Prosecutors argued Friday that financier Jeffrey Epstein should be denied bail while he awaits trial on sex trafficking charges involving underage girls, fearing that he will tamper with witnesses. The prosecutors submitted written arguments in advance of a bail hearing Monday, saying he faces “the very real possibility” of spending the rest of his life in prison and seems not to understand the gravity of his crimes.

“And any doubt that the defendant is unrepentant and unreformed was eliminated when law enforcement agents discovered hundreds or thousands of nude and seminude photographs of young females in his Manhattan mansion on the night of his arrest, more than a decade after he was first convicted of a sex crime involving a juvenile,” prosecutors wrote in their submission.

The filing came a day after defense lawyers told U.S. District Judge Richard M. Berman that Epstein should be given bail and confined to his $77 million Manhattan mansion with electronic monitoring. Epstein was arrested Saturday after arriving at a New Jersey airport from Paris. Epstein pleaded not guilty Monday to charges alleging he recruited and abused dozens of underage girls at his mansions in New York and Palm Beach, Florida, in the early 2000s.

“Against this backdrop of significant-and rapidly-expanding-evidence, serious charges, and the prospect of a lengthy prison sentence, the defendant proposes to be released on conditions that are woefully inadequate.. the defendant should be housed where he can be secured at all times: a federal correctional center,” prosecutors wrote.

Lawyer for Epstein’s alleged victims: There are “well in excess of 50”

They also said they were worried Epstein, 66, might try to derail his trial. They said Epstein recently paid $100,000 to one individual “named as a possible co-conspirator” in a non-prosecution agreement with federal prosecutors in Florida 12 years ago.

They said the payment, along with $250,000 sent to another person who was a former employee and was named as a possible co-conspirator in the non-prosecution agreement, came after the Miami Herald last November began publishing a series of article describing the circumstances of his state court conviction in Florida in 2008 and the deal to avoid federal prosecution.

“This course of action, and in particular its timing, suggests the defendant was attempting to further influence co-conspirators who might provide information against him in light of the recently re-emerging allegations,” prosecutor said.

Epstein was arrested July 6 at Teterboro Airport in New Jersey and charged with child sex trafficking. According to an indictment, Epstein allegedly abused dozens of underage girls as young as 14 from at least 2002 to 2005. He faced similar charges in 2007 but took a plea deal in 2008 to avoid federal prosecution.

The deal was overseen by Alex Acosta, who at the time was the U.S. attorney in Florida’s Southern District. Earlier on Friday, Acosta stepped down from his post as Labor Secretary amid increasing scrutiny over how he handled the case. Acosta will leave the administration in seven days. 

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/jeffrey-epstein-news-financier-accused-witness-tampering-wiring-money-co-conspirators-2019-07-12/

NEW ORLEANS — Homeowners sandbagged their doors and tourists trying to get out of town jammed the airport Friday as Tropical Storm Barry began rolling in, threatening an epic drenching that could test how well New Orleans has strengthened its flood protections in the 14 years since Hurricane Katrina.

With the storm expected to blow ashore early Saturday near Morgan City as the first hurricane of the season, authorities rushed to close floodgates and raise the barriers around the New Orleans metropolitan area of 1.3 million people for fear of disastrous flooding.

The storm was expected to inflict the most damage on Louisiana and parts of Mississippi, with wind and rain affecting more than 3 million people.

About 3,000 National Guard troops, along with other rescue crews, were posted around Louisiana with boats, high-water vehicles and helicopters. Drinking water was lined up, and utility crews with bucket trucks moved into position.

“This is happening. … Your preparedness window is shrinking,” National Hurricane Center Director Ken Graham warned. He added: “It’s powerful. It’s strengthening. And water is going to be a big issue.”

While 10,000 people or more in exposed, low-lying areas along the Gulf Coast were told to leave, no evacuations were ordered in New Orleans, where officials instead urged residents to “shelter in place” starting at 8 p.m.

“My concerns are just hoping it’s not going to be another Katrina,” said Donald Wells, a restaurant cook in New Orleans.

Forecasters said slow-moving Barry could unload 10 to 20 inches (25 to 50 centimeters) of rain through Sunday across a swath of Louisiana that includes New Orleans and Baton Rouge, as well as southwestern Mississippi, with pockets in Louisiana getting 25 inches (63 centimeters).

The storm’s leading edges lashed the state with bands of rain for most of the day, and some coastal roads were already underwater.

Barry was expected to arrive as a weak hurricane, just barely over the 74 mph (119 kph) wind speed threshold. But authorities warned people not to be fooled.

“Nobody should take this storm lightly just because it’s supposed to be a Category 1 when it makes landfall,” Gov. John Bel Edwards said. “The real danger in this storm was never about the wind anyway. It’s always been about the rain.”

Authorities took unprecedented precautions: The governor said it was the first time all floodgates were sealed in the New Orleans-area Hurricane Risk Reduction System. Still, he said he didn’t expect the river to spill over the levees.

Workers also shored up and raised the levee system in places with beams, sheet metal and other barriers.

Barry’s downpours could prove to be a severe test of the improvements made to New Orleans’ flood defenses since Katrina devastated the city in 2005. The Mississippi River is already running abnormally high because of heavy spring rains and snowmelt upstream, and the ground around New Orleans is soggy because of an 8-inch (20-centimeter) torrent earlier this week.

The Mississippi is expected to crest Saturday at about 19 feet (5.8 meters) in New Orleans, where the levees protecting the city range from about 20 to 25 feet (6 to 7.5 meters) in height. That could leave only a small margin of safety in some places, particularly if the storm were to change direction or intensity.

“The river should be taken seriously. It’s a really powerful river,” said Nadia Jenkins of New Orleans. She hadn’t yet decided whether to leave but wasn’t taking any chances: “We’re prepared. We’ve got stuff stocked up. Car is gassed.”

Employees at a Costco in New Orleans said bottled water was selling quickly. Lifelong resident Terrence Williams was getting supplies and said he has a few simple rules for big storms.

“Stock up on water. Stock up food. Get ready for the storm — ride it out,” he said.

A Walmart Neighborhood Market in Lake Charles, in the southwestern part of the state, was packed with shoppers and much of the bread was gone by Friday afternoon.

