Petition Calls For Statue Of GWAR’s Oderus Urungus To Replace Robert E. Lee

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Out with Robert E. Lee and in with… Oderus Urungus?

A new petition is calling for a statue of the late GWAR frontman ― real name David Brockie ― to be erected in his adopted home state of Virginia. And it notes there’s an opening in Richmond, where a statue of the Confederate general is scheduled for removal. 



Oderus Urungus of GWAR performed at the Download Festival in, 2011 in Castle Donington, England. 

Although Brockie was born in Canada, his family moved to Virginia when he was a child. He was a cofounder of GWAR, a shock-rock band known for its wild costumes and a violent stage show where copious amounts of fake blood and other fluids would spew into an ecstatic audience. 

Brockie died of an accidental heroin overdose in 2014. 

“Robert E. Lee is a failed war general that supported a racist cause,” the petition stated. “For too long, the city of Richmond has been displaying statues of him and other loser civil war veterans. We the scumdogs of the universe call on the city of Richmond to erect a statue of great local leader Oderus Urungus in its place.” 



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‘Live PD’ Dropped By A&E On Heels Of ‘Cops’ Cancellation

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — A&E Network has canceled the police reality series “Live PD” after weeks of protests inspired by the death of George Floyd and a report that a crew from the show filmed the death of another Black man in police custody.

The cable network announced the move Wednesday, a day after the similar show “Cops,” on the air for 33 seasons, was dropped by the Paramount Network.

“This is a critical time in our nation’s history and we have made the decision to cease production on Live PD,” A&E said in a statement. “Going forward, we will determine if there is a clear pathway to tell the stories of both the community and the police officers whose role it is to serve them. And with that, we will be meeting with community and civil rights leaders as well as police departments.”

The cancellation also comes a day after reports from the Austin American-Statesman and KVUE-TV that 40-year-old Javier Ambler, who was Black, died in Texas last year after sheriff’s deputies repeatedly used stun guns on him, despite his cries for help and pleas that he was sick and couldn’t breathe.

Prosecutors who are investigating Ambler’s death said the presence of the “Live PD” crew made the arrest, which was captured on police body-camera video obtained by the news outlets, particularly troubling.

A&E said in a previous statement that its video never aired because of a policy against showing a death, and it did not keep the footage after it was informed the initial investigation had closed. A&E said neither the network nor the show’s producers “were asked for the footage or an interview by investigators from law enforcement or the District Attorney’s office.”

Just as Paramount Network did with “Cops,” A&E had already ceased airing episodes of “Live PD” before announcing Wednesday that it was dropping the show altogether.

“Live PD,” which had been on the air since 2016, had a more news documentary approach than “Cops,” which let police speak almost entirely for themselves.

“Shocked & beyond disappointed about this,” the show’s host, veteran journalist Dan Abrams, said on Twitter. “To the loyal #LivePDNation please know I, we, did everything we could to fight for you, and for our continuing effort at transparency in policing. I was convinced the show would go on.”

Follow AP Entertainment Writer Andrew Dalton on Twitter: https://twitter.com/andyjamesdalton



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Compensation for woman after rape trials collapse

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Google

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Northumbria Police has previously apologised for the cases not going ahead at court

A woman who police believe was sexually abused by a gang from the age of 12 has been paid a five-figure compensation sum after three trials collapsed following police failings.

Fourteen people were found not guilty in March 2019 after police failed to gather evidence properly.

Northumbria Police and Crime Commissioner Kim McGuinness said the woman deserved better from police.

The woman, who is in her early 20s, said she felt “let down and angry”.

She said she spent four years giving police statements and had been given no “clear explanation” by the force of what went wrong.

“I still feel very let down and disappointed,” she said. “I’m more angry that there’s no trust. The police are not saying ‘this is what happened and we’re sorry’.

“I had done everything that they had asked us to do and more. And then they didn’t trust me enough to tell the truth.”

The force has apologised to the alleged victims for “police failings which resulted in the cases not going ahead at court”.

‘Seek justice’

Assistant Chief Constable Rachel Bacon said a review by a department “independent of the investigation” is being concluded but “areas of learning have already been identified” with “action taken to address these”.

She said the review’s findings would be shared publically once they have been shown to the victims.

Ms Bacon said: “The victims remain at the forefront of our minds and we are committed to ensuring they receive the support they need.

“I would like to make a direct appeal to anyone who is the victim of any form of sexual offence, please do get in touch – we are here to support you and to seek justice.”

