SELECCIONA EL MES

ADVERTISEMENT 2

ADVERTISEMENT 3

Error: No articles to display

ADVERTISEMENT 1

ADVERTISEMENT 4

A+ A A-

LOS ANGELES (AP) —
    U.S. border authorities fired stun guns at least 70 times over four years at people who were running away, even though there was no struggle or clear indication that agents were in danger, a newspaper reported Friday.
    At least six times, agents used the weapons against people who were trying to climb a border fence and get back into Mexico.
    The Los Angeles Times (http://lat.ms/1M5U2GF ) also said three people had died after being hit by Tasers wielded by border agents or customs officers.
    Two people were shocked while they were handcuffed, and two were hit with five cycles of the weapon, even though the agency's policy says no one should receive more than three.
    The Times examined 450 uses of Tasers from 2010 to 2013 that were documented by U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials.
    It found that most of the people subjected to Tasers had been caught crossing the U.S.-Mexico border or were suspected of being in the country illegally, not fleeing arrest on more serious charges.
    The nation's largest law enforcement agency, which oversees the Border Patrol and inspectors at ports of entry, decided in 2008 to supply agents with the hand-held devices that deliver a paralyzing electric charge as a way to end confrontations quickly and safely.
    The program started with a pilot project in Texas and devices were widely distributed to agents beginning in 2010.
    Customs and Border Protection Commissioner R. Gil Kerlikowske issued a new use-of-force policy last year. Now, agents are instructed to use Tasers only when a suspect poses an imminent threat and to be particularly cautious when subjects are running.
    The Border Patrol and other law enforcement agencies have become more restrained in using Tasers, Kerlikowske said, even though he still believes "the good far outweighs the bad" with the weapons.
    "You're seeing much less of the Taser being used when someone is in a precarious position, or fleeing," said Kerlikowske, a former police chief in Seattle. "I think we've learned a lot, and so has law enforcement."

Read more...

NEW YORK (AP) —
    CNBC reached its biggest audience ever with the third Republican presidential debate, but paid a price in criticism of how its moderators handled the opportunity to question the candidates.
    The Nielsen company said 14 million viewers watched the debate Wednesday night, down from the 24 million who saw the first contest on Fox News Channel in February and 23 million viewers for CNN's second contest. Still, it's an extraordinarily high bar: a 2011 debate with GOP candidates on CNBC had 3.3 million viewers, Nielsen said.
    This week's debate also competed against the second game of the World Series.
    Like baseball umpires, debate moderators are most noticed when something goes wrong, and Carl Quintanilla, Becky Quick and John Harwood were in the spotlight Thursday. Individual candidates grumbled and Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus said the moderators' performance "was extremely disappointing."
    Representatives from all the GOP campaigns plan a private meeting in the next few days to air out complaints about how the debates are being run, said Douglas Watts, a Ben Carson spokesman. Besides the line of questioning, some campaigns are resisting lengthy debates.
    The next GOP debate is scheduled Nov. 10, to be shown on the Fox Business Network.
    At the outset Wednesday, Quintanilla asked each candidate a job interview question: "What is your biggest weakness?"
    Harwood then said to Donald Trump: "You've done very well on this campaign so far by promising to build a wall and make another country pay for it, send 11 million people out of the country, cut taxes $10 trillion without increasing the deficit and make Americans better off because your greatness would replace the stupidity and incompetence of others. Let's be honest, is this a comic-book version of a presidential campaign?"
    Trump called it "not a very nicely asked question," and one of Harwood's NBC News colleagues, Joe Scarborough, called the question "absolutely embarrassing" on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" on Thursday.
    Kathleen Hall Jamieson, a University of Pennsylvania communications professor and debate expert, said Harwood's last sentence ruined what could have been a useful question.
    "It sounds to the audience as if one is spinning the question in a way that presupposes the candidate's candidacy is illegitimate," she said.
    Similarly, she said asking to outline a weakness can be easily skirted, because what candidate is likely to give an honest answer?
    CNBC officials privately noted that Trump and John Kasich praised the debate in later interviews on the network. CNBC would not comment beyond spokesman Brian Steel's comment: "People who want to be president of the United States should be able to answer tough questions."
    In subsequent questions, Carson was asked what kind of analysis made him think his flat tax plan would work; Marco Rubio was asked why he wouldn't "slow down, get a few more things done first" before running for president and whether he hates his job as a senator; Jeb Bush was asked why his candidacy wasn't catching on; and Carly Fiorina was asked why Americans should hire her as president when she was fired by Hewlett-Packard.
    When Quintanilla asked Ted Cruz whether his opposition to a congressional budget deal showed "that you're not the kind of problem-solver American voters want," he exploded.
    "The questions that have been asked so far in this debate illustrate why the American people don't trust the media," the Texas Republican said. "This is not a cage match. And look at the questions — Donald Trump, are you a comic book villain? Ben Carson, can you do math? John Kasich, will you insult two people over here? Marco Rubio, why don't you resign? Jeb Bush, why have your numbers fallen?"
    "How about talking about the substantive issues?" Cruz said.
    That drew applause, predictable since attacking the media usually plays well with a Republican audience, and led other candidates to join in.
    Mike Huckabee objected to Harwood asking him whether Trump had the moral authority to lead the country, and Trump chimed in that it was "such a nasty question." Trump accused Quick of incorrectly quoting him, and it took her several minutes to prove her point. Quintanilla's question about whether the federal government should regulate fantasy football fell flat.
    "We have $19 trillion in debt, we have people out of work, we have ISIS and al-Qaida attacking us, and we're talking about fantasy football?" Chris Christie said. Christie on Thursday called debate questions snarky and biased.
    Rubio, on Fox News Channel's "Fox & Friends," said many people in the media "privately ... believe they're smarter than the people running, and they can't wait to show off in front of their buddies by asking some question they think is going to embarrass" candidates. He said candidates prepared for a substantive debate.
    "It became irritating," he said. "You go on a network that specializes in economic news and you get questions like some of the ones that were asked last night, and ... real frustration begins to bubble over."
    Debates are, by their nature, designed to draw out differences between candidates. Jamieson said some of the questions were poorly constructed.
    "They got it wrong," she said. "They didn't get it wrong 100 percent of the time. They got it wrong enough to be problematic."

