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Brooks Photography students pay there respects to Paul Liebhardt

Kraig Pakulski 0 26 Article rating: No rating
Friends Celebrate the Life of Brooks Institute and Semester at Sea Photographer Instructor Paul Liebhardt

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT)  A beloved Brooks Institute and Semester at Sea photography instructor is being remembered.

Paul Liebhardt worked at NASA before taking a photo of Mohammed Ali that ended up in Sports Illustrated.

His students, and friends celebrated his life at the Unitarian Society of Santa Barbara.

Jonathan Kingston, Robb Winner, Thank Sklark, John Tymitz, Randy Lewis and Dan Patitucci shared their reflections.

After a service full of Liebhardt photos projected on the wall, those in attendance had a chance to choose copies of his books and photos to take home.

Liebhardt liked to say " As long as you are traveling toward the unknown, you're on the right track."

"Paul was such an amazing photographer because he connected with people and he did it so well and he was able to connect with people around the world and a lot of people got into photography because they thought they could hide behind the camera and you can't hide behind the camera there is another person on that side and if you want a great picture you need to foster a relationship with them," said photographer Thann Clark," and I think that is something we need to think about our place in the world and how we relate to other people in the world and I think that is Paul's legacy."

Semester at Sea Vice President for Advancement at the Institute for Shipboard Education Heather Wisniewski was touched by the turnout.

"It has been great to see so many semester at sea folks here just celebrating who Paul is and what semester at sea did for him and so  may here just traveling and experience the world especially experiencing the world through the lens of a camera," said Wisniewski.

Friends continued the celebration of life by sharing stories of Liebhardt's classes at Brooks and his travels on Semester at Sea at Shalhoobs in the Funk Zone

Liebhardt died from complications of a stroke last year.

He was 86 years old.

For more information visit https://semesteratsea.org

The post Brooks Photography students pay there respects to Paul Liebhardt appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Semester at Sea and Brooks Institute Students Remember Photographer Paul Liebhardt

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Paul Liebhardt remembered by Semester at Sea and Brooks Institute students at Celebration of Life

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT)  A beloved Brooks Institute and Semester at Sea photography instructor is being remembered for inspiring students and friends to travel.

Paul Liebhardt worked at NASA before taking a photo of Mohammed Ali with a borrowed camera that ended up in Sports Illustrated.

His students, and friends celebrated his life at the Unitarian Society of Santa Barbara.

Jonathan Kingston, Rob Winner, Thann Clark, John Tymitz, Randy Lewis and Dan Patitucci shared their reflections.

They talked about his many trips to Guatemala. Dozens of his slides taken during those trips ended up in Encyclopedia Britannica.

After a service that included some of Liebhardt's best photographs projected on the wall, those in attendance had a chance to choose copies of his books, photos, and humorous holiday postcards to take home.

Liebhardt liked to say " As long as you are traveling toward the unknown, you're on the right track."

"Paul was such an amazing photographer because he connected with people and he did it so well and he was able to connect with people around the world and a lot of people got into photography because they thought they could hide behind the camera and you can't hide behind the camera there is another person on that side and if you want a great picture you need to foster a relationship with them," said photographer Thann Clark," and I think that is something we need to think about our place in the world and how we relate to other people in the world and I think that is Paul's legacy."

Liebhardt spent a decade on Semester at Sea voyages.

He proved taking photos from behind could lead to great images including one of South African bishop and theologian Desmond Tutu holding his wife's purse while on a walk.

He also took photos of hilarious and ironic signs in India and other countries.

Semester at Sea Vice President for Advancement at the Institute for Shipboard Education Heather Wisniewski was touched by the turnout.

"It has been great to see so many semester at sea folks here just celebrating who Paul is and what semester at sea did for him and so  may here just traveling and experience the world especially experiencing the world through the lens of a camera," said Wisniewski.

Friends continued the celebration of life by sharing stories of Liebhardt's classes at Brooks and his travels on Semester at Sea at Shalhoobs in the Funk Zone.

Friends recalled he once showed up to a event where he was honored soaking wet.

He had said he couldn't make it due to being in Hawaii. He said he swam to the ship.

Friends recall his mother being proud of his accomplishments, while his father preferfed his work at NASA.

One day on th

Videos appear to show federal officer took gun away from Alex Pretti just before fatal shooting, CNN analysis finds

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CNN

By Thomas Bordeaux, Yahya Abou-Ghazala, Casey Tolan, CNN

(CNN) — A CNN video analysis appears to show a federal immigration officer removing a gun from Alex Pretti just prior to officers fatally shooting him.

