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Saturday, August 10, 2024

"Neither Scholar Nor Journalist": NYT 'Influencer' Undermined Study Debunking Mask Mandates

 by Paul D. Thacker via The Disinformation Chronicle,

Hey guys, I had a piece last week in UnHerd discussing hundreds of emails I had gone through that found social media influencer Zeynep Tufekci pressured the prestigious medical nonprofit Cochrane to put out a statement attacking their own review that found there is little evidence that masks stop respiratory viruses. One of the people Tufekci interviewed for the piece also told me that she twisted his words, which is obvious from the emails.

I want to walk you through some of those emails, but if you’d like to read the piece in UnHerd, it’s here: How the NYT undermined mask evidence: Leaked emails reveal how scientists were smeared.

The emails were sent to me after someone had filed Freedom of Information requests at different universities, and I got others from a person at Cochrane who is upset at what is happening inside the organization. Let’s first set the stage for what happened.

Mask activist on the attack

In March 2023, New York Times columnist Zeynep Tufekci wrote an essay arguing that “masks work” while attacking a review on masks by Cochrane, which publishes the gold standard of evidence for medical interventions. When Tufekci’s piece first appeared, I knew it smelled fishy.

Just a month prior, I had published a long Q&A with Tom Jefferson, the lead author of the Cochrane 2023 mask reviewJefferson loves going into all kinds of details about the hierarchy of evidence, how reviews are done, the contrasts between different types of reviews, and other tiny bits of medical information that only interest people with decades of expertise in clinical trials and medical research.

In short, very hard to follow.

My interest in masks was to help readers cut through all the controversy, to understand whether they really help with COVID and if mask mandates make sense in their schools and local community. I had noticed videos and news stories circulating on social media pointing out that several public health officials had done a 180 from the early months of the pandemic, first stating that masks don’t work, before pivoting to advocate for masks.

I called this the “great mask-science flip flop of 2020” and participants included Canada’s chief health officer, Theresa Tam, as well as the leading public health official in England, Jenny Harries.

Even Tony Fauci performed a mask-science flip flop, first arguing that masks didn’t work, before pivoting into full-on mask activist.

As Jefferson kept rambling on with tiny details about how to perform medical reviews that nobody but an expert in medical reviews could really follow, I stopped him.

“Wait, did you just say that Cochrane has done this mask review several times?” I asked. “This isn’t the first one?”

“Yes,” he replied.

So we went down the list. The Cochrane mask review published in February 2023 wasn’t the first time Cochrane scientists had examined the scientific literature to see if there was any evidence masks worked to stop viruses. They had published prior updates finding the same thing in 20202011 20102009, and 2007.

So the whole thing started 17 years ago.

Every time Cochrane has put out a review that looked at masks, nobody said anythingbecause masking wasn’t controversial. Everyone agreed that masks didn’t seem to stop viruses. Physicians had first started using masks over a hundred years ago but that was to stop spreading bacteria during surgery. And bacteria are hundreds of times larger than viruses.

I then started digging around and found several scientific studies concluding masks don’t do much to stop respiratory viruses, as well as several examples of international medical bodies drawing similar conclusions. For example, the World Health Organizations stated in their 2019 pandemic preparedness plan, “There have been a number of high-quality randomised controlled trials (RCTs) demonstrating that personal protective measures such as hand hygiene and face masks have, at best, a small effect on influenza transmission.”

So why was I reading a “masks work” essay in the New York Times?

The only explanation is Zeynep Tufekci. I didn’t really know Tufekci until I read her “masks work” essay last year, and when I looked into her background I found that she was mostly unknown in the scientific world until COVID. Once the pandemic started she made a name for herself writing essays in places like Wired and Scientific American. Intrigued, I looked into her academic publishing record and found that her academic CV was a tad barren, with few peer-reviewed studies but a slew of opinion articles.

Plus, Tufecki has no training in medicine or public health.

I then discovered that her profile had exploded in March 2020 when a New York Times media reporter praised Tufekci for a March 1 tweetstorm and March 17 essay in The New York Times that swayed the CDC to alter federal guidance and begin advising people to mask.

As I read the article praising Tufekci, I started laughing at how crazy it was that national policy could be set by tweets and an essay, not anything published by scientists. It was just so bizarre.

