| Fox News - Latest Headlines | | | | Texas doctor arrested in connection to contaminated IV bags that killed a physician | | Sep 15, 2022 | | A Texas doctor with a disturbing history of domestic violence and animal cruelty has been arrested after contaminated IV bags caused the death of another physician and serious complications in at least one patient. Raynaldo Rivera Ortiz, Jr. 59, was taken into custody Wednesday in Plano, Texas, by the Dallas Police Department, spokeswoman Kristin Lowman told Fox News Digital. Lowman said the department is assisting the U.S. Attorney’s Office with the probe, but declined to provide further details. This isn’t the Corvette-loving doctor’s first brush with the criminal justice system. He was convicted of shooting a neighbor’s dog with a pellet gun in 2015 and accused of assaulting at least two women. KIELY RODNI: THE VOLUNTEER DIVE TEAM THAT FOUND HER REMAINS SUSPECTS FOUL PLAY The Texas Medical Board yanked Ortiz’s license to practice on Sept. 9, hours after federal authorities shared information with the agency about their ongoing criminal investigation, records show. The anesthesiologist was allegedly captured on surveillance footage slipping IV bags into a warmer in the hall outside the operating rooms at Baylor Scott & White Surgicare at North Dallas, according to a suspension order issued by the board. TEXAS HOMICIDE INVESTIGATION UNDERWAY AFTER POSSIBLE CASKET DISCOVERED BURIED UNDER PROPERTY NEAR HOUSTON "When he deposited an IV bag in the warmer, shortly thereafter a patient would suffer a serious complication," the report states. Ortiz’s colleague, beloved anesthesiologist Melanie Kaspar, took a contaminated IV bag home on June 21 to rehydrate due to an illness. "She inserted the IV into her vein and almost immediately had a serious cardiac event and died," the order says. Kaspar was fatally poisoned with bupivacaine — a numbing agent used to alleviate pain during surgery, according to an autopsy. MAN BAILED OUT OF JAIL BY LIBERAL PORTLAND FREEDOM FUND CHARGED WITH MURDER ONE WEEK LATER The drug is meant to be injected into the spinal cord and is known to cause "severe cardio- and neurotoxicity" and death when injected into the veins, according to the Institute for Safe Medication Practices in Canada. Tests were conducted on the remaining IV bags in the warmer. They had "visible tiny holes in the plastic wrap" and contained bupivacaine. Fluids left in a used IV bag that had been given to a healthy patient during a routine surgery who suffered a serious cardiac event contained similar drugs, according to the medical board. "Respondent’s continued practice of medicine poses a continuing threat to public welfare," the emergency suspension order states. Ortiz, who has been practicing for 26 years, was placed on administrative supervision in August for an incident from November 2020. A patient required CPR after Ortiz administered anesthesia, which led the facility, North Garland Surgery Center, to revoke his clinical privileges, board records show. In December 2014, Ortiz and his then-girlfriend, the mother of his child, got into an argument in front of their neighbor, Roxanne Bogdan, and he was arrested for alleged assault. The ex obtained a protective order against Ortiz, and Bogdan testified on her behalf. He blamed the neighbor for their split, according to prosecutors. About four months later, in April 2015, Bogdan heard a "very loud sports car" pull into Ortiz’s driveway, then gunfire and her dog yelping. "She ran into her backyard and saw her dog’s chest covered in blood," according to court papers. The pooch survived. Ortiz has at least three Corvettes, whose engines have a distinct sound, according to the records. Ortiz was convicted at trial and sentenced to 25 days in jail and two years of community supervision. A medical board record says he has a "history of violence toward women" — including a 1999 arrest for allegedly assaulting a spouse. In 2005, a different girlfriend obtained a protective order against him. A spokesperson for Baylor Scott & White Surgicare at North Dallas didn’t immediately return a request for comment, but told other outlets that they paused operations at the medical facility and are helping authorities with the investigation. The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Northern District of Texas didn't immediately return a request for comment. | | | | | Arlington National Cemetery's Confederate monument on Naming Commission's chopping block | | Sep 15, 2022 | | A monument to Confederate soldiers at Arlington National Cemetery is the latest monument targeted by a military renaming commission tasked with wiping references to the Confederacy from the U.S. military. "It is problematic from the top to the bottom," retired Brig. Gen. Ty Seidule, vice chair of the Naming Commission, said during a press conference