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Jack Goldsmith (right) stands next to his stepfather, Chuckie O'Brien. Goldsmith is the author of a new book "In Hoffa's Shadow" where he writes that the feds know who killed Hoffa but won't reveal the suspect. 223
Javier Amir Rodriguez's family was among the crowd of mourners who gathered in a high school football field Monday evening to release white doves to remember him and the 21 other people killed in Saturday's massacre at Walmart.The 15-year-old was the youngest victim in a deadly mission authorities say was carried out by a white supremacist who drove hundreds of miles from a Dallas suburb to El Paso, Texas."Please understand, this violence, this hatred, will not define this community," Democratic presidential candidate Beto O'Rourke said during the vigil at Horizon High School. "We will speak forever about Javier with pride and gratitude and love."Among those killed were parents, grandparents and spouses from both sides of the US-Mexico border. Authorities said a white supremacist from Dallas drove hundreds of miles for his deadly mission.The doves are positive symbols, Horizon High School Principal Elena Erives Acosta said."Symbols of new beginnings, of love and healing," she said at the vigil.The dead include 13 Americans, eight Mexicans and one German. The last moments of their lives before the shooting began could not have been more routine.One couple was shopping for school supplies for their daughter. Another couple had just dropped off their dog at the groomer. A man from Mexico was visiting his granddaughter as she raised money with her soccer team.On Monday, the death toll rose from 20 to 22 after two of the wounded died from their injuries.Here's what we know about the victims so far:These people died protecting their familiesJordan and Andre Anchondo had gone to the store after dropping off their 5-year-old daughter at cheer practice, Jordan's aunt Elizabeth Terry told CNN.The couple brought along their 2-month-old son as they shopped for school supplies for their daughter.Only the little boy would survive.As the gunfire erupted, Jordan, 24, shielded her baby, Terry said. Andre, 23 jumped in front of his wife, said another relative, Jesse Jamrowski."The baby still had her blood on him. You watch these things and see these things and you never think this is going to happen to your family," Terry said."How do parents go school shopping and then die shielding their baby from bullets?"In addition to their 5-year-old-daughter, the couple leaves behind another child, aged 2.The first call of an active shooter went out at 10:39 a.m. local time, authorities said. Around 2 p.m., Anchondo's relatives started calling each other, saying the couple was not answering their phones, Terry said.The baby was "pulled from under her body," said Terry, the sister of Anchondo's father, Paul, for whom the injured infant is named. The infant suffered broken fingers but is home with family, Terry said.Jordan Anchondo died alone at the hospital because no friends or loved ones were able to immediately find her, her aunt said. "It took us a while to confirm and identify her throughout all the chaos," she said.The couple had recently celebrated their first wedding anniversary.Andre Anchondo owned a mechanic shop in El Paso, Terry said. Originally from Odessa, Texas, Jordan Anchondo loved being a mother to her children, Terry said."She had the most contagious smile and laugh," Terry told CNN. "We lost the light of our family and the light of our heart."Dave Johnson, 63, died shielding his wife Kathy and their 9-year-old granddaughter, Kaitlyn, from the hail of bullets, Johnson's daughter Stephanie Melendez told CNN.The couple was grocery shopping and picking out a present for Kaitlyn, the family told CNN's Anderson Cooper.It didn't surprise his family that Johnson risked his life for them. He doted on his granddaughter, spending time with her after work on science experiments, Melendez and her sisters said.Kathy Johnson told her daughters that the gunman got as close as two feet from them. Johnson was shot after he pushed down his wife and granddaughter and covered them, Melendez said."I was so close to losing her but because of him she is still here," Melendez said. "I wish he was here so I can tell him how thankful I am."A relative tracked a victim's car to the Walmart parking lotArturo Benavides, 60, was an Army veteran and a bus driver who loved telling stories of his days in the service as an Army staff sergeant.His niece Jacklin Luna described her uncle as popular and beloved."He was an absolutely caring and strong-willed man," she said. "He was the person that would give any dime and shirt off his back, a meal and a home to anyone.Leo Campos and Maribel Hernandez dropped their dog off at the groomer before going to Walmart, Hernandez's brother Al Hernandez told 4648

