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It's National Distracted Driving Awareness Month, and there's a new push to keep roads safer. In Tennessee, the state with the highest levels of distracted-driving deaths in the country, police have taken a unique approach to catching distracted drivers. Officers are riding on city buses and watching drivers around them, catching ones on their phones and then calling for backup to pull them over. "This is distracted driving week throughout the United States, and so this week, we're spending time working on our roadways to bring attention to our drivers about this type of behavior that we're trying to stop," explains Steve Dillard with the Tennessee Highway Safety Office. In California, drivers can be issued a ticket for just holding your phone behind the wheel, even at a traffic stop. Now, the National Transportation Safety Board is pushing the state to take it a step further and become the first to ban hands-free calls, saying it can still cause drivers to be distracted. But are hands-free devices really a distraction? An instructor with the MasterDrive driving school in Denver, Colorado says hands-free technology still takes the driver’s focus away from driving their vehicle. “While you're looking at your screens and trying to figure out which button to push, the cars in motion,” the instructor says. “The car is not being driven by you at that point, and at any point, things could happen.”Distracted driving claimed more than 3,000 lives in 2017 alone. 1495
INDIANAPOLIS — President Donald Trump has ordered all flags to be flown at half-staff after a deadly mass shooting Friday in Virginia Beach. In a proclamation signed Saturday, Trump ordered the flags to be flown at half-staff until sunset on June 4. Authorities say 12 people were killed in the mass shooting Friday. You can read the full proclamation below: 371

In an unexpected reversal, pharmaceutical giant Biogen said it will pursue US Food and Drug Administration approval for aducanumab, an experimental treatment for early Alzheimer's disease, 201
Law enforcement officers have carried out a large container @LEX18News pic.twitter.com/DX5NW3aJeT— Jacqueline Nie (@JacquelineLEX18) July 11, 2019 158
JEFFERSON COUNTY, Colo. – Several Jefferson County, Colorado, schools, including Columbine High School, were placed on lockout Tuesday afternoon because of what the sheriff’s office said “appears to be a credible threat.” The FBI and other authorities are looking for an 18-year-old woman who is believed to be connected to the lockouts and who is considered armed and dangerous, according to the FBI.A Jeffco Public Schools spokesperson said several schools in the Columbine and mountain areas of the district were on lockout at 1 p.m. but said “everyone is safe.” The spokesperson, Diana Wilson, said business was operating as usual within the schools but no one was allowed inside or outside.“It is our understanding they are searching for a suspicious person,” Wilson said.The FBI alerted Jefferson County authorities to the threat around 11 a.m., the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office said.The FBI and Jefferson County Sheriff's Office are looking for 18-year-old Sol Pais in connection to the threats. The Jefferson County Sheriff's Office said Pais traveled to Colorado Monday night and made threats. They said she is described as 5-foot-5 inches tall, with brown hair. She was last seen wearing a black t-shirt, camouflage pants and black boots and was last seen in the Jefferson County foothills.Authorities say she should be considered armed and extremely dangerous. Anyone with information is asked to call the FBI at 303-630-6227.All after-school activities, sports and practices will occur as normal except for at Columbine High School, where after-school activities are canceled."Thank you for your patience as we worked through this safety issue," the district 1688
来源:资阳报