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Members of the Biden transition team are scheduled to receive briefings from the Pentagon’s intelligence agencies beginning on Monday, according to defense officials.

The briefings are to take place days after, according to a former senior intelligence official familiar with intelligence transition discussions, that the Pentagon had blocked the Biden transition team’s access to the Department of Defense’s intelligence agencies such as the NSA and Defense Intelligence Agency.

The Department of Defense strongly denied claims that it had hindered the briefings, with a spokesman calling the claims “demonstrably false and patently insulting.”

Multiple Pentagon officials blamed the meetings being delayed on the Biden transition organization, saying the members of its intelligence transition team reached out directly to the Pentagon’s intelligence agencies, which they said was a violation of the transition arrangement agreed to with the Biden camp.

“We can’t help them if they can’t read an org chart,” a defense official told CNN.

“That was more of an internal issue for the Biden team than a DoD issue,” another defense official said.

Biden transition team spokesman Ned Price declined to comment about the briefings.

Pentagon officials also said that this week’s briefings between defense intelligence officials and the Biden transition team were scheduled prior to reports of the Pentagon denying access being published by multiple news outlets.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/politics/live-news/biden-trump-us-election-news-12-07-20/h_ee6fdada3942cfd6337afaa1f8fa28ec

For millions of Californians, the COVID-19 pandemic will provide a most unwelcome gift this Christmas: a wide-ranging shutdown imposed as the state grapples with its most massive and dangerous surge in infections and hospitalizations to date.

Monday provided even more devastating news: At least 33,000 new coronavirus cases reported Monday alone, according to The Times’ county-by-county tally of infections. That shatters the previous single-day record, set Friday, when 22,369 coronavirus cases were tallied.

The stay-at-home restrictions that took hold at 11:59 p.m. Sunday across Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley will remain in place for at least three weeks, meaning those regions will not be able to emerge from the state’s latest stay-at-home order until Dec. 28 at the earliest.

Five counties in the San Francisco Bay Area also announced last week that they were proactively implementing the new restrictions and planned to keep them in place until at least Jan. 4.

Combined, those regions are home to some 33 million Californians, representing 84% of the state’s population.

The timing of the rules is the latest blow, in a year full of them, for many businesses — which have been battered by coronavirus-related restrictions and hoped the holiday shopping season would throw them a desperately needed lifeline — and to the psyche of Californians, who for months have lived with the threat of the coronavirus hanging over their heads.

Officials, though, have said desperate times call for drastic measures. The number of new daily coronavirus cases has skyrocketed to a level that would have been unthinkable just weeks ago. Hospitals are already contending with an unprecedented wave of more than 10,000 COVID-19 patients, and the state is on the brink of recording its 20,000th death from the illness.

“Once people die, they’re gone from our lives forever — and there’s no way to measure that impact at all,” L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said during a briefing Monday. “There’s no value you really can place on a person’s husband or daughter or their friend or their loved one. And every death is a tragedy, particularly those deaths that, in some ways, if we were all better at doing our part, we could be preventing right now.”

California Gov. Gavin Newsom has announced a stay-at-home order prohibiting most nonessential activity between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m. in counties in the strictest tier of the state’s reopening road map.

As bleak as things are now, the ceiling of the surge may be yet to come, as experts say the ramifications of travel and gathering for the Thanksgiving holiday have yet to be fully realized.

Cases that stem from “dinner tables or activities and plans, travel through Thanksgiving, are going to show up right about now,” said Dr. Mark Ghaly, California’s Health and Human Services secretary, and “we know we’ll be seeing that for many days to come.”

“We believe,” he said at a Monday briefing, “that the levels of transmission that we’ve been reporting so far will likely continue to go up some because of those activities around Thanksgiving.”

The pandemic that has killed nearly 20,000 Californians and brought an economy to its knees entered a treacherous phase Sunday as much of the state began a new stay-at-home order and coronavirus cases soar.

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Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the new round of restrictions last week, saying stricter intervention was needed to shore up the state’s hospital system and make sure intensive care beds remained available.

The state’s latest strategy carves California into five regions: Southern California, the San Joaquin Valley, the Bay Area, the Greater Sacramento area and rural Northern California.

A region is required to implement a state-defined stay-at-home order — which restricts retail capacity to 20% and shuts down outdoor restaurant dining, hair salons, nail salons, public outdoor playgrounds, card rooms, museums, zoos, aquariums and wineries — if its available ICU capacity drops below 15%.

Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley are already below that threshold, and as of Monday their ICU availability had tumbled to 10.9% and 6.3%, respectively.

The Southern California region encompasses Imperial, Inyo, Los Angeles, Mono, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara and Ventura counties.

On Monday, Ventura, Santa Barbara, and San Luis Obispo counties announced that they may seek approval from the state to separate from the Southern California region and create their own Central Coast region.

The counties will request to be considered a separate region to assess restrictions to curb the spread of the virus if their ICU capacity exceeds 15% in the next three weeks, according to a Ventura County press release.

“A smaller regional approach is important for our community members and struggling businesses,” said County Executive Officer Mike Powers. “We believe it’s reasonable to have the Central Coast as one region instead of including our County with over half the State’s population in the current Southern California Region.”

The area defined as the San Joaquin Valley covers Calaveras, Fresno, Kern, Kings, Madera, Mariposa, Merced, San Benito, San Joaquin, Stanislaus, Tulare and Tuolumne counties.

Some experts say a harm-reduction approach to public health — educating people how to mitigate risk in their activities — would be more effective than all-or-nothing pleas to abstain from contact with other people.

Both Greater Sacramento (20.3%,) and Northern California (28.2%) remain above the ICU threshold for now.

So does the Bay Area, at 25.7%. Health officials there aren’t waiting, however, and have already decided to apply the order — which went into effect in San Francisco, Santa Clara and Contra Costa counties on Sunday; in Alameda County on Monday; and will do so in Marin County on Tuesday.

“We cannot wait until after we have driven off the cliff to pull the emergency brake,” Dr. Sara Cody, Santa Clara County’s health officer, said in a statement.

The latest restrictions have been a source of controversy, however. Critics have demanded to see data justifying the latest rules and questioned whether they will play a significant role in turning the tide of the pandemic — particularly if residents don’t abide by them and law enforcement departments decline to enforce them.

Some have also objected to the state taking a regional view, saying they shouldn’t be punished because of their neighboring counties’ circumstances.

Though the additional restrictions are undoubtedly a hardship for many, Ghaly said they were “required to make sure we get through the surge as quickly as possible and saving as many lives and preventing as many infections as we possibly can.”

California has seen a sustained and shocking rise in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations over the last few weeks — with numbers surging to levels far beyond those seen at any other point in the pandemic.