Tufekci has bounced around to different universities in the past four years, but at the beginning of the pandemic, she was a professor at the University of North Carolina. North Carolina’s big paper is the Raleigh News & Observer, and I found that they profiled Tufekci in 2021, anointing her a COVID hero who had challenged top health officials and got the facts right — but with essays, not science.

Instead of conducting lab experiments related to Covid-19, she used her platform on Twitter and in the opinion sections of Scientific American, The Atlantic and The New York Times to inform the public with practical advice about what to do and why.

I read that newspaper article thinking, “Thank God Tufekci didn’t use her platform on Twitter to challenge airline pilots at Raleigh-Durham International that she could fly a 747 to London’s Heathrow.”

And then I got the emails.

Opinions mean nothing, emails and documents everything

One of the first things I noticed was that Tufecki had emailed Michael Brown, a physician at Michigan State University, on February 24, 2023. According to other emails, I learned that Michael Brown had been the sign off editor for the mask review.

Why, I wondered, had Tufekci contacted Brown at this time?

Searching the news, I realized that Tufekci’s New York Times colleague, Bret Stephens, had published an essay three days prior, ribbing mask advocates like Tufekci because of Cochrane’s mask review: “The Mask Mandates Did Nothing. Will Any Lessons Be Learned?

Tufekci’s rise in prominence is based mostly on her mask advocacy, and the thrust of Stephens’ piece in the New York Times must have cut her open like a surgeon’s scalpel:

[W]hen it comes to the population-level benefits of masking, the verdict is in: Mask mandates were a bust. Those skeptics who were furiously mocked as cranks and occasionally censored as “misinformers” for opposing mandates were right. The mainstream experts and pundits who supported mandates were wrong. 

Without much of a scientific publishing record and so much of her credibility tied to her mask advocacy, Stephens’ essay must have felt threatening.

But when she contacted Brown, Tufekci laid it on thick that she was an academic researcher, claiming expertise in statistics and causal inference, as well as scientific reviews.

“I use and participate in reviews myself (I’m writing one in my own field soon) and thus am familiar with many of the challenges and issues.”

You don’t need to have attended university to know that Tufekci is fibbing here. I glanced through Google Scholar to see what Tufeckci has published in the academic literature and didn’t find much except opinion pieces. In all of 2024, Tufecki has not published a single article in the scientific literature, and in 2023, she published one piece: an opinion essay.

As for the review Tufeckis told Brown in March 2023 that she was writing “in my own field soon”? It has never appeared.

When I contacted Brown about Tufekci, he told me that he had been a bit naive perhaps in dealing with her, as he hadn’t looked into her background, and didn’t realize that she was a mask activist. But what Tufecki did with the quotes she took from Brown is quite disturbing.

In her article, Tufekci quoted Brown and followed up in the next paragraph implying that he supported the idea that “the evidence is really straightforward” that masks provide protection from COVID. But Brown told me that’s not what the science concludes.

Here’s the section of Tufekci’s essay:

Brown, who led the Cochrane review’s approval process, told me that mask mandates may not be tenable now, but he has a starkly different feeling about their effects in the first year of a pandemic.

“Mask mandates, social distancing, the other shutdowns we had in terms of even restaurants and things like that — if places like New York City didn’t do that, the number of deaths would have been much higher,” he told me. “I’m very confident of that statement.”

So the evidence is relatively straightforward: Consistently wearing a mask, preferably a high-quality, well-fitting one, provides protection against the coronavirus.

This is just sleazy.

When I contacted Brown, he said that Tufecki spun his words, because the evidence is clear that masks don’t seem to do much. Brown actually stated as much some months after Tufekci interviewed him. Emailing the organizer of a talk he was giving, Brown wrote that masks “likely” provide “some” protection but “do not make a major impact at the community level when promoted as a public health intervention.”

This is basically the opposite of how Tufekci framed Brown’s quote in her essay.

Brown also told me that he had told Tufekci to contact the scientists who wrote the Cochrane review, because they are the real experts. Duh! While he was the editor of the review, he hadn’t read each and every published study like the review authors.

But Tufekci ignored Brown. Instead, Tufekci contacted Karla Soares-Weiser, the woman running Cochrane. Apparently, Tufekci sent a slew of questions, because Soares-Weiser then emailed Lisa Bero, a professor medicine at the University of Colorado who serves as Cochrane ethics advisor.

