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Rep. Roy demands answers from CDC on vaccine data: They ‘owe us the damn truth’

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Texas Republican Congressman Chip Roy’s letter to the Facilities of Illness Management demanding solutions on the company’s communication on masking and vaccine effectiveness is an effort to deal with a “lack of transparency” and “political agenda”, Roy informed Fox Information on Thursday.

The American folks need to know the reality,” Roy defined. “And the CDC owes us the rattling fact.”

BIDEN ANNOUNCES NEW COVID-19 INITIATIVE AT STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS

Roy despatched the letter to CDC Director Rochelle Walensky earlier this week asking that the company launch knowledge on coronavirus hospitalizations that they’ve reportedly been withholding as a result of fears it might contradict its messaging on the effectiveness of vaccines.

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WASHINGTON, DC – NOVEMBER 04: Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention Director Rochelle Walensky testifies earlier than the Senate Well being, Schooling, Labor, and Pensions Committee 
(Chip Somodevilla)

“I write to you searching for solutions concerning troubling reviews of your company deliberately withholding knowledge associated to COVID-19 hospitalizations,” Roy wrote in a letter to CDC Director Rochelle Walensky. “As not too long ago reported by the New York Occasions, the Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention (CDC) allegedly withheld knowledge, akin to knowledge on COVID-19 hospitalizations by vaccination standing, as a result of company personnel said the information could also be misinterpreted.”

AMERICANS DESERVE APOLOGY FROM CDC, BIDEN’S ANTI-SCIENCE MACHINE

Roy was referring to a New York Occasions report in late February that stated the CDC has “been routinely accumulating data because the COVID vaccines had been first rolled out final 12 months” however has been “reluctant” to make these figures public “as a result of they could be misinterpreted because the vaccines being ineffective.”

WASHINGTON, DC - SEPTEMBER 22: Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas), joined by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), speaks at a news conference about the National Defense Authorization Bill.

WASHINGTON, DC – SEPTEMBER 22: Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas), joined by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), speaks at a information convention in regards to the Nationwide Protection Authorization Invoice.
(Picture by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Pictures)

Roy informed Fox Information that vaccines might very nicely find yourself being a web profit to sure segments of society, the CDC nonetheless has a duty to launch the information no matter potential political ramifications.

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“When the CDC official says, ‘oh we’re reluctant to make this public as a result of that could be interpreted because the vaccines being ineffective’, nicely that’s what we’ve been watching all alongside,” Roy stated. “Whereas social media led by all these so-called specialists mainly have a political agenda to make everyone consider that vaccines work it doesn’t matter what.”

Roy added that the mere undeniable fact that the CDC has modified the definition of vaccinated over the course of the final 15 months exhibits that the motivations behind guidances are political.

“At first it was ‘don’t fear the vaccine stops you from getting it’ after which ‘oh crap that’s not true however we’ll type of gloss over that,’” Roy recalled, including that President Biden said final 12 months that “you’re not going to get COVID” if you’re vaccinated.

Roy’s letter asks Walensky to offer particulars on messaging and knowledge releases concerning vaccines but additionally asks for data on the decision-making that went into the company’s newest replace to its mask-wearing steerage which Roy says has additionally been extremely politicized and has not adopted the science.

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“On masking, you return in March 2020 it was, put on a masks when you’re sick and when you’re not sick you don’t have to put on a face masks, then it transformed to everybody ought to put on a masks exterior, then it turned masks have to be worn to guard these round you,” Roy stated. “Then nearly a 12 months in the past it was absolutely vaccinated folks don’t have to put on a masks then absolutely vaccinated folks needed to put on a masks inside. In January of this 12 months, fabric masks provide the least safety and we advocate N95. It’s simply loopy. After which it modified on the State of the Union. It’s simply nuts.”

“The factor that drives me loopy,” Roy defined. “It’s actually a glimpse into what occurs whenever you flip your freedom over to unelected unaccountable bureaucrats to make selections for you.”

