US Capitol riot: Police Officer Brian Sicknick died of natural causes - medical examiner 19 Apr, 2021 11:16 PM 3 minutes to read US Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick, who died following the January 6 riot, is interred at Arlington National Cemetery. Photo / AP US Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick, who died following the January 6 riot, is interred at Arlington National Cemetery. Photo / AP AP By: Michael Balsamo and Colleen Long Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick, who was injured while confronting rioters during the January 6 insurrection, suffered a stroke and died from natural causes, the Washington DC medical examiner s office ruled Monday (local time), a finding that lessens the chances that anyone will be charged in his death.
The Globe and Mail Bookmark Please log in to listen to this story. Also available in French and Mandarin. Log In Create Free Account Getting audio file ... This translation has been automatically generated and has not been verified for accuracy. Full Disclaimer A complaint against an Alberta judge who criticized a Nigerian-born expert witness’s accented speech as he dismissed charges against two parents in the death of their son will proceed now that an appeal in the case is over. The Canadian Judicial Council shelved the complaint against Justice Terry Clackson, who criticized a medical examiner in a 2019 ruling as he dismissed charges against David and Collet Stephan. They were accused of failing to provide the necessaries of life for old son, Ezekiel, who died in 2012.
S.F. s strangest bar had monkeys, parrots and cobwebs. Lots of cobwebs Gary Kamiya FacebookTwitterEmail 1of2 Abe Warner’s Cobweb Palace on Francisco Street was one of the most popular taverns in the city in the mid-19th century, and was definitely the strangest.File photoShow MoreShow Less 2of2 Abe Warner’s Cobweb Palace, a North Beach tavern of the 19th century, with its namesake cobwebs visible.Wyland Stanley CollectionShow MoreShow Less From the Gold Rush days to almost the turn of the 20th century, the weirdest bar in San Francisco, if not the world, was in a dilapidated building on the waterfront in North Beach. It was known as Abe Warner’s Cobweb Palace, and its like will never be seen again.
Lifelong Lamar County resident Brian Brumley was appointed chair of the Texas State Board of Social Work Examiners by Gov. Greg Abbott in December 2020, and despite wearing many hats as a father, educator, rancher, property owner and mentor, heâs taken the role head-on. âIt is a busy life, but I donât like being still,â Brumley said. Brumley currently works as the director of field education for the School of Social Work at Texas A&M University-Commerce, setting up internships and practicums for around 150 students each semester within a 500-mile radius. While heâs now integral in helping social work students start out their careers, he said he didnât always know that was the field he wanted to pursue. The opportunity just presented itself when he was offered a job with Child Protective Services.
Have patent term adjustments arrived in Mexico? 10-02-2021 15-04-2015 In a significant ruling, Mexico’s Supreme Court overturned decades of resistance and allowed a patent term adjustment, Marina Hurtado-Cruz of Baker McKenzie reports. A new Federal Law for the Protection of Industrial Property (LFPPI) came into force in Mexico last year. The new law will affect industrial property rights including patents. For the first time in Mexico, the possibility of adjusting the validity of patents is allowed when there have been unjustified delays during its examination. All patents filed as of November 5, 2020, may benefit from this right if the requirements established in the LFPPI are met.
Skip to main content Specs , one of San Francisco s oddest and most loved bars, is hanging on for dear life FacebookTwitterEmail Specs Twelve Adler Museum Cafe, San Francisco.Google Street View One of San Francisco’s most eccentric and loved dive bars is hanging on for dear life. “It’s been a nightmare,” Specs co-owner Maralisa Simmons-Cook told SFGATE. “It’s pretty bleak.” Specs has been a favorite North Beach watering hole of artists, poets and musicians for more than 50 years and was a bar for years before that, marking the site of a speakeasy and one of San Francisco’s first lesbian establishments.
Skip to main content The story behind what s hidden beneath the Ben Franklin Statue in SF s Washington Square Park FacebookTwitterEmail A statue of Benjamin Franklin is seen in the center of Washington Square Park in San Francisco on Feb. 5, 2021. In the pedestal of the statue is a time capsule that was place inside in 1979 and will be opened in 2079.Douglas Zimmerman/SFGATE It’s unclear what Dr. Henry Cogswell was trying to say about the life of San Franciscans in 1879 when he placed a string of buttons in his time capsule in Washington Square Park. Perhaps it went just as he planned, playing a joke 100 years in the making, as Supervisor John Molinari immediately broke the string during the 1979 unveiling, scattering buttons everywhere during the ceremony.
Second man charged in fatal beating on New Year’s Day in Emmonak Print article A second man is facing murder charges for his role in the fatal beating of a 39-year-old man on New Year’s Day in the Western Alaska village of Emmonak, according to Alaska State Troopers. Darren Hootch, 34, was arrested Sunday and 27-year-old Rudolf Waska was arrested last week in the death of 39-year-old Brian Agwiak. Hootch and Waska had gone to Agwiak’s house on the night of Jan. 1 to find alcohol, according to charging documents. In a later interview with investigators, Hootch said he threatened Agwiak with a copper pipe before Waska beat him, troopers said.