Anonymous ID: 4c0ef1 Aug. 4, 2022, 8:07 a.m. No.17010174   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Parkland school shooter waives right to visit crime scene as jury prepares for tour

 

Local 10 reporter Christina Vazquez among journalists to tour scene after jury

 

https://www.local10.com/news/local/2022/08/04/parkland-school-shooter-to-appear-in-court-shortly-before-jury-visits-crime-scene

 

PARKLAND, Fla. – Parkland school shooter Nikolas Cruz appeared in court Thursday morning at which time he formally waived his right to visit the crime scene of the Feb. 14, 2018, massacre.

 

Jurors will visit the crime scene at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School before returning to the courthouse in the afternoon.

The seven-man, five-woman jury and 10 alternates will be bused under heavy security the 30 miles from the Broward County Courthouse in downtown Fort Lauderdale to the suburban school. Law enforcement plans to seal off the area around the school and aircraft may be barred from flying overhead to prevent protesters from interrupting the proceedings and to protect the jurors’ safety.

 

The panelists and their law enforcement escorts will be accompanied into the building by Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer, prosecutors and Cruz’s attorneys.

 

(Continued)

Anonymous ID: 4c0ef1 Aug. 4, 2022, 9:58 a.m. No.17010706   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0815

>>17010578

>>17010491

 

Aug 4, 2022

 

Walmart lays off corporate employees after slashing forecast

 

https://www.nbcnews.com/business/business-news/walmart-lays-corporate-employees-slashing-forecast-rcna41485

 

Walmart has begun to lay off corporate employees, the company confirmed Wednesday, about a week after it slashed its profit outlook and warned that consumers had pulled back on discretionary spending due to inflation.

 

In a statement to CNBC, the retail giant described the layoffs as a way to “better position the company for a strong future.”

 

Anne Hatfield, a Walmart spokesperson, declined to say how many workers will be affected and what divisions have experienced cuts. She said Walmart is still hiring in parts of its business that are growing, including supply chain, e-commerce, health and wellness and advertising sales.

 

“Shoppers are changing. Customers are changing,” she said. “We are doing some restructuring to make sure we’re aligned.”

 

The corporate layoffs were first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

 

Walmart is the largest employer in the country, with nearly 1.6 million workers in the U.S. The company, seen as a bellwether for the nation’s economy, spooked investors on July 25 when it cut its outlook for quarterly and full-year profit guidance. That warning had a chilling effect on the retail sector, dragging down the stocks of companies including Macy’s and Amazon and sending up a flare about the health of the American consumer.

 

Walmart said at the time that as shoppers spent more on necessities such as groceries and fuel, they were skipping over high-margin merchandise including apparel. It said it would have to cut prices to sell more of those items, especially as a glut of inventory piled up in its stores and at those of competitors such as Target and Bed Bath & Beyond.

 

Later that same week, Best Buy cut its profit and sales forecast, saying it was seeing softening demand for consumer electronics — big-ticket, discretionary purchases that some shoppers can postpone.

 

As recession worries linger, the U.S. jobs market appears increasingly segmented.

 

U.S. job openings in June dropped sharply, but the labor backdrop remains tight, with 1.8 open jobs per available worker. Many of the companies that boomed during the pandemic, including Walmart’s major competitor Amazon, have started to scale back on hiring.

 

Amazon’s headcount shrank by 99,000 people to 1.52 million employees globally at the end of the second quarter. The company’s workforce had almost doubled in size during the Covid health crisis as it rushed to keep up with customer demand for groceries, puzzles and more online.

 

That reduction was primarily due to attrition, Amazon Chief Financial Officer Brian Olsavsky said on a call with reporters after the company’s second-quarter earnings report last week.

 

Other companies, including Shopify and Robinhood, have also recently announced layoffs. And still others, such as Facebook parent Meta and Google parent Alphabet, have said they will slow hiring or focus on more productivity with current workers.

 

It’s unclear whether Walmart has also slowed its pace of hiring at stores and warehouses, which would allow attrition to shrink its workforce. The company will report its quarterly earnings on Aug. 16 and will likely provide an update on overall headcount.