Sunday, 31 January 2021

Gov. Newsom and unions clash over school openings

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — An effort to reopen California schools is foundering, stoking frustrations across America’s most populous state from parents eager to get their children back in classrooms and a governor who wants them there.

Parents and behavioral experts say many schoolchildren are feeling helpless or depressed and need a classroom setting to improve their mental health. An exasperated Gov. Gavin Newsom told school officials last week to “pack it up” if they fail to resume in-person classes soon.

Teacher unions say they won’t send their members into an unsafe environment. They want all teachers vaccinated before returning to the classroom.

While Texas, Florida and New York are among states that have resumed some classroom instruction, California’s 10,000 public schools have for the most part been closed since March. As most of the state’s 6 million public school students approach a one-year anniversary of distance learning, parents are grappling more than ever with the toll of isolation and intense screen time on their kids’ well-being.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control Prevention said in a recent study that schools should resume in-person learning as soon as possible and there is little evidence of spreading the infection when proper precautions are taken, such as masks, physical distancing and proper ventilation.

Like elsewhere in the country, many California families have abandoned public schools if they can afford private schools that are running regular classes. Among them is Susan Ortega, a mother of two and a Democrat who voted for Newsom but is so fed up with his handling of the pandemic school situation that she has joined an effort to recall him.

“It’s been horrendous,” she said about distance learning. “These kids have given up hope. They can’t get out of bed. They see no point in anything because there is nothing to strive for.”

The resident of the Northern California city of Folsom sent her son to private school last spring but kept her 14-year-old daughter in public school until last week. The girl’s emotional state had deteriorated but after just a few days back in the classroom at a private school she was “almost who she was before all this,” said Ortega, who hopes to eventually return her children to public school.

Newsom has said he will not force public schools to reopen but instead wants to “incentivize” them and has proposed a $2 billion plan that has met criticism from superintendents, unions and lawmakers. Clearly frustrated, Newsom last week implored them to find a solution to reopen.

“If we wait for the perfect, we might as well just pack it up,” Newsom said during a video meeting of the Association of California School Administrators.

The plan Newsom unveiled Dec. 30 would give schools extra funding for COVID-19 testing and other safety measures if they reopen. Elementary schools that reopen to their youngest students by mid-February would get more funding than schools that reopen later, and schools that don’t submit an application don’t get to tap the fund.

The proposal, called “Safe Schools for All,” sets no timeline for middle and high schools. The plan set a Feb. 1 deadline for districts to file COVID-19 safety plans to qualify for the funding, but that deadline will pass Monday without the legislative approval needed to start the program.

Newsom told educators in blunt terms that he is willing to negotiate but certain demands, including the call by unions to have all teachers vaccinated before school starts, were unrealistic given the shortage of vaccines.

“If everybody has to be vaccinated, we might as well just tell people the truth: There will be no in-person instruction in the state of California,” Newsom said Thursday.

The same day, the California Teachers Association sent the governor a letter again criticizing his plan.

“The virus is in charge right now and it does not own a calendar,” the letter said. “We cannot just pick an artificial calendar date and expect to flip a switch on reopening every school for in-person instruction.”

The largest school districts — Los Angeles, San Diego, Fresno, Long Beach, San Francisco and others — say the plan sets unrealistic rules and timelines.

Under the plan, schools are only eligible to reopen once their daily new case rate falls below 25 per 100,000 residents, a level that most of California is far from reaching even though virus rates are dropping fast from precipitous highs.

“We do not need financial incentives to reopen, we need it to be safe,” San Diego Unified School District Board President Richard Barrera said. “The idea that we’re going to be anywhere near 25 is simply not going to happen by mid-February.”

Newsom’s plan requires rigorous COVID-19 testing of students and staff, which schools support but many say they can’t afford.

Austin Beutner, superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District that is the second largest in the country, said his city remains an epicenter for the virus and conditions must improve before schools can reopen.

“I’m asked every day by hundreds of teachers, ‘When do you think we can get the vaccine?’ And all I say is, ‘I don’t know,’” said Beutner, noting that it is impractical to negotiate with teachers on a reopening plan that was still under debate in the Legislature and is likely to change.

Many smaller school districts have the same complaints, state Sen. Connie Leyva, chair of the Senate Education Committee, told a recent hearing on the proposal.

“I would like to know that there is actually a school district out there that thinks this plan is workable, because I have not found one,” said Leyva, a Democrat who represents parts of Los Angeles and San Bernardino counties.

Christine Atha, who lives near Sacramento, initially supported distance learning for safety reasons but now wants it to end.

“These kids don’t need any more videos to watch from behind their desk sitting alone in their rooms. The only thing they need is to return to in-person school,” said Atha, who has two teenagers in high school, both showing signs of depression and anxiety. “The science says you go back to school when it’s time. And it is high time.”



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Bay Area pop-up clinic pauses vaccinations after alleged unfair distribution

CONTRA COSTA COUNTY, Calif. (KRON) -- Two weeks ago, over 500 seniors received their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine at this pop-up vaccination clinic in Lafayette.

The clinic won't be giving the second shot -- after a complaint made to Contra Costa County alleging unfair distribution.

The doctor who hosted the clinic says she did nothing wrong.

Contra Costa Health Services says everyone who received a first dose from this clinic will get their second shot at county clinics.

The doctor says the complaint was a misunderstanding. She didn't want to go on camera because she is receiving threats against her children.

“I would never would have imagined that trying to vaccinate our senior citizens would lead to threats against my kids," Dr. Rebecca Parish said.

Dr. Parish hosted a pop-up drive thru clinic on January 16 and 17. The goal - to help speed up the slow rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine.

Hundreds of seniors received their first dose at Stanley Middle School in Lafayette, but won't be getting their second here after a complaint made to the Contra Costa Public Health Department alleging unfair distribution.

"She vaccinated almost 600 people without making a penny on her own expense and one person who apparently did not understand the rules thought that I guess we don't really know that people under 75 were not permitted to get the vaccine," Dr. Parish's lawyer Daniel Horowitz said.

