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Family of Gabby Aldea remembers young activist as a fighter for the voiceless

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (WAVY) -- A fighter until her last breath: that’s how loved ones are remembering Gabrielle “Gabby” Aldea.

The 21-year-old unexpectedly died this week, but she leaves behind a legacy of activism in Hampton Roads.

Aldea was born with several medical issues, but she turned her adversity into action. It’s something her family plans to continue.

Small in size but big in everything she did, Aldea had a spirit that was larger than life.

“She knew she could be heard and if she could do it, then anybody could do it,” said Aldea’s mother, Chrischa Ives.

She’s mourning her loss, but Ives told 10 On Your Side the overwhelming support from the community has left her humbled with pride.

“She was so brilliant because she was born that way. I couldn’t teach her what she had,” Ives said.

Aldea’s activism began when she was 18 years old. She lost access to healthcare, so she began contacting elected officials to spark change.

“She would get up every day, drive herself to the TCC library and start emailing and she would call them,” Ives said. 

Since then, Aldea became a fixture in the advocacy community. She championed multiple causes, from healthcare to social justice.

“She was not aggressive by any means, [but] she was also not afraid to say what needed to be said,” said Olivia Berneche, Aldea’s aunt. 

Although she’s no longer with us, her family said she made a lasting impact that was more than politics.

“It was giving a voice to those felt that they didn’t have a voice,” Ives said.

They hope her tenacity will inspire others to do the same.

“We can carry that on and that’s the only way we can honor her,” she said. 

There will be a resolution in Aldea’s honor when the Virginia General Assembly reconvenes in January.  


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Poquoson man survives COVID-19, but is heartbroken after losing friend to the virus

POQUOSON, Va. (WAVY) -- As the coronavirus pandemic continues, thousands of Americans have had to process grief and loss.

A Poquoson man survived getting covid-19, only to lose a close family friend to the virus.

Many families worldwide are dealing with losing loved ones from the virus, and are looking for better days. 79-year-old Poquoson resident Erbin Lender beat COVID-19, but lost his friend as well.

"He passed and I survived," Lender said of his friend, Al McKinney.

In September, Lender and his wife Jane went to Shreveport, Louisiana, to visit the Mckinneys, who are family friends.

"They had been to a funeral the week before we got there, and they had contacted COVID, they did not know it at the time when we arrived," Lender said.

Lender was a patient at Willis-Knighton Pierremont in Shreveport, just 15 miles from Willis-Knighton Medical Center North for eleven days. He was taken care of by Dr. Jennifer Prime, who is in charge of the COVID-19 unit.

"We treated him with everything we have medically available for COVID-19," Prime said.

Lender was on specialized oxygen for seven days, and then he was put back on regular oxygen.

"The doctor told me that it looked like I had come through the hardest part. My lungs were responding, were recovering," Lender said.

Although things were looking up for him, Prime explained to Lender that the ventilator was his only hope of staying alive.

But Lender elected not to go on the machine.

Lender says the hospital staff tried different ways of treating COVID-19 for patients. Some of the methods of treatment worked for him, some did not.

"He did require what we call an 'Airvo' that is a oxygen delivery system," Prime said.

In Lender's case, the heating of oxygen was his life saver.

"Mr. Lender was able come down off his oxygen requirements and ultimately improve and go home, which was a miracle," Prime said.

However, McKinney, Lender's friend who contracted COVID-19 at the funeral before Lender visited, was also hospitalized at Willis-Knighton North while Lender was in the other hospital.

MKinney died from kidney failure on Sept. 20.

Lender is a survivor, but it still heartbroken over the loss of his friend.

"It was a sad circumstance. That's your friend that you've known all these years," Lender said.

Still, Lender is grateful for the hospital staff for saving his life.


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$14k fee distillers faced for producing hand sanitizer waived

(NewsNation Now) — Early in the pandemic when hand sanitizer was hard to find, distilleries across the country stepped up by putting their equipment to work producing thousands of gallons of disinfectant.

Distilleries were facing a $14,000 fee due in February, standard for pharmaceutical companies that sell over the counter products. The untimely bill was sent out earlier this week. According to the CARES Act, the money is supposed to fund the FDA’s regulatory activities.

Thursday evening, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services directed the FDA to waive the fee. It appears to be a universal waiver for all similar facilities.

“To get a bill from government now is really a slap in the face,” said Eric Gregory, president of the Kentucky Distillers’ Association told NewsNation affiliate WDKY earlier Thursday.

HHS officials said after many conversations with lawmakers and key agencies, they have withdrawn the Notice published in the Federal Register regarding OTC Monograph Drug Facility Fees and directed the FDA to cease enforcement of these fees. 

“Because HHS OGC has determined the notice is really a legislative rule and that no one at FDA has been delegated authority to issue such a rule, the notice is void. HHS leadership, based on this legal opinion, has ordered the Federal Register Notice to be withdrawn from the Federal Register, meaning these surprise user fees will not need to be paid. Small businesses who stepped up to fight COVID-19 should be applauded by their government, not taxed for doing so," said Brian Harrison, HHS Chief of Staff in a statement. “I’m pleased to announce we have directed FDA to cease enforcement of these arbitrary, surprise user fees. Happy New Year, distilleries, and cheers to you for helping keep us safe!”

“If it’s left untouched, it’s not going to be pleasant. A lot of people, especially the small guys, are going to exit the business,” Jeff Irons, the owner of Huntsville-based Irons One Whisky Distillery, told NewsNation affiliate WHNT before the HHS directed the FDA to waive the fee.

Thursday was also the deadline for businesses to go online and unselect their hand sanitizing ambitions or face more FDA fee’s in 2022.

For the most part, distilleries stopped or slowed hand sanitizer production down several months ago when national supply stabilized.

“I started getting all sorts of phone calls from people saying, hey do you need hand sanitizer? Because we have it by the train load. I was going, I think I’ll stop making it now,” said Irons.

