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Video shows fiery plane crash in Victoria, Minn.

The sheriff’s office says there were no survivors aboard a plane that crashed in Victoria, Minnesota Saturday evening striking a house.

The crash has closed Highway 5 near Rose Street throughout the evening as authorities investigated the crash site.

Photos show the plane wreckage in Victoria, Minn. (Lexi Eileen / Supplied)

According to the FAA, the single-engine plane took off from the Alexandria Municipal Airport and was set to land at Flying Cloud Airport in Eden Prairie when it went down at 5:40 p.m. and crashed into a vacant lot and a home.

It’s unclear how many people were in the plane but deputies say everyone on board was killed. No one on the ground was injured.  Investigators from NTSB say the plane involved is a Mooney M20M aircraft.

NTSB is now working to determine exactly what caused the crash. The Carver County sheriff says there is debris in two spots, at the site along Highway 5 and then at an area to the south.

“It’s a tragic event for the friends and family, and everyone involved,” said Sheriff Jason Kamerud.

Video from a neighbor’s home security camera shows the plane hitting the ground before exploding into flames in the vacant lot and skidding towards the home. The video also shows people running to help after the crash.

Deputies are asking members of the public to avoid the area as the investigation is underway. The sheriff expects Highway 5 to be closed for some time.

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Jets fans only can hope Zach Wilson will be better than this

They came to praise Zach Wilson, not bury him, on the night MetLife Stadium opened its arms again to Jets fans for the first time in 594 pandemic-tormented days.

It was only the annual Green & White Practice, and maybe 15,000 festive fans were in the house, so this was no occasion to bury Zach Wilson.

They sure could have if they had wanted to, though.

Wilson was intercepted twice, nearly was picked off a third time and could not get his team in the end zone.

Because this was the official start of his honeymoon, the boobirds were not inclined to introduce him to New York the way they will once the games begin to count.

Backups Mike White (two TD passes) and James Morgan (one TD pass) were the ones who got the crowd roaring.

Wilson wore his ever present white headband and chomped on gum as he faced the music on the podium in the interview room.

When he was asked to assess his performance, he was more accurate than he was on too many of his throws.

Zach Wilson
Bill Kostroun

“Not great,” he said. “I have high expectations for myself and this offense. I gotta lead those guys, I gotta make better decisions. … Of course I’m gonna be frustrated with myself, but I’m gonna go back in the film room and find out what I can learn and get better from it.”

Mama Wilson said there’d be days like this. So did head coach Robert Saleh.

“These moments are priceless for him,” Saleh said. “He had some good moments and obviously he had some rookie moments.”

The communication between Wilson and offensive coordinator Mike LaFleur up in the box will take time, of course. Advantage, Gang Green. Disadvantage, Wilson’s receivers.

“Many times tonight we weren’t on the same page,” Wilson said. “I just gotta make good decisions. Ninety-five percent of a quarterback’s job is just decision-making.”

Saleh wondered whether Wilson’s first exposure to Jets fans might have affected him. Heaven help Wilson and everyone else if that was the case.

“The biggest learning jump for him was that it was under the lights, it was a bigger crowd,” Saleh said. “I believe the young man wanted to do his absolute best.”

Yes, he wanted to do his absolute best. No, this isn’t a kid susceptible to any stage fright. “Awesome,” was how he described the atmosphere. Asked if jitters played into his performance, Wilson said: “No. Not at all.”

It is always the rookie franchise quarterback who inspires the biggest hope for a better and brighter tomorrow.

Some fans might remember that Richard Todd started six games as a rookie in Joe Namath’s last season as a Jet … they had to wait a year for Ken O’Brien before then-coach Joe Walton traded Todd to New Orleans … they had to wait more than two seasons for Chad Pennington to take the baton from a fading Vinny Testaverde and prayed that he could one day be Joe Montana Lite, but no … they cheered when then-general manager Mike Tannenbaum traded up to land Mark Sanchez, who was Rex Ryan’s Week 1 starter and their Boy Wonder for the first two years of his career before the wheels came off … Geno Smith was never their Boy Wonder … they cheered again when then-GM Mike Maccagnan maneuvered to move up for Darnold, who was Todd Bowles’ Week 1 starter and was expected to take flight under Adam Gase, but of course never did.

