Guardia Nacional asegura estar lista para la temporada de huracanes

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El ayudante general de la Guardia Nacional en Puerto Rico (GNPR), José Reyes, aseguró en RADIO ISLA que están listos para enfrentar cualquier amenaza atmosférica en la temporada de huracanes. 

“La Guardia Nacional está lista. La Guardia Nacional aprendimos mucho con todas las emergencias que hemos vivido en los pasados cinco años que va desde huracanes, terremotos, pandemia, hasta recogido de gomas. Uno siempre aprende mucho”, aseguró José Reyes.

José Reyes informó que adquirieron nuevos equipos de comunicación debido a que los que tenían, los teléfonos satelitales, “no fueron efectivos” en el huracán María. Además, adquirieron una base de comunicaciones para mantener comunicación con todas las agencias del gobierno.

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US court rules Jamaican sniper Lee Boyd Malvo to be resentenced Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Maryland’s highest court has ruled that Washington, DC-area sniper Lee Boyd Malvo must be resentenced, because of US Supreme Court decisions relating to constitutional protections for juveniles made after Malvo was sentenced to six life sentences without the possibility of parole.

In its 4-3 ruling, however, the Maryland Court of Appeals said it’s very unlikely Malvo would ever be released from custody, because he is also serving separate life sentences for murders in Virginia.

“As a practical matter, this may be an academic question in Mr Malvo’s case, as he would first have to be granted parole in Virginia before his consecutive life sentences in Maryland even begin,” Judge Robert McDonald wrote in the majority opinion released Friday.

McDonald wrote that it’s ultimately not up to the Court of Appeals to decide the appropriate sentence for Malvo, or whether he should ever be released from his Maryland sentences.

“We hold only that the Eighth Amendment requires that he receive a new sentencing hearing at which the sentencing court, now cognizant of the principles elucidated by the Supreme Court, is able to consider whether or not he is constitutionally eligible for life without parole under those decisions,” McDonald wrote.

Malvo, 37, is now confined at the Red Onion State Prison in Virginia.

Malvo and his mentor, John Allen Muhammad, shot people in Virginia, Maryland and Washington as they pumped gas, loaded packages into their cars and went about their everyday business during a three-week period in 2002. Malvo was 17 at the time; Muhammad was 41.

Muhammad was sentenced to death and was executed in Virginia in 2009.

In Maryland, Malvo voluntarily testified against Muhammad. In 2006, Malvo pleaded guilty to six counts of first-degree murder in Montgomery County in the suburbs of the nation’s capital.

At his sentencing that year, the prosecutor stated that Malvo, once under the sway of an “evil man”, had changed and “grown tremendously” since his participation in the crimes, according to the Court of Appeals ruling.

The ruling said Malvo’s sentence was “consistent with the pertinent State statute and with the advisory State sentencing guidelines at that time.”

“Since then, however, the Supreme Court has held that the Eighth Amendment does not permit a sentence of life without parole for a juvenile homicide offender if a sentencing court determines that the offender’s crime was the result of transient immaturity, as opposed to permanent incorrigibility,” the ruling said.

The ruling also noted that the Supreme Court has held that the legal constraint applies retroactively and applies to Malvo’s case.

Judges Jonathan Biran, Brynja Booth and Joseph Getty joined McDonald in the majority. Judges Shirley Watts, Michele Hotten and Steven Gould dissented.

Watts wrote that the sentencing court took Malvo’s status as a juvenile into account.

“The record demonstrates that Mr Malvo received a personalised sentencing procedure at which his youth and its attendant characteristics were considered, and the circuit court was aware that it had the discretion to impose a lesser sentence,” Watts wrote.

Hotten wrote that any alleged finding of corrigibility “did not render petitioner’s sentences unconstitutional disproportionate as applied”.

“Rather the proportionality of Petitioner’s sentences must be weighed against the severity of his crimes,” Hotten wrote. “Petitioner committed some of the worst crimes in the history of the State. It was not grossly disproportionate that a heavy penalty was imposed.”

By BRIAN WITTE

Associated Press

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US man on flight from Jamaica held with cocaine in ‘milk powder’ bags Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

An arriving passenger at John F Kennedy International Airport in New York, USA, had his trip turned sour when US Customs and Border Protection officers seized his potentially hallucinating whole milk.

On August 19, US citizen Anthony Xavier Nassy Tyrell arrived on a flight from Kingston, Jamaica. CBP officers conducted a baggage exam on Tyrell’s luggage, discovering eight bags of a Jamaican brand of powdered milk, the CBP said in a recent release.

CBP officers escorted Tyrell to a private search room where the bags were examined, revealing a white powder that tested positive for cocaine.

Tyrell was arrested for the importation of a controlled substance and was turned over to Homeland Security Investigations, the release said.

The weight of the cocaine seized was approximately nine pounds, with an estimated street value of US$150,000.

According to the CBP, this translates to approximately 25,000 doses (100-200 mg). A lethal dose of cocaine is roughly one to three grams, so the amount seized by CBP and kept out of our neighbourhoods would be roughly 2,000 lethal doses.

