Teen brutally murdered in South Carolina; two minors are the suspects

In South Carolina, Two teenagers, ages 15 and 16, have been charged with murder following the violent death of Ka’Niyah Baker, a 13-year-old girl who was beaten, stabbed and burned in a vacant house in Columbia. Police described the case as a “monstrous crime” that has shocked the community. Columbia Police Chief William “Skip” Holbrook explained at a news conference Saturday that Baker was found dead last Wednesday in an unoccupied home after a fire was reported there. “Brutal, atrocious, cruel, horrifying, monstrous and disturbing. “Those are the words I would use to describe this murder investigation,” he added. His disappearance had been reported days before, on January 12, and the last place where he was seen was about 30 kilometers from where his body was discovered. “The cause of death was not an accident,” said Richland County Coroner Naida Rutherford. “Ka’Niyah was brutally beaten, stabbed and subsequently burned.” Suspects with problematic backgrounds The two defendants, both minors, have a history of escapes and legal problems. One of them, 16 years old, had been reported missing the same day as Baker, after cutting off an ankle monitor that authorities in Georgia had imposed on her. This young woman also had a history of disorderly conduct and other minor crimes, according to police. The second suspect, 15 years old, She also had a history of running away and had been registered as a school dropout since December. Both teens lived in Columbia and had crossed paths with Baker, who authorities said shared a history of running away from home or foster care. A system under scrutiny The case has highlighted the failures of the child protection system, Holbrook said. “We have a lot of work to do with our young people. “This case is not only heartbreaking, but also reflects a deep desperation in our society,” said. The Fifth Circuit Solicitor, Byron Gipson, assured that they will seek justice in this case, although the motive behind the murder has not yet been determined. “It is not common to find a level of violence like this in minors. “It is deeply disturbing,” he added. Details prior to the discovery Ka’Niyah Baker, originally from Sumter, had been placed in a foster home in Columbia before her disappearance. When she was reported missing, authorities issued alerts warning that she was in danger. However, at that time he had already died, which caused confusion in the initial reports. Rutherford explained that the pamphlet issued about her disappearance was kept in circulation because it was hoped there was a possibility she was alive. “The description matched that of other missing young women, which led us to continue searching with hope,” said. Holbrook called the investigation one of the most difficult of his career. “The most alarming thing about this case is the lack of emotional reaction in the people involved.”. “It is something that deeply affects conscience,” he said. With information from Law&Crime. Keep reading:

CapCut closes in the United States after banning TikTok

This Sunday, January 19, marked a before and after in the American digital landscape. With the entry into force of a law that bans TikTok and? It has also affected the short video application, CapCut. Since hours before this Sunday, thousands of users encountered an unexpected message when trying to access their accounts in both applications: “Service not available.” This measure, endorsed by the Supreme Court, establishes the separation of these platforms from their parent company, ByteDance, as the only alternative to operate in the country. The veto expands: from TikTok to CapCut Although the initial focus of the legislation was on TikTok, its impact extended to CapCut. This had been launched in the United States in 2020 and over time gained millions of followers thanks to its integration with TikTok, allowing users to edit content and participate in viral trends with ease. The app offered an accessible experience on both mobile and desktop devices, consolidating itself as an essential tool for content creators. However, as of last Saturday night, January 18, Users in the United States began receiving the following message when trying to open CapCut: “Sorry, CapCut is not available at this time. A law has been passed banning CapCut in the United States. Unfortunately, that means you can’t use CapCut for now.” In a statement published on the social network X (Twitter) the same day, the CapCut team thanked users for their support and provided a contact email for those who wish to resolve problems related to their accounts. “We will do everything possible to resolve your request,” the company said. An uncertain future for TikTok and its users The TikTok ban affects millions of users and content creators in the US, as until now it had been a vibrant space for them. Shou Zi Chew, CEO of TikTok, expressed his gratitude to the community and reaffirmed his commitment to keeping the platform operational. “We will do everything in our power to ensure TikTok remains a rich and vibrant space. There is more to come,” he declared. Thank you for your support for CapCut. Please contact us at capcut.support@bytedance.com if your account becomes unavailable due to the ban. Our customer service team will reply as soon as possible, and will continue providing support after January 19. We will do our best to… — CapCut (@capcutapp) January 19, 2025 President Joe Biden, who will hand over to Donald Trump on January 20, He left the future of these applications in the hands of his successorwho, for his part, indicated in an interview with NBC News that he was considering granting a 90-day extension for TikTok, although he did not guarantee that this measure would also include CapCut. “The 90-day extension is something that will probably be done, because it is appropriate. We have to analyze it carefully. “It is a very important situation,” said the US president a few days ago. Reactions and consequences The ban of TikTok and CapCut in the United States marks a historic precedent as it is the first time that the federal government blocks digital applications at the national level. Although some see this measure as a defense of national security, others consider that it limits the digital freedom of users. Keep reading:

