Armed police raid home of Florida scientist fired over Covid-19 data
Rebekah Jones, the Florida data scientist embroiled in a dispute with the state's Republican governor over the handling of coronavirus figures, had her home raided on Monday by armed police who confiscated her computers.
In a stream of posts on Twitter, Jones posted a video of the raid that showed state police carrying handguns escorting her out of her Tallahassee home. She can be heard saying: "He just pointed a gun at my children," with her husband and two children apparently upstairs at the time.
Jones claimed in her tweets that the raid was the work of Ron DeSantis, the governor with whom she has clashed repeatedly since she was fired by the state's department of health in May in a row over Covid-19 data. She compared the incident to sending "the gestapo", adding: "This is what happens to scientists who do their job honestly. This is what happens to people who speak truth to power."
The Florida department of law enforcement confirmed they had entered Jones's house on a search warrant. But in a statement the department said the action was related to a recent computer hack of the health department website, in which emergency response coordinators were sent an unauthorised message.
Also at CNN, The Verge, and The Hill.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 09 2020, @06:07PM (1 child)
Let us not rewrite history. The stupidity that happened following 9/11 was 100% bipartisan. There is always token opposition to things like this, so as to pretend we don't have a uniparty, but it's always only token. For instance when Obama wanted to push the TPP through in an overtly undemocratic fashion, republicans claimed to oppose but then lined up to ensure he always had just enough for a majority when it came vote time. What the uniparty wants, the uniparty gets.
The invasion [wikipedia.org] went 296-133 in the house, with the democrats having had just enough pull to stop the invasion if they came together to vote against it. It went 77-23 in the senate. As the democrats held a majority in the senate they could have also stopped it there.
Where the government really got a hardon though was the Patriot Act [wikipedia.org], though. Taking away civil rights, further bloating the government, and enhancing domestic surveillance? Oh yeah baby, neither party can resist that sort of dirty talk. It went 357-66 in the house, and a whopping 98-1 in the senate.
(Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Wednesday December 09 2020, @10:04PM
In the runup to the invasion of Iraq, I was the sole voice of opposition in the community I was part of. Everyone wanted to invade it seemed. I was mocked by left, and by right, as well as many Independents. "Gotta make Saddam Hussein pay!" Except, Hussein and Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11. "You're either with us, or against us, you TRAITOR!!"
Ditto with the Patriot Act, ditto with the whole Department of Homeland Security, ditto with the freak brigade making life miserable at the airports today. There was near unanimous support for all that idiocy. It was one of the few times in history when Ds and Rs were all kissy-face with each other.
Abortion is the number one killed of children in the United States.