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Simon Greener

Image caption

Northumbria Police and crime commissioner, Kim McGuinness. said police had “rightly apologised to the woman”

The woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was one of three people who agreed to give evidence in three trials as part of the force’s Operation Optic, all of which collapsed.

The 14 defendants, one woman and 13 men, had denied the charges against them.

The operation had investigated allegations the group had groomed, raped and trafficked three girls, including one aged 12, in Newcastle between 2010 and 2014.

At the time the trials at Newcastle Crown Court collapsed last year Judge Robert Adams said the investigation “must be transparent and fair” and there was no “reasonable prospect of conviction in each case”.

The force carried out an internal investigation.

Image caption

Solicitor Richard Hardy said he found it “worrying” that Northumbria Police did not refer itself to the Independent Office for Police Conduct

Solicitor Richard Hardy, who represented the woman in her civil action, said he found it worrying the force did not refer itself to the Independent Office for Police Conduct.

He said: “I think it’s a lost opportunity for Northumbria Police to have regained public confidence by opening their doors, inviting an independent investigation rather than looking into this matter themselves and keeping it in house,

“They’ve lost the opportunity to achieve some real transparency, some accountability and outside scrutiny and that does remain a concern.”

The woman said the years of alleged abuse had marred her life.

She said: “The men didn’t allow me to spend time with family or friends so I missed out on all the normal teenager stuff and my teenage years.

“That was my childhood and then a big chunk of my adult life just wasted.”

Ms McGuiness added: “This woman has been through a series of traumatic events that led her to a court room experience none of us would ever want to go through.

“She deserved better than the service she got from the police, and they have rightly apologised to her.

“Now she and others need to know what went wrong. I have made clear to the police that updating her on the findings of the report needs to be treated as a priority.”

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Rashami Desai recalls her last conversation with late celebrity manager Disha Salian : Bollywood News – Bollywood Hungama

Disha Salian, who managed the likes of Sushant Singh Rajput and Varun Sharma, recently committed suicide in Mumbai. She jumped off a high-rise building and was declared dead when she was taken to the hospital. While no one knows the reason behind her decision, her celebrity friends mourned the demise of the 28-year-old. Rashami Desai, of Bigg Boss 13 and Naagin 4, happens to be one of her close friends and recalled her last conversation with Disha Salian in her Instagram story.

She recalled how they celebrated Disha’s birthday virtually and how she had posted a picture in her signature pose with the caption, “You are your own choice #makeawisechoice.” Just like her other industry friends, Rashami Desai was shocked to the core after she learned of Disha’s death. Rashami questioned what made her choose this and said that, “You left all your loved ones, especially your parents, your friends, and the workplace you loved. I have always known you as a strong and stable personality.

Rashami Desai recalls her last conversation with late celebrity manager Disha Salian

Rashami finally concluded by saying that she will remember Disha Salian in her prayers, always.

Also Read: Rashami Desai is ecstatic as she enjoys her life while abiding by the rules

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Stock Markets Fall Sharply as U.S. Jobless Data Looms: Live Updates

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New jobless claims are expected to reflect continuing layoffs, even as reopening proceeds.

Another huge weekly batch of new unemployment claims is expected to be reported on Thursday by the Labor Department.

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg estimated that 1.6 million people filed initial claims for state unemployment insurance last week. That would continue the decline from the more than six million claims seen in a single week in March, but would still be an unusually high number.

More than 40 million state claims have been filed since the coronavirus pandemic caused a widespread shutdown of businesses, and 21.5 million jobless workers were collecting state benefits in the previous weekly report. Some of those ineligible for state benefits, like the self-employed, are getting aid under an emergency federal program.

“We’re slowly seeing the labor market recovery begin to take form,” said Robert Rosener, an economist at Morgan Stanley, but “there’s still an enormous amount of layoffs going on.”

The government reported last week that jobs rebounded last month and that the unemployment rate fell unexpectedly to 13.3 percent. Correcting for a classification error, the rate was closer to 16.4 percent.

Reopening efforts will quickly reinstate a third of the workers who lost their jobs, said Beth Ann Bovino, the chief U.S. economist at S&P Global, but a return to the labor market conditions that preceded the pandemic is unlikely before 2023.

“We’re expecting a long haul,” she said.

Global markets slump amid a spate of glum forecasts.

