Tag Archives: patrols

As the Helldivers 2 Community Argues Over Nerfs and Buffs Following the Latest Patch, Arrowhead Explains Increased Patrols for Solo Players – IGN

  1. As the Helldivers 2 Community Argues Over Nerfs and Buffs Following the Latest Patch, Arrowhead Explains Increased Patrols for Solo Players IGN
  2. Helldivers 2 patch changed ricochet damage, and now players think they’re getting bodied by rockets that just bounce off bots Gamesradar
  3. Helldivers 2 Patch 01.000.300 Makes Big Balance Changes to Weapons, Stratagems, and Enemies IGN
  4. Helldivers 2 players decry broken ricochet changes, then realise it’s probably just shrapnel from the now-deadly Eruptor PC Gamer
  5. Massive ‘Helldivers 2’ Patch Notes: Stratagem, Weapon, Enemy Nerfs And Buffs Forbes

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Helldivers 2 Patch 1.000.103 Nerfs Planet Hazards, Patrols Spawning on Players, and More – IGN

  1. Helldivers 2 Patch 1.000.103 Nerfs Planet Hazards, Patrols Spawning on Players, and More IGN
  2. Helldivers 2 patch tackles patrols appearing out of thin air, over-the-top meteor swarms, and accidentally blowing yourself up with your own mech PC Gamer
  3. Oh No, Helldivers 2 Has Flying Bugs To Deal With Now GameSpot
  4. Recent Helldivers 2 Termicide Update Has Serious Implications For The Soldiers Of Super Earth Screen Rant
  5. This is getting out of hand: Helldivers 2 players role-played the bugs so hard that people are making impressive animations of Terminids posting on Reddit Gamesradar

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Idaho State Police adds patrols to university campus as school holds vigil for 4 students killed in unsolved stabbings



CNN
 — 

Idaho State Police has added four campus patrols and 14 patrols for the general community as the University of Idaho hosted a vigil Wednesday night for the four students fatally stabbed earlier this month.

Several hundred people attended the vigil on the campus of 9,300 students to commemorate the victims: Ethan Chapin, 20; Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Madison Mogen, 21.

Several family members spoke about their loved ones.

“We lost four beautiful souls,” said Goncalves’ father, Steve. Later, he told those watching to find someone they love and tell them. “The only cure to pain is love,” he said.

Chapin’s mother, Stacy Chapin, talked about how their family was very close. They shared meals when they could, they played games together and loved spending days on the boat listening to country music, Ethan’s “most favorite thing in the whole world.”

“We are eternally grateful that we spent so much time with him,” she said, and then, as her voice cracked, she implored the audience to do the same with their families. “Because time is precious and it’s something you can’t get back.”

The parents – including Mogen’s father, who spoke lovingly about his “great kid” who was “just nice to everybody” – also thanked law enforcement and university officials for their work since the November 13 slayings.

Investigators have yet to identify a suspect or find the murder weapon, but a spokesperson for the Idaho State Police said they have begun to receive forensic testing results, Fox News reported.

“I do know that each type of testing… some take longer than others. And I also do know that there have been results that have been returned and those go directly to the investigators, so that way they can help, again, paint that picture as we keep talking about,” spokesperson Aaron Snell said, while declining to say who the DNA belonged to.

CNN has reached out to Snell for comment.

State police are assisting police in Moscow, a city of about 26,000 people, with the investigation. The uncertainty and lack of information around the unsolved killings has left the campus emptier than usual after Thanksgiving break.

While there is no official number on how many students returned, Provost and Executive Vice President Torrey Lawrence told CNN professors are reporting that about two-thirds to three-quarters of students are attending in-person.

“This is a heavy situation, and we are moving forward by trying to be supportive of all of our people, our faculty, our staff, our students, and trying to address their needs,” Lawrence said.

One student told CNN that, with a killer not identified, people are “sketched out.”

“It definitely feels a little bit different,” said student Hayden Rich. “It seems kind of a sad setting. It is kind of quiet.”

Snell told CNN on Tuesday they’ve seen an uptick in 911 calls while the cases remain unsolved. Most of those calls are concerning “suspicious person” activity, or “welfare check.”

“We are recognizing that there is heightened fear in the community and so the officers are going to those calls and they’re handling them as they come up,” Snell said.

University of Idahos President Scott Green acknowledged last week that some students did not want to return until a suspect is in custody.

