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Minn. reports 39 COVID-19 bar, restaurant outbreaks so far in 2021

Minnesota health officials have reported 39 COVID-19 group outbreaks of customers in bars and restaurants so far in 2021 amid otherwise improving measures of pandemic activity.

The latest social outbreak data, released Monday by the Minnesota Department of Health, also showed 85 outbreaks related to sporting activities, which are defined as at least two cases on the same team or sports program that can’t be traced to other common infection sources.

State health officials remain concerned that outbreaks involving large group events could upset Minnesota’s progress with COVID-19, just as they did last fall. On the encouraging side, the positivity rate of COVID-19 diagnostic testing dropped to 3.6% — the lowest rate since June 24.

Hospitalizations for COVID-19 have declined dramatically as well in Minnesota, where 235 inpatient beds were filled on Sunday with patients suffering from the infectious disease caused by a novel coronavirus.

The latest hospital figure is the lowest since mid-August and compares to a peak of 1,864 COVID-19 patients hospitalized in Minnesota on Nov. 29. The 48 COVID-19 patients requiring intensive care in Minnesota hospitals on Sunday was the lowest recorded total since at least June 9 — the earliest date for which the state has publicized data.

The state Health Department on Monday also reported one COVID-19 death and 561 newly diagnosed infections. The daily totals — which are typically low on Mondays due to less reporting and diagnostic activities on the weekends — bring the state’s toll to 6,433 deaths and 479,591 known infections.

Gov. Tim Walz and state leaders have taken a variety of steps over the past month in response to the improving COVID-19 metrics — expanding indoor capacities at bars, restaurants and entertainment venues and calling for some form of in-person classes at all schools in the state by March 8.

Reportable outbreaks in bars and restaurants are defined in Minnesota as involving five people with COVID-19 from unique households that only visited the same establishment in the past month. None of the reportable outbreaks have involved more than 10 such cases.

Health officials noted that a major difference when compared with the risks of group outbreaks last summer is the continued distribution of COVID-19 vaccine to protect Minnesotans.

The state on Monday reported that 759,747 people in Minnesota have received at least the first of two doses of COVID-19 vaccine, and 356,911 of them have completed the series.

The state estimates that more than 41% of senior citizens in Minnesota have received at least one dose. Seniors are prioritized for limited supplies of COVID-19 vaccine along with health care workers, long-term care facility residents and educators.

People 65 and older have suffered 89% of the COVID-19 deaths so far in Minnesota. That includes the lone death reported Monday, which involved a long-term care facility resident from Ramsey County in the 80 to 84 age range.

Weather-related shipping delays of Moderna COVID-19 vaccine caused the rescheduling of some appointments and community vaccination clinics in Minnesota over the weekend. A state spokesman on Monday said no additional events this week have been rescheduled, though it is unclear whether shipping of Moderna doses will resume as scheduled this week.

Jeremy Olson • 612-673-7744

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Bathhouse dating to the 12th century found in Spanish bar

Archeologists have uncovered the remains of a 12th century bathhouse at a popular bar in the city of Seville, southern Spain.

Cerveceria Giralda has been operating in the heart of the city since 1923, but the bar is housed in a building with a far longer history.

While the vaulted ceilings suggested it could have been a bathhouse, and historical records said there had been one in the area, no one had found concrete evidence of its existence, archeologist Fernando Amores of the University of Seville told CNN Thursday.

Now skylights and red geometric paintings dating from the 12th century have been uncovered during recent renovation work.

Restoration of skylights and painting found underneath decoration installed in the 1920s. Credit: Fernando Amores

In the 12th century, Seville was ruled by the Almohad caliphate, a North African Berber Muslim empire, which controlled much of the Iberian peninsula — modern day Spain and Portugal — at the time.

Amores was part of a team of experts that collaborated on the restoration of what he called a “very unusual” find.

The skylights are made in the form of eight-pointed stars, and the red ocher paintings make up interlinking geometric patterns.

There are four kinds of skylights in different sizes. Credit: Fernando Amores

The star-shaped windows are typical of hammams, and there are four different kinds in different sizes, said Amores. However, the fact that the paintings completely covered the walls and ceiling is unusual, he added.

“It forms a beautiful sky,” said Amores, with light streaming through the windows reminiscent of the stars at night.

The complicated craftsmanship shows the importance of the bathhouse, which was located close to the city’s main mosque when it was built, he said.

There is more restoration work to be done, said Amores, but additional funding will be needed.

