1
U(D54G1D)y+&!#!=!?!# Across the country’s deserts, mothers hunt for any scrap of their missing children. The New York Times photographer Fred Ramos documented their search and the clothing that was found with unidentified bodies. Even when remains are found, identifying the dead can be a long and arduous process. Page A8. Mexico’s 100,000 Disappeared People ANCHORAGE — There was one bed coming available in the in- tensive care unit in Alaska’s larg- est hospital. It was the middle of the night, and the hospital, Providence Alaska Medical Center in Anchor- age, had been hit with a deluge of coronavirus patients. Doctors now had a choice to make: Several more patients at the hospital, most of them with Covid-19, were in line to take that last I.C.U. spot. But there was also someone from one of the state’s isolated rural communities who needed to be flown in for emergency surgery. Who should get the final bed? Dr. Steven Floerchinger gath- ered with his colleagues for an ag- onizing discussion. They had a better chance of saving one of the patients in the emergency room, they determined. The other per- son would have to wait. That patient died. “This is gut-wrenching, and I never thought I’d see it,” said Dr. Floerchinger, who has been in practice for 30 years. “We are taxed to a point of making deci- sions of who will and who will not live.” Since that night, more grim choices have had to be made as Alaska confronts what is cur- rently the nation’s worst coronavi- rus outbreak. Nearly two years af- ter the virus began circulating in the United States, some of the scenes here on the country’s northern frontier echo the darkest early days of the pandemic: test- ing supplies are depleted, patients are being treated in hallways and doctors are rationing oxygen. With emergency rooms over- whelmed, the governor has asked hundreds of medical workers to fly in from around the country to help. Through much of the pandemic, Alaska’s natural isolation had shielded the state, with the early months defined by strict testing protocols for people arriving from the outside. Many villages locked down. When vaccines arrived, there was a legion of planes, fer- ries and sleds to bring doses to far-flung communities. The state has maintained some of the lowest death numbers in the country. But with some pockets of the state wary of taking vaccines — only about half the state’s resi- dents are fully vaccinated — and Gov. Mike Dunleavy resisting re- strictions to curtail the virus, the state’s isolation has become a growing liability as the Delta vari- Alaska Doctors Forced to Pick Who Is Treated Overwhelmed by Worst U.S. Covid Outbreak By MIKE BAKER Continued on Page A19 WASHINGTON A trans- formed Supreme Court returns to the bench on Monday to start a momentous term in which it will consider eliminating the constitu- tional right to abortion, vastly ex- panding gun rights and further chipping away at the wall separat- ing church and state. The abortion case, a challenge to a Mississippi law that bars most abortions after 15 weeks, has at- tracted the most attention. The court, dominated by six Republi- can appointees, seems poised to use it to undermine and perhaps overturn Roe v. Wade, the 1973 de- cision that established a constitu- tional right to abortion and barred states from banning the pro- cedure before fetal viability. The highly charged docket will test the leadership of Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., who lost his position at the court’s ideological center with the arrival last fall of Justice Amy Coney Barrett. He is now outflanked by five justices to his right, limiting his ability to guide the court toward the con- sensus and incrementalism he has said he prefers. The chief justice, who views himself as the custodian of the court’s institutional authority, now leads a court increasingly as- sociated with partisanship and that recent polls show is suffering a distinct drop in public support. At a time when the justices have become uncharacteristically de- fensive in public about the court’s record, one poll taken by Gallup last month found that only 40 per- cent of Americans approved of the job the court was doing, the lowest ABORTION LEADS CHARGED DOCKET IN COURT RETURN CHALLENGE FOR ROBERTS Justices Defend Record as