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Page 31 - லா கவுண்டி உயர்ந்தது நீதிமன்றம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Mohamed Hadid Claims LA s Deep State Is Out to Get Him

In this befouled era of QAnon plots and disputed elections, the conspiracy being peddled by real estate developer Mohamed Hadid seems almost quaint, a throwback to a time when things weren’t so utterly unhinged. In his plot, which could have easily been ripped from a Michael Connelly novel, there are no pedophiles or communists hounding the 71-year-old, just a well-connected neighbor a semi-retired lawyer with an axe to grind and a corrupt judge abetting his misdeeds. At the center of it all is La Strada, Hadid’s hillside Bel-Air spec mansion on Strada Vecchia Road, which, in the nine years since Hadid broke ground, has morphed into a $50 million albatross. In June, a judge ordered him to tear down the structure after years of legal battles comprised of a catalog of accusations that include illegal building, extortion, and bribery, all of which have triggered multiple lawsuits, a criminal case, and an FBI probe. Last November, Hadid claimed after several failed bids to appeal th

Experts insist COVID-19 outdoor restaurant ban is essential

Guy Fieri and many others hate outdoor restaurant ban Here s why some experts say it s essential

Guy Fieri and many others hate outdoor restaurant ban Here s why some experts say it s essential
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Coronavirus Today: Vaccines, trust and Latinos

With the first COVID-19 vaccine on the horizon, some of us may be allowing ourselves to fantasize about a future lived free of pandemic restrictions. But about 70% of the population will need to get vaccinated in order to attain herd immunity and stop the coronavirus from spreading out of control. Public health officials are increasingly concerned that vaccine hesitancy will keep that from happening particularly among people of color, who have expressed higher levels of reluctance to get vaccinated than their white peers. That’s certainly the case among California’s Latino community. In an October survey, only about half the state’s Latino population said they would probably take a COVID-19 vaccine, far fewer than public health officials would like. And while it isn’t the lowest level fewer than 30% of Black Californians said they would take it it’s a big deal, because Latinos make up 40% of the state’s population, represent 58% of its coronavirus cases and acc

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