• Derek Chauvin sentenced to 22.5 years in prison for murder of George Floyd | Minneapolis | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jun/25/derek-chauvin-george-floyd-murder-sentencing
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/21f826e1de91363ba868a35619512e092f51044a/20_0_1167_700/master/1167.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer who murdered George Floyd, has been sentenced to 22 years and six months for second-degree murder, closing one chapter of a case that thrust the issue of race and American policing back into the global spotlight.

  • ‘We don’t get help from anywhere’: Covid exposes inequality in crisis-hit New York neighborhood | New York | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/22/coronavirus-covid-queens-new-york-inequality
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/7a942e8a5a09848f1021b9e9dfcf2ad416ccb9a6/0_267_4000_2402/master/4000.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    A year after New York City became the center of the global Covid-19 outbreak, the neighborhood considered at the time to be the “epicenter of the epicenter” of the pandemic remains in crisis – laying bare many of the economic fault lines exposed by the coronavirus.Corona, Queens, a welcoming enclave for many of the city’s undocumented immigrants and home to many of the “essential” workers who kept New York running during the pandemic’s worst days, has had the highest number of infections and deaths in the city – and now has one of the lowest percentages of people vaccinated.At least 37% of residents there have received one dose of the vaccine, according to city data. On the Upper East Side, home to the city’s grand museums, luxury boutiques and multimillion-dollar townhouses, more than 64% of residents have received their first dose.
    Densely packed, Corona’s multi-family homes are among the most crowded in the city. In the past year, there were 40 eviction filings per 1,000 units, according to the Association for Neighborhood and Housing Development, a coalition of housing non-profits – 1,211 evictions in total. In Brooklyn’s Carroll Gardens, a neighborhood of gourmet coffee shops and craft beer breweries, landlords had sued 37 families altogether.
    It’s no coincidence that New York depended on Corona families to deliver food, clean the subways and work in cramped restaurant kitchens while many New Yorkers stayed put. Like many such neighborhoods across the developed world, its residents were on the frontline, allowing their richer neighbors to shield themselves at home.This disparity was obvious one year ago, when New York City was the global center of the Covid-19 outbreak. At the time, not-for-profits in Corona described to the Guardian how they acted as disaster relief agencies to feed families, connect people with doctors and speak with consulates to repatriate the deceased’s remains.
    A year later, undocumented New Yorkers are still at high risk of contracting the virus, and are largely excluded from the federal economic stimulus benefits that have helped so many others weather the pandemic.
    For Ciria Santiago, who has lived in Corona since 2005, this spring is certainly better than the last. When businesses shuttered at the beginning of the pandemic, her household of six suddenly had an income of zero: the three working-age people in her family were newly unemployed and were unable to obtain benefits because they are undocumented immigrants.
    The Santiagos’ unemployment drought lasted five months. “We either paid rent or bought food,” said Santiago, who would wake up at 4am to wait five hours in line for the local food pantry to open because it was so crowded with demand.Despite their concerns about Covid-19, her husband and nephew returned to work as a cook and delivery driver and dishwasher in July. It was too late for their landlord, who forced them to move in November because of earlier missed rent payments.
    Like many mothers in the neighborhood, Santiago has stayed home while school is online, but she has found satisfaction as a volunteer at New Immigrant Community Empowerment (Nice), which helps immigrant workers in the city. “We’re happy here, but yes, we’re pressured with money, because we don’t get help from anywhere,” said Santiago, who is originally from Veracruz in Mexico.Undocumented immigrants, including the estimated 50% to 75% who pay taxes, have largely not qualified for health, business and cash aid included in the federal stimulus packages. And 5.1 million US citizens or green card holders were excluded from the first round of stimulus payments as well because they filed their taxes with an undocumented person, according to the Migration Policy Institute.