National distillery groups were urging businesses to hold off on paying the $14,000 fee while they worked with lawmakers and the FDA. The American Craft Spirits Association says the aforementioned task proved difficult because of the holidays.



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Hampton couple evicted amid pandemic

HAMPTON, Va. (WAVY) -- Out of luck and out of time.

While Virginia leaders added several measures to keep residents in their homes during the financial hardships of the pandemic, a Hampton couple still lost their home in September.

10 On Your Side's Tamara Scott has their struggle to find a new place to call home.

To help the couple, click here.

Watch the video above for more on the story.


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VP Pence tries to get Gohmert suit dismissed, says it’s a ‘walking legal contradiction’

TYLER, Texas (KETK) — Vice President Mike Pence filed Thursday to dismiss Texas Rep. Louie Gohmert’s lawsuit against him. Pence’s legal team stated that the vice president is not the proper defendant in the case.

“The Vice President — the only defendant in this case — is ironically the very person whose power they seek to promote,” the response stated.

Gohmert’s lawsuit, filed against Pence in his official capacity as vice president, sought to give Pence the ability to “determine which electors’ votes, or whether none, shall be counted” when there is any objection to the slate of electors.

Pence’s legal team’s response went on to state that “A suit to establish that the Vice President has discretion over the count, filed against the Vice President, is a walking legal contradiction.”

Instead of the vice president, the response stated that the House and the Senate would be the proper defendants in the case.

Attorneys for the U.S. House of Representatives also filed a brief asking for the case to be dismissed.

“The House also has a compelling interest in ensuring that the public’s confidence in the
processes for confirming the results of the 2020 Presidential election is not undermined by this
last-minute suit,” the House’s brief stated.

It continued that this lawsuit would “authorize the Vice President to ignore the will of the Nation’s voters and choose the winner in an election in which he himself is a candidate, as will often be
the case.”

Judge Jeremy Kernodle, a Trump-appointed federal judge in Tyler, has given Gohmert until Friday morning to respond with any additional filings.



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Study: Kids more likely to be infected by a family member than in a classroom

JACKSON, Miss. (NewsNation Now) — It's been an ongoing debate since the start of the pandemic: should schools remain open?

Across the country — some school districts like Los Angeles and Chicago — made the decision to switch to virtual learning as coronavirus cases rose in those areas.

Some of the nation's top health officials say kids can go to school in-person, and safely.

President-elect Joe Biden unveiled out his goal to open most K-8 by the end of his first 100 days in office.

Now, a new study out of Mississippi suggests students who have tested positive for the virus might not necessarily have contracted it in classrooms.

The bottom line of this study: Children are more likely to be infected by a family member who doesn't take the proper safety measures, than at school.

That's because children have a lower rate of infection and transmission, the author of the study said.

Children are more at risk from contracting COVID-19 at a holiday party or family gathering, than they are from being in the classroom, or in child care, according to the study led by the University of Mississippi Medical Center, in collaboration with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Children who tested positive were more likely to have attended family gatherings and have visitors at home and their parents and guardians were less likely to report wearing masks.

Dr. Charlotte Hobbs, a mother and professor of pediatric infectious diseases, led the study.

"This echoes what we've seen in adult studies with household transmission," Hobbs said.

Hobbs said they also found that children who attended school or daycare and tested positive reported that other children or staff members were not taking safety measures like masking, social distancing or hygiene.

The researchers interviewed about 400 parents and pulled a list of children who had taken COVID-19 tests.
She said because the disease tends to be less severe in children, it has been studied less, and as a result children are suffering.

"If at school appropriate mitigation efforts are being [observed], being at school is actually in fact perhaps much lower of a place where a child would have the risk of contracting COVID as opposed to having contact with an adult who is infected," Hobbs said.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom unveiled his $2 billion plan for reopening schools earlier this week.

"Transmissions among and from younger students to students is simply not common," Newsom said.

He hopes to be back on track by the spring, with distance learning still an option.

Randy Weingarten, President of the American Federation of Teachers, said she believes kids should be in school, too, but only if funding is available and assurances are made to take the proper safety measures.

"In hospitals, you have those safeguards in place, or people are asked to leave," Weingarten said. "And in schools, particularly when you’re working with kids, you have to be extra careful. What is ironic these days, is that young kids actually are following the rules, whereas older kids are not, and we actually thought it was going to be the opposite. But there’s no excuse for treating anybody as expendable, and this either-or question is wrong."

Hobbs also said even though COVID-19 vaccines are becoming available, now is not the time for parents, families and schools and child care centers to let down their guard and remember one of the available vaccines is only approved for those 16 and older, the other is for those 18 and older.

Full Study


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New coronavirus variant reported in Florida, marking the nation's 3rd confirmed case

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (NewsNation Now) — The new coronavirus variant first reported in the United Kingdom then later reported in Colorado and California has now been detected in Florida, the state's department of health said Thursday.

"Florida has evidence of the first identified case of the UK COVID-19 variant in Martin County," the department said in a tweet. "The individual is a male in his 20s with no history of travel. The Department is working with the CDC on this investigation."

Colorado health officials confirmed Wednesday that the first person in the U.S. known to be infected with the new and apparently more contagious variant of the coronavirus was identified as a Colorado National Guardsman who had been sent to help out at a nursing home struggling with an outbreak. And health officials said a second Guard member may have it, too.

California officials also confirmed later Wednesday that a San Diego County man has California’s first confirmed case of a new variant of the coronavirus.

The cases have triggered a host of questions about how the mutant version circulating in England arrived in the U.S. and whether it is too late to stop it now, with top experts saying it is probably already spreading elsewhere in the United States.

“The virus is becoming more fit, and we’re like a deer in the headlights,” warned Dr. Eric Topol, head of Scripps Research Translational Institute. He noted that the U.S. does far less genetic sequencing of virus samples to discover variants than other developed nations do, and thus was probably slow to detect this new mutation.

Florida has more than 1.3 million confirmed cases of coronavirus and more than 21,500 deaths according to data complied by Johns Hopkins University.



