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Customer’s Racial Slur Drew a Fatal Punch. The Sentence Is House Arrest.

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Customer’s Racial Slur Drew a Fatal Punch. The Sentence Is House Arrest.

A Black supervisor of a Dunkin’ store in Tampa, Fla., who fatally punched a 77-year-old white buyer final 12 months after he repeatedly used a racial slur in addressing him was sentenced this week to 2 years of home arrest, prosecutors stated.

The worker, Corey Pujols, who was initially charged with manslaughter, pleaded responsible to the lesser cost of felony battery beneath a plea deal that may enable him to keep away from jail time. Below the sentence imposed on Monday by Decide Christine Marlewski of the Thirteenth Judicial Circuit Court docket, Mr. Pujols, 27, will likely be on probation for 3 years after he completes his home arrest. He additionally should carry out 200 hours of neighborhood service, and attend anger administration programs.

The deadly confrontation passed off final Could 4, when Vonelle Cook dinner, a retailer common, started berating workers members after being upset with the service he acquired on the retailer’s drive-through window, the authorities stated.

After being informed a number of instances to depart, Mr. Cook dinner parked and went into the store, whereas Mr. Pujols informed one other retailer worker to name the police, prosecutors stated. The pair argued, separated by a counter. Then Mr. Cook dinner used a racial slur, inflicting Mr. Pujols to stroll by a swinging door and are available face-to-face with Mr. Cook dinner, prosecutors stated.

Mr. Pujols “warned the sufferer to not say that once more,” prosecutors stated. “The sufferer repeated the racial slur, and Pujols instantly punched him within the jaw, which triggered the sufferer to fall and hit his head.”

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Mr. Cook dinner died three days later.

In keeping with a police report, Mr. Cook dinner by no means touched or tried to strike Mr. Pujols.

Efforts to succeed in Mr. Pujols and his lawyer on Wednesday night weren’t instantly profitable.

In a press release on Wednesday, Andrew Warren, the state lawyer for Hillsborough County, stated the plea deal “holds the defendant accountable whereas contemplating the totality of the circumstances — the aggressive method and despicable racial slur utilized by the sufferer, together with the defendant’s age, lack of felony document, and lack of intent to trigger the sufferer’s demise.”

Furthermore, Mr. Warren stated, it will have been a tough case to win at trial, given Florida’s authorized panorama.

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“Should you can shoot somebody for throwing popcorn at you beneath Florida’s flawed Stand Your Floor legislation,” Mr. Warren stated, referring to a current case, “it will be laborious to persuade a jury that an individual’s not allowed to hit somebody who instigated a confrontation by storming into their enterprise and barking probably the most aggressive and inflammatory time period within the English language of their face.”

Court docket information point out that Mr. Cook dinner was a registered intercourse offender who had served time in jail after being convicted of a number of costs, together with little one abuse, possession of kid pornography and sexual exercise with minors. That adopted a 2006 arrest during which hundreds of pictures and movies of teenage boys and males having intercourse have been discovered at a Tampa residence owned by Mr. Cook dinner.

Regardless of Mr. Cook dinner’s authorized troubles, his youthful brother, Kenneth Cook dinner, stated that the plea deal was not justice. His brother had mobility points and was a frail outdated man who regarded ahead day by day to getting his cup of espresso on the Dunkin’ store, Mr. Cook dinner, 73, stated in a cellphone interview. He stated that he had informed prosecutors that he would have favored to have seen Mr. Pujols obtain a sentence of 5 years in jail and 5 years’ probation.

“I assumed that’s a good deal for taking a person’s life,” he stated.

Kirsten Noyes contributed reporting.

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Elon Musk Downplays the Role of Climate in L.A. Fires, Scientists Say

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Elon Musk Downplays the Role of Climate in L.A. Fires, Scientists Say

Elon Musk on Thursday inserted himself into the debate over the role climate change plays in wildfires as at least five fires scorched the Los Angeles area, charring entire neighborhoods, killing at least five people and forcing tens of thousands to flee.

“Climate change risk is real, just much slower than alarmists claim,” Mr. Musk wrote to his 211 million followers on X, the social media site he owns. He said the loss of homes was “primarily due” to “nonsensical overregulation” and “bad governance at the state and local level that resulted in a shortage of water.”