The clinic initially focused on getting those 75 and older vaccinated, days before the pop up clinic opened, Governor Gavin Newsom allowed people 65 and older eligible to receive the shot.

Horowitz confirms a doctor who volunteered to administer shots at the clinic filed the complaint with the county.

The county's health department won't confirm any complaints made against Dr. Parish, but in a statement told KRON4:

"Contra Costa Health Services has stopped giving additional doses to this clinic while records are reviewed."

Contra Costa Health Services is also shifting to mass vaccine sites.

Horowitz says it's the reason why Dr. Parish is not receiving second doses.

In the same statement, the county will consider community clinics in the future if needed, particularly in hardest hit communities.

"When somebody makes a complaint, for a minute they freeze things because that's the job of the county to be careful and the county cleared her," Horowitz said. "They said 'no she did everything right' and now she can get vaccines except we don't have vaccines to give. It's stuck in warehouses, you now the politicians are killing the county. We're ready to do it but they won't open up the door so that's the problem."

500 doses of the Pfizer vaccine were provided by Contra Costa County, according to the clinic, a total of 569 seniors between the ages of 65 and 100 were inoculated.

  • 411 seniors between ages of 75 and 100
  • 106 between 70 and 75
  • 52 between 65 and 70

Pfizer vials hold extra doses of the COVID vaccine to not waste the vaccine - 39 volunteers of which 29 were 55 to 64 years of age.

Any younger patient was in tier, some volunteers were in tier as healthcare workers.

"If some people slipped through the cracks, I know that can happen," Horowitz said. "I also know that if you go to any vaccination center at the end of the day, whatever is left over they give to anybody who can take it."

Anyone who needs help making an appointment for their second shot, call (888) 634-1123. They should get a call from the county.

The full statement from Dr. Parish can be found here.

Here is a the full statement on behalf of Contra Costa Health Services:

  • Contra Costa Health Services is committed to its mission of caring for and improving the health of all people in Contra Costa County with special attention to those who are most vulnerable to health problems.
  • Recently, CCHS provided doses of COVID vaccine to a private medical practice for a community vaccination effort in central county. The organizer of the clinic was made aware of and committed to federal, state and county guidelines for providing vaccine equitably and only to those in eligible phases/tiers, namely healthcare workers and those age 75 and older.
  • CCHS has stopped giving additional doses to this clinic while records are reviewed. We will ensure that Contra Costa County residents who received their first dose from this clinic are provided second doses through county vaccination sites.
  • CCHS has a special interest in providing for the health of the most vulnerable communities and those who have been historically marginalized. As we continue to develop infrastructure and evaluate the need for future community clinics and mass vaccine events, we will do so with a steadfast commitment to equity and service to the communities hardest hit by this pandemic.


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House party near Santa Clara University attracts large crowd

SANTA CLARA, Calif. (KRON) -- Photos circulating on social media show a large crowd at a house party near Santa Clara University campus.

Photos from the Instagram account SnitchSCU shows two photos from the alleged party.

Santa Clara's student newspaper, The Santa Clara, reported the gathering was a frat party.

Dozens of party-goers were seen without masks and with no social distancing practices.

The Instagram account who posted the photos was created to publicize any large gatherings occurring during the pandemic.

In its latest post, followers can report the names of attendees, names of party planners or any other relevant information.

In the Bay Area, COVID-19 has hit the South Bay the hardest.

In Santa Clara County, 101,964 residents have tested positive for coronavirus and 1,414 have died, according to the latest data from the county's public health website.

The county has also experienced threatening ICU bed shortages at many of its hospitals.



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No TVs allowed as L.A. County restaurants reopen

While Los Angeles County has allowed restaurants to resume outdoor operations after a two-month ban, health officials are warning residents that dining out is still risky as the coronavirus remains widespread.

"There's no such thing as no risk at a restaurant or any other setting where people from different households are together," L.A. County Health Officer Dr. Muntu Davis said in a Friday briefing.

Here's how the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and L.A. County ranked the risk of coronavirus spread by restaurant setting:

  1. Lowest risk: Drive-through, take-out or pickup only
  2. More risk: Outdoor only with reduced seating and tables spaced farther apart.
  3. Higher risk: Indoor with reduced seating and tables spaced farther apart. Or outdoor with seating not reduced and tables not moved farther apart.
  4. Highest risk: Indoor with seating not reduced and tables not moved farther apart.

When restaurants reopened this time around, they had to adjust to new rules: they can’t have televisions on, waiters must wear both face coverings and face shields at all times, outdoor tables must be placed at least 8 feet apart — not 6 — and no more than six people can be seated per table, all of them from the same household.

The ban on televisions disappointed many restaurant owners, but with the Super Bowl coming up, health officials say they fear it could become a “super spreader” event as people crowd together to watch at local eateries.

“Because some sectors have re-opened, it doesn’t mean that the risk for community transmission has gone away; it hasn’t, and each of us needs to make very careful choices about what we do and how we do it,” L.A. County Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Saturday. “This virus is strong, and we are now concerned about variants and what these will mean in our region.”

The county on Saturday recorded the second case of an apparently more contagious coronavirus strain first reported in the United Kingdom.

The health department said the presence of the variant in L.A. County means “virus transmission can happen more easily,” and urged locals take precautions.

Davis said health inspectors will be visiting businesses to make sure they're following safety protocols.



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4 arrested after shooting leaves 1 paralyzed in San Rafael

SAN RAFAEL, Calif. (KRON) -- A shooting that occurred last weekend in San Rafael left one person paralyzed, authorities said.

On Jan. 23, around 4:40 p.m., San Rafael Police officers responded to the area of Canal Street at Novato Street following a report of a shooting.

When officers arrived, they located the victim with a gunshot wound to the chest. The victim was taken to a local hospital and is alive, but is paralyzed because of the shooting.

San Rafael detectives responded to the scene.

After initial investigation and witness interviews, it appears there was a verbal altercation between the victim and the suspect as they walked down Canal Street towards Novato Street. The suspect and victim knew each other from past contacts, officials say.

