The plans include 378 two and three bedroom townhouses, 145 one and two bedroom apartments and a building of 10 co-living units – each containing six bedrooms.
The traffic stop happened not far from the team’s home stadium, and the bodycam footage begins when Mr Hill’s car is pulled over, several officers approach, and one knocks on the window.“Don’t knock on my window like that,” Mr Hill says several times after rolling the window down.
The officer responds: “Why don’t you have your seatbelt on?”After a brief exchange Mr Hill then says: “Give me my ticket bro, so I can go, I’m gonna be late."Mr Hill then rolls the car window back up. The officer knocks on the window again and orders him to put it down again.
“Keep your window down (or) I’m going to get you out of the car,” the officer says. “As a matter of fact, get out of the car.”The officers pull the football star out of the car and put him face down on the pavement.
“When we tell you to do something, you do it, do you understand?” one of the officers says, as they handcuff Mr Hill.
“You were beating on my window like you crazy,” Mr Hill is heard saying.Trump's incoming national security adviser Mike Waltz has said that foreign hackers must face "higher costs and consequences".
Mr Forno, of the UMBC Cybersecurity Institute, said the hacks were probably years in the making."China traditionally takes a very long and strategic view of how they conduct their espionage and intelligence operations," he said. "The US tends to be much more reactive and much more interested in immediate and visible results."
China's foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning told a news briefing that the accusations were "baseless" and "lacking evidence"."China consistently opposes all forms of hacking and firmly rejects the dissemination of false information targeting China for political purposes," Mao said.