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Jacob Blake paralyzed by police shooting, father says

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Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu Agency via Getty ImagesBy BILL HUTCHINSON and SABINA GHEBREMEDHIN, ABC News

(KENOSHA, Wis.) — Defying the governor’s curfew order, hundreds of protesters outraged over police shooting a Black man in the back in front of his children took to the streets of Kenosha, Wisconsin, again on Monday and into Tuesday, breaking patrol car windows, setting fires to buildings and converging at police headquarters, where officers in riot gear fired tear gas.

The second night of unrest in the city of 100,000 people followed Sunday afternoon’s police shooting of Jacob Blake, who remains hospitalized in serious condition. Blake’s father, also named Jacob, told ABC News on Tuesday morning that the shooting left his 29-year-old son paralyzed from the waist down and that doctors don’t know if he’ll ever walk again. The father said he “prays it’s not permanent.”

In a separate interview with the Chicago Sun-Times, the father said there are now “eight holes” in his son’s body.

“What justified all those shots?” his father told the newspaper. “What justified doing that in front of my grandsons? What are we doing?”

The senior Blake said he’s driving from his home in Charlotte, North Carolina, to be at his son’s bedside at a Milwaukee hospital.

“I want to put my hand on my son’s cheek and kiss him on his forehead, and then I’ll be OK,” he told the Sun-Times. “I’ll kiss him with my mask. The first thing I want to do is touch my son.”

Cell phone video taken by a witness shows three officers following Blake around his SUV and at least one of them is seen shooting Blake multiple times in the back as he opened the driver’s side door and entered the vehicle, in which his three young children, one celebrating his eighth birthday, witnessed the horror and screamed from the backseat.

“It doesn’t make sense to treat someone like that,” Blake’s fiancee, Laquisha Booker, told ABC Milwaukee affiliate WISN. She said police also threatened to shoot her when she asked about the safety of the children.

Booker said Blake did not have weapons on him or in his car, and that she was unsure why police were called to the area in the first place.

The officers involved in the shooting have been placed on administrative leave, and their names have not been released.

Wisconsin Department of Justice Division of Criminal Investigation, which is leading the probe, said the shooting unfolded after officers responded to a domestic violence call around 5 p.m.

Civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump, who’s representing Blake, said his client was attempting to de-escalate a domestic incident when police drew their pistols and stun guns on him. Crump said Blake was walking away to check on his children when police shot him.

“He was shot at seven times in the back. Right now we’re trying to confirm that he was hit four times even though the officer fired seven. So those facts are yet to be verified,” Crump said in an interview Tuesday on Good Morning America.

“His three sons — his 8-year-old, his 5-year-old and his 3-year-old — are absolutely devastated,” Crump said. “You can only imagine the psychological problems that these babies are going to have for the rest of their lives.”

Crump said it’s believed only one officer fired a weapon, and Blake’s family is calling for that officer to be fired immediately.

Asked if he believed there is enough evidence based on the video to charge the officer with a crime, Crump said, “Absolutely.” He said the officer “unnecessarily, unjustifiably and senselessly shot him all those times in the back.”

Other media reports cited several witnesses who said that prior to the shooting Blake scuffled with officers, prompting one of them to yell, “Drop the knife.”

But, Crump said, “We have no indication that he was armed from the witnesses that have come forward to us.”

“Several witnesses said that the police seemed to be the aggressors from the moment they got on the scene. And the video shows what happened,” said Crump, who also represents the families of other Black people killed by police, including the family George Floyd, who died May 25 while in the custody of Minneapolis police. “He was walking away. He wasn’t posing a threat to them or anything like that. So, it seems yet again that we have police officers who are using excessive, unnecessary force in shooting an unarmed Black man in America.”

Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers, a Democrat, ordered a curfew overnight and called in the National Guard to protect property. Protestors ignored that edict and took to the streets, chanting, “No justice, no peace.”

As night fell Monday, demonstrators marched to the Kenosha County Public Safety Building as police in riot gear attempted to head them off.

Protesters marched amid supporters in cars honking their horns, eventually reaching the rear parking lot of the public safety building. Protesters could be seen breaking the windows of patrol cars and lighting fireworks. Some were seen looting, throwing water bottle at officers and setting fires to vacant buildings nearby. The Kenosha County Courthouse was spray-painted with graffiti and the building’s first floor was set ablaze.