Archeologists are also carrying out carbon dating on the stucco — a fine plaster — to get a more precise date of construction, added Amores.

Star-shaped windows are typical of hammams. Credit: Alvaro Jiménez

The project has been a collaboration between the owners of the building, the owners of the bar and the team of archeologists, said Amores, explaining that the whole process has been a triumph of cooperation.

“We are very happy,” he said.

The owners decided to carry out some renovation work last summer, a spokesperson for the bar told CNN. Until then, the original features had been covered up by a layer of decoration installed at the beginning of the 20th century.

As the work revealed evidence of the bathhouse, archeologists were brought in to supervise, the spokesperson added. The baths had at least three rooms, they said, which are now used as a kitchen and two dining rooms.

Architect Francisco Diaz told local TV station Canal Sur that archeologists didn’t initially find anything of interest, but then one skylight was found in the ceiling. “From there it was like drawing back a veil and all of the skylights started to appear,” said Diaz.

Cerveceria Giralda serves tapas and beer, and is well-known in Seville.

“We think it (the bar) could open to the public in a month, combining restaurant operations with possible visits at certain times,” said the spokesperson.

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Biden raises the bar on vaccines and suggests US will get to 1.5 million a day

“I’m quite confident that we will be in a position within the next three weeks or so to be vaccinating people at the range of 1 million a day or in excess of that,” he told reporters, clarifying that he was referring to 100 million shots, not necessarily 100 million people, since some of the vaccines require more than one shot.

Biden said the key factors in ramping up vaccinations are having enough vaccine, having enough syringes and other necessary equipment and having enough people administering them. He said his administration is working to produce additional vaccinators — people who can administer the vaccine.

“I think with the grace of God, the goodwill of the neighbor and the creek not rising, as the old saying goes, I think we may be able to get that to 1.5 million a day, rather than 1 million a day,” he said.

Biden’s announcement came the same day that officials for Pfizer and Moderna said it will take time to scale up manufacturing for their vaccines.

Moderna President Dr. Stephen Hoge relayed that vaccine makers have an obligation to maintain quality and consistency as they scale up capacity.

“That’s the frustrating thing about scaling up,” Hoge said.

The increase in vaccinations will not necessarily move the target timeline for getting vaccines to anyone in the US who wants one.

The President said that he thinks anyone who wants a vaccine will be able to get it by this spring, a target date similar to one set under the Trump administration.

Biden’s commitment to ramp up coronavirus vaccinations comes among a larger list of efforts discussed the White House on Monday to address the coronavirus pandemic.

Biden signed a presidential proclamation on Monday reinstating the travel restrictions imposed due to the Covid-19 pandemic for individuals traveling to the United States from the Schengen Area in Europe, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Brazil and South Africa.

And speaking to reporters, Biden also referenced the importance of creating a forum where Americans “can show up, stand in line, and get their vaccine without having to stand in line for eight hours — being able to pick up the phone, call the pharmacy and get your name on the list(.)”

But the new efforts come amid ongoing confusion and urgent concerns across different states over the country’s coronavirus vaccine supply and distribution.

Earlier Monday, New York City Health Commissioner David Chokshi told CNN that the city “does not have enough doses” of Covid-19 vaccine to “be able to meet the demand we know exists among New Yorkers.”

Florida’s Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, said Florida’s capacity far outweighs the amount of vaccine they have been given by the federal government. And Massachusetts Republican Gov. Charlie Baker similarly said that the state is “setting up the capacity to administer far more doses, then we are currently receiving or projecting to receive from the (federal government).”

Over the last two days, both Biden’s top spokeswoman, White House press secretary Jen Psaki, and US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, said they did not know the what the current coronavirus vaccine supply levels are. Both blamed the Trump administration for the problem.

But speaking to press on Monday, Biden claimed that his administration does know how many coronavirus vaccines are available in the US. However, he did not disclose any concrete numbers.

“(W)e are optimistic that we will have enough vaccine. And in very short order. As you know, we came in office without knowledge of how much vaccine was out being held in abeyance are available. Now that we’re here, we’ve been around a week or so, we now have that,” Biden said. “And we’ve gotten commitments from some of the producers that they will in fact produce more vaccine in a relatively short period of time and then continue that down the road.”

This story has been updated with additional reporting.

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Microsoft mocks Apple’s doomed Touch Bar in new Surface ad

Microsoft has a habit of reigniting the Mac vs. PC conflict for its Surface ads, and this time it’s going after Apple’s Touch Bar. In a new TV commercial, aired during Sunday night’s NFL championship games, Microsoft pits Apple’s MacBook Pro against the company’s Surface Pro 7. It’s a chance for Microsoft to mock Apple’s Touch Bar in a TV commercial for the first time.

