Inmates allege Texas plans to use unsafe execution drugs

HOUSTON (AP) — Texas plans to use expired and unsafe drugs to carry out executions early this year in violation of state law, three death row inmates allege in a lawsuit.

Prison officials deny the claim and say the state’s supply of execution drugs is safe.

The first execution, of Robert Fratta, is set for Jan. 10. The state’s highest criminal court of appeals put the lawsuit from Fratta, Wesley Ruiz and John Balentine on hold Friday while it considers an appeal by the Texas Attorney General’s Office. The state wants the case to be decided by a criminal court, not a civil one.

Shawn Nolan, an attorney for Balentine and Ruiz, who are both set for execution in February, criticized Texas’ secrecy in matters related to its execution procedures.

State lawmakers banned the disclosure of drug suppliers for executions starting in 2015. The Texas Supreme Court upheld the law in 2019.

“Texas continues to just really rely on secrecy in these executions and that’s why they’re trying to do an end run around this lawsuit because they don’t want to tell anybody that these drugs are expired,” Nolan said.

Attorneys for the inmates have asked for an evidentiary hearing to determine if prisoners are at “serious risk of pain and suffering in the execution process,” Nolan said.

There has been a history of problems with lethal injections since Texas became the first state to use this execution method in 1982. Some problems have included difficulty finding usable veins, needles becoming disengaged or issues with the drugs.

Like other states in recent years, Texas has turned to compounding pharmacies to obtain pentobarbital, which it uses for executions, after traditional drugmakers refused to sell their products to prison agencies in the U.S.

“All lethal injection drugs are within their use dates and have been appropriately tested,” Amanda Hernandez, a spokeswoman for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, or TDCJ, said in an email Tuesday.

But in a 15-page declaration submitted in support of the death row inmates’ lawsuit, Michaela Almgren, a pharmacology professor at the University of South Carolina, said she concluded after reviewing state records that “all the pentobarbital in TDCJ’s possession is expired, as it is far beyond” the specified beyond use date.

“A drug that has surpassed its (beyond use date) is at risk of stability and sterility failings and may not retain sufficient potency, thus it must not be used,” Almgren wrote.

She found that some vials of pentobarbital were more than 630 days old while others were more than 1,300 days old, well over their beyond use date limit of 24 hours when stored at room temperature. If such compounded drugs are frozen, their beyond use date limit is 45 days.

Department records obtained by attorneys for the inmates showed that prison officials did potency testing of their supply of pentobarbital that extended its beyond use date to September and November.

But Almgren called the state’s testing “completely unscientific and incorrect, and therefore the results are invalid.”

Nolan said that using expired drugs would violate several state laws, including the Texas Pharmacy Act and the Texas Controlled Substances Act.

Fratta joined the lawsuit after it was filed. Lawyers for all three inmates say they not trying to stop the state from “carrying out lawful executions.”

“If the state wants to go forward with these executions, they can do that. They just need to get non-expired drugs,” Nolan said.

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Follow Juan A. Lozano on Twitter: twitter.com/juanlozano70


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[World] US Embassy in Cuba resumes visa and consular services

BBC News world-us_and_canada 

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

The Cuban economy has been in dire straits in recent years

The US Embassy in Cuba has resumed visa services five years after they were paused due to a spate of mysterious health incidents among its staff.

At least 20,000 visas a year will likely be issued, primarily to Cubans trying to reach family members in the US.

The reopening comes amid a record exodus from the island, as Cuba suffers one of its worst economic crises.

Consular services were reduced to a minimum under the Trump Administration.

The services were closed in 2017 following reports of unexplained health incidents among embassy employees, which eventually became known as the “Havana Syndrome”.

The syndrome was initially noted among US intelligence officers and diplomats in the Havana embassy – before being reported in other parts of the world – who first began complaining of an array of unusual symptoms about seven years ago.

Many theories behind the illnesses have been now debunked but the full causes remain unclear.

The news of resumption of visa services, announced last week by the embassy, will come as relief for thousands of Cubans who are desperate to see their families in Florida and elsewhere in the US.

The step comes as Cuban migration to the United States is reaching levels not seen in decades. Under a bilateral agreement, the US will issue at least 20,000 visas a year to Cubans.

However, that is a tiny proportion of those who are leaving or trying to leave. Border authorities in the US recorded around 225,000 Cubans entering the country illegally last year.

After 2016, the Trump Administration implemented a whole raft of new economic sanctions on the communist-run island, following the easing of the same rules by President Barack Obama.

