Saturday, May 23, 2026

‘I Cannot Breathe’: Man Dies After Encounter With Minneapolis Police

A man in Minneapolis died on Monday night after an encounter with police. Video circulating on social media purportedly shows the man being pinned face-down on the street by an officer who appears to be pressing his knee into the man’s neck.

Police have not confirmed the video’s authenticity, but Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey said he believes what he saw in the clip. He called the officer’s actions “wrong at every level” during a news briefing Tuesday.

In the clip, the man, who is Black, is heard pleading with officers.

“Please man, I can’t breathe,” he says.

The man repeats the phrase again and again: “I cannot breathe. I cannot breathe.”

Within minutes, the man closes his eyes and stops speaking. The officer, who appears to be white, appears to keep his knee on the man’s neck, even as onlookers begin shouting for police to attend to him.

“Get off of him!” one woman is heard shouting.

“Bro, he’s not fucking moving!” another bystander shouts. “Get off of his neck!”

The Minneapolis Police Department said in a press release that officers arrived at the scene in response to a reported “forgery in progress.” The suspect, police said, was in a car and appeared to be under the influence. He “physically resisted” officers, police said.

“Officers were able to get the suspect into handcuffs and noted he appeared to be suffering medical distress,” the statement said, adding the officers called for an ambulance but the man died shortly after arriving at a hospital. Police did not release the man’s identity, but said they believed he was in his 40s.

The press release stated that no weapons were used during the encounter. It did not mention that an officer had pinned the man to the street and had put his knee on the man’s neck prior to his death. 

The police department said an investigation was underway. The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension and FBI would be included, police noted without elaboration. Neither agency immediately responded to HuffPost’s requests for comment.

Video recorded by officers’ body cameras, which were turned on during the encounter, is being reviewed as part of the investigation, police said.

The officers involved have been placed on paid administrative leave, police said. Their names haven’t been publicly released.

“He should not have died,” Mayor Frey said during the news briefing Tuesday. “What we saw was horrible, completely and utterly messed up. … Whatever the investigation reveals, it does not change the simple truth that he should be with us this morning.”

“Being Black in America should not be a death sentence,” Frey continued. “When you hear someone calling for help, you are supposed to help. This officer failed in the most basic human sense.”

A protest against police violence has been planned for Tuesday night at the intersection where the incident occurred. Frey said he supported the right of community members to express their anger, but encouraged protesters to social distance and wear masks to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

Social media users noted similarities in the man’s death and that of Eric Garner, an unarmed Black man who died in 2014 after being placed in a chokehold by a New York City police officer.

“I can’t breathe,” Garner said repeatedly before he died.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.



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France clamps down on hydroxychloroquine use for COVID-19

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Olivier Véran, France’s health minister | Christophe Archambault/AFP via Getty Images

Move follows publication of a study casting doubt on the drug’s benefit for COVID-19 patients.

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France’s flirtation with hydroxychloroquine as a coronavirus fix is coming to an end.

The country’s public health agency advised Tuesday against using hydroxychloroquine outside of clinical trials. Shortly after that, the national medicines regulator suspended its use in clinical trials.

The moves follow the Lancet’s publication on Friday of a large observational study casting doubt on the benefit of hydroxychloroquine and another malaria drug, chloroquine, for COVID-19 patients. It also found an increased risk of heart problems and death.

Health Minister Olivier Véran had asked the National Council for Public Health (HCSP) over the weekend to consider whether he should revise France’s emergency use authorization to prescribe hydroxychloroquine to hospitalized COVID-19 patients.

Furthermore, the drugs regulator ANSM announced Tuesday that new patients should not be enrolled in the 16 clinical trials of hydroxychloroquine currently underway in France.

That echoes the World Health Organization’s announcement Monday that it would temporarily suspend the hydroxychloroquine part of its global Solidarity trial amid a safety review.

