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Georgia AG to investigate local authorities' response to Ahmaud Arbery killing

The Georgia attorney general has promised his office will investigate local authorities’ handling of the death of Ahmaud Arbery, the black 25-year-old man shot to death by two white men who escaped charges for more than two months.Captured in a shaky graphic video that went viral this week, the Feb. 23 shooting of Arbery in southern Georgia shocked and inflamed the local community and the wider public.Gregory McMichael, a retired 64-year-old district attorney’s investigator, and his 34-year-old son, Travis, were arrested and charged with murder Thursday.After the shooting, the two men told Gly...

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$70k for Zoom classes? Virus crisis leaves students miffed

Washington (AFP) - The cost of a university education in the United States has long been eye-watering, with a year costing tens of thousands of dollars.But as the coronavirus crisis settles in, students -- many of whom take out huge loans to finance their degrees -- are wondering how to justify spending $70,000 a year on.... Zoom classes.They feel like they're getting the raw end of the deal, and are demanding that their colleges be held to account."We're paying for other services that the campus offers that aren't digitized," says Dhrumil Shah, who is doing a Master's degree in public health ...

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US Supreme Court to take on Trump taxes and presidential immunity

Washington (AFP) - Can Donald Trump refuse to turn over his tax returns and financial records to Congress and New York prosecutors? The Supreme Court takes up this politically charged question on Tuesday, and it may use the occasion to better define the limits of presidential immunity.The high court's nine justices, confined at home by the novel coronavirus pandemic, will question lawyers for both sides by telephone in a highly anticipated session to be broadcast live.The hearing, initially set for late March, is being held now to allow time for the justices to render a decision before the pre...

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Religion's hold on Little Richard, rock's sex-amped founder

New York (AFP) - A ferocious pianist with a madcap rubberband of a voice and bombastic stage personality, Little Richard, who died Saturday at 87, will go down in history as a key architect behind years of rock's music world dominance.But though his pancake makeup and gaudy costumes oozed sexual ambiguity, Little Richard's upbringing in the church underwrote his complicated lifelong journey with religion and sexuality.Born Richard Wayne Penniman in the southern US state of Georgia, the performer was raised attending Seventh-day Adventist, Baptist and Holiness churches, where he would linger fo...

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Obama calls Trump's handling of pandemic a 'chaotic disaster'

Washington (AFP) - Former president Barack Obama has launched a scathing attack on Donald Trump's handling of the coronavirus pandemic, calling it an "absolute chaotic disaster."In a leaked web call Friday night with former members of his administration, Obama also said the Justice Department's decision to drop charges against Michael Flynn, the former Trump national security adviser who pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI in the Russia probe, endangers the rule of law in the US.In the audio, first obtained by Yahoo News, Obama urges former staffers to join him in rallying behind Joe Biden as h...

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Roy Horn, of magical duo Siegfried and Roy, dies

Washington (AFP) - Roy Horn, half of Las Vegas illusionist duo Siegfried and Roy, died Friday of complications from the coronavirus. He was 75.Known for his work with big cats, elephants and snakes, the German-born magician died at Mountain View Hospital in Las Vegas, his publicist told US media. He tested positive for COVID-19 last week.Horn's celebrated work with exotic animals came to an abrupt and violent end in 2003 when he was dragged from the stage by a 400-pound white tiger and seriously injured.Although he recovered, the Las Vegas show -- a hugely lucrative collaboration with long-tim...

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Empty Las Vegas Strip counts losses as locals venture out

Las Vegas (AFP) - The marble statues at Caesars Palace are fenced off, the Venetian hotel's gondolas sit empty, and the New York-New York casino rollercoaster has ground to a halt.Even the Bellagio's famous dancing fountains are "completely shut" due to the coronavirus pandemic, says a surly security guard, before shooing an AFP correspondent away.In the absence of bustling crowds of drunken revelers, packed poker tables and overzealous club promoters, the slogan "what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas" has never felt more redundant.Last year, May was Las Vegas's second-busiest month, drawing ne...

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'More than sufficient probable cause' in US killing of black jogger

Washington (AFP) - Authorities in the southern US state of Georgia said Friday they had "more than sufficient probable cause" to charge two white men over the killing of an unarmed black jogger, but did not explain why it took 74 days for the suspects to be detained. Gregory McMichael, 64, and his son Travis, 34, were arrested late Thursday and charged with murder and aggravated assault in the February 23 death of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery.Arbery's death in the coastal city of Brunswick, captured in a video that has gone viral, was the latest killing of an unarmed black American, galvanizing a...

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Trump official blew off American manufacturer of N95 masks as pandemic began spread in US: report

On Saturday, The Washington Post reported that Michael Bowen, a manufacturer in Fort Worth, Texas, offered to produce millions of N95 masks for the federal government in January — but a key official expressed little interest in the proposal.

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Judge in Michael Flynn case could surprise Bill Barr: legal expert

On Saturday, writing for Bloomberg Opinion, Harvard Law professor Noah Feldman argued that Attorney General William Barr's motion to dismiss the charges against President Donald Trump's ex-National Security Adviser Michael Flynn could still face one key roadblock: the judge himself.

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White House expects more pandemic-related economic damage coming but has no plan to battle it: report

According to a report in the New York Times, Donald Trump's administration is expecting months of more economic fallout due to the coronavirus pandemic but officials are divided on how to handle it with an election in November looming.

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Shooting of Ahmaud Arbery 'fueled by the rise of Trumpism': ex-GOP House spokesperson

On MSNBC Saturday, former Breitbart staffer and GOP congressional spokesman Kurt Bardella warned that President Donald Trump's rhetoric is empowering racist killings like the tragedy that occurred in Georgia.

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City commissioner calls the old, sick, and homeless drains on society that coronavirus should kill

Earlier this month, the five-member City Council of Antioch, California voted to remove Ken Turnage II from his role as chairman of the city planning commission after Turnage published a Facebook post saying, "the elderly, the homeless and people with weak immune systems as a drain on society who should be left to perish as COVID-19 sweeps through Contra Costa County," according to the Los Angeles Times.

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