Klpq Lawyer: Titans Fowler Under NFL Investigation
A small-town police chief was accused in a federal lawsuit Thursday of stopping a would-be rescuer from performing CPR on a gay heart att
stanley flask ack victim because he assumed the ailing man had HIV and posed a health risk.Claude Green, 43, died June 21 after being stricken yards from City Hall in Welch, a community of about 2,400.The American Civil Liberties Union sued on behalf of his mother.Police Chief Bobby Bowman called the allegations a boldface lie. He said that he called an ambulance and that Green was taken to the hospital in no more than nine minutes. No one refused him CPR, as his sister and mom are saying. They can do what they want, but if they re saying
stanley becher I refused him CPR, that is no way true, Bowman said. The lawsuit accuses Bowman of pulling off Green s friend Billy Snead as Snead was performing chest compressions on the man. Snead was a passenger in Green s pickup truck when Green collapsed; Snead had managed to pull over the vehicle.Green was pronounced dead at the hospital after about 30 minutes of attempts to revive him.Rose Saxe, a lawyer with the ACLU s AIDS Project, said Bowman s alleged actions contributed to Green s death and violated the Americans with Disabilities Act, equal protection laws and due process rights.Saxe said Green s death was tragically senseless because he did not have the AIDS virus, but added that he should h
stanley uk ave received lifesaving care even if he was HIV-positive. According to the ACLU, the Center s for Disease Con Wdzn Fund Some Truly Weird Art And Get Some Totally Insane Shwag!
Passing fields of soy, corn and towering bleach-white windmills
stanley mugs fanning out across windy plains, I arrive early one morning somewhere between Chicago and Indianapolis at a place that prom
stanley spain ises 8220 ow much fun. The Pig Adventure, housing 3,000 sows and producing 80,000 piglets per year, sits alongside a 36,000-cow Dairy Adventure, with murmurings of further adventures for fish and chickens. This is agro-Disneyland, a place where rides have been replaced by adorable pink piglets and 72-cow robotic milking parlours or cow merry-go-rounds as our guide calls them . I line up next to a retired couple and an extended family with three freckled kids from Chicago, and our tour starts inside a sleek lobby
stanley thermos mug outfitted with touch-screens and billboards illuminating the intelligence of pigs 鈥?as smart as three-year-olds, better at learning tricks than dogs, outranked in brainpower only by chimps, dolphins and elephants. We pass through a mock shower where animated bubbles slide down the walls to clean us a feeling akin to being ensconced inside a car during a carwash and into a wide, carpeted corridor. Everything smells as pleasantly antiseptic as a dentist office. Arriving at a viewing area, we ogle some real pigs through thick, soundproof panes of glass. Here, visitors can see for themselves how, even in today global, supermarket era, Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations ; 鈥?or factory farms, as they ;re bette