Statewide, average daily coronavirus cases have jumped sixfold since early October, hospitalizations have quadrupled since late October, and average daily deaths have nearly tripled in the last month.

Over the last week, California has averaged 20,414 cases per day, a 78.3% increase from two weeks ago, according to data compiled by The Times.

Roughly 240,000 Californians have tested positive for the coronavirus in the last 14 days. That number is larger than the entire population of the city of San Bernardino.

There are now 10,070 coronavirus-positive patients hospitalized statewide and 2,360 are in intensive care, according to numbers Newsom presented Monday. Both those figures are all-time highs.

An average of 112 Californians have died from COVID-19 every day over the last week.

“I think we have moved from characterizing this as a surge, in my mind, to being basically a viral tsunami in terms of its size,” said Dr. Robert Kim-Farley, a professor at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, medical epidemiologist and infectious disease expert.

In Los Angeles County, the state’s most populous, health officials reported more than 10,500 new cases Sunday, an unprecedented number for a single day. Hospitalizations for COVID-19 are nearing 3,000, and Ferrer said that number could rise dramatically in the next few weeks as the full toll of the Thanksgiving holiday comes into view.

Given the county’s recent sky-high case counts, Ferrer said officials are projecting that daily hospitalizations could surpass 4,000 this month — with daily deaths potentially rising to 65 soon thereafter.

Before the latest surge, the county had never seen recorded 2,300 COVID-19 patients hospitalized in a single day.

“These numbers reflect actions we took in late November, and we can’t take those actions back,” Ferrer said. “What we can do is change our actions today so that, two to three weeks from now, we’re not reporting a similarly disastrous cascade of events.”

Though the pandemic has reached crisis levels in California, state officials say there is light at the end of the tunnel as companies begin to roll out their initial shipments of COVID-19 vaccines.

Newsom said Monday the state was planning to receive 2.16 million doses of vaccine this month — with delivery expected to start by next week.

“Hope is on the horizon,” he said.

More tools are also coming online. Starting Thursday, Californians will be able to opt into a smartphone-based system, turning on COVID-19 exposure notifications in their iPhone settings or downloading the CA Notify app in the Google Play Store.

Some residents can expect to get a notification by phone alerting them that the program is available.

State officials hope the Bluetooth-based technology — which doesn’t collect location data or people’s identities — will help slow the transmission of the novel coronavirus by quickly notifying people when they’ve been exposed to someone who later tests positive for the disease.

Newsom has also named a new general in the battle against COVID-19. He announced Monday that he had appointed Tomás Aragón as director of the California Department of Public Health.

Aragón had been health officer for the city and county of San Francisco.

“We’re very, very enthusiastic to have him now on the team,” Newsom said, “to continue to supplement our efforts as we move into this next and challenging phase.”

The appointment requires confirmation from the state Senate.

Times staff writers Alex Wigglesworth, Jack Dolan and Sean Greene and Lyndsay Winkley of the San Diego Union-Tribune contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-12-07/california-covid-19-shutdown-to-last-through-christmas-as-hospitalizations-spike

Attorney Sidney Powell suffered losses in two states Monday morning, with judges in both Michigan and Georgia ruling against her clients in lawsuits challenging the election results in those states.

Both cases alleged widespread voter fraud and errors having to do with absentee ballots and vote counting. In the Michigan case, U.S. District Court Judge Linda Parker said that because the election has taken place and its results have been certified, it is too late to grant an injunction.

TRUMP LEGAL TEAM CELEBRATES AFTER MICHIGAN JUDGE ALLOWS PROBE OF DOMINION VOTING MACHINES

“The time has passed to provide most of the relief Plaintiffs request in their Amended Complaint; the remaining relief is beyond the power of any court. For those reasons, this matter is moot,” the judge wrote.

Powell’s lawsuit called for decertification of the results, an injunction blocking state officials from sending the results to the Electoral College, an order to send certified results that name President Trump as the winner, an order for a manual recount for absentee ballots, and an order that votes that were tabulated by machines not be counted unless the machines were certified according to state and federal requirements.

“If granted, the relief would disenfranchise the votes of the more than 5.5 million Michigan citizens who, with dignity, hope, and a promise of a voice, participated in the 2020 General Election,” Parker wrote.

Parker also stated that Michigan law provides a process for how elections may be challenged, including deadlines.

“Plaintiffs did not avail themselves of the remedies established by the Michigan legislature. The deadline for them to do so has passed,” the judge said. “Any avenue for this Court to provide meaningful relief has been foreclosed.”

Sidney Powell, right, speaks next to former Mayor of New York Rudy Giuliani as members of President Trump’s legal team during a news conference at the Republican National Committee headquarters, Nov. 19, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Parker further discussed the case’s timing problem by stating that the plaintiffs’ claims are also barred because they delayed unnecessarily in bringing them.

“Plaintiffs could have lodged their constitutional challenges much sooner than they did, and certainly not three weeks after Election Day and one week after certification of almost three million votes,” Parker wrote.

GIULIANI APPEARS WITH WITNESSES ALLEGING VOER FRAUD IN HEATED MICHIGAN HEARING

The judge further expressed doubt that the case would have any likelihood of success, noting that the allegations realistically amount to state law violations, not constitutional ones.

Parker concluded by accusing the plaintiffs of attempting to sow doubt among the public when it comes to democratic institutions.

“[T]his lawsuit seems to be less about achieving the relief Plaintiffs seek—as much of that relief is beyond the power of this Court— and more about the impact of their allegations on People’s faith in the democratic process and their trust in our government,” Parker said.

In stark contrast to Parker’s 36-page order, the federal judge in the Georgia case ruled from the bench, speaking directly to the parties. While Parker merely denied a request for an injunction in the Michigan case, Judge Timothy Batten dismissed the Georgia case.

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Like Parker, Batten pointed to Powell’s clients’ delay in bringing their claims, according to Law&Crime’s Adam Klasfeld.

“The law is pretty clear that a party cannot obtain the extraordinary remedy of injunctive relief unless he acts quickly,” Batten said on Twitter.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/sidney-powell-kraken-lawsuit-dismissed-georgia-michigan

Biden had been under growing pressure to nominate a Black person to be his defense secretary in recent weeks. He chose Austin after also considering former Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson for the job, several people familiar with the discussions said.

Lingering concerns about Johnson’s tenure in the Obama administration improved Austin’s standing among Congressional Black Caucus members in recent days, according to two people, including a House Democratic aide. Johnson has been criticized for his record on expanding family detention and accelerating deportations, as well as approving hundreds of drone strikes against suspected terrorists that killed civilians.

“General Austin is a southerner, has impeccable credentials given his military career and would be an outstanding secretary for the department,” Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), a CBC member who is close to Biden, told POLITICO earlier Monday.

