Friends of the Dayton Oregon District shooter cut ties with him earlier this year because he’d unexpectedly brandished guns and once talked about shooting up Timothy’s, a popular bar among University of Dayton students, a former friend told the Dayton Daily News.

Other people — far from friendly with Connor Betts, the shooter — recalled to the Dayton Daily News how they’d been concerned about him and his bizarre behavior for years, even reporting him to local police.

>> New details emerge about Dayton shooting victims

Betts, 24, shot and killed nine people, including his sister, in a less-than-a-minute rampage Sunday in the Oregon District. Police shot him outside Ned Peppers, 419 E. 5th St., a popular Oregon District bar where many of the victims were shot. Police haven’t publicly disclosed a motive.

» RELATED: Dayton shooter obsessed with killing, classmates say

The last straw in Will El-Fakir’s relationship with Betts was when he pulled out a gun and held it near El-Fakir’s head about five months ago, he said.

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El-Fakir told the Dayton Daily News he relayed that story to Dayton police Sunday afternoon. El-Fakir said he knew Betts from Bellbrook High School, where they graduated together. El-Fakir attended the University of Dayton and graduated this year. Betts enrolled in Sinclair Community College a few years after Bellbrook, something Sinclair officials said is normal among their students.

» RELATED: 5 things to know about Dayton shooter Connor Betts

“He was getting a little violent with friends,” El-Fakir said. “He started bringing guns around us for no particular reason.”

When the pair cut ties five months ago, it wasn’t the first time they’d had problems. A few years earlier, El-Fakir said, Betts was using drugs and “was definitely not in a right state of mind.” Police haven’t confirmed any past or contemporary drug use by Betts.

But they eventually became friends again and would hang out in UD’s student neighborhood. That is, until about five months ago, when El-Fakir said he found some of Betts’ comments increasingly troubling.

» RELATED: Suspect’s sister, a Wright State student, killed in Oregon District shooting

One such conversation, El-Fakir said, happened at Timothy’s Bar and Grill, 1818 Brown St., a popular student dance bar.

“There were times when he went to bars and just scoped the place out,” El-Fakir said. “He’d say, ‘If I brought this-or-that through here, it would have done some damage.’”

El-Fakir said he asked Betts if he was being serious, but Betts didn’t reply. “No one really took him seriously,” El-Fakir said. “We were all young guys and we had known each other for years. It’s not something you’d see your friends doing.”

Before the split, they had occasionally discussed politics.

El-Fakir, who said he’s personally pro-2nd Amendment, described Betts as “definitely not a right-leaning person. His political views definitely leaned to the left. And believe it or not, he was actually pro-gun control. He was actually anti-2nd Amendment.”

“I don’t know if this is the motive that made him snap,” El-Fakir said, “(but I think) he donned himself with that ballistic vest just to show people how easy it was to arm themselves. It’s pure speculation.”

“He never once spit out a conservative opinion on gun control,” El-Fakir said.

>> Dayton police chief: Weapon of this type ‘fundamentally problematic’

The Dayton Daily News first reported online Sunday that Betts had been suspended from Bellbrook High School for having a “hit list” of girls. The newspaper attempted to obtain records about that incident.

In reply to requests for records about the incident, the Sugarcreek Twp. Police Department and Greene County Juvenile Court clerk both provided the Dayton Daily News with a denial, citing state law that addresses records expungement. Bellbrook police said they had no records related to the incident.

The Dayton Daily News and several major national publications additionally requested records from Bellbrook-Sugarcreek Schools, but superintendent Douglas Cozad declined, in part because the district hadn’t received formal documentation of the Betts’ death.

David Partridge said he was one of the people who called police and turned Betts in over the “hit list.”

The 26-year-old who now lives in Dayton’s Belmont neighborhood said when he heard the name of the shooter, he instantly remembered the incident from 2009.

A female classmate called Partridge and said Betts “has your relative on this hit list and there’s graphic violence in there, stuff about how he wants to harm or kill people,” Partridge recalled.

When he confronted Betts on the phone about the list, he said he remembers Betts acting surprised and trying to deny it. Their phone conversation took place while Betts rode the bus to school one morning, where Partridge said police officers met him and took him into custody.

Another classmate, who spoke to the Dayton Daily News on condition that her name not be used for fear of retaliation, confirmed Partridge’s account. Partridge and others disputed ex-Bellbrook High School principal Chris Baker’s recollection that the incident involved writing on a bathroom door. He and other students said that incident was in 2012 and involved a different student. Reached again Monday, Baker wouldn’t clarify and referred questions to the superintendent.

Prior to the 2009 incident, Partridge said he didn’t know Betts very well.

“He was maybe just a little strange, kind of quiet, sometimes slightly inappropriate like jokes,” Partridge said. “When this list was brought to my attention, it was genuinely surprising to me.”

Partridge graduated the following year as a junior and said he never saw Betts at school again after that day. He saw him two times in the years since at places that Betts worked. Once after visiting Chipotle with the relative who was threatened in the list, Partridge remembered getting a Facebook message from Betts saying it was “nice to see you,” which he found strange.

“I want people in Dayton and I want people in America all to know that this could have been prevented possibly,” Partridge said.

“He bought these firearms legally, and this was an individual that had a repeated pattern of violent thoughts, speaking and behavior, for years,” he said. “Somebody knew that he was collecting weapons. People were around him when he was continuing to say disturbing, violent things.”

MORE ON THE DAYTON SHOOTING

» PHOTOS: Scenes from the Oregon District shooting

» Dayton Shooting: Names of victims released

» Hotlines, meeting site set for families of victims

» Doorbell camera records response to save lives

»Oregon District businesses issue response to deadly attack


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Source Article from https://www.journal-news.com/news/local/friend-police-dayton-killer-discussed-shooting-bar/3NGLDQ9w2f67iRAMkKkoKL/

Advocates of stricter gun legislation hold a candlelight vigil for victims of recent mass shootings outside the headquarters of the National Rifle Association on Monday in Fairfax, Va.

Win McNamee/Getty Images


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Advocates of stricter gun legislation hold a candlelight vigil for victims of recent mass shootings outside the headquarters of the National Rifle Association on Monday in Fairfax, Va.

Win McNamee/Getty Images

The National Rifle Association’s sway in the nation’s capital may be waning at a time when two mass shootings in Ohio and Texas are reigniting the debate about enacting new gun restrictions.

In the past few months, the gun rights group’s president stepped aside; its top lobbyist resigned; and allegations of financial misconduct at the highest levels of the group have burst into the open.

Amid allegations of impropriety, the New York and Washington, D.C., attorneys general have launched investigations.

Last week, three NRA board members publicly stepped down, protesting that they couldn’t get straight information about the group’s financial affairs.

“They’ve lost some of their ability to respond because they are distracted, they are losing funding, and they are losing support,” said Rob Pincus, a spokesperson for Save the Second, a pro-gun rights group — but one that wants accountability reforms inside the NRA.

“Whatever statements they make are also losing efficacy because of the damage that’s been done to their reputation.”

The 2018 midterms marked a milestone where the NRA’s opponents were able to outspend it. Everytown for Gun Safety, a group founded by Michael Bloomberg, led that charge.

“The NRA is completely dysfunctional right now. It’s like looking at a five-alarm fire, but the amazing thing is that they lit the match,” said John Feinblatt, the president of Everytown for Gun Safety. “And the question is can the NRA get its house in order to be a player in 2020.”

They were joined in the gun control effort by the Giffords gun control organization, which was founded after former Democratic Rep. Gabby Giffords was shot in at a constituent meeting in Tucson, Ariz., in 2011.

