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Former Uvalde school cop Adrian Gonzales goes on trial

Kraig Pakulski 0 37 Article rating: No rating
Adrian Gonzales appears in court for his trial in Corpus Christi

By Shimon Prokupecz, Matthew J. Friedman and Rachel Clarke, CNN

Corpus Christi, Texas (CNN) — The trial of former school police officer Adrian Gonzales began Tuesday with emotional opening statements from the prosecution and defense about the Robb Elementary School massacre in Uvalde, Texas.

Gonzales is accused of failing to protect children before the shooter got into the school and massacred 19 children and two teachers. His lawyers say the only person responsible for the worst school shooting since Sandy Hook is the gunman himself, who was killed by Border Patrol officers.

Special prosecutor Bill Turner said May 24, 2022, started as a “day of celebration” for the fourth-graders receiving their end-of-year certificates of achievement, before the gunman walked onto their campus.

He described how – after shots were fired outside and Gonzales became the first officer to arrive – a coach, Melodye Flores, told Gonzales where to go, and repeated that the danger was evident.

“His shots are ringing out,” Turner said of the gunman. “This is not confusion.”

“He knows where (the shooter) is, but Adrian Gonzales remains at the south side of the school. The gunman makes his way up the west side of the west building where the fourth-graders are.”

While still outside, the gunman “fired shots into a classroom full of children, (room) 102. Adrian Gonzales remains. He moves down to classroom 104, fires shots into the classroom of 104. Adrian Gonzales remains,” Turner said, at times choking up.

“(The gunman) then hurries to the west door and enters. It’s been a minute, and there’s a break in the shooting, and Adrian Gonzales remains.”

Gonzales reported on his police radio he thought the shooter had made it into the building, the prosecutor said. “This isn’t confusion. Adrian Gonzales remains,” he said.

Gonzales, now 52, has pleaded not guilty to 29 counts of child endangerment or abandonment.

Defense lawyer Jason Goss acknowledged the emotions of the prosecutor. “I could understand why he had emotion. I can’t talk to you without it either,” he told the jury.

“This is one of the worst things, one of the worst things that ever happened in this country,” he went on. “It’s awful, but Adrian Gonzales did the best he could with what he knew at the time.”

He said Gonzales was responding to reports of a vehicle accident involving a man with a gun, not a school shooting.

Goss questioned the portrayal of events by the prosecution and said there was much confusion at the scene.

“This is not a man that does nothing,” he said of his client. “This is not a man that is sitting and doing nothing. It’s a man who is confused. It’s a man who has made assumptions that are understandable, that turned out to be wrong. But he was trying. He was going towards that danger.”

He urged the jury not to be swayed by their emotions about what happened.

“What the prosecution wants you to do is see those horrible things, get so mad at Adrian that you say, ‘convict him’ because of this horrible thing that’s happened,” he said, adding that the person responsible was the gunman alone.

“The monster who did this to these kids, the monster who hurt these children, is dead. He is dead. He doesn’t get this justice.”

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US Space Force Seeks Industry Input to Develop Heavy, Super-Heavy Launch Complex at Vandenberg

Kraig Pakulski 0 31 Article rating: No rating
The U.S. Space Force (USSF) has released a Request for Information (RFI) seeking industry input on the potential development of a space launch complex for heavy and super-heavy launch vehicle […]

The post US Space Force Seeks Industry Input to Develop Heavy, Super-Heavy Launch Complex at Vandenberg appeared first on edhat.

Un “malentendido” que hizo saltar las alarmas: qué se sabe de los incidentes de anoche en Caracas

Kraig Pakulski 0 32 Article rating: No rating

Por CNN en Español

En una Venezuela todavía bajo extrema tensión tras el sorpresivo ataque militar de Estados Unidos del fin de semana en Caracas, la zozobra volvió a instalarse en la capital la noche del lunes, con disparos oídos cerca de la sede del Gobierno, mientras fuerzas de seguridad continúan patrullando la ciudad.

Los tiros fueron registrados cerca de la Avenida Urdaneta, cerca del Palacio de Miraflores, según reportó un residente a CNN bajo condición de anonimato. En otros videos verificados por CNN se escuchan los disparos y se ve fuego antiaéreo sobre Caracas, lo que desató múltiples especulaciones a menos de tres días de la captura del presidente Nicolás Maduro.

