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Tag: children

  • The Uplift: Save the Swamp

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    The story of one man’s mission to save a beloved Georgia swamp. A 17-year-old makes history by accomplishing a daring feat with the support of her dad. Plus, more heartwarming news.

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  • Brooklyn Book Bodega feeds young minds by filling home shelves

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    BROOKLYN NAVY YARD, Brooklyn — Book by book, block by block, the Brooklyn Book Bodega is working to make books as accessible as a bag of chips from your local corner store.

    Co-founders Rebecca Cogen and Seema Aghera chose the name “Bodega” with intention.

    “When you think of bodegas in New York, you think of a place that is familiar, a place where people come together,” said Aghera.

    “Books should have been as accessible as your neighborhood bodega,” added Cohen.

    This nonprofit, grassroots organization is actively working to eliminate “book deserts,” neighborhoods where book ownership is scarce.

    “Our mission is to increase the number of 100-plus book homes for kids in New York City,” said Aghera.

    By providing free, lightly used books, they want to ensure that every child, regardless of their family’s financial situation, has the opportunity to own stories that can shape their world.

    “We exist because kids who read do better in life. There’s an impact on their educational outcomes, their financial earnings, and their mental health,” Aghera said.

    Brooklyn Book Bodega distributes free books through pop-up events and community partnerships.

    “We are set up in the places and spaces where kids spent time,” said Aghera, emphasizing the nonprofit’s commitment to accessibility and community-first outreach.

    Volunteers play a vital role, helping to inspect, sort, and distribute books in the nonprofit’s Book Hub. Each book includes a stamp where kids can write their names, marking it as their own.

    “There is still so much work to do,” said Aghera.”If we all worked together, we could make a change.”

    Brooklyn Book Bodega encourages New Yorkers to get involved through donating used books, volunteering, or simply spreading the word.

    For more information, visit their website.

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    CCG

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  • New Hampshire teen who killed sister-in-law and nephews could get 97 years in prison

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    CONCORD, N.H. — CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — A young man from New Hampshire who was 16 when he killed his sister-in-law and two young nephews deserves at least 97 years in prison, prosecutors will tell a judge Friday.

    Eric Sweeney, now 19, had been living with his older brother’s family in Northfield for three years when he fatally shot Kassandra Sweeney, 25, and her sons, 4-year-old Benjamin and 23-month-old Mason, in August 2022.

    Originally charged with first-degree murder, Sweeney instead pleaded guilty in August to lesser second-degree murder charges. At a sentencing hearing Friday, defense lawyers will seek a prison term of 40 years to life, based in part on the “immeasurable trauma” Sweeney suffered as a child, including a mother who “dragged him through drug dens and a succession of abusive father figures.”

    “We are asking the court to grant Eric some measure of mercy,” attorneys Lauren Prusiner and Morgan Taggart-Hampton wrote in a sentencing memorandum made public Thursday.

    Prosecutors are seeking consecutive sentences of 35 years to life for Kassandra Sweeney’s death and 40 years to life for each of the boys’ deaths, with up to 18 years suspended if goals related to education, mental health treatment and good behavior are met.

    “Benjamin and Mason embody the reason why crimes against children deserve the harshest of penal sanctions. They did absolutely nothing wrong, they were innocent and utterly blameless for what the defendant did,” Assistant Attorney General Bethany Durand wrote in her sentencing memo. “Their murders deserve separate, consecutive sentences.”

    Kassandra Sweeney, a nursing assistant, worked nights so she could care for her boys during the day. On the morning of the killings, she had fixed them a snack and was recording videos of them playing and laughing to send to her husband. Four minutes after she sent the last video, all three were shot in the head, Benjamin through the hood of the dinosaur costume he was wearing.

    Sweeney later told police he was in the basement when he heard something break upstairs, a man with a deep voice yelling and multiple “pops,” according to court documents. He said he went upstairs and found his sister-in-law and nephews on the floor bleeding and then took Kassandra’s cellphone and keys and drove away. He then called his brother, who called police.

    According to prosecutors, Sweeney’s older brother, Sean, and his wife were serving as the teen’s guardians when Sweeney’s “increasing behavioral issues” including lying and violating house rules began causing tensions in the home.

    Without providing a motive for the killings, his defense lawyers wrote that, “His depression deepened. He knew he was on the brink of losing the safest, most moving home he had ever known.”

    They argue Sweeney’s behaviors stemmed from his deeply traumatic childhood.

    “He stood on the street at six years old asking bystanders to buy him food,” the attorneys wrote. “He wore shoes with the soles coming apart, and worried that any toys he received for Christmas through Toys for Tots would be sold for drug money.”

    The defense argues that sentencing Sweeney to what would effectively be a life sentence without parole violates the state Constitution. They said he loved those he killed and will “grapple with the consequences of his actions for the rest of his days.”

    “A forty year minimum sentence would offer Eric hope that someday, he can make a meaningful life outside prison walls, and achieve some measure of redemption for his crimes,” they wrote.

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  • Colorado juvenile detention staff violated strip-search policy 1,000 times in 9 months, watchdog finds

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    Staff at Colorado’s juvenile detention centers violated policies meant to protect youth during strip searches more than 1,000 times during nine months between 2023 and 2025, according to a new review by the Child Protection Ombudsman of Colorado released Tuesday.

    There is no effective oversight to ensure strip searches at juvenile detention centers are justified and properly documented, the review found, and the vast majority of youth strip searches did not reveal any contraband, raising questions about how Colorado Division of Youth Services staff members are using the invasive procedure.

    In one instance, five youth in a detention center were strip-searched because one of them might have been charging a vape pen in a computer classroom, the review found. In another instance, a 14-year-old boy was held in a room by himself for more than 10 hours until he consented to a strip search. Another time, a youth was strip-searched three times in one day because staff believed he possessed drug paraphernalia, the report found.

    Nothing was found during any of those searches, the office reported.

    AnneMarie Harper, a spokeswoman for the Division of Youth Services, said in a statement Tuesday that the agency would investigate the ombudsman’s findings.

    “When it comes to searches of youth in our care, DYS staff is trained to balance personal privacy while also taking a trauma-informed approach,” she said. “These efforts help to make sure that dangerous materials and substances that could put all youth and staff at risk are not in our facilities.”

    The ombudsman’s office discovered 1,006 policy violations across 1,009 youth strip searches statewide during three three-month stretches in 2023, 2024 and 2025. Division of Youth Services staff members failed to document supervisor approval for searches, conducted searches with just one staff member present when two are required, and failed to clearly document the reasons for searches or the results, according to the report.

    “When you are talking about the strip search of youth, we have to be incredibly careful that we are documenting every detail and trying to treat these youth as safely as possible,” said Stephanie Villafuerte, the child protection ombudsman.

    ‘Reasonable suspicion’ for search

    About 2,000 youth between the ages of 10 and 21 are housed at juvenile detention centers statewide, according to the report. They are strip-searched when they arrive at the facilities, after visits with family, and after returning to the detention centers from court or other appointments. But they are also subject to strip searches when a staff member has “reasonable suspicion” to believe a juvenile might have contraband.

    The ombudsman’s review focused only on those searches for reasonable suspicion, which the report noted is “arguably the most subjective” reason for a search, a process during which youth fully undress and an adult staff member looks at their naked body.

