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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/16/politics/donald-trump-fact-check-cabinet-meeting/index.html

Next summer will mark forty years since I drew my first paycheck on Capitol Hill as a Page in the House of Representatives. Between working for the Congress, and then covering lawmakers as a reporter, I’ve seen lawmakers almost come to blows, watched Speakers angrily denounce their critics, seen lawmakers block the doors to the House floor to keep lawmakers from leaving, and all sorts of other legislative mischief.

But I have never seen what happened on Tuesday, when Rep. Emmanuel Cleaver (D-MO) did what amounted to a ‘gavel drop,’ as he refused to read a parliamentary ruling against House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and simply walked away.

“I abandon the Chair,” Cleaver said, after getting my attention by clearly not reading the script in front of him, and speaking in the first person from the Speaker’s Chair.

Maybe it’s happened before in the almost 230 years that the House and Senate have been at work – but what Cleaver did on Tuesday was something that left my jaw on the floor.

In his off-the-cuff remarks, Cleaver seemed to indicate that he had given a pass to Rep. Sean Duffy (R-WI), who during debate on a resolution condemning President Trump, had denounced a group of minority women Democrats as ‘anti-American.’

When one Democrat rose to ask that Duffy’s words be ‘taken down’ and scrubbed from the Record, Cleaver brushed off the complaint.

And he evidently thought the same should have been done for Speaker Nancy Pelosi, when she referred to the President’s “racist tweets,” directly going against precedents of the House which clearly state that such speech is against the rules.

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In a statement, Cleaver said he was simply frustrated at what was going on before his eyes.

“I have spent my entire life working with people of all faiths and stripes in an effort solve real-world problems with concrete solutions, but never have we been this divided and this unwilling to listen to countering opinions or accept objective truths,” the Missouri Democrat said.

“However, a house divided against itself cannot stand, regardless of how strong the foundation,” Cleaver added.

Some of my colleagues were just as surprised at the turn of events.

The rules rebuke of Pelosi was historic as well – it was the first time a Speaker had words ‘taken down’ in 35 years, since a famous floor spat between Speaker Tip O’Neill, and future Speaker Newt Gingrich (though not many people at the time would have predicted Gingrich’s ascension to that leadership post).


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Source Article from https://www.ajc.com/blog/jamie-dupree/seen-lot-capitol-hill-never-seen-that/v593FKsTrf2XUQytDtw3CP/

Washington has also been pulled into the trade battle between the North Asian neighbors, and it remains to be seen if the U.S. will weigh in on the situation. Japan and South Korea are two of Washington’s biggest allies in the region.

David Stilwell, the top U.S. diplomat for East Asia policy, met South Korean officials in Seoul on Wednesday, according to Reuters. He said Washington will “engage in all issues that are related to South Korea and the United States,” but avoided responding directly to questions on what role the U.S. will play in the conflict.

Stilwell reportedly told Japan’s NHK broadcaster last week that the U.S. will not intervene in the dispute.

Experts are not sure if the Trump administration will actually get involved in the Korea-Japan dispute or not.

“Prior (U.S.) administrations would have tried to work behind the scenes to de-escalate tensions between the two countries,” said Troy Stangarone, senior director of congressional affairs and trade at the Korea Economic Institute of America.

“However, it is unclear how the Trump administration will be involved. Ideally, they would encourage both governments to engage in dialogue to find a reasonable solution to the current dispute,” Stangarone told CNBC via email.

Last Wednesday, South Korea’s Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha told U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo that Japan’s restrictions may not only damage South Korean companies, but could also disrupt the global supply chain and hurt U.S. firms, according to Reuters.

The U.S. State Department later issued a statement noting the importance of U.S.-Japan-South Korea trilateral cooperation, and agreed to continue working closely to address common challenges in the region.

Koll said the probability of the U.S. stepping in as an active mediator is very low.

“The Trump administration is not afraid to weaponize trade,” he said, adding that using trade to settle political disagreements may seem reasonable to the current U.S. administration.

In Trump’s world, it’s America first, Koll pointed out — as for the rest of world, “that’s (their) problem.”

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/07/17/south-korea-japan-trade-war-risks-escalation-impact-on-tech-firms.html

A “major heat wave” is expected to bake two-thirds of the nation through this weekend, with forecasters calling for temperatures to soar across much of the central and eastern U.S., the National Weather Service said.

Many in those areas could see the hottest temperatures of the year, thanks to a large dome of high pressure that will send temperatures climbing in the coming days, the weather service said.

Already on Tuesday night, an estimated 34 million people were under heat advisories and another 21 million were under excessive heat warnings, according to the weather service. The affected areas stretched from Texas to much of the Plains. The East Coast is feeling the heat, too, with advisories issued from South Carolina to New Jersey.

Although he didn’t declare a heat emergency, Boston’s mayor on Tuesday warned residents to prepare for the heat and take precautions for temperatures expected to be between 85 and 97 degrees, with the hottest forecast on Saturday. With the humidity, it could feel as hot as 105 degrees, the mayor’s office said.

In New York City, temperatures and heat indices are forecast to reach “dangerously high levels by the weekend” — with temperatures in the mid- to upper-90s by Friday, with heat indices of close to 107 degrees on Saturday, the city’s office of emergency management and health department said Tuesday.

The heat index is a measure of how hot it feels when humidity is factored in with air temperature.

Cooling centers are set to be open in New York City from Wednesday to Sunday.

“Hot weather is dangerous and can kill. People with chronic physical and mental health conditions should use air conditioning if they have it, and get to a cool, air-conditioned place if they don’t,” Dr. Oxiris Barbot, commissioner for the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, said in a statement.

This heat wave is expected to bring the hottest temperatures so far this year in Chicago, Detroit, New York City and Washington, D.C., The Weather Channel reported. Widespread record-high temperatures are not expected because mid-July is typically the hottest time of the year.

Detroit is expected to see an afternoon heat index of up to 105 degrees Friday and Saturday; Chicago is forecast to get much of the same; and the Washington, D.C. area could see heat indices of up 100 to 115 degrees during the afternoons of Friday through Sunday, according to the weather service.

Forecasters in St. Louis warned of a “major heat wave” that will grip the region starting Wednesday and into the weekend. The area was under an excessive heat warning from 1 p.m. Wednesday to 8 p.m. Saturday, with highs each afternoon expected to be in the mid- to upper-90s and with a heat index as high as 113 degrees, according to the weather service.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/weather/heat-wave-expected-bake-two-thirds-nation-through-weekend-n1030636

Another day, another opportunity for Stephen Colbert to body slam President Trump.

On Tuesday night’s installment of The Late Show, Colbert called POTUS out for his back-and-forth with the four Democratic Congresswomen known as “The Squad.”

The CBS late-night host read Trump’s tweet from earlier in the day, when the president insisted his controversial social media posts from Sunday weren’t racist.

“Those Tweets were NOT Racist. I don’t have a Racist bone in my body!” Trump tweeted this morning.

That didn’t sit well with Colbert.

“OK. I’m going to stop you right there. We’ve seen your body. I’m not sure there are any bones in your body,” Colbert said to laughter, adding, “Just mascarpone cheese pumped into a cheap suit.”

The comedian wasn’t done, and then compared Trump to KFC founder Colonel Sanders.

“Racism is your brand,” Colbert continued. “It’s like Colonel Sanders saying ‘I don’t have a finger-lickin’ bone in my body.’”

Source Article from https://deadline.com/2019/07/stephen-colbert-snaps-trumps-i-dont-have-a-racist-bone-claim-1202647525/

Retired Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens, who was appointed by President Gerald Ford in 1975 as a moderate but later became a leading liberal voice, has died, the Supreme Court said Tuesday. He was 99.

The cause of death was complications from a stroke he suffered on Monday, the Supreme Court said.  His daughters were by his side at the time of his death. 

