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Source Article from https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-10-14/china-wants-more-talks-before-signing-trump-s-phase-one-deal-k1q8bxgz

People look on at a celebration of Indigenous Peoples’ Day in 2016 at Seattle’s City Hall. Seattle began observing Indigenous Peoples’ Day two years earlier to promote the well-being and growth of Seattle’s Indigenous community.

Elaine Thompson/AP


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Elaine Thompson/AP

People look on at a celebration of Indigenous Peoples’ Day in 2016 at Seattle’s City Hall. Seattle began observing Indigenous Peoples’ Day two years earlier to promote the well-being and growth of Seattle’s Indigenous community.

Elaine Thompson/AP

On Monday in the nation’s capital, there is no Columbus Day. The D.C. Council voted to replace it with Indigenous Peoples’ Day in a temporary move that it hopes to make permanent. Several other places across the United States have also made the switch in a growing movement to end the celebration of the Italian explorer in favor of honoring Indigenous communities and their resiliency in the face of violence by European explorers like Christopher Columbus.

Baley Champagne is responsible for that change in her home state of Louisiana. The tribal citizen of the United Houma Nation petitioned the governor, John Bel Edwards, to change the day. He did, along with several other states this year.

“It’s become a trend,” Champagne said. “It’s about celebrating people instead of thinking about somebody who actually caused genocide on a population or tried to cause the genocide of an entire population. By bringing Indigenous Peoples’ Day, we’re bringing awareness that we’re not going to allow someone like that to be glorified into a hero, because of the hurt that he caused to Indigenous people of America.”

And so in Houma, La., people from across the state will gather to honor and celebrate Indigenous Peoples’ Day for the first time.

She wants it to be “a celebration and to bring acknowledgment to the Native population,” Champagne said. “You know, because we have many friends of all different races in this area and Houma is named after the Houma people, the Houma Choctaw. So to bring this, I think it’s long overdue. It’s a big celebration. And we’re just so excited to have this finally.”

There’s no comprehensive list of places that have switched, but at least 10 states now celebrate some version of Indigenous Peoples’ Day on the second Monday in October, like Hawaii’s Discoverers’ Day or South Dakota’s Native Americans’ Day. Many college campuses have dumped Columbus Day for Indigenous Peoples’ Day as have more than 100 cities, towns and counties across the country.

For Native Americans, Columbus Day has long been hurtful. It conjures the violent history of 500 years of colonial oppression at the hands of European explorers and those who settled here — a history whose ramifications and wounds still run deep today.

“Today we understand that while [Columbus] was an explorer and is credited with being one of the first Europeans to arrive in the Americas, we now know a great deal about the history and the way that he and his people behaved when they came to this continent,” said Shannon Speed, a citizen of the Chickasaw Nation and director of the UCLA American Indian Studies Center. “Which included pillaging, raping and generally setting in motion a genocide of the people who were already here. That’s not something we want to celebrate. That’s not something anyone wants to celebrate.”

The shift isn’t happening without some pushback. For many Italian Americans, Columbus Day is their day to celebrate Italian heritage and the contributions of Italian Americans to the United States. It was adopted at a time when Italians were vilified and faced religious and ethnic discrimination. The first commemoration came in 1892, a year after a mass lynching of 11 Italian Americans by a mob in New Orleans. Italian Americans latched onto the day as a way to mainstream and humanize themselves in the face of rampant discrimination. It became a national holiday in 1934 to honor a man who, ironically, never set foot in the United States. Columbus anchored in the Bahamas.

For many Italian Americans, Columbus Day isn’t just about the man but about what the day represents: a people searching for safety and acceptance in their new home.

For many Italian Americans, Columbus Day is about celebrating Italian heritage and the contributions of Italian Americans to the United States. Above, the Christopher Columbus statue at Manhattan’s Columbus Circle in New York.



Bebeto Matthews/AP

In 2017, after someone vandalized the Christopher Columbus statue in New York City’s Central Park, the then-president and chief operating officer of the National Italian American Foundation, John M. Viola, wrote in a New York Times editorial, “The ‘tearing down of history’ does not change that history. In the wake of the cultural conflict that has ripped us apart over these months, I wonder if we as a country can’t find better ways to utilize our history to eradicate racism instead of inciting it. Can’t the monuments and holidays born of our past be reimagined to represent new values for our future?”

He went on to write, “We believe Christopher Columbus represents the values of discovery and risk that are at the heart of the American dream, and that it is our job as the community most closely associated with his legacy to be at the forefront of a sensitive and engaging path forward, toward a solution that considers all sides.”

Speed says she recognizes the importance of celebrating the history and contributions of Italian Americans, but there has to be another way to honor them.

“There are a lot of Italian Americans who very much support the shift to Indigenous Peoples’ Day because they don’t want to feel themselves associated with a man who is known to have committed terrible crimes against humanity,” she said. “Italian Americans were greatly discriminated against in this country, and it’s incredibly important to have a day to celebrate that heritage. It just shouldn’t be around the figure of Columbus.”

Celebrating Columbus, she said, not only whitewashes a violent history but also discounts the further trauma that honoring him inflicts on Indigenous people.

