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Sunday, July 31, 2022

Attorney for Jacksonville rapper Julio Foolio wants prosecutor removed case - WJXT News4JAX

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – The attorney for a controversial Jacksonville rapper wants the prosecutor removed from his case.

Charles Jones, known as rapper Julio Foolio, was arrested in April on charges of a window tint violation and fleeing and eluding police.

RELATED: Jacksonville rapper Julio Foolio stopped by police over window tint, arrested: JSO | I-TEAM obtains bodycam video showing traffic stop involving Jacksonville rapper Julio Foolio | Attorneys for Jacksonville rapper Julio Foolio challenging how client’s traffic stop was handled

Body camera video obtained by News4JAX shows a state prosecutor standing outside and looking into Rapper Julio Foolio’s car. Her presence at the scene of his April arrest prompted Foolio’s attorney to file a motion asking a judge to remove her from the case.

Foolio is known for his controversial rap videos with details about Jacksonville murders. Some of those cases are unsolved.

RELATED: Jacksonville rappers are making music videos about real murders. Police and mothers of victims are watching

Foolio’s arrest report shows undercover detectives pulled him over for a window tint violation. He was then charged with fleeing and eluding police.

In the back of a patrol car, a detective asked Foolio about his best friend’s murder.

Detective: Alright, so I didn’t want to bring it up. I know you’re going to be upset, um, ****… some detectives want to talk to you real quick about what happened to ****.”

Foolio’s motion to disqualify the Assistant State Attorney accuses the prosecutor of participating in the on-scene investigation and discriminating against Foolio, who “has already suffered consequences.”

In a motion to suppress, Foolio’s attorney said the prosecutor illegally seized evidence from the scene without a warrant.

The prosecutor’s conversation with detectives at the scene was recorded on body camera.

Detective: How do you want me to put that in personal property? He said evidence.

Prosecutor: Yes. It is evidence. We have circumstances right now where his action (inaudible).

Detective: Cameras are still on.

Prosecutor: As well as the phones.

Detective: We’re taking the phones as well?

The state filed a response to Foolio’s motion to remove the prosecutor, saying Foolio is the figurehead of the criminal gang 6 Block.

It adds that the prosecutor is one of three attorneys assigned to the Proactive Targeted Prosecution Unit. The prosecutor has been a part of the unit since 2017, where she is assigned to prosecute documented members of 6 Block.

The state said it is common for prosecutors to show up at crime scenes. Officials said the prosecutor did not participate in an investigatory type of role or collect evidence illegally.

The state’s response said the defense has made unsupported accusations about the prosecutor and does not provide grounds for disqualification.

Foolio’s attorney believes the prosecutor should be considered a witness. The state argues she cannot be a witness because she was not there when the alleged crime initially happened.

Foolio’s next court date is scheduled for 9 a.m. Monday, regarding a ruling on recent motions filed in his case.

Foolio’s attorney is not the first to request a different prosecutor in a case involving a rapper with local gang ties.

In March, a judge denied a motion to remove a prosecutor in the case of Hakeem Robinson, aka Ksoo. Robinson is in jail on two different first-degree murder charges.

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Biden Tests Positive for Covid Again in ‘Rebound’ Case - The New York Times

The president tested positive on Saturday morning and will once again isolate, although his symptoms have not come back, the White House physician said.

President Biden tested positive for the coronavirus again on Saturday morning, becoming the latest example of a rebound case after taking the Paxlovid treatment that has otherwise been credited with broadly impressive results in fighting the virus and suppressing its worst effects.

“The president has experienced no re-emergence of symptoms, and continues to feel quite well,” Dr. Kevin C. O’Connor, the White House physician, said in a memo released by the press office. “This being the case, there is no reason to reinitiate treatment at this time, but we will obviously continue close observation.”

The “‘rebound’ positivity,” as Dr. O’Connor termed it, meant that Mr. Biden was forced to resume “strict isolation procedures” in keeping with medical advice. The White House announced that the president would no longer travel to his home in Wilmington, Del., on Sunday as planned nor make a scheduled visit to Michigan on Tuesday to promote newly passed legislation supporting the domestic semiconductor industry.

Mr. Biden played down the development. “Folks, today I tested positive for COVID again,” he wrote on Twitter. “This happens with a small minority of folks. I’ve got no symptoms but I am going to isolate for the safety of everyone around me. I’m still at work, and will be back on the road soon.”

The White House later posted a video of the president on the Truman Balcony with his dog Commander and he appeared well. “I’m feeling fine,” he said. “Everything’s good.”

Mr. Biden first tested positive for Covid-19 on July 21 and experienced a sore throat, runny nose, cough, body aches and fatigue. After five days of isolation, he tested negative on Tuesday evening and returned to the Oval Office on Wednesday, declaring that his relatively mild case demonstrated how much progress had been made in fighting the virus that has killed more than one million Americans.

But doctors were watching for signs of a rebound case and made sure to keep testing him every day. He tested negative on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday before receiving a positive antigen result on Saturday morning.

