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Travel chaos looms for July 4th weekend: Hundreds of flights are canceled out of NYC due to storms

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A dangerous heat wave affecting the US South is expected to worsen this week, bringing with it record-breaking temperatures that will top 100 degrees.

‘Excessive’ is the word the National Weather Service has used to describe the forecast for the next few days for states like Texas and Louisiana, which are already seeing temperatures that feel close to 120 degrees Fahrenheit.

Currently, more than 55million people from southern Arizona to the Florida coast, are feeling the effects of the record-breaking temperatures – which meteorologists now warn is set to stay through the Fourth of July weekend.

The heat has already resulted in the death of a Dallas postal worker – as well as a 31-year-old man and his stepson in an Austin park.

Still looming over Texas and parts of Mexico, the scorching ‘heat dome’ is now set to expand, experts said Tuesday – while being compounded by a series of storms ripping through the country further north, disrupting more than 1,700 flights in the process, and spawning several tornadoes.

The service warned Tuesday of the dome’s progress this week. ‘High temperatures Friday and Saturday across much of southern New Mexico and into portions of western, southern, and central Texas will range between 105 110 degrees.’

It added: ‘Highs closer to the Gulf Coast will be in the upper 90s to low 100s, but dew points in the 70s will contribute to heat indices of 105-115, locally as high as 120 degrees.’

In a separate statement, the service’s prediction warned that over the course of next week, the weather will bring ‘more danger than a typical heat event, due to the longevity of near-record or record high nighttime lows and elevated heat index[es].

As previously mentioned, some 55million people – 16 percent of the contiguous United States – live in the areas expected be affected by the rapidly spreading dome.

Excessive heat warnings, the highest level of heat alerts, are currently in effect in cities like Dallas, New Orleans and Baton Rouge, which are expected to bear the brunt of the extreme weather

There, the heat index will approach 120 degrees, before worsening Wednesday as the system moves northward, officials said Tuesday.

As this happens, cities in the Central Plains and Missouri Valley – already victims to a series of twister-spawning storms – will also fall victim to the dangerous temperatures, with readings poised to pass the triple digits in places like Oklahoma.

Moreover, the heat mass is simultaneously expanding eastward, toward already hard-hit rural communities in Louisiana and Arkansas.

Temperatures in those states are set to surpass 100 degrees Fahrenheit Wednesday after nearing that marker Tuesday afternoon, extending into Mississippi and even Alabama – where temperature will feel as if they are 110 to 115 degrees, officials say.

Source: www.dailymail.co

Rockets rookie Amen Thompson finds strength, role model in older brother Troy Thompson Jr.

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As Amen Thompson, whom the Houston Rockets selected with the No. 4 overall pick in the 2023 NBA draft, walked into Toyota Center for his introductory press conference, he was led by his family. That group included his parents, Maya and Troy Thompson Sr.; his identical twin brother, Ausar, who was drafted one spot after Amen by the Detroit Pistons; and older brother Troy Thompson Jr., one of his biggest inspirations to play basketball.

Laying the foundation for hard work and dedication, Troy, who is eight years older than his younger brothers, was a very skilled high school player. After taking off a year after graduation, he chose to stay closer to home and attended City College of San Francisco in 2014. He made the team as a walk-on and received 11 offers to play Division 1 basketball during his time there.

Halfway through his first year, he wrote his future goals down, and one of them was to potentially continue his playing days and education at a historically black college or university (HBCU).

Thompson Jr.’s first choice was Howard University, which his parents attended. Still, he selected Prairie View A&M University, located 47 miles outside of Houston, to finish out his final two years of eligibility from 2016 through 2018.

“I wrote down that I wanted to get 10 division one offers, and at least one of them be an HBCU,” Thompson Jr. said. “I have family members that went to Prairie View, and it has a little nostalgic vibe with them (his parents). I didn’t know a lot about PV until I got there. It was so welcoming, and it was a great experience for me. It helped me become a man. It was a good experience.”

