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Monday 25 April 2022

Woman survives 6 days in snowy California forest

 Woman survives 6 days in snowy California forest

Authorities say a woman stranded for six days in a remote Northern California forest survived by rationing yogurt and eating snow

SUSANVILLE, Calif. -- A woman stranded for six days in a broken-down car in a remote Northern California forest survived by rationing yogurt and eating snow, authorities said.

The Lassen County Sheriff’s Office Facebook page detailed the ordeal of 52-year-old Sheena Gullett, a resident of Little Valley.

Gullett and friend Justin Lonich, 48, were driving to Little Valley on dirt roads off Highway 44 on April 14 when their vehicle became stuck in snow. They spent the night in the vehicle and in the morning its battery was dead.

The sheriff’s office said the two tried to walk to the highway but Gullett fell behind because the soles of her boots came off. Lonich couldn't find her in heavy snowfall, so he sought shelter and built a campfire.

The next day he found a gravel road but again had to shelter overnight. On April 17, Lonich reached the highway and hitched a ride to Susanville where he reported that Gullett was stranded.

A search was conducted by ground, and also by air when the weather was clear.

A sheriff’s sergeant found the vehicle on April 20 and Gullett emerged. The sheriff’s office said she was very emotional but physically OK after rationing a six-pack of yogurt over six days and eating snow.

Sunday 24 April 2022

S Carolina officer killed responding to domestic disturbance

S Carolina officer killed responding to domestic disturbance

A South Carolina police K-9 officer, volunteer firefighter and emergency medical technician has been shot and killed while responding to a domestic disturbance

CAYCE, S.C. -- A police K-9 officer, volunteer firefighter and emergency medical technician in central South Carolina was shot and killed while responding to a domestic disturbance early Sunday, police said.

Roy Andrew “Drew” Barr, 28, had just begun talking to a man outside the house when someone inside opened fire shortly before 3 a.m., said Chief Chris Cowan of the Cayce police department at a news conference. He said Barr was hit by one bullet.

The man who shot Barr killed himself after seven-hour standoff, said the South Carolina state police, which has been asked to investigate the shooting. The South Carolina Law Enforcement Division's statement listed Barr's age as 27.

Barr became a police trainee in 2016 and a K-9 officer in October 2020, Cowan said. He was paired with a black Labrador and posed with her for his official department photo.

“He loved his dog, Molly, and he loved his job. He loved being a K-9 officer and he was good at it,” Cowan said.

Barr didn’t have a wife or kids and instead was committed to serving his community, he said.

“He was married to this profession,” Cowan said.

Barr had survived a shooting in 2017, when he was still a trainee, news outlets reported. The gunman in that case is serving a total of 30 years in state and federal sentences.

Cayce is a suburb of nearly 14,000 people just west of Columbia.

“Our hearts are breaking in Cayce," Mayor Elise Partin told reporters earlier Sunday. “Officer Drew Barr has been an important part of the Cayce family since 2016.”

The Monetta Volunteer Fire Department said Barr was the captain of their department in Aiken County, WSPA-TV reported.

Friday 22 April 2022

Paintings, stone axes repatriated to Peru in LA ceremony

Paintings, stone axes repatriated to Peru in LA ceremony

U.S. officials have repatriated 16 cultural items to the Peruvian government, including paintings, historical documents and stone axes

LOS ANGELES -- U.S. officials have repatriated 16 cultural items to the Peruvian government, including paintings, historical documents and stone axes.

The FBI returned the items to representatives of Peru at a ceremony Friday in Los Angeles.

“These objects and the heritage they carry with them took an opaque journey into the United States and now have a clear path of return to Peru through proper diplomatic channels," Kristi K. Johnson, assistant director of the FBI's Los Angeles field office, said in a statement.

The objects include historical documents, a 17th century painting stolen from a Peruvian church in 1992 and a painting stolen from a different church in 2002 that was hand-carried into the United States by an art dealer, sold to an art gallerist in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and later sold in 2016 to a buyer in California, the statement said.

