Daniel Radcliffe Has Blunt Fact-Check For J.K. Rowling After Anti-Trans Tweets

“Harry Potter” actor Daniel Radcliffe is putting J.K. Rowling on notice after the author’s latest transphobic tweets, in which she attempted to define women based on menstruation.

“Transgender women are women,” Radcliffe wrote in an essay on the website of The Trevor Project, an organization that helps at-risk LGBTQ youth. 

“Any statement to the contrary erases the identity and dignity of transgender people and goes against all advice given by professional health care associations who have far more expertise on this subject matter than either Jo or I.”

His essay comes after Rowling mocked a headline referring to “people who menstruate” and sarcastically wondered aloud: “I’m sure there used to be a word for those people. Someone help me out. Wumben? Wimpund? Woomud?”

Radcliffe also said he was “deeply sorry” to Harry Potter fans who feel “tarnished or diminished” by Rowling’s comments. 

“I really hope that you don’t entirely lose what was valuable in these stories to you,” he wrote, saying he hopes Rowling’s words don’t taint the message of love in the books. 

“If you found anything in these stories that resonated with you and helped you at any time in your life — then that is between you and the book that you read, and it is sacred,” he wrote. “And in my opinion, nobody can touch that.”

Radcliffe is a longtime supporter of the Trevor Project and in 2011 was honored with the organization’s Hero Award. 

Rowling has been under fire for her transphobic comments in the past, including last year when she came out in support of a woman fired for saying people can’t change gender identity:

The Human Rights Campaign fired back:  



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Trump Is Opposed To ‘Kneeling In General,’ Raising Hell With Religious Worship

President Donald Trump is “very much against kneeling in general,” press secretary Kayleigh McEnany declared Monday. That was a head-spinner for those who spend time kneeling in houses of worship and at memorials and gravesides.

McEnany was referring to Trump’s opposition to athletes who take a knee before sports events to protest racism and police brutality, but the devil is in the details of bad wording. Those — like Trump — who spend little to no time kneeling at religious services likely didn’t realize how obliviously disrespectful McEnany’s declaration sounded.

Twitter critics were only too happy to point it out:



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Coronavirus Outbreak: California movie theatres to reopen from 12 June with limited capacity, subject to county approval- Entertainment News, Firstpost

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California movie theaters can begin opening later this week if they limit theater capacity to 25% or no more than 100 attendees, under state guidance released Monday.

Representational image

The guidance adds movie theaters to a long list of other businesses that can start reopening as the nation’s most populous state relaxes its stay-at-home order. Restaurants, churches, hair salons and retail stores have already reopened in many counties.

Soon that reopening will expand vastly in counties that can meet certain metrics including number of cases, positive test rates and testing and tracing capabilities. Other entertainment venues that can reopen later include bowling alleys, mini golf courses and arcades.

The state recommends movie theaters implement reservation systems, designate arrival times and designating certain seats that people can use so that moviegoers can maintain 6 feet (2 meters) of distance from other groups. Moviegoers should, at a minimum, wear face coverings when entering and exiting the theater or buying concessions, according to the California Department of Public Health guidelines.

Hollywood movie studios are hoping enough theaters will be open to hold a late-summer blockbuster season. AT&T Inc’s Warner Bros currently plans to release director Christopher Nolan’s thriller Tenet on 17 July, and Walt Disney Co aims to debut the action epic Mulan on 24 July. In California, theaters must receive approval for their reopening plans from county health officials, who should consider rate of coronavirus infection, local preparedness to handle new cases and other metrics, the state guidelines said.

The state also suggests theaters use disposable or washable seat covers that are easy to clean and prop open doors so people don’t have to touch handles.

The most important region to the film industry is Los Angeles County, the biggest movie market in the United States. Officials there reported an uptick in new infections over the weekend. The National Association of Theatre Owners has said it expects 90% of theaters worldwide to be open by mid-July.

