• Directed by a task force for the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, FBI agents reportedly raided the private island of criminal financier Jeffrey Epstein.
  • The island, Little Saint James, is located between islands St. Thomas and St. John in the Virgin Islands.
  • One witness, who sailed past the island, described the scene to INSIDER.
  • The search, which occurred Monday morning local time, occurred two days after Epstein died by an apparent suicide, while being held in federal jail on charges of sex trafficking and conspiracy to commit sex trafficking.
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

FBI agents from New York raided the late financier Jeffrey Epstein’s private island in the Caribbean Monday morning local time, according to a report from NBC News.

The search was led by a task force for the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, according to NBC News. It occurred two days after Epstein died from an apparent suicide, while being held in federal jail on charges of sex trafficking and conspiracy to commit sex trafficking.

Two senior law enforcement officials confirmed the search on the island to NBC News.

Federal prosecutors said over the past weekend that the investigation into Epstein’s charges, particularly focusing on the conspiracy charge, would continue despite his death.

“To those brave young women who have already come forward and to the many others who have yet to do so, let me reiterate that we remain committed to standing for you,” US Attorney Geoffrey Berman said in a statement Saturday following Epstein’s death, “and our investigation of the conduct charged in the indictment, which included a conspiracy count, remains ongoing.”

Read more: Trump just spread a baseless conspiracy theory about Jeffrey Epstein’s death

Representatives from the US Attorney’s Office and FBI in New York could not be immediately reached by INSIDER for comment.

One witness, who was sailing past the island, described the scene to INSIDER.

“Our charter guests today got more for their trip than just sailing, tropical fish, and turtles — we sailed almost directly into an FBI raid on Jeffrey Epstein’s Little St James Island,” Kelly Quinn, a captain for Salty Dog Day Sails, wrote in an email to INSIDER.

Read more: Why did Jeffrey Epstein build a temple on his private island?

“As we [were] rolling up the jib and dropping the main, we witnessed FBI agents offloading from a boat and organizing, disbursing onto the island and what appeared to be a raid with about 15-ish officers from various law enforcement agencies, namely the FBI,” Quinn wrote.

Quinn also said it has been an “interesting couple of years” for the charter boat company, having survived hurricanes Irma and Maria and “not working for 18 months while we rebuilt the rest of our business, boats, and lives” — and now getting to see “this Jeffrey Epstein situation unfold in front of our eyes on the world stage.”

Source Article from https://www.insider.com/fbi-raided-criminal-financier-jeffrey-epsteins-private-island-report-2019-8

Thousands of people have attended the funerals of five Russian nuclear engineers killed by an explosion as they tested a new rocket engine, a tragedy that caused radiation fears and raised questions about a secretive weapons programme.

The engineers were laid to rest on Monday in Sarov, which hosts Russia’s main nuclear weapons research centre, where they worked.

Flags flew at half-staff in the city 370km east of capital Moscow that has been a base for Russia’s nuclear weapons programme since the late 1940s. The coffins were displayed at Sarov’s main square before being driven to a cemetery.

Russia‘s defence ministry initially reported that the explosion at the navy’s testing range killed two people and injured six others.


But over the weekend, the state-controlled Rosatom nuclear energy company said the blast also killed five of its workers and injured three others. The final toll remains unknown.

Rosatom said the explosion occurred while the engineers were testing a “nuclear isotope power source” for a rocket engine.

The company said the victims were on a sea platform testing a rocket engine and were thrown into the sea by the explosion.

Rosatom director Alexei Likhachev praised the victims as “true heroes” and “pride of our country”.




Local authorities in nearby Severodvinsk, a city of 183,000, reported a brief spike in radiation levels after the explosion, but said it did not pose any health hazards.

Still, the statement from Severodvinsk’s administration came just as the defence ministry insisted that no radiation had been released, a claim that drew comparisons to Soviet-era attempts to cover up catastrophes.

Spooked residents rushed to buy iodide, which can help limit the damage from exposure to radiation.

Following the explosion, Russian authorities also closed part of Dvina Bay on the White Sea to shipping for a month, in what could be an attempt to prevent outsiders from seeing an operation to recover the missile debris.

‘Skyfall’

Russian environmental groups have urged the government to release details of the radioactive leak, but officials offered no further details.

Neither the defence ministry nor Rosatom mentioned the type of rocket that exploded during the test, saying only that it had liquid propellant.


But Rosatom’s mention of a “nuclear isotope power source” led some Russian media to conclude it was the Burevestnik (Petrel), a nuclear-powered cruise missile first revealed by Russian President Vladimir Putin in March 2018 during his state of the nation address along with other doomsday weapons.

Experts have also linked the blast to the 9M730 Burevestnik nuclear-powered cruise missile, known by NATO as SSC-X-9 Skyfall.

President Donald Trump weighed in on Monday on the blast, tweeting, “The United States is learning much from the failed missile explosion in Russia. We have similar, though more advanced, technology. The Russian ‘Skyfall’ explosion has people worried about the air around the facility, and far beyond. Not good!”

The US and the Soviet Union pondered nuclear-powered missiles in the 1960s, but they abandoned those projects as too unstable and dangerous.

While presenting the new missile, Putin claimed it will have an unlimited range, allowing it to circle the globe unnoticed, bypassing the enemy’s missile defence assets to strike undetected.

The president claimed the missile had successfully undergone the first tests, but observers were sceptical, arguing that such a weapon could be very difficult to handle and harmful to the environment.

Source Article from https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/08/russian-nuclear-engineers-buried-skyfall-nuclear-blast-190813025930755.html


In their letter, Reps. Jerry Nadler and Doug Collins said on Monday said they agreed with Attorney General William Barr, who said over the weekend that he was “appalled” by Epstein’s death | J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo

Congress

The leaders of the House Judiciary Committee wrote to the Federal Bureau of Prisons on Monday, pushing for answers in the weekend death of financier Jeffrey Epstein, who was being held in a New York jail on sex trafficking charges.

Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.), the committee’s chairman, and Rep. Doug Collins (R-Ga.), the ranking member, sent a list of nearly two dozen questions to Hugh Hurwitz, the bureau’s acting director. They pressed for answers on the bureau’s suicide prevention program, conditions of the jail cell and Epstein’s confinement, and asked for the names of those who responsible for monitoring Epstein.

Story Continued Below

“The apparent suicide of this high-profile and — if allegations are proven to be accurate — particularly reprehensible individual while in the federal government’s custody demonstrates severe miscarriages of or deficiencies in inmate protocol and has allowed the deceased to ultimately evade facing justice,” Nadler and Collins wrote.

Epstein was found dead in his cell early Saturday. He had been placed on suicide watch on July 23 after an apparent attempt, but was taken off less than a week later for unknown reasons.

In their letter, Nadler and Collins said on Monday they agreed with Attorney General William Barr, who said over the weekend that he was “appalled” over Epstein’s death, which he said “raises serious questions that must be answered.”

On Monday morning, Barr told the Fraternal Order of Police’s 64th biennial conference: “There will be accountability. This case will continue on against anyone who is complicit with Epstein. Any co-conspirators should not rest easy.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/story/2019/08/12/house-judiciary-leadersepstein-death-1459218

She has been described as everything from vivacious and highly connected to the people-pleasing life of the party. She’s also been accused of functioning as something of a “madam” and “recruiter” for disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, 66, who apparently took his own life on Saturday while in federal custody over sex trafficking charges.