Progress in containment of wildfires in Southern California as winds weaken

Fires in the Los Angeles area have left at least 27 people deadhave destroyed more than 12,000 structures and left more than 60 square miles to ashes. The Palisades and Eaton wildfires continue this Saturday. The winds have been weakening, giving fire officials a much-deserved respite and easing some of the threats, so far. Nevertheless, The National Weather Service indicated that dangerous conditions are expected for next week. Additionally, officials noted that tens of thousands of people in Los Angeles County remain under evacuation orders. Curfews remained in effect for the areas affected by the Palisades and Eaton fires from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. For his part, heLos Angeles Mayor Karen Bass announced that civic leader Steve Soboroffformer police commissioner and advisor to the late former mayor Richard Riordan, to lead city’s rebuilding efforts after Palisades Fire as recovery director. The announcement comes a day after state lawmakers announced new proposals aimed at accelerating rebuilding and recovery efforts in Los Angeles County as thousands of people continue to be evacuated. “Steve Soboroff’s name is associated with hope,” Bass said. “It will recommend a comprehensive strategy for the city to rebuild and to accelerate the process. Accelerate is a very important word here. “We want to accelerate the return of residents, businesses, schools, non-profit organizations and parks”. He noted that no one is better prepared to create a reconstruction plan. “He knows our communities. He knows how to activate City Hall. “He has been at City Hall.” The expert said that he has a 10-point plan that will begin on his first day of servicereported CBS News. “It’s about the victims… It’s about restoring the community, because without community people are lost,” he said. To citizens criticizing the city’s actions in response to the fires, Soboroff explained the following: “If people want to get on the bus with us, let them get on. If you want to spend your time throwing embers now and next Tuesday when it’s windy doing that kind of thing, you better not get on our bus“. The mayor said she plans to sign several executive orders next week to speed up the recovery effort. “We are going to do everything we can to clear the way so that people can return home,” he said. Gavin Newsom issues order prohibiting tenant evictions The governor of California, Gavin Newsom issued an executive order preventing landlords from evicting tenants for housing survivors of the Los Angeles fires. “At a time when so many people have been suddenly displaced, we need more housing and shelter than ever,” Newsom said in a statement. “Opening your place of residence to help house those in need is not only encouraged and generous, it deserves protection.“. Although the order prohibits landlords from evicting tenants for housing one or more people displaced by the wildfires, it does not restrict them from enforcing other conditions of the lease. The governor’s office described the executive order as a temporary solution, set to expire on March 8. “These are extraordinary times,” Attorney General Rob Bonta said in a statement. “If you provide shelter to someone who has been affected by the Los Angeles wildfires, you should not be evicted. “To allow that to happen would be totally wrong.” California announced a series of legislative proposals aimed at helping Los Angeles County recover from the wildfires. The vast majority of the projects are aimed at protecting homeowners and renters affected by the flares that devastated an area of ​​more than 60 square miles in the last week. Keep reading:

Tourist accused of burning businesses in Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico, will remain detained in Missouri at least until next week

