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Memphis deactivates the unit that fatally beat Tyre Nichols, as officials urge reform

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Memphis deactivates the unit that fatally beat Tyre Nichols, as officials urge reform

Protesters march via downtown Memphis in response to the demise of Tyre Nichols earlier this month. Video footage of Nichols being arrested and overwhelmed by police was launched to the general public on Friday.

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Protesters march via downtown Memphis in response to the demise of Tyre Nichols earlier this month. Video footage of Nichols being arrested and overwhelmed by police was launched to the general public on Friday.

Scott Olson/Getty Pictures

The official efforts to reply to the vicious beating of Tyre Nichols by Memphis police are already underway, simply two days after footage of the incident was launched to the general public.

5 Memphis law enforcement officials have been fired and charged with Nichols’ homicide, however lawmakers and regulation enforcement authorities in Tennessee say extra needs to be performed within the wake of Nichols’ demise.

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In the meantime, protesters proceed to take to the streets of Memphis and elsewhere across the nation to precise outrage over the incident and once more rally in opposition to the remedy of Black folks by police.

This is the most recent:

Memphis police disband the so-called SCORPION Unit

The Memphis Police Division introduced Saturday that it was disbanding the specialized unit whose officers stopped and beat Nichols on Jan. 7. Nichols died within the hospital three days later.

The so-called SCORPION Unit – which stood for Avenue Crimes Operations to Restore Peace in Our Neighborhoods – is being deactivated following a gathering between Chief Cerelyn ‘C.J.’ Davis and officers on the squad.

The opposite officers assigned to the unit “unreservedly agree with this subsequent step,” an announcement from the division mentioned.

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“Whereas the heinous actions of some casts a cloud of dishonor on the title SCORPION,” the assertion went on, “it’s crucial that we, the Memphis Police Division take proactive steps within the therapeutic course of for all impacted.”

Davis beforehand mentioned she wouldn’t disband the unit after Nichols’ demise, the Related Press reported.

Ben Crump and Antonio Romanucci, two attorneys for Nichols’ household, said it was “appropriate and proportional” to dissolve the police unit.

“We hope that different cities take related motion with their saturation police items within the close to future to start to create higher belief of their communities,” the attorneys mentioned. “We should understand that that is simply the following step on this journey for justice and accountability, as clearly this misconduct is just not restricted to those specialty items. It extends a lot additional.”

Tennessee Democrats say they will suggest police reforms this 12 months

Prime Democrats in Tennessee’s state legislature say they may suggest new laws concentrating on police coaching, self-discipline, psychological well being and extra in response to the demise of Tyre Nichols.

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Home Democratic Caucus Chair John Ray Clemmons, Rep. G.A. Hardaway and Rep. Joe Cities, Jr., introduced their plan throughout a press convention on Saturday.

Among the many points the payments intention to handle are implicit bias coaching, psychological well being evaluations for law enforcement officials, limits on officers transferring departments after dealing with self-discipline or being fired and a reevaluation of low-level visitors stops, NBC Information reported.

Republicans maintain a large majority within the Tennessee Basic Meeting, however the Democrats mentioned they have been assured they may get bipartisan assist due to the magnitude of the incident, the Memphis Business Attraction reported.

Crump requires federal police reform

In media interviews over the weekend, legal professional Ben Crump referred to as on Congress to cross police reform, saying it was essential after the demise of one other Black man by the hands of officers.

He particularly urged federal lawmakers to cross the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, which was twice accredited by the Home however stalled within the Senate in 2021.

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“With out federal police reform, I feel we will proceed to see these hashtags proliferate a lot that we won’t sustain with them,” Crump told ABC’s This Week.

The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act would ban chokeholds, prohibit no-knock warrants in federal drug instances, finish certified immunity for regulation enforcement officers – and extra.

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U.S. tourist faces 12 years in prison after bringing ammunition to Turks and Caicos

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U.S. tourist faces 12 years in prison after bringing ammunition to Turks and Caicos

An Oklahoma man faces up to 12 years in prison on a Caribbean island after customs officials found ammunition in his luggage.

Ryan Watson traveled to Turks and Caicos with his wife, Valerie, to celebrate his 40th birthday on April 7. They went with two friends who also turned 40.

The vacation came to an abrupt end when airport staff found a Ziploc containing bullets in the couple’s carry-on luggage. Watson said it was hunting ammunition he had accidentally brought with him — but a strict law in Turks and Caicos may still see a court imposing a mandatory 12-year sentence.

