Gracias por SEGUIRNOS, este artículo contiene la edición 1261 de la revista digital de HOUSTON de ¡Que Onda! Magazine.
Del 13 de abril al 19 de abril del 2023
Gracias por SEGUIRNOS, este artículo contiene la edición 1261 de la revista digital de HOUSTON de ¡Que Onda! Magazine.
Del 13 de abril al 19 de abril del 2023
Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg announced today that recent initiatives by her office have helped lead to a 21% reduction in the criminal case backlog from the COVID-related highs of recent years. As of April 10 – the 100th day of 2023 – the backlog has been cut to 114,242 cases, a reduction of nearly 31,000 from 2021. And the figure continues to fall.
The numbers show the office’s aggressive focus on reducing the case backlog has paid off. Ogg credited her staff for that success and specifically pointed out two recent initiatives that spurred major backlog reductions – the creation of a Homicide Division within the office and the implementation of a “triage” program.
Ogg created the Homicide Division in 2022, assigning 12 veteran prosecutors to a unit dedicated to trying languishing homicide cases. The team has aggressively pushed some of the most violent offenders’ cases to plea or trial. Some had been pending for more than four years, worsened by the pandemic and closure of the Criminal Justice Center following Hurricane Harvey.
In addition, Ogg and her senior leadership secured the funding to create an overtime program in which prosecutors meet after hours and on weekends to review more than 30,000 nonviolent, mostly victimless misdemeanor and state jail felony cases. Those cases are then considered for solutions other than incarceration.
“This backlog reduction is a welcome reward for our unending focus and hard work on resolving these cases,” Ogg said. “Most importantly, these successes lead to more victims getting resolution of their cases – and getting that resolution more quickly. And that’s the best reward of all.”
Prices are moving in a more palatable direction for US consumers.
Annual inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index, dropped in March for the ninth consecutive month. And for the first time since September 2020, grocery prices fell on a monthly basis.
Prices rose 5% for the 12 months ended in March, down from 6% in February, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Wednesday. Annual CPI plunged to its lowest rate since May 2021, helped by year-over-year comparisons to a period when food and energy prices spiked amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Still, CPI showed some cooling on a monthly basis. The index, which measures price changes over time for a basket of goods, ticked up 0.1% from February, as compared to a previous 0.4% increase.
Shelter costs, which tend to reflect lagging data, were the largest contributor of the monthly gain, offsetting sharp declines across energy categories, according to the BLS.
The food at home index dropped 0.3% for the month, helped by lower prices for eggs (which fell nearly 11%) and fruits and vegetables (which declined 1.3%). The broader food category was unchanged (0%) for the first time since November 2020.
Economists were expecting an annual increase of 5.2% and a monthly gain of 0.2%, according to Refinitiv.
“It’s a good print, but it’s not the end of the game, it’s not the end of the story,” Erik Lundh, principal economist at the Conference Board, told CNN. “There’s more to come — hopefully, knock on wood — and we’re heading in the right direction.”
Stripping out the often-volatile components of food and energy, core CPI grew 0.4% for the month, resulting in a 5.6% annual growth rate. In February, core CPI accelerated 0.5% month on month and 5.5% year over year.
“On the surface, price pressures are lessening. But when the box is opened, [core inflation] accelerated to the highest rate since May 2021,” economist Sung Won Sohn, president of SS Economics and Loyola Marymount University professor, said in a statement. “This is well over the 2% target set by the central bank.”
He added: “More hikes in the interest rate are coming.”
CPI is one of the major inflation gauges that’s being watched like a hawk by the Federal Reserve, which is in the throes of a yearlong campaign to battle inflation through monetary tightening and stark interest rate hikes.
The 1 percentage point drop in headline CPI is the largest downward swing seen in more than eight years; however, that feat was accomplished largely due to last year’s inflation spike.
“Inflation really started to take off last spring and through June,” Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, told CNN. “And so things are going to feel a lot better here in the next few months because of those base effects.”
Because month-to-month changes can be volatile, even in spite of seasonal adjustments, year-over-year comparisons typically can help smooth out some of that jumpiness.
But times have been anything but typical for the past three years. So, for the months ahead, moving averages become all the more critical to observe, Lundh said.
