Good guy with a gun draws weapon as pregnant woman is beaten, stomped by her boyfriend — and the brutal attack ends right there



A good guy with a gun drew his weapon as a pregnant woman was being beaten and stomped by her boyfriend outside a grocery store in Florida over the weekend — and as you might guess, the attack ended right then and there.

What are the details?

The woman told Pinellas County Sheriff's deputies that her boyfriend — 27-year-old Cole Danisment — got angry and repeatedly punched her in the face in the parking lot of a Publix in Largo around 5:15 p.m. on Saturday, the Miami Herald reported, citing an arrest affidavit. Largo is about 45 minutes southwest of Tampa.

The woman fell to the ground, and Danisment allegedly stomped on her head and upper body, the paper said.

However, a witness said he feared for the woman’s life, which prompted him to intervene — drawing his gun on the suspect, the Herald noted.

The paper added that Danisment didn’t end his "brutal” attack until the witness pulled his gun on him.

The victim was left “covered in large amounts of blood” and suffered a possible broken nose in the attack, the Herald said, adding that the victim told deputies Danisment knew she was 14 weeks pregnant with his unborn child.

Deputies said there was a no-contact order against Danisment after his arrest on a domestic battery charge a week before, the paper said, adding that the order did not stop his “pattern of violence” against his girlfriend.

The suspect admitted attacking the victim but told deputies he “saw red” and couldn’t remember what happened after “blacking out,” the Herald reported, citing the affidavit.

What happened to the suspect?

Danisment was charged with aggravated domestic battery and booked into the Pinellas County Jail, where he remained held Tuesday on a $20,000 bond, the paper said, citing online records.

Publix not administering COVID-19 vaccine to young children 'at this time' after FDA authorization



Publix, the Florida-based grocery store, appears to have taken a stance against providing the COVID-19 vaccine to children under age 5.

What are the details?

Last week, the Food and Drug Administration authorized the Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccines for children ages 6 months to 5 years old.

But a spokesperson for Publix told the Tampa Bay Times on Wednesday that Publix pharmacies will not administer the authorized COVID vaccines to children younger than 5 years old "at this time."

The spokesperson declined to elaborate and said Publix is not releasing an explanation of its decision.

However, a customer service representative for Publix explained on Twitter:

Publix is not administering the COVID vaccine to individuals under 5 years of age at this time. We suggest that customers speak with pediatrician’s offices, community health centers, children’s hospitals, and public health clinics for availability at this time.

TheBlaze reached out a Publix spokesperson seeking clarification on whether the policy applies just to stores in Florida or if the policy extends to every Publix grocery store. The representative did not immediately respond.

What is the background?

Florida's state government, including Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) and state Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo, have publicly voiced opposition to administering the COVID vaccine to young healthy children.

Against recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Florida Department of Health released guidance in March that advised against giving the vaccine to healthy children.

"Based on currently available data, healthy children aged 5 to 17 may not benefit from receiving the currently available COVID-19 vaccine. The Department recommends that children with underlying conditions are the best candidates for the COVID-19 vaccine," the guidance states. "In general, healthy children with no significant underlying health conditions under 16 years old are at little to no risk of severe illness complications from COVID-19."

Last week, DeSantis reaffirmed the state's position.

"I would say we are affirmatively against the Covid vaccine for young kids," he said. "These are the people who have zero risk of getting anything."

Publix to require associates to wear face coverings regardless of vaccination status



Publix will mandate that associates wear face coverings indoors regardless of whether they have been vaccinated. The grocery chain's policy will take effect on Monday.

The company pointed to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which is recommending that fully vaccinated individuals wear a mask when in indoor public places in regions of the country where there is substantial or high transmission.

"The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) updated guidance recommends that individuals in areas of substantial or high transmission risk wear face coverings over their noses and mouths when in public, indoor spaces," Publix communications director Maria Brous said in a statement, according to The Hill.

"Effective Aug. 2, Publix is requiring associates, regardless of their vaccination status, to wear face coverings over their noses and mouths while inside any Publix location, and we encourage all to do their part to slow the spread of COVID-19," the statement said.

The company will still "encourage, but not require, our associates to get vaccinated," Brous said, according to The Hill.

Publix's website indicates that the company has more than 1,200 stores located throughout the southeast in the states of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia.

According to the CDC, 57.9 percent of the U.S. population ages 12 and up have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 while 67.1 percent of that population demographic has received at least one dose.

The Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines both involve two shots while Johnson & Johnson's Janssen vaccine involves just one shot.

In the U.S., the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is authorized to be used in people ages 12 and older while the other vaccines are only available to those 18 and up.

So far in the U.S. there have been more than 34.7 million COVID-19 cases and more than 612,000 deaths, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

FACT CHECK: Did Publix Reveal It Will Stop Carrying Ben & Jerry’s Products?

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Ron DeSantis utterly dismantles false accusations made by '60 Minutes' once and for all

Ron DeSantis utterly dismantles false accusations made by '60 Minutes' once and for all



Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis on Wednesday continued to rake "60 Minutes" over the coals for its deceptive reporting on the state's vaccine distribution partnership with Publix, holding a news conference that utterly dismantled CBS News' false accusations of a "pay to play" scheme between the governor and the grocery store chain.