“The NRA is a swamp of infighting, self-dealing, and pandering to a small core of extreme supporters,” said Peter Ambler, executive director at Giffords. “The mess they created proves they don’t speak for a majority of Americans who agree that commonsense gun laws aren’t controversial and are necessary to protect our communities.”

The National Rifle Association said on Monday that it wants to focus on the “root causes” of gun violence. The gun rights group also said it wanted to pursue “real solutions that protect us all from people who commit these horrific acts.”

One of the biggest opponents of new gun control legislation is Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., who decides what gets a vote on the Senate floor. Mirroring the NRA’s statements, McConnell said this week merely that he wanted to find potential solutions — without naming any.

“Senate Republicans are prepared to do our part,” McConnell said, adding that he “encouraged [GOP committee chairs] to engage in bipartisan discussions of potential solutions to help protect our communities without infringing on Americans’ constitutional rights.”

There are a number of proposals the Senate could take up: The House passed background check legislation earlier this year; Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman and Trump ally Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., has proposed red flag laws in the past and indicated he has an agreement with Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., to push a bill addressing them. Republican Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania has proposed bipartisan legislation that expanded background checks but failed in 2013 after the shootings at Sandy Hook.

Toomey’s proposal faltered in the Senate after the NRA opposed it.

He told reporters on Tuesday that he’s worried the effort would fail again if the vote happened immediately.

Instead, he argues that he needs to build up momentum again for the legislation before moving to a vote.

“If we force a vote tomorrow, then I think the vote probably fails, and we may set back this whole effort,” Toomey said.

On Monday morning, President Trump tweeted his support for expanded background checks, in line with what Toomey has been advocating.

But in prepared remarks just hours later, the president made no mention of those measures — instead falling in line with familiar NRA rhetoric that blames societal issues, rather than access to firearms, for mass shootings.

“Mental illness and hatred pull the trigger, not the gun,” the president said.

It’s a sign that despite the NRA’s internal struggles, the gun rights community still holds serious influence with the president. Until the president shifts on the issue, it’s unlikely large numbers of Republicans will get out in front of him or the gun lobby.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/08/06/748622556/with-nras-internal-turmoil-opponents-see-opportunity-to-advance-gun-restrictions

The Republican Party’s absurd “analysis” of the weekend’s double horror — first El Paso and then, just hours later, the killing of nine innocent men and women in Dayton, Ohio, by a young gunman — would be laughable if this were a moment for laughter. Trump blamed the carnage on the internet, violent video games and mental illness, in that order. But all of these phenomena are present in every other industrialized country, yet none suffers the kind of horrific gun violence we routinely experience in the United States. Japan, where a culture of violent video gaming is deeply rooted, has essentially no gun violence at all.

Source Article from https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/commentary/2019/08/06/eugene-robinson-sensible/

[Read our live briefing for the latest updates on the Dayton and El Paso shootings]

Mr. Betts often expressed concerns to her about having dark thoughts, she said.

“I remember specifically him talking about being scared of the thoughts that he had, being scared that he had violent thoughts,” said Ms. Carpenter, who cut off contact with him in 2013 after he lashed out at her during an online chat. “He knew it wasn’t normal.”

The police in Dayton were quick to caution on Monday that much about the shooting early Sunday morning was still unknown. There was still no clear motive, nor an understanding of how three people — Mr. Betts, his sister and a mutual friend — all went out together and one ended up shooting the other two. The friend, who has not been named by the police, was shot in his lower torso but survived; the sister, Megan Betts, 22, was killed.

“It seems to just defy believability that he would shoot his own sister,” said Dayton’s police chief, Richard Biehl, at a news briefing on Monday morning. “But it’s also hard to believe he didn’t recognize that was his sister, so we just don’t know.”

[Those who died left behind at least eight children, and countless friends, co-workers, classmates and family members. Here is what we have learned about each of the victims.]

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/05/us/dayton-shooter-connor-betts.html

Police on Monday said that Patrick Crusius, the man suspected of killing 22 people in El Paso last weekend, stopped at the Walmart where he allegedly carried out the mass shooting because he was hungry and randomly chose the store to carry out his attack. Authorities added that Crusius got lost in a neighborhood before visiting the Walmart — but not long after he arrived, the shooting began.

Crusius, who is now in custody and being held without bail, has been unemployed for five months and used food stamps, authorities said — but he bought his high-powered rifle legally. A racist manifesto that police believe was written by Crucius, posted online before the shooting, criticized a growing Hispanic population in Texas.

The death toll from both the El Paso shooting and another mass shooting in Dayton, Ohio, this weekend rose to at least 31 on Monday. Those people are among at least 80 killed or injured within the span of 13 hours. President Trump plans to visit the two cities on Wednesday as the nation grapples with the tragedies.

“CBS Evening News” anchor Norah O’Donnell spoke to Ray Garcia, who raced to the scene and pulled several kids from a girls’ soccer team to safety. Garcia said he ran towards the danger “because of the kids.”

“That was most important for me, was the kids,” he said. “Getting them out of there. I didn’t want them to keep suffering like they were. They were crying, they had seen too much already.”

Authorities have now identified all deceased victims of the El Paso shooting. At least seven are Mexican nationals. El Paso Mayor Dee Margo vowed that his city will stand strong in the face of evil.

“El Paso is a family and we must continue to stand united as our region heals,” Margo said, adding “Our borders may separate us; our grief transcends them. We’re one region and we will honor every victim like they were a member of our community.”

Javier Prado, an El Paso resident who became a U.S. citizen after moving to America for college, says he won’t let the attack unnerve him. “I think the worst thing that we can do as a community is stay in fear,” he said. “We need to show our support and show that we’re not going to be intimidated.”

Many in El Paso in part blame President Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric for the shooting. Democratic Congresswoman Veronica Escobar said the president was not welcome in the city — but the mayor said he considers welcoming the president’s visit as his “formal duty.”

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/el-paso-shooting-suspected-shooter-stopped-at-walmart-before-lethal-shooting-because-he-was-hungry-police/

At least seven of the 22 people murdered in the mass shooting at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas, on Saturday were Mexican nationals, making it a tragedy that spans both sides of the US-Mexico border.

And Mexico’s government is promising to respond.

“We consider this an act of terrorism against the Mexican-American community and Mexican nationals in the United States,” Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard said Sunday at a press conference. “Mexico is outraged. But we aren’t proposing to meet hate with hate. We will act with reason and according to the law and with firmness.”

Mexico has said it will increase protections for its citizens in the United States and has also threatened to take legal action — including potentially filing a lawsuit against the seller of the assault weapon used in the attack and possibly seeking the extradition of the 21-year-old suspected shooter on terrorism charges.

Experts I spoke to say it’s unlikely Mexico would triumph if it chose to pursue extradition. But as mounting evidence suggests this was a racially motivated attack, the Mexican government may have reason to at least attempt it and put even a little pressure on the United States.

“For Mexico, this individual is a terrorist”

Ebrard on Sunday outlined a set of actions Mexico would take in response to the attack, including providing support for victims and their families and sending a diplomatic note to Washington asking the administration to take a strong stand against hate crimes.

He also said Mexico would try to get greater access to the US’s investigation into the El Paso suspect and the shooting, and that he would be asking Mexico’s attorney general to consider whether to seek the suspect’s extradition to Mexico so he could be tried on terrorism charges in that country.

An extradition request would certainly be a substantial ask on the part of the Mexican government.

