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南昌酒瘾那家医院好
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发布时间: 2025-05-28 05:46:50北京青年报社官方账号
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With the 20th anniversary of 9/11 coming up next year, the children of 9/11 first responders are coming together to share their stories for the first time in a new book due out next year."Even though we all experienced the day, we wall experienced it differently," said Susan Fiorentino, daughter of NYPD Retired Detective Pete Fiorentino, who responded to the World Trade Center attacks. "I was 10," said Susan, now 29 years old. It was Fiorentino's idea and she is leading the project to collect stories. "It’s important to raise awareness this is still a community that is suffering and we need to support them."So far, she has gathered 50 stories, including her own. She says the experience of 9/11 has influenced her and so many other 9/11 children to lead a life of service."I had a lot of people who said because my father because my mother was a first responder, that is what made me get into the first responder field," she said.She is still looking to collect more stories about how the children of 9/11 responders saw their childhood and now adulthood impacted by the day, documenting history through the eyes of some who have never told their stories before."Through connecting with others in my own experience in getting help with being a 9/11 first responder child has helped me so I hope it would help others as well," she said.The book will be published next summer. All the proceeds will go to the Tunnel to Towers Foundation, which honors first responders and members of our armed forces.Anyone interested in submitting their story should e-mail Susan before December 1 at Susan.Fiorentino11@gmail.com.This story was first reported by Christie Duffy at WPIX in New York, New York. 1706

  南昌酒瘾那家医院好   

is offering UFO and alien enthusiasts an "out of this world" experience.Licensed prostitute Alice Little works at the Moonlite Bunny Ranch near Carson City.Little started advertising a 50 percent discount between Sept. 20 and 22 about a month ago after learning about the viral Storm Area 51 Facebook event. Little says that she is an alien enthusiast herself.Little claims that even before the special began, she had already broken her previous revenue records. Little says that her income for September has already hit six figures.“In over three years as a legal prostitute, I’ve never seen such excitement from tourists interested in exploring all of the unique adventures that make Nevada such an amazing destination. We have aliens, we have famous top-secret military bases, we have the best in gaming and nightlife, and we have legal prostitution. The ‘Storm Area 51’ crowd clearly wants to explore all of these marvelous only-in-Nevada opportunities.”The Bunny Ranch is located in Lyon County, where prostitution is legal in the form of regulated brothels.Little says she transformed her luxury suite at the brothel into "Area 69," a sensual “alien abduction fantasy experience” complete with sensory deprivation and sensation play, alien probing, and even alien impregnation adventures.Multiple businesses and bars in Clark, Lincoln and Nye counties have found different ways to capitalize on the viral event. Many of them are hosting themed events or offering special products, including Budweiser who 1513

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close to where a man was found shot to death earlier Tuesday morning, according to the medical examiner.Police and EMS responded at around 8 a.m. to an open field where a 30-year-old male victim was pronounced dead at the scene from a gunshot wound. 251

  

earlier this week — just days ahead of a viral Facebook event that calls for attendees to "storm" the infamous government compound.The two men, 21-year-old Govert Charles Wilhemus Jacob Sweep and 20-year-old Ties Granzier, both of the Netherlands, were arrested at the Nevada National Security Site, an area in Nevada's Mojave Desert located near Area 51.Nye County Sheriffs responded to the site on Sept. 10 and found a car parked at a gate about 3 miles into the property. They spoke with Sweep and Granzier, who both speak and read English.Police say the men understood the posted "no trespassing" signs, and claim they wanted to "look" at Area 51. Sweep and Granzier allegedly had cameras and a drone in their car.The men were arrested and taken to the Nye County Detention Center.In an interview at the jail, Sweep said he received instructions from a gas station attendant at Area 51 Alien Center, a tourist attraction near the site, on where to go to get a good view of Area 51. He claims he had no intention of crossing into the restricted federal property. He also says he intended to leave before Sept. 20 — the day of the viral "Storm Area 51, They Can't Stop All of Us" Facebook event."We didn't have any intention to storm it because we leave one day before the actual storming dates, and we just wanted to go there," Sweep said.Sweep believes his status as a YouTuber is the reason he and Granzier have not yet been released from jail."If I wasn't a YouTuber... I'm just here for trespassing and I think its not normal for such a small thing," Sweep said.Granzier is a popular YouTube personality in Europe. He has more than 700,000 subscribers to his YouTube page.The "Storm Area 51" Facebook event 1717

  

for his role in the death of Eric Garner.ORIGINAL STORY: A final decision on the future of the officer accused of fatally choking Eric Garner is expected to be announced by New York Police Commissioner James O'Neill at 12:30 p.m. Monday, according to multiple law enforcement officials.Officer Daniel Pantaleo was found guilty in a disciplinary trial earlier this month of using a chokehold on Garner, the New York man whose final words, "I can't breathe," became a rallying cry for the Black Lives Matter movement.The departmental administrative judge officially recommended Pantaleo be fired. O'Neill had been expected to follow the recommendation, a senior law enforcement official said then. Pantaleo has been suspended pending the commissioner's decision, the NYPD spokesman said.The decision comes more than five years after police tried to arrest the 43-year-old father of six, who was allegedly selling loose cigarettes illegally on Staten Island. In video of the arrest, Pantaleo can be seen wrapping one arm around Garner's shoulder and the other around his neck before jerking him back and pulling him to the ground.As Pantaleo forces Garner's head into the sidewalk, Garner could be heard saying "I can't breathe. I can't breathe." He died shortly afterward.Garner's death, three weeks before the death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, started the resurgence of police accountability and brought the Black Lives Matter movement to the forefront, Rev. Al Sharpton said last month.The "I can't breathe" phrase reflected the suffocating frustration with what activists said was a lack of police accountability after police killings of unarmed African Americans. The phrase was widely heard and seen at protests, and NBA stars like LeBron James bore the message on T-shirts in support of the cause.Judge recommended he be firedThe departmental disciplinary trial focused on whether Pantaleo used a department-banned chokehold in the arrest.The city medical examiner's office ruled Garner's death a homicide in the days after his death, and the medical examiner testified that Pantaleo's alleged chokehold caused an asthma attack and was "part of the lethal cascade of events."Pantaleo denied that he used the maneuver, but Deputy Commissioner of Trials Rosemarie Maldonado ruled that a chokehold triggered a series of events that culminated with Garner's death, according to the report, which CNN obtained from a source familiar with the matter."Here, (Pantaleo's) use of a chokehold fell so far short of objective reasonableness that this tribunal found it to be reckless -- a gross deviation from the standard of conduct established for a New York City police officer," Maldonado wrote. "Moreover, (Pantaleo's) glaring dereliction of responsibility precipitated a tragic outcome."Despite the disciplinary trial, Pantaleo has avoided criminal charges in the death. A grand jury in New York declined to indict the officer in 2014, and the city of New York settled with Garner's estate for .9 million in 2015. The Justice Department declined to bring federal civil rights charges last month. 3109

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