Bystander video shows one agent reaching into the scrum of other officers seeking to restrain Pretti and retrieving a weapon that appears to match the firearm the Department of Homeland Security says Pretti possessed.

Officers can be heard shouting “he’s got a gun” when the unidentified agent reaches into Pretti’s waistband as the pile of officers try to subdue him. Just over one second after the officer emerges holding the weapon, a shot rings out, followed by at least 9 more, according to videos.

The videos show that the officer who retrieved the weapon had nothing in his hand prior to approaching Pretti. It is unclear from the videos reviewed by CNN whether the officer who took the weapon from Pretti immediately told the others that he was taking it away.

But about a minute after the shooting, as Pretti’s body laid motionless on the street, another officer can be heard in one video asking, “where’s the gun?” The officer who retrieved the weapon walks over and responds, “I got the gun.”

It is unclear which agent first fired at Pretti.

In a statement, DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin claimed that an officer fired on Pretti while fearing for his life.

“The officers attempted to disarm the suspect but the armed suspect violently resisted,” McLaughlin said. “Fearing for his life and the lives and safety of fellow officers, an agent fired defensive shots.” She added that medics delivered aid to Pretti but he was pronounced dead on the scene.

At no point in any of the videos reviewed by CNN can Pretti be seen wielding a weapon; he is seen carrying a cellphone in one hand earlier in the encounter.

Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara said at a press conference that Pretti was believed to be a lawful gun owner with a permit to carry.

“From what I see right now, this does not look like a justified shooting,” said Charles Ramsey, the former Philadelphia and Washington, DC, police commissioner, who reviewed the videos as a CNN law enforcement analyst. “The guy is prone on the sidewalk… and they’re still firing rounds into him.”

Prior to the shooting, videos reviewed by CNN show that tensions escalated quickly in a south Minneapolis neighborhood where a group of federal agents were conducting an operation. About two minutes before shots were fired, several agents are seen detaining a person on a street as bystanders blow whistles, honk car horns and record video, according to one video filmed from a nearby car.

Pretti – a 37-year-old who worked as an ICU nurse at a Minneapolis VA hospital, according to his family – is first seen standing in the street, holding his cell phone in one hand and recording officers while directing traffic with his other hand. As a federal agent interacts with other bystanders, Pretti yells at the officer, “do not push them into the traffic!”

The officer then walks toward Pretti and several other bystanders, and pushes a woman to the ground. Pretti moves between the agent and the woman. The agent sprays Pretti with a chemical irritant and drags him to his knees as Pretti pulls at the backpack of the other bystander, potentially reaching for a water bottle.

At least six other agents quickly gather, with officers standing over Pretti and pushing him to the ground as he appears to resist them, leading to a scrum on the street.

One agent appears t

Senate Democrats threaten partial government shutdown over DHS funding after Minnesota shooting

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By Veronica Stracqualursi, CNN

(CNN) — Democrats will block a government spending bill following the fatal shooting of a Minneapolis man by a Border Patrol agent, the Senate minority leader said Saturday – dramatically increasing the chances of a partial government shutdown next week.

“Democrats sought common sense reforms in the Department of Homeland Security spending bill, but because of Republicans’ refusal to stand up to President Trump, the DHS bill is woefully inadequate to rein in the abuses of ICE. I will vote no,” Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York posted on X.

“Senate Democrats will not provide the votes to proceed to the appropriations bill if the DHS funding bill is included,” he added.

The Senate faces a Friday midnight deadline to pass the spending measure, which includes funding for the Department of Homeland Security and avoids a partial government shutdown. The funding package will need 60 votes to advance.

With a 53 seat-majority, Senate Republicans will need at least eight Democrats to vote to advance the measure as GOP Sen. Rand Paul is likely to vote against the bill.

Senate Democrats plan to hold a caucus call Sunday night, according to a Senate Democratic source.

The odds of a partial government shutdown were already rising before Schumer’s post as several Democrats came out against funding for DHS in the wake of Saturday’s shooting. The shooting by a Border Patrol officer was the third carried out by federal agents in Minnesota this month amid anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement protests. (Border Patrol and ICE are agencies with the Department of Homeland Security.)

Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada, who opposed the government shutdown last year, said on X that she would not support the current DHS funding bill. “The Trump administration and Kristi Noem are putting undertrained, combative federal agents on the streets with no accountability,” she said, also proposing that lawmakers debate DHS funding separately from the larger spending bill.