As the two continued to walk down Canal Street, a car with two people inside parked in a. nearby driveway.

The female driver, later identified as Daisy Rodriguez, stepped out of the car and yelled to the suspect to shoot the victim. The suspect shot the victim, got into the car and the three drove away.

Later that evening around 7:40 p.m., San Rafael Police officers located Rodriguez driving in a different car near 330 Bellam Blvd. They made a traffic stop and took her into custody without incident.

Rodriguez was interviewed by San Rafael Detectives and was booked at the Marin County Jail for attempted homicide, assault with a deadly weapon, and aiding and abetting a crime.

Detectives continued to investigate the incident and eventually identified two additional people involved in the crime.

Brayan Morales and Edwin Gramajo Reyes were located by SRPD Detectives and both were booked for aiding and abetting a crime. Detectives believe that Morales helped conceal evidence that was used in the shooting, and detectives believe that Gramajo Reyes was a passenger who witnessed the shooting and helped conceal evidence after the fact.

As the investigation continued, detectives identified the suspect who shot the victim as Jose Alejandro Delacruz. Delacruz was considered armed and dangerous. 

A warrant was obtained for Delacruz and East Bay agencies were notified of the want. 

On Jan. 30, a Richmond Police Officer located Delacruz as a passenger in a vehicle in North Richmond. He was arrested on the San Rafael warrant and taken back to the San Rafael Police Department.

After his arrest, San Rafael Detectives executed a Search Warrant at an address in the 700 block of Lincoln Avenue in Richmond looking for evidence related to the shooting.

Delacruz was interviewed by San Rafael Detectives and booked at the Marin County Jail for Attempted Homicide and Assault with a Deadly Weapon.

The following people were arrested in this case:

  • Jose Alejandro Delacruz, a 22-year-old resident of Richmond
  • Daisy Elizabeth Rodriguez, a 24-year-old resident of San Rafael
  • Edwin Gramajo Reyes, a 20-year-old resident of Fairfax
  • Brayan Daniel Morales Escobar, a 24-year-old resident of Petaluma


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Trump names 2 lawyers to impeachment defense team

WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald Trump on Sunday named two lawyers to his impeachment defense team, one day after it was revealed that the former president had parted ways with an earlier set of attorneys.

The two lawyers representing him will be David Schoen, a criminal defense lawyer with offices in Alabama and New York, and Bruce Castor, a former county prosecutor in Pennsylvania. Both issued statements through a Trump adviser saying that they were honored to take the job.

“The strength of our Constitution is about to be tested like never before in our history. It is strong and resilient. A document written for the ages, and it will triumph over partisanship yet again, and always,” said Castor, who served as district attorney for Montgomery County, outside of Philadelphia, from 2000 to 2008.

Trump’s team revealed Saturday that several South Carolina lawyers who were set to represent him at the trial starting next week were no longer participating.

Trump, the first president in American history to be impeached twice, is set to stand trial in the Senate on a charge that he incited his supporters to storm Congress on Jan. 6 as lawmakers met to certify Joe Biden’s electoral victory.

Republicans and Trump aides have made clear that they intend to make a simple argument in the trial: Trump’s trial is unconstitutional because he is no longer in office. Legal scholars say there is no bar to an impeachment trial despite Trump having left the White House.

“The Democrats’ efforts to impeach a president who has already left office is totally unconstitutional and so bad for our country,” Trump adviser Jason Miller has said.

Castor is as well-known in Pennsylvania for a case that he did not bring as he is for any of the prosecutions that he brought. He declined to charge actor Bill Cosby after a woman went to police in suburban Philadelphia in 2005 to say that Cosby had drugged and molested her a year earlier.

A new prosecutor arrested Cosby in 2015 after documents from her 2005 civil suit against Cosby were unsealed, revealing Cosby’s damaging testimony about sexual encounters with the woman, Andrea Constand, and others.



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Teen who beat rare cancer three times passes away from COVID-19

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – A high school junior who beat cancer three times has passed away from COVID-19 complications.

Aspen Deke’s family said the 17-year-old passed away Saturday evening in the arms of her mom and dad. They thanked everyone for prayers, love and support.

At the age of four, Aspen was diagnosed with the Philadelphia chromosome positive form of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. At the time she was given a dire prognosis.

In November she was diagnosed with COVID-19.

Aspen went through four years of chemo and a bone marrow transplant, but her parents said COVID-19 was much worse than cancer.

“At least with cancer, as bad as it sounds and it is scary, but there’s a lot that you know about it. They can say, ‘This is how bad it is, this is what we are going to do. This is what we expect.’ But with this everything is unknown,” Eric Deke told FOX4 last week.

Deke was admitted to Children’s Mercy Hospital almost two weeks before her favorite holiday, Christmas, and has been in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit since New Year’s Eve. Most of that time was been spent intubated on a ventilator.

Both her friends and parents said Aspen loved to bake cakes and cupcakes for birthdays and holidays, and planned months in advance buying gifts for her parents, brothers and friends at her high school and others she met during cancer treatments at Children’s Mercy.

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What's coming to Netflix in February

A Pelé documentary, a Zendaya romance and a Polish horror film are just a few of the titles coming to Netflix in February.

Fans of "To All the Boyd I've Loved Before" are in luck -- a new sequel starring Lana Condor and Noah Centineo comes to Netflix February 12.

Those looking for something darker will find it in "Malcolm and Marie," in which Zendaya teams up with "Euphoria" creator Sam Levinson in an "ode to great Hollywood romances."

And Katherine Heigl returns to the small screen with "Firefly Lane," a series based on the bestselling book about two friends and their complicated, four decades-long relationship.

