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Search resuls for: "Montalto"


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In happier times, the room had been used for receiving dignitaries who visited the Duke's mother, Luisa Isabel Álvarez de Toledo. Celebrated as the "Red Duchess," Luisa Isabel was a socialist-minded, fascism-battling aristocrat beloved by ordinary Spaniards. In 1955, only 18 years old and already pregnant with Leoncio, Luisa Isabel married José Leoncio González de Gregorio, a nobleman from Soria. After giving birth to Gabriel, family lore has it that she handed him to the nurses and declared she had fulfilled her role as a woman. "Someone in the household said she was our mother," Gabriel recalls.
Persons: Leoncio Alonso González de Gregorio y Álvarez, Duke of, Duke, Francisco Pacheco, Luisa Isabel Álvarez de, Duchess, Luisa Isabel, I'm, Leoncio, Christopher Columbus, who'd, Francisco Franco, Pilar, Gabriel, Liliane Dahlmann, Luisa Isabel's, Flouting, Liliane, José Leoncio González de Gregorio, José, Spanish armadas, Franco's, Simone de Beauvoir, Franco, Nate Sweitzer, Julia Franco, José Leoncio, Sid Vicious, Miguel, El, Arenas, sequester, Columbus, Juan Luis Albentosa, Diego Velázquez, , , Sidonia, Alfonso Maura, Andres Martinez, , María, Capi Arenas, “ I’ve, Duke of Montalto, King Juan Carlos I, Gabriel . The, Hernán Cortés, He'd, Íñigo Ramírez de Haro, Leoncio wasn't, Leoncio Alonso wasn't, Duke of Medina, Eduardo Ferreiro, Leoncio's, Viñamata, Spain's, Slim, Thomas Piketty, It's, I've, he'll, Javier Timmermans, she's, Gregorio Palace, Barrameda, they'd, Matthew Bremner Organizations: YouTube, Andalusians, BI, Historians, Franciscan, Frontera, Columbus, Spanish National Heritage Board, Casa, Foundation, BI Pilar Locations: Toledo, Duke of Medina Sidonia, Spain, Luisa Isabel Álvarez de Toledo, Medina, Sidonia, America, Europe, Soria, Spanish, Pilar, Paris, Madrid, Sanlúcar, American, Palomares, France, El Pais, Murcia, Palos de, Catalonian, María Montserrat, Germany, Barcelona, Aragon, Fernandina, Casa Medina, Montserrat, Medina Sidonia
The 1200 Building is scheduled to be demolished next summer, the local school district announced last month. Authorities told WPLG-TV that Saturday was the last day for people to tour the building, which has been preserved as evidence by the Broward Sheriff’s Office. Max Schachter, whose 14-year-old son Alex Schachter was killed in the massacre, led Saturday's tour. Classes have long-since resumed at the Stoneman Douglas campus while the building with bullet-riddled and blood-splattered walls remained locked off. Chris Hixon, the school's athletic director and wrestling coach, was killed when he ran toward Cruz and tried to stop the shooting.
Persons: Marjory Stoneman, Max Schachter, Alex Schachter, , , Stoneman Douglas, Nikolas Cruz, Tony Montalto, Gina Montalto, Chris Hixon, Debbi Hixon Organizations: Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, Authorities, Broward Sheriff’s, Association, Stoneman Locations: Fla, Florida, Parkland, Cruz
[1/2] The "1200 building" at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, the crime scene where the 2018 shootings took place, is seen in Parkland, Florida, U.S. August 4, 2022. The re-staging of the school shooting, one of the deadliest in U.S. history, was part of a civil lawsuit against Scot Peterson, a police officer who was stationed outside the Parkland, Florida, high school when the gunfire began on Feb. 14, 2018. In June, Peterson was acquitted by a Florida jury of criminal charges of child neglect, culpable negligence and perjury connected the shooting. The nonprofit group defines a mass shooting as four or more people shot or killed, not including the shooter. Ahead of the re-enactment, nine members of Congress and family members of victims toured the school building.
Persons: Marjory Stoneman, Amy Beth Bennett, Scot Peterson, Peterson, Tony Montalto, Gina, Michael Piper, Carol, Lisa Phillips, Nikolas Cruz, Julia Harte, Cynthia Osterman, Leslie Adler Organizations: Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, Broward, Sun Sentinel, U.S . Congress, Thomson Locations: Parkland , Florida, U.S, Florida, Broward County, Parkland
For Franco Montalto, a flooding expert and engineer, decades of research were suddenly amplified by a real-life emergency in the Adirondacks, where he and his family were on vacation this week. In the middle of the night, they were awakened by forest rangers knocking on the door of their lakeside cabin. The house was surrounded by a foot of water, and they needed to evacuate. “It was profound to experience these conditions firsthand,” he said. Dr. Montalto, a professor at Drexel University in Philadelphia who is writing about flooding as a member of the New York City Panel on Climate Change, knows better than most that climate change is producing hard-to-predict and shifting weather patterns that can trigger “cascading events.”Flooding can occur “for different reasons at different times in different places,” he said in a recent interview.
Persons: Franco Montalto, , Montalto Organizations: Drexel University, New York Locations: , Philadelphia
June 29 (Reuters) - A Florida jury on Thursday acquitted a former sheriff's deputy accused of failing to protect students during the 2018 mass shooting at Parkland's Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. After the verdict, Peterson told reporters at the courthouse that he would like to talk to the parents of students who lost their lives in the shooting. Peterson was armed but never went inside while the shooting was underway, according to the Broward County Sheriff's Office and surveillance video. A jury in October spared Nikolas Cruz, the gunman in the Parkland shooting, from the death penalty, instead calling for life in prison without possibility of parole. In May, the United States marked the one-year anniversary of the deadliest U.S. school shooting in nearly a decade, in which a gunman in Uvalde, Texas, killed 19 children and two teachers and injured 17 others.
Persons: Parkland's Marjory Stoneman, Scot Peterson, Peterson, Tony Montalto, Gina, Montalto, Nikolas Cruz, Julia Harte, Deepa Babington Organizations: Parkland's, Parkland's Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, Broward State Attorney’s Office, Broward County Sheriff's Office, Police, Texas Department of Public Safety, Thomson Locations: Florida, Broward County, Parkland, United States, Uvalde , Texas
If the Republican governor signs the bill into law, Florida prosecutors trying capital felony cases would need to convince only two-thirds of the 12-member jury that someone who is convicted deserves the death penalty, rather than a unanimous decision by a jury. It would have no effect on the requirement for a jury's unanimous vote to convict a defendant. Three jurors voted to spare Cruz, and by default his sentence was life in prison without the possibility of parole, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. If the bill becomes law, Florida would join Alabama as the only states where a unanimous jury decision is not required, the center noted. In 2017, Florida passed a law that required death penalties to be imposed only after a unanimous recommendation by a jury.
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