Polls Show Decline in Public Support By ADAM LIPTAK Continued on Page A17 Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. is no longer the swing vote. POOL PHOTO BY ERIN SCHAFF GREENSBORO, Md. — It was a warm Saturday evening when Jennell Black heard a commotion outside her mobile home on Mary- land’s Eastern Shore. Outside her door, four men were holding her 19-year-old son face down, pin- ning his shoulder, legs and arms. One of them, who turned out to be an off-duty police chief from a nearby town, was lying on top of him. “That’s Anton,” Ms. Black said in disbelief. Then she raised her voice: “Anton!” She watched helplessly as An- ton Black, a former star high school athlete with a nascent mod- eling career, struggled and then became unresponsive. The offi- cers told Ms. Black that her son was having a mental health emer- gency and would be taken to a hos- pital, not to jail. They assured her that he was breathing and had a pulse. But when they finally sat him up, she could tell something was gravely wrong. “He’s turning dark,” she said. He never regained con- sciousness. It was 2018, two years before George Floyd was killed in Minne- apolis after similar treatment, with two officers holding down his lower body and one with a knee on his neck. Mr. Floyd was pinned face down for nine and a half min- utes, Mr. Black for more than six. An autopsy report released four months later blamed Mr. Black’s death on congenital heart abnor- malities. It classified the death as an accident and said there was no evidence that the police officers’ actions had played a role. “It was horrible,” said LaToya Holley, one of Mr. Black’s sisters, adding that his sports physicals had never re- vealed any heart problems. “We didn’t imagine at all that it would read the way it did.” The medical examiner’s find- ings thrust the Black family into one of the most contentious issues in American policing today: un- armed people who die after being restrained. The debate, playing out in autopsy rooms, court- houses and police training ses- Studies on Use Of Police Holds Are Challenged Face-Down Restraints Ignored in Autopsies By SHAILA DEWAN Continued on Page A14 WASHINGTON — Former Vice President Mike Pence turned up in Hungary last month to speak to a conference on conservative so- cial values hosted by the far-right government of Prime Minister Viktor Orban. Jeff Sessions, the former attor- ney general, was another recent visitor. Tucker Carlson did his Fox News show from Hungary for a week this summer. The American Conservative Union is planning a version of its CPAC gathering in Budapest early next year. Those are among the more visi- ble recent fruits of a well-funded campaign by Mr. Orban in the United States that stretches back a decade and now stands as a case study in how governments around the world seek to shape policies and debates in Washington, some- times raising concerns about im- proper foreign influence in U.S. politics. Carried out by a network of gov- ernment offices, Washington lob- byists, Hungarian diaspora groups, educational institutions and government-funded founda- tions, the effort’s main impact has Hungary Runs Vast Campaign For U.S. Sway By KENNETH P. VOGEL and BENJAMIN NOVAK In the middle of the night, Uyen Nguyen trudged through a grassy marshland with her mother and three siblings until they reached the edge of the ocean, where a small, dilapidated fishing boat was beached on the sand. It set off with 31 people packed on it. It was 1985, a decade after Saigon had fallen, and their final attempt at fleeing Vietnam. Days later, the boat’s engine sputtered out, stranding the passengers at sea for about a month and forcing them to catch rainwater to sustain themselves. Ten people died, in- cluding Ms. Nguyen’s mother and two of her siblings. The others, in- cluding Ms. Nguyen, 10, and her 15-year-old brother, were rescued by fishermen and taken to a refu- gee camp in the Philippines. Ms. Nguyen thought of that es- cape after seeing images of Af- ghans crammed on U.S. military planes in August, desperate to leave a country ravaged by a dec- ades-long war. The unmistakable parallels, she said, have com- pelled her to help Afghans whose situation is similar to what she ex- perienced. “We can’t just sit back, espe- cially since