“Lisa, I have been back and forth with NYT about the mask review. CAN I GET YOUR VIEWS ON THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS?” emailed Soares-Weiser. She then sent questions to Bero that she had gotten from Tufekci.

What makes this all comical is that Tufekci obviously knows nothing about reviews, yet Soares-Weiser freaked out because Tufekci writes a column at the New York Times.

It’s science by essay writer.

After Bero answered the questions, Soares-Weiser thanked her. “Thank you, Lisa. I'm navigating a difficult situation and of course need to take these points into account. Help appreciated.”  

For anyone with a passing familiarity with scientific research, one thought should come immediately to mind: why didn’t Soares-Weiser tell Tufekci to send those questions to scientists who had written the review? That’s what Michael Brown did.

That will become clear in a bit.

I got a copy of the email Tufekci sent Jefferson for questions and it’s dated March 9, the day before she published her 2000+ word essay. I’ve written for the New York Times. It’s a rather laborious process dealing with editors and fact checkers. It would impossible for Tufekci to contact Jefferson for comment and then slam out a 2000+ word essay, get that essay edited, deal with those edits, and then get it fact checked.

What those dates tell you is that Tufekci had the essay ready to publish before she contacted Jefferson for comment, suggesting she didn’t even care what he had to say. Jefferson has been publishing scientific research on respiratory virus for several decades, but Tufekci wasn’t interested in what he had to say because she already considered herself the expert.

The day Tufecki published her essay, Soares-Weiser then rushed out a statement claiming she was working to fix problems in the Cochrane mask review. But Soares-Weiser did this without consulting the scientists who had done the work. This would be like the editor-in-chief of the New York Times publishing an essay complaining about a New York Times investigative series without bothering to consult any of the reporters or editors who had done the work.

I will not speak for the others but am deeply distressed by this course of events which have occurred without our knowledge,” replied Jon Conly, a professor and former head of the department of medicine at the University of Calgary.

Michael Brown responded that he had spoken to Tufekci and told her that “I stood by the conclusions of the review but asked that she reach out to you, the authors, to answer some of her questions directly. She assured me that she would do so.”

Of course, Tufekci did NOT reach out to the scientific authors, because she wasn’t interested in what they had to say.

Brown then sent an email to Soares-Weiser and several of the Cochrane editors reminding them that changes were being considered to the mask review language, even though it was the same wording as had been used in the 2020 update.

Why were changes being considered then? As Brown explained, it had nothing to do with science. “[I]t was only under intense media coverage and criticism that these revisions were suggested.”

Emails find that Soares-Weiser appeared to be in a bit of panic, monitoring negative commentary about her decision to publish a statement without bothering to consult the scientists. “I had a challenging meeting with the [governing board] yesterday. I am holding on, stressed, but OK,” she emailed Lisa Bero.

Bero then suggested to Soares-Weiser that Cochrane publish negative comments being submitted by outsiders criticizing the mask review. “That should be published as soon as possible (following screening for libel or profanity),” Bero emailed. “It is important for readers to know that criticism has not just come through the media, but through the formal channels that we have.”

Shortly after bullying Cochrane’s Soares-Weiser to put out a statement claiming she would make changes to the mask review, Tufekci began tweeting that she had gotten the review “corrected.”

However, this isn’t true.

A month back, Soares-Weiser put out a correction to her prior statement, and now says that Cochrane will not make any changes to the mask review.

The entire saga calls into question Zeynep Tufekci’s ethics and whether Soares-Weiser is still fit to lead Cochrane.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/neither-scholar-nor-journalist-how-nyt-influencer-undermined-groundbreaking-anti-mask

Helpful, Harmful, or Illegal: Can Your Patients Really Record You?

 


Anesthesiology resident Max Feinstein, MD, reviews the legalities around recording conversations with physicians.

Following is a transcript of this video; note that errors are possible.

Feinstein: What would you do if you're an anesthesiologist placing an epidural for a pregnant patient, and partway through, you notice that their partner has their phone out and it's pointed right towards you? You ask whether they are filming and they uncomfortably say no, and put their phone away.