Tuesday, according to a Military.com report. The Arlington statue, a bronze and granite monument that depicts southern soldiers marching into battle while Black slaves holding a White soldier's baby follow, was built in 1914. But, 108 years later, the Naming Commission is recommending to Congress that the statue be removed down to its granite base plate. The decision comes as part of the commission's final report to lawmakers, which also included recommendations to change the name of the Navy's USS Chancellorsville and USNS Maury. NAMING COMMISSION RECOMMENDS ARMY AND NAVAL ACADEMIES SCRAP NAMES OF CONFEDERATE ALUMNI The USS Chancellorsville was named after a Civil War battle in which the Confederacy emerged victorious, considered one of Gen. Robert E. Lee's most storied battlefield victories. The USNS Maury is named after a pioneer of oceanography and naval officer who joined the side of the south during the Civil War. "What did they say when they commissioned the ship? We looked at what used to be in the boardroom, and there were pictures of Lee and Jackson in the boardroom, and that's been taken out since then," Seidule said of the USS Chancellorsville. "So we looked at the entire context and felt as though this commemorated the Confederacy, as a unanimous decision among the eight commissioners." NAVY ADVISED TO RENAME USS CHANCELLORSVILLE TO AVOID TIES TO THE CONFEDERACY The commission's work has mostly centered around the names of bases that honor Confederate leaders, including Fort Hood, Texas; Fort Bragg, North Carolina; and Fort Benning, Georgia. The commission has recommended new names for these Army bases. Congress created the commission in 2020 after lawmakers overrode a veto by former President Trump, who opposed renaming bases that honor Confederate leaders. The changes are supposed to be finished by 2024, though members of the commission acknowledged that the changing of base names will be one of the military's more complicated undertakings. "There's some places where the secretaries can move on fairly quickly," Retired Lt. Gen. Thomas Bostick, a member of the commission, said during the Tuesday briefing. "Maybe the bases are going to take some time." | | | | | Several GOP Senate candidates reveal they do not support 15-week federal abortion limits | | Sep 15, 2022 | | Many Republicans running in this year's midterm elections do not support Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., proposed bill that would limit abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy – or after "the stage at which substantial medical evidence indicates that they are capable of feeling pain." In June, the Supreme Court, in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, returning power to the states to limit abortion. Following the SCOTUS decision, abortion became one of the focal points of this year's midterm election, as numerous GOP candidates were accused by their Democratic opponents of holding "extreme" views on abortion. One recent ad from VetVotes and the Senate Majority PAC targeted Arizona Senate candidate Blake Masters for his pro-life stance, and called him "unAmerican." Since Graham's announcement, several Senate Republican candidates who supported the Dobbs decision told Fox News Digital that they will not support a federal limitation on abortion, while only a few would back the measure. SEN. LINDSEY GRAHAM EXPLAINS PROPOSED FEDERAL ABORTION BILL: ‘I HAVE NO APOLOGY FOR BEING PROUDLY PRO-LIFE’ Some Democrats have pointed out that if GOP members back a federal abortion restriction, they are effectively taking abortion out of the hands of the states. Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, who is running against Mehmet Oz in the Pennsylvania Senate race, tweeted, "Just 'leave it to the states', huh @droz?" while also calling on his opponent to say whether he supports the bill. "Dr. Oz is pro-life with three exceptions: life of the mother, rape and incest." Brittany Yanick, communications director for Dr. Oz for Senate, told Fox News Digital, before saying Oz would uphold the state's right to rule on the issue of abortion. "And as a senator, he'd want to make sure that the federal government is not involved in interfering with the state's decisions on the topic. It's quite the contrast from John Fetterman, who supports abortion up until the moment of birth," Yanick said. MIKE HUCKABEE: GOP NEEDS TO STOP BEING AFRAID OF ISSUES LIKE ABORTION Other Republicans echoed Oz's position, but were more forthright in saying that Graham's bill had no chance of passing in Congress. "If Washington, D.C., were half as interested in addressing inflation, reducing the debt, and securing the border as they are waging partisan fights over abortion, the American people would be better off," said Republican Joe O'Dea, the Colorado Senate candidate challenging Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo. "This