Cinemark Holdings Inc plans to open five theaters in Texas on June 19 to test new safety procedures. Cineworld Group Plc, owner of Regal Cinemas in the United States, said it believes all of its theaters will reopen in July. AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc, the world’s largest theater chain, has said its theaters will remain shuttered through June.

Meanwhile, the state is also allowing film, music and television production to resume subject to labor agreements. Film, television and commercial production make up a significant amount of the Los Angeles economy.

California has reported more than 130,000 coronavirus cases and 4,600 deaths.

(Click here to follow LIVE updates on coronavirus outbreak)

For most people, the virus causes mild or moderate symptoms and clears up within weeks. But it can be more serious for some people, including older adults and people with pre-existing health conditions, causing pneumonia and even death.

(With inputs from agencies)

Updated Date: Jun 09, 2020 08:44:42 IST


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Trump Rebuffs Protests Over Systemic Racism and Calls Police ‘Great People’

President Trump on Monday flatly denied that systemic problems existed in American police departments, declaring that as many as 99.9 percent of the nation’s officers are “great, great people” as he rebuffed mass street protests denouncing racist behavior in law enforcement.

Mr. Trump, who has adopted an uncompromising law-and-order posture and scorned demonstrations that have broken out in cities nationwide, surrounded himself with law enforcement officials at the White House and tried to link liberals’ calls to defund the police to his Democratic opponent, former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. — even though Mr. Biden came out earlier against defunding the police.

“There won’t be defunding,” Mr. Trump said. “There won’t be dismantling of our police. There’s not going to be any disbanding of our police.”

While Trump advisers had hoped to tie Mr. Biden together with the protesters to try to hurt him with moderate and independent voters, Mr. Biden’s campaign undercut that tactic by announcing that he “does not believe that police should be defunded,” while noting that he “supports the urgent need for reform.”

The back-and-forth highlighted how drastically the campaign has changed in the two weeks since George Floyd died after a white police officer kneeled on his neck in Minneapolis. Mr. Biden has spent much of that time expressing solidarity with protesters against racial injustice, and on Monday traveled to Houston to meet with Mr. Floyd’s family in advance of Tuesday’s funeral. Mr. Trump has sought to appeal to his hard-core base with threats to use force in the streets and other harsh language to try to show he has no tolerance for disorder.

Mr. Trump called the family of Mr. Floyd last month, but he has not met with protest leaders or major African-American political figures since the demonstrations erupted. White House officials have explored the possibility of a trip by Mr. Trump or Vice President Mike Pence to Minnesota but so far have backed off the idea, recognizing that neither would be welcome by many there.

While aides said on Monday that Mr. Trump was studying possible proposals for changes to law enforcement, the president himself made little effort to suggest as much during his appearance with law enforcement officials.

“Our police have been letting us live in peace,” he said, “and we want to make sure we don’t have any bad actors in there and sometimes we’ll see some horrible things like we witnessed recently, but I say 99.9 — let’s go with 99 percent of them — great, great people and they’ve done jobs that are record setting.” Mr. Trump took no questions from reporters invited to record the event.

Recent polls indicate that Mr. Trump is out of step with many Americans on the protests, some of which have unfolded in Republican-leaning states that voted for him in 2016. A Monmouth University poll released last week found that 76 percent of Americans — including 71 percent of white people — called racism and discrimination “a big problem” in the United States, a 26-percentage-point spike since 2015. In that poll and others, majorities of Americans said that demonstrators’ anger was fully justified and that police officers were generally more likely to treat black people unfairly than to mistreat white people.

Mr. Trump’s own numbers have been sliding in battleground states like Michigan and Wisconsin, and states that supported him four years ago like Florida, Arizona, North Carolina and even Texas appear increasingly in play. The president was so agitated over a new CNN national poll showing him 14 percentage points behind Mr. Biden on Monday that he posted online a memo from his own pollster calling surveys by major networks biased against Mr. Trump.

