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Student Opens Fire in California High School, Killing 2

Students are escorted out of Saugus High School after reports of a shooting on Thursday, Nov. 14, 2019, in Santa Clarita, Calif. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

SANTA CLARITA, Calif. (AP) — A student pulled a gun from his backpack and opened fire at a Southern California high school Thursday, killing two students and wounding three others before shooting himself in the head on his 16th birthday, authorities said.

The attacker was hospitalized in critical condition, officials said, and investigators offered no immediate motive.

The gunfire began around 7:30 a.m. at Saugus High School in the Los Angeles suburb of Santa Clarita. Authorities estimated that the suspect took just 16 seconds to pull out the weapon, shoot five classmates and turn the gun on himself.

At the time, students were “milling around” and greeting each other in an outdoor quad area, sheriff’s homicide Capt. Kent Wegener said. Surveillance video showed the shooter standing still while “everyone is active around him.”

“He just fires from where he is. He doesn’t chase anybody. He doesn’t move,” Wegener said.

The suspect appeared to fire at whoever was in front of him. He had no known connection to those he shot, Wegener said.

Video showed the last thing the assailant did was shoot himself with the final bullet in the .45-caliber handgun, Wegener said. The weapon was empty when it was recovered.

A 16-year-old girl and a 14-year-old boy died.

Two girls, ages 14 and 15, were each in good condition after being treated for gunshot wounds, according to Patricia Aidem, a spokeswoman for Providence Holy Cross Medical Center.

A 14-year-old boy was treated and released from another hospital, authorities said.

Sheriff Alex Villanueva said the shooter was a student at the school but did not identify him.

The sheriff said a biography on an Instagram account believed to belong to the teen contained the posting: “Saugus, have fun at school tomorrow.”

The message was discovered Thursday morning after the shooting. It was unclear when it was made and by whom, the sheriff said.

It was later removed, and investigators do not know who made the change, Wegener said.

Investigators were searching the suspect’s home. Wegener said the sheriff’s department had not received any recent calls to the boy’s house “that would indicate that there was turmoil” there.

The teen’s father died two years ago. Two years before that, the father had been arrested amid a domestic dispute with the boy’s mother.

Fellow students and a neighbor say he was a Boy Scout who was smart, quiet and gave no indication he would become violent. One girl who knew him for years said he wasn’t bullied and had a girlfriend.

“At this point in time, we have no indication of motivation or ideology,” said Paul Delacourt, the agent in charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles field office. Santa Clarita is a city of more than 200,000 about 30 miles (48 kilometers) northwest of downtown LA.

The sound of gunfire sent some students running while others and staff followed recently practiced security procedures.

Kyra Stapp, 17, was watching a documentary in class when she heard two gunshots. Panicked students ran in and reported the shooting.

Stapp’s class and others were herded into a teacher break room where they locked the door and turned off the lights.

Kyra texted her mother and tried not make any noise. They exchanged messages as sirens screamed and helicopters and deputies carrying rifles and shotguns swarmed the campus. Then Kyra fell silent while officers escorted students out.

“She’s been texting me and all of a sudden she’s not,” Tracy Stapp said. “That was like the worst 10 minutes of my life, I swear.”

Shauna Orandi, 16, said she was in her Spanish class doing homework when she heard four gunshots that she initially mistook as instruments from a band class. She said a student burst into the room saying he’d seen the gunman, and her classmates were stunned into silence.

“My worst nightmare actually came true,” she said later as she left a nearby park with her father. “This is it. I’m going to die.”

Freshman Rosie Rodriguez said she was walking up the library stairs when she heard noises that sounded like balloons popping. She realized they were gunshots when she saw other students running.

Still carrying a backpack laden with books, she ran across the street to a home, where a person she didn’t know gave shelter to her and about 10 other students.

“I just heard a lot of kids crying. We were scared,” Rodriguez said.

A huge crowd of anxious parents gathered in the park, waiting to be reunited with their children.

Students are escorted out of Saugus High School as some parents join them after reports of a shooting on Thursday, Nov. 14, 2019, in Santa Clarita, Calif. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)
Students are escorted out of Saugus High School as some parents join them after reports of a shooting on Thursday, Nov. 14, 2019, in Santa Clarita, Calif. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

Undersheriff Tim Murakami tweeted an apology to the parents, saying investigators needed to interview the students before they could be released.