“He brought to our bench an inimitable blend of kindness, humility, wisdom, and independence. His unrelenting commitment to justice has left us a better nation,” said Chief Justice John Roberts in a statement. 

Stevens served on the Supreme Court until he retired at the age of 90 in 2010. Upon his retirement, former President Obama praised him as an “impartial guardian of the law” who served the nation with “honor and humility.”

Mr. Obama said at the time he wanted to appoint a justice who possessed, like Stevens, “an independent mind, a record of excellence and integrity, a fierce dedication to the rule of law, and a keen understanding of how the law affects the daily lives of the American people.” 

Mr. Obama ultimately chose Justice Elena Kagan as Stevens’ replacement.

In nearly 35 years on the Supreme Court, Stevens became increasingly liberal. After his retirement in 2010, he told “60 Minutes” that the justices who ruled in the majority on the case that decided the 2000 election were “profoundly wrong.” 

In his retirement, he made headlines for calling for the repeal of the Second Amendment and saying Justice Brett Kavanaugh should not be confirmed

“At that time, I thought (Kavanaugh) had the qualifications for the Supreme Court should he be selected,” Stevens said in October 2018. “I’ve changed my views for reasons that have no relationship to his intellectual ability…I feel his performance in the hearings ultimately changed my mind.”

Stevens was born in Chicago on April 20, 1920, to a wealthy father who had built what was then the largest hotel in the world. 

Gangsters robbed the family at gunpoint when he was 12 years old. “And we were all lined up and they threatened to kill, to shoot everybody with a sub-machine gun,” he told “60 Minutes.” As they faced a machine gun, a neighbor just happened to come to the door and the men fled. 

Stevens’ father lost his wealth in the Great Depression, and was later arrested for embezzlement. His conviction was overruled on appeal. Stevens told “60 Minutes” the experience taught him that “every judge has to keep in mind the possibility that the system has not worked correctly in a particular case.”

Stevens graduated from the University of Chicago, and then served in the U.S. Navy in World War II from 1942 to 1945, an experience that sometimes found its way into his writings.  

FILE – In this May 3, 2010 file photo, retiring Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens speaks during the annual meeting of the 7th Circuit Bar Association & Judicial Conference of the 7th Circuit, in Chicago. Liberals fear that after helping elect President Barack Obama he’ll abandon them when he nominates a Supreme Court justice, choosing a consensus-building moderate rather than a liberal in the mold of retiring Justice John Paul Stevens. (AP Photo/David Banks, File)

David Banks


He later earned his law degree from Northwestern University, graduating first in his class. He taught antitrust law at both the University of Chicago and Northwestern. 

Stevens served as a United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit from 1970 to 1975, when he was nominated by Ford to the Supreme Court. 

In his time on the court, he wrote over 400 majority opinions. In 1997, he was part of the unanimous ruling against former President Clinton in Clinton v. Jones, where Mr. Clinton sought to delay a sexual harassment lawsuit from Paula Jones by saying it would burden the presidency.

“In the entire history of the republic, only three sitting presidents have been subjected to suits for their private actions,” Stevens said. “As for the case at hand … there’s nothing in the record to identify any potential harm that might ensue from scheduling the trial promptly.”

The next president, George W. Bush, was the subject of one of Stevens’ harshest dissents, in 2000’s Bush v. Gore. The Bush campaign sought to delay the recount of ballots in Florida, arguing the recount would recount would cause irreparable harm to the nation.

Stevens disagreed, saying the court should have denied the stay and let the recount go on. 
“Although we may never know with complete certainty the identity of the winner of this year’s presidential election, the identity of the loser is clear. It is the nation’s confidence in the judge as impartial guardian of the rule of law,” Stevens wrote in his dissent. 

Upon his retirement 10 years later, he still maintained that was the correct response.

Asked by “60 Minutes” if the court’s decision was a partisan one, Stevens said, “I wouldn’t really say that. I don’t question the good faith of the people, the justices with whom I disagreed. But I think they were profoundly wrong.”

He ruled against the Bush administration in two cases involving the war on terror. He wrote the 2004 decision that terror suspects at Guantanamo Bay did have legal rights. Two years later, he ruled the Bush administration’s military tribunals at the naval base violated U.S. and international law.  

Before his retirement in 2010, he delivered a 20-minute long dissent in the case of Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, which struck down the century-old ban on corporate spending in elections.

“Simply put, corporations are not human beings,” he said. “In the context of an election to public office, the distinction between corporate and human speakers is significant. Corporations cannot vote or run for office because they are managed and controlled by nonresidents, their interest may conflict in fundamental ways with the interest of voters. … The rule announced today that Congress must treat corporate speakers exactly like human beings in the political realm represents … a radical change in the law.”

He told NPR in 2010 his only regret was his 1976 decision to revive the death penalty. More than 20 years later in 2002, he wrote the majority opinion ruling the Constitution does not permit executing the mentally disabled.

A dedicated Cubs fan — he attended the 1932 World Series game when Babe Ruth pointed to the place in the stands where he planned to hit a home run — he threw out a first pitch in 2005. He was also an avid bridge and tennis player and a licensed pilot. 

In 1979, Stevens and his wife, Elizabeth Jane Sheeren, divorced, making him only the second Supreme Court Justice to divorce while sitting on the court. He later married Maryan Mulholland Simon.

Both his first wife and his second wife preceded him in death, as did his son, John Joseph, and his daughter, Kathryn. 

He is survived by his by his children, Elizabeth Jane Sesemann and Susan Roberta Mullen, nine grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren. 

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/justice-john-paul-stevens-died-liberal-supreme-court-justice-dead-at-99-cause-of-death-stroke-complications/?ftag=CNM-00-10aag7e

One by one, the victims were lured to remote locations: an abandoned building in downtown Los Angeles, an empty rooftop in Hollywood, a quiet park in the San Fernando Valley.

Each was accused of a transgression against the notorious MS-13 street gang. Each would meet their end in a manner federal investigators described as “medieval.”

In one case, court records show, a 16-year-old boy was lured to a canyon and beaten to death in 2017. His body went undiscovered for so long that his remains wound up charred in a wildfire, according to coroner’s records. Earlier that year, another man suspected of defacing an MS-13 graffiti tag was abducted and dragged into Angeles National Forest. Six gang members cut him apart with machetes, according to prosecutors, who alleged that one cut out his heart.

The gruesome slayings were among seven Los Angeles-area murders linked to the Fulton clique of MS-13 in the last two years, according to an indictment unsealed Tuesday that charged 22 members of the gang, most of them in connection with first-degree murder and racketeering.

The sweeping, 78-page indictment marks the latest salvo between California law enforcement and the notorious gang, which was formed decades ago in Los Angeles and has recently escalated its violent tactics to increase its power, investigators said.

MS-13 has also become a bogeyman used by President Trump to justify stronger immigration enforcement by linking the issue to crime.

Nineteen of the 22 defendants charged in the indictment had entered the country illegally in the last four years, said Thom Mrozek, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office in Los Angeles. Several of the victims described in the indictment were also new arrivals to the U.S. from Central America, officials said.

“These gang members sought out young victims in their teens and early 20s who were new to this country. Many had recently immigrated from El Salvador and Honduras. They were alone looking to fit in with others from native countries,” said Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Jackie Lacey, whose office will prosecute several of the defendants on murder charges at the state level. “But instead, they met their demise quickly at the hands of gang members who preyed upon them.”

Four people were killed in the Angeles National Forest by members of the clique who wielded machetes, baseball bats and knives, the indictment alleges. A fifth victim was slain in the Malibu hills and a homeless man was shot and killed earlier this year in Whitsett Fields Park in North Hollywood, which prosecutors described as the clique’s “stronghold,” according to the indictment.

The slayings were motivated in part by a schism within MS-13. Paul Delacourt, the assistant director in charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles field office, said some younger members of the gang wanted to employ more violent means “to exert their dominance in Los Angeles as opposed to maintaining allegiance to the Mexican Mafia,” the sprawling criminal network that holds sway over most Latino gangs in the county.