A person familiar with Biden’s decision said the president-elect chose Austin because he is crisis-tested and respected across the military. Biden also trusts Austin, as they worked together when Biden served as vice president and had a large foreign policy portfolio.

The president-elect was also drawn to the history-making aspect of Austin’s nomination and his deep logistics experience, which will prove critical as the military helps distribute coronavirus vaccines, the person said.

Austin declined to comment through a spokesperson. A spokesperson for the Biden transition team also declined to comment.

Biden and Austin got to know each other during the Obama administration’s Iraq drawdown, when the former vice president led Iraq policy and Austin served as the last commanding general of U.S. forces in Iraq. In that position, Austin played a key role in the surge of forces that began in 2007 and was in charge of the withdrawal of U.S. combat forces in 2011.

Austin’s nomination may run into trouble on Capitol Hill. Austin has not been out of the military for the required seven years and would need a waiver from Congress to become secretary of Defense — and lawmakers have signaled their wariness of granting yet another exception for a retired general to lead the Pentagon just four years after President Donald Trump sought one for his first defense secretary, Jim Mattis.

Austin’s candidacy has also been met with resistance from some national security experts, who expressed concern about the balance of civil-military power in the Pentagon under yet another retired general.

“From a civil-military relations perspective, this seems like a terrible idea,” tweeted Rosa Brooks, a Georgetown University professor and former Pentagon official who wrote an op-ed in The New York Times calling for a woman to be chosen as Defense secretary. “Lots of damage during the Trump era. Especially after Mattis, Kelly, McMaster, Flynn…. putting a recently retired 4 star, no matter how wonderful, into the top civilian DoD position sends the worst possible message.”

Another knock against Austin is that he doesn’t have the same star power as Mattis or the other four-star officers of that period. “He just doesn’t knock your socks off,” said a former defense official close to the transition. “I just don’t see him as an independent thinker.”

However, the Biden team saw Austin as the safe choice, said one former defense official close to the transition, adding that the retired general is believed to be a good soldier who would carry out the president-elect’s agenda.

“There would be less tension” with Austin as defense secretary instead of Johnson or Flournoy, the person said. “Maybe less disagreement … the relationship would be smoother.”

CBC Chair Rep. Karen Bass (D-Calif.) on Sunday told CNN that her caucus was backing both Austin and Johnson for Defense secretary, noting that a special CBC task force has been meeting weekly with the Biden-Harris transition team.

But the position wasn’t unanimous among the CBC members.

Rep. Anthony Brown of Maryland, the only CBC member on the Armed Services Committee, and Rep. Marc Veasey of Texas backed Flournoy in a letter to Biden last week.

The pair praised her experience in the Clinton and Obama administrations, which they said is needed to retrain the military on matching gains by China and reorienting U.S. counterterrorism policies for a new era, and praised Flournoy as “a tireless advocate for diversity and inclusion in national security.”

And on Monday, House Armed Services Chair Adam Smith (D-Wash.) came out in support of Flournoy.

“I’ve certainly communicated to the Biden people that I think Michèle Flournoy is hands down the best qualified person for the job. That does not mean that she’s the only person who can do the job … but I think Michèle Flournoy is uniquely qualified.”

During his decades of service, Austin earned a reputation for avoiding the limelight and rarely took part in public events such as press conferences or think tank discussions.

In addition to the other firsts, he was also the first Black vice chief of staff of the Army, the service’s second ranking officer.

In 2013, President Barack Obama named him to run Central Command, responsible for all U.S. military operations in the Middle East, where he oversaw operations against the Islamic State when it took over large swaths of Iraq and Syria in 2014.

He faced particularly tough questions in 2015 about the U.S. military’s role training forces in Syria to fight the Islamic State during the country’s civil war, acknowledging that the U.S. spent some $500 million but trained only a handful of fighters.

Another cloud hanging over the command at the time was allegations that Central Command downplayed intelligence reports on the threat posed by the terrorist group and painted a brighter picture of the progress of U.S. military efforts.

Austin’s command was cleared in an investigation by the Defense Department’s inspector general in 2017.

He retired after 41 years in 2016 and joined the board of directors of Raytheon Technologies, one of the largest Pentagon contractors and a potential sticking point among progressive lawmakers, who have raised concerns over appointing a Defense secretary who has ties with industry. He is also on the board of Nucor, the largest American steel producer, as well as health care company Tenet. He is a trustee of the Carnegie Corporation of New York, a philanthropic foundation.

Public records show that he has his own consulting firm, Austin Strategy Group, LLC in Great Falls, Va.

Bryan Bender contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/12/07/lloyd-austin-biden-secretary-defense-frontrunner-contender-443479

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/12/07/government-shutdown-happen-if-congress-doesnt-act-friday/3856020001/

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is warning that renewed restaurant restrictions could be on the way in the state as the coronavirus outbreak worsens, but operations at NBC’s “Saturday Night Live” won’t be interrupted despite the fact that the program recently had an indoor, live audience.

As previously reported by Fox News, the comedy show is said to have skirted strict coronavirus regulations in the Big Apple by paying audience members $150 for their participation in the season premiere this fall. This would allow the program to consider live audience members paid individuals who “work” for the show.

An NBC spokesperson did not return Fox News’ request for comment on whether this policy is ongoing.

STATEN ISLAND BAR OWNER’S ATTORNEY ADDRESSES PETE DAVIDSON MOCKING PROTESTERS ON ‘SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE’

Cuomo said on Monday that if the hospitalization rate continues for another five days – it included a total of 4,602 people as of Monday – indoor dining will be closed in New York City entirely, while it will be reduced to 25% capacity, from 50%, in the rest of the state.

Dr. Anthony Fauci – the nation’s top infectious disease expert – joined Cuomo’s daily press briefing on Monday, adding that Cuomo’s plan for the state seemed really “sound.”

Meanwhile, over the weekend the cast of SNL performed a skit making light of a situation in Staten Island where residents marched on a bar known as Mac’s Public House to protest coronavirus-related restrictions on indoor dining and drinking.

Comedian Pete Davidson, who is from Staten Island, has drawn criticism for commenting on the protests, saying participants are “making us look like babies.”

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Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/new-york-lockdown-snl-covid-loophole

TALLAHASSEE — The Florida Department of Law Enforcement on Monday raided the home of a former Department of Health data analyst who has been running an alternative website to the state’s coronavirus dashboard, alleging that she may have broken into a state email system and sent an unauthorized message to employees.

But Rebekah Jones, who was was fired from her job in May as the geographic information system manager for health department’s Division of Disease Control and Health Protection and who has since filed a whistleblower complaint against the state, denied having any role in the alleged intrusion into the state web site and instead said she believes Monday’s action was intended to silence her.