DeSantis held a news conference titled "Facts vs. Smears" during which he spent a half hour explaining how his administration has been the target of "malicious smears" from the media. He and Florida Emergency Director Jared Moskowitz, a Democrat, together explained in detail the steps the DeSantis administration took to begin distributing the COVID-19 vaccine to Florida's senior citizens.

"When you're talking about this ridiculous smear narrative, it's important to break down just how false it is, how thoroughly dishonest it is, because this is bad for our country," DeSantis said.

On Sunday, CBS News' "60 Minutes" ran a 13-minute hit piece attacking DeSantis' role in Florida's vaccine distribution and accusing the governor of accepting $100,000 in campaign donations from Publix in exchange for granting the grocery store exclusive rights to distribute the vaccine. While "60 Minutes" aired a clip of DeSantis denying the allegations to reporter Sharyn Alfonsi, the program's editors cut out most of DeSantis' argument showing how the allegations were false.

After the report aired, Palm Beach County Mayor Dave Kerner, a Democrat, issued a statement saying "60 Minutes" intentionally misled viewers about the county's vaccination efforts and clarified that the county asked the governor to expand the state's partnership with Publix.

"They had that information, and they left it out because it kneecaps their narrative," Kerner said.

Moskowitz and Publix also issued statements blasting the false "60 Minutes" report.

In a detailed slideshow presentation, DeSantis and Moskowitz demonstrated how the claim that Publix received an exclusive deal to distribute the vaccine in Palm Beach was a "lie," showing how Florida partnered with CVS, Walgreens, hospitals, long-term care facilities, senior living communities, churches and other places of worship, and the Department of Health in Palm Beach County along with Publix to distribute the vaccine.

"The exclusive deal is a lie. They knew it was a lie, and yet they put it on the air," DeSantis said. "The fact is, there was never a deal with the state of Florida and Publix for any of this. No contracts. The state of Florida never paid Publix one red cent for distributing it."

Moskowitz told reporters that Florida considered other major retailers to participate in the state's pilot program for vaccination distribution, noting that his first choice was Walmart.

"We needed to open up more locations ... my first choice was Walmart. I called Walmart first and said listen we have some doses we wanna pilot this, we wanna pilot it specifically in areas that not just have hesitancy but where we see shots slowing down," he said. "Walmart said 'great we'd love to partner with you but we can't start for 21 days.'"

* @Publix wasn't chosen for rollout b/c of political donation says @GovRonDeSantis Emergency Management director… https://t.co/8Wzlue0PQ7
— MAHSA SAEIDI, ESQ. (@MAHSA SAEIDI, ESQ.)1617818970.0

Moskowitz explained that when Publix was asked when they could start vaccine distribution, they said they could be ready to go in 72 hours. And that's why Publix was selected to partner with Florida.

DeSantis said "60 Minutes" was provided with this information, which they neglected to report.

In statements to several news organizations, a spokesman for "60 Minutes" defended its reporting.

When Florida state data revealed people of color were vaccinated at a much lower rate than their wealthier neighbors, 60 MINUTES reported the facts surrounding the vaccine's rollout, which is controlled by the governor. We requested and conducted interviews with dozens of sources and authorities involved. We requested an interview with Gov. Ron DeSantis, he declined; We spoke to State Emergency Management Director Jared Moskowitz twice, but he declined to be interviewed on camera for our story until well after our deadline. The idea we ignored their perspective is untrue. Counter to his statement yesterday, we also spoke on the record with Palm Beach County Mayor David Kerner. For over 50 years, the facts reported by 60 MINUTES have often stirred debate and prompted strong reactions. Our story Sunday night speaks for itself.

But DeSantis said that when his office offered to have Moskowitz and Kerner be interviewed, "60 Minutes" declined.

"Jared is not gonna sit down in an interview a month ago, or two weeks ago, to dismiss a fake story. He's got better things to do," DeSantis said. "But when it was clear that they were hell-bent on doing this, we said, alright, Jared will go on air. Dave Kerner will go on air. No, no no, we don't want to do that. We don't want to do that, because obviously, that would have undercut their narrative."

The governor accused "60 Minutes" of promoting a baseless conspiracy theory to smear him.

"The bottom line is ... to assert as a matter of fact that Publix was rewarded with exclusive rights in Palm Beach County is something that even the dimmest bulb in the New York corporate media constellation would have been able to realize that was false," DeSantis said.

"You literally take 10 minutes to make a few phone calls — '60 Minutes' was in Florida for three months trying to dig up dirt ... they wanted to smear Florida, they wanted to smear our vaccination effort, they obviously wanted to smear me. They spent three months and the best they could come up with is a half-baked conspiracy theory that literally is readily debunked by talking to like two people.

"So I think that means that we probably did a pretty good job, because if we had done a really bad job they would have actually had facts that they could have relied on to try to do the hit piece," he added.

Watch Gov. DeSantis news conference:

CBS And ‘60 Minutes’ Double Down On DeSantis-Publix Lies, Refuse To Answer Basic Questions About Their Bogus Smear Job

"I told them on the phone that [the Publix narrative] was false. And then they say that it's not that we 'ignored their perspective.' Really? Where is the balance in the story?" Moskowitz asked.