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Daily Archives: February 2, 2021
Covid live updates: U.S. cases and hospitalizations drop; Mexico close to approving Russian vaccine – CNBC
Posted: February 2, 2021 at 7:35 pm
Honeywell CEO explains how a walk led to a mass Covid vaccination site in North Carolina
The idea for the three-day mass vaccination event held this past weekend at Bank of America Stadium was hatched on a walk among friends, according toHoneywell InternationalCEO Darius Adamczyk.
It just so happened Adamcyzk was joined by Carolina Panthers PresidentTom Glickand Atrium Health CEOGene Wood on the stroll. "In the Covid era, one of the social things you can still kind of do is go for walks outside with some of your friends, Adamcyzk said on "Squawk Box," explaining the men live in the same neighborhood.
They were discussing the slower-than-expected start to Covid vaccinations in the U.S. when they realized their respective organizations might be able to do something about it, Adamcyzk recalled. "We said, 'You know, maybe we could help here. Maybe we could partner as a team.'"
More than 20,000 people were ultimately vaccinated from Friday to Sunday at the football stadium, he said. "We did this in the course of three days Friday, Saturday, Sunday," Adamcyzk added. "Twelve hours a day, 20,000 people. Think about if we could do that, set up 50 or 100 of these kinds of sites across the country."
Kevin Stankiewicz
Tedros Ghebreyesus, director general of the World Health Organization, raised the alarm on how weak cooperation between countries could hinder the global recovery from the coronavirus pandemic.
In a post published by the Foreign Policy magazine, Tedros wrote: "Despite the growing number of vaccine options, current manufacturing capacity meets only a fraction of global need. Vaccines are the best chance of bringing this pandemic under controlunless leaders succumb to vaccine nationalism."
"International collaboration among scientists was critical to vaccine development, but now weak cooperation between nations is a major barrier to achieving worldwide vaccination at the scale needed to end the pandemic," he added.
Several countries, including the U.S., have been struggling to roll out the different Covid-19 vaccines amid amid limited supplies and logistical issues.
Fred Imbert
A medical worker prepares a syringe during vaccination with the Gam-COVID-Vak (Sputnik V) vaccine against COVID-19 at Sochi's City Hospital No 4.
Dmitry Feoktistov | TASS | Getty Images
Mexico is nearing approval for the Russian Covid-19 vaccine Sputnik V after the results of an advanced study were published early in The Lancet, Mexican officials said, according to a report by Associated Press.
The Mexican government's pandemic spokesperson, Assistant Health Secretary Hugo Lopez-Gatell said the health ministry signed a contract Monday to receive 400,000 doses of Sputnik V this month, according to the report.
Once the Russian vaccine is approved, it will be the third to receive emergency approval in Mexico after prior emergency approvals of Pfizer and AstraZeneca vaccines, the Associated Press reported.
A dozen countries have already approved Sputnik V for use.
Rich Mendez
National Football League fans convene in downtown Tampa ahead of Super Bowl LV during the COVID-19 pandemic on January 30, 2021 in Tampa, Florida.
Octavio Jones | Getty Images
No NFL players tested positive for the coronavirus in the league's latest round of testing leading up to Super Bowl LV set for Sunday between the Kansas City Chiefs and Tampa Bay Buccaneers Reuters reported.
In total, 2,567 tests were administered to 152 players and 278 team personnel in the latest round of tests, according to the report. The League releases results weekly and tests frequently, especially when there are doubts about safety.
According to the NFL Network, two players on the Kansas City Chiefs, receiver Demarcus Robinson and center Daniel Kilgore, were put on the reserve list after having close contact with a barber that recently tested positive for the coronavirus. Both players were masked during the interaction, the League said, according to the report.
Rich Mendez
The United States will begin shipping Covid-19 vaccine doses directly to retail drugstores on Feb. 11 as it looks to expand access to the life-saving shots nationwide, the Biden administration's Covid-19 response team said.
The federal program, which is separate from its partnership with CVS and Walgreens to vaccinate long-term care residents, will start with 6,500 stores nationwide, White House Covid response coordinator Jeff Zients said at a press briefing.
The U.S. is also increasing its weekly shipments of vaccine doses to states by 5%, he said. That means the federal government will now send a minimum of 10.5 million doses per week for the next three weeks across the U.S.
The administration has allocated 1 million doses to pharmacies in addition to the 10.5 million it has set aside for states, tribes and U.S. territories beginning next week, Zients said.
Noah Higgins-Dunn
The United States appears to be turning a corner on the Covid-19 pandemic as cases and hospitalizations rapidly fall across the country, but that progress could be thwarted by more contagious strains that have quickly taken hold in other parts of the world.
The seven-day average of daily new cases in the U.S. is down 41% from its peak last month and the number of people hospitalized with Covid-19 is down 29% from the peak.
But epidemiologists warn that the U.S. is at a dangerous point in the pandemic. They expressed concern that the declining numbers could lull the country into a sense of complacency when more caution than ever is needed. And while the numbers are off their peaks, the level of infection remains so high in most of the country that the loosening of restrictions as well as the spread of more contagious variants could still undo the country's progress, they say.
"There seems to be already a tendency, including in my own community, to start opening things up again, letting the bar stay open later and that sort of thing," Dr. Bill Schaffner, an epidemiologist at Vanderbilt University, said in a phone interview. "I'm worried about that because I thought we'd learned that lesson. As soon as you do that, cases start to go up again."
Will Feuer
Democrats will push forward on passing a $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill without any Republican support.
Congress is set to take the first votes Tuesday toward passing a budget resolution, which allows lawmakers to use the reconciliation process. Through it, Democrats could pass an aid package with a simple majority vote in the Senate.
The party hopes to pass the budget resolution this week. It instructs committees to draft policies including $1,400 direct payments, a $400 per week unemployment benefit through September, state and local government relief and rental and mortgage assistance.
In announcing the Senate would move ahead with the budget measure, Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said "time is a luxury our country does not have." He said he still hoped Republicans would join Democrats in passing a bill, a day after 10 GOP senators met with President Joe Biden about relief efforts.