Here are the Netflix Originals coming to the streaming site in February:

Available Feb. 2

Kid Cosmic 

Mighty Express, season 2

Tiffany Haddish Presents: They Ready, season 2

Available Feb. 3

All My Friends Are Dead 

Black Beach

Firefly Lane 

Available Feb. 4

The Yin-Yang Master: Dream of Eternity

Available Feb. 5

Hache, season 2 

Invisible City 

The Last Paradiso 

Little Big Women

Malcolm & Marie 

Space Sweepers 

Strip Down, Rise Up

Hache

Available Feb. 10

Crime Scene: The Vanishing at the Cecil Hotel 

The Misadventures of Hedi and Cokeman

Available Feb. 11

Capitani 

Layla Majnun 

Red Dot 

Squared Love 

Available Feb. 12

Buried by the Bernards 

Nadiya Bakes 

Hate by Dani Rovira

To All The Boys: Always And Forever 

Xico’s Journey

Available Feb. 14

The Big Day

Available Feb. 15

The Crew 

Available Feb. 16

Animals on the Loose: A You vs. Wild Movie

Available Feb. 17

Behind Her Eyes 

Hello, Me! 

MeatEater, season 9 – part 2

Available Feb. 18

Thus Spoke Kishibe Rohan 

Available Feb. 19

I Care A Lot 

Tribes of Europa 

Pitta Kathalu

Available Feb. 20

Classmates Minus

Available Feb. 23

Brian Regan: On The Rocks

Pelé 

Available Feb. 24

Canine Intervention

Ginny & Georgia 

Available Feb. 25

Geez & Ann

High-Rise Invasion

Available Feb. 26

Bigfoot Family 

The Girl on the Train

Crazy About Her



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Wrong-way driver strikes, kills bicyclist in San Jose hit-and-run

SAN JOSE, Calif. (KRON) -- A vehicle-bicycle collision left one person dead in San Jose on Sunday, according to authorities.

Around 4:27 a.m. on Sunday, police responded to the area of S. 1st Street and Reed Street after reports of a vehicle-bicycle collision.

When officers arrived, they located the downed bicyclist and provided medical aid to the bicyclist, who was only described as an adult male.

The man died at the scene.

The preliminary investigation reveled the bicyclist was riding southbound on S. 1st Street when he was struck by a dark-colored Chevrolet Silverado type truck that was going the wrong way, officials say.

The truck was going northbound in the southbound lanes and fled the scene. The truck has not been located.

The San Jose Police Department is now asking for the public's assistance in locating the vehicle involved. It is described as a dark colored, black or blue, newer Chevrolet Silverado truck with a cover over the bed and front end damage.

This is the second fatal traffic accident and second victim in San Jose this year.

Police say the identity of the victim will be released by the Santa Clara County Coroner's Office after they confirm the identity and notify next of kin.

Anyone with information is urged to contact Detective Templeman of the SJPD's Traffic Investigations Unit at (408) 277-4654.



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Suspect arrested for animal abuse, felony vandalism at San Jose preschool

SAN JOSE, Calif. (BCN) -- A 40-year-old San Jose homeless man was arrested for animal abuse and felony vandalism at a preschool Saturday morning, San Jose police said. 

Officers responded to a report of a man acting erratically and destroying property in the Play 'N' Learn preschool in the 500 block of Massar Avenue about 11: 30 a.m. 

The suspect, identified as George Robles, was attempting to flee when he was located and taken into custody by officers trained by the department's Crisis Intervention Team. 

Robles did damage estimated at $1,800 to the school building and children's play equipment, police said.

"Further investigation revealed that a 65-pound pet tortoise named Michelangelo had been stabbed with a piece of wood through his outer shell and suffered other injuries consistent with recent abuse," police said.

Robles, who was placed on a 72-hour emergency mental health evaluation, was booked for felony vandalism and animal abuse. 

"Abuse of an innocent animal is intolerable and must be addressed," acting Chief of Police Dave Tindall said in a statement. "This underscores the need for continued collaboration with our mental health professionals. I am thankful for our Officers crisis intervention training which resulted in a safe arrest for all those involved."

Copyright © 2020 by Bay City News, Inc. 



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Timeline: Bay Area rain storms expected this week

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) - The Bay Area is forecasted to get rain the next couple of days.

The showers come days after California announced a gradual reopening of outdoor dining.

KRON4 Meteorologist Dave Spahr says projections of timing place the rain late on Monday through overnight and into early Tuesday morning. 

By the afternoon, things clear again and the remainder of the week, from a rain standpoint, it will be relatively uneventful.

NWS tweeted that a frontal boundary to the north will result in scattered showers across the North Bay Sunday morning.

Don’t forget, you can always get the latest forecast, track LIVE radar and get earthquake alerts with the KRON4 Weather app. You can download it from the Apple iTunes store or from the Google Play store.



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Cats rescued after early morning kitchen fire in Oakley

(BCN) - Two cats were rescued following a search through a smoke-filled home in Oakley as crews extinguished an early morning kitchen fire Sunday, the East Contra Costa Fire Protection District said.
The fire, reported about 5:30 a.m. on Connie Lane was quickly put out and personnel then located the missing cats.

Copyright © 2020 by Bay City News, Inc. 



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Inside the COVID wards with a nurse's assistant

(NEXSTAR) - Tatyiany Valeriano has been working on the COVID ward at Mayo Clinic as a nurse's assistant for a year and a half. Since the COVID-19 pandemic started, she says she's seen she's become altogether "immune" to death.

"We've been around death so much it becomes routine," she said solemnly.

Valeriano, 22, is studying to become a nurse. Since the beginning of the pandemic, she's had to question her chosen career path.

"Just last Tuesday alone, I was like, why did I pick a profession that has so much sadness and death? Was this a mistake? But then again I can't picture doing anything else," she said.

Valeriano recalled a three-month period — 22 shifts in all — in which someone died every single day.

"When you become a nurse, a lot of people don't experience death like this," she said. "But now in a couple months alone, I've been here for at least fifty people's deaths."

As a nurse's assistant, Valeriano provides support to the nurses around her. Daily tasks include assisting with procedures, bathing patients, helping people ambulate and transfers.

Even the small to-dos can seem like massive undertakings on a COVID ward. Valeriano has a heart condition herself, and "everyday is nerve-racking" for her.

