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HARTFORD, Conn. A Connecticut woman disfigured by a friend s pet chimpanzee was denied permission Friday to sue the state for $150 million because at the time of the attack, the law allowed private ownership of the animals.The state is immune to lawsuits unless they re allowed by state Claims Commissioner J. Paul Vance Jr., who approved the
stanley quencher state s motion to dismiss Charla Nash s claim.Nash was blinded, lost both hands and underwent a face transplant after being mauled in Stamford in 2009. $4M settlement in Conn. chimp attackChimpanzee attack victim Charla Nash urges state officials to let her sue Conn. for $150MCharla Nash shows off face months after transplantShe reached a $4 million settlement last year with the estate of chimp owner Sandra Herold, who died in 2010.Her lawyer said the state should be held responsible for not seizing the animal before the attack, because it was warned the animal was dangerous. State Attorney General George Jepsen said the state shouldn t be held liable for the mauling. Vance said in his
stanley canada decision that at the time of the attack, state law did not prohibit the private ownership of chimpanzees and did not require the state to seize an animal that was privately owned and not banned by the state. Vance noted that the state banned the ownership of chimpanzees after the attack. The State of Connecticut, were it a private person, would generally not have any duty to control the conduct of a third party absen
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It took NASA al
stanley vaso most the same amount of time as a sitcom episode to send Luca Parmitano back to the airlock when the Italian astronaut experienced a leak in his spacesuit last summer, a new report reveals.
https://gizmodo/helmet-leak-forces-iss-astronauts-to-abort-spacewalk-801447474 https://gizmodo/heres-what-its-like-to-almost-drown-in-space-1178817340 Above: Self-portrait of Expedition 36/37 European Space Agency astronaut Luca Parmitano during a July 2013 spacewalk. Credit: NAS. The 23-minute gap of time between when Parmitano first sent a report of water
stanley cup in his helmet, to when NASA told him to go back to safety, exposed the astronaut to an increased level of risk, the report said. While Parmitano emerged from the incident safely, in his last minutes inside the spacesuit the water was covering his eyes, getting close to his nose and mouth, and affecting the communications equipment. There wasn ;t an issue of anything being hidden or surprised. It was a lack of understanding about the severity of the event. It was believed a drink bag caused the leak, said Chris Hansen, the chair of the mishap investigation board, in a press conference today February 26th . This misunderstanding, added Hansen who is also the chief engineer of the International Space Station Program also led to a problem when a leak occ
stanley tazas urred in the same suit just the week before. Parmitano water leak occurred July 16th when he and Chris Cassidy were preparing a