“We’re seeing an influx of younger gang members coming into the area associating themselves with the Fulton clique who are extremely violent, who have to commit murders to join the clique,” U.S. Atty. Nick Hanna said.

All 22 of the alleged MS-13 members are in custody. Eighteen had been apprehended in the last year on a range of federal and state charges, authorities said. Three were arrested in recent days in the Los Angeles area by a task force composed of FBI agents, LAPD officers and Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies. Another was captured over the weekend in Oklahoma.

Authorities filed two more cases under seal against juvenile defendants in federal court. Some of the suspects were high school students at the time of the slayings, according to a law enforcement official who spoke on condition of anonymity in order to discuss the case candidly. Some of the killings were also recorded by the perpetrators, the official said. In one case, a suspect posed for pictures holding items he’d stolen from a butchered victim.

MS-13 has about 20 active cliques in Los Angeles, but police had previously said the gang had waned in size and influence recently. Last year, then-Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck told The Times the number of active MS-13 members in the city had dropped from about 1,000 in 2011 to between 700 and 800 in 2018.

Beck said the gang was not among the five most active in the city, but stressed that he still considered them a threat. LAPD officials declined to discuss the gang’s size or territory Tuesday.

Earlier this year the department arrested several MS-13 members in an operation in the San Fernando Valley that stemmed from an investigation into the murder of Bradley Hanaway, a homeless man whose death was among those detailed in the indictment. In announcing that investigation, the LAPD said detectives had noted an uptick in MS-13 graffiti and activity in the area.

Claude Arnold, who once ran the Los Angeles field office of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and spent the bulk of his career investigating transnational gangs, said similar surges in bloodshed have taken place in other MS-13 havens, including Long Island, N.Y., and Washington, D.C., when the areas saw an influx of new members from outside the country.

“These are newer entrants, so they’re making their bones with the gang, it’s just how it is,” Arnold said. “They want to make a name for themselves, and those are the people who are generally the most violent members of street gangs.”

The Fulton clique targeted people they believed to be cooperating with law enforcement, who belonged to a rival gang or who’d fraudulently claimed membership in MS-13, Lacey said. Six of the slayings described in the indictment unsealed Tuesday were committed to join or advance within the Fulton clique, authorities said.

The defendants identified in Tuesday’s indictment are: German Hernandez, Angel Guzman, Ever Morales, Fernando Parada, Jose Baquiax Alvarez, Kevin Gomez, Kevin Arteaga, Edgar Velasquez, Walter Chavez Larin, Yefri Revelo, Wilfredo Vides, Gerardo Alvarado, Roberto Carlos Mendez Cruz, Bryan Alberto Ordones, Roberto Alejandro Corado Ortiz, Edwin Issac Mendez, Josue Balmore Flores Castro, Luis Arturo Gonzalez, Edwin Martinez, Steven Emmanuel Linares, Marco
Antonio Ramos and Erick Eduardo Rosales Arias.

Attempts to contact their defense attorneys were unsuccessful.

Authorities began digging into the Fulton clique’s activities in late 2017, when detectives investigating the disappearance of 16-year-old Brayan Alejandro Andino discovered the teen’s body in Lopez Canyon, said LAPD Deputy Chief Horace Frank. The teen was lured to the Lake Balboa area by two female associates of MS-13, and then beaten to death.

Frank said the brutality of MS-13’s attacks was almost unparalleled.

“No parent should ever have to experience what Brayan’s and the other parents and family members have endured, and continued to endure,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2019-07-16/ms-13-murders-los-angeles-gang

In 1942 he married Elizabeth Jane Sheeren, with whom he had a son and three daughters. The couple divorced in 1979, and Justice Stevens married Maryan Mulholland Simon, a dietitian, the next year. She died in 2015. His son, John Joseph, died of cancer in 1996, and his daughter Kathryn preceded him in death.

He is survived by two daughters, Elizabeth Jane Sesemann and Susan Roberta Mullen, nine grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren.

With two older brothers who were lawyers, John was encouraged after his discharge from the Navy to attend law school himself. He used the G.I. Bill to attend Northwestern University Law School, where he completed his degree in two years. He was editor in chief of the law review and graduated first in the class of 1947 with the highest grade-point average in the school’s history.

A Supreme Court clerkship was a natural sequel. He spent the court’s 1947-48 term as a law clerk to Justice Wiley B. Rutledge, a respected former law professor and dean who was President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s last Supreme Court appointee.

Justice Rutledge, who died of a stroke at 55 in 1949, cutting short his service on the court after six years, influenced his young protégé profoundly. Justice Rutledge viewed himself as an old-fashioned “common law” judge who decided cases one at a time. He was a liberal and, while committed to a strong national government, was also an internationalist; in 1948 he dissented on behalf of a group of German-born United States residents challenging the government’s right to deport them.

Justice Rutledge had “great faith in wisdom born of experience and mistrusted untried statements of general principles,” Mr. Stevens wrote in an admiring essay in the mid-1950s, years before his own judicial career began. Decades later, in writing the court’s opinion that gave the Guantánamo detainees access to federal court, Justice Stevens took great pleasure in vindicating his old boss’s position in the 1948 case, Ahrens v. Clark. And in rejecting the Bush administration’s plan for military commissions, Justice Stevens cited another dissent by Justice Rutledge, from 1946, in which he argued on behalf of habeas corpus for a Japanese general, Tomoyuki Yamashita, who had been sentenced to death by a military commission.

After his Supreme Court clerkship, Mr. Stevens returned to Chicago to begin what would be a 22-year career in private practice. Although he had always been known simply as John Stevens, he began adding his middle name when signing legal pleadings to add something extra to his bland first and last names. The full name eventually became part of his professional identity.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/16/us/john-paul-stevens-dead.html

Escalating tensions on Capitol Hill erupted into a floor fight in the House of Representatives on Tuesday afternoon, as Speaker Nancy Pelosi spoke in favor of a proposed resolution condemning “racist” comments by President Trump — and Pelosi’s words were eventually ruled out of order by House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, a Democrat.

“The words used by the gentlewoman from California contained an accusation of racist behavior on the part of the President,” Hoyer said, in a decision that technically banned Pelosi from speaking on the House floor for the rest of the day. “The words should not be used in debate.”

The Democrat-controlled House then voted along party lines not to strike Pelosi’s words from the record, and voted separately restore her speaking privileges. The votes effectively overruled Hoyer, as one Democrat member of Congress told Fox News, “We’re going to defend our Speaker.”

The dramatic episode began when Pelosi’s prepared remarks condemning Trump turned personal, and Georgia Republican Rep. Doug Collins rose to challenge her and demand that her words be “taken down.” The extraordinary rebuke was the first of its kind involving a member of Congress and a speaker of the House in decades.

The scene then became even more bizarre when the chair, Rep. Emanuel Cleaver, D-Mo., told representatives after a lengthy huddle that he was trying to make a fair ruling as to whether Pelosi had broken House rules governing decorum, but people weren’t cooperating. Cleaver told Fox News he felt Pelosi was being singled out.

Cleaver simply declared, “I abandon the chair,” and left — a moment with no apparent precedent in modern congressional history. North Carolina Rep. G.K. Butterfield, also a Democrat, assumed the chair, before Hoyer took the reins.

In her prepared remarks, Pelosi spoke in frank and unsparing terms about Trump’s comments on Twitter over the weekend.

“There is no place anywhere for the president’s words, which are not only divisive, but dangerous — and have legitimized and increased fear and hatred of new Americans and people of color,” Pelosi, D-Calif., said. “It’s so sad because you would think that there would be a given that we would universally, in this body, just say, ‘Of course. Of course.'”