Before entering a room, Valeriano must fully "suit up" in personal protective equipment (PPE), including an N95 mask, face shield and gown. The procedure has become routine. Anytime she enters a room — even if someone "codes," or goes into cardiac arrest — she must be fully gowned.

Valeriano recalls a recent patient who came in on the verge of death. Valeriano spent twenty minutes brushing her hair, washing her face and "making her look nice for the family."

However, when the family came into the room to say goodbye, most of them weren't wearing masks properly. Valeriano said she could tell they didn't believe in the dangers of COVID-19, even as they sat with their family member, who'd later die of the virus.

It's moments like these that make the work "frustrating."

"They say nurses are strong and have been through a lot, and it's true," she said. "But I think every day is so unexpected on a COVID floor...It takes a lot of energy out of you."

She says she wants to tell people who don't "believe" in COVID to walk a mile in her shoes.

"They should know that's ignorant," she said, "because the people spending their days on these units, we have a bunch of feelings ourselves, but we don't let them come out because we can't."

"Give us some slack," she concluded, "because it takes a toll."



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California's Great America set to reopen May 2021

SANTA CLARA, Calif. (KRON) - California’s Great America is set to reopen in May of 2021 after being closed for the entire 2020 season due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The scheduled reopening is May 22nd, according to park officials.

"We continue to monitor state guidelines and work with industry and government officials to ensure our reopening plan meets all required health and safety regulations," the park said in a statement.

For more information about restrictions and guidelines, head to What To Expect When We Reopen.



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Teen with autism scores 3-pointer during high school basketball game

An Oklahoma high school student with autism had a basketball game to remember when he scored a three-pointer on January 23.

Students from Waukomis High School and Garber High School paused their Skeltur Conference game at the Stride Bank Center in Enid to give Waukomis student Elisandro Rivera a chance to score a three-pointer.

Video shared by Enid resident James Baker shows both teams pausing play to let Rivera shoot three-pointers until he scores.

Speaking to KOCO, Rivera’s mom, Lorena Hernandez, said that playing basketball has helped the teenager build up his confidence.

“We are just happy he got to experience [that] at an actual tournament, we are just happy for him,” Hernandez said.



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Thousands of ultra-Orthodox Israelis attend Rabbi's funeral, ignore COVID-19 lockdown

Thousands of members of Israel’s ultra-Orthodox Jewish community attended the funeral procession for Rabbi Meshulam Soloveitchik in Jerusalem on Sunday, January 31, flouting restrictions imposed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Many ultra-Orthodox Israelis have refused to abide by restrictions, at times clashing with police.

The stance of ultra-Orthodox Israelis threatens to undermine

Israel’s rapid mass vaccination programme, according to the AP.

Israel has administered the first vaccine dose to 3 million of its 9.3 million citizens, according to the Times of Israel.



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How much would a $15 minimum wage really be worth?

(KXAN) — Millions of American workers haven't seen their $7.25 minimum wage increase in over 10 years, but a push by the Biden administration and Washington Democrats might give these workers a double raise.

As part of President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package, the federal minimum wage would increase to $15 by 2025. Many in Congress and elsewhere say that's just too much.

Well, depending on where you live, it might not be enough.

A new map created by Business Insider shows how much the increase would actually be for minimum wage workers in each state. While the Economic Policy Institute reports about 32 million Americans would receive a raise overall, how many workers in each state might actually be getting less because of where they live?

Using information from the Bureau of Economic Analysis, the map figures how much $15 would translate to given the state's "regional price parity," or how expensive goods and services are compared to other states.

In Hawaii, the state with a 119.3 RPP -- 19% higher than the national average -- a $15 minimum wage would be the same as making $12.57 per hour. Meanwhile, a $15 minimum wage in Mississippi would actually feel like making $17.77 an hour -- the highest on the map.

The $15 minimum wage in Texas would feel about $15, ranking in at $15.54 per hour, although that estimate is lower than most other southern states, except for Florida, where $15 per hour would feel more like $14.85.

There are countless arguments for and against raising the minimum wage, but Felix Koenig, assistant professor of economics at Carnegie Mellon University, told Business Insider that cost of living should be in the equation during minimum wage talks.

And because cost of living is constantly in flux, Koenig explained: "How much workers will benefit from $15 thus depends on how soon this policy is introduced, how much prices rise in the meantime, and how often it gets uprated in subsequent years."



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San Francisco Opera announces free virtual performances

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) - The San Francisco Opera has been shut down due to the pandemic, but you can now catch the shows virtually.... for free!

You can enjoy Wagner’s Lohengrin (February 6–7), Mozart’s Così fan tutte (February 13–14), Puccini’s La Rondine (February 20–21) and Verdi’s Falstaff (February 27–28) from the comfort of your own home.

Free opera streams are viewable on demand with registration at sfopera.com



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4 arrested in connection with alleged murder attempt: San Rafael police

SAN RAFAEL, Calif. (BCN) - The last of four suspects in a San Rafael shooting earlier this month was arrested Saturday evening in North Richmond, police officials said.

On Jan. 23, San Rafael police officers responded to the area of Canal Street at Novato Street on the report of a shooting.

At the scene, officers found a man with a gunshot wound to the chest. The victim was given medical aid before being hospitalized. The victim is alive, but remains paralyzed due to the shooting, police said.

Detectives investigating the shooting determined there had been a verbal altercation between the victim and shooter, who knew each other from past contacts, as they walked down Canal Street.

Police said the two continued down the street and passed a vehicle occupied by two people, later identified as 24-year-old Daisy Elizabeth Rodriguez of San Rafael and 20-year-old Edwin Gramajo Reyes of Fairfax.

Rodriguez, the driver, allegedly stepped out of the vehicle and yelled to the suspect to shoot the victim. The suspect, later identified as 22-year-old Jose Alejandro Delacruz of Richmond, shot the victim, got into the car and fled the scene.