Several people broke off from the demonstration to break windows of cars and set fire to vehicles at an auto dealership. Several men were caught on video bashing a traffic light with a baseball bat. Several garbage trucks were set ablaze.

Outside the police station, protesters faced off with officers, who occasionally pushed people back and fired tear gas canisters in an attempt to disperse the crowd.

The civil unrest comes amid months of protests across the nation — and around the world — over the killings of Black people by police, including Floyd and Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old emergency medical technician who was fatally shot in her Louisville, Kentucky home, on March 13.

“That’s why you have people protesting not only in Wisconsin,” Crump said on GMA, “they’re starting to protest all over America, saying, ‘Enough is enough. When will Black lives matter?”

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Smartphone app alerts University of Arizona students if they are exposed to COVID-19

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AntonioGuillem/iStockBy TERI WHITCRAFT, MATT GUTMAN and ALYSSA PONE, ABC News

(TUCSON, Ariz) — When the University of Arizona opened its doors Monday, more than 8,300 students, faculty and staff had been tested for COVID-19 and everyone on campus was wearing a mask. The school had even begun sampling its wastewater to quickly detect a potential hot spot.

But the centerpiece in the school’s preemptive battle against COVID-19 was the “Covid Watch” smartphone app, which uses Bluetooth technology to send an alert to someone’s phone if they are exposed to the virus.

“We’re not a contact tracing app because nobody’s actually being traced or tracked,” said Tina White, one of the app’s creators, who got her masters degree from the University of Arizona in 2009. “We’re an exposure notification app, which is fully anonymous.”

To the technological layperson, this may seem like a distinction without a difference, but to White and the other engineers who crowdbuilt the app, it was crucial to make privacy a part of the app’s most elemental code.

White was working on her dissertation in mechanical engineering at Stanford when she first heard about the COVID-19 outbreak in China. When she learned that authorities in China and other countries were using cellphone data to track the movements of those infected with the virus, she realized it could infringe on privacy and civil liberties.

So she and two international students began to collaborate on a smartphone app that would protect people’s privacy by generating random number sequences. Covid Watch uses local Bluetooth signals to exchange those random numbers between phones — sort of like a short-wave walkie-talkie.

If someone tests positive and reports that to the campus health office, the signal on their phone will anonymously alert people that they may have been exposed and should quarantine or get tested. The app will tell the people when they were exposed, how long to quarantine and when they should get tested.

“It is something that people can use and know that it’s anonymous and something that isn’t going to be an infringement on civil liberties,” White told ABC News. “The whole team got started in order to help save lives during the pandemic. And to preserve civil liberties. And with the belief that you don’t have to have a trade-off between the two.”

After spending months tweaking algorithms and working with Google and Apple, as well as state health departments and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Covid Watch was officially launched last week on the app store and every student at the University of Arizona was encouraged to download it. The app will be helpful even if just 10% of students download it, according to experts, but 56% of the students need to download and use the app for it to stop the virus on campus.

“This is one of the first in the U.S. to be released, that is fully anonymous and fully decentralized,” White said.

University of Arizona professor Joyce Schroeder and others helped customize the app to not only alert a user of exposure, but also to inform them if their level of risk from exposure is high or low.

“We can set the exposure alerts so that they’re only going to notify people who are in real great danger,” she said. “For example, if they’ve been around this person for a very long time at the height of their viral shedding.”

“Universities have always been the hotbed of innovation, and it’s fitting that this solution came not from big tech but from students who were concerned about privacy,” said Sameer Halai, one of the cofounders and head of product at Covid Watch. “This is a solution that can now scale to other states and even countries because we have designed it to be simple to use and adapt anywhere, regardless of the size and stage of the outbreak.”

As students prepared for their first day on campus, University of Arizona President Robert Robbins said he was cautiously optimistic that they had done all they could to keep the virus at bay.

“We were the demonstration project for the Google [and] Apple COVID app using Bluetooth technology,” Robbins said. “Nobody’s ever tried this before. It’s the first test case in the country on a university campus.”

But the danger, according to Robbins, is not limited to what happens on campus.

“What we can’t control is what happens off campus,” he said. “And that’s what’s got everyone so concerned and got me concerned … we are going to give it our best shot to get our campus through.”