Pelosi continued, her voice rising: “There’s no excuse for any response to those words but a swift and strong unified condemnation. Every single member of this institution, Democratic and Republican, should join us in condemning the president’s racist tweets. To do anything less would be a shocking rejection of our values, and a shameful abdication of our oath of office to protect the American people. I urge a unanimous vote, and yield back the balance of my time.”

Collins immediately stood and asked if Pelosi wanted to “rephrase that comment.”

“I have cleared my remarks with the parliamentarian before I read them,” Pelosi said, before walking away to applause.

“Can I ask the words be taken down? I make a point of order that the gentlewoman’s words are unparliamentary and be taken down,” Collins said.

Fox News is told Collins used House Rule XXII, Clause 1(B). That rule requires that remarks on the floor “be confined to the question under debate, avoiding personality.”

“The chair will remind all members, please, please, do not make personality-based comments,” Cleaver said.

CONWAY BLASTS DEMS’ ‘TIRED’ CLAIMS OF RACISM, SAYS SHE ‘TOTALLY DISAGREES’ WITH HUSBAND’S SCATHING OP-ED

Collins then repeated his request to strike Pelosi’s comments. For more than 30 minutes after Collins’ objection, House members were huddled with the parliamentarian, Thomas J. Wickham Jr., to determine next steps.

As the consultation dragged on, Pelosi then appeared to leave the House floor, which itself constituted a violation of House Rules when someone’s words were taken down. Members are supposed to be seated on the floor when a member’s words are stricken.

Cleaver then abdicated. Hoyer eventually assumed the chair so that a Democrat leader, and not a rank-and-file member, could take control.

Hoyer then ruled that, based on the precedent “of May 15, 1984,” Pelosi’s language did not meet the standard.

The precedent came after Republican Newt Gingrich, then a Georgia congressman, sparred with then-House Speaker Tip O’Neill, a Massachusetts Democrat. O’Neill remarked: “My personal opinion is this: You deliberately stood in that well before an empty House and challenged these people, and you challenged their Americanism, and it is the lowest thing I have ever seen in my thirty-two years in Congress.”

The parliamentarian determined at the time that the speaker’s use of the word “lowest” amounted to inappropriate language, and O’Neill’s words were taken down.

Collins, in a statement late Monday, condemned Democrats for effectively reversing Hoyer’s ruling.

“Democrats admitted her words violated the rules of decorum, the very rules that ensure democracy’s every voice can be heard as we carry out the people’s business,” Collins said. “Still, every Democrat lawmaker voted against striking her words from the record. It bears repeating the House prizes decorum because it is a symptom of and a catalyst for a healthy, confident democracy. I hope we recover that confidence soon and more forward with respect for the American people who sent elected officials, including the president, to represent them in Washington.”

Among other volumes, the House has used Thomas Jefferson’s “Manual of Parliamentary Practice” as a touchstone for House operations even today. Jefferson’s manual stated that House members cannot use language on the floor “which is personally offensive to the President.”

The House also has relied on Cannon’s Book of Precedents, authored by the late Missouri Rep. Clarence Cannon, a Democrat. Cannon’s book says that “personal criticism, innuendo, ridicule and terms of opprobrium” are out of the order in the House.

Fox News has obtained a copy of the draft resolution being debated, which mentioned Thomas Jefferson, Alexander Hamilton and James Madison. It also quoted Benjamin Franklin, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, President John Kennedy and President Ronald Reagan.

The resolution, entitled “H. Res. 489 — Condemning President Trump’s racist comments directed at Members of Congress,” asserted that “President Donald Trump’s racist comments have legitimized fear and hatred of new Americans and people of color.”

Fox News is told Republican support for the resolution is likely to be in the single digits. The scrap on the House floor over Pelosi’s comments could delay a vote late into the evening.

Hoyer, D-Md., didn’t have a direct answer when questioned about the text of the resolution earlier Tuesday.

AOC ‘SQUAD’ CALLS TRUMP ‘OCCUPANT’ OF WHITE HOUSE IN NO-HOLDS-BARRED PRESS CONFERENCE

House Republican leaders, meanwhile, said the outrage over Trump’s comments was “all about politics.” A series of news organizations, meanwhile, have flatly referred to Trump’s comments as “racist,” without acknowledging the dispute over the matter.

A White House meeting with GOP congressional leaders that had been scheduled for Tuesday afternoon was postponed indefinitely, Fox News has learned. Democrats were set to hold a press conference later in the day.

“They talked more about impeachment than anything else,” McCarthy, R-Calif., said earlier in the day, referring to Monday’s fiery news conference with Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib, and Ayanna Pressley. “We should get back to the business of America.”

The brouhaha began on Sunday after Trump tweeted that unnamed “Democrat Congresswomen” should go back and fix the “corrupt” and “crime infested places” from which they came and then “come back and show us how it’s done.”

Key Republicans have stood by the president. South Carolina GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham, for example, told “Fox & Friends” that the progressive representatives were a “bunch of communists,” and charged that Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar was plainly anti-Semitic. Just over a dozen GOP lawmakers have condemned Trump’s comments.

Omar previously has been criticized by prominent members of both parties for making remarks widely deemed anti-Semitic. This past March, the Democrat-led House overwhelmingly passed a bipartisan resolution that indirectly condemned Omar’s repeated “anti-Semitic” and “pernicious” comments, including some in which she suggested Jewish politicians in the U.S. were bought and paid for.

The final House resolution, after days of Democrat infighting, did not actually mention Omar by name, and instead condemned bigotry of “all kinds.”

Omar has also referred to 9/11 as a day when “some people did something,” rankling Trump and top Republicans, who called the remarks clearly insensitive.

“We all know that [AOC] and this crowd are a bunch of communists, they hate Israel, they hate our own country, they’re calling the guards along our border—the Border Patrol agents—concentration camp guards,” Graham said.

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Some Republicans have condemned the president’s remarks, including Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, who tweeted: “There is no excuse for the president’s spiteful comments –they were absolutely unacceptable and this needs to stop.”

But, McCarthy, while clarifying that he believes the Democrats in question “love this country,” said he was not on board with the resolution and will encourage other Republicans to vote against it.

Fox News’ Chad Pergram and Ronn Blitzer contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/house-floor-fight-pelosi-collins-condemn-trump-tweets

Twice, prosecutors tried to convince jurors that Ray Tensing, a white University of Cincinnati police officer, was guilty of murder in the death of Samuel DuBose, an unarmed black driver. Twice, jurors deadlocked and failed to reach a verdict. Prosecutors declined to seek a third trial. Mr. Tensing, who had been fired shortly after the shooting, was later reported to have reached a settlement with the university that included legal fees and nearly $250,000 in back pay.

Baltimore erupted in large, sometimes violent, protests in 2015 when Freddie Gray, a black man, died after suffering a spinal cord injury while in police custody. The local prosecutor charged six officers in connection with his death, but none were convicted. Federal prosecutors declined to file charges.

Roy D. Oliver II, a white police officer in Balch Springs, Tex., shot and killed Jordan Edwards with a high-powered rifle as Jordan, who was black and 15, and other teenagers drove away from a house party in 2017. Mr. Oliver was convicted of murder last summer and sentenced to 15 years in prison, a sentence Jordan’s family called too lenient.

Mohamed Noor, a Minneapolis police officer, said he feared for his life when Justine Ruszczyk, a white woman wearing pajamas and holding a glittery cellphone, approached his squad car on a summer night in 2017. Mr. Noor, who is black, shot and killed her. Jurors did not accept his account, and convicted him of murder this year. He was sentenced to 12.5 years in prison.

