California lawmakers try to address homelessness with new proposed encampment ban

California lawmakers try to address homelessness with new proposed encampment ban
California lawmakers try to address homelessness with new proposed encampment ban
Mario Tama/Getty Images

(SACRAMENTO, Calif.) — A new bill in California aims to ban homeless encampments near “sensitive community areas” statewide.

The bipartisan Senate Bill 1011, introduced earlier this month, would ban people from “sitting, lying, sleeping or storing, using, maintaining or placing personal property upon a street or sidewalk” if a homeless shelter is available.

It also bans people from camping within 500 feet of a public or private school, open space or major transit stop. A violation could result in a misdemeanor or an infraction but, according to the bill’s sponsors, it would be up to local officials to determine how to enforce the misdemeanor violations.

State Sens. Brian Jones, a Republican, and Catherine Blakespear, a Democrat, say the bill is intended to address issues of homelessness in a state with the largest homeless population in the United States.

“What we are trying to do is compassionately clearing encampments near areas that are sensitive to the public and the public needs to have safe access to,” Jones said in an interview with ABC News.

“It is not compassionate for us to have people dying on the streets in front of us and in our public spaces while we walk by them,” Blakespear said in a separate interview with ABC News.

This bill, introduced on Feb. 5, would require law enforcement to give “verbal or written information regarding alternative locations to sleep, homeless and mental health services, or homeless shelters in the area.”

Under the proposed bill, each locality would be expected to have its own policies on what happens to someone’s property when they are moved out of a camping site and those sites are cleaned out, both lawmakers told ABC News.

Some of California’s homeless shelters have been under fire in recent years, mired by allegations from civil rights groups of poor conditions including rodent and bedbug infestations, filthy bathrooms and harassment.

The American Civil Liberties Union accused Orange County shelters in 2019 of “unsafe and unsanitary living conditions,” “discrimination and abuse,” and “deprivation of fundamental rights.”

The County of Orange issued a statement to news outlets, including the LAist, following the report, saying at the time that local officials are “committed to ensuring our emergency shelters are safe for all our clients. Each emergency shelter has its own provider and complaint process. We work to ensure valid complaints are addressed by our service providers in a timely fashion.”

When asked about how shelter conditions would impact the implementation of this program, Blakespear and Jones both pointed to tactics used in San Diego under its Unsafe Camping Ordinance, which the senators say their bill was inspired by. The city of San Diego opened safe camping sites so people could choose to continue to camp in managed, designated areas where they have access to bathrooms, food, water and social workers to help get people back on their feet.

Jones and Blakespear say they hope California cities embrace similar initiatives to support the bill’s goal. However, the creation of safe camping sites is not mentioned in the bill.

“There are lots of reasons people don’t want to be in congregate shelters — concerns about theft, lack of privacy,” Blakespear said. “I think having safe camping, along with safe parking and permanent supportive housing, and also additional emphasis on mental health and substance abuse issues and having more beds available for people there, those are all pieces of the puzzle.”

Jones said safe camping areas can provide better enforcement against harassment and violent interactions, which he said may also occur in unmanaged encampment sites. Both lawmakers said having a steady place for homeless residents to access social services is vital to achieving stability.

“If they’re in the safe camping areas when the social services people come, they know they’re going to be able to interact with that person on a regular and continuous basis,” Jones said.

Homelessness has continued to increase nationwide since 2016, according to federal data. A recent report from the Department of Housing and Urban Development found more than 650,000 people were experiencing homelessness on a single night in January 2023, a 12% increase from 2022.

Roughly 28% of all people experiencing homelessness in the U.S. — 181,399 people — are in California, according to HUD. Roughly 68% of that homeless population is experiencing homelessness outdoors, data shows.

Jones and Blakespear’s proposed bill is not the only homelessness-focused initiative in the works in the state.

Proposition 1 — dubbed “Treatment Not Tents” — has been the subject of debate ahead of the state’s March vote.

The proposition intends to create supportive housing for people with severe mental illness to achieve stability, expand community-based mental health services, support the mental health workforce and prioritize treatment over incarceration, among other goals. However, the distribution of funding on a local level has prompted debate, with some critics arguing it could divert funds from other mental health programs, according to the Secretary of State Voter Guide.

