TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「On March 28, 2020, Janie Marshall lost her footing and stumbled near another woman while both were being treated for non-COVID-19 ailments at a Brooklyn hospital. Authorities say the other woman, Cassandra Lundy, shoved Marshall, 86, for having “got into [Lundy’s] space” and violating new social-distancing orders aimed at containing the virus. Marshall—who had dementia and was in the hospital for stomach issues—fell to the ground, hit her head and later died. The city’s medical examiner ruled the death a homicide, and Lundy, now 33, was charged with manslaughter and assault. It was the city’s first homicide associated with COVID-19, and, nearly a year later, one more piece of evidence that the U.S. system of justice can be counted a casualty of the virus, writes Melissa Chan. Among its many impacts—none of them good—closed courthouses and canceled jury trials mean neither victims nor defendants, much less their anxious families, can be assured of attending trials in person. And there’s no telling when that will change. “Every time I think about my aunt, I well up in tears,” says Marshall’s niece, Eleanor Leonard, 74, photographed outside the Kings County Supreme Court in Brooklyn on Feb. 15. Framed photographs of Marshall are seen inside Leonard's home. “I want this over. And I won’t have peace, and I don’t think my aunt has peace in her grave, until this woman is convicted.” Read more at the link in bio. Photographs by Mark Clennon (@mark.c) for TIME」2月24日 7時29分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 2月24日 07時29分


On March 28, 2020, Janie Marshall lost her footing and stumbled near another woman while both were being treated for non-COVID-19 ailments at a Brooklyn hospital. Authorities say the other woman, Cassandra Lundy, shoved Marshall, 86, for having “got into [Lundy’s] space” and violating new social-distancing orders aimed at containing the virus. Marshall—who had dementia and was in the hospital for stomach issues—fell to the ground, hit her head and later died. The city’s medical examiner ruled the death a homicide, and Lundy, now 33, was charged with manslaughter and assault. It was the city’s first homicide associated with COVID-19, and, nearly a year later, one more piece of evidence that the U.S. system of justice can be counted a casualty of the virus, writes Melissa Chan. Among its many impacts—none of them good—closed courthouses and canceled jury trials mean neither victims nor defendants, much less their anxious families, can be assured of attending trials in person. And there’s no telling when that will change. “Every time I think about my aunt, I well up in tears,” says Marshall’s niece, Eleanor Leonard, 74, photographed outside the Kings County Supreme Court in Brooklyn on Feb. 15. Framed photographs of Marshall are seen inside Leonard's home. “I want this over. And I won’t have peace, and I don’t think my aunt has peace in her grave, until this woman is convicted.” Read more at the link in bio. Photographs by Mark Clennon (@mark.c) for TIME


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