Sharing those experiences with his younger siblings was one of the things that kept them motivated to continue following their dreams of making it into the NBA. Thompson Jr. tried out for Sacramento’s NBA G-League affiliate, the Stockton Kings, in 2019, but he was not selected for the roster after the final cuts.

“Growing up, I didn’t even know that I was the influence I was,” Thompson Jr. said of being an inspiration to his brothers.

Yet, he was very instrumental in the futures of Amen and Ausar as they decided to skip college and play two years at Overtime Elite, where they could strictly focus on basketball.

“He is the blueprint and the role model for me,” Amen said of his older brother. “Growing up in Oakland, my family tried to keep me away from certain things, and he was a big part of that because he went through that stuff. Seeing where he was able to get in basketball made me believe that I could do anything.”

Source: rocketswire.usatoday.com

Shooter in attack that killed 5 at Colorado Springs gay nightclub pleads guilty, gets life in prison

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The suspect in a mass shooting that killed five people at a Colorado Springs LGBTQ+ nightclub in 2022 has been sentenced to life in prison after pleading guilty to murder and other charges in the attack.

The sentencing of Anderson Lee Aldrich comes just seven months after the shooting and spares victims’ families and survivors a long and potentially painful trial.

Aldrich, who declined to address the court prior to sentencing, pleaded guilty to five counts of murder and 46 counts of attempted murder. Aldrich also pleaded no contest to two hate crimes, one a felony and the other a misdemeanor.

“This thing sitting in this court room is not a human, it is a monster,” said Jessica Fierro, who’s daughter’s boyfriend was killed that night. “The devil awaits with open arms.”

The guilty plea comes just seven months after the shooting and spares victim’s families and survivors a long and potentially painful trial.

Photographs of victims of a mass shooting at a gay nightclub are on display at a memorial on November 23, 2022, in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

People in the courtroom wiped away tears as Judge Michael McHenry explained the charges and read out the names of the victims. Relatives and friends of victims were able to give statements in court to remember their loved ones and survivors spoke about how their lives were forever altered just before midnight on Nov. 19 when the suspect walked into Club Q and indiscriminately fired an AR-15-style semiautomatic rifle.

The father of a Club Q bartender said Daniel Aston had been in the prime of his life when he was shot and killed. “He was huge light in this world that was snuffed out by a heinous, evil and cowardly act,” Jeff Aston said. “I will never again hear him laugh at my dad jokes.”

Daniel Aston’s mother, Sabrina, was among those who said they would not forgive the crimes.

Another forgave the shooter without excusing the crime.

“I forgive this individual, as they are a symbol of a broken system, of hate and vitriol pushed against us as a community,” said Wyatt Kent, Aston’s partner. “What brings joy to me is that this hurt individual will never be able to see the joy and the light that has been wrought into our community as an outcome.”

In addition to Aston, the victims of the shooting were identified as Kelly Loving, Derrick Rump, Ashley Paugh and Raymond Green Vance.

The shooter’s body shook slightly as the victims and family members spoke. The defendant also looked down and glanced occasionally at a screen showing photos of the victims.

“I intentionally and after deliberation caused the death of each victim,” Aldrich told the judge.

The guilty plea follows a series of jailhouse phone calls from the shooter to The Associated Press expressing remorse and the intention to face the consequences for the shooting.

Several survivors told the AP about the plea agreement after being approached about the shooter’s comments to AP. They said prosecutors had notified them that the shooter, who is nonbinary and uses they and them pronouns, would plead guilty to charges that would ensure a sentence of life behind bars.

The shooter originally was charged with more than 300 state counts, including murder and hate crimes. The U.S. Justice Department is considering pursuing federal hate crime charges, according to a senior law enforcement official familiar with the matter who spoke to AP on condition of anonymity to discuss the ongoing case.

The line to get through security early Monday snaked through the large plaza outside the courthouse as victims and others queued up to attend the hearing. One man wore a t-shirt saying “Loved Always & Never Forgotten.”

The attack at Club Q came over a year after the shooter had been arrested for threatening their grandparents and vowing to become “the next mass killer.” In June 2021, the shooter’s grandparents told authorities that they were warned not to stand in the way of a plan to stockpile guns, ammo, body armor and a homemade bomb. The shooter was then arrested after a standoff with SWAT officers that was livestreamed on Facebook.