Officials at the White House said that Mr. Trump wants to focus on a law-and-order message both because he thinks it is his best political option and because it is his instinctive default setting on matters involving the police. Mr. Trump has long sought to divide people by race going back to the days when he took out full-page ads calling for the death penalty for the Central Park Five, a group of Latino and African-American teenagers later exonerated in a sensational rape case.

Even as the president has described some protesters as “thugs” and threatened to unleash “vicious dogs” on any who tried to enter White House grounds, advisers have suggested that Mr. Trump should give a speech going beyond previous statements or find another way to show that he hears the anger from protesters about police misconduct. Two officials said that there is still a push for Mr. Trump to hold “listening” sessions, an idea they have floated since shortly after Mr. Floyd was killed.

In private, Mr. Trump has been musing about race in America since Mr. Floyd’s death and his own response. In a meeting last week with roughly two dozen White House aides, campaign officials and surrogates, Mr. Trump expressed unhappiness about Mr. Floyd’s killing but immediately said the country needed law and order, according to people who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe his private comments. He said nothing more broadly about police treatment of black people in the United States.

Instead, he meandered as he talked, saying that he had signed legislation overhauling criminal justice in 2018 not because it was an issue that he was passionate about, but because Jared Kushner, his son-in-law and senior adviser, had wanted him to, according to one of the people familiar with what was said.

He also mused about how he has asked people whether they prefer being called “black” or “African-American,” an issue he had his campaign research.

At another point, Mr. Trump talked about the protesters, questioning whether they were peaceful and citing the fire last week at St. John’s Church, a block from the White House. The fire caused relatively minor damage in a basement but has been seized on repeatedly by Mr. Trump and his advisers as a justification for forcibly pushing demonstrators out of the area a day later.

Republicans privately said they saw the cry for defunding as a political gift, one that will alienate middle-of-the-road voters and energize the president’s base. Mr. Trump’s advisers on Monday held a media call with Ken Blackwell, the former mayor of Cincinnati, and Carolyn Welsh, a former sheriff in Pennsylvania, to try to link Mr. Biden to the issue.

After Mr. Biden’s campaign declared that he did not support defunding police, Mr. Trump’s aides pressed the matter, calling it a “weak statement” by a staff member. “As the protesters like to say, silence is agreement,” said Tim Murtaugh, the Trump campaign’s communications director. “By his silence, Joe Biden is endorsing defunding the police.”

Since Mr. Floyd’s death, Mr. Biden has urged Congress to pass several measures on policing, such as banning chokeholds and stopping the transfer of military weaponry to police departments. Last year, Mr. Biden called for spending hundreds of millions of dollars on community policing programs, including hiring more officers.

Even some of the law enforcement officials invited to meet with Mr. Trump urged him to support change. Sheriff Tony Childress of Livingston County in Illinois endorsed mandatory de-escalation training for officers; a ban on all physical restraint on or above the neck and any acts that restrict the flow of blood or oxygen to the brain; and requirements that officers render medical aid and intervene when physical force is being inappropriately applied.

“We look forward to working with you to hopefully getting legislation involved in making these things true and making them law,” Sheriff Childress told Mr. Trump.

Mr. Trump, who brought no advisers of color with him for his Bible-holding photo op at St. John’s last week, included Ja’Ron Smith, the deputy director of the White House Office of American Innovation, in Monday’s event.

“As an individual, I’ve also had the fear of living in a certain neighborhood or driving certain types of cars as an African-American just because of my relationship with the police,” Mr. Smith said. “There are a lot of African-American males across the country that have stories that they can share.”

But he added that police officers should not be demonized. “We can’t let a few bad apples represent something that is the core of everything we do,” he said.

Attorney General William P. Barr, in an interview with Fox News on Monday, said that the demonstrations were so bad at the end of May that the Secret Service recommended that President Trump go to his bunker for safety, contradicting the president’s claim that he went there to check it out.