Europe’s hype around hydroxychloroquine originated in France, where a small, non-randomized trial in the Marseille clinic of doctor Didier Raoult claimed to have promising results. The U.S. also granted emergency authorization for COVID-19 in March, and U.S. Donald Trump said last week that he’s taking it to prevent the disease.

In a video posted Monday, Raoult stood by his findings.

“How can one messy study done with ‘big data’ change what we see?” he said.



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Younger and poorer: The people locked out of JobKeeper

Up to half a million short-term casual workers in industries worst-hit by the pandemic could access JobKeeper if the federal government expanded the scheme to include workers employed at their workplace for fewer than 12 months.

As the government faces calls to widen its wage subsidy program, new research claims the young and poor – “those least able to cope” – will experience the most pronounced financial hit due to the pandemic.

The analysis from Melbourne University’s Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey suggests 28 per cent of the nation’s workforce, or about 3.5 million workers, worked in industries where businesses were forced to close, like hospitality, aviation and the arts, or those that experienced steep declines in turnover, including the real estate, apparel and automotive sectors.

Of these workers, about 500,000 are casuals who have not worked for the same business for more than 12 months, meaning they are ineligible for the $1500 fortnightly payment.

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Police find children feared taken from Queensland park safe and well

Queensland police have located two young children safe and well hours after an urgent Amber Alert was issued to find them while feared taken from a suburb south-west of Brisbane who may be at significant risk.

The seven-year-old boy and six-year-old girl were last seen at the Redbank Plains Recreational Reserve on Moreton Avenue in Redbank Plans being taken by a woman and man known to them between 4.30pm and 4.45pm today.

Queensland Police then confirmed around 8.15pm the two children had been found.

The group left the scene in a grey 2007 BMW 335i with the Queensland vehicle registration 713-XVE and driven by the man on Collingwood Drive towards the Ipswich Motorway, police said earlier.

A 26-year-old woman and 38-year-old man believed known to the children were last seen leaving the Redbank Plains Recreational Reserve with the children. (Supplied)

Both children were described as African with proportionate builds, black hair and black eyes.

The 26-year-old woman with the children was also described as African, around 170cm tall with a slim build, black hair and eyes, while the 38-year-old man was described as of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Island appearance, around 180cm tall with a proportionate build, short brown hair and brown eyes.

Anyone with information about this incident should contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

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‘If We Get It, We Get It’: Beachgoers Belittle Coronavirus On Memorial Day Weekend

A recent uptick of coronavirus cases in Alabama didn’t deter people from descending on the state’s beaches over Memorial Day weekend, according to local media reports.

Footage that CNN aired on Monday’s broadcast of “Anderson Cooper 360” showed Gulf Shores Beach busy with people. None wore masks, per CNN national correspondent Gary Tuchman, and those interviewed were defiant in the face of the virus that’s killed more than 550 people in the state, where lockdown restrictions were eased on Friday. 

Almost 100,000 people have now died from the virus nationwide.

Restaurants, bars and stores in the city were also busy with, the report noting, many visitors failing to observe social distancing measures. Some restaurant staff did also not wear masks, said Tuchman.

“My family has the same mindset as me,” one man on the beach told Tuchman. “We kind of just agreed that if we get it, we get it, we’re going to handle it as a family and just get over it because that’s what family does.”

One woman said “everybody has got to go somehow,” adding: “I don’t want to die but, I mean, if that’s what God has in store for my life, then that’s OK.”

Others falsely likened COVID-19, the potentially deadly disease caused by the virus, to seasonal influenza and suggested “there’s enough wind and air that’s going to clear it out of the way” on the beach, claims that Tuchman debunked.

Another man cited President Donald Trump’s refusal to wear a mask, which commentators have noted has become a right-wing talking point in recent weeks, as his reason for doing the same. “If he’s not wearing a mask, I’m not going to wear a mask,” said the man. “If he’s not worried, I’m not worried.” 

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends “wearing cloth face coverings in public settings where other social distancing measures are difficult to maintain.”

