A new section of the border wall is seen in November 2019 south of Donna, Texas. Trump’s 576-mile border wall is expected to cost nearly $20 million per mile, which is more expensive than any other wall under construction in the world.

Verónica G. Cárdenas for NPR


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Verónica G. Cárdenas for NPR

A new section of the border wall is seen in November 2019 south of Donna, Texas. Trump’s 576-mile border wall is expected to cost nearly $20 million per mile, which is more expensive than any other wall under construction in the world.

Verónica G. Cárdenas for NPR

The pricetag for President Trump’s border wall has topped $11 billion — or nearly $20 million a mile — to become the most expensive wall of its kind anywhere in the world.

In a status report last week, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, which is overseeing wall construction, reported that $11 billion has been identified since Trump took office to construct 576 miles of a new “border wall system.”

And the Trump administration is on the hunt for funding to build even more. The Department of Homeland Security has asked the Defense Department to come up with money for 270 additional miles of border wall that DHS says is needed to block drug smuggling routes on federal land. The Pentagon is studying the request, which did not come with a dollar figure.

If the Trump administration completes all of the wall projects it has set in motion, three-quarters of the U.S. southern border would be walled off from Mexico. The government inherited about 650 miles of border structures erected under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama.

“You’re going to have a wall like no other. It’s going to be a powerful, terrific wall,” President Trump said at a rally in Milwaukee last week. “A very big and very powerful border wall is going up at a record speed, and we are fully financed now, isn’t that nice?”

To get an idea why the government is spending so much on Trump’s border wall, look no further than the construction sites down in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas.

On one side of a caliche road, you can see the pedestrian fence that was erected more than a decade ago. At 18 feet, it looks downright puny. On the other side of the road are massive steel bollards topped with an “anti-climbing plate” that rise 30 feet above the cotton fields, surrounded by men in hardhats and heavy equipment.

Bush’s fence averaged $4 million a mile; Trump’s wall costs five times that—$20 million a mile. The overall cost of $11 billion is approaching the price of a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier.

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Customs and Border Protection spokesman Christian Alvarez points out there’s a lot more to Trump’s barrier.

“The border wall system will include a 150-foot enforcement zone, lighting, cameras, other technology, and most importantly an all-weather access road making it easier to respond to (undocumented immigrant) traffic,” Alvarez said. “So it’s not just gonna be the barrier itself.”

There’s more steel — an expensive commodity — in a 30-foot structure. Also, there are powerful floodlights, and every mile will have conduit for electric power and fiber optics that connect the surveillance cameras. Electronic gates that allow passage through the wall cost up to $1 million a piece. And there’s a graded, graveled enforcement zone as wide as a six-lane highway.

“The border wall system will include a 150-foot enforcement zone, lighting, cameras, other technology, and most importantly an all-weather access road making it easier to respond to traffic,” Christian Alvarez, a Border Patrol spokesman, says.

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“The border wall system will include a 150-foot enforcement zone, lighting, cameras, other technology, and most importantly an all-weather access road making it easier to respond to traffic,” Christian Alvarez, a Border Patrol spokesman, says.

Verónica G. Cárdenas for NPR

Trump’s border wall is now the tallest and most expensive in the world, said Reece Jones, a geographer at the University of Hawaii who studies border walls.

“The cost of almost $20 million per mile cost is four times as much as the most expensive other walls being built,” Jones said.

Border walls are much in vogue in the post-Cold War era, he said, and there are now at least 60 around the world. Israel’s wall on the West Bank ranks as the second most expensive — at a paltry $1 million to $5 million a mile.

Congress appropriated funds to build the wall in the Rio Grande Valley, but the government now says it needs more. CBP is dipping into $600 million of the Treasury Forfeiture Fund, which holds money seized in criminal investigations.

Some of the extra money will be used to build the wall higher and 10 miles longer. There have also been “increased project costs due to unforeseen site conditions” — to wit, serious seepage problems where the levee wall crosses a canal that empties into the Rio Grande.

These extra costs came to light in a recent deposition made by Loren Flossman, CBP’s wall chief. He also said the agency needs more money to cover the ballooning expense of acquiring the strips of private property under the wall.

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Taking private land through eminent domain involves multiple agencies, including the Department of Justice, and can lead to lawsuits. The process “significantly increases the hurdles that the government has to face,” said Scott Nicol, a longtime wall opponent with the Sierra Club in the Rio Grande Valley.

“Where you have private property and the government has to go through the courts to get that property, it takes a lot longer and it drives the cost up because you have to pay for that land,” Nicol said. “You have to send DOJ lawyers in to get that land.”

By mid-January, the government had constructed 101 miles of border wall. A hundred miles of this is replacement or secondary wall; only one mile has been built where no barriers previously existed.

Contrary to President Trump’s claims, the wall is not “going up at a record speed.” In fact, construction has fallen months behind schedule because of the complexities of acquiring private land in the South Texas.

The massive wall projects that are currently underway are fully financed, primarily because of the president’s willingness to sidestep a defiant Congress.

Over the last two budget cycles, a Democrat-controlled House authorized $2.75 billion for the wall — much less than Trump asked for. So Trump shut down the government, declared a state of emergency and diverted billions more from the Defense Department to pay for his wall.

Pro-immigrant groups promptly sued, and initially succeeded in getting federal injunctions to block military funding for the wall. But conservative majorities on both the U.S. Supreme Court and the federal appeals court in New Orleans stayed the injunctions and let the administration proceed with construction.

“I mean, with all due respect to the president, he’s obsessed with this wall,” said Rep. Henry Cuellar, a Democrat from Laredo, Texas, who sits on the House Appropriations Committee. “It’s a campaign promise, and what happened to that Mexico was going to pay for this?”

Democrats say they do want border security, but the way to do it is with manpower and technology, not steel and concrete.

“I live on the border. I don’t want to see chaos. I want to see law and order at the border,” Cuellar continued. “But I don’t want to just be spending billions of dollars to those federal contractors.”

The federal contractors are mostly giant construction companies with experience handling complex federal projects.

Then there’s Fisher Sand & Gravel. The North Dakota company snagged a $400 million wall contract after CEO Tommy Fisher went on Fox News — a channel Trump frequently watches — to boast how he could build the wall faster and cheaper out on the California border.