“As such, faculty have been asked to prepare in-person teaching and remote learning options so that each student can choose their method of engagement for the final two weeks of the semester,” he wrote in a statement.

Dozens of local, state and federal investigators are still working to determine who carried out the brutal attack. Investigators have yet to identify a suspect or find a weapon – believed to be a fixed-blade knife – and have sifted through more than 1,000 tips and conducted at least 150 interviews.

The four students were found stabbed to death in an off-campus home in Moscow. The killings have unsettled the campus community and the town, which had not seen a murder since 2015.

Police said they believe the killings were “targeted” and “isolated” but have not released evidence to back up that analysis. They also initially said there was no threat to the public – but later backtracked on that assurance.

“We cannot say there’s no threat to the community,” Police Chief James Fry said days after the killings.

Authorities said they have not ruled out the possibility that more than one person may be involved in the stabbings.

So far, using the evidence collected at the scene and the trove of tips and interviews, investigators have been able to piece together a rough timeline and a map of the group’s final hours.

On the night of the killings, Goncalves and Mogen were at a sports bar, and Chapin and Kernodle were seen at a fraternity party.

Investigators believe all four victims had returned to the home by 2 a.m. the night of the stabbings. Two surviving roommates had also gone out in Moscow that night, police said, and returned to the house by 1 a.m.

Police earlier said Goncalves and Mogen returned to the home by 1:45 a.m., but they updated the timeline Friday, saying digital evidence showed the pair returned at 1:56 a.m. after visiting a food truck and being driven home by a “private party.”

The next morning, two surviving roommates “summoned friends to the residence because they believed one of the second-floor victims had passed out and was not waking up,” police said in a release. Somebody called 911 from the house at 11:58 a.m. using one of the surviving roommates’ phones.

When police arrived, they found two victims on the second floor and two victims on the third floor. There was no sign of forced entry or damage, police said.

Investigators do not believe the two surviving roommates were involved in the deaths.

A coroner determined the four victims were each stabbed multiple times and were likely asleep when the attacks began. Some of the students had defensive wounds, according to the Latah County coroner.

Student Ava Forsyth said her roommate is staying home because she does not feel safe. Forsyth said she feels “moderately” safe, but “not so much” at night, when she takes advantage of a free campus walking security service.

Rich, the student who said people are “sketched out,” said he decided to come back for the many tests he has this week. Student Lexi Way told CNN that she feels safe with upped campus security and “tends to learn better in class.”

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Chicago shooting: UChicago student killed in Hyde Park attempted robbery; activist Jahmal Cole nearly shot; patrols increase

CHICAGO (WLS) — The University of Chicago is increasing patrols near its Hyde Park campus after two shootings, one of which killed a 24-year-old recent graduate, took place within hours of each other Tuesday.

Chicago police said that shortly before 2 p.m. in the 900-block of East 54th Place, a dark-colored car pulled up alongside a 24-year-old man. A man got out of the car, pulled out a gun and demanded the 24-year-old’s property.

It was not clear if the victim moved to give up his things, but the man opened fire, shooting the victim in the chest, police said. Then the shooter got back in the car and fled west on 54th Place.

The victim was taken to University of Chicago hospital, where he died. He has not yet been identified.

The University of Chicago released a statement Tuesday afternoon confirming the victim was a recent graduate of the college.

“This is devastating news for our entire community,” the statement said in part.

The university said they are working with CPD for their investigation.

Nick Jackson is mourning the loss of his close friend.

“He had just gotten his driver’s license; he was in a new relationship. He had the whole world in front of him, and this happened,” Jackson said.

Police have not released any further description of the shooter or the car he was in. No one is currently in custody. Area One detectives are investigating.

RELATED: Chicago shooting: 4-year-old boy shot inside parked car in South Chicago, police say

About two hours earlier, someone fired shots from a Hyundai Sonata blocks away at 53rd Street and South Harper Avenue, according to a security alert from the University of Chicago.

No injuries were reported, but several vehicles and two businesses were damaged by gunfire, the alert said.

The Sonata had been reported stolen Monday, according to the alert.

Jahmal Cole, head of My Block My Hood My City and a candidate for Congress, said he was nearly struck during the 53rd Street shooting, which took place in a busy business district.

“I heard 30 shots within 10 seconds, just within walking distance of here,” Cole said. “A lot of windows got shot out.”

Cole said he was walking to lunch when he heard random gunshots whizzing by his ear and ran for his life.

