Tuesday, 30 November 2021

2 men assault 9-year-old boy with autism while asleep in his bed: Gilroy police

GILROY, Calif. (KRON) - A 9-year-old boy with autism was assaulted by two men while asleep in his room on Monday morning, according to the Gilroy Police Department.

Around 2:10 a.m. on Nov. 29, police responded to Saint Louise Hospital following the report.

Authorities say an adult man reportedly broke into the Gilroy house with another man and assaulted the boy.

The men ran from the scene, police say.

The boy's mom believes the man was Joseph Sanseverino, who she had previously dated and still lived at the house.

Authorities have been searching for Sanseverino and the other man, who was identified by the mom as Ethan.

Police continue to investigate the incident at this time.

If you have any information, you are asked to contact Officer Fraide at (408) 846-0485. You can remain anonymous by calling the Tip Line at (408) 846-0330.



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Family remembers 28-year-old man killed in Oakland while trying to stop car break-in

OAKLAND, Calif. (KRON) - The family of a man killed for trying to stop a car break-in is going public as new clues are released in the search for his killer. 

28-year-old Eric Davis’s held a vigil to remember his life, just days after he was shot and killed at Lake Merritt. 

Oakland police are hoping anyone may know where to find a newer model Toyota Rav4 SUV that is wanted in the murder of Eric Davis.

Investigators released a picture Tuesday afternoon in hopes of being able to solve this senseless murder. 

Davis was shot and killed Sunday afternoon at Lake Merritt after investigators say he was simply trying to stop car crooks from breaking into cars.

Those who knew Davis call his murder senseless. 

On Tuesday night, family and friends gathered together to remember his life. 

His girlfriend even offered her thanks to him for having the privilege of knowing him. 

Family members say Davis was raised in Southern California and moved to Oakland a few years ago to start his life. 

His cousin Kendra told KRON4 that he had a number of goals he was working on. She called him hard-working and had a smile that everyone loved. 

She says their close-knit family is completely at a loss for words over his loss. 

She's calling for the violence to stop and hopes someone will speak up with what they know to bring justice to Davis. 

Davis leaves behind a younger brother, and a mother, both of who live in Southern California.

A $10,000 reward is being offered for information leading to an arrest in the case. 



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Thieves break in, throw party at new San Francisco restaurant

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) - The grand opening of a new restaurant in downtown San Francisco will likely be delayed after the owners say thieves broke into the business, stole a bunch of equipment and furniture and apparently threw a large party inside.

The restaurant, Ramen Hiroshi, was set to open early next month.

The owner believes they were targeted and scoped out a couple weeks ago because he says there was definitely some planning involved.

He says the burglars covered the glass windows so no one could see inside and found handmade signs posted on the walls but that's only the beginning.

Co-owner Daniel Bomya recently returned to the strange scene -- Taped, covered glass windows at his newest restaurant, planned to open early next month on Pine and Kearny Streets.

However, that grand opening is now in jeopardy because of what Bomya found inside beyond the shielded windows.

Bomya says thieves smashed their lockbox and then broke into the restaurant on Saturday night two weeks ago. 

He says he quickly realized that the burglars stole some of their equipment and furniture and apparently hosted a large underground party in the space based on the trash and vomit left behind. 

Signs were also posted up on the walls letting party go-ers know where the bathrooms are located.

He says the place smelled of marijuana.

He says their surveillance camera system was also stolen. Bomya says he's now sharing their story to warn other businesses.

The restaurant has since replaced security cameras and a surveillance system at the restaurant.

The original target date for the grand opening was Dec. 10 but with so many things now missing or needing to be replaced, they say it will likely take longer.



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Helping non-profits on Giving Tuesday

(KRON) - As a teen, Christian Aguirre leaned on the Rainbow Community Center in Concord for support, now he's helping others as an HIV Outreach Manager.

Aguirre says without this non-profit, "I probably wouldn't be here right now."

The center has been providing resources for the LGBTQ community since 1995.

On Tuesday, the non-profit reaches more than 1,000 people every year all across Contra Costa County.

They provide access to housing, funding, clothing, toys during the holidays and mental health services.

So Giving Tuesday is a big deal for them, along with other non-profits like Homies Empowerment in East Oakland, who rely on donations from the community to keep their good work going.

"Black Friday is all about shopping, it's all about supporting consumerism. But Giving Tuesday is all about caring for each other, us being community-minded, us taking care of our neighbors. It's a beautiful idea and this is the first time we have ever participated. To hear from neighbors who have been impacted by our work and now they want to give back," Dr. Cesar Cruz, Founder of  Homies Empowerment said.

The volunteers at Homies Empowerment were once troubled youth who participated in the program themselves, turned away from gang life, and now give back.

Since the pandemic, their work has shifted to handing out food, clothes, supplies, and $1,000 to those in need.

The FREEdom store serves on average 400 individuals and families weekly.

In the North Bay, Napa Wildlife Rescue runs purely on volunteers, grants, and donations to help orphaned or injured animals.

"Wildlife is in crisis. It has been in crisis across the world for some time. We have lost about 60% of the wildlife since 1970. and organizations like napa wildlife are the only ones really who are working to push back on that," President John Cominsky said.

There are of course many more charities out there that are doing important work and, could use your assistance too.

Non-profit donations are tax-deductible. Money or time can go a long way.

For more information, visit the following websites:



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Walnut Creek considers hiring additional police officers to patrol downtown

(BCN) - The Walnut Creek City Council will hold a special meeting Wednesday to discuss hiring five new police officers to patrol downtown in response to the Nov. 20 looting of Nordstrom by 90 masked bandits rushing the store just before closing, making off with about $125,000 in merchandise. 

The city would spend $2 million of its remaining $4 million of federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funding on new Broadway Plaza security measures. In addition to the five police officers -- costing $1.6 million if funded through the end of June 2023, as recommended by staff -- the city would also spend $215,000 for additional security cameras and $35,000 for a tethered drone 100 feet over the area. 

The council would also allocate $130,000 for immediate overtime pay for additional officers three days a week through June 30, 2022. 

The staff recommendations would leave the city with $2 million in ARPA funds to spend in the future. 

The council will also likely formally approve sending letters to the district attorney, state legislators and Gov. Gavin Newsom, expressing concern and asking for additional resources. 