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and member of the White House’s coronavirus, last week encouraged people to get outside over Memorial Day weekend, while adhering to social distancing measures.

“Go out, wear a mask, stay 6 feet away from anyone so you have the physical distancing, and go out,” he told CNN’s town hall on the pandemic. “Go for a run. Go for a walk. Go fishing. As long as you’re not in a crowd and you’re not in a situation where you can physically transmit the virus, and that’s what a mask is for, and that’s with the physical distance.”

Check out the video here:

Earlier in the weekend, beachgoer Steve Ricks told NBC 15 News that the majority of the thousands of visitors to Gulf Shores had been following social distancing rules.

“It was absolutely fabulous. It looks like America’s opening up,” he said. “There are literally thousands of people out here on the beach, and what I’m really pleased to see is that many of these folks, almost all of them, are doing a great job with social distancing.”

Check out the interview here:

A HuffPost Guide To Coronavirus



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Airline resumes flights to Italy (but turns around when airport’s shut)

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(CNN) — We’re all pretty excited about being able to travel again — but German airline Eurowings might be more eager than most.

The low-cost carrier resumed services from Düsseldorf to Sardinia, Italy, on Saturday — but was forced to turn around at its destination because Olbia Airport is still closed.

Flight EW9844 set off on the 730-mile (1,170km) flight to Sardinia’s Olbia Airport on the morning of May 23, but was in Sardinian airspace before being informed by air traffic control that it wasn’t open to commercial traffic.

The Airbus A320 hung around in a holding pattern hoping for permission to land, but no dice.

A diversion was proposed to Cagliari, some 120 miles away, reports Italian newspaper Corriere Della Sera, but the flight crew opted to cut its losses and head back to Düsseldorf.

This little sightseeing tour of western Europe, for the benefit of the A320’s load of two Sardinian passengers, took a total of four hours and ten minutes.

So how did this misunderstanding happen? A Eurowings spokesperson told CNN Travel that “Against the background of the corona crisis, the situation at numerous airports in Europe is very dynamic.

“The large amount of information provided on operating hours or airport closures are often changed at short notice,” added the spokesperson, and there are “daily changes in entry regulations in the various countries.”

The confusion appears to center on Italy’s Ministry of Infrastructure and Transportation reopening the airport on Sunday, May 17, but that decision was overruled the same day at a regional level, reports the One Mile at a Time aviation blog.

Olbia Costa Smeralda Airport is currently closed until at least June 2.

Eurowings’ spokesperson lays the blame on “a misunderstanding in the consolidation of the relevant flight information.”

The passengers — both of them — were rebooked and, it’s safe to say, were at least able to social distance appropriately on their A320 jaunt last Saturday morning.

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5 big EU countries blast Big Tech over approach to corona apps

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Coronavirus-tracking apps are being used as a tool in the fight against the pandemic | Fiona Goodall/Getty Images

Top digital officials from Germany, France, Italy, Spain and Portugal call for more independence from foreign tech companies.

Five of Europe’s biggest countries criticized Silicon Valley on Tuesday for “imposing” standards on coronavirus-tracking technology, arguing that the EU needs to wean itself off dependency on foreign tech companies.

In a joint op-ed published in several languages, the top officials in charge of digital affairs from Germany, France, Italy, Spain and Portugal accused the firms of neglecting the right of democratically-elected governments to have the final say over how such tools should be developed.

The firms were not named. Apple and Google helped to develop the technology underpinning many coronavirus-tracking apps.

“We believe that this attempt … is a missed opportunity and the wrong signal when it comes to promoting open cooperation between governments and the private sector,” the officials wrote. “States and companies must work together to recover from this pandemic and to become stronger, more cooperative and more digital than ever.”

The joint publication comes as countries around the globe are about to roll out smartphone applications to trace potential new infections by analyzing Bluetooth signals between phones.

Many of these programs will be based on an approach championed by Google and Apple, whose operating systems run on about 99 percent of smartphones globally.

