Zimbabwe frees journalists held for ‘coronavirus breach’

The two Zimbabwean journalists arrested last week as they were investigating the abduction of three opposition party members have been released on bail, a lawyers’ association said on Tuesday.

Frank Chikowore and Samuel Takawira, working for the online news outlet 263Chat, had been held on the grounds that they had breached Zimbabwe’s anti-coronavirus social distancing rules.

“The magistrate granted them 500 Zimbabwe dollars ($20 / 18 euros) bail each,” Kumbirai Mafunda, a  spokesman for the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights, told reporters.

The pair were “ordered not to interfere with witnesses and continue to reside at the addresses they gave the police until the matter comes to an end,” he said outside the Mbare magistrate’s court in the capital.

‘Coronavirus breach’ or political suppression?

Chikowore and Takawira were arrested on Friday at a private hospital where they were conducting interviews with an opposition lawmaker and two party officials.

The three had been admitted to the hospital after being allegedly abducted and tortured by as-yet unidentified assailants.

Accused of not maintaining adequate social distancing between themselves and interviewees, the journalists were arrested by a police officer guarding the hospital and charged with breaching regulations to curb the spread of coronavirus.

The pair were initially denied bail on their first court appearance on Friday, sparking outrage from local media and rights groups.

Despite the government categorising journalism as an essential service during the lockdown, numerous journalists have been harassed and jailed in the landlocked country.

Last month a Zimbabwean high court ordered police to desist from arresting, detaining or interfering with the work of journalists providing coverage during the COVID-19 lockdown which began March 30 in the southern African country.

By Agence France-Presse (AFP)



Source link

Trump hits back at Twitter after his tweets labelled as ‘misleading’

0



In an unprecedented move, on Tuesday (local time) labelled tweets from US President as misleading.


The social media giant highlighted two of Trump’s tweets that falsely claimed mail-in ballots would lead to widespread voter fraud, CNN reported.



“Get the facts about mail-in ballots,” read a message beneath each tweet.


Trump hit back at for labelling his tweets as misleading, saying the social media platform is “interfering” in the 2020 presidential election and completely “stifling” free speech.


is now interfering in the 2020 presidential election. They are saying my statement on mail-in ballots, which will lead to massive corruption and fraud, is incorrect, based on fact-checking by Fake News CNN and the Amazon Washington Post…,” Trump tweeted.


ALSO READ: Donald Trump is supposed to lead by example but he is a fool: Joe Biden



“Twitter is completely stifling free speech, and I, as President, will not allow it to happen!” he said.


The message is linked to a fact-checked page the platform had created filled with further links and summaries of news articles.


Twitter said that the move was aimed at providing “context” around Trump’s remarks.


But Twitter’s decision is likely to raise further questions about its willingness to consistently apply the label to other Trump’s tweets.



Source link

None of my staff has undermined #Coronavirus messaging – PM Johnson

0

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Monday (25 May) he believed that none of his staff had undermined the public health message for how people can help tackle the coronavirus outbreak, adding he regretted the anger over his senior adviser’s movements, writes Estelle Shirbon.

“Yes of course I do regret the confusion and the anger and the pain that people feel … That’s why I wanted people to understand exactly what had happened,” Johnson told a news conference straight after his adviser, Dominic Cummings, defended his trip to northern England during the lockdown.

“I do not believe that anybody in Number 10 has done anything to undermine our messaging,” he said, referring to his Downing Street office.

Source by [author_name]

Missing Kiwi bushwalkers found alive

Two young bushwalkers missing in New Zealand’s Kahurangi National Park for 18 days have been found alive.

A huge array of officials and volunteers began a search for Dion Reynolds and Jessica O’Connor, both 23, on May 19.

The pair, hailing from the small town of Takaka, had begun a tramp from the remote Anatori River, near the north tip of South Island, on May 9.

What began as a small search operation grew to involve dozens, including cliff rescue specialists, defence force personnel, fire and emergency workers and police – using helicopters, drone aircraft and dog teams.

A forecast 100mm of rain forced the search’s postponement on Monday and Tuesday, and brought grave fears for the pair.

However, on Wednesday – 18 days after setting out – police announced the pair had been found, against the odds.

“”(They) got lost fairly early on in the tramp … they did the right thing,” police spokesman Malcolm York said.