Combined with the economic downturn from the coronavirus pandemic and economic mismanagement by the state, the economy in Cuba has been in dire straits in recent years.

The US government recently announced plans to ease tough sanctions imposed on Cuba by former President Trump.

Under new measures approved by the Biden administration, restrictions on family remittances and travel to the island will be eased.

 

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Rep.-elect George Santos admitted to using stolen checks in Brazil in 2008, documents show



CNN
 — 

Republican Rep.-elect George Santos admitted to stealing a man’s checkbook that was in his mother’s possession to purchase clothing and shoes in 2008, according to documents obtained by CNN.

The admission came in a statement Santos gave to police in 2010, according to 150 pages worth of case documents.

Police had suspended an investigation into Santos because they were unable to find him for nearly a decade. But law enforcement officials in Brazil will reinstate fraud charges against the New York Republican, CNN reported Tuesday.

Santos used stolen checks to make purchases at a shop in Niterói, a city outside of Rio de Janeiro on June 17, 2008, according to court documents. When making the purchase, he used an ID card with the checkbook owner’s name and a picture of himself, according to police documents.

Police summoned Santos several times in 2008, 2009 and 2010 to speak to them. Santos’ mother told the police in November 2010 that the checks were stolen from a checkbook she had in her purse belonging to Delio da Camara da Costa Alemao, who died a year prior to her speaking with police, and that her son had used four checks. Santos’ mother was Costa Alemao’s nurse prior to his death.

Speaking with the police for the first time that month, Santos confessed he stole the checkbook from his mom’s purse and that he used “some sheets” to make purchases. Santos confessed to forging the man’s signature on two checks to purchase clothes and shoes costing approximately $1,313.63 on the date of the forgery, and confirmed it was his signature on the forged checks.

He also told police he was an American with dual citizenship, was White and a professor, police documents show.

Santos said his mother, who only learned of the stolen checks around a month after he took them, asked him “with despair” to return the checkbook, but he had already ripped up the remaining checks and threw them in a manhole.

“He [Santos] acknowledged having been responsible for forging the signatures on the checks, also confirming that he had destroyed the remaining checks,” authorities wrote in an inquiry report about Santos. The document containing the confession was signed by Santos on November 18, 2010.

CNN has reached out to an attorney for Santos.

santos voter mckend vpx

Santos voters speak to CNN after his false claims were revealed

Santos signed two checks at the store as if he was the account owner, court documents show. The checks were intended to pay for the purchase in two installments – set for July 25 and August 25, 2008.

The store clerk became suspicious after the signatures on the checks did not match, he told police. Two days after Santos made the purchases, a man named Thiago came into the same store with the shoes Santos had purchased and tried to return them for a different size. He said a friend gave him the shoes and was unaware of any illicit activity.

The clerk had to pay the amount of the fraudulent purchase in installments to the store, he told police, although the store ended up waving some of the payments for the clerk, the store manager told the police in 2010. Soon after the sale, they were able to find the bank account’s owner and talk to him on the phone, the manager said. He said he had closed the account in 2006 after losing the checkbook.

At one point the clerk was able to track down Santos using social media and, he said, Santos promised to pay him back but never did. The clerk turned over pictures of Santos to police that he had found on social media. Screenshots of the conversations between the clerk and Santos are included in the documents obtained by CNN.

Santos told investigators that neither his mother, nor his friend Thiago, were aware of the fraudulent purchases at the time of the crime.

In June 2011, investigators filed a request with the Civil Police to take immediate judicial measures against Santos. In September, a judge summoned him to respond to the complaint through an attorney. Neither Santos nor an attorney ever responded. Three months later, authorities tried to deliver a summons for Santos at the prior home of his mother but he was not able to be located and she no longer lived there.

Again in 2013, neither Santos, nor his mother or grandmother at their former addresses, were able to be located. In October of that year, an edict was published in Rio de Janeiro’s justice gazette summoning him to appear in court after authorities were unable to locate him. Santos was given 10 days to offer his defense but he never appeared. A judge eventually suspended the statute of limitations in order for the case to be reopened later if Santos was found, the documents show.

As recently as October 2020, a document from the judiciary said they still had never been able to locate Santos to prosecute him for the crime.

Brazilian authorities, having now verified Santos’ location, will make a formal request to the US Justice Department to notify Santos of the charges, Maristela Pereira, a spokeswoman for the Rio de Janeiro prosecutor’s office, told CNN. The prosecutor’s office told CNN the request will be filed upon reopening on Friday.