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Nursing home operator says vaccine rollout is 'frustrating' so far

NEWPORT NEWS, Va. (WAVY) -- While the rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine in Virginia is still in its infancy, the doctor in charge of coordinating its distribution at a group of area nursing homes says it's already been "frustrating."

As part of Operation Warp Speed, the federal government teamed up with pharmacies like Walgreens and CVS to vaccinate those in long-term care facilities. Monday was the first day pharmacy workers began vaccinating residents and staff in Virginia.

Virginia Health Services, based in Newport News, owns and operates seven convalescent and rehabilitation care centers in Virginia. However, so far, a clinic to vaccinate residents and staff has only been scheduled at one of the facilities.

"To have the official start date of the 28th to come and go and not have dates for some of these facilities is frustrating," said Dr. Robert Walters, Jr., vice president of clinical affairs at Virginia Health Services. "These months right now in the winter are very vulnerable months."

As of New Year's Eve, the Virginia Department of Health said 64,882 people had received their first dose of the vaccine. Less than 3% of those vaccinated had been people over 70.

Even though people over 70 years old represent 75% of the state's overall coronavirus deaths and nearly 50% of deaths occurred in long-term care facilities.

VHS's Walter Reed Convalescent & Rehabilitation Care Center in Gloucester is the site of the largest documented coronavirus outbreak currently in Hampton Roads with 75 cases and five deaths.

Walters said the "long-term care pharmacy partners" are making the decisions on what facility gets vaccinated when.

VDH Director of Immunization Christy Gray told reporters on Wednesday that she expects more people have actually received shots and the providers just haven’t put them in the system. She also said "it’s expected to be slower at the beginning but we are expecting to increase our efficiency over time.”

If Walters could provide input, he wouldn't recommend starting at Walter Reed.

"My inclination would have been to prioritize facilities that have not had exposures. To maximize the likelihood that those people never get the disease," Walters said. "There is some degree of immunity that can occur from having had the illness in some facilities that have already had an outbreak already had a degree of exposure."

That way they can hopefully prevent any more outbreaks -- while they work on getting others under control.


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Texas hits new virus hospitalization record, passing 12,000

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Texas hit another grim milestone Thursday when it surpassed 12,000 patients hospitalized with COVID-19, setting a new record high in that category for the fourth consecutive day.

Meanwhile, a Travis County district judge sided with Austin officials on a restriction regarding late-night dine-in services on New Year’s Eve following a hearing just hours before people would normally head out for a long night of celebrations.

Judge Amy Clark Meachum ruled the Austin area ban on dine-in eating and drinking between 10:30 p.m. and 6 a.m. each night from Thursday until Sunday morning can be enforced. At a court hearing in Austin, the state argued that Austin’s local orders are not allowed under previous statewide orders previously issued by Texas Governor Greg Abbott. Texas did not object to similar orders previously put in place by other cities, notably El Paso and San Antonio.

Judge Andy Brown, who is the top elected official in Travis County where Austin resides and who originally imposed the order, said in a statement the ruling will “help our community slow the spread of COVID-19, while allowing businesses to safely continue their operations through takeout, drive-thru, and delivery service options.”

“I encourage everyone in Travis County to order food for takeout from a local restaurant and to celebrate the New Year safely at home tonight,” Brown said.

An official record of the hearing will not be available for another day after Judge Meachum said during the hearing that neither her nor her staff planned to work the holiday and were called in following the late afternoon petition Wednesday for a temporary restraining order.

Texas reported 12,268 COVID patients in hospitals, an increase of 1,400 in one week. State officials also counted 349 newly-reported deaths. The Texas death toll has reported more than 26,400 fatalities.

The stark numbers keep rising as officials roll out the first vaccines in a system that has produced delays, some confusion and frustration.

Texas had about 4,300 doses of the Moderna vaccine that had to be checked for problems with cold storage requirements and some shipments had to be replaced, the Department of State Health Services said this week. Texas also had more than 144,000 doses that were expected prior to Christmas not arrive until this week, an agency spokeswoman said.

Abbott and state health Commissioner Dr. John Hellerstedt suggested this week that some providers were not using all their vaccines and keeping some in reserve, which several hospital groups have disputed.

According to state vaccine data, the state has received 773,000 doses and more than 282,515 people have received at least one round of the shot, through Wednesday.


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California hospitals at 'brink of catastrophe'; 25,000 dead

LOS ANGELES (AP) — California surpassed 25,000 coronavirus deaths since the start of the pandemic, reporting the grim milestone Thursday as an ongoing surge swamps hospitals and pushes nurses and doctors to the breaking point as they brace for another likely increase after the holidays.

“We’re exhausted and it’s the calm before the storm,” said Jahmaal Willis, an emergency room nurse at Providence St. Mary Medical Center in Apple Valley. “It’s like we’re fighting a war, a never-ending war, and we’re running out of ammo. We have to get it together before the next fight.”

Public health officials continued to plead with residents just hours before the start of 2021 not to gather for New Year's Eve celebrations.

In Los Angeles County, where an average of six people die every hour from COVID-19, the Department of Public Health tweeted out snippets every 10 minutes on lives that have been lost.

“The hair stylist who worked for 20 years to finally open her own shop.”

“A grandmother who loved to sing to her grandchildren.”

“The bus driver who put her daughter through college and was beaming with pride.”

The tweets, which included messages to wear a mask, physically distance, stay home and “Slow the spread. Save a life,” came on a day when the county reported a record 290 deaths. That would be a rate of one death every five minutes, though it included a backlog.

Los Angeles County, which has a quarter of the state's 40 million residents, has had 40% of the deaths in California, the third state to reach the 25,000 death count. New York has had nearly 38,000 deaths, and Texas has had more than 27,000, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

Infections are spreading rapidly and California confirmed Wednesday that it found a second reported U.S. case of a mutant variant of the coronavirus that appears to be more contagious. It's not clear where the 20-year-old San Diego man was infected with the variant or if it had led to any wider spread of the disease.