“They stayed put and they made themselves visible, so when we got to that spot, we were able to see them.

The pair were hungry, being without food for “quite some time”, but were comforted by family and friends after being airlifted to Nelson.

Mr York said the pair had minor injuries; Mr Reynolds has a strained ankle and Ms O’Connor has a strained back from a fall.

In all, three search dog teams were used after the police pups fatigued during the extensive search.

Mr York said it was “pretty rare” for such a long search to have a happy ending.

“(It’s a) fantastic outcome and one we were all hoping for,” he said.

Mark O’Connor, father of Ms O’Connor, said he was “absolutely over the moon”.

“The search team and the police have done such a fantastic job, fabulous,” he told Stuff.

A fundraising page to support search and rescue volunteer organisation LANDSAR for their efforts has already attracted over $NZ29,000 ($A27,024).

Source by [author_name]

Can Coronavirus Spread In Water Or Swimming Pools? Here’s What We Know

Thanks to the coronavirus pandemic, summer will look a lot different this year. So what does that mean for going in the water?

There is some good news: According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, no evidence has emerged to suggest that you can contract the coronavirus in pools, hot tubs, water parks or in large bodies of water like at the beach.

That said, some safety measures and health warnings should still be kept in mind before you take a dip. Here’s what you should know:

It’s still unknown if the spread of coronavirus will slow down in the summer

Some experts suspected at the beginning of the pandemic that the coronavirus could dissipate in the warmer months, similar to the flu and other viruses. However, that’s yet to be determined. The CDC states that hotter temperatures do not kill the virus. The disease can also still spread in warmer, humid climates. So don’t use sunbathing at the pool or the beach as an excuse to not practise healthy habits or follow guidelines.

You should still maintain 2 metres distance, both in the water and on land

Being outside and in the water is not completely risk-free, although it is better than staying in a more confined space. People should still practice safe social distancing when they’re at a pool, the beach, a lake or other recreational areas.

The CDC advises that you should avoid “group events, gatherings, or meetings both in and out of the water if social distancing of at least 6 feet, or two metres, between people who don’t live together cannot be maintained.”

Exceptions to this rule only include emergency evacuations and cases where someone is rescuing a distressed swimmer or providing medical help or first aid.

Washing your hands and cleaning surfaces remain a priority

The CDC advises that public pools should be equipped with plenty of hand soap and sanitiser to make it easy for visitors to maintain proper hygiene. All high-touch surfaces ― like handrails and chairs ― should also be regularly disinfected. If you’re swimming in your own pool or a family pool, you should make sure to wipe those areas down regularly.

Proper water maintenance is also important. The regular amount of chlorine used to treat pools should be enough to inactivate the virus, The Los Angeles Times reported.

Don’t share pool floats, goggles or any other equipment

There’s a chance that the virus can be spread when an infected person ― even those who are asymptomatic ― expels respiratory droplets onto surfaces and then someone else touches the same surface. (Although how easily the virus can spread when touching surfaces has been called into question recently, it’s better to assume right now that you could be susceptible to transmission in such a manner.)

It’s best to limit contact where possible, which means you should absolutely not share items like floats, masks, googles, snorkelling equipment, etc. (even with people who are in your own house). Bring or use your own, and be sure to disinfect them regularly.

Face masks are also recommended in certain areas

Pool operators and people who will be in close proximity to others outside of the water are encouraged to wear a mask, according to the CDC. Take it off once you get in the water ― swimming with such a face covering can make it difficult to breathe.

Guidance on Covid-19 and swimming could change as the season progresses

There’s still a lot we don’t know about the coronavirus, and the knowledge that we do have about it changes quickly. As summer goes on, researchers may discover more about how the virus lives and travels. Be sure to continuously check guidance and recommendations from your local health authorities and the CDC.

But, for now, dive on in ― the water’s fine. Just make sure you’re being smart about it first.



Source by [author_name]

This Homeless Choir From San Diego Strikes Gold On ‘America’s Got Talent’

Before coronavirus forced the country into quarantine, Derek Williams was “outdoors.” He’s part of a group of people experiencing homelessness who sometimes sleep in Balboa Park, a lush tourist area near downtown San Diego.  