With the convicted sex offender now gone, she is the center of attention. So who is his longtime confidante and former flame, Ghislaine  Noelle Maxwell?

The U.S attorney for the Southern District of New York, Geoffrey Berman, has vowed to continue the investigation into Epstein and allegations of an ongoing sex trafficking ring, in spite of the financier’s death. And even though criminal charges cannot be brought against a dead person, “co-conspirators” are not offered such a reprieve.

On the civil side of the legal spectrum, the Maxwell name has been routinely illuminated.

Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell in New York City in 2005. (Joe Schildhorn/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images, File)

Several of Epstein’s accusers have pinpointed Maxwell as playing a pivotal role in enlisting victims, according to thousands of pages of court documents unsealed on Friday in relation to a 2015 defamation suit filed against Maxwell – just hours before Epstein’s death. Victims, with testimony from witnesses, have further accused Maxwell of being ultimately tasked with arranging massages and sexual favors for Epstein and a circle of high-profile associates.

JEFFREY EPSTEIN’S FINAL DAYS – AND THE LEGAL CASES THAT WON’T DIE WITH HIM

One affidavit claims that in 1996 Maxwell and Epstein sexually molested two victims, alleged to have reported the incident to the FBI only to have the claim fall on deaf ears, according to the Miami Herald.

However, Maxwell has not released any public statements since Epstein’s arrest in early July, which culminated in his apparent suicide on Saturday. No charges have been brought against her,

And from the beginning, she has vehemently and consistently denied any allegations of misconduct.

Lawyers for Maxwell did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

As questions mount, the socialite’s whereabouts are not publicly known. She has addresses linked to residences in Salisbury and in London, but her flashy Manhattan townhouse – off high-end Madison Avenue – was sold for $15 million in 2016, and she is thought to have moved back to the U.K the following year.

Her retreat from the limelight as the Epstein case evolved in recent years is a far cry from the heights of public adoration among New York’s jet-setters.

Maxwell, now 57, is a dual citizen of England and France. She was born on Christmas Day to British media mogul Robert Maxwell, owner of the tabloid Daily Mirror, who died under mysterious circumstances in 1991 – falling from the yacht he named after Ghislaine, his youngest of nine children. After his death, evidence surfaced suggesting that the late Maxwell may have been using the paper’s employee pension fund to keep the empire afloat.

A devastated Maxwell later relocated across the pond to New York, living off a $100,000-a-year trust fund and trying her hand at real estate. According to profile of her in Britain’s Sunday Times, Maxwell met Epstein shortly after her move to New York and in him she found a man who “could replace the lifestyle she had” with her father.

As the story goes, he had the wealth to open doors, while she possessed the power to cement crucial social connections.

“New York City high society has always been dominated by the rich and powerful, and the status and perceived wealth that comes with the Maxwell name certainly helped Ghislaine make connections in the city,” noted Ronn Torossian, crisis communications expert and CEO of the Manhattan-based firm 5WPR. “Even after her father’s death in 1991, Ghislaine had already made a name for herself and was cemented as a high-profile member of the New York City society.”

From an initial romantic fling with the financier, their relationship developed into a tight-knit, “best friend” companionship, and it was the publishing heiress who reportedly connected Epstein with the Duke of York, Prince Andrew and President Bill Clinton.

In time, the duo’s style of living morphed into a money-mad world of billionaires and bikinis, private planes and posh parties, and it was Maxwell who sought to satisfy the whims of the rich and powerful who operated at her periphery.

JEFFREY EPSTEIN FEARED CELLMATE, A MUSCLE-BOUND EX-COP CHARGED IN MURDER WHO WAS MOVED BEFORE FINANCIER’S DEATH: REPORT

For years, Maxwell has had an “in” at the hottest tickets in town. In 2000, she donned gold trousers, a midriff top and a brash blond wig – alongside British Royal Prince Andrew – to attend supermodel Heidi Klum’s “Hookers and Pimps”-themed Halloween party in Manhattan.

Then there were the Vanity Fair Oscar bashes, fashion week soirees and high-rolling charity benefits; in 2010 she was one of 500 elite guests at the upstate New York wedding ceremony of Chelsea Clinton and investment banker, Marc Mezvinsky.

In 2008, her financier close friend Epstein pleaded guilty to two counts of solicitation of prostitution, including one with a minor, and was sentenced to 18 months in jail, but under a highly controversial plea deal he was allowed to leave for work five days a week and was released five months early.

While Epstein was convicted in a Florida state court, he was given a pass from federal prosecution under a plea deal that ensured four unnamed co-conspirators and “any potential co-conspirators” immunity from all criminal charges.

Despite the blemish, Maxwell’s profile on the social and philanthropic scenes gained in luster over the ensuing years.

Her private passions have been devoted to “cleaning up the seas.” Once an aspiring marine biologist, Maxwell went on in her adult life to earn licenses to pilot submarines, helicopters, ROVs and AUVs – which she described in interviews as “remote and tethered vehicles off the back of boats for doing underwater exploration.” Maxwell was also known to have become a qualified emergency medical technician (EMT), and was fluent in several languages. She no longer holds an FAA certification despite once being listed as a licensed pilot.

She wrote columns for National Geographic in 2015 urging Americans to sign the “I Love the Ocean Pledge” to have the U.N. take up ocean issues as part of its Sustainable Development Goals. A year earlier, she gave a TED talk and spoke at the University of Texas, Dallas on ocean protection matters.

Seven years ago, Maxwell founded the TerraMar Project, an environmentalist nonprofit devoted to marine protection and positioned herself as something of a leader in both the for-profit and nonprofit sectors. It was abruptly shuttered less than a week after Epstein was taken into federal custody in July and sex trafficking charges were brought against him by New York federal prosecutors.

“I’ve started and incubated and sold lots of small businesses. I have some that I’m incubating now,” she told the wealth management and business magazine Spears in 2015. “For example, I’ve helped patent a new medical device, inbuilt scrubs that you wear on your person to reduce the rate of infection in hospitals. I don’t think I’m employable per se. Also, I love the freedom of being an entrepreneur.”

Maxwell never had children of her own, and she never married. After Epstein, she was romantically tied in reports to tech billionaire Ted Waitt, who also advocates for ocean conservation through his Waitt Foundation.

Although registered to vote in Florida – with no declared political affiliation and no voting activity for more than a decade – Maxwell’s primary residence was in the heart of Manhattan. According to The Washington Post, Maxwell depicted herself as “unemployed” and donated the maximum $2300 toward Hillary Clinton’s 2008 election campaign.

It’s not yet clear if Maxwell will now cooperate with authorities, or to what degree, if any, she might be under federal investigation – but according to Melissa L. Jampol, a former sex crimes assistant at the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, it’s highly likely at this point she is facing a criminal probe.

“Now that Epstein is deceased, prosecutors and victims will want to focus on anyone else who is culpable. One of the counts filed against Epstein was a conspiracy count,” said Jampol. “The bottom line is that anything you say can and will be used against you. So at this point, her silence is protecting her to the extent that it can.”

Defense attorney Doug Richards concurred that Maxwell’s lay-low tactic on the topic has worked to date, but can only work for so long.

“Ghislaine Maxwell has managed to avoid scrutiny since the 2008 plea agreement largely by keeping a low public profile and refraining from public statements about Epstein’s new charges and his death,” he said. “That’s a smart strategy from a criminal defense standpoint, but the questions swirling around his death make it increasingly likely that she and other co-conspirators will now be in the government’s sights.

