Inevitably, it took a matter of seconds for the two tales of Boris Johnson’s no-show press conference in Luxembourg to take hold.

On the one hand, the day after calling himself The Incredible Hulk, and in the midst of ongoing efforts to brand Jeremy Corbyn a chicken, the prime minister was too scared of the noise of about 200 anti-Brexit protesters to turn up to his own press conference.

The Incredible Hulk has, arguably, been overworked as a character, yet there remains no episode in the franchise in which he encounters a small group of shouty people, and decides to run away.

On the other, here was Luxembourg’s prime minister trying to humiliate the British prime minister, by staging a press conference just yards from an angry mob.

We are told the prime minister’s staff repeatedly asked for the press conference to be moved indoors, away from the shouting, and that the Luxembourg side repeatedly refused.

Whichever side you choose will depend on your view on Brexit. Neither side will yield to the other. The impossible Brexit culture war rolls endlessly on.

But there are nevertheless some facts that neither side is able to contest. The UK now has a prime minister who asks to be hidden from the Luxembourg public. A prime minister that still likes to claim that Brexit does not represent a retreat from the global stage – quite the opposite in fact – but who is, nevertheless, a hate figure all over Europe.

Three years ago, that a British prime minister would be unable to hold a public press conference in Luxembourg for fear of public reaction would not be merely unthinkable but actually laughable.

That there would have to be diplomatic back-channelling going on to spare the prime minister’s blushes after a lunch in Luxembourg is a reality that has only very recently become imaginable.

Last summer, the UK government went to great lengths to stage a visit from Donald Trump, without the president having to go anywhere near where a protester might be. Theresa May held a press conference in the garden at Chequers, the first time such a thing has happened.

Britain did its bit for a friend and ally. But when Theresa May did so, she was rightly criticised for stymieing the British public’s right to protest, for providing a hermetically sealed environment for an internationally loathed public figure who perhaps did not deserve it.

Now the UK is another such nation, led by another such figure. Boris Johnson expects countries he visits to go to great lengths to shield him from the revulsion of the international community which he has done everything to earn.

If other countries don’t feel compelled to censor their own people, to shut down their own streets, that is their choice. They are not responsible for Boris Johnson’s actions. It is not their responsibility to hide him from his own hatred.

Source Article from https://www.independent.co.uk/independentpremium/boris-johnson-luxembourg-speech-eu-no-deal-brexit-a9107761.html

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/09/16/middleeast/saudi-attack-us-iran-options-intl/index.html

Comedian Shane Gillis has been removed from the “Saturday Night Live” lineup less than a week after NBC announced its new hires for season 45.

The announcement comes amid mounting criticism over a widely-circulated video of Gillis speaking on a podcast in 2018. The clip shows him repeatedly using Asian slurs and crudely mocking Chinese people. He reportedly had attempted to delete the video and others.

“After talking with Shane Gillis, we have decided hat he will not be joining ‘SNL,'” the statement reads. “We want ‘SNL’ to have a variety of voices and points of view within the show, and we hired Shane on the strength of his talent as a comedian and his impressive audition for SNL.”

It continues, “We were not aware of his prior remarks that have surfaced over the past few days. The language he used is offensive, hurtful and unacceptable. We are sorry that we did not see these clips earlier, and that our vetting process was not up to our standard.”

Gillis also issued a response to the news, writing on Twitter, “It feels ridiculous for comedians to be making serious public statements but here we are. I’m a comedian who was funny enough to get on ‘SNL.’ That can’t be taken away. Of course I wanted an opportunity to prove myself at ‘SNL,’ but I understand it would be too much of a distraction.”

Adding that he “respect[s] the decision they made,” and is “honestly grateful for the opportunity,” he then cracekd, “I was always a MAD TV guy anyway.”

Gillis, a Pennsylvania native, has performed in major clubs across the country. Two clubs in Philadelphia confirmed in recent days that they refused to continue booking him because he frequently relied on jokes that are “racist, misogynistic, xenophobic and homophobic.”

The comic was hired alongside two other “SNL” newcomers, Chloe Fineman and Bowen Yang. Yang will be the show’s first Asian cast member.

It’s unclear whether “SNL” will hire an additional person to round out the cast without Gillis.




Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/entertainment/2019/09/16/snl-cuts-new-hire-shane-gillis-after-backlash-over-2018-video/23814016/

Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh is facing a new allegation of sexual misconduct, leading some Democrats to call for his impeachment. Above, he listens to a discussion at a Washington event.

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Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh is facing a new allegation of sexual misconduct, leading some Democrats to call for his impeachment. Above, he listens to a discussion at a Washington event.

Zach Gibson/Getty Images

There are renewed calls for Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh to be impeached, after an essay in the New York Times, excerpting a book by Times reporters, was published this weekend.

The essay includes a previously unreported allegation of sexual misconduct against Kavanaugh involving a female student while he was at Yale University. NPR has not confirmed the allegation. The reporters include the name of someone who said he witnessed it, but that person has declined to speak publicly about it and has not responded to NPR’s attempts to reach him. According to the Times, the female student also declined to be interviewed and her friends say she doesn’t recall the incident.

Kavanaugh is also not speaking. “The Justice declines to comment,” a Supreme Court spokeswoman tells NPR. He has denied past allegations of sexual misconduct.

Some Democrats running for president, including Kamala Harris, Julián Castro and Elizabeth Warren, are now calling for Kavanaugh’s impeachment.

“There has not been an investigation with the level of attention that normally would occur around these kinds of allegations and especially related to the subject at hand, which is the appropriateness of this individual serving on the highest court of our land for a lifetime appointment,” Harris said Monday on NPR’s Morning Edition.

Calls for impeachment, though, put Democrats in a political pickle — their base believes Kavanaugh lied about these incidents in his testimony before Congress, and they are dissatisfied with what they believe was a cursory investigation by the FBI. Sen. Chris Coons, for example, sent the very allegation reported on in the Times essay to the FBI on Oct. 2 of last year. Nonetheless, Kavanaugh was confirmed 50-48 four days later.

The Democratic leadership believes impeachment of Kavanaugh — or President Trump, for that matter — can’t be done without hard evidence that can sway public opinion (and some Republicans) to their side. Otherwise, they see it as a futile effort expending too much political capital, distracting from their policy agenda and jeopardizing their chances to retain the House and beat Trump in 2020.

So how would impeachment work, and more importantly, how likely is it that he would be impeached (hint: not very)?

Can a Supreme Court justice be impeached?

Yes. The U.S. Constitution lays it out in Article II, Section 4:

“The President, Vice President and all civil Officers of the United States, shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors.”

Judges fall under “all civil Officers of the United States.”

What does the Constitution say about judges’ “behavior”?

There’s a reference to judges’ behavior in Article III, Section I (emphasis ours):

“The judicial Power of the United States, shall be vested in one supreme Court, and in such inferior Courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish. The Judges, both of the supreme and inferior Courts, shall hold their Offices during good Behaviour, and shall, at stated Times, receive for their Services, a Compensation, which shall not be diminished during their Continuance in Office.”

But that does not mean that bad behavior is necessarily grounds for impeachment. Here is how the Legal Information Institute at Cornell Law School explains it:

“Article III, section 1 specifically provides judges with ‘good behavior’ tenure, but the Constitution nowhere expressly vests the power to remove upon bad behavior.”