Atlanta, Georgia, USA - August 28, 2011: Close up of entrance sign for Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Atlanta, Georgia, USA – August 28, 2011: Shut up of entrance signal for Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention.
(iStock)

“The underside line is that Joe Biden on the State of the Union was speaking about investigating COVID fraud. The COVID fraud that must be investigated is the NIH and Fauci and the CDC and Walensky and the entire mouthpieces that pushed propaganda for the sake of it. As they mainly admitted within the function of my letter and asking about it once they stated we didn’t need to danger it as a result of we thought the effectiveness of the vaccine could be misinterpreted. That’s improper. That’s propaganda.”

Roy says the CDC has not responded to his letter or supplied any data associated to his questions that he submitted together with a deadline of April 1. 

The CDC didn’t reply to a number of requests for remark from Fox Information.

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Southwest

Jocelyn Nungaray murder: Texas county dubbed 'sanctuary for criminals' as Dem DA tries to shift blame

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The Texas district attorney charged with prosecuting two illegal immigrants for the murder of a 12-year-old Houston girl blamed a “broken system” that allowed the pair to allegedly commit the killing. 

Johan Jose Martinez-Rangel, 21, and Franklin Jose Peña Ramos, 26, are charged with capital murder in the death of Jocelyn Nungaray, both of whom crossed illegally into the United States earlier this year.

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“They should have never been released when they crossed over into El Paso, but we have a broken system, and Jocelyn’s death resulted. And it’s just hard when you know something could have been prevented like a child’s death,” Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg told KPRC on Thursday.

ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT SUSPECT ACCUSED OF KILLING JOCELYN NUNGARAY WORE ICE ANKLE MONITOR 

Jocelyn Nungaray, 12, was found strangled to death in a Houston creek this week. (Fox Houston courtesy of the Nungaray family)

Both suspects, who are Venezuelan nationals, allegedly lured Nungaray under a bridge and sexually assaulted her for two hours before she was strangled to death and left in a creek. Nungaray’s murder has amplified concerns over the vetting of migrants and the Biden administration’s border policies.

Ogg said the immigration system has been broken for decades, something many Texans have been aware of for quite some time. 

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“We’ve seen it for a long time here. What’s different is we’re seeing people from other countries, it’s not just immigrants from Mexico,” she said. 

“We’re seeing immigrants from China, from the islands, from South America, like these individuals — that’s new. And I think it’s increasing the risk factor for regular people here,” added Ogg. “So I’m hoping our government will work together in a bipartisan fashion to keep the public safe by making our borders safer.”

Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg

Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg said the immigration system is broken as her office works to prosecute two illegal immigrants charged with killing a 12-year-old Houston girl. (Photo by Brett Comer/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)

Peña Ramos was arrested by Border Patrol agents after entering the country illegally and released from custody, with ICE telling Fox News in a statement Friday that he had “illegally entered the U.S. without inspection, parole or admission by a U.S. immigration officer on an unknown date and at an unknown location.”

Nungaray’s murder has prompted calls for stronger border enforcement and accountability. 

“Our immigration system is broken, and if ever there was a case that reflected that, it’s this one,” Ogg said.

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Fox News Digital reached out to Ogg’s office. 

JOCELYN NUNGARAY MURDER: ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT SUSPECT ACCUSED OF KILLING HOUSTON GIRL HAS BAIL SET AT $10M

Ogg, a Democrat, was unseated in her bid for a third term in March by former Harris County prosecutor Sean Teare, who won the Democratic primary for the DA’s office by a landslide. Teare will face off against Dan Simmons, the lone Republican candidate in the race, in November.

Meanwhile, crime in the county has become a concern for elected local and state officials. 

“Harris County has become a sanctuary for criminals, and the blame is not just on the Biden administration, but it’s on the DA’s office,” Texas state Rep. Briscoe Cain, a Republican who lives in Harris County, told Fox News Digital. 

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“Harris County has become a sanctuary for criminals, and the blame is not just on the Biden administration, but it’s on the DA’s office.” 

