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Pro surfer rushes into ocean near Oahu to make dramatic rescue

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mikeywright69/InstagramBy ELISSA NUNEZ and MEREDITH DELISO, ABC News

(OAHU, Hawaii) — On New Year’s Eve, pro surfer Mikey Wright was drinking and enjoying the ocean view from his place in Oahu when he and his family saw a woman swept up in the rough waters.

As people ran toward the water, he grabbed his phone and started filming to document her rescue. But he realized it soon might be too late to help her.

So Wright handed his phone and beer to his wife, took off his shirt, hopped a fence and sprinted toward the water.

Within minutes, Wright had pulled the woman out from the water, with help from other bystanders on the beach, his sister’s guidance and their lifesaving surfing experience.

After posting a video of the dramatic rescue to his Instagram account, Wright has been hailed a hero. The surfer said he was just in the “wrong place at the right time.”

“I didn’t question if I was in danger,” Wright, 24, told ABC’s “World News Tonight” over Zoom Saturday. “I just knew that she needed help.”

Wright, an Australian currently in Hawaii for surf competitions, was on Oahu’s North Shore, a stretch popular among surfers due to its big waves.

The woman had been taking a video from dry rocks, Wright said, when a “freak” 15-foot wave dragged her out into the ocean.

“This lady was in a very tricky situation,” Wright said. “Even for a confident person in the water, that’s not somewhere you want to be.”

Wright said he assessed how to best approach the woman to avoid the jagged volcanic rocks and 15-foot swells. His sister, who followed him to the water, also helped alert him to when waves were “doubling up.”

“We had to jump over it, because when a wave doubles up like that, it’s got the force of two waves,” he said. “It has like double the strength.”

Once they were back on the sand, Wright and his sister checked to make sure the woman was OK and wasn’t knocked around or cut up too much. Luckily, she mostly just had a graze on her wrist, while he made it out with only some scratches down his back, Wright said.

“We came out pretty, pretty lucky,” he said.

By that point, the woman’s son had also joined them and thanked him for saving her, Wright said.

“We stayed there for a little while just to make sure she was OK,” Wright said. “She was just very thankful.”

“I think she knew she was in a bad situation,” he added.

Wright fittingly captioned the video of the rescue on his Instagram account with “Hold my beer.” In the first part of the footage, several people can be seen running to help the woman as she struggles in the water.

“They’re going to get saved,” Wright says, before handing the phone to his wife.

“You can’t save him,” someone can be heard saying off-camera, as Wright is then seen running toward the water himself.

In the second part of the video, Wright can be seen jumping in the surf. He reaches the woman and starts to bring her toward the shore as waves continue to crash into them. After one final wave, they’re out of harm’s way, as several others come to their aid.

Pro surfers praised Wright following the rescue.

“You’re a living legend!” Hawaiian Ezekiel Lau wrote in the comments, while Jessi Miley-Dyer teased, “Who needs a cape when you have a mullet.”

Others offered a warning.

“This lady is so lucky to be alive,” the North Shore Lifeguard Association said on social media. “The North Shore surf can sweep up and grab you at any time. Please be careful!”

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Police union asking for more medical training, equipment after Andre Hill shooting

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FacebookBy MEREDITH DELISO, ABC News

(COLUMBUS, Ohio) — The Columbus, Ohio, police union is asking for more medical training and equipment following the death of Andre Hill, a Black man who was shot and killed by a police officer last month.

Newly-released body-camera footage appears to show responding officers handcuffed Hill before rendering any first aid.

Adam Coy, the officer who shot Hill, was fired by the city earlier this week after an investigation determined that his use of deadly force was not reasonable.

The Columbus Division of Police is currently investigating the actions of the other officers who responded to the scene.

Following the release of the footage, the city’s police union is pushing for more training and tools to render aid.

“I don’t think, maybe, perhaps we didn’t realize until the tragic death of Mr. Hill that we didn’t have the appropriate training or the appropriate equipment to properly render aid,” Brian Steel, vice president of the Fraternal Order of Police Capital City Lodge #9, told ABC Columbus affiliate WSYX-TV in an interview posted Friday.

Steel told the station the current equipment in police cruisers is “very minimal.” The union is asking the division and city to fund basic and advanced life-support training and trauma kits that include dressings and tourniquets.

“We understand, this is going to cost money, this is going to cost training. It’s too important of an issue not to take seriously,” he told the station.

“We believe rendering aid is an important thing. The public clearly demands it, and we are going to answer that,” he added. “We’re going to try to maybe come up with some solutions to some of these problems.”

According to WSYX, Police Chief Thomas Quinn has called for a review of what first-aid equipment should be added to cruisers and the estimated cost for the supplies.

The chief also ordered last week that officers must render aid immediately, according to WSYX. The Columbus Police Training Academy also has been directed to develop a mandatory course for officers on how to apply aid and avoid causing greater harm, according to the station.

Hill was shot after officers were dispatched to a “non-emergency” disturbance call on Dec. 22. Coy’s partner, Officer Amy Detweiler, told investigators she heard Coy scream Hill had a gun, though no weapon was found.

On Thursday, the police division released body-camera footage from several officers on the scene. According to Ben Crump, the lawyer for Hill’s family, officers left Hill in handcuffs for 13 minutes without providing any first aid help.

Quinn called the footage “horrifying.”