Paxlovid rebound has become a source of debate within the scientific community and among Covid patients. Initial clinical studies of the drug, which is made by Pfizer, suggested that only about 1 percent to 2 percent of those treated with Paxlovid experienced symptoms again. A study published in June that has not yet been peer-reviewed found that of 13,644 adults, about 5 percent tested positive again within 30 days and 6 percent experienced symptoms again.

But the anecdotal accounts of Paxlovid rebound — including a case involving Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the president’s chief medical adviser — have echoed widely, causing many to wonder whether the reported data was still accurate as the new and much more contagious BA.5 subvariant sweeps through communities and reinfects even patients who recently recovered from Covid-19.

“I think this was predictable,” Dr. Jonathan Reiner, a prominent cardiologist and professor of medicine and surgery at George Washington University Hospital, wrote on Twitter on Saturday after the president’s positive test was disclosed. He added that “the prior data suggesting ‘rebound’ Paxlovid positivity in the low single digits is outdated” and that the real number was likely significantly higher.

Either way, experts stressed that Paxlovid had been notably successful in preventing more severe Covid-19 illnesses and hospitalizations. And a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study published in June reported that symptoms from a rebound tended to be milder than during the primary infection and unlikely to lead to hospitalization.

“While we continue to monitor real-world data, we remain very confident in the treatment’s effectiveness at preventing severe outcomes from Covid-19,” Amy Rose, a Pfizer spokeswoman, said in a statement on Saturday.

The C.D.C. issued an emergency health advisory in May that said people experiencing a rebound case “should restart isolation and isolate again” for at least five days, reflecting the agency’s general isolation recommendations for people infected with the virus. The advisory also said that rebounding did not represent reinfection with the virus or resistance to Paxlovid.

Dr. Ashish K. Jha, the White House’s Covid-19 response coordinator, told reporters when Mr. Biden first tested positive that by looking at Twitter, “it feels like everybody has rebound, but it turns out there’s actually clinical data” suggesting otherwise. Moreover, he said, “Paxlovid is working really well at preventing serious illness, rebound or no rebound, and that’s why he was offered it, and that’s why the president took it.”

Dr. Paul G. Auwaerter, the clinical director in the infectious diseases division at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, said it was unlikely that Mr. Biden, who has been fully vaccinated and boosted twice, would become seriously ill. He added that scientists were working to explain why some people experience a rebound of the virus.

Among his Covid-19 patients experiencing a rebound case, Dr. Auwaerter said, many of them have had the recent Omicron subvariants. None has been hospitalized while rebounding. Those highly infectious and vaccine-evasive forms of the virus, he added, can cause people to test positive for longer.

Taking the drug, Dr. Auwaerter said, could be like “moving the goal posts” in the course of an infection, suppressing the virus but not clearing it completely. Still, he said, high-risk people should “absolutely” still take the medication.

Dr. John P. Moore, a virologist at Weill Cornell Medicine, said researchers were still lacking correlations between age, risk factors or vaccination status. “I haven’t heard anyone come up with a definitive cause,” he said. “He’s just the unlucky guy in the one out of 20. It’s just a numbers game.”

Dr. Moore said that if data could support such a move, federal regulators might want to consider allowing a longer course of the drug, to definitively rid the body of the virus. “The simplest thing would be to go back on the drug for longer,” he said.

Mr. Biden’s rebound case will complicate his effort to turn his illness into a positive story. As the oldest president in the nation’s history, Mr. Biden, 79, has been eager to show that he remains fit, especially as he forecasts plans to run for a second term in 2024. He continued to work from the White House residence during his first isolation, appearing by video before several groups, and then made a triumphal return to work in person on Wednesday.

Instead of the narrative of beating the virus, however, the president’s rebound case reinforces the unpleasant reality that the pandemic refuses to go away. Although the death toll has fallen dramatically, Covid-19 remains a fact of life for Americans, some of whom have been infected multiple times.

Mr. Biden’s new positive test may also raise questions about his fidelity to precautions against infecting others after returning to the office. Aides said he would wear a mask while with others, but in every public appearance he made since Wednesday, his face remained uncovered.

Aides said that he was socially distant from others and that he was cautious to avoid exposing aides, Secret Service agents and members of the household staff. The White House Medical Unit found that 17 people had been in close contact with Mr. Biden before his initial positive test, but as of Wednesday none had tested positive.

While the president did not wear a mask in the video on Saturday, a photograph released by the White House showed him wearing one as he signed a disaster declaration responding to flooding in Kentucky.

Dr. Auwaerter said Mr. Biden might not have put others at great risk in the last few days even without wearing a mask, since he was being tested for the virus regularly and was testing negative. For those not testing as regularly, he said, it would be prudent to continue wearing a tightfitting and high-quality mask, particularly around high-risk people, because of how infectious Omicron subvariants can be.