“So that current fence they’re building right now in Calexico, the government has been given basically 300 days to build two miles. With one crew, we can build 15 miles in one year,” Fisher told a Fox interviewer.

Now, the Pentagon inspector general is reviewing the contract. Auditors want to know if the White House steered it to Fisher, who maintains his bid was the best.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/01/19/797319968/-11-billion-and-counting-trumps-border-wall-would-be-the-world-s-most-costly

Sanders’ campaign did say in a recent campaign email that “Biden lauded Paul Ryan for proposing cuts to Social Security and Medicare” — which PolitiFact said Sanders’ campaign got wrong. But there is no evidence that the campaign altered any video.

Biden, however, referenced the fact-checking website in making a muddled claim: “PolitiFact looked at it and they doctored the photo, they doctored the piece and it’s acknowledged that it’s a fake.”

Sanders’ campaign bristled at the criticism from Biden — a serious charge that Democrats recently have begun to level at Republicans, including Donald Trump, for manipulating images and videos on social media. An aide said Sanders might address the criticism head on.

“Joe Biden should be honest with voters and stop trying to doctor his own public record of consistently and repeatedly trying to cut Social Security,” said Sanders Campaign Manager Faiz Shakir in a statement Saturday. “The facts are very clear: Biden not only pushed to cut Social Security — he is on tape proudly bragging about it on multiple occasions.”

Biden’s accusation came after a voter here asked about his record on Social Security — Sanders and his campaign have been attacking the former vice president’s long-standing record of entertaining cuts to the program that are anathema to progressives and many mainstream Democrats.

The criticism on Social Security is a politically damaging attack in Iowa in the closing days of a campaign where Biden is counting on older voters. Until now, Biden’s campaign has responded by pointing out his current plan calls for expanding Social Security.

But the fact that an Iowa voter asked Biden about the issue suggests that Sanders’ criticisms — which are more extensive than the single video Biden referred to and involve multiple remarks by Biden over the years — might have broken through more if Sanders had mentioned it at the Democratic debate Tuesday or put it in paid media, instead of on Twitter and Facebook.

During his remarks Saturday, Biden accurately pointed out that his plan seeks to boost Social Security spending, then demanded Sanders’ campaign issue an apology.

“It is simply a lie, that video that’s going around. And ask anybody in the press, it’s a flat lie. They acknowledged that,” Biden said. “This is a doctored tape. And I think it’s beneath him. And I’m looking for his campaign to come forward and disown it. But they haven’t done it yet.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/01/18/joe-biden-falsely-attacks-bernie-sanders-100811

“There is ample evidence, overwhelming evidence,” House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.), who is also an impeachment manager, said on CBS News’s “Face the Nation.” “Any jury would convict in three minutes flat that the president betrayed his country by breaking the law.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/dershowitz-distances-himself-from-white-house-response-to-democrats-impeachment-charges/2020/01/19/d61d4e42-3ac3-11ea-b90d-5652806c3b3a_story.html

LONDON — A slew of influential Iranian artists, television personalities and sports stars have publicly broken with Tehran after the government denied for days that it shot down a Ukrainian passenger plane last week.

“Apologies for lying to you for 13 years,” Gelareh Jabbari, a host on the state-run Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting TV network, wrote Monday in an Instagram post. The post has since been deleted but was seen by NBC News.

“It was very hard for me to believe our people have been killed, forgive me for believing this late,” added Jabbari, the anchor of the lifestyle show, “Good Morning Iran,” in an apparent reference to the 82 Iranians who were among the 176 passengers and crew members killed.

Iran initially denied that a missile had struck the plane last Wednesday shortly after it took off from Tehran, the capital, only to reverse course on Saturday and admit that it had shot the plane down by mistake.

Many students and middle-class Iranians took to the streets in protest. In Tehran, some students refused to trample on paintings of U.S. and Israeli flags in an apparent rejection of the government’s attempts to deflect blame.

Those in more influential positions used their sway to send a message.

Prominent Iranian movie director Masoud Kimiai and popular actors Navid Mohamadzadeh and Taraneh Alidoosti were among several filmmakers, actors and musicians who announced they were boycotting the upcoming Fajr film and theater festivals in the wake of the plane’s downing.

In a statement picked up by the liberal newspaper Arman Melli, they were among 14 directors, actors and musicians who offered their condolences to those who lost family members.

Taraneh Alidoosti attends “The Salesman” premiere during the 69th annual Cannes Film Festival in May 2016.Neilson Barnard / Getty Images file

According to the newspaper, the statement also criticized the authorities and demanded they explain to the nation the delay in admitting responsibility for shooting the plane down.

Alidoosti, one of Iran’s most popular actors who starred in the Oscar-nominated “The Salesman,” told her 5.8 million followers on Instagram Sunday that “we are not citizens, we are captives, millions of captives.” This Instagram post was also seen by NBC News before being deleted.

A police officer stands guard by debris from an Ukrainian plane that was accidentally shot down after taking off from Tehran on Jan. 8.Ebrahim Noroozi / AP

The government’s handling of the incident has only served to “confirm an existing sense of moral bankruptcy that the Islamic Republic is accused of,” said Afshin Shahi, an associate professor in Middle East politics at Bradford University.

“The Islamic Republic is facing the worst legitimacy crisis in its 40-year history, and the pressures are mounting from every angle,” he said, adding that state repression, censorship and the country’s economic woes in the last three years had created a profound sense of disillusionment. “The gap between the state and society has widened to an extreme extent.”

In a sign of how seriously Iranian authorities are taking the backlash, the country’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei delivered a sermon at this Friday’s prayers, where he praised recent strikes on U.S. bases in Iraq.

The last time Khamenei spoke at the service was eight years ago to mark the annual 10 days of celebrations of the 1979 revolution that overthrew Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.

As for allegations of repression, Alireza Miryousefi, a spokesperson for Iran’s mission to the United Nations, told NBC News that “Iranian citizens are free to express their opinions, as has been witnessed over the last months. And they are free to seek or refuse employment as they wish.”

“It is only natural that in a nation of over 80 million people, there will always be a wide range of opinions,” he added. “In recent days, the government has very clearly and repeatedly apologized in the aftermath of the Ukrainian Airlines tragedy. The government has also pledged a full investigation, and to hold those responsible to account for this mistake.”

