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Tuesday, February 14, 2023

'Stray bullet killing of innocent NYC mom of 2 sparks arrest of 23 ‘most dangerous’ gang members'

 Nearly two dozen of New York City’s “most dangerous” gang members were taken off the streets — in a major bust sparked by the stray-bullet killing of an innocent Queens mom two years ago, authorities said Tuesday.

The tragic March 2021 death of 37-year-old mother of two Gudelia Vallinas — shot on her way back from shopping for her family — prompted an investigation that ultimately led to the 84-count indictment against 23 reputed gang members, according to prosecutors.

“Miss. Vallinas is our American dream, whose life was suddenly halted due to gang members recklessly firing bullets, with total disregard of anybody around them,” Queens District Attorney Deputy Chief Jason Savino said, decrying the act of violence as “absolutely horrific.”

Vallinas, an immigrant from Mexico who cleaned houses for a living, was walking home on March 21, 2021, in Woodside when she was hit in the head by a stray bullet — in a shooting that authorities said was part of an ongoing war between two gangs.

The feud started in 2018 when the alliance between the two Crips gangs in Woodside and Astoria public housing developments fell apart over a drug deal.Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz holds a press conference with NYC mayor Eric Adams and NYPD commissioner Keechant Sewell announcing a Queens gang bust in Woodside and Astoria after a series of shootings.

Authorities announced the gang takedown Tuesday.
Stephen Yang

Since then, the crews have repeatedly taunted each other on social media and in drill rap videos, leading to drive-by shootings on mopeds and brazen daytime gunfights, authorities said.

“The reckless criminality we saw during this investigation is the kind of lawlessness that has killed law-abiding citizens of New York that have been caught in the crossfire of gang violence,” Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz said at a press conference announcing the indictment.

The Astoria set of Crips are the “Rolling Crips” — who rap under the name  “Hip Hop Boys” and The Woodside members are known as the “True Cash Gettas,” according to the DA’s Office.

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Vallinas
Vallinas leaves behind two children.
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Surveillance footage showing the Queens gang shooting where Gudelia Vallinas, 37, was caught in the crosshairs and killed.
Surveillance footage showing the Queens gang shooting where Gudelia Vallinas, 37, was caught in the crosshairs and killed.
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Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz, joined by Mayor Eric Adams and NYPD Commissioner Keechant L. Sewell, announced that a two-year investigation into gang violence in and around two Queens public housing developments led to the indictments of 23 alleged members of warring subsets of the Crips street gang.
Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz, joined by Mayor Eric Adams and NYPD Commissioner Keechant L. Sewell, announced that a two-year investigation into gang violence in and around two Queens public housing developments led to the indictments of 23 alleged members of warring subsets of the Crips street gang.
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Gudelia Vallinas
Vallinas was killed in the Queens shooting.
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More of those arrested in NYC.
More of those arrested in NYC.
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Vallinas
Vallinas was killed when she was caught in the crosshairs of gang gunfire in Queens.
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Savino said the indictment targets the “alphas” in the gang. Those charged range in age from 21 to 40.

Eighteen of the men face charges connected to shootings, prosecutors said. Fifteen face counts of attempted murder, while the rest were charged with conspiracy and other crimes.

“Our beautiful Queens is just a bit safer with some of the most dangerous individuals in all of Queens now in custody,” Savino said.

Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz shows some of the handguns recovered in a Queens gang bust in Woodside and Astoria.
The two sets of Crips had a falling out in 2019.
Stephen Yang

Two men, Benaiah Reid and Dajuan Williams, both 19 at the time, were charged over Vallinas’ death but not named in Tuesday’s indictment.

“Her greatest joy was her family,” her father-in-law told The Post of Vallinas shortly after her murder.

The loving mom was gunned down at Broadway and 48th Street, just half a block from the first-floor rowhouse apartment where she raised her daughter, 9, and son, 10, the family has said.

“Gangs plus guns equal graves and our goal is to be proactive, and not just one gun at a time but to take down these dangerous individuals who are carrying around guns,” Mayor Eric Adams said at the Tuesday press conference.

Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz holds a press conference with NYC mayor Eric Adams and NYPD commissioner Keechant Sewell announcing a Queens gang bust in Woodside and Astoria after a series of shootings.
Police believe this takedown took the “alphas” in the gangs off the streets.
Stephen Yang

Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell vowed that city authorities “will be back with more cases and more arrests wherever violent criminals threaten our communities.”

“Other gangs who believe that they too could create a culture of fear in our city,” Sewell told reporters, adding, “those who believe that are wrong.”

https://nypost.com/2023/02/14/23-of-nycs-most-dangerous-gang-members-off-the-street-in-queens-takedown-da/?utm_campaign=iphone_nyp&utm_source=twitter_app

FDA Grants June 15, 2023 PDUFA Date to Albireo for Bylvay® in Alagille Syndrome

 

  • Bylvay (odevixibat)granted Priority Review by U.S. FDA
     
  • ASSERT study demonstrated efficacy of Bylvay in pruritus, bile acids and sleep with a low drug-related diarrhea rate in Alagille patients
     
  • Approval in second indication would more than double Bylvay market opportunity

U.S. FAA forms safety review team after near miss incidents

 

The acting head of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is forming a safety review team after several recent near miss incidents raised questions about the U.S. aviation system.

Acting FAA Administrator Billy Nolen in a memo seen by Reuters said he is "forming a safety review team to examine the U.S. aerospace system's structure, culture, processes, systems, and integration of safety efforts."

The FAA will hold a safety summit in March to examine what additional actions "the aviation community needs to take to maintain our safety record."

Nolen, who is set to testify before the Senate Commerce Committee Wednesday, said a group of commercial and general aviation leaders, labor partners, and others "will examine which mitigations are working and why others appear to be not as effective as they once were."

https://www.marketscreener.com/news/latest/U-S-FAA-forms-safety-review-team-after-near-miss-incidents--42987816/

Scientists ‘switch off’ autism symptoms using $3 epilepsy drug: discovery

 Scientists are reporting a breakthrough discovery: A $3-per-pill epilepsy drug may be used to “switch off” autism symptoms in mice, according to a new peer-reviewed study published Tuesday in Molecular Psychiatry journal.

Autism spectrum disorder is a complex developmental condition that impacts how an estimated 5.4 million (2.2% of) adults — and one in 44 children — in the United States perceives and socializes with others. It is often accompanied by abnormalities such as epilepsy or hyperactivity, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data.

A team of experts at Germany’s Hector Institute for Translational Brain Research found that the medication lamotrigine — an anti-seizure drug first approved for use in the US in 1994 — was able to curb behavioral and social problems linked to the disorder.

Now, their findings are being hyped as the closest thing yet to a potential cure for humans.

“Apparently, drug treatment in adulthood can alleviate brain cell dysfunction and thus counteract the behavioral abnormalities typical of autism,” lead researcher and cellular biologist Moritz Mall said in a statement. “[This occurs] even after the absence of MYT1L has already impaired brain development during the developmental phase of the organism.”Blister packs containing Lamictal anti-epileptic tablets

Lamictal is the brand name for lamotrigine, an epilepsy drug that costs around $3 per pill.
Bloomberg via Getty Images

Lamotrigine, which is sold under the brand name Lamictal, among others, is a medication used to treat epilepsy and stabilize mood in those who suffer from bipolar disorder.

The drug, which typically sells for just under $3 per pill, works by reversing changes to brain cells caused by a genetic mutation.

Scientists have spent years intensively searching for the molecular abnormalities that contribute to ASD and have identified MYT1L protein as one that plays a role in various neuronal diseases.

The protein is a so-called transcription factor produced by almost all the nerve cells in the body that decides which genes are or are not active in the cell. It also “protects the identity of nerve cells by suppressing other developmental pathways that program a cell towards muscle or connective tissue.”

Mutations of the protein have previously been linked to other neurological diseases and brain malformations.

To test impact of the protein on autism symptoms, researchers at HITBR genetically “switched off” MYT1L in mice and human nerve cells. They found that this led to electrophysiological hyperactivation in the mouse and human neurons impairing nerve function.

