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5 Shot, 2 Confirmed Dead in Northwest Washington, DC – NBC4 Washington

Five men were shot — two fatally — in Washington, D.C., Wednesday afternoon, police said.

The shooting was reported at the corner of O Street NW and North Capitol Street, just north of New York Avenue in the Truxton Circle neighborhood.

D.C. police officers and D.C. Fire & EMS were called to area for the report of several people shot. Units arrived shortly after 12:45 p.m. and found several people shot in the street.

Two men were pronounced dead at the scene, and three men took themselves to the hospital.

The shooting was reported at the corner of O Street NW and N. Capitol Street, just north of New York Avenue.

The scene is on a vibrant block of the neighborhood near homeless outreach program So Others Might Eat and a bilingual charter school. Parents could be seen picking up students about 2 p.m.

Executive Assistant Chief Ashawn Benedict described the area as “an open-air drug market” that police routinely patrol.

Police have cordoned off the area while they investigate. It was not immediately known whether they have a suspect.

Several streets were closed off around the shooting scene, police said: First Street NW between O and P streets and the 1300 block of N. Capital Street. Metrobuses are being re-rerouted until further notice.

There was no word on what may have led up to the shooting.

Police have cordoned off the area while they investigate.

Overnight, another deadly shooting occurred about a half-block away.

In that incident, a 25-year-old man died and a woman was wounded at Florida Avenue and N. Capitol Street. It wasn’t known whether these shootings might be related.

So far this year, 136 people have died in homicides in the District, compared to 131 people at this time last year, according to Metropolitan Police Department data. Overall violent crime is up 2%, and assaults with a dangerous weapon are down 11%.

This is a developing story. Please refresh for updates.



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Senate Democrats pass Inflation Reduction Act; House to vote next

WASHINGTON D.C. — Democrats pushed their election-year economic package to Senate passage Sunday, a hard-fought compromise less ambitious than President Joe Biden’s original domestic vision but one that still meets deep-rooted party goals of slowing global warming, moderating pharmaceutical costs and taxing immense corporations.

The estimated $740 billion package heads next to the House, where lawmakers are poised to deliver on Biden’s priorities, a stunning turnaround of what had seemed a lost and doomed effort that suddenly roared back to political life. Democrats held united, 51-50, with Vice President Kamala Harris casting the tie-breaking vote.

“It’s been a long, tough and winding road, but at last, at last we have arrived,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., ahead of final votes.

“The Senate is making history. I am confident the Inflation Reduction Act will endure as one of the defining legislative measures of the 21st century.”

Senators engaged in a round-the-clock marathon of voting that began Saturday and stretched late into Sunday afternoon. Democrats swatted down some three dozen Republican amendments designed to torpedo the legislation. Confronting unanimous GOP opposition, Democratic unity in the 50-50 chamber held, keeping the party on track for a morale-boosting victory three months from elections when congressional control is at stake.

“I think it’s gonna pass,” Biden told reporters as he left the White House early Sunday to go to Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, ending his COVID-19 isolation. The House seemed likely to provide final congressional approval when it returns briefly from summer recess on Friday.

The bill ran into trouble midday over objections to the new 15% corporate minimum tax that private equity firms and other industries disliked, forcing last-minute changes.

Despite the momentary setback, the “Inflation Reduction Act” gives Democrats a c ampaign-season showcase for action on coveted goals. It includes the largest-ever federal effort on climate change – close to $400 billion – caps out-of-pocket drug costs for seniors on Medicare to $2,000 a year and extends expiring subsidies that help 13 million people afford health insurance. By raising corporate taxes, the whole package is paid for, with some $300 billion extra revenue for deficit reduction.

Barely more than one-tenth the size of Biden’s initial 10-year, $3.5 trillion rainbow of progressive aspirations in his Build Back Better initiative, the new package abandons earlier proposals for universal preschool, paid family leave and expanded child care aid. That plan collapsed after conservative Sen. Joe. Manchin, D-W.Va., opposed it, saying it was too costly and would fuel inflation.

Nonpartisan analysts have said the “Inflation Reduction Act” would have a minor effect on surging consumer prices.

Republicans said the measure would undermine an economy that policymakers are struggling to keep from plummeting into recession. They said the bill’s business taxes would hurt job creation and force prices skyward, making it harder for people to cope with the nation’s worst inflation since the 1980s.