Read more...

BURKESVILLE, Ky. (AP) —
    A fugitive accused of shooting a Tennessee police officer and firing at a Kentucky trooper was killed in a shootout with authorities early Friday, ending a nearly weeklong manhunt.
    Floyd Ray Cook, 62, was pronounced dead at the scene in south-central Kentucky after being confronted by state troopers and a federal marshal who were searching an embankment, Kentucky State Police public affairs officer Billy Gregory told The Associated Press.
    Cook was armed with a handgun and exchanged gunfire with the officers south of Burkesville, Gregory said. He was wounded and pronounced dead at the scene. No officers were injured.
    The manhunt for Cook began after he was accused of shooting and wounding an Algood, Tennessee, police officer during a traffic stop last Saturday afternoon. He fled in a black Ford truck.
    Just over an hour later, a Kentucky State Police trooper recognized Cook's vehicle and tried to stop him in rural Cumberland County, just beyond the Tennessee state line, authorities said. Cook tried to speed away, but wrecked and jumped from the truck on foot. He allegedly opened fire on the officer, missed and ran into the woods.
    A swath of the border between Kentucky and Tennessee had since been gripped with fear of the man authorities described as "armed, dangerous and desperate."
    With Cook no longer on the loose, residents in the area would be able to return to their normal lives, Gregory said.
    "I think they'll all breathe a little bit easier, knowing there's no longer a threat," he said Friday.
    Convicted of rape in the 1970s, Cook was wanted in Marion County, Kentucky, for failing to comply with the sex offender registry, according to Sheriff Jimmy Clements. He also has convictions for robbery, burglary, assault and riot, and is wanted in Hardin County on an indictment charging him with trafficking methamphetamine and tampering with evidence.
    Authorities sent out public alerts. Schools in the Cumberland County district called off classes for three days this week out of fear that students might cross Cook's path.
    Officials believed they had zeroed in on him late Wednesday. An investigator spotted a car associated with Cook at a gas station in White House, Tennessee, just off Interstate 65 north of Nashville, said Tennessee Highway Patrol Lt. Bill Miller.
    A marshal, believing Cook to be in the car, approached and the driver attempted to speed away, ramming two police cruisers and narrowly missing an officer on foot, the U.S. Marshals Service said. An officer fired at the car.
    The car careened down a dead-end street, through a fence and into a ravine, Miller said. The two occupants fled on foot into the surrounding cornfields, he said. But neither turned out to be Cook.
    Two of Cook's known associates, Katy McCarty, 35, and her boyfriend, 50-year-old Troy Wayne, were found, arrested and were being held as fugitives.

Read more...
The News Gram Online. All rights reserved.

Register

User Registration
or Cancel