Major European markets opened more than 2 percent lower on Thursday, following a spate of negative forecasts about the global recovery and ahead of data likely to show more job losses in the United States.

Stocks in London, Paris and Frankfurt were all 2 percent lower. The drop followed a smaller drop on Wednesday on Wall Street but the negative momentum picked up as Thursday trading began. Markets in Japan and Australia fell by roughly 2 percent earlier in the day.

The skepticism rippled across other markets. Prices for U.S. Treasury bonds, long seen as a safe place to park money in times of trouble, rose. Prices for oil in the United States fell 4 percent in futures markets.

Futures that track U.S. stocks were predicting Wall Street would open nearly 2 percent lower.

Investors were preparing for another negative weekly jobless claims report in the United States later in the day. They were also reacting to the Federal Reserve’s forecast on Wednesday that the unemployment rate could stay high for the next several years. Earlier that day, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development warned in a new report that the world economy is facing the most severe recession in a century and could experience a halting recovery.

The forecasts highlight the possibility of a second wave of infections that could hit the world’s major economies as they emerge from efforts to stop their first outbreaks. The global outlook could remain unsteady until vaccines become widely available.

European food delivery service to buy Grubhub.

Just Eat Takeaway said on Wednesday that it had agreed to buy Grubhub for $7.3 billion, a deal that would give the European company a foothold in the United States.

Uber had been in talks to buy Grubhub, but those discussions foundered over price and regulatory concerns, said people with knowledge of the discussions, who were not authorized to speak publicly.

Food delivery has become more popular during the coronavirus pandemic. But profits in the food delivery business have been elusive. Uber Eats, DoorDash and Grubhub have all spent millions of dollars on marketing and incentives to lure customers away from the others. Grubhub, which had been profitable, began losing money as it spent more to fight off rivals. And restaurants have complained about the fees and tactics of those companies.

In the all-stock deal, Just Eat Takeaway said it would value Grubhub at $75.15 per share, a 27 percent premium to Grubhub’s closing price of $59.05. Grubhub’s founder and chief executive, Matt Maloney, will join Just Eat Takeaway’s board and oversee its business in North America, the companies said.

Just Eat Takeaway was created this year through the $7.8 billion combination of two of the earliest participants in Europe’s food-delivery market, Just Eat and Takeaway.com. It has been fighting competition in Europe from Uber Eats and Deliveroo, a London-based company whose investors include Amazon.

Catch up: Here’s what else is happening.

  • Rose Marcario, the chief executive of Patagonia for 12 years, is stepping down effective June 12, the outdoors brand said on Wednesday evening. It did not give a reason for her departure. Patagonia’s sales have dropped 50 percent in North America because of the coronavirus pandemic. The company’s transition will be led by Doug Freeman, its chief operating officer.

  • Disneyland in Anaheim, Calif., will reopen on a limited basis on July 17, the theme park’s 65th anniversary, the Walt Disney Company said on Wednesday. California Adventure, an adjacent Disney property, will also reopen on that date, with people wanting to visit either theme park required to use a new reservation system. A phased reopening of Disney’s hotels in Anaheim will follow on July 23. The plans must still be approved by state and local health officials. Disneyland attracted roughly 19 million visitors last year, making it the world’s second-busiest theme park behind the Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World in Florida, according to the Themed Entertainment Association. Disney World is scheduled to begin reopening on July 11. Disney parks in France, Japan and Hong Kong remain closed.

  • Los Angeles County issued guidelines for film and television to begin production as early as Friday, but it’s more likely that production will not resume until July at the earliest. Studios and production companies are still waiting for unions to determine job protocols, even though the industry issued its own white paper last week that established general guidelines for resuming production.

Reporting was contributed by Mohammed Hadi, Kate Conger, Adam Satariano, Michael J. de la Merced, Brooks Barnes, Tiffany Hsu, Carlos Tejada and Nicole Sperling.

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7500 trailer: Joseph Gordon-Levitt is a pilot in a hijacked flight

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Written by Kshitij Rawat
| New Delhi |

Published: June 11, 2020 1:49:17 pm





7500 will begin streaming on Amazon Prime Video from June 19. (Photo: Amazon Studios)

In the Amazon Prime Video movie 7500, Joseph Gordon-Levitt plays the co-pilot of a plane that is hijacked by terrorists. The title of the movie refers to the code which pilots use to communicate a plane hijack to air traffic control.

Written and directed by German filmmaker Patrick Vollrath, 7500 already had its world premiere at the Locarno Film Festival on August 9, 2019.