Williams has a scruffy, graying beard. He favors a beige fedora. The 55-year-old University of Southern California alumnus shelters in a camping tent he sometimes shares with an ex-girlfriend. There’s a twinkle in his blue eyes when he talks about singing to entertain friends who also live on the street. His showmanship has earned him the nicknames “DJ Derek” and “D-Rock.” 

A passion for music led D-Rock to join the Voices of Our City Choir, an organized singing group for local homeless folks. Over the last few years, Voices of Our City has metamorphosed into a lifeline for the disenfranchised, offering hope to the homeless. What once was a stem peeking out between a sidewalk crack has been tended into a flower garden of love and inspiration.

D-Rock and the rest of the choir got to share their skills with millions of viewers Tuesday night on the premiere of “America’s Got Talent,” NBC’s talent-show smorgasbord and ratings juggernaut, hosted by actor Terry Crews.



The Voices Of Our City Choir with “America’s Got Talent” host Terry Crews

And Voices of Our City’s “AGT” audition was a huge hit. The 2,500-person audience went berserk, standing and cheering wildly. Onstage and off, there were tears of happiness and joy and incredulity. Sure, “AGT” audiences are known for over-the-top applause. But the choir won the show’s coveted Golden Buzzer — complete with a shower of gold glitter — an award that grants the group automatic advancement to the show’s semifinal rounds.

Getting To The Show On Time

On a pre-pandemic March 7, D-Rock rises and shines early at his tent. He needs time to get to downtown San Diego’s East Village. That’s where a charter bus is waiting to take 50 choir members to audition for “America’s Got Talent.”

This year’s celebrity judges are TV personality Simon Cowell, comedian Howie Mandel and model/actors Heidi Klum and Sofia Vergara.

“Once I get on that bus, I know this is for real,” D-Rock says. “I had been telling people it was going to happen, but I’m not sure if I’d believed it myself.”

Derek "D-Rock" Williams with a piece of the golden glitter from the "America's Got Talent" audition.



Derek “D-Rock” Williams with a piece of the golden glitter from the “America’s Got Talent” audition.

The two-and-a-half-hour drive to Pasadena was like a magic carpet ride.

“Insane” is how Steph Johnson describes the vibe inside the “AGT” charter bus.

“Everybody is singing and cheering for each other — it’s total excitement,” says Johnson, a talented singer, songwriter and guitarist. She’s the founder, creative director and executive director of the 250-member Voices of Our City Choir, which recently became a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.

Johnson is the last one to board the bus. Often, she drives the choir to gigs in a much smaller Dodge van. On this day, she’s a passenger and is enjoying the ride.

“I take a seat on the back of the bus next to our board president and tell her I’m going to cry,” Johnson says. “She looks at me and goes, ‘That’s OK. I’ve already cried five times.’”   

The Birth Of A Homeless Choir

In a country with more than half a million unsheltered residents, the city and county of San Diego ranked fifth on the list of regions with the highest number of people experiencing homelessness.

Two years ago, Sean DiMarius was sleeping in the Alpha Project’s 325-bed Temporary Bridge Shelter. He noticed a flyer about the choir meeting in the Living Water Church of the Nazarene. His interest was piqued, but he demurred.

“I saw it was in a church, and I said no,” recalls the 40-year-old man, who identifies himself as transgender. He wears a Superman baseball cap over a short crop of red-dyed hair. “I didn’t want to hear no God talk, telling me God gonna make everything better while I’m sleeping on the street.”

By chance, DiMarius later met Johnson at a community event. Among a multitude of honors, Johnson was named 2020 Woman of the Year by San Diego assembly member Todd Gloria. Her own jazz album, “So in Love,” is due out this summer.

Sean DiMarius



Sean DiMarius

“I see and hear this wonderful lady playing music,” DiMarius says. “And it was like she’d come to get me.”

Armed with her 100-watt smile, Johnson gave DiMarius a choir songbook. Nobody smiles like that at everybody, he thought to himself. Shortly after, DiMarius showed up for a Friday choir practice. 

“Everybody starts hugging me,” he says. “I’m like, ‘Is this a cult?’ But, no, it’s not a cult. It’s a group of people that care about each other.”

Ricky Infante



Ricky Infante

Ricky Infante agrees. The 25-year-old self-identified transgender woman has been on and off the streets since running away from home as a teen to escape physical and verbal abuse. She almost never misses a choir practice. 