“The US and Mexico have a very vibrant extradition treaty that is used all the time,” Emily Edmonds-Poli, a professor of political science and international relations at the University of San Diego, told me. “But it is generally the case that it’s the United States extraditing people from Mexico. It’s more of a one-way street.”

Mexico does have some legitimate legal standing, but it’s tricky

Scott R. Anderson, a fellow at the Brookings Institution think tank in Washington, told me that while countries traditionally handle the prosecution of crimes that happen on their own territories, that’s shifted a bit in recent years with the focus on transnational crime, including terrorism and drug cartels — an obvious example being the case of El Chapo.

The Mexico-US extradition treaty, he said, does allow for certain cases of extraterritorial jurisdiction — that is, instances where a country can prosecute crimes that happen outside of its borders. The first would be if the perpetrator came from the country making the extradition request, which would mean the shooter was a Mexican national, which doesn’t apply in this case.

The second is a trickier and involves crimes that both the requesting state (in this case, Mexico) and the state getting the request (in this case, the United States) recognize.

So there may be an argument there: The US can prosecute extraterritorial murders in certain instances, but it usually only steps in if the local jurisdiction doesn’t.

And, according to Anderson, the treaty also states that neither Mexico nor the US is obligated to extradite its own nationals, though both are obligated to prosecute them if possible — and the El Paso shooter will definitely face prosecution in the US, making Mexico’s argument difficult to make. The US also very rarely extradites its own citizens — the case being that the American legal system is robust enough that the accused will have a fair trial in the US.

“While the mechanisms are definitely there, and if the two countries wanted to do it, it could certainly happen, my gut reaction is it definitely won’t,” Edmonds-Poli said.

Foreign Minister Ebrand also said that Mexico would consider filing suit against the seller of the weapon used in the El Paso shooting, including investigating whether all the laws were followed or if any red flags were ignored.

Lawsuits brought by US citizens against gun sellers and gun manufacturers after mass shootings have had limited success in US courts, so it’s unlikely that Mexico will get much traction there, either.

But Gustavo Flores-Macías, an associate professor at Cornell University, pointed out to me that these lawsuits could still put pressure on the US government and the authorities investigating the shooting to find out if the US failed to follow warnings or enforce background checks. Essentially, these lawsuits would serve to call attention to the US’s loopholes and lax regulations on firearms.

Any extradition request is as much a political question as a legal one

The El Paso shooter will likely spend the rest of his life in prison or face the death penalty in the United States — something the Mexican government is almost certainly aware of.

So why pursue extradition?

Some of it might have to do with the tense relationship between the US and Mexico. Mexico’s leftist President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, also known as “AMLO,” has faced pressure from the Trump administration throughout his tenure and has gone along with the United States on its immigration plans, including implementing the controversial “Remain in Mexico” policy under which the US forces asylum seekers to wait in Mexico while their US asylum claims are processed, regardless of their country of origin.

Critics have accused AMLO’s government of capitulating to Trump’s demands on immigration and trying not to upset the administration on issues like trade. But with the El Paso attack, Mexico can take a strong stand, proving that it’s protecting and defending Mexican citizens in the United States. These moves are “powerful for domestic consumption in Mexico, regardless whether legal actions in the US are successful,” Flores-Macías said.

AMLO himself has kept his language somewhat neutral, condemning the attack and criticizing the flow of firearms in the US but stopping short of provoking Trump or his administration. “We don’t want to interfere in the affairs of other countries. We’re going to continue sticking to the principles of non-intervention,” AMLO said Sunday, according to the Guardian.

Still, AMLO’s government is clearly putting some public pressure on the Trump administration here. It’s not clear how successful it will be, though. “Extraditions are often used as leverage points, or bargaining chips,” Edmonds-Poli said. But, she added, with the United States, “Mexico is always on the losing end of the asymmetry. They’re not playing from a place of strength.”

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2019/8/6/20755174/el-paso-shooting-mexico-ebrard-extradition

In the aftermath of mass shootings in Texas and Ohio, President Trump vowed Monday to give federal law enforcement “whatever they need” to investigate and disrupt hate crimes and domestic terrorism.

But the Department of Homeland Security, which is charged with identifying threats and preventing domestic terrorism, has sought to redirect resources away from countering anti-government, far-right and white supremacist groups.

The shift has come despite evidence of a growing danger. Last year, every extremist killing in the United States involved a follower of far-right hate groups or ideology, according to the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism. The FBI has noted a sharp increase in domestic terrorism cases involving white supremacists.

In June, the acting secretary of Homeland Security, Kevin McAleenan, told Congress that “white supremacist extremist violence” is “an evolving and increasingly concerning threat.”

Under Trump, 85% of the “countering violent extremism” grants awarded by Homeland Security explicitly targeted Muslims and other minority groups, including immigrants and refugees, more than under the Obama administration, according to an analysis by the Brennan Center for Justice, a nonpartisan policy institute at the New York University School of Law.

Homeland Security officials did not respond to requests for comment Monday, but the former officials said the department is working on a draft of a plan that includes a focus on domestic terrorism and mass casualty events.

In April, McAleenan announced a new Office of Targeted Violence and Terrorism Prevention, including “racially motivated violence.” It appears to largely be a rebranding of an Obama-era initiative.

Under President Obama, the office had about 40 full-time staff and a $24-million annual budget, according to Nate Snyder, an Obama administration counterterrorism official. The office now has fewer than 10 full-time employees and a budget below $3 million.

“You have some very dedicated government employees still at the office dealing with terrorism prevention and just trying to keep the lights on,” Snyder said.

After Trump’s election, members of his transition team told Homeland Security officials they wanted to reorient programs meant to combat violent extremism to focus more on the threat posed by radical Islamic terrorism.

But right-wing and anti-government groups have carried out more domestic attacks, and killed more Americans, than foreign terrorist groups since 2001, data show.

According to the most recent FBI data, hate crimes increased for the third straight year in 2017, rising 17% from 2016. The FBI warned this week that the risk of future attacks may be growing as well.

“The FBI remains concerned that U.S.-based domestic violent extremists could become inspired by these and previous high-profile attacks to engage in similar acts of violence,” the FBI said in a statement Sunday after the attacks in El Paso and Dayton, Ohio.

Federal authorities have been slow to acknowledge the danger, focusing chiefly on terrorist threats from Islamist groups and sympathizers, including Al Qaeda and Islamic State, since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

“Very little has been done on white supremacist ideology,” said Seamus Hughes, deputy director of the Program on Extremism at George Washington University. “Unfortunately, it’s been a bipartisan glaring hole in the countering violent extremism policy response.”

In his comments Monday, Trump appeared to blame mental illness for the latest mass shootings, not ideology. “Mental illness and hatred pull the trigger, not the gun,” he said at the White House.

But numerous studies disprove the theory that terrorism is a mental health problem, according to the Brennan Center for Justice.

Obama issued a rare statement Monday underscoring the growing threat of white supremacist and racism-motivated domestic terrorism.

“While the motivations behind these shooting may not be fully known, there are indications that the El Paso shooting follows a dangerous trend,” Obama tweeted. “Troubled individuals who embrace racist ideologies and see themselves obligated to act violently to preserve white supremacy.”

Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss), who chairs the House Homeland Security Committee, was more pointed in his criticism.

“White supremacist terrorism … is on the rise and is now our top domestic terrorism threat,” Thompson said Monday. “Those that looked the other way for years — or enabled right-wing extremism for political advantage — are on notice.”