While the picture is more clear for the trajectory of headline CPI, it’s a little more opaque for core and “supercore” activity (core services, excluding housing), Zandi said.
The base effects are much less pronounced for core CPI, because the spring and summer inflation spike was driven by food, energy and goods prices.
“Core inflation is remaining more persistent,” he said. “I expect improvement really toward the middle and second half of the year when the cost of housing services really begins to slow.”
Shelter costs, as measured in the CPI, tend to lag more than other categories as the BLS collects rent data every six months and most rents don’t change too frequently. Private-sector data shows that apartment rents have fallen in recent months, suggesting an eventual cooldown in shelter prices will show up in the CPI.
Stripping out housing, however, still leaves a “supercore” inflation measurement that has remained stubbornly high.
“Supercore correlates with wages; thus, the Fed would be looking at some relief in this metric as a sign of slower wage gains,” Gary Pzegeo, head of fixed income at CIBC Private Wealth US, said in a statement. “Today’s report shows the supercore decelerated in March, but it remains a sticky component of inflation, running around +4% annualized on a three- and six-month basis.”
“This is too fast and a sign that the labor market remains offsides,” he added.
The March CPI trajectory doesn’t take another rate hike off the table, Lundh said.
“There was some encouraging news in the inflation data today, but I don’t think it’s sufficient to cause the Fed to pause,” he said. “So we’re expecting to see a [quarter-point] hike in the May meeting and even potentially another hike following that.”
The Fed’s fight grew more complex in March with the collapse of two regional US banks, which then caused turmoil in the financial industry. The Fed, the Treasury Department and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation stepped in to shore up depositors and prevent future bank runs.
However, there are expectations that the turmoil could mean future credit tightening, which in turn could dampen demand and even help the Fed in its inflation-fighting goals. However, it could also create more uncertainty about a future recession.
“The CPI is backwards looking and the Fed still has to consider how much of a credit crunch to factor into the economy,” said Gina Bolvin, president of Bolvin Wealth Management, in a statement.
While inflation has moderated since reaching a decades-high level last summer, the pace has been slower than anticipated as a strong labor labor market and resilient consumer spending has continued to fuel economic growth.
Ukraine’s military rejected as untrue a Russian claim to have captured more than 80 percent of the city of Bakhmut and said on Wednesday that Kyiv’s forces controlled “considerably more” than 20 percent of it in the east.
Serhiy Cherevatyi, the spokesperson for the eastern military command, made the comment to Reuters a day after the head of Russia’s Wagner mercenary group said that his forces were advancing in their bid to seize Bakhmut after months of fighting.
“I was just in touch with the commander of one of the brigades holding the defense of the city. And I can confidently say that Ukrainian defensive forces control a considerably larger percent of Bakhmut’s territory,” he said.
Ukrainian forces have hung on for months in Bakhmut, a small city in eastern Donetsk region, where the fiercest fighting of Moscow’s full-scale February 2022 invasion has killed thousands of soldiers and been dubbed the “meat-grinder.”
Wagner head Yevgeny Prigozhin said on Tuesday his forces controlled most of Bakhmut including the whole administrative center, factories, warehouses and municipality buildings.
“Prigozhin needs to show at least some kind of victory in the city, which they have been trying to capture for nine months in a row and that’s why he’s making such statements,” said Cherevatyi.
Source: english.alarabiya.net
Less than 24 hours after a jury in Austin found Daniel Perry guilty of shooting to death a protester, Gov. Greg Abbott announced on social media Saturday that he would pardon the convicted killer as soon as a request “hits my desk.”
The unprecedented effort, which Abbott announced to his 1 million followers on Twitter, came as Abbott faced growing calls from national conservative figures such as Fox News host Tucker Carlson and Kyle Rittenhouse, who was acquitted in the shooting deaths of two Wisconsin protesters in 2020, to act to urgently undo the conviction.
“Texas has one of the strongest ‘Stand your ground’ laws of self-defense that cannot be nullified by a jury or progressive district attorney,” Abbott said in a statement. “I will work as swiftly as Texas law allows regarding the pardon of Sgt. Perry.”
Abbott’s office did not return calls from the American-Statesman on Saturday seeking additional comment. The two-week trial, which included dozens of witnesses and much forensic evidence, was not broadcast. Abbott attended no portion of the trial.