Rally participants listen to an address by Frank Bear Killer of the Oglala Lakota tribe outside the state Capitol in Lincoln, Neb., in 2016 to mark Lincoln’s first Indigenous Peoples’ Day. At least 10 states now celebrate some version of Indigenous Peoples’ Day.



Nati Harnik/AP

“Indigenous children are going to school and being forced to hear about and celebrate the person who set in motion the genocide of their people,” Speed said. “That’s incredibly painful. It creates an ongoing harm. And so we can’t have a national holiday that creates an ongoing harm for a significant portion of our citizens.”

For Native Americans, that pain is the first thing they feel when they hear “Columbus Day,” Speed said. But when a group of Berkeley, Calif., residents asked the city to change Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples’ Day in 1992, then-Mayor Loni Hancock said it was the first time she’d really understood the negative impact of this holiday on Indigenous people.

“We had to think about what is this holiday about and who discovered America and how really profoundly disrespectful it was to say that a European explorer who never actually set foot on the continent did that,” Hancock said. “Discounting the Indigenous people who had lived here for centuries with very sophisticated cultures and pretty much in harmony with the earth.”

Indigenous peoples first proposed the day during a 1977 United Nations conference on discrimination against them. But it wasn’t until 1989 that South Dakota became the first state to switch Columbus Day to Native Americans’ Day, celebrating it for the first time in 1990. And then Berkeley became the first U.S. city to switch to Indigenous Peoples’ Day. The Pew Research Center says Columbus Day is the most inconsistently observed national holiday in the United States.

“Certainly the hundreds and thousands of Italian immigrants who came over in steerage class on the boats at the turn of the 19th century endured a lot of hardships to get here,” Hancock said. “But the discovery of America is something where you want to get your history right. And I think that to fully understand and take responsibility for who we are as a people in this land made it very important to be clear about who was here first and reflect on what happened in our history after that, in terms of the displacement and oftentimes genocide of those people. How that might have reflected a general discounting of the history and the humanity of nonwhite people of many kinds in this country and to take responsibility for our history.”

National Desk intern Megan Manata contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/10/14/769083847/columbus-day-or-indigenous-peoples-day

California is set to become the first state to require later start times for some public schools after Gov. Gavin NewsomGavin Christopher NewsomCalifornia becomes first state to mandate later start times at public schools New California law bans school lunch debt shaming California governor signs law banning manufacture, sale of fur products MORE (D) signed legislation into law Sunday.

The new law will be implemented over time and will eventually mandate middle schools to start no earlier than 8 a.m. and high schools to begin no earlier than 8:30 a.m., according to the Los Angeles Times.

The new start times must be in effect by the start of the 2022-2023 school year begins or when a school’s three-year collective bargaining agreement with its employees comes to an end, depending on which comes first.

State Sen. Anthony Portantino (D) applauded Newsom’s signing of the bill, saying research has shown later start times benefits students.

“Newsom displayed a heartwarming and discerning understanding of the importance of objective research and exercised strong leadership as he put our children’s health and welfare ahead of institutional bureaucracy resistant to change,” Portantino said, according to the news outlet.

“Generations of children will come to appreciate this historic day and our governor for taking bold action. Our children face a public health crisis. Shifting to a later start time will improve academic performance and save lives because it helps our children be healthier,” he added.

A legislative analysis from July found about half the public schools in the state will be forced to push back their start times by 30 minutes or less in order to be compliant with the new law.

The bill overwhelmingly passed the state Assembly last month. Those against the bill argued individual districts and schools should set their own start times.

Some rural school districts are exempt from the new law, the Times noted.

Newsom’s signature Sunday came on the last day he had to sign into law bills that the state legislature passed last month.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/465624-california-becomes-first-state-to-mandate-later-start-time-at-public

While the seven judges of the Supreme Court found the Catalan leaders guilty of secession, they did not sentence them for rebellion, a crime that could have resulted in prison sentences as long as 25 years.

By discarding the charge of rebellion, the Supreme Court could now help Spain’s judiciary reactivate its efforts to extradite Mr. Puigdemont and a few other Catalan politicians who fled in late 2017, after they were ousted from office by the Spanish government, which used emergency constitutional powers to impose a period of direct rule over Catalonia.

Over the past two years, Mr. Puigdemont has successfully fought against extradition attempts from Belgium and Germany, where local judges rejected the Spanish claim that he had led a rebellion.

Mr. Sánchez was expected to make a televised address to the nation later on Monday. But center-right Spanish politicians welcomed the ruling. Pablo Casado, the leader of the main opposition Popular Party, called on Mr. Sánchez to promise not use his executive right to grant an early pardon to the condemned Catalan politicians.

“Whoever does it, pays it,” Mr. Casado said.

In a televised news conference, Laura Borras, a separatist lawmaker, called the ruling “profoundly anti-democratic” and a violation not only of the rights of elected politicians, but also of the more than two 2 million people who voted for separatist parties in Catalonia in recent years.

“This is a ruling that creates irreparable damage,” Ms. Borras said.

On Twitter, Mr. Junqueras said, “We will return stronger, more convinced and firmer than ever.”

