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Ongoing George Floyd Protests Leave Close to 300 NYPD Officers Injured

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FILE - In this Nov. 4, 2019, file photo, Chief of Detectives Dermot Shea, the incoming New York City Police Commissioner, attends a news conference at New York's City Hall. Shea is drawing on his early days as a patrolman as he pushes the nation’s largest police department to cultivate deeper bonds with the communities it serves. Shea says that will be key to building trust and cutting crime. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)

By Ilana Siyance

The tragic death of George Floyd has led to even more tragedy, loss and death all around the nation.  In NY, close to 300 of New York’s finest have been injured during the ongoing protests.  As reported by the NY Post, 292 NYPD officers have been hurt in violent clashes that erupted during demonstrations, police said.

NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea called for an end to violence against officers.  “Violence has been used multiple times during what could have been and what should have been peaceful protests,” Shea said Thursday night at a live-streamed press conference.  “Violence poisons the well of democracy. It has done so at a time when we so desperately need civil discourse about issues that all of us, black, white — all of us that we care so much about.”

The protests should be peaceful, but many times they are not.  NYPD police said it seems multiple different groups including Al Qaeda, ISIS, neo-Nazis, other political extremists and hate groups have unified for the goal of opportunistic propaganda to “accelerate conflict, incite violence.”

“What they’re seeking is more disorder, more violence, more mayhem,” said Deputy Commissioner for Intelligence and Counterterrorism John Miller.  As reported by NBC, police officials said “there’s been a pretty dramatic escalation in terms of rhetoric and propaganda from these extremist entities” in posting online and on social media trying to use George Floyd protests for their own agendas and to create unrest in the country.  “It’s our responsibility and obligation to make sure that we track down which of these propagandists has security implications for the large number of protests in New York City,” police officials said.

As of Saturday, the NYPD said they have made 1,024 protest related arrests and given 1,164 summonses. These numbers do not include curfew violations. Some 467 arrests have been linked specifically to felonies.  While the data still needs to be studied before making any inferences, 3.6 percent of those arrested had previous arrests or incidents with law enforcement tied to shootings, homicides, or weapons charges; 6 percent had ties to gangs; and 2.3 percent of those arrested were repeat offenders.

“You have anarchist groups that are actively planning to do destruction and violence against police,” said Miller, explaining that those groups don’t generally loot, but rather break glass, and damage buildings.  Then, “You have the looters who have tried to blend with the protesters for cover and then break off with the sole purpose of looting merchandise,” he continued.

 

 

 

 

MLB offers 76-game season, Playoffs Rise Up to 16 teams

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. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens, File)

By RONALD BLUM (AP)

(AP) — Major League Baseball has made another try to start the coronavirus-delayed season in early July, proposing a 76-game regular season, expanding the playoffs from 10 teams to as many as 16 and allowing players to earn about 75% of their prorated salaries.

Players have refused cuts beyond what they agreed to in March shortly after the pandemic began, part of baseball’s again acrimonious labor relations. The arduous negotiations have jeopardized plans to hold opening day around the Fourth of July in empty ballparks and provide entertainment to a public still emerging from months of quarantine.

MLB’s latest proposal would guarantee 50% of players’ prorated salaries over the regular season, according to details obtained by The Associated Press.

The proposal would eliminate all free-agent compensation for the first time since the free-agent era started in 1976. It also would forgive 20% of the $170 million in salaries already advanced to players during April and May.

“If the players desire to accept this proposal, we need to reach an agreement by Wednesday,” Deputy Commissioner Dan Halem wrote in a letter to union negotiator Bruce Meyer that was obtained by The Associated Press. “While we understand that it is a relatively short time frame, we cannot waste any additional days if we are to have sufficient time for players to travel to spring training, conduct COVID-19 testing and education, conduct a spring training of an appropriate length, and schedule a 76-game season that ends no later than Sept. 27.”

“While we are prepared to continue discussion past Wednesday on a season with fewer than 76 games, we simply do not have enough days to schedule a season of that length unless an agreement is reached in the next 48 hours,” he added.

There was no immediate response from the union, which is likely to view the plan as a step back because of the large percentage of salaries not guaranteed.

“There’s social unrest in our country amid a global pandemic. Baseball won’t solve these problems, but maybe it could help,” Washington pitcher Sean Doolittle tweeted. “We’ve been staying ready & we proposed 114 games — to protect the integrity of the game, to give back to our fans & cities, and because we want to play.”

“It’s frustrating to have a public labor dispute when there’s so much hardship. I hate it,” he said. “But we have an obligation to future players to do right by them. We want to play. We also have to make sure that future players won’t be paying for any concessions we make.”

While there is no chance players would accept this proposal as is, the offer dropped the sliding scale teams embraced last month that would have left stars with just a fraction of their expected pay. The latest proposal figures to spark more talks that could lead to opening day at some point in July.

Players agreed March 26 for prorated salaries that depend on games played, part of a deal for a guarantee of service time if the season was scrapped.

MLB says it can’t afford to play in ballparks without fans and on May 26 proposed an 82-game schedule. The union countered five days later with a 114-game schedule at prorated pay that would extend the regular season by a month through October.

MLB is worried a second wave of the virus would endanger the postseason — when MLB is scheduled to receive $787 million in broadcast revenue.

Teams estimate the new offer would guarantee $1.43 billion in compensation: $955 million in salaries, including an allowance for earned bonuses; $393 million if the postseason is played — half the broadcast revenue — for a 20% bonus for every player with a big league contract; $50 million for the regular season postseason pool normally funded with ticket money; and $34 million for the forgiven advances.

Mike Trout and Gerrit Cole, who have the highest salaries of $36 million each, would have been guaranteed $5.58 million each under the initial MLB proposal with the chance to earn up to about $8 million, and $25.3 million apiece in the union plan. They would be guaranteed $8,723,967 each under the latest offer and would get $12,190,633 apiece if the postseason is completed.

A player at the $563,500 minimum could earn up to $244,492 and those at $1 million — about half those on current active rosters — could get up to $389,496.