Those Republicans put forward an aid proposal about a third of the size of the Democrats' plan.
Jacob Pramuk
99-year-old war veteran Captain Tom Moore at his home in Marston Moretaine, Bedfordshire, April 16, 2020, after he achieved his goal of 100 laps of his garden - raising more than 12 million pounds for the NHS.
Joe Giddens | PA Images | Getty Images
Capt. Sir Tom Moore, who became a universally loved hero for his fundraising efforts during the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, has died, his family said in a statement.
The 100-year-old recently suffered from pneumonia and was diagnosed with Covid-19 last week, his family said. The World War II veteran raised $53 million for the U.K.'s National Health Service by walking laps in his garden last year, according to Reuters.
"The care our father received from the NHS and carers over the last few weeks and years of his life has been extraordinary," his family said in a statement. "They have been unfalteringly professional, kind and compassionate and have given us many more years with him than we ever would have imagined."
Rich Mendez
Former U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang stands with his family at an event announcing his candidacy for New York City Mayor in upper Manhattan in New York City, January 14, 2021.
Mike Segar | Reuters
Andrew Yang, the former Democratic presidential candidate who is now running for New York City mayor, said he's tested positive for Covid-19 and is in quarantine.
"I am experiencing mild symptoms, but am otherwise feeling well and in good spirits," Yang said in a statement. Yang said he tested negative for the virus over the weekend but then tested positive Tuesday through a rapid test.
Yang said that his campaign team, who are subject to weekly testing if they attend in-person activities, have started tracing all of his close contacts. He will continue to attend virtual campaign events.
Noah Higgins-Dunn
Russia's Sputnik V vaccine was 91.6% effective in preventing the spread of Covid-19, according to a peer-reviewed phase 3 clinical trial published in The Lancet international medical journal, according to a report by Reuters.
"The development of the Sputnik V vaccine has been criticized for unseemly haste, corner-cutting, and an absence of transparency," Professor Ian Jones of the University of Reading and Professor Polly Roy, of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine told The Lancet.
"But the outcome reported here is clear and the scientific principle of vaccination is demonstrated," said the scientists, who were not involved in the study, according to Reuters. "Another vaccine can now join the fight to reduce the incidence of Covid-19."
Terri Cullen
UPS CEO Carol Tome stands with workers
Source: UPS
UPS reported better-than-expected revenue and profits over the busy holiday season, reflecting a boom in online shopping amid the Covid-19 pandemic. Shares of the company rose roughly 4% following its earnings report.
Revenue for the Atlanta-based logistics and delivery company rose 21% to $24.9 billion during the fourth quarter ended Dec. 31. Its domestic package division saw a 17.4% increase in year-over-year revenue as its network filled to the brink with deliveries from online retailers.
"Looking at the fourth quarter, our results were strong and considerably better than we expected," CEO Carol Tome said on the company's earnings call following the report. "This is the highest quarterly operating profit in the company's history, with record profit produced in each segment."
Noah Higgins-Dunn
Flor Rodriguez (L), 72, of Nevada, receives a Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccination from Southern Nevada Health District nurse Daliah Rubio at Jerome Mack Middle School on January 29, 2021 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Ethan Miller | Getty Images
Pfizer plans to deliver 200 million doses of its Covid-19 vaccine to the U.S. by May, earlier than its initial forecast of July, according to slides published by the company.
The company, also said it can potentially deliver 2 billion doses globally by the end of this year now that health-care providers can extract an additional sixth dose of the vaccine from the vials.
Pfizer, like other Covid vaccine makers, has been struggling to meet the demand for shots that hopefully will help bring an end to the pandemic. It recently enlisted the help of French drugmakerSanofito help produce 100 million doses of its vaccine.
In the slides published, Pfizer also said patients will "likely need to boost regularly to maintain immune response and to counter emerging variant strains."
Berkeley Lovelace Jr.
Concerns that coronavirus mutations could render available vaccines less effective were justified after the mutation "of most concern" occurred spontaneously in the U.K. variant, Reuters reports, citing a professor of outbreak medicine who is part of a panel that advises the British government.
The U.K. variant's mutation, known as E484K, has also been seen in the South African and Brazilian variants, according to Reuters. Studies have found that vaccines and antibody therapy are less effective against the South African variant.
Initially, early studies showed that vaccines worked just as well against the U.K. variant, called B.1.1.7, prior to the E484K mutation, the wire service reported.
"The mutation of most concern, which we call E484K, has also occurred spontaneously in the new Kent strain in parts of the country too," Calum Semple, a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies, told BBC radio.
Terri Cullen
BP reported its first full-year loss in a decade while Exxon Mobilposted its fourth-straight quarter of losses as business restrictions imposed for the ongoing pandemic drove oil and gas prices lower.
BP's fourth-quarter profit of $115million missed analyst expectations of $285.5 million and the U.K.-based oil and gas company warned the pandemic would continue to impact its performance, CNBC's Sam Meredith reports.
Exxon's fourth-quarter loss was $20.1 billion on revenue of $46.54 billion. The company earned 3 cents a share, excluding items, which was ahead of the 1 cent profit expected by analysts surveyed by Refinitiv, but revenue fell short of the Street consensus for $48.76 billion, CNBC's Pippa Stevens reported.
Melodie Warner
A Sun Tran employee offers free masks to passengers to prevent the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), at the downtown bus station in Tucson, Arizona, U.S., June 20, 2020.
Cheney Orr | Reuters
The Biden administration's mask mandate for transportation took effect just before midnight Tuesday, requiring travelers on planes, trains, ferries and other modes of transportation to wear a face covering.
U.S. airlines have required travelers to wear masks on board since last spring, but workers have urged federal mask requirements to give more weight to the rule. The Trump administration recommended masks but stopped short of mandating them. Airlines have banned more than 2,000 people for refusing to wear masks on board.
"We recently got good news when President Biden signed an executive order mandating face masks across interstate travel, including airports and aircraft," Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian told employees on Monday. "This adds a layer of protection for our people who have been integral in enforcing our mask policy. To date, we've banned approximately 950 people for failing to comply with the mask requirement."