The Nov. 20 theft made national headlines for its scale and boldness. Suspects arrived in up to 25 vehicles just before 9 p.m., blocking the street in front of Nordstrom as they raced inside. Two employees were injured, one was pepper-sprayed and another with threatened with a knife, according to a staff report for Wednesday's meeting.

Police arrested three people. The attack was one of many similar attacks in the Bay Area that weekend by dozens of armed suspects at stores in Oakland, San Francisco, Hayward, Pleasanton, and San Jose. Authorities have said it's not clear whether the cases are related. 

The street running through Broadway Plaza is closed until the end of the year at least, Mayor Kevin Wilk has said.

The Walnut Creek City Council will meet at 8:30 a.m. Wednesday at the council chamber, at 1666 N. Main St.. The meeting can be accessed on the city's YouTube channel or at www.zoom.us (webinar ID: 83663187906, passcode 015005).

Copyright © 2021 Bay City News, Inc.



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Why some are calling organized retail robbery 'borderline domestic terrorism'

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) - Domestic terrorism is now being used to describe what it's like to experience flash mob retail robbery in the Bay Area.

KRON4's Haaziq Madyun spoke to the representative of over 200 major retailers in the state, who explains why she views these crimes as terror.

The CEO of the California Retailers Association Rachel Michelin explains why she believes using the phrase, domestic terror is appropriate to describe the lasting impact on someone who was behind the counter working, or in the store shopping, when dozens of thieves suddenly appear without warning.

"Suddenly you've got 90 people showing up in cars with crowbars and sledgehammers running into the stores and committing these brazen crimes. I think it's terrorizing to the people in the stores and those employees," Michelin said. 

There has always been shoplifting. It comes with the retail territory, but Michelin says California businesses have never experienced anything like this.

"These brazen acts that we've seen. These coordinated efforts that we've seen up and down the state of California. No one has seen that before."

Some politicians have been saying that they are going to do something about it.

"Those organized efforts and they are organized and we want to go after those rings," said Governor Gavin Newsom.

However, it is clear that organized theft rings seem to be leveling up in spite of the tough talk.

"I think we're still trying to wrap our minds around it. We're trying to figure what our next steps are, but if we don't do something bold, if we don't really work together on solutions, I just want to make sure we stop it. We need to make sure our employees and our customers are safe when they go into a store anywhere in the state of California," Michelin said.



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Video: House fire reported in Daly City

DALY CITY, Calif. (KRON) - Video posted to Twitter Tuesday afternoon showed a house fire in Daly City.

Daniel Snowden, who took the video, tells KRON4 that the house was located on Miriam St. between Citrus Ave. and Westlake Ave, near Jefferson High School.

KRON4 has reached out to fire officials and will update this story when we hear back.



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Thousands of diapers stolen from Solano County non-profit organization

BENICIA, Calif. (KRON) - A theft at a Solano County non-profit has left workers searching for answers, as well as the need to replace the items they planned to give away for the holidays. 

Thousands of diapers, hygiene products, in addition to other valuable items were ripped off and stolen from the Food is Free Solano organization.

Now, they need help so that they can help others in need. 

Heather Perini with Food is Free Solano, a nonprofit organization, still can't believe what happened, but it did. 

Someone broke in and cleaned out thousands of diapers, all donated to help families cope with financial stress brought on by the pandemic, as well as dealing with living in the Bay Area. 

Heather says to make matters worse, the diapers were part of a collaboration. 

She explains while it may not seem significant to lose diapers, it is a much bigger issue.

Heather explains they did receive some items Tuesday to replenish their vanquished storage, but they have a long way to go.

For more information, visit the Food is Free Solano website.



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Shelter in place issued for residents near 234 Northgate One for hazardous materials

SAN RAFAEL, Calif. (KRON) -- A shelter in place was issued for residents near 234 Northgate One in San Rafael on Tuesday morning.

First responders are handling a 'hazardous materials incident,' according to an alert by San Rafael police. "Residents should avoid the area and those in immediate proximity should shelter in place," the alert said.

The incident first started around 9 a.m. It does not impact the vaccination clinic at Northgate Mall, according to Marin County.

This story will be updated as information becomes available.



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Over 50 terrified dogs rescued from truck headed to slaughterhouse

INDONESIA (WJW) — More than 50 dogs were recently rescued from a truck headed to an illegal slaughterhouse in Indonesia.

Police in Sukoharjo and rescuers from Dog Meat Free Indonesia (DMFI) reportedly worked together last week to help the scared animals, which were found in sacks with their mouths tied up, Four Paws International said in a release.

"The animals were tied up in sacks, muzzles bound tight with ropes or cables, eyes wide open with fear," Four Paws said.

One dog did not survive the journey, and all of the animals were emaciated.

The police also reportedly took a long-suspected dog meat trader into custody. The move was part of the country's first large-scale police raid on a dog slaughterhouse.

"The shocking and criminal events that we have witnessed as well as the positive actions taken by the Sukoharjo authorities must be a turning point in fighting against this outlawed, outdated, and cruel trade," Four Paws' Dr. Karanvir Kukreja said in a statement. "The positives we can take out of this awful situation are that law enforcement and campaign groups are ensuring that this illegal trade is coming to an end."

Police official Wahyu Nugroho cited a government program aimed at banning the dog meat trade. "Because of course, dog meat is not intended for consumption," he said.

People from Dog Meat Free Indonesia, which works to stop the country's cat and dog meat trade, took the animals to a temporary shelter and gave them emergency veterinary treatment. All of the animals were said to be under a year old and most were stolen pets.

Watch a video of the rescue below:

DMFI said they plan to try to return animals to their families but will also put some up for adoption once they are healthy enough.



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Testimony begins in the Jussie Smollett trial

CHICAGO (NewsNation Now) — Testimony is set to begin Tuesday in the trial of former “Empire” actor Jussie Smollett, who prosecutors say staged a homophobic and racist attack in Chicago but whose defense attorney says is a “real victim” of a “real crime.”

Smollett's attorney says there has been a "tremendous rush to judgment" by the police in the case, and because of it, his client's career and reputation are damaged.

Smollett is charged with felony disorderly conduct after allegedly arranging a hate crime against himself in January 2019. Smollett claims he was attacked by strangers who used homophobic and racial slurs then put a noose around his neck.