The film looks unsettling and seems to have horror elements, by which I don’t mean anything supernatural, but a sense of terror that Gordon-Levitt’s character Tobias Ellis feels — the helplessness as he tries to deal with the situation.

So do not expect a macho-man suddenly swooping in to take down the terrorists and save the day like so many Hollywood action movies. 7500 is striving for realism, which is quite admirable.

The official synopsis of the film reads, “It looks like a routine day at work for Tobias, a soft-spoken young American co-pilot on a flight from Berlin to Paris as he runs through the preflight checklist with Michael, the pilot, and chats with Gökce, his flight-attendant girlfriend. But shortly after takeoff, terrorists armed with makeshift knives suddenly storm the cockpit, seriously wounding Michael and slashing Tobias’ arm. Temporarily managing to fend off the attackers, a terrified Tobias contacts ground control to plan an emergency landing. But when the hijackers kill a passenger and threaten to murder more innocent people if he doesn’t let them back into the cockpit, this ordinary man faces an excruciating test.

7500 will begin streaming on Amazon Prime Video from June 19.

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Petroleum minister claims fuel crisis will be controlled within 3 days

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ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Petroleum Omar Ayub said that the petrol crisis will be over in the next three days, stating that action will be taken against hoarders.

The federal minister was speaking to media outside the Peshawar High Court, where he said the government has initiated action against those stocking petroleum reserves which led to an artificial shortage.

“This is the first time that action is being taken against this mafia,” said the federal minister.

Ayub said that during raids, petrol reserves were recovered and cases have been registered against the culprits.

He alleged that the ‘mafia’ is not letting the people take relief from the subsidized petroleum prices, adding that the petrol demand has surged by 30%.

PM orders action against those responsible for petrol shortage

On Tuesday, Prime Minister Imran Khan in a meeting of the federal cabinet ordered maximum punitive action against those responsible for the artificial petrol shortage in Pakistan.

PM Imran had directed the Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA) and Petroleum Division to take necessary action to ensure regular supplies within two to three days

Due to the reduction in the prices of petroleum products from the beginning of June, the public complained of a shortage of petrol supply at pumps across the country.

The shortage of petrol added to the misery of citizens across the country, including the residents of the financial hub of the country, Karachi.

According to reports, petrol pumps across the country have been facing a shortage of fuel supply.

PHC hears plea on petrol, wheat crisis

The Peshawar High Court held a hearing on a notice pertaining to petrol and wheat crisis in the country.

Omar Ayub also presented before the High Court, where Justice Qaiser Rashid asked about the government measures to mitigate the crisis.

The judge said that the petrol pumps are not taking care of the SOPs and ‘useless’ meetings are being held to discuss the situation.

The PHC judge continued that earlier people faced wheat crisis and now petrol shortage, telling the federal minister he was summoned so that the public can be given quick relief regarding the situation.

The minister told the court that the petrol companies have constituted a ‘mafia’ and creating the shortage.

The court ordered the federal minister to control the situation as soon as possible.

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Watch: Eight dead as harrowing footage captures Jozini ‘drink-drive’ crash

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  • Warning – the video featured in this article shows a crash that claimed eight lives in Jozini on Wednesday 11 June, caused in a drink-drive incident. This footage may be unsettling for some.

CCTV footage of a devastating road accident on Wednesday has been shared on social media. A truck driver slammed into oncoming traffic, killing eight people in the process. The drink-drive incident has shocked the Jozini community in KwaZulu-Natal, and the sheer horror of the incident is compounded by the video.

Latest from the Jozini crash

The crash, which happened shortly after midday, was summarised by the following:

  • The driver of an articulated truck lost control and crashed into five vehicles.
  • The pile-up included two buses, one mini-bus taxi, one bakkie, and a Toyota Condor.
  • The truck driver was detained by police and he tested positive for having high amounts of alcohol in his system.
  • As well as the abhorrent death toll of eight, a further 32 people were injured in the horror Jozini crash.

Watch the Jozini horror crash here

KZN MEC laments drink-drive crash

Local authorities were left seething with the truck driver, who they confirmed was under the influence of alcohol at the time of the multi-vehicle pile-up. KwaZulu-Natal MEC for Transport, Community Safety, and Liaison Bheki Ntuli expressed his immense frustration for the lives lost and damage caused by this drink-drive tragedy.