“From both a civil and criminal standpoint, Epstein’s death does her no favors. Victims are rightly unsatisfied with the way that this case was handled, and his death rekindles the demand for someone to be held accountable and for justice to be done, and she’s next in line.”

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But regardless of what comes from the Epstein scandal – convictions or otherwise – some already say Maxwell’s socialite days are done.

“Ghislaine is irreversibly tied to Jeffrey Epstein and his public image. Ms. Maxwell can never erase the stain of being seen as the enabler of Jeffrey Epstein. No matter what happens in the court of law, she is thought of as guilty in the court of public opinion,” Torossian added. “I don’t believe there is a reputable public relations agency in the United States that will work with Ghislaine Maxwell. She won’t redeem her name in this city.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/a-look-at-ghislaine-maxwell-jeffrey-epsteins-alleged-recruiter

The FBI says agents are on the grounds of the U.S. Virgin Islands home of accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.

The bureau confirmed to Fox News that agents were at his Little Saint James Island home in St. Thomas, but did not provide details.

The notorious island took on a string of nicknames over the years, including “Pedophile Island” and “Orgy Island.”

A view of Little St. James Island, in the U. S. Virgin Islands, a property owned by Jeffrey Epstein.
(The Associated Press )

The 66-year-old Epstein was known to frequent the lush property in the U.S. Virgin Islands. What’s more, an employee who reportedly worked there has claimed the wealthy financier kept a mysterious safe inside the main residence.

The employee, speaking to Bloomberg, suggested that a steel safe in his office there may have stored more than just cash.

On Saturday Epstein was found unconscious in his cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center, and he was later pronounced dead, having apparently committed suicide, said the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

JEFFREY EPSTEIN DEAD: TIMELINE OF SEXUAL ABUSE ALLEGATIONS AND RELATED LEGAL CASES

The death is said to have occurred after his cellmate was transferred for reasons that were not immediately clear.

He was reportedly found hanging in his jail cell with a bedsheet wrapped around his neck and secured to the top of a bunk bed, the New York Post reported.

Epstein was being held in connection with charges of sex trafficking and conspiracy.

(New York State Sex Offender Registry via AP, File)

Epstein was being held on the charges after he was denied bail. Prosecutors said he sexually abused dozens of young girls in his New York and Florida residences between 2002 and 2005, to which Epstein pleaded not guilty.

He faced up to 45 years in prison.

JEFFREY EPSTEIN’S PRIVATE CARRIBBEAN ISLAND HAD MYSTERIOUS SAFE, FORMER EMPLOYEE CLAIMS

Epstein started transforming Little St. James Island after he bought it more than two decades ago — clearing the native vegetation, ringing the property with towering palm trees and planting two massive U.S. flags on either end.

He also built a stone mansion with cream-colored walls and a bright turquoise roof surrounded by several other structures, including the maids’ quarters and a massive, square-shaped white building on one end of the island. Workers there, the Associated Press reports, told each other it was a music room fitted with a grand piano and acoustic walls, whose gold dome flew off during the deadly 2017 hurricane season.

An aerial view of Little St. James Island and its buildings.
(The Associated Press )

The employee who spoke to Bloomberg said when Epstein visited the property, he would walk around shirtless in shorts and flip-flops, and had a rule that he should never catch sight of the staffers who maintained the place.

Locals recalled seeing Jeffery Epstein’s black helicopter flying back and forth from the international airport in St. Thomas to his helipad on Little St. James Island, where he built a cream colored mansion with a bright turquoise roof surrounded by several other structures including the maids’ quarters and a massive, square-shaped white building on one end of the island that some say is a music room fitted with acoustic walls.
(The Associated Press)

Sometimes, the employee added, women would sunbathe topless or in the nude around a pool near the island’s main residence.

Many people who worked for Epstein on the island told AP last month that they had signed long nondisclosure agreements. One former employee who declined to be identified said Epstein once had five boats, including a large ferry in which he transported up to 200 workers from St. Thomas to his island every day for construction work.

The man said he saw a handful of young women when he was on Epstein’s property but he believed they were older than 18.

“When he was there, it was keep to yourself and do your thing,” the man recalled, adding that Epstein paid well and would give away older machinery and surplus including lumber to his employees.

Epstein later bought neighboring Great St. James Island, which once was popular with locals and tourists for its main attraction, Christmas Cove, a place where you could hang out and order pizza and have it delivered via boat.

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Federal authorities considered the smaller of the two islands Epstein’s primary residence in the United States, a place where at least one alleged victim said in a court affidavit that she participated in an orgy, as well as had sex with Epstein and other people.

She said she saw former U.S. President Bill Clinton on the island, but that she never saw him having sex with anyone. A Clinton spokesman has issued a statement saying he never visited there.

Fox News’ Greg Norman, Nicole Darrah, Tamara Gitt and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/federal-agents-search-jeffrey-epsteins-home-in-virgin-islands

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TRUMP ADMINISTRATION OVERHAULS ENDANGERED SPECIES REGULATIONS: The Trump administration finalized modifications Monday to the implementation of the Endangered Species Act to make it more accommodating to businesses that view the law as cumbersome and restrictive to developers.

The administrative changes are the most far-reaching regulatory revisions to the 1973 Endangered Species Act in decades, environmental groups say.

“The best way to uphold the Endangered Species Act is to do everything we can to ensure it remains effective in achieving its ultimate goal—recovery of our rarest species,” said Interior Department Secretary David Bernhardt. “The Act’s effectiveness rests on clear, consistent and efficient implementation.”

Republicans note the law has only recovered about 1% of the species that have been placed on the endangered species list.

Court challenges coming: Democratic states and environmentalist groups, which plan to sue, counter that the rule changes would weaken a law credited with saving the bald eagle, humpback whale, American alligator, and others. They say the law has successfully kept 99% of listed species from becoming extinct.

And they argue Republicans aim to benefit miners, farmers, rangers, and oil and gas companies that in the course of operations have to avoid harming species protected by the law.

The modifications come after a report by the United Nations released in May projected that 1 million plant and animal species around the world face possible extinction, threatening the stability of ecosystems around the world.

Democratic Attorneys General Xavier Becerra of California and Maura Healey of Massachusetts led a coalition of 10 states in submitting comments to the Trump administration when it introduced the draft of the rule changes last year, arguing the modifications are “in clear violation of” the law’s “overriding conservation purpose.”

“When of course the whole purpose of the letter and spirit of the act is to institutionalize caution, these proposals throw caution to the wind and try to avoid determinations that species qualify as threatened and endangered and try to reduce what has to be done if they are on the list,” David Hayes, executive director of the New York University School of Law’s State Energy and Environmental Impact Center, which works with attorneys general to protect environmental rules, told me.

Not a ‘radical’ change: The Trump administration, however, is casting the changes as less far-reaching than Democrats and environmentalists claim.

“We developed these regulations primarily to provide greater transparency and consistency in our regulations. Nothing in here is a radical change from how we have been listing species in the last decade or so,” said Gary Frazer, assistant director for endangered species at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, in a press call with reporters.

The rule modifications don’t change the underlying statute, and do not go as far as congressional Republicans would like.

“These final rules are a good start, but the administration is limited by an existing law that needs to be updated. I am working in the Senate to strengthen the law, so it can meet its full conservation potential,” said John Barrasso of Wyoming, chairman of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee.