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Jerry Falwell Jr. officially resigns from Liberty University

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wellesenterprises/iStockBy KYRA PHILLIPS, IVAN PEREIRA and JON HAWORTH, ABC News

(LYNCHBURG, Va.) — After a daylong back and forth, Jerry Falwell Jr. officially resigned from Liberty University Monday night, he told ABC News.

The embattled religious leader told ABC News he submitted his resignation letter to the school late Monday night.

The move came hours after the school said that he agreed to resign as its president, after which Falwell reversed his decision after media outlets announced it.

The conservative leader has come under scrutiny after he was mired in an alleged sex scandal involving his wife and a business partner.

“I was never called to be a pastor, my calling was to use my legal and business expertise to make Liberty University the evangelical version of Note Dame,” Falwell told ABC News. “Some of us are called to be preachers, that wasn’t mine. I was called to make Liberty University the greatest Christian university’s in the world and I couldn’t have done that as a preacher.”

Liberty University issued a statement on the matter late Monday night.

“The Executive Committee’s Board of Trustees asked Falwell to go on indefinite leave of absence on August 7, to which he agreed,” the statement read. “Since that time, additional matters came to light that made it clear that it would not be in the best interest of the University for him to return from leave and serve as President. The Executive Committee met this morning and a conference call gathering of the full Board was planned for tomorrow. Falwell responded by agreeing to resign immediately as President of Liberty University today but then instructed his attorneys to not tender the letter for immediate resignation. The Executive Committee will go forward with its meeting in the morning followed by the full Board.”

Said acting President Jerry Prevo: “I call upon the University community and supporters to be in prayer for the University and for all its leadership, past, present and future, as we walk with the Lord through this stormy time of transition.”

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Scoreboard roundup — 8/24/20

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iStockBy ABC News

(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Monday’s sports events:

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

INTERLEAGUE
Chi Cubs 9, Detroit 3
St. Louis 9, Kansas City 3

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Toronto 6, Tampa Bay 4
Minnesota 3, Cleveland 2
Texas 3, Oakland 2
Houston 11, LA Angels 4

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Miami 11, Washington 8
Milwaukee 4, Cincinnati 2
Colorado 3, Arizona 2

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION PLAYOFFS

Milwaukee 121, Orlando 106
Oklahoma City 117, Houston 114
Miami 99, Indiana 87
LA Lakers 135, Portland 115

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE PLAYOFFS

NY Islanders 4, Philadelphia 0
Dallas 5, Colorado 2

MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER

New York City FC 1, Columbus 0

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Lori Loughlin and Mossimo Giannulli reportedly "terrified" to go to prison

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JOSEPH PREZIOSO/AFP via Getty Images(LOS ANGELES) — After Lori Loughlin and her husband, Mossimo Giannulli were handed two and five month sentences respectively for their role in the so-called Varsity Blues college admission scandal, sources tell E! Online the couple is “terrified” to go to prison.

“They are terrified about going to jail,” according to the insider, citing the couple’s fear of the ongoing spread of COVID-19 within prison systems.

Where the couple will spend their incarceration is still unknown, according to another source who tells the entertainment website, “Nothing has been decided about where they are serving.  That’s up to the government to determine.”

Regardless of where they serve out their time, Loughlin and Giannulli have asked to serve their sentences at different times, out of concern for their daughters, adds a source.  “They don’t want to have any overlap and leave the girls on their own.”

“They are trying to work out a way that one of them can be in L.A. with the girls while the other is serving their sentence,” explains the insider, adding that Bella Giannulli, 21, and Olivia Giannulli, 20, are “worried” about their parents and “hate to see them so upset.”

Loughlin, 56, and Giannulli, 57, pleaded guilty for their roles in the massive college admissions scam. They had both been accused of paying Rick Singer $500,000 to get their daughters into USC as crew recruits — even though neither girl had ever rowed competitively.  Singer also pleaded guilty to his role in facilitating the fraud.

Prosecutors have charged over 50 suspects, including parents and coaches, in the investigation.  Former Desperate Housewives star Felicity Huffman pleaded guilty to related charges in May of last year and was sentenced to two weeks in prison, 250 hours of community service and a $30,000 fine.

By George Costantino
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.