Hospitals, particularly in Southern California and the agricultural San Joaquin Valley in the middle of the state, have been overrun with virus patients and don't have any more intensive care unit beds for COVID-19 patients.

In Los Angeles County, hospitals have been pushed "to the brink of catastrophe,” said Dr. Christina Ghaly, health services director. “This is simply not sustainable. Not just for our hospitals, for our entire health system.”

Cathy Chidester, director of the county's Emergency Medical Services Agency, said hospitals are facing problems with oxygen with so many COVID-19 patients needing it because they are struggling to breathe. Older hospitals have infrastructure that is struggling to maintain oxygen pressure, and officials are trying to locate additional oxygen tanks for discharged patients to take home.

Ambulances are being forced to wait in bays before they can transfer patients inside hospitals — and in some cases, doctors are treating patients inside ambulances, she said. Some ambulances have waited as long as eight hours to offload patients because no beds were available.

At Providence St. Mary Medical Center, about 60 miles (100 kilometers) east of Los Angeles, there is a cacophany of alarms that sound when a patient's heart stops and a constant hiss from the oxygen keeping so many alive, Willis said. The hospital has filled the triage area with beds and rxpanded it into a parking lot. Three dozen patients were waiting to be admitted.

“We’re overflowing," Willis said. "We’re treating patients in chairs, we’re treating patients in the hallways.”

In Santa Clara County, home to Silicon Valley, only 8% of ICU beds were available, which is better than many places. Hospitals are still “stretched to the limit,” said Dr. Ahmad Kamal, county director of healthcare preparedness.

Two months ago, the county had 4.5 cases per 100,000 people. Now it has 50 cases per 100,000.

“What we are seeing now is not normal,” Kamal said. “It is an order of magnitude more than we saw just two months ago. We are not out of the woods. We are in the thick of the woods. And we all need to redouble our efforts.”

Kamal said the one bit of good news was that hospitals hadn’t felt the additional pressure of new cases after Christmas that they did after Thanksgiving, which has led to the current surge.

But public health officials fear a double-whammy from people who gathered at Christmas and New Year's will create a surge upon a surge. They made their final pleas to persuade people to stay home on what is typically one of the biggest party nights of the year.

“We recognize the temptation and the frustration," Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said. "You may simply want to stray for one night to celebrate with friends. However, all it takes is one slip to have one exposure and the coronavirus has found another host, another victim, and our dangerous surge continues.”

Most of the state is under a 10 p.m. curfew and newly extended restrictions that have closed or reduced capacity of businesses. People people are being urged to stay home as much as possible to try to slow the spread of infections.

Police in Los Angeles will be patrolling streets and looking to shut down large New Year’s Eve gatherings, Mayor Eric Garcetti said. San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria issued an executive order directing stricter enforcement of state and local public health rules.

___

This story has been corrected to show that 25,000 coronavirus deaths were reached Thursday, not Friday.



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Dick Thornburgh, ex-governor and US attorney general, dies

Dick Thornburgh, who as Pennsylvania governor won plaudits for his cool handling of the 1979 Three Mile Island crisis and as U.S. attorney general restored credibility to a Justice Department hurt by the Iran-Contra scandal, has died. He was 88.

Thornburgh died Thursday morning at a retirement community facility outside Pittsburgh, his son David said. The cause is not yet known. He suffered a mild stroke in June 2014.

Thornburgh built his reputation as a crime-busting federal prosecutor in Pittsburgh and as a moderate Republican governor. As the nation’s top law enforcement official, he prosecuted the savings and loan scandal. He also shepherded the Americans with Disabilities Act; one of his sons had been severely brain damaged in an auto accident.

After leaving public office, Thornburgh became a go-to troubleshooter who helped CBS investigate its news practices, dissected illegalities at telecommunications company WorldCom and tried to improve the United Nations’ efficiency.

“I’ve always had an opportunity to right a vessel that was somewhat listing and taking on water,” he told The Associated Press in 1999. “I wouldn’t object to being characterized as a ‘Mr. Fix It.’ I’ve liked the day-in, day-out challenges of governance.”

President Ronald Reagan appointed Thornburgh attorney general in the waning months of his administration. Thornburgh succeeded the embattled Edwin Meese III, who was investigated by a special prosecutor for possible ethics violations, and his appointment in August 1988 was hailed on Capitol Hill as an opportunity to restore the agency’s morale and image.

He was asked to stay on as attorney general when George H.W. Bush became president in 1989.

Thornburgh ran into trouble with the press and members of Congress who were put off by his imperious manner. He also battled liberals and conservatives in Congress over Justice Department appointments.

Despite the difficulties, Thornburgh enjoyed the continued backing of President Bush and won unprecedented increases from Congress in the Justice Department’s budget to fight crime.

The prosecution of savings and loan operators and borrowers increased during his tenure as the nation faced a growing crisis in the thrift industry. He set up securities fraud and S&L task forces in several major cities.

Also under Thornburgh, the Justice Department pursued the prosecution of deposed Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega, who was brought to Miami to face drug trafficking charges after a U.S. invasion.

Thornburgh tried to halt unauthorized leaks of information about criminal investigations, but he ran into trouble in the spring of 1989 when CBS News aired a story that the FBI was investigating the congressional office of Rep. William Gray, D-Pa. The story produced expressions of outrage among Democrats because it was aired when Gray was seeking to be elected House majority whip.

An internal investigation later showed that Thornburgh’s own chief spokesman played a role in confirming the story.

U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey said Thornburgh led Pennsylvania and the Department of Justice “successfully and with integrity.”

“The steady nature in which he guided Pennsylvania through one of its most dangerous crises – the nuclear accident at Three Mile Island – should serve as an example for all elected officials,” the Republican senator said.

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf, a Democrat, shared Toomey's sentiment, describing Thornburgh during the accident as a “necessary and steady voice of calm in the midst of a crisis.”

As Pennsylvania governor from 1979 to 1987, Thornburgh won a reputation as a squeaky-clean, reform-minded executive who cut the state government’s payroll, but his defining moment came barely two months into office.

