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To the Philly District Attorney’s office, I’m grateful for your commitment to justice. I understand that many people of color across the country don’t have that luxury and I plan to use my platform to shine a light on those issues.— Meek Mill (@MeekMill) April 24, 2018 269
This is an innovative program to help visitors and locals access the Gaslamp Quarter safely, he said. "We listen to our membership and the public that come down to Gaslamp and take all suggestions seriously." 218

This was just one of the many reasons Claire Golden and her family made the trip from Boston. “It’s really pretty,” Golden said. But lately, the neighborhood has become inundated with clumps of these bikes.“There is a bike war in San Diego, going on between five different companies,” Limandri said. On nearly every corner of Little Italy, there is a dockless bike. The bikes are a great amenity for people like Golden, who want to explore San Diego.“It’s easy...instead of getting an Uber or walking, to just get around the city,” Golden said. However, the Little Italy Association says there are just too many of them in the neighborhood. So many that it's becoming a safety issue - especially when the bikes block sidewalks, parking spaces, ramps, and construction zones. Here's what they're going to do about it: “First thing in the morning, our maintenance guys come up with one of their trucks," said Marco Limandri of the Little Italy Association. "They’ll see if there are any of those bikes are blocking the sidewalks, and they’ll pick them up and they’ll relocate them two blocks away.The destination: State Street, which runs parallel to I-5. A location that the association says is far enough away from the hustle and bustle of restaurants and businesses in Little Italy. On any given day, you can see rows of endless bikes and scooters, sent to State Street from areas on India and Kettner Streets. The Association said they do not necessarily have a problem with where the customers leave the bikes. They said most of them courteously park them on side streets. Instead, they took issue with where the bike companies launch them. “Our streets are not showrooms,” Limandri said. “These aren’t their sidewalks. They have no authority to place them. That’s the point.”The Association is in the early stages of proposing to each bike company, to take one parking spot as a designated launching lot. They have not reached an agreement yet, but they hope to get there soon. “This is a community in which pedestrians, bikes, cars, wheelchairs and strollers all have to interact,” Limandri said. “So once they understand that, I think we can work out an agreement where they are able to support the 'bikability' of San Diego, and people can come to Little Italy or other areas, and enjoy them.”Other San Diego neighborhoods dealing with similar issues include the Gaslamp and Hillcrest. They hope to come to a compromise through the implementation of permits. 2548
Traveling on a tourist visa, Chau arrived to the Andaman and Nicobar Islands in October with one mission: preach to the Sentinelese.Indian authorities say Chau was 27, but Mat Staver, founder of a Christian ministry that Chau was involved with as a college student, gave Chau's age as 26.He had traveled to the remote island years ago and returned knowing that his mission was illegal and risky. Still, he wanted to get to know the islanders' way of life. He hoped to eventually share the gospel and perhaps translate the Bible, said a friend, John Middleton Ramsey.He asked a local friend, an electronic engineer, to get a boat and also recruit others -- several fishermen and a water sports expert -- who could help him.He carefully planned his expedition and used a 13-page long journal to write his strategy, the steps he would take to reach the island and, later, some of his memories.After he paid the fishermen around 0, police said, the group boarded "a wooded boat fitted with motors" and headed to the island on the night of November 15.They stopped a little less than half a mile away and waited in the dark. At some point in the morning, Chau "used a canoe to reach the shore of the island," Pathak said.He returned later that day with arrow injuries, police said.But that did not discourage him.He returned to the island the following day. It's unclear what happened but "the (tribespeople) broke his canoe" and he had no other option than to swim back to the boat.On the third attempt of his mission, he didn't come back.The fishermen said they later saw the tribespeople dragging his body around but police haven't been able to independently verify Chau's death. Authorities believe he was killed.All seven locals who facilitated the trip have been arrested. 1776
They had dropped off their dog at the groomer before heading to Walmart, Hernandez's brother, Al Hernandez, told the affiliate. The family didn't know anything was wrong until the groomer called them and said the dog hadn't been picked up.Seven Mexican nationals also lost their lives.Secretary of Foreign Affairs Marcelo Ebrard identified them via Twitter as Sara Esther Regalado, Adolfo Cerros Hernández, Jorge Calvillo García, Elsa Mendoza de la Mora, Gloria Irma Márquez, María Eugenia Legarreta Rothe and Ivan Filberto Manzano.Mexico explores legal action against USOn Sunday, Ebrard called the shooting an act of terrorism against Mexicans in the US and said in a press conference that the Mexican government will look into whether there is enough evidence to solicit the extradition of the gunman to face charges in Mexico.El Paso County had an estimated population of 840,000 people as of July 2018, according to the US Census Bureau. An estimated 83% were Hispanic or Latino.In a video posted on his Twitter, Ebrard said what happened in the Texas city was "unacceptable" and that "the first judicial actions" the government will take will be in accordance with international law."Mexico would like to express its utmost profound condemnation and rejection of this barbaric act where innocent Mexican men and women were killed," Ebrard said. "We are outraged. We do not support the culture of hate."He also said Mexico President Andrés Manuel López Obrador instructed him to take swift legal action in order to first protect the families who were affected and then "so that Mexico can demand that the United States protect the Mexican community in the United States." 1676
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