“When I’m feeling negative, I can take in the ambiance of the choir and feel better,” Infante says shyly. “It’s filled with so much love and authenticity.”   

Johnson held the first official choir practice in 2016. It included a half dozen people, including Mark Sheetz. Homeless then and now, he’s sheltering during the pandemic with 1,200 others in the convention-less San Diego Convention Center.

Mark Sheetz



Mark Sheetz

“I had a feeling this choir could be something,” Sheetz, 57, says in a gravelly voice. “I guess I never thought it would get on ‘America’s Got Talent’ or that I’d meet Terry Crews.” 

John Brady is one of 60-plus choir members who found housing through services run by Voices of Our City. He is now a paid staffer and an advocate on several San Diego boards. He also advises the mayor and the city council on homelessness issues.

Brady was desperate and suicidal following a brutal hate crime and was living right outside the Living Waters Church when he first met Johnson. “I had a background in stage, lighting [and] audio,” he says. “I offered to set up the sound system in the church, and Steph roped me in.”

She Always Says ‘Yes’

Johnson and the choir are on a journey that’s likely to hit warp speed following the group’s national TV appearance on “AGT.”

In the last few years, Voices of Our City’s profile has risen. The choir is the subject of a Susan Polis Schutz documentary that aired nationally on PBS. The group sang “Amazing Grace” with the San Diego Symphony. And it performed at the historic Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles on a bill with Jason Mraz and original members of The Doors.

How did the group get here? It wasn’t easy. The road was bumpy. Johnson points to one primary factor that moved the needle. When opportunities arose, she always said, “Yes.”

Steph Johnson, founder of the Voices of Our City Choir



Steph Johnson, founder of the Voices of Our City Choir

“If anybody reads about us or sees us on TV and is moved, they should come away with one idea,” Johnson says — smiling, of course. “It’s that one person really can make a difference.”

Not because that one individual has to carry the full burden or save the world.

“One person will attract another person and another,” Johnson says. “Pretty soon you have a mission. If your true intention is to create a solution for a societal problem, then it’s going to be a positive.”

Johnson and the choir co-wrote an original song for the “AGT” audition, “Sounds of the Sidewalk,” about the homeless experience. The upbeat collaboration includes a spoken-word solo by 62-year-old Patricia Gaines.

Homeless off and on for most of her life, Gaines uses a wheeled walker to get around. Soft-spoken and polite, she’s the epitome of that kindly lady who passes you the peace during church service.

It’s jarring when she quietly says that, if she wasn’t singing with the choir, she’d probably be out drunk somewhere.

Patricia Gaines



Patricia Gaines

“The choir is a blessing that drew me away from alcoholism,” Gaines says. “Not only that, it inspires me to write down what I’m feeling. Before, I kept those feelings on the inside. And drowned them with alcohol and drugs. Now, I let them out. And it matters to somebody.”

Apparently, her words matter to Simon Cowell.

“I’d seen Simon on TV before,” Gaines says. “And now, here I am shaking Simon’s hand. And he looks me in the eye and says, ‘I appreciate what you write. I appreciate what you done.’ This is Simon telling me this.”

Gaines’ solo on “Sounds of the Sidewalk” is about a bygone vision of her mother leaving the kids for an evening.

“She wore high heels and a nice dress, … and I would watch her going out … to do whatever it was,” Gaines recalls. “She was beautiful, and she had a rhythm. And she always told us, ‘Everything gonna be all right.’”

The Power Of Music

At the nucleus of the choir’s soul-tugging message: the power of music.

“Singing is a metaphor for having a voice,” Johnson says. “It feels good to open up and say what you want to say. Art is a vital way for people to rediscover their worth. And it has a ripple effect.”

Steph Johnson with Patricia Gaines of the Voices of Our City Choir



Steph Johnson with Patricia Gaines of the Voices of Our City Choir

She hopes the “AGT” exposure helps in some way to melt away the barriers separating people from those who live just outside their own safe walls.

“Think about how we’ve all been in quarantine,” Johnson says. “Imagine the whole world is instructed to stay home — but you don’t have a home. That adds an extra heaviness to homelessness. If it’s possible, it makes you feel even more alone. The isolation is triggering. It feels bleak. It’s like you matter even less.”