The tech giants’ approach often went against other proposals initially put forward by policymakers, which were dropped after the two companies announced they would partner on software which would allow apps to trace potential infections even while running in the background of people’s smartphones.

Germany, for instance, changed course and ditched a German-led proposal in favor of that promoted by Google and Apple in April, which has delayed the rollout of the app by several weeks, if not months, according to officials involved in the process.

In the op-ed, the countries stress that recent experience has illustrated the importance of Europe to boost its “digital sovereignty, [which] is the foundation for Europe to be competitive.”

“It must be our aim to set the digital standards in the globalized world in order to determine the use and production of applications, especially in the field of key technologies, independently of individual companies or economic sectors,” they write.



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UK minister resigns over Dominic Cummings’ lockdown trip

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Douglas Ross, right, with U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson in November 2019 | Pool photo by Daniel Leal-Olivas/Getty Images

Junior minister Douglas Ross said he could not tell constituents the adviser’s actions were justifiable.

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LONDON — A junior minister in Boris Johnson’s government resigned on Tuesday over top aide Dominic Cummings’ alleged breach of the U.K.’s lockdown guidelines, saying he could not “in good faith” tell his constituents that the advisers’ actions were justifiable.

Douglas Ross, under secretary of state for Scotland, wrote to Johnson saying that the public reaction to reports of Cummings’ 260-mile drive from London to Durham in late March demonstrated that the adviser’s “interpretation of the government guidance was not shared by the vast majority of people who have done what the government asked.”

His is the first resignation in connection with the issue and will increase pressure on Johnson, who has faced calls to sack Cummings from opposition parties and from at least 20 Conservative MPs.

Ross added: “I have constituents who didn’t get to say goodbye to loved ones; families who could not mourn together; people who did not visit sick relatives because they followed the guidance of the government. I cannot in good faith tell them they were all wrong and one senior adviser to the government was right.”

Johnson has stood by Cummings since the first reports of his actions on Friday evening. On Monday, Cummings said he did not regret his actions and Johnson reiterated that he believed his adviser had acted legally and in the best interests of his family.

A No. 10 spokesman said: “The prime minister would like to thank Douglas Ross for his service to government and regrets his decision to stand down as parliamentary under secretary of state for Scotland.”



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St. Louis Post-Dispatch Editorial Exposes Trump’s ‘Colossal’ Lie About Obama

President Donald Trump has repeatedly blamed former President Barack Obama for his administration’s shortcomings in dealing with the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic. 

“The last administration left us nothing,” Trump said last month.

But the St. Louis Post-Dispatch found that Trump’s own budget documents show the opposite ― exposing what it called “a lie of colossal Trumpian proportions.”

The newspaper’s editorial board said the Trump administration told Congress that the Obama administration left it with everything needed for a pandemic ― and sought big budget cuts from the programs as a result. 

Trump’s 2020 budget asked Congress to cut the pandemic preparedness budget by $102.9 million, part of $595.5 million in requested cuts to public health preparedness and response outlay.

“Obama left office with an unblemished record of building up the nation’s pandemic preparedness,” the newspaper said. “Trump systematically sought to dismantle it.” 

Trump has since blamed his predecessor for lack of personal protective equipment and testing supplies, saying “our cupboards were bare. We had very little in our stockpile.”

But the newspaper said a chart provided by the Trump administration with the budget shows that by 2016 ― Obama’s final year in office ― the nation’s public health emergency preparedness was at between 98% and 100% by every key measure.

“That’s by the Trump administration’s own assessment,” the Post-Dispatch said. “If the cupboard was bare, it’s because Trump swept it clean.”

A HuffPost Guide To Coronavirus



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California Issues Guidelines For Safe Reopening Of Houses Of Worship

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Rabbi Shalom Rubanowitz looks forward to reopening his synagogue doors — if his congregation can balance the laws of God and California during the coronavirus pandemic.

On Monday, the state released a framework that will permit counties to allow in-person worship services. They include limiting worshipers to 100 or less, taking everyone’s temperature, limiting singing and group recitations and not sharing prayer books or other items.