The former Catalan leaders could still appeal their case before Spain’s Constitutional Court, if they could demonstrate that their fundamental rights had been violated, as well as to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/14/world/europe/catalonia-separatists-verdict-spain.html

A graphic, violent parody video, shown at a meeting of President Trump’s supporters at his Miami resort, depicts a likeness of the president shooting, stabbing and assaulting his political opponents and members of the news media in a church, The New York Times reported Sunday.

The video was shown last week at an American Priority conference at Mr. Trump’s Doral Miami resort, the Times said. The president wasn’t there.

In the video, Mr. Trump’s critics and media members are portrayed as parishioners fleeing his gruesome rampage. The fake Trump strikes the late Sen. John McCain in the neck, hits and stabs TV personality Rosie O’Donnell in the face, lights Sen. Bernie Sanders’ head on fire and shoots or otherwise assaults people whose faces are replaced with news organizations’ logos.

CBS, CNN, The Washington Post, NBC, ABC, PBS, Politico and the BBC are among the news organizations depicted as victims of the fake Trump’s rage.

The White House hasn’t responded to a request for comment from CBS News.

June 2017 file frame from video shows the Trump National Doral in Doral, Florida

Alex Sanz / AP


The president of the White House Correspondents’ Association, Jonathan Karl, issued a statement saying the group is “horrified” by the video and adding that, “All Americans should condemn this depiction of violence directed toward journalists and the President’s political opponents. We have previously told the President his rhetoric could incite violence.  Now we call on him and everybody associated with this conference to denounce this video and affirm that violence has no place in our society.”

McCain’s widow, Cindy McCain, tweeted her reaction:

CNN called the images “vile and horrific” and called on Mr. Trump, his family, the White House and the Trump campaign to denounce it “immediately and in the strongest possible terms. Anything less amounts to a tacit endorsement of violence and should not be tolerated by anyone.”

Democratic presidential hopeful Beto O’Rourke tweeted that the video “isn’t funny. It will get people killed.”

The organizer of the Miami event, Alex Phillips, told the Times the video was played as part of a “meme exhibit” and wasn’t associated with or endorsed by the conference “in any official capacity.” ”American Priority rejects all political violence,” he said, adding that he’s looking into the matter.

The video includes the logo for Mr. Trump’s 2020 campaign but spokesperson Tim Murtaugh told the Times the “video was not produced by the campaign, and we do not condone violence.”

The Times said Donald Trump Jr., the president’s former spokeswoman, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis were among the conference’s scheduled speakers.

“Ms. Sanders and a person close Mr. Trump’s son said on Sunday that they did not see the video at the conference,” the Times reported. The newspaper said a spokeswoman for DeSantis didn’t reply to an email seeking comment.

The setting for the massacre is the “Church of Fake News,” capturing Mr. Trump’s familiar refrain about news stories and organizations he says he considers to be producing fake news.

In the video, Mr. Trump’s face is superimposed on a killer’s body as he shoots people in the face and otherwise assaults them. Among the targets: former President Obama, Black Lives Matter, California Democratic Representative Maxine Waters, Bill and Hillary Clinton and Rep. Adam Schiff who, as Democratic chairman of the House Intelligence Committee is leading the impeachment inquiry of Trump.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-graphic-video-depicting-trump-like-figure-assaulting-foes-media-shown-trump-doral-miami-resort-new-york-times/

Hold the ‘champagne’: What Chinese state media are saying about…

“The Champagne should probably be kept on ice, at least until the two presidents put pen to paper,” said state-owned media China Daily.

read more

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/13/rdifs-dimitriev-saudi-arabia-a-precedent-for-fixing-us-russia-relations.html

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Source Article from https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2019/10/ted-cruz-inappropriate-trump-ask-china-probe-bidens.html

October 13 at 10:46 PM

President Trump’s order to withdraw essentially all U.S. forces from northern Syria came after the commander in chief privately agitated for days to bring troops home, according to administration officials — even while the Pentagon was making public assurances that the United States was not abandoning its Kurdish allies in the region.

The officials, granted anonymity to describe internal deliberations, described Trump as “doubling down” and “undeterred,” despite vociferous pushback from congressional Republicans who have been loath to challenge the president apart from a few issues, such as national security.

Behind the scenes, Trump has tried to convince advisers and lawmakers that the United States is not to blame for Turkey’s military offensive, which has targeted Kurdish fighters who have aided the U.S. fight against the Islamic State.

But experts — and many Republicans — say otherwise. And even Trump allies say the president needs to do a better job of selling the troop withdrawal to the public, beyond tweets. 

The escalating crisis in northern Syria has prompted further criticism from foreign policy heavyweights in Trump’s party, who argue that the president’s strategies abroad send a concerning message to allies and endanger regional partners. 

“I’ve always looked at the approach the administration takes as very transactional and very short-term in nature,” former senator Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), who chaired the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said in a phone interview Sunday. “It’s almost seeking headlines for the very next day, but not really thinking through the longer-term impact on our ­country.”

In a tweet and later in the interview, Corker warned against the decision to withdraw support for Kurdish forces, telling The Post that it was a “blight on our character.” He said, too, that it would only embolden Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has given no indication that he would halt the offensive that began Wednesday despite the threat of sanctions from the U.S. Congress and international condemnation. 