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2019-08-05/trump-officials-have-redirected-resources-from-countering-far-right-racism-fueled-domestic-terrorism


President Donald Trump’s message was a distillation of a sentiment “Fox & Friends” co-host Brian Kilmeade expressed on air Tuesday morning. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

white house

08/06/2019 07:46 AM EDT

Updated 08/06/2019 08:12 AM EDT


President Donald Trump on Tuesday attacked former President Barack Obama over the latter’s statement on the weekend’s mass shootings in Texas and Ohio, tweeting edited quotes from Fox News hosts to make his point and again claiming he is “the least racist person” in the world.

“‘Did George Bush ever condemn President Obama after Sandy Hook. President Obama had 32 mass shootings during his reign. Not many people said Obama is out of Control,’” Trump wrote online. “’Mass shootings were happening before the President even thought about running for Pres.’ @kilmeade @foxandfriends”

Story Continued Below

Trump’s message was a distillation of a sentiment “Fox & Friends” co-host Brian Kilmeade expressed on air shortly after 6 a.m. Tuesday morning. The president followed up that tweet with another post paraphrasing a comment from Kilmeade’s morning show colleague, Ainsley Earhardt.

“‘It’s political season and the election is around the corner. They want to continue to push that racist narrative.’ @ainsleyearhardt @foxandfriends,” Trump continued. “And I am the least racist person. Black, Hispanic and Asian Unemployment is the lowest (BEST) in the history of the United States!”

Obama on Monday afternoon lamented the violence that transpired Saturday morning in El Paso, Texas, and early Sunday morning in Dayton, Ohio, which left at least 31 people dead and injured dozens more.

In his statement, Obama called on Americans to “soundly reject language coming out of the mouths of any of our leaders that feeds a climate of fear and hatred or normalizes racist sentiments.” The former president did not mention Trump, or any other politician, by name.

The 21-year-old white man accused of carrying out the El Paso shooting is suspected of authoring a racist, anti-Hispanic manifesto before his rampage, and many high-profile Democrats have partly blamed the president’s history of incendiary immigration rhetoric for the attack.

Trump on Monday morning condemned “racism, bigotry and white supremacy” during a televised address from the White House. “Hate has no place in America. Hatred warps the mind, ravages the heart and devours the soul,” he said.

For years, Trump has referred to himself as the “least racist” person on Earth, touting that self-designation as recently as last week after he was widely rebuked for his criticism of Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.), the city of Baltimore and four progressive congresswomen of color.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/story/2019/08/06/trump-attacks-obama-shootings-statement-1448922

Hours after President Trump condemned “racism, bigotry and white supremacy” on Monday following two mass shootings that killed 31 people, CNN’s Christiane Amanpour played a clip of one of his rallies to White House counselor Kellyanne Conway. At the May 8 event, Trump repeatedly described a migrant caravan headed for the U.S. border as “an invasion” — language similar to that used in a manifesto tied to the alleged gunman in El Paso’s massacre that railed against “the Hispanic invasion of Texas.”

Would Trump follow the same message he urged Americans to practice and curb his own inflammatory words and tweets, Amanpour asked Conway.

While insisting that Trump “already did,” Conway repeatedly refused to answer whether she had advised him to tone down his language and instead criticized the question itself.

“I’m not going to allow you to equate him with the murderers,” Conway replied.

The 16-minute interview on “Amanpour” highlighted again the divide between Trump’s calls in a scripted speech for “unity, devotion and love” in the face of hatred and the divisive words he regularly uses himself on Twitter and at rallies.

The president’s recent stoking of racial animus has often been directed at minority Democratic lawmakers, including telling four freshman congresswomen — all American citizens — to “go back” to “the crime infested places from which they came” and calling Rep. Elijah E. Cummings (D-Md.), who is African American, “racist” while saying that his majority black district is “a disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess.” At the same May rally noted by Amanpour, Trump also smiled and joked when an audience member shouted “Shoot them!” referring to immigrants.

When Trump’s “invasion” language was mirrored in a manifesto linked to 21-year-old Patrick Crusius, the accused El Paso shooter, numerous Democrats and some Republicans condemned the president. Former president Barack Obama offered a sharp rebuke on Monday, calling for Americans to “soundly reject language coming out of the mouths of any of our leaders that feeds a climate of fear and hatred or normalizes racist sentiments.”

At the start of the interview, Amanpour pressed Conway on whether Trump would heed Obama’s demands.

“I’m asking you: Will you and the president’s advisers seek to restrict his Twitter use and his other use of these words?” Amanpour asked. “What he said about Elijah Cummings, what he said about Baltimore, what he says about migrants? Yes or no, it is simple, because if it is no, it stays there at the top.”

Conway refused to detail her conversations with Trump. “No, I’m not telling you what I discuss with the president,” Conway said.

“No, I’m asking you, do you agree with that?” Amanpour rebutted. “Do you agree with it? Infestation. Invasions. These are important words. Look back in history, Kellyanne.”

Conway again deflected, so Amanpour asked, “Will he follow up on what he urged the country today to put aside racial hatred, white supremacy and just stop all this hatred?”

Conway replied that “He already did it.” She then criticized the 2020 Democratic candidates for their “really hateful language” toward the president. “Today, he showed equal parts grief, shock, anger, condolences, resolve and action.”

Still, Amanpour was hung up on one word used by Trump: invasion.

“Kellyanne, you’re his senior counselor, you are really close to him. Do you countenance those words that the president uses?” the CNN host asked. “Do you try to tell him not to use those words like ‘invasion,’ like ‘infestation,’ like all the words that he uses which are associated with hate speech?”

Conway did not give a direct answer, instead talking about former FBI director James B. Comey, former special counsel Robert S. Mueller III and the Trump administration’s push for reviving the federal death penalty.

“I’d like to know if the 2020 crowd who was preening and screaming all over your network and elsewhere is going to look America in the eye and somehow tell us that the death penalty should not be considered for this monster,” Conway replied, referring to Crusius.

Amanpour chided the White House counselor, saying, “I’m trying to have a grown-up conversation with you.”

While the president did call for some measures such as the extreme risk protection orders known as “red-flag” laws, Amanpour noted that Trump did not mention guns in his address on Monday.

“Will he now discuss the prevalence and the easy use, without use of sensible gun laws, of guns like this guy had?” she asked.

Conway said that the president would have more to say this week about the massacres, and then criticized Congress and the Democratic presidential candidates once more.

“For all the grandstanding by the 2020 crowd this weekend, again getting clicks and kicks and ratings and the jollies, and some of them with their potty mouths cursing out the president, what we saw today was the president — the one and only president — addressing a nation and a world,” said Conway, “and telling them white supremacy, racism, evil bigotry is completely unequivocally denounced.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2019/08/06/kellyanne-conway-christiane-amanpour-el-paso-trump/

A day after the mass shooting that left 10 people dead, including the gunman, and more than two dozen others wounded in Dayton, Ohio, police say they are not close to establishing a motive for the killings.

“Not close enough, not close enough at all,” Dayton Police Chief Richard Biehl told reporters Monday. “We have a lot of evidence still to go through.”

But unlike the mass shooting in El Paso, Texas, on Saturday, Biehl said the shooting in Dayton early Sunday does not appear to have been racially motivated.

“We are not seeing any indication of race being the motive,” Biehl said. “But we are not through all the evidence. And so until we are through all the evidence we cannot rule that out. But I’m saying we are not seeing anything at this time to suggest race as a motive.”