Jets quarterback Zach Wilson talks with offensive coordinator Mike LaFleur during practice at MetLife Stadium.
Bill Kostroun

From afar, from too far away, from their living rooms or wherever they settled to watch or listen to the games last season, Jets fans stopped pulling their hair out following an 0-13 start only because they were the front-runners in the Trevor Lawrence sweepstakes. But then, without fired defensive coordinator Gregg Williams available to call an ill-timed, inexplicable Cover Zero, the Jets shocked the Rams on the road, and then the Browns at home, and there went that dream.

So the faithful got to watch Wilson up close and personal for the first time under the lights, and from here to eternity, however long eternity lasts, they will hope he can show them everything that compelled GM Joe Douglas to make him the first quarterback taken after the Jaguars won the Trevor Lawrence sweepstakes.

They hope that Zach Wilson will grow into more than a consolation prize.

They hope that Zach Wilson, who will be their Week 1 starter, was the right pick over Trey Lance and Justin Fields and Mac Jones.

They hope that they can marvel at the improvisational magic they have heard so much about from Wilson’s right arm. They hope they can one day gawk at Wilson making the kind of throw they have seen from the likes of Aaron Rodgers or Patrick Mahomes. They hope they can watch a flick of his wrist become a deadly missile strike for a touchdown.

This was not that one night.

“It’s part of the process,” Wilson said.

Jets Hall of Fame fan Ira Lieberfarb was at the scrimmage with his wife Linda.

“He has all the tools to be a top quarterback,” Lieberfarb said. “He and the Jets have to groom him the right way. He needs to put in the work, and the Jets have to do something with a quarterback that they haven’t done in a long time and coach him up the right way.”

What, Wilson worry? With five weeks left before the regular-season opener?

“We’ll be ready for Week 1,” he said. He can ask any of the rookie franchise QBs who preceded him: Honeymoons don’t last forever.

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Bear Sighting Inside Porter Ranch Ralphs Grocery Store – NBC Los Angeles

Imagine walking into your neighborhood Ralphs to do your daily grocery shopping and encountering a furry friend in the honey aisle.

Residents of Porter Ranch got a surprise Saturday morning, when they saw a 125 lbs. male bear walking through the aisles of a Ralphs.

The bear was spotted inside the store around 6:30 a.m. – 7 a.m., according to the Los Angeles Police Department – Devonshire Station.

Courtesy of Suzanne Jensen

LAPD said there were reports of maybe three bear sightings in the area, but only one was seen inside the Ralphs.

The bear was chased outside toward the back of a nearby Walmart building, where officers waited for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Once they arrived, the bear was shot with a tranquilizer. He was then tagged and taken to a suitable habitat, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service PIO, Tim Badley.

No injuries were reported.

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Obama’s birthday party guests leave early because of traffic ‘sh– show’

Celebrity guests have begun leaving former President Barack Obama’s Martha’s Vineyard “scaled-down” birthday bash, creating a “s–t show” of traffic congestion on the resort island.

Singer John Legend, model wife Chrissy Teigen, and rapper Takeoff were seen leaving the ex-president’s 29-acre Oak Bluffs seaside property just before midnight by a Post photographer.

Legend was heard performing for the crowd Saturday evening, and the Migos MC was also rumored to have taken the raised stage set up on the sprawling estate.

PHOTOS OF MASSIVE TENT AT OBAMA’S MANSION RAISE QUESTIONS OF ‘SCALED BACK’ BIRTHDAY PARTY

In between musical acts, a DJ was heard playing “Ain’t Nobody” by Chaka Khan, in honor of the 60-year-old man of the hour.

A fleet of taxis were seen driving into the Obama residence to take party staff home, and a handful of SUVs possibly containing stars were also seen departing the shindig.

A local Massachusetts police officer could be heard describing the vehicle situation in the town of 4,500 as a “s–t show” on his radio as the party began to wind down, according to the photog.

The party’s original guest list of nearly 500 people, in addition to 200 staff members, had been reduced earlier this week to only “friends and close family” after an outbreak of COVID-19’s Delta variant in nearby Cape Cod.

The 11th-hour decision — which led to the reported disinvites of former adviser David Axelrod and comics David Letterman, Larry David and Conan O’Brien — followed a report by The Post, which cited a source as saying the former president was creating a public health nightmare by trying to get 700 people to the island.

Still, there was plenty of star power in attendance with Jay-Z, Beyoncé, Steven Spielberg, Bradley Cooper, Don Cheadle, Erykah Badu, Steven Colbert and John Kerry photographed arriving for the party.

Other guests included Bruce Springsteen, Tom and Rita Hanks, Dwyane Wade and Gabrielle Union, Eddie Vedder, and Questlove, who was slated to perform.