In March 1979, he was confronted with the worst nuclear accident in American history when a routine equipment failure at the Three Mile Island power plant turned into a partial meltdown, which released radioactive elements.

Thornburgh agonized over whether to order an evacuation of the area around the plant. He recalled years later that “some people were telling us more than they knew and others were telling us less than they knew.”

He eventually ordered pregnant women and young children to leave an area five miles around the plant, which caused thousands of others near Harrisburg to flee.

His cool handling of the 10-day crisis was credited with averting panic.

He was praised in later years for recognizing that Pennsylvania’s manufacturing industry was fading and pumping state money into economic development for new businesses.

Thornburgh’s career in government services stretched back to the 1960s. He was U.S. attorney in western Pennsylvania from 1969 to 1975, prosecuting drug traffickers, organized crime figures and corrupt politicians.

From 1975 to 1977, he was assistant attorney general in charge of the Justice Department’s criminal division, where he stepped up federal prosecutions of public corruption in the post-Watergate era.

He showed his sense of humor at events during his first gubernatorial campaign in 1978, mocking the state Legislature’s generous compensation to the tune of “My Favorite Things.” “Nice big fat paychecks and liberal pensions / Fringes and perks that we won’t even mention ...” As attorney general, he referred to white-collar crime as “crime in the suites,” as opposed to streets.

When Thornburgh left the U.S. attorney general post in 1991, he made a run for U.S. Senate, losing to Harris Wofford in the general election.

The election landed Thornburgh in a courtroom in Texas, where Karl Rove, one of George W. Bush’s closest advisers, sued him to try to get back nearly $300,000 in back campaign debts. Thornburgh lost in court, appealed and eventually settled the case.

In 1992, Thornburgh accepted a top administrative job at the United Nations to fight bureaucratic excess and corruption. He left the job after his one-year contract ended, expressing frustration at inefficiency and saying the U.N. is “almost totally lacking in effective means to deal with waste, fraud and abuse by staff members.”

In recent years, Thornburgh was tapped to investigate wrongdoing in the corporate world.

In 2002, the Justice Department tapped Thornburgh to help investigate WorldCom for mismanagement, irregularities and fraud. He described the company, which made the largest bankruptcy filing in U.S. history, as “the poster child of corporate governance failures.”

Thornburgh was co-leader of an investigation conducted by CBS when its “60 Minutes Wednesday” program used faked documents to bolster a 2004 story that questioned George W. Bush’s Vietnam War-era military service. The probe’s damning final report led to the firing of three news executives.

Richard Lewis Thornburgh was born July 16, 1932, and grew up in Rosslyn Farms, near Pittsburgh. He trained as an engineer at Yale, seeking to follow his civil-engineer father’s footsteps, but went to law school at the University of Pittsburgh.

Upon graduation, he went to work as a corporate lawyer, later joining the law firm of Kirkpatrick and Lockhart.

Thornburgh married his childhood sweetheart, Virginia “Ginny” Hooton, in 1955. She was killed in an automobile crash in 1960 that left one of their three sons, Peter, severely brain damaged.

Three years later, Thornburgh married Ginny Judson, who raised his three sons and bore another, William. (He wrote in his memoir that “Ginny and my first wife shared not only a name but many characteristics that would no doubt have made them fast friends.”)

He said the accident was a defining moment that forced him to refocus his life on what his mission and legacy would be.

Both he and his second wife became active in programs for the disabled. In 1985, the Thornburghs were named “Family of the Year” by the Pennsylvania Association for Retarded Citizens.

Five years later, the Americans With Disabilities Act was signed into law after Thornburgh played a key role in negotiating compromises with Congress.



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Norfolk native dies at a hospital after contracting coronavirus in Virginia prison, according to family

PORTSMOUTH, Va. (WAVY) -- After spending time in prison, Benjamin Edwards is now free.

Following a period of sickness, Edwards died Dec. 28 at 3:19 a.m. from COVID-19 while serving time.

His son, Benjamin Williams, was the last family member to speak to Edwards, Dec. 11, in a phone call from the Nottoway Correctional Center in Burkeville, Virginia.

"He called me and he wasn't feeling well. I have it actually [in] a recording. He was very scared," Williams said.

In the phone call, family members say Edwards sounded short of breath. He complained of vision loss and hearing loss.

"What cell? What building? You gotta tell me all this," said Williams in the recorded call with his father.

Photo courtesy: Kimberly Tucker

Family members say Edwards' health declined rapidly in late summer after he fell from a top bunk in his cell. His family said he was supposed to have the bottom bunk because of his health, but another prisoner took it. They also say Edwards tested negative for COVID-19 around late September or early October and was sent to the infirmary for more than 30 days. He was then returned to a cell in early December, they say.

Ronald Lee Jackson, Edwards' brother, says he spoke with Edwards about the conditions in his cell.

"He had told me when he was sick that they had moved him to a cell -- a cell that [no one else had inhabited] with no running water. The stools weren't working. They stuck him in there," Jackson said.

After Edwards' last conversation with his son on Dec. 11, the family says they received a call the next day from a prison official who stated Edwards had been transported to Centra Lynchburg General Hospital where he was placed on a ventilator. The next call came from a nurse at the hospital just after 3 am on the morning of Dec. 28. The nurse said Edwards had died.

According to the Department of Corrections, 7,171 offenders have tested positive for COVID-19. 21 are in hospitals. 45 inmates and two staff members have died from COVID-19.

Because of the pandemic, Virginia adopted an early release program for qualifying prisoners. So far, a total of 1,322 prisoners have been released. Edwards' family members say he applied for the program but was denied when prison officials said there was a continued risk.

Kimberly Tucker, a longtime friend and advocate, disputes that finding. She said Edwards' troubles started with a drug addiction.

"He was not a risk to anyone. He couldn't even raise his arm because of the tube that was into his heart that had been there for over 12 years. Benjamin could have come home if they had released him. We already have a job [for him] and we have a house for him to move into. Everything was set up," said Tucker who is assisting several former and current offenders.