However, the charges against the shooter were thrown out in July 2022 after Aldrich’s mother and grandparents, the victims in the case, refused to cooperate with prosecutors, evading efforts to serve them with subpoenas to testify, according to court documents unsealed after the shooting.

Xavier Kraus, a former neighbor, told CBS Colorado that the suspect got their guns back following the 2021 incident.

“We had a conversation that time too about, you know, I expressed my fear of guns,” Kraus said. “He tried to assure me, ‘It’s not the gun you have to be afraid of, bro. It’s the people behind the gun.'”

Other relatives told a judge they feared the shooter would hurt their grandparents if released, painting a picture of an isolated, violent person who did not have a job and was given $30,000 that was spent largely on the purchase of 3D printers to make guns, the records showed.

The shooter was released from jail then and authorities kept two guns – a ghost gun pistol and an MM15 rifle – seized in the arrest. But there was nothing to stop the shooter from legally purchasing more firearms, raising questions immediately after the shooting about whether authorities should have sought a red flag order to prevent such purchases.

The El Paso County Sheriff’s Office said it would not have been able to seek a court order stopping the shooter from buying or possessing guns because the 2021 arrest record was sealed after the charges were dropped. There was no new evidence that they could use to prove that Aldrich posed a threat “in the near future,” the sheriff’s office said.

Investigators later revealed that the two guns the shooter had during the Club Q attack – the rifle and a handgun – appeared to be ghost guns, or firearms without serial numbers that are homemade and do not require an owner to pass a background check.

The shooter told AP in one of the interviews from jail they were on a “very large plethora of drugs” and abusing steroids at the time of the attack. But they did not answer directly regarding the hate crimes charges. When asked whether the attack was motivated by hate, Aldrich said only that was “completely off base.” The shooter’s attorneys, who have not disputed Aldrich’s role in the shooting, have also pushed back on hate being the reason.

Some survivors who listened to the recorded phone calls saw the shooter’s comments as an attempt to avoid the death penalty which still exists in the federal system. Colorado abolished it in 2020 and life without prison is now the mandated sentence for first-degree murder in the state. They objected to the shooter’s unwillingness to discuss a motive and their use of passive, general language like “I just can’t believe what happened” and “I wish I could turn back time.”

Source: www.cbsnews.com

Beyoncé y SZA, grandes ganadoras de los BET Awards

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Beyoncé y SZA han sido las artistas más premiadas en los premios BET de este año. Beyoncé y su ‘Break My Soul’ se llevaron el premio elegido por la audiencia, el Viewer’s Choice Award, y también el premio que la organización de los BET otorga a canciones motivadoras de mujeres empoderadas (BET Her Award).

Ella y SZA compartieron premio en la categoría del Álbum del Año por ‘Renaissance’ y ‘SOS’, respectivamente. Además del disco del año, SZA se llevó el reconocimiento al Vídeo del Año (por ‘Kill Bill’) y el premio a Mejor Artista Femenina de R&B/Pop.

Aunque Drake era el artista con más nominaciones, 7 en total, no se llevó ningún premio en solitario. Ganaba la Mejor Colaboración por ‘Wait for U’, con Future y Tems, y el premio a Mejor Grupo (por su reciente álbum) con 21 Savage. También en esta categoría estaban nominados Quavo y Takeoff, que no se llevaron el galardón, pero dieron la actuación más importante de la noche con ‘Bad and Boujee’. Era la primera vez que se juntaban después de la muerte de Takeoff el año pasado, y a él le dedicaron su reunión.

Otros premiados: Mejor Artista Masculino de R&B/Pop fue para Usher y Chris Brown; Latto conseguía el premio a la Mejor Artista Femenina de Hip Hop y Kendrick Lamar al Mejor Artista Masculino de Hip Hop. El reconocimiento al Mejor Artista Revelación fue para Coco Jones, que también actuó con ‘ICU’.