‘Things were so bad that the Secret Service recommended the President go down to the bunker,” Mr. Barr said. “We can’t have that in our country.”

Katie Benner, Thomas Kaplan and Giovanni Russonello contributed reporting.



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George Floyd live updates: Biden opposes defunding police; Derek Chauvin’s bail up to $1.25 million; mourners pay respects in Houston

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Hundreds of mourners paid their respects to George Floyd at a public viewing in his childhood hometown of Houston.

USA TODAY

The public viewing for George Floyd was held in Houston and the police officer accused of killing him appeared in a Minneapolis courtroom Monday, two weeks after Floyd’s death helped ignite a wave of historic protests across the nation.

Hundreds of mourners lined up to form a procession to Floyd’s coffin inside the Fountain of Praise church. Others paid their respects at a mural of Floyd on a wall in his old neighborhood in the city’s Third Ward.

“There’s something special about his life and his family,” said Bevan Walker, 50, as a snapped a photo of the mural. “His name is going to be synonymous with justice for generations to come.”

Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer charged with second-degree murder, has been in jail since his arrest May 29. A judge Monday set his unconditional bail at $1.25 million, or $1 million with standard conditions.

The drumbeat for “defunding” police was growing louder, despite opposition from Democratic presidential hopeful Joe Biden. A veto-proof majority of city council in Minneapolis has publicly expressed support for disbanding the city’s force. Mayors in Los Angeles and New York promised to funnel some funds from police to community programs. Civil rights lawyer Ben Crump, representing Floyd’s family, has asked the United Nations for recommendations aimed at systemic changes in U.S. law enforcement.

“The United States government has consistently failed to hold police accountable and did not bring federal criminal charges even in cases with irrefutable video evidence,” Crump said in a statement.

A closer look at some recent developments:

Our live blog will be updated throughout the day. For first-in-the-morning updates, sign up for the Daily Briefing. Here’s the latest news:

Joe Biden: Don’t defund police

Presumptive Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden issued a statement saying he does not support the growing push to defund police departments. Biden, through spokesman Andrew Bates, said he supports funding initiatives such as mental health programs and substance abuse treatment so officers can concentrate on policing.

“He hears and shares the deep grief and frustration of those calling out for change, and is driven to ensure that justice is done and that we put a stop to this terrible pain,” Bates said in a statement.

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Derek Chauvin bail: Up to $1.25 million

Derek Chauvin, the veteran Minneapolis police officer accused of second-degree murder in the death of George Floyd, appeared in court for a hearing Monday and had his conditional bail kept at $1 million. It was initially set at $500,000 but doubled Wednesday when a second-degree murder charge was added. Prosecutors were granted their request for $1.25 million unconditional bail.

Chauvin, 44, said almost nothing during an 11-minute hearing in which he appeared before Hennepin County Judge Jeannice M. Reding on closed-circuit television from the state’s maximum security prison in Oak Park Heights. His attorney, Eric Nelson, did not contest the bail and didn’t address the substance of the charges, which also include third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter.

Chauvin was seen on video pressing his knee against Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes as the unarmed, handcuffed black man gasped that he couldn’t breathe. Court papers show Chauvin kept his knee on Floyd for two minutes after another officer couldn’t detect a pulse on him.

The other three officers involved in the case – J. Kueng, Thomas Lane and Tou Thao – are charged with aiding and abetting a murder. They remain in the Hennepin County jail on $750,000 bail.

Houston says goodbye to ‘Big Floyd’

Monday’s public viewing for George Floyd drew thousands — including Texas Gov. Greg Abbott — in his childhood hometown of Houston. Floyd, 46, grew up in the neighborhood’s Cuney Homes housing project, also called “The Bricks.” Known as “Big Floyd,” he put out rap mix tapes and was a standout athlete at Jack Yates High School.

