Biden to eulogize late Sen. Bob Dole at Washington National Cathedral funeral

Biden to eulogize late Sen. Bob Dole at Washington National Cathedral funeral
Biden to eulogize late Sen. Bob Dole at Washington National Cathedral funeral
Jonathan Ernst-Pool/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — Former Sen. Bob Dole — decorated World War II veteran, longtime lawmaker and former presidential candidate — will be honored at Washington National Cathedral on Friday before being flown back to his home state of Kansas and laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery.

Dole died Sunday in his sleep at the age of 98.

President Joe Biden will deliver the eulogy at the funeral service, which will air on ABC News and ABC News Live, as well as on video screens at the World War II Memorial on the National Mall in Washington for public viewing.

A handful of former presidents and other dignitaries are also likely to attend the invitation-only service.

Biden, who served with Dole in the Senate for 25 years and has praised the late Kansas lawmaker for wit that crossed party lines, gave formal remarks on Dole’s service to the nation on Thursday at a Capitol ceremony as Dole lay in state — an honor reserved for the most revered American officials.

“My fellow Americans, America has lost one of our greatest patriots,” Biden said, looking to Dole’s wife of 46 years, Elizabeth, who also served in the Senate, and his daughter, Robin, who is expected to speak Friday. “We may follow his wisdom, I hope, and his timeless truth — that the truth of the matter is, as divided as we are, the only way forward for democracy is unity, consensus. The only way.”

Remarks are also expected Friday from former Sen. Pat Roberts, a fellow Kansas Republican, and former Sen. Tom Daschle of South Dakota, whose time serving as the Democratic leader overlapped with Dole’s leadership role.

After the funeral, Dole’s motorcade is scheduled to pause at the World War II Memorial for a ceremony paying tribute to his military service. There, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark A. Milley and actor Tom Hanks are expected to speak about Dole’s life.

His casket will then be flown to Kansas where Dole will be honored at funeral services in his hometown of Russell and at the Capitol in Topeka, where he served in the state legislature for two years before beginning a 36-year career in Congress.

Dole, who nearly died in WWII and was later awarded two Purple Hearts, served as the Senate Republican leader for more than a decade and was instrumental in the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act. He sought the presidency three times, winning the Republican nomination in 1996 before losing to incumbent President Bill Clinton, who later awarded Dole the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Dole announced in February that he had been diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer and was starting treatment.

In a USA Today op-ed Dole finished on pen and paper less than two weeks before his death, he pushed lawmakers to find common ground in difficult times, writing, “Those who suggest that compromise is a sign of weakness misunderstand the fundamental strength of our democracy.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Now-defunct e-cigarette company agrees to pay $50 million for marketing to minors

Now-defunct e-cigarette company agrees to pay  million for marketing to minors
Now-defunct e-cigarette company agrees to pay  million for marketing to minors
Marccophoto/iStock

(NEW YORK) — A now-defunct e-cigarette retailer has agreed to pay $50 million to resolve allegations it marketed and sold vaping products to minors by appealing to their social media preferences, taste for fruit flavors and penchant to listen to influencers.

The settlement agreement was announced Thursday by Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey, whose office accused Eonsmoke of “a coordinated advertising campaign intentionally targeted at consumers who were not of the minimum legal purchase age to purchase tobacco products” — which in Massachusetts is 21.

Eonsmoke directly sold e-cigarette products — including electronic nicotine devices, e-liquids, and nicotine pods — to underage consumers via its website, without conducting any age verification at the time of sale or delivery, the state said.

“Eonsmoke coordinated a campaign that intentionally targeted young people and sold dangerous and addictive vaping products directly to minors through their website,” Healey said in a news release announcing the settlement. “We were the first to take action against this company and its owners, and today we are holding them accountable and permanently stopping them from conducting these illegal practices in our state.”

Eonsmoke shut down in April 2020 amid increased regulatory scrutiny. Its co-owners, Gregory Grishayev and Michael Tolmach, have agreed to pay a combined $750,000 as part of the settlement. If either man wants to sell tobacco products in Massachusetts in the future, they must get authorization from the Food and Drug Administration and give notice to the state attorney general’s office.