“The smuggling of illicit drugs poses a significant threat to our nation, and CBP is determined to keep these drugs off our streets,” said Francis J Russo, Director of CBP’s New York Field Operations. “As America’s unified border security agency, our employees are dedicated to working with our law enforcement partners to protect the public from these substances.”

Tyrell now faces federal narcotics smuggling charges and will be prosecuted by the US Attorney’s Office in the US Eastern District Court of New York.

All defendants are considered innocent unless and until proven guilty.

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Panda twins born in China Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Twin giant pandas have been born at a breeding center in southwestern China, a sign of progress for the country’s unofficial national mascot as it struggles for survival amid climate change and loss of habitat.

The male and female cubs, born Tuesday at the Qinling Panda Research Center in Shaanxi province, are the second pair of twins born to their mother, Qin Qin. Another panda, Yong Yong, gave birth to twins at the center earlier this month.

Qin Qin was also born at the center and previously gave birth to twin females in 2020.

State media gave no word on the father, but Chinese veterinarians for years have been using artificial insemination to boost the population of the animals, which reproduce rarely in the wild and rely on a diet of bamboo in the mountains of western China.

The efforts have paid off, with some captive-bread pandas being released into the wild. The population of wild pandas has ticked up gradually, reaching an estimated 1,800. About 500 others live in captivity in zoos and reserves, the majority in the mountainous, heavily forested province of Sichuan.

Encroachment on their land by farmers and industry has reduced the pandas’ space while cutting them off from other populations with which to breed.

Like much of central and western China, Sichuan has been hit by soaring summer temperatures and drought this year that have sparked forest fires and the withering of crops and forests, generally attributed to global climate change.

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Jamaica, T&T press US to help stop flow of illegal guns Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness and Trinidad and Tobago’s Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley said CARICOM is pressing the US to assist the region in cracking down on illegal gun shipments into the Caribbean.

Speaking with media at the Diplomatic Centre in Port of Spain during Holness’ visit to Trinidad and Tobago for the country’s 60th independence anniversary celebrations, Holness said that Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago will be working together to address the flow of illegal weapons into both countries by collaborating and sharing information.

we had to impress upon the United States as CARICOM, that you cannot turn a blind eye to us

“Weapons are an enabler of violence, how they get into our countries and the people who are financing and sending them, there’s incredible commonality. Along the lines of sharing information, we will be collaborating on that…politically we need to amplify our voices…we don’t make guns and ammunition but they’re available so widely in our society.”

Dr Rowley said CARICOM members have made a united front in pressing the US government to step up measures to detect the movement of illegal gun shipments bound for the Caribbean.

“The United States has made a statement about focusing on the flow of arms and ammunition in the Caribbean. That didn’t come about by accident. We all have been pressing our point to the US as a supplier.”

“It is turning out that the biggest challenge is national security in Jamaica which we are also facing here…a huge national security challenge via a flow of arms and ammunition…and that is something which we had to impress upon the United States as CARICOM, that you cannot turn a blind eye to us, where every CARICOM country is in this predicament.”

“It’s something that we’re cooperating on and today we signed on to that…and we had some discussions for further closer cooperation in information sharing on this particular matter of the external forces that affects small arms and assault weapons coming from the Unites States.”

Holness added that there is a concern regarding the movement of illegal weapons through legal ports of entry and the implications of corruption.

“The importation of weapons [into Jamaica] comes in both via legal ports and illegal methods. The ones we’re really concerned about are the ones coming through our legal ports…If it’s coming through your ports it speaks to a high level of possible corruption in the port system and the customs system.”

Holness said the Jamaican government is addressing this challenge via a multipronged strategy and regarding entry via illegal ports of entry, they have also stepped up patrols.

He said there is also the problem of organised or enterprise crime, whose agents infiltrate state organisations and corrupt institutions in order to facilitate illegal trade.

He added that like Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica also is working on implementing measures to address domestic crime via a multidimensional strategy.

Dr Rowley said Trinidad and Tobago and Jamaica will be sharing information and working together to combat these issues.

Holness said overall, the instability created by global supply issues and the COVID-19 pandemic has shown that a stronger CARICOM is needed if the region is to move forward.

“What we’ve seen coming out of the [9th] Summit of the Americas is that…In a world of uncertainty where there can be an exogenous shock…we will need each other more than ever and so it’s important that there’s a strong relationship, government to government, regionally, to be able to withstand shocks.

“We need to be stronger regionally…we need to secure our food supply, our energy supply. Equally, we need to secure the labour that we need and….the financing that we need. Once we realise that we need to come together and work as a region so that we can become resilient to sustain these external shocks, we’ll have a clearer path toward the prosperity of our people.”

Both leaders also signed a Memorandum of Understanding to resolve a trade dispute and engaged in bilateral talks on various matters of mutual interest including national security, sport and tourism.