If you're practicing in the United States and the partner was indeed recording, they could actually be violating state wiretap laws, depending on where this took place. On the other hand, if you are a patient under anesthesia and you record your anesthesiologist insulting you, you might find yourself on the winning end of a lawsuit like this patient did.

Juju Chang (ABC News): Well, one unsuspecting patient checked his smartphone after a routine procedure and discovered some nasty results.

Tiffany Ingham, MD: Round and round we go, wheel of annoying patients, we go. Where it'll land, nobody knows! And, really, after 5 minutes of talking to you in pre-op, I wanted to punch you in the face and man you up a little bit.

Feinstein: My name is Max Feinstein and I'm an anesthesiologist in New York City. I'm not a lawyer, but as a physician and a content creator, I think it's really important for both patients and healthcare providers to have a good understanding of when it's okay to record audio or video in the hospital.

The term "wiretap laws" refers to statutes that govern audio and video recordings made of face-to-face conversations, telephone calls, or video calls. These laws vary from state to state. Where states that have one-party consent laws means that only one person who is in the area that's being recorded has to provide consent. Nobody else in the area has to provide consent. In the example of the pregnant patient whose partner is recording everything that's going on in the room, technically the only person who has to provide consent is the person doing the recording. Nobody else is legally required to provide consent.

Thirty-seven states in the United States have one-party consent laws. This contrasts with all-party consent, meaning, as the name implies, that everyone who is involved with the recording has to provide their consent. Violation of these laws may result in fines up to $100,000 and possibly jail time as well.

Wiretap laws are not the same thing as HIPAA, which you might have heard about before. Among other things, HIPAA specifically covers the audio and video recordings made by the healthcare providers of their patients. HIPAA does not extend to recordings that patients make of their healthcare providers. HIPAA is just about recordings made of the patient, whereas wiretap laws can refer to anyone in the room, including patients, doctors, nurses, or anyone else.

In addition to wiretap laws, many hospitals also have policies in place specifically describing what is and is not allowed as far as recording is concerned. For example, Mayo Clinic is a large hospital system that specifically has policies requiring that everyone who is involved with a recording give their consent, including healthcare providers. This is an example of a hospital policy that requires consent for everyone involved, despite the fact that the state in which it's located, Minnesota, is a one-party consent state for recordings.

But the question that comes to my mind is what actually happens if someone is found in violation of this hospital policy? I don't think that there is a hospital jail or something that people get thrown into. When I was doing the research for this video, I actually made phone calls to large, recognizable hospital systems in the United States and asked to be transferred to the security department and questioned them about what would happen if someone is found to be violating recording policies.

My overall takeaway from these phone calls is that it's complicated and really situation-dependent, but actions that hospitals might take range from taking away a patient's cell phone temporarily, all the way to terminating a relationship with the patient. But, obviously, you can't terminate a relationship for a patient who is critically ill in the ICU, so again, that's really situation-dependent.

Wiretap laws were actually featured in this month's newsletter from the Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation, which was actually the inspiration for this video. The APSF is a nonprofit organization that does really important work related to patient safety and anesthesiology. I have put a link in the description below if you want to check out the June 2024 newsletter.

There are many good reasons that a patient or a family member might want to record a conversation with their healthcare provider. One might be for future reference in case the explanation or instructions that are being provided are complex and the patient or family would like to refer back to them in the future. I have actually done this myself. Even though I have gone through medical school, I have still asked doctors if I can record conversations related either to me or to a family member.

Recording an encounter with a healthcare provider can also be really helpful in case the patient and the healthcare provider don't share the same language. Of course, interpreter services should always be made available to patients, but having a recording of the conversation can be helpful for translating again in the future or, again, for reference in the future.

A recording can also be helpful for educational purposes and this is something I have done, for example, with several of my videos featuring actual patients who provided their consent to be recorded for educational purposes in a video going onto YouTube. Just a reminder that any recording in the United States that involves a patient is going to be subject to HIPAA, so it's important to make sure that you have the appropriate consent when doing this.

A patient or family member may be inspired to make a recording to ensure that there is nothing inappropriate being done or said in the encounter with the healthcare provider. One patient in Virginia accidentally left his phone recording as he was having his colonoscopy done. When he went back and listened to the recording, he found out that the anesthesiologist was actually insulting him while he was under anesthesia.

Watch the video above for more.

