BPCC STUDENTS WIN GOLD AT STATE SKILLSUSA COMPETITION bossierpress.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bossierpress.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
La
Associated Press comprobó que una serie de noticias que fueron ampliamente difundidas en redes sociales esta semana son falsas, entre ellas que habría un pico máximo de decesos por COVID entre julio y agosto.
Por Marcos Martínez Chacón, Rafael Cabrera y Abril Mulato
Ciudad de México, 23 de julio (AP).– Un resumen de las
historias e
imágenes más populares, pero completamente
falsas de la semana. Ninguna de éstas es legítima, a pesar de que se compartieron ampliamente en las redes sociales.
The Associated Press las verificó. Aquí están los hechos:
INSTITUTO DE SALUD NO ALERTÓ SOBRE REPUNTE DE MUERTES POR COVID
NO FUE REAL: Una mirada a lo que no sucedió esta semana sfgate.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sfgate.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
By Victor Omondi
Ruby Jones, an elderly Black woman, filed a case against three Oklahoma City Police Department officers, alleging that they broke her arm while serving an arrest warrant for her mentally ill son.
“I know it was God that spared my life,” Ruby Jones said, as reported by The Oklahomian.
In the suit filed on Tuesday, the 74-year-old woman claimed that the three officers, Dan Bradley, Ryan Staggs, and James Ray, unlawfully invaded her home and disregarded her civil rights by applying excessive force, leading to painful injuries.
Bodycam video released in February revealed the officers walking up to Jones’ home on August 24, alleging they were there to apprehend her son Chauncey Jones, 43. As Jones asks to see the warrant, the officers force their way inside the house.