The mice lacking MYT1L suffered from brain abnormalities and showed several behavioral changes typical to ASD, such as social deficits or hyperactivity.

Psychology exercise for children, kid drawing family together with young educational therapist. Children mental therapy
A new study conducted by the Hector Institute for Translational Brain Research — and published Tuesday in Molecular Psychiatry journal — found that a cheap epilepsy drug was able to curb behaviors associated with autism.
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Researchers noted that the most “striking” reaction was the discovery that the MYT1L-deficient neurons produced extra sodium channels that are typically restricted to cells in the heart muscle.

These proteins are critical for electrical conductivity and cell function as they allow sodium ions to travel through the cell membrane. Nerve cells that overproduce these sodium channels can result in electrophysiological hyperactivation — a common symptom of autism.

“When MYT1L-deficient nerve cells were treated with lamotrigine, their electrophysiological activity returned to normal. In mice, the drug was even able to curb ASD-associated behaviors such as hyperactivity,” the statement continued.

These promising results come as autism rates have skyrocketed in the NYC metro area. Autism diagnoses have tripled in the New York-New Jersey metro area: from 1% of the population in 2000 to 3% in 2016.

It is believed that part of the drastic increase of these diagnoses is due to the growing number of diagnoses of children without intellectual disabilities, which are therefore less likely to have been identified previously.

But earlier, more accurate diagnoses don’t completely explain the upward trend, which was based on estimates from the CDC. Experts have warned that the growing trend of women giving birth later in life may be partly responsible for the rise.

Meanwhile, clinical human trials studying lamotrigine’s impact on MYT1L are being planned — and while the research is currently limited to mice, the results are promising, researchers stressed.

https://nypost.com/2023/02/14/scientists-switch-off-autism-using-3-epilepsy-drug-study/

Trans athletes — like Lia Thomas — will be banned from Texas college sports, Greg Abbott vows

 Transgender athletes will not be allowed to compete in college sports in the Lone Star State, Texas Governor Greg Abbott has vowed.

“This next session, we will pass a law prohibiting biological men to compete against women in college sports,” the governor said during a meeting of young conservatives in Dallas.

Under his leadership, the state imposed a similar ban in 2021 on transgender competitors in public schools from kindergarten through high school.

Texas lawmakers are now turning their attention to universities, with two lawmakers filing a bill to ban trans women from competing against biological women in college sports.

Alongside Texas, 17 other states have passed laws or placed restrictions on transgender people participating in sports, many of which have subsequently been challenged in court.

Abbott referenced Harvard transgender swimmer Lia Thomas during his remarks.

The 22-year-old University of Pennsylvania swimmer sparked a national debate on whether athletes who were born male should be allowed to compete against biological females.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott vowed to "pass a law prohibiting biological men to compete against women in college sports."
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott vowed to “pass a law prohibiting biological men to compete against women in college sports.”
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Thomas, who is originally from Austin, Texas, did not have the support of many of her teammates — sixteen of which argued she had an “unfair biological advantage.”

“We’ve fought for the rights of women to be able to succeed in this world only to have that now superseded by this ideology that men are going to be empowered to compete against women,” Abbott added during his comments.

The 6’1″ swimmer dominated in the pool, breaking records and winning titles. She was able to participate due to hormone treatment to lower her testosterone level, a requirement by the NCAA, which updated its policy in the last year to support transgender athletes.

Lia Thomas, a swimmer at the University of Pennsylvania, has been at the center of the debate over trans athletes in college sports.
Lia Thomas, a swimmer at the University of Pennsylvania, has been at the center of the debate over trans athletes in college sports.
USA TODAY Sports

If lawmakers in the Lone Star state do pass a bill restricting trans athletes, a court battle would almost certainly follow, as it has in many other states.

Florida passed a similar law in 2021, called the Fairness in Women’s Sports Act which banned anyone born biologically male from being able to compete against women at public school and college levels. The Florida law requires players to submit a birth certificate showing their sex when they were born when signing up for a team.

