Two People Killed During Demonstrations In Kenosha
Jacob Blake, the man Kenosha, Wisconsin, police shot in the back is said to be paralyzed from the waist down. In other news r ace and health, Latinos struggles in Marin County, Calif. and more.
NPR:
'Going To Take A Miracle' For Man Shot By Police To Walk Again, Lawyer Says
Jacob Blake, the Black man who was shot multiple times at close range by police in Kenosha, Wis., over the weekend, is currently paralyzed from the waist down, according to the family's attorney. "Praying it's not permanent," civil rights lawyer Benjamin Crump tweeted Tuesday afternoon. (Booker, 8/25)
The New York Times:
Three People Shot, Two Fatally, On Third Night Of Unrest In Kenosha, Wis.
Three people were shot early Wednesday, and two of them died, law enforcement officials said, during a chaotic night of demonstrations over the shooting of Jacob Blake, a Black resident whose children were nearby as their father was shot this week by a white police officer. In Kenosha, a third night of protests over the shooting of Mr. Blake stretched into the early morning hours of Wednesday, after demonstrators clashed with law enforcement officials near the county courthouse downtown. (Bosman, 8/26)
Also —
WBUR:
'Our Communities Are In Crisis': Latinos And COVID-19
Marin County, just north of San Francisco, is best known nationally as a picturesque gateway to wine country and home to moneyed tech investors and a handful of aging rock stars. The reality, of course, is more complicated. Those complexities can be found in a San Rafael neighborhood known as the Canal. Its large Latino population has been hit hard by COVID-19. Many residents are immigrants. The Canal's struggles reflect systemic failures and are playing out nationally as Latinx and other communities of color continue to bear the brunt of the deadly virus. (Westervelt and Peñaloza, 8/26)
Dallas Morning News:
Sutherland Springs Gunman Who Killed 26 Had Threatened Mass Violence, New Court Records Show
The gunman who killed 26 people at First Baptist Church of Sutherland Springs in November 2017 had threatened mass violence while in the service, according to new court filings, and was one of more than 7,000 airmen whose criminal histories the U.S. Air Force failed to report to a federal database used to vet gun buyers. The new information is emerging as over three dozen families continue to sue the U.S. government alleging that its negligence led to the shooting. (Morris, 8/25)