Defense attorney Nenye Uche said during opening statements Monday that two brothers attacked the former “Empire” actor because they didn’t like him and that a $3,500 check the actor paid the men was for training so he could prepare for an upcoming music video, not as payment for staging a hate crime, as prosecutors allege.

Uche called Smollett "a real victim."

The Chicago Police Department spent more than 3,000 hours on the case.

“Jussie Smollett took advantage of the pain and anger of racism to promote his career," former Chicago Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson said.

Judge James B. Linn said he would like the evidence in the case to be focused on the night of the attack.

Twelve jurors are expected to see surveillance cameras from four different angles. Two key witnesses for the prosecution will be the brothers accusing Smollett of staging the attack.

The class 4 felony carries a prison sentence of up to three years, but experts have said it is likely that if Smollett is convicted, he would be placed on probation and perhaps ordered to perform community service.

It is unclear whether the actor will testify.



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Dunkin' cup leads to arrest of man accused of raping woman, leaving her for dead

MEDFORD, Mass. (WPRI) — A discarded Dunkin' cup led to the arrest of a Massachusetts man accused of hitting a woman multiple times with a rock, raping her and leaving her for dead off a hiking trail, a prosecutor said.

Brady McCue, 28, was arraigned Monday in Somerville District Court on charges of armed assault to murder, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon causing serious bodily injury, kidnapping and four counts of aggravated rape.

The victim, a 48-year-old woman who was not known to McCue, was walking in the area of Leslie Road Trail Head in Medford around 8 a.m. Friday at the time of the attack.

The woman told police her attacker was carrying a white Dunkin' coffee cup.

When investigators searched the area, they found the discarded cup with a sticker showing the time and place it was purchased.

Police then were able to obtain security footage from the Dunkin' in Medford Square and went to a nearby housing complex where people helped investigators identify the suspect as McCue.

In court, prosecutor Carrie Spiros said that within hours after the woman reported the alleged crime, McCue was in custody confessing.

He told investigators he hit the woman over the head with a rock and struck her 14 times in the face before trying to duct tape her mouth and drag her into a wooded area to rape her before fleeing the scene.

“Before he purchased the coffee at the Dunkin’ Donuts, he had left his apartment with the intention of hurting someone,” Spiros said. “He later indicated that he left the apartment with the intention to kill someone.”

McCue was ordered to undergo a mental health evaluation to determine competency and criminal responsibility.

As of Friday, the woman was being treated for serious injuries at a Boston hospital and was in stable condition.



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Pfizer to apply for COVID-19 booster approval for 16 and 17 year olds: report

(The Hill) – Pfizer and BioNTech are reported set to seek approval for booster shots of their COVID-19 vaccine for 16- and 17-year-olds.

People familiar with the company's plans told The Washington Post that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is expected to approve the company’s request surrounding the additional shots quickly. 

Currently, Americans ages 18 and older are eligible for booster shots six months after their second dose of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines, or two months after the single dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. 

The possible expansion of booster eligibility comes as concerns surrounding the new omicron variant mount.

On Monday, President Biden said omicron "is a cause for concern, not a cause for panic," and that lockdowns to address it are not needed.

“On Thursday, I'll be putting forward a detailed strategy outlining how we're going to fight COVID this winter, not with shutdowns or lockdowns but with more widespread vaccinations, boosters, testing and more,” Biden said.

Last week, in a statement about the variant, Biden touted booster shots and encouraged those who were eligible to get their additional doses. 

"First, for those Americans who are fully vaccinated against severe COVID illness – fortunately, for the vast majority of our adults — the best way to strengthen your protection is to get a booster shot, as soon as you are eligible," he said on Friday

No omicron cases have yet been confirmed in the U.S., though experts believe they inevitably will be.

The Hill has reached out to Pfizer for comment. 



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Person rescued from water near Ferry Building pronounced dead

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) -- Crews rescued a person from the San Francisco Bay on Tuesday morning who was declared dead by paramedics.

The rescue operation happened near the Ferry Building along the Embarcadero. The San Francisco Fire Department said to avoid the area as of 8:23 a.m. There are no delays in the ferry system due to this incident.

The U.S. Coast Guard, fire department and police department are all on the scene.

They did not share how the person got into the water. This story will be updated.



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Small earthquake reported in South Bay

MORGAN HILL, Calif. (KRON) -- The United States Geological Survey is reporting a magnitude 2.7 earthquake in the South Bay just after 8 a.m. on Tuesday.

It happened near Morgan Hill, about 22 miles away from San Jose. It was 1.4 km in depth.

It's too early to tell how far it was felt. This story will be updated.



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6-foot social distancing rule doesn’t protect from COVID-19 whether indoors or outdoors

CAMBRIDGE, United Kingdom (StudyFinds.org) — Although the “six-foot rule” has been a staple of coronavirus safety measure since 2020, is it really doing anything to keep people healthy? A new study finds the answer to that appears to be a resounding no. Scientists from the University of Cambridge say the social distancing rule of six feet does not protect against catching COVID-19, even outdoors.

The team calls the social distancing rule an “arbitrary measurement” of safety in the absence of masks. It could have been set anywhere between three to 10 feet, depending on the risk tolerance of the local public health authority putting out the mandate.

Infected individuals spread the virus through coughing, speaking, and even breathing. People expel larger droplets that eventually settle on surfaces or break into smaller aerosols that may float through the air. The study used computer modelling to quantify how these infectious particles travel. Results show coughs vary widely when it comes to expelling particles.

“I remember hearing lots about how COVID-19 was spreading via door handles in early 2020, and I thought to myself if that were the case, then the virus must leave an infected person and land on the surface or disperse in the air through fluid mechanical processes,” says lead author Professor Epaminondas Mastorakos in a university release.

No masks lead to an unknown dynamic when coughing

Scientists say the findings in the Physics of Fluids underline the continued importance of vaccination, ventilation, and masks heading into winter.

Early in the pandemic, health experts focused on hand washing and surface cleaning. However, Cambridge engineers note it’s been clear for nearly two years that COVID spreads through airborne transmission. They have developed various programs to investigate how the virus behaves in different environments.

“One part of the way that this disease spreads is virology: how much virus you have in your body, how many viral particles you expel when you speak or cough,” adds first author Dr. Shrey Trivedi. “But another part of it is fluid mechanics: what happens to the droplets once they’re expelled, which is where we come in. As fluid mechanics specialists, we’re like the bridge from virology of the emitter to the virology of the receiver and we can help with risk assessment.”