But the new positive test will also set back Mr. Biden’s efforts to get back on the road to promote his agenda and campaign for Democrats facing an uphill struggle to keep control of both houses of Congress in this fall’s midterm elections.

The president, whose approval rating stood at only 33 percent in a New York Times/Siena College poll in July, has been described as eager to travel the country after a spate of foreign trips, but the renewed isolation will delay that further.

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Friday, July 29, 2022

U.S. polio case tied to viruses detected in U.K., Israel, suggesting silent spread - STAT

Genetic analysis of the virus responsible for the first case of polio in the United States in nearly a decade shows it is linked to vaccine-derived viruses recently detected in Jerusalem and London, the Global Polio Eradication Initiative announced on Friday.

“Further investigations — both genetic and epidemiological — are ongoing to determine possible spread of the virus and potential risk associated with these various isolates detected from different locations around the world,” the program said in a statement.

The analysis indicated the viruses have been circulating for some time, signaling silent spread of vaccine-derived polioviruses over a wide geographic area.

“It basically suggests there’s been substantial transmission, undetected,” Walter Orenstein, a polio expert at Emory University who was not involved in the analysis, told STAT.

The case, an unvaccinated man in his 20s who lives in Rockland County, N.Y., recently developed paralysis that was diagnosed as having been caused by a type 2 polio vaccine virus. Health authorities in Rockland County, which is north of New York City, said the man had not traveled outside the country in the time when he would have been infected. That means someone else had to have brought the viruses into the country.

Vaccine-derived polioviruses — VDPVs in polio parlance — come from oral polio vaccine, which contains live but weakened polioviruses. Children who are immunized with this vaccine excrete vaccine viruses in their stools. In places where hygiene is poor, these viruses can spread from child to child, immunizing others as they do. But as they spread, the vaccine viruses can regain the power to paralyze. At this point, more children globally are paralyzed every year by circulating vaccine-derived polioviruses than the wild-type viruses, which now are only endemic in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Because of the risk associated with the oral vaccine, the United States stopped using it in 2000; it has since exclusively used inactivated polio vaccine, which does not contain live viruses. The United Kingdom uses IPV, as it’s called, as well.

Israel uses both OPV and IPV. But the version of the oral vaccine it uses does not include type 2 viruses, which means this chain of transmission began in yet another, currently unidentified country.

The type 2 component of the oral vaccine was withdrawn in 2016 in a coordinated global effort to try to stop transmission of type 2 vaccine viruses. But the move, known as “the switch,” did not succeed. Until recently, when type 2 vaccine virus outbreaks occurred the response was to use oral vaccine containing only the type 2 strain to try to stop the spread — a fighting fire with fire approach.

It must be from one of these campaigns that the type 2 viruses in this transmission chain originated.

Steve Oberste, chief of the polio and picornavirus branch at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said it is impossible with the information currently available to pinpoint where the transmission chain started or how the viruses that infected the Rockland County man reached him.

The viruses from Jerusalem and London were detected in wastewater sampling. To date there haven’t been paralytic polio cases associated with this chain of transmission reported in either location.

Oberste noted that all three locations — Jerusalem, London, and New York — draw large numbers of travelers.

“Clearly they’re linked. It’s hard to infer directionality, especially when you only have a small number of sequences,” he said. “It’s going to be hard to say: Was it someone who came from Israel directly to New York? Someone who came from London directly to New York? Or even someone who brought it into Israel from somewhere else and it was brought into New York by someone who’s from wherever that place is, but it was the same virus?”

While the finding doesn’t help to solve the mystery of how the Rockland County man contracted polio, it does underscore that countries that have thought polio was a long-gone threat need to ensure vaccination rates stay high and they stay vigilant, the polio program said.

“It is vital that all countries, in particular those with a high volume of travel and contact with polio-affected countries and areas, strengthen surveillance in order to rapidly detect any new virus importation and to facilitate a rapid response,” the statement said.

The Global Polio Eradication Program is a partnership of the World Health Organization, the CDC, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the service club Rotary International, and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

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Houston region to receive more monkeypox vaccine doses as case numbers climb - Houston Public Media

More doses of the monkeypox vaccine are on their way to the Houston region as case numbers continue to climb.

Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo announced Thursday night on Twitter that 16,780 doses of the JYNNEOS vaccine, which is FDA-approved and prevents monkeypox, had been allocated to the Houston region by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Earlier in the week, Hidalgo and Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner wrote a joint letter to the CDC asking for more vaccines, and both the Houston Health Department and Harris County Public Health stopped scheduling vaccine appointments because of a supply shortage.

Hidalgo wrote on Twitter that the first of three vaccine shipments was scheduled to arrive Friday. But Porfirio Villarreal, a spokesperson for the Houston Health Department, said Friday morning that it likely would be several days before the additional doses are received.

The city health department receives the doses on behalf of the region, Villarreal said, giving 30 percent of each shipment to Harris County Public Health while also distributing some doses to medical providers.

"We don't have an exact date of delivery," he said. "Right now, it's just allocated to us."