“Mac gave me this little bar, but why can’t they just give me a whole touchscreen?” asks a boy comparing the two laptops. That’s something that some MacBook Pro users have been calling for, or just the removal of the Touch Bar altogether. Apple is now reportedly planning a redesign for the MacBook Pro later this year, with the Touch Bar rumored to be replaced by physical function keys.

Elsewhere in the ad, Microsoft tries to position the Surface Pro 7 as a gaming device. “It is a much better gaming device,” claims the ad, which is an unusual way to frame Microsoft’s popular Surface device. The Surface Pro 7 is barely capable of running the latest PC games at acceptable frame rates with its integrated Intel graphics, so it’s not the biggest selling point.

Microsoft has previously compared its Surface Pro to the MacBook Air, bashed Macs in general, and found a guy named Mac Book to tell people to get a Surface Laptop.

This latest ad also focuses on the older Surface Pro 7, which has now been replaced by the Surface Pro 7 Plus for businesses and schools at least. The new model includes a bigger battery, Intel’s 11th Gen processors, a removable SSD, and LTE.

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Capitol riot: Army vet who tended bar accused by FBI of conspiring in insurrection 

To the FBI, she’s a militant leader who traveled to Washington, DC, and stormed the US Capitol, encouraging others to do the same.  

The two worlds of Jessica Watkins crashed into each other in the small village of Woodstock, Ohio, when FBI agents turned up early one morning to arrest her for her alleged role in the January 6 insurrection.

“We could hear so many sirens. And then we heard them yelling for her to come downstairs with her hands up and she did not,” said Emma Dixon, who witnessed the pre-dawn raid from a home across the street.  

When the FBI arrived in Woodstock, Watkins was not there. Her boyfriend, Montana Siniff was. He told CNN disorientating flash-bangs were used.  A window was broken. It remained that way days later. 

FBI agents questioned him and eventually left, he said. In a complaint filed in court, federal prosecutors said agents recovered what “appears to be directions for making explosives, authored by ‘the Jolly Roger.'” Jolly Roger is also the name of Watkins’ bar and a Facebook account believed to be linked to her, authorities say.   

“That is entirely false. She hates explosives. There is no moral or lawful way to really make use of explosives as a regular citizen,” Siniff said.

Watkins, 38, is now detained at the Montgomery County Jail, about 50 miles away in Dayton, after she handed herself in to authorities last Sunday.

Records show Watkins served in the Army under a different name from April 2001 to December 2003. She was deployed to Afghanistan from September to December 2002.

Watkins is accused, along with two other military veterans, of a multitude of charges: conspiracy, conspiracy to impede an officer, destruction of government property, obstruction of an official proceeding, entering a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority, and violent entry or disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds.  

The three veterans were the first to face conspiracy charges, some of the most severe charges so far for those who breached the Capitol on January 6. 

CNN has found a disproportionate number of people charged in the Capitol attack are former members of the military.

‘The most beautiful thing’

No one disputes that Watkins went to the Capitol to protest against the certification of President Joe Biden’s election win. She is seen on video bragging about it while inside the Capitol building. 

Her boyfriend said she went to “help protect some Trump VIP members within the rally,” but he did not know whom.

After breaching the Capitol, Watkins described the scene inside the building as she saw it.

She told the Ohio Capital Journal: “To me, it was the most beautiful thing I ever saw until we started hearing glass smash. That’s when we knew things had gotten really bad.”

She added: “It was some people hijacking what started off as a peaceful movement.”

But the words on her Parler account after the breach offer a very different perspective. They are highlighted in the federal complaint against her.

“Yeah. We stormed the Capitol today. Teargassed, the whole, 9. Pushed our way into the Rotunda. Made it into the Senate even,” she wrote.

Another post from Watkins used as evidence by the FBI said: “We never smashed anything, stole anything, burned anything, and truthfully we were very respectful with Capitol Hill PD until they attacked us.  Then we stood our ground and drew the line.”

Watkins and many others came to Washington trained in warfare, some wearing their combat gear of ballistic helmets, Army fatigues and goggles.

Videos showed one group of more than a dozen people, in formation, hands on each other’s shoulders, marching up the Capitol steps.

Federal prosecutors say Watkins and others used the Zello phone app, which works like a walkie-talkie, to communicate and plan the assault.