Simulations showed how much of the virus would reach another person in the same room from a cough containing 1,000 droplets. The researchers found there isn’t a sharp cut-off once the droplets spread beyond two meters.

When a person coughs and isn’t wearing a mask, most of the larger droplets will fall on nearby surfaces, but smaller droplets suspended in the air can quickly and easily spread well beyond the six-foot mark. How far and how quickly these aerosols spread will depend on the quality of ventilation in a room. In addition to the variables surrounding mask-wearing and ventilation, there’s also a high degree of variability.

“Each time we cough, we may emit a different amount of liquid, so if a person is infected with COVID-19, they could be emitting lots of virus particles or very few, and because of the turbulence they spread differently for every cough,” Trivedi continues.

The 6-foot rule may only be good for COVID messaging

The team’s calculations took into account turbulent flow and detailed descriptions of droplet motion and evaporation.

“Even if I expel the same number of droplets every time I cough, because the flow is turbulent, there are fluctuations,” Mastorakos says. “If I’m coughing, fluctuations in velocity, temperature and humidity mean that the amount someone gets at the two-meter mark can be very different each time.”

The six-foot rule is an effective and easy-to-remember message for the public. However, the study finds it isn’t a mark of safety given the large number of variables associated with an airborne virus. Vaccination, ventilation, and masks – while not 100 percent effective – are vital for containing the pandemic.

“We’re all desperate to see the back of this pandemic, but we strongly recommend that people keep wearing masks in indoor spaces such as offices, classrooms and shops,” Mastorakos concludes. “There’s no good reason to expose yourself to this risk as long as the virus is with us.”

The researchers are carrying out similar simulations for spaces such as lecture rooms to assess the risk as people spend more time indoors. The World Health Organization recommends a distance of at least three feet (one meter) from others — even if they don’t appear to be sick. WHO also advises people to avoid crowds and close contact and to wear a properly fitted mask in poorly ventilated rooms.



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Elizabeth Holmes trial: Prosecution to cross-examine ex CEO

SANTA CLARA COUNTY, Calif. (KRON) -- Ex-Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes will be cross-examined by the prosecution on Tuesday in her criminal fraud trial.

The trial is three months long and this will be her fifth day on the witness stand.

The 37-year-old former Silicon Valley star and her former partner, Ramesh “Sunny” Balwani, are charged with  two counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and nine counts of wire fraud related to an alleged a multi-million-dollar scheme to defraud investors with their blood-testing technology company.

For the past four days, it was her attorneys asking her questions - painting a picture that Holmes was not herself but instead controlled by Balwani, who also ran Theranos with her.

She claims he sexually assaulted her and controlled almost every facet of her life.

Prosecutors claim that her blood testing device, which made her a billionaire by luring in investors, was not what it was advertised to be. They said she knew it didn’t test all the ailments it claimed but still asked investors to pour in hundreds of millions of dollars into her company.

This story will be updated.



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'Countdown to New Year's Eve 2022,' best party will be in Las Vegas

LAS VEGAS (KLAS) -- New Year's Eve will be back in a big way as the nation bids farewell to 2021 and celebrates the start of 2022. One of the biggest parties will be in Las Vegas.

If you can't be there in person, don't worry. Nexstar Media Inc.'s Las Vegas television station, KLAS-TV, will host “Countdown to New Year’s Eve 2022,” a live New Year’s Eve special on Friday, Dec. 31, 2021, with coverage from 8:58 p.m. to 12:35 a.m. PT, featuring live musical performances, special entertainment, a countdown to midnight across all four-time zones, the midnight ball-drop in New York City, and spectacular firework shows from Dallas' Reunion Tower and from Denver's downtown area, as well as a 10-minute firework show launched from the rooftops of eight Las Vegas Strip hotels.

The show will air in the following 13 cities: Los Angeles, San Diego, Sacramento, San Francisco, Portland, Denver, Salt Lake City, Albuquerque, Honolulu, Fresno, Bakersfield, Grand Junction, and Colorado Springs.

"Countdown to New Year's Eve 2022" will also be available online with exclusive bonus content and can be seen on the stations' digital and streaming platforms. Partygoers, family, and friends will have the opportunity to share their own personal New Year’s Eve merry-making experiences and holiday wishes using #VEGASNYE on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.

The special will be hosted by two-time Emmy nominee, comedian, and actor Michael Yo, and actress and Fandango correspondent Nikki Novak.

Performances will include Country-pop star and multi-platinum recording artist, Scotty McCreery, and quintessential Las Vegas acts like Blue Man Group, Cirque du Soleil's Ka!, Illusionist Xavier Mortimer, and Absinthe.

Once again, KLAS-TV will partner with Souper Bowl of Caring to raise money to address the issue of hunger and food insecurity in each of the cities where the special will be aired. The youth-inspired movement tackles hunger in local communities by mobilizing grassroots resources including churches, schools, and civic groups. Last year, viewers donated nearly 350,000 meals.

“Partnering with Souper Bowl of Caring last year really made an impact for our local communities and this year, we are adding more phone lines providing viewers an even greater opportunity to donate,” said Lisa Howfield, vice president and general manager of KLAS-TV.

Viewers will be encouraged to donate to their local food bank by phone, online, or by texting “NYEDONATE” to 26989.



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Looking Forward: Year of change leads to year of hope

LAS VEGAS (KLAS) -- The past year has been unlike any other. The pandemic brought much of the country to a standstill as thousands of businesses closed or pivoted to operate in a new way. Many people found themselves either not working, or working from home with facial masks became part of our normal attire.

Las Vegas, which has always drawn large crowds for the New Year's Eve holiday, was quiet compared to previous years. Casinos that had been ordered closed for more than two months in the spring of 2020 were still trying to recover at the end of the year. And, for the first time in years, Las Vegas Strip hotel properties did not have the annual New Year's Eve fireworks show. In addition, live entertainment was still sidelined.

There was some doubt if there would be any fireworks to ring in 2021 but the Plaza Hotel & Casino in downtown Las Vegas was given the green light to have a midnight fireworks display from its rooftop.