    Some state and local governments have attempted to fill in the gaps. New York state this month agreed to provide up to $15,600 in one-time payments to undocumented immigrants who lost work during the pandemic. In the city, undocumented people can also access food assistance and the city’s low-cost or no-cost health program. Philanthropic groups are also providing financial aid to the city’s undocumented people.
    But none of this answers the fundamental issue that undocumented people are in a stratified class from the rest of the city’s residents.
    In her role as program director at Nice, Diana Moreno said she has yet to see “sustainable, systemic change” in how undocumented immigrants have been treated through the pandemic.“These workers don’t feel like they have a choice: they have to go to work, in order to get to work, they have to take public transportation, and they have to be out and about in the city, and they are not being properly compensated or properly cared for,” Moreno said.Moreno said the biggest issue Nice members face is that the US still does not have a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.
    “We are not saying US citizens have had an easy time during this pandemic – we’ve all suffered extensively,” Moreno said. “But US citizens have access to a safety net, and yes, it is a faltering safety net, but it exists.”
    Corona is one of the most diverse neighborhoods in New York City, and here, a church sign on National Street is posted in four different languages.
    Corona is one of the most diverse neighborhoods in New York City.
    The pandemic has also emphasized how a lack of permanent immigration status is a health threat.The Center for Migration Studies released a report in late January that found that in Queens, the neighborhoods most at risk for poor health outcomes were the two combined community districts of South Corona/Elmhurst and North Corona/Jackson Heights. These are also the two sectors of Queens with the highest concentration of non-citizens – which includes undocumented people, green-card holders and people on temporary visas.Undocumented people are not eligible for most health insurance programs, and are the largest group of people in the country ineligible for financial assistance to get healthcare coverage.Until then, undocumented immigrants are uniquely vulnerable even when provisions are in place that should protect them, like the city’s pandemic eviction moratorium.
    Part of this low rate can be attributed to how much Covid-19 there has been in the neighborhood already – people may be less inclined to get the vaccine if they have already contracted the illness. Moreno at Nice said it had also been difficult for people to book appointments because of the scarcity of spaces available and the limited time working people have available to get one.Epidemiologist Denis Nash said: “The vaccine delivery system has really been designed to perpetuate some of the inequities we’ve seen in transmission.” Nash is one of the researchers leading the City University of New York’s group study on the spread of Covid-19. He said since the early phases of the pandemic, essential workers have been at higher risk than non-essential workers. “Of all the different interventions and strategies and policies that we’ve come up with in different parts of the country, including New York City and New York state, we haven’t really identified strategies that work well for reducing disparities and protecting essential workers,” said Nash, executive director of Cuny’s Institute for Implementation Science in Population Health.To help them, Nash explained, community transmission has to be kept at a minimum, but it has been unmitigated across most of the US. “That is really bad for essential workers,” Nash said.And because essential workers will always be on the frontlines of an infectious disease outbreak, it’s crucial to identify strategies that actually reduce their risk of infection. Nash said: “If we don’t come up with strategies to help them or deal with that situation then I think we’re going to see the same situation repeated in the next pandemic.”Francisco Moya, a New York City council member who represents, and was born and raised in, Corona, knew immediately that his community would be hard hit by the virus. When the local Elmhurst hospital was overwhelmed by Covid-19 cases, he became the first stop for people looking to donate PPE and money there. During those PPE deliveries, people would warn him not to breathe the air around the hospital.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#etatsunis#newyork#sante#inegalite#immigrant#sanspapier#minorite#systemesante#travailleurmigrant#travailleuressentiel

