Society's Child
Police identified Sean D. Kealiher, a 23-year-old Portland resident, as the man who was hit after leaving Cider Riot, a Couch Street gathering place for antifascists, anarchists and other leftists. Shots were fired at the car after it hit Kealiher, and the vehicle crashed into a building.
Kealiher, who identified as an anarchist, was driven to a hospital. Doctors tried to save his life, according to police, but he died of blunt-force trauma.

James O’Keefe (right) announces Project Veritas’s plan to expose CNN at the Values Voter Summit, Oct. 12, 2019.
In an article at Project Veritas's Web site posted the same day, O'Keefe goes into more detail:
This week, a CNN insider will blow the whistle and through Project Veritas will release dozens of recordings made of officials at the highest levels of CNN, revealing a political agenda, bias and misconduct hidden from public view.
This series of tapes — which we think will be the biggest story of the year for Project Veritas — blends two extraordinary series of events; a brave insider secretly recording at work. This is a hard-hitting piece of hidden camera muckraking into one of the supposed "most trusted names in news."
Comment: Given Project Veritas' history of hard-hitting exposés, this should be good.
See also:
- Project Veritas: Google whistleblower goes public on 'machine learning fairness', says 'burden lifted off my soul'
- New leak to Project Veritas: Googlers internally petitioned "to end Google's business with Breitbart "
- Why did YouTube competitor Vimeo also ban Project Veritas' Google expose?
- Vimeo bans media watchdog Project Veritas after it accused Google of anti-Trump bias
- Project Veritas expose: Google whistleblower exposes efforts to influence 2020 election against Trump - UPDATE
- YouTube removes Project Veritas video on Pinterest's 'censorship of conservative views'
- Twitter restricts Project Veritas for expose of Pinterest
- Victory for Project Veritas: Judge Patti B. Saris rules Americans can secretly record public officials
Robert Mardis, 67, died roughly 12 minutes after PG&E cut power to his home and the surrounding area. An autopsy report concluded the man died of severe coronary artery atherosclerosis, according to the Sacramento Bee.
Fire personnel responded to a call around 3:40 a.m. and found Mardis unresponsive on the floor of his home, according to El Dorado County Interim Fire Chief Lloyd Ogan. He was found wearing a nasal cannula, used to deliver oxygen to the nose, and was hooked up to a PPAP machine for that purpose. Mardis' family told Fox 40 he couldn't reach his battery-powered tank in time.
The grenade was detonated on Hari Singh High Street, close to the busy Lal Chowk square. Police have cordoned off the area around the explosion and a search operation is underway. The local force tweeted that the injured civilians are all in a stable condition.
A group of unidentified gunmen opened fire inside a mosque in the village of Salmossi in the northern province of Oudalan, according to local media reports.