Scientists say global warming is responsible for more intense and more frequent storms and flooding, but without extensive study, they cannot directly link a single weather event to the changing climate.

Late Friday afternoon, Barry was about 70 miles (115 kilometers) southeast of Morgan City, with winds of 65 mph (100 kph). Tracking forecasts showed the storm moving toward Chicago, swelling the Mississippi River basin with water that must eventually flow south again.

Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant signed an emergency declaration while President Donald Trump declared a federal emergency for Louisiana, authorizing the Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Emergency Management Agency to coordinate relief efforts.

In Baton Rouge, where severe flooding caused billions of dollars in damage three years ago, Kaci Douglas and her 15-year-old son, Juan Causey, were among dozens filling sandbags at a fire station. She planned to sandbag the door of her townhouse.

“I told my son, it’s better to be safe than sorry,” she said.

In New Orleans, a group of neighbors cleaned out the storm drains on their street. Working as a team to lift the heavy metal covers off, they discovered that most of the drains were full of dirt, leaves and garbage.

All over town, people parked their cars on the city’s medians — referred to around here as “neutral grounds” — in hopes their vehicles would be safe on the slightly elevated strips.

Tourists converged on the airport in hopes of catching an early flight and getting out of town ahead of the storm. At least one convention — that of the Delta Sigma Theta sorority — was cut short by a day. A Rolling Stones concert was postponed from Sunday to Monday.

Katrina caused catastrophic flooding in New Orleans 14 years ago and was blamed for more than 1,800 deaths in Louisiana and other states, by some estimates.

In its aftermath, the Army Corps of Engineers began a multibillion-dollar hurricane-protection system that isn’t complete. The work included repairs and improvements to some 350 miles (560 kilometers) of levees and more than 70 pumping stations.

–By Kevin McGill and Janet McConnaughey

Source Article from https://www.al.com/news/2019/07/powerful-tropical-storm-barry-strengthens-as-it-moves-into-new-orleans.html

Anti-ICE demonstrators protest at an ICE facility in Aurora, Colorado.

Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5emwIhxXlwE

Alex Acosta said Friday he is stepping down as labor secretary so his handling of a 2008 prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein won’t distract from the U.S. economy’s “amazing” performance.

Andrew Harnik/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Andrew Harnik/AP

Alex Acosta said Friday he is stepping down as labor secretary so his handling of a 2008 prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein won’t distract from the U.S. economy’s “amazing” performance.

Andrew Harnik/AP

Residents of South Florida expressed relief that President Trump’s Labor Secretary Alex Acosta is resigning his post. The Friday announcement was seen as “a victory” by those still angered by Acosta’s handling of a 2008 sex crimes case involving wealthy financier Jeffrey Epstein.

Acosta is a former federal prosecutor in South Florida. This week he had been under renewed and intense scrutiny stemming from the deal under which Epstein pleaded guilty to lesser sex crimes and served 13 months in county jail, with work release during the day.

As Acosta announced his resignation, federal prosecutors in Manhattan alleged in court filings that Epstein had attempted to buy influence over people who were set to testify against him. He is accused of wiring $350,000 last year to two associates.

Federal authorities are seeking to block Epstein’s release as he awaits trial stemming from charges brought against him earlier this week. Epstein is due back in court Monday for a bail hearing.

He is accused of sexually abusing underage girls, some as young as 14.

Florida State Sen. Lauren Book, a Democrat, said in a statement that Acosta’s resignation was “a victory for crime victims everywhere.”

She added, “Acosta aided and abetted criminal sex predator Jeffrey Epstein — and was rewarded with one of the top positions within the United States government … until the truth caught up with him.”

“This is a step towards justice for the survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s abuse,” tweeted Rep. Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, D-Fla.

Fellow Florida Democrat, Rep. Donna Shalala, started a tweet thread with this opening salvo:

“Sec. Acosta announced his resignation from his position as Secretary of Labor for failing to vigorously prosecute serial child predator Jeffrey Epstein. Good riddance.”

Acosta’s time as labor secretary was ticking down after federal prosecutors in New York brought the new charges against Epstein on Monday.

The indictment alleges Epstein “enticed and recruited” underage girls to his properties in Manhattan and in Palm Beach, Fla. He allegedly not only sexually abused the minors but also constructed an elaborate scheme of paying victims to lure other underage girls to be abused.

Acosta spent roughly an hour in Washington on Wednesday defending his handling of the Epstein case he oversaw in Florida more than a decade ago. Under the deal Acosta brokered, Epstein pleaded guilty to a pair of counts of solicitation, one of the cases involving a minor.

The plea also stipulated that Epstein register as a sex offender.

Epstein was allowed to leave his cell for up to 12 hours a day to work at his office. He also had a personal driver take him from the jail to the office and back.

In a statement Friday, Jack Scarola, an attorney in Palm Beach who represents some of Epstein’s accusers, called Acosta’s decision to leave his post in President Trump’s Cabinet “very good news.”

“Mr. Acosta will now have plenty of time and no distractions that prevent him from fully accounting for the sweetheart treatment Epstein received,” he said. “We look forward to this occurring in a forum where there is no opportunity to get away with untruths, half-truths, evasion, and diversion.”

Isidro “Sid” Garcia, another Palm Beach lawyer who is also representing an Epstein accuser, told NPR it wasn’t a bad idea for Acosta to go.

“I thought the plea deal that was made was very questionable. I wasn’t sure at the time who dropped the ball or failed to do what they had to do,” Garcia said.

He thinks Epstein’s connections to powerful people allowed him to secure such an extraordinary deal on Acosta’s watch.

“[It’s] not entirely shocking that he got the deal that he did,” Garcia said.

“I feel power and influence obviously influenced the scales of justice,” said Kirk Blouin, town manager of Palm Beach, Fla., who prior to his post served 29 years in the Palm Beach police department.

Blouin says he did not work directly on the investigation of Epstein but was in the department and worked with officials who did. He said the Epstein case stood out.

“I was involved in thousands of cases, and not all of them turn out the way you think they should, but in that case it was very bizarre.”

Speaking before reporters at the White House Friday, Acosta said it would be “selfish” for him to remain in the administration at this time.