  • ‘Enough of the senseless killings’: Biden calls Chauvin verdict ‘a start’ as Democrats demand action | George Floyd | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/20/biden-harris-derek-chauvin-verdict
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/cc70864ca6df73fec7a70c3db143e240954c6b35/0_80_6000_3600/master/6000.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    Addressing the nation on Tuesday evening, Joe Biden said the guilty verdict for the former Minneapolis police office Derek Chauvin was “a start”. But, he said, “in order to deliver real change and reform, we can and we must do more”.

    “Protests unified people of every race and generation in peace and with purpose to say enough,” Biden said. “Enough. Enough of the senseless killings. Today’s verdict is a step forward.

  • Derek Chauvin found guilty of murder of George Floyd | George Floyd | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/20/derek-chauvin-verdict-guilty-murder-george-floyd
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/07d708f7609bd04018ab85d3b016e2fe55b43fe0/0_186_3900_2340/master/3900.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    Derek Chauvin has been convicted of murder for killing George Floyd by kneeling on his neck for more than nine minutes, a crime that prompted waves of protests in support of racial justice in the US and across the world.

  • Chauvin used deliberate and excessive pain technique on George Floyd, police expert says | George Floyd | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/07/derek-chauvin-trial-george-floyd-death-police-expert

    https://youtu.be/fgUtytVwJsM

    An expert police witness has told the Derek Chauvin murder trial in Minneapolis that the accused former officer used a technique designed to deliberately inflict pain and subjected George Floyd to it for an extended period.

  • The protesters who gather every day to demand justice for George Floyd | George Floyd | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/08/derek-chauvin-trial-minneapolis-george-floyd-protesters
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/535a76f6aaf235f2b1c2a76a0110bb1a47e22f5b/0_117_3500_2100/master/3500.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    A small but determined group rise early to take their spot outside the Minneapolis courthouse – and they stay all day

  • ’A specific kind of racism’: Atlanta shootings fuel fears over anti-sex-work ideology | Atlanta | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/18/atlanta-spa-shootings-anti-sex-worker-racism-sexism
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/5f0299d496ee7581e4964135456b56a7f89c50a3/0_182_5472_3283/master/5472.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    many (...) observed the surge in racist violence against Asian Americans during the pandemic: in the past year, there have been 3,800 reported incidents of anti-Asian violence, roughly 503 of which took place during 2021 alone, according to the group Stop AAPI Hate. Women make up the vast majority of those attacked. And some argue that it is equally absurd to exclude discussion of anti-sex-work sentiment from the conversation about these most recent attacks on the Asian community.

    Though it is not yet known whether any of the victims of Tuesday’s shooting provided sexual services at their workplaces, Long told police that the spas he opened fire on represented a “temptation he wanted to eliminate”, suggesting that he at least believed that they did. Advocates say this reveals the way racism, sexism, and anti-sex-work sentiment work together to produce anti-Asian violence: no matter what, they say, his crime was ultimately one against sex workers.

  • Biden reverses Trump actions on green cards, architecture and ’anarchist jurisdictions’ | Biden administration | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/feb/24/joe-biden-reverses-executive-actions-donald-trump-legacy
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/2a4c02852e783a991cbdde5b216c74a872fa2669/0_255_5723_3436/master/5723.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    Biden reverses Trump actions on green cards, architecture and ’anarchist jurisdictions’. Move undoes actions that blocked many immigrants from entering the US and sought to cut funding to cities Trump deemed ‘lawless’
    Joe Biden speaks in the State Dining Room of the White House, 24 February 2021.Joe Biden has formally reversed a series of executive actions taken by Donald Trump, including a proclamation that blocked many green card applicants from entering the United States. Trump issued the ban last year, saying it was needed to protect US workers amid high unemployment due to the coronavirus pandemic. Biden rejected that reasoning in a proclamation rescinding the visa ban on Wednesday. The president said it had prevented families from reuniting in the United States and harmed US businesses.
    Other actions undone by the president included one that sought to cut funding from several cities Trump had deemed “lawless” and “anarchist jurisdictions”, and another mandating that federal buildings should be designed in a classical aesthetic. The reversals come as the new president seeks to press forward with his own agenda and undo key aspects of his predecessor’s legacy. Since taking office last month, Biden has revoked dozens of Trump orders and issued dozens more of his own.
    Immigrant advocates had pressed in recent weeks for him to lift the visa ban, which was set to expire on 31 March. Biden left in place another ban on most foreign temporary workers.Curtis Morrison, a California-based immigration attorney who represents people subject to the ban, said Biden will now have to tackle a growing backlog of applications that have been held up for months as the pandemic shut down most visa processing by the state department. The process could potentially take years, he said.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#etatsunis#pandemie#sante#politiquemigratoire#immigration#visa#droit

  • ’Vaccine tourism’: tens of thousands of Americans cross state lines for injections | US healthcare | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/31/us-vaccine-tourism-state-borders-covid-19-shots
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/10d63d84924bc1094d576754404899d1c77bc9ca/0_25_3000_1800/master/3000.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali

    Travel between jurisdictions creates ‘unfair opportunities’ and disrupts infrastructure, experts say – though the impulse may be understandable
    With more than 50 unique vaccination plans across the United States, one’s access to the Covid-19 vaccine depends in large part on where one lives. In Wisconsin, mink farmers are being considered for the next phase of vaccine prioritization. In New Jersey, smokers can get priority access to the vaccine. In Colorado, journalists fall under the category of frontline workers. This complex system has given rise to a new type of pandemic travel – dubbed “vaccine tourism” – in which people cross state or even country lines to get earlier access. Without standardized protocol, and because of the fractured American health system, tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of people have gotten vaccines outside their home states.
    “They are coming from Canada, Brazil, New York, Georgia, folks from Minneapolis have come here. Some friends of mine in St Petersburg [Florida] told me that they were in a vaccination line with people from Venezuela,” said Dr Jay Wolfson, a professor of public health at the University of South Florida. He credits advertisements from international travel agencies with at least part of the vaccine tourist influx. “I get calls all the time from people saying, ‘Jay, can you get me in someplace?’ – and I can’t. And I won’t.”
    Florida has been one of the most popular vaccine tourism destinations for domestic and international travelers alike, due to the state’s initial policy of vaccinating anyone over the age of 65 years old. The state recently implemented new ID rules in an attempt to direct more vaccines to Florida residents, but not before about 50,000 out-of-state recipients got a dose. Though some of these vaccine recipients are seasonal state residents, or snowbirds, whose decision to spend the winter in Florida was unrelated to their vaccination prospects, many thousands have come to the state just for a shot.The 50,000 doses represent only about 3.4% of the total vaccinations administered in Florida, but even a small percentage going to out-of-state recipients in any state can affect the entire country’s vaccination infrastructure.
    “Administering a vaccine dose involves appointments, involves needles, involves human resources. And all of those resources that are vehicles for delivering doses of the vaccine are tied to a local community, state, or city in terms of allocation,” said Dr Kyle Ferguson, a postdoctoral fellow in the division of medical ethics at the New York University Grossman School of Medicine.Cities and states generally receive batches of the vaccine from the federal government based on the adult population in the area and plan their distribution strategy accordingly. When someone crosses city, state, or national lines to get a vaccine, it disrupts the success of both jurisdictions’ vaccine rollout.“Vaccine tourists are using their power to create an unfair opportunity for themselves. There are design flaws that people are exploiting, taking advantage of some soft spots in those systems,” said Ferguson. “None of this should be about worthiness or deservingness, but when someone travels for the vaccine, they’re using resources, both doses and all the delivery mechanisms, that have been allocated to a different community.”
    Vaccine tourism can also be risky for patients and healthcare providers. “If you give a dose of the vaccine to somebody who may not be able to return and get their second dose or if there’s an adverse event, who is responsible?” Wolfson asks. “Travelling long distances for a shot, there’s a risk to the patient of not fulfilling the dosage and of not being able to follow up with healthcare providers to have, what we call it in healthcare, continuity of care.” Nevertheless, many are willing to take the risk, especially if they are particularly susceptible to health complications from the virus or don’t have to travel far to get vaccinated across a border.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#etatsunis#vaccination#sante#tourismevaccinal#stsemesante#inegalite

  • My Pillow salesman Mike Lindell apparently has some ideas about declaring martial law - The Washington Post
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2021/01/15/pillow-salesman-apparently-has-some-ideas-about-declaring-martial-la

    A pillow salesman apparently has some ideas about declaring martial law
    The galaxy of individuals who have orbited President Trump over the past five years is not lacking for unusual characters. Few, though, have had quite the same trajectory as businessman Michael Lindell.
    Lindell is the CEO of the company My Pillow, which, as you might expect, makes pillows. His company advertises heavily on Fox News, often with spots featuring Lindell himself. A major Republican donor, he participated in an event centered on manufacturing early in Trump’s administration. Since then, he’s returned to the White House regularly and has touted his close relationship with the president. That includes an effort last August to get Trump to endorse a supposed coronavirus treatment in which Lindell had a financial stake. (Trump did not do so.)

    Since Trump lost the 2020 presidential election, Lindell has been a fervent champion of the utterly baseless claim that the election was somehow stolen from Trump. Lindell has repeatedly appeared on far-right “news” programs to insist that he has evidence that Trump actually won the election, a claim for which no credible evidence has ever emerged. As recently as Thursday, he posted on his Facebook page a claim that Trump would be president for “4 more years.

    On Friday, he may again have had the chance to see that desk. At about 3 p.m., he was escorted into the West Wing where he reportedly met briefly with Trump. The subject of his visit? If notes Lindell was holding while he waited to enter were any indication, he wanted to discuss his thoughts on how Trump might finagle those “4 more years” Lindell had promised his Facebook followers.