MLB estimates its revenue would drop from $9.73 billion last year to $2.75 billion this year with a 76-game season. Adding prorated shares of signing bonuses, option buyout, termination pay, assignment bonuses and benefits, MLB says players would get 70.2% of revenue, up from 46.7%. Also factoring in signing bonuses for amateurs in the draft this week and international players, MLB projects players would get 86.2%, up from 52.1%.

Expansion of the playoffs would make a major change for MLB’s 30 clubs. Postseason teams doubled to four with the split of each league into two divisions in 1969, then to eight with the realignment to three divisions and the addition of a wild card in 1995, a year later than planned due to a players’ strike. The postseason reached its current 10 with the addition of a second wild card and a wild-card round in 2012.

Players proposed expanding the playoffs to 14 teams in both 2020 and ’21. The MLB plan also would cover the next two seasons. It doesn’t specify a format other than as many as eight clubs per league.

Free agent compensation has long caused bitter fights since the arbitration decision in December 1975 that struck down the reserve clause — it led to an eight-day strike during spring training in 1980 and a 50-day strike during the 1981 season. Compensation had been narrowed in recent years but still caused some free agents to have fewer bidders and sign later, such as pitchers Craig Kimbrel and Dallas Keuchel in 2019.

MLB proposed dropping the loss of draft picks and international signing bonus pool allocation for signing a qualified free agent.

All players would have the right to opt out and not play, but only high-risk individuals would be treated as if injured and would receive salary and service time.

Players’ distrust of MLB stems from accusations of service time manipulation to delay eligibility for free agency and salary arbitration; payroll paring for rebuilding the union calls tanking; slow free-agent markets; and five years of relatively flat salaries.

MLB’s frustration with the union has built since Tony Clark took over after Michael Weiner died in late 2013. Management complains the union procrastinates responding to proposals and then causes hectic deadline negotiations.

Halem sent Meyer an angry letter Wednesday, and Meyer replied in kind Friday.

“I am not going to respond to the assertions and mischaracterizations in your letter because we are well past the point that exchanging letters is a constructive use of our limited time,” Halem wrote Monday. “To be clear, we are neither shutting down negotiations nor requesting that the association negotiate against itself.”

Democrats propose sweeping police overhaul; Trump criticizes

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House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif., center, and other members of Congress, kneel and observe a moment of silence at the Capitol's Emancipation Hall, Monday, June 8, 2020, on Capitol Hill in Washington, reading the names of George Floyd and others killed during police interactions. Democrats proposed a sweeping overhaul of police oversight and procedures Monday, an ambitious legislative response to the mass protests denouncing the deaths of black Americans at the hands of law enforcement. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

By LISA MASCARO (AP)

Democrats in Congress proposed a far-reaching overhaul of police procedures and accountability Monday, a sweeping legislative response to the mass protests denouncing the deaths of black Americans in the hands of law enforcement.

The political outlook is deeply uncertain for the legislation in a polarized election year. President Donald Trump is staking out a tough “law and order” approach in the face of the outpouring of demonstrations and demands to re-imagine policing in America.

“We cannot settle for anything less than transformative structural change,” said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, drawing on the nation’s history of slavery.

Before unveiling the package, House and Senate Democrats held a moment of silence at the Capitol’s Emancipation Hall, reading the names of George Floyd and many others killed during police interactions. They knelt for 8 minutes and 46 seconds — now a symbol of police brutality and violence — the length of time prosecutors say Floyd was pinned under a white police officer’s knee before he died.

Trump, who met with law enforcement officials at the White House, characterized Democrats as having “gone CRAZY!”

As activists beyond Capitol Hill call to restructure police departments and even to “ defund the police,” the president tweeted, “LAW & ORDER, NOT DEFUND AND ABOLISH THE POLICE.” He declared later, “We won’t be dismantling our police.”

Democratic leaders pushed back, saying their proposal would not eliminate police departments — a decision for cities and states — but establish new standards and oversight.

Joe Biden, the presumed Democratic presidential nominee, “does not believe that police should be defunded,” said spokesman Andrew Bates.

The Justice in Policing Act, the most ambitious law enforcement reform from Congress in years, confronts several aspects of policing that have come under strong criticism, especially as more and more police violence is captured on cellphone video and shared widely across the nation and the world.

The package would limit legal protections for police, create a national database of excessive-force incidents and ban police choke holds, among other changes.

It would revise the federal criminal police misconduct statute to make it easier to prosecute officers who are involved in “reckless” misconduct and it would change “qualified immunity” protections to more broadly enable damage claims against police in lawsuits.

The legislation would ban racial profiling, boost requirements for police body cameras and limit the transfer of military equipment to local jurisdictions.

Overall, the bill seeks to provide greater transparency of police behavior in several ways. For one, it would grant subpoena power to the Justice Department to conduct “pattern and practice” investigations of potential misconduct and help states conduct independent investigations.

And it would create a “National Police Misconduct Registry,” a database to try to prevent officers from transferring from one department to another with past misconduct undetected, the draft says.

A long-sought federal anti-lynching bill that has stalled in Congress is included in the package.

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., a co-author with Rep. Karen Bass, D-Calif., and Democratic senators will convene a hearing on the legislation Wednesday.

“The world is witnessing the birth of a new movement in this country,” said Bass, chairwoman of the Congressional Black Caucus, which is leading the effort.

While Democrats are expected to swiftly approve the legislation this month, it does not go as far as some activists want. The outlook for passage in the Republican-held Senate is slim.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, whose Louisville hometown faces unrest after the police shooting of Breonna Taylor in her home, said he would take a look at potential Senate legislation.

It is unclear if law enforcement and the powerful police unions will back any of the proposed changes or if congressional Republicans will peel off some of their own proposals.

Republicans are likely to stick with Trump, and GOP campaign officials bashed efforts underway in some cities to reallocate police funds to other community services.

Yet McConnell was central to passage of a 2018 criminal justice sentencing overhaul the president signed into law, and some key GOP senators have expressed interest in more streamlined changes to policing practices and accountability.

Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, who marched with protesters Sunday, told reporters late Monday at the Capitol that he is working with other Republican senators “to see if we can’t fashion a piece of legislation which could receive bipartisan support to make some changes to the way we do our policing.”