— Texas state Rep. Briscoe Cain

Cain also cited local criminal court judges “who have let the world know that Harris County is a safe place for criminals, illegal or legal or otherwise.” 

Prosecutors make recommendations, but judges are ultimately responsible for who gets released on bond, and the sentences imposed, he noted. 

Jocelyn Nungaray murder suspects

Franklin Jose Peña Ramos, left, and Johan Jose Martinez-Rangel have been charged in the killing of Jocelyn Nungaray in Houston, Texas, on Monday, June 17. (Harris County Jail)

 

Peña Ramos and Martinez-Rangel are each being held on $10 million bond. Nungaray was laid to rest Thursday. 

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Back-to-back scares rattle Los Angeles Metro buses in a span of hours

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Back-to-back scares rattle Los Angeles Metro buses in a span of hours

In a span of just six and half hours, two Los Angeles Metro buses were the focus of dangerous and scary situations Monday.  

The first incident happened at around 3:15 a.m. when a Metro bus full of passengers near West Olympic and Flower Street downtown was overrun by people gathered for a street takeover involving an estimated 50 vehicles.  

According to the bus operator, the mob of individuals shot fireworks at the bus and left it covered in graffiti.  

There were also reports that the same group “tagged” a nearby building and attempted to break into a Starbucks on 9th and Flower before eventually being dispersed by officers with the Los Angeles Police department.  

It is unclear if any arrests were made. There were also no reports of injuries.

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A Metro bus was tagged and shot at with fireworks in Downtown Los Angeles on July 1, 2024. (OnScene.TV)

Earl Ofari Hutchinson, president of the Los Angeles Urban Policy Roundtable said that law enforcement needs to step up where the continued problem of street takeovers are concerned.

“You’re tasked with protecting citizens, it’s your job,” he told KTLA’s Carlos Saucedo. “You got to crack down, got to stop it. We’ve called repeatedly for the creation of a permanent joint taskforce – LAPD, LASD and state officials – to come in. In other words, to monitor, ID, impound and arrest. 

Not long after that incident, at 9:45 a.m., deputies with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department surrounded a Metro bus at Los Feliz and San Fernando roads in Glendale on reports of an armed passenger.  

Authorities said that all the passengers on the bus had exited when the bus operator, who was wrapping up his shift, noticed a passenger slumped over, reportedly sleeping, in his seat with a gun.  

Law enforcement responds to a report of an armed suspect on a bus in Glendale
Law enforcement responds to a report of an armed suspect on a bus in Glendale on July 1, 2024. (KTLA)

Responding SWAT teams were able to watch the man by viewing Metro’s real-time surveillance cameras inside the bus while they used a bullhorn to get the suspect to wake up. 

The suspect was eventually taken into custody at 11:45 a.m. without incident and a firearm was recovered at the scene.

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“He woke up,” Deputy Lucas Darland said. “It was not a violent situation or confrontation at all.”  

The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority has been plagued by recent violence, including several incidents of people killed on buses or trains.  

In May, Metro bus operators staged a “sick out” impacting several bus lines to draw attention to what they were calling a safety crisis.  

Late in June, L.A. Metro board members voted to move forward with a five-year transition to establish a “Transit Community Public Safety Department.”  

Currently, Metro, who used to have its own version of a transit police force between 1978 and 1997, contracts with LAPD, LASD and Long Beach PD for security, though officials at the transportation authority have been critical of the law enforcement personnel hired to provide safety resources to riders.  

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Southwest

Texas leaders draft 'Jocelyn's Law' after 12-year-old's murder, would deny bail for capital murder suspects

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Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said he told the mother of a 12-year-old Houston girl who was allegedly killed by two illegal immigrants that he wants state lawmakers to pass a bill named after the victim that would deny bail to certain murder suspects. 

Patrick, a Republican, said he spoke with Alexis Nungaray, mother of Jocelyn Nungaray, after the girl was laid to rest Thursday. The alleged killers — Johan Jose Martinez Rangel, 22, and Franklin Jose Peña Ramos, 26 — are each being held on $10 million bonds. 