“To pull the rug out and to do so in such a hasty manner, where there’s been no preparation, nothing has been done to limit the damage to them, and as [former defense secretary Jim] Mattis and others have said, this is going to create additional activities, additional opportunities for ISIS . . . it’s bad all the way around,” said Corker, who has remained relatively quiet since he left office in January. 

Such criticisms have been echoed publicly and privately by current Republican elected officials who have been increasingly alarmed by the withdrawal, announced in a late-night White House statement on Oct. 6 and fully fleshed out by Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper on Sunday. 

Trump has closely watched that kind of public criticism in recent days — complaining frequently about comments from Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) in particular — but has been encouraged to stay the course by other allies who support a withdrawal, such as Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and Fox News Channel host Tucker Carlson, according to administration officials.

The president, one senior administration official said, was particularly heartened by a segment from another Fox News host, Lou Dobbs, defending him last week.

For his part, Graham appeared to be more aligned with Trump on Sunday evening, saying that he planned to work with Democratic and Republican lawmakers on economic sanctions against Turkey.

“The outrage in Syria about Turkey continues. The ripple effect I was concerned about has happened at a faster pace than I believed. The administration needs to be far more aggressive,” Graham said in an interview.

Graham and Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) have drafted legislation that would place sanctions on the U.S. assets of people at the highest levels of the Turkish government, including Erdogan, as well as on any military transactions with Turkey.

The two are circulating their plan among Senate offices. 

Graham and Sen. Christopher A. Coons (D-Del.) have also asked Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) to arrange a briefing from the Pentagon and State Department, as well as intelligence officials, on the withdrawal. 

An aide to Schumer deferred to the majority leader’s office, although Schumer has said that he wants Esper; Gen. Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; and Kenneth F. McKenzie Jr., the head of U.S. Central Command, to appear publicly before senators. A spokesman for McConnell said Sunday that he had no announcements to make. A private briefing could help shape the congressional response, as could a closed-door Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on Syria scheduled for Thursday morning. 

Some Republican donors and officials worried that Trump’s decision would trap them in an untenable situation and have deleterious effects around the world. Furthermore, the significant intraparty rift is coming at a time when Trump particularly needs Republican support as he faces the threat of impeachment. 

“Republican senators are going to increasingly resemble a herd of ostriches with their heads in the sand,” said Dan Eberhart, a prominent Republican donor. “They don’t want to break with Trump while simultaneously wanting to disagree with his policy on allowing Turkey to get away with exterminating the Kurds inside Syria.”

Still, Trump has resisted the repeated urging from some of his closest allies, such as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Graham, to intervene in the situation and has become more convinced that bringing troops home is both the right decision and a key political promise to fulfill ahead of the 2020 ­election.

That view has been reinforced by the reaction from supporters. At a campaign rally in Minneapolis last week, the crowd chanted “Bring them home!” as Trump noted that U.S. troops had been in Afghanistan — the longest war in American history — for nearly two decades. 

During deliberations in the past, Trump has repeatedly pushed to remove troops from Syria but has usually been dissuaded by top officials, such as John F. Kelly, his former chief of staff.

The usual argument against removing troops, according to former senior administration officials, would be that doing so would cause widespread deaths and chaos and Trump would be blamed for it. 

“Normally, convincing him he would be blamed for death and chaos could keep it from happening at least at that moment,” one former senior administration official said.

But current administration officials say many moderating officials like Kelly are gone, and longtime friends say the move is consistent with Trump’s worldview — and that he has long wanted to do this. 

“When he looks at a conflict, he’ll say, do we have a national interest? What is our national interest?” said Chris Ruddy, a Trump ally. “A secondary thing is the money issue. Why are we spending billions, if not trillions, in places like Afghanistan and the Middle East?”

Corker also suggested that the president’s decision was swayed by a circle of current advisers putting “un-thought-out ideas in the president’s head.” 

“I just have known through my years there that so many people have access to the president,” Corker said, declining to name them. “Typically, you want the people who are giving input to have credentials and have knowledge of the area, but I know that’s not the case necessarily today.” 

Some Trump allies were urging him to do more. Retired Gen. Jack Keane, who regularly speaks with Trump and has been a candidate for positions in the past, said he should quickly enforce a no-fly zone and warn Turkish officials that there would be retaliation. 

Keane said international allies had flooded the State Department with concerns about trusting the United States.

“All is not lost,” he said. But not doing anything, he said, “sends a message about trust and reliability, something the United States has taken some pride in since World War II, that we can be counted on.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/unswayed-by-top-advisers-trump-doubles-down-on-decision-to-withdraw-troops/2019/10/13/3305b884-edfc-11e9-b2da-606ba1ef30e3_story.html

A vigil was held Sunday outside the home of 28-year-old Atatiana Jefferson who was fatally shot the night prior by a Fort Worth, Texas police officer. Jefferson, who is black, was killed in her home by a white officer who has since been placed on administrative leave.

Mayor Betsy Price was in attendance at the vigil but left shortly after she was approached by a crowd of people who chanted “lock him up” in reference to the unidentified officer. Her family is still seeking answers, CBS Dallas-Fort Worth reports.