we’re either refugees or children of refugees,” said Ms. Nguyen, 46, an entrepreneur in Seattle who eventually immigrat- ed to the United States with her brother as unaccompanied mi- nors. “I don’t see an option not to do something.” The Vietnam War has long stood as a symbol of American failure, with thousands of Viet- namese left behind after Ameri- can troops swiftly withdrew and Communist forces toppled Saigon. Vietnamese Americans Mobilize To Aid the Newest War Refugees By MADELEINE NGO Continued on Page A16 JASON GULLEY Scientists are exploring icy caves to study their relationships with glacial melting. Pages D4-5. Spelunking for Climate Hints BERLIN — Emilia Fester is 23 and has yet to finish college. Max Lucks is 24 and calls himself a mil- itant cyclist. Ria Schröder is 29 and has the rainbow flag on her Twitter profile. Muhanad Al-Ha- lak is 31 and came to Germany from Iraq when he was 11. And all of them are now in the German Parliament. The German election result was in many ways a muddle. The win- ners, the Social Democrats led by Olaf Scholz, barely won. No party got more than 25.7 percent. Voters spread their ballots evenly across candidates associated with the left and the right. But one thing is clear: Germans elected their youngest ever Par- liament, and the two parties at the center of this generational shift, the Greens and the Free Demo- crats, will not just shape the next government but are also poised to help shape the future of the coun- try. For now, the Greens, focused on climate change and social justice, and the Free Democrats, who campaigned on civil liberties and digital modernization, are king- makers: Whoever becomes the next chancellor almost certainly needs both parties to form a gov- ernment. “We will no longer leave politics to the older generation,” said Ms. Schröder, a newly minted law- maker for the Free Democrats Germany’s Parliament Isn’t Just New. It’s Young. By KATRIN BENNHOLD and MELISSA EDDY A Generational Shift Is Led by Two Parties, Now Kingmakers Continued on Page A6 Continued on Page A18 Ben Roberts-Smith, Australia’s most decorated soldier, is suing three news- papers for defamation. PAGE A10 INTERNATIONAL A4-12 Soldier Fights for Reputation The sprawling 1,250-square-mile sys- tem of water and farmland in Northern California is a four-season destination for watersport fans. PAGE A13 NATIONAL A13-19, 22 Frolicking on California’s Delta Alessandro Nivola is a lead character in “The Many Saints of Newark,” the “Sopranos” prequel. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-8 Role of a Lifetime Both teams won their regular-season finales to gain spots in the American League wild-card game. PAGE D1 SPORTS D1-7 A Yankees-Red Sox Showdown The Parsi community, which helped build many of the country’s institutions, is shrinking at an alarming rate. PAGE A4 A Loss for Modern India A man rode a skateboard up to a statue of George Floyd in a New York City park on Sunday and splashed the face with paint, the police said. PAGE A22 Floyd Statue Is Vandalized A 13-square-mile slick extended from Huntington Beach to Newport Beach as dead fish and birds began to wash ashore in some areas. PAGE A16 Big Oil Spill Off California One man’s 10-year fascination with virtual reality delights and disappoints but continues to improve. PAGE B1 Hunting a Dopamine Rush An exuberant musical pageant about the wives of Henry VIII is back. Review by Jesse Green. PAGE C1 Tudor Queens Rule A team’s first game in New Orleans since Hurricane Ida brought joy, if not a victory, to a hard-hit city. PAGE D1 Happy to Have the Saints Back Mohib Ullah, 46, had a list of Rohingya who perished in the hope that the data could be used as evidence. PAGE B6 OBITUARIES B5-6 He Documented Massacres Henry M. Paulson Jr. PAGE A21 OPINION A20-21 Late Edition VOL. CLXXI .... No. 59,201 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 2021 Frances Haugen, a former Facebook manager, said she had grown alarmed by the company putting its own inter- ests before the public’s. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-4 A Whistle-Blower Speaks Out Today, mostly cloudy, rain, thunder- storms, high 73. Tonight, overcast, occasional rain, low 63. Tomorrow, cloudy, stray showers, high 68. Weather map appears on Page D8. $3.00