No solo Quavo, Takeoff y Coco Jones se subieron al escenario durante la gala de los premios. También Lil Uzi Vert, Ice Spice, Latto o GloRilla tuvieron su momento y dieron actuaciones de lo más comentadas en redes. También hubo en los premios espacio para celebrar a la gran Tina Turner, lo hizo Patti LaBelle con la canción ‘The Best’.

Por último, en cuanto a música, la canción premiada en la categoría de Premio Dr. Bobby Jones al Mejor Gospel/Inspirational fue para ‘Bless Me’, de Maverick City Music y Kirk Franklin (tiene el récord de estos premios). Además, Teyana «Spike Tey» Taylor se llevó el premio al Director de Vídeo del Año, Burna Boy al Mejor Acto Internacional, y Libianca al Mejor Nuevo Acto Internacional. Obviamente también se homenajeó a Busta Rhymes (este año el Premio a la Trayectoria Profesional lo ganó el rapero, escritor y productor) de la mano de BIA, Coi Leray y Spice, entre otros.

Source: jenesaispop.com

Passenger shot and killed Uber driver she believed was taking her to Mexico, police say

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A woman accused of fatally shooting her Uber driver in Texas after falsely believing she was being driven to Mexico against her will has been charged with murder, authorities said.

Phoebe D. Copas, 48, of Tompkinsville, Kentucky, remained in El Paso County jail following her arrest June 16, the day the driver was shot, according to El Paso police and county jail records.

The family of driver Daniel Piedra Garcia, 52, said he was taken off life support Wednesday, NBC affiliate KTSM of El Paso reported.

Though Copas was initially booked on suspicion of aggravated assault causing serious bodily injury, the case was upgraded to murder after the driver died this week, according to police and jail records. Bond for Copas was increased from $1 million to $1.5 million.

An attorney assigned to defend Copas did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Detectives believe Copas was in El Paso to visit her boyfriend, according to a complaint affidavit obtained by KTSM. She was in the backseat of the Uber en route to meet him at a casino when she saw roadway signs stating “Juarez, Mexico,” which is across the border from El Paso, according to the affidavit.

Believing she was being kidnapped and taken to Mexico, Copas shot the driver, causing the vehicle, a Nissan Maxima, to strike a highway barrier and come to a stop along U.S. 54 South, police said.

Copas did not call authorities before shooting, and she didn’t summon help immediately after opening fire, the document states.

Rather, she took a photo of the injured driver and texted it to her boyfriend, detectives said in the affidavit. Then she called for help, the document states.

The boyfriend, who was not identified, went to the scene and was there as police arrived, according to the affidavit.

First responders arrived to find Piedra bleeding profusely from the back of his head, the affidavit stated. He was hospitalized in critical condition.

Multiple shots had been fired, the document states, and after Copas exited the Nissan she dropped everything she was holding, including a handgun.

“The investigation does not support that a kidnapping took place or that Piedra was veering from Copas’ destination,” police said.

In a statement about the case, Uber said it would cooperate with investigators should its help be needed, and added that it has been in touch with the driver’s loved ones.

“We are horrified by the rider’s actions,” it said.

Ana Piedra, the victim’s wife, wrote in a GoFundMe set up to help with hospital and funeral expenses that her husband was their household’s sole provider.

After doctors expressed zero hope he would survive, Daniel Piedra was disconnected from life support, she stated on the fundraising page, which was verified by the site.

Didi Lopez, the victim’s niece, told KTSM her uncle was not a criminal or a kidnapper.

“It’s so easy to go make your assumptions and just make up scenarios. But that’s not who he is,” she said. “He’s a hardworking man.”

A bond hearing was scheduled Thursday, according to a court docket for the case.

Source: www.nbcnews.com

Joe Biden to announce $40B to boost high-speed Internet across U.S.

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President Joe Biden will announce Monday the allocation of $40 billion in federal funds to distributed to states in an effort to expand high-speed Internet to every nook of the country by 2030.

The announcement will kick off a three-week “investing in America” push by the administration, in which officials will make numerous public appearances to tout the ongoing impact of Biden’s legislative agenda, including massive infrastructure projects across the nation.