According to Human Rights Watch, Iranians have experienced “rampant violations” by security forces and the judiciary. In recent years, it said, authorities have tightened their grip on peaceful activism by detaining lawyers and human rights defenders.

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei delivers Friday prayers sermon, in Tehran, on Jan. 17.Reuters

Over the decades, sporadic unrest has often been met with a harsh response.

In 2009, the government suppressed the so-called Green Movement that drew millions to the streets in the wake of a disputed presidential election.

But protests in Iran have become more frequent and widespread over the past two years. They have coincided with harsh U.S. economic sanctions imposed by President Donald Trump’s administration after he pulled the United States out of the landmark Iran nuclear deal in May 2018.

In November, large-scale protests sparked by a planned increase in gas prices drew mostly working-class demonstrators, who in the past have formed a bastion of support for the regime. During the protests the government shut down the internet for days, making it difficult to discern the scale of the demonstrations and the resulting crackdown.

But Amnesty International reported that more than 300 people had been killed in the protests, and the United States said the toll could have been more than 1,000.

The protests over the airliner, however, are “a watershed moment,” said Hadi Ghaemi, executive director of the New York-based Center for Human Rights in Iran, who said the downing of the Ukrainian airliner had “become a national symbol of what Iranians suffer daily from government forces and the bureaucracy.”

“People are completely fed up with the political system and the repression and especially in this case, the lies, cover-up and incompetence of their government,” said Ghaemi, whose nonprofit seeks to document rights abuses in Iran.

The artistic boycott of the Fajr festivals and the actor Alidoosti’s comments Sunday were examples of an “unprecedented” level of consensus among members of the artistic community in Iran who are disillusioned and frustrated with the Iranian state, said Shahi, the professor.

Traditionally, critics in Iran have made a distinction between more moderate members of the establishment and hard-liners, Shahi said. But this appears to be changing.

“What is interesting is that they have gone beyond the factional politics of the Islamic Republic and criticize the entirety of the system,” Shahi said.

And then there are those who have defected in recent months.

Kimia Alizadeh, 21, who became the only woman from Iran to win an Olympic medal when she took bronze in taekwondo at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, posted a scathing attack on Instagram on Saturday on the “hypocrisy” of Iran’s administration. She implied in the post that she had left the country but did not say where.

In December, Iran’s Chess Federation said top-rated champion Alireza Firouzja had decided not to play for Iran over its informal ban on competing against Israeli players. And three months earlier, the International Judo Federation said Iranian judoka Saeid Mollaei had refused to return home over fears for his safety.

Bronze medalist Iran’s Saeid Mollaei celebrates on the podium in the mens 81kg category at the World Judo Championships in Budapest on in 2017. Peter Kohalmi / AFP via Getty Images file

Chris Doyle, the director of the Council for Arab-British Understanding, said that it wasn’t just well-known Iranians who had defected and that the brain drain was a well-established trend in Iran and across the Middle East.

“These tend to be people such as doctors and lawyers on the wealthier end of the spectrum with the ability to do so,” he said.

But working-class Iranians have also voiced their discontent, and Shahi said many of them were also leaving, which he described as “muscle drain.”

“Iran is suffering from the politics of hopelessness,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/influential-iranians-break-ranks-state-after-ukrainian-jet-downing-n1117721

An incident during which a Baltimore police officer was assaulted as he tried to make an arrest has polarized local law enforcement.

Video surfaced late Friday night of a city police officer being kicked and punched by a crowd of people as he struggled with a suspect on the ground. The officer was not seriously injured during the attack, and the crowd eventually dispersed.

The video sparked condemnation from Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan and other local leaders.

“Crime in Baltimore is out of control,” said Sgt. Mike Mancuso, president of Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 3. “[The incident is] indicative of a broken city that is being led by people who have absolutely no real-time crime plan or, it seems, even know how to formulate one.”

Mancuso laid blame for the attack on the city’s current elected leadership, which he characterized as asleep at the wheel when it comes to combating violent crime in the city.

“Until new leadership is elected and appointed, this lack of respect for the law and those who enforce it will continue and deepen,” he said.

The union boss’s words triggered a sharp rebuttal from the city’s state’s attorney, Marilyn Mosby, who accused the union of “fanning the very flames they then call on me to put out,” according to Fox News.

Violent crime is on the rise in Baltimore, where the per-capita murder rate record was recently broken. January has been an especially violent month for the city. Twelve people were shot during eight separate shootings last Saturday.

The city’s mayor said police were still searching for the people seen stomping on the officer in Friday night’s attack.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/video-crowd-stomps-on-baltimore-police-officer-during-attempted-arrest

Joe Biden for the first time on Saturday addressed criticism from Senator Bernie Sanders’ campaign over the former vice president’s record on Social Security. Biden criticized the Sanders campaign for pushing a video he describes as “doctored” that appears to show Biden agreeing with former Republican Speaker of the House Paul Ryan’s stance on privatizing the program. 

Speaking at a town hall in Indianola, Iowa, on Saturday, Biden fielded a question about his stance on Social Security from an audience member.

“Let’s get the record straight. I’m not gonna blame anybody, but, well let me just say the facts: There’s a little doctored video going around … put out by one of Bernie’s people … saying that I agreed with Paul Ryan, the former vice presidential candidate, about wanting to privatize Social Security,” Biden said.

Biden noted that Politifact determined the video takes his comments out of context and said his campaign will show the full video.

“It is simply a lie, that video that is going around,” Biden also said. “And ask anybody in the press. It’s a flat lie. They’ve acknowledged that. This is a doctored tape. And I think it’s beneath him, and I’m looking for his campaign to come forward and disown it.”

At issue is a video of Biden speaking at the Brookings Institution in April 2018 that’s been widely shard by Sanders supporters and campaign staffers. The 20-second-long clip shows Biden apparently saying Ryan was “correct” about Social Security.

“Paul Ryan was correct. When he did the tax code, what’s the first thing he decided we have to go after? Social Security and Medicare,” Biden says at the beginning of the clip. “Now, we need to do something about Social Security and Medicare. That’s the only way you can find room to pay for it.”

The Politifact article Biden cited on Saturday labeled the claim that he was agreeing with Ryan false. Biden’s campaign said the former vice president was in fact mocking Ryan in those comments. 

