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A Police Shooting in West Texas and a Mother’s Search for Answers

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On the afternoon of March 3, Dora Vela was in the course of her shift as a mail provider when a message on her telephone popped up with information about her 14-year-old son. Ms. Vela instantly known as again.

“Juan is lifeless,” a girl’s voice informed her, referencing her son, Juan Herrera, who had run away from residence late final 12 months.

“How are you aware this?” Ms. Vela recalled shouting again. “What occurred? The place is my son? I freaked out.”

The caller, who stated she had been sheltering Juan in addition to at the least 4 different youths, went on to inform her that her son was fatally shot after a neighborhood sheriff’s deputy responded to a name a few housebreaking in progress at an upscale condominium advanced in Midland, a midsize metropolis in West Texas.

However greater than three weeks after her son’s demise, Ms. Vela is aware of little greater than that. She has not seen an post-mortem report or been informed who fired what number of photographs and why. An unnamed sheriff’s deputy has been positioned on administrative depart, as is customary in police-involved capturing investigations, officers stated, however no data has been launched about what occurred on the scene and whether or not the deputy was the shooter.

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Moments after being informed Juan had been shot, Ms. Vela rushed to Midland Memorial Hospital. However she stated she was not allowed to see him and was initially given an outline of the capturing by legislation enforcement officers that didn’t match her son. It took her greater than 5 days to find his stays in Dallas, some 330 miles away, the place his physique was despatched to facilitate the identification of his dental information, she stated.

“I’ve so many questions,” Ms. Vela, who additionally has three daughters, stated final week at her modest residence. “And nobody’s telling me what occurred.”

The result’s each a fog, with a 14-year-old youth lifeless, and a reminder of the struggles that many households, significantly these with out means, can face to find out even essentially the most fundamental info about officer-involved deaths.

The Texas Rangers, state police investigators typically assigned to delicate instances, have taken over the inquiry from the Midland County sheriff’s workplace and have stated little about what transpired that day. In a imprecise assertion launched to the media, the authorities stated that at round 2:20 a.m. on March 3 a sheriff’s deputy was dispatched to the Sandstone Ridge Residences, an upscale, gated advanced within the north a part of city, and that photographs have been fired.

The authorities didn’t elaborate on particulars of the capturing however added that “the suspect” was transported to a close-by hospital, the place he was pronounced lifeless. Almost every week later Juan was recognized by way of dental information. He was not carrying identification on the time of his demise, which could assist clarify why his stays have been despatched to a medical expert in an even bigger metropolis, Ms. Vela stated.

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However the thriller surrounding the case is consuming away at Ms. Vela and others in Midland, within the coronary heart of the West Texas oil patch. Whereas the case has acquired little consideration outdoors Texas, state civil rights activists have raised questions on using police drive throughout encounters with Black and Latino individuals and the lack of expertise that always follows deadly encounters with the police.

Rodolfo Rosales, a state director with the Texas department of the League of United Latin American Residents, the oldest and one of many largest Latino civil rights group in america, urged the authorities to launch any related footage and particulars concerning the capturing.

“The household deserves solutions, the group deserves solutions,” stated Mr. Rosales, who is thought to colleagues as Rudy. “There must be transparency.”

Sgt. Steven Blanco of the Texas State Police stated no additional data can be launched to the general public till the case has been introduced to a Midland County grand jury.

Sitting in her lounge, Ms. Vela mirrored on her son’s transient life. She turned to a big picture of Juan carrying a white T-shirt and matching headphones.

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At a younger age, he discovered it tough to pay attention and was later recognized with consideration deficit hyperactivity dysfunction, she stated.

Medicine helped at first, however she terminated his therapy after he turned 11 as a result of he complained of extreme abdomen aches. Ms. Vela had hoped that having him play soccer may hold his busy thoughts occupied. “He would get bored simply, however sports activities wasn’t for him,” she stated.

His grades and conduct took a flip for the more severe, and he was assigned to another program for troubled youth, Ms. Vela and members of the family stated. “It’s there when he fell into the incorrect crowd,” his mom stated.

Ms. Vela stated Juan ran away after what appeared like a routine argument between mom and son. Later, she realized he was residing with a gaggle of youngsters in one other a part of city. She ultimately tracked a few of their TikTok accounts that confirmed him sitting on the ground, wanting distant and distraught, as seemingly older youngsters taunted him.