IN COURT RETURN

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C M Y K Nxxx,2021-10-04,A,001,Bs-4C,E1

U(D54G1D)y+&!#!=!?!#

Across the country’s deserts, mothers hunt for any scrap of their missing children.The New York Times photographer Fred Ramos documented their search and theclothing that was found with unidentified bodies. Even when remains are found,

identifying the dead can be a long and arduous process. Page A8.

Mexico’s 100,000 Disappeared People

ANCHORAGE — There wasone bed coming available in the in-tensive care unit in Alaska’s larg-est hospital.

It was the middle of the night,and the hospital, ProvidenceAlaska Medical Center in Anchor-age, had been hit with a deluge ofcoronavirus patients. Doctorsnow had a choice to make: Severalmore patients at the hospital,most of them with Covid-19, werein line to take that last I.C.U. spot.But there was also someone fromone of the state’s isolated ruralcommunities who needed to beflown in for emergency surgery.

Who should get the final bed?Dr. Steven Floerchinger gath-

ered with his colleagues for an ag-onizing discussion. They had abetter chance of saving one of thepatients in the emergency room,they determined. The other per-son would have to wait.

That patient died.“This is gut-wrenching, and I

never thought I’d see it,” said Dr. Floerchinger, who has been inpractice for 30 years. “We aretaxed to a point of making deci-sions of who will and who will notlive.”

Since that night, more grimchoices have had to be made asAlaska confronts what is cur-rently the nation’s worst coronavi-rus outbreak. Nearly two years af-ter the virus began circulating inthe United States, some of thescenes here on the country’snorthern frontier echo the darkestearly days of the pandemic: test-ing supplies are depleted, patientsare being treated in hallways anddoctors are rationing oxygen.With emergency rooms over-whelmed, the governor has askedhundreds of medical workers tofly in from around the country tohelp.

Through much of the pandemic,Alaska’s natural isolation hadshielded the state, with the earlymonths defined by strict testingprotocols for people arriving fromthe outside. Many villages lockeddown. When vaccines arrived,there was a legion of planes, fer-ries and sleds to bring doses tofar-flung communities. The statehas maintained some of the lowestdeath numbers in the country.

But with some pockets of thestate wary of taking vaccines —only about half the state’s resi-dents are fully vaccinated — andGov. Mike Dunleavy resisting re-strictions to curtail the virus, thestate’s isolation has become agrowing liability as the Delta vari-

Alaska DoctorsForced to PickWho Is Treated

Overwhelmed by WorstU.S. Covid Outbreak

By MIKE BAKER

Continued on Page A19

WASHINGTON — A trans-formed Supreme Court returns tothe bench on Monday to start amomentous term in which it willconsider eliminating the constitu-tional right to abortion, vastly ex-panding gun rights and furtherchipping away at the wall separat-ing church and state.

The abortion case, a challengeto a Mississippi law that bars mostabortions after 15 weeks, has at-tracted the most attention. Thecourt, dominated by six Republi-can appointees, seems poised touse it to undermine and perhapsoverturn Roe v. Wade, the 1973 de-cision that established a constitu-tional right to abortion and barredstates from banning the pro-cedure before fetal viability.

The highly charged docket willtest the leadership of Chief JusticeJohn G. Roberts Jr., who lost hisposition at the court’s ideologicalcenter with the arrival last fall ofJustice Amy Coney Barrett. He isnow outflanked by five justices tohis right, limiting his ability toguide the court toward the con-sensus and incrementalism hehas said he prefers.

The chief justice, who viewshimself as the custodian of thecourt’s institutional authority,now leads a court increasingly as-sociated with partisanship andthat recent polls show is sufferinga distinct drop in public support.At a time when the justices havebecome uncharacteristically de-fensive in public about the court’srecord, one poll taken by Galluplast month found that only 40 per-cent of Americans approved of thejob the court was doing, the lowest

ABORTION LEADSCHARGED DOCKETIN COURT RETURN

CHALLENGE FOR ROBERTS

Justices Defend Recordas Polls Show Decline

in Public Support

By ADAM LIPTAK

Continued on Page A17

Chief Justice John G. RobertsJr. is no longer the swing vote.

POOL PHOTO BY ERIN SCHAFF

GREENSBORO, Md. — It was awarm Saturday evening whenJennell Black heard a commotionoutside her mobile home on Mary-land’s Eastern Shore. Outside herdoor, four men were holding her19-year-old son face down, pin-ning his shoulder, legs and arms.One of them, who turned out to bean off-duty police chief from anearby town, was lying on top ofhim.