About 8.5 million homes and businesses nationwide do not have Internet access, the White House said.

The newest funding will go to states with the most need as part of the Broadband Equity Access and Deployment Program — a major provision of Biden’s $1.2 trillion Bipartisan Infrastructure Law of 2021, in which each state could receive $100 million or more from the government to boost connectivity.

The White House said it plans to release the dollar amounts that each qualifying state could receive.

To get the funds, states will need to submit blueprints to the Commerce Department by December, explaining how the money will be spent.

State and local governments would next submit their plans to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, which would begin distributing the funds next spring.

States won’t get all the money right away, with the government allocating only 20% of the infrastructure funds during this first round of payouts as part of an 18-month rollout that will continue through the end of 2025.

The administration said it will allocate the funds using updated broadband coverage maps as more than 1 million new coverage locations have come online nationwide in the past year.

Administration officials sought to compare Biden’s efforts to the sweeping actions of the 32nd U.S. president during the Depression era.

“Just like Franklin Delano Roosevelt delivered electricity to every home in America through his Rural Electrification Act, the announcement is part of President Biden’s broader effort to deliver investments, jobs, and opportunities directly to working and middle-class families across the country,” the White House said in a Monday statement.

Earlier this month, the government announced $930 million in new infrastructure projects that aim to “close the digital divide for everyone in America” by expanding middle mile high-speed Internet infrastructure across 35 states and Puerto Rico.

The White House also launched a program to help more people, including families in the poorest sectors of the country, afford Internet access.

The Online For All campaign will feature grass-roots organizations and corporate entities working with the Department of Education to help families pay monthly Internet service costs as “research indicates that approximately half of the remaining qualified Americans are not aware of the program,” the White House said previously.

In February, Vice President Kamala Harris called high-speed Internet a “basic necessity” in announcing a $175 million fund in helping secure Internet access at the nation’s 61 Historically Black Colleges and Universities.

Altogether, the Biden administration expects to spend more than $90 billion to expand affordable Internet access, with another $25 billion provided through the American Rescue Plan to boost connectivity in many economically challenged regions.

Source: www.upi.com

4 volunteer crew members begin 378-day stay inside 1,700 square foot habitat at Johnson Space Center

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Starting Sunday night, a team of four volunteers will spend the next year inside a 1,700 square foot 3-D printed habitat at Johnson Space Center.

The team is simulating what it would be like to live on the planet Mars, and they started their adventure just after 6:30 p.m. Houston time.

So, what’s this for?

Four intrepid scientists began their year-long mission, living as if on Mars so that the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, or NASA, could learn about how humans would fare during extended space travel.

Among the challenges to rehearse? The distance between the planets-which averages roughly 140 million miles.

“When we go to Mars someday, there’s going to be up to a 22-minute delay each way,” Dr. Suzanne Bell, a Behavior Health and Performance Laboratory lead at Johnson Space Center, said.

“So Mission Control won’t even hear about a problem until 22 minutes after it’s occurred. This requires the crew to work with unparalleled levels of autonomy, and they’ll have to problem solve on their own,” she said. “They’ll have to determine what they elevate back to Mission Control and wait 44 minutes for the response. And so that’s exactly one of the things we’re trying to replicate.”

The experiment is called CHAPEA, which stands for Crew Health and Performance Exploration Analog. Bell says they were very selective in who they chose for the mission, as nearly 4,000 people applied. But only four will live in isolation for a year.

“We’ve specifically chosen people that we hope to succeed together very carefully screened, and really clear that they have the ability to work on teams,” Bell said. “And so our objectives are really about optimizing that human health and performance.”

“When we go to Mars someday, there’s going to be up to a 22-minute delay each way,” Dr. Suzanne Bell, a Behavior Health and Performance Laboratory lead at Johnson Space Center, said.

“So Mission Control won’t even hear about a problem until 22 minutes after it’s occurred. This requires the crew to work with unparalleled levels of autonomy, and they’ll have to problem solve on their own,” she said. “They’ll have to determine what they elevate back to Mission Control and wait 44 minutes for the response. And so that’s exactly one of the things we’re trying to replicate.”