“Democrats have already robbed American families once through inflation, and now their solution is to rob American families a second time,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., argued. He said spending and tax increases in the legislation would eliminate jobs while having insignificant impact on inflation and climate change.

In an ordeal imposed on all budget bills like this one, the Senate had to endure an overnight “vote-a-rama” of rapid-fire amendments. Each tested Democrats’ ability to hold together a compromise negotiated by Schumer, progressives, Manchin and the inscrutable centrist Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz.

Progressive Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., offered amendments to further expand the legislation’s health benefits, and those efforts were defeated. Most votes were forced by Republicans and many were designed to make Democrats look soft on U.S.-Mexico border security and gasoline and energy costs, and like bullies for wanting to strengthen IRS tax law enforcement.

Before debate began Saturday, the bill’s prescription drug price curbs were diluted by the Senate’s nonpartisan parliamentarian. Elizabeth MacDonough, who referees questions about the chamber’s procedures, said a provision should fall that would impose costly penalties on drug makers whose price increases for private insurers exceed inflation.

It was the bill’s chief protection for the 180 million people with private health coverage they get through work or purchase themselves. Under special procedures that will let Democrats pass their bill by simple majority without the usual 60-vote margin, its provisions must be focused more on dollar-and-cents budget numbers than policy changes.

But the thrust of their pharmaceutical price language remained. That included letting Medicare negotiate what it pays for drugs for its 64 million elderly recipients, penalizing manufacturers for exceeding inflation for pharmaceuticals sold to Medicare and limiting beneficiaries out-of-pocket drug costs to $2,000 annually.

The bill also caps Medicare patients’ costs for insulin, the expensive diabetes medication, at $35 monthly. Democrats wanted to extend the $35 cap to private insurers but it ran afoul of Senate rules. Most Republicans voted to strip it from the package, though in a sign of the political potency of health costs seven GOP senators joined Democrats trying to preserve it.

The measure’s final costs were being recalculated to reflect late changes, but overall it would raise more than $700 billion over a decade. The money would come from a 15% minimum tax on a handful of corporations with yearly profits above $1 billion, a 1% tax on companies that repurchase their own stock, bolstered IRS tax collections and government savings from lower drug costs.

Sinema forced Democrats to drop a plan to prevent wealthy hedge fund managers from paying less than individual income tax rates for their earnings. She also joined with other Western senators to win $4 billion to combat the region’s drought.

Several Democratic senators joined the GOP-led effort to exclude some firms from the new corporate minimum tax.

The package keeps to Biden’s pledge not to raise taxes on those earning less than $400,000 a year.

It was on the energy and environment side that compromise was most evident between progressives and Manchin, a champion of fossil fuels and his state’s coal industry.

Clean energy would be fostered with tax credits for buying electric vehicles and manufacturing solar panels and wind turbines. There would be home energy rebates, funds for constructing factories building clean energy technology and money to promote climate-friendly farm practices and reduce pollution in minority communities.

Manchin won billions to help power plants lower carbon emissions plus language requiring more government auctions for oil drilling on federal land and waters. Party leaders also promised to push separate legislation this fall to accelerate permits for energy projects, which Manchin wants to include a nearly completed natural gas pipeline in his state.

Copyright © 2022 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.



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1 Killed, 5 Shot in Northeast DC Apartment Complex: Police – NBC4 Washington

At least one man has died and five others were shot at a Northeast apartment complex on Monday, according to D.C. police Chief Robert Contee. 

In an update Monday night, D.C. police said they responded to the 400 block of 15th Street NE outside the Azeeze Bates property at around 8:30 p.m., and not the nearby Benning Courts apartments, for reports of gunfire.

The conditions of the five men are not yet known. A potential motive for the shooting was not provided.

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives Washington Field Division said it would assist D.C. police in the ongoing shooting investigation.

News4 is working to learn more about this developing story.



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Arizona officials confirm bird flu cases in Southwest

Arizona officials have confirmed the first cases in the Southwest of a bird flu that has led to the deaths of 37 million birds from commercial farms in the central and eastern U.S.

The disease was spotted after tests by federal wildlife officials in three wild cormorants that had been found dead in a park in the Phoenix suburb of Scottsdale, Arizona Game and Fish officials announced this week.