“I want to be clear that, I am not sure if I was an intended target today or if it was a random shooting. This is how they get down nowadays. Regardless, this is unacceptable and the people of the First District deserve better,” Cole said in a post on Facebook. “Today, I thought I was going to die because I saw blood coming from my neck, thinking I was shot, again. Fortunately, it was a scrape from diving under a car.”

Cole said while he doesn’t believe he was targeted Tuesday afternoon, he has been shot at in the past, in 2018 and in June of this year as well.

Kilwins, a popular Hyde Park ice cream shop, was damaged in the shooting.

The shop’s owner and employees spoke Wednesday about their safety concerns in returning to work, and Cole returned to where he was shot at.

“We need the partner in federal government to step up. Somebody has to have a sense of urgency,” he said. “You can’t nonprofit your way out of this. We can’t program out way out of these shootings,” he said.

The Sun-Times Media Wire contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2021 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.



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Russian, Chinese warships hold first joint patrols in the Pacific

MOSCOW, Oct 23 (Reuters) – Russian and Chinese warships held their first joint patrols in the Western part of the Pacific ocean on October 17-23, Russia’s defence ministry said in a statement on Saturday.

Moscow and Beijing, which staged naval cooperation drills in the Sea of Japan earlier in October, have cultivated closer military and diplomatic ties in recent years at a time when their relations with the West have soured. read more

A group of naval vessels from Russia and China conduct a joint maritime military patrol in the waters of the Pacific Ocean, in this still image taken from video released on October 23, 2021. Russian Defence Ministry/Handout via REUTERS

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The naval manoeuvres have been closely watched by Japan which said earlier this week that a group of 10 vessels from China and Russia sailed through the Tsugaru Strait separating Japan’s main island and its northern island of Hokkaido. read more

“The group of ships passed through the Tsugaru Strait for the first time as part of the patrol,” Russia’s defence ministry said in the statement. The strait is regarded as international waters.

“The tasks of the patrols were the demonstration of the Russian and Chinese state flags, maintaining of peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific region, and guardianship of the subjects of maritime economic activities of the two countries,” the ministry added.

Reporting by Polina Devitt
Editing by Peter Graff

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Lockdown in Brisbane extended as army patrols Sydney to enforce COVID curbs

  • Brisbane lockdown extended until Sunday, was due to expire Aug 3
  • New South Wales records 207 COVID-19 cases in past 24 hours
  • Army patrols Sydney to enforce stay-at-home restrictions

SYDNEY, Aug 2 (Reuters) – Australia’s Queensland state on Monday extended a COVID-19 lockdown in Brisbane, while soldiers began patrolling Sydney to enforce stay-at-home rules as Australia struggles to stop the highly contagious Delta variant of the coronavirus spreading.

Queensland said it had detected 13 new locally acquired COVID-19 cases in the past 24 hours – the biggest one-day rise the state has recorded in a year. The lockdown of Brisbane, Australia’s third-biggest city, was due to end on Tuesday but will now stay in place until late on Sunday.

“It’s starting to become clear that the initial lockdown will be insufficient for the outbreak,” Queensland state Deputy Premier Steven Miles told reporters in Brisbane.

The rising new case numbers in two of the country’s biggest cities comes as disquiet grows on how the government of Prime Minister Scott Morrison is handling the pandemic. read more

Although Australia’s vaccination drive has lagged many other developed economies, it has so far fared much better in keeping its coronavirus numbers relatively low, with just under 34,400 cases. The death toll rose to 925 following the death of a man in his 90s in Sydney.

Australia is going through a cycle of stop-start lockdowns in several cities after the emergence of the fast-moving Delta strain, and such restrictions are likely to persist until the country reaches a much higher level of vaccination coverage.

A lone bird walks past the quiet Circular Quay train station during a lockdown to curb the spread of a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Sydney, Australia, July 28, 2021. REUTERS/Loren Elliott/File Photo

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Prime Minister Morrison has promised lockdowns would be “less likely” once the country inoculates 70% of its population above 16 years of age – a percentage which now stands at 19%. Morrison expects to hit the 70% mark by the end of the year. read more

Meanwhile the lockdown of Brisbane and several surrounding areas comes as Sydney, the biggest city in the country, begins its sixth week under stay-at-home orders.

New South Wales state, home to Sydney, said on Monday it detected 207 COVID-19 infections in the past 24 hours as daily new cases continue to linger near a 16-month high recorded late last week.

