Why bubble tea brawl accused a no-show The man who allegedly slapped a bubble tea employee in the face and kicked her in the stomach avoided appearing in court as he waited for COVID-19 test results to return. Picture: Supplied
Crime by Emily Cosenza 7th May 2021 4:21 PM The man at the centre of the Adelaide bubble tea brawl, who was filmed allegedly slapping an employee in the face, was a no-show to his first court appearance after getting a COVID-19 test. Lei Guo, who is also known as Gavin Guo, was arrested and charged with basic assault after footage of the violent tussle at FunTea in Adelaide s CBD emerged on social media in early February.
A local consignment shop has closed, but they ended on a high note.
Kelly Barnes and Sally Lane, owners of Clover + Mint in Simcoe, were able to donate bags of high end items to Haldimand Norfolk Women’s Services.
Over 40 per cent of the clients of the business decided to donate their items to Women’s Services, allowing the pair to drop off multiple bags of clothing and accessories.
In a Facebook post, the duo thanked everyone for supporting their business over the years.
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Declaring Lubbock a “sanctuary city for the unborn , voters have approved a local ban on almost all abortions, and the Texas legislature is considering a law to bar the procedure as early as six weeks into a pregnancy.
Lubbock, home to some 260,000 people, is the 25th such “sanctuary city” - all but two in Texas - to have banned abortions in the last two years.
Drucilla Tigner, a policy and advocacy strategist for ACLU-Texas, noted that most other towns that have passed similar sanctuary city measures have populations of a few hundred or thousand, and often have no medical providers whatsoever, let alone one that provides abortions, as Lubbock does.