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The families of Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd and Breonna Taylor will deliver a joint press conference on Friday, calling for new laws that they say would increase police accountability.According to a press release, the families will call for "a congressional hearing and a national task force geared at crafting new bipartisan legislation centered on ending racial violence and increasing police accountability."Watch the press conference in the player below.Arbery, Floyd and Taylor have all died at the hands of police or former police officers since February. Arbery was shot and killed in Georgia following a struggle with a former police officer and his son in February, and video showed the two men block his path as he ran down a suburban road. Floyd died in police custody in Minnesota on Monday, and video showed an officer kneeling on his neck as he struggled to breathe. Taylor was shot in her Louisville home in March when police entered her home on a "knock-free" warrant. Thinking the police were intruders, she shot at the officers, who then responded with fatal fire of their own.The press conference comes as anti-police brutality protests have taken place across the country in recent days, some of which have escalated into violence and damage. 1275
The Ohio State University had its application to trademark "The" tentatively denied by the U.S. Trademark Office on Wednesday. "The applied-for mark appears to be used in a merely decorative manner that would be perceived by consumers as having little or no particular source-identifying significance," the Trademark Office concluded. The Trademark Office will allow Ohio State to alter its application to have the trademark request reconsidered. The application submitted in August was to allow OSU to trademark the use of "The" on clothing using standard characters, without claim to any particular font style, size, or color. 640

The Erie County Sheriff's Office in Ohio have arrested a man accused of escaping a police cruiser after allegedly having sex in a hot tub. According to a police report, deputies responded to Kalahari Resorts around 8:15 p.m. Tuesday after a lifeguard reportedly caught a man and woman allegedly having intercourse in a hot tub.Security told deputies Kamden Mack, 25, became "irate" after being confronted by the lifeguard. Mack told deputies he did not know why security was evicting him, then swore at security officers, according to a report. Mack and the woman, Taylor Coats, 22, denied the accusations. Mack and Coats were told by deputies to gather their belongings and leave the property, according to the report. Sheriff's deputies left the pair with security and were getting to ready leave when they were informed that Mack and Coats tried running from security officers. Security officers captured Mack and held him on the ground when deputies arrived, according to the report. Deputies had to pull Mack into the back of a cruiser after he allegedly refused to go inside. After Mack was in the cruiser, one deputy attempted to locate Coats, while the other stayed with Mack. At this time, Mack was able to open the passenger door and started running toward the convention center, according to the report. Deputies eventually caught up to Mack and tackled him to the ground. He was then placed inside of a patrol vehicle with a working safety lock. Deputies arrested Coats after security found her in her hotel room. Mack was charged with felony escape, misdemeanor persistent disorderly conduct and criminal trespassing. Coats was charged with misdemeanor persistent disorderly conduct and criminal trespassing. 1734
The mother of a New Hampshire high school student who received free food from a lunchroom worker told a local newspaper that her son is not a needy child.Speaking anonymously to the Union Leader earlier this week, the mother said, "I have three children, and they are all well-cared for and well-fed."She did not get fired for feeding a hungry child." 363
The Environmental Protection Agency is set Thursday to announce the repeal of the Obama-era Waters of the United States rule that extended federal authority and protections to streams and wetlands, according to a source familiar with the details of the announcement.The announcement is scheduled to take place at the National Association of Manufacturers, a trade group in Washington, DC.The 2015 regulation, commonly known as WOTUS, defined what bodies of water are protected under the federal Clean Water Act but was a favorite punching bag of Republicans, who ridicule it as government overreach. Democrats defended it as necessary to ensure waterways remained pollution-free.Thursday's repeal of the regulation is likely to draw intense litigation from the environmental community. Those groups have argued the Trump EPA's changes to the rule protects fewer small waterways and that could result in more pollution and put people at risk.A source who's been invited to the announcement tells CNN that EPA administrator Andrew Wheeler is expected to sign the finalized rule repealing the regulation."It's the first of two steps. First the regulation has to be repealed then the EPA will move to replace it with a new regulation," the source said. Wheeler unveiled a proposed replacement regulation last December.The EPA announced Wednesday that Wheeler will "make a major water policy announcement" but did not specify what the announcement would be. EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers did not immediately respond to CNN's request for comment.President Donald Trump has repeatedly called clean water a priority for his administration. "We want crystal clean water and that's what we're doing and that's what we're working on so hard," he said in an environmental speech earlier this summer.But the Obama-era rule has been under attack from Trump and conservatives for years.Several states challenged the Obama-era rule, and a federal judge in Georgia 1966
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