Perry, an Army sergeant, was working as an Uber driver in Austin on the night of July 25, 2020, when he ran a red light at the intersection of Fourth Street and Congress Avenue and drove into a Black Lives Matter march before stopping.
Garrett Foster, carrying an AK-47 rifle, was among a group of protesters who approached his car. Perry told police that Foster threatened him by raising the barrel of his rifle at him, so he shot him five times with a .357 revolver through the window of his car before driving away.
Perry’s defense team argued that he acted in self-defense, but prosecutors contended that Perry instigated what happened. They highlighted a series of social media posts and Facebook messages in which Perry made statements that they said indicated his state of mind, such as he might “kill a few people on my way to work. They are rioting outside my apartment complex.”
A friend responded, “Can you legally do so?” Perry replied, “If they attack me or try to pull me out of my car then yes.”
A jury Friday unanimously convicted Perry.
State District Judge Clifford Brown is set to sentence him to prison in the coming days. He faces up to life in prison.
David Wahlberg, a former Travis County criminal court judge, said he cannot think of another example in the state’s history when a governor sought a pardon before a verdict was formally appealed.
“I think it’s outrageously presumptuous for someone to make a judgment about the verdict of 12 unanimous jurors without actually hearing the evidence in person,” Wahlberg said.
Doug O’Connell, who represents Perry, told the Statesman in a statement Saturday: “Right now we are completely focused on preparing for Daniel’s sentencing hearing. I visited Daniel in jail this morning. As you might expect he is devastated. He spoke to me about his fears that he will never get to hug his mother again. He’s also crushed that his conviction will end his Army service. He loves being a soldier.”
Travis County District Attorney José Garza had no immediate comment.
The jury deliberated 17 hours over two days before reaching the verdict Friday afternoon after an eight-day trial with dozens of witnesses. Perry didn’t testify during the trial.
Foster’s brother, Ryan Foster, said Saturday that he didn’t think Perry should be pardoned. “This was clearly premeditated,” Ryan Foster told the Statesman. “He (Perry) thought a lot about it and planned on doing it. … He wanted to kill a protester and saw somebody exercising their Second Amendment right.”
After the judge read the verdict to the packed courtroom Friday, Perry, 35, buried his head into one of his lawyer’s chests and erupted into loud sobs. The jury also found Perry not guilty of an aggravated assault with a deadly weapon in connection to driving in front of another protester.
Perry’s conviction was instantly condemned by gun-rights advocates Friday night.
“(Gov. Abbott) this is an unfair conviction. Please step in and free Daniel Perry,” Rittenhouse wrote on Twitter. “He was justified in defending his own life when an AK-47 was pointed at him and he doesn’t deserve to be in jail.”
Fox’s Carlson decried the conviction in a two-minute segment on his show, referring to the Austin protesters as a “mob of rioters” who surrounded Perry’s car and began pounding on it. He said Perry fired when Foster raised his rifle.
“This is a legal atrocity,” Carlson said. “There is no right of self-defense in Texas.”
He invited Abbott on his show Monday to discuss whether he would consider a pardon for Perry.
Jennifer Laurin, a University of Texas law professor, addressed the portion of Abbott’s statement on Texas’ self-defense laws. She said that a jury is instructed to reject the defense when the person asserting it provoked the response, as prosecutors say Perry did when he drove his car into a crowd of protesters.
“Painting the conviction as rogue nullification is uniformed or deceptive,” Laurin tweeted.
Abbott lacks authority under state law to issue a pardon without first getting a recommendation from the Board of Pardons and Paroles, whose members he appoints. In his statement, Abbott said he already asked the board to review the verdict to determine if Perry should be granted a pardon.
“I have made that request and instructed the board to expedite its review,” Abbott said. “I look forward to approving the board’s pardon recommendation as soon as it hits my desk.”
Abbott typically announces pardons every year in December around Christmas.
A pardon would release Perry from his sentence and restore his right to vote and serve on a jury.Defense lawyer Rick Cofer, who was not involved in the trial, expressed astonishment over Abbott’s announcement.