Floyd also had several brushes with the law. In 2009, he went to state prison after pleading guilty to charges of armed aggravated robbery. When he was released in 2013, friends say he returned to Houston, determined to steer youth away from the mistakes he made.

“Just having his presence there really helped solidify things in the neighborhood,” said Chris Johnson, a minister at Good Hope Missionary Baptist Church. “He helped a lot of conflicted and confused people.”

Sheila Masters, who knew Floyd since he was a boy, said he was an energetic young man, dreaming about someday playing sports professionally and promising Masters and his mother to “one day take us out of the hood.” Masters, 59, who is the mother of rapper and lifelong Floyd friend Cal Wayne, said she hoped people didn’t ease up on protests, even after Floyd is buried Tuesday in Houston.  

“Please don’t stop fighting. Please don’t stop marching,” said Masters, who wore a “Justice for George Floyd” mask. “Change hasn’t come yet. Change has to start with us.”

– Rick Jervis

Portland police chief steps down amid criticism

Jami Resch, strongly criticized for her department’s heavy-handed approach toward protests sparked by George Floyd’s death, resigned Monday as police chief of Portand, Oregon. She had taken the job less than six months ago. Chuck Lovell, an African American lieutenant on the force, was promoted to replaced her.

Resch said she suggested the change in command to Mayor Ted Wheeler, who said he supported Lovell to lead the department as it moves through needed reforms.

In other cities: 

– Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan is fending off calls for her resignation for law enforcement’s use of a type of tear gas to disperse Sunday night protesters, days after Durcan and the police chief said such tactics would not be employed for at least a month.

– Nashville Mayor John Cooper said much of the city’s police force would be outfitted with body cameras and in-car cameras in July, a program that had been delayed over costs.

– Los Angeles prosecutors said they won’t bring charges against thousands of protesters arrested for violating curfew and failing to disperse.

– Denver police say they are banning the use of chokeholds effective immediately and requiring officers who point their guns at anyone to file a report and notify a supervisor.

‘Defund police’: Here’s what is happening

The call to “defund the police” is gaining momentum. In Minneapolis, a veto-proof majority of the city council committed to dismantling its police department, breaking with Mayor Jacob Frey’s desire to make changes but not break up the embattled police force. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti vowed to cut as much as $150 million from a planned increase in the police budget, and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said the city would move funding from the NYPD to youth initiatives and social services.

“It’s not just about taking away money from the police, it’s about reinvesting those dollars into black communities,” Patrisse Cullors, a co-founder of the Black Lives Matter movement, told WBUR in Boston.

– Ryan Miller

Democrats honor Floyd with silence, unveil police reform bill

House Democrats knelt in silence for 8 minutes and 46 seconds at a ceremony on Capitol Hill on Monday to honor George Floyd, who died after a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck for almost nine minutes as he lay handcuffed in the street.

“It’s a long time, 8 minutes and 46 seconds. It’s a long time to be on one knee,” South Carolina Representative James Clyburn said. “But for 244 years, there were plenty of knees on the necks of blacks who came to this country.”

Democrats also unveiled a sweeping package addressing police changes, the first major legislative response to Floyd’s killing and protests against police brutality across the nation. The Justice in Policing Act of 2020 calls for mandatory dashboard and body cameras, an end to police chokeholds and the creation of a national registry to track officers with a record of misconduct.

The legislation is not expected to get a warm reception from most Republicans, who control the Senate.

– Christal Hayes

Fired Atlanta police officers sue for unlawful firing

Two police officers fired after using their Tasers during recent protests have filed a lawsuit to get their jobs back, reported the Atlanta Journal-Constitution on Monday.

The Atlanta police officers were fired after video showed authorities pulling two young people from a car and shooting them with stun guns Saturday, May 6. The officers were fired the next day, and they were charged with four other officers.

The lawsuit, addressed to Police Chief Erika Shields and Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, states Ivory Streeter and Mark Gardner’s use of force was lawful and they were fired without a proper investigation.

