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Home/News & Info
Posted by : DayaLys / On : April 30, 2020

Pioneering Hip-Hop Journalist Dee Barnes Is Now Homeless

ALL Things HipHop, News & Info, Our posts

Check out Dee Barnes’ GoFundMe campaign here.

Dee Barnes has been evicted from her home after a long financial struggle.

In a new interview, Barnes revealed she’s now homeless. “I had never asked for public help before, but I then remembered a long time ago while I was going through the assault trial in 1991 people were sending me checks for my legal fees. I never cashed any of them — not one — but knowing I had that support kept me strong enough to continue to face each court date,” she told HipHopDx.

She continued, “right now, I am officially homeless. My goal with the campaign is to regain stability, which is imperative for survivors of any trauma.”

Barnes had recently created a GoFundMe explaining her situation.

A post on her account reads, “Standing in our own truth not the definitions or the expectations is powerful, and this is my TRUTH…Yes, I did post the link to my PayPal, CashApp and GooglePay accounts asking for help because I am in the process of being evicted. This page was created as an emergency fund to stop the process and the subsequent legal fees. Even though I am facing extreme financial hardship, I keep my head up. I know who I am, I know my worth and I know I’m not alone.”

As the host of Pump It Up! Barnes became the first female hip-hop journalist to have a broadcast television show. Her career derailed in 1991, after being brutally attacked by Dr. Dre. Barnes filed criminal charges against Dre and a civil suit followed before they settled out of court in 1993.

Dre, who had long dismissed the story, spoke on his history of abusing women during an episode of HBO’s The Defiant Ones, saying he was “out of his fucking mind.” The music mogul referred to abuse as “a major blemish” on who he is as a man.

After the attack, Barnes says she continues to have migraines 28 years later, and believes that she was blackballed by the industry.

“As far as the subject matter of my past history with Dr. Dre and my current situation, I will say any time a women tells her account of abuse from a public figure, there is always extreme backlash,” she said in the interview. “Women are punished first by the crime committed against them and then for holding abusers accountable for their actions and speaking out against domestic violence and sexual assault. Survivors should be able to hold people in positions of power accountable for their actions without losing their own power.”

In 2016, Dre threatened to sue Sony Pictures over the release of the TV movie Surviving Compton: Dre, Suge & Michel’le, which depicted him as a violent abuser to former girlfriend and singer Michel’le.

Michel’le has gone on record with allegations of physical abuse against Dre.

Article via OkayPlayer

Check out some Lovelyti videos:

Twitter GOES OFF On Dr. Dre During The Premiere of Michel’le Biopic Surviving Compton

Michel’le VS Dre~i’m Not Sweating Dre’s Legal Threat My Movie Is STILL Coming out #survivingcompton

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Posted by : kevin dukes / On : April 29, 2020

O.C. District Attorney warns residents after release of 7 ‘high-risk’ sex offenders during coronavirus pandemic

News & Info

Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer on Tuesday issued a warning to residents after seven registered sex offenders who he said were “high-risk” were recently released from custody early, amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

Spitzer said the convicted men spent “just days” in jail instead of the six months required by law for those registered as sex offenders.

The men apparently had also been charged with cutting off their GPS monitors or tampering with their tracking devices.

They were released beginning on April 7 as a result of rulings by appointed Court Commissioner Joseph Dane, Spitzer said.

The DA called the men “the most dangerous kind of criminal and the most likely to reoffend.”

“These are not the kind of people who should be getting a break,” he said.

Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes announced Tuesday that the jail population in the county has been reduced by nearly 45% since March 7.

After additional steps were taken to make sure inmates were safe during the crisis, Barnes said overcrowding is not an issue, according to Spitzer.

“It is not the court’s responsibility to control the jail population by releasing these dangerous criminals back into our communities,” the DA said. “The residents of Orange County deserve to have the peace of mind that registered sex offenders are being held accountable and not just let out the front door of a jail by a court commissioner who refuses to follow the law.”

Spitzer called the decision to release the inmates “dangerous” and vowed that his office will not appear in front of Dane on parole violations involving registered sex offenders.