“That’s Anton,” Ms. Black saidin disbelief. Then she raised hervoice: “Anton!”

She watched helplessly as An-ton Black, a former star highschool athlete with a nascent mod-eling career, struggled and thenbecame unresponsive. The offi-cers told Ms. Black that her sonwas having a mental health emer-gency and would be taken to a hos-pital, not to jail.

They assured her that he wasbreathing and had a pulse. Butwhen they finally sat him up, shecould tell something was gravelywrong. “He’s turning dark,” shesaid. He never regained con-sciousness.

It was 2018, two years beforeGeorge Floyd was killed in Minne-apolis after similar treatment,with two officers holding down hislower body and one with a knee onhis neck. Mr. Floyd was pinnedface down for nine and a half min-utes, Mr. Black for more than six.

An autopsy report released fourmonths later blamed Mr. Black’sdeath on congenital heart abnor-malities. It classified the death asan accident and said there was noevidence that the police officers’actions had played a role. “It washorrible,” said LaToya Holley, oneof Mr. Black’s sisters, adding thathis sports physicals had never re-vealed any heart problems. “Wedidn’t imagine at all that it wouldread the way it did.”

The medical examiner’s find-ings thrust the Black family intoone of the most contentious issuesin American policing today: un-armed people who die after beingrestrained. The debate, playingout in autopsy rooms, court-houses and police training ses-

Studies on UseOf Police HoldsAre Challenged

Face-Down RestraintsIgnored in Autopsies

By SHAILA DEWAN

Continued on Page A14

WASHINGTON — Former VicePresident Mike Pence turned upin Hungary last month to speak toa conference on conservative so-cial values hosted by the far-rightgovernment of Prime MinisterViktor Orban.

Jeff Sessions, the former attor-ney general, was another recentvisitor. Tucker Carlson did his FoxNews show from Hungary for aweek this summer. The AmericanConservative Union is planning aversion of its CPAC gathering inBudapest early next year.

Those are among the more visi-ble recent fruits of a well-fundedcampaign by Mr. Orban in theUnited States that stretches backa decade and now stands as a casestudy in how governments aroundthe world seek to shape policiesand debates in Washington, some-times raising concerns about im-proper foreign influence in U.S.politics.

Carried out by a network of gov-ernment offices, Washington lob-byists, Hungarian diasporagroups, educational institutionsand government-funded founda-tions, the effort’s main impact has

Hungary RunsVast Campaign

For U.S. Sway

By KENNETH P. VOGELand BENJAMIN NOVAK

In the middle of the night, UyenNguyen trudged through a grassymarshland with her mother andthree siblings until they reachedthe edge of the ocean, where asmall, dilapidated fishing boatwas beached on the sand. It set offwith 31 people packed on it.

It was 1985, a decade afterSaigon had fallen, and their finalattempt at fleeing Vietnam. Dayslater, the boat’s engine sputteredout, stranding the passengers atsea for about a month and forcingthem to catch rainwater to sustainthemselves. Ten people died, in-cluding Ms. Nguyen’s mother andtwo of her siblings. The others, in-cluding Ms. Nguyen, 10, and her15-year-old brother, were rescuedby fishermen and taken to a refu-gee camp in the Philippines.

Ms. Nguyen thought of that es-cape after seeing images of Af-

ghans crammed on U.S. militaryplanes in August, desperate toleave a country ravaged by a dec-ades-long war. The unmistakableparallels, she said, have com-pelled her to help Afghans whosesituation is similar to what she ex-perienced.

“We can’t just sit back, espe-cially since we’re either refugeesor children of refugees,” said Ms.Nguyen, 46, an entrepreneur inSeattle who eventually immigrat-ed to the United States with herbrother as unaccompanied mi-nors. “I don’t see an option not todo something.”

The Vietnam War has longstood as a symbol of Americanfailure, with thousands of Viet-namese left behind after Ameri-can troops swiftly withdrew andCommunist forces toppled Saigon.