These artifacts were voluntarily surrendered to the FBI, the statement said.

“In these instances, the people who bought these objects did the right thing. Once they realized they were stolen, they agreed to forfeit them,” said Liz Rivas, a special agent with the FBI's art crimes team.

For example, the person who had the historical documents said they were purchased as souvenirs in Peru and they were reselling them online to make money during the coronavirus pandemic, Rivas said. She said the person didn't know they were stolen, and in this case, the documents didn't meet the minimum value for a criminal case.

The last four objects were stone axes seized in Indianapolis in 2014 from the collection of amateur archaeologist Donald Miller. Thousands of artifacts were taken from Miller's home and returned to dozens of countries spanning from China to Papua New Guinea.

Authorities encourage art and artifact buyers to review the FBI’s stolen art file before making a purchase to find out if the items were reported as stolen.

——

This version of the story has been updated to correct the year that stone axes were seized from the collection of amateur archaeologist Donald Miller in Indianapolis. The year was 2014, not 2004. 

Fatal Indiana fire: `We tried our best to get the kids out'

 Fatal Indiana fire: `We tried our best to get the kids out'

An uncle of four young children who died in an Indiana mobile home fire says survivors did “everything we could” to try to rescue the kids

FORT WAYNE, Ind. -- An uncle of four young children who died in an Indiana mobile home fire says survivors did “everything we could” to try to rescue the kids.

The children — ages 2, 3, 5 and 10 — died Thursday morning in the blaze in Fort Wayne, the Allen County Sheriff’s Department said. Authorities have not released the names of the children, but an 18-year-old uncle who was among four people who survived the fire, Travis Garrison, spoke to The Journal Gazette. The children were his sister's.

“We tried our best to get the kids out. We did everything we could,” Garrison, of Waterloo, said.

The other survivors were Garrison's sister, Audrey Kistler, 24; her boyfriend, Samuel Barnett, 17; and family friend Jessica Mann, 30, all of Fort Wayne, the sheriff’s department said Friday.

Garrison said he awoke from the heat of the fire in the Dupont Estates Mobile Home Park on the city's north side.

“It was blurry, smoky. I couldn’t see anything,” he said.

When Garrison couldn’t get the front door’s deadbolt unlocked, he rushed to the back door, he said.

“I was running through the house screaming, ‘Fire! Fire! Fire!’ trying to get everybody’s attention and wake them up,” he said. “I came out the back door, and I was still screaming ‘Fire!‘”

After he escaped, Garrison said he pounded on the window of the room where his sister, Kistler, and Barnett were sleeping, then went to the front where three of her four kids were in a bedroom.

Garrison said he heard Barnett break a window and learned Barnett forced Kistler out and followed. Mann escaped the back bedroom by pushing an air conditioner out.

Garrison tried to kick in the front door without success.

“I heard the kids screaming,” he said. “I couldn’t do anything about it.”

Kistler and others got on top of Garrison’s pickup truck and tried to get through the boys' bedroom window.

Neighbors called 911, and some joined the rescue efforts.

Shelby Wright, who lives across the street, said she went outside after hearing an explosion.

“There was too much smoke,” Wright said. “I couldn’t even breathe, couldn’t see.”

A second explosion made the situation worse, she added.

Garrison said he had heard a propane tank making a whistling noise before the fire got worse.

When the Fort Wayne Fire Department arrived at 8:33 a.m., the fire had spread throughout the mobile home, according to statements from the fire and sheriff's departments.

Firefighters had the blaze under control enough to enter the home at 8:56 a.m. and found the children's bodies, a fire department news release said.

Thursday 21 April 2022

Committee criticizes Wichita police misconduct, racism

 Committee criticizes Wichita police misconduct, racism

A Wichita city report says the police department needs to reform by clamping down on biased police officers and improving its leadership

A committee appointed by Wichita City Manager Robert Layton said the department must crackdown on biased police officers, poor leadership, botched investigations and poor oversight, among other things, The Wichita Eagle reported.

