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Turn porch lights on to honor COVID-19 victims

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Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist are asking all Michiganders to turn on their porch lights from 8-9 p.m. on Wednesday to mark one year since the first known COVID-19 cases in Michigan and honor those lost to the pandemic.

“As we mark this occasion, we also look towards the light at the end of the tunnel. We have three safe, effective vaccines, all miracles of science, that will help protect you, your family, and others from COVID and help us get our country and the economy back to normal,” Whitmer said in a news release.

Since March, Michigan has lost 15,670 people to COVID-19. There have been 598,014 cases, according to the state health department.

Monday’s COVID-19 Case Count: Michigan reports 1,960 new COVID-19 cases, 4 deaths over weekend

Coronavirus Obituaries: We remember those we have lost

“It’s been one year since COVID-19 was found in Michigan, and as a result, this virus has changed almost every aspect of our daily lives, but despite its darkness, we have seen the brightest light shine in the determined resolve of each other during these trying times,” Gilchrist said in the news release. 

“The simple act of turning on our lights is a way to remember and honor those we have lost and show that we’re all in this together and we will emerge from this crisis, together.” 

Contact Minnah Arshad: MArshad@freepress.com and follow her on Twitter @minnaharshad. 

Support local journalism here. 

Read or Share this story: https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2021/03/08/whitmer-covid-19-porch-lights/4635092001/

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Washington Post: Evidence shows police told South Dakota AG involved in fatal crash that victim’s glasses were found in his car

Ravnsborg struck and killed 55-year-old Joseph Boever on September 12. He initially told police he had hit a deer, but he discovered Boever’s body the following morning after returning to the scene of the collision.

“They’re Joe’s glasses, so that means his face came through your windshield,” one of the detectives told Ravnsborg during an interview that was released by the state on Tuesday, according to the Post.

“His face was in your windshield, Jason. Think about that,” a detective with the North Dakota Bureau of Criminal Investigation said to Ravnsborg, according to the Post, which said the official “denied seeing the pair of glasses inside his vehicle or on the man’s body.” The newspaper said the newly released interviews were recorded on September 14 and September 30.

Prosecutors in the state announced three misdemeanor charges against Ravnsborg last week, the Post said — charges that could result in up to 90 days in jail and $1,500 in damages if the state’s top law enforcement official is found guilty of all of them.

After the police interviews were released, South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, a Republican, called on Ravnsborg to step down, writing in a tweet: “Now that the investigation has closed and charges have been filed, I believe the Attorney General should resign.”

“I have reviewed the material we are releasing, starting today, and I encourage others to review it as well,” she wrote.

But Ravnsborg does not plan to resign, according to Mike Deaver, his private spokesman, who told the Argus Leader that “at no time has this issue impeded his ability to do the work of the office.”
Last year, the state released a toxicology report stating that a blood sample given by Ravnsborg the day after the crash showed his blood alcohol content was 0%.

Officials also released last year the 911 call made by Ravnsborg the night of the crash in which he told dispatchers, “I hit something” that was in the middle of the road.

The dispatcher asked, “Are you injured at all, Jason?”

To which Ravnsborg responded, “I am not, but my car sure as hell is.”

Ravnsborg, a Republican, was elected South Dakota attorney general in 2018, according to his office’s website.



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5 victims identified in massive 133-car pileup in Fort Worth that killed at least 6

This is a developing story and will be updated.

Five of six victims killed in a Fort Worth crash involving more than 100 cars were identified Friday as investigators worked to determine the cause.

Thursday’s pileup was the most staggering of the crashes that dotted ice-slicked roads across Dallas-Fort Worth. The crash, which was reported just after 6 a.m. Thursday, occurred in the southbound TEXPress lanes of Interstate 35W just north of downtown, Fort Worth Fire Chief Jim Davis said.

Officials said 133 vehicles were involved, and the crash spanned a half-mile between Northeast 28th Street and Northside Drive.

The Tarrant County medical examiner’s office identified the victims as: Tiffany Louann Gerred, 34; Aaron Luke Watson, 45; Michael Henry Wells, 47; Christopher Ray Vardy, 49; and William Darrell Williams, 54, were all among the crash victims.

All of the identified victims died between 6 a.m. and 6: 15 a.m., according to the medical examiner’s office. Causes of deaths for the victims are still pending.