    The practice is inherently traumatic, even when done completely within policy, the report noted. Youth who are committed to a detention center are more likely than other juveniles to have suffered abuse and neglect, and strip searches can retraumatize them.

    “Strip searches are traumatizing for anyone, and perhaps particularly for teenagers,” said Jessica Feierman, senior managing director at Juvenile Law Center. “They are very aware of their bodies, their bodies are changing, so it is a moment where a strip search can have unique harm.”

    Strip searches should be used sparingly, she said, and ideally not at all — alternatives like handheld metal detectors or airport-style body scanners can often be just as effective at revealing contraband, Feierman said.

    The sheer number of strip searches of Colorado youth, the missing documentation about how the searches were conducted and why, and the low amount of contraband recovered raise concern, she said.

    “All of those things suggest a heavy overreliance on strip searches, even though they are so harmful to young people,” she said.

    On average, DYS staff members found contraband in just 10% of the 1,009 strip searches for reasonable suspicion that the ombudsman’s office reviewed.

    That low percentage suggests that detention center staff are misusing strip searches, said Dana Flores, senior manager for youth justice in Colorado at the National Center for Youth Law.

    “The report indicates that DYS staff are treating strip searches as a mechanism to assert power and control, and that is not rehabilitative,” she said. “That is just an abuse of discretion by adults who are supposed to be providing trauma-informed care to young people we know have already experienced trauma. If only 10% are turning up contraband, and that is the rationale behind strip searches… there must be a motivation for staff to keep doing this that goes above and beyond simply seeking contraband.”

    Contraband — in particular, cocaine and fentanyl — is a ubiquitous problem across Colorado’s youth detention centers, she added, noting that kids who are jailed often search for ways to escape reality. Strip searches of youth don’t address the big-picture problem, she said.

    “That ultimately isn’t going to address the root cause of the problem, which is that this youth has access to contraband,” she said. “So you could strip search a kid on Monday and find drugs on their person — the larger question is what are you doing to provide that young person with the appropriate behavioral health treatment and education to address what may be a substance abuse disorder?”

    ‘We don’t have documentation’

    Division of Youth Services workers document strip searches in handwritten logs, the review found. That log is supposed to include information on when the search was conducted, who approved and carried out the search, the purpose of the search and the outcome.

    However, the Child Protection Ombudsman’s review found the information in the log was often missing, Villafuerte said.

    “We don’t know whether these searches are being conducted in a way that is incorrect, because we don’t have documentation,” she said. “Oftentimes, we don’t know who conducted the search, we don’t know if one or more people were present, we don’t know the underlying reasonable suspicion behind the reason to search. Without having the information, it makes it incredibly difficult to understand whether these searches are being conducted in a way that is effective, and if not, what can we do to make them effective.”

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  • Lynn Smith on new book teaching kids resilience

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    Lynn Smith on new book teaching kids resilience – CBS News










































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    Author and journalist Lynn Smith joins “CBS Mornings Plus” to talk about her children’s book “Just Keep Going,” following a character named Mouse who learns to face challenges with perseverance and friendship.

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  • Family sues Denver’s Eating Recovery Center for allegedly ignoring suicidal thoughts

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    A Virginia family is suing the Eating Recovery Center over what they allege was a failure to prevent patients from harming themselves during their daughter’s treatment at a facility in Denver.

    Jerry and Rebecca Music and their now-adult daughter, Allison Music, sued the Eating Recovery Center and 29 executives, physicians and other staff members in Denver District Court on Sunday.

    They alleged the providers didn’t respond appropriately when Allison voiced thoughts of suicide or nonfatal self-harm, and forced her to witness other patients hurting themselves or attempting suicide.

    Eating Recovery Center representatives didn’t immediately respond to questions about the lawsuit on Monday afternoon.

    Allison, then 16, entered the partial hospitalization program at the center’s Spruce Street location in April 2023, according to the lawsuit. That location has stopped treating patients with eating disorders and now takes children and teens with anxiety and mood disorders.

    ERC owns one other location in the Denver area that treat minors and two that treat adults, which have helped make Colorado a destination for eating disorder care.

    About a month after she started treatment, Allison voiced a desire to die by suicide, leading her mother to conclude Allison wouldn’t be safe in the rented home where they were staying. She transitioned into the full residential program, but ERC didn’t include any enhanced monitoring in her care plan, according to the complaint.

    The lawsuit alleged Allison received only seven individual therapy sessions over five months, because the facility treated therapy as a privilege, and received no treatment for traumatic events in her history. The family also alleged other practices they considered degrading, including requiring Allison to eat food off the floor, denying bathroom visits and making patients get weighed while naked.

    Other ex-patients reported similar practices to The Denver Post that they said worsened their trauma. Representatives for ERC previously told The Post that patients with eating disorders face a high risk of death, making unpleasant practices like force-feeding or monitoring in the bathroom necessary in some cases.

    Allison repeatedly reported thoughts about dying or harming herself in a nonfatal way in the weeks after starting residential treatment. According to the lawsuit, her suicidal thoughts escalated in June 2023 after another patient attempted to strangle herself and staff failed to intervene, even as the unnamed patient turned blue. Staff also allegedly told patients not to intervene when others were harming themselves on the unit.

    The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment conducted an inspection of the Spruce Street facility in mid-August 2023, investigating allegations that staff hadn’t responded appropriately to suicide attempts.

    The agency found two patients repeatedly tried to die by suicide in June 2023 and that facility leadership opted not to send them elsewhere for mental health treatment, despite staff concerns that they couldn’t keep the patients safe. Leadership said they thought the patients were trying to get out of eating disorder treatment and recommended staff “therapeutically ignore” patients’ self-harming behavior, even if they lost consciousness after wrapping something around their necks.

    In an interview in 2023, Dr. Anne Marie O’Melia, ERC’s chief medical officer, told The Post that ignoring the patients violated the facility’s policies, and ERC made changes after the state brought the matter to leaders’ attention.

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    Meg Wingerter

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  • Clint Smith on adapting

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    Clint Smith on adapting “How the Word Is Passed” for young readers – CBS News










































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    Clint Smith’s bestselling book “How the World Is Passed” has been reimagined for a younger audience by Dr. Sonja Cherry-Paul. Smith joins “CBS Mornings Plus” to talk about the project and why teaching the full history of America matters.

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  • ChatGPT introduces new parental controls for teens

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    ChatGPT introduces new parental controls for teens – CBS News










































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    Parents can now connect their ChatGPT accounts to their children’s and get notifications when sensitive issues are raised. Jo Ling Kent has more from Los Angeles.

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  • Arizona judge blocks Trump administration from deporting migrant Guatemalan and Honduran children

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    TUCSON, Ariz. — A federal judge in Arizona on Thursday temporarily blocked President Donald Trump’s administration from immediately deporting dozens of Guatemalan and Honduran children who came to the U.S. alone.

    U.S. District Judge Rosemary Márquez in Tucson granted a preliminary injunction, citing concerns about the steps the government had taken to prepare to deport the children.

    “The foundation of Defendants’ argument for their authority to transport Plaintiffs out of the United States is that Defendants are reuniting Plaintiff Children with parents abroad, but counsel could not identify a single instance of coordination between a parent and any government—American or Guatemalan,” she wrote.

    The ruling extends the protection for the children living in shelters or foster care after Márquez issued a temporary restraining order over Labor Day weekend. The order was meant to keep the children from being removed until at least Sept. 26.