The Transportation Security Administration, one of the agencies that will enforce the rule, says travelers who fail to comply could face civil penalties.
Leslie Josephs
Global corporate travel spending fell by more than 50% last year to $694 billion as the coronavirus pandemic ended a decade of growth, a trade group estimates. It could take until 2025 to recover.
Business travel spending will likely increase by 21% this year, most of it at the end of the year as more people are vaccinated, estimates the Global Business Travel Association, whose members include airlines, hotel chains, travel agents and others.
While the group expects travel spending to grow, it will be at a slow pace. After China, the U.S. is the second-biggest corporate travel market. It was hard hit by the pandemic, with travel spending falling an estimated 61% to $121.7 billion last year. "A coordinated vaccination campaign across the US and North America will of course be paramount to ensuring a rapid return to pre-pandemic economic activity," the GBTA said in its forecast.
Leslie Josephs
Empty vials of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine are seen at a first come first serve drive-thru vaccination site operated by the Lake County Health Department on January 28, 2021 in Groveland, Florida.
Paul Hennessy | NurPhoto | Getty Images
Pfizer expects to sell about $15 billion in Covid-19 vaccine doses this year.
The company, which is making its vaccine with German partner BioNTech, also forecast total revenue between $59.4 and $61.4 billion this year.
Pfizer, like other Covid vaccine makers, has been struggling to meet the demand for shots that will help bring an end to the pandemic. Pfizer has said it expects to deliver 200 million doses of its two-shot vaccine to the U.S. by July 31. It recently enlisted the help of French drugmaker Sanofi to help produce doses.
Berkeley Lovelace Jr.
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Coronavirus tally: Global cases of COVID-19 top 103.4 million and U.S. vaccinations top case tally – MarketWatch
Posted: at 7:35 pm
The global tally for confirmed cases of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 climbed above 103.4 million on Tuesday, according to data aggregated by Johns Hopkins University, while the death toll rose above 2.24 million. The U.S. has the highest case tally in the world at 26.3 million and the highest death toll at 443,365, or about a fifth of the global total. The U.S. added at least 139,293 new cases on Monday, according to a New York Times tracker , and counted at least 1,990 deaths. Case numbers have been declining, however. The U.S. averaged 146,409 new cases a day in the past week, down 29% from the average two weeks ago. Hospitalizations have also been falling, according to the COVID Tracking Project. There were 93,536 COVID-19 patients in U.S. hospitals on Monday, down from 95,013 a day earlier and the lowest level since Nov. 29. The CDC's vaccine tracker is showing that as of 6.00 a.m. ET Monday, 32.2 million doses had been administered so far, which is more than the confirmed case tally. So far, 49.9 million doses have been delivered to states.Brazil has the second highest death toll at 225,099 and is third by cases at 9.2 million. India is second worldwide in cases with 10.8 million, and now fourth in deaths at 154,486, after being surpassed by Mexico late last week. Mexico has the third highest death toll at 159,100 and 13th highest case tally at 1.9 million. The U.K. has 3.8 million cases and 106,774 deaths, the highest in Europe and fifth highest in the world.
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Coronavirus in Georgia | Another above-average day for deaths – 11Alive.com WXIA
Posted: at 7:35 pm
Here's the latest COVID-19 case, death and hospitalization data from the state.
ATLANTA We're breaking down the trends and relaying information from across the state of Georgia as it comes in, bringing perspective to the data and context to the trends.
Visit the 11Alive coronavirus page for comprehensive coverage, find out what you need to know about Georgia specifically, learn more about the symptoms, and keep tabs on the cases around the world.
State and federal officials with the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) are continually monitoring the spread of the virus. They are also working hand-in-hand with the World Health Organization to track the spread around the world and to stop it.
Appling 1704 50
Atkinson 741 14
Baldwin 3507 91
Bartow 9088 155
Ben Hill 1429 50
Bleckley 753 32
Brantley 804 22
Bulloch 4621 46
Carroll 6503 112
Catoosa 4530 50
Charlton 976 15
Chatham 16638 296
Chattahoochee 2444 3
Chattooga 1962 53
Cherokee 18159 201
Clarke 11194 92
Clayton 18020 299
Coffee 3989 102
Colquitt 3055 56
Columbia 9749 119
Coweta 7196 112
Crawford 468 10
DeKalb 47298 619
Decatur 1986 47
Dougherty 4994 243
Douglas 9720 129
Effingham 3147 46
Emanuel 1636 51
Fayette 5202 103
Forsyth 14391 110
Franklin 2133 29
Fulton 68705 904
Gwinnett 74367 726
Habersham 4357 119
Haralson 1503 28
Henry 15565 201
Houston 8777 145
Jackson 7467 99
Jeff Davis 1164 33
Jefferson 1444 47
Laurens 3420 127
Liberty 2435 40
Lowndes 6925 115
Lumpkin 2528 43
Madison 2360 28
McDuffie 1460 31
McIntosh 543 10
Meriwether 1280 31
Mitchell 1413 68
Montgomery 670 19
Muscogee 11830 258
Newton 6310 155
Oglethorpe 1038 16
Paulding 8745 131
Pickens 2127 40
Randolph 423 30
Richmond 17142 296
Rockdale 4949 102
Seminole 677 14
Spalding 3324 108
Stephens 2711 66
Taliaferro 91 0
Tattnall 1651 32
Treutlen 576 19
Walton 6751 156
Washington 1493 39
Whitfield 13508 168
Wilkinson 661 21
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Coronavirus in Georgia | Another above-average day for deaths - 11Alive.com WXIA
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Coronavirus Tracker: 97 new COVID-19 deaths reported in the last week in Bexar County – KENS5.com
Posted: at 7:35 pm
Facts, not fear: We're tracking the latest numbers from the coronavirus pandemic in San Antonio and across Texas.
SAN ANTONIO We're tracking the latest numbers from the coronavirus pandemic in San Antonio and across Texas. Here are the latest numbers reported by Bexar and surrounding counties:
More county case information is available through theTexas Department of Health Services COVID-19 dashboard.