The Orthodox congregation of Shul on the Beach in Los Angeles County’s Venice Beach will follow the guidelines, consulting with rabbinical authorities who place a high importance on preservation of life, Rubanowitz said.

“We can do it, it’s just a question of how,” he said, noting that Orthodox believers are barred from using technology or carrying many personal items on the Sabbath.

The path of reopening provides “a great deal of hope,” he added. “That’s what people need.”

Houses of worship are the latest focus as the state eases mid-March stay-at-home orders that shut down all but essential services and kept 40 million Californians at home to slow the spread of COVID-19.

Social distancing precautions are cited for reducing rates of hospitalizations and deaths and most of California’s 58 counties are deep into phase two of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s four-stage plan to restart the battered economy. The state on Monday cleared the way for in-store shopping to resume statewide with social distancing restrictions, although counties get to decide whether to permit it.

Individual counties also will decide whether to allow the reopening of in-person services for churches, mosques, synagogues and other religious institutions. In-person religious services are relegated to phase three, which Newsom had said could be weeks away.

But they could come much sooner under the guidelines. Counties that are having success controlling the virus are likely to move quickly. Others with outbreaks — such as Los Angeles County, which has about 60% of California’s roughly 3,800 deaths — may choose to delay.

Orange County supervisors may consider a resolution being introduced Tuesday to reopen houses of worship next weekend under federal and state health guidelines.

Worshippers who are allowed to return will find some jarring changes. The state guidelines limit gatherings to 25% of building capacity or 100 people, whichever is lower. Choirs aren’t recommended. Neither are shaking hands or hugging. Worshipers are urged to wear masks, avoid sharing prayer books or prayer rugs, keep their distance in pews and skip the collection plate. Large gatherings such as for concerts, weddings and funerals should be avoided.

The guidelines say even with physical distancing, in-person worship carries a higher risk of transmitting the virus and increasing the numbers of hospitalizations and deaths and recommend houses of worship shorten services.

Each county will have to adopt rules for services to resume within their jurisdictions and then the guidelines will be reviewed by state health officials after 21 days.

Some church leaders aren’t eager to reopen. The Rev. Amos Brown, pastor of Third Baptist Church in San Francisco and head of the local NAACP chapter, led a protest Monday against reopening.

“We are not going to be rushing back to church,” he said by phone, noting that many leaders of his denomination have been sickened or died nationwide. Freedom of religion is “not the freedom to kill folks, not the freedom to put people in harm’s way. That’s insane,” he said.

But a few churches have defiantly reopened their doors already, a handful have sued the governor, and several thousand were threatening to ignore his orders and reopen for Pentecost on May 31.

Cross Culture Christian Center, a Lodi church that defied the governor and then sued him, said the guidelines were welcome but didn’t change anything.

“Our church and places of worship across California have suffered greatly because our leaders chose to marginalize and criminalize faith-based gatherings,” Pastor Jon Duncan said in a statement. “If we are to remain free, we must never allow this to happen again.”



Demonstrators protest during a rally to re-open California and against Stay-At-Home directives on May 1, 2020 in San Diego, California.

Some places of worship around the country opened over the weekend after President Donald Trump declared them essential and the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released guidelines for reopening faith organizations.

But some of the largest religious institutions in California are taking a more cautious approach.

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange announced last week that it is phasing in public Masses beginning June 14, starting with restricted numbers of worshipers. At first, choirs will be banned, fonts won’t contain holy water and parishioners won’t perform rituals where they must touch each other.

“We know that God is with us, but at the same time we have to be careful and make sure that we protect each other in this challenging time,” Bishop Kevin Vann said Friday.

Two church services that already were held without authorization have been sources of outbreaks; one in Mendocino County and the other in Butte County.

For most people, the new coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia, and death. As of Monday, California had at least 94,558 confirmed cases of COVID-19, more than 3,000 hospitalizations and 3,795 deaths.



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