“It’s what happens in Uganda or El Salvador,” said Cofer, a former prosecutor. “Total abrogation of the rule of law. And what’s even worse is that Abbott knows better. He was a smart Texas Supreme Court Justice. He knows this is legally wrong. Profoundly wrong. Pure politics.”
DA Alvin Bragg accuses the House Judiciary Committee chair of a ‘transparent campaign to intimidate and attack’ him.
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, who is prosecuting former President Donald Trump in a case related to hush-money payments made to an adult-film actress, has sued a Republican legislator probing his investigation.
In the lawsuit filed on Tuesday, Bragg accused Representative Jim Jordan, the chair of House Judiciary Committee, of a “transparent campaign to intimidate and attack” him after the New York district attorney indicted Trump on 34 felony charges of falsifying business documents.
The lawsuit — the latest salvo in a back-and-forth between the Democratic prosecutor and Republican legislators — asked a judge to invalidate subpoenas that Jordan has issued or plans to submit as part of a probe into Bragg’s handling of the case.
In the lawsuit, Bragg said he’s taking legal action “in response to an unprecedentedly brazen and unconstitutional attack by members of Congress on an ongoing New York State criminal prosecution and investigation of former President Donald J Trump”.
“Congress lacks any valid legislative purpose to engage in a free-ranging campaign of harassment in retaliation for the District Attorney’s investigation and prosecution of Mr Trump under the laws of New York,” the lawsuit said.
It added that Congress lacks constitutional authority “to oversee, let alone disrupt, ongoing state law criminal matters”.
The move came as Jordan, who was a close Trump ally during the former president’s time in office, has issued a flurry of letters and subpoenas to individuals involved in the case against Trump, who is the first president in US history to be criminally charged.
One subpoena seeks testimony from former prosecutor Mark Pomerantz, who previously oversaw the Trump investigation. Pomerantz publicly detailed how he sparred with Bragg over the direction of the probe before leaving the office last year.
House Republicans had previously sent a letter to Bragg demanding he testify about what they called a “politically motivated prosecutorial decision”.
In response, Bragg accused Republicans of an “unlawful incursion” into his jurisdiction. His office has dismissed claims that its prosecution of Trump is politically motivated, calling such claims “unfounded”.
Trump and his allies, including Jordan, have continued to push the narrative that Bragg is a political operative who receives funding from liberal superdonor George Soros, a claim Soros has denied.
Jordan responded to Bragg’s lawsuit in a tweet on Tuesday.
“First, they indict a president for no crime,” he wrote. “Then they sue to block congressional oversight when we ask questions about the federal funds they say they used to do it.”
Last week, Trump appeared in court for the first time, where he was arraigned on charges related to a hush-money payment made to the adult-film performer Stormy Daniels through his lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen.
Daniels has said she had an affair with Trump before he was president.
While typically a misdemeanour under New York state law, falsifying business records rises to a felony if it is done with “intent to defraud and intent to commit another crime and aid and conceal the commission thereof”.
In a news conference following the arraignment, Bragg said Trump violated both state and federal election laws, and also mischaracterised the payments to Cohen as being for “tax purposes”.
A statement of facts released alongside the indictment accused Trump of conducting “a scheme with others to influence the 2016 presidential election by identifying and purchasing negative information about him to suppress its publication and benefit [Trump’s] electoral prospects”.
Prosecutors will have to prove Trump falsified the records in service to a secondary crime but will not need to prosecute that secondary crime.
Bragg is represented in Tuesday’s lawsuit against Jordan by Theodore Boutrous, a well-known First Amendment lawyer who has also represented Trump’s estranged niece, Mary Trump, in legal clashes with her famous uncle.
The case has been assigned to US District Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil, a Trump appointee who previously served as a federal bankruptcy court judge.
The lawsuit came after the House Judiciary Committee on Monday announced plans hold a hearing in Manhattan on crime in New York City and what it has called Bragg’s “pro-crime, anti-victim” policies.
Bragg’s office, in response, pointed to statistics showing that violent crime in Manhattan has dropped since he took over the post in January 2022.
In a statement, Bragg called the hearing “a political stunt” and said that, if Jordan “truly cared about public safety”, he would focus on crime in cities in his home state of Ohio “instead of using taxpayer dollars to travel hundreds of miles out of his way”.