In August 2023, Gov. Gavin Newsom also announced that the state will convert several vacant office buildings in Sacramento into affordable housing to address high housing costs and homelessness in the state.

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COVID patients are 4.3 times more likely to develop chronic fatigue, CDC report finds

COVID patients are 4.3 times more likely to develop chronic fatigue, CDC report finds
COVID patients are 4.3 times more likely to develop chronic fatigue, CDC report finds
SONGPHOL THESAKIT/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — COVID-19 patients are at least four times more likely to develop chronic fatigue than someone who has not had the virus, a new federal study published Wednesday suggests.

Researchers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) looked at electronic health records from the University of Washington of more than 4,500 patients with confirmed COVID-19 between February 2020 and February 2021.

They were followed for a median of 11.4 months and their health data was compared with the data of more than 9,000 non-COVID-19 patients with similar characteristics.

Fatigue developed in 9% of the COVID patients, the team found. Among COVID-19 patients, the rate of new cases of fatigue was 10.2 per 100 person-years and the rate of new cases of chronic fatigue was 1.8 per 100 person-years.

Person-years is a type of measurement that multiplies the number of people in a study and the amount of time each person spends in a study. It is useful for evaluating risk.

Compared with non-COVID-19 patients, those who has tested positive were 68% at risk of fatigue and were 4.3 times more likely to develop chronic fatigue in the follow-up period, the study found.

Fatigue following COVID-19 infection was more common among women, older people and those who had other medical conditions including diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and a history of mood disorders.

There was no strong evidence of racial or ethnic differences when it came to developing fatigue after COVID-19 except a slightly lower incidence among Black patients, results also showed.

Additionally, researchers found that patients with COVID-19 who developed fatigue after the infection had far worse outcomes such as hospitalization or death than patients without fatigue.

Among 434 COVID-19 patients in whom fatigue developed, 25.6% were hospitalized more than one time during the follow-up period compared to 13.6% of 4,155 patients without fatigue who were hospitalized.

What’s more, COVID-19 patients with fatigue were at higher risk of dying. During the follow-up period, 5.3% with fatigue died compared to 2.3% of those without fatigue.

“Our data indicate that COVID-19 is associated with a significant increase in new fatigue diagnoses, and physicians should be aware that fatigue might occur or be newly recognized [more than] one year after acute COVID-19,” the authors of the study wrote. “Future study is needed to better understand the possible association between fatigue and clinical outcomes.”

The authors added that the high rates of fatigue “reinforce the need for public health actions to prevent infections, to provide clinical care to those in need, and to find effective treatments for post–acute COVID-19 fatigue.”

The team said it also hopes that increased awareness of fatigue and other long COVID symptoms helps COVID patients seek early care when needed to reduce their risk.

The results build upon those seen in previous reports including a joint U.S.-U.K. study of electronic health records that found 12.8% of patients received a new fatigue diagnosis within six months of COVID-19 infection.

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California landslide appears to leave 3 multimillion-dollar homes teetering on edge of cliff

California landslide appears to leave 3 multimillion-dollar homes teetering on edge of cliff
California landslide appears to leave 3 multimillion-dollar homes teetering on edge of cliff
Officials are concerned about three homes on Scenic Drive in Dana Point, Calif., that are teetering on the edge of a cliff following multiple rounds of severe storms. CREDIT: KABC

(LOS ANGELES) — Officials in Southern California are concerned about three multimillion-dollar homes teetering on the edge of a cliff following multiple rounds of severe storms that triggered a large landslide.

Three homes on Scenic Drive in Dana Point, California, about 60 miles south of Los Angeles, are seemingly closer to the ridge of the steep cliff after a large chunk of dirt and rock sheared off amid the heavy rains, as shown by drone video taken in the region. The video also shows a pile of rock and dirt that cascaded down the cliffside piled on the beach below.

There is no immediate threat to the properties, officials told ABC Los Angeles station KABC following an inspection. One of the homeowners, who did not wish to be identified, told the station that his home is secure and has not been red-tagged by the city as too dangerous to occupy.

On Feb. 6, evacuations were ordered in Isla Vista in Santa Barbara County after a storm caused cliff erosion. The severe weather caused balconies to collapse on four oceanview apartments, the Santa Barbara Independent reported.

A forecast for even more rain could increase the level of concern for homes in Dana Point. Some coastal California areas could see up to 10 inches of rain in the next week, forecasts show.