SEE ALSO: Trump condemns ‘racism, bigotry and white supremacy’ after mass shootings in El Paso and Dayton

The gunman, 24-year-old Connor Betts, was wearing a mask, a bulletproof vest and hearing protection when he opened fire outside a nightclub in Dayton early Sunday. Police in the area neutralized Betts within 30 seconds, Biehl said, and he died at the scene — but not before he was able to get off at least 41 shots with a .223-caliber high capacity rifle, killing nine people, including his sister, and wounding as many as 30 others.




Biehl said authorities were still trying to understand why Betts shot his sister, who had driven earlier in the evening to the Oregon nightlife district with Betts and another companion, who was wounded in the shooting. The three apparently parted at some point before the shooting.

“It seems to just defy believability that he would shoot his own sister,” Biehl said. “But it’s also hard to believe that he didn’t recognize that it was his sister.”

Of the nine killed, six were black.

Biehl said Betts had just a pair of traffic violations on his record, and that the rifle and a shotgun found at the scene were purchased legally.

Police in El Paso say the shooter in that massacre, 21-year-old Patrick Crusius, had posted an anti-immigrant “manifesto” before killing 22 people at a Walmart in the border city. Crusius, who was taken into custody, told authorities that he wanted to kill as many Mexicans as possible.

Read more from Yahoo News:

Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/08/05/dayton-police-say-they-are-not-close-to-a-motive-for-mass-shooting-but-no-evidence-it-was-racial/23788296/

Ten new pro-gun laws will take effect in Texas in four weeks, less than a month after 22 people died in a mass shooting at a Walmart in El Paso.

Gov. Greg Abbott signed the measures after they were passed in a 2019 legislative session that the National Rifle Association, or NRA, called “highly successful” at the time, celebrating that the measures “will further loosen Texas’ permissive gun laws” and would send the “gun control crowd home empty-handed.”

Texas is home to almost 1.4 million holders of active firearm licenses, and five of the 20 deadliest mass shootings in the United States since 1900 have occurred in the state. Among them is the rampage in El Paso, where authorities said Monday that the number of deaths had risen to 22.

The NRA said its “deepest sympathies are with the families and victims” of the shootings in El Paso and in Dayton, Ohio, where nine people were killed Sunday. The organization said it wouldn’t “participate in the politicizing of these tragedies.”

The NRA did heavily influence the political process in Texas, however, lobbying for all 10 of the new bills, some of which will make it easier to store or carry guns in foster homes and on church and public school grounds:

  • Foster homes: A bill that was cleared May 21 and signed by Abbott weakens state laws on safe storage of firearms in foster homes.

Texas had previously permitted approved foster parents to keep licensed firearms in their homes, but only if weapons and ammunition were stored in separate locked locations. The new law allows guns and ammunition to be stored together in the same locked location — a protocol that is discouraged by the pro-gun National Shooting Sports Foundation.

When the law was passed, the NRA’s lobbying group, the Institute for Legislative Action, or NRA-ILA, called it “just the first step toward restoring the Second Amendment rights of foster parents and their families.”

  • Churches: A new law removes “the premises of a church, synagogue or other established place of religious worship” from the list of locations where carrying a licensed handgun is a misdemeanor. Beginning Sept. 1, gun owners will be allowed to carry properly licensed handguns into a church unless the church explicitly declares that it bans weapons on its grounds.

“Places of worship are not crime-free zones, as Texans sadly know,” the NRA-ILA said in backing the measure, apparently referring to the killings of 26 worshipers at First Baptist Church of Sutherland Springs in November 2017. “And current law, as written, only serves to confuse and potentially disarm law-abiding citizens.”

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/many-call-tighter-gun-laws-texas-set-loosen-n1039481

The weekend shootings in Dayton, Ohio, and El Paso, where nine and at least 22 people were gunned down, respectively, clearly fits the term. But some readers wanted to know why two shootings on the West Side of Chicago over the weekend — one that injured seven people in Douglas Park and the other, just blocks away, that left one man dead and seven others injured — were not labeled as mass shootings. Here’s what some experts who study gun violence had to say about the issue:

Source Article from https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-cb-mass-shootings-language-definition-gun-violence-20190805-dv2g5lcumbeq3gji4dnycx7j74-story.html

Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your Tuesday …

Trump plans trip to El Paso shooting site as Dems urge him to stay away
President Trump is planning to visit El Paso, Texas on Wednesday, the city’s mayor says, as some Democrats continue to blame the president for the mass shooting there and have urged him to stay away. News of Trump’s planned appearance teed up a potentially bitter national political moment just four days after suspected gunman Patrick Crusius, 21, allegedly opened fire at a Walmart and killed 22 people while injuring more than two dozen others. El Paso, Texas Mayor Dee Margo said he is “already getting the emails and the phone calls” from individuals “with lots of time on their hands,” but that his focus remains on his community, not politics.

Several Democrats have accused Trump of planting the seeds of hate with racist, anti-immigration rhetoric that led to two mass shootings that left 31 dead in El Paso, Texas and Dayton, Ohio. Other critics accused Democrats of politicizing two tragedies by blaming Trump. The White House has not confirmed Trump’s schedule, or whether he will also visit Dayton, Ohio, where a gunman killed nine people over the weekend. But the Federal Aviation Administration has advised pilots of a presidential visit Wednesday to both El Paso and Dayton.

Trump, for his part, on Monday called for reforms at the intersection of mental health and gun laws — including so-called “red flag laws” to take guns from those deemed a public risk. In unequivocal terms, he also condemned white supremacy, responding to reports that the shooter in El Paso wrote a racist manifesto ahead of the violence. The manifesto specifically said that Trump’s rhetoric was not to blame for the shooting, and said the shooter’s views “predate” Trump’s presidential campaign.

Wall Street looks to bounce back as US-China trade war escalates dramatically
The Treasury Department on Monday officially declared China  a currency manipulator, after the yuan fell to a more than 10-year low against the U.S. dollar. Secretary Steven Mnuchin, with the support of President Trump, determined that China is in fact unfairly influencing its currency – allegations that had been made by the president multiple times throughout the day. The yuan’s movement on Monday combined with the administration’s announcement that it plans to impose 10 percent tariffs on the remaining $300 billion worth of Chinese goods coming into the U.S. next month, sent markets spiraling, leading to their worst day of 2019. U.S. stocks went into freefall on Monday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average down 900 points at its low before curbing some of those losses, ending the session 767 points lower.

Wall Street will look to recover Tuesday but a rocky road may lie ahead.  The yuan showed signs of stabilizing early Tuesday as futures pointed to a modestly lower open for American equities, with E-Mini S&P 500 futures down 0.3 percent.

Director of the foreign ministry’s Arms Control Department, Fu Cong speaks during a press conference at the Ministry of Foreign Affair building in Beijing, Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2019. China said Tuesday it “will not stand idly by” and will take countermeasures if the U.S. deploys intermediate-range missiles in the Indo-Pacific region, which it plans to do within months. (AP Photo/Christopher Bodeen)

China vows response if US deploys missiles in region, arms race feared
A top Chinese military official on Tuesday said Beijing would “not stand idly by” if the U.S. goes forward with deploying intermediate-range missiles in the Indo-Pacific region, raising new fears an arms race. Last weekend, Mark Esper, the U.S. defense secretary, said that he “would like to” place these missiles in Asia, while in Sydney. Australia’s defense minister has said that country will not be a base for the missiles. It was not clear when these missiles would be put into place, but one senior official from the U.S. told Reuters that it would be years away. Esper made the comments after the U.S. withdrew from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces arms control treaty with Russia last Friday.