The chairman of the Judiciary Committee, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., has said his panel intends to hold a hearing to review use of force and other issues, and other GOP lawmakers have suggested Floyd’s death could spark more modest changes.

Rep. Will Hurd, R-Texas, who marched in support of Floyd in Houston, penned an op-ed Monday about how his own black father instructed him to respond if he was pulled over by the police, and suggested proposals for changes in police practices.

What started with the Black Lives Matter movement after the death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., has transformed with the killings of other black Americans into a diverse and mainstream effort calling for changing the way America polices its population, advocates say.

“I can’t breathe” has become a rallying cry for protesters. Floyd pleaded with police that he couldn’t breathe, echoing the phrase Eric Garner said while in police custody in 2014 before his death in New York.

“All we’ve ever wanted is to be treated equally — not better, not worse,” said Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y.

Biden’s own platform reflects much of the approach from congressional Democrats, and his former presidential primary rivals, Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.Y., and Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., are co-authors of the package in the Senate.

It’s not about racism, fools, it’s about Western folly

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A protester holds a skateboard in front of a fire in Los Angeles, Saturday, May 30, 2020, during a protest over the death of George Floyd. Credit: Ringo H.W. Chiu,AP
Don’t be fooled by what’s going in the US and in some European cities. It has nothing to do with racism, injustice and compassion. It is pure politics on the one hand and a form of mass ideological enslavement on the other.

Above all, it is not about reason, but irrationality.

There are those who fight for positive reasons, believing they will alleviate racism and that they have to correct the wrongs that exist in every democracy. But most people are there because in the pack they feel better off, can defend themselves from attacks and insults, avoid thinking.

I don’t care about all that so I’ll tell you how things are.

The policeman who killed George Floyd will spend the rest of his life in prison. The American system is not the Chinese one, where a policeman who tramples other citizens is given a medal. Unfortunately, anyone who does not submit to the dominant narrative will be called a racist, white supremacist and fascist, and not necessarily in that order.

Black Lives Matter, the movement behind the protests, doesn’t care about blacks. They never protest when blacks are killed by other blacks, although the biggest cause of death in the United States of blacks between the ages of 15 and 45 is … other black men. They have never protested against black slavery markets such as those in Mauritania or when blacks exterminate other blacks as they do in Sudan.

The police are not anti-black, since an average of about 20 percent of the police force in America is black (50 percent in Los Angeles is Hispanic, 60 percent in Atlanta is black as is 33 percent in Philadephia etc). Some of America’s poorest and most violent cities have black mayors, black governors and black councils. Like Baltimore, and Chicago.

In short, reality is not an edifying black and white film.

Reading the outraged media, hearing Obama who embraces the protests, or watching the kneeling members of hypocritical establishments, it would seem that in America racist white policemen have fun going around shooting black unarmed citizens.

Let’s see the facts.

There are hundreds of millions of interactions between the police and civilians in America every year. 1004 people were killed by police hands in 2019. Of these, 235 were black. And of these, 226 were armed. This means that 9 unarmed black citizens were killed by police over a population of 330 million last year. Each of these lost lives is a defeat.

But such as to justify the devastation of cities? The destruction of people’s livelihood? And the accusations of “systematic racism”?

As Heather Mac Donald reports in an article in the Wall Street Journal, blacks represent a quarter of the total number of people killed in police shootings every year, a stable figure since 2015. The answer would seem that this 25 percent demonstrates racism since African Americans are only 13 percent of the American population. Let us look deeper.

There were 7,407 murder victims of color in the United States in 2018, the last year for which final data are available. The 9 unarmed men killed in police shootings are 0.1 percent of those killings. While African Americans are twice as involved in police shootings as their total percentage would seem to justify, they commit 53 percent of the murders and 60 percent of the robberies – well over four times their percentage of the population. And whose fault is that? The fact that life, the system, is unfair? Maybe.

But 55 years of Democratic programs in the fight against racism and poverty have not helped. Nor is the fact that all the cities where the protests take place, including Minneapolis where George Floyd was killed, are almost all Democratic fiefdoms.

In addition, the killing of black citizens by the police is on the wane. Higher numbers were reported under Obama.

But unlike the liberal partisans, we say that it is not anyone’s fault, neither Obama’s nor Trump’s.

Except that liberals must go back to blaming Trump, to see the Mississipi Burning again, to publish articles about the Ku Klux Klan, to dream of racial war to redeem our “sick” society. The real disease, however, is in the mind of the beholder, it is the idea that we are racist and unjust and that we have to pay for who we are.

Liberals love to see the system burning for electoral gains.

Trump has his political game, that is, to close the ranks of white Main Street and others who find the riots frightening and unacceptable. The Democrats have their game, stirring the racial war for electoral purposes. Who loses the game? Society, its decency, our capacity for discernment and culture.

In a society calling itself “open” it is becoming increasingly difficult to say these things without being verbally and physically attacked.

In Bristol, UK, the “anti-racists” tore down a statue of philantropist Colston because he was involved in the slave trade. You have to look at it, at those images of human fury and fanaticism, cultural vengeance and moral irrationality. It is the West’s folly.

Giulio Meotti is an Italian journalist with Il Foglio, and writes a twice-weekly column for Arutz Sheva. Besides his Italian books, he is the author of the English language books “A New Shoah”, that researched the personal stories of Israel’s terror victims, published by Encounter, and of “J’Accuse: the Vatican Against Israel” published by Mantua Books.. His writing has appeared in publications such as the Wall Street Journal, Gatestone, Frontpage and Commentary.

Trump Continues to Slam Colin Powell After His Biden Endorsement

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- President Donald Trump holds a Bible as he visits outside St. John's Church across Lafayette Park from the White House Monday, June 1, 2020, in Washington. Part of the church was set on fire during protests on Sunday night. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

By Brian Freeman (NEWSMAX)

President Donald Trump continued his attack on fellow Republican Colin Powell after the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and secretary of state endorsed Democrat Joe Biden for president on Sunday.