Jones said state police came into her house at 8:30 a.m., at gunpoint and, over the course of three hours, swept her house and took her cell phone and several laptops that contained COVID-19 data that she has accumulated over several months.

“This was a threat,” Jones said in an interview with the Herald/Times at her home Monday night. “It is one thing to point a gun six inches away from my face and threaten me. It is another to point it at my 2-year-old’s face.”

Her lawyer, Lawrence Walters, called the state’s claim that she accessed the state email system “baseless.” He said the raid “could be retaliation” for Jones’ public defiance against her former employer and said the state’s seizure of her computers could be an attempt to undermine her lawsuit.

“Access to our confidential and privileged information shouldn’t be used by our adversaries in a litigation,’’ he said. “It’s extremely rare. It’s close to unprecedented, and it’s dangerous for the judicial system.”

Allegation of manipulated data

Jones was fired in May after she complained in an email to users of a state data portal that the state was manipulating data. She announced that she had been removed from overseeing the dashboard and hinted that she had been stripped of the responsibility as a result of raising concerns about the state’s commitment to transparency.

The FDLE said in a statement late Monday that it issued the search warrant after suspecting Jones of being responsible for sending an unauthorized message to members of the State Emergency Response Team charged with coordinating the public health and medical response.

The Nov. 10 message, obtained by the Tampa Bay Times, urged recipients to “speak up before another 17,000 people are dead. You know this is wrong. You don’t have to be a part of this. Be a hero. Speak out before it’s too late.” At the time of the message, Florida had reported 17,460 coronavirus-related deaths among Florida residents and non-residents.

The FDLE said in its statement that the search warrant was issued for Jones’ Tallahassee home and it began an investigation “after receiving a complaint from the Department of Health regarding unauthorized access to a Department of Health messaging system which is part of an emergency alert system, to be used for emergencies only. Agents believe someone at the residence on Centerville Court illegally accessed the system.”

Jones denied any involvement in the hack.

“Hacking is not something I ever thought they would accuse me of because I have never displayed any capability of doing that,” she said. “I’ve never taken any computer courses or anything like that. I do statistics in a software program designed basically to do all that stuff for you by clicking stuff.”

In an affidavit signed by FDLE investigator Noel Pratt on Dec. 3, he concluded the email message was sent to approximately 1,750 accounts before it was discovered. Pratt said in the affidavit that he tracked down the IP address of the computer associated with the email and it directed him to Jones’ home address, which he said was probable cause to conduct a search of her property and seize her computers.

Jones said FDLE agents told her the Department of Health’s inspector general’s office gave them her IP address. “I guess they just signed off on that and showed up at my house with guns,’’ she said.

Serving the search warrant

The FDLE said that when agents arrived at Jones’ home, “they knocked on the door and called Ms. Jones in an attempt to minimize disruption to the family.

“Ms. Jones refused to come to the door for 20 minutes and hung up on agent,’’ the statement said. “After several attempts and verbal notifications that law enforcement officers were there to serve a legal search warrant, Ms. Jones eventually came to the door and allowed agents to enter.”

According to the video from inside Jones’ home, which she said she took using a camera on a bookshelf, police pointed guns at her and ordered her husband to appear. “Come outside the house,’’ they commanded, asking who else was in the house. She replied it was her two children and husband.

“Come down the stairs, now,’’ police shouted. “Police! Come down now.”

Jones yelled: “They just pointed a gun at my children” and that is where the video ended.

Jones said it was not true that she refused to open the door. She told the Herald/Times that the delay in opening the door has to do with her taking the time to get dressed becau

se she feared she was going to be arrested.

She also said that if she had been able to hack into the email she would have used a different number of coronavirus fatalities.

“If I was really that skilled that I could hack a system, and I was going to make people feel bad about this, I at least would have the number of deaths right, because it didn’t include any of the non-residents.”

She said that in May, “DeSantis publicly said I’m not a data scientist, I’m not a computer scientist and I wouldn’t even know what to do if I saw a database, and now he’s accusing me of hacking one,’’ she said. “It’s a real 180 there. I’m not a hacker. I don’t hack. I don’t know s— about computers. I know how to do statistics.”

The fact that the state is now in possession of her laptops and cell phone will expose her sources, Jones said.

“The most damning stuff that they are going to get from that equipment is the information about all of the employees from the state who have talked to me over the last six months,” Jones said. “And, the fact that I promised them I would never tell anybody who they were, or where they worked and I have failed to protect them, really f—–g pissed me off.”

Praise for Florida’s dashboard

Jones had attracted national attention for her work creating the dashboard, which had been singled out for praise last spring by Deborah Birx, coordinator of the White House coronavirus task force. After she was removed for what the governor’s office called “insubordination,’’ Jones created a competing dashboard. Her version draws upon state data but offers an expanded menu of metrics, including data the state was not making public at the time — such as hospital bed availability by facility, a key number, especially now as the number of confirmed cases soars.

She also developed the COVID monitor, a dashboard to report nationwide coronavirus cases by school, data which Florida officials collect but for months refused to make publicly available.

In July, she filed a confidential whistle-blower complaint with the Florida Commission on Human Relations, which she said is expected to release its findings soon. She also wrote in an op-ed in the Miami Herald in July that other state workers were being silenced for expressing their concerns about the state’s handling of the coronavirus and its data collection.

On Twitter Monday, she accused DeSantis of orchestrating the raid.

“They took my phone and the computer I use every day to post the case numbers in Florida, and school cases for the entire country,’’ she said. “They took evidence of corruption at the state level. T

hey claimed it was about a security breach. This was DeSantis. He sent the gestapo.”

She added: “This is what happens to scientists who do their job honestly. This is what happens to people who speak truth to power.”

Jones said the raid won’t stop her from continuing her work.

“I’m going to buy another computer tomorrow and go back to work,’’ she said, adding that she was proud of her ability to build her own web site and “hadn’t missed a single day.”

The governor’s office did not respond to requests for comment.

State Rep. Anna Eskamani, an Orlando Democrat, retweeted Jones’ original Twitter post and added the comment: “Horrifying. Why are guns being drawn out for a “data breach?”