“Petitioners have suffered irreparable injury to their personal and professional reputations as a result of their unlawful dismissal,” the suit states, according to the Journal-Constitution.

– Elinor Aspegren

Biden met with Floyd family, won’t attend service

Joe Biden met with George Floyd’s family in Houston but will not attend the public viewing Monday or Tuesday’s private ceremony and burial, his office says. Family lawyer Ben Crump had said Biden was expected to attend, but Biden’s office now says he will provide a video message to avoid disruptions from the added security measures his attendance would require.

In England, statue of slave trader tossed into river

Police in Bristol, England, were searching for protesters who toppled a bronze statue of 17th century merchant, philanthropist and slave trader Edward Colston and tossed it into the River Avon. Photos from the scene show a protester with his knee on the figure’s neck, an homage to George Floyd, who died while being similarly restrained by a Minneapolis police officer. The BBC reports that the statue was later dragged through the city’s streets and thrown into the harbor. The empty plinth was used as a makeshift stage for protesters.

Colston was a principal of the Royal African Company that shipped tens of thousands of men, women and children from Africa to the Americas. He bequeathed his wealth to charities and his name is prominent on his city’s streets, memorials and buildings.

Floyd family appeals to UN to bring systemic changes to US policing

Civil rights lawyer Ben Crump, representing George Floyd’s family, has asked the United Nations to intervene in Floyd’s case and make recommendations for systemic police changes in the U.S. Crump is urging the UN to investigate the circumstances surrounding the death of Floyd, who died after a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck for almost nine minutes while other officers provided no aid.

Reforms requested include “deescalating techniques,” independent prosecutions and autopsies for every police killing. The goal: “Stop further human rights abuses including torture and extrajudicial killings of African Americans,” Crump said in a statement obtained by ABC.

Security fence draws protest art: ‘The whole nation is crying’

More than a mile of temporary security fencing encasing the White House and its environs as demonstrations roll across the city has become a showcase for protest art. Some sections of the fencing, which the Secret Service has said could come down this week, is covered with signs and posters: “Black Lives Matter,” “I Can’t Breathe,” “No more police murder of black people.” Kai Gamanya, who hung a painting featuring a fist flanked by a crown and a pyramid, told DCist her work reflects that black people come from royalty.

“It’s like the whole nation is crying, and this whole fence is crying,” Gamanya said. “And if you were to back up and see it from beginning to end, it’s nothing but posters from all the way down.”

More on protests, George Floyd:

Contributing: The Associated Press

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KBO Week In Review: Stuffed animals and strikeouts – Sportsnet.ca

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Happy Birthday Sonam Kapoor: 5 times the diva stole our hearts with her interesting looks from her films

Image Source : INSTAGRAM/SONAMKAPOOR

Happy Birthday Sonam Kapoor: 5 times the diva stole our hearts with her interesting looks from her films

On the most popular and much-loved star kid of the industry, Sonam Kapoor is celebrating her 35th birthday today on June 9. The actress might be the happiest today as she has finally reached Mumbai to be with her family. Ever since the COVID-19 lockdown, she was under home quarantine with her husband Anand Ahuja at their New Delhi residence but the actress flew back to Mumbai recently to celebrate her special day with her loved ones. One of the most stylish actresses, Sonam has always been under the limelight for her dramatic fashion statements. The gorgeous lady can wear anything from a lehenga-choli with beautifully ornated silhouettes to a simple LBD and still rock it. It is not just the dress but the confidence with which she carries it makes the difference. Her costumes in her films makes her stand apart from others. As the actress celebrates her 35th birthday today, let’s have a look at some of the best looks from her films including Neerja, Prem Ratan Dhan Payo, Veere Di Wedding, Khoobsurat, Sanju and others.

