WRTV News at 5:30 | Wednesday, April 7, 2021
WRTV News at 5:30 | Wednesday, April 7, 2021
Germany's top court has refused to issue an injunction blocking the country's participation in the European Union's 750 billion-euro (more than $900 billion) coronavirus recovery fund, clearing the way for the launch of the fund and its common borrowing aimed at supporting green and digital economic development. The Federal Constitutional Court said Wednesday it turned back a motion for a preliminary injunction from a group including economics professor Bernd Lucke, a founder of the populist Alternative for Germany who has since left the party.
Judge revokes Chauvin’s bail and he will remain in police custody until his sentencing, which is scheduled for June.
Clip of Fox News host’s maniacal cackle goes viral and garners millions of views with social media users calling it ‘scary,’ ‘unhinged,’ and ‘unsettling’
Apple launched its AirTags, Venmo debuted crypto trading, and Uber and Lyft are in a driver slump: Here are 10 things in tech you need to know today.
The accident in an Indian hospital happened when an oxygen tank was refilling the storage tank.
Fox News host uses show to question validity of Derek Chauvin verdict, asking: ‘Can we trust the way this decision was made?’
Follow latest updates from Minneapolis
Force releases body camera footage showing moment teenager was killed
With warmer weather just around the corner, we're taking our home-design focus to the great outdoors Originally Appeared on Architectural Digest
The Ingenuity drone completes the first powered, controlled flight by an aircraft on another world.
Ohio’s Bureau of Criminal Investigation leading investigation into fatal police shooting
We're getting outdoorsy on Clever this week Originally Appeared on Architectural Digest
Judges, police officers and teachers in Quebec will be barred from wearing religious symbols at work.
Rolling updates on the day’s news from Washington and beyond
‘Law enforcement officers deserve better than to be utilised as pawns! And you and your colleagues should be ashamed of yourselves!’ Demings thunders at Jordan
Risky uses of artificial intelligence that threaten people’s safety or rights such as live facial scanning should be banned or tightly controlled, European Union officials said Wednesday as they outlined an ambitious package of proposed regulations to rein in the rapidly expanding technology. The draft regulations from the EU's executive commission include rules for applications deemed high risk such as AI systems to filter out school, job or loan applicants. The proposals are the 27-nation bloc’s latest move to maintain its role as the world’s standard-bearer for technology regulation, as it tries to keep up with the world's two big tech superpowers, the U.S. and China.
‘The time is long overdue to make public colleges and universities tuition-free,’ says Vermont senator
‘She was just a kid,’ demonstrators chant on Tuesday evening
Security is ramped up in Minneapolis as jurors retire in the trial into the death of George Floyd.
The funeral is planned for Thursday