“I called the president this [Friday] morning. I told him I thought the right thing was to step aside. It would be selfish for me to stay in this position and continue talking about a case that is 12 years old rather than the amazing economy we have right now.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/07/12/741326915/new-accusations-for-epstein-as-some-in-south-florida-say-good-riddance-to-acosta

President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump boasts that Kim Jong Un ‘was so happy to see me’ Romney defends Paul Ryan: ‘The fault for our 2012 loss is mine alone’ Trump declares emergency over Tropical Storm Barry MORE will meet with Guatemalan President Jimmy Morales at the White House next week as the country has been at the center of the administration’s efforts to stem the flow of migrants toward the U.S. southern border.

The White House announced Friday that Morales will visit on Monday. The two leaders will discuss “ways to create a more robust relationship focused on addressing migration and security priorities,” according to a statement from press secretary Stephanie Grisham.

The two men will also talk about how Guatemala can work with other Central American nations to expand economic opportunities for its citizens.

The meetings are likely to include talks over a safe third country agreement; Trump previously said the two countries were close to reaching an agreement on the pact. Under such an arrangement, Guatemala would be required to process asylum claims from migrants who set foot there first while headed to another country.

The move would curb the number of asylum-seekers who could continue on toward the U.S.

Trump has been openly critical of Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador in recent months, asserting that those nations have not done enough to prevent their citizens from leaving to seek asylum in the U.S.

The administration cut hundreds of millions of dollars in aid to the three Northern Triangle countries earlier this year before reversing course and allowing roughly two-thirds of the money to go forward.

But the two sides have been working in partnership in recent weeks.

Acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan reached an agreement with the Guatemalan government in May to expand areas of collaboration between the two countries to target human trafficking and smuggling.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/452806-trump-to-host-guatemalan-president-for-talks-on-immigration

Even when obscene amounts of wealth aren’t being thrown around to let the “rich and famous” skate, sexual assault convictions are absurdly low. According to RAINN (Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network), only five out of every 1,000 rapes committee ends in a felony conviction, while the Washington Post puts it slightly higher, at seven out of 1,000. Either way, the conviction to rape ratio is under 1%. That is abhorrent.

Source Article from https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/commentary/2019/07/12/holly-richardson-sex-with/

Vice President Mike Pence saw firsthand the extreme overcrowding migrants are often forced to endure at federal detention centers when he visited two Friday in Texas.

Agents wore face masks, and video showed detainees packed into their holding areas surrounded by chain-link fence, the concrete floors littered with silver thermal blankets. Reporters accompanying Pence described the facility as smelling “horrendous.”

A group of men detained behind chain link fencing shouted to news cameras, “No shower, no shower!”

Pence said afterward that what he saw was evidence of a “system that was overwhelmed.”

The experience did not appear to temper a statement he made earlier in the day that reports of mistreatment, filthy conditions and lack of basic necessities were “slanderous.”

The vice president, flanked by Sen. Lindsey Graham. R-S.C., and officials from the Department of Homeland Security, repeated the words, “the crisis is real,” in referring to illegal border crossings and legal asylum claims at the border.

“But what’s not real,” he said, “is the slanderous allegations of heartless mistreatment by Customs and Border Protection. I can see it in your eyes, I can hear it in your voice, about the care and concern.”

The remarks were made during a roundtable discussion held after Pence toured a temporary holding facility near Donna-Rio Bravo International Bridge in Texas.

At the 1,000-capacity facility in Donna, Texas, most of the detainees were lying on mats on the floor. The location held about 800 migrants.

“I couldn’t be more impressed with the compassionate work that our Customs and Border Protection are doing here at this border facility,” Pence said.

He said President Donald Trump sent him so “the American people could see what’s happening here.” A reporter on the tour was not allowed to speak to children or adults being held.

“It’s time we moved past the harsh rhetoric of the American left,” Pence said at the roundtable held in McAllen.

He refuted the description, used by U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and other Trump critics, of detention facilities as “concentration camps.”

At the Donna facility, he sought to discredit reports and photographs of poor conditions at federal migrant facilities, including accounts of children sleeping on concrete benches or living without soap or toothpaste.

“Every family that I spoke to told me that they are being well cared for,” he said.

Pence bolstered his claim by asking a group of migrants at the Donna facility, likely Spanish speakers, if “they’re taking good care of you here.” Most nodded.

Hope Frye, a San Francisco immigration attorney who said she has toured all the federal migrant facilities in the Rio Grande Valley, was adamant that conditions have been deplorable.

“The idea that this is false or exaggerated is really offensive to me,” she said. “It’s like saying migrants’ voices are untrue. It all paints the same picture — depraved indifference to the safety and welfare of children who come to us and are put in our care.”

In May, the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector General wrote an internal report stating that conditions were so bad at an El Paso, Texas, border facility, where about half the migrants in custody were sleeping outdoors, that agents there feared possible rioting.

Pence acknowledged there was overcrowding at some detention facilities, but he argued that it was simply more evidence the government faced a true crisis at the border.

At the roundtable, Homeland Security and U.S. Border Patrol officials recounted stories of “recycled children” used by migrants in attempts to gain entry to the United States, false asylum claims and sick migrant children rescued and cared for.

Rodolfo Karisch, chief U.S. Border Patrol agent for the Rio Grande Valley Sector, said more than 30 migrants a day were sent to hospitals for various injuries, ailments and conditions.

South Carolina Republican Graham called U.S. Border Patrol agents “every bit” the patriot that U.S. soldiers fighting overseas are. “I don’t know what we pay you,” he said, “but it’s not enough.”

Like Pence, he laid overcrowded conditions at detention facilities, filled in part with families fleeing poverty and gang violence in Central America, at the feet of congressional Democrats.

“The problem we have here can be fixed, literally overnight,” Graham said.

He sought support for his own legislation that seeks to force asylum seekers to apply for American safe harbor at home, immediately deport unaccompanied minors and increase detention time for migrant children.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/no-shower-no-shower-migrants-shout-pence-visits-texas-detention-n1029426

NEW ORLEANS — Homeowners sandbagged their doors and tourists trying to get out of town jammed the airport Friday as Tropical Storm Barry began rolling in, threatening an epic drenching that could test how well New Orleans has strengthened its flood protections in the 14 years since Hurricane Katrina.

