The homeowners are dead. But their true heirs have been stiffed out of their rightful inheritance in an elaborate effort to steal entire houses in South Florida, investigators say.
Now, a year later, we’ve turned back to those essential workers to check in. Some have changed jobs. Some have lost friends and family to the disease. They all kept going to work. We asked them how things have evolved over the last 12 months, what they’re worrying about now, and if they see any hope on the horizon as vaccines become more broadly available. These are their stories, in their own words.
Interviews by Elena Gooray, Abraham Gutman, Erica Palan, and Sandra Shea. Quotes have been condensed for length and clarity. TIM TAI / Staff Photographer Patricia Henwood, an emergency medicine physician at Jefferson University Hospital, is focused on vaccine now. It is critically important to continue to maintain distancing and masking, and be patient until we can get more vulnerable people vaccinated and get vaccinations scaled up.
a lot of the ec in occupy wall street. it is stunningly consistent with what i talk about in this book. chris christie has endorsed but romney. yes. well, i hang on everything chris christie says. i guess i am running girl. i really am. at the good is going to be romney. i m going to write about that in my column. i ve had it with these upstarts. he is not of reagan. he is the best of senator. best of all, he has a demonstrated ability to attract liberals into voting for him. [laughter] next on book tv, jeff sharlet talks about the depth and nature of religious belief in the united states. this is about an hour-and-a-half. thank you. thank you, and thank you for coming out and joining me. it is a pleasure to be here at porter square books. i used to live up the street, and so this was my bookstore for a while. so i spent a lot of money here. i m getting a little back. also, i would like to give a plug for independent bookstores. i have come to the end of this book tou