“Colin Powell was a pathetic interview today on Fake News CNN,” the president wrote on Twitter. “In his time, he was weak & gave away everything to everybody — so bad for the USA. Also got the ‘weapons of mass destruction’ totally wrong, and you know what that mistake cost us?”

Trump had already tweeted at least two other times on the subject a number of hours earlier when news of Powell’s endorsement of Biden first broke.

Trump wrote on Twitter that “Colin Powell, a real stiff who was very responsible for getting us into the disastrous Middle East Wars, just announced he will be voting for another stiff, Sleepy Joe Biden.”

An hour later the president tweeted again, saying “Somebody please tell highly overrated Colin Powell that I will have gotten almost 300 Federal Judges approved (a record), Two Great Supreme Court Justices, rebuilt our once depleted Military, Choice for Vets, Biggest Ever Tax & Regulation Cuts, Saved Healthcare & 2A, & much more!”

Powell did not vote for Trump in 2016 either.

Trump campaign spokesman Tim Murtaugh brushed off the reported defection of some other top Republicans, such as former president George W. Bush and Sen. Mitt Romney, saying “President Trump has the support of a record number of Republicans across the country. He leads a united party and will win in November,” Fox News reported.

Settler Leader: Netanyahu Moving Ahead with Annexation Plans

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(Ronen Zvulun/ Pool Photo via AP)

(AP) Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has assured Jewish settlers that he is going ahead with plans to begin annexing parts of the occupied West Bank next month, a settler representative said Monday.

Netanyahu told a group of settler leaders late Sunday that President Donald Trump’s Mideast plan allowing the annexation has not been finalized, Oded Revivi, mayor of the Efrat settlement, told The Associated Press. But Netanyahu said that once a final map is agreed upon with the Americans, he will present it to settler leaders individually, Revivi said.

Revivi was one of a dozen settler leaders who attended Sunday’s meeting to support the annexation effort and offer a counterbalance to growing criticism of the plan among the prime minister’s nationalist base.

Annexation of West Bank land has long been a dream of the Israeli settler movement.

Despite what is widely viewed as a pro-Israel plan, some settlers have voiced concern that it does not go far enough. They note that many settlements would be turned into isolated enclaves surrounded by Palestinian territory. They also reject the U.S. offer to recognize Palestinian statehood, albeit with far less land and far less authority than the Palestinians seek.

“This doesn’t answer all our dreams but you have to keep it in perspective and see what the alternative is,” Revivi said. “We have an opportunity with this president, this prime minister and this international climate and we have to seize it.”

The schism in the settlement leadership burst into the open last week when David Elhayani, chairman of the Yesha Council, an umbrella settlers’ group, told an Israeli newspaper that the plan was inadequate and proved Trump was “not a friend of Israel.”

Netanyahu, fearful of upsetting his close ally in the White House, responded harshly, lauding Trump’s friendship and accusing the settler leadership of being ungrateful.

Revivi, a senior figure in Yesha, said the majority of settlers supported the plan, even if they harbored some concerns, and were solidly behind Netanyahu.

Netanyahu and much of his nationalist base are eager to move ahead with annexation, especially with Trump facing shaky re-election prospects in November. The presumptive Democratic nominee, Joe Biden, has said he opposes annexation.

Netanyahu has said he wants to annex parts of the West Bank, including the strategic Jordan Valley and dozens of Jewish settlements, in line with Trump’s Mideast plan. He’s lauded the move as a historic opportunity to establish Israel’s permanent borders, without having to evacuate a single settler. Previous peace plans have all included far greater Israeli concessions.

A U.S. Embassy official, said the “the work of the mapping committee is ongoing.” The official was not authorized to speak to the media on the record and requested anonymity.

Netanyahu’s office declined to comment.

The U.S. plan envisions leaving about one third of the West Bank, which Israel captured in 1967, under permanent Israeli control, while granting the Palestinians expanded autonomy in the remainder of the territory. The Palestinians, who seek all of the West Bank as part of an independent state, have rejected the plan, saying it unfairly favors Israel.

They have already cut off key security ties with Israel and say they are no longer bound to agreements signed. The moves have raised concerns of a return to violence if the plan is carried out. Israel’s defense minister has urged the military to hasten preparations for the country’s planned annexation in apparent anticipation of what could be fierce Palestinian protests against the move.

The annexation plan has also come under harsh criticism from some of Israel’s closest allies, who say that unilaterally redrawing the Mideast map would destroy any lingering hopes for establishing a Palestinian state and reaching a two-state peace agreement.

German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas is set to arrive in Israel this week and is expected to voice his country’s displeasure with the plan. Next month, Germany will be taking over the rotating presidency of the Council of the European Union and will be assuming the presidency of the U.N. Security Council.

 

Protesting Lawyer Shoots Innocent Motorist in Head During George Floyd Protest in Colorado

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screenshot

by TJV News

In a barely reported  incident : a radicalized lawyer, 27 year old James Marshall from Colorado, is being charged with attempted murder and assault after he shot a driver in the head while the motorist tried to creep through a line of protesters blocking the road.

This is the 3rd lawyer arrested for violence at a George Floyd Protest, the other 2 are the Brooklyn lawyers who lobbed a  Molotov cocktail at a police car.

Initially social media misinformation made the rounds, mostly proliferated by George Floyd protesters, who attempted to paint the innocent victim as the guilty one who was trying to run over protesters.

“We’ve heard the same thing,” Alamos Police Capt. Joey Spangler said of the rumors. “But again, it’s an ongoing investigation. I can say we have no evidence to show that he was driving into or through the protester”, the Captain told KRDO TV

A nearby security camera captured the incident on tape, revealing the driver was not trying to run anyone over and was basically stopped and waiting for the few protesters to clear the way.

Obtained by KRDO NewsChannel 13, video shows about a dozen protesters swarm the middle of the street before a truck approaches very slowly and attempts to make its way through the small group.

Despite driving extremely slow, not hitting anyone or even putting any of the protesters in danger, attorney James Marshall, 27, pulled out a handgun and shot the driver in the head.

The driver, Danny Pruitt, was found alert and sitting in his truck a half-mile down the road. He is currently on life support.

