First Published: 3:57 PM PDT, July 21, 2021
Court documents by the agency revealed that Samantha Josephson, 21, sustained “numerous wounds to multiple parts of her body to include her head, neck, face, upper body, leg, and foot,” Inside Edition previously reported.
Samantha Josephson, the University of South Carolina senior who was allegedly kidnapped and brutally killed after getting into a car that she mistook for her Uber, suffered “heinous, cruel and malicious acts,” prosecutors told jurors on Tuesday during the trial of accused murderer Nathaniel Rowland, according to a published reported.
Josephson, 21, an aspiring lawyer, was out with her friends in Columbia’s Five Points entertainment district. After she got separated from her roommates she called an Uber and mistakenly got into a black Chevrolet Impala driven by Rowland, the man who prosecutors say allegedly kill her, Inside Edition Digital previously reported.
The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision Monday to review Mississippi’s ban on most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy has raised hopes and fears that Roe v. Wade will be overturned and its viability standard eliminated.
Job Responsibilities
The development, implementation and maintenance of privacy policies and procedures, investigation and tracking of privacy incidents to comply with HIPAA, CCPA, GDPR and other applicable state/federal/international laws.
Support the objectives of the Global Privacy Office.
Working with/enabling our Transformation Programs (Connected/Evolve).
Partnering with the data governance and security teams to enable consistent processes and workflow as it relates to global privacy and protection procedures and guidelines.
Be able to execute job responsibilities independently and with the understanding of how the output will affect other operational areas as it relates to data privacy and protection.
Politics, Policy, & Social Media: How Natural Hair Has Influenced A Generation Refinery29 2/23/2021 aimee simeon
“Hi guys, welcome to my channel,” played like a broken record in my head throughout my college days, during which I was consumed with the growing natural hair community on YouTube.
“Today I’m gonna show you how I achieved this twist out on transitioning hair,” were usually the words that followed during the hour-long style sessions I would have in my bedroom.
I started getting perms at age nine. It’s hard to forget sitting in the bathtub in my childhood Brooklyn apartment, watching neutralizing shampoo go from yellow to pink when the formula was all rinsed out. Or, rummaging through my scalp to pick at the scabs from the burns I’d get from scratching before my perm. As an adolescent child, straight hair was all that I knew. Relaxing my head of curls provided an easier solution for my mom who didn’t have time to detangle and style m