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Earlier in the day, the stars turned heads in the sleepy enclave, as the Hanks were spotted browsing through a bookshop in nearby Edgartown, where Legend and Teigen were also seen shopping.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was spotted having lunch at the Winnetu Resort in Edgartown — where Spielberg was also seen taking selfies with fans — after she reportedly did not make the cut for the new streamlined guestlist.

The Democrat’s office did not immediately respond to the New York Post’s request to clarify why she was on Martha’s Vineyard.

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Once lagging, Europe catches up to the US in vaccinations

BRUSSELS (AP) — Despite a sluggish start, the European Union’s COVID-19 vaccination drive has caught up to that of the United States, where the slowdown of the country’s once-vaunted campaign has contributed to the virus’s deadly comeback.

In mid-February, less than 4% of people living in the 27-nation EU were at least partially vaccinated against the coronavirus, compared with nearly 12% in the U.S, according to Our World in Data, an online science publication connected to the University of Oxford.

Now the EU has surpassed the U.S. by that same measure, with some 60% of the bloc’s residents receiving at least one dose, versus less than 58% of Americans.

In Italy, where roughly 63% of people 12 and older are fully protected, Premier Mario Draghi took a victory lap this past week.

“I said that I don’t want to celebrate successes, but it must be said that Italy has inoculated more doses per 100 inhabitants than France, Germany, the United States,” he said as the country’s vaccine verification program went into effect Friday.

People in Italy must now show proof they have had at least one vaccine dose, recovered from COVID-19 or recently tested negative for the virus if they want to dine indoors, use gyms or go to concerts, theaters, museums and tourist sites such as the Colosseum.

European authorities attribute success in Italy and elsewhere to nationalized health care and a history of public confidence in the safety of immunizations.

The EU’s slow process for approving the vaccinations set the bloc back at the beginning, but that is now paying dividends because it is instilling more confidence in the rapidly developed formulas, said Dr. Peter Liese, a European Parliament member from Germany.

While the U.S. and Britain issued emergency authorizations of vaccines to get shots into arms quickly, the EU went through the longer process of granting full approvals, putting it weeks behind.

“I am convinced that we have a good argument to explain to people still hesitating that the vaccine was properly tested in Europe,” Liese said recently. “Now it becomes clear that not only the pace of vaccination in the first months but also the long-term strategy is important.”

The turnaround in Spain has been pronounced. In mid-April, when nearly a quarter of all Americans were fully vaccinated, only 7% of Spaniards were similarly protected, according to Our World in Data. Now, nearly 60% of Spain’s roughly 47 million people are fully vaccinated, while about half the U.S. is.

Portugal, with around 10 million people, had fully vaccinated around a third of its population by the end of June. Now officials say it is on track to reach 70% by the end of the summer.

Like the American vaccination drive, the European Union effort started around Christmas and struggled to meet initial demand. But it quickly turned into a major political embarrassment for European officials, as the U.S. and Britain jumped ahead.

The major factor holding back the EU initially was its decision to purchase vaccines as a bloc instead of as individual countries. The move ensured smaller member nations weren’t left out, but it ended up taking more time to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies, said Giovanna De Maio, a visiting fellow in international relations at George Washington University.

The U.S. was also more efficient in distributing the vaccine, quickly setting up large-scale vaccination sites and also supplying shots to neighborhood pharmacies, groceries and other places, while the EU initially focused on hospitals and other medical facilities, she said.

EU nations were also overly confident manufacturers would deliver. As it turned out, Astra-Zeneca failed to produce its shots on time and delivered a paltry number of doses. Concerns over its safety and effectiveness also contributed to vaccine skepticism. But with the major rollout of the Pfizer shot, things turned around.

Meanwhile, the U.S. vaccination effort peaked and then dropped off dramatically in the face of significant hesitancy and outright hostility, fueled by misinformation and partisan politics.

As of the end of July, the U.S. was dispensing under 600,000 shots a day on average, down from a peak of over 3.4 million a day in April. The highly contagious delta variant has sent new daily cases soaring over the past month to levels not seen since February. The vast majority of those hospitalized were not vaccinated.

Still, not all is well within the EU. Discrepancies between member states are huge. For example, in the Netherlands, 85% of adults have received at least one dose. In Bulgaria, it is less than 20%.

There are also troubling signs that Europe’s campaign is losing steam.

