Tag Archives: Deceased

Taylor Lautner’s Wife Tay Is “Deceased” Over His Taylor Swift Comment

As for what went down after that moment? Well, Swift seemed to paint a picture of that very night in her 2010 song “Back to December,” which Lautner has confirmed is about their romance.

The popular track holds telling lyrics about a night in September, seemingly referencing the 2009 VMAs, which fell on Sept. 13 of that year. She sings, “I miss your tan skin, your sweet smile/So good to me, so right/And how you held me in your arms that September night/The first time you ever saw me cry.”

Flash forward to now, and Lautner and Swift have both moved on to respective romances. For his part, Lautner and his wife, who now also goes by Taylor Lautner, wed in November after over four years together. As for Swift, she and boyfriend Joe Alwyn have been together since 2016. The pair lead a romance that stays mostly under the radar—and for a reason.

“It’s not really [because I] want to be guarded and private, it’s more a response to something else,” Alwyn told ELLE UK in April. “We live in a culture that is so increasingly intrusive… The more you give—and frankly, even if you don’t give it—something will be taken.” 

Listen to more of Mr. and Mrs. Taylor Lautner’s podcast here.

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Tornado slams Louisiana town leaving 3 dead, including child; missing mom found deceased

Tragedy struck Louisiana Tuesday evening after a possible tornado tore through the town of Keithville, killing three people, including a young boy, as well as his 30-year-old mother initially considered missing. 

According to the Caddo Parish Sheriff’s Office, the missing mother was found deceased at 2:27 a.m. – one street over from where her home was destroyed in the Pecan Farms area of Keithville. 

She was located under debris caused by a tornado. First responders will continue to search the area for unknown victims,” according to the sheriff’s office. No one else has been reported missing as a result of the storm.

Deputies initially responded to Lareta Street in Pecan Farms after reports of a tornado. The agency said several structures in the area were damaged and electrical lines and trees were knocked down.

LARGE SNOWSTORM SPAWNS NATIONWIDE BLIZZARDS, TORNADOES IN SOUTH

After a large search for a missing child and a mother, the sheriff’s office reported an 8-year-old boy was found dead in a wooded area of Pecan Farms, where the home was destroyed. Deputies, K-9 teams, firefighters and volunteers had been still searching through debris for the mom.

Another death was also reported, but the sheriff’s office is not able to identify that person yet.

Significant damage in Keithsville, Louisiana, after a tornado tore through the town Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2022, killing an 8-year-old boy and sending first responders on a search for his mother.
(Caddo Parish Fire District Number Four)

A man and a woman were also transported to the hospital with unknown injuries. The sheriff’s office said deputies in Caddo Parish are going from house to house to check on the residents. 

Caddo Parrish Fire District Four posted the following statement on Facebook early Wednesday morning:

“Please keep our first responders and the members of our community in your thoughts and prayers tonight as an absolutely devastating tornado touched down in the southern part of the parish.”

News outlets in Louisiana also reported up to 25 injuries in Union Parish after a tornado leveled a neighborhood in Farmerville Tuesday evening. No fatalities were reported.

WINTER WEATHER POUNDS SIERRA NEVADA, DUMPS RAIN AND SNOW ACROSS NORTHERN CALIFORNIA

The deadly tornado in Louisiana was part of a massive severe weather outbreak moving east across the United States, creating tornadoes in the southern states and blizzard-like conditions from the Midwest to the northeast. 

Earlier in the day, the National Weather Service in Fort Worth, Texas, confirmed five tornadoes touched down across the northern part of the state, but potentially a dozen occurred.

At least five people were injured in the Dallas suburb of Grapevine after a possible tornado struck the town.

A road closed in Grapevine, Texas, after a possible tornado struck the town injuring at least five people.
(Grapevine Police Department/Facebook)

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The severe weather threat extends into Wednesday for Mississippi, Alabama and the Florida Panhandle, according to the Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma.

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DC lightning strike by White House: Third deceased victim identified

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D.C. police have identified the third person killed by a Thursday lightning strike near the White House as Brooks A. Lambertson, 29, a Los Angeles bank employee who was in the nation’s capital on business.

A husband and wife from Wisconsin, who were visiting the District to celebrate their 56th wedding anniversary, were also killed, police previously said. A fourth person was critically injured when the strike hit just before 7 p.m. Thursday, in a grove of trees in Lafayette Square, about 100 feet from a statue of President Andrew Jackson.