Around 7:40 p.m. that evening officers located Rodriguez driving a different vehicle in the area of 330 Bellam Blvd., conducted a traffic stop and arrested her without incident. Rodriguez was booked at the Marin County Jail on suspicion of attempted homicide, assault with a deadly weapon and aiding and abetting a crime.

Further investigation led to detectives discovering another allegedly involved suspect, a 24-year-old Brayan Daniel Morales Escobar of Petaluma. Detectives believe Morales Escobar assisted in concealing evidence used in the shooting.

Morales Escobar and Gramajo Reyes were located by San Rafael detectives and were both booked on suspicion of aiding and abetting a crime.

The alleged shooter, Delacruz, was not located by officers, but a warrant for his arrest was obtained.
On Saturday, a Richmond officer located Delacruz in North Richmond. He was arrested on the San

Rafael warrant, and was booked at the Marin County Jail on suspicion of attempted homicide and assault with a deadly weapon.

Anyone with information regarding this shooting is asked to contact the San Rafael Police Department at (415) 485-3000 or submit a tip online.

Copyright © 2020 by Bay City News, Inc. 



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What you need to know about the new COVID-19 mutations

AUSTIN (KXAN) — Pharmaceutical companies are working to understand how effective COVID-19 vaccines are on variants being discovered worldwide — some that have already landed in the United States.

"Globally, we think there's four or five of these now," says Dr. Rodney Rohde, chair of Texas State University's clinical laboratory science program.

Rohde said so far, variants include one from the United Kingdom, two from Brazil (P.1 and P.2), one from South Africa and one variant from California that's currently circulating around Los Angeles.

The South Africa variant has been found in the United States for the first time, with two cases diagnosed in South Carolina, state health officials said Thursday.

This KXAN map shows the four areas where COVID-19 variants have been discovered. Strains from Brazil and the United Kingdom have now been detected in the United States.

On Monday, Minnesota health officials confirmed the first known COVID-19 variant from Brazil in the United States.

The confirmation came as Moderna also announced it would be conducting further studies to test its vaccine against the South African strain of the virus.

It's also the same day Jeanette Larson and her husband, who has Parkinson's, finally got their Moderna vaccine.

"I'd been trying for several weeks," Larson said. "I had registered myself and my husband with probably almost a dozen places, waiting for a call."

"To me, it's a little bit like the flu, you're going to have variants every year," says Jeanette Larson of the new COVID-19 variants. She says she trusts the science and will get another booster shot, if needed, to protect against the mutations. (Courtesy of Jeanette Larson)

They ended up going to her doctor's office after it had extra doses at the end of the day.

Now, Larson is keeping an eye on news of the COVID-19 variants.

Rohde, who specializes in virology and microbiology, said variants are expected.

"It's still kind of the same virus and makeup, but these little regions change just a little bit," Rohde said, pointing to the spikes on a coronavirus. "And so that means that that lock and key, that antibody, it's kind of lock and key fit may not work as well. It does not mean it quits working."

But Rohde says if the virus changes too much, it can become a problem.

"The typical antibodies that the human body produces may not recognize it at all, or very weakly, or a vaccine may not be as effective," he said.

He said part of the virus changes occurs randomly but other times, it responds to environmental pressures.

"For example, let's say in this instance -- and I'm just hypothesizing here. Let's say that the coronavirus main strains are feeling the pressure of therapy," Rohde said. "Or it's been through enough of a population that it kind of recognizes that the human is adapting to it. And so they will automatically kind of transition to change genetically."

Moderna said its two-dose vaccine is expected to protect against "emerging strains detected to date," but added that protection against the South African variant was less effective.

As a result, Moderna's CEO said the company will be moving forward with a potential variant booster, which they hope will protect against the variant first identified in the Republic of South Africa.

Moderna said it will also test an additional booster, in addition to the one now heading to its next study phase.

Larson said she's glad they were able to get their vaccine and plans to keep guard against whatever is next.

"We will still wear our masks. We'll still try to be as careful as we've been," she said.

Rohde said that's one of the best ways to minimize mutations.

"Trying to limit travel, continuing prevention and then, yeah, we want to keep an eye on surveillance as we talked about so that we can hopefully know that our vaccine and therapy products are working at least well enough to keep people from dying," Rohde said.

Jeanette Larson says she signed herself and her husband (pictured) up for waiting lists that included Austin Public Health, Williamson Co. and even Falls County, about 70 miles away from her Round Rock home (Courtesy of Jeanette Larson)

Pfizer vaccine efficacy

Previously, Moderna had published in vitro studies, which is what Pfizer did earlier this month.

"Which means it's done in-house," explained Rohde. "They take cell cultures, cells that are growing, and they take patients who have had those infections, who would have the antibodies, and they put it in with the new virus strain. And they see what happens. Will it cause an infection?"

A Pfizer spokesperson told KXAN they're encouraged by these early findings, but further data are needed to monitor the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine’s effectiveness in preventing COVID-19 caused by new variants.

Pfizer did not say whether or not they will be moving studies into the next phase, as Moderna is doing, but said they'd release more updates overall as they become available.

Benchmark Research in Austin has conducted several COVID-19 vaccine trials for both Moderna and Pfizer. However, they don't yet know if Moderna's booster shot studies will come to Austin.

"Almost all of the major pharmaceutical companies are doing in-vitro neutralization studies right now against the new variants. This states that Moderna is now moving this booster shot into preclinical and Phase 1 studies so there is a possibility that later this year or in a few months we could work with Moderna on this, but we only conduct Phase 2 and 3 studies (mostly Phase 3) so we will not be participating in this right now," Benchmark Research said in an email to KXAN.

All studies referenced only pertain to the COVID-19 variants from the U.K. and South Africa. Moderna's CEO says the South African variant appears similar to the P.1 from Brazil.



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Highway patrol trooper's emotional goodbye after 40 years on the job

Why you should book trips now for after the pandemic

(NEXSTAR) - If you're thinking about taking a trip in the post-COVID future, now might be a good time to book, with airlines and vendors offering deals aplenty.