And although the party at the city's newest gaming property -- the Circa resort -- moved away from a live audience, it truly became a television and virtual experience for most people who watched the "Las Vegas New Year's Eve Countdown to 2021" on KLAS-TV, Channel 8 which was broadcast across 14 West Coast TV markets. The show featured Las Vegas entertainment acts, celebrity greetings, and celebrations as major cities around the world and in the U.S. rang in the New Year. And it will all happen again this year with a sense of hope about 2022 will bring.

KLAS-TV, Channel 8, and 8NewsNow.com will be able to bring you the best views of the New Year's Eve fireworks and celebrations again this year with "Countdown to New Year's Eve 2022."



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Looking Back: Donny Osmond was ready to put 2020 behind him

LAS VEGAS (KLAS) -- Numerous entertainers sent their well-wishes to the public on New Year's Eve last year and most were just looking to put 2020 in their rearview mirror. Stages in Las Vegas went dark and stayed that way for months. Music icon Donny Osmond used the time to do a new album and launch a new residency.



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Looking Back: Penn & Teller were already planning for 2022

LAS VEGAS (KLAS) -- Magicians Penn & Teller were among the entertainers to wish everyone a safe and Happy New Year in 2021!



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Omicron brings COVID-19 vaccine inequity 'home to roost'

LONDON (AP) — The emergence of the new omicron variant and the world's desperate and likely futile attempts to keep it at bay are reminders of what scientists have warned for months: The coronavirus will thrive as long as vast parts of the world lack vaccines.

The hoarding of limited COVID-19 shots by rich countries — creating virtual vaccine deserts in many poorer ones — doesn’t just mean risk for the parts of the world seeing shortages; it threatens the entire globe.

That's because the more the disease spreads among unvaccinated populations, the more possibilities it has to mutate and potentially become more dangerous, prolonging the pandemic for everyone.

“The virus is a ruthless opportunist, and the inequity that has characterized the global response has now come home to roost,” said Dr. Richard Hatchett, CEO of CEPI, one of the groups behind the U.N.-backed COVAX shot-sharing initiative.

Perhaps nowhere is the inequality more evident than in Africa, where under 7% of the population is vaccinated. South African scientists alerted the World Health Organization to the new omicron variant last week, though it may never be clear where it first originated. Researchers are now rushing to determine whether it is more infectious or able to evade current vaccines.

COVAX was supposed to avoid such inequality — but instead the initiative is woefully short of shots and has already abandoned its initial goal of 2 billion doses.

Even to reach its scaled-back target of distributing 1.4 billion doses by the end of 2021, it must ship more than 25 million doses every day. Instead, it has averaged just over 4 million a day since the beginning of October, with some days dipping below 1 million, according to an Associated Press analysis of the shipments.

Shipments in recent days have ramped up, but nowhere near the amount needed.

Meanwhile, richer nations often have a glut of shots, and many are now offering boosters — something the WHO has discouraged because every booster is essentially a dose that is not going to someone who's never even gotten their first shot. Despite the U.N. health agency's appeal to countries to declare a moratorium on booster shots until the end of the year, more than 60 countries are now administering them.

“What it highlights are the continuing and fundamental risks to everyone associated with not seriously addressing the inequalities still at play globally in the fight against disease and poor health," said Dr. Osman Dar, director of the One Health Project at the Chatham House think tank.

Anna Marriott, health policy manager for Oxfam, said COVAX was limited from the outset after being pushed to the back of the vaccine queue by rich countries.

“The COVAX team may be delivering as fast as they can, but they can’t deliver vaccines they haven’t got,” Marriott said.

Just 13% of vaccines COVAX contracted for and 12% of promised donations have actually been delivered, according to calculations by the International Monetary Fund from mid-November. About a third of the vaccines dispensed by COVAX have been donations, according to the vaccine alliance known as Gavi, and the initiative is now partly a clearinghouse for those donated doses, the very situation it was set up to avoid.

Last week, COVAX sent out a news release praising a European Union pledge to ship 100 million vaccines to Africa by the end of the year — but only 1/20 of that amount was actually on planes.

Asked about the logistical challenges of distributing the other 94 million doses in only six weeks, Aurelia Nguyen, managing director of COVAX maintained that arrangements “are in place to move a vast number of doses between now and the end of the year."

In a statement, she said the issue was ensuring that “conditions are right on the ground for doses to be administered.”

In minutes released ahead of an executive meeting this week, Gavi fretted that the perception that rich countries are dumping older or lesser vaccines on poor countries could undermine the whole project. On Monday, in a joint statement with WHO and the African Union among others, it admonished that “the majority of the donations to date have been ad hoc, provided with little notice and short shelf lives.”

Fury over dose dumping is already very real. In Malawi and South Sudan, tens of thousands of out-of-date doses were destroyed.

But it's not just getting the vaccines into poorer countries that's a problem, according to some experts. COVAX is “falling short on getting vaccines from the (airport) tarmac into people’s arms,” said Dr. Angela Wakhweya, senior director for health equity and rights at CARE.

Authorities in Congo, for instance, returned their entire COVAX shipment this summer when they realized they would not be able to administer doses before they expired.

In a “risk management” report on COVAX, Gavi warned that “poor absorption” of vaccines by developing countries could lead to “wastage” of some doses. One problem is logistics — just getting the doses in the right country at the right time. But just as important is the ability of often underfunded national health systems to distribute the shots where they're most needed, along with syringes and other necessary gear. A third issue is persuading sometimes hesitant people to get the vaccines.

World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, however, has disputed distribution is a problem, saying the only obstacle to immunization in poor countries is supply.

Most COVAX doses distributed so far have been AstraZeneca’s vaccine, a shot that has yet to be authorized in the U.S. and whose botched rollout in Europe helped fuel anti-vaccine sentiment when the vaccine was linked to rare blood clots. The vaccines mostly used in the U.S. and much of Europe — made by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna — have only been available in tiny amounts via COVAX.

The U.S., which blocked vaccine sales overseas and exports of key ingredients for months, has donated 275 million doses in all, more than any other country, but the vast majority of the Biden administration's 1.1 billion pledge has a deadline of September 2022. The European Union, which has in general allowed vaccines manufactured in the bloc to be sold anywhere in the world, has actually delivered about a third of its 500 million promised doses.

Efforts to ramp up global production beyond a select group of manufacturers have stalled, which many activists and scientists blame on pharmaceutical companies' opposition to waive intellectual property rights for the highly lucrative vaccines.