How would the process work?

It would be the same as removing a president, which Democrats currently are also struggling with how to address, given that the majority of House Democrats now favor beginning the impeachment process against President Trump.

The House would need to bring it up, and charges would need to be filed having to do with “treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors.” The House would need just a majority for impeachment, but to remove the official, two-thirds of the U.S. Senate would need to vote to do so.

The House is controlled by Democrats, and the Senate is controlled by Republicans.

Has a Supreme Court justice ever been impeached?

Yes, but only one — it was more than 200 years ago, and he wasn’t removed from office.

The justice was Samuel Chase. He criticized President Thomas Jefferson’s policies before a grand jury in Baltimore, and with Jefferson’s party controlling Congress, Jefferson gave the green light to impeach Chase. The House impeached him in 1804, but the Senate, in 1805, did not affirm it and remove him.

That established a high bar for impeaching or removing a justice and established that their decisions should not matter in impeaching or removing them from office.

Chief Justice William Rehnquist wrote a book on judicial impeachment and, per Douglas Keith at the Brennan Center for Justice, noted about Chase’s impeachment that it was “enormously important in securing the kind of judicial independence contemplated by” the Constitution.

Have any judges been removed from office?

Yes, eight have been removed from office after convictions in the Senate actually. Fifteen have been impeached, mostly for “making false statements, favoritism toward litigants or special appointees, intoxication on the bench, and abuse of the contempt power,” the Brennan Center notes.

The last to be removed from office was G. Thomas Porteous, a federal judge in New Orleans, in 2010, convicted on four articles of impeachment.

The AP wrote at the time:

“[T]he 63-year-old judge had a gambling problem and began accepting cash and other favors from people with business before his court. He also was accused of lying to Congress and filing for bankruptcy under a false name.”

A year earlier, a federal judge out of Texas, Samuel Kent, was impeached by the House after admitting “to sexually harassing and abusing two female members of his staff.” He was also convicted of obstruction of justice. Kent, however, resigned before the Senate could vote to remove him from office.

Will House Democrats push forward to impeach Kavanaugh?

It’s highly unlikely.

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler of New York told WNYC Monday that he has questions for FBI Director Christopher Wray on how they handled the investigation into the Kavanaugh allegations, but he is focused on President Trump.

Also, Kavanaugh’s removal is a near impossibility in the Republican-controlled Senate. Sen. Lindsey Graham, chair of the Judiciary Committee, tweeted Monday: “I promise you Justice Kavanaugh will not be impeached over these scurrilous accusations.”

So going out on that limb has to weigh on Democrats as well. President Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell both have leapt to Kavanaugh’s defense. Trump tweeted three times Monday, defending the justice he appointed, saying Democrats “are looking to destroy, and influence his opinions” and that “they should be sued.”

McConnell called the allegations against Kavanaugh “uncorroborated and unsubstantiated.”

Not even all Senate Democrats are on totally on board.

Sen. Doug Jones of Alabama noted on MSNBC that Kavanaugh could be impeached if he, in fact, lied to Congress. But, he added, “At some point, though, I mean, he was confirmed. That is what our Constitution says.”

Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, who is also running for president, said on ABC’s This Week that it was premature to say Kavanaugh should be impeached, but she criticized the confirmation process that played out as a “sham” and is calling for more documents.

“I don’t think you can look at impeachment hearings without getting the documents,” she said.

If the impeachment process is unlikely to result in Kavanaugh’s removal, why do some Democrats want to go through with it anyway?

Harris acknowledged on NPR that Kavanaugh was unlikely to be removed from office, but she still believes Congress should act.

“I don’t think in the United States Senate, that the leader of the Senate would allow that there would be a vote if the House returned articles of impeachment to actually convict,” she said, tying in President Trump as well, “but that doesn’t doesn’t mean the process shouldn’t take hold. And this relates to the topic of impeachment as it relates to another individual.”

She added, “If you gauge what the United States Senate has done to the current leadership, it has been coddling and frankly not holding it to account, this administration, on a number of levels. But it doesn’t mean that those of us who have a responsibility to act shouldn’t act.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/09/16/761193794/new-calls-to-impeach-justice-kavanaugh-how-it-would-work-and-why-it-likely-wont

NEW YORK (AP) — New York City prosecutors have subpoenaed President Donald Trump’s tax returns, a person familiar with the matter told The Associated Press on Monday.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr.’s office recently sent a subpoena to Trump’s accounting firm seeking the last eight years of state and federal tax returns for Trump and his company, the Trump Organization, according to the person, who was not authorized to speak publicly about the matter and spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Vance, a Democrat, subpoenaed the Trump Organization last month for records related to payments former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen helped arrange to the porn actress Stormy Daniels after she claimed she had an affair with Trump.

Vance’s office declined to comment Monday on the tax return subpoenas, the news of which was first reported by The New York Times.

The accounting firm, Mazars USA, said in a statement that it “will respect the legal process and fully comply with its legal obligations.”

The firm said it believes strongly in ethical and professional rules and regulations governing the accounting industry and does not comment on work it does for clients.

A lawyer for the Trump Organization, Marc Mukasey, said he is “evaluating the situation and will respond as appropriate.”

Federal prosecutors in New York and Washington spent months probing payments made during the 2016 presidential campaign to two women who said they had affairs with Trump, including Daniels and model Karen McDougal.

Cohen, who made one of the payments himself and arranged for American Media Inc., the parent company of the National Enquirer, to pay the other, pleaded guilty to campaign finance violations, tax evasion and other crimes and is serving a three-year sentence.

A lawyer for Cohen declined to comment.

Trump, who denies any sexual relationship with either woman, has said any payments were a personal matter, not a campaign expense.

The U.S. attorney’s office in New York informed a court last month that it was finished investigating the payments. No one besides Cohen was charged, though prosecutors said in public court filings that Trump himself was aware of and directed the payments.

The Trump Organization also reimbursed Cohen for money he paid to Daniels. Cohen has argued that organization officials disguised the true nature of the payments and that it is unfair he is the only one prosecuted.

The federal inquiry looked at whether campaign finance laws were broken.

The New York Times reported, citing “people briefed on the matter,” that Vance’s inquiry involves an examination of whether anyone at the Trump Organization falsified business records by falsely listing the reimbursements to Cohen as a legal expense.

Falsifying business records can be a crime under state law.




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Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/finance/2019/09/16/new-york-prosecutors-subpoena-trumps-tax-returns-source/23814007/

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The company that made billions selling OxyContin has filed for bankruptcy protection. This comes after it reached a tentative settlement with many governments.
AP

Pharmaceutical giant Purdue Pharma is framing its bankruptcy filing as an opportunity to cut red tape and provide billions in settlement cash to curb the opioid crisis it’s accused of facilitating. But the OxyContin maker’s legal issues are far from over.

Purdue Pharma filed for bankruptcy in White Plains, New York, late Sunday night, days after announcing a tentative deal to settle claims with about half the states and more than 1,000 local governments. The deal could be worth up to $12 billion over time; about $3 billion will come from the Sackler family, owners of the privately held drugmaker.