A 2014 video showing Jason Van Dyke, a white Chicago police officer, firing 16 shots into Laquan McDonald, a black teenager who had been holding a knife, touched off political upheaval and led to an agreement to overhaul the city’s Police Department. Jurors found Mr. Van Dyke guilty of murder last year — the first such conviction for an on-duty Chicago officer in decades — and he was sentenced in January to nearly seven years in prison. Laquan’s family and the Illinois attorney general called the sentence inadequate.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/16/us/eric-garner-police-shootings.html

Wealthy financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein continued to have visits from young women that allegedly resulted in sexual liaisons while he was in ‘jail’ in Florida, a lawyer for one of his accusers said Tuesday.

Attorney Brad Edwards, who represents Epstein accuser Courtney Wild and several other alleged victims, claims that Epstein’s 13-month jail sentence — the result of a plea bargain with federal prosecutors in Florida — failed to prevent the money manager accused of sexually assaulting numerous underage girls from having “improper sexual contact” with young women.

At a Tuesday press conference in New York, Edwards said that a recent newspaper article — citing a Palm Beach County sheriff’s deputy — described Epstein as a “model prisoner” during his jail term in West Palm Beach in 2008 after he pleaded guilty to soliciting prostitution in a deal with federal prosecutors that was kept hidden Epstein’s alleged victims.

New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services via Reuters
U.S. financier Jeffrey Epstein appears in a photograph taken for the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services’ sex offender registry, March 28, 2017, and obtained by Reuters, July 10, 2019.

Despite being a registered sex offender, Epstein was allowed by the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office to participate in a work-release program that permitted him to spend up to 16 hours a day, six days a week at an office in West Palm Beach that housed his non-profit organization, the Florida Science Foundation.

“Most of the time was spent in an office, a private office that was adjacent to his lawyer’s office all day every day,” Edwards contended at the press conference. “And what you’re going to learn is he was not sitting there conducting some scientific research for the betterment of the community, but he was having office visitors, some who were flown to him from New York and continuing to engage in similar conduct, literally while he was in ‘jail.'”

Edwards said he does not know the exact ages of the visitors, but that he knows of none that were under the age of 18.

“I do know that he was able to have visitors that were under the age of 21…,” Edwards said.

He said he had interviewed one young woman who “personally visited” Epstein at his work-release office.

“It was not for some business arrangement and it was for, if you’re in jail, improper sexual conduct,” said Edwards, who declined to identify the woman.

Mike Segar/Reuters
Courtney Wild looks on as attorney Brad Edwards speaks at a news conference regarding financier Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking case in New York, July 16, 2019.

Federal prosecutors have yet to comment on the allegations alleged by Edwards.

Epstein, 66 — who at one time socilized with former President Bill Clinton, Great Britain’s Prince Andrew, and President Donald Trump — was arrested on July 6 for alleged sex trafficking of minor girls in Florida and New York. Some of the charges date back to the early 2000s.

A team of law enforcement officers from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the New York Police Department (NYPD) took Epstein into custody at the Teterboro Airport in Bergen County, New Jersey, after he returned to the United States by private jet from France, sources told ABC News. Authorities also raided Epstein’s New York City mansion and seized evidence.

Since his arrest, Epstein has been held in custody without bail. Federal prosecutors have asked a judge to keep him in jail as his case proceeds because they suspect he is a flight risk. Epstein’s attorneys argue that he is entitled to bail.

Edwards’ client, Wild, and one other accuser, Annie Farmer, testified at Monday’s detention hearing in Manhattan federal court. Both women spoke in support of keeping Epstein locked up without bail.

Farmer said she was 16 when Epstein had her sent to New Mexico where he was “inappropriate” with her. Wild told the judge she was 14 when Epstein sexually abused her in Palm Beach, Florida.

Epstein appeared to watch them address the judge but his face showed no emotion.

U.S. District Court Judge Richard Berman said he will decide on Thursday whether to grant Epstein’s release or, as pre-trial services recommended, keep him jailed.

During Tuesday’s news conference in New York, Wild read a statement asking other alleged victims to come forward.

“If you have already made the decision to come forward, thank you. If you have not, the time ‌is now,” Wild said. “To every victim out there I understand what you are going through. You may feel scared, or have feelings of shame and guilt, or feel alone. You may try to convince yourself that this was a long time ago and you have moved on. But you are not alone and this was not your fault.

“If you are a victim of Jeffrey Epstein, then you know what I know, that he will never stop sexually abusing children until he is in jail,” Wild said. “We will not get justice unless you speak out.”

Wild, identified in court documents as “Jane Doe 1,” sued the Department of Justice in 2008, alleging that a non-prosecution agreement reached with Epstein by federal prosecutors in South Florida was hatched in violation of the Crime Victims’ Rights Act, which enumerates the rights afforded to victims in federal criminal cases, including the the right “to reasonable, accurate, and timely notice of any public court proceeding, or any parole proceeding, involving the crime or of any release or escape of the accused.”

In February of this year, U.S. District Court Judge Kenneth Marra ruled in favor of Wild and other Epstein accusers, finding that the federal government failed to confer with the victims in advance of the deal. Marra is now considering the possible remedies for the violation, which could potentially include tearing up the non-prosecutions agreement

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/US/financier-jeffrey-epstein-allegedly-improper-sexual-conduct-young/story?id=64363827

One of the symptoms of uneasiness is the inability to stay still. Leana Wen knows this. She’s a doctor. And she was the president of Planned Parenthood until today, when the abortion organization’s board met in secret and pushed her out, after less than nine months on the job, because of “philosophical” differences. They’re uneasy. They can’t stay still.

And no wonder: Planned Parenthood is facing more opposition than ever. The Republican in the White House has filled the lower federal courts and two Supreme Court vacancies with conservative justices, potentially (underline that word) endangering Roe v. Wade, the foundational decision upon which Planned Parenthood depends.

The states have also worked up the courage to take on Planned Parenthood. This year alone, nine states passed pro-life laws limiting abortion after a fetal heartbeat is detected in the womb. In Alabama, legislators banned abortion entirely. None of these laws are currently being enforced, and they’ll undoubtedly be litigated in the courts. But the message is clear: Planned Parenthood doesn’t have the power. We the people do.

Perhaps that’s what frightens Planned Parenthood the most. The culture is changing. A recent poll found that although the majority of Americans are against overturning Roe, more than 61% support restrictions that would probably require its being overturned. Only 18% said abortion should be available to a woman at any point during her pregnancy, a very low number that is consistent with past polls.

Planned Parenthood can’t hide behind its healthcare mask anymore. Last year, a poll found that 48% of voters supported legislation to withhold taxpayer funds from Planned Parenthood as long as it continues to provide abortions. Only 40% disapproved.

Leana Wen tried to rehabilitate Planned Parenthood’s image by making healthcare its priority. “People aren’t coming to Planned Parenthood to make a political statement,” she told Buzzfeed News last year. “They’re coming because they need their vaccinations. They need their well woman exams. They’re getting HIV tests.”

When Wen was first hired, some pro-choice advocates celebrated her new focus. Others, however, saw it as a shift away from the real fight, or the only fight that matters: the war for abortion.

“It’s a symbol of fatigue, the battle has been a tough one and they’re tired,” Hank Sheinkopf, a veteran Democratic campaign consultant, told BuzzFeed News. “If you publicly project that you’re no longer an advocate but a provider of medical services, the presumption is the bad guys will no longer beat you up because you’re no longer poking a stick in their eyes all the time.”

Planned Parenthood must have agreed, because they ousted Wen in a “secret meeting.” Of course they did. And in doing so, Planned Parenthood proved pro-lifers right: The company’s priority has always been abortion, not healthcare. They want swift and firm action to protect abortion — not mammograms (which they don’t do), not vaccinations, not well woman exams.

Leana Wen was always fighting a losing battle. Or perhaps she wasn’t doing enough. But when it comes to Planned Parenthood, nothing is ever enough.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/planned-parenthood-ousts-leana-wen-and-proves-that-abortion-not-healthcare-is-its-priority

Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rosselló doubled down on his plans to stay in his job after protests calling for his resignation turned violent Monday night. The massive protests injured about two dozen police officers and roughly five protesters were arrested as a result of the demonstration, according to authorities.