Max Feinstein, MD, is a PGY-4 anesthesiology resident at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City, where he is also chief resident of teaching. His YouTube channelopens in a new tab or window focuses on perioperative medicine, especially the role of the anesthesiologist.

https://www.medpagetoday.com/popmedicine/popmedicine/111441

'Social Media Bans Could Deny Teenagers Mental Health Help'--or Remove Source of Problem

 Social media's effects on the mental health of young people are not well understood. That hasn't stopped Congress, state legislatures, and the U.S. surgeon general from moving ahead with age bans and warning labels for YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram.

But the emphasis on fears about social media may cause policymakers to miss the mental health benefits it provides teenagers, say researchers, pediatricians, and the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.

In June, Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, MD, MBA, called for warning labelsopens in a new tab or window on social media platforms. The Senate approved the bipartisan Kids Online Safety Actopens in a new tab or window and a companion bill, the Children and Teens' Online Privacy Protection Act, on July 30. And at least 30 states have pending legislationopens in a new tab or window relating to children and social media -- from age bans and parental consent requirements to new digital and media literacy courses for K-12 students.

Most research suggests that some features of social media can be harmful: Algorithmically driven content can distort reality and spread misinformation; incessant notifications distract attention and disrupt sleep; and the anonymity that sites offer can embolden cyberbullies.

But social media can also be helpful for some young people, said Linda Charmaramanopens in a new tab or window, PhD, a research scientist and director of the Youth, Media & Wellbeing Research Lab at Wellesley Centers for Women in Massachusetts.

For children of color and LGBTQ+ young people -- and others who may not see themselves represented broadly in society -- social media can reduce isolation, according to Charmaraman's research, which was published in the Handbook of Adolescent Digital Media Use and Mental Healthopens in a new tab or window. Age bans, she said, could disproportionately affect these marginalized groups, who also spend more time on the platforms.

"You think at first, 'That's terrible. We need to get them off it,'" she said. "But when you find out why they're doing it, it's because it helps bring them a sense of identity affirmation when there's something lacking in real life."

Arianne McCullough, 17, said she uses Instagram to connect with Black students like herself at Willamette University, where about 2% of students are Black.

"I know how isolating it can be feeling like you're the only Black person, or any minority, in one space," said McCullough, a freshman from Sacramento, California. "So, having someone I can text real quick and just say, 'Let's go hang out,' is important."

After about a month at Willamette, which is in Salem, Oregon, McCullough assembled a social network with other Black students. "We're all in a little group chat," she said. "We talk and make plans."

Social media hasn't always been this useful for McCullough. After California schools closed during the pandemic, McCullough said, she stopped competing in soccer and track. She gained weight, she said, and her social media feed was constantly promoting at-home workouts and fasting diets.

"That's where the body comparisons came in," McCullough said, noting that she felt more irritable, distracted, and sad. "I was comparing myself to other people and things that I wasn't self-conscious of before."

When her mother tried to take away the smartphone, McCullough responded with an emotional outburst. "It was definitely addictive," said her mother, Rayvn McCullough, 38, of Sacramento.

Arianne said she eventually felt happier and more like herself once she cut back on her use of social media.

But the fear of missing out eventually crept back in, Arianne said. "I missed seeing what my friends were doing and having easy, fast communication with them."

For a decade before the COVID-19 pandemic triggered what the American Academy of Pediatrics and other medical groups declared "a national emergency in child and adolescent mental healthopens in a new tab or window," greater numbers of young people had been struggling with their mental health.

More young people were reporting feelings of hopelessness and sadness, as well as suicidal thoughts and behavior, according to behavioral surveysopens in a new tab or window of students in grades nine through 12 conducted by the CDC.

The greater use of immersive social media -- like the never-ending scroll of videos on YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram -- has been blamed for contributing to the crisis. But a committee of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine found that the relationship between social media and youth mental health is complex, with potential benefits as well as harms. Evidence of social media's effect on child well-being remains limited, the committee reported this yearopens in a new tab or window, while calling on the National Institutes of Health and other research groups to prioritize funding such studies.

In its report, the committee cited legislationopens in a new tab or window passed in Utah last year that places age and time limits on young people's use of social media and warned that the policy could backfire.