“Perhaps he didn’t know find out how to get out of there,” she stated. “Perhaps he was afraid.”

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With little or no communication between her and the authorities, Ms. Vela and different kin like Melanie Melendez, Juan’s aunt, have gathered bits of knowledge speaking to individuals on the streets and viewing social media.

On the early hours of March 3, they realized, Juan and 4 different mates had gone to the Sandstone Ridge Residences, an upscale advanced with a pool and a tanning deck, to do “automotive hopping,” during which younger individuals commit thefts as alternatives come up after which velocity away in a automotive, Ms. Vela stated. That’s the place the capturing happened, the police assertion stated.

It’s unclear if the youngsters have been armed or if the deputy was carrying a physique digital camera.

Credit score…

Two weeks after his demise, Juan’s physique was laid to relaxation at a funeral residence in Midland surrounded by heartbroken kin.

Grief didn’t cease Ms. Vela from in search of clues about her son’s final moments. She wasn’t informed the place on his physique he was shot or by what number of bullets. However throughout a rosary prayer service, Ms. Vela stood over Juan’s open brown picket coffin and observed heavy layers of make-up on the highest a part of his face and that his hair was combed downward, as if to obscure an harm. A black rosary was positioned on his folded fingers.

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Within the background, the track “Un Dia a La Vez” — “One Day at a Time” — by Los Tigres del Norte, a norteño band, performed as a photograph slide confirmed Juan as a new child staring curiously on the digital camera. Later slides confirmed him smiling subsequent to his three sisters and goofing round with mates in school.

A day later, a small group of kin attended his funeral at Our Woman of Guadalupe Parish and Shrine. The Rev. Timothy Hayter pointed at a statue of a crucified Jesus on the altar and tried to console them.

He requested the somber crowd to recollect Juan as a shy teenager who beloved music and drawing and who had stated a prayer earlier than driving a curler coaster.

“He was legitimately actually afraid, and what did he do? He requested God to assist him,” Father Hayter stated. “And I’ve little question that in these darkest moments for him, that he did precisely what his mom taught him, to achieve out to God.”

Some within the pews gasped loudly and others held each other tightly.

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“Hold on to these moments,” the priest informed them.

After the funeral, Ms. Vela and her oldest daughter, Esmeralda Herrera, 18, who moved again residence from Arizona after her brother died, held on to remnants of his life. Ms. Herrera remembered that Juan had despatched her a track he had recorded not too long ago and pressed play on her telephone. Mom and daughter took in each phrase.

“All on my own, I did all of it on my own, within the streets all on my own” Juan sang. “You couldn’t inform, going by way of all of this hell.”

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Central banks urged to keep pace with ‘game changer’ AI

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Iowa floodwaters breach levees as even more rain dumps onto parts of the Midwest

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Iowa floodwaters breach levees as even more rain dumps onto parts of the Midwest

A tornado is seen near Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on Tuesday. More severe weather was forecast to move into the region, potentially bringing large hail, damaging winds and tornadoes in parts of western Iowa and eastern Nebraska, according to the National Weather Service.

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Nick Rohlman/The Gazette/AP

DES MOINES, Iowa — Tornado warnings, flash flooding and large hail added insult to injury for people in the Midwest already contending with heat, humidity and intense flooding after days of rain.

The National Weather Service on Tuesday afternoon and evening issued multiple tornado warnings in parts of Iowa and Nebraska as local TV news meteorologists showed photos of large hail and spoke of very heavy rain.

Earlier on Tuesday, floodwaters breached levees in Iowa, creating dangerous conditions that prompted evacuations.

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A vast swath of lands from eastern Nebraska and South Dakota to Iowa and Minnesota has been under siege from flooding from torrential rains since last week, while also being hit with a scorching heat wave. Up to 18 inches of rain have fallen in some areas, and some rivers rose to record levels. Hundreds of people were rescued, homes were damaged and at least two people died after driving in flooded areas.

Onlookers take in the catastrophic damage to the Rapidan Dam site in Rapidan, Minn., on Monday. Debris blocked the dam, forcing the heavily backed up waters of the Blue Earth River to reroute along the bank nearest the Dam Store.