    The lawsuit was filed by the Florence Immigrant & Refugee Rights Project on behalf of 57 Guatemalan children and another 12 from Honduras between the ages 3 and 17.

    The White House did not immediately respond to an email from The Associated Press requesting comment.

    This lawsuit and a related one in Washington were filed in response to the Trump administration’s work to quickly deport Guatemalan migrant children.

    Last month, the administration notified shelters — where migrant children traveling alone initially live after they cross the U.S.-Mexico border — that they were going to take them back to Guatemala and that they must be ready in a matter of hours. Many children got as far as boarding planes in Texas on the morning of Aug. 31 and were set to depart to Guatemala.

    The Arizona lawsuit is asking for the government to give the children the chance to present their cases and have access to legal counsel. It also wants the children placed in the least restrictive setting that is in their best interest.

    Meanwhile, the Trump administration has pushed back, saying it is trying to reunite the children with their families, which is in the kids’ best interest and at the behest of the Guatemalan government.

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  • Parents say son with autism was nonverbal until trying an off-label drug that treats chemo side effects

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    Caroline Connor’s concerns about her son Mason’s development began around his first birthday, when she noticed he wasn’t talking or using any words. Their pediatrician didn’t seem worried, but the speech delay persisted. At 2 and a half, Mason was diagnosed with autism.

    The Connors went on a mission, searching for anything that would help.

    “We just started researching on our own. And that’s when my husband Joe came across Dr. Frye in a research study he was doing,” Caroline said.

    Dr. Richard Frye, a pediatric neurologist, is one of many doctors searching for treatments that can help kids with autism. He’s studying leucovorin, an inexpensive, generic drug derived from folic acid, also known as folate or vitamin B9. Leucovorin is currently prescribed to ease the side effects of cancer chemotherapy. Pregnant women are prescribed multivitamins with folic acid to prevent neural tube defects. The neural tube develops into the brain and spinal cord.

    Leucovorin isn’t a cure for autism, but “it could really have a substantial impact on a very good percentage of children with autism,” Frye said.

    This week, the Food and Drug Administration began the process of approving leucovorin as a treatment for autism, despite there having been no large, phase 3 clinical trials.

    “We do have some good preliminary evidence that leucovorin helps,” Frye said. “But normally, the FDA would want to see at least a couple of large phase 3, placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trials. Right now, we only have phase 2B studies, and more research is needed to answer key questions, like how to dose it correctly, when to start and which children will benefit most.”

    The theory behind the drug’s use for autism postulates that some children have a blockage in the transport of folic acid into the brain that potentially contributes to some of the neurological problems associated with the disorder. Leucovorin bypasses that blockage and can help some autistic kids improve their ability to speak. Three randomized controlled trials of leucovorin to treat autism have shown positive effects on speech. 

    Frye notes there are actually five blinded controlled studies to date, all positive, though at different doses and in different populations. Still, he says, “the evidence isn’t yet where it would normally be for a drug.” 

    Frye said he was “disappointed” that his group had not received funding from the new NIH Autism Data Science Initiative and that he was not consulted on the design of upcoming leucovorin trials. “It’s strange, because I’ve been leading this work for decades,” he noted.

    The science of cerebral folate deficiency

    Cerebral folate deficiency (CFD), or a deficiency of folate in the brain, was first described by Dr. Vincent Ramaekers. Ramaekers found that some kids with neurodevelopmental disorders had normal levels of folic acid in the blood, but low levels in their spinal fluid. He then teamed up with Dr. Edward Quadros, who had been studying how an autoimmune disorder might lead to a blockage of folic acid transport into the brain. Ramaekers and Quadros found that autoantibodies against the folate receptor alpha (FR⍺), which transports folic acid from the blood into the brain and the placenta, might cause abnormal fetal brain development and some autism spectrum disorders.

    One study found that over 75% of children with autism spectrum disorder had FR⍺ autoantibodies, as compared to 10-15% of healthy kids. There is evidence that there’s a familial or genetic predisposition for developing FR⍺ autoantibodies. While environmental and immune system dysregulation may also play a role, there’s no evidence to suggest that vaccines cause the development of FR⍺ autoantibodies.

    The brain has a backup system to the FR⍺ known as the reduced folate carrier, or RFC. The RFC isn’t as efficient a transporter as the FR⍺, but it can transport leucovorin, also known as folinic acid, into the brain. Enzymes in the brain convert leucovorin into the active form of folate.

    Treatment with leucovorin increases brain levels of folate in kids with CFD. In one study led by Frye, one-third of such kids experienced improvement in their speech and other behavior when treated with leucovorin. Two randomized trials conducted in France and India showed similar results. A folate receptor autoantibody test (FRAT) is available to help identify which children may most likely respond to leucovorin treatment.

    Frye’s team has also identified new potential biomarkers, such as the soluble folate receptor protein, that could predict which children require higher doses.

    Frye notes that there are many nuances to treating CFD with leucovorin, including the addition of adjunctive treatments to optimize mitochondrial function.

    The side effects associated with leucovorin are mild. Some children experience hyperactivity during the first few weeks of treatment, but that typically subsides within a month or two. A similar pattern is seen with other B vitamins.

    Mason’s “little bottle of hope”

    Mason Connor’s first words came just three days after he started taking leucovorin at the age of 3, his parents say.

    Doctors can currently only prescribe the drug for autism off-label, which means repurposing a drug approved for one condition to treat another.

    “We’ve done the science, and the next step is that we want to get more funding so we can actually get it FDA approved,” Frye said. 

    He welcomed the FDA’s recent interest but cautioned that it “may have been a little premature,” given the gaps in knowledge and the need for physician education on how to prescribe leucovorin correctly in autism.

    There’s one big problem. “Leucovorin’s an old drug and you can get it for a very low price. So nobody is going to make a lot of money on it. So there’s no reason for them to invest,” Frye said. 

    Compounding the challenge: supply and quality vary. “Leucovorin is a generic, and different manufacturers use different additives,” Frye explained. “Some formulations children with autism don’t tolerate well.” 

    Frye used to recommend that patients use the generic form of leucovorin manufactured by West-Ward Pharmaceuticals, a U.S. subsidiary of Hikma, but, he says, “it ran out early this year. Right now, the only reliable source is through a high-quality compounding pharmacy that knows how to make it for kids with autism.” Frye is in the process of establishing a for-profit company to manufacture the right form of leucovorin for kids with autism.

    An estimated 20-30% of all prescriptions in the U.S. are off-label, according to nonprofit Every Cure. This is often done as there are more than 14,000 known human diseases with no FDA-approved drugs to treat them. Drugs like leucovorin are frequently used off-label because doctors believe that the benefits outweigh the risks. However, there is often limited awareness about these treatments, so they may go unused.

    Dr. David Fajgenbaum says he’s “literally alive today from a repurposed drug” after he was diagnosed with a rare cancer-like disease that almost killed him. His research into his disease led to a drug meant for another condition.

    “It’s heartbreaking to think about drugs being on the pharmacy shelf while someone suffers from a disease,” Fajgenbaum said. 

    His nonprofit, Every Cure, uses AI to scour available medical data on diseases and treatments to uncover potential matches. Every Cure brought to light the work of Frye, Ramaekers, Quadros and others on leucovorin to treat autism.