The committee was formed in response to an investigation by The Eagle that found some members of the department's SWAT team joked about the use of force and exchanged biased texts, including an offensive image of George Floyd, a Black man who was killed by Minneapolis police.

The committee's findings mirror those of the Wichita Citizen’s Review Board, a group of citizens that reviews investigative reports on police cases, released earlier this month.

The report released Thursday found that then-Police Chief Gordon Ramsay and his deputy chiefs mishandled an internal investigation into the allegations against the SWAT team members, did not appropriately discipline them and did not report their findings to federal or state prosecutors.

“Arguably, no discipline was administered to those officers who received ‘education-based discipline’ or ‘coaching and mentoring,’” the report says.

The report also calls for more training and says those “who have demonstrable biases should be systematically removed from the department.”

The text messages, which were sent from 2015 to 2021, were first discovered in April 2021 while investigators were searching the phone of a Sedgwick County deputy in an unrelated case.

Interim Police Chief Lemuel Moore said during a news conference that he would decide in the coming weeks how the officers could be disciplined, KSN-TV reported.

“The discipline itself does need to be reviewed and, from my perspective, more discipline may be issued, needs to be issued in this matter,” Moore said.

The report also recommended an independent review by a third party to determine the extent of bias in the police department. City officials at the news conference said Wichita is moving toward hiring an independent firm.

Moore said the police department has already taken steps to improve community trust with law enforcement.

For example, the U.S. Department of Justice will conduct three training sessions every Friday in May to talk to all the nearly 700 officers about racial discrimination and civil rights violations.

The Justice Department also will host meetings in the next 45-60 days that will bring officers and members of community groups together, Moore said. Panels of Black and Hispanic community members are being formed, with plans for LGBTQ and other groups next year, he said.

Moore said all officers are required to attend and that he would have stern instructions for them.

“You’re getting paid to listen, so sit there and be quiet, no matter how tough it is, no matter how wrong the person speaking to you may be. It’s important we have an ear and that we listen to the community,” he said

Wednesday 20 April 2022

Tennessee plans 1st COVID-19-era execution, more scheduled

 Tennessee plans 1st COVID-19-era execution, more scheduled

Tennessee is set this week to execute its first inmate since the start of the coronavirus pandemic

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Tennessee is set to execute its first inmate Thursday since the start of the pandemic, planning a lethal injection procedure that has become less common in the state than the electric chair in recent years.

Oscar Smith, 72, is scheduled to die for the 1989 killings of his estranged wife and her teenage sons. The execution using the state's preferred method puts Tennessee on a divergent path from South Carolina, which has been preparing for a rare U.S. firing squad execution. However, South Carolina's Supreme Court put the planned April 29 execution on hold Wednesday, at least temporarily, saying a more detailed order would follow.

In Tennessee, secrecy laws prevent the public from determining just how the drugs for Smith’s execution were obtained.

Meanwhile, South Carolina lawmakers have failed to pass a similar law to keep its drug suppliers confidential, despite the urging of corrections officials. Now the state has fallen back on the much older, and less often used execution method. The last U.S. firing squad execution was in 2010.

South Carolina has cited its struggles to obtain lethal injection drugs in recent years, an issue in many states because pharmacies and manufacturers have refused to supply their medications for executions.

Smith has argued he should also be executed by firing squad, reasoning that it is less painful than Tennessee's two options, but his lawsuit was denied.

His execution would be the first of five planned by Tennessee for 2022, resuming its quick, pre-pandemic pace of putting inmates to death. The five pending death warrants tie Tennessee with Texas for the most nationally this year, according to the Washington-based nonprofit Death Penalty Information Center.

Smith had been scheduled for a June 2020 execution, one of several dates delayed because of the pandemic.

Smith was convicted of fatally stabbing and shooting Judith Smith and her sons Jason and Chad Burnett, 13 and 16, at their Nashville home on Oct. 1, 1989.