With the storm expected to blow ashore early Saturday near Morgan City as the first hurricane of the season, authorities rushed to close floodgates and raise the barriers around the New Orleans metropolitan area of 1.3 million people for fear of disastrous flooding.

The storm was expected to inflict the most damage on Louisiana and parts of Mississippi, with wind and rain affecting more than 3 million people.

About 3,000 National Guard troops, along with other rescue crews, were posted around Louisiana with boats, high-water vehicles and helicopters. Drinking water was lined up, and utility crews with bucket trucks moved into position.

“This is happening. … Your preparedness window is shrinking,” National Hurricane Center Director Ken Graham warned. He added: “It’s powerful. It’s strengthening. And water is going to be a big issue.”

While 10,000 people or more in exposed, low-lying areas along the Gulf Coast were told to leave, no evacuations were ordered in New Orleans, where officials instead urged residents to “shelter in place” starting at 8 p.m.

“My concerns are just hoping it’s not going to be another Katrina,” said Donald Wells, a restaurant cook in New Orleans.

Forecasters said slow-moving Barry could unload 10 to 20 inches (25 to 50 centimeters) of rain through Sunday across a swath of Louisiana that includes New Orleans and Baton Rouge, as well as southwestern Mississippi, with pockets in Louisiana getting 25 inches (63 centimeters).

The storm’s leading edges lashed the state with bands of rain for most of the day, and some coastal roads were already underwater.

Barry was expected to arrive as a weak hurricane, just barely over the 74 mph (119 kph) wind speed threshold. But authorities warned people not to be fooled.

“Nobody should take this storm lightly just because it’s supposed to be a Category 1 when it makes landfall,” Gov. John Bel Edwards said. “The real danger in this storm was never about the wind anyway. It’s always been about the rain.”

Authorities took unprecedented precautions: The governor said it was the first time all floodgates were sealed in the New Orleans-area Hurricane Risk Reduction System. Still, he said he didn’t expect the river to spill over the levees.

Workers also shored up and raised the levee system in places with beams, sheet metal and other barriers.

Barry’s downpours could prove to be a severe test of the improvements made to New Orleans’ flood defenses since Katrina devastated the city in 2005. The Mississippi River is already running abnormally high because of heavy spring rains and snowmelt upstream, and the ground around New Orleans is soggy because of an 8-inch (20-centimeter) torrent earlier this week.

The Mississippi is expected to crest Saturday at about 19 feet (5.8 meters) in New Orleans, where the levees protecting the city range from about 20 to 25 feet (6 to 7.5 meters) in height. That could leave only a small margin of safety in some places, particularly if the storm were to change direction or intensity.

“The river should be taken seriously. It’s a really powerful river,” said Nadia Jenkins of New Orleans. She hadn’t yet decided whether to leave but wasn’t taking any chances: “We’re prepared. We’ve got stuff stocked up. Car is gassed.”

Employees at a Costco in New Orleans said bottled water was selling quickly. Lifelong resident Terrence Williams was getting supplies and said he has a few simple rules for big storms.

“Stock up on water. Stock up food. Get ready for the storm — ride it out,” he said.

A Walmart Neighborhood Market in Lake Charles, in the southwestern part of the state, was packed with shoppers and much of the bread was gone by Friday afternoon.

Scientists say global warming is responsible for more intense and more frequent storms and flooding, but without extensive study, they cannot directly link a single weather event to the changing climate.

Late Friday afternoon, Barry was about 70 miles (115 kilometers) southeast of Morgan City, with winds of 65 mph (100 kph). Tracking forecasts showed the storm moving toward Chicago, swelling the Mississippi River basin with water that must eventually flow south again.

Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant signed an emergency declaration while President Donald Trump declared a federal emergency for Louisiana, authorizing the Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Emergency Management Agency to coordinate relief efforts.

In Baton Rouge, where severe flooding caused billions of dollars in damage three years ago, Kaci Douglas and her 15-year-old son, Juan Causey, were among dozens filling sandbags at a fire station. She planned to sandbag the door of her townhouse.

“I told my son, it’s better to be safe than sorry,” she said.

In New Orleans, a group of neighbors cleaned out the storm drains on their street. Working as a team to lift the heavy metal covers off, they discovered that most of the drains were full of dirt, leaves and garbage.

All over town, people parked their cars on the city’s medians — referred to around here as “neutral grounds” — in hopes their vehicles would be safe on the slightly elevated strips.

Tourists converged on the airport in hopes of catching an early flight and getting out of town ahead of the storm. At least one convention — that of the Delta Sigma Theta sorority — was cut short by a day. A Rolling Stones concert was postponed from Sunday to Monday.

Katrina caused catastrophic flooding in New Orleans 14 years ago and was blamed for more than 1,800 deaths in Louisiana and other states, by some estimates.

In its aftermath, the Army Corps of Engineers began a multibillion-dollar hurricane-protection system that isn’t complete. The work included repairs and improvements to some 350 miles (560 kilometers) of levees and more than 70 pumping stations.

–By Kevin McGill and Janet McConnaughey

Source Article from https://www.al.com/news/2019/07/powerful-tropical-storm-barry-strengthens-as-it-moves-into-new-orleans.html

Alex Acosta said Friday he is stepping down as labor secretary so his handling of a 2008 prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein won’t distract from the U.S. economy’s “amazing” performance.

Andrew Harnik/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Andrew Harnik/AP

Alex Acosta said Friday he is stepping down as labor secretary so his handling of a 2008 prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein won’t distract from the U.S. economy’s “amazing” performance.

Andrew Harnik/AP

Residents of South Florida expressed relief that President Trump’s Labor Secretary Alex Acosta is resigning his post. The Friday announcement was seen as “a victory” by those still angered Acosta’s handling of a 2008 sex crimes case involving wealthy financier Jeffrey Epstein.

Acosta is a former federal prosecutor in South Florida. This week he had been under renewed and intense scrutiny stemming from the deal under which Epstein to pleaded guilty to lesser sex crimes and served 13 months in county jail, with work release during the day.

As Acosta announced his resignation, federal prosecutors in Manhattan alleged in court filings that Epstein had attempted to buy influence over people who were set to testify against him. He is accused of wiring $350,000 last year to two associates.