Orandi said she has heard about so many school shootings that she always assumed she’d panic. But she stayed calm with the help of her teacher, who locked down the classroom.

Saugus High’s security is provided by one unarmed sheriff’s deputy and nine “campus supervisors” who act as guards, said to Collyn Nielson, chief administrative officer for the William S. Hart Union High School District.
The campus is surrounded by a fence, and students enter through a limited number of gates each morning. There are a dozen security cameras but no metal detectors.

All district schools hold lockdown drills three times a year, including two in the fall that have already occurred, Nielson said.

“In speaking with staff and hearing reports, students reported they knew what to do and immediately went into lockdown mode,” he said.

___

Antczak reported from Los Angeles. Associated Press writers Christopher Weber, Brian Melley and Justin Pritchard in LA also contributed to this report.

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Dab Your Eyes at Spanish and European Film Fests in Bangkok

A still from “The Dead Queen” (2018). Image: Persona Non Grata Pictures
A still from “The Dead Queen” (2018). Image: Persona Non Grata Pictures

BANGKOK — Cinema from the Latino and European worlds will collide at two film festivals across the capital later this month.

Film Festival in Spanish – Nov. 22-27

Seven films from the Spanish-speaking countries of Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Peru, and Spain will screen for free from Nov. 22 to 27 at Lido Connect as part of the “Film Festival in Spanish” event.

Opening the film fiesta is Argentine comedy “Super Crazy” (2018), about a dreary midlife woman who one day drinks a mysterious concoction and finds herself completely revitalized, to saying and doing anything she wants.

A dysfunctional love triangle set in Mexico City between a gay man, a bisexual man, and a woman is mashed up with a crime thriller involving drug lords in the Mexican “I Promise You Anarchy” (2015).

“The Dragon Defense” (2017) from Colombia takes a bold, dramatic move on three desperate chess-loving friends who live a tedious life in Bogota, whose comfort zones are shaken by midlife crises.

The details of other films and the festival schedule can be found online. Admission is free with online tickets available via Eventbrite.

All screening will be in Spanish and will include Thai and English subtitles.

Open-Air European Union Film Festival – Nov. 29-Dec. 15

Want to watch films made under the constellation of European Union stars and cool Bangkok breeze instead?

Grab some popcorn and head to “European Union Film Festival” where 17 films from 17 members of the union will screen for free from Nov. 29 to Dec. 15 at lawns of ambassador’s residences and cultural institutes across the capital.

The second outdoor edition of one of the longest-running film festivals in Bangkok will include fewer titles than last year’s, partly due to Brexit fallout – no films from the UK are included!

Still, the program will be able to capture the diverse facets of European history and culture, from a life of an indigenious Swedish girl, to the plight of refugees, to a Cold War-era impossible love story.

This year’s headlining film is the Finnish biopic “The Ragged Life of Juice Leskinen” (2018). Based on the life of the Finnish ‘70s and ‘80s rock legend, the biopic tells a classic story of a rockstar who rises to stardom while falling into the abyss of alcoholism and egotism. Although portrayed as a funny person, Leskinen is also dark and hurts many people, including himself.


Love detaches from time itself in Portugal’s “The Dead Queen” (2018). Weaving a story across three different eras from the medieval times through modern times and into the far dystopian future, it begins with King Dom Pedro digging up his assassinated lover from her grave.

The Polish “Cold War” (2018), directed by Pawel Pawlikowski of Academy Award-winning “Ida” (2013), again brings images of post-war Poland in nostalgic black and white to the screen. In Pawlikowski’s latest film, Wiktor and Zula, both in a Communist propaganda band, fall into a deep, soul-consuming love – that will be tested by the Berlin Wall itself.

Love isn’t even limited to humans in French film “Bloody Milk” (2017), which shows the ties between a dairy farmer and his cows. They are everything to him – but one day, one gets infected with an epidemic.

Those in the mood for something fun can check out “Tiger Theory” (2016) from the Czech Republic. A veterinarian who is fed up with his nagging wife fakes Alzheimer’s and admits himself a psychiatric facility to get away from her – but it’s not that easy to be free from the missus, he finds.