Villarreal said there were 66 confirmed monkeypox cases among Houston residents as of Friday, an increase of about 20 cases since Monday. He said the majority of those cases are men who have sex with men, although the virus is not a sexually transmitted disease.

Monkeypox is rarely fatal, according to the CDC, and typically resolves within 2-4 weeks. The CDC said symptoms are similar to smallpox but are milder and can include fever, headache, muscle aches, chills, exhaustion, swollen lymph nodes and a rash that can look like pimples or blisters on the face, inside the mouth and on other parts of the body.

Close or intimate person-to-person contact, such as kissing, cuddling and sex, is a primary means of spreading monkeypox, according to the CDC. The virus also can be spread through contact with infectious rashes, scabs or bodily fluids or with items that are infected, such as clothing and bedding.

Villarreal said the Houston region initially received a little more than 5,000 vaccine doses last Friday, July 22, with the 3,500 kept by the city health department having already been administered to or reserved for people in high-risk groups. Vaccination appointments with the Houston Health Department are scheduled through Aug. 8, Villarreal said, with each recipient set to receive a second dose four weeks later to complete the series.

At this time, the vaccine is being administered only to Houston-area residents who have had contact with someone infected with monkeypox; recently attended an event or venue where there was high-risk exposure to someone with monkeypox or sex with anonymous or multiple partners; those who take pre-exposure prophylaxis for HIV; and those who have been diagnosed with gonorrhea or syphilis within the last three months.

"If there's ample supply or expanded supply, once that happens, then we're able to open it up to some more people," Villarreal said.

Villarreal urged Houston-area residents to watch for symptoms and contact their doctors if they think they might be infected with monkeypox and also to communicate such concerns with sexual partners. He said members of the medical community should be on the lookout for signs of monkeypox as well.

For more local information about the monkeypox outbreak, call the Houston Health Department at 832-393-4220 or Harris County Public Health at 832-927-0707.

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Biden nominates abortion rights lawyer in U.S. Supreme Court case to federal judgeship - Reuters.com

July 29 (Reuters) - President Joe Biden on Friday nominated a lawyer who represented the Mississippi clinic at the heart of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to overturn its landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade abortion rights decision to become a federal appeals court judge.

Biden's latest slate of nine new judicial nominees included Julie Rikelman, an abortion rights lawyer with the Center for Reproductive Rights whom the president picked to serve on the Boston-based 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

The nomination, which Republicans are likely to oppose in the narrowly Democratic-controlled Senate, came a month after the conservative-majority Supreme Court overturned Roe, which for nearly five decades had guaranteed women nationally a constitutional right to obtain abortions. read more

Rikelman had argued against such a ruling in representing the Jackson Women's Health Organization - Mississippi's only abortion clinic - in challenging a Republican-backed law that banned abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy. read more

The clinic has since closed, after a near-total ban in Mississippi sprang into effect following the decision by the United States' highest court. About half of the 50 U.S. states have banned or are expected to ban or restrict abortions following that ruling.

"Julie Rikelman brings exactly the kind of experience with reproductive rights we desperately need on the courts," Christopher Kang, chief counsel of the progressive group Demand Justice, said in a statement.

Conservative opposition is expected in the U.S. Senate, where Democrats are facing pressure from progressive activists to speed up judicial confirmations before the Nov. 8 midterm elections, when they risk losing control of the chamber to Republicans.

"This nominee is a radical, left-wing abortion activist who has no business being on any court, let alone a federal appellate court," said Mike Davis, who heads the conservative judicial advocacy group the Article III Project.

Rikelman is one of two new appellate court nominees by Biden. He also nominated Connecticut Supreme Court Justice Maria Araujo Kahn to the New York-based 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Biden's latest nominees continued the White House's push to diversify the federal bench. They include Daniel Calabretta, a California state court judge nominated to become the first openly LGBT federal judge in the state's Eastern District.

Myong Joun, a state court judge in Boston, was picked to become the first Asian American man on the federal bench in Massachusetts, where Biden also nominated Julia Kobick, a deputy state solicitor in the state attorney general's office.

District of Columbia Superior Court Judge Todd Edelman was nominated to be a federal judge in Washington, and U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Jeffery Hopkins would if confirmed by the Senate become a district court judge in Southern Ohio.

Biden also nominated Araceli Martinez-Olguin of the National Immigration Law Center and Superior Court Judge Rita Lin to be federal judges in California's Northern District.

Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; editing by Jonathan Oatis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Thomson Reuters

Nate Raymond reports on the federal judiciary and litigation. He can be reached at nate.raymond@thomsonreuters.com.

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Thursday, July 28, 2022

Experts warn of election 'havoc' across the U.S. if North Carolina case succeeds – Oregon Capital Chronicle - Oregon Capital Chronicle

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AG Nessel Prevails in ELCRA Case - Michigan (.gov)

LANSING – The Michigan Supreme Court sided with Attorney General Dana Nessel and affirmed that the Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act (ELCRA) prohibits discrimination on the basis of an individual’s sexual orientation. 

