Reuters: U.S.

Tuesday, August 29, 2017

1,000 rescue calls per hour

Tuesday, August 29, 2017
J.J. Watts of the Houston Texans just set a new fund-raising goal -- $1.5 million -- to help survivors of Harvey. Here's what else you need to know to
Get Up to Speed and Out the Door.

By Doug Criss.

1. Hurricane Harvey

THE LATEST: Four people have died in the slow-motion disaster that is Harvey, but that number could rise as flooding continues to worsen in Houston and throughout southeast Texas. Harvey, which has barely moved since slamming Texas on Saturday as a Category 4 hurricane, is still a tropical storm. It's slipped back into the Gulf, and the National Weather Service predicts it will make landfall again midday Wednesday near the Texas-Louisiana border. Houston's already gotten 25 inches of rain in two days. Another 25 inches could fall by the weekend. Swollen rivers and creeks in east Texas won't crest until later this week.

THE RESCUES: Thousands of people have been rescued from flooded homes and vehicles, but thousands of others still need help. The Coast Guard is getting 1,000 calls per hour for rescue. It's not just a government rescue effort either. A host of volunteers has hopped in boats and saved people. That includes the famed Cajun Navy, the Louisiana-based rescue force that gained fame during Hurricane Katrina  -- which made landfall 12 years ago today. Texas has activated its entire National Guard.

THE IMPACT: The nation's fourth-largest city sits under water and will remain that way for a while. An estimated 30,000 people will need shelter. Some will stay in Houston's convention center; others will go to Dallas, where its convention center is being turned into a mega-shelter. 

WHAT'S NEXT: Louisiana is prepping for Harvey's unyielding rains. New Orleans has closed schools and city facilities as the city expects to get 4 to 8 inches of rain over the next couple of days. And President Trump and first lady Melania Trump will visit Texas today to check on relief efforts.

2. North Korea

North Korea took its missile tests to a whole new level early this morning when it fired one over Japan. The unidentified missile flew over the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido and broke into pieces over the Pacific. The launch set off warnings in northern Japan, and people were urged to seek shelter. South Korea responded with a bombing drill to test its ability to "destroy the North Korean leadership." Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and President Trump talked by phone and agreed the UN Security Council must get involved.

3. President Trump

President Donald Trump's attorney reached out to the Kremlin for assistance in building a Trump Tower in Moscow well into the business mogul's presidential campaign, the attorney said, adding that he discussed the project with Trump three times. The attorney, Michael Cohen, denied that the project was related "in any way" to Trump's campaign, though the developments appear to contradict Trump's vehement denials of any such business connections to Russia in the past. Previous reports have indicated that efforts to build a Trump Tower in Moscow were underway during the presidential campaign in 2015, but it had not been reported that those efforts continued into 2016.​

4. Police military gear

President Trump continues his drive to be the "law-and-order" President. He's lifted a ban on military gear for local police. It was President Obama who stopped police from getting military equipment -- like armored vehicles, grenade launchers and camouflage uniforms -- in 2015 over concerns about the "militarization" of the police response to unrest in Ferguson, Missouri.

The President also defended his controversial pardon of Joe Arpaio, saying the ex-Arizona sheriff was treated "unfairly" and had been "very strong" on fighting illegal immigration.

5. Killer nurse

He may be one of Germany's worst serial killers. Niels Hoegel is already serving a life sentence after he was convicted of killing six people while working as a nurse. Now, authorities think Hoegel may have killed 84 other people. As part of the investigation, they exhumed the bodies of former patients at clinics where Hoegel worked in northwest Germany. Hoegel, 40, has admitted to injecting patients with a drug that stopped their hearts so he could get a euphoric feeling from reviving them.
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