The disease has not yet been found in any domestic birds or in commercial operations, the agency said.

But it is a concern, according to Glenn Hickman, president and CEO of Hickman Family Farms, one of the largest egg producers in the Southwest. Hickman operates four chicken ranches in Arizona, one in California and two in Colorado.

The company has stopped any visits to its farms and doublechecked its biosecurity program, which is designed to prevent its approximately 2 million chickens from being infected. Its chickens are kept in barns that are secured so that wild birds can’t enter, and any people or tools that enter are disinfected.

Arizona Game and Fish officials have been closely monitoring for the disease by responding to all calls of dead birds.
dpa/picture alliance via Getty I

The company dodged a scare recently when the avian flu was found in a flock 3 miles from one of its Colorado farms, Hickman said Thursday. And while he’s concerned about the Scottsdale find, its not anywhere near as concerning as if a nearby commercial operation had an outbreak.

“Those are a lot scarier because the massive amount of virus that is potentially produced when you have a large population is much more than the relatively small amount of virus per bird in the wild bird population,” he said. None of his farms were affected.

Arizona Game and Fish officials have been closely monitoring for the disease, which had been no closer than Colorado before this week’s announcement, by responding to all calls of dead birds.

Anne Justice-Allen, the department’s wildlife veterinarian, said calls from the public alerted her agency to the dead cormorants, water-loving birds that often nest in groups. The three juveniles had fallen out of their nests and were spotted dead by morning walkers in the park, who called wildlife officials.

Glenn Hickman, CEO of Hickman Family Farms, had his company stop visits to its farms and doublechecked its biosecurity program.
Hickman Family Farms

“It’s a good thing they did,” Justice-Allen said, because they were able to collect the birds and test them before park workers removed them.

“We had a high suspicion that it was something that we do not normally see,” Justice-Allen said. “We have resident cormorants in the area, and we do not normally see mortality events in them.”

Justice-Allen said a major concern is backyard flocks of chickens, which are allowed in parts of metro Phoenix. The disease has been found in many homeowner flocks across the country.

Bird owners should watch for symptoms like birds not eating or lethargy, runny noses, seizures or diarrhea, she said. Anyone seeing those symptoms should call the state Department of Agriculture.

The first U.S. detection of the new strain of highly contagious avian flu in domestic poultry was in February in Indiana. More than 37 million birds have been killed to prevent the infection from spreading since then.

As of June 3, it had been detected in wild birds in 40 states, but not in California, Arizona, Nevada or New Mexico. Commercial flocks in 19 states have been infected.

Once an infection is found, the birds won’t recover and are killed to prevent spreading the illness, Justice-Allen said.

The outbreak has not only killed domestic fowl. It has also had a heavy toll on bald eagles and other wild bird species, much more so than the nation’s last bird flu outbreak detected in 2014. That outbreak cost more than 50 million domestic poultry.

Hickman said egg producers are so far making up for lost production from outbreaks affecting flocks this year.

“I think I can speak pretty firmly that regardless of how many birds that have been affected and depopulated, there are still eggs on every shelf in every grocery store in America,” Hickman said.

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Disturbing photo shows rapper Goonew’s EMBALMED body propped up on a stage at DC nightclub

A nightclub has sparked an outrage after hosting a ‘funeral’ that featuring what appeared to be the embalmed corpse of a rapper who was shot dead during a robbery two weeks ago.    

Fans of rapper Goonew were left aghast after cellphone recordings emerged from the event, dubbed The Final Show, which was hosted by club Bliss in Washington DC on Sunday.

The 24-year-old rapper, whose real name was Markelle Morrow, was shot dead on the night of March 18 in the 3400 block of Walters Lane in the District Heights neighborhood. 

His mother, Patrice Parker Morrow, said that her son was shot in the back during a robbery and a large bejeweled pendant he always wore was stolen, reported NBC4. 