Both Spitzer and Barnes have also expressed frustration over a statewide order that bail be reduced to zero for many offenders.

The inmates who were released are:

  • Luis Joel Ramirez, 27. Ramirez was last known to have lived in Costa Mesa. According to the DA’s office, his criminal history includes sexual battery, assault with a deadly weapon, resisting a peace officer, burglary and possessing of a leaded cane, a deadly weapon. He was released on April 7 after serving 20 days on a parole violation for cutting off his GPS, then released again on April 24 after serving 16 days on a parole violation for failing to report, the DA’s office said.
  • James Franklin Bowling, 50. Bowling last lived in Orange and his criminal history includes lewd conduct in a public place, repeated convictions for failing to register as a sex offender, repeated convictions for sex offender on school grounds and possession of controlled substance and paraphernalia, officials said. Bowling had two parole violations since February and was released on April 9 after serving 14 days on a parole violation for failing to charge his GPS monitoring device. He was ordered to report to parole but “does not report,” the DA’s office said.
  • Rudy William Grajeda Magdaleno, 39. Magdaleno last lived in Anaheim. His criminal history includes child molestation, indecent exposure, assault, battery, criminal threats and inflicting injury on an adult, officials said. He has had five parole violations since 2017. He was released on April 13 after serving 142 days on a parole violation for failing to charge his GPS monitoring device. He was ordered to report but he “does not report,” officials said.
  • Calvin Curtis Coleman, 52. Coleman last lived in Santa Ana and his criminal history includes lewd conduct in a public place, officials said. He has had three parole violations since 2019 and was released on April 13 after serving 18 days on a parole violation after failing to charge his GPS monitoring device. He was ordered to report to parole.
  • Kyle Albert Winton, 40. Winton last lived in Mission Viejo and his criminal history includes annoying or molesting a child, criminal threats to cause great bodily injury or death, resisting a peace officer and DUI and hit and run with property damage, officials said. He has one parole violation and was released in April after serving 10 days on a parole violation for failing to charge his GPS. He was ordered to report to parole, but he “does not report,” officials said.
  • Jose Adrian Oregel, 46. Oregel last lived in Santa Ana and his criminal history includes unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor, oral copulation of a person under the age of 18 and causing great bodily injury. He was described by the DA’s office as a second striker. He was released on April 22 after serving 18 days for failing to charge his GPS device. He was ordered to report to parole.
  • Mario Ernesto Sandoval, 45. Sandoval was last known to live in Stanton and his criminal history includes sexual battery, touching for sexual arousal, indecent exposure, assault on a peace officer and assault, officials said. He has had one parole violation in 2020. Officials said he failed to charge his GPS device and was unaccounted for one-third of the time he was out of custody. He was released on April 22 after serving 16 days on a parole violation for failing to report to charge his GPS device. He was ordered to report to parole.

via: https://ktla.com/news/local-news/o-c-district-attorney-warns-residents-after-release-of-7-high-risk-sex-offenders-during-coronavirus-pandemic/

Photo Credit: ktla.com

Posted by : kevin dukes / On : April 29, 2020

Brooklyn man arrested for stealing stimulus checks, credit cards from mail

News & Info

BROOKLYN — A Brooklyn man has been arrested over accusations he’s been stealing mail, including credit cards and stimulus checks from the US Trasury Department, according to US Attorney Richard P. Donoghue’s office.

Feng Chen was arrested in Brooklyn Tuesday and appeared via videoconference before a judge Wednesday afternoon. In the early morning hours Tuesday, NYPD officers saw Chen looking inside the medical collection bin at a closed medical office and then walking to a nearby residence and examining mail left at the door. He then walked into the gated area of a second residence and left carrying what appeared to be mail.

When he saw the police, Chen tossed the mail on the sidewalk. When officers got out of their vehicle, they observed a bulge in Chen’s jacket pocket. Upon a search, officers found checks, stimulus payments totaling up to $12,000, credit cards, opened envelops and letters.

“For many families, these stimulus checks are a lifeline in these difficult times and anyone who tries to cut that lifeline will face the full weight of the law,” stated United States Attorney Donoghue. “This Office will vigorously prosecute all those who seek to take advantage of the public health crisis.

