.

REUTERS/Nicholas Pfosi

3

View Slideshow

The lawmaker, however, accused Chauvin’s defense of attacking Floyd’s character in the trial’s first week.

“It’s been really horrendous to watch the defense put George Floyd on trial instead of the former police officer who’s charged with his murder,” she said.

The trial kicked off last Monday and is expected to last several more weeks.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/04/04/derek-chauvin-trial-has-minneapolis-on-edge-says-ilhan-omar/

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg on Sunday defended the breadth of President Joe Biden‘s American Jobs Plan, a $2.2 trillion bill that aims to improve U.S. infrastructure and revitalize the economy as it works to recover from COVID-19.

The proposal, which Biden unveiled last week, was met with criticism from Republican and some Democratic lawmakers over its size. While conservatives, such as Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, argued against the plan because of its spending goals, progressives, such as New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, suggested that additional funds are necessary to truly realize the bill’s intended impacts.

Speaking to ABC News host George Stephanopoulos during an appearance on the network’s This Week program, Buttigieg acknowledged the emerging partisan divide. A Democrat and former presidential candidate, Buttigieg served as mayor of South Bend, Indiana, for eight years before assuming his leadership role at the Department of Transportation under Biden’s administration.

“There are obviously a lot of people on the other side of the aisle saying, ‘This is too big, too bold.’ And then, some of our friends on our side of the aisle are saying, ‘It should be even bolder,'” said Buttigieg, referencing the competing critiques from prominent congressional figures in both major parties.

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg responded to criticisms of President Joe Biden’s infrastructure bill on Sunday. Above, Buttigieg speaks during an event titled “Transforming Rail in Virginia” at the Amtrak-VRE station in Alexandria, Virginia, on March 30, 2021.
Win McNamee/Getty Images

“Again, that’s a natural part of this conversation and this process,” he continued. “But let me stress, this is the biggest investment in American job creation proposed or, if achieved, since World War II. This is a huge deal.”

Buttigieg pointed out that the American Jobs Plan seeks to better various overarching elements of national infrastructure, beyond the traditional conception of the term. In addition to rebuilding roads and bridges, the legislative proposal outlines federal objectives to improve broadband access, ensure drinking water supplies are uncontaminated, expand workforce development efforts, further an ongoing transition toward clean energy, and revamp ports, waterways and airports.

“What it would mean to have 10,000 bridges around America replaced, what it would mean — or improved — what it would mean to get broadband out to every single American, what it would mean to have zero lead pipes remaining in those water service lines is absolutely enormous, as is that 19 million job figure,” the transportation secretary said.

Ocasio-Cortez has urged an expansion of Biden’s infrastructure bill on more than one occasion since its recent unveiling. Her critiques have predominantly focused on the cost, noting that more funding might allow the proposal to achieve its goals.

“If we’re looking at ideals and what we think is the actual investment that can create tens of millions of good union jobs in this country, that can shore up our health care, our infrastructure, our housing—and doing it in a way that draws down our carbon emissions, to help us get in line with the IPCC standards—we’re talking about, realistically, $10 trillion over 10 years,” the congresswoman said during a Wednesday interview with MSNBC political commentator Rachel Maddow.

This is not nearly enough. The important context here is that it’s $2.25T spread out over 10 years.

For context, the COVID package was $1.9T for this year *alone,* with some provisions lasting 2 years.

Needs to be way bigger. https://t.co/eTQ7cxuTzF

— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) March 30, 2021

She highlighted similar concerns about the bill on Twitter the previous day, suggesting that its logistical strategies were “not nearly enough” to support the changes it summarized.

“This is not nearly enough. The important context here is that it’s $2.25T spread out over 10 years,” the representative wrote. “For context, the COVID package was $1.9T for this year *alone,* with some provisions lasting 2 years. Needs to be way bigger.”

Newsweek reached out to Ocasio-Cortez’s office for further comment, but did not receive a reply in time for publication.

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/pete-buttigieg-responds-aoc-calling-22t-biden-infrastructure-plan-not-nearly-enough-1580974

Manatee County in Florida was under a state of emergency over the weekend and more than 300 homes were ordered evacuated over a leak at a wastewater reservoir.

A significant leak was discovered Friday at the wastewater pond located at Piney Point, a former phosphate plant.

Officials had warned about the potential for the reservoir’s collapse, flooding nearby areas.

Manatee’s Public Safety Department alerted residents Friday and Saturday, urging them to leave immediately.

Authorities are now working to drain water from the reservoir and empty into the bay at Port Manatee to lessen the risks of a collapse.

Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency over the county Saturday. He said in a press conference Sunday the water being dumped wasn’t radioactive, saying it’s primarily salt water “mixed with legacy process water and stormwater runoff.”

The Florida Department of Environmental Protection says the water “meets water quality standards for marine waters with the exception of pH, total phosphorus, total nitrogen and total ammonia nitrogen. It is slightly acidic, but not at a level that is expected to be a concern.”

DeSantis said that officials are working to bring in additional pumps to drain the reservoir and are pumping out 33 million gallons per day.

As The Associated Press notes, the ponds “sit in stacks of phosphogypsum, a solid radioactive byproduct from manufacturing fertilizer.”

Officials are working to prevent a collapse but according to Scott Hopes, Manatee’s acting county administrator, attempts to plug the leak with rocks and other earth materials have failed.

The issue with the plant isn’t new. According to Hopes, “As you know, this issue has been ongoing for a couple of decades.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/04/04/984301265/state-of-emergency-evacuations-in-florida-county-over-wastewater-pond-leak

A 32-year-old woman was found shot to death inside a car. A 21-year-old, a 17-year-old, a 16-year-old, a 15-year-old and a 4-year-old were also shot. The victims were transported to an area hospital, their condition is listed as stable.

Source Article from https://www.wbrc.com/2021/04/05/person-killed-multiple-others-shot-patton-park/