Eonsmoke’s products contained some of the highest nicotine concentrations on the commercial market and came in a variety of sweet and fruit flavors.

Healey alleged it directly marketed vaping products to young people through social media sites such as Instagram, Snapchat and YouTube, and included youth popular culture references, social media influencers, celebrity endorsers, cartoons and internet memes that intentionally minimized or omitted the fact that the vaping products contained nicotine.

Between 2015 and 2018, the company did not conduct any age verification of consumers purchasing vaping products from its website, according to the investigation. Until September 2018, when the attorney general’s office sent a cease-and-desist letter ordering Eonsmoke to stop selling its products in Massachusetts, underage youth across the state were able to freely purchase unlimited quantities of vaping products — some of whom were 15.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

‘All options’ on the table as Rhode Island sees rise in COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations

‘All options’ on the table as Rhode Island sees rise in COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations
‘All options’ on the table as Rhode Island sees rise in COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations
Lubo Ivanko/iStock

(NEW YORK) — As COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations rise in Rhode Island, hospitals are strained by staffing shortages and testing turnaround times are delayed, Gov. Dan McKee is urging residents to “take these next six weeks seriously.”

The state has one of the highest COVID-19 infection rates in the country, as the Northeast, including Massachusetts and Connecticut, have seen a surge in cases during colder weather.

Nearly 85% of all Rhode Islanders have gotten at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, according to state data. That includes over 96% of adults. While breakthrough cases have steadily increased in recent weeks, the vast majority of new cases are in unvaccinated people, state data shows. Under 7% of all patients hospitalized for COVID-19 have been fully vaccinated, according to state data.

During a press briefing Thursday, Gov. McKee said the state is considering “all options,” including reinstating an indoor mask mandate, amid the increase in infections, while calling on residents to get vaccinated and receive booster shots.

It’s a message he repeated in a video addressed to Rhode Islanders Wednesday night.

“If we don’t take these next six weeks seriously, we risk all the progress that we’ve made together,” he said.

Officials expected an increase in cases as people gathered more indoors and after Thanksgiving, “but this is something that we need to watch,” he said.

“I want to be clear — all options remain on the table in terms of mitigation strategies, including reinstating an indoor mask,” the governor added.

State leaders “strongly recommend” wearing a mask when in a crowded indoor public space.

Some hospitals and health leaders have voiced support of an indoor mask mandate, as COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations have reached their highest levels since January and February, respectively.

Hospitals statewide have also continued to see staffing shortages due to pandemic burnout, among other factors. McKee said Thursday he is exploring the idea of using FEMA and deploying the National Guard to provide support.

Cases in kids surge

The highest number of cases are in children ages 5 to 18, an age group that is also seeing its highest level of case rates since the pandemic started, the latest state data shows.

“We are seeing increases in COVID-19 cases among children,” the Rhode Island Department of Health said on Facebook this week, while encouraging parents to get their children vaccinated against COVID-19. “Between Halloween and Thanksgiving, the case rate among children age 5 to 9 has doubled, and it has tripled among children age 10 to 14.”

Dr. Allison Brindle, a general pediatrician at Hasbro Children’s Hospital primary care clinic and the president of the Rhode Island chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said she has also seen an increase in cases in the clinic since Halloween.

“We are seeing an uptick in cases in kids because everything is back,” Brindle told ABC News. “We have tools in our toolkit, though, with our two main tools being vaccinations and masking with distancing in order to prevent illness.”

Masks are currently required in the state’s schools under an executive order.

Children tend to have milder cases of COVID-19. Though hospitalization and death are uncommon, more data on the pandemic’s long-term impacts on children’s mental and physical health is needed, according to the AAP. There is also added stress on families when there is a positive case, Brindle said.

“If your child is home from school, then parents are out of work,” she said. “There’s less access to the distance learning strategies than were in place before.”

Addressing testing issues

In addition to masking and vaccination, staying home when sick and getting tested when you have symptoms will be key to limiting transmission, especially during the holidays, Brindle said.