How Bexar County is trending
We've tracked how many coronavirus cases have been confirmed in Bexar County from the time officials began reporting cases in March 2020. The graphic below shows the number of cases since June and charts those daily case numbers along a 7-day moving average to provide a more accurate picture of the overall coronavirus case curve in our area and the direction we're trending amid the pandemic.
On Tuesday, San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg reported an additional 1,260 new coronavirus cases in Bexar County. In all, 176,790 Bexar County residents have been diagnosed with the virus, more than 8 percent of the county's population. The county's 7-day moving average rose to 1,510.
Nirenberg also reported 15 new coronavirus-related deaths, raising the county's death toll to 2,167 since the pandemic began.
The number of patients in Bexar County hospitals rose slightly for a second day Tuesday. Five more coronavirus hospitalizations were reported on Tuesday in comparison to Monday, bringing the day's concurrent total to 1,176. 138 patients were admitted in the past day.
399 patients are in intensive care, while 232 patients are on ventilators.
This week's local positivity rate dropped to 11.4 percent, a decrease of 4.5 percentage points over the last week. The county's risk level remains at a severe level.
Coronavirus in Texas
The total number of novel coronavirus cases in the state since the pandemic began grew by 23,047 on Tuesday, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services. That total includes 18,951 new confirmed cases, 3,133 new probable cases, and a backlog of 963. More details can be found on this page.
Monday's figures bring the total number of Texans diagnosed with COVID-19 to more than 2.41 million.
Meanwhile, state health authorities reported another 331 deaths from coronavirus complications in Texas. In all, 36,870 Texans have died from COVID-19.
The number of COVID-19 patients receiving treatment for their symptoms throughout Texas decreased on Tuesday by 72. The concurrent total stands at 11,002.
The state estimates that about 1.993 million Texans have recovered, while 367,152 Texans remain ill with COVID-19.
The latest update from the Texas Education Agency showed that there have been at least 146,963 cumulative cases among staff and students across the state through January 24. That number comprises 93,542 positive student cases and 53,421 staff cases. More information can be found here.
The TEA releases new data on school cases on Fridays.
Latest Coronavirus Headlines
Coronavirus symptoms
The symptoms of coronavirus can be similar to the flu or a bad cold. Symptoms include fever or chills, cough, shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, fatigue, muscle or body aches, headache, new loss of taste or smell sore throat, congestion or runny nose, nausea or vomiting, and diarrhea, according to the Centers for Disease Control.
Most healthy people will have mild symptoms. A study of more than 72,000 patients by the Centers for Disease Control in China showed 80 percent of the cases there were mild.
But infections can cause pneumonia, severe acute respiratory syndrome, kidney failure, and even death, according to the World Health Organization. Older people with underlying health conditions are most at risk.
Experts determined there was consistent evidence these conditions increase a person's risk, regardless of age:
The CDC believes symptoms may appear anywhere from two to 14 days after being exposed.
Human coronaviruses are usually spread...
Help stop the spread of coronavirus
Find a Testing Location
City officials recommend getting a COVID-19 test if you experience fever or chills, cough, shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, fatigue, muscle or body aches, headache, new loss of taste or smell, sore throat, congestion or runny nose, nausea or vomiting, or diarrhea.
San Antonio operates several no-cost testing locations, including two walk-up locations open Monday-Sunday from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.:
Cuellar Community Center5626 San Fernando St.San Antonio, TX 78237
Ramirez Community Center1011 Gillette Blvd.San Antonio, TX 78224
Additionally, Freeman Coliseum offers drive-through no-cost testing from Monday through Sunday between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. An appointment is required and can be made either onlineor by calling (833) 213-0643.
Here's a Testing Sites Locatorto help you find the testing location closest to you in San Antonio.
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Coronavirus Tracker: 97 new COVID-19 deaths reported in the last week in Bexar County - KENS5.com
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Coronavirus strain in UK picks up mutation that could impact vaccines, experts say – KMOV.com
Posted: at 7:35 pm
A mutation that could allow Covid-19 to escape antibody protection has now been found in samples of a rapidly spreading strain in the UK, according to a report Monday by Public Health England.
The mutation, called E484K, was already part of the genetic signature of variants linked to South Africa and Brazil.
According to the PHE report, the mutation has been newly detected in at least 11 samples of the UK's B.1.1.7 strain. It also appears some of these samples may have acquired this mutation independently, instead of spreading from a single case.
This could mean a variant already known to be more transmissible also risks becoming somewhat resistant to the immune protection offered by vaccines, or more likely to cause reinfection among people who were previously infected, experts say.
"This doesn't appear to be great news for vaccine efficacy," said Joseph Fauver, associate research scientist in epidemiology at the Yale School of Public Health.
He added the new finding is also something to keep monitoring in the US, where efforts to look for variants through genetic sequencing have lagged behind the UK. The fact that we've only seen this in the UK "may be a result of their robust genomic surveillance program," Fauver said.
Experts say it's too early to predict whether this development will greatly impact the trajectory of Covid-19 in the UK and around the world.
However, there is some research suggesting that E484K may be a key culprit behind why certain vaccines appear less effective in South Africa.
Novavax recently announced its vaccine was 89% effective in its Phase 3 UK trial, but only appeared 60% effective in a separate Phase 2b study conducted in South Africa. Similarly, in Johnson & Johnson's Phase 3 trial, efficacy differed by country: 72% in the US versus 57% in South Africa. In both trials, 90 to 95% of cases in South Africa were linked to the B.1.351 variant, which contains the E484K mutation.
But much of the early evidence on this so-called "escape mutant" comes from research in the lab, showing that antibodies appear less able to bind spike proteins arising from the mutation.
The latest example comes from a new study finding that antibodies from vaccinated people were less effective at neutralizing a synthetic virus resembling those in the PHE report -- meaning, they contained pivotal mutations from B.1.1.7, plus E484K.