What the rule changes would do: Among other things, the new rules allow the Fish and Wildlife Service and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to consider economic analyses in listing decisions for species that may become threatened or endangered.

It would end the so-called “blanket rule” of automatically granting protections to species that are classified as threatened, and would instead make a distinction between “threatened” and “endangered” species. Threatened is a weaker classification than endangered that provides for looser regulations.

Another proposed change would give the government more flexibility in how it determines whether species face threatening conditions in the “foreseeable future,” defining the term in a more narrow way that critics say would discount longer-term impacts such as climate change.

The May U.N. report listed climate change as one of the threats to biodiversity and endangered species.

Welcome to Daily on Energy, written by Washington Examiner Energy and Environment Writer Josh Siegel (@SiegelScribe). Email jsiegel@washingtonexaminer.com for tips, suggestions, calendar items, and anything else. If a friend sent this to you and you’d like to sign up, click here. If signing up doesn’t work, shoot us an email, and we’ll add you to our list.

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION DELIVERS SETBACK TO NATION’S FIRST MAJOR OFFSHORE WIND PROJECT: The Trump administration delivered a setback Friday to the planned development of the nation’s first major offshore wind farm, delaying the final environmental review of the project until next year.

Vineyard Wind had been scheduled to be operational by early 2022, with turbines built off Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts expected to provide enough power for more than 400,000 homes.

The developer of the Vineyard Wind have warned permitting delays could jeopardize the project, given its contract with Massachusetts is based on the assumption that the company will be able to collect a federal investment tax credit that expires at the end of this year.

Vineyard Wind spokesman Scott Farmelant called the Interior Department’s decision “a surprise and disappointment,” but said the project remains “viable” and is moving forward.

“We urge the federal government to complete the review as quickly as possible,” he said. The company had expected the review to be completed this summer.

But the Interior Department ordered a supplemental review for the project to consider the potential impact on commercial fishing.

Industry groups criticized the Interior Department’s delay of the project, noting that it could interfere with the Trump administration’s claim that it is not neglecting renewables as part of its “energy dominance” agenda, and is supportive of offshore wind.

Vineyard Wind is the first of several offshore wind farms planned off of the East Coast that could power millions of homes, with projects proposed for Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, and Maine.

“The Department of the Interior’s regrettable decision to further delay the review of the Vineyard Wind project undermines the Trump Administration’s American energy dominance agenda and a major U.S. economic growth opportunity,” said Tom Kiernan, CEO of the American Wind Energy Association.

EPA DENIES SIX APPLICATIONS FROM REFINERIES SEEKING EXEMPTIONS FROM RFS MANDATES: The Environmental Protection Agency said Friday that it has exempted 31 oil refineries from 2018 requirements to use renewable fuel, while denying six applications.

This marks the first time the Trump administration has denied small refiner exemption applications under the Renewable Fuel Standard.

The RFS requires refiners to blend billions of gallons of corn ethanol into the nation’s fuel supply each year. The exemption program aims to protect companies that find it economically untenable to meet the standard.

Corn farmers and their representatives in Congress have accused EPA of excessive use of the refinery exemptions, which they argue are eroding the market for ethanol.

Status quo? Biofuels stakeholders said EPA’s denials of exemption applications do not go far enough compared to the number it approved.

“At a time when ethanol plants in the Heartland are being mothballed and jobs are being lost, it is unfathomable and utterly reprehensible that the Trump administration would dole out more unwarranted waivers to prosperous petroleum refiners,” said Geoff Cooper, president and CEO of the Renewable Fuels Association.

The refining industry, meanwhile, supported the exemptions EPA granted.

“We are pleased that EPA recognized the extreme hardship that the RFS program is having on small refineries. These waivers will go a long way to protecting manufacturing jobs in Pennsylvania, the Midwest, and across the country,” said Chet Thompson, president and CEO of American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers.

EPA IS DOING MORE DEREGULATION THAN ANY AGENCY, INTERNAL WATCHDOG SAYS: The EPA is doing more deregulation than any other federal agency, according to a report Friday from the agency’s inspector general.

EPA took 16 deregulatory actions in fiscal year 2017, more than all other agencies, and did another 10 deregulatory actions in fiscal year 2018.

For those two fiscal years years, the EPA surpassed what was required by Trump’s “two-for-one” deregulatory executive order that requires agencies to weaken or eliminate two regulations for every new regulation issued.

The deregulatory moves in fiscal years 2017 and 2018 generated $96.6 million in cost savings.

But environmental groups and other critics say weakening regulations related to air, water, and climate change results in foregone health and environmental benefits that exceed the cost savings.

The Rundown

New York Times A giant factory rises to make a product filling up the world: plastic

Wall Street Journal Saudi plans for biggest-ever IPO are back on

Wall Street Journal Giant batteries supercharge wind and solar plans

Bloomberg Trump’s top energy regulator invites execs to coal country

Calendar

TUESDAY | August 13

American Wind Week 2019 continues, lasting through August 17. During Wind Week, the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) and supporters of wind energy highlight the “many ways that wind powers opportunity” at dozens of events across the country and online with #AmericanWindWeek.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/policy/energy/daily-on-energy-trump-administration-overhauls-endangered-species-regulations

On Monday, Chinese officials focused on what they described as “deranged acts” by the protesters, including throwing gasoline bombs, saying they marked the emergence of terrorism in the Chinese city.

“Radical Hong Kong protesters have repeatedly used extremely dangerous tools to attack police officers,” Yang Guang, a spokesman for the Chinese government’s Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office, said in a news briefing on Monday, according to Chinese state broadcaster CCTV.

China’s media is sending a clear signal to the protesters.

On Monday afternoon, Chinese state-owned English tabloid the Global Times tweeted a video showing the People’s Armed Police assembling in Shenzhen, a city bordering Hong Kong, about a 1.5 hour- drive away.

The People’s Daily, the official newspaper of China’s Communist Party, posted on Chinese social media a statement saying the People’s Armed Police are in Shenzhen prepared to handle “riots, disturbance, major violence and crime and terrorism-related social security issues.”

In a Tuesday social media post from the Global Times‘ Chinese edition, the outlet said “if Hong Kong rioters cannot read the signal of having armed police gathering in Shenzhen, then they are asking for self-destruction,” according to a CNBC translation.

China is “implying they might send in the People’s Liberation Army or issue direct intervention but they don’t want to,” according to Ben Bland, a director at Sydney-based policy think tank Lowy Institute.

“(Beijing) hopes that the signals will scare protesters to back down,” but if and when Beijing decides to deploy troops they will not “advertise it,” he told CNBC. This is all part of a “delicate dance between China and Hong Kong” that’s reached a critical point because there is almost no common ground or overlapping interests between the protesters and Beijing, Bland added.

Although China’s leaders do not want to deploy the PLA, they are “willing to do it if they have to,” the Asia politics expert said.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/08/13/hong-kong-protests-china-media-says-military-assembles-nearby.html

A California Highway Patrol officer was killed and two other officers were wounded in a wild shootout Monday evening off the 215 Freeway in Riverside that also left the gunman dead and motorists dodging bullets.

One of the wounded CHP officers was in critical condition Monday night while the other officer suffered minor injuries.
The suspect, who has not been identified, was taken to a hospital where he was pronounced dead.

According to initial reports from law enforcement at the scene, a CHP motorcycle officer stopped the driver for an unknown offense.