Lambertson died Friday, according to police.

Four critically injured after lightning strike near the White House

Lambertson’s father, who requested his name not be used as the family grieves because “it’s not about us,” said in an interview with The Washington Post on Saturday night that his son was “probably the best human being that I know.”

His son’s kindness, generosity and humility “showed up in everything he did, in all his interactions with people,” he said.

Lambertson’s family and his employer, City National Bank, said in a statement Saturday that he was in D.C. for his job as a vice president managing sponsorships for the company. Lambertson, who lived in downtown L.A., previously worked in marketing for the NBA’s Los Angeles Clippers, according to the statement.

Police offered few other details about Lambertson or additional information about the incident Saturday.

In a phone call, Lambertson’s father expressed gratitude to all the first responders and others who tried to help his son. They did everything that could be done, he said, and his son’s death “was not for lack of everybody doing their jobs.”

How lightning works — and how to stay safe when it’s in the area

“His sudden loss is devastating to all who knew him, and his family, friends and colleagues appreciate the thoughts and prayers that poured in from around the country,” the statement from Lambertson’s family and employer said.

A D.C. police spokeswoman said late Saturday that the department did not have an update on the condition of the fourth victim, who had been hospitalized after the strike.

This breaking story will be updated.

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Genetically modified pig heart transplanted into deceased recipient, researchers say

The procedure was the first of its kind and represents an advance in efforts to determine whether organs in non-human animals can be modified and successfully used in humans in need of a transplant.

The 72-year-old recipient, Lawrence Kelly of Pennsylvania, had been declared brain-dead. His family donated his body for the study, which aimed to investigate how well the modified pig heart worked in a deceased human’s body.

After Kelly’s transplant in June, the research team repeated the procedure with another deceased recipient, 64-year-old Alva Capuano of New York City, in early July.

Dr. Robert Montgomery, director of the NYU Langone Transplant Institute, said the procedures allowed for more in-depth study of how well the recipients’ bodies tolerated the pig hearts.

“We can do much more frequent monitoring and really sort of understand the biology and fill in all of the unknowns,” he said.

He added that their study was unique because they attempted to emulate real-world conditions by, for example, not using experimental devices and medications.

The researchers are working on publishing further details of the study.

‘He went out a hero’

Researchers traveled out of state to procure the heart, which had genetic modifications aimed at a number of factors, like modulating the organ’s growth and reducing the chance that the recipient’s immune system would reject it.

The flight meant the team could replicate the conditions of a typical heart transplant, said Dr. Nader Moazami, surgical director of heart transplantation at NYU Langone Health.

“It was about an hour and 15 minute flight from New York, which is typical of the distance that we take hearts for clinical transplantation,” said Moazami, who performed the transplant.

The heart went to Kelly, a Navy veteran who was declared brain-dead after a car crash. Kelly’s fiancee, Alice Michael, authorized the donation of his body to research.

“They were going to take his liver, and they couldn’t find a recipient. And then New York University called me with this research thing. And I automatically said yes, because I know he would have wanted to do it. He loved to help people,” she said.

“When they asked me, I didn’t have to think twice about it. I just automatically said yes, because I knew it was groundbreaking research, and I know he would have wanted it. It was hard because I had to wait to bury him. But in the long run, maybe he can help a lot of people.

“He was a hero in life, and he went out a hero,” Michael said.

After the transplant, the researchers conducted tests for three days to monitor how well the heart was accepted, while the recipient’s body was kept alive using machinery including ventilation.

“No signs of early rejection were observed and the heart functioned normally with standard post-transplant medications and without additional mechanical support,” the medical center said in a news release.

Additionally, the researchers said they found no signs of infection with porcine cytomegalovirus (pCMV), which experts have been concerned could pose an obstacle to using pig organs in human recipients.

A new method for transplant research

Testing how well an organ transplantation works using the donated body of a deceased person is a new method, Moazami said. The first use of this technique for research happened in September, when a team at NYU Langone led by Montgomery transplanted a kidney from a genetically modified pig into a deceased human.

Although the study represents a step forward, Moazami said, there is still work to be done before such a procedure is made broadly available outside a research setting.

“There’s still a long way to go before we go from here to clinical transplantation to support a patient in the longer term,” he said. “There’s still many, many, many questions that need to be answered.”

