Pennsylvania
Police: Pennsylvania officer shoots snake that wrapped itself around man’s neck
UPPER MACUNGIE, Pa. – Officers in Pennsylvania shot and killed a snake after they are saying it wrapped itself round a person’s neck Wednesday afternoon.
Police from the Higher Macungie Township Police Division had been referred to as to a house on the 1400 block of Church Road for reviews of a person in cardiac arrest.
When officers arrived they discovered a 28-year-old man mendacity on the ground with the mid-section of a snake wrapped round his neck, in response to police.
An officer managed to shoot the 15-foot-long snake within the head and pull the person to security, police mentioned.
The person acquired emergency medical therapy and was taken to a neighborhood hospital in unknown situation.
Pennsylvania
BioNTech settles with U.S. agency, University of Pennsylvania over Covid vaccine royalties
Vials containing the Pfizer/BioNtech vaccine against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) are displayed before being used at a mobile vaccine clinic, in Valparaiso, Chile, January 3, 2022.
Rodrigo Garrido | Reuters
BioNTech has entered into two separate settlement agreements with the U.S. National Institutes of Health and the University of Pennsylvania over the payment of royalties related to its COVID-19 vaccine, the company said in filings.
The German company, which partners with U.S. drugmaker Pfizer for its COVID-19 vaccine, said on Friday it would pay $791.5 million to the U.S. agency to resolve a default notice.
Separately, the company will pay $467 million to the University of Pennsylvania (Penn), which has agreed to dismiss a lawsuit brought against the vaccine maker accusing it of underpaying royalties.
BioNTech said partner Pfizer will reimburse it for up to $170 million of the royalties payable to Penn and $364.5 million of the royalties paid to the National Institutes of Health (NIH)for 2020-2023 vaccine sales.
NIH and Penn did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The U.S. government is owed royalty payments under the terms of the license BioNTech has taken for certain patents owned by the NIH, among other entities.
Penn’s lawsuit had said BioNTech owes the school a greater share of its worldwide vaccine sales for using “foundational” messenger RNA (mRNA) inventions developed by Penn professors and Nobel Prize winners Katalin Kariko and Drew Weissman.
The company also amended its license agreements with both NIH and Penn, agreeing to pay a low single-digit percentage of its vaccine net sales to both the entities.
Both settlements include a framework for a license to use NIH and Penn’s patents in combination products.
The agreements do not constitute an admission of liability in either case, the company said.
Pennsylvania
5 injured, several families displaced after rowhome fire in Allentown, Pennsylvania
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Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania lawmaker’s bill would crack down on ghost guns made by 3D printers
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