The bankruptcy came as no surprise and was considered part of the settlement’s complex structure.

“This settlement framework avoids wasting hundreds of millions of dollars and years on protracted litigation and instead will provide billions of dollars and critical resources to communities across the country trying to cope with the opioid crisis,” Purdue Chairman Steve Miller said in a statement.

Miller said the Connecticut-based company does not intend to admit wrongdoing, one of the sticking points for some plaintiffs who have not signed off on the settlement.

Thousands of lawsuits

Purdue Pharma is being sued by almost every state and more than 2,500 other plaintiffs, most of them local governments spending billions to treat opioid abuse and respond to life-or-death 911 calls. About half the states have agreed to the settlement, and now Purdue Pharma lawyers are working on bringing the rest into the fold. A federal bankruptcy judge will decide the fate of plaintiffs who balk at the deal.

Lawyers back bankruptcy, settlement

Lawyers leading the National Prescription Opiate Litigation Plaintiffs’ Executive Committee said they worked with Purdue Pharma lawyers in developing details of the bankruptcy protection filing. “As a result of these collaborative efforts … the bankruptcy filing will not prevent us from finalizing an agreement with Purdue to bring opioid recovery resources into the communities we represent,” the statement said.

Value of settlement questioned

Some experts question whether the plaintiffs will ever see $12 billion. With the wealthy Sackler family paying only a fraction of the settlement, the bulk of the money must come from the company. “Purdue is not worth much because it has few resources now,” Carl Tobias, a product liability expert and law professor at the University of Richmond, told USA TODAY. Tobias said the company’s continuing operation, and payment of the settlement, depends on “dubious contingencies” such as international holdings and developing new drugs the FDA has yet to approve.

Other reason for dissent

Lawyers for some plaintiffs say the proposed payouts, even if they are made, won’t be enough to fund needed opioid mitigation efforts. Others say the cost to the Sackler family is small compared to the riches the drug sales have given them. “A deal that doesn’t account for the depth of pain and destruction caused by Purdue and the Sacklers is an insult, plain and simple,” New York Attorney General Letitia James said.

Court filings show money trail

Court filings assert that members of the Sackler family were paid more than $4 billion by Purdue from 2007 to 2018. A court filing by James claims family members stashed $1 billion in foreign accounts. “This family is now attempting to evade responsibility and lowball the millions of victims of the opioid crisis,” James said. Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro filed a lawsuit last week alleging that certain members of the Sackler family are personally liable for the devastation of the opioid crisis because they directed, controlled and participated in a “deadly campaign of deception.”

More: How to turn an opioid lawsuit settlement into a tax deduction

Sackler family in the fray

The Sackler family issued a statement expressing sympathy for victims of the opioid crisis that has claimed hundreds of thousands of lives over the past two decades. “Like families across America, we have deep compassion for the victims of the opioid crisis,” the statement said, calling the settlement a “historic step toward providing critical resources that address a tragic public health situation.” 

Meet the Sacklers

The Sackler saga with Purdue Pharma began in 1952 when Raymond and Mortimer Sackler, physicians and brothers, bought the company. Both have died, but several children and a grandchildren have served on the company’s board. Richard Sackler, son of Raymond, previously served as CEO. The family is well known in philanthropic and art circles, and the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery is a Smithsonian museum of Asian art on the National Mall in Washington.

Deal could end costly litigation

Miller says continued litigation “would rapidly diminish all the resources of the company and would be lose-lose-lose all the way around.” The Sackler family says it is hopeful that “in time, those parties who are not yet supportive will ultimately shift their focus to the critical resources that the settlement provides to people and problems that need them.” Key issues that could be decided include whether the suits against the Sacklers in state courts will be able to move ahead, and what will happen to the company itself.

Purdue Pharma could live, sort of

Purdue Pharma and the Sacklers have been a lightning rod for the opioid crisis not only because of leadership in the research and development of the drugs, but because of aggressive marketing efforts. “Their ruthless pursuit of profits destroyed other families and communities throughout Illinois and the nation,” Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul said. Still, the company could continue to operate, minus the Sacklers, with profits used to pay for the settlement. Another option could be for a judge to order it be sold.

Contributing: The Associated Press

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/09/16/purdue-pharma-files-bankruptcy-heres-what-means/2339353001/

FARMINGTON, Maine (WABI) In a press conference Monday afternoon, Farmington Police Chief Jack Peck, Jr. confirmed that Fire Chief Terry Bell sustained injuries and was Lifeflighted in critical condition.

Peck described the blast as devastating, saying it looked like something out of the 9-11 attacks.

Sheriff Scott Nichols was one of the first to arrive on scene, and helped to pull the injured from the explosion site. He equated it to things he witnessed during his military service overseas.

Those who live nearby were found to be safe.

The firefighter who died is a long time member of the department, his name had not yet been released.

That firefighter will be taken from the scene to the Medical Examiner’s Office by law enforcement and fire department procession Monday afternoon.

Source Article from https://www.wabi.tv/content/news/Farmington-Fire-Chief-critically-injured-one-of-his-crew-has-died-others-injured-560488061.html

The Russian government hacked into the FBI’s communication system to stop the bureau from being able to track Russian spies working in the US, Yahoo News reported in a bombshell investigation published Monday.

The US in 2012 became aware of “the full gravity” of Russia’s ability to breach certain types of secure communications and track devices used by FBI surveillance teams, the report said. In addition to fearing that the Russians may have gained access to US intelligence channels, officials also believed that Russian spies could locate undercover FBI surveillance teams and the substance of FBI communications.

That would have not only enabled the Russians to evade surveillance and communicate with human sources, but given them the opportunity to collect information about their pursuers, Yahoo News reported. It also prompted concerns among officials that there was a Russian asset lurking within the US intelligence community.

The Russians first breached the FBI’s communication systems in 2010, after the arrest and exposure of a group of Russian spies in the US, Yahoo News said. That year, the FBI began investigating Russia’s efforts to recruit US assets; one of the foremost targets was Carter Page, who later served as a foreign-policy aide on President Donald Trump’s campaign.

Read more: The acting director of national intelligence is withholding a mysterious whistleblower complaint of ‘urgent concern’ that may involve Trump

The FBI informed Page in 2013 that the Russians were trying to cultivate him, but Page ignored their warnings and even publicly boasted about his connections to high-ranking Russian government officials.

The Russians are also said to have breached the backup communication channels the FBI used, something one former senior counterintelligence official told Yahoo News the US “took extremely seriously.”

The investigation found that Russia’s hack of the FBI’s communication systems was a key reason the Obama administration kicked out 35 Russian diplomats and closed two Russian diplomatic facilities in December 2016.

President Barack Obama said the measures were in retaliation for Russia’s interference in the 2016 election, but Yahoo News reported that the US also wanted to close those two compounds because they were critical to Russia’s efforts to intercept FBI communications.

Read more: Putin just asked Interpol to find a Russian spy in the US, days after the media revealed his whereabouts

Russia and the US have ramped up their counterintelligence and cybersecurity operations against each other in recent years as tensions between them mount.

