Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Airbnb to ban ‘party houses’ after fatal shooting in Calif.

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Airbnb Inc. says it’s banning “party houses” in the wake of a deadly shooting at an Airbnb rental in California.

In a series of tweets Saturday, Airbnb co-founder and CEO Brian Chesky said that the San Franciscob­ased company is stepping up efforts to “combat unauthoriz­ed parties and get rid of abusive host and guest conduct.”

Chesky said Airbnb is expanding manual screening of “high risk” reservatio­ns that are flagged by its system. It’s also forming a rapid response team dedicated to house parties. The company will remove guests who fail to comply.

Five people were killed in a Halloween party shooting in Orinda, a suburb 18 miles northeast of San Francisco.

“What happened on Thursday night in Orinda was horrible. I feel for the families and neighbors impacted by this tragedy. We are working to support them,” Chesky tweeted.

People with knowledge of the transactio­n say the woman who rented the home lied to her Airbnb host, saying she was renting it so her asthmatic family members could escape wildfire smoke. More than 100 people had gathered for the party, police said.

The Airbnb ad banned parties and Orinda has a 13-person limit on occupancy for short-term rentals.

House parties have long been an issue for Airbnb.

In 2018, Airbnb permanentl­y banned a man who crammed more than 250 people into an Airbnb rental in Seven Hills, Ohio, for an unauthoriz­ed New Year’s party while his host hid in a bedroom. In July, two people were killed during a party at an Airbnb in Pittsburgh. In Egypt: Top prosecutor Hamada el-Sawy said Saturday that a train conductor who allegedly forced two street vendors without tickets to jump off a moving train, leading to the death of one of the youths, will stand trial.

The incident took place last week in the Nile Delta town of Tanta and has stirred calls for the resignatio­n of Egypt's transporta­tion minister.

The conductor allegedly demanded the youths “pay for tickets but they refused,” after which he reportedly opened a carriage door for them to jump out. The conductor, who is in custody, faces two charges, including causing injuries that led to the death of one of the two men, and deliberate­ly injuring the other youth. A trial date has not been set.

 ?? VINCENT YU/AP ?? Richard Chan, a candidate for district council elections, Saturday in Hong Kong. Police fired tear gas and used a water cannon against protesters demanding meaningful autonomy after Beijing signaled it could tighten its grip on the territory.
VINCENT YU/AP Richard Chan, a candidate for district council elections, Saturday in Hong Kong. Police fired tear gas and used a water cannon against protesters demanding meaningful autonomy after Beijing signaled it could tighten its grip on the territory.

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