A funeral for Washington DC-based rapper Markelle Morrow, 24, who performed under the stage name Goonew, took place at Bliss nightclub, where his embalmed body was apparently put on public display 

Viral videos and photos from the raucous funeral show the deceased dressed in designer clothes and sporting a crown 

Mourners were said to have paid $40 cover charge to enter the club. Videos show people in the crowded venue dancing and singing around the dead rapper’s body 

Morrow was shot and killed in Washington DC on March 18 during a robbery, according to his family 

On Sunday, a large crowd of mourners gathered to say goodbye to the up-and-coming rapper at Bliss, which bills itself as an ‘elegant, luxurious, cutting-edge, stylish and hip lounge,’ and ‘the perfect place for a sophisticated night of lounging and dancing.’

The celebrity news site The Shade Room reported that guests paid a $40 cover charge to attend the home-going for Morrow.

Videos recorded during the event show what appears to be Morrow’s body, with his eye open, propped up on a stage sporting a designer Amiri hooded sweatshirt, ripped jeans decorated with flames and sneakers, accessorized with a watch and a gold crown.

People in the crowd are seen dancing and singing with much enthusiasm while multi-colored strobe lights illuminate the packed venue. At one point, fireworks are set off right next to Morrow.  

Many commenters on Instagram were appalled by this macabre display, describing it as ‘weird,’ ‘disturbing’ and overall disrespectful. 

Others, however, defended having Morrow’s body up on stage, suggesting that it was what his family wanted.   

The management of Bliss nightclub released a statement on its Instagram page on Monday, seeking to distance itself from the growing firestorm surrounding the controversial funeral.

‘Bliss was contacted by a local funeral home to rent out our venue for Goonew’s home-going celebration,’ the message read in part. ‘Bliss was never made aware of what would transpire. We sincerely apologize to all those who may be upset or offended. 

‘Please keep Goonew’s family and friends in your prayers at this difficult time.’

Bliss club’s management on Monday sought to distance itself from the controversy surrounding the unusual funeral, stating that the club ‘was never made away of what would transpire’

Police are offering a $25,000 reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction in Morrow’s killing 

While it is unclear from the videos and photos taken during the funeral that the figure on the stage was Morrow’s actual body, as opposed to a wax effigy, rapper Black Fortune, who performed at the event, insisted that it was, in fact, the dead rapper’s real corpse.  

Black Fortune wrote on his Instagram Stories: ‘No this ain’t no wax figure my Brodie went out gansta.’

Calls and emails to Bliss seeking comment were not immediately returned on Monday afternoon. 

More than two weeks after Morrow’s death, no arrests have been made. Police in Prince George’s County are offering a $25,000 reward for information leading to a conviction.   



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LA-bound flight from DC diverted to Oklahoma after passenger attacks attendant and air marshal

Delta plane traveling from DC to LA is diverted to Oklahoma City after male passenger assaults flight attendant and an air marshal on board

  • Delta flight DL342 took off from Washington DC’s Ronald Reagan National Airport at 5:16pm Eastern Time, bound for Los Angeles
  • A passenger onboard, described as a man in his 30s, reportedly became unruly and menaced a flight attendant en route
  • An air marshal then intervened, and the passenger assaulted the air marshal
  • The flight was diverted to Oklahoma City where the passenger was taken off the plane in handcuffs
  • It then carried on to Los Angeles, where it was expected to land two hours late, at 10:17pm Pacific Time 
  • Delta in a statement praised their crew and apologized for the delayed landing in Los Angeles 










A Delta flight from Washington DC to Los Angeles was diverted on Thursday evening after a passenger attacked a flight attendant, and then turned on an air marshal.

Flight DL342 took off from Reagan National Airport at 5:16pm local time, but a mid-air altercation broke out.

The plane had to be diverted to Oklahoma City, and the male suspect aged in his 30s was taken off the plane in handcuffs, CBS reported.

The flight then continued to Los Angeles, where it was scheduled to land at 10:17pm Pacific Time – two hours late. 

Delta flight DL342 took off from Washington DC at 5:16pm local time on Thursday, bound for Los Angeles

The plane was forced to make an unscheduled emergency landing in Oklahoma City after a man in his 30s on board the plane attacked a flight attendant and an air marshal

Bayne Bunce, 59, told Axios that he was on the plane and answered a call to assist federal air marshals.

He said he saw a man trying to ‘get at’ a flight attendant. 

Captain Arthur Gregory with Oklahoma City police said an air marshal attempted to take the suspect into custody after he ‘assaulted a flight attendant,’ but he ‘proceeded to assault the air marshal.’  