Source: aljazeera
The Louisville Metro Police Department has released dramatic bodycam video of officers responding to the Monday bank shooting where five people were killed and an officer fatally shot the gunman.
The bodycam video shows the tense moments between police officers and the shooter, Connor Sturgeon. It begins with video from Officer Nickolas Wilt who drives up to the scene with his training officer, identified as Cory “CJ” Galloway.
Wilt, police say, was shot in the head as he ran toward the gunshots police were facing as they arrived. He is listed in critical condition. Wilt’s camera shows him following Galloway up the outside steps to the bank, his service pistol in his two hands. The video cuts off before he is shot.
Bodycam footage from Galloway, who was also shot, shows him taking fire, then retreating to a safe position behind a planter as officers talk about how they can’t see the gunman and that he is shooting through windows in the front of the bank.
“Shooter has an angle on that officer!” one officer can be heard saying. “We got to get up there!” he adds.
Deputy Chief Paul Humphrey said the gunman broke out glass from the lobby windows and when he fired, officers – who could finally pinpoint his location – shot back.
As he looks into the bank lobby, Galloway’s camera audio sounds out with several shots.
“Suspect down, get the officer!!” one officer yells as he moves up the stairs and into the bank to investigate further.
Humphrey lauded the actions of the officers.
“Officer Wilt was a brand new officer, he had no experience. He was going based on two things: his training and his character. And you will see that he never hesitates – even after getting shot at,” Humphrey said at a news conference where nine minutes of video was released.
When the shooting was over, officers and teams from other agencies reentered the bank with supplies and started providing medical treatment right away, Humphrey told reporters.
After talking to medical staff, Humphrey said it is “100% certainty” that those swift actions saved lives.
“The actions that they took to follow up after being shot at themselves, to be compassionate and provide medical treatment, absolutely saved lives that day,” Humphrey said
Officers took Wilt to the hospital in a patrol vehicle, officials said.
The shooter legally bought an AR-15-style rifle at a local gun dealership six days before he used it to kill five of his colleagues, the interim Louisville Metro Police chief said Tuesday.
Currently, “Kentucky imposes no waiting period between the time of purchase and the physical transfer of a firearm,” according to the Giffords Law Center. By comparison, some states have waiting periods of 7 to 10 days.
It’s still not clear what provoked Sturgeon, a 25-year-old employee, to go on a deadly rampage at Old National Bank and livestream the gruesome attack on Instagram.
Sturgeon had interned at the bank for three summers and been employed there full-time for about two years, his LinkedIn profile showed. The assailant had been notified that he was going to be fired from the bank, a law enforcement source said Monday.
But Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg said he doesn’t believe the shooter was given a notice of termination. “From what I have been told from an official at the bank, that is not accurate,” Greenberg told reporters Tuesday.
Now, investigators are combing through the footage and other evidence to try to understand what led to the massacre that also left several wounded – including a police officer who was shot in the head.
Officials executed a search warrant at Sturgeon’s home, but interim Police Chief Jacquelyn Gwinn-Villaroel declined to say what was found.
The carnage marked the 146th mass shooting this year with four or more victims, not including a gunman, according to the Gun Violence Archive.
And the AR-15 and its offshoots have been the weapon of choice in many of the most horrific mass shootings in recent memory, including the Covenant school shooting in Nashville just two weeks ago that’s reignited a fierce political fight over gun control.
It took just one minute for a gunman to complete his deadly rampage before he stopped and waited for police to arrive, according to footage of the massacre described by a city official to CNN.
The video begins by showing an AR-15-style weapon, followed by a worker in the bank saying good morning to the gunman, the official said.
“You need to get out of here,” the shooter is heard saying to the woman on the livestream, which has been taken down by Instagram’s parent company Meta.
The gunman then tries to shoot her in the back but can’t because the safety is on and the weapon still needs to be loaded, the official said. Once the shooter loads the weapon properly and takes the safety off, he shoots the worker in the back, the official said. Her condition is not known.
The assailant then continues his rampage, firing at workers while they tried to outrun him, the official said. The shooter does not go to other populated floors of the bank, the official said.
Once the shooter is done firing, he sits down in the lobby area that looks out onto East Main Street, apparently waiting for police, the official said.
