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(KGTV) — Attorney General William Barr has decided to self-quarantine out of caution after President Donald Trump and several other lawmakers and aides tested positive for the coronavirus this week.Barr has had four COVID-19 tests since Friday and all have been negative, according to Justice Department spokesperson Kerri Kupec. She told the AP that Barr is quarantining out of an abundance of caution.Barr had attended one meeting at the Justice Department headquarters on Friday and stayed home during the weekend except to be tested.RELATED:President Trump drives by his supporters outside Walter Reed8 attendees of Trump's Supreme Court announcement test positive for the coronavirusLast weekend, Barr was one of several people to attend a White House event for Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett, where he was seen on video talking with former Trump aide Kellyanne Conway, who has since tested positive for the virus. Neither was wearing a mask.Many others in attendance were also not wearing a facial covering, as they sat close together throughout the ceremony. Since that event, at least eight people have tested positive for the coronavirus, including President Trump, first lady Melania Trump, Sens. Tom Tillis, and Mike Lee, Notre Dame President John I. Jenkins, Gov. Chris Christie, and Conway.The Associated Press contributed to this report. 1368
(KGTV) - California regulators are considering a plan to charge a fee for text messaging on mobile phones to help fund programs that make phone service accessible to the poor.The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) is set to consider the proposal in a vote scheduled for next month, according to The Mercury News. It's not clear how much mobile phone users would be asked to pay under the proposal, but it would likely be billed as a flat surcharge, not a per-text fee, according to the paper.And wireless industry and business groups are not "LOLing." The groups are reportedly already trying to defeat the proposal before it makes its way to the commission.“It’s a dumb idea,” Jim Wunderman, president of the Bay Area Council business-sponsored advocacy group, told the Mercury News. “This is how conversations take place in this day and age, and it’s almost like saying there should be a tax on the conversations we have.”The new surcharges could generate a total of about .5 million a year, according to business groups. The same groups warned that under the proposal's language, the charge could be retroactively be applied for five years, totaling more than 0 million for consumers, the paper reported.Click here for a look at the proposal.The proposal argues that the state's Public Purpose Program budget has increased from 0 million in 2011 to 8 million in 2016, while revenues funding the program from the telecommunications industry saw a "steady decline" from .5 billion in 2011 to .3 billion in 2017.The report calls this "is unsustainable over time."In a statement to the Associated Press, CPUC spokeswoman Constance Gordon said, "from a consumer's point of view, surcharges may be a wash, because if more surcharge revenues come from texting services, less would be needed from voice services." 1845

(KGTV) - Did only one person actually sign the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776?Yes.Despite the grand image we've been shown, only John Hancock signed the document on July 4, 1776.Most of the other delegates didn't sign it until August 2nd.But even that wasn't the end.When copies were printed with what was believed to be all the signatures in 1777, Thomas McKean's name was left off.It wasn't added to the document until around 1781. 454
(KGTV) - Does a picture being sent around social media show an ancient Mayan sculpture that looks very similar to Batman?No.The picture actually shows a piece of art created for an exhibit at the Mexican Museum of Design in 2014.Interestingly, there is a bat god named Camazotz in Mayan mythology.But it looks nothing like Batman. 338
(KGTV) — A woman was arrested Friday after police said she threw apparent blood onto the state Senate floor.According to California Highway Patrol, the woman threw a feminine hygiene product containing what appeared to be blood from the second floor public gallery.CHP did not say what the woman's motivation was, but referred to her as a "demonstrator," the Associated Press reported. The act happened as hundreds of protesters at the Capitol rallied against a recently passed law cracking down on fraudulent medical exemptions for vaccinations.The AP also reported the woman had yelled "that's for the dead babies" before throwing the red liquid. Several senators were reportedly hit. Senate President Pro Tempore Toni Atkins called the behavior "unacceptable."The state Senate relocated to a committee room to complete their session.The woman was charged with assault, vandalism, and disrupting the orderly conduct of official business at the state Capitol, according to CHP. 986
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