Sen. Jacky Rosen – Nevada’s junior Democratic senator who also voted to reopen the government last year – said she would vote against the funding bill “until we have guardrails in place to curtail these abuses of power and ensure more accountability and transparency.”

Earlier this week, Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia, another Democrat who voted to end the longest government shutdown, had indicated his opposition to the bill. He argued the spending measure shouldn’t pass “without significant amendment” and called for “effective safeguards against ICE operations.”

Sen. Brian Schatz of Hawaii, widely expected to become the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate, and Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia also said Saturday they would not vote to fund DHS.

The House passed DHS funding separately on Thursday but combined it with the larger funding bill for other agencies.

Should the spending bill fail to advance, other agencies that would shut down include the departments of Defense, Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, Transportation, and Housing and Urban Development.

House funding measure allocates $20 million for body cameras

The House measure passed this week allocates $20 million for the “procurement, deployment, and operations” of body cameras for federal agents enforcing immigration

¿Quién era Alex Pretti, el hombre que murió baleado por un agente de la Patrulla Fronteriza en Minneapolis?

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Por Jeff Winter y Rob Kuznia, CNN

Alex Pretti, el hombre de 37 años que murió baleado por agentes federales de inmigración este sábado, trabajaba como enfermero atendiendo a veteranos enfermos, de acuerdo con familiares, amigos y colegas, quienes dijeron que esto reflejaba su profundo deseo de ayudar a los demás.

Pretti trabajó como enfermero en la Unidad de Cuidados Intensivos (UCI) en el Centro Médico de Veteranos (VA) de Minneapolis durante unos cinco años, según un compañero de trabajo que pidió permanecer en el anonimato.

“Alex era un alma bondadosa que se preocupaba profundamente por su familia y amigos y también por los veteranos estadounidenses a quienes atendía como enfermero de UCI en el hospital de veteranos de Minneapolis. Alex quería marcar la diferencia en este mundo”, dijeron sus padres, Michael y Susan Pretti, en un comunicado. “Lamentablemente, no estará con nosotros para ver el impacto que tuvo”.

El Dr. Dimitri Drekonja, jefe de la Sección de Enfermedades Infecciosas en el VA de Minneapolis, escribió en Bluesky que era “una buena persona, amable, que vivía para ayudar”. Drekonja dijo que Pretti apoyaba a los veteranos gravemente enfermos en el hospital. Su compañero de trabajo dijo que Pretti investigaba cómo evitar que los veteranos murieran de cáncer de colon.

Pretti recibió un disparo mortal mientras agentes de inmigración lo sujetaban en el suelo en Minneapolis; el Departamento de Seguridad Nacional (DHS, por sus siglas en inglés) dijo que los funcionarios le quitaron una pistola a Pretti en la escena y dispararon en defensa propia. Un análisis de CNN de un video muestra que un agente federal retiró el arma justo antes del disparo. “Los funcionarios intentaron desarmar al sospechoso, pero el sospechoso armado resistió violentamente”, dijo la agencia en un comunicado.

La policía de Minneapolis ha dicho que Pretti era un propietario legal de armas con permiso, y los registros judiciales muestran que no tenía cargos en el estado, solo infracciones de tránsito y estacionamiento.

Sus padres, en su declaración, refutaron las afirmaciones del DHS de que representaba una amenaza para los agentes cuando fue baleado. Dijeron que buscaba proteger a una mujer que estaba cerca de los agentes en ese momento.

“Las mentiras enfermizas que el Gobierno ha dicho sobre nuestro hijo son reprobables y asquerosas”, dijeron los padres, agregando que “era un buen hombre”.

Pretti comenzó a participar en protestas contra la aplicación de leyes migratorias en Minneapolis después de que un agente de ICE matara a tiros a Renee Good a principios de este mes, dijeron familiares a Associated Press.

“Se preocupaba profundamente por la gente y estaba muy molesto por lo que estaba sucediendo en Minneapolis y en todo Estados Unidos con ICE, al igual que millones de personas”, dijo Michael Pretti, padre de Alex.

Pretti se graduó del bachillerato en Green Bay, Wisconsin, en 2006, según Spectrum News, afiliada de CNN. Pretti se costeó sus estudios de enfermería trabajando en el hospital de veteranos y se unió a su personal después de graduarse, de acuerdo con un compañero de trabajo.

Su vecina, Jeannie Wiener, dijo que se sorprendió al enterarse de que Pretti murió baleado este sábado. Comentó que a m

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