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Many Flaws in Cuomo Agency Report on Nursing Homes and COVID-19: Lawmaker

Two Swedes Jailed for Bombing Danish Tax Office

COPENHAGEN—A Copenhagen court on Thursday found two Swedes guilty of bombing the Danish tax agency and sentenced them to five and four years’ jail respectively. Zacharias Tamer Hamzi, 24, and Nurettin Nuray Syuleyman, 23, were convicted of transporting a bomb via the Oresund Bridge, known from the TV crime series “The Bridge”, and detonating the device in August 2019. The explosion in Copenhagen shattered glass doors and windows and scorched metal cladding at the main entrance of the building in Nordhavn, just north of the city center. One person was slightly wounded. The motive for the bombing remained unclear, but the court dismissed terrorism charges. The prosecutor had sought lifetime sentences for the childhood friends, neither of whom had been convicted of a serious crime before. “I’m pleased that my…

Many Flaws in Cuomo Agency Report on Nursing Homes and COVID-19: Lawmaker

A New York state report that sought to clear officials, including Gov. Andrew Cuomo, was deeply flawed, a federal lawmaker said.

The New York State Department of Health report primarily blamed staff members who officials said were infected when they went to work, spreading the聽CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, which causes COVID-19, to residents at nursing homes.

An order from Cuomo, a Democrat, that nursing home operators could not refuse to accept residents solely based on a confirmed or suspected diagnosis of COVID-19, wasn’t a factor, according to the report. The order was changed in May.

In a letter (pdf) to the governor late Thursday, Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.), ranking member of the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis, outlined what he said were numerous flaws in the report.

Sufficient proof wasn’t presented to support the thesis that staff, rather than the March 25 order, were to blame for New York state’s high nursing home mortality rate, the letter stated.

The report “dismisses the nursing home order as a driving factor in patient deaths because the peak in nursing deaths did not align with peak hospital readmission,” according to the letter.

“This analysis, however, ignores the role that readmissions played in the rate of deaths, even if they were declining. Whether or not nursing home deaths would be less numerous and would decline far faster without your order is an important question this report fails to even address.”

Many Flaws in Cuomo Agency Report on Nursing Homes and COVID-19: Lawmaker A patient is loaded into the back of an ambulance by emergency medical workers outside Cobble Hill Health Center in the Brooklyn borough of New York City on April 17, 2020. (John Minchillo/AP Photo)

Lawmakers asked the Cuomo administration for a number of documents and information, including the total number of聽confirmed or suspected COVID-19 positive patients returned to a nursing home or other long-term care facility between March 25 and present.

Rich Azzopardi, a Cuomo advisor, told The Epoch Times in a statement: “These travel sized Trumps can write as many election-year partisan attacks on taxpayer-funded letterhead as they want, but the fact is are they have no authority to launch their own inquiry.”

Azzopardi pointed to a 2017 opinion (pdf) from the Department of Justice, which stated in part that members of Congress don’t have the authority to conduct oversight without the absence of “a specific delegation by a full house, committee, or subcommittee.”

Azzopardi said the report was peer-reviewed by medical experts and “showed definitively that the spike in facility deaths was early, likely caused by asymptomatic staffers through no fault of their own and predated the March 25th directive.”

Others disagree with the timeline.

The policy “left nursing facilities in New York with little choice, regardless of whether they were prepared to safely isolate those patients or not,” Rebecca Gould, president and CEO of Schuyler Hospital, told members of Congress at a hearing last month.

Many Flaws in Cuomo Agency Report on Nursing Homes and COVID-19: Lawmaker The Isabella Geriatric Center is shown in New York City, on May 1, 2020. (Frank Franklin II/AP Photo)

Thousands Dead

Over 6,000 nursing home residents died of COVID-19 in nursing homes in New York, according to state data.

New York is the only state to exclude deaths of nursing home residents who are transferred to hospitals and die there, according to research by the Committee to Unleash Prosperity, a nonprofit advocacy group.

Cuomo is one of only five governors to ignore federal guidance and force COVID-19 patients into nursing homes, House lawmakers said last month.

The others were also Democrats: Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan, Tom Wolf of Pennsylvania, Phil Murphy of New Jersey, and Gavin Newsom of California.

Besides asking Cuomo’s administration for information, the federal lawmakers called for New York Attorney General Letitia James to open an independent investigation into the administration’s nursing home orders.

James, a Democrat, has not responded as of Thursday, Scalise said.

James did not respond to a request for comment from The Epoch Times.

Follow Zachary on Twitter: @zackstieber

Focus News: Many Flaws in Cuomo Agency Report on Nursing Homes and COVID-19: Lawmaker

Moscow to Reopen Schools as Daily Cases Fall

MOSCOW—Moscow on Thursday said it would reopen schools and universities next week, in the latest lifting of coronavirus restrictions as the number of new daily infections in the Russian capital fell to 568. Moscow, which has overall recorded more than 227,000 cases of the virus, last month lifted a lockdown in place since March and has staggered the reopening of businesses and the lifting of other restrictions. Sergei Sobyanin, Moscow’s mayor, said on Thursday the outbreak was waning in the city and it was time to further ease restrictions. He said schools, universities, summer camps, and cultural centres could reopen starting next week. From the same time, residents of the city of nearly 13 million will no longer be required to wear masks outdoors, he said. But masks will remain…