“I was appalled when I learned that the truck driver is suspected to have been driving under the influence of alcohol – which could be the cause of this ghastly accident that resulted in eight fatalities.”

“Alcohol has contributed immensely to bad driver behavior which leads to traffic violations, road crashes, and the increasing road death toll. The blatant disregard for the rules of the road is to blame for the deaths of many breadwinners on our roads, which is a huge cost to the economy.”

Bheki Ntuli



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How fair is Zoom justice?

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On the morning of May 18, Judge Keith Dean of the Collin County District Court in Texas thanked the potential jurors in front of him for coming and performing their civic duty, as always. Then he and Judge Emily Miskel gave some new, unusual instructions: Tell your roommates to leave the room when we tell you to. Stay plugged into an outlet. And no Googling about the case in another tab!

It was what officials believed was the country’s first wholly online jury trial, gone virtual because the coronavirus has made it dangerous for people to pack into a courtroom in person. This was a minor case—a summary trial of a civil case against an insurance company, with a nonbinding verdict—but a milestone nonetheless. And as the global pandemic stretches on, this experiment with video hearings could too.

But while holding an entire trial by video is new, some jurisdictions have held some types of hearings over video for years. So, what have they learned about the effects of remote courtroom proceedings?

Higher bail amounts

Two-way video technology entered the courtroom almost 50 years ago, believe it or not. Illinois first used a primitive videophone for bail hearings in 1972; in the next decade, Philadelphia and Florida’s Dade County adopted closed-circuit television systems for arraignments, according to the National Center for State Courts. By the mid-1990s, some courts were transmitting video over PCs’ local networks (LANs), others by fiber-optic cables in the telephone system, and others by satellite transmission.

Video hearings have been most commonly used for pretrial initial appearances (also called bail hearings, or bond hearings), in order to save the cost and risks of transporting defendants from the jail to the courthouse. By 2009, when the Pretrial Justice Institute surveyed pretrial programs in the U.S., 57 percent were using video for initial appearance conferences.

Along with convenience and efficiency came some unintended consequences, though. Cook County, Ill., started using closed circuit TV for most bail hearings involving felony cases in 1999. Anyone who had been arrested in Chicago over a 24-hour period was shuffled into a holding pen in a Chicago court basement, where they would appear rapid-fire before a judge in the courtroom over video.

Defense lawyers called it a “cattle call” and said they had no avenue for direct, private communication with their clients. Defendants didn’t get the chance to point out mistakes in their criminal records, for instance, or to explain mitigating circumstances that could help their attorneys argue on their behalf for pretrial release. Probable cause was found and bail was set for each case in about 30 seconds. Attorneys argued that all of this impeded their clients’ rights to effective counsel and due process.

Northwestern University researchers studied the amount of money bail assigned to cases before and after the advent of video and found that the change from in-person hearings to video hearings coincided with a 51 percent increase in bail amounts, on average.

In 2006, a federal class action lawsuit against Cook County challenged the use of CCTV for bail hearings as unconstitutional. After the Northwestern researchers released the results of their bail analysis in 2008, the lawsuit became moot because the county voluntarily switched back to in-person bail hearings for felony cases.

Florida’s Dade County has continued to use CCTV for bail hearings for the past three decades, but the public defender’s office moved the attorneys from the courtroom to the jail several years ago. Attorneys are no longer in the same room as the judge, said the county’s public defender, Carlos Martinez, but they have the access to their clients that they need to do their jobs. (Since the pandemic, they are back in the courtroom again, speaking to their clients by phone.) In an ideal system, he added, the hearings would actually take place right in the jail, so that everyone is in the same place and video is rendered unnecessary.

The dehumanizing effect of video

Video hearings can also put defendants at a visual and auditory disadvantage, research shows. People seem less like people when seen through a screen, and this has an impact on outcomes. Studies have shown that people are more likely to be deported in immigration hearings if they appear on video than in person, and people applying for asylum are less likely to be granted it over video too.

Just as important as what people in court can see is what they hear. “The audio feature on some video­conferencing technology uses a middle bandwidth filter that cuts off low and high voice frequencies, which are typically used to transmit emotion,” reads a 2015 Justice Department–funded report about video hearings. “This feature removes critical emotional cues that can be used by judicial officers to determine a defendant’s remorse and character.”

“Whether you’re in front of a judge or in front of a jury, they’re judging credibility,” said Peter Kratsa, president of the Pennsylvania Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, “and the way to judge credibility is to be in the room with somebody, not over camera.”