Tiffany Louann Gerred

Gerred, an administrative clerk for the Tarrant County District Clerk’s Office, leaves behind a young daughter. Gerred was assigned to the 360th District Court which hears family cases. She always entered the courtroom with a smile on her face and was a bright presence, Judge Patricia Baca Bennett said.

“It was always nice to see her because she was always upbeat and that made it a pleasure to work with her,” Baca Bennett said.

Tarrant County District Clerk Thomas Wilder called Gerred “a beacon of light with her energetic personality” in an email to his staff Friday morning. Resources would be available to her grieving colleagues, Wilder added.

The crash

The crash closed all northbound lanes of I-35W Thursday, including toll lanes, with traffic backed up in both directions from Interstate 30 to Interstate 820, Fort Worth police said.

As of about 6:30 a.m. Friday, the ramps from north loop Interstate 820 to southbound I-35W were still closed for the accident investigation.

A total of 65 people had been treated at area hospitals Thursday for injuries related to the crash, but that number is expected to rise as more people seek help, MedStar spokesman Matt Zavadsky said. None of those treated were children.

Zavadsky said a large number of people who were involved in the accident were health care workers who were wearing scrubs and hospital badges.

Four Fort Worth police officers were hospitalized as a result of the wreck, Chief Neil Noakes said. Three had been on their way to work, and one was injured while helping at the scene. All four were released from the hospital.

In the early hours of Friday morning, less accidents were reported areawide.

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Six victims identified after deadly nitrogen leak at Georgia food processing plant

Authorities on Friday released the names of the six people who were killed after liquid nitrogen leaked at a Georgia food processing plant Thursday.

The dead, all employees of Foundation Food Group in Gainesville, were identified as Jose DeJesus Elias-Cabrera, 45; Corey Alan Murphy, 35; Nelly Perez-Rafael, 28; Saulo Suarez-Bernal, 41; Victor Vellez, 38; and Edgar Vera-Garcia, 28, the Hall County Sheriff’s Office announced.

Four of the victims lived in Gainesville, while Murphy and Suarez-Bernal were from the nearby towns of Clermont and Dawsonville, respectively. Perez-Rafael was the only woman among the victims.

There was no immediate cause of death listed for the six, pending autopsies performed by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, the sheriff said.

The cause of Thursday’s deadly workplace incident, about 60 miles northeast of Atlanta, is being investigated by the sheriff’s office, the fire department and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, officials said.

Five of the victims were pronounced dead at the scene, according to authorities. The sixth victim, one of 12 people rushed to Northeast Georgia Medical Center, died at the hospital.

Four people were still there by midday Friday, a hospital spokeswoman said. Three were in critical condition and one was listed as fair, according to the official.

While Foundation Food Group Vice President Nicholas Ancrum declined to discuss the cause of the accident in detail on Thursday, he said “preliminary indications are that a nitrogen line ruptured inside the facility.”

Poultry plants use refrigeration systems that often include liquid nitrogen, which vaporizes into an odorless gas capable of displacing oxygen when leaked.

Since 2017, OSHA has inspected or investigated complaints involving the Gainesville plant, which has been operated by Foundation Food Group and Prime Pak Foods Inc., records showed.

  • OSHA opened a Dec. 10, 2020, safety probe that remains active and available records don’t detail the issues at hand.
  • A May 26 referral, involving a potential amputation threat, was closed on Nov. 20 with no apparent penalties, records showed.
  • Prime Pak agreed to pay $3,750 on Oct. 17, 2019, for failure to provide proper eye and face protection to workers.
  • The company in 2018 agreed to settle with OSHA for $12,548 over a July 6, 2017, incident in which an employee lost a pinky and ring fingers when he “removed the guard from the cuber to clear a jam and had his left hand pulled into it,” according to OSHA records.
  • Prime Pak was originally fined $25,097 but ultimately didn’t have to pay OSHA for an April 6, 2017, incident when an employee lost at least three fingers in a meat-mixer accident, records showed.

A Foundation Food Group spokesman could not be immediately reached for comment on Friday.

Newly elected U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., who courted Latino voters in his upset victory earlier this month, pledged to “help the workers, their families, and the Gainesville community heal.”

“My prayers and sympathies are with the families of those who lost loved ones and the people who were harmed today in this awful incident,” he said in a statement Thursday night.

Suzanne Gamboa contributed.



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