The state has recorded more than 3,500 infections since the outbreak begun in June, when a limousine driver contracted the virus while transporting an overseas airline crew, and has asked for military personnel to aid efforts to enforce the restrictions. read more

Some 300 army personnel, who will be unarmed and under police command, on Monday began door-to-door visits to ensure people who have tested positive are isolating at their homes.

Army personnel also accompanied police officers around the streets of the areas of Sydney were most COVID-19 cases have been recorded. Footage published online showed police asking the few people encountered on the street as to why they were out of their homes in the largely deserted streets in Sydney’s south west.

($1 = 1.3624 Australian dollars)

Reporting by Renju Jose; Editing by Michael Perry and Kenneth Maxwell

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Pittsburgh public safety director discusses extra patrols in wake of South Side shooting

Pittsburgh’s public safety director said his office “sort of predicted something like this would happen,” referring to Friday morning’s shooting on the city’s South Side.Three people were injured, with one in critical condition. A police officer was injured in a scuffle.Public Safety Director Wendell Hissrich said extra patrols have been out on the South Side on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights, visiting establishments in the area and trying to keep the streets safe.”There were multiple witnesses who were held, as well as some individuals being detained, and that would not have happened if it wasn’t for the quick work of the officers and the fast response of the paramedics and EMTs,” said Hissrich. On July 1, Pittsburgh’s Action News 4 reporter Kylie Walker detailed the efforts police were making to step up their presence on the South Side. You can read more of her report here.Hissrich said surveillance cameras were “beneficial” to authorities in Friday’s incident, and that Public Safety intends to put more of them in the area.”We are kind of limited in the amount of cameras that we can have in the city, so we have to move cameras from one part of city to another,” he said. “Being that we are considering this right now a critical priority, we will be moving more cameras into the South Side area to cover more area where we believe there were problems last night and could be problems in the future.”In addition to the cameras, more light towers will be installed as early as Friday night, Hissrich said.He added that Public Safety is working with city officials regarding possible ways to change the traffic pattern on East Carson Street, with the idea of limiting vehicular traffic and allowing more space for pedestrians and for emergency vehicles to get through the area.

Pittsburgh’s public safety director said his office “sort of predicted something like this would happen,” referring to Friday morning’s shooting on the city’s South Side.

Three people were injured, with one in critical condition. A police officer was injured in a scuffle.

Public Safety Director Wendell Hissrich said extra patrols have been out on the South Side on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights, visiting establishments in the area and trying to keep the streets safe.

“There were multiple witnesses who were held, as well as some individuals being detained, and that would not have happened if it wasn’t for the quick work of the officers and the fast response of the paramedics and EMTs,” said Hissrich.

On July 1, Pittsburgh’s Action News 4 reporter Kylie Walker detailed the efforts police were making to step up their presence on the South Side. You can read more of her report here.

Hissrich said surveillance cameras were “beneficial” to authorities in Friday’s incident, and that Public Safety intends to put more of them in the area.

“We are kind of limited in the amount of cameras that we can have in the city, so we have to move cameras from one part of city to another,” he said. “Being that we are considering this right now a critical priority, we will be moving more cameras into the South Side area to cover more area where we believe there were problems last night and could be problems in the future.”

In addition to the cameras, more light towers will be installed as early as Friday night, Hissrich said.

He added that Public Safety is working with city officials regarding possible ways to change the traffic pattern on East Carson Street, with the idea of limiting vehicular traffic and allowing more space for pedestrians and for emergency vehicles to get through the area.

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After Anti-Asian Violence, Volunteers Take to Streets to Form Patrols

FLUSHING, N.Y.—Before sunset Monday, a few dozen Asian-Americans outfitted in neon vests and jackets combed the streets of this New York City neighborhood.

They weren’t police officers. They were students, retail workers and retirees equipped with little more than a cellphone in the event they came across someone being harassed or attacked. Their mission: to stop would-be attackers from hurting other Asians, whether it be by calling the police for help or stepping in themselves.

“It’s made me feel sick,” said volunteer Wan Chen, 37, of the rise in anti-Asian hate crimes around the country. “So this is the time we need to speak up and try our best to help. If anyone tries to do anything, maybe they’ll think twice.”

Volunteer groups such as this one have sprung up around the U.S., patrolling the streets of Asian communities from New York City to Oakland, Calif. They have multiple goals: to escort individuals worried about their safety where they need to go, check in on community members, and if needed, intervene if they see someone being harassed.