The article also points to what Biden said after that 20-second clip, when he stated, “We need a pro-growth, progressive tax code that treats workers as job creators, as well, not just investors; that gets rid of unprotective loopholes like stepped-up basis; and it raises enough revenue to make sure that the Social Security and Medicare can stay.”

It is worth noting that despite Biden’s repeated use of the words “doctored” and “fake,” the video is neither of those things. While the former vice president’s comments were taken completely out of context and the Sanders campaign’s framing of his words is misleading, the 20-second-video itself is real and unaltered.

The Sanders campaign online for weeks now has been prodding Biden into this fight over his record on Social Security, as they point to numerous videos as evidence the former Delaware senator was open to making cuts to the program in order to balance the federal budget.

“I tried with Senator Grassley back in the ’80s to freeze all government spending, including Social Security — including everything!” Biden says dramatically on the Senate floor in a 1995 C-SPAN video.

Another video, shared recently by a Sanders campaign speechwriter, shows Biden on Meet the Press in 2008 while running for president saying he would “absolutely” look at ways to tinker with the costs of Social Security like raising the retirement age.

After Biden’s campaign-trail response on Saturday, the Sanders campaign was quick to release a statement saying Biden should “stop trying to doctor his own public record of consistently and repeatedly trying to cut Social Security.”   

“The facts are very clear: Biden not only pushed to cut Social Security — he is on tape proudly bragging about it on multiple occasions,” Sanders campaign manager Faiz Shakir said in a statement.

The Sanders campaign has been making a concerted effort in the lead up to the Iowa caucuses to try to chip away at Biden’s support among senior citizens. Nearly 40% of all Democratic voters over the age of 65 say Biden is their first choice, according to CBS News polling.   

Biden also took the opportunity on Saturday to lay out his proposal for Social Security.

“I have been a gigantic supporter of Social Security from the beginning,” Biden said before breaking down his plan.

“What I’m proposing, and we’ll get it done, is that everybody making over $400,000 will have to pay the same percentage you’re paying if you’re making $60,000,” Biden said. Doing so, according to Biden will allow for larger to payouts to the “super elderly,” prevent massive drops in payouts to someone whose spouse has died and make Social Security solvent for younger generations. 

Cara Korte contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/biden-accuses-sanders-campaign-of-sharing-doctored-video-of-him-attacking-social-security-2020-01-18/

“I do not know if Newnan had looked at itself this closely before now,” said Robert Hancock, a lawyer and real estate consultant who, as president of Newnan’s Artist in Residence program, helped commission the installation.

Newnan was a hospital town that treated soldiers on both sides of the Civil War. The town found its prosperity, in part, in the cotton industry, and at one point, Newnan was one of the wealthiest towns per capita in the United States.

When Mr. Hancock moved to town in 1986 there were about 12,000 people. The population today is pushing 40,000, with the biggest growth spurt occurring between 2000 and 2010. In that decade alone, the population doubled.

White people still make up more than half the population, but the newcomers are largely from other backgrounds. The share of Hispanics has more than doubled, while the Asian population, although still small, grew more than fivefold between 2000 and 2017. In that same period, the black population dropped from about 42 percent of the population to 28 percent.

The sheer size of the town’s growth has led some to bristle. “People are wrestling with the numbers, asking themselves, ‘Is this going to make us more like the big city we don’t like?’ and ‘How can we keep this small-town feeling?’” said Cynthia Jenkins, the first African-American woman elected to the City Council, in 2003. “If there are less people in the grocery store I recognize, then are we getting too big?”

“Seeing Newnan,” as the art installation is called, was created by the photographer Mary Beth Meehan. Mr. Hancock and Chad Davidson, director of the University of West Georgia’s School of the Arts, were in Providence, R.I., for an art conference in 2015 when they saw one of Ms. Meehan’s installations.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/19/us/newnan-art-georgia-race.html

Chat with us in Facebook Messenger. Find out what’s happening in the world as it unfolds.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/01/19/politics/how-to-watch-impeachment-trial/index.html

Donald Trump’s legal team has delivered a fiery response to impeachment summons from the Senate, calling the two articles passed by the House “a dangerous attack on the right of the American people to freely choose their president”.

“This is a brazen and unlawful attempt to overturn the results of the 2016 election and interfere with the 2020 election, now just months away,” the lawyers said on Saturday, also claiming the charges against the president were invalid as they did not concern a crime.

Impeachment is a political process, not a criminal one. Under the US constitution, the president can be removed if found guilty of whatever lawmakers consider to be “high crimes and misdemeanours”. Trump is charged with abusing his power and obstructing Congress.

On Saturday, House impeachment managers outlined their view of the case against Trump in a 111-page legal brief of their own. It pulls together private and public testimony of a dozen witnesses, ambassadors and national security officials at high levels of government.

In a joint statement, the seven managers led by the Democratic intelligence committee chair Adam Schiff said their case was “simple, the facts are indisputable, and the evidence is overwhelming: President Trump abused the power of his office to solicit foreign interference in our elections for his own personal political gain, thereby jeopardising our national security, the integrity of our elections, and our democracy”.

“And when the president got caught, he tried to cover it up by obstructing the House’s investigation into his misconduct.”

Trump’s legal team, led by White House counsel Pat Cipollone and Trump personal lawyer Jay Sekulow, is challenging the impeachment on both procedural and constitutional grounds, claiming Trump has been mistreated by House Democrats and that he did nothing wrong.

Trump will file a more detailed legal brief on Monday, and the House will be able to respond to the Trump filing on Tuesday.

The case hinges on a 25 July phone call with Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelenskiy, in which Trump asked his counterpart to do him a “favour” and investigate both a conspiracy theory concerning election interference and ties between former vice-president Joe Biden and his son, Hunter Biden, and the eastern European country.

Biden remains a possible Democratic candidate for president. At the time of the Ukraine call, Trump was withholding from Kyiv nearly $400m of military aid and the prospect of a White House meeting for Zelenskiy.

Trump’s legal team for the Senate trial, starting on Tuesday,will also include Ken Starr, whose investigation led to the impeachment of Bill Clinton, and former Harvard professor, Alan Dershowitz.