COVAX's failure to deliver anywhere close to enough vaccines has led some to wonder if it's worth the effort to fight for the shots, given that the pandemic has so far not devastated Africa as many had initially feared — and has often been the worst in richer nations. That's a strategy few public health officials would endorse.

“I think what Africa could do to really shame the world is to stop asking for vaccines,” said Christian Happi, a Nigerian virologist who sat on the scientific advisory board of CEPI. “The vaccines have not arrived, and anyways it may turn out that we don’t need them as much as the West.”


Hinnant reported from Paris. Associated Press writer Zeke Miller contributed from Washington.



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Oakland police chief to address recent homicides

OAKLAND (BCN) -- Hours after Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf said she'll propose training and hiring more police while putting the brakes on next year's planned hiring freeze, police announced Monday that Chief LeRonne Armstrong will hold a news conference Tuesday to discuss staffing issues and recent homicides.

The city saw it's 127th shooting death this year on Sunday, even with the addition of tactical teams over the holiday weekend to support patrol officers responding to an increase in violent crimes.

Recent weekends have seen armed caravans shooting at police and security guards and at dozens of businesses, mainly cannabis businesses, police said, but also pharmacies and retail shops.

Police insist the addition of tactical teams played a significant role in reducing crime over the holiday weekend but declined to provide further information about the teams. A spokeswoman said that Armstrong will address the issue in his news conference, scheduled for 11 a.m. at the department at 455 7th St.

Copyright © 2021 Bay City News, Inc.



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Jury awards $10 million to woman who stepped on rusty nail at Walmart

FLORENCE COUNTY, S.C. (WBTW) -- A jury has awarded $10 million to a South Carolina woman who sued Walmart after she needed multiple surgeries because of an infection that resulted from stepping on a rusty nail inside one of the company's stores in Florence, her lawyers said.

The incident happened in June 2015, according to a news release from the Anastopoulo Law Firm, which represented April Jones.

According to the release, Jones had to have her right leg amputated above the knee following the incident. She has been in a wheelchair for six years, and the verdict will allow her to purchase a prosthetic and make her home more accessible, the law firm said.

A jury deliberated for about an hour and a half after hearing evidence in a five-day trial. According to the law firm, one of Walmart's experts testified during cross-examination that the nail was the cause of the injury.

"The weakness of Walmart's case, among other things, was their failure to produce a video that they claim showed their conforming behavior to a company policy calling for employees to perform regular safety sweeps," the news release said. "No such evidence was presented for the duration of the five-day-long trial."



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'Jesus Christ Superstar' actor charged in Capitol riot heading home despite ‘gobbledygook’ at hearing

(AP) – An actor charged with storming the U.S. Capitol as a member of the far-right Oath Keepers militia group nearly talked his way into remaining in jail after a judge heard on Monday that the Florida man was challenging the court's authority over him.

A prosecutor said he wasn't planning to seek pretrial detention for James Beeks of Orlando, Florida, until learning in court that the actor didn’t accept the court’s jurisdiction over him.

Beeks, who has performed in a traveling production of the musical “Jesus Christ Superstar” and as a Michael Jackson impersonator, initially rejected being represented by an attorney and made comments that the judge called “gobbledygook.”

“A defendant who rejects the jurisdiction of the court, rejects being subject to the laws of the United States, rejects the rule of law is not typically released pretrial because that person cannot be trusted to comply with the conditions of pretrial release,” Chief U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell warned Beeks during a hearing in federal court in Washington, D.C.

The production company that employs Beeks said he recently informed the company that he is a “sovereign citizen," according to prosecutors. During Monday's hearing, Beeks denied being part of the “sovereign citizen” extremist movement, which believes the U.S. government is illegitimate.

His chances of being released from jail seemed to wane as he offered answers that the judge said she couldn’t understand. Then another lawyer, Michelle Peterson, intervened for Beeks.

Beeks then let Petersen represent him and was ordered released from jail after agreeing to follow the court-imposed conditions of release, such as agreeing to GPS monitoring, not possessing a gun and not having any contact with members of the Oath Keepers.

Beeks was arrested in Milwaukee last Tuesday. He hasn’t yet entered a plea to a felony charge of obstruction of Congress and a misdemeanor charge of unlawfully entering a restricted building or grounds.

Authorities say Beeks, who went into the Capitol wearing a jacket from Michael Jackson’s “BAD” world tour, was a member of the Oath Keepers and had paid membership dues to the group two weeks before the riot.

Since Jan. 6, more than 650 people have been arrested in nearly all 50 states for crimes related to the breach of the U.S. Capitol, officials said.

A few other defendants charged in the Capitol riot have espoused ideologies and expressed rhetoric that appear to comport with the “sovereign citizens” movement.

In September, a different federal judge in Washington jailed self-represented defendant Pauline Bauer for failing to comply with court orders to cooperate with probation officers during her pretrial release. Bauer, who owns a restaurant in rural Kane, Pennsylvania, has repeatedly interrupted the judge during hearings and has argued in vain that the court doesn’t have any jurisdiction over her.



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What parents need to know about the Omegle app

(NewsNation Now) — A chat site used by a recently located teen before her disappearance is raising eyebrows with its perceived lack of supervision.

Omegle was a site visited by a recently recovered 15-year-old girl prior to her disappearance and led to the teen meeting up and staying with an adult male in Chicago.

The girl, from Gassville, Arkansas, disappeared Oct. 1 after she left a note in her room that read, “I need to do this, so don’t look for me. I will be back and I will make you happy for me. I hope you know I love u.”

On Nov. 24, the girl's story was featured on NewsNation’s “Missing” series. Two days later, her mother, Nicole McKiernan, said she got a tip from a man who believed he’d interacted with the 15-year-old in Chicago. McKiernan passed the tip on to U.S. marshals, who found the teen “safe and unharmed,” but staying with a man in his 20s at his apartment.

The teen "has explained to me that he was the nicest guy that she has ever met,” McKiernan said.

An investigation found the teen met the man on the Omegle app, which allows strangers to randomly videochat. Experts say it fits a pattern of human trafficking — predators posing as sympathetic friends or love interests to lure young women away from home and groom them.

“When she talks about him, you can just see this, like, glimmer or light in her eye, like he is just the best thing since sliced bread,” McKiernan said.

McKiernan said her daughter was told she had to clean the apartment twice a week, diet, and exercise daily. She was not allowed to leave the apartment when the man was not there.