“The NYPD recognizes how the COVID-19 pandemic presents an opportunity for a variety of malicious, criminal scams. In this case, I applaud our alert detectives and federal partners for interrupting an alleged scheme to victimize New Yorkers by stealing important mail and stimulus money meant to aid them during this unprecedented crises,” stated NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea.

If convicted, Chen faces a maximum of five years in prison.

via: https://www.pix11.com/news/local-news/brooklyn/brooklyn-man-arrested-for-stealing-stimulus-checks-from-mail-officials

Photo Credit: pix11.com

Posted by : kevin dukes / On : April 29, 2020

News anchor allegedly caught cheating when half naked woman walks into live shot

News & Info

A Spanish news anchor was accused of cheating on his TV star girlfriend when viewers spotted a semi-naked woman saunter behind him while he was filming a live segment, according to a report.

Alfonso Merlos, 41, was hosting the Estado de Alarma channel news report from his home amid the coronavirus lockdown when the scantily clad gal walked into the background of the shot, according to The Sun.

Eagle-eyed fans pointed out the woman was not his partner Marta López, a former star of the “Big Brother” reality show — sparking a media firestorm earlier this week, according to the outlet.

Merlos remained silent for days despite accusations of two-timing, then apologized to López during an appearance on “The Ana Rosa” news show Monday.

“If you think that my attitude has not been correct or that there are things that I have not done well, I have no problem asking for forgiveness, although my goal was not to harm someone else,” he said.

He claimed he’d broken up with the reality star before the at-home segment was shot — but Lopez insisted they were still together at the time. She called the incident “unpleasant” and “shameful.”

The partially clothed woman was later identified as journalist Alexia Rivas, according to the local new site 20 Minutos. Rivas said she has been dating the newsman for several weeks.

via: https://nypost.com/2020/04/29/news-anchor-caught-cheating-when-naked-woman-walks-into-shot/

Photo Credit: nypost.com

Posted by : kevin dukes / On : April 29, 2020

Dozens of dead bodies found in U-Haul trucks outside NYC funeral home

News & Info

Police found dozens of bodies being stored in unrefrigerated trucks outside a Brooklyn funeral home and lying on the facility’s floor Wednesday, law enforcement sources told The Post.

Between 40 to 60 bodies were discovered either stacked up in U-Haul box trucks outside Andrew Cleckley Funeral Services in Flatlands or on the building’s floor, after neighbors reported a foul odor around the property, sources said.

NYPD detectives were joined by several other city agencies investigating the trucks at the Utica Avenue facility Wednesday evening, with the section of the street closed off to the public.

John DiPietro, who owns a neighboring property, said he had observed cadavers being stored in the trucks for at least several weeks during the coronavirus pandemic.

“You don’t respect the dead that way. That could have been my father, my brother,” said DiPietro.

Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams was on the scene, but could not confirm any details of the storage. Adams said the city needed to ramp up staff for a “bereavement committee” to deal with the surging deaths due to the coronavirus.

“We need to bring in funeral directors, morgues, [medical examiners], clergies … when you find bodies in trucks like this throughout our city, treating them in an undignified manner, that’s unacceptable.”

Calls to the funeral company, went unanswered Wednesday afternoon.

via: https://nypost.com/2020/04/29/bodies-stored-in-trucks-at-brooklyn-funeral-home-sources/

Photo Credit: nypost.com/Paul Martinka

Posted by : Tawny Hembry / On : April 28, 2020

Tacoma nurse brought COVID-19 home. Now her husband is on a ventilator, fighting for his life

Health, News & Info

Tammy Edwards remembers closing her front door and falling to her knees.

Moments earlier, the nurse at Tacoma General Hospital had watched her husband of nearly 10 years, Brian Edwards, strapped to an oxygen tank and taken away in an ambulance.

She knew he was stricken with COVID-19, because she had brought it home from work.

She knew, because of her medical training and the overwhelming signs, he was struggling — most notably an inability to breath and dangerously low oxygen levels.