Federal authorities are seeking to block Epstein’s release as he awaits trial stemming from charges brought against him earlier this week. Epstein is due back in court Monday for a bail hearing.

Epstein is accused of sexually abusing underage girls, some as young as 14.

Florida State Sen. Lauren Book, a Democrat, said in a statement that Acosta’s resignation was “a victory for crime victims everywhere.”

She added, “Acosta aided and abetted criminal sex predator Jeffrey Epstein – and was rewarded with one of the top positions within the United States government … until the truth caught up with him.”

“This is a step towards justice for the survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s abuse,” tweeted Rep. Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, D-Fla.

Fellow Florida Democrat, Rep. Donna Shalala started a tweet thread with this opening salvo:

“Sec. Acosta announced his resignation from his position as Secretary of Labor for failing to vigorously prosecute serial child predator Jeffrey Epstein. Good riddance.”

Acosta’s time as labor secretary was ticking down after federal prosecutors in New York brought the new charges against Epstein on Monday.

The indictment alleges Epstein “enticed and recruited” underage girls to his properties in Manhattan and in Palm Beach, Fla. He allegedly not only sexually abused the minors but also constructed an elaborate scheme of paying victims to lure other underage girls to be abused.

Acosta spent roughly an hour in Washington on Wednesday defending his handling of the Epstein case he oversaw in Florida more than a decade ago. Under the deal Acosta brokered, Epstein pleaded guilty to a pair of counts of solicitation, one of the cases involving a minor.

The plea also stipulated that Epstein register as a sex offender.

Epstein was allowed to leave his cell for up to 12 hours a day to work at his office. He also had a personal driver take him from the jail to the office and back.

In a statement Friday, Jack Scarola, an attorney in Palm Beach who represents some of Epstein’s accusers called Acosta’s decision to leave his post in President Trump’s Cabinet “very good news.”

“Mr. Acosta will now have plenty of time and no distractions that prevent him from fully accounting for the sweetheart treatment Epstein received,” he said. “We look forward to this occurring in a forum where there is no opportunity to get away with untruths, half-truths, evasion, and diversion.”

Isidro “Sid” Garcia, another Palm Beach lawyer who is also representing an Epstein accuser told NPR it wasn’t a bad idea for Acosta to go.

“I thought the plea deal that was made was very questionable. I wasn’t sure at the time who dropped the ball or failed to do what they had to do,” Garcia said.

He thinks Epstein’s connections to powerful people allowed him to secure such an extraordinary deal on Acosta’s watch.

“[It’s] not entirely shocking that he got the deal that he did,” Garcia said.

“I feel power and influence obviously influenced the scales of justice,” said Kirk Blouin, town manager of Palm Beach, Fla., who prior to his post served 29 years in the Palm Beach police department.

Blouin says he did not work directly on the investigation of Epstein but was in the department and worked with officials who did. He said the Epstein case stood out.

“I was involved in thousands of cases, and not all of them turn out the way you think they should, but in that case it was very bizarre.”

Speaking before reporters at the White House Friday, Acosta said it would be “selfish” for him to remain in the administration at this time.

“I called the President this [Friday] morning. I told him I thought the right thing was to step aside. It would be selfish for me to stay in this position and continue talking about a case that is 12 years old rather than the amazing economy we have right now.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/07/12/741326915/new-accusations-for-epstein-as-some-in-south-florida-say-good-riddance-to-acosta

The “Outnumbered” hosts were a bit puzzled Friday over some of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s latest comments toward House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Speaking to a CNN reporter, the freshman New York Democrat objected to the media’s focus on her previous statement, where she criticized Pelosi for “singling out … newly elected women of color.”

“Well I think it’s really just pointing out a pattern, right?” she asked Manu Raju.

HOUSE DEM BLASTS ‘JUVENILE’ OCASIO-CORTEZ, CHIEF OF STAFF: ‘IGNORANCE IS BEYOND BELIEF’

“We’re not talking just about progressives, it’s singling out four individuals and knowing the media environment we’re operating in … knowing the amount of death threats we get, knowing the amount of concentration of attention, I think it’s worth asking why,” Ocasio-Cortez argued.

“She’s worried about the concentration of attention?” Fox News contributor Katie Pavlich wondered, responding to laughter from co-hosts Harris Faulkner and Fox News politics editor Chris Stirewalt.

Faulkner, the host of “Outnumbered Overtime,” pointed out that the chief of staff of Ocasio-Cortez deleted a tweet last month in which he blasted moderate Blue Dog Democrats as the new “Southern Democrats.”

“She doesn’t think that puts them in the crosshairs, somehow?” Faulkner asked.

“I gotta say, it takes a lot of chutzpah for Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to complain about the concentration of media attention, as she’s doing an interview in the hallway to get more attention,” Stirewalt added.

Pavlich said “that’s her whole thing, getting attention,” arguing later that “the chickens are coming home to roost” on the Democrats’ use of identity politics.

Democrat and Fox News contributor Jessica Tarlov said “really upset” about Ocasio-Cortez’s comments about Pelosi, calling out her own Fox News Opinion piece on the subject.

“No one has been a stronger advocate for both racial and gender diversity in the House than Pelosi,” Tarlov wrote.

Also on Friday, Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., denied playing the race card against Pelosi.

“That’s stupidly untrue,” she told Fox News on Capitol Hill, after being asked about accusations that she did just that.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/outnumbered-aoc-complaint-about-media-attention-takes-a-lot-of-chutzpah

The Democratic-led House rejected Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez-led efforts Friday to curb President Trump’s border crackdown.

Two amendments Ocasio-Cortez authored to a defense authorization bill failed to get enough support from her colleagues on the House floor Friday.

The Bronx Democrat, who has called for defunding ICE and disbanding the Department of Homeland Security, pushed an amendment to prohibit Trump from deploying troops on the southern border for immigration enforcement.

The House rejected her measure 179-241.

Ocasio-Cortez also sought to bar Trump from using funds to detain undocumented immigrants in Department of Defense facilities.

It failed by a 173-245 vote.

The lefty firebrand said she’s not yet giving up hope on undoing some of Trump’s immigration policies.