Experts say the free Omegle site, which can be accessed by kids as young as 13, has led to myriad issues for minors.

“Omegle might be one of the riskiest social media platforms available on the internet,” said Marc Berkman, CEO of the Organization for Social Media Safety.

There is no need to register on the site, which debuted in 2009. Its popularity has been spread by social media sites including TikTok, and because of restrictions on in-person interaction, Omegle became more popular during the pandemic.

“There are no rules,” McKiernan said. “There are no age limits. A 14-year-old can get put with a 40-year-old. It’s an absolutely disgusting website.”

The site does say users must be 18 or older to enter, but kids as young as 13 can be on with parental permission.

“That’s a warning, really, for parents, Berkman said. “We would love to see Omegle put up age verification software.”

Berkman sees the lack of such softward as an invitation to very serious problems.

“Unfortunately, the culture of Omegle has become such that a lot the people that are chatting are looking for sexually explicit content, are looking to see the person that they’re chatting with engage in sexually explicit acts," he said. "And so it’s wildly unsafe for child users, period. And because of that, we’ve seen cases of sexual exploitation, kidnappings, traffickings all come out of children using Omegle.”

Berkman says many of the problems follow a predictable pattern.

“Predators will get usually a young teen girl on a site like Omegle and they will engage in conversations, strike up a relationship and eventually try to get this young girl, young woman to flash or expose a body part," he said. "Often, they are filming it. Now sometimes, they then go back to the target, let them know that they have this video recording and they blackmail them for additional content, over and over."

"Our internet is messed up," McKiernan said. "It is putting our children in way too much danger.”

Berkman recommends parents talk to their kids about online safety, warn them not to talk to, or meet up with, strangers, don’t engage in activity that makes them feel uncomfortable and never send sensitive or private materials.

NewsNation reached out to Omegle for comment on their policies, but has not heard back from the site. It is important to note, however, that Omegle makes clear that users who are 18 or older and looking for adult content should leave Omegle and visit an adult site.



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How to pronounce omicron, the new COVID variant of concern

(NEXSTAR) – Omicron, the latest COVID-19 variant of concern designated by the World Health Organization, gets its name from a letter in the Greek alphabet. But unlike the alpha or delta variants before it, omicron might not roll off the tongue so naturally to English speakers.

How are you supposed to say omicron?

For American English speakers, there are two correct pronunciations, according to Merriam-Webster. Both aa-muh-kraan and o-muh-kraan are correct, according to the dictionary. Both place emphasis on the first syllable. (Click here to hear both pronunciations.)

For British English speakers, the pronunciation is more like like o-my-kraan, with emphasis on the second syllable.

Traditionalists may insist on sticking with the ancient Greek pronunciation. Dr Armand D'Angour, a professor of classical languages at Oxford University, told the Telegraph that would sound like "oh-mee-kron."

No matter how you say it, the omicron variant is worrying. The WHO warned Monday that the global risk from the variant is “very high” based on the early evidence, saying the mutated coronavirus could lead to surges with “severe consequences.”

The WHO said there are still "considerable uncertainties” about the omicron variant. While no deaths linked to omicron have been reported so far, little is known for certain about the variant, including whether it is more contagious, more likely to cause serious illness or more able to evade vaccines. Last week, a WHO advisory panel said it might be more likely to re-infect people who have already had a bout with COVID-19.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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Monday, 29 November 2021

Oakland store owner questions staying open after multiple burglaries in one year

OAKLAND, Calif. (KRON) - “The hardest part for a lot of small business owners in talking with several is we really don't know what the city is doing to curb this violence,” Victor Diaz said.

Another small business burglarized in Oakland. The latest to become a victim is Renegade Running on Grand Avenue near Broadway.

Surveillance cameras captured two thieves breaking into the store just before Monday morning.

As you can imagine, these store owners are frustrated and feeling anxious lately with all of these burglaries and break-ins. 

One of the owners at Renegade Running says this is the third time they've been burglarized this year, and the 4th time since they opened a year and a half ago. Now, they're just not sure how much more they can take.

“I don't know how many more incidents like this we can take to keep our doors open,” Victor Diaz said.

Victor Diaz is contemplating keeping his doors open for business in Oakland after they were most recently shattered late Sunday night.

“It looks like two individuals broke into the store. They attempted to smash one window closest to the sidewalk and were not able to penetrate that window and then tried the door and were able to penetrate into the store through that door,” Diaz said. 

Surveillance cameras captured the burglars going in and out of the store multiple times, filling several bags with items, and eventually taking off a getaway car parked right outside the business.

Diaz spoke to KRON4 on Monday as workers came to replace the glass door.

Between the shoes stolen and the damage, he says the theft costs the store at least $5,000 and this isn't the first time. 

Diaz says the running shop's been broken into three times this year.

“So when you're building community, we love being in Oakland and when something like this happens it's just disheartening, of course, it's a little sad and frightening,” Diaz said.

He says a lot of businesses in the area are on edge after the numerous burglaries these last couple of weeks.

“There are people who logically do not want to come downtown, do not want to risk being involved in any physical altercations with people, either saving the goods in their car or being witness to it in a store and again it feels like the police are so short-staffed that they're not visible through no fault of their own and there's no city or public officials that are out talking to us to find out either what they can do or to hear from them what they are doing so all of it feels like a big ball of frustration and in some cases feeling like you know, maybe there is no way out,” Diaz said. 

In reaction to the many burglaries, robberies, and homicides this past week, Oakland police announced that they will have additional staff to address the increase in violent crime.



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Oakland city leaders discuss crime prevention plans

OAKLAND, Calif. (KRON) - Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf and city councilmembers addressed the city's police shortage on Monday. 

They gave KRON4 an idea of what will be done in the coming months to address an increase in crime. 

Oakland's current budget freezes an additional 50 positions in the police department.

Mayor Schaff says she's proposing a reversal of that as well as stopping any cuts from the city's police force." 

A public health crisis -- That's what Oakland's city leaders say they are dealing with when it comes to gun violence.

"Our businesses, our community are grappling to understand how they will get through as we come in these remaining days of the year," councilmember Treva Reid said.  

Police say the most recent victim was a man who was shot and killed while trying to be a good samaritan at Lake Merritt Sunday afternoon.

"The victim interrupted an auto robbery in progress and was shot by the passenger in the suspect vehicle,” police officer Kim Armstead said.  