"The legislators' intent to protect time for sleep and schoolwork and to prevent at least some compulsive use could just as easily have unintended consequences, perhaps isolating young people from their support systems when they need them," the report said.

Some states have considered policies that echo the National Academies' recommendations. For instance, Virginia and Maryland have adopted legislation that prohibits social media companies from selling or disclosing children's personal data and requires platforms to default to privacy settings. Other states, including Colorado, Georgia, and West Virginia, have created curricula about the mental health effects of using social media for students in public schools, which the National Academies also recommended.

The Kids Online Safety Act, which is now before the House of Representatives, would require parental consent for social media users younger than 13 and impose on companies a "duty of care" to protect users younger than 17 from harm, including anxiety, depression, and suicidal behavior. The second bill, the Children and Teens' Online Privacy Protection Act, would ban platforms from targeting ads toward minors and collecting personal data on young people.

Attorneys general in California, Louisiana, Minnesota, and dozens of other states have filed lawsuitsopens in a new tab or window in federal and state courts alleging that Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, misled the public about the dangers of social media for young people and ignored the potential damage to their mental health.

Most social media companies require users to be at least 13, and the sites often include safety features, like blocking adults from messaging minors and defaulting minors' accounts to privacy settings.

Despite existing policies, the Department of Justice says some social media companies don't follow their own rules. On Aug. 2, it sued the parent company of TikTok for allegedly violating child privacy laws, saying the company knowingly let children younger than 13 on the platform, and collected data on their use.

Surveys showopens in a new tab or window that age restrictions and parental consent requirements have popular support among adults.

NetChoiceopens in a new tab or window, an industry group whose members include Meta and Alphabet, which owns Google and YouTube, has filed lawsuits against at least eight statesopens in a new tab or window, seeking to stop or overturn laws that impose age limits, verification requirements, and other policies aimed at protecting children.

Much of social media's effect can depend on the content children consume and the features that keep them engaged with a platform, said Jenny Radeskyopens in a new tab or window, MD, co-director of the American Academy of Pediatrics' Center of Excellence on Social Media and Youth Mental Healthopens in a new tab or window.

Age bans, parental consent requirements, and other proposals may be well-meaning, she said, but they do not address what she considers to be "the real mechanism of harm": business models that aim to keep young people posting, scrolling, and purchasing.

"We've kind of created this system that's not well designed to promote youth mental health," Radesky said. "It's designed to make lots of money for these platforms."

https://www.medpagetoday.com/psychiatry/generalpsychiatry/111445

MSM Absent In Reporting "Dozens Of Night Time Low Temp Records" Across US

 Climate alarmists and their left-wing corporate media allies, who constantly spread fear and anxiety among an already heavily medicated population, churn out endless streams of climate doom headlines right at the peak of the Northern Hemisphere summer (how convenient). They deliberately ignore the fact that the 2022 Tonga Volcano eruption is contributing to some of the Earth's warming—and they'll conveniently leave out this critical piece of climate news:

"Dozens of night time low temp records have been broken the last 2 mornings. Many folks waking up to temps in the upper 40s and lower 50s this morning," private weather forecaster BAM Weather wrote on X. 

BAM Weather explained these low temperatures are "Typical of early October weather for most." 

Let's not forget that climate alarmists usually point to 'record temperatures' with data going back several decades, half a century, or a little more. If they were to show the entire picture, well, their agenda and climate grift would evaporate overnight. 

The lower 48 region is about three weeks post-peak summer.

Looking ahead, the National Weather Service's Climate Prediction Center still expects the weather phenomenon La Nina to emerge "during Sep-Oct-Nov (66% chance) and persist through the Northern Hemisphere winter 2024-25 (74% chance during Nov-Dec-Jan)." 

Here are the weather impacts in a La Nina year across the Lower 48.

Leftist corporate media usually get it wrong - with zero accountability - because they're plagued by the 'climate religion' and push an agenda to scare folks into believing that more government taxes and banning cow farts and Taylor Swift's jet will solve the world's problems.

https://www.zerohedge.com/weather/msm-absent-reporting-dozens-night-time-low-temp-records-across-us

Uvalde officials release bodycam footage from Robb Elementary shooting

 Officials in Uvalde, Texas have released police body camera footage and a collection of audio and video recordings of the deadly mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in 2022.