New York – Danielle Bertothy, the Missouri tourist accused of starting a fire that consumed several businesses in Cabo Rojo, Puerto Ricoright after New Year, She will remain detained in the aforementioned state at least until Wednesday of next week.. The El Nuevo Día report this Friday indicates that the Prosecutors in the case requested, through a motion, that the woman not be allowed to leave on bailafter leaving the island a few hours after the events. The 36-year-old defendant appeared yesterday at an initial hearing in the Court for the Eastern District of Missouri. headed by Judge Noelle C. Collins. The First Alert 4 report details thatThe woman arrived in the judge’s room handcuffed and wearing a sweatshirt with the phrase “Grateful Dead”the same one she had when she was arrested the day before. Bertothy responded sparingly to the judge’s questions without showing much emotion. Bertothy was arrested at her home in St. Peters by ATF agents. Bertothy, who is represented by attorney Justin Gelfand, waived the identity hearing. Gelfand asked that the hearing to determine whether or not he will be granted bail also be held in Missouri. The Prosecutor’s Office accepted the request, so it will be held on January 22. Cocaine and a firearm are seized in Bertothy’s home The motion presented by the federal prosecutor’s office in Puerto Rico indicates that Officers who raided Bertothy’s residence confiscated cocaine and a firearm.. The motion also specifies that Although the suspect has not confessed to the facts, she told agents that she had done some things that were not typical of her.. To support her request for preventive detention, prosecutor Corinne Cordero Romo stated in the judicial text that Bertothy represents a flight risk and a danger to the community. He argued that the woman left Puerto Rico shortly after the fire after leaving the Airbnb where she was supposed to stay until December 11. “Preventive detention is appropriate here because the defendant poured gasoline and set fire to a bar, store, restaurant and hotel with approximately 20 guests the day after New Year’s, endangering the lives of numerous people before fleeing the District of Puerto Rico”, stated the federal authorities. According to the document signed by Cordero Romo, “numerous factors favor the arrest, including the nature and circumstances of the accused crime, the weight of the evidence (which includes videos of the accused with a gas container in the bar shortly before the fire and walking towards the fire where he remains until the fire is lit) and the danger to the community.” The information that investigators have indicates that on January 2, at around 9:37 am, The accused asked a friend on the island to help her find someone to pick her up in the El Combate beach area. and transfer her to the airport that same day. A driver picked her up at approximately 11:28 am. According to the authorities, Security cameras at a fast food restaurant in the aforementioned municipality captured Bertothy wearing the same shoes as the person seen starting the fire. in other surveillance material. The incident at Bar Marea began around 8:30 pm on January 1when Bertothy arrived, already drunk, at the place. The woman ordered several drinks. But When he started behaving aggressively, the owners asked him to leave, which he refused.. After being called the first time, municipal police officers escorted the woman to the Airbnb where she was staying. However, she returned to the business 20 minutes later. “This time, the accused acted more aggressively, so the police were called again.. Finally, she left alone,” Cordero Romo revealed. At around 12:25 am, when they had already closed the business, Cameras captured a woman, who would be the accused, carrying a red container used to store gasoline in a behavior that is consistent with pouring the liquid. Immediately, the fire started with the person present. The suspect is then seen walking through the Marinera restaurant on her way back to her Airbnb. Researchers also have proof that the owner of the Airbnb had provided him with a generator with gasoline and a tourist tank in response to the general blackout reported on the island on December 31. “The host identified the red gasoline container in the video as having the same characteristics as the one she gave to the defendant, and identified the person seen in the recording as the defendant,” the motion details. The owners and employees of businesses in the area were the ones who initially identified Bertothy as the cause of the fire based on the recorded images of the altercation in Bar Marea and the subsequent material from surveillance cameras. The affected establishments were: Luichy’s Seaside Hotel, Marinera Restaurant, Bar Marea and Artesanías Juavia. These are located in the PR-3301 highway. Ángel Luis Marrero Negrón, owner of the inn, rents the other three establishments. According to preliminary calculations that he provided to the media, Losses were estimated at $500,000.. Agents from the ATF (Agency for Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives) raided the tourist’s home on January 7. At that time, she was not arrested. The foreigner left Puerto Rico on a Southwest Airlines flight which he took from the Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport. He arrived in St. Louis on January 3. That day, the agents had gone to the woman’s home to interview her. Bertothy’s arrest was reported after the Puerto Rico Federal Prosecutor’s Office accused her of arson. He faces between 5 and 20 years in prison if convicted.. This case echoed among Puerto Ricans in the diaspora who, outraged, began to share the images of the events that circulated on social networks. The Puerto Rican councilor of St. Louis, Daniela Velázquez, sent a letter to the employers of the woman at HLK Agency to take disciplinary action against her in view of the seriousness of the allegations. Although the woman was suspended from her job, there are no reports so far that she has been fired from her position at … Read more