The killer waits about a minute and a half before police arrive – a swift response praised by local leaders – and a gunfight ensues, the official said. The gunman was struck and killed.
The entire incident – from when the gunman started shooting to when he was killed – lasted about nine minutes, Louisville Police Lt. Col. Aaron Cromwell said.
After the first bullets flew, “There’s a few minutes after that before we get the first call on it. Three minutes after that when we respond to the scene,” Cromwell said Tuesday. “And then about three minutes after we respond, the subject is neutralized.”
At one point, a Louisville police dispatcher alerted officers: “25-year-old White male, Connor Sturgeon 6 4’. He’s texted a friend, called a friend, left a voicemail saying he’s gonna kill everyone at the bank. Feeling suicidal,” according to Broadcastify audio. The timing of the dispatch wasn’t immediately clear.
The massacre started around 8:30 a.m., about 30 minutes before the bank opens to the public.
Staff members were holding their morning meeting in a conference room when the gunman opened fire, bank manager Rebecca Buchheit-Sims told CNN.
She said the massacre “happened very quickly.” Buchheit-Sims attended the staff meeting virtually and watched in horror as gunfire exploded on her computer screen.
“I witnessed people being murdered,” she told CNN. “I don’t know how else to say that.”
Four victims died shortly after the shooting: Joshua Barrick, 40; Juliana Farmer, 45; Tommy Elliott, 63; and James Tutt, 64, police said. A fifth victim, Deana Eckert, 57, died later Monday.
Of the nine patients hospitalized shortly after the shooting, four have been discharged and one has died. One still in the hospital is in critical condition, and the other three are in stable and fair condition, a University of Louisville Hospital spokesperson said Tuesday.
Before Monday’s massacre, the gunman had not had “any prior engagement” with police, the interim chief said.
Sturgeon graduated in December 2020 from the University of Alabama, where he earned his bachelor’s degree and a master’s degree in finance, according to a university spokesperson.
After three consecutive summers interning at Old National Bank, he was hired as a Commercial Development Professional in June 2021, according to his LinkedIn profile.
One of Sturgeon’s former high school classmates who knew the shooter and his family well said the horrific news Monday came as a “total shock.”
“I can’t believe it,” said the former classmate, who asked not to be identified and has not spoken with Sturgeon in recent years. “I can’t even say how much this doesn’t make sense.”
One of the slain victims, bank senior vice president Tommy Elliott, was remembered by local and state leaders as a close mentor and beloved community leader.
“Tommy was a great man. He cared about finding good people and putting them in positions to do great things. He embraced me when I was very young and interested in politics,” said Yates, the state senator. “He was about lifting people up, building them up.”
Elliott was also close friends with the governor and Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg, who said he spent Monday morning at the hospital with Elliott’s wife.
“It is painful, painful for all of the families I know,” Greenberg said. “It just hits home in a unique way when you know one of the victims so well.”
Beshear remembered Elliott as an “incredible friend” and called the other slain victims “amazing people” who will be mourned by their loved ones.
The city is setting up a family assistance center in collaboration with the American Red Cross to provide support for those impacted, the mayor said.
“To the survivors and the families, our entire city is here to wrap our arms around you,” Greenberg said.
Harris County has settled a lawsuit against e-cigarette company JUUL Labs and will receive a $20 million settlement.
The county was the first governmental entity in Texas to file suit against JUUL in 2021. Harris County Attorney Christian Menefee said the county accused JUUL of marketing its vaping products to minors.
“We’re extremely proud to be able to lead as the largest county in the state, the third largest in the country,” he said. “I think it’s important that we lead on public health issues.”
JUUL is known for delivering popular electronic nicotine with a variety of different flavors for vaping. Their JUUL e-cigarette is made using a heating element to convert a nicotine solution into an aerosol that can be inhaled by the user.
The local settlement is part of a larger global settlement with JUUL Labs. The settlement total in Texas is said to be $42.8 million. Menefee said the case was always about reducing youth nicotine addiction in the community.
“The dollars that are coming in the door will hopefully be used to mitigate the impact of our youth with nicotine addiction,” he said. “We’re gonna stand in the gap and we’re gonna protect those folks.”