Holness will be in the country to observe independence day celebrations on August 31 and is due to depart on September 1.

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VIDEO: Market Street burglary caught on tape

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

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Max Fernandez annual Back to School Drive

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

The Parliamentary Representative for St Johns Rural North continues his giving ways for the 7th consecutive year, but dishing out hundreds of school supplies and backpacks to students just in time for the opening of the new school term.

Charles Max Fernandez has been using his funds to ensure that students are fully equipped with the necessities for the classrooms.

“This is been another year of back-to-school packages for 500 to 600 students in my constituency. I am happy that I can assist at a time when the global challenges have resulted in higher prices on all goods worldwide,” Fernandez told antigua.news.

The first stop was in the Cedar Valley community. The next stop will be the Yorks Community Center.

Fernandez said education has always been the passport for the future.

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Is Wallings Nature Reserve in Jeopardy?

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

The future of the Wallings Nature Reserve- the country’s first community-managed national park could be in jeopardy if the management company pulls out of the project.

The project at the historic Wallings Reservoir is managed by the Wallings Nature Reserve Incorporated.

Executive Director Refica Attwood told the Observer Am show this morning this is the end of the road for her. 

“I am no longer interested in the development of the Wallings Forest area. And I say this without any fear of favor. I have done enough from 2016 to 2022. I have shown persons the potential of the area. It’s now stifling and I am physically and mentally tired. Frustrated. I have not been collecting a salary from Wallings. I have had to take up consultation jobs to ensure me and my children can survive,” Attwood said on radio Monday.

The situation stems from a back and forth with the Ministry of Agriculture about the permanent use of the facility which falls under the ministry’s responsibility.

The company has a temporary arrangement with the ministry; however, they have been working for quite some time to get something more permanent.

The matter resurfaced recently triggering this response from Attwood.

“Wallings is the first major project that the company has been doing for Antigua and Barbuda. Wallings Nature Reserve is not tied to the Wallings Forest area. We are doing the government a favour to do a tourism project,” she said.

Attwood said the constant battle from 2018 to 2022 with the ministry of agriculture is causing a major issue according to Attwood.

“The legal counsel within the ministry of agriculture went as far as to call our donors. I have been having emergency meetings with these donors because the ministry took it upon themselves to phone the donors asking what relationship they have with Wallings Nature Reserve and why are they helping the organization to grow,” Attwood explained.

Additionally, she said the government is also threatening to take legal action for a reforestation project.

An official from the Ministry says the longstanding issue over the project at Wallings is being handled by the departments legal team.

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‘Sharp Force Trauma To The Neck And Feet’ Killed Sasha – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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A postmortem examination determined that ‘sharp force trauma to the neck and feet’ killed Sasha Polius, whose partially decomposed body was discovered at Lower Morne Road, Castries, on July 23 this year.

Officer in Charge of the Major Crime Unit, Superintendent Luke De Freitas, disclosed the postmortem results in a statement on Monday.

Superintendent Luke De Freitas

De Freitas also said that the forensic laboratory identified the partially decomposed body as Sasha’s on Friday.

The senior police officer explained that the Royal Saint Lucia Police Force (RSLPF) had already started a homicide investigation while it awaited identity confirmation.

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Relatives reported that they last saw Sasha on July 17 when she left to attend a barbecue.

They filed a missing person’s report with the police after she failed to return home and efforts to contact her were unsuccessful.

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Tea drinkers enjoy possible health benefits, a study suggests Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass

A cup of tea just got a bit more relaxing.

Tea can be part of a healthy diet and people who drink tea may even be a little more likely to live longer than those who don’t, according to a large study.

Tea contains helpful substances known to reduce inflammation. Past studies in China and Japan, where green tea is popular, suggested health benefits.

The new study extends the good news to the UK’s favourite drink: black tea.

Scientists from the US National Cancer Institute asked about the tea habits of nearly a half million adults in the United Kingdom, then followed them for up to 14 years.

They adjusted for risk factors such as health, socioeconomics, smoking, alcohol intake, diet, age, race and gender.

Higher tea intake — two or more cups daily — was linked to a modest benefit: a 9% to 13% lower risk of death from any cause vs non-tea drinkers. Tea temperature, or adding milk or sugar, didn’t change the results.

The study, published Monday in Annals of Internal Medicine, found the association held up for heart disease deaths, but there was no clear trend for cancer deaths.

Researchers weren’t sure why, but it’s possible there weren’t enough cancer deaths for any effect to show up, said Maki Inoue-Choi, who led the study.

A study like this, based on observing people’s habits and health, can’t prove cause and effect.

“Observational studies like this always raise the question: Is there something else about tea drinkers that makes them healthier?” said Marion Nestle, a professor of food studies at New York University.

“I like tea. It’s great to drink. But a cautious interpretation seems like a good idea.”

There’s not enough evidence to advise changing tea habits, said Inoue-Choi.

“If you drink one cup a day already, I think that is good,” she said. “And please enjoy your cup of tea.”

By Carla K Johnson

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