"That's the hard thing bringing him home [deceased], to know that he passed away from this COVID and he didn't have to. This is what we are getting from the prison system, this is OK for them. It's not OK for us. It's not OK," said Tucker.

Lisa E. Kinney, director of communications for the Department of Corrections, issued a statement to WAVY-TV 10 saying the department cannot comment on the health of prisoners. She did, however, offer a statement on safety protocols they have in place at corrections facilities.

"Inmates testing positive are placed in medical isolation so they don't infect others. Treatment follows the department's COVID medical guidelines. We treat symptoms as they arise, just as you would in any primary care setting. We can provide many things, including oxygen, on-site. If they require an inpatient level of care, inmates go to a hospital," said Kenney.

Kenney also offered a statement on vaccination plans.

"We're hoping to receive the vaccine within a week or two. Inmates likely won’t be vaccinated in one large group; it’ll be age-based and co-morbidity based like it is for the public. We're hoping DOC employees will be included in the vaccinations for essential workers. You may want to touch base with VDH for more information on the vaccination schedule," said Kenney.

Edwards' loved ones are making plans to bid farewell. They are paying a $1,000 for the transport of his remains to Norfolk and funeral arrangements are expected to cost more than $6,000.

They have established a Facebook fundraiser account in hopes members of the public with assist with the expenses.


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Senate scrambles to find solution for stimulus checks

WASHINGTON, D.C. (Nexstar) — With just days left before the new congress is sworn in, the Senate still has to address the defense bill and the possibility of a $2,000 stimulus check.

"People are frightened to death that they are going to be evicted from their homes," Sen. Bernie Sanders (D-VT) said.

In a rare New Year's Eve session, Sanders accused Senate Republicans of holding the bill to bump stimulus checks from $600 to $2,000 hostage.

"All that I am asking Senator McConnell is give us the vote; what is the problem?" Sanders asked.

"Socialism for rich people. That is what Speaker Pelosi and Sen. Sanders have sketched out," Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said.

McConnell says the bill would send thousands of dollars to people who don't need it.

"Washington Democrats took President Trump's suggestion and secured it so skewed so the checks would benefit high-earning households," McConnell said.

Instead, McConnell supports a bill combining the stimulus boost with several other of Trump's priorities.

"The Republican leader claims the president insists that all three issues must be addressed in one bill. But of course the president has made no such demand," Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said.

Schumer says combining the issues will just kill the checks completely. He proposed Thursday the Senate vote on each issue — one at a time.

"That way $2,000 checks could become law, and we could debate all the president's supposed concerns," Schumer said.

If the Senate makes any changes or additions to the House bill, like McConnell is proposing, the House would be required to vote again. They aren't planning to return before the current congressional session ends on Sunday.


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9 nuns at NY convent die in just over month from COVID-19

LATHAM, N.Y. (AP) — Officials in upstate New York say nine nuns at a convent have died of causes related to COVID-19 in just over a month.

An Albany County spokesperson says in a statement to the Times Union newspaper that officials are aware of the deaths among the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet in Latham.

WNYT-TV reported earlier in December that 22 sisters had tested positive. The convent’s website says it is home to 140 nuns.

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany says the convent is not ready to issue a statement.


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Mexican police search for missing nursing students

EL PASO, Texas (Border Report) – Mexican police came up empty this week in their search for three nursing students missing since 2018.

Officers acting on a tip searched the area around a lake in the town of Matamoros, Chihuahua, for the bodies of Sigrid Casandra Diaz, Mayra Guadalupe Mendoza and Oswaldo Galvan Rodriguez. The three nursing students from the nearby city of Parral were forcibly abducted in May of 2018 by what the Chihuahua state police described at the time as an “armed commando unit.”

The missing nursing students (photo from Facebook, Colectivo Contra la Tortura y la Impunidad)

The abduction victims shared an apartment in Parral and worked at the same hospital. A fourth roommate, Merari Lozano, reportedly had been abducted earlier, but police on Thursday had no specific information on her.

Chihuahua state police officers search the area near a lake near Parral, Chihuahua, for the bodies of three nursing students abducted in 2018.

The officers did not find any bodies this week but recovered 40 spent bullet casings from around Torreoncillo Lake and found signs of several clandestine bonfires, the Chihuahua Attorney General’s Office said.

Mexican media initially linked the abductions to possible drug activity. However, sources at the AG’s Office on Thursday said the abductions were connected to a prostitution ring and two former police officers.

One of the officers, Omar Ivan R.J., was arrested in 2019 on kidnapping charges and is a suspect in the disappearance of the nursing students, the state police said.

Omar Ivan R.J. (photo State of Chihuahua)

Omar Ivan and a second former policeman, Francisco Luis B., have also been linked to the arrest of Claudia Palmira Monzalvo Acosta, a.k.a. “La Pamy,” who allegedly provided escorts to members of the Sinaloa cartel, sources in the Chihuahua Attorney General’s Office said. 

Monzalvo was convicted in June of the sexual exploitation of two women ages 17 and 24. She was sentenced to 57 years in prison in September.

Claudia Palmira Monzalvo Acosta, a.k.a. "La Pamy" (State of Chihuahua)

The Attorney General’s Office said Monzalvo would recruit young, economically disadvantaged women, take them out to private parties or fly them to ranches around the state for purposes of prostitution. The AG’s Office said Montalvo would typically charge her customers $175 but only pay the women $25 to $40.

A source at the Attorney General's Office on Thursday told Border Report that Monzalvo would be charged with murder as well.

Visit the BorderReport.com homepage for the latest exclusive stories and breaking news about issues along the United States-Mexico border.