In a study released by the CDC last year, nearly half of students surveyed used e-cigarettes on 20 or more of the past 30 days. Hospital admission statistics from UT Health suggest 1 in 5 kids in Houston have tried vaping. In the past, many websites have also been reported to sell e-cigarettes without requiring any age documentation.
“What I’m hoping is that there’s a nationwide effort to take measures that we’re gonna put blocks in between our youth and harmful products,” Menefee said. “Including nicotine and lace products.”
Harris County Commissioners will be deciding how to use the funds from the settlement.
Source: houstonpublicmedia
El final de la temporada regular confirma los porcentajes de los equipos para hacerse con el número 1 del draft. Wembanyama, el suculento premio.
Terminada la temporada regular, llega lo bueno para los de abajo. O lo único que se pueden plantear al irse de vacaciones y tener un largo verano antes de tiempo, muchos de ellos por decisión propia. Es una de las cosas que falla en la estructura de la NBA: como las últimas dos semanas se normaliza el hecho de que muchos equipos no pongan en pista a sus mejores jugadores buscando tener un peor récord y así tener más posibilidades de que en la lotería lleguen a la posición más alta del draft. Esto no se ha potenciado este curso, pero sí se ha repetido y, desde luego, no se ha resuelto. Y, como estos equipos ya no tienen nada que hacer, se centran en el próximo gran objetivo. Que tiene nombre y apellido: Victor Wembanyama.
El proceso es el siguiente: solo las cuatro mejores selecciones se deciden por sorteo y se eligen entre los 14 equipos que no llegan a playoffs. El equipo con el peor récord tiene la mejor oportunidad de obtener una selección de draft más alta, pero para evitar tankear esto no significa que el peor balance tenga asegurado el número 1. Después de que se seleccionan las cuatro primeras posiciones (del sistema de ubicación de la lotería), el resto del orden del draft de la primera ronda es inverso al registro de victorias y derrotas de los equipos restantes. Además, la lotería no determina el orden del draft en las rondas posteriores del draft.
Esto deja a Pistons (17-65), Rockets y Spurs (con 22 victorias cada uno) como el trío que más posibilidades tiene de hacerse con el 1, un 14%. Los Hornets, con 27 victorias, tienen un 12,5% de opciones de pasar del cuarto al primer puesto. Luego están los Blazers (33 partidos ganados y un 10,5% de opciones) y Magic (34, para un 9%). Esos serían los 6 balances más bajos y, por lo tanto, los que mayor porcentaje tienen de hacerse con Wembanyama. Pero para entrar en esa puja también estarán en la lotería Pacers y Wizards (35 victorias por cabeza), que comparten récord y para determinar quién será séptimo y quién octavo en la lotería pasarán por un sorteo previo, repartiéndose así un 7% y un 6,5% de porcentaje.
El top 10 lo completan Jazz y Mavericks, que se esforzaron por hacerse con uno de los 10 peores balances y así poder tener más opciones de tener una selección dentro de las 10 primeras, un pick protegido que no tendrían que traspasar a los Knicks por el acuerdo que firmaron en el traspaso de Kristaps Porzingis en 2019. Los Jazz tienen un 4,5% de posibilidades de alcanzar el número 1, mientras que las opciones de los texanos se reducen a un 3%. Los 4 equipos restantes (las posiciones que van de la 11 a la 14) se ocuparán en función del récord conseguido. Estas son las cuentas. El objetivo está claro. Conseguir a una futura estrella generacionar. Hacerse con los servicios de ese ser de otro planeta: Victor Wembanyama.
Source: as
Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid painkiller 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine. Drug overdoses from synthetic opioids killed more than 70,000 people in the U.S. in 2021, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
In a statement, the White House said it will work with international partners to build a global coalition to “prevent illicit drug manufacturing, detect emerging drug threats, disrupt trafficking, address illicit finance, and respond to public safety and public health impacts.”
“This global coalition will develop solutions, drive national actions, and create synergies and leverage among like-minded countries who agree that countering illicit synthetic drugs must be a global policy priority,” according to the White House.
The initiative includes increasing coordination among U.S. intelligence and law enforcement agencies and with private sector companies, including chemical industries, shipping and delivery companies in the U.S. and abroad.
The White House did not name the countries involved in the partnership.