One important limitation was the length of the study, he said; the organ and recipient were evaluated for only 72 hours after the transplant. Additionally, there could be important differences in how deceased human bodies respond to the procedure, compared with living humans. More research will be needed to determine how transplant recipients would fare in the long term.

“We thought that in 72 hours, we could learn all the things that we would learn if we had extended this a little bit more,” Moazami said, noting that the short time frame limited the expense of the study and allowed the recipient’s body to be returned to his family quicker.

“We thought that 72 hours was a reasonable amount of period for our short-term study, to understand all the things that we needed — that three days versus five days versus seven days, wouldn’t make a difference. Would three days versus one month make a difference? Yes, absolutely. But at this stage, that would have been very, very difficult to pull off.”

Transplantation of animal organs into humans also raises an array of other ethical questions such as whether the benefits of using a modified pig heart outweigh the risks that a patient would face if they instead waited for a human organ to become available.

Personal connection and a new frontier

For Montgomery, the research has a personal side. He is a recipient of a human heart transplant, and he said the difficulty in securing a transplant is part of what motivates his work.

“During my illness, it became clear to me that this paradigm is not working. It’s a failing paradigm, and that we need a renewable resource, an alternative source of organs, that doesn’t require someone to die in order for someone else to live,” he said.

“My whole illness was all about informing me about the reality of that and changing the way I think, not that it’s not important to continue to do what we’re doing, but we’ve got to move this in a completely different direction.”

Generally, demand for organ transplantations far exceeds the supply of donor organs available in the United States. As of July 7, there are 106,074 people on the organ transplant waiting list, with 3,442 on the heart waiting list. On average, 17 people die on the organ transplant waitlist every day.

Moazami suggested that transplants from animals might someday be useful in the pediatric setting, where patients can face even greater challenges getting a human organ transplant in time. Animal organs could be used as a “bridge,” buying time before a more optimal human organ becomes available.

“Perhaps the best way to study this is maybe use it as a bridge to a human transplant, if you will, so that any patient who is in need of an organ would get this heart with the caveat that when a human heart becomes available that matches the recipient, we swap it out again,” Moazami said.

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Amazon Alexa will be able to mimic deceased loved ones’ voices

The company announced on Wednesday during its annual re:MARS conference, which focuses on artificial intelligence innovation, that it’s working on an update to its Alexa system that would allow the technology to mimic any voice, even a deceased family member.

In a video shown on stage, Amazon (AMZN) demonstrated how, instead of Alexa’s signature voice reading a story to a young boy, it was his grandmother’s voice.

Rohit Prasad, an Amazon senior vice president, said the updated system will be able to collect enough voice data from less than a minute of audio to make personalization like this possible, rather than having someone spend hours in a recording studio like how it’s done in the past. Prasad did not elaborate on when this feature could launch. Amazon declined to comment on a timeline.

The concept stems from Amazon looking at new ways to add more “human attributes” to artificial intelligence, especially “in these times of the ongoing pandemic, when so many of us have lost someone we love,” Prasad said. “While AI can’t eliminate that pain of loss, it can definitely make their memories last.”

Amazon has long used recognizable voices, such as the real voices of Samuel L. Jackson, Melissa McCarthy and Shaquille O’Neal, to voice Alexa. But AI recreations of people’s voices have also increasingly improved over the past few years, particularly with the use of AI and deepfake technology. For example, three lines in the Anthony Bourdain documentary “Roadrunner” were generated by AI, even though it sounded like they were said by the late media personality. (This particular case raised a stir because it was not made clear in the movie that the dialog was AI generated and had not been approved by Bourdain’s estate). “We can have a documentary-ethics panel about it later,” director Morgan Neville told The New Yorker when the film debuted last year.
More recently, actor Val Kilmer, who lost his voice to throat cancer, partnered with startup Sonantic to create an AI-driven speaking voice for him in the new “Top Gun: Maverick” film. The company used archival audio footage of Kilmer to teach an algorithm how to speak like the actor, according to Variety.

Adam Wright, a senior analyst at IDC Research, said he sees the value in Amazon’s effort.

“I think Amazon is interested in doing this because they have the capability and technology, and they are always searching for ways to elevate the smart assistant and smart home experience,” Wright said. “Whether it drives a deeper connection with Alexa, or just becomes a skill that some folks dabble with from time to time remains to be seen.”