Miami Herald reporter Nicholas Nehamas contributed to this report. Mary Ellen Klas can be reached at meklas@miamiherald.com and @MaryEllenKlas

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Source Article from https://www.tampabay.com/news/health/2020/12/07/florida-police-seize-computer-of-covid-data-whistleblower/

We’re now over 10,000 patients in our hospitals — 72 percent increase over the last 14 days. You could see how quickly this grows on 11/23, just a few weeks ago, we had shy of 6,000 Covid-19 positive patients in our hospital system. Now over 10,000 — just like that, 72 percent increase. Twenty-three hundred and sixty individuals have been admitted to I.C.U.s. You’ve seen a 69 percent increase in I.C.U. capacity or rather, I.C.U. beds being utilized just in the last 14 days. So here’s our total capacity, the pie, the circle there of I.C.U. beds, critical-care capacity in the state of California. You can see now as a state, this is again, in the aggregate — we don’t live in the aggregate, but this is in the aggregate — I.C.U. capacity, what’s available in our I.C.U. critical-care capacity system, is just 14.2 percent of beds. Good news is you can see in the lower right there, ventilators available is the highest number we’ve ever seen. The regional stay-at-home order; now because two regions, San Joaquin Valley and the Southern California region, the largest region, which in and of itself is a unique view of sorts, these two regions. now have fallen under the 15 percent I.C.U. capacity.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/07/us/pressure-on-california-hospitals-is-still-mounting-fast-newsom-says.html

Republicans slammed President-elect Joe Biden after he announced his choice of California Attorney General Xavier Becerra for secretary of Health and Human Services on Monday, and they criticized Becerra’s record on abortion and other issues.

Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., said he would not vote to confirm Becerra, and pro-life group Susan B. Anthony List urged other Republican senators to “stop this unacceptable nomination from going forward.”

BIDEN PICKS HEALTH TEAM, INCLUDING BECERRA FOR HHS SECRETARY, FAUCI AS TOP CORONAVIRUS ADVISER

“Xavier Becerra spent his career attacking pro-life Americans and tried to force crisis pregnancy centers to advertise abortions,” Cotton wrote on Twitter. “He’s been a disaster in California and he is unqualified to lead HHS. I’ll be voting no, and Becerra should be rejected by the Senate.”

“With his choice of California Attorney General Xavier Becerra for HHS Secretary, Joe Biden has proven yet again he is an extremist on abortion,” Susan B. Anthony List wrote on Twitter, adding that the former California congressman has voted against banning partial-birth abortions.

Alliance Defending Freedom’s Kristen Waggoner echoed Susan B. Anthony List’s “extremist” label.

“ADF had to go all the way to the Supreme Court to stop Becerra from forcing religious pro-life pregnancy centers to advertise for abortions. He is an extremist who has no regard for conscience or protecting life. There’s nothing moderate about this pick. Nothing,” Waggoner wrote on Twitter.

Choosing Becerra shows that a Biden administration will be anything but “moderate,” Southern Baptist Theological Seminary president Al Mohler concurred.

“Biden’s choice of Xavier Becerra as HHS Secretary shows the abject lie of the ‘moderate’ Biden and sets up a fight the Republicans in the Senate had better not lose. Conservatives in Georgia—are you paying attention? All eyes are on you. Voter registration ends Monday!” Mohler wrote on Twitter.

The balance of power in the Senate hangs on the Georgia runoff elections, so it remains to be seen whether Republicans will be able to block Becerra’s confirmation.

Xavier Becerra, California’s attorney general, center, speaks during a news conference outside the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2019. Photographer: Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images

To be HHS secretray, Becerra would have to cut short his term as state attorney general, which lasts until January 2023.

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Fox News’ inquiry to Biden’s team was not immediately returned.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/republicans-biden-hhs-xavier-becerra-abortion-senate

For millions of Californians, the COVID-19 pandemic will provide a most unwelcome gift this Christmas: a wide-ranging shutdown imposed as the state grapples with its most massive and dangerous surge in infections and hospitalizations to date.

The restrictions that took hold at 11:59 p.m. Sunday across Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley will remain in place for at least three weeks, meaning those regions will not be able to emerge from the state’s latest stay-at-home order until Dec. 28 at the earliest.

Five counties in the San Francisco Bay Area also announced last week that they were proactively implementing the new restrictions and planned to keep them in place until at least Jan. 4.

Combined, those regions are home to some 33 million Californians, representing 84% of the state’s population.

The timing of the rules is the latest blow, in a year full of them, for many businesses — which have been battered by coronavirus-related restrictions and hoped the holiday shopping season would throw them a desperately needed lifeline — and to the psyche of Californians, who for months have lived with the threat of the coronavirus hanging over their heads.

Officials, though, have said desperate times call for drastic measures. The number of new daily coronavirus cases has skyrocketed to a level that would have been unthinkable just weeks ago. Hospitals are already contending with an unprecedented wave of more than 10,000 COVID-19 patients, and the state is on the brink of recording its 20,000th death from the illness.

As bleak as things are now, the ceiling of the surge may be yet to come, as experts say the ramifications of travel and gathering for the Thanksgiving holiday have yet to be fully realized.

Cases that stem from “dinner tables or activities and plans, travel through Thanksgiving, are going to show up right about now,” said Dr. Mark Ghaly, California’s Health and Human Services secretary, and “we know we’ll be seeing that for many days to come.”

“We believe,” he said at a Monday briefing, “that the levels of transmission that we’ve been reporting so far will likely continue to go up some because of those activities around Thanksgiving.”

The pandemic that has killed nearly 20,000 Californians and brought an economy to its knees entered a treacherous phase Sunday as much of the state began a new stay-at-home order and coronavirus cases soar.

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Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the new round of restrictions last week, saying stricter intervention was needed to shore up the state’s hospital system and make sure intensive care beds remained available.

The state’s latest strategy carves California into five regions: Southern California, the San Joaquin Valley, the Bay Area, the Greater Sacramento area and rural Northern California.

A region is required to implement a state-defined stay-at-home order — which restricts retail capacity to 20% and shuts down outdoor restaurant dining, hair salons, nail salons, public outdoor playgrounds, cardrooms, museums, zoos, aquariums and wineries — if its available ICU capacity drops below 15%.

Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley are already below that threshold, and as of Monday their ICU availability had tumbled to 10.9% and 6.3%, respectively.

The Southern California region encompasses Imperial, Inyo, Los Angeles, Mono, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara and Ventura counties. The area defined as the San Joaquin Valley covers Calaveras, Fresno, Kern, Kings, Madera, Mariposa, Merced, San Benito, San Joaquin, Stanislaus, Tulare and Tuolumne counties.

Some experts say a harm-reduction approach to public health — educating people how to mitigate risk in their activities — would be more effective than all-or-nothing pleas to abstain from contact with other people.

Both Greater Sacramento (20.3%,) and Northern California (28.2%) remain above the ICU threshold for now.

So does the Bay Area, at 25.7%. Health officials there aren’t waiting, however, and have already decided to apply the order — which went into effect in San Francisco, Santa Clara and Contra Costa counties on Sunday; in Alameda County on Monday; and will do so in Marin County on Tuesday.

“We cannot wait until after we have driven off the cliff to pull the emergency brake,” Dr. Sara Cody, Santa Clara County’s health officer, said in a statement.

Though the additional restrictions are undoubtedly a hardship for many, Ghaly said they were “required to make sure we get through the surge as quickly as possible and saving as many lives and preventing as many infections as we possibly can.”