The suspect is believed to have opened fire on the officer after reaching into his truck and pulling out a rifle after his vehicle was impounded, according to initial reports. It is unclear why the vehicle was being impounded.

The officer returned fire, and the two other CHP officers soon arrived and engaged the suspect in a gun battle. Law enforcement officers from local agencies also arrived to help.

Dozens of rounds were fired at the scene, according to law enforcement.

It is unknown whose gunfire killed the suspect; that will be determined by the Riverside County coroner, according to officials.

Several sources said the suspect was still up and shooting when county sheriff’s deputies and a Riverside police officer arrived.

“We don’t know why,” Riverside police spokesman Ryan Railsback said of the gunman’s motive. “That is all going to be part of this lengthy investigation.”

“Please say some prayers for the CHP officers involved,” wrote state Assemblywoman Melissa Melendez (R-Lake Elsinore) on Twitter.

Jennifer Moctezuma, 31, of Moreno Valley was driving home with her 6-year-old twins when a bullet flew through her front windshield.

Retired Marine Charles Childress, 56, also of Moreno Valley, was in the car behind them when he heard gunfire and saw the bullet that went through Moctezuma’s windshield.

He then heard the children screaming and knew he had to get the family out of the car in front of him.

“I was 21 years in the Marine Corps, and my training just kicked in,” Childress said.

Childress led Moctezuma and her two children, all of whom were unharmed, as they crawled down to the bottom of the bridge away from the gunfire.

“He’s my hero,” Moctezuma said. “He’s my hero.”

A California Highway Patrol dispatcher said the department responded to reports of gunfire but could not provide details. A Riverside County Fire Department dispatcher said the agency was requested to respond to Box Springs Boulevard and Eastridge Avenue.

CHP cruisers, fire engines and ambulances were on the 215 Freeway at Box Springs.

The freeway was closed, and Caltrans urged people to avoid the area. Metrolink said that the tracks near the incident had
been shut down and that trains had
been diverted.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2019-08-12/reports-of-major-shooting-incident-in-riverside-bring-huge-police-response

Pedophilic predator Jeffrey Epstein may have managed to die before facing justice, but his satanic sidekick and supposed “socialite” partner Ghislaine Maxwell may still prove capable of crushing the house of cards complicit in the pair’s sex trafficking.

That is, if we can find where on Earth she is.

Once upon a time, Maxwell, the British daughter of publishing tycoon Robert Maxwell, was a fixture in Manhattan high society. She counted everyone from Ivana and Donald Trump to Prince Andrew and Bill Clinton as friends over the years, but most crucially, Epstein became a cross between a boyfriend and a business partner. Media reports have salaciously referred to her as a “madame.” More realistically, it seems she was a slave catcher who recruited children for Epstein’s sex ring and participated in such pedophilic encounters.

A lawsuit before Epstein’s death accuses Maxwell of firsthand sexual abuse, not simply aiding and abetting Epstein’s predations. Unsealed records from Virginia Giuffre’s testimonies against Maxwell are frankly too disturbing to relay here, but they make clear that while Maxwell prioritized using their victims to fulfill Epstein’s daily sexual quotas, she used them for her own perverse pleasure.

So Maxwell knows where all the bodies are buried. We just have to find her.

Maxwell, who moved to Manhattan in 1991 after her father fell off a boat and died, remained in the city’s social scene for many years even after Epstein’s publicized case privately secured a non-prosecution deal that protected Maxwell and friends. Even though she had been closely linked to Epstein, she faced even less public blowback than him, remaining a tabloid fixture until Giuffre pursued a bold civil lawsuit against Maxwell. The suit was settled in the plaintiff’s favor. The settlement size remains undisclosed, but Maxwell’s legal costs lead her to sell her $15 million New York residence.

As of 2017, her lawyers claim she’s likely in London, but given the threat she poses to Prince Andrew, that seems unlikely. If pressed, no one could provide a more damning testimony to the United States against the accused royal, and it seems unlikely that Maxwell would gamble on her safety by remaining a sitting duck in a city dominated by people with a vested interest in her death.

In an ambiguously sourced report, the Daily Mail claimed that Maxwell has already begun cooperating with prosecutors. Maybe it’s wishful thinking, but securing Maxwell’s testimony ought to become priority No. 1 for authorities attempting to clinch justice from the jaws of defeat.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/where-the-hell-is-ghislaine-maxwell

On Aug. 11, 2019, the New York Post ran a story that repeated uncritically a rumor originating from a convicted fraud and former mob informant. The informant claimed he had heard that “US Attorney General William Barr personally made a hush-hush trip to the [the Metropolitan Correctional Center] two weeks ago, about the time [alleged sex-trafficker Jeffrey] Epstein was found in his cell with bruises around his neck.” Several news outlets repeated this claim, and it became entwined with various vague conspiracy theories alleging a nefarious connection between Barr and Epstein:

It was unclear what Barr was alleged to have done during his purported visit to the detention facility. The Post article, with the headline “Jeffrey Epstein Could Have ‘Paid’ for Help with Suicide: Former Gotti Pal,” relied solely on the speculative musings of a man named Lewis Kasman. Kasman’s expertise on this topic, according to the Post’s reporting, was that he had visited the same facility where Epstein was being kept “several times” in 1992, when Kasman’s boss, mobster John Gotti, was held there.

Kasman, who had been referred to in media reports as Gotti’s “adopted son,” gained notoriety after he “ratted out much of the Gambino crime family” as a paid FBI informant beginning in 1995. Years later, in 2010, Kasman would avoid jail time for “obstruction of justice, lying to the FBI, fraud and racketeering” thanks to his previous help aiding the FBI. In 2015, he was arrested in Florida for allegedly stealing money from his own lawyer. He has been the source of dubious claims in the past, including the baseless claim that “John Gotti’s brain was taken to Guantanamo for experiments.”

We reached out to the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) to ask if AG Barr had paid any visit to the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) during the window of time indicated by Kasman. In response, DOJ Office of Public Affairs Director Kerri Kupec called the claim “preposterous,” telling us via email that “Attorney General Barr has never visited MCC.” She added that the suggestion of a quiet visit was dubious as well, reminding us “the Attorney General has 24/7 FBI protective detail. So they would have had to be there, too.”

We also reached out to Brad Hamilton, the author of the Post story, to ask if Kasman provided any corroborating evidence that made him trust Kasman’s speculation as reportable, given the informant’s history of false or absurd statements. We have not yet received a response. All told, however, the claim has its origins in a man with a history of wild claims whose expertise on the topic is limited to his having made “several” visits to the same prison over two decades earlier. As such, we consider the claim without merit.

Source Article from https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/epstein-barr-visit/

A bald eagle prepares to take off from a pine tree in Pembroke Pines, Fla. The eagle population rebounded after protections put in place under the Endangered Species Act.

Wilfredo Lee/AP


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A bald eagle prepares to take off from a pine tree in Pembroke Pines, Fla. The eagle population rebounded after protections put in place under the Endangered Species Act.

Wilfredo Lee/AP

In a move that critics say will hurt plants, animals and other species as they face mounting threats, the Trump administration is making major changes to how the Endangered Species Act is implemented. The U.S. Department of Interior on Monday announced a suite of long-anticipated revisions to the nation’s premier wildlife conservation law, which is credited with bringing back the bald eagle and grizzly bears, among other species.

Republican lawmakers and industry groups celebrated the revisions, some of the broadest changes in the way the act is applied in its nearly 50-year history.