During a press conference Tuesday afternoon, the embattled governor said, “I was elected by the people,” citing this as one of his main reasons for not resigning.

The remarks and the protests come in the wake of multiple scandals that have hit the Rosselló administration during recent weeks regarding corruption investigations and the leaking of private chats between the governor and some officials and close associates.

At least 889 pages of the private chats, which included profanity-laced, misogynistic and homophobic comments were released Saturday by Puerto Rico’s top investigative journalism media outlet after excerpts were first reported days before.

In the chats on the encrypted messaging app Telegram, Rosselló made fun of an obese man he posed with in a photo, called former New York City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito a “whore” and said Carmen Yulín Cruz, the mayor of San Juan who had announced her intent to run for governor against Rosselló in 2020, was “off her meds.”

“Either that, or she’s a tremendous HP,” the governor said, using the Spanish initials for “son/daughter of a b—-.”

The members of the chat group were Luis Rivera Marín, Rosselló’s secretary of state; Christian Sobrino, who held a series of important economic posts; Carlos Bermúdez, a one-time communications aide; Edwin Miranda, a communications consultant; Interior Secretary Ricardo Llerandi; Public Affairs Secretary Anthony Maceira, and Elías Sánchez, one-time representative to the board overseeing Puerto Rico’s bankruptcy.

Citizens protest near the executive mansion demanding the resignation of Gov. Ricardo Rossello, in San Juan, Puerto Rico on July 15, 2019.Carlos Giusti / AP

The chat also contains vulgar references to Puerto Rican star Ricky Martin’s homosexuality and a series of emojis of a raised middle finger directed at a federal control board overseeing the island’s finances.

Talking about a lack of forensic pathologists as the death toll rose after Hurricane Maria, Sobrino said, “Can’t we feed a body to the crows?”

The scandal has sunk Rosselló into the deepest crisis of his career.

The messages were leaked shortly after Puerto Rico’s former secretary of education, former Puerto Rico Health Insurance Administration head Ángela Ávila-Marrero and four other people with government contracts under Rosselló’s administration were arrested last week and are facing 32 counts of money laundering, fraud and other related charges for the alleged embezzlement of $15.5 million in federal funding between 2017 and 2019.

The White House reacted to the unrest in Puerto Rico on Tuesday afternoon saying, “The unfortunate events of the past week in Puerto Rico prove the President’s concerns about the mismanagement, politicization, and corruption have been valid.”

“We remain committed to Puerto Rico’s recovery and steadfast in protecting taxpayers and the Puerto Rico survivors from political corruption and financial abuse,” the statement said.

In reaction to comments from the White House, Rosselló said that “corruption is a social evil” and it “has occurred in all administrations.”

The U.S. Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, is expected to make a stop in San Juan on Thursday, as part of an official trip that will take him to Argentina, Ecuador, Mexico and El Salvador.

The scandal comes as the U.S.Senate is prepared to add more restrictions that could limit federal funds for the island, including $12 billion in Medicaid appropriations for the next four years and other hurricane-recovery aid.

Puerto Rico is still recovering from the category 4 hurricane that destroyed the island’s long-neglected infrastructure and power grid and resulted in the deaths of at least 2,975 people, making it the deadliest U.S.-based natural disaster in 100 years and has come to define a sad turning point in the island’s history.

For many Puerto Ricans still recovering from Hurricane Maria and on the back of the island’s biggest public financial collapse, the scandal analysts and ordinary people are calling “Chatgate” or “Rickyleaks” has resulted in unprecedented protests against the U.S. commonwealth’s chief executive.

Growing protests

As thousands marched in the capital Monday calling for Rosselló’s resignation, police tried to disperse them with pepper spray in front of the Fortaleza governor’s residence, which was protected by barricades.

Puerto Rico police spokesperson Axel Valencia told Telemundo during live coverage of the demonstrations that such protests are one of the biggest, most intense he’d seen in the island in recent history — leaving about 40 properties in Old San Juan, where protests took place, damaged.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, Homeland Security Investigations, and the Drug Enforcement Administration are investigating the violent acts and vandalism that took place Monday.

Protesters have been calling for Rosselló’s resignation for over three consecutive days. Demonstrations first started with hundreds of people, then growing to the thousands. The growth was reflected on Twitter as the hashtag #RickyRenuncia (Resign Ricky, a shortened version of his name, Ricardo) was trending worldwide Monday.

Some leaders of the U.S. territory’s Legislature said they weren’t planning impeachment proceedings. Others introduced a resolution to initiate a process of impeachment for Rosselló. In it, House Rep. Dennis Márquez outlined 18 possible crimes that stem from the leaked chats.

At the same time, an influential association of mayors from Rosselló’s pro-statehood party said he had lost their support.

The president of the commonwealth’s House of Representatives, Carlos Méndez Núñez, said Sunday night that legislators from Rosselló’s pro-statehood New Progressive Party, which has a majority in both houses, did not support starting impeachment proceedings against the governor. He said they gave Rosselló a one-week deadline to reflect, show contrition and prove he could continue to govern.

“Impeachment isn’t on the table yet,” he said. “But we reserve the right to evaluate if that’s merited.”

Puerto Rican artists Benito A. Martínez Ocasio, known as Bad Bunny, and René Pérez, known as Residente, both said on social media they planned to return to Puerto Rico to protest Rosselló’s administration on Wednesday.

Playwright Lin-Manuel Miranda, whose production of “Hamilton” on the island is mentioned in the chats, called them “a very disturbing portrait of how this Administration operates.

Even if Rosselló survives until next year’s election, it’s clear to many observers that he has been profoundly weakened and less able to deal with crises.

Despite widespread cynicism in Puerto Rico about politicians’ corruption and self-dealing, the chat shocked residents in a way that other scandals haven’t, particularly given Rosselló’s image as a gentle, even meek family man, said Mario Negrón Portillo, a professor at the University of Puerto Rico’s school of public administration.

“Everyone woke up one day and the governor was spouting vulgarities,” Negrón said. “There’s nothing worse for a politician than losing legitimacy. I think Ricardo Rosselló has lost legitimacy.”

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Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/latino/protests-grow-turn-violent-puerto-rico-gov-rossell-insists-he-n1030396

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/16/politics/kellyanne-conway-trump-race-ethnicity/index.html

President Trump met with members of his cabinet Tuesday morning, as he continues to face backlash over his inflammatory tweets, although that backlash isn’t coming from his administration. So far, they’re either defending the president or distancing themselves from his tweet Sunday suggesting that progressive women of color should “go back” to their countries

During the cabinet meeting, the president continued to defend his remarks, saying if the congresswomen decide to leave the U.S. they can go “wherever they want.” 

“It’s up to them,” he said. “Go wherever they want, or they can stay. But they should love our country. They shouldn’t hate our country. You look at what they’ve said, I have clips right here — the most vile, horrible statements about our country, about Israel, about others. Uh, it’s up to them. They can do what they want. They can leave they can stay but they should love our country and they should work for the good of our country.”

The president sparked a firestorm over the weekend with a series of tweets seemingly targeting freshmen Democratic Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rashida Tlaib, Ayanna Pressley and Ilhan Omar that were immediately and widely condemned as racist. He wrote that the representatives — three of whom were born in the U.S., and all American citizens — should “go back and help fix the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came.”

Mr. Trump has continued to stand by his tweeted remarks over the weekend, tweeting Tuesday morning that he doesn’t have a “racist bone” in his body. 

Freshman Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez retorted, “You’re right, Mr. President – you don’t have a racist bone in your body. You have a racist mind in your head, and a racist heart in your chest. That’s why you violate the rights of children and tell the Congresswoman who represents your home borough, to “go back to my country.”

But perhaps the president’s most vigorous defense of his remarks came Monday on the White House South Lawn, when he shrugged off concerns that white nationalists are harnessing his remarks. 