Amazon’s foray into personalized Alexa voices may struggle most with the uncanny valley effect — recreating a voice that is so similar to a loved one’s but isn’t quite right, which leads to rejection by real humans.

“There are certainly some risks, such as if the voice and resulting AI interactions doesn’t match well with the loved ones’ memories of that individual,” said Micheal Inouye of ABI Research. “For some, they will view this as creepy or outright terrible, but for others it could be viewed in a more profound way such as the example given by allowing a child to hear their grandparent’s voice, perhaps for the first time and in a way that isn’t a strict recording from the past.”

He believes, however, the varying reactions to announcements like this speak to how society will have to adjust to the promise of innovations and their eventual reality in the years ahead.

“We’ll definitely see more of these types of experiments and trials — and at least until we get a higher comfort level or these things become more mainstream, there will still be a wide range of responses,” he said.

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Amazon Announces Alexa Can Mimic the Voice of Deceased Relatives

In news that is certainly set to raise some eyebrows, Amazon announced an experimental feature for its voice assistant, Alexa, that will let it imitate the voices of dead relatives.

At Amazon’s annual MARS conference, the company showed off a demo in which Alexa reads a bedtime story to a child using the voice of his dead grandmother.

Amazon’s head Alexa AI scientist Rohit Prasad said the feature is meant to highlight Alexa’s “human attributes” which have become more important “in these times of the ongoing pandemic when so many of us have lost someone we love.”

Black Mirror: Season 3 Photos

Prasad added that while AI can’t eliminate “that pain of loss” it can carry on the memories of the deceased.

Amazon claims that its AI will be able to imitate someone’s voice after listening to just a minute of their recorded voice.

Details of how this new AI works aside, the internet is already discussing the ethics of such a tool. After all, anything that was the subject of an episode of Black Mirror can’t possibly be something people are clamoring for.

It should be noted that Amazon isn’t the only company experimenting with using AI to memorialize deceased loved ones. In 2021 Microsoft patented a tool that could potentially turn deceased relatives into chatbots users could communicate.

And it’s clear that raising the dead with technology is becoming the norm, as seen with instances in which CGI was used to bring back Peter Cushing’s Grand Moff Tarkin in Rogue One, or Anthony Bourdain’s voice in a recent documentary about the travel author.

Would an AI imitating deceased relatives interest you? Personally, I’d rather not though it doesn’t seem to be stopping tech companies from exploring the field.

Matt T.M. Kim is IGN’s News Editor. You can reach him @lawoftd.



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Pig kidney transplant successfully tested on deceased woman

A pig kidney was successfully tested on a dead patient at a hospital in New York last month for the first time without being immediately rejected. 

While pig organs are similar to human ones, a sugar in pig cells triggers organ rejection. 

GRAPHIC SURGICAL IMAGE BELOW

“It had absolutely normal function,” said Dr. Robert Montgomery, who led the surgical team at NYU Langone Health. “It didn’t have this immediate rejection that we have worried about.”

Researchers have turned to pigs to help with the kidney donor shortage. Around 12 patients die a day waiting for a kidney. 

The pig came from Revivicor, a biotech company that engineers the animals to edit out the sugar gene. The company has a herd of 100 pigs at a facility in Iowa. 

The gene alteration was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration last December as safe for human food consumption and medicine. But the FDA said developers would need to submit more paperwork before pig organs could be transplanted into living humans.

In this September 2021 photo provided by NYU Langone Health, a surgical team at the hospital in New York examines a pig kidney attached to the body of a deceased recipient for any signs of rejection. (Joe Carrotta/NYU Langone Health via AP)
(Joe Carrotta/NYU Langone Health via AP)

“This is an important step forward in realizing the promise of xenotransplantation, which will save thousands of lives each year in the not-too-distant future,” said United Therapeutics CEO Martine Rothblatt in a statement. Revivicor is a subsidiary. 

ORGAN TRANSPLANTS SAW MARKED DECLINE WORLDWIDE AMID PANDEMIC: STUDY 

The kidney was tested on the patient for two days during which it worked properly, filtering waste and producing urine. 