Smith has maintained he is innocent. In a clemency filing, rejected Tuesday by Republican Gov. Bill Lee, Smith's legal team claimed problems with the jury in his 1990 trial.

“There is one thing I know for a fact," Smith told The Associated Press in a phone interview Monday. "I know where I’m going from here. With my faith and belief, I’ll be with my savior and my family that’s deceased.”

His attorneys were denied requests to reopen his case after a new type of DNA analysis found the DNA of an unknown person on one of the murder weapons.

The state has not conducted any executions since February 2020, when Nicholas Sutton died in the electric chair for the killing of a fellow inmate in an east Tennessee prison. Of the seven inmates Tennessee has put to death since 2018 — when Tennessee ended an execution pause stretching back to 2009 — only two died by lethal injection.

Smith declined to choose between the chair and lethal injection, so lethal injection became the default method.

Tennessee uses a three-drug series to put inmates to death: midazolam, a sedative to render the inmate unconscious; vecuronium bromide, to paralyze the inmate; and potassium chloride, to stop the heart.

Officials have said midazolam renders an inmate unconscious and unable to feel pain. Expert witnesses for inmates, however, say the drugs would cause sensations of drowning, suffocation and chemical burning while leaving inmates unable to move or call out.

In Oklahoma last October, an inmate put to death using the same three-drug lethal injection convulsed and vomited after receiving midazolam. Oklahoma has carried out three lethal injections since, without similar reactions reported.

In Tennessee, Smith's attorneys argued unsuccessfully for the firing squad, pointing to South Carolina giving the greenlight to firing squad executions last month — one of four states to allow that execution method, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

Exactly how some states have execution drugs on hand, while others struggle to secure them, is often obscured by state public records exemptions.

A Tennessee Department of Correction spokesperson declined to identify the source of its execution drugs, which can be manufactured or compounded. Documents about the drugs obtained by The Associated Press through a public records request were heavily redacted, removing references to the state's supplier.

Meanwhile in South Carolina, a corrections official said in a recent affidavit that manufacturers and compounding pharmacies contacted by the state refused to provide the drugs.

Though South Carolina has failed to pass additional secrecy for lethal injection suppliers, Idaho recently took that step.

Republican Gov. Brad Little signed legislation banning officials from revealing — even under court order — where they obtained execution drugs.

 Video of sobbing child and officers 'wrenching,' says NY gov

A widely seen video of an 8-year-old Black child sobbing as he’s being led into a Syracuse police car over a bag of chips was called “heart wrenching” by New York Gov. Kathy Hochul

SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- A widely seen video of an 8-year-old Black child sobbing as he's being led into a Syracuse police car over a bag of chips was called “heart wrenching” Wednesday by New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, who said more needs to be done to build trust with communities of color.

The video taken Sunday shows a white officer holding the clearly distraught youth from behind by his elbows, leading him from a sidewalk to the back seat of a police vehicle. Another officer says the situation is about “stealing stuff.” The man recording the video argues with police to let the child go.

The video has been widely shared on social media, with many people condemning the officers for treating the child roughly. Hochul, at a COVID-19 briefing in Syracuse, said the video was difficult to watch.

“We have more work to do, and I know that the mayor is working closely with the police department to get to the bottom of everything,” said Hochul, a Democrat. “But also make sure that we do protect our children — that they’re handled in a different way when it comes to encounters with law enforcement.”

Syracuse police said Tuesday the officers’ actions were being reviewed, along with body-worn camera footage. Police said the incident involved an accusation of youths stealing from a store.

The 8-year-old was never handcuffed and was put in the rear of a patrol car to bring him home. Officers met with the child’s father and no charges were filed, police said.

The father, Anthony Weah , told Syracuse.com that officers were friendly at the house. But he said he was aghast after seeing the video.

“Why would the police treat that child like that?” Weah asked. “Over a $3 bag of chips.”