Global warming can cause extreme rainfall events to become more frequent and severe, according to climate scientists. Combined with sea level rise, climate change is causing coastal erosion and transforming coastlines all over the world, researchers said.

“So it’s really important that we track these events and understand how our coast is changing over time,” Adam Young, researcher at the University of California, San Diego’s Coastal Processes Group, told ABC News.

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Palestinian families speak out over rise in killings, violence in West Bank

Palestinian families speak out over rise in killings, violence in West Bank
Palestinian families speak out over rise in killings, violence in West Bank
Hafez Abduljabbar speaks with ABC News’ James Longman. CREDIT: ABC News

(NEW YORK) — Tawfic Abdel Jawwad went to spend a year with his family in the West Bank after he finished high school in New Orleans, where he was born and raised.

Tawfic, 17, was enjoying connecting to his roots and spending time with his cousins, the teen’s father, Hafez Abduljabbar, told ABC News.

But now he says his son is a martyr.

Abduljabbar claims Tawfic was driving to a picnic last month with a friend when he was killed on a hillside road in what Abduljabbar called an ambush.

He claimed that eyewitnesses told him, “They shot him and executed him from a very short distance. He didn’t see them. He didn’t see them coming. He didn’t see them hiding. They just came out of the trees and just saw shooting.”

The teen’s death, which is still under investigation, is among the many killings that Palestinians and international groups say are part of the growing violence and threats inflicted by Israeli settlers in the West Bank.

And while the U.S. has recently taken action with sanctions against accused settlers, Palestinians in the area said they are afraid that they are still going to be targeted.

The circumstances of Tawfic’s death remain unclear.

When asked about the incident by ABC News, the Israel Defense Forces said in a statement, “A report of an off-duty police officer and a civilian who shot at a Palestinian, suspected of throwing stones in the area of Mazra a-Sharqiya was received on Friday, January 19, 2024. An off-duty IDF soldier was also present at the point. The Israel Police is reviewing the incident, in which the police investigation unit is cooperating with the military criminal investigation division (CID)”

Abduljabbar rejected the IDF’s claims that Tawfic was throwing stones, contending that his son could not have been throwing rocks while the car was moving. He said that when he went to get his son from the scene, IDF soldiers were there pointing guns at him.

“They scarred my family like that,” Abduljabbar said.

The Israel police have opened what they described as “a comprehensive investigation” into the incident,” and the U.S. State Department said that it hopes and expects “that the investigation will be conducted expeditiously.”

“We are eager to hear and learn of the findings,” the agency said in a statement.

Since Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack, the United Nations has documented more than 500 incidents against Palestinians and violence by settlers has surged.

One of the most serious cases was an attack in the village of Qusra on Oct. 11.

Ibrahim al-Wadi and his son Ahmed had been in a funeral procession for four other Palestinians allegedly killed by armed settlers a day earlier. The father and son were set upon and shot to death in their car, according to witnesses.

The IDF says the incident remains “under review” and is still under “active investigation” by Israeli border police.

Abdel Hafez, al-Wadi’s brother, told ABC News that he was in the procession during the assault and was lost in the commotion following the attack.

“We found our friends there, and my brother and his son martyred, then we moved them. We were with four martyrs then became six,” Hafez said.

He added that the humiliation that came after the deaths has been unbearable for this family.

Video cameras outside Hafez’s home filmed Israeli soldiers tearing down posters that commemorated his brother and nephew.

The IDF would not comment on this specific issue, but said in a statement, “The video sent by ABC shows a soldier taking something off the wall. That is not enough information for the IDF to respond.”

Hafez said he does feel some hope given recent actions by the U.S. in response to the violence.

On Feb. 1, President Joe Biden issued sanctions to four Israeli settlers accused of inciting violence or being involved in attacks on Palestinians. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has criticized the sanctions and defended the settlers.

These initial sanctions are not related to the murders of Tawfic or Ibrahim al-Wadi and his son.

One of the Israelis sanctioned is Yinon Levi, who has been accused by the U.S. of creating an atmosphere of fear in the West Bank.

Levi and other settlers at Meitarim farm have repeatedly attacked Palestinian and Bedouin civilians and threatened them with additional violence if they don’t leave their homes, according to the State Department.

Yinon Levi and his wife Sapir denied the accusations in an interview with ABC News.

