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Police in California took a wipe out of crime Tuesday after pulling over a stolen SUV and finding 192 rolls of toilet paper — a sought-after commodity as people hoard supplies amid the coronavirus pandemic. Beverly Hills police posted a photo of officers searching the white SUV on social media. Two boxes stuffed with rolls of toilet paper are pictured outside the vehicle. “Gives ‘They saw me rollin’...’ a whole new meaning,” the department wrote on Twitter. Police arrested the driver. It was unclear whether the toilet paper was also stolen. “The driver was arrested for several charges -- unrelated to the toilet paper,” Beverly Hills Police Lt. Elizabeth Albanese told the Los Angeles Times. Officers also recovered a gun while searching the vehicle, the department wrote in a reply on Instagram. It was unclear whether the driver had a gun permit.
Some quarantined deputies with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department may go unpaid as the sheriff and county chief executive feud over payments to those ordered to stay home last month over coronavirus concerns. The spat emerged during the countrywide outbreak of COVID-19 and just days after the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors removed Sheriff Alex Villanueva as head of the county's emergency operations center and replaced him with LA County CEO Sachi Hamai. Villanueva told Fox 11 on Thursday that officers quarantined after April 1 will receive new emergency benefits and said the county CEO would not pay out similar benefits to officers quarantined last month. ”County leaders decided to follow new federal guidelines that took effect today, which state from April 1 forward, employees get 80 hours of paid sick leave if quarantined,” he told the outlet.
A South African policeman stops a man in Hillbrow, Johannesburg, today during a patrol aimed to enforce the country's lockdown
Policemen wearing face shields man a quarantine checkpoint today in Marikina, Metro Manila, Philippines.
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Video circulating on social media on Thursday shows the men carrying a wooden coffin near Avenue N and East 9th Street in the Borough Park section of Brooklyn on Wednesday morning. Several of the men in the funeral procession could be seen not wearing any facial covering. The funeral was held for Yosef Leifer, who was the rabbi of Congregation Karnei Reim on Avenue N. Leifer was a Holocaust survivor who became a rabbi of the Ukrainian Hassidic dynasty known as Nadvorna, which is named after the city in Ukraine in which the dynasty originated. #facepalm
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Pennsylvania — Wilson police say a man shot his longtime girlfriend and killed himself because he was extremely upset about the coronavirus pandemic and losing his job.
BREAKING – Berlin, Germany: Fire on high - rise roofs in Neu - Hohenschönhausen. The fire on several high-rise roofs in the Neu-Hohenschönhausen district has largely been extinguished. Nobody was injured, a fire department spokesman said early Friday afternoon, the channel ISCResearch reported.
Meanwhile, in Spain ... Police neutralized a man with two swords. The motives of the offender are not known.
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As shown in a video stream of SpaceX's testing which is recorded by residents near its Boca Chica facility in Texas, the craft imploded during a 'cryo' test that filled the craft with a propellant that lowers the temperature in an effort to simulate trips to space. After the propellant is injected in the craft, SpaceX's prototype can be seen buckling from the inside out until it eventually collapses on itself under the pressure.
Michigan, Louisiana and Georgia are expected to become the next coronavirus hot spots in the United States - as the death toll rose by 911 in one day, bringing the total past 6,000, and the number of infections across the country hit 245,000. Those states could be the next hot spots based on the current rate of deaths and positive coronavirus tests across the country, according to the White House COVID-19 task force coordinator Dr Deborah Birx. Meanwhile, the proportion of tests coming back positive in states like Indiana, Illinois and Connecticut are now also ringing alarm bells for health officials. In terms of current hot spots, New York continues to bear the brunt as the epicenter of the outbreak in the US with more than 100,000 infections and 2,935 deaths. The state recorded 562 news deaths and 10,482 additional cases as of Friday.