Lets get to a data check. I almost did not do a Second Screen. Futures negative. Less weight than i saw yesterday, euro advancing. Hydrocarbons churn. On to the Second Screen for quick check, dollarruble with a focus on syria, a little bit weaker. Gold advances this morning, up eight dollars. There is a data check. Let me look at the back monitor on what is going on in syria. Back 40 years on opec adjusted for inflation. Here is the surge. Adjusted for inflation. This explains our reliance on a higher price oil. Despite all the talk about how we might be headed toward energy independence. Global demand is rising about 1. 5 to 2 per year. Disabilityo economic in the middle east. We look at the front page, only one story this morning with our attention. Topresident obamas campaign destroy Islamic State has expanded and now in syria. Last night the pentagon confirming u. S. And arab allies launched airstrikes against the Islamic State the additions. Drones. , bombers, also the targets inc
Bergen County Players (BCP), one of America’s foremost community theater groups, will continue its 90th season with the return of a treasured holiday season tradition: the annual BCP family show. THE STORY OF VELVETEEN RABBIT, a musical based on the classic book by Margery Williams, plays December 3 through December 18 at the Little Firehouse Theatre, 298 Kinderkamack Road in Oradell. Check out photos here!
Mount Vernon police face strip search lawsuit lohud.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lohud.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Mount Vernon residents had alleged abuse by the police for years. But there was no viable recourse. Benedict Evans
WNYC. It has been published simultaneously by Gothamist.
One night in the spring of 2017, Michelle Campbell was in her kitchen, cooking hot dogs for a few friends, when she heard the boom of her front door breaking. It was the narcotics unit of the Mount Vernon, New York, police. They carried a search warrant and a battering ram. They swarmed in, guns drawn.
The police ordered Campbell and her guests onto the floor and cuffed them. One officer, a detective in a tactical vest and a black hat named Camilo Antonini, surveyed the bodies. He singled out Campbell’s nephew, a skinny man with a scruffy beard and big eyes named Reginald Gallman.
in the March 2021 issue of Esquire
One night in the spring of 2017, Michelle Campbell was in her kitchen, cooking hot dogs for a few friends, when she heard the boom of her front door breaking. It was the narcotics unit of the Mount Vernon, New York, police. They carried a search warrant and a battering ram. They swarmed in, guns drawn.
The police ordered Campbell and her guests onto the floor and cuffed them. One officer, a detective in a tactical vest and a black hat named Camilo Antonini, surveyed the bodies. He singled out Campbell’s nephew, a skinny man with a scruffy beard and big eyes named Reginald Gallman.