Benadryl helps to relieve allergy symptoms like sneezing, itchy watery eyes, runny nose and itchy throat and nose.
Lawyers for Patricia R. Moran, of Wall Township, filed the lawsuit in state Superior Court on Wednesday. Moran, a nurse with more than three decades of experience, is represented by the firm McOmber & McOmber.
In a copy of the lawsuit posted to the firm's website, Moran claims several nurses within the adult involuntary psychiatric unit, the floor on which she worked, "knowingly misused and administered Benadryl, intentionally administered the medication, not for its intended uses, but instead to make a patient drowsy or fall asleep."
"Upon information and belief, the medication was administered by staff to lighten the workload for the night shift nurses," the suit states.
The administrative tasks required of doctors, nurses and other medical professionals are so complex and time-consuming that they squander hundreds of billions of dollars each year, according to a new analysis of health care spending in the U.S.
Activities such as medical coding and billing, recordkeeping and other clerical activities result in roughly $266 billion in excess spending annually, according to the study, which was published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
But the overall amount of money that goes down the drain is even greater. Factoring in other inefficiencies, such as a lack of price controls for health services, poor coordination of care, and fraud and abuse, the total tab that is wasted every year runs between $760 billion and $935 billion, according to the researchers. That's fully a quarter of all annual health care spending in the U.S., not to mention greater than the entire 2019 defense budget.
Comment:
- Costs Force Half of U.S. Chronic Disease Patients to Skimp on Care
- Why an MRI costs $1,080 in America and $280 in France
- Insurance companies accidentally make the case for universal Medicare
- More Americans Fear Losing Their Health Insurance Than Being in a Terrorist Attack
- 50 signs that the U.S. health care system is a gigantic money making scam that is about to collapse
Greater Manchester Police said a man in his 40s has been arrested on suspicion of serious assault and taken into custody.
The five victims have been taken to hospital but their conditions are unknown.
A force statement read: "Specialist officers are continuing to respond to an incident at the Arndale shopping centre in Manchester city centre.
Comment: Also in just the last 2 weeks:
- Two dead after shooting outside synagogue in Halle, Germany: one man arrested and other perpetrators on the run - UPDATES
- Four homeless men bludgeoned to death in Manhattan
The suspect, 40, was seen shouting and behaving erratically, bystanders said. He was later arrested on suspicion of terrorism offences and was being investigated for the preparation and instigation of an act of terrorism.
Police said he had been assessed by specialist doctors and compulsorily detained under the Mental Health Act. They said they did not believe there was any wider threat to the community and it was thought he acted alone.
"We don't know the motivation for the attack. It was brutal and extremely frightening for everyone who witnessed it. We don't believe anyone else was involved, but we are keeping it under review," he added.
The investigation into the attack was focusing on whether the suspect was incited by Islamist propaganda and how big a part mental health issues may have the played.
The man arrested was not believed to have previously known to counter-terrorism authorities. He was not on a list of 3,000 current subjects of interest run by MI5 or their list of 20,000 former subjects of interest.
Sources stressed the motives in the case seemed initially harder to discern than normal and that the investigation was at a very early stage in understanding what drove the attack.
Police have asked the public for any images or footage that may have been taken at the scene and said anyone who may have information that could assist the investigation should call 0161 856 0394.
Witnesses described people screaming and "running for their lives" after the man was seen shouting and using racial epithets near the Superdry store in the shopping centre.
Janet Loudon, 21, and a friend, who wanted to remain anonymous, had just met up when they heard a disturbance outside the Arndale. Loudon said she came out of work at 10.30am and encountered a black man shouting racial slurs including the N-word and being hostile towards an Arndale worker, who was also black.
"It wasn't clear what the man was saying but he was swearing and telling the public, 'I'm going to fuck you up,' repeatedly and he got more and more agitated. He was pointing at the police and Arndale workers," she said, adding that he claimed he was being targeted because of his race and referred to himself using the N-word.
"Everyone was panicking and frantic. We saw a victim slouched between an ATM which was a horrific sight and she was taken away to be helped."
A 19-year-old woman, another woman for whom no age was given and a man in his 50s were taken to hospital with stab wounds.
A fourth victim - a woman in her 40s who was not stabbed - did not need to go to hospital following assessment by paramedics. Another woman has since gone to hospital with a superficial wound.
Video footage and photographs showed armed police officers deployed around the Exchange Square side of the shopping centre. One clip showed officers using a Taser and holding a man to the ground before arresting him.
John Greenhalgh, 30, who captured the footage, was travelling on a tram when it stopped suddenly. "You could tell it was something quite serious," he said. "There were a lot of armed police. They were there very quickly.
"The tram was evacuated and we were put in the back of a van. We weren't told what was happening. There was a guy sitting on the floor screaming."
In other video and pictures posted on Twitter, a large number of emergency service vehicles were seen arriving at the centre. Footage showed people being taken away on stretchers, and members of the public were asked to stay away from the centre.
Armed police officers wearing face coverings were stationed outside the centre as a long queue of ambulances arrived and a police helicopter hovered overhead. Plainclothes detectives arrived at the scene while uniformed officers told people the Arndale would be closed for some time.
Bernadette Westhall, 55, said she saw people "running for their lives" and screaming as the attack unfolded. She was in the toilets on the ground floor near a Starbucks cafe when she heard a commotion. "I was coming out of there and everybody was just screaming and running for their lives. I ran straight into a shop and stayed in there until the coast was clear. It was a lady that he attacked."
Shazia Asif, 40, a carer from Oldham, said: "I was upstairs shopping in the Next. I looked down to outside the Starbucks and saw a woman had been stabbed. There was a lot of blood.
"Somebody had a scarf around her arm - I think she had been stabbed in the arm. They then said, 'Get out.' I was just shocked. I didn't see anyone running away."
One man, who did not wish to be named, was working in a fire and security services office across the road from the Arndale and spotted police detaining a man with a knife just before the alarm was raised about the stabbings.
He said: "They pinned a guy against a wall. Then I saw a policewoman with them holding a foot-long knife in a tube - I didn't see if it had blood on it. It was about 12 inches long and looked like a machete."
On Friday afternoon a cordon remained around the shopping centre as forensic teams searched the area. Shops in the centre remained closed as some workers were allowed back in to collect their personal belongings.

Cracks were found in a vital reinforcing component known as the ‘pickle fork’ – which attaches the wings to the plane’s fuselage - in three of the jetliners last week, prompting the FAA to launch an emergency investigation.
The discovery prompted the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to launch an emergency investigation, ordering the inspection of some 1,900 737 NGs across the US.
A leaked report obtained by aviation analysis firm Leeham shows that of the first 500 surveyed, 25 - or five percent - of the jets had suffered cracks to the pickle fork. It's not yet clear where the cited jets are located, the kinds of conditions they were flown under, or how many different airlines have been affected.

The pickle fork, named so because of its resemblance to the kitchen utensil, is a component that helps attach a plane’s fuselage to its wing structure, helping to manage the stress, torque and aerodynamic forces that bend the connection between the wings and the body of the jet. Though no crashes or incidents have yet been attributed to the cracked pickle forks, the consequences would be dire should the mechanism fail mid-flight.
The suit, first reported by the Times, alleges the Tavistock clinic in Leeds, and its Gender Identity Development Service (GIDS), painted an "inaccurate and potentially misleading" picture about the risks of hormone blockers, which are used to delay sexual development in children who wish to switch genders.
The case was brought by the mother of a 15-year-old patient at the clinic - who has only identified as "Mrs. A" - and Sue Evans, who worked there as a mental health nurse between 2003 and 2007. Evans told the Times she was concerned with how rapidly children were recommended for hormone treatment at the clinic, which some experts say can have serious medical risks, including loss of fertility and the ability to have an orgasm. Families are not made aware of some of those dangers, Evans said.
Mrs. A - who said she wanted to remain anonymous to protect her child's identity - expressed concern that "no one, let alone my daughter, understands the risk" of the hormone procedure, which she called an "experimental treatment." Proper informed consent cannot be obtained under those conditions, she added.












Comment: It's a tragedy, of course, that anyone would lose their life in an accident such as this. But it will be interesting to see more details emerge. Was it a simple accident or a confrontation between rival idiot factions in the culture war?