bill will never pass, just like Bennet and Schumer’s bill legalizing elective late-term abortion will never become law. The whole back and forth proves the point I’ve been making for months: Congress needs to pass a balanced approach that protects a woman’s right to choose early in pregnancy and provides responsible limits on late-term abortion," O'Dea said. Brian Freimuth, spokesperson for the campaign of Nevada GOP Senate nominee Adam Laxalt, told Fox News Digital that he does not support a federal law. "This proposal has no chance to pass Congress and receive President Biden's signature," Freimuth said. "The law in Nevada was settled by voters decades ago and isn't going to change. As a pro-life candidate, Adam made his views clear in a recent Reno Gazette Journal column," where he described how he believes the right to an abortion in Nevada should be decided by Nevada voters, not the federal government. Laxalt has also stressed the views of his midterm opponent, Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev., who supported the Women's Health Protection Act that would allow abortions "without limitations" and after fetal viability. Not all Republicans have taken stances against the abortion limitation bill. Graham said it was Democrats who, following the Dobbs decision, "rallied behind pro-choice legislation which allows abortion right up until the moment of birth," pushing a "radical" position that Americans would reject. "Our legislation is a responsible alternative as we provide exceptions for cases of rape, incest, and life and physical health of the mother," the senator said, also noting that around 55,000 abortions at or after 15 weeks of pregnancy occur each year. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., who co-sponsored the Graham bill, said he believes it would be the right move for Florida. "Banning abortion after four months is consistent with Florida law and more permissive than all but two European countries," Rubio said. "Why doesn’t the media ask Val Demings why she doesn’t support a single restriction on abortions? She is an extremist that supports abortion, for any reason, at any time up to the moment of birth and paid for by taxpayers." The bill, labeled the Protecting Pain-Capable Unborn Children from Late-Term Abortions Act, aims to protect unborn babies after the point in the pregnancy where they begin to feel pain. The bill, which includes exceptions for rape, incest and when the life of the mother is threatened, would mirror European abortion limits. "The Supreme Court of the United States has acknowledged that, by at least 12 weeks gestation, an unborn child has taken on ‘the human form’ in all relevant aspects" the bill reads, referring to the 2007 Gonzales v. Carhart court case that banned partial-birth abortion. | | | | | What is the Imperial State Crown? The diamond-encrusted crown was worn by Queen Elizabeth and other monarchs | | Sep 15, 2022 | | The Imperial State Crown is one of the most iconic crowns worn by the British monarch Queen Elizabeth II during her seven decades on the throne. Her Majesty's heir, King Charles III, is now the sovereign monarch of the United Kingdom and owner of this royal treasure. The king, along with other members of the royal family, accompanied the queen's coffin from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Hall, where she will lie in state until her funeral next week. Her coffin currently sits on top of a raised platform draped in a royal standard with the Imperial State Crown placed on top of it. The queen was 96 when she passed away in Scotland at her beloved Balmoral Castle. The crown was worn during the queen's coronation in 1953, following the death of her father, King George VI, and at the openings of Parliament.It is a part of the Crown Jewels of the United Kingdom, a collection of crowns worn by the monarch to symbolize the over 800 years of rule by the British royal family. QUEEN ELIZABETH II DIES AT 96: A LOOK AT HER LIFE AS BRITISH ROYALTY Originally crafted for Queen Victoria during her coronation in 1838, the crown was remade again in 1937 for King Edward II to resemble the St. Edward's Crown. A few months after his mother's funeral, King Charles will officially be proclaimed king and will wear the St. Edward's Crown at the coronation in Westminster Abbey. However, the Imperial State Crown will still remain one of the most prized jewels in the royal collection. The crown contains the world's fourth-largest polished diamond and is adorned with nearly precious stones. In the brow of the crown is a 317.4-carat stone from a Cullinan Diamond, which was found in Africa at the start of the 20th century. Four rubies, 17 Sapphires, 269 pearls, and thousands of smaller diamonds also make up the stunning beauty of the crown. QUEEN ELIZABETH II REMEMBERED AS KING CHARLES III