Onlookers take in the catastrophic damage to the Rapidan Dam site in Rapidan, Minn., on Monday. Debris blocked the dam, forcing the heavily backed up waters of the Blue Earth River to reroute along the bank nearest the Dam Store.

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The sheriff’s office in Monona County, near the Nebraska border, said the Little Sioux River breached levees in several areas. In neighboring Woodbury County, the sheriff’s office posted drone video on Facebook showing the river overflowing the levee and flooding land in rural Smithland. No injuries were immediately reported.

Patrick Prorok, emergency management coordinator in Monona County, described waking people at about 4 a.m. in Rodney, a town of about 45 people, to recommend evacuation. Later Tuesday morning, the water hadn’t yet washed into the community.

“People up the hill are saying it is coming our way,” Prorok said.

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Rachel Morsching sits Tuesday on the flooded porch of her father Dean Roemhildt's home in Waterville., Minn. Waters from the nearby Tetonka and Sakatah lakes have encroached on the town amid recent heavy rains.

Rachel Morsching sits Tuesday on the flooded porch of her father Dean Roemhildt’s home in Waterville., Minn. Waters from the nearby Tetonka and Sakatah lakes have encroached on the town amid recent heavy rains.

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As new areas were flooding Tuesday, some cities and towns were cleaning up after the waters receded while others downstream were piling sandbags and taking other measures to protect against the oncoming swelled currents. Some normal, unassuming tributaries ballooned into rushing rivers, damaging homes, buildings and bridges.

“Normally, this river is barely a trickle,” 71-year-old Hank Howley said as she watched the Big Sioux’s waters gush over a broken and partially sunken rail bridge in North Sioux City, South Dakota, on Monday. “Really, you could just walk across it most days.”

South Dakota state geologist Tim Cowman said that the five major rivers in the state’s southeastern corner have crested and are dropping, albeit slowly. The last of those rivers to crest, the James, did so early Tuesday.

Heavy rains in recent days have submerged farmland near Vermillion, S.D., on Tuesday. Flooding has devastated communities in several states across the Midwest.

Heavy rains in recent days have submerged farmland near Vermillion, S.D., on Tuesday. Flooding has devastated communities in several states across the Midwest.

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In a residential development along McCook Lake in North Sioux City, the devastation became clear Tuesday as floodwaters began to recede from Monday, exposing collapsed streets, utility poles and trees. Some homes had been washed off their foundations.

“Currently, there is no water, sewer, gas or electrical service in this area,” Union County Emergency Management said in a Facebook post.

President Biden approved a major disaster declaration for affected counties in Iowa on Monday, a move that paves the way for federal aid to be granted.

To the south in Sioux City and Woodbury County, Iowa, officials responded to residents’ complaints that they had received little warning of the flooding and its severity. Sioux City Fire Marshal Mark Aesoph said at a news conference Tuesday that rivers crested higher than predicted.

“Even if we would have known about this two weeks ago, there was nothing we could do at this point. We cannot extend the entire length of our levee,” Aesoph said. “It’s impossible.”

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Water had spilled over the Big Sioux River levee, and Aesoph estimated hundreds of homes likely have some internal water damage.

Homes on the south side of Spencer, Iowa, near the Little Sioux River are unlivable as water has reached the main floor, resident Ben Thomas said. A lot of people in town are facing a “double whammy,” with homes and businesses affected.

Officials in Woodbury County said around a dozen bridges over the Little Sioux River had been topped by flood water, and each would need to be inspected to see if they can reopen to traffic.

Forever Wildlife Lodge and Clinic, a nonprofit animal rescue, in northwest Iowa has answered over 200 calls since the flooding started, said licensed wildlife rehabilitator Amanda Hase.

Hase described the flooding as “catastrophic” for Iowa wildlife, which are getting washed out of dens, injured by debris and separated from each other. She and other rehabilitators are responding to calls about all kinds of species, from fawns and groundhogs to bunnies and eaglets.

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“I’ve never seen it this bad before, ever,” she said.

Floodwaters rush over a collapsed railroad bridge over the Big Sioux River near North Sioux City, S.D., on Monday.

Floodwaters rush over a collapsed railroad bridge over the Big Sioux River near North Sioux City, S.D., on Monday.

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Further to the east in Humboldt, Iowa, a record crest of 16.5 feet was expected Wednesday at the west fork of the Des Moines River. Amid high temperatures and humidity, nearly 68,000 sandbags have been laid, according to county emergency manager Kyle Bissell.