“Jocelyn’s family was shocked any bail was given in this case,” Patrick wrote on X. “I told Jocelyn’s mom that the Texas Senate will pass bail reform once again and will not accept the House killing this legislation. It will be named after her daughter as ‘Jocelyn’s Law,’ so her daughter’s name will never be forgotten and will ensure capital murderers are not eligible for bail ever again.”

ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT SUSPECT ACCUSED OF KILLING JOCELYN NUNGARAY WORE ICE ANKLE MONITOR 

Franklin Jose Peña Ramos, left, and Johan Jose Martinez Rangel have been charged in the killing of Jocelyn Nungaray in Houston, Texas, on Monday, June 17. (Harris County Jail)

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“Jocelyn’s Law” would allow Texans to vote for a constitutional amendment to automatically deny bail for those charged with capital murder.

“Jocelyn’s murder is re-igniting this move to pass this constitutional amendment and we certainly hope it passes,” Rania Mankarious, the CEO of Crime Stoppers of Houston, told Fox News Digital.

The state Legislature is expected to convene on Jan. 14, 2025. 

“On the first day we are able to file bills for the next legislative session, I will file Jocelyn’s Law,” state Sen. Joan Huffman, also a Republican, wrote online. 

Patrick accused state Democrats and Texas state House Speaker Dade Phelan, a fellow Republican, of killing past bipartisan-supported bail reform bills proposed by Huffman. He cited S.J.R. No. 44, a resolution proposed by Huffman that would have made Martinez Rangel and Peña Ramos ineligible for bail. 

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HOUSTON’S ‘MATTRESS MACK’ TO PAY FOR FUNERAL FOR JOCELYN NUNGARAY

Nungaray was buried last week, days after she was found strangled to death in a Houston creek. Martinez Rangel and Peña Ramos, both Venezuelan nationals, lured her under a bridge on June 16 and sexually assaulted her before she was killed, Harris County prosecutors said. 

Both men entered the United States illegally through El Paso, Texas weeks earlier. A Harris County judge ordered the pair held on separate $10 million bonds. 

“We don’t know the background of these individuals. Normally, in a criminal proceeding… you have some type of background data for the judge to do a proper risk assessment to determine what level of bail or what to do with this individual,” Mankarious said. 

While the state Senate looks at the bail issue through the lens of public safety, state House lawmakers also care about public safety but also seem to view it through a “hyper-sensitive approach” in an effort to avoid placing an undue burden on a criminal defendant, said Mankarious.

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“The notion is that judges would abuse this added tool of denying bail, and we just don’t feel that way,” she said. “There are many, many, many egregious cases, we are seeing it, not just in Harris County but across every major city in this country, where the criminal element is sort of unlike anything we’ve ever seen in years past and we’ve got to address it.”

JOCELYN NUNGARAY MURDER SUSPECT HAS BAIL SET AT $10 MILLION 

images of Jocelyn Nungaray

Jocelyn Nungaray, 12, was found strangled to death in a Houston creek this week. (Fox Houston courtesy of the Nungaray family)

“Jocelyn’s Law” would also enhance “Lauren’s Law,” named after 13-year-old Lauren Landavazo of Wichita Falls, to make the killing of a child under 15 a death penalty-eligible offense, Patrick said.

Landavazo was shot and killed in 2016 as she was walking home from school. The killer, Kody Lott, is serving a life sentence and is eligible for parole after serving 30 years.

Currently, only the murder of a child under 10 is a death penalty-eligible offense. 

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Crime victims’ advocates in Texas have been trying to get tougher bail legislation on the books for years, especially in certain cases involving egregious crimes. In years past, many criminal offenders in Harris County were released on low bond or no bond at all, with some going on to reoffend, sometimes violently, Mankarious said.

 

“The courts at the time were really leaning in to this notion that everybody deserves bail and it can’t be punitive,” she said. “The last few years have been difficult for all of us working in this system.”

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