But scientists are clear: A warming planet, driven largely by the burning of fossil fuels, has created the conditions for increasingly destructive wildfires, along with more damaging hurricanes and other extreme weather.

Studies have found that extreme wildfires are getting more frequent and more intense, and fires are spreading faster, too.

“Wildfires have become larger and more frequent because of climate change in the Western part of the United States,” said Michael F. Wehner, a senior scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Regarding Mr. Musk’s comments, he said, “I find the whole thing pretty alarming.”

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Scientists are unable to say with certainty that any single weather event was caused by global warming. But coming off the hottest year in history, the Los Angeles area has received less rainfall since the start of the rainy season in October than almost any other year since record-keeping began in 1877.

That drought turned vegetation into ready kindling, and temperatures have been above normal, further drying out grasses and scrubs. At the same time, Santa Ana winds have been unusually ferocious, blowing as fast as 100 miles per hour.

Benjamin Hatchett, a fire meteorologist at the University of Colorado, said there have been dry starts in past years but the combination of drought and high winds is fueling more destruction.

“This is probably just a bad, unfortunate, confluence of events,” Mr. Hatchett said. “I would be very hesitant to immediately say this is climate change and I don’t think that’s the right message here.

But because of climate change, he said, “this is the kind of conditions we expect to see more of going into the future.”

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President-elect Donald J. Trump, Mr. Musk and other Republicans have sought to politicize the wildfires, using it as a way to attack Democratic officeholders in California. Mr. Trump in particular has seized on environmental regulations, including federal and state protections for California’s endangered delta smelt fish. He falsely claimed that those regulations led to inadequate water availability for firefighting efforts.

Peter Gleick, co-founder of the Pacific Institute, a California research organization that focuses on water, said Mr. Trump was spouting “complete nonsense.”

“There’s no link between California’s water policies and efforts to protect endangered species and water availability for firefighters,” Mr. Gleick said. “They’re completely unrelated.”

He noted that Southern California reservoir levels, including ones that feed Los Angeles, are above normal for this time of year. “There’s no water shortage,” he said. “The real issue is that urban water systems are not built or designed to fight massive, urban wildfires.”

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Live news: Los Angeles sheriff confirms wildfire looting arrests

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Live news: Los Angeles sheriff confirms wildfire looting arrests

Los Angeles firefighters have managed to contain three smaller wildfires, though the largest fires remain uncontained as the southern California region continues to navigate one of its most destructive natural disasters.

The Woodley, Sunset and Sunswept fires have all been contained as of Thursday morning, authorities said.

The Palisades fire has spread 17,200 acres as of Thursday morning. Los Angeles Fire Department chief Kristin Crowley said wind gusts were up to 60mph and expected to resume throughout the day. She estimated that thousands of structures had been damaged. 

Los Angeles County Fire chief Anthony Marrone said growth of the Eaton fire had been “significantly stopped”, but the fire — which has spread to 10,600 acres — had not been contained and more than 1,000 structures had been damaged.

The third largest wildfire, Hurst, has spread 855 aces and has also not yet been contained.

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Photos: See the California wildfires' destructive force, in satellite images

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Photos: See the California wildfires' destructive force, in satellite images

This is a developing story. For the latest local updates head to LAist.com and sign up for breaking news alerts.

Fast-moving fires are blazing trails of destruction in the Los Angeles area, killing at least five people, injuring many more, and destroying hundreds of homes and businesses. Satellite images by Maxar Technologies show homes and businesses before the fires started and the charred aftermath after one day.

The Palisades fire has burned more than 17,000 acres, including homes along the Pacific Coast Highway. The fire has also damaged landmarks across Los Angeles County, including some vegetation and trees on the site of the Getty Villa, a Greco-Roman art museum on the highway.

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In the image from Jan. 8, the remains of homes in Altadena, Calif., near Marathon Road are seen from space after the Eaton fire blazed through the area. The Eaton fire has destroyed 10,600 acres, including parts of Altadena, north of Pasadena, an area bordering the Angeles National Forest.

Homes and businesses along Altadena Drive are seen burning in the image from Jan. 8.

The California Newsroom is following the extreme weather from across the region. Click through to LAist’s coverage for the latest.

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