Police: City Councilman Wounded In Apparent Carjacking

A West Virginia city councilman was shot and his wife and mother-in-law were briefly taken hostage in an apparent carjacking, authorities said.

Clarksburg Councilman Jim Malfregeot was on his porch and the women were in a car Sunday night when the suspect appeared, Clarksburg Police Chief Mark Kiddy told The Exponent Telegram.

Malfregeot was hospitalized and the women were released a short time later on U.S. 19 North between Clarksburg and Shinnston, Kiddy said.

“She told me that she was able to talk him into releasing them on 19,” Kiddy said of Malfregeot’s wife.

Kiddy said the suspect, Antonio DeJesus, 32, was arrested without incident at a gas station by Bridgeport Police and the Harrison County Sheriff’s Department. The suspect was on supervised release in a Northern District of West Virginia drug trafficking case and didn’t attend a supervised release revocation hearing this month, Kiddy said.

Malfregeot was in guarded condition after surgery, Kiddy said. He has served on the council for eight years, including a term as vice-mayor.

2nd West Virginia County Goes Red On State Coronavirus Map

A second county in West Virginia is on track to have schools go virtual-instruction only and cancel extracurricular activities after an increase in…

A second county in West Virginia is on track to have schools go virtual-instruction only and cancel extracurricular activities after an increase in coronavirus cases reported on Friday, a day before the state will announce which public schools are allowed to reopen next week. 

Monongalia County is the second county to turn red on the state’s color-coded map that gauges whether schools are ready for in-class teaching, sports and other activities. It comes two days after Gov. Jim Justice ordered the county’s bars to close indefinitely after news of West Virginia University students packing bars in Morgantown. 

Justice said that the map will be next updated on Saturday night to determine which counties can welcome back students for in-person classes on Tuesday. 

“We’re about ready to go back to school. Unfortunately we’re going to have some that we just can’t turn loose right yet, which is in the best interest of the school,” Justice said on Friday. 

Six counties were marked as orange, meaning in-person classes are allowed but no sports. Over a dozen were color-coded yellow, which allows for counties to fully reopen schools if education leaders take measures such as requiring masks for some grades and limiting crowded activities. Most of the state’s 55 counties were in the green, where disease transmission is minimal. 

Monroe County is the other county to be labeled red, where there are more than 25 confirmed coronavirus cases per 100,000 residents. 

On Friday, Justice announced the state will devote an additional $50 million in federal pandemic relief funds for personal protective equipment and testing capacity at schools.

West Virginia announced six new deaths linked to COVID-19, bringing the state’s total to 243. 

The virus usually results in only mild to moderate symptoms, but is particularly dangerous for the elderly and people with other health problems.

West Virginia University Reports Highest Student Virus Cases

West Virginia University reported its highest number of daily coronavirus cases among students for the second straight day.The 48 confirmed student cases…

West Virginia University reported its highest number of daily coronavirus cases among students for the second straight day.

The 48 confirmed student cases reported Thursday out of 408 tests given equates to a positive case rate of 11.8%. It marks the fourth straight time that the rate has exceeded 10%. By comparison, the statewide seven-day positive average was 2.94%.

The previous high of 38 positive student cases was reported Wednesday.

On Wednesday, Gov. Jim Justice shut down bars indefinitely in Monongalia County, citing crowds of unmasked students and an increase in positive coronavirus cases. Justice had allowed the bars to reopen on Monday. Monongalia County includes the WVU campus in Morgantown.

Classes began Aug. 26 with a mix of online and in-person offerings. WVU President Gordon Gee said in a letter Tuesday that students must make “the right choices” as far as social distancing and wearing masks in order for the Morgantown campus to remain open during the pandemic.

There have been at least 10,650 confirmed cases statewide since the pandemic began. The number of reported virus-related deaths has more than doubled since Aug. 1, increasing by seven Thursday to at least 237.

More Inmates, Staff Test Positive At West Virginia Jails

Coronavirus outbreaks at West Virginia correctional facilities continue to grow, the governor announced on Wednesday.

Five additional inmates have tested positive at Mount Olive Correctional Complex since Monday, according to state data, bringing the total to 143 positives cases. Gov. Jim Justice said 18 staff members there were also confirmed to be infected.

The state’s South Central Regional Jail also has eight active cases, including two among staff members, Justice said.

“The National Guard is doing great sanitizing both facilities and all that,” Justin said at a press conference.

The latest data from the Department of Health and Human Resources shows a little over 1,000 people not showing symptoms are quarantined across the state’s 10 regional jails as a precautionary measure.

The virus usually results in only mild to moderate symptoms, but is particularly dangerous for the elderly and people with other health problems.

Lawsuit: Whistleblower In VA Deaths Wrongfully Suspended

A man who says he alerted authorities to a string of suspicious patient deaths at a West Virginia veterans hospital has filed a lawsuit claiming he was wrongfully suspended because of his actions, a newspaper reported.

Gregory Bee said he was suspended from the Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center in Clarksburg in 2019 after he attempted to make the deaths public by contacting various news outlets, the office of the inspector general and the office of Rep. David McKinley, the Charleston Gazette-Mail reported Tuesday, citing the lawsuit.

In an email response to a request for comment, medical center spokesman Wesley R. Walls told The Associated Press that hospital officials “would be happy to respond to these allegations in detail, but in order to do so we need the individual’s written consent to discuss their complete work history.”

Walls added that while the “VA encourages employees to identify problems and will not tolerate any efforts to retaliate against those individuals,” he added that “identifying as a whistleblower doesn’t automatically give credence to someone’s claims nor does it shield them from accountability when they have failed to uphold VA’s values.”

Former nursing assistant Reta Mays pleaded guilty in July to killing seven military veterans in 2017 and 2018 by injecting them with insulin when it was not prescribed.

The lawsuit says Bee worked in patient care services at the Clarksburg facility from 2015 until April 2019. It says he was instructed in August 2018 to amend various policies regarding the security, storage and administration of insulin, as well as language concerning hypoglycemia. He learned about the deaths shortly after he received those instructions, and attempted to make them public in the fall of 2018, the lawsuit says.

In the same time period, the lawsuit says, a “false allegation of sexual harassment” was made against Bee and he was suspended for seven days for being 15 minutes late for work. In March 2019, Bee was reassigned to the laundry facility and a supervisor told Bee he was advised to “confine” him there, according to the lawsuit.

Bee objected to the transfer and filed a complaint in February 2019 with the VA’s Office of Accountability and Whistleblower Protection, which remains pending. He was placed on administrative leave without pay on April 5, 2019, the lawsuit says. Bee alleges that he received a “de facto termination,” since he hasn’t been paid since.

Bee is seeking reinstatement to employment, back wages and compensatory damages.

Kanye West Sues To Be Listed On West Virginia Ballot

Rapper Kanye West has sued the West Virginia Secretary of State’s Office after being told his bid to get on the ballot for president came up short on qualified signatures.

Secretary of State Mac Warner’s office told news outlets last month that West needed 7,144 signatures from registered voters in West Virginia. West submitted 15,000 signatures, but only 6,383 were confirmed, according to Secretary of State spokesperson Mike Queen.

The lawsuit says West did not have a chance to challenge that decision before a drawing for order of names appearing on the ballot, WSAZ-TV reported Monday. The lawsuit requests an emergency hearing date and a ruling that would allow his name to be listed.

West announced a presidential bid in July, saying he’s seeking the nation’s highest office on a ticket he calls the “Birthday Party.”

West has since been gathering signatures to get on the ballot in several states.

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