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Minneapolis leaders push ahead with efforts to change police
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Minneapolis leaders who pledged to dismantle the city’s Police Department in the wake of George Floyd’s death won’t achieve the type of structural overhaul to public safety they hoped for – at least not this year.
Minneapolis leaders push ahead with efforts to change police
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Minneapolis leaders who pledged to dismantle the city’s Police Department in the wake of George Floyd’s death won’t achieve the type of structural overhaul to public safety they hoped for – at least not this year.
Israeli police kill unarmed autistic Palestinian man
JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli police shot dead an unarmed autistic Palestinian man in Jerusalem's Old City on Saturday after mistakenly suspecting he was carrying a weapon.
Israeli forces kill unarmed autistic Palestinian man
JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli police shot dead an unarmed autistic Palestinian man in Jerusalem's Old City on Saturday after saying they suspected he was carrying a weapon.
Most California curfews lifted as peace replaces unrest
LOS ANGELES (AP) — After days of raucous protests accompanied by sporadic violence and scattered looting that led to deployment of the National Guard, Los Angeles, San Francisco and most other cities in California anxiously lifted curfews Thursday amid more peaceful demonstrations.
Israeli forces kill unarmed autistic Palestinian man
JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli police shot dead an unarmed autistic Palestinian man in Jerusalem's Old City on Saturday after saying they suspected he was carrying a weapon.
The Latest: Kentucky to remove Davis statue from Capitol
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AP FACT CHECK: Trump team distortions on Biden and police
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump's campaign team is misrepresenting Democratic rival Joe Biden's stance on improving police practices following George Floyd's death.
'Stop the pain,' a brother of George Floyd tells Congress
WASHINGTON (AP) — Philonise Floyd challenged Congress on Wednesday to “stop the pain" as lawmakers consider a sweeping law enforcement overhaul, so his brother George won't be just "another name” on a growing list of black Americans killed during interactions with police.
Law enforcement reports for Oct. 5. 2022
The reports below were provided by the respective law enforcement agencies as noted. Suspects are considered innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
AP News in Brief at 11:04 p.m. EDT
Debates turn emotional as schools decide how and if to open
AP News in Brief at 11:04 p.m. EDT
Pelosi to call House back into session to vote on USPS bill
Law and order vs. health care as Dems, GOP vie for suburbs
WASHINGTON (AP) — In Republican hands for 28 years but now up for grabs, a suburban Missouri congressional district hugging St. Louis has become a lab for what each party considers one of its most lethal political weapons.
Law and order vs. health care as Dems, GOP vie for suburbs
WASHINGTON (AP) — In Republican hands for 28 years but now up for grabs, a suburban Missouri congressional district hugging St. Louis has become a lab for what each party considers one of its most lethal political weapons.
Black bikers see racism in Myrtle Beach, SC, traffic plan
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — Motorcycle clubs roar into Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, each May for separate week-long rallies, one mostly white, the other mostly Black. Each brings millions of dollars, spent by hundreds of thousands of bikers, and some inevitably let loose, with binge drinking, public nudity and noise competitions that rattle the beachfront high-rises.
Sports celebrities plug stay-home order to help limit virus
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Columbus Blue Jackets player Cam Atkinson, Dayton basketball coach Anthony Grant and former Ohio State football coach Jim Tressel are among Ohio sports celebrities joining an effort to encourage residents to comply with a statewide order to stay home except for doing essential work or taking care of health and basic needs for themselves or others. The campaign goes by hashtags including #InThisTogetherOhio. Grocery stores, banks and other essential businesses remain open. The state's health director says idled dorms and hotels could be used as overflow areas if hospital capacity is exceeded. Cases now top 560. A look at coronavirus-related developments in Ohio on Tuesday:
Sports celebrities plug stay-home order to help limit virus
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Columbus Blue Jackets player Cam Atkinson, Dayton basketball coach Anthony Grant and former Ohio State football coach Jim Tressel are among Ohio sports celebrities joining an effort to encourage residents to comply with a statewide order to stay home except for doing essential work or taking care of health and basic needs for themselves or others. The campaign goes by hashtags including #InThisTogetherOhio. Grocery stores, banks and other essential businesses remain open. The state's health director says idled dorms and hotels could be used as overflow areas if hospital capacity is exceeded. Cases now top 560. A look at coronavirus-related developments in Ohio on Tuesday:
Sports celebrities plug stay-home order to help limit virus
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Columbus Blue Jackets player Cam Atkinson, Dayton basketball coach Anthony Grant and former Ohio State football coach Jim Tressel are among Ohio sports celebrities joining an effort to encourage residents to comply with a statewide order to stay home except for doing essential work or taking care of health and basic needs for themselves or others. The campaign goes by hashtags including #InThisTogetherOhio. Grocery stores, banks and other essential businesses remain open. The state's health director says idled dorms and hotels could be used as overflow areas if hospital capacity is exceeded. Cases now top 560. A look at coronavirus-related developments in Ohio on Tuesday:
Sports celebrities plug stay-home order to help limit virus
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Columbus Blue Jackets player Cam Atkinson, Dayton basketball coach Anthony Grant and former Ohio State football coach Jim Tressel are among Ohio sports celebrities joining an effort to encourage residents to comply with a statewide order to stay home except for doing essential work or taking care of health and basic needs for themselves or others. The campaign goes by hashtags including #InThisTogetherOhio. Grocery stores, banks and other essential businesses remain open. The state's health director says idled dorms and hotels could be used as overflow areas if hospital capacity is exceeded. Cases now top 560. A look at coronavirus-related developments in Ohio on Tuesday:
US death toll closes in on Italy's as Midwest braces
CHICAGO (AP) — The U.S. moved closer to overtaking Italy for the highest death toll in the world from the coronavirus Saturday as Chicago and other cities across the Midwest braced for a potential surge in victims and moved to snuff out smoldering hot spots of contagion before they erupt.