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Lake-effect snow continues to paralyze Buffalo region, 77 inches of snowfall so far

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Lake-effect snow continues to paralyze Buffalo region, 77 inches of snowfall so far

BUFFALO, New York — Piles of snow, in some locations taller than most individuals, buried components of western and northern New York as a lake-effect storm pounded areas east of Lake Erie and Lake Ontario for a 3rd straight day Saturday, with presumably much more to return.

Snowfall totals as excessive as 77 inches (196 centimeters) had been reported within the Buffalo suburb of Orchard Park, residence to the NFL’s Buffalo Payments. Partway throughout the state, the city of Pure Bridge, close to the Fort Drum Military base, reported just below 6 toes (1.8 meters).

The snowfall in some spots ranked among the many highest ever recorded within the space, rivaling the eye-popping quantities that fell throughout comparable storms in 2014 and 1945.

The snowfall totals, which started accumulating Thursday evening in some spots, “could be on the order of historic not just for any time of yr however for any a part of the nation,” mentioned Nationwide Climate Service meteorologist Frank Pereira, at NWS headquarters in Faculty Park, Maryland.

The lake-effect storm, brought on by chilly air choosing up moisture from hotter lakes, created slender bands of windblown snow that dumped toes of snow in some communities, whereas leaving cities a brief drive away comparatively unscathed.

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It wreaked havoc on some roadways, as vans that took to smaller backroads to keep away from a closure on components of an interstate within the space ended up in mass gridlock that Erie County Govt Mark Poloncarz described on social media as “tractor-trailer demo derby day.”

It additionally wreaked havoc on the marriage plans of Robert Junge and Maria Szeglowski, who had picked at the present time for his or her nuptials after getting engaged precisely a yr in the past.

Their reception venue canceled, rescheduling for subsequent week. The musician they employed for his or her church ceremony additionally could not make it, together with greater than half of their anticipated 180 visitors.

However they had been decided, utilizing one in all two limos they rented to get the bride to the church, whereas Junge drove himself.

“Nothing was going to cease me from marrying her, it doesn’t matter what,” Junge, 35, of North Tonawanda, New York, instructed The Related Press.

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On the intense aspect, he mentioned, the snow is “going to make for some stunning footage.”

The snowfall compelled the Nationwide Soccer League to maneuver Sunday’s recreation between the Payments and Cleveland Browns to Detroit.

Partial sunshine and a break from the snow got here in a number of the hardest-hit areas south of Buffalo’s heart Saturday because the snow bands shifted north.

Forecasters predicted a number of inches extra might fall Saturday evening into Sunday, though Pereira mentioned completely different areas within the area had been more likely to be hit somewhat than totals growing an excessive amount of within the areas the place the heaviest snows had already fallen.

Gov. Kathy Hochul deployed about 70 members of the Nationwide Guard to assist with snow elimination in a number of the hardest-hit areas.

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Poloncarz tweeted that two folks within the Buffalo space died “related to cardiac occasions associated to exertion throughout shoveling/snow blowing.”

The lake-effect has additionally dumped as much as 2 toes (0.6 meters) of snow in some communities in Michigan south of Lake Superior and east of Lake Michigan.

A snowplow driver within the city of Hamlet, Indiana, was killed Friday when his plow slid off the pavement and rolled over, based on the Starke County Sheriff’s Division. Hamlet is about 30 miles (48 kilometers) from Lake Michigan.

Buffalo has expertise with dramatic lake-effect snowstorms, few worse than the one which struck in November 2014. That epic storm dumped 7 toes (2 meters) of snow on some communities over three days, collapsing roofs and trapping drivers in additional than 100 automobiles on a lakeside stretch of the New York State Thruway.

ALSO WATCH: Climate Or Not with Lee Goldberg: Winter Climate Outlook

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Hong Kong sentences 45 democracy activists to up to 10 years in prison

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Hong Kong sentences 45 democracy activists to up to 10 years in prison

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A Hong Kong court has sentenced 45 leading pro-democracy activists to up to 10 years in prison in a landmark security case as authorities stamp out dissent in the Chinese territory.

Legal scholar Benny Tai received 10 years in prison, the heaviest sentence. The court, in its ruling on Tuesday, said that Tai was a “principal offender” in organising an unofficial primary election in 2020.

The other defendants received sentences of between four and eight years. Joshua Wong, a former leading student protest organiser, was sentenced to more than four years in prison, while Gordon Ng, an Australian national, received more than seven years.

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“One day in prison is too many,” said Chan Po-ying, wife of former lawmaker Leung Kwok-hung, 68, who was sentenced to 81 months.

The trial of the Hong Kong 47, as the case was known, was the largest national security trial in Hong Kong, which has been struggling to restore its reputation as an international financial centre in the wake of Beijing’s political crackdown and coronavirus pandemic restrictions.

“This case is unprecedented in Hong Kong’s history of democratic movement,” said Eric Lai, a research fellow at Georgetown University’s Center for Asian Law. “Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement will suffer for many years due to the vacuum of leaders and outstanding activists.”

The defendants — who were arrested in sweeping dawn raids in January 2021 — represented some of the city’s most prominent pro-democracy politicians, activists, union officials, journalists, academics and student leaders.

Thirty-one, including Tai and Wong, had pleaded guilty in hopes of receiving reduced sentences, while 14 were convicted in May. Two were previously acquitted, though prosecutors have filed an appeal against one of the acquittals.

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Most of the defendants have been in detention for more than three years after being denied bail. The charges carried a maximum penalty of life imprisonment.