Hearing for new sentence in case of the Menéndez brothers postponed until March 20 due to fires in Los Angeles

Los Angeles – The Los Angeles prosecutor’s office reported this Friday that The hearing to consider a new sentence in the case of brothers Erik and Lyle Menéndez will be postponed to March 20 and 21due to the devastating fires. The Postponement of the hearing, originally scheduled for January 30 and 31, “is due to the impact of the recent forest fires in the parties’ extensive preparations for the hearings,” added the brief signed by Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan J. Hochman. This hearing, which had its first motion on November 25seeks pave the way to change convictions and prison sentences for the murder of his parents in 1989 after existing Newly discovered evidence that both were victims of child sexual abuse by their fatherJosé Menendez. Among them, a letter written by Erik Menéndez admitting to another family member that he was being abusedas well as the testimony of a worker from the father’s company who alleges that he was abused by José Menéndez. The brothers were found guilty in a second trial of the murder of Kitty and José Menéndez at his Beverly Hills home on August 20, 1989, in a controversial case in which The young people reported having suffered sexual abuse by their father. After 35 years in prison, The brothers regained public attention due to the hit Netflix series ‘Monsters: The Story of Lyle and Erik Menéndez‘, to which was added a documentary and the commotion of a new generation that looks with different eyes at those who were previously seen as ruthless killers. Keep reading: Who are the Menéndez brothers accused of murdering their parents in 1989, whose story was recreated in “Monsters” Netflix turned the Menéndez brothers’ house into a tourist spot

Why what we understand as “normal” development in children could be wrong

Image source, Getty Images photo caption, Due to the immense variety of components that affect the growth of a human being, it is very difficult to define something as “normal.” Item information Author, Samuel Forbes and Prerna Aneja Author’s title, The Conversation* January 14, 2025 For parents, caregivers and teachers, it is often tempting to base our understanding of a child’s development on what we believe is “normal.” We often do it without thinking, when we describe a child as “doing well” in one subject and “falling behind” in another. Whenever we make this kind of comparison, we have some kind of mental reference point in our heads: for example, a toddler should be able to climb furniture at age 2. Increasingly, child development researchers argue that the same is true in their field, the study of how behaviors and skills such as language develop. Many of the studies that claim to investigate child development, whether implicitly or explicitly, claim that their findings are universal. There may be many reasons for this. Sometimes there is a temptation to exaggerate conclusions, sometimes it can be the way readers or the media interpret the findings. The result is that what has been found in a group of children is then taken as the standard, the criterion against which future research is compared. Academic biases Image source, Getty Images photo caption, Most of the existing academic research on child development comes from Western countries. Most research on child development comes from wealthier Western countries, particularly the United States, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Germany, and France. Chances are, if you’ve heard of childhood development milestones, they occurred in one of these countries. This is because it can be difficult to conduct basic research on child development in developing countries, as colleagues and reviewers will ask or demand comparisons with Western populations to put findings from these regions in context. Of course, without realizing it, these colleagues and reviewers have established Western children as the norm. Complex environments Image source, Getty Images photo caption, Most academic studies on child development have been carried out in developed countries, and do not take into account development in other cultures. But is it fair to make these comparisons? One of the complicated aspects of child development research is that it occurs in a cultural and social context from which it cannot be separated. But this context is often confusing. Differences in physical environment, parenting styles, location, climate, etc. interact to shape children’s growth. In addition to these differences, there are also individual variations. These can be, for example, curiosity, shyness and neurodiversity, which can frame the way a child shapes their own learning environment. Take the field of childhood motor development: the study of how children learn to move. Many parents in particular may be familiar with charts showing when they can expect their child to sit, crawl, stand and run. The existence of these graphs makes it seem quite universal, and a child’s motor development is often judged in this way. This makes sense. Early research was concerned with finding out what was normal, and it makes sense to try to support children who might be at risk of falling behind. The time and order investigated then gave rise to the norms and scales that we still use today. Image source, Getty Images photo caption, Studies have standardized the stages of development, without taking into account that the environment affects each individual differently. Is something like the timing of motor development universal? It’s easy to imagine it could be. When there are no physical or cognitive barriers, we all learn to sit and stand, so at first glance it seems fair to say that it could be. But it turns out that the context in which children develop plays a very important role even in something as seemingly universal as this. In countries and cultures where babies routinely receive firm massages from their caregivers, such as in Jamaica, motor development accelerates. It is clear that a norm developed in one culture may not translate well to another. Beyond the rules Image source, Getty Images photo caption, Many times, research has no way to incorporate key information such as the social and cultural context of the children it studies. Clearly, the problems highlighted above are not unique to motor development. In areas such as language development or social development, the cultural component is even more pressing. There is simply no way to understand these elements of child development without also understanding the context in which they take place. Each child develops within a context and, no matter how normal our own culture may seem to us, There is no objective, context-independent standard with which we can compare other children.. That is, we should accept the disorder. If we think of normal child development as something that just happens, researchers miss understanding the dynamics of development itself. But worse, educators and caregivers may not realize that development is something we can act on, and they miss the opportunity to create change. Image source, Getty Images photo caption, Each child develops uniquely, and it is through that understanding that better results are achieved. An important part of viewing child development as intertwined with culture is that it not only means collecting data from other cultures, but involving local communities and research perspectives. Understanding communities means listening to them, empowering them and giving them space to have a voice. Moving beyond a Western-centric understanding of child development will not only benefit researchers and lead to more accurate science, but will hopefully benefit everyone who works with children around the world. *This article was published on The Conversation and reproduced here under the creative commons license. Beam click here to read the original version. Samuel Forbes is Associate Professor of Psychology at the University of Durham and Prerna Aneja is a Lecturer in Psychology at the University of East Anglia. Subscribe here to our new newsletter to receive a selection … Read more