California has seen a sustained and shocking rise in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations over the last few weeks — with numbers surging to levels far beyond those seen at any other point in the pandemic.

Statewide, average daily coronavirus cases have jumped sixfold since early October, hospitalizations have quadrupled since late October, and average daily deaths have nearly tripled in the last month.

Over the last week, California has averaged 20,414 cases per day, a 78.3% increase from two weeks ago, according to data compiled by The Times.

Roughly 240,000 Californians have tested positive for the coronavirus in the last 14 days. That number is larger than the entire population of the city of San Bernardino.

There are now 10,070 coronavirus-positive patients hospitalized statewide and 2,360 are in intensive care, according to numbers Newsom presented Monday. Both those figures are all-time highs.

An average of 112 Californians have died from COVID-19 every day over the last week.

“I think we have moved from characterizing this as a surge, in my mind, to being basically a viral tsunami in terms of its size,” said Dr. Robert Kim-Farley, a professor at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, medical epidemiologist and infectious disease expert.

In Los Angeles County, the state’s most populous, health officials reported more than 10,500 new cases Sunday, an unprecedented number for a single day. Hospitalizations for COVID-19 are nearing 3,000, and county Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said that number could rise dramatically in the next few weeks as the full toll of the Thanksgiving holiday comes into view.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if we start seeing daily hospitalizations approaching 4,000 in a couple of weeks,” Ferrer said in an interview Sunday. “I am positive that we haven’t seen the full increases in our case numbers associated with the Thanksgiving holiday, just based on the timeline.”

Though the pandemic has reached crisis levels in California, state officials say there is light at the end of the tunnel as companies begin to roll out their initial shipments of COVID-19 vaccines.

Newsom said Monday the state was planning to receive 2.16 million doses of vaccine this month — with delivery expected to start by next week.

“Hope is on the horizon,” he said.

More tools are also coming online. Starting Thursday, Californians will be able to opt into a smartphone-based system, turning on COVID-19 exposure notifications in their iPhone settings or downloading the CA Notify app in the Google Play Store.

Some residents can expect to get a notification by phone alerting them that the program is available.

State officials hope the Bluetooth-based technology — which doesn’t collect location data or people’s identities — will help slow the transmission of the novel coronavirus by quickly notifying people when they’ve been exposed to someone who later tests positive for the disease.

Newsom has also named a new general in the battle against COVID-19. He announced Monday he had appointed Tomás Aragón as director of the California Department of Public Health.

Aragón had been health officer for the city and county of San Francisco.

“We’re very, very enthusiastic to have him now on the team,” Newsome said, “to continue to supplement our efforts as we move into this next and challenging phase.”

The appointment requires confirmation from the state Senate.

Times staff writers Jack Dolan and Sean Greene and the San Diego Union-Tribune contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-12-07/california-covid-19-shutdown-to-last-through-christmas-as-hospitalizations-spike

On Sunday, Senator Kelly Loeffler, a Republican in one of the runoff elections in Georgia next month, fielded questions and sparred with her Democratic opponent, the Rev. Raphael Warnock, in a televised debate.

But on the internet, some Democrats saw evidence of foul play — a light-colored strand on Ms. Loeffler’s head that they claimed, without evidence, proved that she was being fed answers onstage.

Ms. Loeffler was not wearing a wire, and the mysterious filament was likely just a strand of hair that caught the light. The Atlanta Press Club, which hosted the debate, tweeted on Monday that Ms. Loeffler and Mr. Warnock “had no audio assistance from their campaigns.” A spokesman for Ms. Loeffler’s campaign sent a link to the Atlanta Press Club’s tweet debunking the rumor when asked for comment.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/07/technology/no-kelly-loeffler-didnt-wear-a-wire-during-a-debate.html

Republican U.S. Senator David Perdue and Democratic Candidate for U.S. Senate Jon Ossoff were supposed to go head-to-head in a debate on Sunday, but Purdue declined to attend the event at the Atlanta Press Club, leaving Ossoff debating with an empty podium.

Ossoff is hoping to replace Perdue as senator for Georiga in the January runoffs and has encouraged his supporters to vote early. However, rather than sparking a conversation about the candidates and their policies, yesterday’s debate had viewers talking for all the wrong reasons.

Viewers took to social media to share memes and jokes at Perdue’s expense, with many taking the lead from Ossoff who shared a photo of himself gesturing to an empty podium simply captioned with a chicken emoji.

Ossoff also tweeted: “I showed up to debate tonight. David Perdue pleaded the fifth.”

Twitter user @AdamTexDavis said: “Clint Eastwood interviewing David Perdue after tonight’s debate,” with a photo of Eastwood gesturing to an empty chair at the 2012 Republican National Convention when he pretended the empty chair was then-President Barack Obama.

Writer Charles Bethea said: “Live shot of David Perdue at the APC debate” with a photo of a microphone with nobody standing behind it.

Former director of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics Walter Shaub simply said: “Here is a complete transcript of David Perdue’s remarks in his debate with Jon Ossoff:” with nothing following the statement.

A Twitter user replied to Shaub and said: “You missed the visual that went with Perdue’s performance at his debate with Jon Ossoff,” and attached a GIF of Dipsy from the Teletubbies running away.

Twitter user Jennifer D. Meglich said: “Visual representation of Perdue at tonight’s debate. @ossoff for the win,” and attached a photo of chickens.

Georgia Republican Senator Kelly Loeffler also had viewers talking about her debate against Democratic opponent Rev. Raphael Warnock on at the Atlanta Press Club on Sunday. Viewers were struck by how Loeffler dodged questions, continously repeated the term “radical liberal,” and appeared listless and robotic.

Loeffler’s performance was compared to Perdue’s no-show by some Twitter users, like Covie, who said: “Perdue’s empty podium was more life-like than Kelly Loeffler,” and Jo, who said: “David Perdue was livelier in his debate performance tonight than Kelly Loeffler was in hers. And Perdue didn’t even show up.”

Sen. David Perdue (R-GA) attends a rally with Vice President Mike Pence in support of both he and Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) on December 4, 2020 in Savannah, Georgia. Perdue skipped a debate with Jon Ossoff on Sunday, leaving the Democratic candidate for the U.S. senate to debate with an empty podium.
Spencer Platt/Getty

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/david-perdue-empty-podium-debate-jon-ossoff-memes-jokes-1552801

Police tape marks the corner of the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus last May after protests over the death of George Floyd. Columbus Police are investigating the shooting death of a Black man last week by a Franklin County Sheriff’s deputy.

Andrew Welsh Huggins/AP


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Andrew Welsh Huggins/AP

Police tape marks the corner of the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus last May after protests over the death of George Floyd. Columbus Police are investigating the shooting death of a Black man last week by a Franklin County Sheriff’s deputy.

