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Philadelphia’s zombie drug ‘tranq’ already in NYC
PHILADELPHIA (WPIX) – Driving in Philadelphia’s embattled Kensington neighborhood on Tuesday to get a firsthand have a look at the results of xylazine, an animal tranquilizer that was turning fentanyl addicts into “zombies,” WPIX noticed a sea of individuals with leg wounds, swollen fingers and even lacking limbs alongside infamous Kensington Avenue.
“Subsequent factor you already know, you get up with these big-a** holes throughout you,” mentioned Jennette Freas, 48, who will get assist with wound care at Prevention Level Philadelphia. “They only popped up anyplace. It’s not essentially the place you shoot up.”
Shawn Westfahl, coordinator for overdose prevention on the non-profit company, mentioned it’s believed the concept to combine xylazine — referred to as “tranq” — into the heroin and fentanyl provide began in Puerto Rico earlier than the animal sedative turned up in Philadelphia.
Xylazine is now in 90% of Philadelphia’s drug provide, and a federal regulation enforcement supply instructed WPIX it has additionally been detected in New York Metropolis drug stash homes.
“Including a horse tranquilizer, one thing extra sedating, makes it really feel prefer it lasts longer,” Westfahl famous.
Artwork El Malik, who mentioned he first tried fentanyl in Seattle earlier than returning to his native Philadelphia, seen a number of years in the past that his medication had been turning a distinct shade of white or pink.
“We might get up, and we might be utterly sick,” El Malik instructed WPIX. “We’d see individuals strolling round wanting like animals, with their knuckles touching the bottom.”
El Malik’s fingers are swollen to about 3 times the traditional dimension, and he mentioned medical doctors have warned him about an infection that would result in amputation.
“Yeah, there’s a chance,” El Malik mentioned. “Lots of my buddies have misplaced their limbs already.”
WPIX noticed one younger man in a wheelchair who was lacking his left foot.
Sean Anderson, 44, is initially from Delaware and mentioned his shin not too long ago had two holes in it earlier than it healed.
“Delaware’s nothing like right here,” Anderson mentioned. “It is a complete different world.”
Anderson mentioned he was turned onto drugs and heroin by his mom when he was younger. He got here to Philadelphia after his mom died of the coronavirus. He mentioned a neighborhood supplier gave him a free bag of dope.
“After I was leaving, some man gave me samples and that’s what obtained me caught,” Anderson mentioned. “They’d samples of free dope. I obtained one and I’ve been caught ever since.”
The general public who reside in tents, wheelchairs and among the many rubbish alongside Kensington Avenue at the moment are hooked on two medication: xylazine and fentanyl.
Remarkably, xylazine just isn’t listed as a managed substance by the Drug Enforcement Administration. The drug is monitored by the Meals and Drug Administration, which issued a warning final November concerning the drug tainting the nation’s road drug provide.
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Goldman Sachs’ chief warns global investors are staying on the ‘sidelines’ in China
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Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
Goldman Sachs’ chief executive has warned that global investors are still “predominantly on the sidelines” over deploying capital in China because of weak consumer confidence and difficulties getting money out of the country.
David Solomon said investors “continue to be concerned” about cashing out of investments in the world’s second-largest economy.
“It’s been very difficult over the course of the last five years to get capital out,” he told an event on Tuesday organised by the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, the territory’s de facto central bank.
“I think you’ve got a combination of issues that have global investors predominantly on the sidelines with respect to capital deployment,” Solomon said.
He added that investors would like to see “an improvement in consumption” in China and “continued progress in the opening up of the capital markets”.
Speaking on the same panel, Morgan Stanley chief executive Ted Pick said he agreed with Solomon. “Transparency is important and battling deflation takes time,” he said.
Deflationary pressures have increased in China, where the country’s leadership is trying to stabilise a property sector crisis and boost domestic consumption in order to meet its economic growth target of 5 per cent for the year.