Both have been fixtures on Fox News. Some in the administration have echoed warnings from Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell that the lawyers must be sensitive to staid Senate traditions and not use the sharp rhetoric exhibited during House proceedings last year.

Many observers suggest the slow nature of the trial will prove a turnoff to the American public, boosting Trump’s hopes of surviving unscathed. Others report that the president wants to add fire and TV knowhow to the team mounting his defence.

White House lawyers succeeded in blocking Trump from adding House Republicans to his team, the AP reported, but also advised against picking Dershowitz. They are concerned about the professor’s association with Jeffrey Epstein, the financier who killed himself in a New York jail last summer while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.

Dershowitz has said he will deliver constitutional arguments defending Trump from allegations he abused his power and obstructed Congress.

Former New York mayor and current Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani told the AP the president had a “top-notch” team and insisted he was not disappointed to be excluded. Giuliani, who many in the White House blame for leading Trump to impeachment over Ukraine, said his focus would be on being a potential witness.

On Friday, House Democrats released documents, text messages, audio recordings and photos turned over by Lev Parnas, a Giuliani associate indicted on campaign finance charges. The release included photos of the Soviet-born businessman posing with Giuliani, Trump and Donald Trump Jr.



Rudy Giuliani, left, with Lev Parnas at the Trump Hotel in Washington in September. Photograph: Reuters Staff/Reuters

Messages between Parnas and a staffer for Devin Nunes, a congressman and Trump ally, were also released. Parnas appeared to be connecting the staffer to Ukrainian officials who pushed unfounded corruption allegations against the Bidens.

The documents also raised more questions about the security of Marie Yovanovitch, a former ambassador to Ukraine who testified in House impeachment proceedings. An unidentified individual with a Belgian country code appeared to describe Yovanovitch’s movements.

The document release followed the announcement by the Government Accountability Office that the White House violated federal law by withholding congressionally approved security aid.

The White House said it did not have to follow decisions by the GAO because it is an arm of Congress. White House officials noted that Trump did send the aid to Kyiv.

But the GAO report and Parnas documents intensified the pressure senators have been under to call more witnesses for the trial. The White House has instructed officials to disregard subpoenas seeking testimony or information.

On Saturday Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, a moderate Republican wooed by Democrats, told reporters she was comfortable waiting to decide if more information was needed until after hearing arguments from House managers and attorneys for Trump and questions from other senators.

Trump seems certain to survive the Senate trial, as a two-thirds majority will be needed to convict and remove him and Republicans remain in line behind him.

In their statement on Saturday, the House impeachment managers said senators “must accept and fulfil the responsibility placed on them by the framers of our constitution and the oaths they have just taken to do impartial justice. They must conduct a fair trial – fair to the president and fair to the American people”.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/jan/18/donald-trump-lawyers-senate-impeachment-democrats-dershowitz-giuliani

As the top Republican on the House Intelligence Committee, Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Tulare) presented a fiery defense of President Trump during impeachment hearings last month, angrily accusing Democrats of ginning up a false narrative about the president’s efforts to get Ukraine to dig up dirt on a political rival.

But newly released text messages suggest Nunes’ staff was aware of and involved in portions of the scheme, casting a new light on his combative defense.

Documents released by the House committee show repeated contact between Lev Parnas, who worked with Trump’s personal attorney Rudolph W. Giuliani, and Derek Harvey, an aide to Nunes on the committee, about meetings with Ukrainian prosecutors to get damaging information about Democrat Joe Biden, who is running for president, and about a debunked theory about Ukrainian involvement in the 2016 U.S. election.

The messages between Parnas, who functioned as Giuliani’s emissary to Ukrainian officials, and Harvey indicate Nunes’ office was aware of the back-channel White House effort that has led to Trump’s impeachment on charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.

Parnas, who is facing federal campaign finance violation charges in New York, has publicly turned on Trump and Giuliani in recent weeks. He has provided documents to the House committee and given explosive media interviews as the Senate prepares to determine whether to remove Trump from office. The trial will begin in earnest on Tuesday.

In his interviews, Parnas has sought to tie Nunes closely to the attempt to unearth dirt on Biden and to gather information on an unsubstantiated theory promoted by Russia — but refuted by the U.S. intelligence community — that it was Ukraine, not Russia, who interfered in the 2016 presidential election.

A spokesman for Nunes did not return an email seeking comment Saturday.

During the House impeachment inquiry, Nunes accused Democrats of coordinating with the still-anonymous whistle-blower who first alleged that Trump had blocked nearly $400 million in military aid to Ukraine until newly elected Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky publicly committed to announcing an investigation of Biden and his son Hunter, who had served on the board of a Ukrainian energy company while Biden was vice president, and the false claims about 2016.

The text messages appear to show that Parnas sought to set up Skype and FaceTime calls last spring between Harvey and Ukrainian officials who were assisting Giuliani in his efforts to gather negative information on Biden and to oust the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitch, who was seen as an obstacle.

It is unclear from the messages whether the calls took place, but Parnas’ attorney has said they did. One from April 3 shows Harvey grumbling that Parnas was providing information to John Solomon, a former columnist for The Hill, rather than to him.

“Any documents for us or are you going to keep working through Solomon?” Harvey wrote.

Eight days later, Solomon published the first in a series of articles promoting the conspiracy theory that Ukraine had interfered in the U.S. election, that Biden’s son had worked for a corrupt Ukrainian company, and a story that Yovanovitch gave Ukrainian officials a list of people not to investigate. The named source in that article has since recanted his accusation.

Other messages show Parnas and Harvey arranging to meet with Giuliani and Solomon at the Trump International Hotel in Washington on May 7, the day after the U.S. Embassy in Kiev announced Yovanovitch had been recalled and just days before Parnas and Giuliani were scheduled to meet with members of Zelensky’s new Cabinet in Ukraine.

Parnas’ attorney had previously told CNBC that Harvey initially planned to interview the Ukrainian officials in person but scrapped the trip in favor of Skype interviews after realizing that the travel would need to be approved by Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Burbank), who heads the House Intelligence Committee and who had not signed off on investigations involving Ukraine.

Parnas told MSNBC in an interview aired this week that he was told to work with Harvey because Nunes “couldn’t be in a spotlight” because of an ethics investigation.