“We’re in a moment where immigration is a tough issue in a lot of communities and it’s unfortunate that in this go around we weren’t able to reverse some of the Trump-era rules,” Ocasio-Cortez told The Post.

“But the vote count itself was very encouraging … the next time we go around, it’s much more likely to pass,” she said.

Ocasio-Cortez’s measures were among more than 400 amendments the House considered to the National Defense Authorization Act.

The overarching bill — which passed the House Friday — would authorize $733 billion for fiscal year 2020 in military and defense spending and gives troops a 3.1 percent pay raise. The Senate already passed its version of the defense bill at $750 billion.

Ocasio-Cortez voted against the overarching bill, saying, “The (defense spending) increase was just a little too much for us to stomach.”

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/07/12/house-rejects-two-aoc-amendments-to-limit-trump-border-crisis-crackdown/

The lawyers also proposed that he would pay for round-the-clock security guards to ensure he did not flee. They said he would wear an ankle bracelet that monitors his location, surrender his passport and ground his jet.

The lawyers cited what they called Mr. Epstein’s “spotless 14-year record of walking the straight and narrow, complemented by an exemplary 10-year history of diligent sex offender registration and reporting” as compelling proof that he was able to “conform his conduct to the law’s dictates.”

But in their response on Friday, prosecutors said there had been “extensive allegations of obstruction and tampering” in connection with civil lawsuits brought against Mr. Epstein following his conviction in Florida.

“Epstein’s efforts to influence witnesses continue to this day,” the prosecutors said.

The evidence of the payments, which were sent from a trust account Mr. Epstein controlled, was contained in records obtained by the government from a financial institution identified only as “Institution-1,” the memorandum said.

The prosecutors, in asking Judge Richard M. Berman of Federal District Court to deny Mr. Epstein’s bail request, offered new information about his holdings. They described him as “extravagantly wealthy,” saying he was worth more than $500 million and earned at least $10 million per year, according to the records.

Mr. Epstein faces up to 45 years in prison if he is convicted of sex-trafficking and conspiracy charges, and the long sentence, the government argued, provided a motive for him to flee.

“There would be little to stop the defendant from fleeing, transferring his unknown assets abroad, and then continuing to do whatever it is he does to earn his vast wealth from a computer terminal beyond the reach of extradition,” the prosecutors wrote.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/12/nyregion/epstein-witness-tampering.html

The latest forecast from the National Hurricane Center shows Barry crossing the Teche Area (black line), with storm surge encroaching on areas around Erath, Delcambre and Jeanerette. The storm is expected to bring between 15 and 20 inches of rain to lower St. Martin, St. Mary and Iberia parishes, with higher totals possible in some areas.

Source Article from https://www.iberianet.com/news/barry-strengthening-taking-aim-on-teche-area/article_6e1b611a-a4ca-11e9-88bb-3bb917bc3e09.html

July 12 at 4:45 PM

Alexander Acosta was an accidental member of President Trump’s Cabinet — and he proved to be an uncomfortable fit with the disruptive, flashy style of an administration bent on shaking things up.

He came to the Trump transition team in 2017 with impeccable, if mainstream, Republican credentials as an assistant attorney general in the George W. Bush administration and a former U.S. attorney. He was a Latino in a Cabinet lacking diversity.

When Trump’s first choice for labor secretary, fast-food executive Andrew Puzder, was forced to pull out over several personal and professional controversies, then-White House counsel Donald McGahn brought Acosta’s name to the president and vouched for him as a fellow member of the hard-right Federalist Society.

But Acosta, 50, who resigned Friday over his controversial handling of a 2008 plea deal over sex crimes involving the financier Jeffrey Epstein, quickly ran afoul of the constituencies that matter to Trump conservatives.

By contrast, Deputy Labor Secretary Patrick Pizzella, a hard-liner whom Trump named as acting secretary on Friday, is expected to follow an agenda that closely matches the White House’s.

Acosta, who aspired to be a federal judge, had a strategy as secretary to play a safe, inside game running the Labor Department, according to multiple current and former administration officials. He aimed for a balance in his approach to labor policy that would satisfy the White House — while also placating union leaders and Democrats on Capitol Hill.

But industry grew frustrated with what its leaders felt was his foot-dragging on rolling back Obama-era labor rules that were hurting their bottom line.

When Mick Mulvaney became acting White House chief of staff early this year, he was receptive to their pleas — and Acosta was on the defensive. And during the most turbulent week of his career, the secretary was left with few friends in the White House, senior administration officials said.

This account of Acosta’s tenure was confirmed by current and former Trump and Obama administration officials and industry officials, some of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive personnel issues.

Acosta enjoyed 18 months with a relatively low profile at an agency that enforces federal laws covering millions of employers and workers, yet typically flies under the radar in Republican administrations.

He had an amicable, if not close, relationship with the president, frequently flattering him in private and public, and touting Trump’s success in maintaining a strong economy and good job numbers. Acosta forged an alliance with the president’s daughter and senior adviser, Ivanka Trump, who was pushing an industry-led apprenticeship program to train future workers.

At the department’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Acosta rescinded a record-keeping rule that required companies to submit employee injury and illness data. He moved to strip key provisions of an Obama-era rule to limit workplace exposure to beryllium, a toxic substance that has exposed shipyard and construction workers to health dangers; businesses complained that the rule was burdening them.

He had a setback early on when a Bloomberg Law report revealed that agency officials had withheld an unfavorable report showing that workers would stand to lose billions of dollars in tips if a proposed rule was enacted. It would have allowed employers to pool the gratuities of minimum-wage workers and split them with nontipped ones.

Acosta eventually reached a compromise with Senate Democrats on legislation that prevents employers from being able to pocket workers’ tips. But the incident cemented the secretary’s suspicion of his career staff, according to two former Labor Department officials.

His labor agenda was largely driven by outside forces: court rulings that prompted him to take action, as well as pressure from unions and, eventually, from an angry White House.

Puzder, a hard-line conservative who had pledged aggressive rollbacks of Obama rules, had set high expectations among conservatives that Trump would enact a pro-business labor agenda.

Acosta — measured, deliberate, amicable — was at first inscrutable.