Marshall was arrested and charged with multiple crimes, but is now free after paying a $60,000 bond.

You can see the brazen attempted murder as reported by KRDO TV.  This displays the intensely violent mindset of many of the more radical George Floyd protesters who are out on the streets across America. Strangely, this is not a national story , as the narrative is being painted by the main line media that these are now 100% peaceful and righteous protests.

Graphic News report below

 

“Molotov Cocktail” Lawyer Lambasts de Blasio For NYPD Policing Violent Protests

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A photo taken by a witness showed Ms. Rahman holding a Molotov cocktail as she was offering it to another protester, according to prosecutors, who provided the photo. Credit...U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York

by Jared Evan

Two attorneys were taken back into custody Friday for charges in connection with a Molotov cocktail attack on a police patrol car during protests in Brooklyn last weekend in the wake of George Floyd’s death & one of the alleged attackers was interviewed by an online outlet ,before her attack,  lambasting the mayor for using the police to keep the violent riots as peaceful as possible.

“This has got to stop. And the only way they hear, the only way they hear us is through violence, through the means that they use”, suspect and lawyer Urooj Rahman said in the newly unearthed interview.

The first several nights of the George Floyd protests were extremely violent, particularly in Brooklyn. Hours of footage of the crowd gathered from social media display the protesters, spitting at cops, cursing them out, and some rioters physically confronting them. By all accounts it was perfectly reasonable for NYPD to have a presence, since the initial protests triggered violence, looting and several murders all across the nation.

The radicalized Brooklyn born lawyer Urooj Rahman however did not see a need for police at these violent riots. Urooj Rahman, 31, was one of the two suspects in the brazen Molotov cocktail attack on a police car.  In most circumstances this would be considered a serious act of terrorism, and the suspect held without chance of bail for up to 14 days, if  arrested under the Terrorism Act,  however the suspects had been out on $25,000 bail with electronic monitoring, CNN pointed out.

On Saturday night, Brooklyn federal prosecutors charged Rahman and  fellow lawyer Colinford Mattis, with causing damage by fire and explosives to a New York Police Department car after they allegedly drove a tan minivan to the Fort Greene neighborhood and Rahman threw a makeshift explosive into the broken window of an empty patrol car, according to court filings, according to CNN.

These are fairly lenient charges, considering if the police car had officers in it, there could have been dead cops. It would not be beyond reason for prosecutors to throw the full extent of the law at these two radicalized lawyers, who’s backgrounds are of storybook like success.

The NY Times reported that both lawyers come from poor backgrounds in Brooklyn. Ms. Rahman was born in Pakistan and grew up in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, a neighborhood with a large population of Muslim immigrants. The neighborhood came under intense police scrutiny after the Sept. 11 terror attack, which became a defining experience for Ms. Rahman, childhood friends said, The Times  reported

The NY Post reported on the newly uncovered interview from online entity Loud Labs.

“I think this protest is a long time coming,” lawyer Urooj Rahman said in a videotaped interview filmed near the Barclays Center in Brooklyn at around 12:15 a.m. May 30.

“This s–t won’t ever stop unless we f–kin’ take it all down. And that’s why the anger is being expressed tonight in this way,” she said.

The video surfaced Friday, as Rahman and co-defendant Colinford Mattis were taken back into custody by US marshals.

The NY Post continued: During the four-minute interview, Rahman claimed to be unaware that cops had been hurt by protesters during violent clashes sparked by the police killing of George Floyd — but said de Blasio should have held back the NYPD “the way that the mayor in Minneapolis did.”

The Minneapolis model was obviously a failure as millions of dollars of damage was done to the city, with buildings and a police station in flames.

“I think the mayor should have done that, because if he really cared about his police officers, he should have realized that it’s not worth them getting hurt,” she said.

Rahman was then caught on surveillance video just before 1 a.m. that day lighting a Molotov cocktail and tossing it into an empty police vehicle near the 88th Precinct, according to court papers, the Post reported.

 

An Insider Explains How Contact Tracing Works in Fascinating Presentation

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(Dreamstime)

TJV News

In this fascinating video- recently published on YouTube, an insider who was fully trained to be a contact tracer in California explains how it exactly works  and what this controversial method being implemented to prevent the spread of coronavirus means to everyone. Questions of privacy heavily weigh in as this new concept becomes more widely implemented.

https://youtu.be/nafP5Hpyh48

 

All You Need to Know About NYC Re-Opening & Entering Phase 1, Cuomo’s Important Press Conference

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. Photo Credit: AP

Edited by TJV News

“Tomorrow is a new day”, Governor Cuomo declared on Twitter last night. before the daily press conference. Phase 1 one NYC re-opening began on Monday.

The governor also took a ride on the NYC subway, which local media found amusing considering Cuomo is notoriously known for not liking subway rides. New York also decided to allow graduation ceremonies with social distancing with attendance capped at 150. Over the weekend, Cuomo announced that religious services can restart with restrictions on capacity

NY government website highlighted exactly what Monday’s fist phase of re-opening

This is the first of a four-step process that will gradually ease restrictions on business activity and people’s ability to move around and socialize in the state of New York. The progress is contingent on infection rates, hospital capacity and the state’s ability to test and trace those who may have contracted the virus. Regardless, each phase will last at least two weeks. Some parts of the state that opened up in mid-May have already entered the second stage, as shown on this monitoring dashboard. New York City, the epicenter of the outbreak in the U.S., is the last region to meet the requirements to start reopening, Bloomberg reported.

This chart fully explains the 4 Phases of re-opening as determined by NY State

 

 

 

 

From NY State website & Bloomberg News

Must I still keep social distancing and avoid seeing friends?

You can see friends and others — but remain careful. A May 22 executive order from New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said groups of up to 10 people can gather for any lawful reason. (It was introduced after a lawsuit challenged a prior order, which eased distancing rules for Memorial Day activities and religious services only.) But health experts still advise New Yorkers to practice social distancing and wear face protections in public.

Are trains, buses and ferries still running, and are they safe?