“There were many other officers who responded to the scene. None of them used deadly force. But as seen in these videos, few of them rendered first aid to Mr. Hill as they waited for a medic,” Quinn said in a video statement. “We are investigating to get to the bottom of who upheld the policies and standards of the Columbus Division of Police, and who did not.”

Hill’s family is calling on prosecutors to criminally charge Coy in Hill’s death.

“How there’s 22 officers on the scene and with body-camera footage and not one of them helped my dad. But instead, the first time they touch him is to put handcuffs on,” Hill’s daughter, Karissa Hill, said during a press briefing Thursday.

A public memorial service for Hill is scheduled for Tuesday, Crump said.

ABC News’ Bill Hutchinson and Sabina Ghebremedhin contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

4-year-old Texas boy Messiah Taplin fatally shot on New Year's Day

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LPETTET/iStockBy BILL HUTCHINSON, ABC News

(ARLINGTON, Texas) — A 4-year-old boy was shot and killed in Arlington, Texas, in the first hour of the New Year, according to police.

The boy, identified by the Tarrant County Medical Examiner as Messiah Taplin, was shot about 12:30 a.m. Friday and died just after 1 a.m. at a local hospital, police said.

Police said they have detained “persons of interest” for questioning in the homicide investigation. But no arrests have been made.

Officers went to an apartment complex in the north part of the suburban Dallas city after a 911 caller reported hearing gunshots, the Arlington Police Department said in a statement.

When officers arrived, they followed a trail of blood leading to an unlocked apartment, according to the statement.

“Officers went inside and discovered a crime scene. No one was inside of the apartment at that time,” the statement reads.

As officers were investigating the scene, a vehicle drove into the parking lot that matched a car spotted leaving the apartment complex shortly after the shooting, police said. Officers stopped the car and detained its occupants.

It was not immediately clear if the people inside the car were the “persons of interest” police are questioning.

Homicide detectives were later notified by police in Grand Prairie, about 7 miles east of Arlington, that a 4-year-old boy was taken to a hospital in their city and died from an apparent gunshot wound, according to the statement.

“Investigators believe the child was shot at the Arlington complex on Washington Drive and they are working to determine exactly what happened,” police said in the statement.

No further information was available about the child’s death.

The child’s death was the second fatal shooting Arlington police responded to in the first hour of the New Year. At 12:25 a.m., officers received a call of shots fired in a residential neighborhood in east Arlington and discovered a woman suffering from an apparent gunshot wound on the back porch of a home, police said in a statement. The woman, whose name was not immediately released, was pronounced dead at the scene.

“Investigators do not believe this was self-inflicted and that someone shot the woman on the back porch,” the police statement reads.

No arrest has been made in the shooting.

Authorities asked that anyone with information about either killing to contact Arlington police investigators or the Tarrant County Crime Stoppers line.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Coronavirus live updates: More people without underlying conditions dying from COVID-19 in LA

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Myriam Borzee/iStockBy ROSA SANCHEZ, ERIN SCHUMAKER, IVAN PEREIRA, EMILY SHAPIRO and MEREDITH DELISO, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — A pandemic of the novel coronavirus has now infected more than 83.3 million people worldwide and killed over 1.8 million of them, according to real-time data compiled by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering at Johns Hopkins University.

Here’s how the news is developing Friday. All times Eastern:

Jan 01, 8:59 am
More people without underlying conditions dying from COVID-19 in LA

Early in the pandemic, 10% of patients who died from COVID-19 in Los Angeles County did not have underlying conditions, according to health officials. Today, that number has risen to 14% of patient deaths.

“This indicates, that in fact, that more people than ever are not only passing away, but passing away without any underlying health conditions,” Barbara Ferrer, director of the Los Angeles County department of public health, said during a New Year’s Eve news conference.

Hospitals in Los Angeles are currently overwhelmed to the point that ambulances are waiting hours in emergency bays with patients inside, which prevents medics from responding to additional emergency calls. The death toll in Los Angeles County stands at 10,345.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Long lines for COVID-19 vaccines build in Florida, Tennessee, Puerto Rico

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MarsBars/iStockBy ERIN SCHUMAKER, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — As the United States’ uneven vaccine rollout continues, lines for vaccination have begun to form in places such as Tennessee, Florida and Puerto Rico.

In Chattanooga, Tennessee, dozens of cars queued up Thursday morning, the first day that those 75 and older were eligible to get vaccinated for COVID-19.

Just after 10 a.m., the county health department issued a notice on Twitter, asking those farther back in the line to leave and come back another time.

In Florida, after Gov. Ron DeSantis expanded vaccine eligibility to those 65 years and older using an executive order, hundreds of people in Lee County, which includes Fort Myers, brought coats, chairs, blankets and tents to wait in line overnight Tuesday and get the vaccine on Wednesday.

“Supply is limited,” DeSantis said Wednesday. “We don’t have enough vaccines for all 4 million plus senior citizens in Florida.”

Abdulla Benkhatar, who is 90 and was first in line at a local recreation center, told ABC News Fort Myers affiliate WZVN-TV that he began waiting at 10 a.m. Tuesday.

“We’ve been at home for almost 10 months now,” Benkhatar said. “It’s really important to me, for my health, and to be able to do things I like to do and get back to normal.”

In Puerto Rico, health care workers have consistently been lining up at the Pedrin Zorrilla Coliseum in San Juan trying to get vaccinated, according to the Miami Herald.

Some had returned multiple nights in a row to try and get a shot, while others had defied Puerto Rico’s 9 p.m. curfew to line up on a highway overnight.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.