ASCENDS THE BRITISH THRONE More specifically, the Black Prince's Ruby and Stuart Saphire are some of the most famous jewels from the entire royal collection on this crown. While it is not being used by the monarch, the Crown is heavily guarded in the Tower of London in the Crown Jewel collection. The public may view the Imperial State Crown in the Jewel House located within the tower. Only three people on Earth have the legal right to touch the crown, the monarch, the Archbishop of Canterbury during the monarch's coronation, and the Crown Jeweller, who oversees its maintenance. | | | | | Los Angeles high school fentanyl overdose: LAPD detain suspect in 15-year-old girl's death | | Sep 15, 2022 | | One person has been detained in connection with the fatal fentanyl overdose of a 15-year-old Los Angeles high school student who died on campus Tuesday night after buying drugs with a friend in a nearby Hollywood park. Los Angeles police detectives were searching the home of a suspect Thursday who was described as a teenager, Fox Los Angeles reported. The girl who died, identified by the news outlet as Melanie Ramos, was found dead in a bathroom inside Bernstein High School. The LAPD could confirm to Fox News that someone had been detained. The parents of the two teens became worried when they didn't come home Tuesday night and went out to search for them after reporting them missing. The stepfather of one girl found her collapsed in a courtyard on the school campus. LOS ANGELES COUNTY SUPERVISOR KUEHL HAS WARRANT SERVED AT HER HOME She told him her friend was in a bathroom and that they bought Percocet pills in nearby Lexington Park. Investigators believe the pills were laced with fentanyl. Ramos was found in the bathroom and pronounced dead at the scene by paramedics. That same night, LAPD officers discovered two other victims of drug overdoses that could be connected to the same drug dealer. One was a 17-year-old male Hollywood High School student who was taken to a hospital. Another teen victim was found in the same area. Paramedics administered Narcan to the fourth victim. In a Wednesday morning news conference, Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent Alberto Carvalho said at least six students have overdosed on drugs in recent weeks. "For the individual, who, for a number of weeks, has been spreading pain, destruction and now death – rest assured, we’re going to use the full weight and muscle of this school system, the full weight of this city’s law enforcement entity, and the DEA to know who you are, who the people behind you are and we shall bring justice to the grieving parents," he said. | | | | | DeSantis was right to send migrants to Martha's Vineyard. We need to bring border crisis to Democrats | | Sep 15, 2022 | | What should happen when the policies set by one set of people affect an entirely different set? On Thursday night, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis sent two planes of illegal immigrants to Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts. Taryn Fenske, the governor’s communications director, told Fox News, "Yes, Florida can confirm the two planes with illegal immigrants that arrived in Martha’s Vineyard today were part of the state’s relocation program to transport illegal immigrants to sanctuary destinations." RON DESANTIS SENDS TWO PLANES OF ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS TO MARTHA'S VINEYARD Martha’s Vineyard is traditionally an enclave for rich and powerful liberals. Former President Barack Obama has a home there as reportedly does singer James Taylor, who was recently at the White House celebrating President Biden’s spending boondoggle plan. In theory, everyone should be happy with the move. Migrants get to be taken to this beautiful location in Massachusetts, a "sanctuary" state where they should feel welcome. Instead, the left is angry about this. "Deeply deeply sick and dehumanizing to fling human beings somewhere vindictively." tweeted MSNBC host Chris Hayes. FLORIDA GOV. DESANTIS SAYS FUNDS ARE IN PLACE TO BUS ILLEGAL MIGRANTS OUT OF HIS STATE But why? What is the point of being a sanctuary city or state if not to specifically provide sanctuary? It’s not vindictiveness to make the policymakers share the burden they are creating. In fact, it’s the only way change is possible. When immigrants follow a process to enter the United States, they normally have a sponsor of some sort. A family member, an employer, sometimes a house of worship. Upon getting permission to enter, they head toward their sponsor’s locale, whether to stay with them or to be provided lodging by that sponsor. My own family were refugees from the Soviet Union. We were allowed passage to Italy where we then waited on permission to enter. The equivalent of that would be the migrants waiting in Mexico for the United States to allow them in. This