“We will have more details about our work with partners in the coming weeks and months, including as we build a global coalition to tackle this scourge,” a National Security Council spokesperson said in a statement to VOA.
A key step in this effort would be to internationally track the shipping of the precursor chemicals used to make fentanyl, said Earl Anthony Wayne, former ambassador to Mexico who is now a fellow at the Wilson Center.
“There’s no tracking right now,” Wayne told VOA. “What you need to do is start building an international consensus to put new limits on these things. That doesn’t happen overnight.”
There is a wide variety of substances that can be used to make fentanyl, and many of them have legitimate uses and are legal to sell, making them difficult to control internationally. The U.S. has been lobbying the U.N. Commission on Narcotic Drugs to place international controls on 14 key fentanyl precursors and fentanyl analogues — drugs that have similar chemical structure and mimic the pharmacological effects of fentanyl.
Mexico and China
The fentanyl crisis has increased Washington’s tension with Mexico and China. The two countries are the primary sources for fentanyl and the precursor chemicals that are trafficked into the U.S., according to a report by the Drug Enforcement Administration.
U.S. officials say that since China started controlling fentanyl in 2021, Chinese traffickers shifted to exporting precursors for Mexican drug cartels to manufacture and traffic across the border, making up almost all fentanyl on American streets. They say Mexican cartels often make fentanyl look like other medications, such as Xanax, oxycodone or Percocet, or mix it into other drugs, including heroin and cocaine. Many people who die of overdoses in the U.S. do not know they are taking fentanyl.
Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador denies that his country produces the drug.
“In Mexico, fentanyl is not produced. The raw material for fentanyl is not produced. If China’s government says they do not produce it either, then it is interesting. Who is producing it?” he said in a news conference on Monday, referring to Beijing’s response to his letter requesting that China help stop the flow of the drug.
In response to Lopez Obrador’s letter, China denied involvement in trafficking fentanyl and blamed the U.S. for its drug problems.
“The root cause of overdose lies in the U.S. itself, and the problem is completely made in the U.S. The U.S. should face up to its own problems and take more substantive measures to strengthen domestic supervision and reduce demand,” China’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said last week.
China suspended all counternarcotics cooperation with the U.S. in August 2022 as a protest to then-Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan, which Beijing considers a breakaway province.
“China subordinates its counternarcotics cooperation to the geostrategic relationship with the United States,” Vanda Felbab-Brown, director of the Brookings Institution’s Initiative on Nonstate Armed Actors, said in a March congressional hearing on China’s role on the fentanyl crisis.
In the absence of significant warming in the bilateral relationship, there is little prospect Beijing would intensify its anti-drug cooperation with the U.S., Felbab-Brown added.
“U.S. punitive measures, such as sanctions and drug indictments, are unlikely to change that.”
Target Mexico
Some U.S. congressional members have been calling on the Biden administration to increase pressure on the Mexican government to crack down on fentanyl trafficking. In March, Republican South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham said he would introduce legislation to designate cartels as foreign terrorist organizations and give the U.S. military the authority to stop them.
“We’re going to unleash the fury and the might of the United States against these cartels,” he said.
The administration rejected the plan.
“The United States has powerful sanctions authorities specifically designated to combat narcotics-trafficking organizations and the individuals and entities that enable them,” said White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre.
Some Republicans have even called for the U.S. military to target facilities of drug cartels inside Mexico. Legislation to put the U.S. “at war with the cartels by authorizing the use of military force” has been introduced by Republican lawmakers.
“We must start treating them like ISIS, because that is who they are,” said Republican Congressman Dan Crenshaw, a co-sponsor of the bill.
National Security Council spokesperson Adrienne Watson said the administration is not considering military action in Mexico.
“We have robust law enforcement cooperation with Mexico, which has enabled us to take successful action against cartels, transnational criminal organizations, drug traffickers and human smugglers, and that will continue,” she said in a statement to VOA.
Lopez Obrador confirmed that members of his security Cabinet are in the U.S. this week to discuss fentanyl trafficking with U.S. officials. The meeting is a followup of the January summit in Mexico City to discuss better cooperation on various issues, including fentanyl trafficking, between U.S. President Joe Biden, Lopez Obrador and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
Source: voanews