According to an attorney, they maintain the officer “didn’t have time to perceive a threat” before opening fire. “You didn’t hear the officer shout, ‘Gun, gun, gun,'” Lee Merritt said after viewing the officer’s bodycam video. “He didn’t have time to perceive a threat. That’s murder.”

Jefferson was watching her 8-year-old nephew when she was shot through a window and killed around 2:30 a.m. October 12.

Atatiana Jefferson

Lee Merritt /CBS DFW


“It’s another one of those situations where the people that are supposed to protect us are actually not here to protect us,” Jefferson’s sister, Amber Carr, said. “You know, you want to see justice, but justice don’t bring my sister back.”

Jefferson’s aunt, Venitta Body, said the family is struggling to understand why Jefferson was killed.

“It’s like from the moment we got the call, it’s been more and more inconceivable and more confusing. And there has nothing been done in order to take away that confusion,” Body said.

James Smith, the concerned neighbor who called the non-emergency number, told CBS Dallas-Fort Worth that he was just trying to be a good neighbor.

“I’m shaken. I’m mad. I’m upset. And I feel it’s partly my fault,” Smith said. “If I had never dialed the police department, she’d still be alive.”

Smith said Jefferson and her nephew typically lived with an older woman, who’s been in the hospital.

“It makes you not want to call the police department,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/fort-worth-police-shooting-community-holds-vigil-for-woman-fatally-shot-by-officer-in-home-2019-10-13/

Joe Biden says if elected president he’ll ban holding of positions with foreign companies by family members and those associated him, a definition that covers hundreds of people from his 44 years in national office.

“No one in my family or associated with me will be involved in any foreign operation whatsoever. Period. End of story,” the former vice president and 36-year Delaware senator said at an Altoona, Iowa, campaign event.

The declaration by Biden, 76, comes after torrents of criticism about his son Hunter Biden by President Trump over his position on the board of a Ukrainian natural gas company. The $50,000-a-month role began in 2014 at the same time his father, the vice president, played a lead role in the Obama administration’s Ukraine policy.

Hunter Biden, 49, is a frequent target of Trump on Twitter, at campaign rallies, and other forums, repeatedly calling the Biden father-son due “corrupt.” Trump, in a July 25 phone call, leaned on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate Hunter Biden’s work in that country, with U.S. military aid dangled as leverage. That exchange is now at the heart of an impeachment inquiry against Trump by House Democrats.

Democrats vying for the 2020 presidential nomination against Biden have been pressed on whether they would permit family members of their vice presidential pick to sit on foreign boards. Most have said no, though they’ve demurred from directly attacking Biden over the issue.

Hunter Biden has also been criticized for his business dealings in China. On Sunday, the 49-year-old’s lawyer George Mesires announced his client was stepping down from the board of BHR (Shanghai) Equity Investment Fund Management Company. BHR is a private equity firm backed by Chinese state-owned financial companies and whose largest shareholder is the state-controlled Bank of China.

Joe Biden, on the sidelines of United Food and Commercial Workers’ presidential forum in Altoona, Iowa, said the younger Biden “could” have continued in the role.

“He has decided that he does not think that is good to do. He has said that he does not like appearance of it,” Biden said. “I’ve never discussed this with my son while I was vice president, or since being vice president, except in the recent past when I was told by his lawyers that he is going to be issuing a statement.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/biden-says-he-will-ban-family-and-anyone-associated-with-me-from-any-foreign-operation

Panicked shoppers fled a South Florida mall on Sunday after believing they heard gunshots, prompting police S.W.A.T. teams and federal agents to lock down the commercial center for several hours — but the authorities later said there was no evidence of a shooting.

A man hit his head on a door as he tried to evacuate the building, according to the police, who said the man was being treated at a local hospital. Several other people had minor injuries, the police said.

A spokesman for Delray Medical Center, where the man was taken, said he could not give out information on the patient’s condition.

The scare happened around 3 p.m. at the Town Center at Boca Raton, an upscale shopping mall about an hour north of Miami and right off Interstate 95. It was the latest unfounded report of a shooting at a public place since mass shootings in Odessa, Tex.; Dayton, Ohio; and El Paso, where a gunman killed 22 people at a Walmart in August.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/13/us/Mall-shooting-boca-Raton.html

The killing comes amid existing tensions between citizens and the Fort Worth Police Department, whose officers have shot seven men since June, all but one of whom died. The current police chief, Ed Kraus, took over in May after the city manager fired the previous police chief after months of friction with city administrators over his management of the department.

Manny Ramirez, president of the Fort Worth Police Officers Association, said the officer who had killed Ms. Jefferson had never been the subject of an investigation and was “very shaken up” by what had happened, as were other officers in Fort Worth’s 1,700-person Police Department.

Officer Ramirez described the shooting as a “tragic mistake” and said officers were mourning the loss of Ms. Jefferson, who he noted had “every right to have a firearm in that house.”

Ms. Jefferson graduated in 2014 from Xavier University of Louisiana, the country’s only black Catholic college, with a degree in biology. She was working from home, selling pharmaceutical equipment, as she studied to apply to medical school.