“We are here and we have to defend ourselves and nothing more,” Sapir Levi told ABC News’ James Longman.

However, ABC News obtained videos from April 2022 and March 2023 of Yinon Levi with his dog discouraging Arabs and activists from herding sheep in the area. In another video from October 2023, Yinon Levi is seen getting off a bulldozer with a weapon, threatening Arab civilians.

Yinon Levi sent a statement to ABC News in response to the videos, claiming, “This is exactly what I explained. Anarchists come to our territory and do provocations. They disturb the soldiers, they attack us, the dog and the sheep on purpose and document it for provocation.”

When asked if they think their presence in the West Bank would create a hurdle to a two-state solution, Sapir Levi contended that Jews in the country have no choice.

“We all saw what happened when we didn’t have a country. So we don’t have another option. We need to live in this country and we don’t have another place to go,” she said.

However, when told about Tawfic’s murder, Yinon Levi acknowledged that he would be angry, just like the boy’s family, if he were in their situation.

“I don’t know what I would do, but obviously there is anger over such a thing,” he said. “But this is not the reality here.”

 

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Norwegian Cruise Line passengers claim Antarctica voyage was rerouted mid-trip

Norwegian Cruise Line passengers claim Antarctica voyage was rerouted mid-trip
Norwegian Cruise Line passengers claim Antarctica voyage was rerouted mid-trip
David Sacks/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — Antarctica-bound passengers aboard a Norwegian Cruise Line ship claim their course was rerouted mid-voyage to instead travel around South America, nearly 200 miles off course from the destination they say they booked.

The cruise ship was originally slated to travel around South America before heading on to Paradise Bay, Antarctica, but after passengers boarded, one traveler said she noticed the trip description had changed.

According to Helen Midler, the new description read “round-trip of South America” and the itinerary had been altered.

She posted videos about the changes to the TikTok account @ruinedvacation to express her disappointment, garnering millions of views.

“They are not going anywhere near mainland Antarctica, which is what we paid for,” she said in the video.

Other passengers have since taken to social media, sharing their disappointment and frustration in videos posted on TikTok.

“We feel we’re being cheated, being scammed,” one traveler said.

In a statement to ABC News, Norwegian Cruise Line said the ship did go to Antarctica, but instead of heading to Paradise Bay near the mainland, it instead went to Admiralty Bay, off an island more than 200 miles north of the original Antarctic destination.

“While we try to maintain original itineraries as much as possible, at times modifications are made to optimize the itinerary or to accommodate certain circumstances,” the statement from the cruise line said. “In addition, due to a recent regulatory requirement in the area, the ship is operating at a reduced speed, also impacting its original itinerary.”

“It’s been largely a disappointment, in terms of not knowing where we’re going,” passenger Eric Huang told ABC News this week. “I don’t feel like I experienced Antarctica on this cruise. I think I would have to come again to be able to do that.”

This is not the first time a ship has changed its intended course with passengers on board.

In December, passengers aboard the MSC Meraviglia said they thought they were headed to to Ocean Cay in the Bahamas, but 24 hours before departure, they said the destination was switched to Canada.

The cruise line at the time said the change had to happen because storms made it impossible to travel to the Bahamas.

Experts say this serves as a good reminder that no matter where you’re planning to travel on a cruise line, there is no 100% guarantee that’s where you’ll end up.

“We always recommend that passengers read their crews contract carefully,” Cruise Critic Editor-in-Chief Colleen McDaniel told ABC News. “Also, we recommend working with people like travel advisers who can serve as your advocate for you in case something goes wrong.”

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Three DC police officers shot while trying to serve arrest warrant; suspect barricaded, firing shots: Police

Three DC police officers shot while trying to serve arrest warrant; suspect barricaded, firing shots: Police
Three DC police officers shot while trying to serve arrest warrant; suspect barricaded, firing shots: Police
avid_creative/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — Three police officers were shot in Washington, D.C., while trying to serve an arrest warrant at a home Wednesday morning, and the suspect is still barricaded and opening fire, according to D.C. police.

All three officers suffered non-life-threatening gunshot wounds, Police Chief Pamela Smith told reporters. A fourth officer was also injured but was not shot, Smith said.

The incident unfolded around 7:30 a.m. when officers responded to a home to try to serve an arrest warrant for cruelty to animals, Smith said.