“It doesn’t concern me because many people agree with me. And all I’m saying, they want to leave, they can leave,” Mr. Trump said Monday. 

Administration officials have either declined to comment on the president’s tweets or defended him. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said the president’s comments weren’t racist. Top White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow declined to comment Monday, saying the president had tweeted what he’d tweeted. 

But some former administration officials condemned the president’s remarks. Former White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci tweeted, “Would @realDonaldTrump ever tell a white immigrant – whether 1st, 2nd, 3rd or 4th+ generation – to ‘go back to your country’? No. That’s why the comments were racist and unacceptable. America is a nation of immigrants founded on the ideals of free thought and free speech.”

During his cabinet meeting Tuesday, the president said the immigration legislation his son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner has been working on with Congress is nearly ready, and if it doesn’t pass, it will become a campaign issue. 

“Our country really has a tremendous immigration gap,” the president said, describing the current immigration system as a “maze of complexity.” 

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-meets-with-cabinet-today-2019-07-16-live-updates/

WASHINGTON – The Justice Department will not bring federal charges against a New York City police officer over the death of Eric Garner during a chaotic arrest that ignited nationwide protests five years ago.

The decision, announced Tuesday by Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Richard P. Donoghue, marks the end of a civil rights probe into an episode – much of it captured on video – that helped turn a national spotlight on how police officers use force against minorities.

“Like many of you, I have watched that video many times, and each time I’ve watched it, I’m left with the same reaction: that the death of Eric Garner was a tragedy,” Donoghue said.  “The job of a federal prosecutor, however, is not to let our emotions dictate our decisions. Our job is to review the evidence gathered during the investigation, like the video, to assess whether we can prove that a federal crime was committed.”

Authorities spent years investigating Garner’s death in an examination that proved contentious both inside and outside of the Justice Department. Attorneys in the department’s Civil Rights Division long advocated for bringing a criminal charge, while prosecutors in Brooklyn recommended against it. 

CLOSE

A New York City police officer will not face federal charges in the 2014 death of Eric Garner.
USA TODAY

In the end, Donoghue said Attorney General William Barr broke the logjam, deciding in recent days that Justice would not bring a federal civil rights prosecution against officer Daniel Pantaleo.

“The video and the other evidence gathered in the investigation does not establish beyond a reasonable doubt that Officer Pantaleo acted willfully in violation of federal law,” Donoghue said.

Garner, a 43-year-old black man, was accused of selling single cigarettes outside a store on Staten Island when Pantaleo attempted to arrest him. Garner gasped, “I can’t breathe,” after Pantaleo and other officers knocked him to the ground with Pantaleo holding him around the head and neck. The video of the encounter would later become a social media phenomenon.   

Garner died soon after. His last words, however, became a rallying cry for the Black Lives Matter movement whose members have staged demonstrations against alleged excessive force used by police across the country. The campaign gained increased notoriety as professional athletes and Hollywood’s elite took up the cause, some donning T-shirts emblazoned with Garner’s last words.  

“We’re here with heavy hearts because the DOJ has failed us,” Garner’s mother, Gwen Carr, said Tuesday. “Although we looked for better from them, five years ago my son said ‘I can’t breathe’ 11 times and today we can’t breathe because they have let us down.”

The city medical examiner listed Garner’s cause of death as “compression of neck (choke hold), compression of chest and prone positioning during physical restraint by police.” The officer’s lawyer, Stuart London, and the police union have denied that Pantaleo used a choke-hold maneuver banned by the NYPD.

The city paid a $5.9 million civil settlement to Garner’s family. Pantaleo has been assigned to administrative duty since Garner’s death.

In 2017, the city’s Civilian Complaints Review Board determined that Pantaleo used excessive force. Pantaleo also is awaiting a verdict in a NYPD disciplinary proceeding.  

Federal authorities have been conducting a separate, years-long civil rights inquiry into Garner’s death.

Wednesday is the five year anniversary of Garner’s death, and the date would have marked the Justice Department’s last opportunity to bring civil rights charges before the statute of limitations expires. An official who was not authorized to speak publicly said prosecutors closed the case without presenting it to a federal grand jury. 

More: Lawyer: NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo a ‘scapegoat’ in Eric Garner’s death

More: Eric Garner grand jury decision fuels protesters’ fury

Months after the arrest, a Staten Island jury declined to indict Pantaleo, a decision that set off angry demonstrations. Pantaleo has denied any wrongdoing.

Garner’s mother vowed that the Justice Department’s decision would not go unchallenged and that the family would seek Pantaleo’s removal from the force.

“We are asking the (police) commissioner to make the right decision,” Carr said. “Officer Pantaleo and all the officers who were involved in my son’s death that day need to be off the force. The streets of New York City are not safe with them walking around. Five years ago, it was my family. Today or tomorrow it could be your family.”

Some civil rights advocates joined the family in expressing outrage with the department’s decision.

“This is a major miscarriage of justice,” said Carmen Perez, executive director of The Gathering for Justice, which helped thrust Garner’s death into the national spotlight. “For the Department of Justice to announce this one day before the 5th anniversary of Eric Garner’s death sends a disrespectful message that black bodies are dispensable to the NYPD and all who’ve had the power to act over the past five years.

New York Attorney General Letitia James, an elected Democrat, said the Justice Department had fallen short of its mandate.

“The entire world saw the same devastating video five years ago, and our eyes did not lie,” James said. “Today’s inaction reflects a DOJ that has turned its back on its fundamental mission – to seek and serve justice.”

But Dontoghue defended the decision, suggesting that the chaotic nature of the struggle involving the officer and Garner resulted in Pantaleo inadvertently grabbing Garner by the neck.

He said Pantaleo tried to employ two approved NYPD tactics to arrest Garner: An armbar, which is used to place handcuffs on a subject and a “rear takedown” or “seatbelt,” which is used knock suspects off balance and bring them to the ground. 

Donoghue said nothing in the video suggested Pantaleo intentionally placed Garner in a choke-hold. He cited the size difference between Pantaleo and Garner as a reason the police officer had trouble subduing Garner.

The prosecutor claimed that Garner complained of being unable to breathe after Pantaleo no longer had him by the neck.  

Medical experts did not agree on the cause of Garner’s fatal cardiac arrest, Donoghue said. While the medical examiner who conducted the autopsy ruled his death a homicide, other experts said it could have been due to the choke-hold or other factors, including Garner’s “serious underlying medical conditions.”

“Today’s announcement is long overdue,”  Donoghue said. “The department owed it to Mr. Garner’s family and the community, to complete the investigation and announce our decision earlier.”

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/07/16/justice-department-not-bring-charges-death-eric-garner/1741169001/

Crews found a Southern California woman and her dog after a four-day search Monday.

Sheryl Powell, 60, of Huntington Beach, disappeared Friday near the Grandview Campground in the Bristlecone Pine Forest area of Inyo National Forest after taking the family dog for a bathroom break while her husband moved their Jeep, according to the Inyo County Sheriff’s Office.

Authorities first found Powell’s dog, Miley, about 2.5 miles away from where Powell was last seen. It was then reported that Powell was found alive by ground search team members near the Montenegro Springs area, which is below where her dog was located earlier.

She was taken to an airport where an ambulance took her to a local hospital for medical clearance, according to the Sheriff’s Office.

Powell’s son, Greg, told CNN Monday his mother was dehydrated, but doing well.

“She’s so strong,” he exclaimed through tears.

Greg says he believes she was threatened by someone, which led her to run down the hill where she got lost.

Powell’s daughter, Farrah, told CNN affiliate KTLA that Powell did not have food or water with her when she went missing.

The Sheriff’s Office described Powell as “resilient and strong but exhausted after being lost in an extremely remote area above Big Pine, [California].”

