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The coronavirus outbreak has disrupted 14 college football games scheduled for this week, five of which involving AP Top 25 teams.Among the games postponed, Texas A&M will sit out for the second straight week due to coronavirus cases. Texas A&M did not release any details on the number of cases involving the team. Last week, 15 Division I FBS games were canceled or postponed. Houston will have its fourth game this season disrupted this season, with this weekend’s game against SMU postponed. The Cougars had their first three contests of the season disrupted due to the virus. Houston would not say how many cases prompted the postponement.Here is a list of the games postponed or canceled this week:Ole Miss vs No. 5 Texas A&MGeorgia Tech vs No. 12 Miami (Fla.)Charlotte vs No. 15 MarshallNo. 22 Texas vs KansasCentral Arkansas vs No. 25 LouisianaOhio vs Miami (Ohio)Utah State vs WyomingUAB vs UTEPWake Forest vs DukeHouston vs SMUUL Monroe vs Louisiana TechUNLV vs Colorado StateNavy vs South FloridaArizona State vs Colorado 1052
The Charlotte area is getting inundated with rain. You can see a car submerged along Freedom Drive. @FOX46News pic.twitter.com/TNwIL2MAT8— Derek Miloff (@Dmiloff) November 12, 2020 188

The family of a Pennsylvania woman who died in jail in 2015 from heroin withdrawal symptoms was awarded .75 million in a wrongful death suit settlement this week, CBS News reported. Victoria "Tori" Herr, then 18, died on April 5, 2015, nine days after being arrested after police found drugs in the woman's apartment. Herr told police that she had consumed 10 bags of heroin a day. During her first four days in custody, Herr reportedly suffered from bouts of vomiting and diarrhea. She was treated with water and Ensure, but was unable to keep her fluids down. The result of those symptoms led her to cardiac arrest and to lose consciousness, CBS News reported. Herr's lawyers claimed that the Lebanon County Correctional Facility did not meet her basic medical needs, and then lied. "Anyone who looked at her would have known that she was very sick and that she needed attention," Herr's family lawyer Jonathan Feinberg told CBS. "There was a complete disregard for her needs, which can only be tied back to the fact that she was addicted to drugs."As part of the multi-million-dollar settlement, the jail's warden, nurses and other employees agree that there was no wrongdoing. To read CBS News' full report, click here. 1284
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has issued its first guidelines for celebrating Halloween amid the COVID-19 pandemic.The CDC has listed a number of ways to celebrate the holiday and categorized them as low, moderate or high-risk activities."High risk" Halloween activities:Traditional trick-or-treatingCrowded indoor costume partiesIndoor haunted housesHayrides or tractor rides with people not in a family or who don't live together"Moderate risk" Halloween activities:One-way trick-or-treating, with bags lined up for families outdoors, and social distance maintainedCostume parties outdoors where people can remain six feet apartOpen-air, one-way, walk-through haunted forest visitsVisiting pumpkin patches or going apple picking, while maintaining social distancing, wearing masks, and using hand sanitizer"Low-risk" Halloween activities:Carving and decorating pumpkins with the family or members of a householdDecorating a house, apartment or living spaceHaving a virtual Halloween costume contestHaving a family or household Halloween movie nightFor a look at the full guidelines, visit the CDC website here.This story was originally published by Katie Morse on WKBW in Buffalo, New York. 1223
The Federal Bureau of Investigation said in an email to E.W. Scripps that a civil rights investigation has been opened into the fatal shooting of an Overland Park, Kansas, teen by a police officer.FBI spokeswoman Bridget Patton said the Kansas City Field FBI Field Office, the Civil Rights Division, and the US Attorney's office for the District of Kansas are looking into the death of John Albers, who was fatally shot in January 2018.According to USA Today, Albers was backing out of his family's garage towards former Overland Park officer Clayton Jenison, who yelled him to stop and then fired 13 times.The shooting was later ruled justified by the Johnson County District Attorney, USA Today reported.After the shooting, Albers' family settled a wrongful death lawsuit against the city for .3 million."The FBI will collect all available facts and evidence and will ensure that the investigation is conducted in a fair, thorough, and impartial manner," Patton said. 979
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