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‘Suspicious’ circumstances around Black teen found dead in Louisiana

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Young Quawan Charles is seen here in this undated family photo. (Quawan Charles’ family)By VICTORIA MOLL-RAMIREZ, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — As the rural Louisiana town of Baldwin mourns the death of Quawan “Bobby” Charles, the family of the teenage boy is demanding answers.

“We believe that if he had been of a different color that this will be taken a lot more seriously,” the family’s attorney, Ronald Haley, told ABC News. “We [would] not be talking today about 13 days have gone by, with no leads, 13 days have gone by with no answer, 13 days have gone by without [the] official cause of death… This family deserves that Bobby will be laid to rest.”

The 15-year-old vanished from his home on Oct. 30. Days later, the family said his body was found in a sugarcane field about 20 miles away, in Iberia Parish.

What happened between when his body was found and the day he went missing is still under investigation.

Though the autopsy report has not yet been released, a graphic photo of Charles’ body has been circulating online.

“On the left side of his face there is like a knot,” Charles’ cousin Celina Chase told ABC News, describing the photo. “On the right side, there’s like an incision, and then around his mouth area, like the majority of his lips is gone, like he has been tortured.”

The medical examiner’s office said a full report can take up to 12 weeks, yet the local sheriff’s department has already deemed the circumstances around his death “suspicious.”

They said they have interviewed multiple individuals and are combing through physical evidence related to the case.

“I’m a parent myself. I would be concerned about the death of my child,” Iberia Parish Sheriff Thomas S. Romero told ABC News affiliate WBR-TVZ. “Emotions run deep, but we have to deal with facts, and it takes time for some of this evidence to come forward, for toxicology to come back.”

The ACLU is demanding a full, independent investigation into Charles’ death.

“The disrespect and lack of transparency demonstrated by local officials in response to Bobby’s tragic and suspicious death is unacceptable,” Alanah Odoms Hebert of ACLU of Louisiana, said in a statement. “We join the family in demanding a full and transparent investigation into the circumstances surrounding Bobby’s death.”

The Sheriff’s department said it is providing the family with updates on the case and is urging anyone with information to call Detective Jarred Spurlock of the Iberia Parish Sheriff’s Office, Bureau of Investigation at 337-369-3711.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Chicago announces new COVID-19 restrictions as Thanksgiving approaches

No Comments National News

Gian Lorenzo Ferretti Photography/iStockBy MEREDITH DELISO, ABC News

(CHICAGO) — Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced new restrictions for city residents as Thanksgiving approaches and COVID-19 cases continue to surge.

Starting on Monday, Chicagoans are urged to stay home except for work, school or essential needs and to avoid nonessential travel. They are also advised to not gather with anyone outside of their household, including for Thanksgiving.

“While this is tough, and of course this whole year has been tough, we must tell you, you must cancel the normal Thanksgiving plans,” Lightfoot said at a press briefing Thursday. “Particularly if they include guests that do not live in your immediate household.”

The stay-at-home advisory, which will last for 30 days, follows a curfew that went into effect last month that indefinitely closes nonessential businesses from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. Indoor service at restaurants and bars has also been halted.

The advisory is in response to exponential COVID-19 spread throughout Chicago. One month ago, the average daily cases in the city was 500, and the positivity rate was just over 5%, the mayor said. On Thursday, Chicago had an average of 1,920 daily new cases and a positivity rate of just over 14%, according to city data.

The mayor warned the city could see another 1,000 Chicagoans die from COVID-19 by the end of the year, on top of the 3,152 lives lost due to the virus thus far, if “we do not step up and do the things we know actually work.”

“This is a time when we all must take this seriously,” she said. “We all have to step up and do our part.”

Among the additional restrictions announced Thursday, the city is also imposing a new capacity limit of 10 people at venues for special events, including weddings and funerals.

The mayor warned that the city will fine and, if necessary, shutter businesses that don’t comply with the COVID-19 orders.

City officials stressed that they are primarily seeing COVID-19 spread through gatherings, especially ones in people’s homes.

“Right now, while we’re seeing numbers like this, gathering is the biggest concern, because COVID is just looking for an opportunity, and right now, unfortunately, it has so many opportunities all over this city,” Dr. Allison Arwady, commissioner of the Chicago Department of Public Health, said Thursday.

The advisory comes a day after the state’s health department advised that residents “stay home as much as possible” and work from home if they can for the next three weeks, as Illinois reported a record number of daily new COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations.

“Our goal is to reduce transmission as we head into the holidays so businesses and schools can remain open,” the department said.

Illinois and Chicago join a chorus of state and local leaders nationwide urging residents to stay home and issuing new restrictions amid worsening COVID-19 statistics.

Utah Gov. Gary Herbert declared a state of emergency Sunday and issued a mask mandate as hospitals in the state reached capacity. On Wednesday, a judge in El Paso County, Texas, extended a lockdown through Dec. 1 amid high hospitalization rates, and Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine announced new restrictions on gatherings and a stronger mask mandate as daily cases continue to break records in the state.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

MTV taps Vanessa Hudgens to host 'MTV Movie & TV Awards: Greatest of All Time' special

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Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images(LOS ANGELES) — Vanessa Hudgens is taking the reins as host of MTV’s new special, MTV Movie & TV Awards: Greatest of All Time.

According to the network, the 31-year-old actress will guide viewers through the 90-minute special which “will pay homage to the best of the best from the most beloved actors to scene stealing moments” dating all the way back to the 1980’s. The program will also feature “exclusive footage of the most anticipated 2021 releases.” Performers and honorees will be announced at a later date. 

The MTV Movie & TV Awards: Greatest of All Time is airing place of the network’s annual MTV Movie & TV Awards which were unable to happen this year due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Despite the cancellation, the network promises a comeback for the awards with a “weekend event takeover” in 2021, just in time for its 40th anniversary. 

The MTV Movie & TV Awards: Greatest of All Time will premiere on Sunday, December 6, at 8/7c on MTV.

By Danielle Long
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Maren Morris won't "perch on the fence," she's determined to leave this world "Better Than We Found It"

No Comments Country Music News

ABCThere’s no denying that 2020’s been a hard year, even for the woman who’s now the reigning Female Vocalist for both the CMA and ACM.

While Maren Morris crafted “The Bones,” the winner this week for both CMA Song and Single of the Year, she admits creativity has been hard to come by in a year dominated by COVID-19, social issues, and the election. 

“For me, it’s been sparse,” she reflects, “just because I’ve been a new mom, I’ve been off the road and…  I haven’t had the mental bandwidth to write songs.”

Maren and husband Ryan Hurd welcomed their son Hayes on March 23, near the beginning of the pandemic, and it was months later before she knew she had something to say.

“After the [political] conventions,” she explains, “and just sort of entering this extremely polarized season of an election year, and just everything that happened during the summertime with the the riots and the protests, and… the murder of George Floyd, I felt like the few times I have written I really wanted to say something and not just phone it in and perch on the fence.”

“So I felt like the few times I’ve written, I’ve gotten some really real s***,” she observes.

Maren’s newest recording is a plea to work toward a better world.

“I’m happy that ‘Better Than We Found It’ was received with so much love, because it was given with love,” she says. “It wasn’t given as a hand slap or to say FU to all these people.”

“It was literally saying, pleading from a mother’s heart now, ‘Please, can we leave this better, just a little bit better for our kids?'” she continues. “So that’s kind of where my head’s been at in the writing space.”

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U4rr6LewdIU&w=640&h=360]

By Stephen Hubbard
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.