Supreme Court upholds law that bans TikTok in the US unless it changes ownership. How will it be applied?

Today, the US Supreme Court unanimously confirmed the federal law that bans the social network TikTok starting next Sunday, January 19, unless it is sold by its parent company based in China.. The measure maintains that the risk to national security raised by its ties to China outweighs concerns about limiting the freedom of expression of the application and its 170 million users in the United States. The decision came in the context of a unusual political upheaval by President-elect Donald Trump – who promised he could negotiate a solution – and the outgoing administration of Joe Biden, who has indicated that he will not apply the law starting Sunday, his last full day in office. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre issued a statement saying that “TikTok should continue to be available to Americans,” but that national security issues should be addressed. “Given the mere fact that it is time, this administration recognizes that actions to implement the law must simply fall to the next administration, which takes office on Monday,” he added. How does this affect current users? The bipartisan law requires that ByteDance, owner of TikTok based in China, will divest the company on Sunday, a day before Trump takes office. If no sales occur, the platform used by millions of Americans will theoretically be banned. A sale does not seem imminent And while experts have said the app won’t disappear from existing users’ phones once the law goes into effect on Jan. 19, new users won’t be able to download it and updates won’t be available. That will eventually render the app inoperative, said the Department of Justice In court documents, he highlighted Associated Press. In a rapidly changing situation, It is unclear what will happen on Sunday with TikTok in the United States, as there are signs that Trump could try to keep the app available. The Biden administration has also signaled that it will not take any enforcement action on Sunday. The Justice Department had raised two key issues in defending the ban: that the Chinese government could exercise control over content that users see to influence public opinion, and that could collect sensitive data over millions of American users. In today’s ruling, the court acknowledged that national security reasons affected its analysis of whether there was a violation of freedom of expression under the First Amendment of the Constitutionand the judges focused on the issue of data collection. The high court concluded that the reasons for enacting the law are “decidedly content-agnostic” and have nothing to do with restricting certain speech. “TikTok’s scale and its susceptibility to control by foreign adversaries, coupled with the vast swaths of sensitive data the platform collects, justify differential treatment to address the government’s national security concerns,” the supreme ruling said. “The challenged provisions promote an important governmental interest unrelated to the suppression of free speech and do not substantially burden free speech more than is necessary to promote that interest,” the court added. “The anti-TikTok sentiment that led Congress to pass the law, driven by concerns about the level of control the Chinese government has over the company, has quickly dissipated in some quarters,” he said. NBC News.