The details of other films and the festival schedule can be found online. Admission is free, but registration is required via Ticketmelon from Nov. 15.

All screenings will be in their native languages and will include Thai and English subtitles.

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How Much It’ll Cost to Celebrate Thanksgiving in Bangkok

Photo: Rawpixel
Photo: Rawpixel

BANGKOK — Show off that American cultural capital by pretending to care about pilgrims in 1600s America and binging on turkey in Bangkok.

Although variety for Thanksgiving events are few and far between, they still range from expensive five-star hotel buffets to pub grub to free church services.

Family Fun

The Londoner Brew Pub at Phattanakan Road 32 is holding a whole day of fun for the family on Sunday Dec. 1. Grab a plate of roast turkey for lunch, play jenga with giant blocks, and practice your cornhole-tossing chops for the tournament at 3pm. Cornhole is a lawn game where players try to toss beanbags into holes on a board. There will be prizes!

Each plate of roast turkey, lamb, beef, or pork – or a mix of them – is 395 baht.

For an even more all-American dinner, Roadhouse Barbecue is having a 1,289 baht (583 baht for kids) buffet on Nov. 28 that includes Maryland style crab cakes with creole mustard sauce, Southern style cornbread, and roast turkey with giblet gravy, and sweet potato casserole. Yeehaw! Bookings recommended.

If you don’t mind a side of Jesus with your dinner, the Pentacostal Empowerment Covenant Church is holding a free Thanksgiving dinner and service on Nov. 24 starting at 5pm, but call in advance so the church can prepare the right amount of food. However, there will be grilled chicken and other Thai food rather than turkey.

Hotel Dinners and Buffets, Listed by Net Price Per Person on Nov. 28

We called up all these hotels and demanded the net price for you – no more getting blindsided by that pesky “++” found at the end of prices.

    • 1,472 baht for a buffet at the Royal Orchid Sheraton Hotel, kids 10 to 12 eat at half the price.
    • 1,154 baht for a Thanksgiving lunch from noon to 2:30 pm at Amaya Food Gallery at Amari Watergate Bangkok. Kids from 6 to 12 eat at half the price, or 577 baht.
    • 1,450 baht for a buffet at 57th Street at the Bangkok Marriott Hotel Sukhumvit, which will include turkey, an oyster bar, and pies. A four-course Thanksgiving dinner at The District in the same hotel costs 2,100 baht, 3,500 for the course with wines.
    • 1,756 baht for a buffet sans drinks at Voila at Sofitel Bangkok Sukhumvit, but it’s discounted to 1,362 baht if you book online.
    • 1,942 baht (3,037 baht for a package including beer and wine) for a Thanksgiving buffet at the Westin Grande Sukhumvit. Book online for cheaper prices of 1,412 baht and 2,507 baht, respectively.
    • 2,178 baht net for an adult, and 1,089 baht for children aged 6 to 11 years old for a buffet at the Dining Room at the Grand Hyatt Erawan Bangkok.
    • 2,471 baht for a buffet at Niche at Siam Kempinski. For free-flow wines, beer, cocktails, whiskey, the price is 3,649 baht.
    • 2,943 baht for a buffet at Red Oven at So Sofitel, and about double the price for a free-flow champagne. The price tag jumps to 4,239 baht to include free-flow beer, cocktails, and wine.
    • 3,060 baht for a sharing menu course at Bull & Bear at the Waldorf Astoria. The sharing menu is large enough to share with six to 10 people.

Related stories:

Isaan Turkey Farmer Talks About His Gobble Gobbles

Bangkok Quickies: Where to Feast For Thanksgiving

Where to Stuff Yourself on Thanksgiving in Bangkok

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‘Itzy’ Coming to Bangkok This December

BANGKOK — K-pop band Itzy will perform for the first time in Thailand this December.

As part of their “Itzy? Itzy!” tour, the band will perform 6pm Dec. 21 at Union Hall 2 at Union Mall, Thai Ticket Major announced Thursday.

Tickets, which cost 2,500 baht, 3,500 baht, and 4,900 baht, will go on sale Saturday.

Itzy is a South Korean girl group under JYP Entertainment that debuted in February. Their debut album, “It’z Different” is known for singles like “Dalla Dalla” and “Icy.” The group won best new female artist at the 2019 Genie Music Awards.