Cities around the country have seen upticks in hate crimes against Asians since the start of the pandemic. One analysis conducted by researchers at California State University, San Bernardino, found hate crimes targeting Asians in 16 of the largest U.S. cities increased 149% between 2019 and 2020. Over the same period, overall reports of hate crimes declined by 7%, the researchers found.

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San Francisco police increase patrols following recent assaults against Asian Americans

On Wednesday, a man and a woman, both of Asian descent, were assaulted in San Francisco in separate attacks by the same alleged suspect, police said.

Separately, three men were arrested for their alleged involvement in an assault and robbery of an Asian American man last month inside a San Francisco laundromat.

The police patrols are being increased in coordination with local Asian American and Pacific Islander community organizations, the department said Wednesday.

Violence toward Asian Americans has spiked nationwide, coinciding with the Covid-19 pandemic. Several unprovoked attacks against elderly Asian Americans in the Bay Area this year led, in part, to the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office creating a special response unit focused on crimes against Asians, particularly older Asians.

Vicha Ratanapakdee, an 84-year-old from Thailand, died after he was abruptly attacked while out on a morning walk on January 28, according to San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin. A 19-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of murder and elder abuse in the case, he said.
In Oakland’s Chinatown neighborhood, police said a man violently shoved three unsuspecting people on January 31, injuring a 91-year-old man, 60-year-old man and 55-year-old woman. A 28-year-old man has been charged with three counts of felony assault for the attacks, according to charging documents.
Elsewhere in California, in response to increases in attacks against people of Asian descent, Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva and the LA County Sheriff’s Department are meeting with groups in Asian American communities this week to spread awareness and encourages citizens to report threats or suspicious activity.
San Francisco Mayor London Breed, regarding the patrols announced Wednesday, said, “No one should have to live in fear that their race or ethnicity could make them a victim.”

Two people attacked within minutes in San Francisco

On Wednesday morning in San Francisco, an Asian man and woman were assaulted by the same suspect in separate attacks, police said.

“Investigators are working to determine if bias was a motivating factor in the incident,” San Francisco Police Officer Adam Lobsinger said in a statement.

The aftermath of the clash was caught on video by CNN affiliate KPIX. The footage shows a crowd including police officers and paramedics gathered around an Asian woman, who holds an ice pack to the side of her head and face while crying out. A man can be seen on a gurney handcuffed as he is treated by a paramedic.

“He hit people,” the woman is heard saying in the video, speaking in Cantonese. “He bullies old people,” she said, “so I gave a punch.”

The woman says to the man “You jerk,” then tells police, “He bullied me, he bullied me, jerk.”

Both the suspect, a 39-year-old man, and the 75-year-old woman were taken to the hospital for non-life-threatening injuries, Lobsinger said, with the suspect treated for “an unrelated, prior medical condition.”

Officers had been called after an earlier attack on an 83-year-old man, Lobsinger said. A local security guard pursued the suspect on foot, Lobsinger said, and as he was fleeing, police say he assaulted the woman.

The injured woman told KPIX she had been leaning against a utility pole when the man punched her without provocation.

The victims and suspect have not been officially identified and the incident remains under investigation.

Arrests made in laundromat assault caught on video

Three young men were arrested Wednesday for allegedly robbing and assaulting an older Asian man last month in an attack caught on surveillance video inside a San Francisco laundromat.

The Feb. 23 assault occurred near the Nob Hill and Chinatown neighborhoods. An Asian American man had just taken a seat inside the laundromat when three people charged in, threw down the man and violently robbed him, surveillance video obtained by CNN affiliate KGO-TV showed.

The 67-year-old victim, who was not identified, suffered non-life threatening injuries from the attack, police said.

The men arrested were identified by police as Calvin Berschell, Jason Orozco, and Nolowde Beshears. All three are 19 years old and live in Antioch, California, a suburban community located about 45 miles east of San Francisco.

Arrest warrants were served early Wednesday morning in Antioch and all three were taken into custody without incident, according to a release from SFPD. While executing a search warrant, police seized two weapons and evidence relating to the robbery.

Court dates and bail have not yet been set. It is unclear if any of the three men retained attorneys.

Police expect the men to be charged with burglary robbery, elder abuse, and assault. A case has not yet been presented to the District Attorney’s office, according to spokeswoman Rachel Marshall.

CNN’s Eric Levenson, Stephanie Becker, Dan Simon and Jadyn Sham contributed to this report.



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