Chinese stocks rallied in September after Beijing launched a stimulus package, including measures to boost the stock market. But the rally has cooled as authorities held off from making significant new fiscal spending announcements.
The CSI 300, China’s blue-chip index, on Tuesday closed down 11 per cent from a post-stimulus peak on October 8.
“The fiscal piece will take time, the real estate dynamic is going to take a number of quarters,” said Pick. “Clearly the name of the game here is to reignite consumer confidence and that’s something that takes a while to take hold, but we’re seeing some green shoots.”
The conference is a sign of HKMA’s sway over global financial institutions even as US-China relations fray. The annual event is attended by the biggest names on Wall Street, in part because the HKMA oversees hundreds of billions of dollars and is a valuable client and limited partner of many of the institutions.
Attendees included Apollo Global Management’s chief executive Marc Rowan, Blackstone president Jon Gray, and leading figures from buyout groups KKR, TPG, CVC and Carlyle.
Solomon and Pick were responding to a question from deputy HKMA chief Howard Lee about whether China’s stimulus package and “positive remarks” from Beijing officials, who stressed the importance of China opening up to the world, would make investors “feel more assured” about the country.
Earlier in the morning, China’s vice-premier He Lifeng delivered a speech in which he said mainland officials wanted to preserve Hong Kong’s status as an international financial centre while encouraging greater mutual market access between the city and the rest of mainland China.
The bank bosses spoke briefly about Donald Trump’s US election victory. Citi chief executive Jane Fraser said it had prompted a “big unlock” in demand for initial public offerings and mergers and acquisitions that had been “very gummed up” in recent years.
The prospect of reduced regulation “puts many CEOs in a good mood”, she said.
News
California governor delays clemency decision for Menendez brothers pending new DA review | CNN
CNN
—
California Gov. Gavin Newsom will delay his decision on clemency for Lyle and Erik Menendez, who were convicted of murdering their parents in 1989, until the newly elected Los Angeles County district attorney completes his review of the case, Newsom’s office said Monday.
“The governor respects the role of the district attorney in ensuring justice is served and recognizes that voters have entrusted District Attorney-elect (Nathan) Hochman to carry out this responsibility,” Newsom’s office stated. “The governor will defer to the DA-elect’s review and analysis of the Menendez case prior to making any clemency decisions.”
Current District Attorney George Gascón, who has voiced strong support for the Menendez brothers’ clemency petition and submitted letters to the governor advocating for them, requested a judge in October to resentence the siblings, who are serving life without parole.
Gascón was recently defeated in his reelection bid by Hochman, a former federal prosecutor who campaigned on a tougher stance against crime. With Hochman set to take office in December, questions have arisen about the future of the resentencing effort and the clemency process.
Hochman stated that he is committed to thoroughly reviewing the Menendez case, including the confidential prison files, trial transcripts and extensive exhibits, as well as consulting with prosecutors, defense attorneys and family members of the victims.
“This is the same type of rigorous analysis I have done throughout my 34-year career in criminal justice as a prosecutor and defense counsel, and the same type of thorough review that I will give to all cases regardless of media attention,” he told CNN.
The brothers, family members and the public deserve a thorough review, Hochman said.
The renewed examination of the Menendez case comes more than 35 years after Jose and Kitty Menendez were shot dead in their Beverly Hills home. Their sons, then 21 and 18, were arrested less than a year later in 1990 and found guilty of first-degree murder in 1996.
During their two highly publicized trials, the brothers did not dispute the act of killing their parents but claimed self-defense, citing a lifetime of physical and sexual abuse by their father. The first trial, notable for being one of the earliest televised cases, ended in a mistrial due to a hung jury. In the subsequent trial, much of the evidence regarding the alleged abuse was deemed inadmissible, resulting in the brothers’ conviction and life sentences.
Attention to the case has surged following the September release of the Netflix series “Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story.” Netflix recently launched a documentary on the case, featuring the brothers discussing the events that led to the tragic killings.
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Hong Kong sentences 45 democracy activists to up to 10 years in prison
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Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
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.
“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.
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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