The experiment is called CHAPEA, which stands for Crew Health and Performance Exploration Analog. Bell says they were very selective in who they chose for the mission, as nearly 4,000 people applied. But only four will live in isolation for a year.

“We’ve specifically chosen people that we hope to succeed together very carefully screened, and really clear that they have the ability to work on teams,” Bell said. “And so our objectives are really about optimizing that human health and performance.”

Source: abc13.com

Gerardo Ortiz – El Perro

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No ha parado de ladrarDenle comida a ese perroQue trae hambre y la avariciaLo hace meterse en lo ajenoY ya robó hasta a sus amigosY parece que no llenó
Dice que mi amigo fueLe faltó mucho para esoFueron otros interésPorque lo movía el dineroHoy la cosa es diferentePues yo mismo piloteo
Y va a ladrar y va decirte muchas cosasY es lo menos que me importaMuerdes al que te dio de comerY va a ladrar y va a tirar toda su envidiaPerro que se fue cuando no habíaEn esta mesa no va a comer
Y por eso hay que sembrarPa cosecharAy nomás
Aquí no se va a poderYo soy hombre, no un payasoVas a conocer el pezCuando lleguen los chingazosYa me llené de traicionesY firmes siguen mis pasos
Bien lista la Glock .42Por si miro zopilotesGustos en un deportivoY ahorita no hay quien me toqueVan a seguir los homeronesAhora en las ligas mayores
Y va a ladrar y va decirte muchas cosasY es lo menos que me importaMuerdes al que te dio de comerY va a ladrar y va a tirar toda su envidiaPerro que se fue cuando no habíaEn esta mesa no va a comer

Los Dos Carnales – Home Run

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Mire, nomás porque traigo un pesoDicen que no soy el mismoSeñores no se confundanMe encuentro en el mismo pisoPues que me quieren abajoPara poder ser su amigo
Me trataron de su perroY ahora andan muy ofendidosPensaron iba andar siempreBatallando por lo mismoNo presumo de billetesNi tampoco de ser fino
Pero corriente no soyTodo fue gracias a diosA los que me humillaronY me hicieron menos, miren dónde estoyYa ni me quieren hablarDicen que no soy igualMe querían ver ponchadoY en una rectita, les metí un home run
AjayTengo casa llena, carnalPa que sepan, viejos (uh)
Ahora escucho vocecitasY las escucho a lo lejosHablan de mí por la espaldaYo me mantengo discretoVamos recio pa delanteY nomás los dejo viendo
Los hechos hablan solitosYa la habíamos batallandoEl árbol al fin dio sombraHace mucho lo plantamosLo poquito que yo tengoNadie me lo a regalado
Y si les debo un favorYa se los pagué con dosPa que no anden hablandoMenos divulgando que se me olvidóTodo fue gracias a diosHoy la vida me sonrióAproveché la rectaTenía casa llena y les pegue un home run

Un robot está peinando el fondo del mar en busca de restos de la implosión del submarino Titán mientras comienza una investigación multinacional

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Un robot está peinando el fondo del mar en busca de restos de la implosión fatal del sumergible Titán mientras las autoridades de EE.UU. y Canadá desvían su atención de la búsqueda y el rescate a la investigación de lo que condujo al desastre marítimo y buscan establecer si se violó alguna ley.

La Guardia Costera de EE.UU. convocó a una Junta de Investigación Marina para investigar la implosión, el “más alto nivel de investigación que lleva a cabo la Guardia Costera”, anunció este domingo el investigador jefe de la Guardia, el capitán Jason Neubauer.

La junta trabajará para determinar la causa de la implosión catastrófica y las muertes, así como para hacer recomendaciones “para aplicar sanciones civiles o penales según sea necesario”, dijo Neubauer.

Por ahora, los investigadores están dando prioridad a la recuperación de escombros del lecho marino. Los expertos militares encontraron restos del sumergible a unos 500 metros de la proa del Titanic el pasado jueves, dijo anteriormente la Guardia Costera de EE.UU.