In an interview with the New York Post last week, Santos denied that he had been charged with any crime in Brazil, saying: “I am not a criminal here – not here or in Brazil or any jurisdiction in the world. Absolutely not. That didn’t happen.”

US Representative-elect George Santos (R-NY) speaks at the Republican Jewish Coalition Annual Leadership Meeting in Las Vegas, Nevada, on November 19, 2022. (Photo by Wade Vandervort / AFP) (Photo by WADE VANDERVORT/AFP via Getty Images)

Maggie Haberman says George Santos coverage is a ‘death of local media’ story. Here’s why

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Ex-Tennessee quarterback ‘can’t stand’ Bulldogs’ Stetson Bennett: ‘He’s such a punk’

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

The rivalry between Tennessee and Georgia picked up steam this season as the Volunteers returned to relevance

For the first time since 2007, Tennessee football won double-digit games, earning the No. 1 spot in the College Football Playoff rankings for the first time. 

Georgia quickly ended Tennessee’s spot at the top of the rankings in Week 10, with the Bulldogs beating the Volunteers, 27-13. 

FORMER GEORGIA QUARTERBACK TALKS STETSON BENNETT, BULLDOGS CFP MATCHUP WITH OHIO STATE

Georgia is now one game away from back-to-back national championships as a matchup with No. 3 TCU awaits. 

They are led by sixth-year senior quarterback Stetson Bennett, who was a finalist for the 2022 Heisman Trophy. Bennett, a former walk-on, has proved all the doubters wrong in his career. 

But one former Tennessee quarterback is not a fan. 

“You know who I can’t stand though? Stetson Bennett,” former Tennessee quarterback Erik Ainge said Monday on “The Erik Ainge Show.” “It was cute when he first got to play and played pretty good. And now the whole like ‘I’m a walk-on, I’m a JUCO transfer’… he’s like 28-3 as a starter at Georgia, or something like that.

Ainge was a quarterback in Knoxville from 2004-2007 and was the last Tennessee QB to beat Alabama before the Volunteers defeated the Crimson Tide in 2022. 

“I’m cheering hard,” Ainge said when asked if he’ll be cheering against Bennett on Monday. “I want Georgia not just to lose the game, I don’t want them to lose with Stetson Bennett throwing four touchdowns. I want Stetson Bennett to throw four picks and cost his team a championship.”

“He’s such a punk,” Ainge added.

It’s not the first time Ainge has taken a shot at Georgia, calling the atmosphere at Sanford Stadium “overrated” in November. 

“Playing between the hedges is overrated,” Ainge said in a tweet. “Not that loud and definitely not intimidating. It’s nothing like playing in Neyland. Vols will be just fine in Athens!”

Bennett rallied Georgia from a 14-point fourth-quarter deficit against Ohio State in the College Football semifinals, throwing two touchdowns in the final quarter to advance to Monday’s national championship game. 

 

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Avalanche buries University of Northern Colorado president, kills son amid dangerous backcountry conditions

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An avalanche partially buried the president of the University of Northern Colorado and killed his 22-year-old son while they were backcountry skiing on New Year’s Eve.

UNC President Andy Feinstein told the Greeley Tribune that he and his son, Nick, were in an area known as the Numbers located outside the Breckenridge Ski Resort boundary when they were caught in the slide.

“I literally had to use my fingertips to dig out a pocket for me to see light and to dig out,” Feinstein said. “One minute I was skiing and enjoying the powder, and the next minute I was riding what looked like a violent wave of whitewash.”

While the younger Feinstein remained buried, Andy Feinstein was able to dig himself out of the snow and ski 40 minutes out of the area to get cell phone reception to call 911, the Summit County Rescue Group said.

UTAH NEFFS CANYON AVALANCHE: OFF-DUTY FIREFIGHTER RESCUES BURIED SKIER CALLING FOR HELP

A 23-member rescue team responded along with three members of the Summit County Sheriff’s Office to search for Nick Feinstein.

About two hours after the slide, a team with a search dog discovered the 22-year-old’s body.

Andy Feinstein said he and his son were “fit and experienced skiers,” frequently taking part in outdoor activities like skiing, hiking, camping and fishing.

Nick Feinstein’s sister, Rachel, described Nick to the paper as “the best big brother and role model” who taught her everything she knows about growing up.

WEST BRACING FOR LIFE-THREATENING STORM AS RECORD WARMTH SPREADS ACROSS EAST COAST

He was studying enterprise technology integration at Penn State and was set to graduate in the spring.