Unless you’re an essential worker or on an essential trip, you should refrain from riding at all. But if you must, a few ground rules apply: If possible, avoid rush hours and keep your distance. Always wear a face mask. Don’t skimp on the hand sanitizer. And once you reach your destination, wash your hands. If you’re still worried, you can always remind yourself that both vehicles and stations are now being cleaned more frequently than before the virus outbreak.

MTA SUBWAY AND BUSES: Both will be back on their normal day schedules starting Monday, but trains still won’t run between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m. Tickets can only be bought from kiosks, not from station agents. The agency plans to post staff and volunteers in some stations to give hand sanitizer and face masks to customers who need them.

FERRIES: The Staten Island Ferry will run on a modified schedule — departures in both directions every half hour — during weekday mornings and evenings. At all other times, departures will be hourly. The East River Ferry will continue running at about half capacity, and daily service ends at about 9 p.m.

METRO-NORTH & LONG ISLAND RAILROAD: Both expanded their limited-service schedules last month as areas outside the city began reopening. Metro-North now runs additional city-bound trains in the morning and in the opposite direction in the evening, and LIRR has increased capacity by 15%. Ticket counters remain closed, so passengers must use kiosks or the MTA app. But on the upside, off-peak fares will apply to all rides.

NEW JERSEY TRANSIT: Trains and buses are still operating. The concourse in New York’s Penn Station will be closed for cleaning every night between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m., but customers can still enter via the main entrance on 7th Avenue and 32nd Street. Those with paper tickets will be asked to tear those themselves to minimize hand-to-hand contact with staff.

AMTRAK: The train operator has pared back its trips nationwide, but still runs regional trains in the Northeast. It also resumed its popular Acela route between Boston and Washington earlier this month — though on a reduced schedule. Customers can still buy food and drinks onboard, but there’s no seating in the dining cars.

Are stores open again?

A variety of nonessential businesses can now open up again, including retailers that sell clothes, jewelry, sporting goods, books and furniture – but customers still can’t enter. For now, retailers must stick with curbside pickup and delivery. That, combined with damage incurred during the recent protests and worries about profitability, has led some stores to keep their doors closed a bit longer.

Those that do reopen must follow a strict protocol for cleaning and sanitation, ensure proper social distancing and provide employees with face masks. The state also recommends businesses stagger workers’ schedules.

What about parks?

Many parks with green spaces have remained open while playgrounds and basketball courts have been closed. The city hasn’t yet set a date for when the shuttered areas will reopen.

When will I be able to go back to my office?

The short answer: It depends. Most companies are taking a cautious approach and they’ll likely send employees back to offices in waves rather than all at once. Even so, the governor’s plan doesn’t permit offices to reopen until Phase Two, which at the very earliest will be two weeks from now.

What happens if New York sees a surge in cases and no longer meets the state’s reopening requirements? For now, it’s unclear how that will be handled.

The governor delivered his Daily press conference

  • NY released  the daily coronavirus data for Monday, claiming that the number of deaths reported in the state was fewer than 100 once again, and that much of central NY state is will soon enter ‘Phase 2’ of the reopening plan. Cases climbed just 0.2%, compared with a 7-day average of 0.3%.
  • Regarding his earlier ride on the 7 train (which we mentioned below), Cuomo says he wouldn’t ask New Yorkers to ride the trains if he didn’t feel comfortable riding them.
  • Finally, Cuomo warned NYers to “stay smart” after the reopening “because if you don’t, you can see a spike…and that is the last thing we want to see”.
  • “Stay smart…stay smart…look at facts around us – other states, the spike is going up, California, the numbers are going up, Florida, the numebrs are going up, Texas the numbers are going up…look at the reopening date and look at what happened after they reopened…that is the cautionary tale my friends,” Cuomo said.
  • Ask if he expected a spike in the coming weeks, Cuomo replied “are you a cynic, my friend?” before adding that subways have been opened this entire time, and that a rebound isn’t guaranteed “if we stay as smart and disciplined as we have for the past 100 days”.
  • “In terms of reopening, we have been calibrating our strategy based on the data and the facts, and overall the numbers are down, the numbers are good and our plan is working,” Governor Cuomo said. “Based on today’s numbers we can continue to advance our reopening, and we will now allow outdoor graduations of up to 150 beginning June 26th. New Yorkers have worked together to bend this curve quickly, and if we continue on this trajectory, remain responsible and follow all social distancing protocols, we can keep accelerating our reopening strategy.”

 

All eyes’ on New York: Reopening tests city torn by crises

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ILE - In this June 20, 2019, file photo, tourists visit Times Square in New York. After three months of a coronavirus crisis followed by protests and unrest, New York City is trying to turn a page when a limited range of industries reopen Monday, June 8, 2020. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

By JENNIFER PELTZ (AP)

After three bleak months, New York, the corner of the U.S. hit hardest by the coronavirus, gradually began reopening Monday in what was seen as a landmark moment in the crisis and a test of the city’s discipline.

With the virus in check — at least for now — stores previously deemed nonessential were cleared to reopen for delivery and pickup, though customers cannot yet browse inside. Construction, manufacturing and wholesalers also received the go-ahead to resume work.

“This is a triumph for all New Yorkers that we’ve gotten to this point,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said.

But he warned the city against letting its guard down and risking a resurgence of the virus: “We got this far by doing it the right way, by doing the social distancing, the face coverings. We’ve got to keep doing it at those work sites and everywhere if we expect to keep moving forward.”

New York City became the epicenter of the U.S. coronavirus outbreak, with more than 21,000 people dying citywide of confirmed or probable COVID-19. That is roughly 1 out of 5 of the 110,000 coronavirus deaths across the U.S.

At its peak, the scourge killed more than 500 people a day in New York City in early to mid-April. At the end of last week, the number of deaths per day had dropped into the single digits.

The number of people testing positive for the virus was down to 200 to 300 per day at the start of last week, compared with more than 6,000 a day in early April.

“All eyes will be on New York this next couple of months,” said urban policy expert Jonathan Bowles, executive director of the Center for an Urban Future. “The city now has to prove that it really knows what it’s doing, that it can still be a dense city like New York and yet figure this out.”