Officers tried to make contact with the individual inside the home, but the individual refused to go outside, the chief said. Officers then tried to go inside the home and the suspect then fired at them, Smith said.

The suspect remains barricaded and is continuing to fire shots, Smith said.

It’s not clear if any other people are inside the suspect’s home, she said.

Several schools in the area are on lockdown, according to law enforcement sources.

Agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives have responded to the scene.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

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How one Montana town turned around decades of pollution into new opportunities

How one Montana town turned around decades of pollution into new opportunities
How one Montana town turned around decades of pollution into new opportunities
Eric Yang/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — The Anaconda Smelter Stack has been a towering landmark for the town of Anaconda, Montana, but it was also one of the factors behind the decades of environmental damage that is still being cleaned up.

Standing at over 585 feet tall, the stack was once used as part of the town’s copper processing and spread heavy metals and arsenic over 300 square miles, destroying vegetation and killing animals.

But after more than decades of pollution remediation work by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and other groups, the city has been on the rebound. Greener grass, cleaner homes, and even an 18-hole golf course have popped up in the last couple of years.

“So to have a lot of this vegetation coming back, it’s really, really something neat,” said Charlie Coleman, the former project manager for the EPA’s Anaconda Smelter Remedial project.

And while Coleman and others said Anaconda’s turnaround is a success story that can be replicated across the country, residents in other parts of the state that are dealing with similar pollution fallout say they need more work and resources.

From 1884 to 1981, copper ore processed in Anaconda helped electrify the nation, and made coins, car radiators, air conditioning systems and other machines.

In 1983, two years after the copper plant closed down, the EPA designed the plant a Superfund site after it was determined that the nearby soil and water were polluted with hazardous chemicals.

Coleman worked in tandem with various government agencies, city officials and the mine’s owner, the Atlantic Richfield Company, which is a subsidiary of BP, to remove contaminants from the soil and waterways to acceptable levels.

Among the work done was removing 3 million cubic yards of waste, replanting new vegetation, wetlands and soil, cleaning local rivers and removing toxic dust from attics.

“We’ve cleaned up nearly three-quarters of the community,” Coleman said, adding that work will continue for at least one more year.

Some slate piles could not be moved, so the environmentalists came up with a plan to cover the piles and revegetate on top of them.

The EPA said the clean dirt on top dilutes any lingering containments to acceptable levels, under 400 parts per million.

Anaconda was recently taken off the EPA’s Superfund list.

Bill Everett, the CEO of the Anaconda-Deer Lodge County, told ABC News that the town struggled economically due to the pollution, but the cleanup has now led to a rise in developments, businesses attractions and new residents.

“The community had to scramble, find employment elsewhere, move in other directions, and try to somehow make this an economically stable community. Unfortunately, it wasn’t for 40 years and we’re just now finally starting to recover from that,” Everett said.

Environmentalists said the Anaconda smelter stack spread pollution throughout the area, and residents of nearby Butte, Montana said they’ve been disappointed with the Superfund cleanup effort in their community so far.

Butte was once the site of copper mining and the town sent their ore to Anaconda for processing, however, the operation left mine waste like lead and arsenic all over the community.

“I grew up across the street from mine dump that was called the Yellow Hill,” Butte resident Bill Foley told ABC News. “We’d go play on it and ruin our shoes, now you think about it and it’s crazy that we live like that.”

One of the town’s most contaminated sites is the Berkeley Pit, a colossal hole in the ground that’s flooded with one of the largest bodies of polluted water in the United States.

Cleanup has been going on since the 1980s but residents said the remediation efforts have been slow as the hillsides have many dead zones and there is toxic wastewater in the creek that runs through the middle of town.

Evan Barrett, a Butte resident, told ABC News that he has been frustrated by the EPA’s lead contamination guidelines that state levels must be 1,200 parts per million. Anaconda’s Superfund standards were 400 parts per million, according to Barrett.

“We have three times as much lead in the soil than they do over in Anaconda which makes no sense whatsoever,” he said.

There appears to be some hope as the EPA recently released new national guidance on lead contamination that may lead to a reduction in that 1,200 parts per million standard.

Aaron Urdiales, the director of Superfund and emergency management division for EPA Region Eight, told ABC News that he is aware of Butte residents’ concerns and noted that the data shows a decline in blood lead levels in the town.