Avalanches have killed three people in the U.S. so far this winter, according to the Colorado Avalanche Information Center, which tracks the deaths nationally.

Another fatal avalanche that occurred Saturday buried and killed a snowmobiler in Montana. The third avalanche death happened on Dec. 26 near Nitro when the slide caught four people in the backcountry near Nitro Chute in Colorado, fully burying two and killing one.

The avalanche risk remained “considerable” in Colorado high country this week following recent snowstorms, the agency said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

 

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Funeral home owner who dismembered corpses, sold body parts sentenced to 20 years in prison

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A former Colorado funeral home owner has been sentenced to 20 years in federal prison on charges of fraud and selling body parts without permission. 

“This is the most emotionally draining case I have ever experienced on the bench,” U.S. District Judge Christine M. Arguello said during Tuesday’s sentencing hearing in Grand Junction, Colorado. “It’s concerning to the court that defendant Hess refuses to assume any responsibility for her conduct.”

Megan Hess, 46, pleaded guilty to fraud in July after a 2018 Reuters investigation into the sale of body parts in the United States. Former workers discussed the operation out of the Sunset Mesa Funeral Home, owned by Hess and her mother Shirley Koch, 69, who dismembered bodies and sold the parts while returning ashes to the grieving families. 

Koch told the judge she was sorry and took responsibility for her actions, but the judge handed down a 20-year sentence – the maximum allowed under the law.

IDAHO MURDER SUSPECT COULD BE A ‘MORON’ WHO MADE TEXTBOOK MISTAKES, CRIMINAL PROFILER SAYS

“Hess and Koch used their funeral home at times to essentially steal bodies and body parts using fraudulent and forged donor forms,” prosecutor Tim Neff said in a court filing. “Hess and Koch’s conduct caused immense emotional pain for the families and next of kin.”

Hess would sell the body parts to medical training companies and other firms. She would charge families up to $1,000 for cremations that never occurred while offering free cremations in exchange for a body donation to others. 

QUIET OHIO TOWN ROCKED BY KILLING OF NEWLYWED DOLLAR TREE WORKER BY MACHETE-WIELDING ATTACKER

She would then provide ashes from a mixed bin of different corpses. 

Selling organs is illegal in the U.S. as they must be donated, but selling parts such as heads, arms and spines for use in research or education is not regulated under federal law. 

FLORIDA COUPLE MURDERED IN RETIREMENT COMMUNITY IDENTIFIED, PERSON OF INTEREST IN CUSTODY: POLICE

Prosecutors claim that the scheme hit at least 200 families, who were horrified to learn the truth of what happened to their departed loved ones. 

“Our sweet mother, they dismembered her,” Erin Smith, a victim, said. “We don’t even have a name for a crime this heinous.”

Prosecutors highlighted the “macabre” crime and described it as one of the most significant body parts cases in recent U.S. history. Hess’s lawyer claimed that she had been unfairly vilified as a “witch,” a “monster” and a “ghoul.” 

The judge ordered Hess and Koch be sent to prison immediately. 

Reuters contributed to this report. 

 

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Cowboys’ Micah Parsons fiercely defends Tee Higgins after Bart Scott suggests blame in Damar Hamlin incident

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Dallas Cowboys’ rookie linebacker Micah Parsons came to the defense of Cincinnati Bengals wideout Tee Higgins after former NFL player and current ESPN analyst Bart Scott suggested he was to blame in part for Damar Hamlin collapsing on the field during Monday night’s game. 

Parsons responded to a video of Scott’s comments on Twitter Tuesday, calling Hamlin’s cardiac arrest a “freak incident” and blasted Scott for suggesting Higgins was responsible in any way.

“Yoo are we serious?!!? Why do we let some people speak on TV?!” Parsons said in the tweet.

NHL HALL OF FAMER SENDS MESSAGE IN SUPPORT OF DAMAR HAMLIN WHILE RECALLING SIMILAR INCIDENT 

“This was a freak incident but putting fault on another player is wild! They should make some of these guys go over lines or something or not even give them a seat at the table!”

During Tuesday’s broadcast, Bart explained that Higgins lowered his head before making contact with Hamlin’s chest. 

“Right before the tackle, [Higgins] lowers his helmet, and he kinda throws his body into [Hamlin’s] chest,” Scott began to explain. “He’s standing up because he’s thinking he’s gotta chase Tee Higgins at an angle to make a tackle, so he didn’t expect Tee Higgins to launch his body back into him.”