    “I think our system is just flawed and there’s this major gap where drug companies are great at developing new drugs for new diseases, and we as a system are really lousy at looking for new diseases for old drugs. That’s why we started Every Cure — to unlock these hidden cures,” Fajgenbaum said.

    Mason is now 5 years old, and the plan is for him to start mainstream kindergarten in the fall — helped toward a new path by an old medicine.

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  • A New Era of Vaccine Federalism

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    Soon after, when the legislature formally took up a bill to expand exemptions, three former state health officers released a letter warning that it would “weaken the hard-earned protections keeping our children, families, and communities safe.” Keith Marple, an eighty-one-year-old Republican delegate from Harrison County, urged fellow-lawmakers to vote it down, and spoke of people he’d known with permanent complications of polio. “We’re here today voting not just on one child . . . but on the thousands of children in West Virginia coming into school age,” he declared. “Are we going to protect them? Or are we going to let them take their chances?” This time, the legislation failed.

    West Virginia is a rural state with limited health-care infrastructure; many families don’t have easy access to clinicians, and vaccination requirements create an impetus to engage with the medical system. “There’s a big concern that if we open up exemptions, we’re going to see these diseases roaring back,” Steven Eshenaur, the head of the Kanawha-Charleston Health Department, told me. The state’s extraordinary success in getting kindergarteners immunized belies a more complicated reality: immunization rates for toddlers, before the mandates apply, are among the lowest in the country. “The writing is on the wall,” Eshenaur said. “If parents don’t have to do it, it’s probably not going to happen.”

    Morrisey hasn’t withdrawn his executive order, which conflicts with the state’s immunization law, and has generated confusion and uncertainty. The state’s health department has granted hundreds of vaccine exemptions, while members of the Board of Education have unanimously decided to effectively ignore those exemptions. (Justice has called Morrisey’s actions “plain out and out nuts.” Morrisey, in turn, derided Justice for holding a “very liberal position.”) In May, some parents filed a lawsuit alleging that the governor’s order placed immunocompromised children at risk; the mother of a ten-year-old boy with a serious genetic disorder said, “Something as simple as a common cold, that is not simple for him.” Then a registered nurse named Miranda Guzman brought a rival lawsuit, after her child’s school refused to honor a religious exemption. Morrisey’s executive order doesn’t require parents to explain their religious objection, and no major religion expressly forbids vaccination. (In the complaint, Guzman says that she believes it’s wrong to needlessly interfere with her child’s “God-given natural immune” system.) “It is precisely religious people who should want to see the citation in scripture—who should want chapter and verse,” Christopher Martin, a public-health professor at West Virginia University, told me. “Your grandparents were Christian, and they got vaccinated, didn’t they?”

    The movement to weaken the state’s decades-old vaccination requirements is enmeshed with Kennedy’s orbit. Aaron Siri, a Kennedy ally, is one of Guzman’s lawyers, and the lawsuit is funded in part by the Informed Consent Action Network, an anti-vaccine organization founded by Kennedy’s former communications director. Last month, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights sent West Virginia an unusual letter, apparently threatening to withhold more than a billion dollars in funding if the state’s health departments fail to grant exemptions outlined in the governor’s executive order. “I stand with @WVGovernor Patrick Morrisey,” Kennedy posted on X.

    West Virginia’s success in keeping children safe from vaccine-preventable illnesses highlights the singular power of immunization. Many of the struggles that children face—obesity, isolation, mental-health challenges—are knotty problems without easy answers. But a single policy can protect them from many infectious threats. With the federal government in retreat, vaccine wars have shifted to the states, and individual leadership can make a pivotal difference. Justice and Morrisey are both Republicans, but one expended political capital to preserve vaccination requirements while the other aims to weaken them. A judge has issued a preliminary injunction, allowing children of the plaintiffs in the Guzman case to attend school this fall, and soon West Virginia’s Supreme Court will hear arguments about whether school officials should follow the state’s legislature or its governor. Its decision will serve as a test of whether an unlikely state can continue to lead the way.

    In the U.S., public-health authority rests largely with the states. Within their borders, states have broad power to issue quarantines, enforce curfews, regulate businesses, require seatbelts, and license medical professionals. For decades, they’ve moved more or less in lockstep on issues of immunization, using the C.D.C.’s recommendations to develop their requirements for entry into schools, day cares, and other communal spaces. Since the nineteen-eighties, every state has required that virtually all school-age children get vaccinated against diseases such as polio, measles, and tetanus. The C.D.C. estimates that routine childhood vaccination in the U.S. has saved more than a million lives, averted hundreds of millions of illnesses, and led to trillions of dollars in societal savings.

    The nation’s vaccination apparatus was already fraying before the rise of MAHA. Since 2019, vaccination rates have fallen in about three-quarters of U.S. counties, according to an NBC News-Stanford analysis, and more than half of them have experienced at least a doubling in the level of vaccine exemptions. Research consistently shows that exemptions result in a higher rate of vaccine-preventable diseases. One study found that kids who received exemptions were twenty-two times more likely to contract measles and nearly six times as likely to get whooping cough.

    Instead of motivating a federal approach to shared problems, America’s increasingly nationalized politics have led to a fracturing of public-health policy. The American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Academy of Family Physicians, and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists have all recently issued recommendations that conflict with vaccine guidance from the federal government. This month, America’s Health Insurance Plans, the nation’s largest association of health insurers, announced that through the end of 2026 its member plans would cover all shots recommended by the C.D.C.’s vaccine-advisory panel prior to the recent meeting. Democratic-led states are taking steps to protect access to vaccines. Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey said that the state would require insurers to cover immunizations recommended by its health department. California, Oregon, and Washington have created an alliance to develop vaccine recommendations, and New Mexico recently authorized pharmacists to deliver COVID-19 shots based on its own guidelines. The state’s health secretary said that it “cannot afford to wait for the federal government to act.”

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    Dhruv Khullar

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  • Trump’s Tylenol Directive Could Actually Increase Autism Rates, Researchers Warn

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    For decades, the discussion around autism has been a hotbed of misinformation, misinterpretation, and bad science, ranging from the long-discredited link between the neurodevelopmental condition and vaccines, to newer claims that going gluten-free and avoiding ultra-processed foods can reverse autistic traits.

    On Monday night, this specter arose again in the Oval Office, as President Donald Trump announced his administration’s new push to study the causes of autism with claims that the common painkiller Tylenol, otherwise known as acetaminophen, can cause the condition. The FDA subsequently announced that the drug would be slapped with a warning label citing a “possible association.”

    David Amaral, professor and director of research at the UC Davis MIND Institute, was among those watching in dismay as the president launched into a diatribe about Tylenol, repeatedly warning pregnant women not to take it, even to treat fevers.

    “We heard the president say that women should tough it out,” says Amaral. “I was really taken aback by that, because we do know that prolonged fever, in particular, is a risk factor for autism. So I worry that this admonition to not take Tylenol is going to do the reverse of what they’re hoping.”

    The speculation surrounding Tylenol stems from correlations drawn by some studies that have touted an association between use of the painkiller and neurodevelopmental disorders. One such analysis was published last month. The problem, says Renee Gardner, an epidemiologist at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden, is that these studies often reach this conclusion because they don’t sufficiently account for what statisticians describe as “confounding factors”—additional variables related to those being studied that might influence the relationship between them.