Mr. Merritt said Ms. Jefferson’s family wanted the officer who shot her to be fired and for another agency, perhaps the sheriff’s department, to launch a criminal investigation into the killing and make a referral to local prosecutors.

“This is a family that is grappling with extreme tragedy,” Mr. Merritt said.

He added that he had spoken with Ms. Jefferson’s nephew, who described the night up until the point when his aunt had approached the window.

“I stopped him there,” Mr. Merritt said.

The street now at the center of the latest policing controversy is a quiet road in a working-class neighborhood made up mostly of black and Latino residents.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/13/us/fort-worth-texas-shooting-jefferson.html


BOCA RATON, Fla. – Police responded to a report of shots fired at the Town Center at Boca Raton mall Sunday afternoon. 

Boca police later confirmed that one man was taken to Delray Medical Center after suffering a trauma-related incident. 

Police said his injuries are not considered life threatening. 

According to authorities, the incident was contained to the food court. Police said the response time was immediate due to officers already being on scene at the mall. 

Some shoppers were evacuated and others placed on lockdown inside the mall as a large police presence gathered outside.  

Police also said some minor injuries were reported as a result of people evacuating the mall. 

Additionally, officers with guns drawn were captured on cellphone video entering the mall. 

Some stores locked their doors and turned off the lights, ushering customers to back rooms. 

While locked inside a store, shopper Rodney Parker captured video of officers with guns drawn, searching through a main mall corridor. 

Officers urged anyone in the mall to shelter in place and wait for police to assist with a safe evacuation.

Boca police said officers SWAT teams were conducting an active search of the area but that there was no active shooter. 

Early Sunday evening, Town Center at Boca Mall released the following statement: 

As this is a police matter, please refer all inquiries to Boca Raton Police Services Department. 

Police urge anyone with information to contact authorities at 561-416-3359.

Copyright 2019 by WPLG Local10.com – All rights reserved.

Source Article from https://www.local10.com/news/florida/palm-beach-county/shoppers-evacuated-from-town-center-mall-reports-of-active-shooter

Hunter Biden — the son of former Vice President Joe Biden, and the figure at the heart of President Donald Trump’s efforts to have Ukraine investigate the former vice president — will step down from the board of a Chinese private equity company he has invested in later this month, his lawyer announced in a statement Sunday.

Trump has alleged, without evidence, that Joe Biden used the power of the vice presidency to help Hunter Biden and his business interests in Ukraine, and has also claimed the former vice president assisted his son in making a large business deal in China. The president’s calls for Ukraine and China to investigate these allegations sparked a political maelstrom that kicked off an impeachment inquiry into Trump.

Joe Biden has maintained he did nothing wrong as vice president, and has argued against all claims his son benefited from his office. Sunday, through his lawyer George Mesires, the younger Biden seemed to acknowledge his business dealings had placed heightened scrutiny on his father, while also defending his actions. In a statement, Mesires also explained how Hunter Biden planned to avoid even the appearance of conflicts of interest going forward.

First, the younger Biden pledged to cease all work with any foreign-owned companies in the event that his father is elected president in 2020, Mesires wrote. And ahead of that eventuality, Hunter Biden has said he will step down from the board of BHR (Shanghai) Equity Investment Fund Management Company, a private equity company backed by Chinese state-owned companies.

Trump and his personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, have claimed that Biden leveraged his father’s position as vice president to earn $1.5 billion from Chinese investors. In actuality, that figure is the amount the company hoped to net in early fundraising rounds — according to the Wall Street Journal, it missed that target.

Hunter Biden claims he has not made any money at all in his dealings with the firm. The statement says that Biden’s board work was unpaid and that his financial stake in BHR, which he acquired in 2017, involved a personal investment of about $420,000. The statement claims that Biden received no return on this investment, and that he had no role in the company’s decision making.

To avoid questions of whether his work creates a conflict of interest for his father, the statement says Biden plans to resign from the BHR board by the end of this month; it does not specify whether he will give up his stake in the firm, however.

Hunter Biden had business dealings in Ukraine, and says there’s nothing wrong with that

Before Trump began to attack the Bidens for Hunter’s work in China, he and key allies like Giuliani were fixated on Hunter Biden’s work with Burisma Holdings Limited, a natural gas producer in Ukraine.

In fact, Biden’s Burisma board position is at the center of the impeachment inquiry into Trump: On July 25, Trump repeatedly asked the newly-elected Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelensky, to investigate the Biden family. In public remarks since, Trump has argued that Hunter Biden enriched himself through the board position, and that then Vice President Joe Biden halted an investigation into one of Burisma’s owners, who faced allegations of money laundering, in order to protect his son.

There is no evidence this is the case. Hunter Biden sat on the Burisma board from April 2014 (while the company was already under investigation) until April 2019. And as vice president, Joe Biden, like much of the international community, advocated for more aggressive anti-corruption investigations in Ukraine.

In the statement released Sunday, Mesires argues Biden was appointed a Burisma board member due to his experience on other boards, says there was nothing wrong with Biden serving on the board, and denies Biden was involved in any illegal activity during his time with Burisma.

“Despite extensive scrutiny, at no time has any law enforcement agency, either domestic or foreign, alleged that Hunter engaged in wrongdoing at any point during his five-year term,” the statement reads.