“They were hunting ammunition rounds that I use for whitetail deer,” Watson told NBC Boston in an interview conducted last week that aired after their first court appearance Tuesday.

“I recognized them and I thought, ‘Oh man, what a bonehead mistake that I had no idea that those were in there,’” he said.

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The couple were arrested and charged with possession of ammunition. Authorities seized their passports and explained the penalties they faced.

“When I heard that, I immediately was terrified because I was like, we can’t both be in prison for 12 years. We have kids at home and this is such an innocent mistake,” Valerie Watson said in the interview.

The charges against her were dropped and she returned home to Oklahoma City on Tuesday after the court hearing to be reunited with her two young children.

“Our goal is to get Ryan home because we can’t be a family without Dad,” she said.

The couple also spoke of the financial burden of a much longer-than-planned trip. “This is something that we may never recover from,” Ryan Watson said.

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The U.S. Embassy in the Bahamas issued a warning to travelers in September about a law that strongly prohibits possession of firearms or ammunition in Turks and Caicos, an overseas British territory southeast of the Bahamas.

It said: “We wish to remind all travelers that declaring a weapon in your luggage with an airline carrier does not grant permission to bring the weapon into TCI [Turks and Caicos Islands] and will result in your arrest.”

The embassy added: “If you bring a firearm or ammunition into TCI, we will not be able to secure your release from custody.”

NBC News has contacted the embassy and the government in Turks and Caicos for comment.

The same thing happened to another American, Bryan Hagerich, from Pennsylvania, who was arrested after ammunition was found in his luggage before he attempted to board a flight out of Turks and Caicos in February. He said he accidentally left it in his bag.

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Hagerich was on a family vacation with his wife and two young children but has now been in the country for 70 days. He spent eight days in prison before posting bail.

“It’s incredibly scary. You know, you just don’t know what the next day may bring. You know, what path this may take,” Hagerich told NBC Boston.

“You know, it’s certainly a lot different than packing your bags and going away with your family for a few days. It’s been the worst 70 days of my life,” he said.

Once a professional baseball player, Hagerich was drafted by the Florida Marlins in the MLB 2007 June Amateur Draft from the University of Delaware.

His case goes to trial on May 3.

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US Senate passes $95bn bill including aid for Ukraine

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US Senate passes $95bn bill including aid for Ukraine

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The US Senate has approved a $95bn bill to deliver security aid to Ukraine, Israel and the Indo-Pacific region with overwhelming bipartisan support, in a boost to Joe Biden’s top foreign policy priorities.

The final passage of the legislation in Congress on Tuesday ended a political logjam that had lasted for months and paved the way for Washington to quickly dispatch new weapons to Ukraine as it battles Russia’s full-scale invasion. US officials said some aid for Kyiv would be forthcoming within days.

The bill will also bolster US military assistance for Israel — which has exchanged drone attacks and missile strikes with Iran over the past 10 days — and comes despite mounting tensions between the White House and Israeli leaders over the country’s war in Gaza against Hamas and the heavy Palestinian civilian casualties.

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The approval represents a legislative victory for Biden as he faces an election match-up against Donald Trump in November and a defeat for foreign policy isolationists, particularly Republican lawmakers close to the former president, who had been holding up support for Kyiv for months.

The bill won support from 79 senators, with 18 voting against.

Biden immediately cheered the bill’s passage, saying he would sign it on Wednesday. Aid could start reaching Ukraine as early as this week. “Congress has passed my legislation to strengthen our national security and send a message to the world about the power of American leadership: we stand resolutely for democracy and freedom, and against tyranny and oppression.”

John Kirby, the White House National Security Council spokesperson, said: “Mr Putin thinks he can play for time, so we’ve got to try to make up some of that time.”

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also thanked the US Senate shortly after the vote, which he said “reinforces America’s role as a beacon of democracy and leader of the free world”.

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Zelenskyy emphasised the importance of long-range capabilities, artillery and air defence systems. Dwindling stocks of anti-air missiles have in recent weeks allowed Russian forces to launch wide-ranging missile attacks targeting Ukraine’s energy infrastructures.

The highest hurdle for the bill was cleared on Saturday after Mike Johnson, the Republican Speaker of the House of Representatives, decided to bring Ukraine aid up for a vote despite months of internal divisions and opposition from some rank-and-file lawmakers such as Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, who threatened to oust him from his role.