California sued over law blocking Trump from ballot over tax returns
Four voters in California, along with the conservative transparency group Judicial Watch, announced Monday they have filed a federal lawsuit against the left-wing state, alleging its new law aimed at strong-arming President Trump into releasing his income tax returns is patently unconstitutional. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the law known as the “Presidential Tax Transparency and Accountability Act” last week. Its provisions would require Trump and other presidential primary candidates to file their tax returns for the most recent five years to the California secretary of state by November 26 or be excluded from the March 3, 2020 presidential primary ballot. The law does not apply to the general election, so Trump would still appear on the November 2020 California presidential ballot if he secured the national Republican Party nomination.

New York Times changes Trump headline after Dems complain
A New York Times headline about President Trump’s remarks on the recent mass shootings in El Paso and Dayton drew condemnation online– including some Democratic presidential candidates– and was subsequently changed online late Monday. The newspaper summarized Trump’s comments, in which he denounced hate and white supremacy, with the headline “Trump Urges Unity vs. Racism” on the front page of its first edition.A photograph of Tuesday’s first edition was tweeted out by journalist Nate Silver Monday night and was quickly slammed by critics who accused The Gray Lady of inaccurately representing Trump’s comments.

Prominent Democrats in Washington also took aim at the Times, including New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. “Let this front page serve as a reminder of how white supremacy is aided by – and often relies upon – the cowardice of mainstream institutions,” the freshman congresswoman tweeted. Presidential candidates, many of whom blamed Trump’s rhetoric for the El Paso, Texas, shooting that left at least 22 dead, also decried the headline. New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand tweeted, “That’s not what happened.”

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TODAY’S MUST-READS
NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio to sit down with Sean Hannity Wednesday.
Woman thwarts mass shooting by bringing grandson to hospital: authorities.
More trouble for R. Kelly.

MINDING YOUR BUSINESS
Amazon beware: FedEx and UPS have a plan to compete on the weekend. 
New York City businesses struggle after minimum wage increase.
Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway has more cash than ever: Here are companies he could buy.

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SOME PARTING WORDS

Tucker Carlson gives his take on the real root of the problem of mass shootings in America.

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Fox News First is compiled by Fox News’ Bryan Robinson. Thank you for joining us! Enjoy your day! We’ll see you in your inbox first thing Wednesday morning.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/trump-plans-trip-to-el-paso-and-dems-urge-him-to-stay-away-ny-times-changes-trump-headline-after-backlash

Image copyright
Getty Images

Image caption

Barack Obama tried unsuccessfully to tighten gun controls in the US

Former US President Barack Obama has called on Americans to reject language from any of their leaders that feeds hatred or normalises racism.

Mr Obama did not name anyone but his rare comments came after President Donald Trump sought to deflect criticism that his anti-immigrant rhetoric had fuelled violence.

In a speech on Monday, Mr Trump condemned hatred and white supremacy.

He was speaking after 31 people died in mass shootings in Texas and Ohio.

While in office, Mr Obama fought unsuccessfully to restrict gun ownership. He told the BBC in 2015 that his failure to pass “common sense gun safety laws” had been the greatest frustration of his presidency.

He has refrained from commenting on Mr Trump’s controversial rhetoric regarding migrants but on Monday issued a statement.

“We should soundly reject language coming out of the mouths of any of our leaders that feeds a climate of fear and hatred or normalises racist sentiments; leaders who demonise those who don’t look like us, or suggest that other people, including immigrants, threaten our way of life, or refer to other people as sub-human, or imply that America belongs to just one certain type of people,” he said.

Media captionMr Obama told the BBC that gun control was his biggest frustration

“It has no place in our politics and our public life. And it’s time for the overwhelming majority of Americans of goodwill, of every race and faith and political party, to say as much – clearly and unequivocally.”

During his presidential campaign Mr Trump said Mexican immigrants included drug dealers, criminals and rapists.

More recently, he caused widespread anger by suggesting that four US congresswomen of colour “go back and help fix the totally broken and crime-infested places from which they came”. He denied his comments were racist.

Media captionEl Paso victim’s father says he ‘forgives’ his son’s killer

What did President Trump say?

In a statement from the White House on Monday, Mr Trump called for mental health gun control reforms; the death penalty for those who commit mass murder and more bi-partisan co-operation over gun laws.

“Mental illness and hate pull the trigger, not the gun,” Mr Trump said.

He did not express support for gun control measures proposed in Congress.

“In one voice, our nation must condemn racism, bigotry and white supremacy,” Mr Trump said. “These sinister ideologies must be defeated. Hate has no place in America.”

The president also outlined a number of policies, including more co-operation between government agencies and social media companies, changes to mental health laws as well as ending the “glorification of violence” in American culture.

Media caption“Mental illness pulls the trigger, not guns” – Trump’s five solutions to combat mass shootings.

He called for red flag laws that would allow law enforcement authorities to take away weapons from individuals believed to be a threat to themselves or others.

Mr Trump said government agencies must work together and identify individuals who may commit violent acts, prevent their access to firearms and also suggested involuntary confinement as a way to stop potential attackers.

He also said he directed the justice department to propose legislation to ensure those who commit hate crimes and mass murders face the death penalty.

The president criticised the internet and “gruesome” video games for promoting violence in society.

“It is too easy today for troubled youth to surround themselves with a culture that celebrates violence,” he said. “We must stop or substantially reduce this and it has to begin immediately.”

But he did not address the criticisms of his own harsh rhetoric against illegal immigration, which opponents say has contributed to a rise in racially-motivated attacks.

Mr Trump drew criticism after he incorrectly referred to the Ohio city of Dayton – where nine people were killed in one of two mass shootings that occurred just 13 hours apart – as Toledo.

“May God bless the memory of those who perished in Toledo, may God protect them. May God protect all of those from Texas to Ohio,” he said before walking off stage.

Image copyright
Reuters

Image caption

A vigil for the victims was held in Brooklyn, New York, on Monday

President Trump will visit El Paso on Wednesday.

What happened in Texas and Ohio?

Saturday’s shooting at a Walmart store in El Paso, Texas, left 22 people dead and 26 wounded.

The suspect was arrested and has been named as Patrick Crusius, a resident of the city of Allen, near Dallas. He is believed to be the author of a document posted online before the shooting which said the attack was “a response to the Hispanic invasion of Texas”.

Then in the early hours of Sunday, a gunman killed his sister and eight others in Dayton, Ohio. Twenty-seven others were injured.

The suspect, 24-year-old Connor Betts, was shot dead by police. Officials have not yet suggested a motive for the attack and police said on Monday it was unclear whether he had intended to kill his sister.

Media caption‘My heart hurts on every level’

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-49244602

A Twitter feed appearing to belong to the gunman who killed nine people, including his sister, outside a Dayton, Ohio, bar over the weekend showed left-leaning tweets lamenting the 2016 election of President Trump.

Connor Betts, 24, killed by the authorities during the gun spree, also appeared to support Democratic presidential contender Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, according to The Associated Press.

Connor Betts, 24, allegedly killed several people, including his sister, and wounding dozens before he was quickly slain by police in Dayton, Ohio, over the weekend. (Dayton Police Department via AP)

The account @iamthespookster didn’t bear Betts’ name, but did show selfies that resembled known photos of him.

Twitter took the account down late Sunday, fueling speculation that it belonged to Betts.

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The account stands in contrast to the one operated by Patrick Crusius accused of a shooting massacre in El Paso, Texas, on Saturday that claimed 22 lives. That 21-year-old suspect espoused anti-immigrant leanings, according to a manifesto authorities allege was his.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/twitter-feed-suspected-of-being-dayton-ohio-shooters-points-to-possible-leftist-leanings

EL PASO, Texas — President Donald Trump condemned white supremacy from the White House Monday, but left Hispanics and Latinos out of his speech.