Bissell told reporters Tuesday that there was no water on the streets yet, but flooding had begun in some backyards and was reaching up to foundations. Humboldt is home to nearly 5,000 residents.

More severe weather was forecast to move into the region Tuesday, potentially bringing large hail, damaging winds and even a brief tornado or two in parts of western Iowa and eastern Nebraska, according to the National Weather Service. Showers and storms were also possible in parts of South Dakota and Minnesota, the agency said.

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In Michigan, more than 150,000 homes and businesses were without power Tuesday morning after severe thunderstorms barreled through, less than a week after storms left thousands in the dark for days in suburban Detroit.

The weather service also predicted more than two dozen points of major flooding in southern Minnesota, eastern South Dakota and northern Iowa, and flood warnings are expected to continue into the week.

Many streams, especially with additional rainfall, may not crest until later this week as the floodwaters slowly drain down a web of rivers to the Missouri and Mississippi. The Missouri will crest at Omaha on Thursday, said Kevin Low, a weather service hydrologist.

North of Des Moines, Iowa, the lake above the Saylorville Dam was absorbing river surge and expected to largely protect the metro area from flooding, according to the Polk County Emergency Management Agency. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers projected Tuesday that water levels at Saylorville Lake will rise by more than 30 feet by the Fourth of July.

Jared Gerlock (left) and his son, Robbie, carry a bin of water-logged stuffed animals out of the flood-damaged basement of their home on East Second Street in Spencer, Iowa, on Tuesday. Officials said about 40% of properties in the city were affected after the Little Sioux River flooded.

Jared Gerlock (left) and his son, Robbie, carry a bin of water-logged stuffed animals out of the flood-damaged basement of their home on East Second Street in Spencer, Iowa, on Tuesday. Officials said about 40% of properties in the city were affected after the Little Sioux River flooded.

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Outside Mankato, Minnesota, the local sheriff’s office said Monday that there was a “partial failure” of the western support structure for the Rapidan Dam on the Blue Earth River after the dam became plugged with debris. Flowing water eroded the western bank, rushed around the dam and washed out an electrical substation, causing about 600 power outages.

Eric Weller, emergency management director for the Blue Earth County sheriff, said the bank would likely erode more, but he didn’t expect the concrete dam itself to fail. The two homes downstream were evacuated.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz on Tuesday cautioned against rebuilding too fast, instead emphasizing more sustainable repairs that could prevent or mitigate future flooding.

“Nature doesn’t care whether you believe in climate change or not,” Walz said. “The insurance companies sure believe in it. The actuarials sure believe in it, and we do.”

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WikiLeaks gadfly: the Julian Assange saga

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WikiLeaks gadfly: the Julian Assange saga

Julian Assange had already been ruffling feathers for several years when, in 2010, the Australian hacker and publisher released leaked footage of a US helicopter crew gunning down unarmed Iraqis on a Baghdad street.

The video, dubbed Collateral Murder, was among thousands of classified US military documents that the WikiLeaks website published at the time. As much as any, it put its founder on a collision course with America that only this week — 14 years later — is reaching some form of resolution.

Assange this week walked free from Belmarsh high-security prison in London, where he has been incarcerated since 2019, fighting extradition to the US on espionage charges.

He was on his way by plane to the US-controlled Northern Mariana Islands in the Pacific where, in return for a sentence of time served, he will plead guilty to one charge of conspiracy to obtain and disseminate classified information. Other charges relating to the publication of the material have been dropped.

Assange will then be free to return to his native Australia, without whose patience and diplomatic support some allies believe he might never have seen this day.

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A screen grab taken from the X account of WikiLeaks of Julian Assange following his release from prison © @WikiLeaks/PA Wire

“It’s debatable whether this is a victory for freedom or not,” said Vaughan Smith, founder of the Frontline Club, the group for journalists in Paddington where Assange stayed in the months that he was first polarising global opinion.

At the time, supporters saw him as a fearless warrior for press freedom, exposing double standards at the heart of power. Detractors were forming a different view: they saw a dangerous gadfly, disclosing information regardless of the consequences.

Smith, who has remained a loyal friend, said that whichever way you look at it, Assange has been through a terrible ordeal.