They come at a moment of crisis for many of the world’s plant and animal species. As many as 1 million species are at risk of extinction — many within decades — according to a recent U.N. report.

Wildlife groups and Democratic lawmakers, pointing to that document, are promising to challenge the new rules in Congress and in court. “Now is the time to strengthen the ESA, not cripple it,” said New Mexico Sen. Tom Udall on a press call.

Interior Secretary David Bernhardt says the revisions will help conservation efforts and increase transparency around the law.

One of the changes will allow economic costs to be taken into account while determining whether a species warrants protection. Another will weaken the initial protections given to species deemed to be threatened, one step shy of being endangered.

The changes will apply only to future listing decisions.

U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross says the changes fit “squarely within the president’s mandate of easing the regulatory burden on the American public, without sacrificing our species’ protection and recovery goals.”

The Endangered Species Act has maintained broad bipartisan support since its inception in 1973, but it has long drawn the ire of some who see it as being overly restrictive to business.

Ranchers, developers and fossil fuel companies have urged Republican lawmakers to change the act for decades. The regulatory overhaul announced by federal officials addresses some of their concerns, but some say it doesn’t go far enough.

“These final rules are a good start, but the administration is limited by an existing law that needs to be updated,” said Wyoming Republican Sen. John Barrasso in a statement. “We must modernize the Endangered Species Act in a way that empowers states, promotes the recovery of species, and allows local economies to thrive.”

Modernizing the act is something that is discussed by Democrats, Republicans and career staff at federal and state wildlife agencies, but there is little agreement on what that modernization should look like.

Republicans talk about improving efficiency. Democrats talk about increasing protections. Both, at times, talk about the need for more money to fund wildlife conservation.

A bipartisan effort to increase that funding is in Congress now.

Many of the changes the Trump administration is rolling out address shared administrative concerns about the act, says Jake Li, the director for biodiversity at the Environmental Policy Innovation Center. Others, he says, are problematic and weaken the bedrock law’s effectiveness.

Among them is limiting which habitat — and how much of it — gets considered in determining whether a species is endangered. Land a species currently occupies would be the priority. But wildlife advocates say that could make it harder to account for threats from the warming climate, which has shrunk habitat for some species and will force others to migrate to new areas.

Numerous environmental groups and state attorneys general vow to sue the administration over the changes, alleging they are illegal because they’re not grounded in scientific evidence.

“We don’t take these challenges lightly,” said California Attorney General Xavier Becerra during a conference call. “We don’t look to pick a fight every time this administration decides to take an action. But we challenge these actions by this administration because it is necessary.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/08/12/750479370/trump-administration-makes-major-changes-to-protections-for-endangered-species

A longtime friend of the Dayton gunman bought the body armor, a 100-round magazine, and a gun accessory used in a mass shooting, but there’s no indication that the man knew that his friend was planning a massacre, federal agents said Monday.

Ethan Kollie first spoke with investigators just hours after the shooting and later said he bought the equipment and kept it at his apartment, so Connor Betts’ parents would not find it, according to a court document.

Kollie also said that about 10 weeks ago he helped Betts assemble the AR-15 style gun used in the shooting, the court filing said.

Federal investigators emphasized that there was no evidence that Kollie knew how Betts would use the equipment or that Kollie intentionally took part in the planning.

LADY GAGA TO FUND 162 CLASSROOMS IN DAYTON, EL PASO AND GILROY FOLLOWING MASS SHOOTINGS

The accusations came as prosecutors unsealed charges against Kollie that they said were unrelated to the Aug. 4 shooting in Dayton, Ohio. Early that day, Betts opened fire in a popular entertainment district, killing his sister and eight others. Officers killed Betts within 30 seconds, just outside a crowded bar, and authorities have said hundreds more people may have died if Betts had gotten inside.

Prosecutors accused Kollie of lying about not using marijuana on federal firearms forms in the purchase of a pistol that was not used in the shooting.

Possessing a firearm as an unlawful user of a controlled substance is a federal crime punishable by up to 10 years in prison. Making a false statement regarding firearms carries a potential maximum sentence of up to five years’ imprisonment.

Kollie fully cooperated with authorities before his arrest, his attorney said.

“He was as shocked and surprised as everyone else that Mr. Betts committed the massacre,” said attorney Nick Gounaris.

KACEY MUSGRAVES CALLS FOR GUN CONTROL FOLLOWING MASS SHOOTINGS IN DAYTON, EL PASO

Gounaris wouldn’t comment on what Kollie thought his friend would do with the equipment.

Police have said there was nothing in Betts’ background that would have prevented him from buying the gun he used.

The weapon was bought online from a dealer in Texas and shipped to another firearms dealer in the Dayton area, police said on the day of the shooting.

Betts and Kollie apparently had been friends for several years.

Kollie told agents that they had smoked marijuana and used acid several times a week beginning in 2014 through 2015, said U.S. Attorney Benjamin Glassman.

Betts was with Kollie in 2016 when Betts was charged with driving under the influence, according to a police report from Bellbrook where the gunman lived with his parents.

Investigators have not released a motive for the shooting.

Eight of the victims who died were shot multiple times, according to the Montgomery County coroner’s office. More than 30 others were left injured, including at least 14 with gunshot wounds, hospital officials and investigators said.

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Just days after the shooting, Ohio Republican Gov. Mike DeWine announced a package of gun control measures , including requiring background checks for nearly all gun sales in Ohio and allowing courts to restrict firearms access for people perceived as threats.

Two state lawmakers on Monday reintroduced legislation that would restrict access to guns.

One bill would establish universal background checks while the second raises the minimum age for all gun purchases to 21.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/dayton-ohio-shooter-friend-bought-armor-firearm-prosecutors

FBI agents raided Jeffrey Epstein’s private island in the Caribbean on Monday in a vivid display that the probe into his alleged sex trafficking ring is continuing despite his death.

A swarm of federal agents was seen fanning out across Little St. James in golf carts about 10:30 a.m.

“We were just trying to look at pretty fish and swim with turtles and here we are in the middle of an FBI raid,” said Kelly Quinn, the owner of Salty Dog Day Sails, who was running a sailing charter in the area.

“This has been something on our radar for years,” Quinn added. “We’re all really curious why it’s happening now.”

Two senior law enforcement officials briefed on the investigation confirmed that the FBI launched a search of Epstein’s private island home off the coast of St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

The search was directed by the Epstein task force led by the U.S. attorney’s office for the Southern District of New York, the officials said.

A spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney’s Office declined to comment.

A law enforcement source said the search of Epstein’s home and private island in the U.S. Virgin islands was suggested years ago, but evidently went nowhere.

The raid was launched two days after Epstein was found unresponsive in his cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York City. He was pronounced dead at a lower Manhattan hospital. Multiple law enforcement officials said Epstein appeared to have hanged himself, but his official cause of death is pending.

Epstein had been held at the federal jail since July 6, when he was arrested on charges of trafficking and sexually abusing girls as young as 14 in the early 2000s. He was facing up to 45 years in prison if convicted on two counts of sex trafficking and conspiracy.

Epstein purchased the picturesque island off the coast of St. Thomas for $7.95 million in 1998. He went on to build a sprawling estate featuring a 24,000-square-foot private residence, two pools, a spa and an odd blue-striped structure that has been the subject of endless online fascination.