Tourist accused of setting businesses on fire in Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico, appears in court today in Missouri; faces up to 20 years in prison

New York – This Friday, Danielle Bertothy, the Missouri tourist suspected of starting a fire that left several in rubble business in Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico, shortly after New Year’smust appear at a hearing in a court of the aforementioned state to respond to the accusations that federal authorities presented against him. The arrest of Berthothy, 36, was reported yesterday in St. Peters, the city where he resides. A federal grand jury in the District of Puerto Rico accused the tourist of arson. As reported by the Federal Prosecutor’s Office for the District of Puerto Rico, On or about January 2 last, Bertothy maliciously damaged and destroyed, by means of fire, a building and other property furniture and real estate used in interstate and foreign commerce and in activities that affect interstate and foreign commerce. In this Thursday’s press releasefederal authorities add that the accused will be held responsible for her dangerous actions. “This defendant will be held responsible for her dangerous actions that caused significant harm and put many lives at risk“, declared W. Stephen Muldrow, head of the United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Puerto Rico. “The U.S. Attorney’s Office, together with federal, state and local partners, will continue to vigorously enforce federal laws to bring to justice criminals who engage in violent crimes,” Muldrow added. For Christopher A. Robinson, special agent in charge of the Miami Field Division of the ATF (Agency for Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives), the prosecution demonstrates the commitment of that office in the fight against violence and destructive criminal behavior, whether in the United States or the territories. Bertothy is accused of using fire to destroy buildings affecting interstate commerce. The woman is scheduled for a hearing this Friday before a judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri. If convicted, the defendant faces a minimum sentence of 5 years in prison. and a maximum of 20 years. The federal authorities thanked the collaboration of prosecutors from the Department of Justice in Mayagüez and the Explosives and Public Security Division of the Puerto Rico Police. Ismael Cartagena, in charge of the Office of Explosives and Public Security, indicated through Facebook this Thursday that, to be effective, “investigations are not carried out in a hurry.” “The responsibility of the law and order agencies is to collect all possible evidence, corroborate information and present it to the public ministry to file charges and achieve a conviction. With this, we make true justice shine,” he said as a reflection on the course of events and the management of the authorities. El Diario is carrying out procedures to interview Cartagena as a follow-up to the coverage of the case. The accusations against the woman occurred about two weeks after the fire that occurred on highway 3301 in the El Combate sector. which affected four businesses: Luichy’s Seaside Hotel, Marinera Restaurant, Bar Marea and Artesanías Juavia. Merchants and residents of the area provided local and federal authorities with audiovisual material that allegedly implicates the woman in the crime. One of the videos shows a female, who would be the American, carrying a gallon of gasoline in the area. In another, the tourist is seen arguing with Bar Marea staff in the presence of agents. In an interview with the podcast specialized in issues about Puerto Rico, Válgame PR, this week, Ángel Luis Marrero Negrón, owner of Luichy’s Seaside Hotel, revealed that there are other videoslike one from cameras from a nearby business, which link the woman directly to the events. “That girl is walking with a container, I don’t know, because it was dark, she sprinkles something that is supposedly gasoline and takes a match, and, ‘wow.’ There you can see when the fire starts and she stares, making sure, and walks along the side of the businesses; But, I want to clarify that the coldly calculating woman waited for all the businesses to be closed,” described the interviewee. Audiovisual content began to be shared massively on social networks until reaching members of the Puerto Rican diaspora in the states, who expressed themselves with indignation. St. Louis Councilwoman of Puerto Rican origin, Daniela Velázquez, sent a letter to Bertothy’s employers to take disciplinary action against the woman in light of the seriousness of the allegations. “Your audacity to commit such a brazen act of violence during our beloved holiday season too has impacted Puerto Ricans like me in the diaspora“, Velázquez said to the senior advertising management of HLK Agency. “As a St. Louis-based company with a reputation for commitment to diversity and community impact, I am confident that they will review the situation with the seriousness it requires. “Your response will send a powerful message about living in accordance with global values ​​and communities,” he added. Shortly after, managers notified her that the employee had been suspended from her work at the company. It is not clear whether, as a result of the accusations, other actions such as dismissal would be taken. HLK argued in the statement dated January 4 that they had not yet been contacted by the authorities in Puerto Rico, but that they would be collaborating with any investigation. “We are outraged by this insensitive act and we hope that the authorities can address the matter in a timely manner,” they declared. The case has also encouraged the debate about the humiliating treatment of some tourists towards locals on the island versus the concessions of the authorities to those who visit the territory. The merchants have questioned that, despite the fact that the municipal police were alerted on at least two occasions about the bellicose and aggressive attitude of the woman, who also had verbally and physically attacked staff and customers of Bar Marea before the incident was reported. fire, they did not take her to the barracks or take her information. Supposedly, Berthothy was upset because they didn’t want to serve her any more alcoholic drinks. One of the agents who arrived at the … Read more

They use force on people who pose no threat.