The footage release comes after the Associated Press and other news organizations brought a lawsuit against the city because officials initially refused to publicly release information from the shooting, which left 19 students and two teachers dead.

One of the first calls that police received that day was from a woman who reported a truck crashed into a ditch and a person was running onto the school’s campus, the AP reported.

“Oh my god, they have a gun,” she told police.

A few minutes later, a man calls to say, “He’s shooting at the kids! Get back!” He informed police that the 18-year-old gunman was inside the school.

“Oh my God in the name of Jesus. He’s inside the school shooting at the kids,” he said.

According to the body camera footage from police, an officer asks the gunman to “please don’t hurt anyone else” and to put his gun down. It showed blood on the floors in hallways and classrooms.

Law enforcement’s response was sharply criticized after the shooting.

A scathing report by the Department of Justice (DOJ) found that a lack of preparation, communication and urgency resulted in nearly 400 members of federal, state and local law enforcement agencies standing outside the school for 77 minutes while the gunman was inside.

The gunman, Salvador Ramos, shot his grandmother at her home before taking a truck to the school. His uncle made several 911 calls hoping to be put through to his nephew to beg him to stop, the AP reported.

“Maybe he could listen to me because he does listen to me, everything I tell him he does listen to me,” Ramos’s uncle said on the call. “Maybe he could stand down or do something to turn himself in.”

The outlet noted that the call came too late, after police fatally killed Ramos.

In the body camera footage, published to YouTube by KSAT 12, officers pull children from the school windows and one says “Thank you.” Officers tell them to hurry out, saying, “We got you.”

Families of the victims renewed their calls for police officers to face charges after the DOJ report cited unnecessary deaths, as officers detained parents who attempted to enter the school but did not go in themselves.

Earlier this week, the Texas Department of Public Safety reinstated a state trooper, Steven McCraw, who was suspended after the shooting.

McCraw said the officer in command on the scene of the shooting believed that the situation had shifted from an active shooter situation to a barricade situation and children were no longer in danger.

Only two other officers face criminal charges. Both have pleaded not guilty.

https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/4822360-uvalde-school-shooting-bodycam-footage-release/

Police Audio Corroborates Claims Biden Had A Medical Emergency In Vegas

  by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Police audio has been released revealing that law enforcement in Las Vegas were engaged in a snap operation to secure a route for Joe Biden to get to University Medical hospital, a trauma center, corroborating previous reports that there was some sort of medical emergency involving Biden before he stepped down as the Democratic nominee.

As we highlighted at the time, police sources claimed that US Secret Service informed local law enforcement that there was an emergency situation involving Biden on July 17, and to close necessary streets so that he could be transported immediately to the hospital.

According to the sources, hundreds of officers and employees heard the broadcast live and set in motion emergency response procedures, with radio dispatchers asking for a “surge” of police resources to secure the area and the emergency room on standby.

The plan then abruptly changed and Biden was flown back to Delaware at high speed.

Speculation was that Biden was displaying stroke like symptoms, and that he could have experienced a transient ischaemic attack, also called a “mini stroke”, a serious condition where the blood supply to the brain is temporarily disrupted.

The new audio is from the Las Vegas Metro Police Department’s protective detail for Biden and was released Friday afternoon by Oversight Project, which obtained the recordings through a Freedom of Information Act request.

The three recordings, containing police chatter, are not time stamped, but appear to span a few hours.

In two clips, both of around four-minutes, officers are asked to respond Code 3, which is an emergency response posture.

In the third longer clip of 43 minutes, someone on the radio states “For everybody on the radio, right now they’re on a hold for something regarding the President.”

The protective detail was then informed “For everyone on the radio, right now POTUS is 421. He’s being seen, so we’re just kinda waiting to see how this is shaping out. So, for everybody’s knowledge, he’s 421 right now; we’re just trying to figure out what’s going on and we’re gonna go from there.”

Code 421 means a sick or injured person, according to LVMPD’s code sheet.

The rest of the audio contains chatter about the protective detail quickly moving their resources to ensure a secure route for “POTUS movement.”

While it is difficult to determine exact details from the audio, it is clear evidence that something significant happened to Biden. Something that the American people and the world is still not privy to.

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https://www.zerohedge.com/political/police-audio-corroborates-claims-biden-had-medical-emergency-vegas