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An inmate at Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn died Wednesday in custody after being pepper-sprayed by staff, U.S. Department of Justice officials confirmed.A spokesperson said inmate Jamel Floyd, 35, was barricaded inside his cell and breaking the cell door window with a metal object.He became increasingly disruptive, the spokesperson said, adding it was believed he could be potentially harmful to himself and others. He was pepper-sprayed and staff removed him from his cell, the official said.When medical staff responded, Floyd was unresponsive.Life-saving measures were started by medical staff and EMS continued them once on the scene, the official said.He was taken to a hospital and was pronounced dead, the spokesperson said.No staff members or other inmates were injured.There is no indication that this death was related to COVID-19.The DOJ spokesperson said the FBI and U.S. Marshals Service were notified. 941
Avon is nearing a sale.The cosmetics brand is close to being purchased by Natura Cosmeticos, the latter company said Wednesday. The deal would be all-stock, Natura said."The parties are currently ... negotiating final contractual terms of the Transaction," said the Brazil-based Natura in a press release.If the boards of the two companies approve the deal, it would mark the end of independence of Avon, the 133-year-old brand. Avon popularized the door-to-door cosmetic sales model in the mid-1900s, but its sales have continued to fall as consumers shift their shopping habits online.The deal could be announced as soon as Wednesday, 649
Brothers of Eunice Vazquez said she was loving and caring and they wish she had left work an hour earlier. They hope Daniel Everett turns himself into 163
An inmate was mistakenly released from the troubled Cuyahoga County Jail last week, in spite of the inmate telling jailers that he wasn’t supposed to be released.Not only did that inmate tell at least one jailer he was supposed to stay locked up, Administrative Judge John Russo said he also called a judge's bailiff and let him know about the mistake too.The confusion that led the jail to mistakenly release Fransisco Cruz appears to once again stem from an inmate with multiple cases in the system at the same time.Court records show Cruz was sentenced to 18 months in prison in October 2017 on domestic violence, drug, escape and theft charges.Nine months later, in July 2018, Cruz was released from prison and put into a transitional control program, a type of supervised release.While out, Cruz was arrested again on drug charges in May of this year and put back behind bars to finish his sentence. That prison sentence ended on October 2.The same day, Cruz was sentenced on the May drug charge.Judge Peter Corrigan ordered Cruz spend time in a substance abuse facility and ordered the Cuyahoga County Sheriff's Department to take him there.What happened next is still something jail administrators are trying to figure out.A spokeswoman said the state notified the jail that Cruz's sentence was over. He was released Friday and told to report to his parole officer.That’s when Cruz told a jailer they were supposed to take him to inpatient treatment, Russo told News 5 investigators. But that didn't happen.Cruz then called Corrigan's courtroom to tell the judge what happened, Russo said. A bailiff called the treatment center, but they said they could only take Cruz if the sheriff's department brought him.The county said the 36-year-old was taken back into custody yesterday when he showed up to meet his parole officer.This is at least the fourth mistaken release from the jail since spring. In all four cases, records show the inmate involved had multiple cases moving through the court system at the same time.This article was originally written by Scott Noll for WEWS. 2095
An Internal Revenue Service official alleged in a whistleblower complaint that he was informed of at least one Treasury Department political appointee trying to interfere with the usual audit of the president or vice president's tax returns, 254