was a policy of the Donald Trump administration and has been abandoned by the Biden administration. MASSACHUSETTS DEMS REACT AFTER DESANTIS TRANSPORTS MIGRANTS INTO RITZY MARTHA'S VINEYARD: 'EVIL AND INHUMANE' When people cross our border with no process, the towns and cities at that border are expected to simply handle them and they simply can’t. It was untenable for a long time but with the extreme influx of migrants at our border during the Biden administration, around 200,000 a month, the situation grew dire. But the political class, in particular on the left, refused to do anything about it. The Democrats are in control of the presidency, the House and the Senate and yet they have failed to act in any way, whatsoever, to stem the flow of migrants at the border. CLICK HERE TO GET THE OPINION NEWSLETTER In fact, they deny a problem exists. On "Meet the Press" this past Sunday, Vice President Kamala Harris repeatedly asserted that the border was secure. That is a flat out lie. It is not. We all know it is not. But Harris doesn’t live on the border and, despite being put in charge of it by the president, she seldom visits. John Rourke, owner of Blue Line Moving in Florida, does a yearly clean-up of a city in America. This year his team went to Eagle Pass, Texas. The videos he posted from that border town were scary and unnerving. The vice president should watch them. She does not know that there is garbage strewn through the border towns by the migrants that make their communities look like landfills. She does not know there are dead bodies sometimes found in the grass. She gets to push the idea that everything is fine from a place where things are fine. The border has to be brought to her, so she can understand. At the same time Gov. DeSantis arranged the flight to Massachussets, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott had over 100 migrants dropped off at the Naval Observatory, the vice presidential residence in Washington, D.C. Our border towns are in deep trouble, and have been for a long time. The people who make the policies need to see the effects of those policies. Governors Ron DeSantis and Greg Abbott are doing the right thing in bringing the problem to the people making decisions. They have to continue it. CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM KAROL MARKOWICZ | | | | | | | Eagles' Jason Kelce reacts to viral 'judo hip toss' by Lions rookie Malcolm Rodriguez: 'Did not see it coming' | | Sep 15, 2022 | | 'Tis the season for viral videos, and Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce is starting off the 2022 NFL season with his own social media moment after fans went into a frenzy over him getting tossed by Detroit Lions linebacker Malcolm Rodriguez in the Eagles' 38-35 victory Sunday. During a podcast with younger brother and Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, the duo spoke about the viral moment when the veteran got "hip tossed" by the 2022 sixth-round draft pick. "You're viral right now because of your encounter with … Malcolm Rodriguez. Gave you a good ol' WWE hip toss," Travis Kelce joked on the "New Heights" podcast. LIONS’ TRACY WALKER ON EJECTION AFTER LATE HIT ON JALEN HURTS: ‘I JUST LET MY TEAM DOWN’ "It was good. I thought I had him, I was driving him in the end zone, and right at the last second — Huzzah! — he gave me a judo hip toss. Did not see it coming," Jason Kelce said before giving credit to Rodriguez. "It was impressive nonetheless. It was a quick twist of the hips. He's a good player. He made a better move on me on a draw play earlier in the game where he made a tackle on Jalen Hurts. "That kid's got a really bright future, he's been a star of the ‘Hard Knocks’ show, seems like he's got a great mentality. And it's not the first time I've been viral for getting my a-- kicked, and I'm sure it won't be the last." CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM Travis Kelce recalled his own viral moment when he had a run-in with Buffalo Bills linebacker Von Miller. "I got hip tossed by Von Miller my second year in the league, and he actually hip tossed me from like one knee. I felt like a rag doll," Travis said. "I thought the play was almost over so I kinda just – I don’t wanna say I let up on it — but I definitely wasn’t trying to put any more attention towards Von, and Von had just had a completely different idea of what was going on. Knew he wasn’t going to make the play and just absolutely hip tossed me and threw me into next week." While both brothers laughed off the viral moments, Jason Kelce added that those plays are pretty much inevitable. "I feel like going viral for getting your a-- kicked is like a rite of passage in the NFL. Everybody’s gonna get got at some point," Jason said. The Lions came back within reach of the Eagles late in the second half but ultimately fell in their season opener for