Rttw U.S. companies announced over 90,000 job cuts in March mdash; the highest number since January 2023
Greg McMichael, the man who initiated the chase that ended in Ahmaud Arbery s death, quickly changed his story about why he suspected the 25-year-old Black man running in his neighborhood was a criminal, two police officers testified Tuesday. McMichael also had blood on his hand from checking to see if Arbery had weapon on him after the shooting, one of the officers said.Glynn County police Officer Jeff Brandeberry told a jury that McMichael - one of three white men on trial for murder in the
stanley cup case - at first tol
stanley cup d him that Arbery had been recorded by security cameras breaking in all these houses out here. Well, he makes frequent trips to the neighborhood and gets caught on video cameras every third or fourth night breaking into places and no one s been able to catch him, McMichael told Brandeberry, who read in open court from a transcript of the conversation recorded by his body camera. Glynn County Police Officer Jeff Brandeberry sits on the witness stand during the t
stanley cup rial of Greg McMichael and his son, Travis McMichael, and a neighbor, William Roddie Bryan in the Glynn County Courthouse, Nov. 9, 2021, in Brunswick, Ga. Stephen B. Morton / AP The officer said he spoke to McMichael at the scene of the shooting, with Arbery s body lying under a sheet in the road nearby, as police first responded on Feb. 23, 2020. McMichael s accou Yqkc Ex-boyfriend of slain Pitt student arrested in her death
America s largest death row is now stopped cold after California Gov. Gavin Newsom issued an executive order granting reprieve to the more than 700 condemned inmates in the state. It s a big blow to the death penalty, and continues a recent trend of more states halting or abolishing it.But the death penalty is still alive in most of the United States mdash; at least, on paper.There are 30 states where the
nike dunk death penalty is still legal, with about 2,000 prisoners in those states awaiting execution, a
converse ccording to the Death Penalty Information Center. Until Newsom s order, California had the most inmates set for death, comprising nearly one-fourth of the nation s entire death row population. The death penalty has been flatlining, though, even in many states that still technically allow it. About 10 states have abolished it or had the governor put a moratorium on it in the past decade. Others have no scheduled executions due to legal challenges. Some states with a death penalty have gone a
jordan decade or longer without an execution. New Hampshire and Kansas haven t had one in more than 50 years.The number of executions nationwide keeps falling, too, according to Death Penalty Information Center data. The peak came in 1999, with 98 executions. The numbers have fallen in most years since then, and they are now at the lowest levels in three decades. There were 25 executions in 2018, and have been three so far this year. This is how the death