Andrew Welsh Huggins/AP

Updated at 4:02 p.m. ET

Authorities in Ohio have identified a long-time Franklin County Sheriff’s deputy as the law enforcement officer who shot and killed a Black man in Columbus last Friday.

Law enforcement said the man was waving a gun. His family said he was carrying a sandwich.

The sheriff’s office said the deputy who fired the shots, Jason Meade, a 17-year veteran of the force, was assigned full-time to the U.S. Marshal’s Service Fugitive Task Force at the time of the incident.

The task force had wrapped up an unsuccessful search for “violent suspects,” according to police investigators, when the shooting took place.

The man killed, 23-year-old Casey Goodson, was not an object of the search, nor was he wanted by law enforcement prior to the incident, according to police.

Family members said Goodson was shot three times in the back. An autopsy will be conducted by the Franklin County Coroner, according to investigators.

Columbus Police are leading the investigation of the incident, which occurred within its jurisdiction but did not involve police. As of Sunday afternoon, roughly 48 hours after the shooting, Meade had still not been interviewed by investigators.

“At this time, Deputy Meade is not on duty and is awaiting interview by the Columbus Division of Police Critical Incident and Response Team, which is investigating the incident,” the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement.

Peter Tobin, U.S. Marshal for the Southern District of Ohio, said that Goodson was brandishing a weapon, then things took a turn for the worst.

“He was seen driving down the street waving a gun, and that’s when the deputy, at some point after that, he confronted him and it went badly,” Tobin said at a Friday press conference, NPR member station WOSU reports.

The station adds that authorities provided few details about the encounter or what triggered Meade’s use of deadly force. The sheriff’s office said deputies do not wear body cameras. Investigators said no other law enforcement officers witnessed the shooting.

“A gun was recovered from Mr. Goodson,” according to a statement from Columbus Police. A tweet by the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office said “the suspect’s weapon was recovered at the scene.”

Reporter Paige Pfleger of member station WOSU reported Monday that Goodson’s concealed carry license was current, according to documentation provided by family attorneys.

Activists and family members dispute details in law enforcement’s version of the story and point to it as another example of police resorting to unjustified deadly force against Black Americans.

“They are lying!” Kaylee Harper, who identified herself as Goodson’s sister, wrote in a Facebook post.

“My brother literally walked across the yard, walked into the back fence to get to the side door, had his subway [sandwich] and mask in one hand keys in the other, UNLOCKED AND OPENED THE DOOR and stepped in the house before” he was shot, Harper wrote.

In a statement, Walton + Brown, the law firm representing Goodson’s family, said the shooting was witnessed by Goodson’s 72-year-old grandmother and two toddlers. The firm said Goodson was returning home from a dentist appointment.

“Everything about him was about abiding by the law and in terms of having a gun, he was licensed to do so,” Nana Watson, the president of the Columbus Chapter of the NAACP, told The Columbus Dispatch.

Civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump, who represents many families who have had loved ones killed by police this year, including George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Rayshard Brooks, Walter Wallace and others, tweeted “this must end.”

“This is Casey Goodson, a 23yo Black man from Ohio. On 12/4, an @OHFCSO deputy mistook Casey for a fugitive & fatally shot him 3x in the BACK. He was walking into his own home with a sandwich, NOT a gun. This shoot 1st, ask Qs later mentality MUST END! We demand #JusticeForCasey!!”

Heather Johnson, a friend of the Goodson family, who also spoke with The Columbus Dispatch, said he had no criminal history and described him as a family man.

“Casey was 23 years old, he never had any type of crimes. He was good, he worked at the Gap, he loved his family,” Johnson told the paper. “He just enjoyed being a big brother and enjoyed being with his family, he loved them very much.”

The shooting comes as the nation is still grappling with long-simmering issues stemming from social inequities, systemic racism and aggressive police tactics used against communities of color. Those matters touched off months of nationwide protests following Floyd’s Memorial Day killing by Minneapolis police.

It also comes just weeks before a transition of power at the White House. President-elect Joe Biden made criminal justice reform a central pillar of his campaign.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/12/07/943829901/police-in-ohio-say-slain-black-man-brandished-a-gun-family-says-he-held-a-sandwi

In a recent interview with The Associated Press, Attorney General William Barr defended the extension of executions into the post-election period, saying he’ll likely schedule more before he departs the Justice Department. A Biden administration, he said, should keep it up.

“I think the way to stop the death penalty is to repeal the death penalty,” Barr said. “But if you ask juries to impose and juries impose it, then it should be carried out.”

The plan breaks a tradition of lame-duck presidents deferring to incoming presidents on policy about which they differ so starkly, said Robert Durham, director of the non-partisan Death Penalty Information Center. Biden, a Democrat, is a death penalty foe, and his spokesman told the AP that he’d work to end the death penalty when he is in office.

“It’s hard to understand why anybody at this stage of a presidency feels compelled to kill this many people … especially when the American public voted for someone else to replace you and that person has said he opposes the death penalty,” Durham said. “This is a complete historical aberration.”

Not since the waning days of Grover Cleveland’s presidency in the late 1800s has the U.S. government executed federal inmates during a presidential transition, Durham said. Cleveland’s was also the last presidency during which the number of civilians executed federally was in the double digits in a year, with 14 executed in 1896.

Anti-death penalty groups want Biden to lobby harder for a halt to the flurry of pre-inaugural executions, though Biden can’t do much to stop them, especially considering Trump won’t even concede he lost the election and is spreading baseless claims of voting fraud.

Activists say the bill, which Biden has since agreed was flawed, puts added pressure on him to act.

“He is acknowledging the sins” of the past, said Abraham Bonowitz, Death Penalty Action’s director. “Now he’s got to fix it.”

Several inmates already executed on death row were convicted under provisions of that bill, including ones that made kidnappings and carjackings resulting in death federal capital offenses.

The race of those set to die buttresses criticism that the bill disproportionately impacted Black people. Four of the five set to die over the next few weeks are Black. The fifth, Lisa Montgomery, is white. Convicted of killing a pregnant woman and cutting out the baby alive, she is the only female of the 61 inmates who were on death row when executions resumed, and she would be the first woman to be executed federally in nearly six decades.

The executions so far this year have been by lethal injection at a U.S. penitentiary in Terre Haute, Indiana, where all federal executions take place. The drug used to carry out the sentences is sparse. The Justice Department recently updated protocols to allow for executions by firing squad and poison gas, though it’s unclear if those methods might be used in coming weeks.

The concern about moving forward with executions in the middle of a pandemic — as the Bureau of Prisons struggles with an exploding number of virus cases at prisons across the country — heightened further on Monday when the Justice Department disclosed that some members of the execution team had tested positive for the virus.