Rhode Island has a “robust state infrastructure” for testing, especially for students, she noted. Though recently testing results have been delayed. Results of PCR tests taken at state-run sites are taking about 72 hours to process, instead of the usual 48-hour window, with some residents reporting even longer wait times.

McKee pointed to increased volume and prioritizing testing in school and nursing home outbreaks as causing delays for the general public.

The state’s health department is exploring additional laboratory capacity and using private labs to help with turnaround times, McKee said Thursday.

“The bottom line is this: Testing turnaround times must get back to where they used to be, and I’ve directed our team to make this a priority,” the governor said.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Flight attendants say they’re nearing breaking point: ‘My job is not to manage you’

Flight attendants say they’re nearing breaking point: ‘My job is not to manage you’
Flight attendants say they’re nearing breaking point: ‘My job is not to manage you’
Mutlu Kurtbas/iStock

(NEW YORK) — A year and a half into the global pandemic, with the Omicron variant lurking and holiday travel looming, many flight attendants say they’ve reached their breaking point with unruly passengers, many of whom still refuse to respect mask mandates.

“My job is not to manage you, the one passenger that constantly needs to be reminded to put their mask on. My job is to manage getting people where they need to go as quickly and safely as possible,” said Mitra Amirzadeh, a low-cost carrier flight attendant and Association of Flight Attendants member.

Dozens of videos over the past year have shown customers assaulting flight attendants, including one in which several passengers had to use duct tape to restrain an unruly man in his seat on a Frontier flight after he caused a disturbance with a flight attendant.

“Since the FAA started keeping track of reports of incidents like this on board, we’ve had more events in 2021 than we’ve had in the entire history of that record keeping in aviation,” Sara Nelson, president of the AFA and a flight attendant for two decades, told ABC News. That record keeping began in 1995.

About 85% of nearly 5,000 U.S. flight attendants said they’ve dealt with an unruly passenger in 2021, and 17% said they’ve been physically assaulted, according to a survey conducted by the AFA-CWA, AFL-CIO.

Since Jan. 1, the Federal Aviation Administration has received at least 5,114 reports of unruly passengers and 3,710 reports of passengers refusing to wear a mask. Out of some 973 investigations, 239 resulted in penalties.

“Air rage has unfortunately become all too common. I’ve lost count of the times I’ve been insulted or threatened on a flight simply for doing my job,” Teddy Andrews, an American Airlines flight attendant, said during testimony before Congress in September. “On this flight, my colleague on the verge of tears came to the galley after a passenger refused to wear a mask and had been giving her a hard time. He said: ‘N-word,’ I don’t have to listen to a damn thing you say, this is a free country.'”

In addition to the ongoing abuse, flight attendants also fear for increased health risks to passengers — and to themselves.

“I don’t think that most passengers recognize that we’re not just waiters and waitresses in the sky. Our primary role is safety,” Andrews said.

In January, the FAA announced a Zero Tolerance Campaign that warned potential on-flight violators they could face fines and/or jail time.

“The truth of the matter is, every day that I go to work I’m putting my life at risk. I’m putting my family’s life at risk,” Amirzadeh added.

In July, the AFA urged the Department of Justice to make the policy permanent, saying that although incidents have “dropped sharply” since the FAA announced the policy “the rate remains too high.”

The politicization of mask-wearing and passengers consuming too much alcohol have created additional dangers, experts told ABC News.

“Inside our airline,” said Paul Hartshorn, national communications chair for the Association of Professional Flight Attendants at American Airlines, “we’ve never seen so many disruption reports on a daily basis. A lot of them due to mask compliance, but a lot of them due to other reasons.”

“What we see going on now on the aircraft is what’s happening in society,” added Andrews, the flight attendant from American. “This play on masks has become so politicized and so polarized, that people are now acting out on the aircraft. We’ve always asked people to comply — we ask you to wear seatbelts, we ask you to stay seated.”

Attorney General Merrick Garland warned U.S. attorneys across the country to be on alert for unruly passengers on airplanes during the holiday season. After Thanksgiving, the FAA issued more than $161,000 in fines to eight passengers accused of alcohol-related in-flight disturbances.