The suspect drove away in a black Toyota Rav4 according to police, who are offering a $10,000 reward for information that leads to arrest.

While investigators work to solve the city's 127th homicide of the year, Mayor Schaff says steps are being done to prevent another senseless death.

"We will not only budget a police over 678 officers, but in fact maintain those minimal staffing levels,” Mayor Schaaf said.  

Mayor Schaaf says the city will be making the case to reverse police budget cuts and hiring freezes that are scheduled to start in 8 months.

She plans on taking a closer look at the city's bail policy, the amount of time it takes for cases to go to trial, as well as the ability to use the city's ceasefire policy to its full extent. 

"Which include the threat of punishment if services and compliance with the message of peace and freedom are not taken up," Mayor Schaaf said.  

Mayor Schaff says a hiring plan for new officers will be brought in front of the council by Friday.



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San Francisco police respond to multiple shootings, sideshows over weekend

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) -- San Francisco police are busy investigating after a crime-filled weekend.

Police say there were multiple shootings, including a homicide, and sideshows.

San Francisco Supervisor Ahsha Safai described the violent weekend as "disturbing," and says it needs to end.

"Definitely some of the violent activity involving guns has ticked up in the previous years," Supervisor Safai said.

San Francisco police were busy this weekend where there were three shootings in less than four hours.

Supervisor Safai says crime isn't at its worst historically but is increasing.

Citizen app video shows the first shooting on Friedell Street in the Bayview Neighborhood.

SFPD said it happened around 1:30 a.m. Sunday.

Detectives said they found a man at the scene with a non-life-threatening injury.

Video shows a second shooting about 90 minutes later on Turk and Taylor Streets.

Police said one man was injured.

The third shooting is being investigated as a homicide, according to police.

It happened around 5 a.m. Sunday morning near Portrero and Cesar Chavez in the Mission District.

Officers found a man shot at the scene. He was rushed to the hospital where he later died.

Police said there have been no arrests in the sideshows, but Supervisor Safai said there still may be.

Police said the three shootings aren't connected and no arrests have been made in those crimes either.



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San Jose homeless camp barriers create new problems

SAN JOSE, Calif. (KRON) - San Jose’s ongoing effort to clear the city’s largest homeless camps is making progress but some advocates for the homeless are pushing back on the strategy.  

They say newly installed barriers blocking access to the camp are creating new problems. 

What was easily the largest homeless camp in San Jose is now surrounded by concrete k-rail barriers. 

Many of the 150 to 200 unhoused people living in the camp have relocated next door, just east of Spring Street, near Columbus Park.  

The barriers are a temporary solution designed to keep unhoused people from returning to their previous campsites but unhoused advocates, like Pastor Scott Wagers, say the barriers are making it hard on those trying to bring food and other services into the area. 

The barriers went up just before Thanksgiving after the FAA gave the city an ultimatum to clear the camp or risk losing millions of dollars in federal funding.  

In a statement, the airport said in part:

“This closure creates a long-dead end street that still allows for unhoused residents and service providers to access the area, helps decrease through traffic to increase safety and helps prevent illegal dumping.” 

Camp resident Scott Largent says the barriers have resulted in overcrowding and will hinder access for firefighters and other emergency crews. 

The barriers are to remain until the June deadline for the entire 40 acres site to be clear, per the FAA ultimatum. 



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'Gifts from the Heart': Biden White House Christmas decorations unveiled

WASHINGTON (AP) — “Gifts from the Heart” is the theme of President Joe Biden's first White House Christmas.

First lady Jill Biden was scheduled on Monday to unveil decorations matching the theme, said to be inspired by people the couple met as they traveled the country this year.

“The things we hold sacred unite us and transcend distance, time, and even the constraints of a pandemic: faith, family, and friendship; a love of the arts, learning, and nature; gratitude, service, and community; unity and peace," the Bidens write in a commemorative 2021 White House holiday guidebook. "These are the gifts that tie together the heart strings of our lives. These are the gifts from the heart."

The decor features a gigantic gingerbread White House that recognizes front-line workers who persevered through the coronavirus pandemic, while the official Christmas tree — an 18-foot-tall (5.5-meter tall) Fraser fir — celebrates the gifts of peace and unity, the White House said.

With the Bidens spending Thanksgiving week in Nantucket, Massachusetts, more than 100 volunteers set about decorating the executive mansion — including the Oval Office — with 41 Christmas trees, some 6,000 feet (2,000 yards) of ribbon and more than 10,000 ornaments.

Twenty-five wreaths adorn the north and south sides of the building, and nearly 79,000 lights illuminate the Christmas trees, garlands, wreaths and other holiday displays.

Jill Biden has invited a second grade class from Malcolm Elementary School in Waldorf, Maryland, to help her reveal the decorations, the White House said. PBS KIDS characters Martin and Chris Kratt from the program “Wild Kratts” will also be on hand.

Before a PBS puppet show for the schoolkids, the first lady will read her 2012 children's book, “Don't Forget, God Bless Our Troops,” and deliver remarks thanking the team of volunteer decorators.

She also invited a local National Guard family to highlight the role the Guard has played in the U.S. response to COVID-19, as well as military families spending the holidays away from loved ones.

Reporters will tour the decorated White House before the formal unveiling.

“As we celebrate our first holiday season in the White House, we are inspired by the Americans we have met across the country, time and again reminding us that our differences are precious and our similarities infinite,” the Bidens wrote. “We wish you a happy, healthy, and joyous holiday season. As we look to a new year full of possibility, may gifts from the heart light our path forward.”

On Sunday, Vice President Kamala Harris' husband, Doug Emhoff, marked the start of Hanukkah, by helping to light the National Menorah on the Ellipse.

The official White House Christmas tree, always set up in the Blue Room, is decorated with peace doves carrying a banner embossed with the names of the 50 states and the U.S. territories. Jill Biden tweeted a photo of the tree early Monday.

The Gingerbread White House, which weighs hundreds of pounds, includes eight detailed replicas of community buildings that represent front-line workers.

The White House may see less foot traffic this holiday season as public tours remain suspended due to COVID-19, but videos, photos and details about the Christmas decorations are to be made available for viewing at WhiteHouse.gov/Holidays.

Still to come throughout the holiday season are various interactive viewing experiences to be made available on Instagram, Google Maps Street View, Snapchat and other platforms, the White House said.



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