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And, amid the coronavirus precautions and limits on visitation, she knew precisely what a trip to the hospital under such circumstances could mean — that the kiss on the cheek she’d given Brian moments earlier might be the couple’s last.

Three hours later, Edwards said, her husband had been intubated — sedated and placed on a ventilator that has been helping him breath ever since.

“I said, ‘I love you. You know I can’t be with you,’” Edwards recounted Monday, eight days after Brian, 50, was rushed to the hospital where she works.

“I remember closing my door, and I just lost it. I just had a meltdown,” Edwards, 51, continued. “I didn’t know if I was ever going to see him again. It was really hard. I paced around in my house for a couple hours, crying and praying.”

That night, Edwards also took to social media, posting photos and an update on Brian’s condition to Facebook. The couple grew up in Tacoma — both graduating from Wilson High School — and have a large circle of friends and relatives. She wanted people to know how he was doing.

As a nurse, Edwards said she also wanted people to take COVID-19 seriously. Brian had no underlying health conditions, she explained, and yet he was still fighting for his life.

“I decided, you know what, there’s so much going on in the news right now — so much controversy — that I wanted to reach out to our community and show this is real,” Edwards said of the Facebook post, which has now been shared thousands of times and garnered widespread attention.

“This is not a hoax, and it’s not a conspiracy,” she added. ”This is the real deal.”

Since her husband was admitted to Tacoma General, the emotions have been overwhelming and come in waves, Edwards said.

She’s often terrified and unable to sleep for fear of missing a call from the hospital. Her husband is now in stable but critical condition, but the illness is unpredictable, and he’s “very sick and has a long road ahead of him,” Edwards said.

Edwards also longs to hear her husband’s voice again — to connect with him, even from afar. Right now, her contact with him has been limited to nightly, one-way video chats. Edwards talks to Brian for hours every evening, she explained, confident he can hear her through a phone placed next to his ear, while she watches for small signs to confirm it.

“I just talk to him until his phone dies,” Edwards said.

Then there’s the guilt — which might be the hardest part of all and underscores the incredible sacrifices being made by medical professionals during the coronavirus pandemic.

The registered nurse, who works on Tacoma General’s birthing and postpartum unit, said she became ill earlier this month and tested positive for COVID-19 on April 10. Previously, Edwards was notified of exposure on her unit, she explained.

Brian, meanwhile, developed symptoms the day before her test results came back.

Today, Edwards is still recovering, and has yet to return to work.

The toll COVID-19 has taken on her husband is much greater, she said.

“When he first went in (to the hospital), I figured that he was likely not going to make it. That was awful,” Edwards said, recounting Brian’s persistently worsening cough, gasps for air and exhaustion-induced delirium.

“When he left that day, on Sunday, I buckled and I had to sit down. All I thought about is, ‘This is your fault. It’s your fault,’” Edwards said. “I’m devastated by it. I’m heartbroken. I know I likely caused this, even though we were taking precautions.”

The “only thing that really keeps me strong,” Edwards said, is how Brian supported her career, even after he became ill with COVID-19.

That doesn’t stop Edwards from apologizing to him every night over the phone, she said.

“He knows I’m a nurse, and we know the risk. We talked about it, and he’s not upset with me. But I still tell him I’m sorry,” Edwards said.

”I apologize to him, because I brought it home and he got sick. I have a lot of guilt about that.”

Read more here: https://www.thenewstribune.com/news/local/news-columns-blogs/matt-driscoll/article242275096.html#storylink=cpy

Posted by : kevin dukes / On : April 28, 2020

Mike Pence Bucks Mayo Clinic’s Mandatory Mask Policy During Visit

News & Info

Vice President Mike Pence on Tuesday opted not to wear a face mask during a visit to the Mayo Clinic’s campus in Minnesota, bucking the organization’s mandatory masking policy amid the pandemic.

Video showed Pence, whose face was fully exposed, surrounded by masked staff members and a masked patient while touring the clinic. It wasn’t immediately clear whether the patient was infected with the coronavirus.

The Mayo Clinic informed Pence of the masking policy prior to his visit, the organization tweeted Tuesday. The tweet has since been deleted, but the clinic confirmed to HuffPost that it shared the masking policy with the vice president’s office.