The Department of Justice conducted an investigation into Louisiana State Police’s Recurring Patterns of Excessive Use of Force during chases and arrests, concluding that his conduct violates the Fourth Amendment of the US Constitution. “After an exhaustive investigation, “The Department of Justice today announced its findings that the Louisiana State Police (LSP) engages in a pattern or practice of conduct that violates the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution,” DOJ shared in a statement. Against people who pose no threat As drafted, the Department of Justice considers that the LSP uses unjustified force of Tasers, escalation of minor incidents and use of force against people who did not pose a threat. The findings were released two days after federal prosecutors said No charges filed for fatal 2019 arrest of African-American motorist Ronald Greene. The facts of this case occurred when officers stunned, beat and dragged Greene on the side of a roadafter a high-speed chase outside Monroe, Louisiana. AP reported. According to the same information agency, it highlighted that the state police and their chiefs ignored or concealed evidence of beatingsdeflected blame and impeded efforts to root out misconduct at the agency. As an example of the violations committed by the police, on one occasion officer hit black man 18 times with flashlight after a traffic stop. The governor disagrees Among the improvements, Louisiana Police have revised their policy on the use of force, and “has created a Use of Force Investigation Unit for cases of serious uses of force and has updated the training,” the statement dictates. “The Department is committed to working collaboratively with the state and LSP to continue strengthening these reforms.” Republican Governor Jeff Landry criticized the report as an attempt to “diminish the service and exceptionalism of the Louisiana State Police.” “We will not allow that to happen”Landry said in a statement published by the AP. “The reputation of our men and women in blue is one of respect, admiration and appreciation, and we will always stand behind them.” Keep reading:

Patient dies due to hospital error asking the wrong family about disconnecting life support

This sounds like a nightmare, but it really happened. In summer 2021, David Wellsa 69-year-old man, arrived at PeaceHealth Southwest Medical Center in Vancouver, Washington, after an accident in which He choked on a piece of meat and fell unconscious.. What happened next is something that even in the worst horror movie you couldn’t imagine. It turns out that, due to an identification errorWells was mistaken for his roommate, Michael Beehler. The hospital contacted Beehler’s sister, Debbie Danielson, and asked if she wanted to turn off life support for who she believed was her brother, since he was supposedly with “brain death”. Without thinking too much, Debbie made the difficult decision to authorize the disconnectionbelieving he was ending his brother’s life. Debbie then organized the funeral, wrote the obituary and mourned the loss of what she thought was her loved one. But on August 14, an unexpected call shocked her. His brother Michael was alive. He receives a call from his “dead brother” “I told him, ‘You can’t be alive. You’re dead!’”Debbie remembered, completely surprised. From there, everything was chaos. The medical examiner confirmed that the body presumed dead was not Beehler’s, but Wells’. But that’s not all, since the worst of all is that Wells’s son, Shawn, did not find out about the mix-up until 2023, when the story was revealed in the media. “I have no words to describe how poorly they handled this. “I can never take that decision back,” Shawn said, devastated. And even though his father David Wells they had detected him brain deaththe family was not consulted to disconnect him, although the hospital thought so, but the call was made to the family of Michael Beehler. The incident was so serious that the Washington Department of Health investigated what happened. The hospital had not implemented a proper process to verify patient identities, resulting in this fatal error. Affected family sues Although no sanctions were imposed, the hospital said it took steps to improve its identification procedures. But the Wells family, along with Beehler and Danielsondecided to sue the hospital and other entities involved, including ambulance and funeral homedue to negligence and emotional distress. They are seeking justice for the terrible mess that changed their lives forever. For its part, the PeaceHealth hospital issued a statement in which it defended its care and explained that everything happened during the difficult days of the COVID-19 pandemicwhen hospitals were under enormous pressure. Despite this, the affected family cannot help but feel that such a serious mistake should never have happened. Keep reading:

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