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YouTube users throughout the United States reported an outage Wednesday evening to the popular video sharing platform.Google, parent company of YouTube, did not said what caused the outage. Google said the outage was over by 9:13 p.m. ET"If you’re having trouble watching videos on YouTube right now, you’re not alone – our team is aware of the issue and working on a fix. We’ll follow up here with any updates," Google said in an update earlier in the evening.YouTube users who went to the website and attempted to watch a video found that videos would not play.The outage-reporting website Downdetector.com said nearly 300,000 users reported outages in the 7 p.m. ET hour. 682
at a local Walmart and determined that he is not a threat.According to the police department, a man between 50-60 years old with gray-black hair and a goatee approached a sales clerk Wednesday evening in the sporting goods department and asked the clerk if you could sell him "anything that would kill 200 people."The police identified the man as Philip Michael Attey II. The clerk told Attey that his comment wasn't funny."I know," the man said. He then repeated the question to the clerk."During his interview with detectives, Philip Attey II informed police that he is an anti-gun activist and that he believes that his statements made to the Walmart clerk in front of a customer only helps his cause which is for Walmart to stop selling firearms," the St. Lucie Police said in a statement."At this time, it doesn’t appear that Mr. Attey II is an immediate threat. This is an ongoing investigation," the statement concluded.This story was originally published by 968

and became caught with his coat wrapped around his head and neck.According to The Eagle County Coroner, the man died of positional asphyxia. The deceased was identified as Jason Varnish. The chairlift where he died is located in Vail's Blue Sky Basin. Reports indicate the seat on chair 37 was left in the upright position and that's why the man fell through when he went to sit down. "They should’ve just hit the stop button, there’s an emergency stop and there’s a slow stop and if they’re doing their job they could hit the slow stop before the guests are loading," said Joseph Bloch, an attorney who has worked on cases involving skier accidents.In one of his cases, a chairlift seat was left up, injuring a woman. The 2002 incident resulted in a trial and he said Vail Resorts failed to properly stop the lift and properly train operators. "The wind blew up the seat, my client and her husband were getting on the chair lift and the lift operator didn’t observe that the seat was flipped... and they got pushed into the rocks," said Bloch.Several chairlift-related accidents have made headlines in recent years. A man nearly died at Arapahoe Basin in 2017 when his backpack got tangled in a chairlift. His 1213
-- even if their subpoenas are ignored across the board.A number of House Democrats told CNN that it's time for that next step, saying they've already built enough evidence to advance the proceedings to the public stage."This isn't an Agatha Christie novel -- this is a shakedown," said Rep. Jamie Raskin, a Democrat from Maryland who has taken part in the closed door depositions. "I think we have established an overwhelming case. But we have got very careful prosecutors on the staff who rightfully want to leave no witness unexamined, and they want every detail to be nailed down as much as possible. That's good."Raskin added: "But at a certain point we have to say ... there's just been an overwhelming case that high crimes and misdemeanors have likely been committed against our country."The inquiry is rooted in a 824
at a Colorado nursing home, but the facility is defending its reputation.Miaya Ramirez only worked for University Heights Rehab & Care a few months but what she saw will stay with her much longer. “Patients being neglected, not getting showers, not getting fed properly, being left in their room, unsanitary conditions, being left in soiled briefs,” Ramirez explained to KMGH. The week after she started working, Ramirez says the Director of Nursing asked her to lie on a state report about being understaffed. “We had holes in the staffing book and the DON (Director of Nursing) asked me to fill in people's names in the staffing book and I told her I didn’t feel comfortable doing that,” she said. Ramirez says she was suspended and ultimately fired for trying to care for patients not being helped by nursing staff. She says the doctor of one patient even called police about the neglect. “When the doctor pulled the bandages off she couldn't believe what she saw; she said the wounds were worse,” Ramirez said. “She asked if the dressings were being changed when they were supposed to, if the resident was getting up out of bed when she was supposed to and I told her 'no,'” Ramirez said. Ultimately, Ramirez was fired for putting a clean bandage on that patient. She shared recordings of her termination. University Heights said she was operating out of the scope of care. “What they told me was I should have left the dirty bandage on her backside,” Ramirez said. Operated by Vivage, University Heights says Ramirez is a disgruntled employee and her claims are unsubstantiated. “We are truly a very compassionate organization with a lot of experience. We are the largest provider of skilled nursing in the state of Colorado,” Daphne Bernstein, Senior Vice President of Business Development, said. But complaints investigated by the 1844
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