takes him two minutes to get there. they d done enough surveillance, and we were very familiar with his routine by this point. he came down the road. he was coming from work. the truck went down the road, and i slammed my car in drive. police cars pull in around him, stop him, tell him to get out. otis: we got him out of the car, we put him on the ground, and we handcuffed him. we stood him up. and in the very back of our line of our police cars was lieutenant landwehr in the back seat of a ford taurus. dennis rader was put in the back seat right next to kenny landwehr. and they look at each other. hello, mr. landwehr. hello, mr. rader. landwehr says, do you know why you re here? he says, i have a pretty good idea. otis: we had staged the interview with dennis rader far in advance of him being in that room. we had a camera and obviously audio and video recording going on. morton: literally, in 3 hours and 15 minutes,
During a Kansas Legislature special committee meeting, a witness compared being required to wear a mask to Jewish people in the Holocaust being forced to wear a yellow Star of David by the Nazis.
Multilingual team helps Berlin immigrants fight coronavirus
KIRSTEN GRIESHABER, Associated Press
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1of6Aliye Tuerkyilmaz a member of a multilingual team of five street workers shows an information flyer as she poses for a photo in Berlin, Germany, Tuesday, March 9, 2021. Three times a week, Aliye Tuerkyilmaz hits the markets and busy shopping streets of Neukoelln, the German capital’s crowded immigrant neighborhood that’s studded with minarets, kebab stores and hookah lounges. The 48-year-old Turkish immigrant hands out flyers informing about the coronavirus pandemic and tries to connect with other immigrants in one of the four languages she speaks. Tuerkyilmaz belongs to an multilingual team, a group of five street workers trying to explain the dangers of COVID-19 to those who are often not reached through other efforts by the authorities.Markus Schreiber/APShow MoreShow Less