The choir will be back on TV later this summer. Rest assured, whether it’s a Christmas concert, a corporate gig or a highly produced TV talent show, Voices of Our City has the mojo to profoundly move an audience.

“It’s a cosmic and totally spiritual experience,” Johnson says. “Audiences don’t expect the choir to be brilliant. But our music hits on a deeply emotional level. It moves people, and it has a heavy impact.”

Now living in a single room occupancy hotel, D-Rock carries an “AGT” memento in his wallet — a rectangular piece of golden glitter that flitted into his mouth during the Golden Buzzer hoopla.

“We rocked the house,” D-Rock says.



Source by [author_name]

Crime Patrol actress Preksha Mehta, aged 25, commits suicide : Bollywood News – Bollywood Hungama

0

In one of the most tragic news, TV actress Preksha Mehta reportedly committed suicide at the age of 25. The actress had starred in TV shows like Crime Patrol, Laal Ishq, and Meri Durga. As per reports, the actress was suffering from depression.

Preksha Mehta’s found her body hanging from the ceiling fan on May 26, 2020. Her body has been sent for post-mortem. She even left behind a suicide note citing disappointments faced in her career and relationships. On May 25, she had left a cryptic message on her Instagram story that read, “Sabse bura hota hai, sapnon ka mar jaana (The death of the dreams is the worst).”

“During our initial investigation, we believe that she was suffering from depression. We are carrying out a detailed investigation in this case,” police told PTI.

Crime Patrol actress Preksha Mehta, aged 25, commits suicide

Preksha Mehta had recently gone back to her hometown in Indore amid the nationwide lockdown imposed due to coronavirus outbreak.

This is the second incident that has come into limelight amid lockdown. A few days ago, Manmeet Grewal, who starred in shows like Aadat Se Majboor and Kuldeepak, committed suicide due to financial troubles.

BOLLYWOOD NEWS

Catch us for latest Bollywood News, Bollywood Movies update, Box office collection, New Movies Release & upcoming movies info only on Bollywood Hungama.

Loading…

Source link

Wall Street Journal Board Condemns Trump’s ‘Presidential Smear’ Of Joe Scarborough

The editorial board of The Wall Street Journal published a column Tuesday condemning President Donald Trump’s implications that MSNBC host Joe Scarborough was responsible for an aide’s death.

The column, titled “A Presidential Smear,” deplores Trump’s baseless accusations against the “Morning Joe” host. The president has been tweeting suggestions that Scarborough, a former Republican congressman, was involved in the 2001 death of an intern in his Florida office. 

The editorial noted that Trump “sometimes traffics in conspiracy theories” but labeled his latest accusation “ugly even for him.”

Lori Klausutis, 28, died after hitting her head on a desk. Authorities determined that she fainted due to a previously undiagnosed heart condition and ruled that her death was accidental.

“Mr. Trump always hits back at critics, and Mr. Scarborough has called the President mentally ill, among other things. But suggesting that the talk-show host is implicated in the woman’s death isn’t political hardball. It’s a smear,” the editorial board wrote.

“Mr. Trump rightly denounces the lies spread about him in the Steele dossier, yet here he is trafficking in the same sort of trash.”

The editorial also praised Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) for calling out the president last weekend for spreading the unfounded conspiracy theory and asking him: “Just stop. Stop spreading it, stop creating paranoia. It will destroy us.”

The board acknowledged it had little expectation the president would stop. 

“Perhaps he even thinks this helps him politically, though we can’t imagine how,” the board wrote. “But Mr. Trump is debasing his office, and he’s hurting the country in doing so.”



Source by [author_name]

Trump says he wants full Afghanistan pullout but sets no timeline

President Donald Trump on Tuesday renewed his desire for a full military withdrawal from Afghanistan but added that he had not set a target date, amid speculation he might make ending the United States’s longest war part of his re-election campaign.

“We’re there 19 years and, yeah, I think that’s enough … We can always go back if we want to,” Trump told a White House news conference.

More:

Asked if the Thanksgiving holiday on November 26 was a target, Trump said: “No. I have no target. But as soon as (is) reasonable. Over a period of time but as soon as reasonable.”

The US has already begun to withdraw its forces as part of an agreement signed with the Taliban armed group in the Qatari capital Doha on February 29. By the second quarter of 2021, all foreign forces are supposed to withdraw, ending the US’s longest war.