In particular, the US has recently targeted Russia’s electrical grid and placed “potentially crippling malware” within the Russian system, The New York Times reported in June. Power grids have long been the focus of cyberattacks, but the US’s operation is the most aggressive yet and meant to serve as a warning to Russia, as well as position the US to carry out additional cyberattacks in the event of a conflict with Moscow, the report said.

The Times described two administration officials as saying there was “broad hesitation” to brief Trump in much detail about the operation, in part because of concerns about how Trump would react, or that he would shut down the operation or discuss it with foreign officials.

Trump’s disclosure of classified information to two Russian officials in an Oval Office meeting in 2017 contributed to the US’s decision to extract a top CIA asset in Russia shortly after, CNN reported last week.

Other US media outlets subsequently published key identifying details about the asset, and Russian state-sponsored media later said it had the intelligence operative’s name. Shortly after that, the Russian government filed a request with Interpol for more information about the spy.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/russia-hacked-fbi-to-prevent-tracking-russian-spies-us-report-2019-9

Mohammed Alyahya, editor in chief of the English website of the Saudi-owned Al Arabiya news channel, emphasized that the rulers of the kingdom were deliberating carefully. The attacks show that Iranians are feeling the pain of the Trump administration’s sweeping sanctions, he said, and “they are more likely to take risks like the one they took recently.”

“A conventional military response must only be embarked upon with the utmost care in terms of the legality and consequences, after looking at all the other alternatives,” Mr. Alyahya said. “If there is a military conflict, Iran will inevitably be the biggest loser, but the reality is that everybody will lose. A conventional war will take its toll on everyone.”

The Houthis insisted on Monday that they had carried out the strikes using drones, and threatened more. They made no reference to whether Iranian equipment or training played a role.

A spokesman for the Houthi military, Brig. Gen. Yahya Sare’e, “warned companies and foreigners not to be present in the factories that were hit by our strikes because we may target them again at any moment,” Almasirah, the Houthi news organization, reported on Monday.

The Houthis can strike at will anywhere in Saudi Arabia, he said, and their actions against the kingdom “will expand and be more painful.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/16/world/middleeast/saudi-oil.html

FARMINGTON, Maine (WABI) A Farmington selectman tells our media partner WMTW-TV that a firefighter has died in the explosion on Farmington Falls Road.

Franklin County Sheriff Scott Nichols said many other firefighters were injured in the explosion. According to Selectboard member H. Scott Landry, 6 people have been taken to the hospital: 5 firefighters + 1 civilian.

The explosion happened at 313 Farmington Falls Road, which is also Route 2. The building is the central office for LEAP Inc., which provides support for people with developmental, cognitive and intellectual disabilities.

Landry tells our media partner, WMTW that the LEAP building was a few months old. Firefighters responded to a smell of propane.

According to planning board records, it looks like the LEAP building was a home that had been renovated to be the organization’s central office and training space.

Pictures from the scene showed a building in ruins.

Witnesses reported seeing rubble everywhere and smoke in the sky.

Source Article from https://www.wagmtv.com/content/news/Officials-confirm-death-of-one-firefighter-at-Farmington-explosion-scene-560479991.html

The Working Families Party, the labor-aligned progressive group whose electoral influence has grown since the 2016 election, has endorsed Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts for the Democratic presidential nomination, a boon to her candidacy as she attempts to position herself as the main challenger to former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.

The party endorsed Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont during the last presidential cycle, at which time he described Working Families as “the closest thing” to “my vision of democratic socialism.” The group’s endorsement of Ms. Warren on Monday, one of the few by a prominent progressive organization this early in the primary, could turn heads among left-leaning Democrats desperate to defeat Mr. Biden, the more moderate front-runner, in a primary election where their party’s ideological future is at stake.

“If our focus is on victory, we can’t be delusional about it,” said Maurice Mitchell, the Working Families Party’s national director. “You don’t defeat the moderate wing of Democrats through thought pieces or pithy tweets, you defeat their politics through organizing.”

Mr. Mitchell brushed off the possibility that the group’s endorsement would be seen as a sign of a splintering of the progressive left. The vote among “tens of thousands” of party members resulted in a commanding majority for Ms. Warren, a party spokesman said; she received more than 60 percent of the votes on the first ballot.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/16/us/politics/working-families-party-elizabeth-warren.html

The Taliban say the Red Cross may resume its work in Afghanistan, more than five months after threatening the group. In this photo from March, an orthopedic technician walks past artificial limbs in a workshop at the International Committee of the Red Cross hospital for war victims and the disabled in Kabul.

Wakil Kohsar /AFP/Getty Images


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The Taliban say the Red Cross may resume its work in Afghanistan, more than five months after threatening the group. In this photo from March, an orthopedic technician walks past artificial limbs in a workshop at the International Committee of the Red Cross hospital for war victims and the disabled in Kabul.

Wakil Kohsar /AFP/Getty Images

The Taliban are rescinding a 5-month-old ban that prevented staff with the International Committee of the Red Cross from working in Afghanistan, saying they also will renew security guarantees for the aid workers.

The new arrangement was worked out during talks in Doha, the capital of Qatar, according to representatives from both the Taliban and the Red Cross.

“In a message sent via social media, a Taliban spokesman said they had all instructed all their fighters to ‘pave the way’ for the International Committee of the Red Cross to resume work,” NPR’s Diaa Hadid reports from Islamabad.

“The organization is one of the largest working in Afghanistan today — they’ve faced deadly attacks in the past — including in 2017, when eight Red Cross workers were killed,” Hadid says.

In April, the Taliban issued threats to both the Red Cross and the World Health Organization, saying their staffs would be targeted if they kept working in Afghanistan. Those threats came during vaccination campaigns.

Schaerer Juan-Pedro, who leads the International Committee of the Red Cross delegation in Afghanistan, says the two sides reestablished a “common understanding” about the Red Cross’ work in Afghanistan.

“We welcome the acknowledgment of our humanitarian principles and renewal of security guarantees,” Juan-Pedro said via Twitter.

It’s not clear whether the Taliban have lifted their ban on the World Health Organization, whose work in Afghanistan includes a range of medical care along with vaccinations and polio eradication.

Shortly before the ban was announced in April, the WHO said it was hoping to protect more than 9.3 million children under the age of 5 from polio. At the time, three polio cases had been reported in Afghanistan.

The Red Cross, which says it has had a presence in Afghanistan since 1979, was criticized in 2010 for teaching Taliban fighters the basics of first aid and giving them medical kits. But the international aid group had scaled back its activities in northern Afghanistan after its aid workers died in the 2017 attack, which targeted an orthopedic center.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/09/16/761152686/taliban-lifts-ban-on-red-cross-pledges-to-protect-aid-workers

Both critics and allies have described Monday’s meetings as political theater, and Johnson once more in Luxembourg reiterated that if a fresh agreement cannot be reached by late October, then his government would ensure the UK can exit the EU “on the 31st of October, deal or no deal.”

The encounter with Juncker was scheduled exactly one week after the Parliament in Westminster passed into law a measure designed to block the possibility of an abrupt and economically disruptive departure on October 31.

And after their lunchtime sit-down at a local restaurant, Juncker and Johnson emerged to boos from protesters and were forced to negotiate a scrum of reporters and photographers.

