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42 year old Zamboni driver takes over at goalie for the Carolina Hurricanes. Let’s check in with their coach...
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Tucker Carlson's Take on Russiahoax! 3.0
The Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) took four days to test a woman with the first confirmed case of coronavirus where the origin of the disease is unknown because she hadn't traveled abroad or been exposed to an infected patient as experts warn the deadly virus could spread in the US like it did in Italy. The woman, who is a resident of Solano County, which is about 35 miles outside of Sacramento, was admitted into UC Davis Medical Center on February 19. But questions are now being asked over the CDC's handling of the case after an email from medical center officials to employees revealed that the CDC took four days to test the patient for the deadly disease despite requests from staff at the center. It has also been revealed that experts like Dr Adrian Hyzler, the chief medical officer for Healix International, believe the virus could spread in the US overnight like it did in Italy.
Sporadic violence hit parts of Delhi, India, overnight as gangs roamed streets littered with the debris of days of sectarian riots that have killed 33 people, police said Thursday. Thousands of riot police and paramilitaries patrolled the affected northeast fringes of the Indian capital of 20 million people, preventing any major eruptions. The unrest is the latest bout of violence over Prime Minister Narendra Modi's citizenship law, which triggered months of demonstrations that turned deadly in December. Sunil Kumar, director of the Guru Teg Bahadur (GTB) Hospital, said Thursday the hospital registered 30 deaths while the chief doctor at Lok Nayak Hospital said three people had died there.
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Meanwhile in Russia ...
Police frequency
Six people were killed when a gunman opened fire at the Molson-Coors Campus in Milwaukee Wednesday afternoon. The shooter is among those deceased. The gunfire broke out around 2:00 p.m. local time at the beverage company, located at the 3939 W. Highland Blvd.…
The suspected gunman who killed himself and five other employees at the Molson Coors Beverage Co. in Milwaukee had a long-running feud with a co-worker that erupted before his rampage began, according to media reports. The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel identified the shooter as Anthony N. Ferrill, 51, an electrician who worked at the sprawling brewing campus for 17 years, according to sources and employment records. A co-worker told the newspaper that Ferrill believed he was being discriminated against because he was African-American. The source said he frequently watched movies on his phone during the day, leading to disputes between him and another electrician, who was one of Wednesday's victims. At one point, the pair accused each other of stealing tools and tampering with computer equipment in their respected offices. Co-workers of Ferrill reacted with surprise that he was the shooter, the newspaper reported.
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A biker hit a pedestrian in San Diego.
Forwarded from Bellum Acta | Archive Channel
Daily Reminder:
— There's 3,6 Million Syrian Immigrants in Turkey.
Sultan Erdogan officially opened the Doors of Europe for another Wave of Invasion.
— There's 3,6 Million Syrian Immigrants in Turkey.
Sultan Erdogan officially opened the Doors of Europe for another Wave of Invasion.
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Newark police officers helped the save the life of a man who was threatening to jump into the frigid Passaic River from a fence at Riverfront Park on Monday night. A woman flagged down officers Jocelyn Allen and Kerwin Lovo around 9:45 p.m. near the intersection of Read Street and Raymond Boulevard to report that a man was standing on a fence railing at the park, officials said. Allen chatted with the man briefly as he straddled the fence, learning that he had daughters and reminding the distraught man that his children needed him. Moments later as other Newark police officers and Essex County Sheriff’s Officers arrived, the man briefly looked back toward the river and several officers grabbed his clothing to pull the man to safety.
A Texas woman shot her 10-year-old nephew while babysitting him, when the firearm she was playing with accidentally discharged, police say. Caitlyn Smith, 19, was booked Wednesday into the Harris County Jail and charged with one felony count of injury to a child causing serious bodily injury, according to online inmate records. Deputies with the Harris County Sheriff’s Office were dispatched to a residence around 4 p.m over reports that a child had been shot, KHOU reported. Once on the scene, deputies discovered that Smith accidentally discharged the firearm, striking her nephew. Smith was reportedly taking selfies with the gun before it went off, the New York Post reported. The child was taken to an area hospital where he underwent surgery. Sheriff Ed Gonzalez said in a tweet that the boy was in serious condition but is expected to make a full recovery. Smith remained at the Harris County Jail on $20,000 bond and her next court date on Friday. If convicted, she could face up to 20 years in prison.
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Footage claiming to show a fight breaking out at a supermarket inside the 'red zone' in Italy where 50,000 people have been placed in quarantine has emerged online. The video shows two shoppers coming to blows near the tills of a Lidl supermarket as a member…
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Meanwhile in Italy ...
Nationwide controversy is brewing as states consider banning transgender athletes from sports teams that they identify with, FOX NEWS reported. The new legislation will force transgender athletes to compete under their gender assigned at birth if it passes. Alabama is currently pushing for the transgender athletes ban that many across the country have already established. A bill that is sponsored by Alabama state Rep. Chris Pringle and is known as the "gender is real legislative act" or "girl act," calls for transgender athletes in K-12 public schools to compete based on the gender listed on their birth certificate. Pringle is confident that the bill will pass. “It will pass," he said. "There’s a lot of support in the chamber from other colleagues, a lot of people want to be co-sponsors of the bill, so I see when we get it up, it passing overwhelmingly."