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Jury finds man guilty of manslaughter in stabbing death

Jury finds man guilty of manslaughter in stabbing death May 6, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail Jury finds man guilty of manslaughter in stabbing deathGetty Images YAKIMA, Wash. (AP) A jury in Yakima has found a 21-year-old man guilty of first-degree manslaughter in the death of a 55-year-old handyman in 2018. After six hours of deliberation Wednesday, jurors acquitted Anthony Gregory Mallory of second-degree murder, but found him guilty of the lesser charge, first-degree manslaughter, the Yakima Herald reported. Jurors also found that Mallory used a deadly weapon, a knife, when he fatally stabbed Michael Ochoa on Aug. 21, 2018. That finding will allow Yakima County Superior Court Judge Gayle Harthcock to add two years to Mallory’s sentence.

Is the Abandonment of Guest Worker COVID Protections a Taste of Things to Come?

Is the Abandonment of Guest Worker COVID Protections a Taste of Things to Come? The Farm Workforce Modernization Act would likely lead to enormous increases in the number of workers brought to the U.S. by growers. David Bacon Dorian Lopez, an H-2A guest worker from Mexico, lives in barracks in central Washington built to house contract workers brought to the U.S. by growers under the H-2A visa program.  is co-publishing this article. Growers are just beginning to bring this year’s wave of contracted laborers into Washington state for the coming season to pick apples, cherries and other fruit. The laborers are arriving to just-relaxed COVID-19 health and safety requirements for farmworkers, courtesy of a Superior Court judge in Yakima County, the heart of the state’s apple country.

Washington judge blocks some virus rules on farms

Washington judge blocks some virus rules on farms By Associated Press Share: RICHLAND A Washington judge has blocked some coronavirus-related restrictions on farms and orchards meant to protect farmworkers. Yakima County Superior Court Judge Blaine Gibson issued an injunction last week that stops the state from enforcing a series of regulations to protect workers from the virus, the Tri-City Herald reported. The now-blocked rules had required twice-daily visits from medical staff to isolated workers; required workers to be within 20 minutes of an emergency room and an hour from a ventilator; and provided workers open access to people in the community.

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