Lava lamps may be fun reminders of the 1970s, but these days, some are being used to help keep data secure.Nick Sullivan with a tech firm called Cloudflare shows a wall of lava lamps that are part cryptography. The wall is 235
Kroger is tapping Microsoft to help create grocery stores of the future, and keep up with Amazon and Walmart.The two companies announced a partnership on Monday that will bring digital shelves, price tags, and advertisements to two pilot stores in Ohio and Washington State, near each company's headquarters.The stores are designed to make it easier for customers and workers to navigate the stores, saving shoppers time and Kroger money.Kroger has been partnering with companies such as Nuro, Ocado, and Walgreens as it aims to speed up grocery delivery and pickup, and experiment with digital tools to support its network of physical stores.The grocery chain is trying to give shoppers — who are increasingly browsing and buying everything from consumer electronics to breakfast cereal online — more reasons to visit physical stores.Under the latest partnership, customers first build a shopping list using Kroger's Scan, Bag, Go self-checkout app.Then, the app works with cloud-based software and sensors in the store to guide them around as they check off items on their list. For example, if a customer is looking for pasta, the app will direct the customer to the correct aisle. As the customer nears the aisle and approaches the type of pasta they chose, a personal avatar — like a banana or an avocado —will light up that directs them to the right one. They'll scan the item to check out, and the system will route the customer to the next item on their list."The notion of Kroger having to figure out what digital looks like in store for a grocery shopper is super important," said Jason Goldberg, head of the commerce practice at digital agency SapientRazorfish. He believes the tech could appeal to customers who want more information about the food they're buying, where it comes from, and how to store it in their homes.Shelves at the two tech-enhanced stores will also look much different than traditional stores.Instead of paper tags for prices and promotions, they will be digital. That creates room for Kroger to sell advertising space to brands, which could provide a new profit stream in the low-margin grocery business.Switching will help Kroger quickly change prices on products and create deals, instead of an employee manually making the changes. Kroger said it will boost workers' productivity, since employees will be able to quickly locate products for customers' curbside grocery pickup orders.Kroger's ( 2443
It’s Saturday night service at Northview Church in Carmel, Indiana. As parishioners pack the pews, they start singing about the power of giving. Preaching from the pulpit, senior pastor Steve Poe focuses the night’s sermon on how small donations can have a big impacts.This Indiana-based church is truly helping their neighbors in need! Members of this congregation raised ,000 in donations and used that money to help pay off more than .6 million of medical debt for Indiana citizens.“That will have an impact on 2,500 people or more,” says Poe.With Poe's church buying 30 percent of all medical debt in seven different zip codes across greater Indiana, the pastor says this is financial rehabilitation through religion. In a few weeks, the families whose debts will be covered will receive letters. “What that does then, it will notify their creditors that their debt has been cleared, which gives them the opportunity to start again without this damaging debt," Poe says. "Without this debt hanging over their heads."Northview Church worked with the organization RIP Medical Debt to purchase debt at pennies on the dollar. Founder Craig Antico explains how it works, and why they don’t know the names of the people that they’ve helped. “RIP Medical Debt abolishes medical debt for the poor and those in hardship,” Antico says. “The way that we do it is we go and buy medical debt from either hospitals, doctors, or even the collector investors to buy the debt to make them nonprofit.”A study in the American Journal of Public Health found that medical debt contributes to two-thirds of bankruptcy filings. So, debt relief like this can be life changing. “I could not come up with any words; I was so caught off guard,” says Lisa Sole, who is a recipient of a Northview Church donation. Sole used ,500 dollars to cover medical bills and other debt.“When you are granted the gift of debt being taken away from you, the amount of stress that it relieves off of your body is so healing,” she says.With that kind of healing, Sole was inspired to pass it on and pay it forward, saying it’s truly better to give than receive. “It’s exciting to see the next person’s acceptance and how they’re excited compared to us and the feeling you get,” she says. 2266
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