Women recognize preventions value but still delay health screenings The Washington Post

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Pennsylvania School Bus Driver Former Police Chaplain Faces Child Porn Charges

A school bus driver in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania is facing numerous charges including child pornography, reported WPXI News. The bus driver, identified as Michael Singer, was also a former police chaplain and allegedly sent explicit photos to one of the students he drove to Westinghouse Arts Academy Charter School.Gay porno The investigation reportedly began when the student’s mother told police that her son was being “groomed” by his school bus driver. Police said the inquiry revealed that Singer allegedly exchanged explicit images with the 17-year-old student via a dating app. Police added that Singer admitted to texting the teen but denied knowing he was speaking to the same person on the dating app. The Pittsburgh Bureau of Police told local news reporters that Singer served nominally as a police chaplain but had not been actively involved in with law enforcement for several years. He is no longer permitted to access any Pittsburgh Bureau of Police facility. Singer is facing multiple charges, including possession and dissemination of child pornography, unlawful contact with a minor, and corruption of minors. Related: New York School Bus Driver Caught with Child Pornography

Related: California School Bus Driver Indicted on Federal Child Porn Charges

Related: Pennsylvania Teen Charged as Adult for Stabbing Student on Bus

Related: The Lasting Impact of a Former Pennsylvania School Bus Driver

US Supreme Court declines to halt Trumps sentencing in hush money case

The US Supreme Court on Monday rejected a bid by the state of Missouri to halt Donald Trump’s upcoming sentencing for his conviction in New York on felony charges involving hush money paid to a porn star and left a related gag order until after the November 5 presidential election. The decision by the justices came in response to Missouri’s lawsuit claiming that the case against Trump infringed on the right of voters under the US Constitution to hear from the Republican presidential nominee as he seeks to regain the White House.Gay porno The Supreme Court’s order was unsigned. Conservative Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito indicated they would have taken up Missouri’s case but added that they “would not grant other relief.” Trump was found guilty in May of falsifying business records to cover up a $130,000 payment to porn star Stormy Daniels in exchange for her silence before the 2016 US election about a sexual encounter she has said she had with Trump years earlier. Prosecutors have said the payment was designed help Trump’s chances in the 2016 election, when he defeated Democrat Hillary Clinton. Trump, the Republican candidate in this year’s election, denies having had sex with Daniels and has vowed to appeal his conviction after his sentencing, scheduled for September. Missouri’s Republican Attorney General Andrew Bailey filed a July 3 lawsuit against New York state asking the Supreme Court to pause Trump’s impending sentencing and the gag order placed on him by New York state judge Juan Merchan. Legal disputes between states are filed directly to the Supreme Court. Bailey argued that the criminal case against Trump violated the right of Missouri residents under the Constitution’s First Amendment to “hear from and vote for their preferred presidential candidate.” “Instead of letting presidential candidates campaign on their own merits, radical progressives in New York are trying to rig the 2024 election by waging a direct attack on our democratic process,” Bailey said in bringing the case. Republican attorneys general from Florida, Iowa, Montana and Alaska filed a Supreme Court brief in support of Missouri’s lawsuit. Trump also faces federal and state criminal charges involving his efforts to undo his 2020 election loss to Joe Biden. The Supreme Court in a July 1 ruling powered by its 6-3 conservative majority granted Trump substantial criminal immunity for actions taken in office. It all but ensured Trump would not face trial in the federal election subversion case before the election. Trump’s lawyers promptly invoked the immunity ruling in a bid to toss the hush money verdict. They said prosecutors improperly relied on social media posts made in 2018 by Trump when he was serving as president that qualified as official communications. The judge in the case said he would rule on Trump’s arguments by September 6. Merchan said that if he upholds the conviction, he would sentence Trump on September 18. A New York state appeals court last week rejected Trump’s challenge to his gag order. The decision by the Appellate Division in Manhattan means Trump, who has called all the criminal cases against him politically motivated, cannot comment publicly about individual prosecutors and others in the case until his sentencing.

Pennsylvania School Bus Driver Former Police Chaplain Faces Child Porn Charges

A school bus driver in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania is facing numerous charges including child pornography, reported WPXI News. The bus driver, identified as Michael Singer, was also a former police chaplain and allegedly sent explicit photos to one of the students he drove to Westinghouse Arts Academy Charter School.Gay porno The investigation reportedly began when the student’s mother told police that her son was being “groomed” by his school bus driver. Police said the inquiry revealed that Singer allegedly exchanged explicit images with the 17-year-old student via a dating app. Police added that Singer admitted to texting the teen but denied knowing he was speaking to the same person on the dating app. The Pittsburgh Bureau of Police told local news reporters that Singer served nominally as a police chaplain but had not been actively involved in with law enforcement for several years. He is no longer permitted to access any Pittsburgh Bureau of Police facility. Singer is facing multiple charges, including possession and dissemination of child pornography, unlawful contact with a minor, and corruption of minors. Related: New York School Bus Driver Caught with Child Pornography