the third year in a row. But the Kelce brothers like what they’ve seen so far. "I’m not gonna lie. After watching ‘Hard Knocks,’ I kinda became a fan of the Lions and a lot of the characters they got," Travis said. "Dan Campbell – would love to play for him, awesome guy. "What they do on HBO backs up the team they’re trying to identify as. They got a coach who's a tough-minded, hard-nosed coach and their team played that way," Jason added. | | | | | Delaware judge rules no-excuse mail-in voting unconstitutional | | Sep 15, 2022 | | A Delaware judge ruled Wednesday that a new vote-by-mail law enacted earlier this year is unconstitutional and that voting by mail cannot be used in upcoming November election. Vice Chancellor Nathan Cook ruled that the law, the result of legislation that Democrats rammed through the General Assembly in less than three weeks this past June, violates a provision in Delaware’s constitution that spells out the circumstances under which a person is allowed to cast an absentee ballot. "Our Supreme Court and this court have consistently stated that those circumstances are exhaustive," Cook wrote. "Therefore, as a trial judge, I am compelled by precedent to conclude that the vote-by-mail statute’s attempt to expand absentee voting ... must be rejected." While declaring vote by mail unconstitutional, Cook upheld the state’s new same-day voter registration law. REPUBLICANS SLAM ‘HYPOCRITICAL’ BIDEN FOR FLYING TO DELAWARE ON TAXPAYER DIME TO VOTE, DEMS DEFEND MOVE Julianne Murray, an attorney for plaintiffs challenging the vote-by-mail statute, said she was glad that the judge carefully studied Delaware’s constitution and court precedent in making his determination. "He started on the Constitutional Convention of 1897 and worked his way through," said Murray, who is the Republican nominee for attorney general in November. Jane Brady, a retired judge and former Delaware attorney general who also represented plaintiffs in the lawsuit, said mail-in voting "does not comport with the constitution." WHITE HOUSE SAYS BIDEN'S COSTLY LAST-MINUTE DELAWARE TRIP TO VOTE ‘WORKED OUT BEST’ FOR HIS SCHEDULE "I believe that the legislature has known from day one that they needed a constitutional amendment to do this," she added, noting that lawmakers acknowledged during debate on the legislation that it could likely face a court challenge. "In my view, they abdicated their responsibility," said Brady, who is also chair of the state Republican Party. A spokesman for Democratic Attorney General Kathleen Jennings, whose office represented the Department of Elections in the lawsuit, referred questions to the elections agency. State Election Commissioner Anthony Albence declined to comment. Democratic lawmakers introduce the vote-by-mail bill after failing to win Republican support to amend the constitution. A constitutional amendment requires a two-thirds vote by each chamber in two consecutive General Assemblies. The first leg of a constitutional amendment to eliminate limitations on absentee balloting cleared the legislature in 2020, after initially being defeated in the Democrat-controlled Senate, but the second leg failed to win the necessary majority in the Democrat-led House last year. WISCONSIN ELECTIONS AGENCY SEEKS $1.3M IN ORDER TO INCREASE CONFIDENCE IN ELECTION RESULTS Republican Sen. Colin Bonini, who spoke out vehemently against the vote-by-mail bill in June and introduced 25 amendments in an effort to change it, said the Chancery Court did "the right thing." "I think it was clear that it was unconstitutional," said Bonini, who finished last in a three-way GOP primary contest on Tuesday and will give up the Dover-area seat he has held for 28 years. "I’m disappointed that the court also didn’t strike down same-day registration." Wednesday’s ruling comes two years after a different Chancery Court judge rejected a challenge by the state Republican Party to the constitutionality of a law allowing universal voting by mail in the 2020 election. Vice Chancellor Sam Glasscock III said in that ruling that the General Assembly’s decision to use its emergency powers to declare that voting by mail was necessary to protect public health and ensure continuity of governmental operations during the coronavirus epidemic was not "clearly erroneous." In passing that bill, Democrats asserted that voting by mail was "necessary and proper" during the pandemic, and that conforming to the requirements of Delaware’s constitution, including its explicit limitations on absentee voting, "would be impracticable." Glasscock said the constitutional provision authorizing the General Assembly to exercise emergency powers acted as a "safe harbor" allowing it to authorize "general absentee voting" that otherwise would be prohibited under the state constitution. | | | | | |
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