Facing allegations of rape in Sweden, which he denied, he spent seven years holed up in the Ecuadorean embassy in London, attracting support outside the gates from a diverse crew of celebrities including Pamela Anderson, Lady Gaga and the former Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis.

Once the Ecuadoreans had tired of him, he was arrested and sent to Belmarsh. “It’s pretty sobering the way he has been made to suffer,” said Smith.   

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WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, second left, and Frontline Club founder Vaughan Smith, second from right, attend a press conference at the Frontline Club in London on January 17 2011
Julian Assange, second left, and Frontline Club founder Vaughan Smith, second from right, attend a press conference at the Frontline Club in London on January 17 2011. Smith says of Assange: ‘He doesn’t necessarily fit in’ © Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images

Collateral Murder was published in 2010 alongside a trove of classified US military documents relating to the Iraq and Afghan wars. These were obtained from Chelsea Manning, the former US army intelligence analyst, who served seven years of a 35 year sentence for her part in the saga.   

Shot from an Apache helicopter gunship, the footage exposed casual rules of engagement by US troops, along with a loose relationship with the truth on the part of commanders who had portrayed victims of the 2007 incident as armed.

It was one explosive element in a huge data dump that was highly damaging to the reputation of the US military. Two of the 11 civilians killed were employees of the Reuters news agency.

At first the information from WikiLeaks was published in careful collaboration with The Guardian, New York Times, Der Spiegel, El País and Le Monde newspapers, redacted to protect the identities of sources and personnel involved.

But later — after Assange had fallen out with some of the newspapers he had worked with, and a German hacker had accessed the files — WikiLeaks released the raw documents en masse, along with more than 250,000 US diplomatic cables.

Alan Rusbridger, former editor of The Guardian, said the advent of WikiLeaks, which started life in 2006 exposing corruption in Kenya, marked the beginning of a “new era of transparency”.

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At the same time, journalists are enduring a sustained backlash as western intelligence agencies come down hard on anyone touching classified information.

“The stuff on Iraq and Afghanistan needed to come out,” Rusbridger said. The diplomatic cables were less impactful, he argued, in part because many of them made for “sensible” reading: “It does make you reconsider why all this stuff has to be so secret.”

For the Americans, some of the less-than-diplomatic language used in the cables damaged relations with allies.

Worse, they claimed, it brought sources who were exposed into harm’s way.

At the time of Assange’s indictment in 2019, John Demers, the then-top justice department national security official, said: “No responsible actor, journalist or otherwise, would purposely publish the names of individuals he or she knew to be confidential human sources in war zones, exposing them to the gravest of dangers.”

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Julian Assange speaks to media and supporters from a balcony at the Ecuadorian embassy in London in May 2017
Julian Assange speaks to media and supporters from a balcony at the Ecuadorean embassy in London in May 2017 © Luke MacGregor/Bloomberg

Assange first honed his skills as a teenage hacker in Australia where he also had his first brush with the law. Smith said some of Assange’s later problems were the result of being “different”.

His character, as well as his work, has divided opinion.

“He doesn’t necessarily fit in. From time to time, people who are different have something to say, and humans are inclined to turn on them,” Smith said. The rape allegations, which have passed the point at which they can be prosecuted under Swedish law, had “diminished him and poisoned him in the public eye”, he added.

Others who met Assange along the way were less generous. One described him as “a mercurial guy — sometimes he would behave like a CEO, strategic and efficient. Other times he would be like a badly behaved child.”

UK district judge Michael Snow, who convicted Assange in 2019 for jumping bail in 2012, described him as “a narcissist who cannot get beyond his own selfish interests”.

Even in confinement, Assange remained a potent force, playing a tumultuous role in the 2016 US elections when WikiLeaks released a tranche of emails from the Democratic party. Federal prosecutors said these were originally stolen by Russian intelligence operatives.

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Donald Trump, at first a fan, eventually turned on him too.  

Assange’s treatment during the extradition process in the UK has also proved controversial. For champions of press freedom, it has shown the UK in a poor light, pandering to US interests.

Nick Vamos, an expert in extradition law, disagrees. He suggested that a High Court decision this year to allow Assange to appeal may have been instrumental in securing his release.

“Our extradition laws are generous in terms of allowing people to argue different points,” he said. “That is ultimately what has brought everyone to the negotiating table.”

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