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发布时间: 2025-05-24 05:43:34北京青年报社官方账号
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Republican Greg Murphy will win in the special election to replace Walter Jones as the congressman from North Carolina's 3rd District, CNN projects.In another race on Tuesday, North Carolina state Sen. Dan Bishop will defeat Democrat Dan McCready in the North Carolina 9th District's special congressional election, giving Republicans a narrow victory in the GOP-leaning district where President Donald Trump won by 12 points in 2016.The race drew national attention as a potential 2020 bellwether, in a district that stretched from the Charlotte suburbs to the military town of Fayetteville. Trump and Vice President Mike Pence both made eleventh hour trips to the district on Monday in an effort to bolster Bishop.The "do-over" special election came after the state board of elections refused to certify the 2018 House race results in the district after fraud allegations, ordering a new election. 911

  濮阳东方医院妇科收费与服务   

Shanann Watts' mother said she knew something terrible had happened to her, even before the Colorado wife and mother was reported missing.Last year, Sandy Rzucek recalled something woke her from her sleep, and she sat up in bed. "I heard the Holy Spirit say, 'Shanann,'" she said, whispering the name."I felt my daughter's spirit the moment she died," she said Monday during an appearance on "Dr. Phil." "I knew. I swear to God I knew. ... I woke up the whole house. I said, 'Something's wrong with Shanann.'"Shanann Watts' pregnant body and the bodies of her children, Bella, 4, and Celeste, 3, were found in August in a secluded oil field where Shanann's husband, Chris, worked. He later pleaded guilty to the killings, and is serving five life sentences -- three consecutive and two concurrent -- after Shanann's family agreed to drop the possibility of pursuing the death penalty.Rzucek and her husband and son shared their reactions to the recently released tapes of Chris Watts' five-hour confession to law enforcement, and spoke about how they've struggled with the deaths and with understanding why Watts committed the murders.Watts had initially denied involvement in the August disappearance of his wife and children, and expressed concern about their well-being to a local news station. He pleaded guilty in November. Shanann Watts' brother, Frank Rzucek Jr., said they didn't think Chris Watts had killed his wife "until we saw that interview" on television.'It's eating him up'Last week, authorities released Watts' five-hour interview with authorities, which was recorded in February. Watts opened up about his state of mind in the weeks and months leading up to his conviction and spoke about what led him to plead guilty to his crimes."Why do you think he's telling the truth now?" asked host Phil McGraw.Rzucek said he believed Watts spoke honestly about the killings because "I think it's eating him up.""I think he was more than glad to talk to somebody for five hours, sitting in a box 24/7," said Rzucek, who was the children's godfather."We loved him like a son and Frankie loved him like a brother," Sandy Rzucek said. "I just don't understand."In an appearance last week on "Dr. Phil," a lawyer for Watts' family said that Bella knew her mother and sister had just been killed -- and feared she would be next."Please Daddy, don't do to me what you just did to Cece," Bella said, according to the attorney Steven Lambert. Sandy Rzucek said the hardest part was knowing her granddaughter watched her sister die and beg for her life."To hear my granddaughter beg for her life ... it's pretty rough," she said.'She told me she was at peace'Rzucek said she also felt the presence of her daughter and grandchildren when authorities told them they had discovered their bodies separately."That night I was laying in bed and I just felt a presence and I heard my daughter. I felt her, and I heard her say, 'I love you mommy and I'm sorry,'" she said."She told me she was at peace," Rzucek said.Rzucek said Bella told her "I can go to Disney World any time I want.""I said, that's right, Bella," Rzucek said.A new missionRzucek said the murders have given her a new mission: to comfort women whose children have gone missing."I'm still on a mission for my daughter and my grandchildren because they wanted to live. They had the right to live, and they had beautiful lives," she said."They loved each other. They loved their family. They loved everybody that was around them."She placed her hand on her upper chest."Momma's here," she said. "And I'm going to stand up for them, Dr. Phil. If you'll allow, and you'll help me.""We been together 38 years. Our kids are our everything and our grand babies were our everything," Rzucek said. 3823

  濮阳东方医院妇科收费与服务   

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. — Vice President Mike Pence says 21 people aboard a mammoth cruise ship off the California coast have tested positive for the new coronavirus, including 19 crew members. Pence said Friday that the federal government is working with California officials on a plan to bring the 951-foot Grand Princess to a non-commercial port this weekend. The 3,500 passengers and crew members will be tested for the virus. Friday's test results come amid evidence the vessel was the breeding ground for a deadly cluster of at least 10 cases during its previous voyage.The ship off California was returning to San Francisco after visiting Hawaii. Gov. Gavin Newsom said Thursday that the ship won’t come to shore until the passengers are appropriately assessed. The ship is owned by Princess Cruises, which also owns the Diamond Princess, the ship that was quarantined for two weeks in Yokohama, Japan, last month because of the virus. In the end, about 700 of the 3,700 people aboard became infected. Meanwhile, the death toll from COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the virus, has risen to 14, with all but one victim in Washington state. The other was in California.Pennsylvania, Indiana, Minnesota, Nebraska, Kentucky and Oklahoma all reported their first cases Friday.Also on Friday, President Donald Trump signed a .3 billion funding bill to help public health agencies address the crisis. The bill was widely supported by lawmakers on both side of the aisle.Worldwide, the virus has infected more than 100,000 people and killed over 3,400, with the vast majority of them in China. Most cases have been mild, and more than half of those infected have recovered. 1695