Facing such challenges as how to maintain social distancing on the subway and how to restore public confidence in police in the wake of the unrest set off by the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, can New York City regroup?

Edwin Arce thinks so. A chef at a Manhattan restaurant, he was heartened to see more customers than expected when it reopened for takeout and delivery.

“As a city, we are ready to be back, start going out, living life — with the new reality, though,” of masks and 6-foot (2-meter) separation, said Arce, 31.

Sam Solomon wonders how normal that will be.

“I don’t know if it’s ever going to be like it was,” said Solomon, 22, who has a health-related job. After months of relative isolation, “it’s going to be an adjustment being around so many people,” said the native New Yorker, who never thought she would have to get used to crowds.

The city has already reawakened somewhat as warm weather drew people outdoors, more restaurants offered carryout service, and as thousands of people marched in protest over the Floyd case.

Subway ridership is ticking back up after plunging from 5.4 million rides per weekday in February to under 450,000 in April, the city’s transit agency says. Subway schedules are returning to normal, though riders will see signs showing how far apart to stand on platforms, and the 1 a.m.-to-5 a.m. shutdowns that began in May will continue so trains can be cleaned.

But as the city tries to recover economically, will the virus strike back?

“It’s going to be a big test,” said Dr. Bruce Polsky, a city resident who is chairman of medicine at NYU Winthrop Hospital in suburban Mineola.

Months of social distancing, mask-wearing, hand-washing, shock and fear have made New Yorkers better prepared to keep the coronavirus under control, health experts said.

Yet Dr. Ian Lipkin, a Columbia University epidemiologist who had COVID-19 himself in March, is concerned the virus might spread at the protests following Floyd’s May 25 death. And the virus’s toll — in lives, despair and exhaustion — weighs on him: “It’s very difficult to see how we recover.”

Last week, demonstrations over Floyd’s death were marked by a few nights of smash-and-grab thefts in the city. But the 8 p.m. curfew was lifted Sunday, a day earlier than planned.

Of course, New York City has had to prove itself before — after its population decline and fiscal crisis in the 1970s, after its 1980s-’90s crime peak, after 9/11.

“You can’t keep us down,” said Carlo Scissura, president of the New York Building Congress, a construction industry group. “We may go down a little bit, but we go right back up.”

Bronx Shop Owner Says Looters ‘Targeted’ Minorities During Riots

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AP image

AMY FURR (BREITBART)

A store owner in New York is speaking out following the destructive riots and looting that severely hurt his business on Monday night.

“The quarantine hit me hard. I closed completely for almost two months. We were just getting back up on our feet with online sales,” 25-year-old Oscar Izaguirre, who owns Oscar’s Gold & Diamonds, told the New York Post Saturday

His parents opened the shop in the Bronx after moving from Peru and worked hard to put him and his siblings through college.

When friends called Monday to warn him that rioters were headed his way, Izaguirre said he felt “terrified.”

“There’s millions of dollars of merchandise. Along with 15 or so friends, I moved everything to a safe location,” he recalled, adding that he later watched men with sledgehammers break into the store via a security camera.

Izaguirre continued:

By the time I got there, there were gunshots and fires on the street. Some people had weapons: crowbars, bricks. I was afraid they’d burn up my store, but I stood 20 feet away and said nothing. I was afraid for my life. For several hours, I watched looters go into my store and break the cameras, bash the glass cases, destroy the wiring, even knock out the ceiling tiles. Every store around me got trashed, and I did not hear one rant for justice or for ­George Floyd. Not in The Bronx, not that night. That night, they targeted minorities. They were opportunists who just wanted to steal.

However, Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance said Friday that rioters arrested for “low-level” crimes, such as unlawful assembly or disorderly conduct, would not face any charges, according to Breitbart News.

“The announcement means the overwhelming majority of hundreds of rioters in New York City will likely not face any criminal prosecution,” the report noted.

Despite the violent protests and demonstrations that swept across the city recently, Mayor Bill de Blasio tweeted Sunday that officials had committed to moving resources from the New York Police Department (NYPD) to “youth and social services as part of our City’s budget”:

Saturday, Izaguirre noted that by breaking into and stealing from his store, the looters sent a message that said he did not “deserve” what he and his family worked so hard to achieve.

“But I’m a minority, too. My family and I have worked our whole lives for this,” he concluded.

Alleged Cop-Stabber Yells ‘Allahu Akbar’ as He Attacks Victim, NYPD Video Uncovered

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KATHERINE RODRIGUEZ (BREITBART)

A man allegedly stabbed an officer from the New York Police Department (NYPD) and yelled “Allahu Akbar” as he attacked his victim, according to a video released by the NYPD Saturday.

The video showed Dzenan Camovic, 20, turning a corner on Flatbush Ave. and Church Ave. at 11:45 p.m. Wednesday before he struck the blade into the officer’s neck, the New York Daily News reported

n officer quickly rushed to the aid of the wounded cop, Officer Yayonfrant Jean Pierre, and asked if he has been stabbed. Pierre replied, “yeah,” before cops reported the attack.

Responding officers shot Camovic, a Serbian immigrant, eight times. Police said two other cops at the scene were shot as well.

Pierre, a Haitian immigrant, is recovering from his injuries at home, according to relatives.

Camovic, who screamed “Allahu Akbar,” which means “God is Great” in Arabic, was charged with attempted murder after allegedly stabbing the officer. He is recovering in the hospital from his gunshot wounds.

Authorities have so far been unable to link Camovic to an organized terror group, but there are indications that his alleged tactics were similar to anti-police attacks in Paris and around the globe, said John Miller, the NYPD’s deputy commissioner of counter terrorism.

“All the hallmarks that would be out of the terrorist playbook,” Miller said at a briefing from NYPD  headquarters in lower Manhattan.

Activist City Hall Workers Lash Out Against NYPD & Place Demands on De Blasio

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JAred Evan

A group of social justice anti-police activists compromised of allegedly city hall workers appeared on the Instagram social media platform and announced their intentions to rally against the mayor Monday morning.

Identifying themselves as the City Workers for Justice Group, they laid out their demands on Instagram. The activists wrote:

As current & former @nycgov employees, we are outraged by the escalation, violent misconduct & civil rights violations by the NYPD, and the Mayor’s failure to protect our communities.