Bangkok will be the last stop on their premiere tour in 2019, which will be preceded by Jakarta, Macau, Taipei, Manila, and Singapore. Itzy will be heading to the US in January.

Union Hall 2 is on the sixth floor of Union Mall, reachable from MRT Phahon Yothin and BTS Ha Yaek Lat Phrao.

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Historic Grail to Bless Communion in Bangkok Papal Visit

BANGKOK — An elaborate chalice wrought by a famed Parisian silversmith over a century ago will serve as Pope Francis’ instrument in blessing the Eucharist in Bangkok next week.

The baroque goblet was commissioned by a bishop and brought with him to Thailand, then known as Siam, in 1841 during the reign of Napoleon III. The treasure had not been used since; but it will serve its purpose for the first time when the Pope holds a massive open-air mass at the National Stadium on Nov. 21.

Read: 800 Students and 1 Naga to Dance for Pope in Bangkok

The religious item is unveiled today at Assumption Cathedral alongside two “Popemobiles” that Pope Francis would ride as he greets the faithful, who are expected to show up in tens of thousands.

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Puttipong Puttansri, an expert on Catholic Church history in Thailand, said the silver, gold-gilded grail was made by the same silversmith who supplied treasures to Emperor Napoleon III.

It was ordered made by Bishop Jean Baptiste Pallegoix, who was later sent to Bangkok as the leader of Siam Orientale, or the Catholic Church’s apostolic mission in Siam. During his tenure as the abbot of Conception Church, Pallegoix also befriended a monk residing in a nearby monastery who would later become King Rama IV.

The chalice’s motifs include a pelican which symbolizes God’s sacrifice of his blood through his own son, Jesus – it is believed that pelicans feeds their chicks with its own blood if it can’t find any food.

Catholic officials also show off a converted Nissan pickup truck and what looked like a modified Yamaha golf cart which would serve as the Pope’s vehicles during his visit.

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Puttipong, who was an authorized media tour guide at the cathedral today, said the truck was donated by an anonymous Thai Catholic. In accordance with Pope Francis’ preference, neither vehicle had any bulletproof glass. The truck did have two-small air-conditioner outlets.

Pope Francis had previously told the media he wanted to be close to the people.

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His Holiness will be preaching in Spanish with translation in Thai when he holds the masses at the National Stadium on Nov. 21, while a smaller mass at Assumption Cathedral on the following day will be held in English, Puttipong said.

No more than 50,000 people will be allowed inside the National Stadium, he added.

 

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Finally, a Law on Importing and Producing Medical Cannabis is (Almost) Here

A local strain of cannabis is unveiled in Buriram province on April 19, 2019.

A new law on cannabis legalization will address two issues many foreigners want to know: roles of foreigners in production of weed-based medicine, and how international travelers may bring medical cannabis with them into Thailand for personal use.

Firstly, foreigners will be able to own shares in commercial production of cannabis pharmaceuticals under a new regulation, as long as those shares doesn’t exceed 33 percent.

The new rule, drafted by the Ministry of Public Health, will allow production of cannabis-based medicine for local consumption and exports, with prior authorization by the Narcotics Control Board and the health ministry.

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It is currently under review by the Council of State, an agency tasked with ensuring that all legislatures in Thailand comply with other existing laws. If the review is successful, the regulation would likely come effective in the first quarter of 2020.

Industry observers and legalization activists are closely watching the move because no companies have ever been granted a license to produce cannabis in the country so far.

The new parameters, if approved, will open a whole new world of cannabis business and medicinal marijuana for economic benefits of the Thai population for the first time beyond the narrow scope of research and study, while efforts will continue to be made to ensure that the substance will not be abused and siphoned into undesirable recreational use.

Since early this year, distribution of a narcotic cannabis production license has been restricted to government organizations, universities and hospitals, all for the purpose of research and treating patients and none for commercial.

The Narcotics Control Board will be empowered to designate a company as “a health ministry authorized person, eligible to apply for a cannabis production license.

Shortage Addressed

Government hospitals in and outside Bangkok are currently overwhelmed with patients suffering from cancer-related ailments and neurological diseases hoping for cannabis treatment, and there is only one state producer of cannabis oil for research purposes.

