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Amid the reported global increase in domestic violence during the COVID-19 pandemic, the United Nations called for a domestic violence "ceasefire". [31] In Peru, the number of women reported missing has surged from five per day from before COVID-19 to eight during the lock-downs.
The Ontario Association of Interval and Transition Housing has seen a significant increase in the number of women reaching out for help during the COVID-19 lockdowns, and they suspect that many more are unable to reach out due to quarantining with their domestic-abuser, meaning they cannot be alone to make a phone call. [34]
Female gang members can function in one of three capacities, as theorized and defined by Walter Miller: independently functioning units, coed gangs, and female auxiliaries to male gangs. [2] Independently functioning units are all-female gangs that operate under their own gang colors and name, without oversight from existing male gangs. Coed ...
Acting U.S. Attorney Joshua Levy said the charges against the more than 40 members and associates of the Heath Street Gang included unemployment and COVID-19 fraud totaling more than $900,000 ...
On 14 April 2021, the US Senate voted 92–6 to advance the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act, which would allow the US Justice Department to review hate crimes related to COVID-19, with a section of the bill (titled the Khalid Jabara-Heather Heyer NO HATE Act, originally drafted by Senator Richard Blumenthal) dedicated to providing federal grants for ...
The vicious Venezuelan migrant gang Tren de Aragua is luring desperate women deep into the heart of the US, forcing them to sell their bodies on the streets of American cities to pay off ...
New Report Warns Bloodthirsty Venezuelan Gang's Footprint Will Remain In Us ‘For Decades’ Rausch added that TdA has "zero respect" for police and has attacked law enforcement throughout the U.S.
As gang violence is largely viewed as responsible for El Salvador’s high femicide rates, the crackdown has resulted in the defunding of numerous women's rights organizations across the country. No longer seen as necessary, the loss of these organizations has had detrimental effects on access to education and employment for Salvadoran women. [80]