“We’ve upped our public engagement. We’re pushing more for transparency within the data. But we do understand the concerns,” he said.

 

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Fugitive who allegedly killed girlfriend in Boston caught in Kenya after escaping custody

Fugitive who allegedly killed girlfriend in Boston caught in Kenya after escaping custody
Fugitive who allegedly killed girlfriend in Boston caught in Kenya after escaping custody
Kali9/Getty Images

(LONDON) — The suspect accused of killing his girlfriend at Boston’s Logan International Airport and fleeing to Kenya was recaptured Tuesday after he escaped custody a week ago, police said.

Kevin Kangethe was caught after they conducted an intelligence-led operation, Kenyan officials said.

Earlier this week, police said they arrested two people they believe helped him escape custody.

In addition to announcing the arrests, Amin Mohammed Ibrahim, chief of Kenya’s Directorate of Criminal Investigations, had said Tuesday that they had made progress in their search for Kangethe.

“It’s unfortunate that after we made laborious efforts to apprehend him that through circumstances yet to be determined Kevin escaped from police custody, Muthaiga police station for that matter,” he said. “But so far so good, we have progressed very well and as of today arrested two people who we suspect facilitated the disappearance of the fugitive,” he said Tuesday.

Authorities offered no further details on the two people who were arrested or how they helped facilitate Kangethe’s escape.

Kangethe was awaiting extradition to the U.S. under suspicion that he killed his girlfriend and left her body in an airport parking garage last November.

“In the fullness of time and very soon, we should be able to apprehend him and also take action against all persons who aided or abetted the escape of Kevin from lawful police custody,” Ibrahim said Tuesday.

Kangethe was being held at Muthaiga police station in Nairobi when he escaped custody on Feb. 7.  

He is facing first-degree murder charges in the death of 31-year-old Margaret Mbitu. Mbitu’s body was found in a vehicle at a parking garage at Boston’s Logan International Airport on Nov. 1, 2023.

Kangethe boarded a plane to Kenya after the alleged murder and was arrested Jan. 30 after a three-month international manhunt.

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Three police officers shot in Washington, DC

Three DC police officers shot while trying to serve arrest warrant; suspect barricaded, firing shots: Police
Three DC police officers shot while trying to serve arrest warrant; suspect barricaded, firing shots: Police
avid_creative/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — Three police officers were shot in Washington, D.C., Wednesday morning with all suffering non-life-threatening injuries, according to D.C. police.

Authorities said the shooting scene “remains active.”

Agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are responding.

Story developing…

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Ukraine says it sank another Russian warship in Black Sea

Ukraine says it sank another Russian warship in Black Sea
Ukraine says it sank another Russian warship in Black Sea
filo/Getty Images

(LONDON) — Ukraine said it “destroyed” another one of Russia’s warships in the Black Sea on Wednesday — a claim not yet confirmed by Moscow.

Ukrainian naval drones struck the Caesar Kunikov landing ship, part of the Russian Navy’s Black Sea Fleet, near the city of Alupka on the southern edge of the Crimean Peninsula that Russia seized and annexed from Ukraine in 2014. The drone strike resulted in “critical holes on the left side” of the ship, causing it to “sink,” according to the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense’s Main Directorate of Intelligence, which released dark, grainy video of the alleged attack.

Ukraine said the Caesar Kunikov can carry 87 crew members and that Russia’s search and rescue operation “was not successful.”

ABC News could not independently verify Ukraine’s claim. The Russian government spokesperson declined to comment on the alleged attack during Wednesday’s press briefing, telling reporters that their questions should be addressed to the Russian military.

It’s the second time in two weeks that Ukraine has alleged to have sunk a Russian warship in the Black Sea. Last week, the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense’s Main Directorate of Intelligence released a video purportedly showing Ukrainian naval drones striking a Russian guided-missile ship named Ivanovets on the night of Jan. 31.

The Ukrainian military has disabled 33% of the Russian Navy’s Black Sea Fleet — 24 ships and one submarine out of a total of 74 combat vessels — since Russia launched a full-scale invasion of neighboring Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022, according to the Strategic Communications Department of the Ukrainian Armed Forces. If Ukraine’s claims are true, the Caesar Kunikov would be the 25th disabled Russian warship.

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