But you have to be thoughtful about it, says Kansas City-based travel agent Kathy Sudeikis, who's been in the business for over forty years. Things change, and often faster than the average person can keep up with.

"It is a good time to book, but you have to be realistic about what could happen," Sudeikis said.

She expects "the deals will keep coming," even after the pandemic, as "business has been off enough that there will be deals once people are up in the air and back on cruise ships."

For Sudeikis, travel insurance is a must, especially if you're booking for a trip far into the future. You can buy insurance when you book a flight, hotel or vehicle, or go through a travel agent who can help streamline the process.

Especially these days, travel agents are more essential than ever, Sudeikis said. They help you wade through the fine print and can manage cancellations and reservations. They might even get you deals in the process -- like free upgrades and breakfast.

"You would never want to try to do this on your own," Sudeikis said. "You need somebody to read through the lines, help you wade through the junk. You need an advocate who won't put you in a queue, like an airline does."

As for when you should plan your trip for, Sudeikis recommends the summer, fall and next winter.

If you plan something and it doesn't work out, don't fret, she says. Most vendors, including airlines and hotels, are offering unprecedented refunds, either in the form of a voucher or full cash refund.



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Inside the Bullpen: Blue Shield's role in state vaccination rollout, Newsom recall effort

John Myers, with the L.A. Times, and Laurel Rosenhall, with CalMatters, discuss Blue Shield's role in the state's vaccination effort and the Employment Development Departments continuing issues.

"I think the execution of this vaccine delivery program across California has left a lot of people frustrated," Myers said.

Rosenhall added that the pandemic and issues surrounding the state's handling of it has allowed the recall effort surrounding Gov. Gavin Newsom to gain more supporters.

"This petition that is circulating now was actually written in February of last year. So, that was before the virus upended life for all of us," Rosenhall said.



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Exclusive interview: John Cox on effort to recall Newsom

California recall effort

John Cox, the businessman who challenged Gavin Newsom in California’s 2018 gubernatorial race, says he’ll run again if the effort to recall the governor gets enough verified signatures.

Cox has been a vocal critic of Newsom’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, telling Nikki Laurenzo on Inside California Politics that the state’s vaccine rollout has been “unconscionable.”

Employment Development Department and the Pandemic

California Senator Brian Dahle discusses the Employment Development Department's fraud issues during the pandemic.

"We're getting literally hundreds of calls a day from constituents trying to access the EDD, and it's quite frankly broken. On top of that, there are literally thousands of people who have frauded the system," Dahle said.

Dahle also says he supports a recall effort.

"I definitely support the fact that when the government doesn't work for you, you need to throw the people out. And quite frankly, nothings working in California," Dahle said.



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Tom Steyer explains pandemic's impact on businesses

Former presidential candidate Tom Steyer discusses the role of the task for he co-chaired in helping businesses during the pandemic.

"We had a very specific belief that the recovery could only happen in the way we were outlining once the health situation, the COVID pandemic, was under control. That, that had to be dealt with first," Steyer said.

Steyer says the task force spent months working on a framework and recommendation for the governor.



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Saturday, 30 January 2021

Pregnant women debate taking COVID-19 vaccine

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) -- As the rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine continues across California, expecting mothers are expressing mixed feelings about getting the shot when their turn comes up despite the CDC and healthcare providers recommending that taking the vaccine is the safest route while pregnant.

Adding to the confusion, an initial decision by the world health organization this week recommencing pregnant woman not take the Moderna vaccine -- now reversed after criticism.

A midwife says her clients are expressing mixed feelings about the shot but the CDC and doctors say it is the safest route for pregnant women, women who are lactating or breastfeeding and also for women who are thinking about getting pregnant.

"We're not only worried about the mother, we're also worried about the fetus as well," Dr. Warner Huh said.

Dr. Warner Huh heads the Department of Obstetrics at University of Alabama Hospital in Birmingham, a leading hospital for women's health.

He says many healthcare providers are recommencing pregnant or lactating women take the COVID-19 vaccine.

His pregnant patients recovered quickly from COVID but some became severely ill.

"They have difficulty breathing, oxygenating, and we have to be worried about the downstream consequences not only on the mother, but also on the fetus or the baby," Dr. Warner Huh said.

Earlier this week, the World Health Organization recommended pregnant women not take the Moderna vaccine unless they're a healthcare worker or have a preexisting condition.

While the CDC and most professional medical societies contend it is the safest route while pregnant and that any potential risks associated with taking the vaccine are minimal compared to catching the virus while pregnant.

On Friday, the WHO reversed its stance after criticism. The guidelines now closely aligns with the CDC.

Expecting mothers are urged to seek guidance from your healthcare providers.

Dr. huh added there's still more to learn.

"There's a lot we know about the vaccine, but there's a lot we don't know about the vaccine, but this is a once in a lifetime pandemic," he said. "We have seen nationally and internationally, pregnant women die as a consequence of COVID-19. You know it's our job to be able to provide what we think is the best prevention strategy for pregnant women."

While healthcare providers are not worried about pregnant women taking the vaccine, they are worried about when it will become available to them. At the moment, expectant mothers are not listed as a top priority in the state's COVID-19 vaccination plan.



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1 shot following officer-involved shooting in Pittsburg

PITTSBURG, Calif. (KRON) -- Pittsburg police responded to a commercial business Saturday regarding a man on top of the roof of the business, authorities announced.

When officers arrived to the 3700 block of Harbor Street, the man had already climbed off the roof and was standing next to a car in the parking lot.

Officers asked the man to stand where he was, but police say the man ignored their commands. The man then reportedly reached on top of the car's rear tire and picked up a handgun and ran the opposite way.

Another officer arrived to the scene and found the man and asked him to lay on the ground several times. The man also ignored this officer's commands, police say.

That's when the man ran behind another car and pointed the gun at the officer.

The officer shot the man in the arm one time, which made the man immediately drop his handgun and fall to the ground.

The man was taken to the hospital and is expected to survive.

Police say the man is 32-years-old and from Oakland. Further identification has not been released.