Nessel issued the following statement in response to the ruling from the Court

“Now, more than ever, it is critical that those of us elected to public office work to preserve and protect the rights of all residents. Today’s ruling confirms what we have long known—that the protections afforded by the ELCRA cover all Michiganders.

“It is also important to recognize that the rights of Michigan’s LGBTQ+ community are based on precedent from court decisions.  And while we were once a nation that respected the value of legal precedent to help preserve our rights, that may no longer be the case.  Now is the time to enshrine our rights in law to ensure no person in this state ever experiences barriers to employment, housing, education, or public accommodations and services because of who they are or whom they love.

“Our residents deserve to live in a state that recognizes the value of diversity and rejects the notion that our own civil rights law could be used as a tool of discrimination. This ruling is not only a victory for the LGBTQ+ community, but for all Michigan residents, and one that’s long overdue.”

The lawsuit, Rouch World LLC et al v Michigan Department of Civil Rights et al, was brought by businesses that denied services to customers who were either a same-sex couple or an individual who was transitioning their gender identity. In October, on behalf of the Michigan Department of Civil Rights (MDCR) and the director of the MDCR, Nessel filed a bypass application in the Michigan Supreme Court. The Michigan Supreme Court agreed the case warranted immediate review and Nessel argued before the Court on March 2.

The October brief can be found on the Department of Attorney General website.

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Convicted Killer in Texas Ranger Cold Case Gets Two Life Sentences | Department of Public Safety - the Texas Department of Public Safety

AUSTIN – On July 25, 2022, capital murder suspect José Baldomero Flores III pled guilty in a Bexar County courtroom in the killings of two women, Heather Willms and Esmeralda Herrera. Flores, 41, was sentenced to two life sentences to run consecutively and one charge of arson. The sentencing closes a Texas Ranger Unsolved Crimes Investigation Program (UCIP) case nearly two decades old.

In February 2005, Heather Willms, 21, failed to show up for work as a waitress at a Leon Valley restaurant. She was found sexually assaulted and brutally killed inside her residence. Her killer then attempted to burn her body to remove evidence. Investigators identified Flores, a purported friend of Willms, as a possible suspect. His DNA was located on Willms’ body, along with DNA from an unknown subject. The case eventually stalled, and Flores was never charged.

Then, in March 2011, Esmeralda Herrera, 30, was found dead in her San Antonio apartment in a manner similar to the Willms case. Her apartment had also been set on fire. The San Antonio Police Department investigated and arrested Flores for the murder. However, the prosecutor in the case ruled that there was insufficient evidence for trial, and Flores was released.

Both cases remained cold until 2015, when the Texas Ranger UCIP began focusing resources on the Willms investigation. A case review meeting that included Texas Department of Public Safety laboratory personnel and investigators proved valuable. The Rangers ultimately identified the unknown DNA from Willms’ body and worked closely with the Bexar County District Attorney’s Office and the San Antonio and Leon Valley Police Departments on these investigations.

In November 2016, Flores was arrested for the murders of Willms and Herrera, and in 2019, Michael Hoyle, a former Bexar County Assistant DA, was appointed as a Special Prosecutor for these cases. Finally, on July 25, 2022, Flores was given life sentences in both cases, bringing some closure to the family and friends of these beloved women.

The Texas Ranger Unsolved Crimes Investigation Program was created to assist Texas law enforcement agencies investigating unsolved homicides or violent serial crimes. Since there is no statute of limitations on the offense of murder, investigators pursue these cases to a successful resolution or until no viable leads remain.

Additional photos (left to right: Heather Willms and Esmeralda Herrera):

WillmsHerrera

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(HQ 2022-049)

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English criminal court case broadcast on TV for first time - Reuters UK

The Old Bailey is seen, ahead of the arrival of Ali Harbi Ali, 25, suspect in the murder of British MP David Amess, who is due to appear in court, in London, Britain, October 22, 2021. REUTERS/Hannah McKay

LONDON, July 28 (Reuters) - Cameras were allowed to film a criminal court case in England and Wales for the first time on Thursday, when the sentencing of a man convicted of manslaughter was broadcast live on television.

The government says the move, which was first promised a decade ago, will give the public a greater understanding of the judicial process.

Filming will be limited to the judge's sentencing remarks, and only the judge will appear on camera, with a 10-second delay for live broadcasts.

The first televised case at London's Old Bailey central criminal court saw Judge Sarah Munro jail Ben Oliver for life with a minimum jail term of more than 10 years, after he admitted in January to killing his grandfather.

Currently, hearings in London's Court of Appeal and the UK Supreme Court can be televised, and some cases in Scotland, which operates a separate judicial system, have been broadcast since 1992.

Until Thursday, cameras were strictly forbidden from criminal cases in England and Wales, with the images from hearings restricted to sketches created from memory by artists who remain banned from drawing inside the courtroom itself.