Within minutes, the European Commission issued a press release which said the head of the EU’s executive branch had reminded the UK prime minister that it was now up to the British government to “come forward with legally operational solutions that are compatible with the Withdrawal Agreement.”

“President Juncker underlined the Commission’s continued willingness and openness to examine whether such proposals meet the objectives of the backstop. Such proposals have not yet been made,” it added, in a point soon echoed by Bettel.

Sterling weakened sharply to $1.24 after Johnson failed to appear at the press conference, after having trended downwards during much of the day’s trading.

The currency had enjoyed a strong rally against the U.S. dollar last week, since the passage of parliamentary legislation last Monday that was designed to rule out a no-deal exit in October.

Political allies of the prime minister continued to indicate over the weekend that Johnson may try to circumvent that new legislation, and might defy a parliamentary majority that wants him to request a Brexit deadline extension if he is unable to win significant concessions from Brussels in the coming weeks.

As a consequence the ostensible reason for Monday’s working lunch with Juncker had prompted some skepticism.

“He clocks up the miles/meetings and can argue he tried,” said Robert Hayward, a legislator belonging to Johnson’s Conservative Party, of the Luxembourg trip. In a message to CNBC, Hayward said that the Luxembourg trip will allow the prime minister to later argue, “it’s not his fault” if a new deal is not reached.

Anand Menon, a director at the think tank The U.K. in a Changing Europe, also posited it was about “giving the impression of having tried once he’s failed,” as Johnson seeks to change key clauses in the existing Withdrawal Agreement that three times failed to win parliamentary approval back in London.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/09/16/uk-prime-minister-johnson-avoids-luxembourg-press-conference-on-brexit.html

The New York Times suddenly made a major revision to a supposed bombshell piece late Sunday concerning a resurfaced allegation of sexual assault by Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh — hours after virtually all 2020 Democratic presidential candidates had cited the original article as a reason to impeach Kavanaugh.

The update included the significant detail that several friends of the alleged victim said she did not recall the purported sexual assault in question at all. The Times also stated for the first time that the alleged victim refused to be interviewed, and has made no comment about the episode.

The only firsthand statement concerning the supposed attack in the original piece, which was published on Saturday, came from a Clinton-connected lawyer who claimed to have witnessed it.

The Times’ revision says: “Editors’ Note: An earlier version of this article, which was adapted from a forthcoming book, did not include one element of the book’s account regarding an assertion by a Yale classmate that friends of Brett Kavanaugh pushed his penis into the hand of a female student at a drunken dorm party. The book reports that the female student declined to be interviewed and friends say that she does not recall the incident. That information has been added to the article.”

The update came only after The Federalist’s Mollie Hemingway, who reviewed an advance copy of the book, first flagged the article’s omission on Twitter — prompting other commentators to press the issue.

The Times did not immediately respond to an email from Fox News seeking comment.

The paper’s editors’ note, meanwhile, did little to stem a torrent of criticism late Sunday.

“Should I be surprised at this point that the NYT would make such an unforgivable oversight?”

— Mark Hemingway

“Should I be surprised at this point that the NYT would make such an unforgivable oversight?” asked RealClearInvestigations’ Mark Hemingway.

Wrote the Washington Examiner’s Jerry Dunleavy: “Crazy how the ‘one element’ that wasn’t included in the original article was the part where the alleged victim’s friends said she doesn’t remember it happening.”

This undated photo shows Deborah Ramirez. Her uncorroborated allegations that Kavanaugh had exposed himself to her in college – which came after she admitted to classmates that she was unsure Kavanaugh was the culprit, and after she spent several days talking to a lawyer – were reported Sept. 23, 2018, by The New Yorker magazine. (Safehouse Progressive Alliance for Nonviolence via AP)

“It’s important to point out that this correction almost certainly would have never occurred if conservative media folks like @MZHemingway  and others hadn’t obtained the copy of the actual book itself the same day the excerpt/article was released,” author James Hasson said.

Throughout the day on Sunday, Kamala Harris, Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders, Beto O’Rourke, Cory Booker and Julian Castro, among others, declared that Kavanaugh “must be impeached,” citing the allegation.

The revitalized, longshot push to get Kavanaugh removed from the high court came as Democrats’ apparent effort to impeach President Trump has largely stalled. Trump, for his part, suggested Sunday that Kavanaugh should sue for defamation.

The Times piece by Robin Pogrebin and Kate Kelly, adapted from their forthcoming book, asserted that a Kavanaugh classmate, Clinton-connected nonprofit CEO Max Stier, “saw Mr. Kavanaugh with his pants down at a different drunken dorm party, where friends pushed his penis into the hand of a female student.”

The Times did not mention Stier’s work as a Clinton defense attorney, or Stier’s legal battles with Kavanaugh during the Whitewater investigation, and simply called him a “respected thought leader.”

According to the Times, Stier “notified senators and the FBI about this account” last year during the Kavanaugh hearings, “but the FBI did not investigate and Mr. Stier has declined to discuss it publicly.”

However, the Times’ article also conspicuously did not mention that Pogrebin and Kelly’s book found that the female student in question had denied any knowledge of the alleged episode.

“The book notes, quietly, that the woman Max Stier named as having been supposedly victimized by Kavanaugh and friends denies any memory of the alleged event,” observed Mollie Hemingway. “Seems, I don’t know, significant.”

‘PART OF WHAT MOTIVATED’ CHRISTINE BLASEY FORD WAS TO PUT POLITICAL ‘ASTERISK’ ON KAVANAUGH, LAWYER ADMITS

The book reads: “[Tracy] Harmon, whose surname is now Harmon Joyce, has also refused to discuss the incident, though several of her friends said she does not recall it.”

“Omitting these facts from the @nytimes story is one of worst cases of journalistic malpractice that I can recall,” wrote the National Review’s Washington correspondent, John McCormack, on Twitter.

McCormack wrote separately: “If Kavanaugh’s ‘friends pushed his penis,’ then isn’t it an allegation of wrongdoing against Kavanaugh’s ‘friends,’ not Kavanaugh himself? Surely even a modern liberal Yalie who’s been to one of those weird non-sexual ‘naked parties‘ would recognize both the female student and Kavanaugh are both alleged victims in this alleged incident, barring an additional allegation that a college-aged Kavanaugh asked his ‘friends’ to ‘push his penis.'”

NEW YORK TIMES DELETES TWEET CALLING UNPROVOKED PENIS THRUSTING ‘HARMLESS FUN’

The Times went on to note in the article that it had “corroborated the story with two officials who have communicated with Mr. Stier,” but the article apparently meant only that the Times had corroborated that Stier made his claim to the FBI. No first-hand corroboration of the alleged episode was apparently obtained.

Nevertheless, Democrats announced a new effort to topple Kavanaugh. Hawaii Democratic Sen. Mazie Hirono — who infamously said last year that Kavanaugh did not deserve a fair hearing because he might be pro-life — said the Senate Judiciary Committee should begin an impeachment inquiry to determine whether Kavanaugh lied to Congress.

Impeaching Kavanaugh would require a majority vote in the Democratic-controlled House, and a highly unlikely two-thirds vote in the GOP-majority Senate would then be needed to remove him from the bench. No Supreme Court justice or president has ever been convicted by the Senate, although eight lower-level federal judges have been.