In 2017 the House Ethics Committee investigated whether Nunes had improperly disclosed classified information during the Republican-led investigation into what the Trump campaign knew about Russian attempts to interfere in the 2016 election.

The GOP-led Ethics Committee cleared Nunes of the allegations, and the investigation was dropped in December 2017, long before Harvey and Parnas began texting.

Harvey previously served on Trump’s National Security Council as a special assistant to the president and senior director for the Middle East.

Nunes’ apparent role on the margins of the Ukraine saga has been slow to emerge.

Last month, Democrats on the House Intelligence Committee released a report that included records showing several phone calls between Nunes and either Parnas or Giuliani in early 2019, including a call with Parnas that lasted nearly nine minutes.

House Republicans criticized Democrats for pointing out the calls in their report, saying it was done to give the impression that Nunes had done something wrong.

Nunes brushed aside the suggestion, saying he spoke to Giuliani about special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s investigation, which was winding down at the time. He said he had no recollection of speaking to Parnas, and while he needed to check his records, it “seems very unlikely I will be taking calls from random people.”

“You know, it’s possible,” Nunes told Fox News. “I haven’t gone through my phone records. I don’t really recall that name.”

But last week, shortly before Parnas told MSNBC that he and Nunes had spoken on the phone and met in person but don’t “have too much of a relationship,” Nunes said he did recall a phone call with Parnas.

“I checked it with my records, and it was very clear — I remember that call, which was very odd, random, talking about random things, and I said, ‘Great,’ you know, ‘Talk to my staff,’ and boom, boom, boom,” Nunes told Fox News on Wednesday. “That’s just normal operating procedure.”

Following that interview, Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Torrance) announced on Twitter that Nunes had threatened him with a lawsuit in December unless he apologized for saying Nunes had conspired with Parnas. Lieu included both the original letter from Nunes’ lawyer and Lieu’s Jan. 16 letter in response.

“I welcome any lawsuit from your client and look forward to taking discovery of Congressman Nunes,” Lieu wrote. “Or, you can take your letter and shove it.”

Nunes has filed several lawsuits in the last year against reporters whose coverage he did not like, and against Twitter users who were critical of him during the 2016 election, including users pretending to be his mother and his cow. Most of the cases are still pending.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2020-01-18/text-messages-point-to-devin-nunes-in-scheme-at-heart-of-trump-impeachment

INDIANOLA, Iowa — Former Vice President Joe Biden demanded an apology Saturday from the Bernie Sanders presidential campaign for circulating what he called a “doctored” video misconstruing his record on Social Security.

Biden, a Democratic rival for the nomination, responded to a question from a woman who told him she received a call from a campaign questioning Biden’s position on Social Security and Medicare. He told an audience that “Bernie’s people” had circulated a video that falsely suggested he agreed in 2018 with then-House Speaker Paul Ryan’s position to dismantle the benefits.

“But it is simply a lie that video that is going around, and ask anybody in the press, it’s a flat lie. They’ve acknowledged that this is a doctored tape,” Biden said before pointing to a PolitiFact article outlining falsehoods from the Sanders campaign. “And I think it’s beneath and I’m looking for his campaign to come forward and disown it, but they haven’t done it yet.”

The video in question was posted by an unverified Twitter user and retweeted earlier this month by a senior Sanders campaign adviser. The video clipped remarks Biden made at the Brookings Institute in April 2018, showing Biden saying Ryan was “correct” in trying to dismantle Social Security, a remark his campaign says he made sarcastically.

“The Sanders campaign has pushed a video and transcript that were intentionally, deceptively edited to make it seem like Vice President Biden was praising and agreeing with Paul Ryan, when it is clear he was doing the exact opposite,” a Biden campaign official said in a statement. “In the speech, Biden was reiterating his core belief that we need to undo Trump’s tax cuts for the super wealthy and replace them with a tax code that rewards work, not just wealth.”

Sanders campaign officials have also posted videos, mainly from Biden’s time in the Senate, in which Biden discusses contemporaneous proposals that would have affected Social Security benefits. They have sought to contrast Biden’s history on the issue with Sanders’ and cast the Vermont senator as an unflinching defender of the program.

In response to Biden’s demand for an apology, Sanders pushed back in a statement and told Biden to stop “dodging questions about his record.”

“Joe Biden should be honest with voters and stop trying to doctor his own public record of consistently and repeatedly trying to cut Social Security. The facts are very clear: Biden not only pushed to cut Social Security — he is on tape proudly bragging about it on multiple occasions,” Sanders said.

His campaign also immediately blasted out a memo titled “Joe Biden’s Record on Social Security,” listing video, statements and quotes of Biden talking about the program far as 1984.

Biden’s response came after numerous Sanders campaign advisers and the candidate himself had launched attacks against the former vice president’s record on Social Security.

In recent weeks, Sanders has continued to bring attention to Biden’s Iraq war vote and long political record — which he described as “baggage”— in an effort to dismantle Biden’s argument that he’s ready to be this era’s Democratic leader.

Moments before the Biden campaign official’s statement was released, Biden warned an Exeter, New Hampshire, crowd that Democratic infighting would only hurt the party’s chances of winning an election against President Donald Trump.

“I think the best thing for all Democratic candidates, and what we’re going to do in our campaign as you heard me tonight, you didn’t hear me say a word about any of the other candidates. We are going to focus on the issues of the working families of America and bring them together.”

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2020-election/biden-demands-apology-sanders-over-doctored-video-social-security-n1118481

GRANTSVILLE — A neighborhood is heartbroken and in shock after a Friday night shooting inside a Grantsville home left a family shattered with four dead, including three children.

To Laurie Bahe, a neighbor of 25 years in the tight-knit and quiet street, the crime scene police are investigating as a homicide is unimaginable.

“I pray for the family that it happened to and the people that survived that are going to have a really difficult time with it,” Bahe said, crying. “They were a really, really nice family. It’s just shocking that it happened.”

Police have yet to identify those who were killed — an adult female, two juvenile females and one juvenile boy — but Bahe said they were a “happy” and “outgoing” family that never missed a single neighborhood block party.

“I’m just in shock that it happened,” she said.

Police have confirmed all victims found dead in the 93 Eastmoor Drive home were all related — as was an adult male who was hospitalized with injuries and a juvenile suspect who has been taken into custody.

