30 jilibet
30 jilibet
NoneChelsea's defensive vulnerabilities have been evident in recent matches, with the team conceding goals due to lapses in concentration and lack of organization at the back. The absence of a commanding presence in goal and a reliable backup option has been a cause for concern for Chelsea fans and management alike.
BOISE, Idaho (AP) — The Associated Press and two other news organizations are suing Idaho's top prison official for increased access to lethal injection executions, saying the state is unconstitutionally hiding the actual administration of the deadly drugs from public view. Read this article for free: Already have an account? To continue reading, please subscribe: * BOISE, Idaho (AP) — The Associated Press and two other news organizations are suing Idaho's top prison official for increased access to lethal injection executions, saying the state is unconstitutionally hiding the actual administration of the deadly drugs from public view. Read unlimited articles for free today: Already have an account? BOISE, Idaho (AP) — The Associated Press and two other news organizations are suing Idaho’s top prison official for increased access to lethal injection executions, saying the state is unconstitutionally hiding the actual administration of the deadly drugs from public view. The AP, The Idaho Statesman and East Idaho News filed the lawsuit against Idaho Department of Correction Director Josh Tewalt in Boise’s U.S. District Court on Friday. The news organizations contend the public has a First Amendment right to witness the entire execution process, including when execution team members push the lethal injection medications into the IV lines connected to a condemned person. Idaho’s prison officials have kept that part of the execution concealed behind screens or walls in each of the three executions completed in the last half-century. “At its core, this case involves the press’s ability to fulfill its ‘significant role in the proper functioning of capital punishment’ by providing independent public scrutiny of the State of Idaho’s execution process,” attorney Wendy Olson wrote in court documents. She noted the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has repeatedly found that the public has the right to view executions from start to finish — including in a similar lawsuit brought by AP and other news organizations against Idaho officials in 2012. In that case, the appellate court ordered prison officials to allow media witnesses to watch as the IVs are inserted. “The Ninth Circuit has not minced words,” Olson said, quoting from another 9th Circuit ruling from 2002: “An informed decision by the public is critical in determining whether execution by lethal injection comports with ‘the evolving standards of decency which mark the progress of a maturing society.’” Neither Tewalt nor department spokesperson Sanda Kuzeta-Cerimagic immediately responded to a request for comment from the AP, but Tewalt has previously said the state must maintain confidentiality about the identities of execution team members and about where it obtains execution drugs. Tewalt and other prison officials have told lawmakers in the past that anything threatening that secrecy could put Idaho’s ability to carry out executions at risk, in part because it would be difficult to find qualified volunteers willing to put someone to death. The news organizations point out in the lawsuit, however, that media witnesses can already see other execution team members, though their identities are concealed by medical masks, head coverings and other devices. The same solution could be used for the execution team members tasked administering the lethal drugs, the news organizations said. Idaho has only attempted four lethal injection executions since the U.S. Supreme Court lifted a moratorium on executions in the 1970s. When Keith Eugene Wells was executed in 1994, IV lines ran from his arm to a screen, behind which execution team members used a device to deliver a cocktail of lethal drugs. In the 2011 execution of Paul Ezra Rhoades and the 2012 execution of Richard Albert Leavitt, the IV lines ran through an opening in the wall of the execution chamber, into another area that was hidden from view. Winnipeg Jets Game Days On Winnipeg Jets game days, hockey writers Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe send news, notes and quotes from the morning skate, as well as injury updates and lineup decisions. Arrives a few hours prior to puck drop. The same setup was used in February, when the state attempted to execute Thomas Eugene Creech. But that execution was called off after the execution team members were unable to successfully establish an IV line despite trying eight different locations in Creech’s arms and legs. In October, the state announced it would begin using central venous lines — threading a catheter through a large, deep vein until it reaches the condemned person’s heart — for lethal injections if attempts to insert standard IV lines fail. Prison officials also remodeled the execution chamber to add a special “execution preparation” room for the central line procedure, and installed closed-circuit cameras so that media witnesses can watch. The news organizations want a federal judge to order the state to allow media witnesses the same closed-circuit camera access to the “Medical Team Room,” where the lethal drug preparation and administration occurs. “There is no logical reason why the events that will take place in the Medical Team Room should fall outside the scope of the well settled First Amendment right to view an execution in its entirety,” Olson wrote. “Simply put, there is nothing more ‘intertwined’ with the execution process than the preparation and administration of the very drugs that will effectuate Idaho’s most severe punishment,” she said. Advertisement Advertisement