Steve Scully, an IT worker who worked on Epstein’s island from 1999 to 2006, said he often saw young women there and the main residence was filled with photos of topless girls.

A small building on the opposite end of the Caribbean island estate of Jeffrey Epstein on Little St. James.NBC News

“I don’t know if they were kids,” Scully told NBC News last month. “They looked young to me In almost every one of his — the master bedroom, the office, and the gymnasium certainly.”

The investigation into Epstein’s alleged sex trafficking network is continuing despite his death, multiple top law enforcement officials have said.

“To those brave young women who have already come forward and to the many others who have yet to do so, let me reiterate that we remain committed to standing for you, and our investigation of the conduct charged in the indictment — which included a conspiracy count — remains ongoing,” U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman said in a statement Saturday.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/fbi-agents-swarm-jeffrey-epstein-s-private-caribbean-island-n1041596

Media captionPresident Putin says a new cruise missile will have ‘unlimited’ range

Five Russian nuclear engineers who died in a rocket engine explosion have been buried in Sarov, a closed town 373km (232 miles) east of Moscow, where nuclear warheads are made.

The Russian state nuclear agency, Rosatom, said the experts had been testing a nuclear-powered engine. But it gave no further technical details.

The test was on an offshore platform in the Arctic, at a naval test range.

Russia has previously tested a nuclear-powered cruise missile, “Burevestnik”.

But officials did not specify the system involved in Thursday’s disastrous test.

The explosion was followed by a 40-minute radiation spike in Severodvinsk, a city 40km (25 miles) east of the Nyonoksa test range, by the White Sea.

Severodvinsk officials said radiation in the city reached 2 microsieverts per hour, then fell back to the normal 0.11 microsieverts. Both levels are too small to cause radiation sickness.

Three other engineers were injured in the blast, and are now in hospital, Rosatom said.

Experts in Russia and the West say the test was most likely linked to the 9M730 Burevestnik, meaning “petrel”, a type of seabird. President Vladimir Putin described the missile in a speech to the Russian parliament in March 2018. Nato has given it the designation SSC-X-9 Skyfall.

Mark Galeotti, a leading Russia analyst and researcher at the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi), says nuclear propulsion poses huge technical challenges. “There is speed versus the weight of the system, and the risk of a missile that spews radioactive exhaust wherever it goes,” he told the BBC.

“These new systems have their origin in Soviet times – they’ve been taken off the shelves and given new investment.”

The Burevestnik’s nuclear propulsion would, according to Mr Putin, give it “unlimited” range. But the Nyonoksa explosion could have involved a different weapon, equally capable of delivering a nuclear warhead:

What is known about the explosion?

The five nuclear engineers who died were “elite” experts and “heroes” who knew of the risks and had conducted previous tests in “extraordinarily tough conditions”, senior Rosatom official Valentin Kostyukov said.

He heads the Sarov nuclear centre – a secret Cold War-era facility responsible for Russia’s hydrogen bomb arsenal.

He named the five as: Alexei Vyushin (a designer and software specialist); Yevgeny Korotayev (senior electrical engineer); Vyacheslav Lipshev (head of the scientific testing team); Sergei Pichugin (testing engineer); Vladislav Yanovsky (deputy head of the scientific testing department).

Initially the defence ministry said the explosion on 8 August had involved a liquid-fuel rocket engine, and gave the death toll as two, without specifying the victims.

Later, Rosatom said the test had involved a “radio-isotope propellant source” and had taken place on an offshore platform.

The engineers had completed testing, but suddenly a fire broke out and the engine exploded, throwing the men into the sea, Rosatom said.

Soon after the blast the Severodvinsk administration reported a 40-minute spike in radiation in the city, and news of that prompted locals to buy up stocks of iodine in the city’s pharmacies.

Iodine pills offer some protection from radioactive iodine – and there was a huge demand for them during the 1986 Chernobyl disaster.

Image copyright
Reuters

Image caption

The Nyonoksa test range dates back to Soviet times – the hoarding stands near a naval barracks

Ahead of the test, the defence ministry imposed an exclusion zone in Dvina Bay – the waters north of the Nyonoksa test range. The zone will remain closed to civilian shipping until early September.

A Norwegian Arctic news website, the Barents Observer, reported that a Russian specialised nuclear cargo ship, the Serebryanka, was inside the exclusion zone on 9 August.

There is speculation that the ship was deployed to pick up any radioactive debris in the event of a failed test, and may be doing just that now.

But the closed zone may also be a precaution against any escape of toxic rocket fuel into the water, where locals go fishing.

Is the nuclear-powered missile a game-changer?

Rusi’s Mark Galeotti says “there is a lot of scepticism about whether the Burevestnik will ever see the light of day”.

He notes that another state-of-the-art Russian missile, the Bulava, “had many years of failed tests”.

The Zircon and Poseidon missiles are more advanced projects. The Poseidon underwater drone already exists in prototype.

But Poseidon, like the Burevestnik, appears to be an “apocalyptic” weapon, Mr Galeotti says – impractical for anything short of all-out nuclear war.

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

A museum in Sarov (1997 photo) has mock-ups of the first Soviet A-bomb (foreground) and H-bomb (behind)

Russia’s government newspaper Rossiiskaya Gazeta last month described Burevestnik as “a vengeance weapon”. That was also the phrase used by the Nazis to describe their V-rockets, fired at the UK late in World War Two.

The newspaper said Burevestnik – capable of long-duration flight and avoiding air defences – would target any remaining vital infrastructure after Russia’s intercontinental ballistic missiles had already struck enemy territory.

With the recent collapse of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty, the US will now focus more on “developing the intermediate-range arsenal, something short of all-out war”, Mr Galeotti said.

“The Russian military also want that capability, because they are also worried about China,” he added.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-49319160

Jeffrey Epstein was a multimillionaire financier who hobnobbed with an elite circle of princes, presidents and the ultrawealthy — before his fall from grace following accusations of child sex trafficking in the mid-2000s — accusations that hung over him, the proverbial black cloud, until his reported suicide early Saturday in his Manhattan jail cell.

JEFFREY EPSTEIN DEAD FROM APPARENT SUICIDE IN MANHATTAN JAIL CELL; FBI INVESTIGATING

Here is a look at the major events in Epstein’s life — the crimes, the controversies and the questions that surround his shocking death.

EARLY LIFE

Jan. 20, 1953 – Epstein is born in Brooklyn.

1969 – 1971 – After high school, Epstein takes physics classes at Manhattan’s Cooper Union and enrolls in NYU’s Courant Institute, though he leaves without a degree, according to a 2002 New York magazine profile.

Friend of presidents, the ultrarich and the Wall Street elite. (Photo by Rick Friedman/Corbis via Getty Images, File)

1973 – 1975 – Described by some around him as a math genius, Epstein teaches calculus and physics at the Dalton School on Manhattan’s Upper East Side — without having a degree — according to the magazine.

Epstein attracts the attention of the Wall Street-connected father of a student, who tells him to reach out to Ace Greenberg, a senior partner at Bear Stearns.

JEFFREY EPSTEIN FINANCES REVEALED: HERE’S HOW MUCH HE SAID HE’S WORTH

RISE TO PROMINENCE

1976 – Epstein joins Bear Stearns as a junior assistant to a floor trader at the American Stock Exchange before rapidly rising through the ranks and becoming a partner by 1980, according to New York magazine.