We demand justice for NYC’s Black and Brown communities.
Police exacerbate systemic failures, they don’t resolve them. Our communities need investment & support, not overpolicing. 
#DefundNYPD & reallocate funds to housing support, rental relief, food assistance, education & healthcare.

We are outraged by the NYPD’s rampant violence against black & brown communities, protesters, bystanders, essential workers, medics & legal observers. These officers are a danger to the communities they claim to serve. Each of them must go.

For far too long, police have abused our communities and violated the rights of New Yorkers with near-impunity and little public accountability. This changes now. #Repeal50a and release all disciplinary records for public review.
From rank-and-file to leadership, recent events have shown NYPD misconduct is systemic at all levels. We demand answers. An independent commission of civil rights attorneys, journalists & activists must investigate the response to May & June 2020 protests.

The recent curfew gave NYPD free license to indiscriminately attack and arrest New Yorkers exercising their most fundamental rights. This is a dangerous precedent rife for abuse. We demand that any future curfew must be approved by a ⅔ City Council vote.
These are only the first steps. There must be real change to regain the trust of our communities & the legitimacy to serve them. These systemic failures will not be fixed with minor reforms or with new leadership, but with new structures & accountability.

This apparent rebellion occurred on the heels of de Blasio after resisting for a week of calls to slash police funds from City Council members, announcing that he has a plan to reform the NYPD, including diverting funding from the NYPD to social programs.

The far-left activist anti-police agenda has risen to prominent heights after the George Floyd murder and subsequent violent riots and peaceful disobedience.  De Blasio is facing opposition from the uber progressive City Council & simultaneously facing heat from supporters of the NYPD and police brass.

Rumors have been flying on NYPD social media accounts and on local podcasts that the NYPD police commissioner is about to resign, and other top-ranking NYPD officials were resigning or being replaced. PIX11 reported: “This is not true,” tweeted Freddi Goldstein, press secretary to Mayor Bill de Blasio, said in response to the rumors

NYPD Deputy Commissioner Richard Esposito, over the phone to PIX11 also said the rumors wasn’t true

 

De Blasio Explores Re-directing Some NYPD $$ to Social Programs, Calls to De-fund Police Intensify

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Photo Credit: AP

By Jared Evan

Once the protests had calmed from a violent first several  days to a more peaceful vibe , a major plank of the George Floyd movement in coordination with Black Lives Matter, NAACP and other groups has been heard loud and clear above the chanting and shouting: de-fund the police.

Mayor de Blasio does not want to dissolve the NYPD however he is proposing, redirecting funds.

Some are calling for incremental replacement of the traditional police force and replacing it with community forms of policing, others are calling for some police funding to be redirected to social justice programs as opposed to law enforcement

AP reported: The group MPD150, which says it is “working towards a police-free Minneapolis,” argues that such action would be more about “strategically reallocating resources, funding, and responsibility away from police and toward community-based models of safety, support, and prevention.”

Essentially the activists are calling for a slow dissolving of the police, and most  elected officials are expressing what Rep. Karen Bass, D-Calif., chairwoman of the Congressional Black Caucus, said on CNN, part of the movement is really about how money is spent.

Mayor de Blasio introduced a 4-point plan: shift funding to youth and social services, transparency of police discipline, move vendor enforcement out of NYPD, bringing community voices into senior levels of the NYPD.

“Policing matters for sure, but the investments in our youth are foundational,” the mayor told reporters in a City Hall press briefing. “We will be moving funding from the NYPD to youth initiatives and social services.”

Public Advocate Jumaane Williams has been among the loudest voices for de-funding the police, although details of his plans have not been specific. “We are here to change the framework and he’s setting us up for failure,” Williams said of the mayor, according to PIX11

Initially de Blasio seemed against the cuts to police or the concept of de-funding the police. At a previous press conference the mayor said “I say to people that say ‘defund the police,’ I understand the impulse but that is not the way to move forward and misses the reality we are facing right now.”

De Blasio seems anxious to meet some middle ground of the further left-wing City Council.

Even on Friday after New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer called for $1.1 billion to be cut from the NYPD budget over four years, $265 million annually; de Blasio resisted.

To cut the budget, Stringer advised suspending hiring new police officers, cut overtime by 5%, and trim Other than Personnel Services by 4%, The Blaze reported.

For many in the George Floyd protests shifting of funds is not enough. When Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey (D) appeared to speak to a Black Lives Matter protest, a young activist tempestuously told him to leave the protest after the mayor rejected the idea to completely de-fund the Minneapolis police force. The young liberal mayor had to walk thru the huge anti-police BLM crowd in shame for his refusal to completely capitulate to the far-left demands of the George Floyd movement.

Will de Blasio’s nonspecific gestures be enough for the revolutionary front which is gaining a foothold into policy making?  The mayor reassured the average New Yorker that he would not endanger citizens with a radical dissolution of the NYPD.

The NY Post reported: De Blasio insisted that any cuts made by the NYPD would not be at the expense of public safety.

“I want people to understand that we are committed to shifting resources to ensure that the focus is on our young people,” he said.

“And I also will affirm while doing that, we will only do it in a way that we are certain continues to ensure that this city will be safe.”

 

US Outlines $4.6b Plan To Protect Miami From Climate Impacts

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(AP)

MIAMI (AP) — The federal government is proposing a $4.6 billion plan to protect the low-lying Miami area from the effects of climate change, including the construction of miles of sea walls.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers released a draft plan Friday calling for walls to protect the area from sea level rise that could reach about 13 feet (4 meters) in height.

The Miami Herald reported Saturday that the plan is designed to protect tens of thousands of homes and businesses from flooding.

The plan also calls for movable barriers at the mouths of three waterways, elevating and flood-proofing thousands of buildings throughout the county and restoring mangroves in vulnerable areas.

The plan does not contain previous proposals to buy out hundreds of homes and convert them into parks or open spaces.

The Corps of Engineers plans to hold online public meetings on the proposal on Tuesday and Thursday next week.