The long odds didn’t stop 2020 Democratic presidential hopefuls from joining in on the effort.

“I sat through those hearings,” Harris wrote on Twitter. “Brett Kavanaugh lied to the U.S. Senate and most importantly to the American people. He was put on the Court through a sham process and his place on the Court is an insult to the pursuit of truth and justice. He must be impeached.”

During the hearings, Harris strongly implied that she knew Kavanaugh had improperly discussed Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s then-ongoing probe with a Trump-connected lawyer.

Harris provided no evidence for the bombshell insinuation, which went viral on social media and sent the hearing room into stunned silence, even as she directly accused Kavanaugh of lying under oath.

Castro and Warren echoed that sentiment and said Kavanaugh had committed perjury.

FLASHBACK: GRAHAM SAYS DEMS’ KAVANAUGH SMEARS HAVE UNITED REPUBLICANS

FLASHBACK: FOX NEWS POLL SHOWS KAVANAUGH FIGHT HAS REVITALIZED GOP BASE, INCREASED REPUBLICAN INTEREST IN ELECTION

“It’s more clear than ever that Brett Kavanaugh lied under oath,” Castro wrote. “He should be impeached. And Congress should review the failure of the Department of Justice to properly investigate the matter.”

Warren wrote: “Last year the Kavanaugh nomination was rammed through the Senate without a thorough examination of the allegations against him. Confirmation is not exoneration, and these newest revelations are disturbing. Like the man who appointed him, Kavanaugh should be impeached.”

O’Rourke claimed to “know” that Kavanaugh had lied under oath, and falsely said that the new accuser was not known to Senate Democrats or the FBI last year.

“Yesterday, we learned of another accusation against Brett Kavanaugh—one we didn’t find out about before he was confirmed because the Senate forced the F.B.I. to rush its investigation to save his nomination,” O’Rourke said. “We know he lied under oath. He should be impeached.”

Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., tweeted in part, “This new allegation and additional corroborating evidence adds to a long list of reasons why Brett Kavanaugh should not be a Supreme Court justice. I stand with survivors and countless other Americans in calling for impeachment proceedings to begin.”

Amy Klobuchar stopped short of calling for impeachment, and instead posted a picture of Kavanaugh accuser Christine Blasey Ford with the words, “Let us never forget what courage looks like.”

DEM SENATOR CITES KAVANAUGH’S ALLEGED PRO-LIFE LEANINGS AS REASON TO DENY HIM A FAIR HEARING 

Bernie Sanders, meanwhile, said he backed getting rid of Kavanaugh by any legal means available: “The revelations today confirm what we already knew: During his hearing, Kavanaugh faced credible accusations and likely lied to Congress. I support any appropriate constitutional mechanism to hold him accountable.”

As the calls mounted, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., shot back Sunday afternoon on Twitter — and made clear that Kavanaugh wasn’t going anywhere.

“The far left’s willingness to seize on completely uncorroborated and unsubstantiated allegations during last year’s confirmation process was a dark and embarrassing chapter for the Senate,” McConnell wrote.

He added: “Fortunately a majority of Senators and the American people rallied behind timeless principles such as due process and the presumption of innocence. I look forward to many years of service to come from Justice Kavanaugh.”

The Times’ piece also stated that well before Kavanaugh became a federal judge, “at least seven people” had heard about how he allegedly exposed himself to Deborah Ramirez at a party.

Ramirez had called classmates at Yale seeking corroboration for her story, and even told some of her classmates that she could not remember the culprit in the alleged episode — before changing her mind and publicly blaming Kavanaugh “after six days of carefully assessing her memories and consulting with her attorney,” the New Yorker reported last year in a widely derided piece.

The Senate Judiciary Committee, then led by Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, wrote in an executive summary of its investigation that it contacted Ramirez’s counsel “seven times seeking evidence to support claims made in the New Yorker,” but that “Ms. Ramirez produced nothing in response and refused a Committee request for an interview.”

Late Sunday, Grassley’s office called out the Times for omitting key details in the story published this weekend.

@NYTimes did not contact Sen. Grassley’s office for this story. If they had, we would’ve reminded them of a few key public facts they omitted,” Grassley’s team wrote. “Despite 7 attempts by staff, Ms. Ramirez’ lawyers declined to provide documentary evidence referenced in the article/witness accounts to support the claims. They also declined invitations for Ms. Ramirez to speak with committee investigators or to provide a written statement.”

Additionally, the FBI separately reached out to nearly a dozen individuals to corroborate the allegations by Ford and Ramirez, and ultimately spoke to ten individuals and two eyewitnesses, but apparently found no corroboration.

The agency’s investigation began after then-Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., called for a one-week delay in Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearings so an independent agency could look into the claims against him. Flake said the FBI’s probe needed to be limited in length to avoid derailing the proceedings with endless claims and probes going back to Kavanaugh’s high school years.

Kavanaugh, predicted by Democrats during his confirmation process to be a hardline conservative, often sided with liberal justices during the Supreme Court’s last term.

The president, meanwhile, accused the media of trying to influence Kavanaugh. He also went on to say that Kavanaugh should go on the offensive and take on the media for false statements.

“Brett Kavanaugh should start suing people for libel, or the Justice Department should come to his rescue. The lies being told about him are unbelievable. False Accusations without recrimination. When does it stop? They are trying to influence his opinions. Can’t let that happen!” he tweeted.

Grassley sent several criminal referrals to the Justice Department related to alleged lies submitted to Senate investigators during Kavanaugh’s confirmation process — which could be what the president meant when he wrote Sunday that the DOJ “should come to [Kavanuagh’s] rescue.”

One of those referrals was for now-disgraced attorney Michael Avenatti and one of his clients, Julie Swetnick, regarding a potential “conspiracy” to provide false statements to Congress and obstruct its investigation. Swetnick’s credibility took a hit as she changed her story about Kavanaugh’s purported gang-rape trains, and her ex-boyfriend went public to say she was known for “exaggerating everything.”

Swetnick and Ramirez were just two of several women who had accused Kavanaugh of sexual misconduct during his confirmation process. Christine Blasey Ford notably testified that Kavanaugh attempted to sexually assault her at a party when they were teens, and dubiously asserted that the memory was “indelible” in her “hippocampus” — although no witnesses could corroborate her ever-changing storyeven her close lifelong friend, Leland Keyser, who Ford said had attended the party.

Keyser, according to the Times reporters’ new book, did not believe Ford’s story — and refused to change her mind, despite pressure from progressive activists and Ford’s friends.

“It just didn’t make any sense,” Keyser said, referring to Ford’s explanation of how she was assaulted at a party that Keyser attended, but could not recall how she got home.

Ford’s attorney, Debra Katz, was quoted in a new book as saying that Ford was motivated to come forward in part by a desire to tag Kavanaugh’s reputation with an “asterisk” before he could start ruling on abortion-related cases.

“In the aftermath of these hearings, I believe that Christine’s testimony brought about more good than the harm misogynist Republicans caused by allowing Kavanaugh on the court,” Katz said. “He will always have an asterisk next to his name. When he takes a scalpel to Roe v. Wade, we will know who he is, we know his character, and we know what motivates him, and that is important.