“As airports continue to push alcohol,” Nelson added, “it’s just getting worse and around the holidays, when we have more and more people traveling and more in the spirit of that celebratory vibe.”

Travel volumes are expected to continue reaching or exceeding pre-pandemic levels through December, according to a recent report by the Transportation Security Administration. Those working on planes said they’re expecting full flights.

“The holiday season will be great but not without challenges as the mask mandates will remain in place,” Andrews said. “As the passenger count increases, so might the incidence of air rage.”

“All we want to do,” Andrews added, “is come to work and do our job.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Rick Ross is the most creative after spending time with his mother

Rick Ross is the most creative after spending time with his mother
Rick Ross is the most creative after spending time with his mother
Epic Records

Rick Ross drops his 11th studio album, Richer Than I’ve Ever Been, on Friday, the follow up to his 2019 Port of Miami project. Ricky Rozay says the album name goes beyond having money.

“The title Richer Than I’ve Ever Been is about more than you being at your peak financially,” Ross tells Grammy.com. “In what other areas of your life do you feel the richest right now? Just my direction, going where I need to go. You have to ask yourself, do you feel the best spiritually? Emotionally? A lot of times, we don’t even know what the most important things to us are.”

The Miami MC says he feels the richest, and most creative, after spending time with his mother.

“After I leave my mom’s crib, I’m like, ‘Yo, let’s go forth and get it.’ I don’t want to go to sleep for four days, I want to get in the studio and have some fun and do something special.”

Ross began his recording career in 2006 when he was 30 years old, and he says his maturity was an advantage.

“If I would have become a multimillionaire at a much younger age, I could have been in the studio flirting around with drugs,” he says. 

“I most definitely made mistakes. I still wanted to travel the world. But I wanted to f***ing do something that had never been done before coming from Miami. I wanted to also make sure the music translated that message, that level of success.

“And not just for financial purposes, but to show everybody else — the youngsters — like, ‘Yo, you can do it, too.” Ross continues. “You don’t have to just hit a baseball or slam dunk a ball. You could be creative and make something out of nothing.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Nils Lofgren says making of new Neil Young and Crazy Horse album ‘Barn’ came together as “a beautiful surprise”

Nils Lofgren says making of new Neil Young and Crazy Horse album ‘Barn’ came together as “a beautiful surprise”
Nils Lofgren says making of new Neil Young and Crazy Horse album ‘Barn’ came together as “a beautiful surprise”
Reprise Records

Neil Young and Crazy Horse‘s latest studio album, Barn, got its release today.

As previously reported, the album was recorded this past June in a restored 19th century barn Young owns in the Colorado Rockies. The album is the second Neil has made with Crazy Horse since multi-instrumentalist Nils Lofgren rejoined the band in 2018.

Lofgren, who first played with Crazy Horse during the early 1970s, tells ABC Audio that he hadn’t expected to record a full album when Neil invited the band to Colorado for the sessions.

“[I]n the middle of the pandemic, it was a beautiful surprise,” Nils says, “’cause originally Neil said, ‘Look, I got four songs. Why don’t we at least get together for a week or so and play and be mates, and maybe we can do that two or three times in different locations and get an album.’ So this was extraordinary, ’cause once we got there, he kept writing.”

Lofgren says after “about a week,” Young had penned nine songs.

As Nils recalls, “[T]hen Neil said, ‘Look, I think we’re almost done with an album…so let me write a song tonight…Tomorrow we’re gonna record the 10th song. We’re gonna have an album.'”

Playing with Young on and off for over 50 years, Lofgren says he’s gotten accustomed to how fast Neil records.

“As usual…a lot of the takes were while we were learning the song,” he notes. “And usually, when he gets a great vocal that captures the lyric, that’s it.