“We are beyond grateful for the continued support from her family, local residents, visitors, and the media. We also cannot thank our assisting agencies enough for their amazingly hard work in difficult terrain throughout this 4-day search,” the Sheriff’s Office posted on their Facebook page.

During the search, Powell’s daughter, Farrah, told CNN affiliate KCBS the possibility of her mother getting abducted rather than lost or just being out in the wilderness seemed “more unlikely” with each day.

“Every day gets harder and harder,” Farrah said. “I go through periods where I almost lose hope and I break down into tears and I can’t get my mind off all these potentially horrible things that could be happening.”

Once contacted, Inyo Search and Rescue and Inyo sheriff’s deputies immediately began to look for Powell using aerial equipment with thermal detection abilities that had been provided by California Highway Patrol -Inland Division Air Operations.

Grandview Campground, found at 8,600 foot elevation and more than 300 miles northeast of Huntington Beach, has no intrusive city lights making it a “popular site for star gazers and astronomy groups,” according to the Inyo National Forest website.

The campground has 23 sites, which are flat, sandy and shaded, distributed along two roads. The town closest to the campground is Big Pine, California, which is located about 50 miles from the Nevada border.

Multiple agencies, including China Lake Mountain Rescue Group, Fresno Search and Rescue (SAR), Riverside SAR, Tulare SAR, El Dorado SAR, Mariposa SAR, and CA Rescue Dog Association participated in the search.

Source Article from https://ktvq.com/news/trending/2019/07/16/search-for-missing-camper-sheryl-powell-continues-in-californias-inyo-national-forest/

The male, 5-foot-3 alligator, weighing about 30 or 40 pounds, was captured around 1:30 a.m. at the northwest side of the lagoon, officials said. Alligator trapper Frank Robb, who was brought in over the weekend to replace a volunteer trapper, was walking along the shoreline when he heard the alligator and saw it in lily pads, its eyes shining.

Source Article from https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/breaking/ct-humboldt-park-alligator-caught-20190716-ydqznwqemvhonfk2xuwj3iw7ta-story.html

Nearly two years ago, Hurricane Maria exposed the raw dysfunction of Puerto Rico, collapsing long-neglected infrastructure and leaving several thousand dead on Gov. Ricardo Rossello’s watch. Last week, two of his top former officials were arrested by the FBI on corruption charges.

But the scandal that is threatening to buckle the boyish 40-year-old governor centers on a profanity-laced and at times misogynistic online chat with nine other male members of his administration in which some of the U.S. territory’s most powerful men act like a bunch of teenagers. The leak of at least 889 pages of the private chat has sunk Rossello into the deepest crisis of his career.

In the chats on the encrypted messaging app Telegram, Rossello calls one New York female politician of Puerto Rican background a “whore,” describes another as a “daughter of a bitch” and makes fun of an obese man he posed with in a photo. The chat also contains vulgar references to Puerto Rican star Ricky Martin’s homosexuality and a series of emojis of a raised middle finger directed at a federal control board overseeing the island’s finances.

For many Puerto Ricans still recovering from one of the United States’ worst-ever disasters, on the back of the island’s biggest public financial collapse, the scandal analysts and ordinary people are calling “Chatgate” or “Rickyleaks” has proven to be too much.

Thousands of protesters marched in the capital for a third day Monday to call for Rossello’s resignation. Police tried to disperse the marchers with pepper spray in front of the Fortaleza governor’s residence, which was protected by barricades.

The leaders of the U.S. territory’s House and Senate said they weren’t planning impeachment proceedings, but an influential association of mayors from Rossello’s pro-statehood party said he had lost their support. Puerto Rican artists Benito A. Martinez Ocasio, known as Bad Bunny, and Rene Perez, known as Residente, both said on Twitter they planned to return to Puerto Rico to join the protests. Playwright Lin-Manuel Miranda, whose production of “Hamilton” on the island is mentioned in the chats, called them “a very disturbing portrait of how this administration operates.”

Even if Rossello survives until election day next year, it seems clear to many observers that he has been profoundly weakened and less able to deal with crises ranging from the island’s bankruptcy proceedings to its continued efforts to receive federal funding to help recovery from Maria.

Late Monday, Rossello released a statement saying he respected the protests and was taking their message into account.

“Unfortunately, despite responsible calls for peaceful demonstrations by many participants, a few others decided to damage public property and assault public officials who tried to preserve order and defend the security and rights of all,” he said.

Chatgate erupted a day after Rossello’s former secretary of education and five other people were arrested on charges of steering federal money to unqualified, politically connected contractors. Starting Thursday, an anonymous person or people with access to the chats leaked dozens of pages of them to two local outlets. On Saturday, Puerto Rico’s Center for Investigative Journalism published 889 pages.

In the chat group were Luis Rivera Marin, Rossello’s secretary of state; Christian Sobrino, who held a series of important economic posts; Carlos Bermudez, a one-time communications aide; Edwin Miranda, a communications consultant; Interior Secretary Ricardo Llerandi; Public Affairs Secretary Anthony Maceira and Elias Sanchez, one-time representative to the board overseeing Puerto Rico’s bankruptcy.

The group mentions then-New York City Council speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito, who had criticized Democratic Party head Tom Perez for opposing Puerto Rican statehood, with Rossello calling her the Spanish word for “whore.”

Referring to Carmen Yulin Cruz, the mayor of San Juan who had announced her intent to run against Rossello in 2020, the governor says, “she’s off her meds.”

“Either that, or she’s a tremendous HP,” he continues, using the Spanish initials for “son/daughter of a bitch.”

Federal officials said Wednesday morning that former Education Secretary Julia Keleher; former Puerto Rico Health Insurance Administration head Angela Avila-Marrero; businessmen Fernando Scherrer-Caillet and Alberto Velazquez-Piñol, and education contractors Glenda E. Ponce-Mendoza and Mayra Ponce-Mendoza, who are sisters, were arrested by the FBI on 32 counts of fraud and related charges.

The alleged fraud involves $15.5 million in federal funding between 2017 and 2019. Thirteen million was spent by the Department of Education during Keleher’s time as secretary while $2.5 million was spent by the insurance administration when Avila was the director.

Despite widespread cynicism in Puerto Rico about politicians’ corruption and self-dealing, the chat shocked residents in a way that other scandals haven’t, particularly given Rossello’s image as a gentle, even meek family man, said Mario Negron Portillo, a professor at the University of Puerto Rico’s school of public administration.

“Everyone woke up one day and the governor was spouting vulgarities,” Negron said. “There’s nothing worse for a politician than losing legitimacy. I think Ricardo Rossello has lost legitimacy.”

One chat member calls the head of the federal oversight board a “kitten.” Another participant jokes that a female member of the territory’s Senate belonged in a whorehouse. Along with a photo of himself greeting an obese man, the governor writes, “I’m still there. It’s my fourth orbit. He generates a strong gravitational pull.” Talking about a lack of forensic pathologists at a government forensic agency, Sobrino says, “can’t we feed a body to the crows?”

Rivera Marin, Sobrino, Bermudez and Miranda have already resigned or been fired.

Rossello, the son of former Gov. Pedro Rossello, said in a radio interview Monday, “I’m committed to keep working.”

“I know some people think differently, but I’ve determined that it’s better to keep working without distraction, dealing with all the different issues that this situation has created.”

The president of the commonwealth’s House of Representatives, Carlos Mendez Nuñez, said Sunday night that legislators from Rossello’s pro-statehood New Progressive Party, which has a majority in both houses, did not support starting impeachment proceedings against the governor.

Mendez Nuñez said Rossello had been given a one-week deadline to reflect, show contrition and prove he could continue to govern.

“This week he’ll meet with mayors, with legislators, and we have to give him this time,” Mendez Nuñez said. “Impeachment isn’t on the table yet. But we reserve the right to evaluate if that’s merited.”

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/world-nation/story/2019-07-16/chatgate-scandal-puerto-rico-governor-into-crisis