    In particular, Gardner points out that pregnant women needing to take Tylenol are more likely to have pain, fevers, and prenatal infections, which are themselves risk factors for autism. More importantly, given the heritability of autism, many of the genetic variants that make women more likely to have impaired immunity and greater pain perception, and hence use painkillers like acetaminophen, are also linked to autism. The painkiller use, she says, is a red herring.

    Last year, Gardner and other scientists published what is widely regarded within the scientific field as the most conclusive investigation so far on the subject, one that did account for confounding factors. Using health records from nearly 2.5 million children in Sweden, they reached the opposite conclusion to the president: Tylenol has no link to autism. Another major study of more than 200,000 children in Japan, published earlier this month, also found no link.

    Doctors are worried that Trump’s claims will have adverse consequences. Michael Absoud, a pediatric neurodisability consultant and a researcher in pediatric neurosciences at King’s College London, says he fears that pregnant women will start using other painkillers with a less well-proven safety profile.

    Gardner is concerned that it will also lead to self-blaming among parents, a flashback to the 1950s and ’60s, a time when autism was wrongly attributed to emotionally cold “refrigerator mothers.” “It’s making parents of children with neurodevelopmental conditions feel responsible,” she says. “It harks back to the early dark days of psychiatry.”

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  • Man accused of exposing himself near children at Walpole playground

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    A 24-year-old is facing charges for allegedly exposing himself near children in Walpole on Monday.

    Police were first called to the playground at Bird Park around 9:00 Monday morning after several people reported a man had been exposing himself.

    A man in the area noticed the suspect and began to chase him after the latter ran away from the playground, according to police. The suspect managed to outrun the other man.

    Shortly after the incident, a Walpole police officer stopped the suspect in his car. The suspect, who police identify as Matthew Springer, of Walpole, began to struggle with officers before being subdued and arrested.

    “Very disturbing,” said one Walpole resident in the park.

    Another added, “It’s unbelievable. This park is not like that at all. There’s like no danger here at all.”

    Paul Resten said he saw the police response Monday morning.

    He explained, “I saw the police up in the parking lot. So, I didn’t know what happened. I looked and didn’t see anything online about it. It’s very dissapointing. This is a wonderful place, a wonderful park.”

    Parents like Matthew Connery watched their children closely at the same playground Monday night.

    “Definitely on guard now,” he told Boston 25. “Definitely not something you expect. Things like this happen. You’d like to get as much information out to the public as you can so people can do what they can to keep themselves safe.”

    Springer is facing charges of open and gross lewdness, disorderly conduct and interfering with a police officer.

    He is expected to be arraigned in Wrentham District Court.

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  • Met season opens with new opera based on Michael Chabon novel starring tenor Miles Mykkanen

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    NEW YORK — Miles Mykkanen grew up wanting to sing and dance on Broadway, but he was turned down by the musical theater programs he applied to for college. So he had to “settle” for studying opera at the Juilliard School at Lincoln Center.

    “At 18, when your sights are set on 42nd Street and then you’re getting called to 65th Street, it was weirdly a letdown,” he recalled. “But after a few hours I kind of slapped myself and said ‘Miles, pull yourself together.’”

    That was 16 years ago, and he has since pulled himself together to such an extent that at age 34 he’s just opened the Metropolitan Opera season in a leading role in a new opera, “The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay.”

    With a libretto by Gene Scheer and score by Mason Bates, the opera is based on the novel by Michael Chabon. Mykkanen portrays Sammy Clay, a Jewish kid growing up in World War II-era Brooklyn who teams with his cousin, Czech refugee Joe Kavalier, to create a comic strip hero modeled on Superman.

    He’ll also be back at the Met in the spring in another modern opera, Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho’s “Innocence.” He plays the Bridegroom, a part he first sang in 2024 when San Francisco Opera gave the work’s U.S. premiere.

    Mykkanen had sung at the Met before, mostly attracting little attention in small parts, though his haunting rendition of the Holy Fool in Mussorgsky’s “Boris Godunov” in 2021 drew critical acclaim.

    “But this season is so ideal,” Mykkanen said. “All of a sudden my schedule came together, and I thought, my God, where did this all come from.”

    When the Met was casting “Kavalier & Clay,” it was Michael Heaston, the artistic administrator, who thought of Mykkanen for the role of Sammy.

    “I first became acquainted with Miles when he was still a student at Juilliard, and he immediately impressed me,” Heaston said. “He is a singer who can straddle genres, that rare artist who can sing a heartfelt operatic aria in one moment and then turn on a dime to a classic tune from the American Songbook.

    “When I looked at Mason’s score and considered the vocal and acting demands alike, it seemed tailor-made for Miles.”

    Mary Birnbaum, who taught Mykkanen acting at Juilliard, said she’s not surprised at his sudden rise to prominence.

    “Honestly it’s what I thought he would do all along,” she said. “He’s got a very American sound, and it’s appealing and it’s lush. But also he’s bold as an actor … and he makes material look better for being in it.”

    By coincidence, both his roles this season are people who have something to hide. “They are characters with two huge secrets that are kind of gnawing away at them,” Mykkanen said.

    In Sammy’s case, it’s his sexuality and ambivalence about his attraction to actor Tracy Bacon.

    “As a gay man myself, it’s been really rewarding for me to be working on this role, thinking back to my coming out process 20 years ago now,” Mykkanen said. “Sammy wants to believe there’s a future for him, but he keeps struggling and wondering if the world will ever get past its prejudice and accept him.”

    “Innocence” deals with the lingering effects of a school shooting 10 years later, and as secrets are peeled away, the Bridegroom’s role in the horrific events is gradually exposed.

    Mykkanen relishes the very different musical challenges the two roles provide. Saariaho’s score for “Innocence,” he said is composed with a kind of “mathematical” precision. “When I first cracked it open, it was overwhelming because of the time signatures, the key signatures. You’re trying to figure out, what was she thinking, how do you put this all together?”

    “Kavalier & Clay,” written in a style that uses what Bates calls “symphonic electronica,” has been easier to learn. “I almost feel it’s starting to carve a new genre in opera,” Mykkanen said. “Something American opera has been trying to find in the last decade or so. … I don’t want to stay to say it’s musical theater, but at times it’s very colloquial.”

    Mykkanen grew up in the remote Ironwood region of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, where both his parents were high school band directors. Though he displayed a talent for singing at a young age, it was show music rather than opera that inspired him. When his parents found him a classical voice teacher, “For me it was a means to an end, to develop my voice so I could sing on the Broadway stage.”

    Though his career now takes him all over the U.S. and to Europe, Mykkanen still calls the Ironwood region home. In 2020, he launched an arts festival called Emberlight that has grown into a two-month summer program of live performance, film, art shows and talkbacks with visiting artists. When he’s not on site he handles logistics remotely and also relies heavily on volunteers.

    “Just being the person who with a lot of other people behind me brings art to this region which is rural and remote … It’s been one of the big blessings of my life,” he said.

    And when he isn’t performing, he returns. “I have a room in my parents’ basement where I store my stuff,” he said. “When I’m between contracts I come back here and stay with my mom and dad. … I’lll call them from Amsterdam and say ‘OK, what are we having for dinner next Tuesday when I land.’”

    “Kavalier & Clay” runs through Oct. 11. Also starring are baritone Andrzej Filończyk as Joe; soprano Lauren Snouffer as his sister, Sarah; soprano Sun-Ly Pierce as Rosa Saks, and baritone Edward Nelson as Tracy Bacon. Met music director Yannick Nézet-Séguin conducts the production directed by Bartlett Sher.