SAN ANTONIO — Can Coach Prime afford to stand pat on Pat Shurmur? Deion Sanders turned up in Boulder two Decembers ago with an NFL-ready pocket passer ready to take the wheel. He won’t have that in 2025. Kaidon Salters isn’t Shedeur Sanders. Julian Lewis won’t be as a true freshman. As an NFL lifer, offensive coordinator Pat Shurmur smoothed over some of what few rough edges Shedeur had left in his game. But as a 36-14 shellacking in the Alamo Bowl on Saturday night cautioned America ... not all of them. Instead of finishing off his collegiate tenure with 10 wins and a signature take-me-with-the-first-pick moment, Son of Prime held onto the rock too long and checked into “hero ball” mode, time and again. The Buffs offense faced five distances of 3 yards or fewer in the first half before things went flying off the rails. CU threw it on four of them. Three passes netted only 1 yard and another drop-back, on third-and-3, turned into a 23-yard loss on a sack. Which then became a missed field goal from 48 yards out. “Yeah, (there) was nothing that we did great tonight,” Shedeur reflected after the game. “Ditto,” his father replied. So how much of that was on Shurmur and how much was on No. 2? We’re about to find out. If BYU reminded Buffs fans of anything at the Alamodome, besides pain, it was the power of balance. The Cougars won almost every battle along the line of scrimmage, then ran away — BYU went for 180 on the ground, with 6-foot-2 hammer LJ Martin accounting for 93 of those — and hid. Salter or Lewis could sure use a Martin of their own, at least in the short term. “They did a wonderful job,” the elder Sanders said late Saturday night when asked about his coordinators. “I’m proud of them. I love them for life. They know how to communicate with all our young men. They really put them in positions for them to be extremely successful. And I love what we had. I’m proud of those two.” One of the worst-kept secrets in BoCo is that Shedeur had more or less been CU’s de facto play-caller since his arrival. With Sean Lewis, it didn’t take. With Shurmur, it improved. After a few roster overhauls via the transfer portal, it clicked. The good far outweighed the bad. But Shurmur doesn’t have a top-5 pick pulling the strings now, nor a Heisman Trophy winner in Travis Hunter who could out-leap double teams and out-run entire defenses. Nobody’s seen a Coach Prime offense in college without Shedeur running it. Which makes Shurmur one of the more pivotal, and fascinating, storylines of the winter and spring prep to come. How much power will the OC really have in the post-Shedeur Era? Will he adapt his pro-style proclivities to better fit Salter or Lewis? Will he be flexible enough to sprinkle in more option or zone-read looks, the way BYU did with its quarterback, Jake Retzlaff, a dangerous, instinctive runner but a wildly inconsistent passer? If asked to meet in the middle, to compromise, can he get there? “We’ve established expectation,” Coach Prime said after the game. “So now you expect us to perform a certain way. You expect us to win. You expect us to be exciting. You expect us to (be) a lot more disciplined than we’ve displayed (Saturday). You just have expectations of us now. That’s what we’ve established.” Sure have. But the only thing harder than dragging a program to elevation is keeping it there. You just hope Shedeur left Shurmur a spare set of keys on the way out the door. ©2024 MediaNews Group, Inc. Visit at denverpost.com . Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
In the wake of the incident, Dong Yuhui's business has seen remarkable growth and expansion. His client base has increased significantly, and his projects have garnered widespread acclaim for their creativity and originality. The incident, far from hindering his progress, served as a catalyst for Dong Yuhui to push the boundaries of his work and explore new opportunities for growth.Nicolò's case serves as a reminder of the importance of health and safety in professional sports and the unpredictability of life as a professional athlete. While the news is undoubtedly disappointing for Nicolò and his fans, it also highlights the resilience and determination that define athletes like him, who face adversity with courage and strength.Trump says firms who invest more than $1 BILLION will get fast-tracked permitting deals