Commercial medicinal cannabinoids production has not taken shape. There are simply no local pharma-grade cannabis medicine supply chains available here in Thailand.

Thousands of medical practitioners, pharmacists and dentists specially trained in cannabis are licensed to practice cannabis medicine, but those licenses sit on the shelf as the doctors cannot find cannabis pharmaceuticals to prescribe to their patients.

The launch of cannabis medicine commercial production will help respond to the high demand by the Thai population.

New Export?

Exportation of cannabis medicine to the world market is stated explicitly as a rationale for issuing the regulation, leading one to infer that world-class technology and capital investment will be required to produce premium standards of cannabis pharmaceuticals acceptable in industrialized countries.

Modern pharmaceutical companies, Thai and foreign, are already well versed in know-how and flush with cash. They stand a good chance of being labeled as “health ministry authorized persons” under the new regulation to expand into medical cannabis.

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A hospital in Trat province unveils a medical cannabis service on Oct. 16, 2019.

The release of this regulation will provide enough certainty for large Thai conglomerates to take part in this promising venture, boosted by funds and partnerships from abroad.

To take it further, one can also imagine a state-of-the art pharmaceutical plant by a big name pharma, in a joint ventured by a large Thai corporation, on the Eastern Economic Corridor once the cannabis industry is lit up in full.

Moving Ahead, Cautiously

Just as some officials are touting the economic benefits that cannabis may bring, the authorities have expressed caution in moving the commercialization forward. Their caution translates into measures includes a background check on the applicant.

Among the application procedures spelled out in the draft guidelines, the applicant company will be subject to a background check by the authorities, and a certification of the clean criminal history will be required.

The rule does not say whether the background check will go all the way to cover the shareholders and directors of the company, but one should anticipate the possibility.

Two-Step Authentication

The license itself will come in a two-step process. A routine non-narcotic pharmaceutical production license from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is needed before a company can apply to become a health ministry authorized person.

The FDA drug production license and the company’s status as a health ministry authorized person will then enable the firm to apply for a narcotic cannabis production license, also issued by the FDA.

Existing pharmaceutical companies who already have a normal FDA drug production license on hand will be at an advantage; it will be quicker for them to move straight to the narcotics board and a second FDA production license.

The two FDA licenses will automatically allow you to sell and distribute finished cannabis medicine products in the Thai market—you don’t need additional sales licenses. Normal registration of drug formulas would still be required, though.

Medical Cannabis and Air Travels

Lastly, foreign readers of Khaosod English would be happy to know that the new rule is very tourist-friendly.

After months of ambuigity, it lays down details of how international travelers can get a Thai possession license to carry with them their cannabis medicines to treat their personal illnesses, prescribed by doctors in their own countries.

They will be allowed a supply of 90 days. A copy of the prescription and an original doctor’s certificate outlining necessary details will be required.

The required information includes the name and address of the patient, the illness, the diagnosis and symptoms, the name and characteristics of the medicine, the doses ordered, and the amounts of medicine prescribed, and the name and address and certification number of the doctor.

There is no mention of notarization of the documents, but as with any documents made abroad, notarization by a notary public and legalization and authentication of the documents (not their contents) by the Thai embassy in the applicant’s country should be anticipated.

Licensing for airlines to carry cannabis medicines on the airplane for emergency treatment of passengers is also included in the new rule.

Wirot Poonsuwan is senior counsel and head of special projects at Blumenthal Richter & Sumet in Bangkok and can be reached at [email protected].

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New Species of Carnivorous Dinosaur Identified in Nong Bua Lamphu

A replica of Vayuraptor nongbualamphuensis.
A replica of Vayuraptor nongbualamphuensis.

NONG BUA LAMPHU — Paleontologists announced they identified a new species of carnivorous dinosaurs that once roamed the land that is now Nong Bua Lamphu province.

Mineral Resources deputy director deputy Montri Luengingkasoot said Tuesday that the new species is called Vayuraptor nongbualamphuensis, named after the province where the bone fragments were found and the Sanskrit word for wind deity, reflecting the dinosaur’s perceived speed.

