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郑州郑州第一附属医院眼科医生
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发布时间: 2025-06-02 14:50:09北京青年报社官方账号
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  郑州郑州第一附属医院眼科医生   

AURORA, Colo. – Twenty-four years after he was sentenced to life in prison without parole on a murder charge, a Colorado man has gotten a second chance at life and he’s making it count.Jeff Johnson, 41, was convicted in 1994 of killing John Leonardelli in a carjacking incident. But after the man who was convicted alongside him in Leonardelli’s death confessed and the U.S. Supreme Court changed its stance on juvenile sentences, Johnson was released from prison in November 2018. Johnson was 17 years old when he and Jonathan Jordan, then 19, were arrested for stabbing to death Leonardelli – a father of six – in an Aurora parking garage. Johnson said he saw Jordan stab Leonardelli but instead of helping the dying man, he instead jumped into Leonardelli’s Jaguar along with Jordan and left the scene.Both were convicted, but Jordan at one point admitted to killing Leonardelli. Johnson himself got into drugs while in prison but decided to turn his life around.Johnson started a program in prison to help other inmates and got involved in restorative justice programs to try and help mediate between criminals and their victims.“I came up with a motto for my life,” Johnson said. “A better life is a choice of way. I joined programs like Victim Impact, Victim Awareness, Restorative Justice. For me, that’s what gives my life purpose, and meaning. Being a mirror for them so they could see what you’re able to see.”Johnson met the woman who would change his life forever.“My name is Jenny Johnson, and I’m the wife of a juvenile lifer,” Jenny said. “I worked as a counselor, that’s how we crossed paths. They crossed for a reason. As for Jeff, it’s turning trauma into triumph, on all sides.”After Jordan confessed in a letter to Johnson, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that automatic life sentences for juveniles were unconstitutional. Colorado passed a law eliminating juvenile life sentences, though they were not made retroactive.But the state looked at 48 cases involving prisoners who received such sentences as teenagers and, after hearing from one of Leonardelli’s sons and others, Johnson was resentenced on Oct. 23. And on Nov. 2, 2018, he walked out of the Fremont Correctional Facility a free man.Johnson ended up marrying Jenny, and the two of them gave birth to twins a few months ago. The couple stays in contact with Leonardelli’s family, who are close friends.“This is what they gave me,” Johnson said, holding a watch. “This is Leonardelli’s watch. I keep it and always remember what time it is, to make sure I’m living the best life I can live and make the best choices I can make.”“No words are going to express how bad I feel about everything happening. There’s absolutely nothing I can do to make it better or give back,” Johnson said. “I made several poor choices that night and I take full responsibility for those actions.”But now on the outside, Johnson is continuing the work he started in prison to try and prevent other teens from ending up in similar circumstances that he did.“When you’re involved with somebody losing their life, I feel like it’s my duty and gives my life purpose or meaning in life to come out here, take my story and help all these other kids,” he said. “We’re going to pick the best life we want over the choices that we make. The choices that we make define the character that we have.” 3354

  郑州郑州第一附属医院眼科医生   

An infant has tested positive for COVID-19, said Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear on Wednesday. Gov. Beshear said the 8-month-old baby is among the 35 confirmed cases of the new coronavirus in the state as of Thursday afternoon. "That kiddo is in good condition, is being treated at home and right now, everything is all right," Beshear said of the infant. "This is very rare in what we have seen in the coronavirus."Although children account for a small percentage of confirmed COVID-19 cases around the world, a study-- 527

  郑州郑州第一附属医院眼科医生   

As more states legalize marijuana, more law enforcement efforts are put in place to keep high drivers off the roadways.The State of Missouri is one that is cracking down on people driving after using pot. The Missouri Department of Transportation announced this week it will have a blitz on April 19-20.Those dates have been chosen because the number 420 is a code used by cannabis enthusiasts who celebrate the drug on April 20. In 2018, MoDOT reported 78 people were killed and 142 seriously injured in traffic crashes with at least one-drug impaired driver. 572

  

BLOOMINGTON, Minnesota — A family visiting the Mall of America last week has since been spending time at the Children's Minnesota Hospital with its 5-year-old son, who is recovering after being the randomly chosen victim of a heinous crime.Police said a man unknown to the family grabbed the 5-year-old boy and threw him over the third-floor balcony inside the mall, allowing him to forcefully fall 40 feet to the ground.The child survived and is undergoing intensive health care — he has been hospitalized since the incident April 12.The man who has admitted to harming the boy is 24-year-old Emmanuel Deshawn Aranda, who said he had been looking for someone to kill. He told police he was tired of being rejected by women at the mall and this act was out of that anger.The child's mom told authorities at the scene the family was outside of the Rainforest Cafe when Aranda approached them and picked up the child without warning.The man had already been banned from the Mall of America in his past: He was twice convicted in 2015 for assaults he committed at the shopping center.Aranda is charged with attempted homicide.A 1142

  

An ICE officer opened fire and wounded a man in a Tennessee grocery store parking lot as the officer attempted to make an immigration arrest Thursday.The officer fired two shots after a driver he was trying to arrest during a fugitive operation drove toward the officer while fleeing the scene, ICE spokesman Bryan Cox said, citing initial reports.While ICE operations are a regular occurrence across the United States, it's rare to hear of shots fired in public places as they unfold.The FBI said a Mexican national was struck by gunfire in a Food Lion parking lot outside Nashville in Antioch. He turned himself in later and was receiving medical attention at a local hospital. The individual was not arrested and has not been charged by the FBI."Conclusions about the shooting incident should not be drawn until the investigation is complete," the agency said.An FBI spokesperson earlier said the agency is now investigating a possible assault on a federal officer.The FBI is the lead agency in the investigation, Cox said, and federal prosecutors will decide whether any criminal charges are filed.ICE's Office of Professional Responsibility, which looks into all officer-involved shootings involving ICE, also is investigating, Cox said.Investigators cordoned off the parking lot with crime scene tape and combed the scene for evidence.The target of Thursday's ICE operation was a 39-year-old Mexican national who'd been deported multiple times, Cox said.The truck he was driving is now in FBI custody, said Matt Foster, assistant special agent in charge of the FBI's Nashville office. The vehicle was found abandoned with blood inside, an ICE official said.Nashville Mayor David Briley slammed the shooting in a statement, 1741

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