The Taliban launched an armed rebellion after it was toppled from power by a US-led invasion in 2001.

Trump’s comments come as authorities in Afghanistan said they had released about 900 Taliban prisoners across the country on Tuesday, approximately 600 of them from the notorious Bagram jail near Kabul.

The release is a part of a pledge by the Afghan government to free up to 2,000 of the armed group’s prisoners in response to the Taliban’s three-day ceasefire offer, which began on Sunday to mark the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr.

Prisoner release

On Tuesday, the Afghan government urged the Taliban to extend the ceasefire – only the second in nearly 19 years of war – which has mostly held across Afghanistan, providing a rare respite from the conflict’s grinding violence.

Withdrawal of American troops from Afghanistan was part of Trump’s 2016 election campaign [File: Leah Millis/Reuters]

“For better management of the prisoner issue, it is important to extend the ceasefire,” Javid Faisal, a spokesman for Afghanistan’s national security adviser, told a news conference.

The release was part of a prisoner swap under the Taliban-US agreement, as a precursor to peace talks between the armed group and an inclusive Afghan delegation aiming to end a two-decades-old war.

Taliban spokesman Suhail Shaheen, in a statement on Twitter, welcomed the release of 900 prisoners as “good progress” and said the group would in turn free a “remarkable number” of prisoners soon.

However, he said nothing about extending the ceasefire, which expired at midnight (19:30 GMT) on Tuesday.

Last month, the Taliban rejected a call by the Afghan government for a Ramadan ceasefire.

‘Bring peace’

Fighting between Taliban and Afghan forces had intensified before the ceasefire, and the government said it would resume an offensive against the armed group in the wake of its deadly attacks nationwide earlier this month.

“As per the guidelines of our leaders, and based on the agreement (the US-Taliban peace deal), we will not return to the battlefield,” a Taliban member, Noor Rahman, told Reuters after being released from Pul-e-Charkhi prison, located on the outskirts of Kabul.

Another freed prisoner, Qari Ahmad Sayeed, said he was delighted to be free, adding, “I hope this will result in bringing peace to the country.”

Faisal said all released Taliban members were being given new clothes, cash and transport home. The process was expected to be completed by midnight – the same time the ceasefire ends.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, while welcoming the latest developments, has insisted that freed Taliban prisoners should not return to the battlefield.

President Ashraf Ghani has said his administration is ready to begin peace negotiations, seen as key to ending the war.

Government negotiators would be headed by Ghani’s former rival Abdullah Abdullah after the two signed a power-sharing deal last week that ended a months-long political crisis.

Prisoner releases began in April, but have been slow and marred by wrangling between the Taliban and the government, which was to free 5,000 prisoners under the Doha pact, while the Taliban would free 1,000 members of the Afghan security forces.

Before this week’s releases, Kabul had already freed about 1,000 Taliban inmates, while the group released about 300 Afghan security force captives.

Source link

Police searching for Baltimore suspect shot officer, carjacked another driver

Police in Baltimore were searching for a gunman who led police on a chase, shot an officer and carjacked at least one person in order to make his escape Tuesday night, police said.

The officer, who was struck in the abdomen, is expected to survive and may not require surgery, Commissioner Michael Harrison said at a hospital. The bullet is thought to have grazed him without striking any internal organs, the commissioner said.

“The officer was wearing body armor, which we believe very likely saved his life,” Harrison said.

The officer attempted to pull over an erratic driver who he believed was intoxicated about 9:30 p.m., the commissioner said.

After crashing, the driver fled on foot and the officer gave chase on foot, police said. The suspect is believed to have turned and fired, striking the officer at least once, Harrison said.

The gunman carjacked at least one person in a blue Toyota Camry in order to escape, and police believe he may have carjacked a second person but that had not been confirmed, Harrison said.

“There is a suspect on the loose who is armed and dangerous, who has fired, and shot, a police officer, and thank God that officer is doing OK at this moment,” Harrison said. “But we need help apprehending this violent offender tonight and as soon as possible.”

The officer, who has not been identified, was in good spirits at a hospital and gave his commanding officer a thumbs-up, Harrison said.

Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young hailed the officer’s bravery. “This officer put their life on the line for the residents of our City,” Young said in a statement.



Source link