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Border Report's Top 10 stories of 2020

EL PASO, Texas (Border Report) — From a "giant rat" that turned out to be anything but, to an American family terrorized by gunmen on a popular Mexican highway, to a massive explosion caught on camera at SpaceX's test-launch facility in South Texas, a variety of Border Report stories sprang to the top in 2020:

10. Border Patrol agent seen on TikTok buying tamales from vendor on Mexican side of border barrier

At No. 10, a tale of a tamale transaction. A Border Patrol agent was caught on camera buying tamales from a vendor who was working on the south side of the border barrier on the east side of Tijuana. The vendor is seen reaching through the wall and handing the on-duty agent tamales, though it’s unclear what type they were. You can hear the vendor say in Spanish, “If you don’t like them you don’t have to pay me, taste them first.”

‘9. 'McAllen and South Texas Need Help Now’

City of McAllen

The "Year of Fear." In partnership with the Columbia Journalism Review and the Delacorte Review, the literary nonfiction journal of the Columbia Journalism School, Border Report correspondent Sandra Sanchez contributed several articles to "Year of Fear" project, which focused on the stories and conversations going on in communities leading up to the November election. The conversation quickly turned to the coronavirus pandemic and how it ravaged the Rio Grande Valley. Sandra describes how the pandemic literally hit home when her husband came down with the virus.

8. U.S.-Mexico travel restrictions extended through July 21

A pedestrian walks across the pedestrian bridge leading to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection - San Ysidro Port of Entry on March 21, 2020 in San Diego, California. The United States and Mexico announced a temporary ban on non-essential and leisure travel across the U.S. - Mexican border, but both countries emphasized that trade activity would not be impacted. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images)

Those restrictions remain in place as the year ends and the new one dawns. They are travel restrictions at the U.S.-Mexico border, in place since March 21, on non-essential land traffic from Mexico to the U.S. and from the U.S. to Mexico. The point is to prevent the spread of COVID-19 from one country to another. The current restrictions are set to expire on Jan. 21, 2021.

7. ICE now says detainees held hunger strike in honor of George Floyd

Immigration detainees paid tribute to George Floyd with a controversial hunger strike at a California detention center. But when Immigration and Customs Enforcement first announced the hunger strike at the Mesa Verde ICE Processing Center in Bakersfield, Calif., they alleged that detainees were being coerced — both internally and externally — into a hunger strike, and detainees reportedly said they were told that the purpose of the hunger strike was to protest the repetitive cycle of the menu.

6. Survival potential will determine whether South Texas county hospital takes in COVID-19 patients

In this July 28, 2020, file photo, a man arrives at Starr County Memorial Hospital in Rio Grande City, Texas. The number of daily U.S. deaths from the coronavirus is declining again after peaking in early August, but scientists are warning that a new bout with the disease this fall could claim more lives. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)

In a stunning admission of how dire the COVID-19 situation got in South Texas, the health authority for one border county announced the formation of an ethics committee to screen all patients for survival potential and send home those with low probabilities. They would determine what type of life-saving equipment and treatment they would likely require and whether they would likely survive. Those deemed too fragile or sick or elderly will be advised to go home to loved ones.

5. ICE defies California law, arrests people at courthouse

Prompting an outcry from criminal justice and court officials who said the action undermines local authority and deters immigrants who are in the country illegally from participating in the U.S. justice system, U.S. immigration agents arrested two people at a Northern California courthouse, including a man detained in a hallway on his way to a hearing, flouting a new state law requiring a judicial warrant to make immigration arrests inside such facilities.

5. Border Report | Live cameras

Historic Chihuahuita Neighborhood

Among Border Report's live border cameras is one in El Paso's Chihuahuita neighborhood. Also known as the "First Ward," it is considered the oldest neighborhood in El Paso and is located directly along the border fence line.

4. ‘Chapo’ hitman ‘Chino Antrax’ vanishes from custody in California

Jose Rodrigo Arechiga Gamboa, a.k.a. “El Chino Ántrax."

Regarded as Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman’s top enforcer with the Sinaloa cartel, Jose Rodrigo Arechiga, had in May escaped from custody in San Diego. Arechiga, better known as “El Chino Antrax,” was arrested seven years ago in Amsterdam, and two years later he pleaded guilty in the United States to conspiracy to import cocaine and marijuana. Ten days later, Arechiga and two family members were murdered in Culiacan, Sinaloa.

3. Explosion at SpaceX South Texas facility caught on camera

Border Report correspondent Sandra Sanchez was covering the origins of SpaceX's commercial rocket launch pad and its economic impact on a relatively poor South Texas community. South Texas community leaders wooed SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk in 2011 and came up with a $30 million incentive package for the company to build there. Her camera was rolling when a Starship SN4 prototype exploded during a failed test at the rocket testing launchpad near Boca Chica Beach, Texas.

2. Terror on a Mexican highway: American family robbed at gunpoint in Sonora

Men brandishing an AK-47 assault rifle robbed an Arizona family vacationing in Mexico. The robbery took place on a highway leading to the town of Caborca, near the resort of Puerto Peñasco, Sonora. The men took a four-door Toyota Tundra, a 20-foot flatbed trailer, at least one all-terrain vehicle and the cellphones of the Davis family of Mesa, Arizona.

1. ‘Giant rat’ found in drain under Mexico City

People can't get enough of this "giant rat." With more that half a million pageviews at BorderReport.com and more than a million pageviews on Nexstar websites across the nation, the rat that turned out to be a Halloween prop, is our No. 1 story for 2020. It started out when crews were cleaning 22 tons of trash from Mexico City’s drainage system and came across what was described as a “giant rat.” It remains a mystery how the rat ended up in the sewer.

Top videos of 2020

1. Explosion at SpaceX South Texas facility caught on camera

2. 30 arrested in anti-ICE protest in New York City 2

3. ICE: No detainees on hunger strike at Mesa Verde Detention Center

4. Loved ones reunite at closed US-Canada border

5. Lockdown, curfews enacted for South Texas border counties to stop COVID-19 spread

6. Americans flood into Mexico in search of toilet paper, food and water

7. More than 2,000 couples tie the knot during mass wedding in Mexico

8. El Paso districts to delay in-person classes

9. Record homicides in Mexico's heart of violence  

10. Coronavirus Prevention: Are you washing your hands properly?

Visit the BorderReport.com homepage for the latest exclusive stories and breaking news about issues along the United States-Mexico border.