Bahe said she knew the family for at least 10 years — and she knew the mother as someone who “took very great pride in her gardening” and wasn’t angered when her neighbor’s cows snuck under the fence to eat her grapes. Bahe said the children were smart and sweet, helped neighbors with yard work, and helped return dogs when they ran away.

“I feel sorry for the son, all of them, the dad,” Bahe said, her voice cracking as she spoke of a college-age child who was not living at the home. “It’s going to be devastating for him and his dad.”

Police responded to the scene Friday night after a person, who is unrelated to the family, called 911 after coming to the house. That person drove an injured adult victim believed to be the father of the family and the suspected shooter, who is under the age of 18, to the hospital, where the teen was taken into custody, said Grantsville Police Cpl. Rhonda Fields.

There are no previous reports of police incidents or criminal history at the home, Fields said.

As of Saturday night, police still hadn’t released the names of the victims or who was arrested, but local social media pages have swelled with outpouring of support for a family member — the eldest son who is a student at Utah Valley University — who posted on Facebook he couldn’t get a hold of his family after he learned about the shooting on social media.

“Anyone in Grantsville know (what) is going on??? I can’t get ahold of my family and they live on the street where the shooting happened,” he wrote on Facebook.

KSL is not identifying him until police release information on the family.

As dozens of commenters said they were praying for him, he posted a comment saying dispatchers didn’t give him any information and he “pretty much had to piece it together.”

Several hours later, the son posted he was with his father who was hospitalized in stable condition, thanking the community for their prayers and support.

“I just want to thank you all for your prayers and your support toward me and my dad,” he wrote. “All I can ask is for your continued support. Seriously, thank you.”

Throughout the day Saturday, shockwaves of heartache reverberated throughout the tight-knit Tooele County community.

“There are no words to describe our heartbreak and grief,” Jason Killian, a stake president with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, said in a statement. “We are devastated and so deeply saddened by what has occurred. We love this family, and will support them and the rest of our small community as we mourn together.”

He asked for “consideration and sensitivity” as community members express their condolences.

“We pray for this family and each member of our close community, and invite any who may be struggling to reach out to us for spiritual counseling, and to seek care from mental health professionals for any help they may need,” President Killian said.

The Tooele School District offered condolences to the family on Twitter Saturday afternoon, noting the district’s crisis team has been working to ensure students and staff will have counseling services in the Grantsville area and in schools throughout the district on Tuesday.

“We are deeply saddened and shocked to hear of the events that occurred in Grantsville last night,” the district tweeted. “We want to express our sincere condolences to those who have been impacted. It’s important that we stand together to care & support each other through this difficult time.”

A home on Eastmoor Drive in Grantsville is pictured on Saturday, Jan. 18, 2020, the morning after four people, including three children, were killed and another wounded in a shooting. (Photo: Spenser Heaps, KSL)

Patty Deakin-Daley, the administrator of the widely used community Facebook page Tooele County 411, in a post Saturday morning urged community members to refrain from posting about the shooting on the page, noting the “eldest child of the family learned of his family’s tragedy on Facebook, something no one should ever have to do.”

“Please comment your love, support, condolences and lifting messages here to support him, and to help him get through unimaginable pain and grief,” Deakin-Daley wrote. “We are a loving, kind, and supportive community … Let us rally around this young man and his dad.”

Hundreds commented on the post, expressing thoughts, prayers and love for the family.

Deakin-Daley told the Deseret News there has been a wave of Tooele County residents asking her ways they can help, offering to bring the father and son meals, a place to stay so they don’t have to return to the home, and help with funeral expenses. Deakin-Daley started a Facebook fundraiser to raise money for the family.

“The outpouring is definitely strong, and I would expect nothing less from this community,” Deakin-Daley said. “This community is the kindest most compassionate place I’ve ever been.”

By Saturday morning, all trace of a crime scene had been cleared from the Grantsville neighborhood and the home where police worked through the night. No crime scene tape or police barricades were visible outside the home. Nothing seemed amiss except for a set of blinds leaning askew against the inside of the front window. A white van with stickers on the back window of a seven-member stick figure family sat in the home’s driveway.

Related Stories

Katie McKellar

Source Article from https://www.ksl.com/article/46706058/devastating-grantsville-shooting-leaves-community-in-shock

INDIANOLA, Iowa — Former Vice President Joe Biden demanded an apology Saturday from the Bernie Sanders presidential campaign for circulating what he called a “doctored” video misconstruing his record on Social Security.

Biden, a Democratic rival for the nomination, responded to a question from a woman who told him she received a call from a campaign questioning Biden’s position on Social Security and Medicare. He told an audience that “Bernie’s people” had circulated a video that falsely suggested he agreed in 2018 with then-House Speaker Paul Ryan’s position to dismantle the benefits.

“But it is simply a lie that video that is going around, and ask anybody in the press, it’s a flat lie. They’ve acknowledged that this is a doctored tape,” Biden said before pointing to a PolitiFact article outlining falsehoods from the Sanders campaign. “And I think it’s beneath and I’m looking for his campaign to come forward and disown it, but they haven’t done it yet.”

The video in question was posted by an unverified Twitter user and retweeted earlier this month by a senior Sanders campaign adviser. The video clipped remarks Biden made at the Brookings Institute in April 2018, showing Biden saying Ryan was “correct” in trying to dismantle Social Security, a remark his campaign says he made sarcastically.

“The Sanders campaign has pushed a video and transcript that were intentionally, deceptively edited to make it seem like Vice President Biden was praising and agreeing with Paul Ryan, when it is clear he was doing the exact opposite,” a Biden campaign official said in a statement. “In the speech, Biden was reiterating his core belief that we need to undo Trump’s tax cuts for the super wealthy and replace them with a tax code that rewards work, not just wealth.”

Sanders campaign officials have also posted videos, mainly from Biden’s time in the Senate, in which Biden discusses contemporaneous proposals that would have affected Social Security benefits. They have sought to contrast Biden’s history on the issue with Sanders’ and cast the Vermont senator as an unflinching defender of the program.

In response to Biden’s demand for an apology, Sanders pushed back in a statement and told Biden to stop “dodging questions about his record.”