In Germany, where 54% of the population is fully vaccinated, the number of shots being dispensed per day has declined from more than 1 million in May to about 500,000.

Officials there have begun pushing for more vaccinations at megastores and in city centers and are offering incentives. A vaccination drive in Thuringia state included free bratwurst, while sites in Berlin planned to have DJs play music this weekend in hopes of encouraging young people to get inoculated.

De Maio said she believes nationwide vaccine mandates like her native Italy’s Green Pass program could help EU nations avoid America’s fate.

“European politicians see it coming and they’re taking these measures,” she said of the potential for vaccination efforts to stall in Europe. “They’re desperate trying to avoid that because Europe can’t afford another lockdown, given the big economic toll COVID has already taken.”

___

Marcelo reported from Boston. Associated Press reporters Frank Jordans in Berlin, Frances D’Emilio in Rome, Barry Hatton in Lisbon and Dusan Stojanovic in Belgrade contributed to this story.

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Senate slog to pass infrastructure bill goes on over weekend

U.S. Senate Majority Chuck Schumer (D-NY) looks up after reading a statement calling for the resignation of New York Governor Andrew Cuomo at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, August 3, 2021.

Kevin Lamarque | Reuters

Senators will resume a weekend session toward passage of a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure package after running into opposition from a few Republicans who want to drag out final votes on one of President Joe Biden’s top priorities.

The measure would provide what Biden has called a “historic investment” in public works programs, from roads and bridges to broadband internet access, drinking water and more. In a rare stroke of bipartisanship, Republicans joined Democrats to advance the measure and more votes are expected Sunday. If approved, the bill would go to the House.

Despite the overwhelming support, momentum has dragged as a few Republican senators refused to yield 30 hours of required debate before the next set of procedural votes, which could delay swift passage of the package and result in a dayslong slog.

“We can get this done the easy way or the hard way,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Saturday. But as the hours ticked away with no deal struck to quicken the process for considering amendments and final votes, Schumer said senators would resume at noon Sunday.

Senators were meeting for the second consecutive weekend to work on the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which is the first of Biden’s two infrastructure packages. Once voting wraps up, senators immediately will turn to the next item on Biden’s agenda, the budget outline for a $3.5 trillion package of child care, elder care and other programs that is a much more partisan undertaking and expected to draw only Democratic support.

Senator Joe Manchin, a Democrat from West Virginia, center, speaks during a news conference with the House Problem Solvers Caucus outside the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Friday, July 30, 2021.

Stefani Reynolds | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Schumer has vowed to keep senators in session until they finish up the bipartisan bill and start the initial votes on the next big package.

For some Republican senators, the back-to-back voting on Biden’s big priorities is what they are trying to delay, hoping to slow or halt what appears to be a steady march to achieve the president’s infrastructure goals.

Sen. Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., an ally of Donald Trump and the former president’s ambassador to Japan, was among those leading the effort for the Senate to take as much time as needed to debate and amend the bill.

“There’s absolutely no reason to rush,” Hagerty said during a floor speech Saturday.

Trump himself has weighed in including a statement Saturday criticizing Biden, senators of both parties and the bill itself, though it’s not clear whether the former president’s views hold sway over the lawmakers.

Biden has encouraged senators on, saying the bipartisan package offered an investment on par with the building of the transcontinental railroad or interstate highway system. Vice President Kamala Harris arrived on Capitol Hill for meetings on the bipartisan legislation.

Overcoming the 60-vote hurdle was a sign that the tenuous alliance between Republicans and Democrats could hold on the public works package. In all, 18 Republicans joined Democrats on the 67-27 vote to push the measure past a filibuster, a robust tally.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky has so far allowed the bill to progress, despite the broadsides and name-calling coming from the former president. His vote Saturday — another “yes” — was closely watched. “This is a compromise,” McConnell said.

Senators have spent the past week processing nearly two dozen amendments to the 2,700-page package, but so far none has substantially changed its framework.

More amendments could be debated Sunday with senators considering revisions to a section on cryptocurrency, a long-shot effort by defense hawks to add $50 billion for defense-related infrastructure and a bipartisan amendment to repurpose a portion of the untapped COVID-19 relief aid that had been sent to the states.

For senators who have been slogging through debate — and months of give-and-take negotiations — the bipartisan bill is a chance not only to send federal dollars to their states, but also to show the country that members of Congress can work together in a bipartisan way to solve problems.

Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, said the needs in her state were obvious — including money for water systems in remote villages without running taps for handwashing during the COVID-19 pandemic. But as one of the negotiators, she also wants to demonstrate that lawmakers can unite.