Sonam, on her Instagram, handle shared few pictures from the small birthday bash which was held at her home. Take a look at the photos here:

On the professional front, Sonam Kapoor’s last film was The Zoya Factor in which she was seen opposite South star Dulquer Salmaan. Her next will be the sequel of Veere Di Wedding in which she will collaborate with Kareena Kapoor Khan once again.

Happy Birthday, Sonam Kapoor!

Fight against Coronavirus: Full coverage



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Body-cam footage shows officer punching Alabama store owner who called 911 to report robbery

Authorities in Alabama showed body-camera footage Monday of a police officer punching a liquor store owner who called 911 to report a robbery this spring.

The owner of the store, Kevin Penn, of Decatur, suffered a broken jaw in the March 15 confrontation and was charged with obstruction after refusing to put down a gun, NBC affiliate WAFF reported.

The footage shows the officer striking Penn after a brief argument.

Penn’s lawyer, Carl Cole, told AL.com that Penn showed the gun to the officers to make sure they knew he was armed. He then removed the clip and ejected the bullet from the chamber, Cold told the site.

Decatur Police Chief Nate Allen told reporters that the officer punched Penn “when he became more agitated and angry” and put his hand over a gun on the store counter.

“That’s what caused the immediate charge of the officer,” he said.

Asked if it was proper procedure to punch someone, Allen said the department’s policies require using the least amount of force “to get the job done.”

“I’d much rather have a punch than a shooting,” he added.

Allen said that a suspect was later apprehended for shoplifting at the liquor store. The officer who punched Penn is on administrative duty during an internal investigation, he said.

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Texas Reports Record-Breaking COVID-19 Hospitalizations, As State Reopens

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Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said that bars and bowling alleys are on the list of business that can reopen at 25 percent beginning Friday and restaurants can increase to 50 percent capacity as the state continues to go through phases to reopen the state after closing many businesses to battle the spread of the coronavirus.

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Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said that bars and bowling alleys are on the list of business that can reopen at 25 percent beginning Friday and restaurants can increase to 50 percent capacity as the state continues to go through phases to reopen the state after closing many businesses to battle the spread of the coronavirus.

Eric Gay/AP

Texas reported a record-breaking number of COVID-19 hospitalizations Monday, as the governor plans to reopen more businesses and double capacity.

Texas Department of State Health Services figures show 1,935 people were admitted as hospital patients for coronavirus-related treatment. That is up from a previous record of 1,888 more than a month ago on May 5.

The department’s new figures were released as Gov. Greg Abbott moves forward with a plan to open bars, restaurants, amusement parks and other businesses to 50% capacity.

Abbott led most of the nation’s governors in allowing Texas to lift statewide stay-at-home orders and urging businesses to reopen at limited capacity on May 1.

But even in states where officials left stringent restrictions in place, the number of newly diagnosed cases are also rising. About 20 states, including California and Arizona, have also reported a rise in COVID-19 cases in recent weeks, according to The New York Times. All as state leaders have come under increasing pressure to restart the economy.

The pattern also holds true worldwide. On Monday, the World Health Organization warned the outbreak is worsening around the globe. The U.N. body said the world had recorded its highest daily jump of cases — 136,000. And the U.S. and Brazil continue to report the highest number of new cases on a daily basis with roughly 20,000 each.

Meanwhile, virus experts and epidemiologists are concerned that the recent protests that have cascaded across the country since the killing of George Floyd on Memorial Day, will lead to an unprecedented spike in coronavirus cases.

In Texas, the availability of intensive-care beds and ventilators — 1,600 and 5,800 respectively — have been seen as markers of improvement and evidence that it is time to reopen the economy.

Some officials have stated the increase in cases has more to do with the spread of testing. Some counties are now including prison testing results in their data, which is driving reporting rates up.

And the numbers are likely to continue to rise. On Monday Abbott pledged to increase testing “in underserved and minority communities that have been disproportionately impacted by the virus.”

Throughout Texas, more than 75,000 people have been infected and more than 1,800 others have died from COVID-19, according to Johns Hopkins University.



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