Posteriormente, el Ministerio de Comunicación e Información de Venezuela explicó que la Policía disparó contra drones que “volaban sin permiso” en la zona. “No se produjo ningún enfrentamiento, y todo el país está completamente en calma”, aseguraron las autoridades, que no dieron detalles sobre quién habría estado utilizando los dispositivos aéreos.

En paralelo, un funcionario de la Casa Blanca dijo a CNN que el Gobierno de Donald Trump estaba siguiendo de cerca los reportes, pero señaló que “Estados Unidos no está involucrado”.

Conversaciones entre grupos paramilitares vinculados a Maduro, escuchadas por CNN, indican que los disparos se debieron a una confusión entre diferentes grupos de seguridad que operan cerca del palacio presidencial. En los diálogos se puede escuchar a un miembro de estos grupos pidiendo refuerzos. Luego, otro miembro expresó que hubo un “malentendido” y confusión después de los disparos. Agregó que la situación ahora estaba tranquila.

Se trata de equipos de seguridad que quedaron diezmados tras el ataque militar del sábado: aunque Venezuela no ha dado cifras totales, reconoció la muerte de 32 “combatientes cubanos” que cumplían “tareas de protección y defensa institucional”.

Más tarde, la voz de quien parecer ser el primer orador dijo que un dron había estado volando la zona y fue atacado por la Policía y que la situación estaba bajo control, en línea con lo informado por el Ministerio.

Sin embargo, las aclaraciones no desactivaron las tensiones en Caracas.

Grupos de derechos humanos reportan la instalación de puntos de control y presiones contra la prensa, mientras las fuerzas de seguridad patrullan intensamente las calles.

El ministro del Interior, Diosdado Cabello, publicó casi a medianoche dos videos en las que se lo ve en diferentes puntos de la ciudad, acompañado de fuerzas de seguridad. “Total normalidad en la noche caraqueña”, dice la publicación. En las dos grabaciones, el grupo de hombres armados grita: “Leales siempre, traidores nunca. Dudar es traición”.

El episodio ocurrió horas después de que la chavista Delcy Rodríguez jurara como presidenta encargada del país, por orden del Tribunal Supremo de Justicia. Ella aseguró durante la ceremonia que en estas “horas terribles de amenazas contra la estabilidad” no va a descansar “ni un minuto para garantizar la paz”.

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The post Un “malentendido” que hizo saltar las alarmas: qué se sabe de los incidentes de anoche en Caracas appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

What it’s like inside the infamous jail where Venezuela’s former president Nicolás Maduro is being held

Kraig Pakulski 0 53 Article rating: No rating
NYPD stand guard on a blocked road outside the Metropolitan Detention Center (MDC) in Brooklyn on January 5.

By Alisha Ebrahimji, CNN

(CNN) — A federal jail with a documented history of power outages, staffing shortages and detainee complaints just got two more high-profile detainees.

Former president of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, were moved into the notorious Metropolitan Detention Center (MDC) in Brooklyn on Saturday following their US military capture in Caracas just days ago. The husband and wife face criminal charges in the US.

The couple isn’t the only high-profile detainees to see the walls of the MDC. The building has housed several notable figures like hip-hop mogul, Sean “Diddy” Combs, singer R. Kelly, “Pharma Bro” Martin Shkreli, socialite and Jeffrey Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell, one-time cryptocurrency whiz kid Sam Bankman-Fried, drug kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, rappers Fetty Wap and Tekashi 6ix9ine – even former Honduras president, Juan Orlando Hernandez, who was convicted of drug trafficking charges before he was pardoned last year by President Donald Trump.

Suspected cartel leader Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada Garcia and Luigi Mangione, who pleaded not guilty to the shooting death of a UnitedHealth Group executive, are current inmates at the facility.

In their first court appearance in New York Monday, Maduro and Flores pleaded not guilty to drug and weapons charges and chose, for the time being, not to fight their detention.

Here’s a look at what life inside MDC Brooklyn looks like through the eyes of inmates, attorneys and judges:

From Miraflores Palace to a ‘miserable’ place

Constructed in the 1990s to address overcrowding in New York City prisons, MDC Brooklyn is a pre-trial detention facility for those charged in New York federal court. Detainees include a mix of suspects and defendants, including people accused of serious crimes, high-profile cases, and others awaiting sentencing or transfer.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons operated two centers – one in Brooklyn and one in Manhattan – until 2021, when the doors to t

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