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LOS ANGELES, Calif. NBC, KYMA/KECY - Thousands gathered for a vigil at a Los Angeles church Sunday to support the victims of the Hamas attacks in Israel.Some 2,000 people sought solace and support in the face of grief, coming together to pray for those killed, injured and kidnapped in the attacks on Israel, and the lives that will continue to be impacted as war is underway. Unfortunately it keeps repeating itself. Our family [are] Holocaust survivors, so its heartbreaking. It hits home, said Stephanie Pre stanley cup ssman, one of the attendees.Pressman and her husband brought their young children. The headlines have been horrific, but she feels there is healing in community saying, I think that in these situations where you feel that there is nothing you can do, it s just so important to have your community and to come together and find peace in that. Connection to Israel The crowd was filled with a cross section of the community and prominent leaders alike, including L.A. Mayor Karen Bass and L.A. County Sheriff Robert Luna. Sheriff Luna says he came to share a message that law enforcement stand with all communities and that violence will not be tolerated while vaso stanley adding, We re going to have a lot of visible presence around other Jewish facilities and mosques as well. We re looking at all sides. We don t want stanley kubek any violence. Rabbi Noah Farkas says though the Jewish community is spread across the world, many still have connection to Israel, as for his own loved ones. Some of Uulw Brock Purdy: Bringing respect to the Mr. Irrelevant title
By JACQUES BILLEAUDAssociated PressPHOENIX AP 鈥?A judge has ruled that an Arizona prisoner convicted in the 1978 killing of a university student is mentally fit to be put to death next week, keeping on track what would be the first execution in the state in nearly eight years. In a ruling signed shortly before midnight Tuesday and released on Wednesday, Pinal County Superior Court Judge Robert Olson rejected an argument from defense lawyers that Clarence Dixons psychological problems prevent him from rationally understanding why the state wants to end his life.Dixon was convicted of murder in the killing of 21-year-old Arizona State University student Deana stanley es Bowdoin.Lawyers for Dixon said they will appeal the ruling to the Arizona Supreme Court. While Olson found that Dixon does suffer from schizophrenia, the judge said Dixon is rational and understands the proceedings in his case well enough to show he is competent. Dixons lawyers argued Tuesday in a court in Florence, Arizona, that executing him would violate protections against executing people who are mentally unfit.They said he erroneously believes he will be executed because police at Northern Arizona University wrongfully arrested him in a previous case 鈥?a 1985 attack on a 21-year-old stanley cup usa student. His attorneys concede he was in fact lawfully arrested at the time b stanley germany y Flagstaff police.Olson rejected that argument, saying that on one hand it is an elegant theory that could make all of his legal problems go a |