Adding the E484K mutation appeared to raise the bar for the level of antibodies needed to prevent the lab-made virus from infecting cells, when compared to B.1.1.7 mutations on their own.
The study sampled blood from 23 people who had received a single dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine three weeks prior, with a median age of 82. The study was not able to demonstrate how this impacted people's actual likelihood of becoming infected with virus variants.
Citing the genomics database GISAID, the study also tallied a slightly higher total of cases than the PHE report: two unrelated cases in Wales and a cluster of more than a dozen in England, appearing as early as the first half of December 2020.
Paul Bieniasz, a virologist at the Rockefeller University, noted that the E484K mutation has "appeared sporadically" in multiple samples for months, but until recently it didn't appear to offer the virus an advantage in populations with no preexisting immunity.
But it's a different story in places like South Africa, where many people had been previously infected. On Monday, Dr. Anthony Fauci noted "a very high rate of reinfection to the point where previous infection does not seem to protect you," citing the work of colleagues in South Africa.
The B.1.1.7 strain first spotted in the UK has now been found in at least 70 countries worldwide, including about 470 known cases in the US, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Experts say that aggressive testing, adhering to Covid-19 guidelines and rapidly rolling out vaccines are more important than ever in light of these spreading variants.
"We need to get as many people vaccinated as quickly as we possibly can," Fauci previously said. "Even though there is a diminished protection against the variants, there's enough protection to prevent you from getting serious disease, including hospitalization and deaths."
CNN's Nina Avramova contributed to this report.
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Coronavirus variant from Brazil found in Bay Area, other U.S. cities – KTLA
Posted: at 7:35 pm
A coronavirus variant from Brazil has been detected in a sample from the Bay Area, underscoring the urgency of ramping up inoculation efforts as researchers try to learn whether it, as well as others circulating in California, could undermine the effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines.
Researchers at Stanfords Clinical Virology Laboratory screened nearly 1,000 specimens during the last two weeks and found one case of the Brazilian variant, P.2, said Dr. Benjamin Pinsky, the laboratorys medical director. They reported the finding to public health authorities on Jan. 25.
The researchers also identified four cases of a variant from the U.K., B.1.1.7, that appears to spread more easily, may be more virulent and is already known to be circulating in California, Pinsky said. And they found that about 29% of the specimens had the L452R mutation, a feature of ahomegrown variant that has been increasingly detected across the stateand may have helped drive the most recent case surge.
Its definitely possible that they already contributed to the humongous surge weve seen over the last six weeks or so, said Dr. Edward Jones-Lopez, an infectious diseases expert at USC. And it could get even worse if these strains are indeed fitter than previous strains and people lower their guard and we are not very logistically efficient in delivering vaccines.
Read the full story on LATimes.com.
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Self-proclaimed Proud Boy from North Texas is latest to be arrested in storming of Capitol – The Dallas Morning News
Posted: at 7:34 pm
A web designer originally from Denton County who is a self-described Proud Boys member has been arrested on charges related to the storming the U.S. Capitol, federal court records show.
Daniel Goodwyn, 32, was arrested on Friday in the Eastern District of Texas, according to federal authorities. He currently lives in San Francisco and was captured on video inside the Capitol building with a mob that forced its way inside on Jan. 6, according to the FBI.
He is at least the tenth North Texan arrested for allegedly taking part in the siege.
Goodwyn is charged with knowingly entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds, according to an FBI warrant affidavit.
An attorney for Goodwyn could not immediately be identified.
While he was inside the Capitol building, Goodwyn was called out as sfthoughtcriminal by Anthime Gionet, a far-right social media personality known as Baked Alaska, the FBI says.
Wearing dark sunglasses and a MAGA hat, Goodwyn approached Gionet and told him to stop doxing him and said his name was Daniel Goodwyn, the affidavit says.
Goodwyn was then directed out of the building by a U.S. Capitol Police officer, the affidavit said. Goodwyn then called the officer an oathbreaker and yelled for people to get the officers badge number as he left.
Gionet was arrested on Jan. 15 in Houston.
The FBI says Goodwyn has claimed to be a member of the Proud Boys, a far-right nationalist group that authorities have said took part in the Capitol insurrection.
The Proud Boys say they are proud to be white and have participated in far-right rallies alongside racist organizations. Critics say they spread an ideology of racism, Islamophobia, misogyny and bigotry. The Southern Poverty Law Center deems them a hate group.
Goodwyn posted about his Proud Boys ties as recently as November, while commenting on the presidential election, the affidavit said.
He was identified for the FBI by an associate who recognized him from Gionets livestream broadcast from inside the Capitol during the riot, authorities say. Agents used Goodwyns drivers license photo to confirm his identity.
The associate messaged Goodwyn on Instagram, saying, My dad said you are Antifa pretending to be Trump supporters, according to the FBI. Goodwyn allegedly responded while at the Capitol, writing, Tell your dad if he doesnt want his guns I can find some folks who will.
Goodwyn later posted on Instagram that, I didnt break or take anything, but I went inside for a couple of minutes, the affidavit says.
Public records show Goodwyn had listed addresses in Corinth and Flower Mound before moving to San Francisco.
Goodwyns Linkedin account describes him as a Web & Mobile App Designer & Developer who worked as a web designer for Jews for Jesus in San Francisco between May 2016 and March 2019.
Most recently, he worked for Stop Hate as a designer and citizen journalist, according to his online rsum. It said his duties include working to raise awareness about the stop hate campaigns and messaging.
Goodwyn says on his personal website that he grew up around computers and that his father is a database administrator. He also said he developed an interest in computer graphics and became adept at animations and web design. Goodwyn also says on Linkedin that he attended City College of San Francisco and Austin Community College.
His Twitter account shows that he believed COVID-19 was fake and the election was stolen from Donald Trump. He tweeted Driving to DC now on Jan. 1.
On Jan. 6, the day of the uprising, he tweeted: They WANT a revolution. Theyre proving our point. They dont represent us. They hate us. He tweeted two days later that his Facebook and Instagram accounts had been disabled.