Scientists estimated that the dinosaur was about four to 4.5 meters long and might have been alive roughly 130 million years ago. Thai scientists have been studying the bones since they were first excavated in 1988 at Phu Kao–Phu Phan Kham National Park in Nong Bua Lamphu.

Montri said the bone fragments they found belonged to six parts of the dinosaur’s body, which are enough for scientists to identify a new species due to its unique ankles. He said the dinosaur is more closely related to birds than to carnosaurs, or predatory dinosaurs like the famed Allosaurus.

The site where bone fragments have been unearthed will be developed into a museum, Montri said.

The new species will be the eleventh species of dinosaur discovered in Thailand. The last was Phuwiangvenator yaemniyomi, found July in Khon Kaen.

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Related stories:

Largest Herbivore Fossil in Thailand May Be New Species

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‘Kodaline’ to Bring ‘High Hopes’ to Pattaya Music Fest

Photo: Kodaline / Facebook
Photo: Kodaline / Facebook

PATTAYA — Irish alt-rock band Kodaline is coming to lead an outdoor music festival in Pattaya with their beautifully sad songs early next year.

Best known for their heartfelt hit “All I Want,” the quartet will return to the kingdom as one of the main acts at Maya Music Festival, which will be held from Jan. 31 to Feb. 1 at the 300 rai (48 hectares) Maya Space in Pattaya.

Early bird tickets for the two-day event are on sale online from 3,299 baht. Entry is 13 and up.

The quartet – which consists of lead vocalist Steve Garrigan, guitarist Mark Prendergast, drummist Vincent May, and bassist Jason Boland – was founded in 2005 under the name 21 Demands, before changing to Kodaline in 2011.

They debuted their first extended play “The Kodaline EP” in 2012 and then the full album “In a Perfect World” the year after, which includes chart toppers like “High Hopes,” “All I Want,” and “Pray.” Their latest album, “Politics of Living,” was released in 2018.

More lineups of the music festival, which will consist of four stages serving different genres, will be announced soon online.

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Chinese Court Issues Guidelines for ‘Killer Litter’ Cases

A smart system monitors high-rise littering activities in a residential area in Hangzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province, Oct. 23, 2019. (Xinhua/Huang Zongzhi)

BEIJING (Xinhua) — Acts of deliberately throwing objects from a high altitude will be treated as a crime of endangering public security by dangerous means, intentional injury or intentional homicide depending on specific situations, according to a new guideline issued by the Supreme People’s Court.

Suspects, whose intentional high-rise littering activities have not caused serious consequences but are sufficient to endanger public safety, shall be convicted for endangering public security and sentenced to three to 10 years in jail, the guideline reads.

Those who inflict serious injury or death on people or cause heavy losses of public or private property could face penalties up to life imprisonment or death in accordance with article 115 of China’s Criminal Law.

Anyone who commits the acts with the purpose of injuring or killing a specific person shall be convicted for intentional injury or homicide, the guideline says.

“Criminal activities involving intentionally throwing objects from a high altitude should be severely punished in accordance with the law,” the guideline reads.

The document also lists circumstances that are subject to heavy penalties and are generally not applicable to probation, including committing the acts multiple times, continuing to carry out such acts after being dissuaded from doing so, or conducting the acts in crowded places.

Anyone who causes objects to fall from high altitudes due to negligence, resulting in serious injury or death, shall be convicted for negligently causing severe injury or death according to the Criminal Law, says the guideline.

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Hawaii Man Proposes to Girlfriend While Surfing

In this Sunday, Nov. 10, 2019 photo, instead of just hanging ten when surfing with his girlfriend, Chris Garth drops to one knee and proposes to Lauren Oiye in the surf off Queen's Beach in Waikiki in Honolulu. (Tommy Pierucki via AP)

HONOLULU (AP) — A Hawaii man was surfing with his girlfriend when — instead of hanging 10 — he knelt down on one knee on his board and proposed.

Hawaii News Now reported that Lauren Oiye said yes just before Chris Garth dropped the ring in the ocean.

Multiple photographers nearby captured the Sunday moment.

Luckily, he had a spare.

Garth said he knew it could go wrong, so he used a stand-in while they were out in the water. The real ring was on shore at Queen’s Beach in Waikiki, where the two met years before.

Details about the rings were not released.

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