Supporters of the legislation from both parties and in the White House saw its passage as a bittersweet victory because of the time it took for it to pass Congress.

“So much of the hesitation and short-sightedness that has delayed this moment is premised on sheer fiction,” Mitch McConnell, the Republican Senate minority leader, said on Tuesday, blaming Tucker Carlson, the former Fox News host who recently interviewed Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow, for “demonising” Ukraine.

“Make no mistake: delay in providing Ukraine the weapons to defend itself has strained the prospects of defeating Russian aggression. Dithering and hesitation have compounded the challenges we face,” McConnell said.

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Opponents of Ukraine aid continued to attack the legislation. JD Vance, the Ohio Republican senator close to Trump, likened the arguments in favour of the aid to those that led to the US invasion of Iraq in 2003. “It’s the same exact talking points 20 years later with different names,” Vance said.

Some leftwing lawmakers, meanwhile, criticised the bill for allowing Israel to keep receiving offensive weapons from the US. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator, pushed for an amendment to strip those measures from the legislation, but it was not considered.

Sanders joined two Democrats and 15 Republicans who opposed the package.

“I voted no tonight on the foreign aid package for one simple reason: US taxpayers should not be providing billions more to the extremist Netanyahu government to continue its devastating war against the Palestinian people,” he said.

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How voters from different economic sectors see the 2024 election : Consider This from NPR

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How voters from different economic sectors see the 2024 election  : Consider This from NPR

You’re reading the Consider This newsletter, which unpacks one major news story each day. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox, and listen to more from the Consider This podcast.

Four Americans representing four different perspectives on the U.S. economy.

Courtesy of Arch City Defenders, Winton Machine Company, Bhavesh Patel and the Just One Project


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Courtesy of Arch City Defenders, Winton Machine Company, Bhavesh Patel and the Just One Project


Four Americans representing four different perspectives on the U.S. economy.

Courtesy of Arch City Defenders, Winton Machine Company, Bhavesh Patel and the Just One Project

All Things Considered has been speaking with four “American Indicators” since 2021. They’re four people in different parts of the country reflecting different parts of the economy. Now that it’s an election year, they spoke with NPR again — this time, to talk about how the economy is shaping their own politics.

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1. Travel

Bhavesh Patel is a franchise hotel owner, like Comfort Inn in the Northeast United States.

When he first spoke with NPR in 2021, the country was beginning to emerge from the pandemic recession. At the time, he owned seven hotels in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Illinois. In the years since, he has had to downsize.

“We sold off three properties, so we’re down to four now.”

Patel says his line of hotels has continued to struggle in the wake of the pandemic, and that right now, high end hotels are doing much better as the wealth gap has continued to grow in the U.S. He’s frustrated by the increase in regulation for his business, and considers himself a moderate Republican. For now, he isn’t sure who he’ll be voting for.

2. Cost of living

Lee Camp is a housing attorney in St. Louis. In his city, he says, rents keep increasing and the availability of housing is decreasing. After witnessing a wave of clients facing eviction during the pandemic, Camp says that economic pressures have gotten worse across the board.

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“I love my career. I love that I get to serve people and work alongside so many inspiring and amazing individuals. But the loan payments are back, and that has certainly changed our financial picture in our household.”

When Brooke Neubauer, founder of the Just One Project, the largest distributor of groceries to at-risk individuals in Nevada, looks at the economy today, she says there are plenty of jobs, but says that “what I’m hearing from my clients is that the wages have not caught up with the cost of living.”

Neubauer says that her program’s spending has gone up tremendously as the price of food has gone up as well. And for her, a candidate that values social services is a priority.

3. Manufacturing

In Georgia, Lisa Winton, co-founder of Winton Machine Company, sees herself as a pocketbook voter – not just for herself, but for the 40 people her company employs.

Winton says last year, the economy looked good — her company had their best year by 20%, a banner year. As a result, she says her company had looked into opening a second factory, but her lease on her current space nearly doubled, and they had to put those plans on hold.

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And while her business might be doing better with the help of some Trump-era tax policies, Winton expressed that the Republican party’s shift to the right on some social issues is causing her concern.

This episode was produced by Michael Levitt and Brianna Scott. It was edited by Mallory Yu and Courtney Dorning. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.

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