    ___

    This story has been updated to correct the year that Mykkanen founded the Emberlight festival to 2020 and the first name of Tracy Bacon, a character played by Edward Nelson.

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  • Kids are making deepfakes of each other, and laws aren’t keeping up

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    By Emily Scherer for The 19th

    Last October, a 13-year-old boy in Wisconsin used a picture of his classmate celebrating her bat mitzvah to create a deepfake nude he then shared on Snapchat.

    This is not an isolated incident. Over the past few years, there has been case after case of school-age children using deepfakes to prank or bully their classmates. And it keeps getting easier to do.

    When they emerged online eight years ago, deepfakes were initially difficult to make. Nowadays, advances in technology, through generative artificial intelligence, have provided tools to the masses. Here, The 19th highlights a troubling consequence: the prevalence of deepfake apps among young users.

    “If we would have talked five or six years ago about revenge porn in general, I don’t think that you would have found so many offenders were minors,” said Rebecca Delfino, a law professor at Loyola Marymount University who studies deepfakes.

    Federal and state legislators have sought to tackle the scourge of nonconsensual intimate image (NCII) abuse, sometimes referred to as “revenge porn,” though advocates prefer the former term. Laws criminalizing the nonconsensual distribution of intimate images — for authentic images, at least — are in effect in every U.S. state and Washington, D.C., and last month, President Donald Trump signed a similar measure into law, known as Take It Down.

    But unlike the federal measure, many of the state laws don’t apply to explicit AI-generated deepfakes. Fewer still appear to directly grapple with the fact that perpetrators of deepfake abuse are often minors.

    Fifteen percent of students reported knowing about AI-generated explicit images of a classmate, according to a survey released in September by the Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT), a center-left think tank. Students also reported that girls were much more likely to be depicted in explicit deepfakes.

    According to CDT, the findings show that “NCII, both authentic and deepfake, is a significant issue in K-12 public schools.”

    “The conduct we see minors engaged in is not all that different from the pattern of cruelty, humiliation and exploitation and bullying that young people have always done to each other,” said Delfino. “The difference lies in not only the use of technology to carry out some of that behavior, but the ease with which it is disseminated.”

    Policymakers at the state and federal level have come at perpetrators of image-based sexual abuse “hard and fast,” no matter their age, Delfino said. The reason is clear, she said: The distribution of nonconsensual images can have long-lasting, serious mental health harms on the target of abuse.

    Victims can be forced to withdraw from life online because of the prevalence of nonconsensual imagery. Image-based sexual abuse has similar negative mental health impacts on survivors as those who experienced offiline sexual violence.

    Delfino said that under most existing laws, youth offenders are likely to be treated similarly to minors who commit other crimes: They can be charged, but prosecutors and courts would likely take into account their age in doling out punishment.

    Yet while some states have developed penal codes that factor a perpetrator’s age into their punishment, including by imposing tiered penalties that attempt to spare first-time or youth offenders from incarceration, most do not. While most agree there should be consequences for youth offenders, there’s less consensus about what those consequences should be — and a push for reeducation over extreme charges.

    Jail time offers answers — and questions

    A 2017 survey by the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative (CCRI), a nonprofit that combats online abuse, found that people who committed image-based sexual abuse reported the threat of jail time as one of the strongest deterrents against the crime. That’s why the organization’s policy recommendations have always pushed for criminalization, said Mary Anne Franks, a law professor at George Washington University who leads the initiative.

    Many states have sought to address the issue of AI-generated child sexual abuse material, which covers deepfakes of people under 18, by modifying existing laws banning what is legally known as child pornography. These laws tend to have more severe punishments: felonies instead of misdemeanors, high minimum jail time or significant fines. For example, Louisiana mandates a minimum five-year jail sentence no matter the age of the perpetrator.

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  • Comics artist inspires kids with his Marvel-ous work

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    >> NOT ALL HEROES WEAR CAPES. SOME HAVE A PENCIL, TALENT AND A CREATIVE APPROACH TO GET KIDS EXCITED ABOUT MATH. GULF COAST NEWS BRIT SHOWS US HOW IT ALL ADDS UP IN TONIGHT’S STORY TO SHARE. >> AND THEY KNOW WHO THIS GUY IS GOING TO >> INSIDE THE DIMENSIONS OF A HERO IN THE MAKING JERRY TO CARE LIGHTS THE PAGE WITH PASSION. YOU PUT SO MUCH WORK INTO IT. YOU’RE SO GOOD AT IT. NOW THAT IT’S IN ITS COMES TO. SO NATURALLY, IT IS JUST FUND. THAT’S THE POINT YOU WANT TO GET PUT THROUGH MARVEL’S UNIVERSE AND CHANCES ARE YOU’LL MARVEL AT HIS WORK. EXCELLENT FOR WOLVERINE PUNISHER CONE IN NICK FURY, AGENT SHIELD HAWKEYE DEAD POOL. >> EVEN TIME, CAMEOS OF DR. STRANGE IRONMAN. >> WHO ELSE? >> BELIEVE IT OR NOT, HIS DRAWINGS WEREN’T ALWAYS COVER WORD THE THIS BUT BUT I DON’T MEAN TO BUT THIS IS GARBAGE. BUT AFTER 4 YEARS OF STUBBORN, PERSISTENCE AND SKETCHES, HE WAS OFFERED TO DRAW ON X MEN ANNUAL SERIES. AND I SAID THE >> SHE COULD YOU GIVE ME A FANTASTIC 4 INSTEAD AND I’M THE GUY GOES, LISTEN, I’LL GIVE IT TO SOMEBODY ELSE. YOU KNOW, AND I SAID TAKE IT. YOU WITH MORE THAN 10 SUCCESSFUL MARVEL COMICS UNDER HIS BELT, HIS FAVORITE AUDIENCE ISN’T AT COMICON ANYMORE. YOU CAN DROP YOU IN THE CYLINDER FROM PRETTY MUCH YOU KNOW, BELIEVE THAT A MATTER OF PERSPECTIVE, YOU CAN IMAGINE YOU CAN DRAW ANYTHING. HIS WORKSHOPS IN SCHOOLS AND PUBLIC LIBRARIES ACROSS AMERICAN MIX. MARVEL WITH MATT. THEY THINK SUPERHEROES A COOL LITTLE THING. MATHIS TO COOL. SO WHEN YOU COMBINE THOSE 2 THAT KIND OF ALL OF A SUDDEN MATHIS KIND OF COOL, WHICH IS WHAT THE MATH TEACHER WANTS FOR THEM. >> WHILE JERRY LOVES DRAWING MUSCLES LIKE THE NEXT COMIC. HIS WORK IS ABOUT STRENGTHENING CONFIDENCE. YOU KNOW SOMETHING TO BE AWARE TO JUST SET YOURSELF APART RIGHT FROM SUPERHEROES TO STUDENTS. HE’S TEACHING NEXT GENERATION THEIR OWN KIND OF SUPERPOWER THAT CAN DO. YOU CAN LOOK REALLY GOOD. AND SO I KN