As Vox’s Matthew Yglesias notes, Biden was on a number of other boards, including the board of Amtrak. Trump and other Republicans have argued Biden did not have the requisite experience to be on any board at all, and that this is somehow further evidence of wrongdoing on Joe Biden’s part. But as Vox’s Sean Collins notes, there is a line between the cushy jobs that get handed out to Washington insiders — especially relatives of politicians, even those who are black sheep within political dynasties — and true corruption.

While it may be the case that, as Yglesias put it, “Hunter Biden’s whole career is being Joe Biden’s son,” as Mesires points out, there is nothing illegal about that.

Trump maintains Hunter and Joe Biden have engaged in misconduct

The fact that Hunter Biden seems to have done little more than rely on his family name to help advance his business interests has not stopped those dealings from becoming a political cudgel on the campaign trail of late. At a rally in Minneapolis on Thursday, for example, Eric Trump — one of the president’s sons — led the crowd into a chant of “Lock him up,” a mantra reminiscent of the famous chants about Hillary Clinton during the 2016 presidential campaign.

Trump has also attempted to connect Hunter Biden’s business dealings in both China and Ukraine in order to posit something of a global conspiracy, and continues to call on both countries to investigate Hunter.

“I would think that if [Ukraine] were honest about it, they’d start a major investigation into the Bidens,” he told reporters at the White House last week. “It’s a very simple answer. They should investigate the Bidens … and by the way, likewise, China should start an investigation into the Bidens. Because what happened to China is just about as bad as what happened with Ukraine.”

This focus has led to House Democrats beginning an impeachment inquiry into the president. But while he has fought that inquiry, Trump has not stopped working to hold up Hunter’s business relationships as evidence of corruption within the Biden family — and thus attack the presidential aspirations of Joe.

These attacks have also served to highlight a Washington culture Trump promised to reform by “draining the swamp.” Although he and his children have also been accused of financially benefiting from his office, in pushing claims of a Biden scandal, Trump, as Vox’s Matt Yglesias writes, speaks to the majority of voters, who are concerned about corruption in Washington:

[T]he kid who trades on family connections to make money is much more a case of business as usual than an extraordinary scandal. “Business as usual in Washington,” however, is normally the subject of scorn in American politics. Any focus on Joe Biden’s son is likely to remind people of at least some of what they don’t like about it.

For the last few weeks, as the impeachment inquiry has intensified, Hunter Biden himself has kept a relatively low-profile. In releasing this statement, and promising to eliminate any apparent or real conflicts of interest, it seems he is taking seriously the public’s distaste for that sort of business as usual, and seems to be taking steps to avoid being at the center of similar situations in the future.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2019/10/13/20912336/hunter-biden-resigns-chinese-firm-impeachment-inquiry-joe-trump

The anonymously sourced reports that former Mayor Rudy Giuliani, President Trump’s global fixer, is under criminal investigation by the very same Federal prosecutor’s office he once led represents a truly Shakespearean arc of irony.

There’s much speculation as to how “America’s Mayor,” the widely admired civic leader who presided over New York City during 9/11, could have been siphoned into Trump’s political undertow — just another sucker duped by an unscrupulous, fabulist administration.

But if the media is to tell the whole story of the rise and demise of America’s Mayor, they need to confess to their role in this grifter’s ascension.

We got a President Trump thanks to a compliant, sensationalist media apparatus that breathed life into his phony self-made billionaire myth, just as we owe them Rudy, who they cast as a post-9/11 American hero.

In politics, narrative is everything.

For it is what is collectively “known” about you before you open your mouth to speak that can help determine if you just hold the stage or get to play on a bigger one.

Successful politicians, with designs on history, perform a kind of pas de deux with reporters, their invisible dance partners who provide them the uplift in public perception that over years shapes the arc of their reputation.

There is a mutual benefit for these waltzing couples, with supportive reporters guaranteed access to the legends they have spun into existence.

Nobody on the planet knows this choreography better than former Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who as the hard-charging U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, made many journalists’ careers by leaking to them tips on where and when suspects were going to be taken into custody.

Through the perp walk this “no finger-prints” manipulation of the media made the army of print and broadcast journalists tools for the prosecution, even as it undermined the defendant’s right to a fair trial and the presumption of innocence.

These sub rosa ties are ones that bind the fourth estate to the prosecution’s narrative throughout the case, unless the pressure of the state and media cabal doesn’t just crush the defendant into submission before there is even a trial.

By the time that the planes crashed into the Twin Towers on Sept. 11, 2001 Giuliani was a master surfer of the wave of public opinion.

In the attacks that played out in lower Manhattan, at the Pentagon, and in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, close to 3,000 people were killed — 343 of them uniformed New York City firemen.

Overnight, the American news media turned Giuliani into a larger than life heroic figure. But the people that were most intimately familiar with the city’s pre-9/11 counter-terrorism preparations knew that it was Giuliani’s failures as Mayor which contributed directly to the horrific body count for the Fire Department of New York (FDNY) that day.

