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Oa-beautiful • Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia • Protests • Car chase

Family Blames Police for DC Man's Death in Electric Scooter Crash; Protest Flares D.C. police say they tried to stop Karon Hylton because he was riding on a sidewalk without a helmet. His family says they chased him, causing his death A protest over the death of a 20-year-old D.C. man who died after he was hit by a car while riding an electric scooter has erupted outside a police station in Northwest Tuesday night. Karon Hylton died Monday after the crash Friday in the Brightwood Park neighborhood of Northwest D.C. His loved ones accuse police of causing the crash by chasing him.  Hylton died the day his daughter turned three months old, his girlfriend and the infant's mother, Amaala Jones-Bey, said.  “It’s mind-boggling. This was so unnecessary,” she said Tuesday.  Download our free NBC Washington app for  iOS  or  Android  to get the latest local news and weather. The Metropolitan Police Department says officers tried to conduct a traffic stop at about 10:10 p.m. Friday after

U.S. Supreme Court • Law

Supreme Court’s Vague Election Orders Are a 2020 Wild Card In the unbelievably complicated run-up to the 2020 elections, a variable we really aren’t used to seeing is frequent interventions in election law disputes by the U.S. Supreme Court. It’s largely a product of the  vast wave of litigation  by competing voting-rights and voting-suppression interest groups, mostly generated by adjustments in election procedures attributable to the COVID-19 pandemic. But it’s made more frustrating by the fact that the Supreme Court’s involvement is via largely unexplained “orders” in response to “emergency” requests for rulings, which can make life difficult for lower courts and the contending parties. As Adam Liptak of the New York  Times   observes , we are in uncharted territory here: At least nine times since April, the Supreme Court has issued rulings in election disputes. Or perhaps “rulings” is too generous a word for those unsigned orders, which addressed matters as consequential as absente

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