    Sketching the outlines of a hero in the making, Jerry DeCaire lights the page with passion.”You put so much work into it that you’re so good at it now,” said DeCaire. “And it comes so naturally that it’s just fun, that’s the point you want to get to.”Flip through Marvel’s comics universe, and chances are, you’ll marvel at his work.X-Men, Thor, Wolverine, Dr. Strange, Iron Man — these are just a few comics he’s worked on.Believe it or not, his drawings weren’t always cover-worthy.”He says, ‘Hey buddy, I don’t mean to break your heart, but this is garbage,'” said DeCaire, describing what his mentor, comics legend John Buscema, told him when he was starting out.But four years of stubborn persistence and sketches later, he got an offer to draw an X-Men annual series.Now, with more than 10 successful Marvel comics under his belt, his favorite audience isn’t at Comic-Con anymore.”If you can draw a cube and a cylinder from pretty much any angle you can imagine or perspective you can imagine, you can draw anything,” said DeCaire.His workshops in schools and public libraries across America mix Marvel with math.”They think superheroes are cool. They don’t think math is too cool. So, all of a sudden, math is cool — which is what the teacher wants,” said Jerry.While DeCaire loves drawing muscles like the next comics artist, his work is about strengthening confidence.”Sometimes just being weird and setting yourself apart, right?” said DeCaire.

    Sketching the outlines of a hero in the making, Jerry DeCaire lights the page with passion.

    “You put so much work into it that you’re so good at it now,” said DeCaire. “And it comes so naturally that it’s just fun, that’s the point you want to get to.”

    Flip through Marvel’s comics universe, and chances are, you’ll marvel at his work.

    X-Men, Thor, Wolverine, Dr. Strange, Iron Man — these are just a few comics he’s worked on.

    Believe it or not, his drawings weren’t always cover-worthy.

    “He says, ‘Hey buddy, I don’t mean to break your heart, but this is garbage,'” said DeCaire, describing what his mentor, comics legend John Buscema, told him when he was starting out.

    But four years of stubborn persistence and sketches later, he got an offer to draw an X-Men annual series.

    Now, with more than 10 successful Marvel comics under his belt, his favorite audience isn’t at Comic-Con anymore.

    “If you can draw a cube and a cylinder from pretty much any angle you can imagine or perspective you can imagine, you can draw anything,” said DeCaire.

    His workshops in schools and public libraries across America mix Marvel with math.

    “They think superheroes are cool. They don’t think math is too cool. So, all of a sudden, math is cool — which is what the teacher wants,” said Jerry.

    While DeCaire loves drawing muscles like the next comics artist, his work is about strengthening confidence.

    “Sometimes just being weird and setting yourself apart, right?” said DeCaire.

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  • Mother of Brevard shooting victim calls for community to put guns down

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    A year after her son was shot to death over his jewelry, Connie Staley joined other community members in Melbourne to march for an end to gun violence and to call on people, especially the youth, to put the guns down.Craig Dewberry, 27, was killed last September in what authorities said was a targeted robbery and murder.Four people, ages 16 to 21, were arrested and charged in his murder case.”I just feel like I’m just surviving in this world. He was my everything,” Staley said.”My son was innocent. He bothered nobody.”She said the four arrested in his death targeted him and that he was a regular at the corner store where he was shot.”Why guns? Why kill innocent people?” she asked. “He was just walking inside of a store. They had no reason to rob him. If they wanted to rob him, he would have given them his jewelry.”On Saturday, she joined other community members in a march down University Boulevard in Melbourne, holding signs and calling for an end to gun violence.Just a few weeks ago, a two-year-old girl named Bles’syn lost her life in a shooting, while both of her grandparents were shot and survived.”Us as a community, we’re losing too many people,” said organizer Quamel Wynn.”It’s a big issue for me because I live it, this is where I’m from. I have brothers, I have sisters, I have nieces, I have nephews, I have cousins, I have friends. So something that happens to them, it affects me.”Melbourne Police are still searching for answers in the toddler’s slaying.If you have any information, you’re urged to contact the department or Crimeline.CrimelineCrimeline’s mission is to increase the safety of the Central Florida community by assisting law enforcement agencies in removing undesirable individuals from the community, according to its mission statement>> Call Crimeline at 800-423-TIPS (8477)>> Leave a tip onlineTips that lead to the felony arrest of suspects and/or the recovery of stolen property and drugs may be eligible for cash rewards of up to $1,000. All tips eligible for a reward are paid to tipsters using an anonymous processCentral Florida Crimeline began in July of 1977, originally named Crimewatch, modeled after the first Crime Stoppers program founded in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Call Crimeline at 800-423-TIPS (8477)

    A year after her son was shot to death over his jewelry, Connie Staley joined other community members in Melbourne to march for an end to gun violence and to call on people, especially the youth, to put the guns down.

    Craig Dewberry, 27, was killed last September in what authorities said was a targeted robbery and murder.

    Four people, ages 16 to 21, were arrested and charged in his murder case.

    “I just feel like I’m just surviving in this world. He was my everything,” Staley said.

    “My son was innocent. He bothered nobody.”

    She said the four arrested in his death targeted him and that he was a regular at the corner store where he was shot.

    “Why guns? Why kill innocent people?” she asked.

    “He was just walking inside of a store. They had no reason to rob him. If they wanted to rob him, he would have given them his jewelry.”

    On Saturday, she joined other community members in a march down University Boulevard in Melbourne, holding signs and calling for an end to gun violence.

    Just a few weeks ago, a two-year-old girl named Bles’syn lost her life in a shooting, while both of her grandparents were shot and survived.

    “Us as a community, we’re losing too many people,” said organizer Quamel Wynn.

    “It’s a big issue for me because I live it, this is where I’m from. I have brothers, I have sisters, I have nieces, I have nephews, I have cousins, I have friends. So something that happens to them, it affects me.”

    Melbourne Police are still searching for answers in the toddler’s slaying.

    If you have any information, you’re urged to contact the department or Crimeline.

    Crimeline

    Crimeline’s mission is to increase the safety of the Central Florida community by assisting law enforcement agencies in removing undesirable individuals from the community, according to its mission statement

    >> Call Crimeline at 800-423-TIPS (8477)

    >> Leave a tip online

    Tips that lead to the felony arrest of suspects and/or the recovery of stolen property and drugs may be eligible for cash rewards of up to $1,000. All tips eligible for a reward are paid to tipsters using an anonymous process

    Central Florida Crimeline began in July of 1977, originally named Crimewatch, modeled after the first Crime Stoppers program founded in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

    Call Crimeline at 800-423-TIPS (8477)

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  • D4vd tour dates removed from websites after the discovery of a girl’s body in Los Angeles

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    LOS ANGELES — The last two remaining dates in singer d4vd’s U.S. tour and multiple stops in his upcoming European tour have been removed from ticketing websites, as authorities continue to investigate the discovery of the decomposed body of a teenage girl in Los Angeles.

    Police have not said d4vd (pronounced “David”) is implicated in the death of Celeste Rivas Hernandez, whose body was found inside an impounded Tesla earlier this month. Celeste, 15, was reported missing last year.

    Several news outlets have reported that the vehicle was registered to d4vd, whose real name is David Anthony Burke, 20. His representatives have not responded to requests for comment, and police have also not publicly said whether the singer owned the car.

    D4vd’s scheduled performance in San Francisco on Friday was marked as canceled on the venue’s website. His last U.S. tour stop in Los Angeles on Saturday was removed from the venue’s site and both events were marked as canceled on Ticketmaster.