Wall Street Journal reporter Gordon Lubold, who was present for the vice president’s visit, tweeted that the clinic made it clear that everyone should wear a mask.

The clinic’s website states that all patients, visitors and staff are required to wear a mask on campus in an effort to curb the contagion.

“Please bring your own face mask or covering to wear,” the website states.

Neither Pence’s office nor the Mayo Clinic immediately responded to HuffPost’s requests for comment. 

Pence defended his choice, however, while speaking to White House pool reporters Tuesday afternoon.

“As vice president of the United States, I’m tested for the coronavirus on a regular basis, and everyone who is around me is tested for the coronavirus,” Pence said.

“And since I don’t have the coronavirus, I thought it’d be a good opportunity for me to be here, to be able to speak to these researchers these incredible health care personnel and look them in the eye and say thank you.”

President Donald Trump earlier this month announced guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that recommended people wear cloth face masks in public settings where social distancing may be difficult to maintain.

Trump, however, said that he did not plan to follow the guidance.

“I don’t think I’m going to be doing it,” Trump said during a news briefing at the White House on April 3. “Wearing a face mask as I greet presidents, prime ministers, dictators, kings, queens — I just don’t see it.”

via: https://www.huffpost.com/entry/pence-face-mask-mayo-clinic_n_5ea875c7c5b6550571e96927

Photo Credit: huffpost.com

Posted by : kevin dukes / On : April 28, 2020

102-year-old woman has survived cancer, sepsis, miscarriages, Spanish flu and now coronavirus

News & Info

(Meredith) — Angelina Friedman is quite the fighter. The 102-year-old New York woman has survived cancer, sepsis, miscarriages, and two pandemics.

“She has superhuman DNA,” Joanne Merola told WPIX-TV while marveling at her mother’s endurance.

Friedman (née Sciales) was born in 1918 on a passenger ship bringing immigrants from Italy to New York City during the second wave of the Spanish flu pandemic.

“Her mother died giving birth on the ship, and she was taken care of by her two sisters,” said Merola.

According to the World Health Organization, the Spanish flu infected about a third of the world’s population, and roughly 50 million people died from it.

Decades later, Friedman has survived a second pandemic: COVID-19.

She tested positive for the virus on March 21 after she went to a hospital for a minor medical procedure. She left the hospital a week later and returned to the North Westchester Restorative Therapy and Nursing Center in Lake Mohegan.

After quarantining in her nursing home room for weeks, she finally tested negative for the virus on April 20.

“My mother is a survivor,” Merola said. “She’s survived miscarriages, internal bleeding, and cancer.”

Merola hasn’t been able to visit her mother since February. Because Friedman is nearly deaf, they can’t speak on the phone. So, the nurses are keeping Merola updated on her mother’s progress.

“They tell me she’s doing great. She’s up and about as much as possible,” Merola said. “If my mother could see this, I’d tell her, ‘You keep going, Ma. You’re gonna outlive us all.’”

Friedman has outlived her husband and 10 siblings.

via: https://www.kmov.com/102-year-old-woman-born-during-spanish-flu-pandemic-recovers-from-covid-19/article_0486ab17-6061-56a8-94d2-d67a72fc2b63.html

Photo Credit: kmov.com

Posted by : kevin dukes / On : April 28, 2020

Neighbors meet during the coronavirus quarantine, find out they’re related

News & Info

(CNN) — Kjetil and Zoe Njoten live four houses away from Erik and Jen Strom in the Los Angeles area, but the couples had never talked beyond the occasional “Hi” or a friendly wave.

They bonded — from a safe distance — at an impromptu neighborhood get-together this month over their shared Norwegian heritage.

Kjetil Njoten grew up on Njoten Island in Norway. Both Erik Strom’s and Jen Strom’s families are from the country.

Jen Strom’s family came from a town a couple hours away from where Kjetil Njoten grew up — a coincidence on its own.

Erik Strom told Kjetil Njoten that his family came from a small island that they’d never been able to find, Njoten said.