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“The NFL has tried to take the head out of the game,” Scott added. “We almost don’t think of the violent hits — we always associate that with the defensive players in targeting and lowering their head. But they did put in the rule maybe five years ago, that offensive players can’t use the crown of their head, helmet as a weapon, which is kind of what Tee Higgins did.”

Bart did say he was “not trying to put the blame” on Higgins but noted that the league has made an effort to eliminate those types of plays. 

Hoever, the clip of his comments evoked fierce backlash on social media, including from Parsons. 

“Like does not even consider how Tee Huggins feels before airing some bulls— like that!” he said in a separate tweet. “That traumatic event he just went through! I swear some of these TV guys have too much egos on these stages we give them!”

Hamlin remains in critical condition at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center after suffering a cardiac arrest. 

Doctors said Wednesday that they received “promising readings that they had been hoping to see,” ESPN reported, citing Jordon Rooney and the Hamlin family. Rooney reportedly added that it appeared “progress” was made.

 

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James Marsden questions why ‘Westworld’ was canceled: ‘Wish it was about more than financial success’

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James Marsden is not holding back his disappointment in the cancellation of his HBO show “Westworld” and why he believes the network pulled the plug.

In a new interview given to Rolling Stone, Marsden admitted there was lingering frustration from the way the show ended.

“I’d be lying to you if I told you that the way we ended ‘Westworld’ wasn’t a disappointment. I’m never going to speak without gratitude about any of my experiences, but it would have been nice to be able to complete the story we wanted to finish,” he said.

HBO shockingly announced the end of “Westworld” to fans in November.

JAMES MARSDEN TALKS ‘WESTWORLD’S’ SUCESS, RECALLS EARLY DAYS ON ‘ICONIC’ SHOWS LIKE ‘PARTY OF FIVE’

“I love this ‘Westworld’ family,” Marsden continued. “It was one of those unique opportunities to be part of something where I also would be sitting at home ravenously waiting for the next episode as a fan.” 

Marsden starred as Teddy Flood in seasons one, two and four of the show.

“I totally understand it’s an expensive show and big shows have to have big audiences to merit the expense, I just wish it was about more than financial success,” he admitted.

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“But who knows, maybe there’s some world where it can get completed somehow. Maybe that’s just wishful thinking, because I know we had plans to finish it the way we wanted to,” he added.

Besides saying farewell to “Westworld,” Marsden has also had to close the door on some of his other long-running characters this past year.

“There were a lot of goodbyes this year… It was bittersweet,” he shared.

Marsden also ended his time as Ben Wood on Netflix’s “Dead to Me.” The final season dropped on the streaming service in November of last year. The actor also resumed his role as Prince Edward in the movie “Disenchanted,” the highly awaited sequel made 15 years after the original “Enchanted” film.

 

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Village north of Mexico City spring water well explodes in flames

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People in a village just north of Mexico City complained of a persistent odor of gasoline for weeks, but even they were surprised when the community’s spring-water well burst into flames and began belching dense black smoke.

Residents blocked a major highway this week in protest, complaining that the smell and smoke is unbearable and that they have lost their water supply.

Water catching fire may sound strange, but in Mexico gasoline leaks have been blamed for several tragedies in the past. The fire broke out late last week in the hamlet of Mexicaltongo, in the township of Jilotepec, not far from a major refinery.

The state-owned oil company Petroleos Mexicanos refused to comment on the situation, but people speculated that one of the company’s pipelines was leaking gasoline into local aquifers or that an illegal tap drilled by fuel thieves could have caused the leak.

12 HURT, MANY DISPLACED AFTER FIRE, EXPLOSION AT MARYLAND APARTMENT COMPLEX

Jilotepec Mayor Rodolfo Noguez said late Monday that officials of the oil company, known as Pemex, had agreed to visit the water spring to investigate the huge fire.

“We still do not know what caused this pollution and the fire that it caused,” Noguez said. “There are a lot of hypotheses, the possibilities.”

He said water would be trucked in to affected families.

Mexico, and its system of antiquated and theft-prone fuel pipelines, is no stranger to such disasters.

In 1993, a series of sewer explosions hit a 50-block area in Guadalajara, killing at least 220 people. Investigators later determined the blast was caused by gasoline that leaked from an underground pipeline into the sewer system.

In 1984, a series of explosions in underground gas pipelines rocked the town of San Juan Ixhuatepec, on the northern edge of Mexico City. The blasts devastated a third of the town, killing 452 people and injuring more than 4,200.

 

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