Supporters of televising sentencing hearings say it will help show the public why decisions are made, but critics fear widening this further to allow trials to be broadcast could lead to cases being sensationalised.

Some U.S. courts allow broadcasters to film proceedings, allowing the public to watch high-profile criminal trials, and other countries such as France are considering allowing cases to be televised.

"Opening up the courtroom to cameras to film the sentencing of some the country’s most serious offenders will improve transparency and reinforce confidence in the justice system," Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab said.

"The public will now be able to see justice handed down, helping them understand better the complex decisions judges make."

Reporting by Michael Holden; Editing by Angus MacSwan

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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How Deshaun Watson Became the N.F.L.’s Biggest Scandal - The New York Times

Rob SzypkoCarlos Prieto and

John Ketchum and

Dan PowellMarion Lozano and


This episode contains details of alleged sexual assault.

In the past year, more than 20 women have accused the star N.F.L. quarterback Deshaun Watson of sexual misconduct.

Despite the allegations, Watson has signed one of the most lucrative contracts in the history of football, with the Cleveland Browns, and will take the field today for training camp.


Jenny Vrentas, a sports reporter for The New York Times.

Deshaun Watson was a quarterback for the Houston Texans when he was accused of sexual misconduct during massage appointments.
Eric Christian Smith/Associated Press

There are a lot of ways to listen to The Daily. Here’s how.

We aim to make transcripts available the next workday after an episode’s publication. You can find them at the top of the page.


Jenny Vrentas contributed reporting.

The Daily is made by Lisa Tobin, Rachel Quester, Lynsea Garrison, Clare Toeniskoetter, Paige Cowett, Michael Simon Johnson, Brad Fisher, Larissa Anderson, Chris Wood, Jessica Cheung, Stella Tan, Alexandra Leigh Young, Lisa Chow, Eric Krupke, Marc Georges, Luke Vander Ploeg, M.J. Davis Lin, Dan Powell, Dave Shaw, Sydney Harper, Robert Jimison, Mike Benoist, Liz O. Baylen, Asthaa Chaturvedi, Kaitlin Roberts, Rachelle Bonja, Diana Nguyen, Marion Lozano, Corey Schreppel, Anita Badejo, Rob Szypko, Elisheba Ittoop, Chelsea Daniel, Mooj Zadie, Patricia Willens, Rowan Niemisto, Jody Becker, Rikki Novetsky, John Ketchum, Nina Feldman, Will Reid, Carlos Prieto, Sofia Milan, Ben Calhoun and Susan Lee.

Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsverk of Wonderly. Special thanks to Sam Dolnick, Paula Szuchman, Cliff Levy, Lauren Jackson, Julia Simon, Mahima Chablani, Desiree Ibekwe, Wendy Dorr, Elizabeth Davis-Moorer, Jeffrey Miranda, Renan Borelli and Maddy Masiello.

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Wednesday, July 27, 2022

How Deshaun Watson Became the N.F.L.’s Biggest Scandal - The New York Times

Rob SzypkoCarlos Prieto and

John Ketchum and

Dan PowellMarion Lozano and


This episode contains details of alleged sexual assault.

In the past year, more than 20 women have accused the star N.F.L. quarterback Deshaun Watson of sexual misconduct.

Despite the allegations, Watson has signed one of the most lucrative contracts in the history of football, with the Cleveland Browns, and will take the field today for training camp.


Jenny Vrentas, a sports reporter for The New York Times.

Deshaun Watson was a quarterback for the Houston Texans when he was accused of sexual misconduct during massage appointments.
Eric Christian Smith/Associated Press

There are a lot of ways to listen to The Daily. Here’s how.

We aim to make transcripts available the next workday after an episode’s publication. You can find them at the top of the page.


Jenny Vrentas contributed reporting.

The Daily is made by Lisa Tobin, Rachel Quester, Lynsea Garrison, Clare Toeniskoetter, Paige Cowett, Michael Simon Johnson, Brad Fisher, Larissa Anderson, Chris Wood, Jessica Cheung, Stella Tan, Alexandra Leigh Young, Lisa Chow, Eric Krupke, Marc Georges, Luke Vander Ploeg, M.J. Davis Lin, Dan Powell, Dave Shaw, Sydney Harper, Robert Jimison, Mike Benoist, Liz O. Baylen, Asthaa Chaturvedi, Kaitlin Roberts, Rachelle Bonja, Diana Nguyen, Marion Lozano, Corey Schreppel, Anita Badejo, Rob Szypko, Elisheba Ittoop, Chelsea Daniel, Mooj Zadie, Patricia Willens, Rowan Niemisto, Jody Becker, Rikki Novetsky, John Ketchum, Nina Feldman, Will Reid, Carlos Prieto, Sofia Milan, Ben Calhoun and Susan Lee.

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First monkeypox case is reported in Cook County Jail; Chicago receives 15000 doses of vaccine over the weekend - Chicago Tribune

The Cook County Jail on Tuesday reported its first case of monkeypox, according to the Cook County Department of Public Health.