Vietnamese Americans MobilizeTo Aid the Newest War Refugees

By MADELEINE NGO

Continued on Page A16

JASON GULLEY

Scientists are exploring icy caves to study their relationships with glacial melting. Pages D4-5.Spelunking for Climate Hints

BERLIN — Emilia Fester is 23and has yet to finish college. MaxLucks is 24 and calls himself a mil-itant cyclist. Ria Schröder is 29and has the rainbow flag on herTwitter profile. Muhanad Al-Ha-lak is 31 and came to Germanyfrom Iraq when he was 11.

And all of them are now in theGerman Parliament.

The German election result wasin many ways a muddle. The win-ners, the Social Democrats led byOlaf Scholz, barely won. No party

got more than 25.7 percent. Votersspread their ballots evenly acrosscandidates associated with theleft and the right.

But one thing is clear: Germanselected their youngest ever Par-liament, and the two parties at thecenter of this generational shift,the Greens and the Free Demo-

crats, will not just shape the nextgovernment but are also poised tohelp shape the future of the coun-try.

For now, the Greens, focused onclimate change and social justice,and the Free Democrats, whocampaigned on civil liberties anddigital modernization, are king-makers: Whoever becomes thenext chancellor almost certainlyneeds both parties to form a gov-ernment.

“We will no longer leave politicsto the older generation,” said Ms.Schröder, a newly minted law-maker for the Free Democrats

Germany’s Parliament Isn’t Just New. It’s Young.

By KATRIN BENNHOLDand MELISSA EDDY

A Generational Shift IsLed by Two Parties,

Now Kingmakers

Continued on Page A6

Continued on Page A18

Ben Roberts-Smith, Australia’s mostdecorated soldier, is suing three news-papers for defamation. PAGE A10

INTERNATIONAL A4-12

Soldier Fights for ReputationThe sprawling 1,250-square-mile sys-tem of water and farmland in NorthernCalifornia is a four-season destinationfor watersport fans. PAGE A13

NATIONAL A13-19, 22

Frolicking on California’s DeltaAlessandro Nivola is a lead character in“The Many Saints of Newark,” the“Sopranos” prequel. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-8

Role of a LifetimeBoth teams won their regular-seasonfinales to gain spots in the AmericanLeague wild-card game. PAGE D1

SPORTS D1-7

A Yankees-Red Sox Showdown

The Parsi community, which helpedbuild many of the country’s institutions,is shrinking at an alarming rate. PAGE A4

A Loss for Modern India

A man rode a skateboard up to a statueof George Floyd in a New York Citypark on Sunday and splashed the facewith paint, the police said. PAGE A22

Floyd Statue Is Vandalized

A 13-square-mile slick extended fromHuntington Beach to Newport Beach asdead fish and birds began to washashore in some areas. PAGE A16

Big Oil Spill Off California

One man’s 10-year fascination withvirtual reality delights and disappointsbut continues to improve. PAGE B1

Hunting a Dopamine Rush An exuberant musical pageant aboutthe wives of Henry VIII is back. Reviewby Jesse Green. PAGE C1

Tudor Queens RuleA team’s first game in New Orleanssince Hurricane Ida brought joy, if not avictory, to a hard-hit city. PAGE D1

Happy to Have the Saints Back

Mohib Ullah, 46, had a list of Rohingyawho perished in the hope that the datacould be used as evidence. PAGE B6

OBITUARIES B5-6

He Documented MassacresHenry M. Paulson Jr. PAGE A21

OPINION A20-21

Late Edition

VOL. CLXXI . . . . No. 59,201 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 2021

Frances Haugen, a former Facebookmanager, said she had grown alarmedby the company putting its own inter-ests before the public’s. PAGE B1

BUSINESS B1-4

A Whistle-Blower Speaks Out

Today, mostly cloudy, rain, thunder-storms, high 73. Tonight, overcast,occasional rain, low 63. Tomorrow,cloudy, stray showers, high 68.Weather map appears on Page D8.

$3.00