“It is important that we know, and that is part of what motivated Christine.”

The Federalist reported last week that Ford’s father privately supported Kavanaugh’s confirmation, and approached Ed Kavanaugh on a golf course to make his support clear.

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Some claims that surfaced during Kavanaugh’s confirmation fell apart within days. For example, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., received a call from an anonymous constituent who claimed that in 1985, two “heavily inebriated men” referred to as “Brett and Mark” had sexually assaulted a friend of hers on a boat.

The Twitter account belonging to the accuser apparently advocated for a military coup against the Trump administration. The constituent recanted the sexual assault claim on the social media site days later.

Fox News’ Andrew Craft in Plano, Texas, Chad Pergram, and Ronn Blitzer contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/nyt-kavanaugh-bombshell-goes-bust-after-2020-dems-use-it-to-call-for-impeachment

Purdue Pharma, the company that made billions selling the prescription painkiller OxyContin, filed for bankruptcy in White Plains, New York, days after reaching a tentative settlement with many of the state and local governments suing it over the toll of opioids.

The filing was anticipated before and after the tentative deal, which could be worth up to $12 billion over time, was struck.

“This settlement framework avoids wasting hundreds of millions of dollars and years on protracted litigation,” Steve Miller, chairman of Purdue’s board of directors, said in a statement, “and instead will provide billions of dollars and critical resources to communities across the country trying to cope with the opioid crisis. We will continue to work with state attorneys general and other plaintiff representatives to finalize and implement this agreement as quickly as possible.”

But legal battles still lie ahead for Stamford, Connecticut-based Purdue, which is spending millions on legal costs as it defends itself in lawsuits from 2,600 government and other entities. About half the states have not signed onto the proposal. And several of them plan to object to the settlement in bankruptcy court and to continue litigation in other courts against members of the Sackler family, which owns the company. The family agreed to pay at least $3 billion in the settlement plus contribute the company itself, which is to be reformed with its future profits going to the company’s creditors.

In a statement, the families of late company owners Mortimer and Raymond Sackler said they have “deep compassion for the victims of the opioid crisis” and believe the settlement framework “is an historic step toward providing critical resources that address a tragic public health situation.”

Objections came over the amount of the deal, which some officials say will not reach close to the $12 billion mark, and because it means the company won’t be found liable by a jury or judge.

Purdue chairman Miller said the company has not admitted wrongdoing and does not intend to. “The alternative is to not settle but instead to resume the litigation,” he said on a conference call with reporters. “The resumption of litigation would rapidly diminish all the resources of the company and would be lose-lose-lose all the way around. Whatever people might wish for is not on the table now.”

Because so many states balked at the settlement, it could complicate the bankruptcy process. The Sackler family members said they’re still trying to get more states to sign on.

“We are hopeful that in time, those parties who are not yet supportive will ultimately shift their focus to the critical resources that the settlement provides to people and problems that need them,” they said.

Key issues that could be decided include whether the suits against the Sacklers in state courts will be able to move ahead, and what will happen to the company itself. Under the tentative settlement deal, it would continue to operate, but with profits used to pay for the settlement. Another option could be for a judge to order it be sold.

Court filings assert that members of the Sackler family were paid more than $4 billion by Purdue from 2007 to 2018. Much of the family’s fortune is believed to be held outside the U.S., which could complicate lawsuits against the family over opioids.

A court filing by the New York Attorney General’s office on Friday contended that Sackler family members used Swiss and other hidden accounts to transfer $1 billion to themselves. The discovery of the transfers bolsters several states’ claims that family members worked to shield its wealth because of the growing legal threats against them and Purdue.

The Sacklers have given money to cultural institutions around the world, including the Smithsonian Institution, New York City’s Metropolitan Museum of Art and London’s Tate Modern.

The lawsuits assert that the company aggressively sold OxyContin as a drug with a low risk of addiction despite knowing that wasn’t true.

Since OxyContin, a time-released opioid, was introduced in 1996, addiction and overdoses have surged. In both 2017 and 2018, opioids were involved in more than 47,000 deaths, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In recent years, there have been more deaths involving illicit opioids, including heroin and fentanyl, than the prescription forms of the drugs. That change has happened as awareness of the dangers of prescription opioids has increased and prescribers have become more cautious.

Purdue’s drugs are just a slice of the opioids prescribed, but critics assign a lot of the blame to the company because it developed both the drug and an aggressive marketing strategy.

According to a lawsuit filed by the Massachusetts attorney general, the company pushed big sales of OxyContin from the start. Doing so meant persuading doctors who had been reluctant to prescribe such strong painkillers that this one was safe.

A court filing asserts that Richard Sackler, then a senior vice president in charge of sales at the company, told the sales force at a launch party for the drug: “The launch of OxyContin Tablets will be followed by a blizzard of prescriptions that will bury the competition. The prescription blizzard will be so deep, dense, and white.”

Along with others in the industry, Purdue paid doctors who attested to the drug’s safety and became a major funder of groups that advocated for pain patients and campaigned to have opioids prescribed.

The Associated Press and the Center for Public Integrity found the industry and groups it funded were also politically active, spending more than $880 million nationally on lobbying and campaigns from 2006 through 2015. That spending helped the industry fight off restrictions on prescribing the powerful painkillers.

All those issues are part of the lawsuits facing the drug industry now. The governments that are suing want reimbursement for costs associated with the opioid crisis and also funding for drug treatment and abuse-prevention programs.

In court filings, Purdue has pointed out that its products were approved by federal regulators and prescribed by doctors.

A federal judge overseeing close to 2,000 of the cases has been pushing the parties to reach a grand settlement that would make a difference in the opioid crisis. The judge, Cleveland-based Dan Polster, has scheduled a trial for the claims brought by Ohio’s Cuyahoga and Summit Counties for October.

One lawyer who is suing Purdue on behalf of clients including the city of Albuquerque, New Mexico, and the state of Utah, which has signed on to the tentative settlement, said it’s long been a consideration that Purdue could not afford to pay the massive amounts being sought in the lawsuits.

“I don’t think there’s enough money in that company to pay for the damages that are claimed,” said Jonathan Novak.

That is one reason there are other defendants in most opioid lawsuits, he said, including members of the Sackler family and huge drug distribution companies such as McKesson Corp. and Cardinal Health. State and local governments have also been battling over how any national settlements would be distributed.

Organizations facing big lawsuits have a long history of bankruptcy claims.

Dozens of asbestos companies have done so since the 1980s. Last year, USA Gymnastics filed for protection as it faced lawsuits over sexual abuse by team doctor Larry Nassar.

Earlier this year, Pacific Gas & Electric Corp. sought bankruptcy protection because it faces billions of dollars in potential damages from lawsuits over catastrophic wildfires in California.

And in June, another company that makes opioids, Insys Therapeutics, filed for bankruptcy just days after reaching a $225 million settlement with the federal government over a kickback scheme. Now, a bankruptcy judge will have to sort out how much of that will be paid.

Vincent Buccola, a lawyer and professor of business ethics, said Purdue may be trying to avoid going to court in states that have been deeply harmed by the opioid epidemic.

“That’s not the jury you want to face,” said Buccola, who teaches at the University of Pennsylvania. “So you might try to stop that litigation from happening and consolidate it in front of bankruptcy judge who you hope will be more favorable.”