“They thought it was named Newton, which to us clearly wasn’t a Norwegian name,” Njoten told CNN’s “New Day.”

They joked that maybe the family came from Njoten Island, which can be pronounced like “Newton.” The island is only home to a couple dozen people.

“Wouldn’t it be even crazier if we were actually related, somehow,” Erik Strom said.

Strom said he called his mom to check their family history book, which traces her lineage back to the 1700s.

She texted a picture of his great-great-grandfather. His last name was also Njoten.

They sent that information to Kjetil Njoten’s mom, who was able to confirm the family connection.

It turns out that Kjetil Njoten and Erik Strom have the same great-great grandfather.

And their great-great grandfather lived in same house where Kjetil Njoten grew up 100 years later.

“So a crazy coincidence,” Njoten said.

They’re looking forward to spending more time together once the safer-at-home restrictions are lifted.

“Me and Jen were just squealing and jumping around and all of us were beaming with smiles and desperate to hug but can’t,” Zoe Njoten said.

Jen Strom said they’re planning a “huge family meal, a big party,” adding she’s been practicing making some Norwegian delicacies.

Erik Strom said he’s got lots of relatives looking forward to meeting the Njotens.

“There are people from all over the country who are related to us who are interested in coming out and meeting and just participating in the story,” Erik Strom said.

The Stroms have a 4-year-old daughter, and the Njotens have a 10-year-old son.

“My son is so excited that he’s got a new cousin on the street to play with, eventually,” Zoe Njoten said.

via: https://www.kmov.com/news/neighbors-meet-during-the-coronavirus-quarantine-find-out-theyre-related/article_c0b76bd1-29ec-5dbf-9b77-99deb77b3d08.html

Photo Credit: Courtesy Kjetil and Zoe Njoten

Posted by : kevin dukes / On : April 28, 2020

Women are getting abortions from home during coronavirus quarantine

News & Info

Fifty years ago, women were still fighting for their legal right to an abortion. Now, it can all be arranged online.

A new service called TelAbortion connects women looking to terminate their pregnancies with a doctor who can virtually prescribe miscarriage-inducing pills to take at home, the New York Times reports.

And as the coronavirus lockdown stretches into its third month, women are looking to use the telemedicine option more than ever because of limited access to clinics, especially in conservative states.

Throughout March and April, TelAbortion — which is offered in 13 states — helped twice as many women obtain abortions than in January and February, the report states. As of April 22, the service had confirmed 611 completed abortions.

Ashley Dale, of Hawaii, opted to use the service because of the expenses of traveling to a clinic in Honolulu 200 miles away.

“The alternative would be to wait for a doctor to come to my island in three weeks,” Dale, 35, told a TelAbortion doctor. But by then, she would be past the allowed limit of 10 weeks pregnant to use the pills. “It’s not like it was easy … but at the same time it’s pretty clearly the right choice.”

Another woman used TelAbortion because she didn’t want to face the protesters outside her local Planned Parenthood in Salem, Oregon.

“I just don’t want to deal with that ridicule,” Dawn, 30, tells the Times. One woman made the call from a parking lot while sitting in her car.

Some women are even traveling to one of the 13 states where TelAbortion is offered in order to be eligible for the pills. The trend is picking up even more during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We have had patients who cross state lines in order to receive TelAbortions,” Dr. Elizabeth Raymond, senior medical associate at Gynuity Health Projects, which runs the program, tells the Times. Earlier this month, a Texas woman drove 10 hours in the snow to New Mexico and stayed in a motel just to receive the pills.

Once women are approved for the abortion, a package is sent to their homes and is comprised of two pills — mifepristone, which blocks the hormone that causes pregnancy to mature, and misoprostol, which helps the body get rid of fetal tissue. Women often experience cramping and bleeding.

TelAbortion charges about $200 to $375 for consultations and pills, which come in a package with tea bags, peppermints, maxi pads, prescription ibuprofen and nausea medication.

The Food and Drug Administration is allowing the service to operate.

via: https://nypost.com/2020/04/28/women-are-getting-abortions-from-home-during-quarantine/

Photo Credit: Alamy Stock Photo

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