The officer and the flight attendant did not sustain any serious injuries, CBS reported, and did not require hospitalization. 

‘Delta applauds the quick action and professionalism of the crew and Federal Air Marshals on Delta flight 324 from Washington, D.C. to Los Angeles, which diverted to Oklahoma City after a customer became unruly and was removed from the flight by local law enforcement,’ Delta Airlines said in a statement. 

‘We apologize to our customers for the inconvenience.’ 

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) confirmed the diversion to Axios in an email and said it ‘investigates every unruly passenger report it receives from the airlines.’ 

Violent incidents on airplanes have soared since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, largely due to passenger frustrations at measures in place to stem the spread, including compulsory masks while in the air, except when eating or drinking. 

Delta in a statement praised the actions of their on-board crew. The flight attendant and air marshal were not seriously harmed in the incident

According to the New York Post, a survey undertaken last month found 85 per cent of flight attendants had been confronted by unruly passengers during the pandemic.

It also found that nearly one in five had been attacked.

The FAA has received more than five thousand complaints about unruly passengers so far this year, and has investigated more than one thousand incidents – over five times more than in 2020.  

It is not clear whether the man’s rage on Thursday’s flight was due to COVID-19 measures. Axios reported that he was not wearing a face mask when he was arrested.

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Cops and protestors gather at US Capitol for ‘Justice for J6’ rally

A massive police response mobilized outside a fenced-off US Capitol Saturday morning to greet a group of right-wing protesters who insist their noon demonstration won’t descend into violence.

Advocates at the “Justice for J6” rally in Washington, DC, plan to denounce what they call the “inhumane treatment” of dozens of Jan. 6 rioters who remain jailed while awaiting trials that are still months away.

Two hours ahead of the rally, a fleet of District of Columbia-owned dump trucks lined up to block the city’s streets off from roaming demonstrators, and an olive-green Humvee from neighboring Prince George’s County, Maryland, was stationed outside the Capitol’s Botanic Garden Conservatory.

Counter-protesters arrived early, bearing giant flags in support of Black Lives Matter and trans rights and a banner mimicking Trump’s signature campaign branding that read “Loser.” A hand-lettered sign identified the bearer as “proud Antifa scum.”

Police mobilized outside the US Capitol to greet a group of right-wing protesters who insist their noon demonstration won’t descend into violence.
REUTERS

US Capitol Police, nervous about a reprise of the chaos that led to five deaths, requested reinforcements from the Pentagon this week to fend off any attacks from rally-goers. A company of 100 National Guard troops was expected to patrol the event.

On Wednesday, federal workers reinstalled the tall black security fencing that had been removed in July.

“We’ve cooperated with the Capitol Police, Park Police, Metropolitan Police,” Matt Braynard of Look Ahead America, the rally’s main sponsor, told Fox5 this week. “We’ve got … a diplomatic security team to help make the event be smooth.”

Police stage at a security fence ahead of a rally near the U.S. Capitol in Washington.
AP

The group issued a statement Friday to “condemn political violence in all its forms, especially violence perpetrated on January 6.”

“This is a rally in support of those who have been charged with nonviolent offences to protest of their disparate treatment at the hands of the Department of Justice and the Judiciary,” the statement read.

Rally-goers prep for protest over the Jan. 6 riot.
AP

Braynard’s group claims that 67 of the 595 people who have been charged with assault, obstruction, trespassing and other crimes in connection with the Capitol incursion remain behind bars — many in solitary confinement — as their trial dates are repeatedly delayed.

Two GOP congressional candidates — Joe Kent of Washington state and Mike Collins of Georgia — were set to address the crowd.

Braynard, a former Trump campaign strategist who boosted his public profile with allegations of voting anomalies during the 2020 presidential election, instructed rally-goers not to bring any political gear — either in favor of former President Trump or in opposition to President Biden — to the event.

Dozens of dump trucks form a barrier as security measures are put into place before a rally by allies of Donald Trump in support of the so-called “political prisoners” of the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.
AP

“Anyone not honoring this request will be assumed to be an infiltrator,” he tweeted this week.

Trump on Thursday dismissed the demonstration as “a setup.”

“If people don’t show up they’ll say, ‘Oh, it’s a lack of spirit,’” he told The Federalist. “And if people do show up they’ll be harassed.”

