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‘Melrose Place’ star Amy Locane ordered to astounding 4th sentencing for 2010 DWI case

‘ Melrose Place’ star Amy Locane ordered to astounding 4th sentencing for 2010 DWI case Amy Locane, the former “Melrose Place” star who has long completed her prison sentence for a DWI death might be heading back behind bars for the same case. The 48-year-old actress killed New Jersey woman Helene Seeman and seriously wounded her husband, Fred, in a horrific 2010 collision as the couple was slowly turning into their driveway. Locane slammed into their slow-moving vehicle at 53 mph. Locane would later be convicted for vehicular manslaughter. Despite prosecutors demanding she be jailed for seven years, the trial judge leniently ordered her to serve three years. Although an appeals court ruled that the judge had misapplied the law, no extra jail time was tacked on at her resentencing On Wednesday, a judge rejected Locane’s contention that sentencing her again would violate her double jeopardy protections, reported The Associated Press. The court ruled that a different judge incorrectly re...

Trump has officially begun to withdraw the US from the World Health Organization as pandemic spikes

Trump has officially begun to withdraw the US from the World Health Organization as
pandemic spikes The Trump administration has officially begun to withdraw the United States from the World Health Organization, even as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to grip the globe and infections spike in many states across the U.S.  
Congress received formal notification of the decision on Tuesday, more than a month after President Donald Trump announced his intenti
on to end the U.S. relationship with the WHO and blasted the multilateral institution as a tool of China. The White House said the withdrawal would take effect on July 6, 2021.
Democrats said the decision was irresponsible and ill-considered, noting it comes as the pandemic is raging and international cooperation is vital to confront the crisis.
"This won't protect American lives or interests – it leaves Americans sick & America alone," Sen. Bob Menendez, the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee, tweeted after receiving the White House's notification. "To call Trump’s response to COVID chaotic & incoherent doesn't do it justice."
Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, said he would rejoin the WHO immediately if he wins.
"Americans are safer when America is engaged in strengthening global health. On my first day as President, I will rejoin the @WHO and restore our leadership on the world stage," the former vice president tweeted.
Tarik Jasarevic, a spokesman for the WHO, said the organization had received reports of the United States' formal notification. "We have no further information on this at this stage," he said. 
The formal withdrawal comes as the United States nears 3 million reported coronavirus cases and more than 130,000 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University data. Globally, there have been 11.6 million cases and almost 540,000 deaths.
Trump and his advisers have blasted the WHO for failing to press China to be more transparent about the scope and severity of the COVID-19 outbreak, which began in Wuhan, China.
Trump has said that China "has total control" over the WHO, even though it contributes far less than the US to the health organization's budget. The U.S. has contributed approximately $450 million dollars a year.
Menendez and other Senate Democrats have introduced legislation to reverse the decision and restore U.S. funding to the WHO. It's unclear how far that could get in the GOP-controlled chamber, although some Republicans have also expressed concern with Trump's decision.
Critics said Trump's WHO attacks are an attempt to deflect blame from his own mishandling of the coronavirus outbreak – and one that will end up hurting the U.S. 
"Deflecting blame onto the WHO won’t reverse the administration’s mistakes or undo the suffering our country has endured," said Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. "The president needs to get serious about stopping this pandemic’s lethal spread by restoring our membership in the WHO, ramping up testing, and encouraging everyone to practice social distancing and wear masks.”
Amanda Glassman, a public health expert and executive vice president of the Center for Global Development think tank, noted the world doesn't just face today's threat of COVID-19 but also the treat of future pandemics, which are more likely because of increased zoonotic transmission. 
The probability of a high lethality strain of influenza in the next decade or so is also significant, said Amanda Glassman, a public health expert and executive vice president of the Center for Global Development think tank. She said corrective measures at the WHO are needed but can only happen with the United States staying engaged.

“Withdrawal is counterintuitive at best and dangerous to human life at worst. The US Congress should immediately explore what power it has to prevent this from happening,” Glassman said

Gayle Smith, president and CEO of The ONE Campaign, an advocacy group focused on improving global health and eliminating poverty, echoed that assessment. "The US should use its influence to strengthen and reform the WHO, not abandon it at a time when the world needs it most," said Smith, who served on the National Security Council and other top positions in the Obama administration.

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Mary Kay Letourneau, teacher jailed for raping student she later married, dies at 58 Mary Kay Letourneau, jailed for raping underage student she later married, dies Mary Kay Letourneau, the former Seattle-area schoolteacher who was at the center of a national scandal in the 1990s when she was convicted of raping her sixth-grade student whom she later married, has died, her attorney confirmed to KOMO News Tuesday night Letourneau lost a battle with cancer, her attorney, David Gehrke, said. Letourneau was a former Highline teacher who passed away after being ill for some time. She was 58 "It was expected but sad anyway," Gehrke said. "She was a good person.“ Letourneau generated international headlines when she admitted to a relationship with Vili Fualaau, who was her sixth-grade student at the time. The relationship began when Fualaau was a 12-year-old boy and Letourneau, who was 34 years old at the time, was his sixth-grade teacher. The classroom teacher met Fualaau when...