Another defendant, Katherine Staveley Schwab, surrendered to the U.S. Marshals on Monday in the Northern District of Texas -- on charges of knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; and disorderly conduct on capitol grounds, court records show.
The exact allegations against the Tarrant County real estate agent were unavailable late Monday because the complaint remained sealed.
Schwab flew on a private plane to Washington with Frisco real estate broker Jennifer Ryan to attend the Trump rally, according to published reports.
Ryan, 50, was arrested Jan. 15 and charged in connection with the insurrection. She was released pending trial.
Schwab reportedly bragged on social media about storming the Capitol and raising hell and was later fired from her real estate job, according to a report by Candys Dirt.
Schwab, 32, appeared in federal court in Fort Worth on Monday and was released pending trial in Washington D.C., according to court records. She was placed on home detention and must stay away from the Capitol, records show.
Her attorney could not be reached Monday evening.
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Two members of the Proud Boys face conspiracy charges in US Capitol riot – CNN
Posted: at 7:34 pm
The new indictment against Dominic Pezzola and William Pepe, both of New York, is the first riot-related case to accuse Proud Boys members of working together to attack the Capitol.
But the men are not accused of planning the attack before coming to Washington. They have been charged with conspiring to interfere with police officers defending the Capitol, participating in civil disorder, unlawfully entering restricted grounds and other federal crimes.
Both men were first hit with charges two weeks ago. Prosecutors alleged they had removed metal barricades at the Capitol and that Pezzola had smashed a window using a police officer's riot shield. Footage of the attack shows pro-Trump rioters entering the Capitol through the broken window.
Of the approximately 175 known defendants facing riot-related charges, at least eight are affiliated with the Proud Boys, according to a CNN analysis of court documents. Several of the prosecutors and FBI agents handling these Proud Boys cases are specialists in investigating terrorist groups, violent gangs and other national security matters, according to court filings.
The Justice Department's counterterrorism section, which is part of the national security division, is helping to lead the case against Pezzola and Pepe, according to a news release issued Friday.
In response to the indictment, Pezzola's lawyer Michael Scibetta told CNN that he was "denied contact" with his jailed client, which undercut his ability to mount a "meaningful legal defense."
A lawyer representing Pepe did not immediately respond to emails seeking comment.
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‘Proud Boy’ with local ties charged in storming of US Capitol – The Cross Timbers Gazette
Posted: at 7:34 pm
Date: Tuesday, February 2, 2021
A man with local ties and self-proclaimed member of the Proud Boys was arrested Friday in Corinth on charges related to the Jan. 6 storming of the U.S. Capitol Building.
Daniel Goodwyn, 32, was one of many in an insurrectionist mob made up of ardent supporters of Donald Trump that stormed the Capitol that day, according to a criminal complaint filed against Goodwyn by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. As the U.S. Congress convened to certify the presidential election results, the large crowd forced entry into the building, forcing the Congress members to be evacuated. Several people, including a U.S. Capitol police officer, died during the riot, according to the Associated Press.
Goodwyn was seen and identified in a video that was live-streamed online in which Goodwyn called a police officer an oathbreaker after the officer directed him out of the building. An associate of Goodwyns identified him in the video and also showed the FBI some social media messages and posts by Goodwyn from the Capitol siege. In one post, a message from his account said I didnt break or take anything but I went inside for a couple minutes.
According to the complaint, Goodwyn is a self-proclaimed member of the Proud Boys, a far-right mens organization that received national attention in the first presidential debate when Trump was asked to denounce them and he told them to stand back and stand by.
According to Goodwyns website and LinkedIn pages, he attended Marcus High School in Flower Mound before moving to San Francisco. He was with family in Corinth last week when he was taken into custody and charged with knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority, and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds.
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Our President Wants Us Here: The Mob That Stormed the Capitol – The New York Times
Posted: at 7:34 pm
It was the table setter for what would come, with nearly 2,000 people gathering in Washington on Tuesday evening for a Rally to Save America. Speaker after angry speaker stoked stolen-election conspiracy theories and name-checked sworn enemies: Democrats and weak Republicans, Communists and Satanists.
Still, the crowd seemed a bit giddy at the prospect of helping President Trump reverse the result of the election though at times the language evoked a call to arms. It is time for war, one speaker declared.
As the audience thinned, groups of young men emerged in Kevlar vests and helmets, a number of them holding clubs and knives. Some were aligned with the neofascist Proud Boys; others with the Three Percenters, a far-right militia group.
Were not backing down anymore, said a man with fresh stitches on his head. This is our country.
That night reflected a disconcerting mix of free speech and certain menace; of everyday Americans supporting their president and extremists prepared to commit violence for him. All had assembled in answer to Mr. Trumps repeated appeals to attend a march to the Capitol the next day that he promised would be wild.
It was. By Wednesday afternoon, a narrow group of Trump supporters some exuberant, some hellbent had been storm-tossed together into infamy. A mob overran the nations Capitol, as lawmakers hid in fear. Wholesale vandalism. Tear gas. Gunfire. A woman dead; an officer dead; many injured. Chants of U.S.A.! U.S.A.!
But the insurrection failed.
It had been the culmination of a sustained assault by the president and his enablers on fact-based reality, one that began long before the November election but took on a fevered urgency as the certainty of Mr. Trumps defeat solidified. For years, he had demonized political opponents and the media and egged on thuggish behavior at his rallies.
Since losing to Joseph R. Biden Jr., he had mounted a campaign of lies that the presidency was being stolen from him, and that marching on the Capitol was the last chance to stop it. To many Americans, it looked like one more feel-good rally to salve Mr. Trumps wounded ego, but some of his supporters heard something altogether different a battle cry.
Now, dozens of them have been arrested including an armed Alabama man who had Molotov cocktails in his car and a West Virginia lawmaker charged with illegally entering the Capitol and the Federal Bureau of Investigation is asking for help in identifying those who actively instigated violence. Many participants in the march are frantically working to erase digital evidence of their presence for fear of losing a job or being harassed online.
Mr. Trump, meanwhile, has been broadly condemned and cut off from his social media megaphones, as a new administration prepares to take power.