Access and accountability

Videoconferencing technology can be an equalizer. Public defenders can save money by not having to pay airfare for expert witnesses; attorneys and experts can appear in several courts in different jurisdictions on the same day. But there’s still a threshold to technology, below which someone isn’t on equal footing.

What if someone gets arrested, granted bail, assigned a first court date, and doesn’t have a computer to attend? He or she could get a bench warrant, and possibly get sent back to jail.

“There are homeless people who don’t have a computer; there are 5 or 10 percent of all people who don’t have a computer,” said Hal Shuhmacher, president of the Florida Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. “I suppose it can be done, but I just foresee potential problems there.”

Of course, people can always call into video conferences with a regular telephone line, but not being able to see what’s going on puts them at a significant disadvantage, compared with others who have the full audiovisual experience.

The question of access extends not just to defendants and plaintiffs, but to their families, their friends, advocates, and the curious public. According to Jamiles Lartey, reporting in The Marshall Project, volunteer court monitors, who observe court proceedings to gather data on bail and other justice issues, say they aren’t getting access to video hearings since the pandemic began.

Privacy concerns

On the other hand, the balance between public and private in court is a delicate one—because there’s public, and then there’s public.

Bryce Covert pointed out in The Appeal last year a problematic aspect of the Broward County, Fla., bail hearings streaming live on the website of the local newspaper: “During the proceedings, judges have to make sure that pleas are offered voluntarily, which means they will often ask if a defendant has been diagnosed with a mental illness or are on any medications that would prevent knowingly offering a plea.”

In an open courtroom, anyone could potentially walk in at any time and watch. But is that the same as broadcasting live online across the world, or posting the recordings on YouTube for all time? How videos of hearings are saved and disseminated could complicate a lot of aspects of the process.

“It’s going to make the issue of jury selection harder, if everything’s available online and anybody can go watch,” said Martinez, the Dade County public defender. “And what happens with sealing and expungement? What if you seal and expunge your criminal record, but you still have all these videos available of all your court hearings?”

Looking to the future

Some courts have reacted to the pandemic by putting almost all operations on hold for now—and with it, defendants’ right to a speedy trial. There’s an enormous pressure for courts to start back up again, and the safest way to do that is either by video or phone. What technological substitutes courts allow vary from state to state and are changing every day. (The National Center of State Courts is keeping track here.)

As sudden as this transition is now, many attorneys said that the coronavirus crisis is merely the catalyst for speeding up changes that were inevitable anyway. Some court administrators are already saying they may never go back to doing everything in person because of how much time and money video saves.

But if it’s inevitable, attorneys say, they want it done right. Martinez said he hopes to see a type of video conferencing program that makes it easy for attorneys to have private side-conversations with their clients or the judge. And he wants to know how his attorneys can make their clients stop talking when they’re saying something they shouldn’t and leaning over to shoosh them isn’t an option. Right now, attorneys are just shouting over their clients into their computer mics.

“Maybe tech might have some of these answers,” said Martinez. “[It] isn’t there yet.”

This article was originally published on The Markup by Lauren Kirchnerand and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.

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Why is queer representation so important? What’s it like being trans in tech? How do I participate virtually? You can find all our Pride 2020 coverage here.

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Pulitzer-Winning Pandemic Reporter On Coronavirus: We’re Far From Out Of The Woods

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Pulitzer Prize-winning science reporter Laurie Garrett on Wednesday issued a stark warning about the continuing coronavirus threat, saying “we are far from being out of the woods on this.”

Garrett, who wrote the 1994 book “The Coming Plague: Newly Emerging Diseases in a World Out of Balance,” told MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell that “most of America” seems to have been “lulled into a kind of happy complacency” about the public health crisis that has now killed at least 115,000 people nationwide.

“Nobody likes to be under lockdown. I’m sick and tired of it, right, we all are,” Garrett acknowledged. “But, to have a president just sort of shrug it off and move on to the next topic, as if it was all over, merely is encouraging millions and millions of Americans to believe you can go back outside, you don’t need the mask, you don’t need the gloves and so on.”

“And nothing could be further from the truth,” Garrett continued.

The number of infections have surged in the weeks since Memorial Day, as many states lifted restrictions and allowed businesses to reopen.

“We are far from being out of the woods on this,” Garrett said.

She warned the virus could kill 250,000 in the U.S. by September if infections continue to spread at the same rate as they are now.

Check out the interview above.



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