But he also expressed support for “the people being persecuted so unfairly relating to the January 6th protest” in a statement issued by his Save America PAC this week.

“In addition to everything else, it has proven conclusively that we are a two-tiered system of justice,” Trump wrote. “In the end, however, JUSTICE WILL PREVAIL!”



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Children’s National Near Capacity Amid RSV, COVID Surge – NBC4 Washington

Children’s National Hospital in Washington, D.C., reached full capacity over the weekend as it treated more children with RSV, a respiratory virus that infects the lungs and breathing passages, a hospital official says.

All 323 beds of Children’s National’s acute care hospital were filled over the weekend, Chief Medical Officer Dr. David Wessel told News4 on Monday. Of those patients, 22 have COVID-19. Previously, the hospital’s highest number of COVID patients at once was 18 last winter, when vaccines were not widely available.

Some children and teens who get the coronavirus suffer from symptoms months later. News4’s Doreen Gentzler explains how Children’s National Hospital in D.C. is trying to help children with long COVID.

The hospital is now close to capacity after some patients were discharged, Wessel said.

Wessel said cases of RSV have spiked greatly. The virus is typically seen in the fall and winter, but doctors are seeing more cases of it now as children head back to school and mingle with others for the first time in months.

Wait times in the emergency room at Children’s National could be longer due to the surge, Wessel said. The hospital encourages parents to go to their child’s primary care physician first if it isn’t a true emergency.

But Wessel said the hospital has been anticipating this surge and no patients will be turned away. They have enough room and resources to treat everyone who walks through the door.

“We’ve been planning for this for many weeks. We work closely with the city and the Department of Health to put those surge plans in place. For example, we may have more acute care patients stay in the emergency department. We also have surge capacity outside the operating rooms and in recovery areas as well,” Wessel said.

Symptoms of RSV infection usually include runny nose, decrease in appetite, coughing, sneezing, fever and wheezing, according to the CDC. Symptoms usually come in stages and not all at once.

Very young infants may only show irritability, decreased activity and breathing difficulties, the CDC says.

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47-Year-Old DC Woman Dies of COVID-19 – NBC4 Washington

A 47-year-old woman has died of COVID-19, Washington, D.C., health officials said Tuesday.

The woman is the 1,160th D.C. resident to die from the coronavirus, according to D.C.’s health department.

D.C. did not release any further details about the woman.

On Aug. 25, three D.C. residents died, including an 82-year-old woman, a 63-year-old man and a 53-year-old man.

An additional 178 people tested positive for the virus on Monday, bringing the total number of D.C. COVID-19 cases to more than 55,000, the city said.

Along with most of the nation, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention currently classifies D.C.’s level of COVID-19 transmission as “high.”

Health systems across the U.S. have been dealing with record hospitalizations in recent weeks due to the highly contagious delta variant.

CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said Tuesday that unvaccinated people shouldn’t travel over Labor Day weekend.

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DC mayor issues tone deaf tweet in wake of Uber driver death

Washington, DC, Mayor Muriel Bowser was ripped on Sunday for posting a tone deaf tweet about auto theft prevention just days after the deadly carjacking of an Uber Eats driver.

Bowser shared a video from DC’s Metro police on “preventing auto thefts” following the death last Tuesday of Mohammad Anwar, who was killed after two two teen girls allegedly stun-gunned and carjacked him.

“Auto theft is a crime of opportunity. Follow these steps to reduce the risk of your vehicle becoming a target. Remember the motto, #ProtectYourAuto,” Bowser wrote on Twitter on Sunday.

Anwar, 66, died when he was flung from the car onto a sidewalk. The two girls escaped without injury.

Bowser’s tweet was met with confusion and contempt by those online who were looking for words of sympathy.

“Victim blaming much?” Rita Panahi wrote on Twitter.

One person said the alleged incompetence by the mayor was nothing new.

“Mayor Bowser keeps finding new lows,” Porter Orvetti wrote. “Immigrants and citizens of DC deserve better.”

Another user, Gabriella Hoffman, said the tweet may have been scheduled to go out before Anwar’s death but was “extremely tone deaf.”

“Bowser’s silence is deafening,” Hoffman said.

During a Thursday news conference, Bowser described Anwar’s death as “tragic, senseless, heinous, ridiculous.”



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