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Adobe Flash ends Thursday and you need to uninstall for security reasons

SAN JOSE, Calif. (NewsNation Now) — It's the end of an era on the internet. Adobe will stop supporting its Flash player on Dec. 31, 2020.

You may have noticed this Adobe Flash icon on sites. It will no longer work as of Dec. 31, 2020. (Courtesy: Adobe)

Most people won't notice the change. Apple got rid of supporting Flash on most platforms a decade ago.

Part of the reason to get people to uninstall is that as of Dec. 31, Adobe won't be updating the security of it anymore. For that reason, Adobe will also block Flash content from running in Flash Player beginning Jan. 12.

Flash debuted in 1996 as Macromedia Flash. The tool would go on to deliver animations, videos and other new experiences to the World Wide Web. Adobe announced the end of the platform in 2017.

"Several industries and businesses have been built around Flash technology — including gaming, education and video," Adobe said in 2017. "But as open standards like HTML5, WebGL and WebAssembly have matured over the past several years, most now provide many of the capabilities and functionalities that plugins pioneered and have become a viable alternative for content on the web."

According to the company, more than 1.3 billion people across web browsers and operating systems used Flash — 11 times more people than the bestselling hardware game console.

2.2% or 220,000 of the top 10 million websites are using Flash, as of Dec. 31, according to Web Technology Surveys, a site that tracks the top 10 million websites in the world.

How do I uninstall?

If Flash is still installed on your device, you will likely be prompted to uninstall. Browsers like Google Chrome have been alerting users for months.

If you have Google Chrome or Microsoft Edge, the browsers plan to remove the program in an update. Flash may also be installed on your computer. Adobe has created a tool to check if Flash is installed on your computer.

Here's how to uninstall on Windows or Mac OS.



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At least one injured in shooting at Missouri mall

INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (WDAF) — At least one person has been shot Thursday at a Missouri mall, police said.

According to the Independence Police Department, police officers were working off duty security when they heard gunshots inside the Independence Center around 5:13 p.m.

Police found the victim, a 16-year-old boy, suffering from a gunshot wound to the leg. He was taken to the hospital. The extent of his injuries are unknown at this time.

One person has been detained by police in connection to the shooting.

Witnesses told NewsNation affiliate WDAF that they heard at least six gunshots near the food court area.

This past Saturday another massive fight broke out at Independence Center. Police say several hundred unaccompanied teens started multiple large fights at about 5:30p.m.

Last weekend’s fight prompted mall owners to announce a change. Starting this Friday, no one under 17 will be allowed on mall property Fridays through Sundays after 3 p.m. without their parents or legal guardian.

Saturday, 10 people in all, including six adults, were arrested. Four were the parents or grandparents of teens involved in the melee. Charges range from endangering the welfare of a minor to assault on a law enforcement officer.

In November 2019, a big mall brawl damaged property and a police car. Teens took food off customer’s tables. Then in October 2020, there was another fight reportedly involving 300 juveniles.

At that point, a 9 p.m. teen curfew was established in the area, and the city said parents would be issued citations for youth who didn’t comply.



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Watch Live: US celebrates 2021 beginning with an empty Times Square

NEW YORK (NewsNation Now) — The ball will drop, but the entrance to 2021 will be unique for New York City.

Times Square will remain the center of American revelry this New Year's Eve, but only virtually. Physically, it will be closed. The only spectators witnessing the ball-drop in person will be performers — part of the show, pre-screened for COVID-19.

Police have promised to vigorously enforce a ban on gatherings of any kind in New York City Thursday night, especially at its most famous intersection.

“My message to those ringing in the New Year,” said NYPD Chief of Department Terence Monahan, “Please stay at home.”

“Don’t come. Watch it at home. It’ll be a spectacular television show. Next year, we’ll all gather together and fill Times Square. But this year, don’t even attempt to come down there to watch it.” 

As they ran a test of the ball-drop and put the finishing touches on the stages, passersby took a final look; parts of the area were beginning to close 24 hours before the big event.

NewsNation reporters found major cities around the country scaling-back, canceling plans and finding creative ways to ring in 2021; from fine-dining establishments going takeout in Cleveland and Chicago to pop-up art and virtual New Year's Eve backdrops in Sacramento. 

In Austin, Texas, 2020 ends with a rise in COVID-19 cases that's overwhelming hospitals, leading to restrictions on indoor drinking and dining that now face a legal challenge. Local officials believe they will prevail. Travis County, Texas Judge Andy Brown appealed to residents in a Zoom message Wednesday afternoon.

“We're asking you to cancel your New Year’s Eve celebrations,” he said, “As this is not the time to gather in person with people outside of your homes.” 

In Las Vegas, the Strip is open, but the clubs are closed, leading to concern about people renting houses on Airbnb to party, creating potential ‘super-spreader’ events.

“I think everyone is concerned about house parties now in general because of the regulations and potential for spreading the disease,” Vegas resident Dayvid Figler told NewsNation affiliate KLAS.

Without the crowds in Times Square, the NYPD will have a much smaller presence this year, but heavy weapons and counterterrorism teams are already on the streets.

“We are very aware of recent events, particularly the vehicle explosion in downtown Nashville on Christmas Day,” NYPD Counterterrorism Bureau Chief Martine Materasso told reporters.

The department confirms no credible threats have been made involving the celebrations this year, but as always, it is on alert. Without giving specific numbers, the NYPD says about 80% fewer officers will be stationed around Times Square — allowing greater enforcement across the city’s 5 boroughs.

“Coming to Times Square for New Year’s is a family tradition for some, it is a bucket list item for others,” said Chief Juanita Homes, who heads the department’s Patrol Bureau. "But this year is different.”

Different right down to the confetti. 2,000 pounds of it released at midnight Thursday will include the printed wishes of people from all over the country — their hopes and dreams for 2021.



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