The individual was reportedly immediately isolated and contact tracing is underway, the health department said. County health officials will visit the jail Tuesday to offer testing and vaccinations to eligible individuals as the department continues its vaccination efforts in the city.

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“It is important to remember that the population in the jail is a microcosm of the community,” the statement read. “As such, it is reasonable to expect cases to appear within the jail. The individual is believed to have contracted the virus in the community prior to being ordered into custody at the jail.”

Meanwhile, over the weekend, the Chicago Public Health Department received an allotment of more than 15,000 monkeypox vaccine doses from the federal government. Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker has called on federal health officials to ramp up vaccination efforts.

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Chicago has already distributed over 5,000 doses of the vaccine against the virus that is spreading through the city. As of Tuesday, there were just under 300 cases of the virus in Chicago. And as of Monday, Illinois had recorded 344 cases statewide.

“Even with those 15,000 additional doses, it certainly doesn’t meet the demand of all the population in Chicago that may be eligible, all those who are at risk of exposure,” said Massimo Pacilli, the Chicago Public Health Department’s deputy commissioner of disease control, at a webinar Tuesday morning. “We’re aiming to do the best that 15,000 doses can do and that means to deploy them as first doses so that we can reach as many individuals who can benefit from the vaccine as possible.”

While the current outbreak in Chicago has been mostly spread among men who have sex with men, health officials have noted that the virus can be transmitted by prolonged close contact with bodily fluids or sores such as during intimate sexual activity or by sharing towels, bedding linens, toothbrushes or food and drinks.

Close contacts for those who have the virus are being prioritized for first vaccine doses. And according to the CDPH website, gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men, who are aged 18 or older, and who had multiple or anonymous sex partners, sex at a social venue, or sex in exchange for money in the last 14 days are also currently eligible to receive the vaccine, as long as they meet all the criteria.

Chicago health officials are currently prioritizing first doses since these offer the most protection against the virus, according to CDPH Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady. Chicago currently has a limited supply of JYNNEOSTM, one of two FDA-approved monkeypox vaccines. JYNNEOSTM is administered in two doses, 28 days apart.

According to the city’s department of public health, they have distributed monkeypox vaccines to healthcare providers who reach out to populations eligible to receive the vaccine. The CPHD has also released a list of places across the city where those eligible may receive the first dose of the vaccine.

“This isn’t a complete list and the list will grow and continue to grow both by number of partners of vaccination opportunities across the city and by volume, so the amount of vaccines to sustain current efforts and expand as we go,” Pacilli said.

  • Wellness Home Lakeview at 2835 N. Sheffield Ave, No. 500. Call 773-296-2400. schedule an appointment.
  • Howard Brown Health Clark at 6500 N. Clark St. Call 773-388-1600.
  • Howard Brown Health Sheridan at 4025 N. Sheridan Rd. Call 773-388-1600.
  • Howard Brown Health 63rd at 641 W. 63rd St. Call 773-388-1600.
  • Howard Brown Health 55th at 1525 E. 55th St. Call 773-388-1600.
  • Wellness Home Lakeview at 2835 N. Sheffield Ave., No. 500. Call 773-296-2400.
  • Wellness Home Halsted at 3416 S. Halsted St. Call 773-621-7725.
  • Ruth M. Rothstein CORE Center at 2020 W. Harrison St. Call 312-448-4286 or visit RMR CORE Center.
  • Rush University at Adolescent Family Center, 1645 W. Jackson Blvd. Suite 315A. Call 888-352-7874.
  • Esperanza at 2001 S. California Ave., Suite 100. Visit Esperanza Health Centers.
  • Project Wish at University of Illinois Chicago, 840 S. Wood St., Rm. B39. Fill out the UIC Monkeypox Outreach Signup Form.

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US military making plans in case Pelosi travels to Taiwan - The Associated Press

SYDNEY (AP) — Nancy Pelosi hasn’t said if she’s going to Taiwan, but if she does she’d be entering one of the world’s hottest and most contentious spots. While U.S. officials say they have little fear that Beijing would attack the U.S. House speaker’s plane, they are aware that a mishap, misstep or misunderstanding could endanger her safety. So the Pentagon is developing plans for any contingency.

Officials told The Associated Press that if Pelosi goes to Taiwan — still an uncertainty — the military would increase its movement of forces and assets in the Indo-Pacific region. They declined to provide details, but said that fighter jets, ships, surveillance assets and other military systems would likely be used to provide overlapping rings of protection for her flight to Taiwan and any time on the ground there.

Any foreign travel by a senior U.S. leader requires additional security. But officials said this week that a visit to Taiwan by Pelosi — she would be the highest-ranking U.S. elected official to visit Taiwan since 1997 — would go beyond the usual safety precautions for trips to less risky destinations.