“Mi objetivo principal es evitar que ocurra algo similar haciendo las recomendaciones necesarias para mejorar la seguridad del dominio marítimo en todo el mundo”, dijo Neubauer este domingo.

La operación de salvamento se produce cuando quedan dudas sobre el diseño del sumergible, los materiales utilizados en su construcción, qué causó la implosión y cuándo ocurrió exactamente.

El Titán llevaba 1 hora y 45 minutos en su descenso hacia los restos del Titanic en el fondo del océano el domingo antepasado cuando perdió el contacto con su nave nodriza, lo que dio inicio a una operación multinacional de búsqueda y rescate de un día de duración en el Atlántico Norte que finalizó el jueves con el descubrimiento de sus restos.

¿Cómo fue la implosión del submarino Titán que exploraba el Titanic?

La investigación de la Guardia Costera de EE.UU. es una de varias que se encuentran actualmente en curso. Las autoridades de Canadá también encargadas de investigar el incidente revisarán las grabaciones de voz de la nave nodriza del sumergible, el Polar Prince, dijeron funcionarios canadienses.

Investigadores canadienses abordaron el Polar Prince este sábado “para recopilar información del registrador de datos de viaje del buque y otros sistemas del buque que contienen información útil”, dijo este sábado Kathy Fox, presidenta de la Junta de Seguridad en el Transporte de Canadá. Un registrador de datos de viaje almacena el audio del puente del barco.

Mientras tanto, la Real Policía Montada de Canadá (RCMP por sus siglas en inglés) está investigando si “posiblemente se hayan infringido las leyes penales, federales o provinciales”.

“No hay sospecha de actividad delictiva per se, pero la RCMP está tomando medidas iniciales para evaluar si seguiremos ese camino o no”, dijo el superintendente de la RCMP, Kent Osmond, en una conferencia de prensa el sábado.

Las autoridades estadounidenses y canadienses también han estado realizando entrevistas en el puerto de St. John’s, Canadá, donde el Polar Prince regresó el sábado con sus banderas a media asta.

“Este caso ha sido extremadamente complejo, ya que involucró una respuesta coordinada internacional, interagencial y del sector privado en una región del océano implacable y de difícil acceso”, dijo este domingo el contralmirante de la Guardia Costera de EE.UU. John Mauger, comandante del primer distrito de la Guardia Costera.

La Guardia Costera anunció que la embarcación sufrió una “implosión catastrófica”, matando a todos los pasajeros a bordo.

Los tripulantes de la embarcación eran el CEO de OceanGate Expeditions, Stockton Rush; el empresario británico Hamish Harding; el buceador francés Paul-Henri Nargeolet; y el empresario nacido en Pakistán Shahzada Dawood y su hijo, Suleman, que eran ciudadanos británicos.

¿Qué está pasando en el fondo del océano?

Submarino Titan

El vehículo operado por control remoto de Pelagic, Odysseus 6, sale del océano después de buscar escombros del sumergible Titán el 22 de junio de 2023. (Crédito: Pelagic Research Services)

El mismo vehículo operado por control remoto que encontró el campo de escombros del sumergible la semana pasada ahora está involucrado en la operación para recuperar restos del Océano Atlántico, según un comunicado de Pelagic Research Services, visto por primera vez por CNN, este domingo.

El Odysseus 6K, un vehículo operado por control remoto, estaba en el lecho marino en su cuarta inmersión desde que llegó al sitio de rescate de Titán este domingo, según un comunicado de Pelagic Research Services, visto por primera vez por CNN, el domingo.

La compañía agregó que las capacidades de carga pesada de Odysseus “se han utilizado y continúan utilizándose” en la misión de recuperación de Titán, pero no confirmó si se habían recuperado los escombros y refirió a CNN a la Guardia Costera de EE.UU., que lidera la investigación sobre el esfuerzo de implosión y recuperación.

El capitán Neubauer se negó a dar detalles sobre la operación de recuperación este domingo, pero dijo que “los recursos están en el sitio y son capaces de recuperar los restos”.