Barn is available on CD, vinyl, cassette and digital formats, and as a deluxe box set featuring a CD, a vinyl LP, and a Blu-ray disc that includes a film capturing the making of the album directed by Neil’s wife, actress Daryl Hannah.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Miley Cyrus reveals she and Pete Davidson have matching tattoos

Miley Cyrus reveals she and Pete Davidson have matching tattoos
Miley Cyrus reveals she and Pete Davidson have matching tattoos
Miley Cyrus reveals she and Pete Davidson have matching tattoos

Miley Cyrus appeared on Thursday’s The Tonight Show with her Miley’s New Year’s Eve co-host Pete Davidson, and revealed they’ve been close friends for years — so close, they even have matching “We Babies” tattoos.

Miley and Davidson tell host Jimmy Fallon, it was a snap decision they made after appearing in a Saturday Night Live sketch together.

“We made this SNL sketch where we were babies that were rapping — trap babies,” he began.

“And at the end of it all,” Miley continued, “Our excuse for it all, you know, Larry David said, “What is going on?’ and we said, ‘We babies.’ And for some reason looked at each other and it was like, that’s a great tattoo.”

However, only Miley still has the tattoo, now that Pete has been having most of his ink removed.

The two were on The Tonight Show to promote Miley’s upcoming NBC New Year’s Eve show, which provided the perfect opportunity for her and Davidson to work together.

“I know what I bring to the table. It’s musicianship. And [Pete] the funniest, coolest, hunkiest guy in the world,” she joked.

One thing you won’t see Miley do is brave the cold in New York’s Times Square.

“I don’t like to be cold…And so, that was one of the things I thought all these other shows, people are going to have on big coats everyone is going to be shaking and freezing,” says Miley, adding, “I’m going to have no clothes on per usual. He’ll be funny and I’ll be naked and together, we got a a show.”

Miley closed the show with a tongue-in-cheek cover of “It Should’ve Been Me,” in which she teased Davidson about his rumored relationship with Kim Kardashian.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Rita Moreno was an “invaluable asset” in making ‘West Side Story,’ says Steven Spielberg

Rita Moreno was an “invaluable asset” in making ‘West Side Story,’ says Steven Spielberg
Rita Moreno was an “invaluable asset” in making ‘West Side Story,’ says Steven Spielberg
20th Century Studios/Nico Tavernese

West Side Story dances into theaters this Friday and director Steven Spielberg credits the “invaluable” Rita Moreno for making the movie what it is.

“She was an invaluable asset to our entire production and she kept a kind of moral compass for us and continued to give us purpose,” the esteemed director told ABC News. 

“Why are we telling the story again? Because the power of the story needs to be told to a generation who perhaps have never heard of West Side Story. That was another reason I wanted to bring this movie out now,” the 74-year-old director added.

The musical, inspired by William Shakespeare‘s Romeo and Juliet, is set in New York City and follows the story of Tony and Maria — two star-crossed lovers with ties to rival gangs that are fighting for control over their Upper West Side neighborhood.  The musical tackles themes of violence, racism and sexual assault.

Ansel Elgort, who stars as Tony in West Side Story, says the groundbreaking film earned a seal of approval from the late, legendary composer Stephen Sondheim.

“Sondheim was able to see it before he passed and he loved it,” the 27-year-old actor revealed. “It’s so sad that he’s gone, but what a legend and how great to be able to celebrate him at this time with this great piece of work.”

Rachel Zegler stars as Maria and some critics predict her performance could score an Oscar nod for Best Actress.  She credits her “old soul” for helping her dive into character and, when discussing her “technique,” she says her talent was born from being “raised on classic films” such as “All About Eve and George Cukor‘s The Women.” 