The Contra Costa County Officer Involved Incident Protocol has been enacted and the Contra Costa County District Attorney’s Office will be completing an independent investigation into this incident.

The Pittsburg Police Department’s independent outside investigator is also conducting an independent investigation of the incident pursuant to department policy.

Body-cam footage will be released soon, along with the officer's name.



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Federal conspiracy charges for 2 Proud Boys in Capitol riot

NEW YORK (AP) — Two men identified as members of the Proud Boys have been indicted on federal conspiracy and other charges in the Capitol riot as prosecutors raise the stakes in some of the slew of cases stemming from the Jan. 6 insurrection.

Dominic Pezzola, a former Marine who authorities say was seen on video smashing a Capitol window with a stolen Capitol Police riot shield, and William Pepe, who authorities said was photographed inside the building, were arrested earlier in the month on federal charges that included illegally entering a restricted building. The two, both from New York state, have now been indicted in Washington on charges that newly include conspiracy.

“The object of the conspiracy was to obstruct, influence, impede and interfere with law enforcement officers engaged in their official duties in protecting the U.S. Capitol and its grounds,” the indictment says, accusing Pezzola, Pepe and unnamed others of leading a group of Proud Boys and others to the Capitol and moving police barricades there.

Pezzola went on to snatch an officer’s shield and use it to break the window, according to the indictment, which was filed in court Friday.

Pezzola’s lawyer Michael Scibetta said Saturday he was researching the charges but hadn’t been able yet to discuss the indictment with his client, who is being held without bail. A lawyer for Pepe, Shelli Peterson, declined to comment.

Three self-described members of a paramilitary group were charged with conspiracy this month and accused of plotting the attack on the Capitol. But the new charges against Pezzola and Pepe appear to be the first conspiracy cases involving alleged members of the Proud Boys, a far-right group of self-described “Western chauvinists.”

Michael Sherwin, the acting U.S. attorney for Washington, said in a court filing Friday that Pezzola “showed perseverance, determination, and coordination in being at the front lines every step along the way before breaking into the Capitol,” and that his actions in shattering the window and allowing an initial group of rioters to stream through “cannot be overstated.”

Pezzola was later seen on video inside the Capitol with a cigar, having what he called a “victory smoke,” and boasting that he “knew we could take this” over, Sherwin wrote. He argued the remarks showed Pezzola “invested a significant personal effort to take over the Capitol and that he did so in coordination with others.”

An unidentified witness told the FBI that Pezzola was with a group at the Capitol whose members said they would have killed anyone they got hold of, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and then-Vice President Mike Pence, according to prosecutors. The witness added that people in the group said they’d return on the “20th” and kill everyone they could. The presidential inauguration was Jan. 20.

In a search of Pezzola’s home in Rochester, New York, FBI agents found a computer thumb drive with hundreds of files detailing how to make firearms, poisons or explosives, Sherwin wrote in arguing that Pezzola should continue to be held without bail.

Pezzola, 43, served six years stateside in the Marines as an infantryman and was discharged in 2005 at the rank of corporal, service records show. His lawyer has said his client is self-employed and a family man.

Pepe, 31, was photographed inside the Capitol and later identified as a Metro-North Railroad train yard laborer who had called in sick to go to Washington for a Jan. 6 protest by supporters of then-President Donald Trump, according to a Jan. 11 criminal court complaint. Pepe, who lives in Beacon in New York’s Hudson Valley, has since been suspended without pay from his job at the New York City-area commuter railroad.

At Trump’s urging, thousands of the protesters streamed to the Capitol. Some then stormed it, temporarily disrupting Congress’ certification of Democratic President Joe Biden’s victory over the Republican Trump in the November election.

Overall, federal authorities have charged more than 150 people in the Capitol siege.

The Justice Department said both Pepe and Pezzola have gone to Proud Boys gatherings and have tactical vests emblazoned with the group’s logo.

The group is known for violent confrontations with antifascists and other ideological opponents at protests. In a notable moment on the campaign trail last year, Trump told the group to “stand back and stand by” when asked at a September debate whether he would condemn white supremacist and militia groups that showed up at some protests last summer.

Shortly before the Capitol riot, the Proud Boys’ leader, Henry “Enrique” Tarrio, was arrested in Washington and ordered to stay out of the city after being accused of vandalizing a Black Lives Matter banner at a historic Black church in December.



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Lions trade Matthew Stafford to Rams for Jared Goff, two first-round picks: report

LOS ANGELES (KRON) -- The Detroit Lions are trading QB Matthew Stafford to the Los Angeles Rams for QB Jared Goff, two first round picks and a third round pick, per ESPN's Adam Schefter.

After being the No. 1 overall pick in 2009, Stafford's 12-season career in Detroit has come to an end. 

The 32-year-old will now head to Southern California after completing 64.2 percent of his passes for 26 touchdowns, 10 interceptions and 4,084 yards last year.

Goff, from Novato, CA and a Cal Bear alum, was selected by the Rams with the first overall pick by the Los Angeles Rams in the 2016 NFL Draft.

This story will be updated



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Trump loses lead impeachment lawyers a week before trial

WASHINGTON (AP) — Former President Donald Trump has parted ways with his lead impeachment lawyers little more than a week before his trial, two people familiar with the situation said Saturday. The change injects fresh uncertainty into the makeup and strategy of his defense team.

Butch Bowers and Deborah Barbier, both South Carolina lawyers, have left the defense team in what one person described as a “mutual decision” that reflected a difference of opinion on the direction of the case.

The two people familiar with the legal team discussions insisted on anonymity to discuss private conversations. One said new additions to the legal team were expected to be announced in a day or two.

Bowers and Barbier did not immediately return messages seeking comment.

Trump is set to stand trial on the week of Feb. 8 on a charge that he incited the riot inside the U.S. Capitol. Republicans and Trump aides have made clear that they intend to make a simple argument: The trial is unconstitutional because Trump is no longer in office.

CNN was first to report the departure of the lawyers.



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