Related: California School Bus Driver Indicted on Federal Child Porn Charges

Related: Pennsylvania Teen Charged as Adult for Stabbing Student on Bus

Related: The Lasting Impact of a Former Pennsylvania School Bus Driver

Porn and music disrupt Dallas County court hearing

During the pandemic, courts across the country, including in Dallas County, began hearing cases via Zoom and other live-streamers. It’s been more than four years now since COVID-19 forced the option, and many courts have continued to offer the medium for some hearings. So you’d think that by now, everyone would have figured out a way to secure an online hearing so that it can’t be disrupted by pranksters.Gay porno Earlier today, I observed a hearing in State District Judge Gena Slaughter’s virtual courtroom that was disrupted several times by people who weren’t media, plaintiffs, defendants, or attorneys. The hearing attracted more than the usual amount of attention. It focused on West Dallas resident Janie Cisneros’ lawsuit that, if she won, would compel the city to take her request to consider shutting down the GAF shingle factory in West Dallas. Slaughter continued to remind people to mute themselves, but that didn’t stop one person from logging in repeatedly to share porn and another (or perhaps the same one considering there were 40 people logged in at one point) from playing music for several seconds before Slaughter was able to kick him or her out. A visibly frustrated Slaughter apologized at the end of the hearing, saying she was “very disappointed” that some had joined only to disrupt. She supports providing the general public better access to court proceedings, she said, because “it’s a very important right.” “Unfortunately, I can’t find a control setting that would allow me to automatically block the video of anybody but the attorneys,” she said. “I’m frustrated.” For what it’s worth, the state’s judicial branch website has some recommendations, including streaming the Zoom hearing to a court YouTube account. This would allow the judge to provide the Zoom details only to the lawyers, witnesses, plaintiffs, and defendants while still providing the public access to the proceedings. Making Dallas an Even Better Place

750 North St.Paul St.

Suite 2100

Dallas, Texas 75201

Tel: 214.939.3636

Fax: 214.748.4579

Women recognize preventions value but still delay health screenings The Washington Post

We use cookies and data to If you choose to “Accept all,” we will also use cookies and data to If you choose to “Reject all,” we will not use cookies for these additional purposes. Non-personalized content is influenced by things like the content you’re currently viewing, activity in your active Search session, and your location.Gay porno Non-personalized ads are influenced by the content you’re currently viewing and your general location. Personalized content and ads can also include more relevant results, recommendations, and tailored ads based on past activity from this browser, like previous Google searches. We also use cookies and data to tailor the experience to be age-appropriate, if relevant. Select “More options” to see additional information, including details about managing your privacy settings. You can also visit g.co/privacytools at any time.

Porn and music disrupt Dallas County court hearing

During the pandemic, courts across the country, including in Dallas County, began hearing cases via Zoom and other live-streamers. It’s been more than four years now since COVID-19 forced the option, and many courts have continued to offer the medium for some hearings. So you’d think that by now, everyone would have figured out a way to secure an online hearing so that it can’t be disrupted by pranksters.Gay porno Earlier today, I observed a hearing in State District Judge Gena Slaughter’s virtual courtroom that was disrupted several times by people who weren’t media, plaintiffs, defendants, or attorneys. The hearing attracted more than the usual amount of attention. It focused on West Dallas resident Janie Cisneros’ lawsuit that, if she won, would compel the city to take her request to consider shutting down the GAF shingle factory in West Dallas. Slaughter continued to remind people to mute themselves, but that didn’t stop one person from logging in repeatedly to share porn and another (or perhaps the same one considering there were 40 people logged in at one point) from playing music for several seconds before Slaughter was able to kick him or her out. A visibly frustrated Slaughter apologized at the end of the hearing, saying she was “very disappointed” that some had joined only to disrupt. She supports providing the general public better access to court proceedings, she said, because “it’s a very important right.” “Unfortunately, I can’t find a control setting that would allow me to automatically block the video of anybody but the attorneys,” she said. “I’m frustrated.” For what it’s worth, the state’s judicial branch website has some recommendations, including streaming the Zoom hearing to a court YouTube account. This would allow the judge to provide the Zoom details only to the lawyers, witnesses, plaintiffs, and defendants while still providing the public access to the proceedings. Making Dallas an Even Better Place

750 North St.Paul St.

Suite 2100

Dallas, Texas 75201

Tel: 214.939.3636

Fax: 214.748.4579