He had an unusual working style that colleagues privately called “no fingerprints.” He would orally dictate drafts of rules and policies to his political staff, never putting instructions in an email.

He was slow to enact rules on overtime pay and other deregulatory actions, having his staff tell White House officials that they were in the pipeline but hampered by a shortage of experts. The industry-certified apprenticeship program favored by Ivanka Trump, but opposed by the building trades, seemed to be on the back burner.

After the department’s mine safety agency eased enforcement of a key worker safety rule against a West Virginia coal mine where inspectors had found substantial safety violations, Acosta dressed down David Zatezalo, assistant secretary of labor for mine safety, two former administration officials said.

Zatezalo’s mistake, Acosta told him, was in making him look weak on enforcement.

“He was trying to look like a balanced guy, but he was acting more like a judge than a Cabinet secretary, saying, ‘I’m going to call balls and strikes when they come to me,’ ” said Seth Harris, a former deputy labor secretary under President Barack Obama who is now an attorney advising clients on labor policy.

Two Acosta allies defended his pace as deliberative and said he worked hard to enact policies that could withstand judicial scrutiny. “He’s a good and thoughtful lawyer,” said a Labor Department official, who was not authorized to speak on the record. “His view of deregulation has always been to look at what puts a rule in the best possible position to survive a court opinion.”

Deregulation experts noticed that few wins were coming out of the Labor Department.

“The high-profile deregulatory actions from the administration were coming from elsewhere,” said James Broughel, a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, a free-market research center aligned with the White House on deregulation policy.

“It made you wonder what was going on,” Broughel said. “The political personnel should be able to enact their agenda.”

At the department’s Frances Perkins Building in downtown Washington, Acosta was alienating some of his top political appointees with his inaction, and some of them started to trickle out of the administration.

Nervous about leaks, he became less accessible to his career staff, in recent months closing off his suite of offices, an action first reported by Bloomberg News.

When an investigative series in the Miami Herald late last year renewed scrutiny of Acosta’s role as then-U.S. attorney in what critics called a lenient plea deal for Epstein in Florida in 2008, Acosta’s standing weakened. Some Democrats publicly questioned the deal and called for his resignation.

But the labor movement was largely silent on Acosta’s handling of the Epstein case, underscoring the inroads he had made. The AFL-CIO’s governing council voted not to take a public position.

Meanwhile, business leaders finally found a sympathetic ear in Mulvaney, whose predecessors, Reince Priebus and John F. Kelly, had engaged little with the Labor Department.

Mulvaney, a conservative former congressman from South Carolina, told Acosta and his staff that they had to move faster on rolling back regulations. He eventually forced out Acosta’s chief of staff, Nick Geale, whom White House officials believed misled them on the pace of rule rollbacks. The firing was widely seen in the White House as another warning to Acosta.

Under pressure from Mulvaney, Acosta quickly proposed a rule increasing exemptions for overtime pay for white-collar workers and another limiting companies’ liability for unfair labor practices. Mulvaney continued until this week to maintain a tight rein over the secretary’s rule-cutting pace, according to administration officials.

Rep. Rosa L. DeLauro (Conn.), a leading Democratic voice in Congress on worker issues, said in an interview that Acosta “hollowed out” the Labor Department with “anti-worker policies.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/acostas-measured-approach-was-an-uncomfortable-fit-in-trump-administration/2019/07/12/8f1a17bc-a4b6-11e9-b8c8-75dae2607e60_story.html

The threat of raids has had a dramatic impact. In Los Angeles, Mayor Eric Garcetti, Police Chief Michel Moore, Sheriff Alex Villanueva and other elected leaders have denounced the tactic. Across the country, some immigrants reportedly are skipping work and hiding out, a team of immigration lawyers is descending on a detention facility in Texas, activists are manning tip hotlines that are ringing off the hook in Tennessee, and a group of advocates launched a preemptive lawsuit in New York.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/local/california/la-me-planned-immigration-raids-20190711-story.html

EL PASO, Texas — Two contracted doctors who had been serving inside overcrowded Border Patrol facilities in the El Paso, Texas, region have walked off the job in separate incidents since late May, two Border Patrol union officials have confirmed to the Washington Examiner.

“The situation became so overwhelming, they just quit,” said Wesley Farris, second vice president of the National Border Patrol Council’s El Paso chapter.

Farris said an agent assigned to the Santa Teresa Station in southeastern New Mexico reached out to the union following one walk-out, asking when they would be getting a new doctor.

“An agent texted the union and said, ‘Hey, is there any plan to get us a new doctor?’” Farris said. “‘The agents start texting me like, ‘Hey man, the doctor quit so what do we do?’”

The local union took the information and looked into what had happened. Agents at the station relayed to the union that the doctor had left in the middle of looking over migrants in custody.

“The doctor just left. Got up and left. He was just like, ‘This is too much. This is too much. I can’t handle this,’” Farris said. “Was probably like, ‘I’m a doctor. I don’t need to be in here.’

“When you see that, you’re like, ‘This is bad. It must be bad,’” he continued.

The Washington Examiner tracked down the first doctor, a woman named Raquel. The doctor did not respond to several phone calls asking for comment about the conditions that prompted her to leave.

The second incident involved a doctor contracted at El Paso Station on Gateway South Boulevard in El Paso, according to Joe Frescas, local president of NBPC’s El Paso chapter.

A senior Border Patrol official in El Paso said the walk-offs were medical personnel supplied through a contractor, not Coast Guard medical staff who were deployed to the border and would have been deemed AWOL for having left their jobs.

Most of the Border Patrol’s 11 stations in El Paso have medical personnel on site who are either contracted, Coast Guard, or trained agents. The average station has one doctor and two to three nurses, the union said.

Farris complained the El Paso region’s management has done too little proactively to keep both agents and migrants in good health following breakouts of flu, lice, scabies, measles, and other breakouts.

“The Border Patrol sector’s response to a lot of this is, ‘Buy cases of hand sanitizer. Buy crates of face masks.’ And slowly now we’re getting contract medical contractors in here,” he said.

Farris said senior Border Patrol officials should bring in experts from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to screen people to ensure people in custody are getting adequate care and working conditions for agents are as safe as possible.