Watkins has yet to have an attorney assigned to her. But her boyfriend did talk on her behalf. The two own the Jolly Roger bar together. They are both members of the group she “commanded” called the Ohio State Regular Militia. “She’s not a violent person,” Siniff told CNN. “She can be very spirited, but she is a very good person at heart and she just really wants to try to help people.”

But law enforcement and many of the lawmakers inside say the rioters that breached the Capitol put lives in danger.

Links to far-right Oath Keepers

Siniff said Watkins formed the militia to help victims of tornadoes when local authorities were absent or overwhelmed. 

There’s a long history of paramilitary groups setting themselves up in rural areas of Ohio, Michigan and elsewhere, and the FBI says sometimes there is a darker side. 

Watkins is a member of the Oath Keepers, a pro-Trump, far-right, anti-government group that considers itself part of the militia movement charged to protect the country.

There is no private citizen militia that exists in the US. A militia has to be sanctioned by the state.

The Oath Keepers are clear that they try to recruit members from among active or retired military, first responders and  police, and its name refers to the oath taken to “defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic.”

In court documents the FBI says, “Oath Keepers will violate federal law if they believe their cause is just.”  

Recruiting veterans

Watkins’ alleged co-conspirators are named by the FBI as Donovan Crowl, a former Marine, and Thomas Caldwell, who served in the Navy.

Crowl lives just down the street from Watkins’ Jolly Roger bar and was a regular there. 

Neighbors told CNN that Watkins would try to recruit people when they came into the bar. Most didn’t take her up on it. But Crowl did join Watkins and Siniff in their armed group. 

“When drunk, he’s the guy you want to shut up.  When sober the best man you could have,” Siniff said of the former Marine. “The militia was a good thing to help him … like it was a reason to be sober.”

CNN has reached out to Crowl’s attorney but has not received a response. 

Crowl’s criminal record shows charges for domestic abuse and drunk driving, some of which resulted in conviction. This was noted by the federal judge when his attorney tried to get him released before his trial. His attorney said he merited release as he was not a danger to society.

“He’s seen on video saying, ‘we overran the Capitol,’ his criminal history includes violence and alcohol offenses, he also demonstrated prior non-compliance. The suggestion to release him to a residence with nine firearms is a non-starter,” Judge Sharon Ovington said. Crowl was remanded back into custody awaiting a preliminary hearing in Ohio.

Crowl’s mother, Teresa Joann Rowe, told CNN her son has expressed increasingly hostile political views in recent years.

“It felt like he did a 180-degree turnaround, felt like the world owed him a living and had a big chip on his shoulder,” Rowe said. “I don’t know if it’s because life didn’t go the way he planned.”

Asked why she thinks Crowl may have been drawn to this extremist group, she said, “I would like to understand myself. I don’t get it.”

Caldwell, the third veteran named as a co-conspirator, lives in a secluded property down a country road in Berryville, Virginia, 400 miles from the Woodstock homes of Watkins and Crowl.

It is unclear how long Caldwell knew Crowl and Watkins.  But the FBI says they met up in Washington, DC. Crowl took video of himself and Watkins inside the Capitol and posted it on social media.

Outside the Capitol Caldwell made his feelings clear on January 6.

“Everyone single b**** in there is a traitor, every single one,” he screamed in a video, appearing to refer to the legislators inside. 

Caldwell was a name in his local Virginia political circles. He was a delegate to the Clarke County, Virginia, Republican convention last year.

A lawyer temporarily assigned to Caldwell said at a detention hearing that his opposition to Biden’s election win was not out of the ordinary, and that he was not accused of a violent crime.

But the judge disagreed: “The conduct and statements of Mr. Caldwell and the others, it really is just pure lawlessness,” Magistrate Judge Joel Hoppe of the federal court in Harrisonburg, Virginia, said on Tuesday.

Strong support for Watkins

The village of Woodstock is home to about 300 people. Many of the homes are clustered around the crossroads, and the only traffic signal still fly “Trump 2020” banners. 

There is also the “Don’t Tread on Me” or Gadsden flag of the American Revolution and a Stars and Stripes being flown upside down — a signal of “dire distress,” according to the US code.

Some of the villagers were hostile to our CNN crew, calling the local sheriff to complain twice. Others were happier to talk and argued with their neighbors to back off. 

And even after all the video and social media posts showing Watkins ranting about storming the Capitol, Watkins’s boyfriend defends her.

“I do not believe the charges of conspiracy are at all fair,” Siniff said.

CNN’s Curt Devine contributed to this story.

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