On Feb. 26, 1993, the World Trade Center was attacked with a 1,200-pound bomb concealed in a rental truck that exploded in the basement. The blast killed six, injured 1,000 people, and forced 50,000 to evacuate.

In a detailed after-action report published in 1994 by the FDNY, the inability of firefighters and their officers to communicate over their analog radios that day was flagged as a vital issue that needed to be addressed with some urgency.

In 2008 — when Giuliani was running for president — FDNY Lt. James Wood recounted his experiences during the 1993 World Trade Center bombing in an informational video produced by the International Association of Firefighters (IAFF).

“And I tried to get on the radio to the Chief — this is very important stuff and I couldn’t get out,” he said. “I couldn’t call anybody that could hear me. Nobody responded.”

While the bombing had taken place during Mayor Dinkins tenure as Mayor, Giuliani was sworn in on Jan. 2 1994. As the IAFF recalls it, the critical report about the defective fire radios gathered dust for several years.

It took until March of 2001 for new digital radios to be deployed, but they were withdrawn weeks later after they were deemed responsible for a near life-ending miscue when a firefighter isolated in a basement fire in Queens radioed a “May Day” call for assistance that none of his co-workers heard over their radios. It was only picked up by another fire company miles away.

“The guy caught is caught in a cellar in a private house and he’s calling for help, giving a May Day and the units that are in the immediate area don’t hear him,” said Alexander Santora, a retired FDNY Chief of Safety. “There’s something wrong there with that.”

The new radios were shelved, and the old dysfunctional analogs were put back in service.

The contract for the new radios was a no bid, non-competitive contract that was, as it turned out, just an extension of an existing contract with Motorola, which has a near-monopoly on emergency communications.

According to a report issued by the New York City Comptroller the next month, the Giuliani administration had “willfully” violated “city contracting rules…. endangering firefighters in a reckless bid to buy a new type of hand-held radio that it later had to pull from service,” according to the New York Times.

The Times reported that “the new digital radios were never properly tested before being distributed to firefighters.” As City Comptroller Alan Hevesi documented, “they were purchased through what he described as an improper process that did not allow competing companies to bid for the contract.”

At the time, Michael Wolf, who represented Com-Net Ericsson, a Motorola competitor, told the Times he was stymied in his efforts to even get the city to consider his company’s products.

”If you bypass the bidding regulations, if you don’t have multisource vending, if you just have one guy, one source, that gives you advice, this is the sort of situation that you run into,” he told the newspaper.

Just six months later, FDNY’s bravest faced the doomsday scenario as they sized up the rescue operation in the badly damaged Twin Towers on that clear blue-sky day in September that would take so many of their lives.

They were equipped with the same analog radios that had failed them so badly when the WTC was bombed back in 1993.

As the IAFF video documents and as the 9/11 timeline confirms, at 9:32 am. on Sept. 11, an FDNY Chief ordered all members in the North Tower to the lobby. Even though he repeated the order, not a single company responded.

At 9:59 the WTC South Tower collapsed; and at 10 am the order to abandon the North Tower was repeated. Inside the North Tower were 121 firefighters who never heard that order. They perished when the North Tower collapsed at 10:28 am.

“On 9/11 firefighters went into the North Tower and started ascending the tower, yet they were being called back and they kept going,” said Richard Salem, an attorney who has been representing several of the firefighters’ families who lost loved ones when the North Tower collapsed. “Not one other uniform[ed] officer from any other department [who had functioning radios], perished in that tower other than the FDNY.”

Despicably, Giuliani tried to cover up his own malfeasance by telling the 9/11 Commission that the North Tower firefighters had ignored the radio orders because of “their willingness, the way I describe it to stand their ground.”

Retired FDNY Deputy Chief Jim Riches, who lost his son Jimmy in the North Tower, will tell this tragic story to anyone who will listen. He and other surviving family members shadowed Giuliani during the 2008 primary and carried on a media campaign that was picked up by outlets like the Guardian.

“These radios did not work in the WTC in 1993 and they did not work in 2001,” he told me during a phone interview. “We got the story out there but when the media christened him ‘America’s Mayor,’ it all went away.”

In a recent New Yorker interview, Giuliani was asked if “saying things for Trump, not always being truthful about it — do you ever worry that this will be your legacy? Does that ever worry you in any way?”

He answered: “Absolutely. I am afraid it will be on my gravestone. ‘Rudy Giuliani: He lied for Trump.’ Somehow, I don’t think that will be it. But, if it is, so what do I care? I’ll be dead.”

And then he went on to muse that he was confident that he could make his case to St. Peter.

I think St. Peter will be the least of his worries.

Source Article from https://www.salon.com/2019/10/13/giuliani-was-always-a-fraud-just-ask-the-fdny/

“Hunter makes the following commitment: Under a Biden Administration, Hunter will readily comply with any and all guidelines or standards a President Biden may issue to address purported conflicts of interest, or the appearance of such conflicts, including any restrictions related to overseas business interests,” Mesires said. “In any event, Hunter will agree not to serve on boards of, or work on behalf of, foreign owned companies.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/hunter-biden-will-step-down-from-board-of-chinese-firm-his-attorney-says/2019/10/13/38a45940-edba-11e9-8693-f487e46784aa_story.html