It’s a significant omission and a stark difference from the written document that has been linked to the 21-year-old gunman who opened fire on weekend shoppers Saturday at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas. The shooter’s alleged document mentions a Hispanic invasion, the increasing Hispanic population and a decision by its writer to target Hispanics after reading a right wing conspiracy theory asserting Europe’s white population is being replaced with non-Europeans.

The death toll in the El Paso attack, which is being investigated as domestic terrorism, rose to 22 on Monday.

“We’ve got dead bodies. The majority are Hispanic. Some are foreign nationals from Mexico and we got a manifesto describing what he intends to do and why,” said State Rep. Cesar Blanco, a Democrat who represents El Paso.

“I think it’s telling; he failed to mention Latinos,” Blanco said of the president. “He failed to mention that our community is majority Latino, but it doesn’t surprise me.”

Most of the victims identified so far are Hispanic or Mexican citizens, not unexpected considering the city of El Paso and surrounding communities of El Paso County, Texas are about 83 percent Latino.

Add to that the number of shoppers and workers from Mexico who legally cross the international border each day to shop, dine, work and visit family. The Walmart is part of a complex of retail outlets, with a Sam’s Club and the Cielo Vista mall next door. There is also a theater close by along with many restaurants and hotels.

Trump did say in the speech that he had sent his condolences to Mexican president Andrés Manuel López Obrador, because seven citizens from Mexico were among the dead. But he didn’t make specific mention of El Paso’s residents of Latino descent, who comprise the majority of the community.

Jeramey Maynard, 26, El Paso.Suzanne Gamboa / NBC News

Jeramey Maynard, 26, a local artist and restaurant manager, said Trump’s response has been largely political, exemplified by the president’s call to combine gun regulation reforms with immigration reform.

“He’s choosing his words without saying Hispanic or immigrant and making it about other things,” Maynard said. “He’s been having these racist comments. When it comes time to defend the community, of course we are not going to hear him say anything about the Hispanic community.”

Maynard added that he thought Trump “would paint it with the broadest brush he can. Why would he say something he thinks supports the Democratic Party?”

“Target on our back”

Trump launched his 2016 election campaign with disparaging words, seen by many as racist, about people in the United States who have come from Mexico.

“When Mexico sends its people, they’re not sending the best. They’re not sending you, they’re sending people that have lots of problems and they’re bringing those problems,” Trump said to a largely white crowd at Trump Tower in New York. “They’re bringing drugs, they’re bringing crime. They’re rapists and some, I assume, are good people …”

Some defended the president saying he was referring only to immigrants who commit crimes and not speaking of Latinos in the United States as a whole.

But then Trump went on to question the ability of a U.S. district court judge to be impartial because he is of Mexican descent.

Trump’s political rallies have often been filled with chants of “Build the Wall” in reference to his pledge to build a wall across the entire border and make Mexico pay for it.

He responded to the influx of Central Americans seeking asylum by separating children from their parents and allowing border officials to hold them in chain-link pens.

In the past several days, many Latinos have been vocal about what they see as a through line between the president’s rhetoric and the shooting in El Paso.

Rep. Veronica Escobar, a Democrat whose district includes El Paso, said she had hoped Trump would have apologized for his rhetoric, which she said put a target on the city’s back.

“I would encourage him to do that,” she said.

People gather to pay their respects at a growing memorial site two days after a mass shooting at a Walmart store in El Paso, Texas on August 5, 2019.Callaghan O’Hare / Reuters

The city has seen stark evidence of fear that exists among families because of the Trump hardline on immigration, according to several residents.

Marisa Limón Garcia, deputy director of the Hope Border Institute, said the organization fielded calls from families who were directly affected by the shootings and families who were looking for loved ones.

They were afraid to go to the hospital or to interact with police and border enforcement, who responded to the shooting.

“If you are undocumented or of a mixed status household, the last place you want to go is where there is a tremendous amount of police presence,” Limón Garcia said. Immigrants often are part of families that may include a mix of citizens, legal residents and people without legal status.

Her organization has been working with families to help them get the help they need, but she said it is a daily occurrence for people without legal permission to be in the country to be afraid to go to the hospital.

“This is just another layer of psychological trauma that this community has to face when we have already been ground zero for so many other challenges,” she said.

“The illness is racism and xenophobia”

The Congressional Hispanic Caucus pushed Trump to commit to no longer using “invasion“ to describe Hispanic communities, immigrants or refugees to the country.

The caucus also asked the Trump administration to “acknowledge the threat of white supremacy and domestic terrorism” and to “combat this state of emergency head-on” with federal resources.

Rep. Joaquín Castro, D-Texas, twin brother of presidential candidate Julián Castro, said in a statement that the caucus is grateful Trump addressed the El Paso and Dayton, Ohio, tragedies.

But he said, “this does not make up for the years of attacks by President Trump on Hispanic Americans and our immigrant communities.”

“During the president’s address, he blamed the Internet, news media , mental health and video games, among others … Unfortunately, he did not take responsibility for the xenophobic rhetoric that he has frequently used to demonize and dehumanize Hispanic Americans and immigrants over the past four years.”

But Limón Garcia said the tragedy has not been confined to immigrants.

“Here in El Paso we are a community that is over 80 percent Latino and that means people that are immigrant themselves and then people who have been here for generations,” she said. “It’s clear it was not just a random attack. It’s clear that this cannot be called someone with a mental illness. This illness is racism and xenophobia.”

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Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/latino/he-failed-mention-latinos-el-paso-residents-respond-trump-s-n1039436

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Source Article from https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2019-08-05/trump-s-china-tariff-threats-won-t-bring-trade-deal-closer

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky rekindled the acrimonious debate over control of the Supreme Court when he acknowledged the Senate would consider a presidential nominee to fill a vacancy on the court if one occurred in 2020. Democrats were apoplectic given the role played by McConnell in blocking consideration of President Barack Obama’s nominee, Merrick Garland, to fill the seat vacated by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia in 2016.

At the time, McConnell defended Republicans’ decision not to hold a confirmation hearing for Garland, much less grant him an up-or-down vote on the Senate floor, by invoking the so-called Biden Rule. Named after then-Sen. Joe Biden, the rule referred to the informal practice, begun in 1992, whereby the Senate refrained from considering Supreme Court nominees during a presidential election year. McConnell argued that the decision on who should replace Scalia, one of the court’s leading conservatives and a crucial vote on controversial cases, “should be made by the president that the people elect in the election that’s now underway.” However, when asked what he thought Republicans would do if a vacancy opened up on the Supreme Court in 2020, also a presidential election year, McConnell responded, “Oh, we’d fill it.”

Amid Democrats’ outrage with what they see as blatant hypocrisy and Republicans’ contorted justifications for their actions, we have lost sight of the Constitution. The Senate is entirely within its rights to consider, or not to consider, presidential nominations, including those for the Supreme Court. Arguments otherwise, both on the Left and the Right, reflect a flawed understanding of the Constitution’s doctrine of separation of powers in general and how it relates to the composition and independence of the judiciary in particular.

To his credit, McConnell initially framed the Republican position not to consider Garland in constitutional terms rather than in terms of specific objections to the nominee and his judicial philosophy. Early in the debate, McConnell asserted correctly, “It is a president’s constitutional right to nominate a Supreme Court justice, and it is the Senate’s constitutional right to act as a check on a president and withhold its consent.” But the taciturn Kentuckian shifted his emphasis as the debate unfolded, arguing, “The American people should have a voice in the selection of their next Supreme Court justice. … Therefore, this vacancy should not be filled until we have a new president.”

