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All 5,000 Chase Bank locations nationally are either reducing hours or closing in an effort to reduce the spread of coronavirus. According to a Chase spokesperson, 20% of locations will close until further notice. Customers can check chase.com by Thursday morning to check which locations are closing until further notice. The remaining locations will operate from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. on weekdays, and keep existing weekend hours. "The remaining 80% would continue to serve our customers in every one of our communities," a Chase spokesperson said. "To help protect you and our employees, we’re open for business, however, we've been temporarily adjusting hours, changing procedures and closing some branches—and we’ll continue to adapt. I so appreciate your patience," Thasunda Brown Duckett, CEO of Chase Consumer Banking, said. "With many of us staying closer to home, I encourage you to use tools on the Chase Mobile app and chase.com whenever possible. If you need help because of COVID-19, please reach out to us."Chase is the second-largest bank in terms of numbers of US branches. 1101
A Miller Park Zoo flamingo was euthanized Monday after an elementary school student threw a rock inside the animal's exhibit.A representative from the Bloomington, Illinois, zoo told 195

A real-life Grinch took nastiness to a new level after snatching a gift from a doorstep and leaving a sarcastic "thank you" note for the victim.Hilary Smith ordered a Christmas gift for her boss and had it delivered to her snowy home in St. Paul, Minnesota. But she never saw the package."I looked down, and there was a piece of notebook paper folded neatly on the top step, where the package probably should have been," Smith told 443
A St. Landry Parish, Louisiana, family is questioning why a man is still in jail despite being acquitted on murder charges. Davien Bell was set free in October after he was acquitted in connection with a fatal shooting from March 2016, but shortly after he was released he was brought back into custody.Two months later he's still in jail. "He spent three years and eight months in prison..wrongfully," Bell's uncle Chanse Joubert said. Bell's family says those years are moments they can't get back. However, in October when Bell was set free they were hoping they could make new memories."He was free off all charges," Joubert said. "The next morning we received a phone call that he needed to go back to jail and be released properly." However, Bell hasn't been released. According to the District Attorney, he's being held on other pending charges. "On March 21, 2016 Damien Bell was arrested at the Yambilee building on theft and possession of an illegal firearm," Joubert said. "Two days later his father received a phone call that he needed to report to an interrogation station because they had evidence connecting him to the homicide." "He's been acquitted of murder charges and they're still detaining him based on something he allegedly did," Bell's mother Michelle Joubert said. "They could've handled that in court, during the three years he was there and they didn't."According to the D.A., it wasn't until after Bell's release that they realized he had pending charges. Jury selection for those charges is set for February. "He been in there for three years and eight months," said Bell's father David Wayne Bell Sr. "He missed a lot of holidays, friendships and everything. What they're doing is not justice. "This article was written by Kendria LaFleur for 1787
A typical afternoon inside the offices of a Midtown Manhattan skyscraper suddenly turned to chaos Monday when a helicopter, just 11 minutes into its flight, crash-landed on the roof above.Several floors of the building shook. Before the alarms started to blare and workers had a full understanding of what was happening, security was ordering them to grab their belongings and evacuate.Frantic employees squeezed into the stairwell, hurrying down flight after flight, not knowing that a helicopter had just crashed on top of their building, sparking a fire and leaving one person dead."It took a half hour to get from the 29th floor down to the ground floor. There were just too many people, it was too crowded, and everybody was trying to get off on all the floors at the same time," Nathan Sutton said, standing outside of 787 Seventh Avenue."You could feel the building shake, and you could actually hear the alarms," he said.The pilot, identified as Tim McCormack, died in the crash, law enforcement said.'My mind goes where ever New Yorker's mind goes'Lance Koonce was one block away from 787 Seventh Avenue when he heard something that sounded like a helicopter flying very low. He saw a sheet of flame and smoke when he looked out the window.Morgan Aries was inside the crash site on the 14th floor."We felt a little bit of a tremor," he told CNN.The order to evacuate came minutes later, he recalled."There was a moment in which we all couldn't get out of the building because we're all just backlogged in there," Aries said.New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo was among the many New Yorkers who said the incident brought back memories of the September 11 terror attacks at the World Trade Center in Lower Manhattan."If you're a New Yorker, you have a level of PTSD from 9/11," Cuomo said. "And I remember that morning all too well. So as soon as you hear an aircraft hit a building, my mind goes where every New Yorker's mind goes."Fighting the fireThe helicopter took off from the 34th Street heliport about 1:32 p.m., NYPD Commissioner James O'Neill said, and it crashed about 11 minutes later.At the time of the incident, moderate to heavy rain was falling in the city and visibility at Central Park was down to 1.25 miles. Winds were from the east at 9 mph.Based on interviews the NYPD conducted at the 34th Street heliport on Manhattan's east side, the pilot was waiting out the weather but for some reason decided it was OK to go, another law enforcement source told CNN.The pilot then flew around Battery Park on the southern tip of Manhattan, up the west side of the island and then, somewhere around the streets in the 40s, started to veer toward midtown Manhattan before ultimately crash landing, the law enforcement source said.O'Neill could not say whether the pilot made an emergency call from the Agusta A109E helicopter.The first firefighters were on the scene within five minutes, Thomas Richardson, FDNY chief of fire operations told reporters. Firefighters climbed to the top of the 54-floor building to put out the three-alarm fire.FDNY Lt. Adrienne Walsh, one of the department's first responders, described the roof scene as "a debris field that was on fire."Mourning a pilot, a volunteer firefighter McCormack flew for American Continental Properties, the company that owns the helicopter, for the past five years, according to a company statement."We are mourning the loss of Tim McCormack," the statement said.Nearly five years ago, in October 2014, McCormack was flying a different helicopter over the Hudson River with six tourists on board when a bird struck and broke part of the windshield, according to 3645
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