West Side Story bows in theaters Friday, December 10.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Scoreboard roundup — 12/9/21

Scoreboard roundup — 12/9/21
Scoreboard roundup — 12/9/21
iStock

(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Thursday’s sports events:

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
Utah 118, Philadelphia 96
Memphis 108, L.A. Lakers 95
San Antonio 123, Denver 111

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
Chicago 2, Montreal 0
Tampa Bay 5, Toronto 3
Anaheim 2, Columbus 1 (SO)
Nashville 4, NY Islanders 3
St. Louis 6, Detroit 2
Carolina 2, Calgary 1 (OT)
Boston 3, Edmonton 2
Winnipeg 3, Seattle 0
Minnesota 5, San Jose 2
Los Angeles 4, Dallas 0

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Minnesota 36, Pittsburgh 28

TOP-25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Rutgers 70, Purdue 68
Gonzaga 80, Merrimack 55
Seton Hall 64, Texas 60
Iowa St. 73, Iowa 53

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Last hospitalized Michigan school shooting victim leaves ICU

Last hospitalized Michigan school shooting victim leaves ICU
Last hospitalized Michigan school shooting victim leaves ICU
Emily Elconin/Getty Images

(OXFORD, Mich.) — More than a week after the mass shooting at Oxford High School in Michigan, the last remaining hospitalized victim has left the intensive care unit, authorities said Thursday.

The hospitalized student is one of 11 people who were shot, four fatally, at the school on Nov. 30. She has been moved to a “standard room” at St. Joseph Mercy Oakland Hospital, according to Oakland County Undersheriff Mike McCabe. The 17-year-old student, who has not been identified, is expected to remain hospitalized for another four to six weeks during her rehabilitation, McCabe said in a statement.

Six students and a teacher were among those wounded in the shooting. Four students were killed in what prosecutors allege was a premeditated attack.

The suspected shooter, 15-year-old Ethan Crumbley, a sophomore at the high school, faces multiple charges, including four counts of first-degree murder and seven counts of assault with intent to murder, after allegedly pulling a semiautomatic handgun out of his backpack and firing it in the school’s hallway. His parents, James and Jennifer Crumbley, have also each been charged with four counts of involuntary manslaughter in connection with the shooting. All three have pleaded not guilty to their charges.

On Thursday, the family of two students at the school, including one shot during the attack, filed a $100 million lawsuit against the Oxford Community School District and various school employees, alleging they enabled the suspected shooter in the days and hours before the shooting.

Riley Franz, a 17-year-old senior, was struck in the neck, while her sister, Bella Franz, a 14-year-old freshman, stood next to her and “narrowly escaped the bullets discharged toward her, her sister and her friends,” according to the complaint filed in Detroit federal court on behalf of the sisters.

“We’re going to hold people responsible for betraying the trust we put in them to protect our children,” the family’s attorney, Geoffrey Fieger, said during a press event announcing the lawsuit Thursday. “We’re going to hold every one of them responsible.”

The suit charges that Oxford Community Schools downplayed social media threats allegedly made by Crumbley prior to the shooting, including “countdowns and threats of bodily harm, including death … warning of violent tendencies and murderous ideology prior to actually coming to school with the handgun and ammunition to perpetuate the slaughter,” the complaint stated.

It also alleges school staff acted recklessly by letting him return to class after a meeting with his parents over violent drawings just hours before students were gunned down.

The district is not commenting on the allegations in the lawsuit at the request of the prosecutor to “avoid compromising” the court proceedings, according to a letter its attorney, Timothy Mullins, sent to Fieger on Thursday. “Furthermore, to allow the entire community the ability to heal, I have no intention of litigating this matter in the media,” Mullins wrote.

School leaders have said Crumbley’s parents refused to take him home after the meeting, and because he lacked a disciplinary record, they sent him back to class.

Oakland County Prosecutor Karen McDonald, who brought charges against the suspected shooter and his parents, said she has not ruled out charging school officials.

In a letter to the school community Wednesday, Oxford Community Schools Superintendent Tim Throne said the district has been “fully cooperative” with the county investigation into the school shooting.

He has also called for a third-party investigation into all of Crumbley’s communication with students and staff leading up to the shooting. In his letter Wednesday, he noted he would recommend to the district school board “a review of our entire system.”

The district plans to welcome students, except for high schoolers, back to the classroom Friday for the first time since the deadly shooting. The half-day is part of a “safe, slow and soft re-opening,” and students will be greeted by an increased law enforcement presence, therapy dogs and trauma specialists, Throne said in a letter to families on Thursday.

Backpacks will not be allowed in buildings through at least the end of the next week, the superintendent added.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.