News about Daniel Silva
How DEEP is your commute?Incredible charts reveal exactly how far underground you are on every London Underground station platform
www.dailymail.co.uk,
January 13, 2024
The last thing you might not normally worry about when you are underground is stuffed into a crowded tube at rush hour. However, these amazing London Underground maps show just how fascinating your commute can be. Daniel Silva, a graphic designer, created these graphics by utilizing Transport for London's own details to get into the tube's hidden topography. These amazing guides are full of unexpected information, from the deepest platform to the top, as well as tracks that dip below underground rivers.
Woke judges in America's fastest-growing city Spokane are slammed for releasing dozens of suspected pedophiles and rapists without bail - including notorious cop who raped two women
www.dailymail.co.uk,
October 23, 2023
According to a study published by The Spokesman-Review, no one had been jailed in Spokane, Washington, from January 1, 2021, to this month, there have been 665 people convicted of violent crimes, many of whom were repeat offenders. The convictors were all guilty of violent crimes, including rape, molesting girls, making death threats, assaults, and vehicular homicide, but none of them, including ex-Spokane officer Nathan Nash, 39, were released while waiting for conviction. Others who were arrested for more serious crimes, such as first-degree murder, were also able to walk out of one of the city's only two county jails unhindered, including 43-year-old Jordan Knippling, who allegedly murdered a 53-year-old man in a homeless shelter, according to investigators. Many who contributed to the study, including the county sheriff and the city's spread-thin police chief, all expressed worry about the data, with County Commissioner Al French saying that the releases did not result from overcrowding. Rather, citing how judges have said, 'the only conclusion left [is] just bad judicial decision,' instead of the city's 230,000 residents, who are in danger.'