The disclosure was made in a court filing by lawyers for two inmates at the prison complex, saying the Justice Department informed them that some of the members of the team — among the nearly 100 people are typically brought in to assist in various tasks during each execution — had tested positive for coronavirus after the last execution.

The spiritual adviser for the man who had been executed also filed court papers saying he too had tested positive after attending the execution.

Barr suddenly announced in July 2019 that executions would resume, though there had been no public clamor for it. Several lawsuits kept the initial batch from being carried out, and by the time the Bureau of Prisons got clearance the COVID-19 pandemic was in full swing. The virus has killed more than 282,000 people in the United States, according to figures compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

Critics have said the restart of executions in an election year was politically motivated, helping Trump burnish his claim that he is a law-and-order president. The choice to first execute a series of white males convicted of killing children also appeared calculated to make executions more palatable amid protests nationwide over racial bias in the justice system. The first federal execution on July 14 was of Daniel Lewis Lee, convicted of killing an Arkansas family in a 1990s plot to build a whites-only nation in the Pacific Northwest.

Barr has insisted the reinstatement of federal executions was driven by adherence to laws. He noted that under Democratic presidents, including Barack Obama, U.S. authorities sought death sentences, they just didn’t carry them out.

“I don’t feel it is a political issue,” Barr told the AP.

Trump has been a consistent supporter of the death penalty. In a 1990 Playboy interview, he described himself as a strong supporter of capital punishment, saying, “Either it will be brought back swiftly or our society will rot away.”

Thirty years later, not even the worsening pandemic has slowed his administration’s determination to push ahead with executions, rejecting repeated calls to freeze the policy until the pandemic eases.

Many states with death penalty laws have halted executions over concerns that the rampant spread of the coronavirus in prisons would put lawyers, witnesses and executioners at too great a risk. Largely as a consequence of the health precautions, states have executed just seven prisoners in the first half of the year and none since July. Last year, states carried out a combined 22 executions.

The expectation is that Biden will end the Trump administration’s policy of carrying out executions as quickly as the law allows, though his longer-term approach is unclear.

Durham said that while Obama placed a moratorium on federal executions, he left the door open for future presidents to resume them. Obama, for whom Biden served as vice president, never employed the option of commuting all federal death sentences to life terms.

As president, Biden could seek to persuade Congress to abolish the federal death penalty or simply invoke his commutation powers to single-handedly convert all death sentences to life-in-prison terms.

“Biden has said he intends to end the federal death penalty,” Durham said. “We’ll have to wait and see if that happens.”

———

Balsamo reported from Washington.

———

Follow Michael Tarm on Twitter at http://twitter.com/mtarm. Follow Balsamo at https://twitter.com/MikeBalsamo1.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory/trump-cementing-death-penalty-legacy-biden-inaugural-74579070

Republicans have to “turn out more votes than Stacey Abrams can steal” in Georgia’s Senate runoffs, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich said on Monday.

“They need to vote because the key to a Republican victory is to have more votes than the left can steal,” Gingrich told “Fox & Friends.”

Gingrich’s home state is the site of two U.S. Senate runoffs that will determine party control of the chamber in 2021. Sens. Kelly Loeffler, R-Ga., and David Perdue, R-Ga., are facing challenges from Democrats Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff, respectively.

Asked by host Steve Doocy what he meant when he said the left would “steal” the votes, Gingrich said there were 1.2 million unverified absentee ballots in the 2020 election and in 2018, 3.5 percent of absentee ballots were thrown out. 

JUSTICE ALITO: MAIL-IN BALLOTS RECEIVED AFTER ELECTION DAY IN PENNSYLVANIA MUST BE KEPT SEPARATE

“This year [it] was [0.3 percent]. The difference is three times Biden’s margin, and nobody can explain it. The agreement the Secretary of State [Brad Raffensperger] made with Stacey Abrams was crazy. They have their back now once again with these boxes where you can drop off ballots, which are an invitation to going out and gathering votes, which is illegal under Georgia law,” he said.

Georgia officials are investigating several groups, including one founded by Abrams, for illicit voter registration practices. Abrams lost her 2018 bid for Georgia’s governor and has since worked on Democratic voter turnout operations in the state.

Gingrich’s comments came after Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, R., refused President’s Trump request to order a special session of the legislature to overturn President-elect Joe Biden’s win there. Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, R., told CNN he is concerned that Trump is presenting misinformation that will hurt Loeffler and Perdue.

On Saturday, four Republican state senators launched a written petition trying to collect the signatures to force a special session.

GEORGIA’S KEMP AGAIN REJECTS LAWMAKERS REPLACING ELECTORS AFTER CALL WITH TRUMP

State lawmakers could call a special session on their own, but only if 60 percent of members in both houses of the General Assembly demanded a session in writing. That’s unlikely because more than 40% of the state House are Democrats.

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Gingrich said, “Republicans have learned they are spending an enormous amount of energy monitoring every one of these drop boxes” and said in his entire career in Georgia politics, he had never seen an election “blatantly in favor of being stolen and unorganized.” 

Fox News’ Edmund DeMarche contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/newt-gingrich-republicans-stacey-abrams-steal

We’re only weeks away from the start of 2021 and the status of another round of coronavirus relief checks is no clearer than it was weeks – or even months – ago.

A bipartisan $908 billion stimulus package is expected to be released Monday, coming in at roughly half of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s $2.2 trillion measure but almost double a $500 billion “targeted” approach favored by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. The new plan is expected to include a boost of $300 a week in federal unemployment payments, a freeze on evictions, funding for state and local aid, and money for small businesses. It also includes funding for transportation and vaccine distribution.

It does not include another round of coronavirus stimulus checks like those approved in the early days of the pandemic. That round provided up to $1,200 for individuals and $2,400 for married couples with $500 per dependent. Lawmakers from both parties have expressed support for direct stimulus payments but have failed to reach an agreement on additional checks and it’s not part of the latest relief effort.

And time is running out.

The new proposal will be linked to a year-end spending bill that would keep the government operating past a Dec. 11 deadline. Congress is set to go on holiday later in December, pushing the issue of stimulus checks into January, possibly after the inauguration of president-elect Joe Biden.

Biden hasn’t closed the door to another round of payments as part of the latest discussions, however. Last week, he said direct payments “may be still in play.”

“I think it would be better if they had the $1,200 (payments to families),” Biden said. “And I understand that may be still in play. But I’m not going to comment on the specific details. The whole purpose of this is, we’ve got to make sure people aren’t thrown out of their apartments, lose their homes, are able to have unemployment insurance (that) they can continue to feed their families on as we grow back the economy.”

Source Article from https://www.al.com/news/2020/12/second-stimulus-check-will-you-get-another-1200-before-dec-31.html