Kevin Haag, 67, a retired landscaper from North Carolina who ascended the Capitol steps as the crowd surged forward, said he did not go inside and disapproved of those who did. Even so, he said he would never forget the sense of empowerment as he looked down over thousands of protesters. It felt so good, he said, to show people: We are here. See us! Notice us! Pay attention!
Now, back home after several days of reflection, Mr. Haag, an evangelical Christian, wonders whether he went too far. Should I get down on my knees and ask for forgiveness? he said in an interview. I am asking myself that question.
But the experience seemed to have only hardened the resolve of others. Couy Griffin, 47, a Republican county commissioner from New Mexico, spoke of organizing another Capitol rally soon one that could result in blood running out of that building in a video he later posted to the Facebook page of his group, Cowboys for Trump.
At the end of the day, you mark my word, we will plant our flag on the desk of Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer, he said. He paused before adding, And Donald J. Trump if it boils down to it.
The advance publicity for the March for America had been robust. Beyond the repeated promotions in tweets by the president and his allies, the upcoming event was cheered on social media, including Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.
But woven through many of the messages to stand up for Mr. Trump and, if possible, block the congressional certification of the election he claimed he had won was language that flirted with aggression, even violence.
For example, the term Storm the Capitol was mentioned 100,000 times in the 30 days preceding Jan. 6, according to Zignal Labs, a media insights company. Many of these mentions appeared in viral tweet threads that discussed the possible storming of the Capitol and included details on how to enter the building.
To followers of QAnon, the convoluted collection of conspiracy theories that falsely claims the country is dominated by deep-state bureaucrats and Democrats who worship Satan, the word storm had particular resonance. Adherents have often referred to a coming storm, after which Mr. Trump would preside over a new government order.
In online discussions, some QAnon followers and militia groups explored which weapons and tools to bring. Pack a crowbar, read one message posted on Gab, a social media refuge for the far right. In another discussion, someone asked, Does anyone know if the windows on the second floor are reinforced?
Still, the many waves of communication did not appear to result in a broadly organized plan to take action. It is also unclear if any big money or coordinated fund-raising was behind the mobilization, though some Trump supporters appear to have found funds through opaque online networks to help pay for transportation to the rally.
Patriots, if you need financial help getting to DC to support President Trump on January 6th, please go to my website, a QAnon adherent who identified himself as Thad Williams, of Tampa, Fla., posted on Twitter three days before the event. He said he had raised more than $27,000. (After the Capitol assault, the money transfer companies PayPal and Stripe shut down his accounts. Mr. Williams did not return a phone message, but the website for his organization, Joy In Liberty, said it had given out $30,000 to fund transportation for deserving patriots.)
Other rally goers set up fund-raising accounts through the online service GoFundMe; Buzzfeed News cited at least a dozen, and GoFundMe has since closed them.
One of the most conspicuous figures in the Capitol assault a bare-chested man with a painted face, flag-draped spear and fur hat with horns was linked to the online fund-raising. A familiar presence at pro-Trump rallies in Phoenix, Jacob Anthony Chansley, a 33-year-old voice-over actor, is known as the Q Shaman. He started a GoFundMe account in December to help pay for transportation to another Trump demonstration in Washington, but the effort reportedly netted him just $10. Mr. Chansley retweeted Mr. Williamss funding offer on Jan. 3, but it is unclear whether he benefited from it.
On Tuesday, the eve of the march, a couple thousand people gathered at Freedom Plaza in Washington for The Rally to Save America event, permitted as The Rally to Revival. The disparate interests of those attending were reflected by the speakers: well-known evangelists, alt-right celebrities (Alex Jones of Infowars) and Trump loyalists, including his former national security adviser Michael Flynn and the self-described Republican dirty trickster Roger Stone, both of whom he had pardoned.
The speakers repeatedly encouraged the attendees to see themselves as foot soldiers fighting to save the country. Americans, Mr. Flynn said, were ready to bleed for freedom.
The members of the House of Representatives, the members of the United States Senate, those of you who are feeling weak tonight, those of you that dont have the moral fiber in your body, get some tonight, he said. Because tomorrow, we the people are going to be here and we want you to know we will not stand for a lie.
Then came tomorrow.
It was President Trumps turn. At about noon on Wednesday, he emerged from a viewing party in a tent, strode onto a stage set up in a park just south of the White House and, for more than an hour, delivered a stream of inflammatory words.
He exhorted the crowd of more than 8,000 to march to the Capitol to pressure lawmakers: Because youll never take back our country with weakness. You have to show strength and you have to be strong.
Even before he had finished speaking, people started moving east toward the Capitol. The crowd included supporters who had come by caravan from across the country, Trump flags rippling in the wind, as well as people so moved by the presidents appeal for support that they had jumped into their cars and driven for hours.
They traveled from various corners of resentment in 21st-century America. Whether motivated by a sense of economic disenfranchisement or distrust of government, by bigotry, or conspiracy or a belief that Mr. Trump is Gods way of preparing for the Rapture, they shared a fealty to the president.
Now the moment had come, a moment that twinned the thrilling with the ominous.
Im happy, sad, afraid, excited, said Scott Cyganiewicz, 56, a floor installer from Gardner, Mass., as he watched the throngs of Trump loyalists streaming through the streets. Its an emotional roller coaster.
Mr. Cyganiewicz said he was on his way out of town. He did not want to be around if violence broke out. Only a portion of the broader crowd continued onto the Capitol grounds.
Soon word spread that Vice President Mike Pence who would oversee the pro forma count by Congress of the electoral votes for certification had announced he would not be complicit in the presidents efforts to overturn the election.
You can imagine the emotion that ran through people when we get that word, said Mr. Griffin, the county commissioner from New Mexico, in a video he posted on social media. And then we get down to the Capitol and they have all the inauguration set up for Joe Biden.
He added, What do you think was going to happen?
Many in the crowd spoke portentously of violence or even of another Civil War. A man named Jeff, who said he was an off-duty police officer from York County, Pa., said he didnt know what would happen after he and his wife Amy reached the Capitol. But he felt ready to participate if something were to erupt.