    The singer also had a scheduled appearance at the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles on Wednesday. The event, which was listed as sold out a few days ago, has been removed from the venue’s website.

    Representatives of both venues, as well as d4vd, did not immediately respond to The Associated Press’ request for comment on the status of the tour.

    The Houston-born singer-songwriter began the North American leg of his tour in early August and was set for Europe in early October. At least nine of his European dates have also been canceled on Ticketmaster, including his first stop in Norway on Oct. 1.

    Some dates in Sweden, France, Poland — and the handful of shows he had for Australia in December — are still available for purchase as of Friday. The alt-pop singer was on tour for his first full-length album, “Withered,” released in April.

    D4vd is popular among Gen Z, mixing indie rock, R&B, and lo-fi pop. He went viral on TikTok in 2022 with the hit “Romantic Homicide,” which peaked at No. 4 on Billboard’s Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart. He then signed with Darkroom and Interscope and released his debut EP “Petals to Thorns” and a follow-up, “The Lost Petals,” in 2023.

    An unnamed representative for d4vd told NBC Los Angeles that the singer has been cooperating with authorities since the body was found. It’s not clear why his car had been impounded.

    Rivas was last seen in April 2024 in Lake Elsinore, about 60 miles (95 kilometers) southeast of downtown Los Angeles. She was 13 at the time.

    Rivas’s body “was found severely decomposed,” the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner’s Office said in a statement Wednesday. Her cause of death has not been determined.

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  • What the Video of Charlie Kirk’s Murder Might Do

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    How many of your children saw the assassination of Charlie Kirk on their phones? Did they seek it out, or did it just roll in unannounced on their feeds? If they had never heard of Kirk before they watched his gruesome murder, how did they make sense of what they saw? Did the horrific image—I won’t describe it, because you have probably already seen it—sear itself into their memories?

    I ask because I have two young children and spend most of my time around other parents. In the days after the videos of Kirk’s death spread across social media, I realized that most children with phones, as far as I could tell, had viewed at least one unedited version. This was likely not the first disturbing video these children had encountered, of course, nor the first act of political violence that had appeared on their feeds. These same children, who are mostly between the ages of eleven and eighteen, saw the President’s bleeding ear and dozens, maybe even hundreds, of images of unfathomable trauma in Gaza. How will these already infamous scenes fall into order in their minds and coalesce into something resembling history?

    Widely dispersed photos and video—the stuff we all see—are the closest thing we have to a collective, democratized history, but the connections between memories and their associated images wear thin and become increasingly unreliable. For baby boomers, those images include people standing and pointing in the direction of gunshots at a motel in Memphis, Kennedy’s exploding head, the documentary footage of crowds at Woodstock, the girl in the picture in Vietnam, the bodies at Jonestown, and so forth. As boomers have aged, those images have become a bit unmoored from their place in time, and more evocative of a feeling of rebellion and change, or whatever. I’m sure many members of that generation would tell you that they watched Kennedy get shot live on television, and would describe the terrible movement of his head, without realizing that what they were describing was the Zapruder film, which first aired to the public in 1975, more than a decade after Kennedy’s motorcade drove through Dealey Plaza. Maybe they will also tell you that they saw the photos of the My Lai massacre—and they very well may have, but perhaps the image they are recalling is that of the naked girl running from a napalm attack in Trảng Bàng.

    My generation—I am forty-five years old—seemingly grew up with far fewer public images of violence. One of the texts I’ve grappled with and referenced before in my column is Jean Baudrillard’s “The Gulf War Did Not Take Place,” which argues that Operation Desert Storm was a conflict designed specifically for a new media landscape in which most people would be following the war on cable news. Americans watched Patriot missiles light up the night sky, but, in contrast to those watching TV during the war in Vietnam, we did not see casualties, or much destruction, nor did we tune in every night to hear a litany of the names of dead servicemen. Until 9/11, the violence that we did see on TV was mostly poor quality and from a distance: the shaky shots of the burning Branch Davidian compound, in Waco; the remains of the federal building in Oklahoma City. (One notable exception was the images of starving children during the 1983-85 famine in Ethiopia, which inspired a worldwide effort marked by the release of the charity single “We Are the World.”)

    So here’s a series of questions:

    If exposure to images of violence changes a generation of children, how are boomers different from my generation—and how will my own children, who will be exposed to far more evidence of political violence than I have been, be different from me?

    Is the effect of seeing carefully selected images of violence through the evening news or newspapers different from that caused by the chaos of violent images children see today through their phones?

    If we agree that history is formed through these images, what does history look like when there are thousands of different choices, camera angles, interpretations, and even fakes? How would we understand the massacre at Kent State if it happened today? What would it look like? What happens when, rather than all of us seeing an image of a young woman in the throes of shock and mourning kneeling over a dead body, we see hundreds of cellphone videos that capture the terror as it unfolds in real time?

    I don’t have any satisfying answers to these questions, nor do I have a particularly strong opinion on whether children should see these scenes or not. There have been years of studies on the effects that violence on television and in video games has on young minds, and some authors have suggested that they desensitize children and might even lead to copycat acts. I have always been a bit skeptical of these claims, and particularly of the way that they are invoked during that emotional period after a tragedy has taken place, when people are looking around for someone or something to blame. And, of course, such studies do not fully explain why some kids can watch gore or play violent video games without any problems, and other kids allegedly turn into killers because of them.

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    Jay Caspian Kang

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  • Tesla under investigation after parents say faulty door handles trapped their kids in the back

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    Car safety regulators opened an investigation Tuesday into possible defects in Tesla doors that have reportedly left parents with children trapped in the back seat and forced to break windows to get them out.

    The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said that the preliminary probe is focused on 2021 Tesla Model Ys after receiving nine reports of electronic door handles becoming inoperative possibly due to low battery voltage.

    The company run by billionaire Elon Musk has installed manual door releases inside the vehicles but NHTSA noted that a child may not be able to reach or know how to operate the releases. In four cases, the parents had to break the windows to get inside.

    The investigation into Tesla’s most popular model comes after numerous reported incidents in recent years of other problems with opening Tesla doors, sometime trapping drivers in a burning vehicle after accidents and a loss of power.

    In April, a college basketball recruit said he was “fighting time” trying to get out of his Tesla Cybertruck that had caught fire after he had crashed into a tree and was unable to get the doors open. The University of Southern California player, Alijah Arenas, who was induced into a temporary coma after the accident, said he stayed alive by dousing himself with a water bottle as smoke filled the vehicle.

    NHTSA said the investigation is only focusing on the operability of the electronic door locks from outside of the vehicle, not inside, as that’s the only instance in which there is no manual way to open the door. But it also said it will continue to monitor reports of people stuck on the inside — what it calls “entrapment” — and will take further action as needed.

    The current agency investigation covers approximately 174,300 of the midsize SUVs.

    The agency said the incidents appear to occur when the electronic door locks receive insufficient voltage from the vehicle. It said that available repair invoices indicate that batteries were replaced after such incidents took place. Of those who reported incidents, none saw a low voltage battery warning before the exterior door handles became inoperative.

    NHTSA said that its preliminary evaluation will look at the scope and severity of the condition, including the risks that come from the conditions that have been reported to them.

    The agency’s investigation will also assess the approach used by Tesla to supply power to the door locks and the reliability of the applicable power supplies.

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