By basing the Republican position on the president, instead of on the Senate’s right not to act, McConnell relegated his institution to a secondary role in the confirmation process that was inconsistent with the spirit of the Constitution. While the Constitution indeed grants the power to nominate to the president exclusively, it simultaneously requires the Senate to confirm those so chosen. In other words, the Appointments Clause requires both presidential and senatorial action. The Constitution envisions the president and Senate formally exercising that power jointly, yet independently.

The Constitution’s doctrine of separation of powers requires that the three branches of government be separate and independent from each other. But separation is impossible without independence. In Federalist 51, James Madison argued that each branch “should have as little agency as possible in the appointment of the members of the others.” During the Federal Convention of 1787, Madison’s fellow Virginian George Mason considered “the appointment by the Executive as a dangerous prerogative. It might give him an influence over the Judiciary department itself.” According to Madison, the implication was “that all the appointments for the supreme executive, legislative, and judiciary magistracies should be drawn from the same fountain of authority, the people.”

Yet there is an exception to this principle when it comes to judicial appointments. For Madison, there were two reasons why selecting people to serve on the judiciary should be governed by a different process. First, the Constitution intended the judiciary to be an apolitical branch of the national government. Selecting judges via popular vote would make it an inherently political branch. Second, the nature of the judiciary’s role required “peculiar qualifications,” according to Madison, that may not be best secured by a popular election.

The Constitution’s Appointments Clause should be understood as the solution to this problem. By creating a joint presidential-senatorial role in the confirmation process, Madison and his colleagues hoped to preserve judicial independence and the apolitical nature of the judiciary while simultaneously ensuring the requisite qualifications in those nominated and confirmed. The Appointments Clause does so by avoiding strict executive or legislative control over who is appointed to serve on the federal bench. In contrast, the executive would wield disproportionate influence over the composition of the judiciary if the Senate’s role in the Appointments Clause was deferential to the president’s, as implied by McConnell’s messaging during the Garland debate.

While the Republican decision not to consider Garland’s nomination to serve on the Supreme Court was permissible under the Constitution, it is not impervious to criticism and beyond reproach. To the contrary, highlighting more clearly senators’ power in the confirmation process makes it easier for voters to hold them accountable for the decisions they make.

There is no expectation in the Constitution that the Senate must wait until after an election before it considers a Supreme Court nominee during a presidential election year, just as there is no expectation that the Senate must consider a Supreme Court nominee in the first place. That is for senators to decide based on how they feel about the nominee before them.

Under the Constitution, the doctrine of separation of powers necessarily circumscribes the president’s decision rights in the confirmation process by granting the Senate a co-equal role to ensure that qualified nominees ultimately end up on the federal bench without jeopardizing the independence of the judiciary.

If Republicans had been more upfront about their reasons for not acting on Garland in 2016, they would have affirmed the Senate’s power under the Constitution while simultaneously making it easier for voters to hold them accountable for their decision not to act. Instead, they portrayed themselves as passive players in the process. In doing so, they made it inevitable that McConnell’s latest shift in message would appear hypocritical.

James Wallner (@jiwallner) is a contributor to the Washington Examiner’s Beltway Confidential blog. He is a senior fellow at the R Street Institute. Previously he was a Senate aide and a former group vice president for research at the Heritage Foundation.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/mitch-mcconnell-looks-like-a-hypocrite-on-supreme-court-nominees-but-he-didnt-have-to

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/08/05/politics/trump-economic-embargo-venezuela/index.html

Puerto Rico‘s constitutional crisis was expected to deepen on Monday after the island’s Senate filed a lawsuit seeking to oust a veteran politician recently sworn in as the island’s governor as legislators squabble over who should lead the U.S. territory. The lawsuit seeks a preliminary injunction ordering Pedro Pierluisi to cease his functions immediately and also asks that the court declare unconstitutional a 2005 law that states a secretary of state does not have to be approved by both the House and Senate if he has to step in as governor.

“Puerto Rico is living a situation without historical precedent,” wrote Senate President Thomas Rivera Schatz. Pierluisi was named secretary of state, the next in line to be governor, in a recess appointment last week.

The island’s House of Representatives then confirmed him to the position in a 26-to-21 vote on Friday, a move he argues makes him the replacement for Gov. Ricardo Rosselló. However, the Senate had not yet voted on the appointment, and it was expected to do so Monday afternoon.

In addition, the court announced it would review the lawsuit late Monday, prompting further comment from Schatz. “We are a people of LAW and ORDER,” he wrote in a Facebook post. “There is no circumstance that places someone above the Law.”

Pierluisi said in a statement that there is no time to lose. “Although it is regrettable that this matter has to be elucidated in our courts, I hope that it will be treated with the greatest urgency and diligence for the good of the people of Puerto Rico,” he said.

Pedro Pierluisi makes a statement hours before Ricardo Rosselló steps down as governor of Puerto Rico in San Juan Aug. 2, 2019.

Reuters/Gabriella N. Baez


Rosselló formally resigned on Aug. 2 following nearly two weeks of popular protests amid anger over corruption, mismanagement of funds and a leaked obscenity-laced chat in which he and 11 other men made fun of women, gay people and victims of Hurricane María, among others. Puerto Rico’s constitution said the secretary of state takes over if the governor steps down, and one amendment states that everyone in line to become governor has to be confirmed by both the House and Senate, except for the secretary of state.

Legal experts, however, question the amendment’s validity and believe Pierluisi must be confirmed by both chambers because the amendment contradicts the intent of the constitution and its statement of motives. Pierluisi has said the upcoming Senate vote is a moot point because he already is governor.

“They’re having a hearing for themselves,” he said on Sunday, two days after stating that if the Senate votes against his appointment as secretary of state, he would step down and hand the governorship to the justice secretary, the next in line under the constitution. Pierluisi added that he spoke by phone on Saturday with Schatz, who is running for governor in the 2020 general election.

Puerto Rico celebrates after Gov. Rosselló announces resignation

Schatz has said he has doubts about Pierluisi and insists that a Senate confirmation is necessary. Further complicating the situation was an announcement made earlier by Carmen Yulín Cruz, mayor of the Puerto Rican capital of San Juan.

She said she will file a lawsuit Monday morning questioning whether Pierluisi had the right to be sworn in on Friday. The crisis could now drag on for days or even weeks, with legal experts saying Puerto Rico’s Supreme Court will likely issue the final decision if the Senate does not approve of Pierluisi as secretary of state and he declines to relinquish his position.

A well-respected attorneys’ organization has accused Pierluisi of “hijacking” the constitution. Those who oppose Pierluisi said having him as governor represents a serious conflict of interest because he worked for a firm that represented a federal control board overseeing the island’s finances amid a 13-year recession.

During his public hearing on Friday, Pierluisi said he is against several austerity measures sought by the board as Puerto Rico struggles to recover from Hurricane María, including laying off public employees and eliminating a Christmas bonus. But Pierluisi’s brother-in-law is chairman of the board that Congress created to oversee the restructuring of some of the more than $70 billion in public debt after Puerto Rico declared a form of bankruptcy.

Pierluisi previously was Puerto Rico’s representative in Congress from 2009 to 2017 and then ran against Rosselló in the 2016 primaries and lost. He also served as justice secretary under Rosselló’s father, Pedro Rosselló, when he was governor.

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