This undated photo provided by Revivicor in December 2020 shows a “GalSafe” pig which was genetically engineered to eliminate a sugar in pig cells, foreign to the human body, which causes immediate organ rejection. Scientists temporarily attached kidney from one of these pigs to a human body and watched it begin to work, a small step in the decades-long quest to one day use animal organs for life-saving transplants. (Revivicor via AP)
(Revivicor via AP)

Researchers kept the woman’s’ body on a ventilator during the experiment with her family’s consent. 

Some animal rights advocates question the ethics of raising pigs for organ donation but others note that pigs are already raised for food unlike primates, which were used in some experiments in the 20th century. Pigs also have large litters and short gestation periods. Pig heart valves and skin for burn victims are already used for humans. 

In this September 2021 photo provided by NYU Langone Health, a surgical team at the hospital in New York examines a pig kidney attached to the body of a deceased recipient for any signs of rejection. The test was a step in the decades-long quest to one day use animal organs for life-saving transplants. (Joe Carrotta/NYU Langone Health via AP)
((Joe Carrotta/NYU Langone Health via AP)

“The other issue is going to be: Should we be doing this just because we can?” Karen Maschke, a research scholar at the Hastings Center, who will help develop ethics and policy recommendations for the first clinical trials under a grant from the National Institutes of Health.

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Besides, Revivicor other biotech companies are also looking to develop pig organs for humans. 

Pig transplants into living patients could come in the next few years, experts say. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Deceased suspect, victims in Millcreek fatal shooting identified

MILLCREEK, Utah — Authorities have identified those involved in a fatal shooting, which led to a standoff lasting all night and nearly a whole day.

Officers responded to a home on 3900 South near Highland Drive in Millcreek around 6 p.m. Friday after a man went to the nearby Unified Police precinct, reporting that another man was shooting inside the home and people were dead.

A standoff with officers and SWAT team members ensued, in which the suspect who was barricaded inside the house shot at police — including while they entered the home to rescue an elderly woman.

Saturday around 3 p.m., Salt Lake County Sheriff Rosie Rivera (who oversees UPD) said they had sent drones into the home and found three people dead.

They believed, based on photographs and the suspect description, that one of them was the alleged shooter.

“He was extremely armed with various firearms, a lot of ammunition,” Rivera said. “Our understanding is the family was here to do some type of intervention for drug addiction and there was some mental health issues going on, and something went wrong.”

Later Saturday evening, UPD confirmed the identities of the deceased.

The victims were 54-year-old Bonne Rachelle Brady and 53-year-old Timothy Andrew Legrande. The suspect was 30-year-old Jacob Andrew Legrande.

All three lived in Millcreek, but it was not clear as of Saturday night who lived in the home where the standoff took place.

Joseph Noble, who identified himself as a close family friend, said he tried to drive to Milcreek in time to try and help, but it was too late.

He said he viewed Jacob Legrande as a brother and Timothy Legrande as kind of a stepfather.

“His dad always praised me, always told me how proud of me he was,” Noble said. “I loved them all very much. I’m going to miss them so much.”

“They were good men and I just can’t believe they’re gone,” he continued, crying. “They took me in when I was homeless for a time. I lived on their couch.”

While the causes of their deaths are part of an ongoing investigation, officials believe the two victims were shot and killed Friday before police even found out about the situation. They are also investigating the cause of the suspect’s death, but they were confident that nobody else was in the home during the standoff other than him and the two deceased victims.

“Sometimes we can’t save all the lives, and that’s what happened here,” Rivera said. “Two of them were deceased before we even knew of the call, but they were fortunate enough to save one life here.”

Details on what exactly led to the shooting are not yet available as the investigation is ongoing. All of the individuals involved were relatives.

Rivera also said that throughout the night, the suspect continued to shoot at officers, but none were injured and none of them fired back.

Officers took fire while rescuing the elderly woman.

“That is an act of heroism,” said Jeff Silvestrini, the mayor of Milcreek. “Our officers exercised patience. They didn’t rush in. They didn’t try to shoot it up. They just waited it out until the situation unfolded.”

At one point, the suspect even shot a robot that was sent into the home.

The severity of damage to the robot is not yet known.

The standoff lasted so long because the man was heavily armed with multiple guns and lots of ammunition, and the police agencies involved did not want to put their officers’ lives in further danger. They had also hoped to end the standoff with the suspect safely in custody.

“I want to thank the community, though, because they were very patient with us,” Rivera said. “I know it took a lot out of them, too. But at the end of the day, we do believe the community is safe now.”

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