“I’m really worried that everybody believes that we’re as dysfunctional as we appear to be, and so to prove otherwise, it’s kind of important,” she said. “The Senate needs some demonstrated acts of bipartisanship.”

Senators have found much to like in the bill, even though it does not fully satisfy liberals, who view it as too small, or conservatives, who find it too large. It would provide federal money for projects many states and cities could not afford on their own.

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., said, “America has not seen this type of infrastructure investment in 30 years.”

An analysis of the bill from the Congressional Budget Office drew concerns, particularly from Republicans. It concluded that the legislation would increase deficits by about $256 billion over the next decade.

But the bill’s backers argued that the budget office was unable to take into account certain revenue streams — including from future economic growth. Additional analysis released Saturday by the budget office suggested infrastructure spending overall could boost productivity and lower the ultimate costs.

Paying for the package has been a pressure point throughout the months of negotiations after Democrats objected to an increase in the gas tax paid at the pump and Republicans resisted a plan to bolster the IRS to go after tax scofflaws.

Unlike Biden’s bigger $3.5 trillion package, which would be paid for by higher tax rates for corporations and the wealthy, the bipartisan package is funded by repurposing other money, including untapped COVID-19 aid, and other spending cuts and revenue streams.

The House is in recess and is expected to consider both Biden infrastructure packages when it returns in September.

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Actress Known For ‘Night Court’, ‘The Fall Guy’ & More Was 70

Markie Post, the actress known for turns in Night Court, The Fall Guy, Hearts Afire and more, died on Saturday, following a three year, ten month battle with cancer. She was 70.

Post’s manager, Ellen Lubin Sanitsky, confirmed her passing to Deadline.

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Born on November 4, 1950 in Palo Alto, California, Post got her start in entertainment by working behind the scenes on game shows, including Split Second, earning an associate producer credit on Alex Trebek’s Double Dare, and appearing before the camera as a card dealer on NBC’s Card Sharks.

Her first acting credits came in 1979, with appearances on episodes of CHiPs, Barnaby Jones, The Incredible Hulk, The Lazarus Syndrome, Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, and Hart to Hart.

She’d later appear in series such as The Love Boat, Cheers, Fantasy Island and The A-Team, before landing the role of bail bondswoman Terri Michaels in ABC’s The Fall Guy. She appeared in 65 episodes of that action drama between 1982 and 1985.

Post was also a series regular on NBC’s Night Court, portraying public defender Christine Sullivan for 159 episodes between 1985 and 1992. She also drew notice with her turn as Georgie Anne Lahti Hartman in Hearts Afire, the CBS sitcom, in which she starred opposite John Ritter.

Later in her career, Post recurred on ABC’s Scrubs, as the mother of Dr. Elliot Reid (Sarah Chalke), in addition to Chicago P.D. and other series, portraying herself in a 2008 episode of 30 Rock.

On the film side, Post was perhaps best known for playing the mother of Cameron Diaz’s Mary in Peter and Bobby Farrelly’s classic 1998 comedy, There’s Something About Mary.

Post was determined to keep pursuing acting as “a side job”, even as she got sick. Between chemo treatments, she worked on projects such as Lifetime Christmas movie Four Christmases and a Wedding and ABC series The Kids Are Alright.

“But for us, our pride is in who she was in addition to acting; a person who made elaborate cakes for friends, sewed curtains for first apartments and showed us how to be kind, loving and forgiving in an often harsh world,” her family said in a statement.

Post is survived by her husband, writer Michael A. Ross; daughters, actress Kate Armstrong Ross and Daisy Schoenborn; son-in-law Bryce Schoenborn and her and Michael’s five-month-old granddaughter.

Plans for a memorial are being made, though specific details as to a time and place have not yet been disclosed.

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‘Night Court’ Actress Was 70 – Deadline

Markie Post, the actress known for turns in Night Court, The Fall Guy, Hearts Afire and more, died on Saturday, following a three year, ten month battle with cancer. She was 70.

Post’s manager, Ellen Lubin Sanitsky, confirmed her passing to Deadline.

Born on November 4, 1950 in Palo Alto, California, Post got her start in entertainment by working behind the scenes on game shows, including Split Second, earning an associate producer credit on Alex Trebek’s Double Dare, and appearing before the camera as a card dealer on NBC’s Card Sharks.