Asked about planned military steps to protect Pelosi, D-Calif., in the event of a visit, U.S. Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Wednesday that discussion of any specific travel is premature. But, he added, “if there’s a decision made that Speaker Pelosi or anyone else is going to travel and they asked for military support, we will do what is necessary to ensure a safe conduct of their visit. And I’ll just leave it at that.”

Pelosi would be the highest-ranking American lawmaker to visit the close U.S. ally since a predecessor as speaker, Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., traveled there 25 years ago.

China considers self-ruling Taiwan its own territory and has raised the prospect of annexing it by force. The U.S. maintains informal relations and defense ties with Taiwan even as it recognizes Beijing as the government of China.

The trip is being considered at a time when China has escalated what the U.S. and its allies in the Pacific describe as risky one-on-one confrontations with other militaries to assert its sweeping territorial claims. The incidents have included dangerously close fly-bys that force other pilots to swerve to avoid collisions, or harassment or obstruction of air and ship crews, including with blinding lasers or water cannon.

Dozens of such maneuvers have occurred this year alone, Ely Ratner, U.S. assistant defense secretary, said Tuesday at a South China Sea forum by the Center for Strategic and International Studies. China denies the incidents.

The U.S. officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive security issues, described the need to create buffer zones around the speaker and her plane. The U.S. already has substantial forces spread across the region, so any increased security could largely be handled by assets already in place.

The military would also have to be prepared for any incident — even an accident either in the air or on the ground. They said the U.S. would need to have rescue capabilities nearby and suggested that could include helicopters on ships already in the area.

Pelosi has not publicly confirmed any new plans for a trip to Taiwan. She was going to go in April, but she postponed the trip after t esting positive for COVID-19.

The White House on Monday declined to weigh in directly on the matter, noting she had not confirmed the trip. But President Joe Biden last week raised concerns about it, telling reporters that the military thinks her trip is “not a good idea right now.”

A Pelosi trip may well loom over a call planned for Thursday between Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping, their first conversation in four months. A U.S. official confirmed plans for the call to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity ahead of the formal announcement.

U.S. officials have said the administration doubts that China would take direct action against Pelosi herself or try to sabotage the visit. But they don’t rule out the possibility that China could escalate provocative overflights of military aircraft in or near Taiwanese airspace and naval patrols in the Taiwan Strait should the trip take place. And they don’t preclude Chinese actions elsewhere in the region as a show of strength.

Security analysts were divided Tuesday about the extent of any threat during a trip and the need for any additional military protection.

The biggest risk during Pelosi’s trip is of some Chinese show of force “gone awry, or some type of accident that comes out of a demonstration of provocative action,” said Mark Cozad, acting associate director of the International Security and Defense Policy Center at the Rand Corp. “So it could be an air collision. It could be some sort of missile test, and, again, when you’re doing those types of things, you know, there is always the possibility that something could go wrong.”

Barry Pavel, director of the Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security at the Atlantic Council, scoffed at U.S. officials’ reported consideration of aircraft carriers and warplanes to secure the speaker’s safety. “Obviously, the White House does not want the speaker to go and I think that’s why you’re getting some of these suggestions.”

“She’s not going to go with an armada,” Pavel said.

They also said that a stepped-up U.S. military presence to safeguard Pelosi risked raising tensions.

“It is very possible that ... our attempts to deter actually send a much different signal than the one we intend to send,” Cozad said. “And so you get into ... some sort of an escalatory spiral, where our attempts to deter are actually seen as increasingly provocative and vice versa. And that can be a very dangerous dynamic.”

On Wednesday, China’s Foreign Ministry declined to comment on the presidential phone call. However, spokesperson Zhao Lijian reiterated China’s warnings over a Pelosi visit. “If the U.S. insists on going its own way and challenging China’s bottom line, it will surely be met with forceful responses,” Zhao told reporters at a daily briefing. “All ensuing consequences shall be borne by the U.S.”

Milley said this week that the number of intercepts by Chinese aircraft and ships in the Pacific region with U.S. and other partner forces has increased significantly over the past five years. He said Beijing’s military has become far more aggressive and dangerous, and that the number of unsafe interactions has risen by similar proportions.

Those include reports of Chinese fighter jets flying so close to a Canadian air security patrol last month that the Canadian pilot had to swerve to avoid collision, and another close call with an Australian surveillance flight in late May in which the Chinese crew released a flurry of metal scraps that were sucked into the other plane’s engine.

U.S. officials say that the prospects of an intercept or show of force by Chinese aircraft near Pelosi’s flight raises concerns, prompting the need for American aircraft and other assets to be nearby.

The U.S. aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan and its strike group is currently operating in the western Pacific, and made a port call in Singapore over the weekend. The strike group involves at least two other Navy ships and Carrier Air Wing 5, which includes F/A-18 fighter jets, helicopters and surveillance aircraft.

Prior to pulling into port in Singapore, the strike group was operating in the South China Sea. In addition, another Navy ship, the USS Benfold, a destroyer, has been conducting freedom of navigation operations in the region, including a passage through the Taiwan Strait last week.

___

Knickmeyer reported from Washington.

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