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Source Article from https://www.snopes.com/ap/2019/09/15/purdue-pharma-files-for-bankruptcy-as-part-of-settlement/

CLOSE

Drones claimed by Yemen’s Houthi rebels attacked the world’s largest oil processing facility in Saudi Arabia and a major oilfield operated by Saudi Aramco early Saturday, sparking a huge fire at a processor crucial to global energy supplies. (Sept. 14)
AP, AP

WASHINGTON – A day after appearing to threaten military action against Iran over the attack on Saudi Arabia oil facilities, President Donald Trump struck a more neutral tone early Monday by saying the United States does not need Middle East oil production.

“Because we have done so well with Energy over the last few years (thank you, Mr. President!), we are a net Energy Exporter, & now the Number One Energy Producer in the World,” Trump said. “We don’t need Middle Eastern Oil & Gas, & in fact have very few tankers there, but will help our Allies!”

In another tweet, Trump referred to an incident this year in which Iran shot down a US drone it said had invaded its airspace.

“They stuck strongly to that story knowing that it was a very big lie,” Trump said. “Now they say that they had nothing to do with the attack on Saudi Arabia. We’ll see?”

In June, Trump ordered a military strike on Iran, but changed his mind at the last minute and said the loss of Iranian lives would not have been proportionate to the destruction of an American drone.

Iran insisted the drone invaded its air space, and has accused the U.S. is trying to provoke hostilities.

After meeting with aides Sunday, Trump indicated that “help” to Saudi Arabia could include some kind of military action, claiming the U.S. is “locked and loaded” after the attack on Saudi oil supplies.

While he did not name Iran specifically, Trump tweeted late Sunday that “there is reason to believe that we know the culprit, are locked and loaded depending on verification, but are waiting to hear from the Kingdom as to who they believe was the cause of this attack, and under what terms we would proceed!”

Trump aides, meanwhile, have pointed the finger directly at Iran.

Over the weekend, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that “we call on all nations to publicly and unequivocally condemn Iran’s attacks. The United States will work with our partners and allies to ensure that energy markets remain well supplied and Iran is held accountable for its aggression.”

Iran, meanwhile, denies involvement in the Saudi attack and said it is prepared to defend itself with “full-fledged war.”

As Trump and his administration formulate a response, Pompeo was spotted at the White House on Sunday, as was Defense Secretary Mark Esper.

With global oil prices expected to spike upward, Trump said Sunday he may tap the strategic oil reserve to stabilize the market.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/09/16/donald-trump-u-s-doesnt-need-mideast-oil-discusses-iran-response/2339329001/

The blow is stunning. The attacks on Saudi oil facilities have knocked out half of Saudi Arabia’s oil production. The kingdom is the world’s largest oil exporter. The state-owned company that produces the oil, Aramco, is probably the world’s most valuable enterprise. And oil provides one-third of the world’s primary energy.

It is hard to think through the global ramifications of an event such as this, because we know so little about the attack, about the likely political and military response to it, and about the practical implications for both Saudi Arabia, and more important, the world economy. But some points are already clear and it is worth setting them out.

For a start, a lot depends on how quickly production can be resumed. Assuming there are no further attacks, it should be possible to get some of the damage repaired reasonably swiftly – a matter of weeks. The oil fields themselves, including the giant Ghawar field, the world’s largest, are not touched. It is the processing plants that have been damaged. Further, this comes at a time where there is spare capacity in the oil market. Even if there weren’t, US shale production could be increased quite swiftly.

So while this is a shock to the oil market, and will for a while at least push up all energy prices worldwide, this is not a blow akin to the surge in oil prices in 2008, when oil touched $140 a barrel, or going back further, the oil shocks of the 1970s. We will all pay more to fill up our cars, but compared with what has happened in the past, this should be manageable.

The world economy is further helped by the fact that inflation is low, too low in some places, notably Europe, where the European Central Bank took steps to try to boost both inflation and overall demand. True, any disruption to the world economy is comes at a time when growth is faltering, but there are bigger problems notable trade frictions. If you look at the world economy as a whole, this is a middle-ranking issue, not a catastrophe.

What this does, however, is remind us of other fragilities.

First, the world is still very dependent on fossil fuels, and it will remain so for another generation at least. Oil has come down to one-third of primary energy from nearly half in the early 1970s, but the reliance on gas (which often comes from the same regions) has risen to one-quarter, so together they provide about 60 per cent of the world’s energy needs. (Coal provides about 25 per cent, with the whole range of renewables only 15 per cent.)

This dependence will decline, but the world’s population will continue to increase and the living standards of the emerging world will, we should all hope and expect, continue to rise. We should also hope and expect that coal’s share of global energy provision will continue to fall. Pull this together and it is clear that even a decarbonising world economy will need more oil and more gas over the next 30 years. A lot of that oil and gas will come from the Middle East.

Next, look at this from the perspective of Saudi Arabia. It is overly dependent on oil and gas, and has to diversify, as the Saudi Vision 2030 programme recognises. The plan has been criticised, and the task is huge. There is the basic question as to whether you can engineer a top-down diversification of an economy or whether you should allow market signals to show where competitive lies. But whatever your view, there is no question that this will cost a massive amount of money.

To finance this the kingdom aims to float part of its shareholding in Saudi Aramco, probably 5 per cent, on the world’s markets. There are all sorts of questions here, in particular about the governance of the company – there has been a boardroom shake-up. But the concerns are also partly about the inevitable political risks, and partly about the investor demand for energy companies in a world of shareholder resistance to such investment. These attacks could not, from the point of view of the sale of Aramco shares, have come at a worse time.

There is a narrow issue here, and a broader one. The narrow issue, being debated right now, by the bankers is what this means for the Aramco float: drop the price, postpone it, or what?

The broader one is what should global financial markets do about the challenge facing the world economy as it makes the shift to lower carbon emissions?

The bankers are professionals and will duly decide what is to be done on the narrow issue, but I hope that deeper thought will go into the broader issue in the months. We need to keep the oil and gas flowing, and it is naive to pretend we don’t. That needs investment. We also need to finance the great away from fossil fuels and that needs investment too.

The dreadful events in Saudi Arabia will make people think about the narrow issue. I hope they also encourage people to think honestly about the wider one too.

Source Article from https://www.independent.co.uk/independentpremium/saudi-arabia-oil-drone-strike-aramco-economy-markets-iran-a9106351.html

Since President Trump withdrew from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, the Islamic Republic has tested U.S. resolve with military escalation across the Middle East. Likely Iranian involvement in attacks on Saudi oil production over the weekend marks a new phase in this destabilizing campaign, and it’s no coincidence this happened as Mr. Trump is considering a softer approach to Tehran.

Saudi Arabia reduced daily oil production by about 5.7 million barrels after strikes against facilities in the country’s east on Saturday. Iran-backed…

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/irans-return-handshake-11568578218

Apple is becoming a camera company

Apple’s new iPhones can still send texts, download apps, and make video calls, but the company spends a lot of time and effort marketing its new phones as powerful photography…

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Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/09/16/gold-surges-more-than-1percent-on-global-turmoil-but-silver-rises-more.html