“Joe Biden should be honest with voters and stop trying to doctor his own public record of consistently and repeatedly trying to cut Social Security. The facts are very clear: Biden not only pushed to cut Social Security — he is on tape proudly bragging about it on multiple occasions,” Sanders said.

His campaign also immediately blasted out a memo titled “Joe Biden’s Record on Social Security,” listing video, statements and quotes of Biden talking about the program far as 1984.

Biden’s response came after numerous Sanders campaign advisers and the candidate himself had launched attacks against the former vice president’s record on Social Security.

In recent weeks, Sanders has continued to bring attention to Biden’s Iraq war vote and long political record — which he described as “baggage”— in an effort to dismantle Biden’s argument that he’s ready to be this era’s Democratic leader.

Moments before the Biden campaign official’s statement was released, Biden warned an Exeter, New Hampshire, crowd that Democratic infighting would only hurt the party’s chances of winning an election against President Donald Trump.

“I think the best thing for all Democratic candidates, and what we’re going to do in our campaign as you heard me tonight, you didn’t hear me say a word about any of the other candidates. We are going to focus on the issues of the working families of America and bring them together.”

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2020-election/biden-demands-apology-sanders-over-doctored-video-social-security-n1118481

GRANTSVILLE — A neighborhood is heartbroken and in shock after a Friday night shooting inside a Grantsville home left a family shattered with four dead, including three children.

To Laurie Bahe, a neighbor of 25 years in the tight-knit and quiet street, the crime scene police are investigating as a homicide is unimaginable.

“I pray for the family that it happened to and the people that survived that are going to have a really difficult time with it,” Bahe said, crying. “They were a really, really nice family. It’s just shocking that it happened.”

Police have yet to identify those who were killed — an adult female, two juvenile females and one juvenile boy — but Bahe said they were a “happy” and “outgoing” family that never missed a single neighborhood block party.

“I’m just in shock that it happened,” she said.

Police have confirmed all victims found dead in the 93 Eastmoor Drive home were all related — as was an adult male who was hospitalized with injuries and a juvenile suspect who has been taken into custody.

Bahe said she knew the family for at least 10 years — and she knew the mother as someone who “took very great pride in her gardening” and wasn’t angered when her neighbor’s cows snuck under the fence to eat her grapes. Bahe said the children were smart and sweet, helped neighbors with yard work, and helped return dogs when they ran away.

“I feel sorry for the son, all of them, the dad,” Bahe said, her voice cracking as she spoke of a college-age child who was not living at the home. “It’s going to be devastating for him and his dad.”

Police responded to the scene Friday night after a person, who is unrelated to the family, called 911 after coming to the house. That person drove an injured adult victim believed to be the father of the family and the suspected shooter, who is under the age of 18, to the hospital, where the teen was taken into custody, said Grantsville Police Cpl. Rhonda Fields.

There are no previous reports of police incidents or criminal history at the home, Fields said.

As of Saturday night, police still hadn’t released the names of the victims or who was arrested, but local social media pages have swelled with outpouring of support for a family member — the eldest son who is a student at Utah Valley University — who posted on Facebook he couldn’t get a hold of his family after he learned about the shooting on social media.

“Anyone in Grantsville know (what) is going on??? I can’t get ahold of my family and they live on the street where the shooting happened,” he wrote on Facebook.

KSL is not identifying him until police release information on the family.

As dozens of commenters said they were praying for him, he posted a comment saying dispatchers didn’t give him any information and he “pretty much had to piece it together.”

Several hours later, the son posted he was with his father who was hospitalized in stable condition, thanking the community for their prayers and support.

“I just want to thank you all for your prayers and your support toward me and my dad,” he wrote. “All I can ask is for your continued support. Seriously, thank you.”

Throughout the day Saturday, shockwaves of heartache reverberated throughout the tight-knit Tooele County community.

“There are no words to describe our heartbreak and grief,” Jason Killian, a stake president with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, said in a statement. “We are devastated and so deeply saddened by what has occurred. We love this family, and will support them and the rest of our small community as we mourn together.”

He asked for “consideration and sensitivity” as community members express their condolences.

“We pray for this family and each member of our close community, and invite any who may be struggling to reach out to us for spiritual counseling, and to seek care from mental health professionals for any help they may need,” President Killian said.

The Tooele School District offered condolences to the family on Twitter Saturday afternoon, noting the district’s crisis team has been working to ensure students and staff will have counseling services in the Grantsville area and in schools throughout the district on Tuesday.

“We are deeply saddened and shocked to hear of the events that occurred in Grantsville last night,” the district tweeted. “We want to express our sincere condolences to those who have been impacted. It’s important that we stand together to care & support each other through this difficult time.”

A home on Eastmoor Drive in Grantsville is pictured on Saturday, Jan. 18, 2020, the morning after four people, including three children, were killed and another wounded in a shooting. (Photo: Spenser Heaps, KSL)

Patty Deakin-Daley, the administrator of the widely used community Facebook page Tooele County 411, in a post Saturday morning urged community members to refrain from posting about the shooting on the page, noting the “eldest child of the family learned of his family’s tragedy on Facebook, something no one should ever have to do.”

“Please comment your love, support, condolences and lifting messages here to support him, and to help him get through unimaginable pain and grief,” Deakin-Daley wrote. “We are a loving, kind, and supportive community … Let us rally around this young man and his dad.”

Hundreds commented on the post, expressing thoughts, prayers and love for the family.

Deakin-Daley told the Deseret News there has been a wave of Tooele County residents asking her ways they can help, offering to bring the father and son meals, a place to stay so they don’t have to return to the home, and help with funeral expenses. Deakin-Daley started a Facebook fundraiser to raise money for the family.

“The outpouring is definitely strong, and I would expect nothing less from this community,” Deakin-Daley said. “This community is the kindest most compassionate place I’ve ever been.”

By Saturday morning, all trace of a crime scene had been cleared from the Grantsville neighborhood and the home where police worked through the night. No crime scene tape or police barricades were visible outside the home. Nothing seemed amiss except for a set of blinds leaning askew against the inside of the front window. A white van with stickers on the back window of a seven-member stick figure family sat in the home’s driveway.

Related Stories

Katie McKellar

Source Article from https://www.ksl.com/article/46706058/devastating-grantsville-shooting-leaves-community-in-shock