Social distancing and wearing face masks should stay forever, a Communist-supporting SAGE scientist has claimed.
Professor Susan Michie, of University College London, said she thinks the draconian restrictions should become part of people s every day routine.
In a bizarre comparison, she said Britons never used to wear seat belts in cars or pick up dog poo in the park but learned to over time.
It comes as the country waits with bated breath to see if Boris Johnson will stick to his roadmap and launch Freedom Day on June 21.
The PM could implement a mix and match unlocking, with face masks, work from home guidance and the rule of six indoors likely to still be mandatory.
Monroe County Prosecuting Attorney Michael G. Roehrig has determined that criminal charges will not be filed in a fatal stabbing death that involved two friends who were involved in a violent fight at an area hotel parking lot.
In a lengthy press release that described a brutal, ongoing battle between the two men, Roehrig reported that he decided against charging the man with a crime because he acted in self-defense. Killed in the Feb. 14 fight was Andrew Murray, 25, of Monroe.
Roehrig said following a thorough investigation that included significant video evidence, it was determined the friend was in a fight to save his own life. Roehrig added that manslaughter was considered, but eventually dismissed as a legal option.
HENDERSONVILLE - An attempted murder charge against a mother police initially said threw her infant daughter over a 30-foot ravine has been dropped, with conditions.
Krista Noelle Madden, a Biltmore Park resident, was charged with first-degree attempted murder after her infant daughter was found 30 feet down a steep, heavily forested ravine in rural Henderson County on May 9, 2019. Police said Madden threw the baby over the ravine s edge, though Madden described placing the baby on the ground in interviews with police, according to search warrants.
Her attorney, Sean Devereux, said this week that psychological evaluations showed Madden was going through acute postpartum depression, as well as sleep deprivation, that resulted in a psychotic episode. Madden believed someone was going to harm her baby, so she drove to a rural part of eastern Henderson County and placed the baby at the bottom of an embankment, Devereux said.