Erie County Update: Friday (3pm)

The Erie County Department of Health is releasing results of reports from COVID-19 testing on individuals in Erie County. There are currently 36 lab confirmed cases in Erie County residents as of 12 p.m. today. Additional tests are being run by our Public Health Lab and commercial labs and results will be released when available.

  • The Erie County Public Health Lab has completed 256 tests for Erie County residents, with 220 negative results and 299 tests pending.

  • As of Friday morning, 36 people are in isolation with daily check-ins from our quarantine and isolation team. There are 252 contacts in quarantine and 163 individuals have completed quarantine.

  • The Erie County Department of Environment and Planning has developed an online mapping tool to display data about positive COVID-19 cases. The information displayed on this web site will be updated regularly. Access the web site at www.erie.gov/covidmap.

  • ECDOH has prioritized monitoring for the family and close contacts of individuals with a positive COVID-19 diagnosis; individuals who are elderly or who have chronic medical conditions; and health care providers and medical facilities. Our guidance for the people of Erie County is that we should assume that COVID-19 is prevalent in the community.
  • We are further advising all Erie County residents to monitor for COVID-19 symptoms, which involves daily checks for:

o   Fever (100.4 degrees or higher)

o   Cough

o   Shortness of Breath

  • If you develop symptoms, isolate yourself at home and from others in your household, and call your physician. Before seeking health care call ahead to the facility and tell them your situation. The facility will give you instructions on how to get care without exposing other people to your illness.

  • ECDOH also has guidance for essential employers and returning to work.

o   Employees who have been contacts to confirmed or suspected cases who are asymptomatic should work. Employees with confirmed or suspected COVID-19 who have maintained isolation for at least 7 days after illness onset and have been at least 72 hours fever-free with other symptoms improving may work.

o   Employees who are asymptomatic contacts of confirmed or suspected cases should self-monitor twice a day (temperature, symptoms), and undergo temperature monitoring and symptom checks at the beginning of each shift and at least every 12 hours.

o   If employees who are asymptomatic contacts working under these conditions develop symptoms consistent with COVID-19, they should immediately stop work and isolate at home. All employees with symptoms consistent with COVID-19 should be dealt with as if they have this infection regardless of the availability of test results.

  • Starting Saturday, March 21, the Erie County COVID-19 Information Line will be staffed with live call takers from 8 a.m. until 8 p.m. Visit our web site to see if your question has been answered first: www.erie.gov/covid19. This is a line for the public and for health care providers. We are asking callers to not call with hypothetical questions. Questions about medical conditions have to be answered by an individual’s health care provider.

  • As an update from yesterday’s release of potential public exposures to COVID-19, a location from 3/9/2020 that was initially for Spirit Airlines has been corrected to Frontier Airlines F9N2500, Tampa to Buffalo. Following questions from Thursday’s press conference, our epidemiology team asked additional questions of one of the individuals a positive result, and received this clarification.

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Gateway Pundit warned by its own lawyer it was using ‘a damned fraud’ as a source: report



A new filing in a defamation lawsuit filed by Georgia poll workers Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss against the conspiracy theory website Gateway Pundit reveals that workers at the site feared for their credibility, reported The Guardian — and their own attorney warned them that the source for their claims was not to be trusted.

The site's founder, Jim Hoft, has earned the nickname "The Dumbest Man on the Internet" for years of strange and sloppy claims. Despite this, former President Donald Trump has been reported to be an avid reader of the site.

"Attorneys for Freeman and Moss ... said in their filing that John Burns, a lawyer for Gateway Pundit, had warned the site about relying on Kevin Moncla, a source in Georgia who fed the site information on Freeman and Moss, including their non-public personnel files, according to the filing," said the report.

"'Moncla is a known fabricator. I wouldn’t touch/publish anything he produces,” Burns reportedly wrote, while also calling Moncla “a g-------d fraud."

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As if that weren't enough, Freeman and Moss’s attorneys also unearthed messages from Moncla said in which he said of their clients, "I will help you nail these b----s."

According to the report, Moncla was charged with voyeurism and ordered to pay $3.25 million after filming guests in the bathroom at his house.

Earlier this week, Gateway Pundit filed for bankruptcy amid the litigation against them.

Moss and Freeman, who counted ballots in Atlanta in 2020, have become a focus of numerous MAGA conspiracy theories, spread in part by Trump allies like Rudy Giuliani, who claimed that they were stuffing ballots — based in part on a supposed "flash drive" one passed to the other that turned out to be a ginger mint. Giuliani was found liable for $148 million in a defamation default judgment for his role in these claims.

In addition to the defamation cases, efforts to harass the two workers form part of the election racketeering case against Trump's allies in Fulton County.