1981 – A year after making partner, he leaves Bear Stearns to set up his own money managing business, which caters exclusively to billionaires. His most notable client is billionaire businessman Les Wexner, according to Bloomberg. After Epstein’s death, CNBC reports Wexner and his representatives have turned over documents to authorities allegedly showing Epstein may have misappropriated money.

How Epstein accumulated his wealth is unclear; his net worth has inspired speculation but remains murky. Federal prosecutors noted a mysterious gap in his financial records at a hearing in July.

2000s – Epstein invests millions into a Bear Stearns High-Grade Structured Credit Strategies Enhanced Leverage hedge fund, according to WLNY-TV. The fund is later considered to be “a ticking time bomb” that factored into the collapse of Bear Stearns during the 2008 financial crisis, according to the station.

ACCUSATIONS

March 2005 – A 14-year-old girl and her parents report Epstein molested her at a mansion in Palm Beach, Fla. She says a female acquaintance and classmate at Royal Palm Beach High School had taken her to the house to give Epstein a massage in exchange for money.

JEFFREY EPSTEIN’S PAPER TRAIL: A LOOK AT THE CONVICTED PEDOPHILE’S HIGH-POWERED CONNECTIONS

May 2006 – Police sign a probable cause affidavit charging Epstein and two of his assistants with multiple counts of unlawful sex acts with a minor. The Palm Beach state attorney, Barry Krischer, instead refers the case to a grand jury.

June 2006 – The grand jury, after hearing from only one accuser, returns an indictment of one count of solicitation of prostitution. The charge does not reflect that the accuser in question and others were minors at the time of the alleged incidents.

July 2006 – The FBI opens a federal investigation, dubbed “Operation Leap Year.’’ Documents list the possible crime as “child prostitution.’’

JEFFREY EPSTEIN FEARED CELLMATE, A MUSCLE-BOUND EX-COP CHARGED IN MURDER WHO WAS MOVED BEFORE FINANCIER’S DEATH: REPORT

PLEA DEAL, SEX OFFENDER STATUS

June 2008 – Epstein’s lawyers revisit plea negotiations, and on June 30, Epstein appears in a Palm Beach County courtroom. He pleads guilty to state charges on one count of solicitation of prostitution and one count of solicitation of prostitution with a minor under the age of 18. His victims are not notified of the plea deal.

Epstein is sentenced to 18 months in jail, followed by a year of community control, or house arrest. He is adjudicated as a convicted sex offender who must register twice a year in Florida.

July 7, 2009 – Epstein is released from the Palm Beach County stockade five months early. During his sentence, Epstein is allowed a generous work-release several days of the week in which he’s allowed to work from his house.

THE CASE REOPENS

February 2019 – The Justice Department says it’s opened an investigation into federal prosecutors’ handling of Epstein’s plea deal. The department’s Office of Professional Responsibility intends to examine whether professional misconduct occurred in the highly publicized case.

CELEBRITIES REACT TO JEFFREY EPSTEIN’S DEATH WITH CONSPIRACY THEORIES ABOUT DONALD TRUMP, RUSSIA

U.S. District Judge Kenneth Marra rules federal prosecutors overseeing the case violated the law by concealing from underage alleged victims the existence of the plea deal that shielded Epstein from federal charges.

EPSTEIN’S ARREST AND DEATH

July 2, 2019 – A sealed indictment is filed charging Epstein with sex trafficking of minors and conspiracy to commit sex trafficking of minors.

July 6, 2019 – Epstein is arrested after his plane lands in Teterboro, N.J.

JEFFREY EPSTEIN DEAD: TIMELINE OF SEXUAL ABUSE ALLEGATIONS AND RELATED LEGAL CASES

July 8, 2019 – Epstein’s indictment is unsealed and he pleads not guilty at his arraignment.

July 18, 2019 – Epstein is denied bail.

July 23, 2019 – Epstein is reportedly found unconscious, with neck injuries, in his cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center. It is unclear whether the injury was self-inflicted or the result of an assault by another inmate.

Aug. 10, 2019 – Epstein is found dead in his Manhattan cell. His cellmate was reportedly removed from the cell hours before Epstein’s death. Guards had reportedly not checked in on Epstein for “several hours” though such checks were required at half-hour intervals.

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Aug. 11, 2019 – An autopsy is performed on Epstein. The chief medical examiner releases a statement saying the office needs more information before determining Epstein’s cause of death.

Aug. 12, 2019 – Attorney General William Barr describes “serious irregularities” at the facility where Epstein was held. Barr vows a full investigation by the FBI and the Department of Justice inspector general.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/jeffrey-epstein-life-death-crimes-controversies-timeline

Jeffrey Epstein was found hanging in his Lower Manhattan jail cell with a bedsheet wrapped around his neck and secured to the top of a bunk bed, The Post has learned.

The convicted pedophile, who was 6 feet tall, apparently killed himself by kneeling toward the floor and strangling himself with the makeshift noose, a law enforcement source said Monday.

Epstein was “unresponsive” when he was discovered in his cell in the Special Housing Unit of the Metropolitan Correctional Center around 6:30 a.m. on Saturday, the federal Bureau of Prisons has said.

Staffers attempted to revive him and he was taken to an infirmary inside the lockup, then transported by ambulance to the NewYork-Presbyterian Lower Manhattan Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

The FBI and the Justice Department are both investigating the incident, which US Attorney General William Barr on Monday blamed on “serious irregularities at this facility.”

Barr also vowed that authorities would to “get to the bottom of what happened,” saying the case against Epstein was “very important to the Department of Justice and to me personally.”

“Most importantly, this case was important to the victims who had the courage to come forward and deserved the opportunity to confront the accused in the courtroom,” Barr said.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/08/12/jeffrey-epstein-hanged-himself-with-prison-bedsheet-source/

The acting director of the Citizenship and Immigration Service office, Ken Cuccinelli, fielded question during Monday’s White House press briefing regarding new immigration regulations. One of the more pointed questions: Should the plaque on the Statue of Liberty be removed?

Cuccinelli outlined the new “public charge” rule that allows the federal government to take into account income and education while reviewing a potential immigrant’s request for a visa or green card. Officials say this will ensure that those who are granted access to the U.S. can be financially self-sufficient taxpayers who aren’t in need of federal entitlements.

CBS Radio’s Steven Portnoy asked if the new rule comes into conflict with the Statue of Liberty’s embrace of the downtrodden. He asked if the plaque should be removed.

“As long as the public charge has been in effect since the late 1800s, there’s also been, almost as long, the words at the base of the Statue of Liberty that read, ‘Give us your tired, your poor…’ You’re implementing a public charge rule for the first time,” Portnoy said. “Is that sentiment … still operative in the United States … or should the plaque come down off the statue?”

CNN’S JIM ACOSTA BEATEN IN EPIC WHITE HOUSE HUMILIATION, AND OTHER OUTLANDISH MEDIA MOMENTS

Cucinelli said there are no plans to remove the famous plaque and cheered America’s track record as having a wide embrace.

More from Media

“Well I’m certainly not prepared to take anything down off the Statue of Liberty,” he replied. “We have a long history of being one of the most welcoming nations in the world, on a lot of bases. Whether you be an asylee, whether you be coming here to join your family, or emigrating yourself … I do not think, by any means, we’re ready to take anything off the Statue of Liberty.”

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Fox News’ Adam Shaw and Dan Gainor contributed to this report

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/ken-cuccinelli-is-asked-if-lady-libertys-plaque-should-come-down-amid-immigration-changes