    The Washington Post’s Jabin Botsford captured an image of the notes Lindell was carrying with him as he went to meet with Trump. Only half of the page can be seen, but even that tells a lot.

    Here’s our best attempt to capture what’s written on the page.
    … BE TAKEN IMMEDIATELY TO SAVE THE
    ...THE CONSTITUTION
    ...Colon NOW as Acting National Security
    ...him with getting the evidence of ALL the
    ...in the election and all information regarding
    ...using people he knows who already have security
    ...done massive research on these issues
    ...at Fort Mead [sic]. He is an attorney with cyber-
    ...expertise and is up to speed on election issues.
    ...Insurrection Act now as a result of the assault on the
    ...martial law if necessary upon the first hint of any
    [STRIKETHROUGH]
    ...Sidney Powell, Bill Olsen, Kurt Olsen,
    ...DOD. Move Kash Patel to CIA Acting.
    ...on Foreign Interference in the election. Trigger
    ...powers. Make clear this is China/Iran
    ...also used domestic actors. Instruct Frank
    ...evidence on...the more broad
    ...likely amount...
    ...line...evidence

    • Attorney in Mike Lindell martial law plan denies knowing of pro-Trump plot | Donald Trump | The Guardian
      http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/16/mike-lindell-my-pillow-martial-law-donald-trump

      • Army lawyer named in notes toted by My Pillow inventor
      • White House meeting reportedly ‘brief’ and ‘contentious’
      • US Capitol rioters plead with Trump for pardons

      A US army cyber attorney has expressed confusion at apparent plans among Trump allies to place him in a senior national security role, as part of a mooted move to impose martial law and reverse the president’s election defeat.

      A day after his name and location appeared in notes carried into the White House by the My Pillow founder, Mike Lindell, Frank Colon told New York magazine he was “just a government employee who does work for the army” at Fort Meade, in Maryland.

      Reporter Ben Jacobs added that Colon “seemed befuddled [over] why he would be floated to the president in any senior role and said that he never met Lindell”, although he said he had “seen him on TV”.

  • Trump ’refusing to pay’ Rudy Giuliani’s legal fees after falling out | Rudy Giuliani | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/14/trump-refusing-to-pay-rudy-giuliani-legal-fees-after-falling-out

    Donald Trump has fallen out with his personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, and is refusing to pay the former New York mayor’s legal bills, it was reported, with the president feeling abandoned and frustrated during his last days in office.

    Giuliani played a key role in Trump’s failed attempts to overturn the results of November’s presidential election through the courts. The lawyer mounted numerous spurious legal challenges, travelling to swing states won by Joe Biden, and spread false claims the vote was rigged.

    According to the Washington Post, relations between Trump and Giuliani have dramatically cooled. Trump has instructed his aides not to pay Giuliani’s outstanding fees. The president is reportedly offended by Giuliani’s demand for $20,000 a day – a figure the lawyer denies, but which is apparently in writing. White House officials have even been told not to put through any of Giuliani’s calls.

    Commenting on the report, Ken Frydman, who worked as Giuliani’s press secretary in the 1990s, said: “Lay down with dogs. Wake up with fleas and without $20,000 a day”.

    The apparent breach with Giuliani – one of Trump’s most loyal and sycophantic supporters – has contributed to the president’s sense of isolation and betrayal, aides have suggested.

    Trump is reportedly unhappy that members of his inner circle have failed to defend him following last week’s deadly attack on the US Capitol by a mob of his supporters. Many have been silent following Wednesday’s vote in the House of Representatives to impeach Trump for a second time.

    Those who have reportedly failed to step up include Trump’s press secretary, Kayleigh McEnany, his son-in-law and adviser, Jared Kushner, and his chief of staff, Mark Meadows, responsible for indulging Trump’s belief that the election was rigged.
    […]
    Trump is reportedly more isolated than ever. The White House is sparsely staffed, and those who do go to work there deliberately avoid the Oval Office, the Post reported.

    The rift with the president may sink Guiliani’s lingering hopes of receiving a presidential pardon. Last year, Giuliani held discussions with Trump about receiving an amnesty over his work on the president’s behalf in Ukraine. Criminal charges of illegal campaign donations have been filed against two Giuliani associates, Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman. The trio worked to try to dig up dirt on Biden and his son Hunter.