  

Siblings Mark and Lexy spent four years in foster care, but that all changed when they came to stay with Tom and Debra Crittenden. Now, the Georgia family has been together for two years.“The stars were aligned for us to adopt Mark and Lexy. They were literally the only kids we ever fostered; the only kids we ever met in the process," Tom Crittenden said. "So, it kind of seemed like they’re our kids."However, an adoption story like this one is not very common. Most people want to adopt babies, and at the ages of 15 and 17, Mark and Lexy almost aged out of the foster care system.Kimberly Offutt is the National Foster Care Adoption Director with Bethany Christian Services. She says the doors to the foster care system close to children once they reach the age of 18 leaving them in a very vulnerable position.“More than 10 percent of the kids who age out of foster care haven’t even graduated from high school," Offutt said. "Within two to three years, those children could end up homeless, incarcerated, where another system is now raised in them. Seven out of 10 of the young women actually have children that end up back in the foster care system."According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the longer a child is in foster care, the less likely they are to leave it before turning 18. “Our teenagers recognize that the clock is literally ticking. Every birthday is not a celebration. It is another year that they recognize, ‘if I don’t find a forever family, what’s going to happen to me,’” Offutt said.Offutt says a majority of U.S. children in foster care are between the ages of eight and 14, and the number of children in foster care continues to rise. The only hope in changing that statistic comes from families willing to take a leap like the Crittendens.“It’s just such a shame because it’s such a hindrance for these kids who age out of the system and don’t have that support network. Not just to get them through high school and college or whatever, but for the rest of their life,” Tom Crittenden said.The Crittendens say they understand people’s hesitation to adopt a teenager, but they believe you can still have a large impact on their lives. “We’re not bad. People always stereotype us saying that we have trouble and that we’re bad and stuff and how we’re like disobedient, and that’s not the case," Lexy said. "It’s actually what our parents did. That’s why we’re in foster care. Most of us are in foster care for what our parents did. Not for what we did."Thankfully, Mark and Lexy were able to stay together in their adoptive family.“Without siblings, ya know, we couldn’t really have that much fun. Because your parents are older than you, so having a close sibling is good,” Mark said.They’ve been given a new start with a new family. Debra says she loves introducing the kids to new experiences they’ve never had before.“We’ve taken them on trips. We were with them the first time they ever got on an airplane. We took them over to see the Grand Canyon and Sedona and ended up in Vegas," Debra Crittenden said. "And then, we took them out of the country to see the Caribbean about a month ago. So that’s fun, watching them experience new things that they wouldn’t have had access to."Mark and Lexy say they’d like to see other foster kids have the same opportunity.“To find someone that actually cares for them. To let them know that they are loved,” Mark said.There are 125,000 foster kids still waiting to be adopted.“If not you, who? If not now, when?” Offutt said. 3532

  

PUEBLO, Colo. — On the afternoon of November 4, 2019, the U.S. Attorney's office announced the arrest of Richard Holzer, a white supremacist who they say had plans to bomb a Jewish synagogue in Pueblo,Colorado, about two hours south of Denver. "We are here today to announce that federal law enforcement, working in conjunction with the Pueblo Police Department, has successfully stopped what we believe to be an imminent threat of domestic terrorism against a Colorado religious institution," authorities said.Authorities say Holzer met up with three undercover FBI agents to purchase bombs in a planned attack against Temple Emanuel, the second oldest synagogue in the state.According to a criminal complaint, FBI agents had been talking with Holzer since September, tracking multiple Facebook accounts of his in which he talked to other white supremacists through private messages about attacking Jewish people. In one message, Holzer said, "I wish the Holocaust really did happen." Holzer told undercover agents he hired someone to poison the synagogue's water supply and was now preparing for a "racial holy war.""Jewish community is tiny in Pueblo," one Colorado woman said. "And we all know each other and support one another and our children."Thirty-five families are part of this small congregation. Michael Atlas-Acuna, the president of Temple Emanuel's board of directors, is still a bit shaken by the plot to blow up a synagogue that was built in 1900. "I looked at the building and the inside, and I thought, 'God, we could have lost this,' " he said.If there's a silver lining to take away from the foiled terror plot, it's that the congregation is now stronger than ever before. It was a packed house at a recent Friday night Shabbat service.The congregation called for peace and happiness, and they said they won't let what happened scare them away. "We're going to be here another 100 years," Atlas-Acuna said. "We're going to take the right precautions that we need to take in order to be safe. Maybe the reason was to wake everybody up and realize that there is that threat out there, and to bring everybody together, and I think the whole community is going to be that much more alert." If convicted, Holzer faces up to 50 years in prison. 2277

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