Theres a lot of people here willing to take orders, he said. If the orders are given, the people will rise up.
By the time the bulk of the crowd reached the building, its leading edge had metastasized into an angry mob. A man barked into a megaphone: Keep moving forward! Fight for Trump, fight for Trump!
Military Tribunals! Hang them! shouted someone wearing a cowboy hat.
Arrest Congress! screamed a woman in a flag scarf.
People surged past a few Capitol Police officers to bang on the windows and doors. Many eyewitness accounts and videos have since emerged that convey the pandemonium as hundreds of people overwhelmed the inadequate law-enforcement presence. In several instances of role reversal, for example, rioters are seen firing what appeared to be pepper spray at police officers trying to prevent mobs from getting closer to the Capitol Building.
After a few minutes, the crowd broke through and began streaming into an empty office. Glass shards crunched under peoples feet, as the scene descended into chaos.
Some stood in awe, while others took action. As one group prepared to break through an entryway, a Trump supporter raised a wine bottle and shouted, Whose way? To which the crowd responded, Our way!
Confusion reigned. Hey whats the Senate side? said a tall man in camouflage and sunglasses. Wheres the Senate? Can somebody Google it?
All the while, members of The Oath Keepers, a self-proclaimed citizens militia, seemed to be standing guard for the transgressors. They wore olive-drab shirts, helmets and patches on their upper-left sleeves that said, Guardians of the Republic and Not on Our Watch.
American flags flapped beside Trump 2020 flags, and people wearing Make America Great Again regalia moved beside people wearing anti-Semitic slogans. Chants of Hell No, Never Joe and Stop the Steal broke out, as did strains of God Bless America and The Star-Spangled Banner.
Derrick Evans of West Virginia, who just two months before had been elected as a Republican state delegate, wandered the halls of the Capitol Building, filming himself and joining in the occasional chant. At one point he shouted, Derrick Evans is in the Capitol!
Outside the building, Mr. Griffin, who was once photographed wearing a 10-gallon hat and sitting across from President Trump in the Oval Office, was now gleefully addressing the camera from atop one of the crowded terraces, declaring it a great day for America. Asserting that we came peacefully, he was interrupted by a man wearing a jacket with a hand-grenade logo, who said, Believe me, we are well armed if we need to be.
Amid the cheers and whoops of excitement were questions of what to do next. Some can be heard hunting for specific members of congress, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, whose office was broken into by several people. She and other lawmakers were hiding for fear of their safety.
One image showed a trim man moving through the Senate chamber in full paramilitary regalia: camouflage uniform, Kevlar vest, a mask and baseball cap obscuring his face. He carried a stack of flex cuffs the plastic restraints used by police. The image raised a question yet to be answered: Why carry restraints if not to use them?
Several rioters wielded fire extinguishers. One stood on a balcony on the Capitol buildings west side, spraying down on police officers trying to fend off the crowd. Others carried them into the building itself, one into Statuary Hall and another onto the steps outside the Senate Chamber, spraying in the direction of journalists and police officers.
Our president wants us here, a man can be heard saying during a livestream video that showed him standing within the Capitol building. We wait and take orders from our president.
Despite his followers hopes and expectations, President Trump was missing in action as rioters rampaged through the halls of Congress. It would be hours before he eventually surfaced in a somewhat subdued videotaped appeal for them to leave.
We have to have peace, he said. So go home, we love you, youre very special.
Some of Mr. Trumps supporters expressed frustration, even disbelief, that the president seemed to have given up after they had put themselves on the line for him.
Mr. Haag, the retired landscaper, was among the disappointed. Still, he said, the movement will continue even without Mr. Trump.
We are representing the 74 million people who got disenfranchised, he said. We are still out here. We are a force to be reckoned with. We are not going away.
One man wandered away from the Capitol in the evening gloom, yelling angrily through a megaphone that Mr. Pence was a coward and, now, Mr. Trump had told everyone to just go home.
Well, he can go home to his Mar-a-Lago estate, the man shouted, adding, We gotta go back to our businesses that are closed!
In the aftermath of what Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, called a failed insurrection, scores of those who responded to the incendiary words of the president now face a reckoning.
A chief target of investigators will be whoever struck Brian Sicknick of the Capitol Police with a fire extinguisher; the 42-year-old officer died Thursday after being injured in the riot. At the same time, authorities are investigating the fatal police shooting of Ashli Babbitt, 35, an Air Force veteran who had joined those breaching the Capitol.
Among those charged so far with federal crimes are Mr. Chansley, the so-called Q Shaman; Mr. Evans, the West Virginia lawmaker who resigned on Saturday; and Richard Barnett, an Arkansas man who was depicted in a widely circulated photograph sitting with his foot on a desk in Ms. Pelosis office.
Meanwhile, Mr. Griffin, the commissioner from New Mexico who runs Cowboys for Trump, saw his groups Twitter account suspended and calls for his resignation.
The anger, resentment and conspiracy-laced distrust that led to Wednesdays mayhem did not dissipate with Thursdays dawn. Along with the smashed furniture in the Capitol Building, there were smashed expectations of a continued Trump presidency, of lawmakers held to account, of holy prophecies fulfilled.
Signs of potential violence have already surfaced. Twitter, which terminated Mr. Trumps account on Friday, noted that plans for future armed protests have already begun proliferating online, including a proposed secondary attack on the U.S. Capitol and state capitol buildings on January 17.
The urge for more civil unrest is being discussed in the usual squalid corners of the internet. Private chat groups on Gab and Parler are peppered with talk of a possible Million Militia March on Jan. 20 that would disrupt the presidential inauguration of Mr. Biden.
There is chatter about ride shares, where to find lodging in the Washington area and what to bring. Baseball bats, perhaps, or assault rifles.
We took the building once, one commenter posted, we can take it again.
Reporting was contributed by Sabrina Tavernise, Sheera Frenkel, David D. Kirkpatrick, Campbell Robertson, Mark Scheffler and Haley Willis.
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