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A Facebook post of a 7-year-old Tulsa boy praying for a Tulsa police officer is going viral.Trey Elliott's mother, Brittany Elliott, shared a post on her Facebook page on June 1 that showed Trey praying for a Tulsa Police Officer.The powerful image shows Trey on his knee with his tiny hand placed on the shoulder of the Tulsa police officer who can be seen bending down. Both with their eyes closed in prayer."Today Trey (7) asked to pray for officers in the Tulsa Police Department," Brittany 507
A 20-year-old Bangladeshi woman gave birth to twins -- 26 days after giving birth to her first child.Arifa Sultana gave birth to a boy in late February, according to Dr. Sheila Poddar, a gynecologist at Ad-Din hospital in Dhaka. After a normal delivery, the mother and baby were released from a different Dhaka hospital. Less than four weeks later, she was admitted to Ad-Din hospital."She came to the hospital complaining of lower abdominal pain," Poddar said. Doctors performed an ultrasound and realized Sultana was pregnant with twins.Sultana had two uteruses, a condition called uterus didelphys. Her first baby and the twins were conceived and grown in separate wombs.She did not get an ultrasound before the first delivery, so it was missed, Poddar said."It is not very common to have two uteruses. When the uterus develops, it comes from two tubes, and those tubes fuse together. For some women, the fusion does not occur, and the dividing wall does not dissolve," said Dr. S.N. Basu, head of obstetrics and gynecology at Max Healthcare hospital in New Delhi.Poddar was able to quickly perform a C-section to deliver twins: a boy and a girl. "All three children are safe and healthy," Poddar said. "The mother is also fine."A uterus didelphys is a rare congenital abnormality, and the occurrence of twin gestation has an overall incidence rate of 1 in a million, according to the National Institutes of Health.For it not to be discovered before the birth is even less common."From rural areas, people don't know what is wrong with them. They don't know how many children they are pregnant with and sometimes whether they are pregnant also," Basu said. 1671

A federal judge has ordered Chelsea Manning released from jail after being incarcerated since May for refusing to testify to a grand jury. U.S. District Judge Anthony Trenga ordered the release of the former Army intelligence analyst Thursday after prosecutors reported that the grand jury that subpoenaed her has disbanded. The judge left in place more than 0,000 in fines he imposed for her refusal to testify to the grand jury, which is investigating WikiLeaks. A hearing had been scheduled for Friday; Manning had argued that she had shown she proved she could not be coerced into testifying and therefore should be released. On Wednesday her lawyers said she attempted suicide while at the Alexandria jail. 726
Surveillance systems are popping up everywhere. And in Sherman Oaks, California, a suburb of Los Angeles, some people have big concerns about privately-owned license plate readers recording cars on public streets. “It could be turned bad very quickly,” said homeowner Paul Diamond. Diamond calls these cameras an invasion of his personal privacy. “It does tend to disquiet me that everyone will know everything about where everybody is at any one time,” he said. Security experts say these privacy concerns are legit. “Are they aware that their vehicles are being videotaped? And are they ok with that? And are they ok with essentially private citizens essentially reviewing that tape at will,” asked Steve Beaty, a professor of computer science at Metropolitan State University (MSU) Denver. Beaty says license plate readers have been around for years but up until recently only law enforcement had access to them. “I think what’s new is a lot of this technology is being private people’s hands and in private people’s purview,” he said. Private citizens like Robert Shontell who with a couple dozen of his neighbors bought these cameras and software from the company Flock Safety. While Shontell says these cameras gives him peace of mind, he does address his neighbor’s privacy concerns. “You don’t want somebody that does searches to see what time their neighbor came home last night. You don’t want that. We don’t want that,” he said. “So, what we did was pick three people who have access.” That’s three people that have access to video of every single vehicle that drives by one of the cameras. Robert and two other neighbors. Flock Safety says they built this technology not to create a surveillance state but rather crackdown on crime and they claim they have the numbers to prove it’s working. “We have these statistics like a 33% reduction or a 66% reduction in crime,” said Garrett Langley, Flock Safety CEO. “That’s not arrests that’s just crime not happening.” Langley says a camera and software cost about ,000 and that they’ve helped thousands of people since launching two years ago. “You fast forward to today we’ve got customers across 36 states including Hawaii,” he said. “And we make about five arrests an hour with our law enforcement partners.” Partners like the Redlands Police Department who had several Flock cameras donated to them by the public. “The license plate readers have been pivotal in several of our cases,” said Redlands Police Chief Travis Martinez. “We’ve caught vehicles that have fled armed robberies, Commercial nighttime window smash burglaries of restaurants.” Martinez says his department has made dozens of arrests since using Flock Safety cameras a few months ago. “It’s so great to be able to tell victims of crime that we do have a lead, we do have something that we can investigate,” he said. Martinez says all Flock video automatically deletes after 30 days. But for people like Diamond, however, the potential for misuse and abuse has a longer impact.“Authoritarianism in general,” he said about what scares him the most. “There’s a sense of it creeping over the country I’m not happy about.” 3165
A lawyer for an indicted associate of Rudy Giuliani tells CNN that his client is willing to tell Congress about meetings the top Republican on the House Intelligence Committee had in Vienna last year with a former Ukrainian prosecutor to discuss digging up dirt on Joe Biden.The attorney, Joseph A. Bondy, represents Lev Parnas, the recently indicted Soviet-born American who worked with Giuliani to push claims of Democratic corruption in Ukraine. Bondy said that Parnas was told directly by the former Ukrainian official that he met last year in Vienna with Rep. Devin Nunes."Mr. Parnas learned from former Ukrainian Prosecutor General Victor Shokin that Nunes had met with Shokin in Vienna last December," said Bondy.Shokin was ousted from his position in 2016 after 782
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