It quickly resulted in multiple legal challenges at court — including from a lawsuit from a 13-year-old trans girl from Fort Lauderdale who was not allowed to continue playing on girl’s soccer teams. However, despite these it is still currently in place.

a trans rights protester
Trans rights protesters are fighting against the bans.
Vuk Valcic/SOPA Images/Shutterstock
a man holding a sign saying 'no boys in girls sports'
Protesters rally against people who were born male partipating in female sporting events
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In Texas, LGBTQ groups were quick to speak out against Abbott’s proposal. “This type of legislation would abandon trans athletes and leave them without a way to express themselves in sports,” Equality Texas tweeted.

Trans people have pushed back on Texas’ law restricting them from competing since it was introduced.

“These laws are not ‘protecting girls’ they are hurting girls because transgender girls are girls. Science supports that transgender people are valid and you should to. Let us play sports,” trans youth Elliot told the It Gets Bettter project.

https://nypost.com/2023/02/14/texas-to-ban-transgender-athletes-from-college-sports-abbot/

Appeals Court To Reconsider Case Against Allowing Transgender Athletes In Female Sports

 by Naveen Athrappully via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

A federal appeals court has agreed to reconsider a lawsuit that challenged Connecticut’s policy of allowing transgender athletes to compete in girls’ athletic events, which followed an earlier court decision that had ruled against the lawsuit.

The case, brought by legal group Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), was filed on behalf of four female athletes who claimed that they were consistently deprived of honors and opportunities to compete at elite levels after the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference (CIAC) adopted a policy of allowing males, who identify as females, to compete in female sporting events. In December 2022, a three-judge panel of the 2nd Circuit ruled against the lawsuit, which led to the appeal. On Feb. 13, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit announced that the full court will reconsider the case.

We’re pleased the 2nd Circuit has decided to rehear this important case, and we urge the court to protect women’s athletic opportunities,” said Christiana Kiefer, a senior counsel at ADF, according to a Feb. 13 press release.

“Eighteen states have enacted laws that protect women and girls from having to compete against males, and polls show that a majority of Americans agree that the competition is no longer fair when males are permitted to compete in women’s sports.”

Lawsuit Against Female Discrimination

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Chelsea Mitchell, Selina Soule, Alanna Smith, and Ashley Nicoletti, insisting that the CIAC policy of allowing transgenders to compete in female sports is discriminatory.

Beginning in 2017, two male athletes started competing in Connecticut girls’ high school track events by claiming a female gender identity.

The two male athletes broke 17 records at girls’ track events. As a result, female athletes were deprived of over 85 opportunities to advance to the next level of competition, ADF claims.

In addition, the male athletes also took 15 state track championship titles for women’s events. According to ADF, Mitchell was the fastest female in four of these events. But she couldn’t get the title, honor, and recognition as male athletes secured the top spot. During her high school career, Mitchell lost to males over 20 times.

The other female athletes represented in this case, Selina Soule, Alanna Smith, and Ashley Nicoletti, all likewise have been denied medals, placements, or advancement opportunities because of the male athletes competing on their team,” said ADF.

In December, the three-judge panel rejected the lawsuit, insisting that discriminating against transgender athletes would amount to a violation of Title IX, which is a federal policy that requires institutions not to discriminate on the basis of sex if they receive funding from the federal government.

Transgenders in Female Sports

A heated debate has been ongoing over including transgenders in female events, with some insisting that such a measure protects equality while others point out that this would be unfair to female competitors.

In March last year, Lia Thomas, a swimmer from the University of Pennsylvania, became the first known transgender athlete to win a women’s NCAA championship, breaking a decade-long record in the process. Thomas had beaten the second-place female swimmer by 7.5 seconds, which is roughly half the pool’s length.

A June 2022 poll by the Washington Post-University of Maryland found that nearly 60 percent of Americans opposed allowing transgenders to participate in college and professional female sports.

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) has raised concerns about allowing transgenders to compete in women’s sports and called for protecting female athletics.

Allowing biological boys to compete in women’s sports is wokeness at its worst. It erases women. It can deprive them of the opportunity to be champions, excel at sports, and earn college scholarships,” McCarthy said in a Feb. 1 tweet.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/appeals-court-reconsider-case-against-allowing-transgender-athletes-female-sports