El pasado jueves por la mañana se encontraron cinco piezas importantes diferentes de escombros del sumergible, dijeron las autoridades. Cada extremo del casco presurizado se encontró en un lugar diferente, según Paul Hankins, director de Operaciones de Salvamento e Ingeniería Oceánica de la Marina de EE.UU.

Se espera que las misiones de vehículos operados a distancia continúen durante una semana más, según Jeff Mahoney, portavoz de Pelagic Research Services.

Cualquier intento de recuperar algo del campo de restos justificará una operación más grande en conjunto con Deep Energy, otra compañía que ayuda con la misión, porque los escombros probablemente serán demasiado pesados para que el ROV de Pelagic los levante solo, dijo Mahoney a CNN el viernes pasado.

Se examinarán piezas del sumergible mientras los investigadores tratan de entender por qué implosionó.

La Marina de EE.UU. dijo que detectó una señal acústica consistente con una implosión el domingo en el área general donde el sumergible se zambullía cuando perdió la comunicación, dijo a CNN un alto oficial de la Marina.

Se determinó que el sonido “no era definitivo”, dijo el funcionario, y los esfuerzos multinacionales para encontrar el sumergible continuaron como una operación de búsqueda y rescate antes de que se encontrara el campo de escombros.

La embarcación usó materiales que “simplemente” no funcionaron, dice una experta

Mientras se mapea el campo de escombros y se recolectan las piezas del sumergible, los expertos plantean preguntas sobre el diseño del Titán.

Una revisión de CNN del material de marketing de OceanGate, las declaraciones públicas hechas por Rush y los registros judiciales muestran que incluso cuando la compañía promocionó un compromiso con las medidas de seguridad, rechazó los estándares de la industria que habrían impuesto un mayor escrutinio en sus operaciones y embarcaciones.

Un exempleado que trabajó brevemente para la compañía como técnico de operaciones estaba preocupado por el grosor y la adhesión del casco, dijo, hablando con CNN bajo condición de anonimato.

“Esta era una empresa que ya estaba desafiando mucho de lo que ya sabemos sobre el diseño sumergible”, dijo el jueves a CNN Rachel Lance, ingeniera biomédica de la Universidad de Duke que ha estudiado los requisitos fisiológicos de supervivencia bajo el agua. Señaló que algunos de los materiales de diseño de la embarcación “ya eran grandes banderas rojas para las personas que han trabajado en este campo”.

La experta dijo que las combinaciones no convencionales de materiales utilizados en el Titán, incluida la fibra de carbono, planteaban riesgos de seguridad porque “en el transcurso de presurizaciones repetidas, tienden a debilitarse”.

“Esto no es exactamente lo que, en mi opinión, sería una innovación porque esto ya es algo que se ha intentado y simplemente no funcionó”, dijo.

Cuando el experto en sumergibles Karl Stanley estaba a bordo del Titán para una excursión submarina frente a las costas de las Bahamas en abril de 2019, sintió que algo andaba mal con el sumergible cuando se escucharon ruidos fuertes y envió un correo electrónico a Rush, el director ejecutivo de OceanGate Expediciones, haciendo sonar la alarma sobre sospechas de defectos.

“Lo que escuchamos, en mi opinión… sonaba como una falla/defecto en un área que estaba siendo afectada por tremendas presiones y siendo aplastada/dañada”, escribió Stanley en el correo electrónico, del cual CNN obtuvo una copia.

Cuando se le pidió un comentario sobre el correo electrónico de Stanley, un portavoz de OceanGate le dijo a CNN que no podían proporcionar ninguna información adicional en este momento.

El cofundador de OceanGate, Guillermo Sohnlein, instó a la gente a no apresurarse a juzgar la implosión. “Hay equipos en el sitio que todavía recopilarán datos durante los próximos días, semanas, tal vez meses, y pasará mucho tiempo antes de que sepamos exactamente qué sucedió allí”, dijo Sohnlein a CNN el viernes. “Así que me animaría a que pospongamos las especulaciones hasta que tengamos más datos para continuar”.

Source: cnnespanol.cnn.com