This is a developing story

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Defense pick Peter Hegseth paid accuser to protect his career, his lawyer confirms

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Defense pick Peter Hegseth paid accuser to protect his career, his lawyer confirms

Pete Hegseth, seen here on Dec. 31, 2021, paid a woman to settle her accusation of sexual assault against him, his lawyer says.

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Brett Carlsen/Getty Images/Getty Images North America

An attorney for Pete Hegseth, the Fox News host and President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for defense secretary, confirmed to NPR that Hegseth had paid a woman who accused him of sexual assault in order to prevent her from filing a lawsuit that could damage his career.

Hegseth, 44, has denied the woman’s allegations. The incident took place in 2017.

The Washington Post reported Saturday that Hegseth’s lawyer, Timothy Parlatore, had said in a statement, Hegseth reached a settlement with his accuser, including paying her an unknown amount of money in exchange for her signing a nondisclosure agreement. This arrangement was intended to stop her from filing a lawsuit and to protect Hegseth’s position at Fox News, the Post reported.

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Hegseth’s lawyer, Timothy Parlatore, told NPR on Monday that the information attributed to him was accurate, which first reported news of the settlement. According to the Post article, a friend of the woman had shared information about the incident in a memo sent to the Trump transition team last week. NPR has not independently confirmed the contents of the memo.

No charges were filed, Trump team says

“President Trump is nominating high-caliber and extremely qualified candidates to serve in his Administration,” Trump Communications Director Steven Cheung said in a statement to NPR.

Hegseth’s nomination will go forward, Cheung said.

“Mr. Hegseth has vigorously denied any and all accusations, and no charges were filed,” he said. “We look forward to his confirmation as United States Secretary of Defense so he can get started on Day One to Make America Safe and Great Again.”

Trump has himself been convicted of falsifying business records connected to hush money payments, to adult-film star Stormy Daniels, a case he claims is politically motivated.

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What is Hegseth accused of?

In 2017, Hegseth was named in an investigation by the Monterey Police Department concerning a reported sexual assault at a golf resort in California. According to a statement from city officials, Hegseth acknowledges having sexual intercourse with the woman but insists it was consensual.

The incident occurred in the early hours of Oct. 8 at 1 Old Golf Course Road, which is the address of Hyatt Regency Monterey Hotel and Spa. Police say the woman reported an injury to her right thigh. Their news release does not disclose the alleged victim’s name or age; however, she was 30 at the time and worked for the California Federation of Republican Women, assisting with logistics while Hegseth spoke at their conference.

She was staying at the hotel with her husband.

Hegseth’s relationship status at the time was complicated: in 2017, his second wife filed for a divorce “around the same time” he and his current wife had a baby, according to The Washington Examiner.

In his statement to the Post, Parlatore says that Hegseth had been drinking at the hotel bar and was intoxicated when he went to his hotel room with the woman. According to the Post, the memo from the woman’s friend said that the woman took Hegseth to the room after being informed that he was being a nuisance to other women. A few days later, she contacted the police to report a sexual assault.

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After the woman hired an attorney a couple of years later to consider a lawsuit, both parties reached an agreement. Parlatore noted in his statement to the Post that the MeToo movement was gaining momentum at the time, and he told CBS News that Hegseth would have faced “an immediate horror storm” had he been publicly accused of sexual assault, a quote that Parlatore confirmed to NPR.

The incident in Monterey occurred about a year after Fox News settled with former Fox & Friends co-host Gretchen Carlson for $20 million over her sexual harassment claims against the network’s former chairman, Roger Ailes. Between early 2017 and 2020, the network experienced several high-profile departures linked to misconduct, including hosts Bill O’Reilly and Eric Bolling, Washington correspondent James Rosen and news host Ed Henry.

Hegseth is known for his TV work, and loyalty to Trump

When Hegseth was nominated last week, his selection seemingly surprised several Republican lawmakers; as NPR reported, his name was not on the known shortlist of potential nominees. But it continued a pattern of Trump’s placing loyalists and Fox News personalities in prominent positions.

Trump’s selection has put Hegseth, who lives in Tennessee with his wife and seven children, under intense scrutiny.

Prominent Democrats and military experts have raised questions that range from the meaning of his tattoos and political ethos to whether Hegseth is qualified to oversee the country’s largest employer. The Defense Department has “more than 2.1 million Military Service members and over 770 thousand civilian employees,” according to a 2020 fiscal report.

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Hegseth is a Minnesota native who served as an officer in the Army National Guard, leaving service as a major in 2021 after deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan, according to his official biography. He earned a master’s degree in public policy from Harvard University in 2013.

Those questioning Hegseth’s qualifications include Rep. Betty McCollum, D-Minn., the ranking member of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense.

“I have great respect for anyone who has served our nation in the U.S. Armed Forces. However, not everyone who has worn the uniform is qualified to lead the Department of Defense,” McCollum said in a statement, adding that she is concerned that Hegseth “is ill-prepared to serve as Secretary of Defense.”

Military has its own sexual assault issues

If confirmed, Hegseth would lead a U.S. military that has been trying to reduce the alarming rates of sexual assaults from military academies to overseas deployments.

In a notable shift, the Defense Department implemented a change earlier this year that grants independent military lawyers the authority to handle sexual assault cases,
removing these matters from the chains of command of either the accused or the victim.

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This change to the military justice system was backed by the current defense secretary Lloyd Austin.

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North Carolina State Supreme Court Results 2024: Riggs vs. Griffin

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North Carolina State Supreme Court Results 2024: Riggs vs. Griffin
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