“If they can go and set up multimillion-dollar operations in Africa, why are they just kind of like poking us down here?” said Farris. “We are not equipped at all and I would argue that, you could see from the doctor walking out, the contractors are not really equipped to deal with this.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/i-cant-handle-this-doctors-treating-migrants-on-the-border-are-walking-out

Embattled Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta has announced he is resigning Friday morning. Acosta made the announcement himself, accompanying the president out of the White House residence before the president’s departure for a trip to Milwaukee.

“As I look forward, I do not think it is right and fair for this administration’s labor department to have (Jeffrey) Epstein as the focus rather than the incredibly economy we have today.”

“I told [President Trump] the right thing was to step aside,” he continued. “Cabinet positions are temporary trusts. It would be selfish to stay in this position and continue talking about a case that’s 12 year old, rather than the amazing economy we have right now.”

Acosta had defended his handling of a decade-old plea deal with financier Jeffrey Epstein on sex crime charges when Acosta was the U.S. attorney in Florida’s Southern District. Acosta faced renewed scrutiny over the case after Epstein was arrested on new federal sex trafficking charges in New York last week. 

President Trump said that Acosta called him Friday morning and said it was entirely Acosta’s decision.

U.S. President Donald Trump listens to Labor Secretary Alex Acosta talks to reporters as the president departs for travel to Milwaukee, Wisconsin from the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, U.S., July 12, 2019.

Kevin Lamarque / REUTERS


Standing next to Acosta, Mr. Trump called him a “great labor secretary — not a good one.” He told reporters that Acosta “did a very good job…we’re gonna miss him.” 

The president also defended Acosta’s handling of the 2008 plea deal Acosta’s office made with Epstein. Mr. Trump said people were initially happy with it, then changed their minds. Still, the president thought Acosta, in his press conference Wednesday, had ably defended the actions taken by federal prosecutors. The deal demanded Epstein register as a sex offender, pay restitution to the victims and serve 13 months in a county jail, though he was able to leave six days a week to work. 

Acosta will leave the administration in seven days. 

At a nearly hour-long press conference at the Labor Department on Wednesday, Acosta described Epstein’s actions as “despicable,” insisting Epstein might have gotten away without jail time if the U.S. attorney’s office hadn’t stepped in and taken over the case from the state of Florida. But Acosta struggled to answer questions about whether he would handle the case differently now, offering no apology to Epstein’s victims. 

Asked if he would make the same deal now, Acosta responded: “We live in a very different world. Today’s world treats victims very, very differently,” adding that “today, our judges do not allow victim-shaming by defense attorneys.”  

Acosta also faced criticism for keeping the federal deal not to prosecute Epstein a secret. In February, a federal judge said prosecutors had violated victims’ rights by keeping the agreement secret. Acosta explained to reporters that prosecutors took this approach because the agreement negotiated with Epstein had “an unusual provision,” in that it would require Epstein to pay victims restitution. He said that if the victims had been aware of the restitution negotiation and the deal fell apart, Epstein’s attorneys could argue at trial that their testimony was compromised because they were going to be paid.

In his resignation letter to the president obtained by CBS News, Acosta called his role at the Labor Department “the honor of a lifetime.”

“It has meant so much to me that you have offered your steadfast support in your private discussions and in your public remarks,” Acosta wrote. “My resignation from this position will not diminish my support for you and your agenda. I believe you have done an incredible job and have the right vision for our nation by putting working American families at the center of your presidency.”

Patrick Pizzella, deputy labor secretary, will take over as acting secretary.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/acosta-resigns-us-labor-secretary-announced-resignation-amid-questions-jeffrey-epstein-plea-deal-today-2019-07-12/

Immigration enforcement under President Trump’s administration could face legal action if Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., wins the White House in 2020 as she would set up a task force dedicated to investigating complaints against authorities.

Warren outlined in a policy proposal released this week that she would install the new task force in the Justice Department, granting it “independent authority to pursue any substantiated criminal allegations.”

“Let there be no ambiguity on this: if you are violating the basic rights of immigrants, now or in the future, a Warren administration will hold you accountable,” the proposal reads.

The task force would be just one part of her sweeping effort to reform immigration enforcement and tackle the border crisis. It would pursue “accusations of serious violations,” although it’s unclear what that included other than “medical neglect,” physical assault, and sexual assault.

PASTOR WHO VOLUNTEERS AT FLORIDA MIGRANT SHELTER BLASTED BY DEMS SAYS CARE AT FACILITY IS ‘PHENOMENAL’

Warren’s camp did not respond to a request for clarification about what other offenses would be included under “serious violations” or “basic rights of immigrants.”

Her plan came as Democrats ferociously criticized the way Trump’s administration handled the massive influx of migrants at the southern border — accusing immigration enforcement of, for example, leaving migrants with inhumane conditions.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., reported seeing horrific conditions during her visit to a migrant holding facility, although current and former immigration officials have pushed back on her claims.

News reports have also included stories about migrants dying either in U.S. custody or while trying to cross the border. At one point, Ocasio-Cortez and other freshmen lawmakers accused immigration authorities of “killing innocent children.” On Friday, the New York Congresswoman doubled down when the Democrat-led House Oversight Committee held a hearing on conditions on migrant detention centers.

Trump, in July, defended immigration enforcement, saying that many of the detained migrants were living with better conditions than they previously had.

AOC TEARS INTO TRUMP FOR ‘MANUFACTURED’ BORDER CRISIS AT EMOTIONAL HEARING ON MIGRANT DETENTION

“Now, if you really want to fix the Crisis at the Southern Border, both humanitarian and otherwise, tell migrants not to come into our country unless they are willing to do so legally, and hopefully through a system based on Merit. This way we have no problems at all!” he said.

Warren’s immigration plan also included a dramatic increase in refugee admissions, decriminalizing illegal border crossings, and end what she called “unnecessary” detention.

On Thursday, the Republican National Committee (RNC) responded to Warren’s immigration plan by claiming she favored the interests of illegal immigrants over those of Americans.

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“Elizabeth Warren has made it clear that she fully embraces an open borders philosophy of decriminalizing illegal immigration. All voters now know that she places the interests of illegal immigrants before the interests of American citizens,” RNC spokesman Steve Guest told Fox News.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/warren-warns-immigration-authorities-hold-you-accountable