Her first acting credits came in 1979, with appearances on episodes of CHiPs, Barnaby Jones, The Incredible Hulk, The Lazarus Syndrome, Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, and Hart to Hart.

Charlie Robinson Dies: ‘Night Court’ & ‘Buffalo Bill’ Actor Was 75

She’d later appear in series such as The Love Boat, Cheers, Fantasy Island and The A-Team, before landing the role of bail bondswoman Terri Michaels in ABC’s The Fall Guy. She appeared in 65 episodes of that action drama between 1982 and 1985.

Post was also a series regular on NBC’s Night Court, portraying public defender Christine Sullivan for 159 episodes between 1985 and 1992. She also drew notice with her turn as Georgie Anne Lahti Hartman in Hearts Afire, the CBS sitcom, in which she starred opposite John Ritter.

Later in her career, Post recurred on ABC’s Scrubs, as the mother of Dr. Elliot Reid (Sarah Chalke), in addition to Chicago P.D. and other series, portraying herself in a 2008 episode of 30 Rock.

On the film side, Post was perhaps best known for playing the mother of Cameron Diaz’s Mary in Peter and Bobby Farrelly’s classic 1998 comedy, There’s Something About Mary.

Post was determined to keep pursuing acting as “a side job”, even as she got sick. Between chemo treatments, she worked on projects such as Lifetime Christmas movie Four Christmases and a Wedding and ABC series The Kids Are Alright.

“But for us, our pride is in who she was in addition to acting; a person who made elaborate cakes for friends, sewed curtains for first apartments and showed us how to be kind, loving and forgiving in an often harsh world,” her family said in a statement.

Post is survived by her husband, writer Michael A. Ross; daughters, actress Kate Armstrong Ross and Daisy Schoenborn; son-in-law Bryce Schoenborn and her and Michael’s five-month-old granddaughter.

Plans for a memorial are being made, though specific details as to a time and place have not yet been disclosed.



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Youth Akali leader Vikramjit Singh shot in broad daylight at Mohali : The Tribune India

Tribune News Service

Mohali, August 7

Four unidentified assailants gunned down Youth Akali Dal leader Vikramjit Singh, alias Vicky Middukhera, in broad daylight at Mataur here today. The assailants fled the spot after the killing, which took place around 11.30 am.

Satinder Singh, SSP

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Lucky Khuda Lahora, a gangster lodged in an Armenian jail, is one of the suspects in the case. The police and CIA have formed teams to nab suspects.

Hours later, in a Facebook post, gangster Davinder Bambiha’s group claimed responsibility for the killing. It said Middukhera had been working against the Lawrence Bishnoi gang despite several warnings.

Middukhera, 32, was targeted by two masked men, in their thirties, as he came out of a real estate agency’s office in the Sector 72 market. They opened fire as soon as he sat in his SUV in the parking lot.

Youth Akali Dal leader Vikramjit Singh, alias Vicky Middukhera

Middukhera ran for safety towards a nearby park by scaling the boundary wall, but the assailants chased him down and pumped in nine bullets before fleeing the spot.

The CCTV footage showed four men in a car, bearing Punjab registration number, waiting in the parking lot before the incident. As Middukhera emerged from the office half an hour later, two men ran towards him and opened fire, suggesting it was a pre-planned attack.

Mohali SSP Satinder Singh said: “Nine rounds were fired at him. No arrest has been made so far.”



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Chicago shooting leaves 1 police officer dead, another wounded; 2 suspects nabbed: reports

One Chicago police officer died and another was seriously wounded Saturday night during a confrontation on the city’s South Side, according to reports.

Two suspects were taken into custody while a third suspect was being sought, police said, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. 

At least one of the suspects was hospitalized in critical condition after being shot, FOX 32 of Chicago reported.

COORS FIELD CONCESSIONS WORKER DEAD AFTER FRIDAY’S DENVER SHOOTINGS: REPORTS

Dozens of police officers were seen in the area soon after the shooting, while a police helicopter flew overhead, the Sun-Times reported.

The shooting occurred around 9 p.m. in the city’s West Englewood neighborhood, FOX 32 reported.

Two wounded officers were taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where one of the officers, a woman, eventually died from her wounds, FOX 32 reported.

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The wounded suspect was taken to Advocate Christ Medical Center, according to FOX 32.

No details were immediately released on how or why the shooting started.

The shooting occurred just two days after Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot launched a Community Safety Coordination Center, intended as a central operation to help address and prevent violent crime, Chicago’s WTTW-TV reported.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

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