Former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton each reacted to Tuesday’s verdict in the Derek Chauvin murder trial.

The former president said the jury “made the right decision” in convicting Chauvin, an ex-Minneapolis police officer on murder charges in the death of George Floyd in the city last May.

“His tragic death and the evidence at the trial, made painfully clear that we must do much better in recruiting, training, and holding law enforcement accountable to the communities they serve,” Clinton wrote in a statement posted to Twitter. “The failure to do so continues to plague America, as we have seen in recent days.” 

Clinton added that the “color of a person’s skin” is too often a determinative factor in how they are treated in “nearly every aspect of American life.” 

OBAMAS: DEREK CHAUVIN GUILTY VERDICT ‘NECESSARY STEP’ TOWARD PROGRESS BUT ‘FAR FROM A SUFFICIENT ONE’ 

“While the verdict won’t bring George Floyd back, it can help us prevent more senseless deaths and hasten the day when we are all treated equally in matters of life, liberty, dignity, respect, and opportunity,” he wrote.” 

DEREK CHAUVIN TRIAL VERDICT: EX-MINNEAPOLIS POLICE OFFICER FOUND GUILTY ON ALL CHARGES IN GEORGE FLOYD’S DEATH 

He said that could be Floyd’s “lasting legacy.”

Hillary Clinton, the Democratic Party’s 2016 presidential nominee, said Floyd’s family and community finally received “accountability” for his murder in her own statement on Twitter.

“Always and forever, Black lives matter,” she wrote.

The Minneapolis jury found Chauvin, 45, guilty on all three charges of second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. 

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Floyd died on May 25, 2020, after Chauvin kneeled on his neck for more than nine minutes during an arrest.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/bill-clinton-says-jury-made-the-right-decision-in-finding-derek-chauvin-guilty-of-george-floyds-murder

If the jury in the trial of Derek Chauvin finds him guilty on any of the three charges he faces, it will certainly be a dramatic televised moment when the verdict is read. But how much prison time Mr. Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer charged in the killing of George Floyd, would have to serve if he is found guilty will not be decided until several weeks later, after a pre-sentencing report about Mr. Chauvin’s background is produced. Judge Peter A. Cahill would also have to determine if there were special circumstances of the crime that would justify a higher sentence than the prison terms laid out by Minnesota’s sentencing guidelines.

Mr. Chauvin, who has been out on bail since last fall, might also be able to go home after a guilty verdict, as he awaits sentencing. It would be up to the judge to either order Mr. Chauvin to jail immediately, or let him remain out on bail, should he be found guilty. Mr. Chauvin is charged with two counts of murder — second-degree unintentional murder and third-degree murder — and the sentencing guidelines for each, for a defendant like Mr. Chauvin with no criminal history, is 12.5 years. But the maximum sentences for each charge differ: Second-degree murder could be as high as 40 years in prison, while the maximum for third-degree murder is 25 years.

Mr. Chauvin is also charged with second-degree manslaughter, which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years, but under the guidelines he would most likely be sentenced to four years.

The state, however, has asked for a lengthier sentence should Mr. Chauvin be convicted on any of the charges — what is known as an “upward sentencing departure” — citing aggravating factors including, the state has said in court filings, that the killing of Mr. Floyd happened in the presence of children, that Mr. Floyd was treated with “particular cruelty” by Mr. Chauvin, and that Mr. Chauvin, as a police officer, “abused his position of authority.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/20/us/chauvin-sentence-murder.html

CHICAGO (WLS) — The streets were quiet in Chicago after former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was convicted of murder in the death of George Floyd, with the overwhelming sentiment expressed appearing to be relief and righteousness.

Chauvin was found guilty on all charges shortly after 4 p.m. He was charged with second degree murder, third degree murder, and second degree manslaughter.

RELATED | Derek Chauvin found guilty of murder, manslaughter in George Floyd’s death

A small group of people gathered in Daley Plaza downtown in anticipation of the verdict. While they were heartened by the guilty verdicts, they said true justice in America requires more than just one conviction.

The Chicago Alliance Against Racism and Political Repression organized the rally, saying they had planned to gather after the verdict regardless of what the jury decided.

They said this is a moment that is bigger than George Floyd, Derek Chauvin, or Minneapolis, and they hope people in Chicago reflect on what they say is badly needed police reform in the city.

The group is also planning a rally at 9 a.m. Wednesday across from City Hall, calling on the Chicago City Council to pass an ordinance that would give communities more say in policing in their neighborhoods.

WATCH | Mag Miles stores board up as a precaution following Chauvin verdict

Some people said they had stomach pains as they awaited the verdict, and many told ABC7 Eyewitness News they felt a sense of anticipation and dread, regardless of what the verdict turned out to be.

Rev. Martin Hunter, Laquan McDonald’s great uncle, was also closely watching the jury’s decision. He knows how a video can not only sway public opinion, but also convince a jury to convict a police officer.

“We now have another police officer charged and convicted for what he has done to a Black man in America. This is again the beginning of a new era in policing. We still have a long way to go in this country,” he said.

McDonald was shot 16 times by former Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke in 2014. After citywide outcry and more than a year of work by journalists and activists, police released dashcam video of the incident, which proved instrumental in charging Van Dyke with first degree murder and 16 counts of aggravated battery with a firearm. Van Dyke was convicted of second degree murder and all counts of aggravated battery, and was sentenced to six years and nine months in prison for McDonald’s murder.

Hunter also said as he was watching the verdict be read, he teared up and realized he had never been able to grieve for his great-nephew.

“If we have the conversation of how this is stopped, and the answer is always police need training, they need re-training, they need new training. This is the training,” said Hermene Hartman, N’Digo founder and publisher.

The verdict was widely praised by politicians as being a step in the right direction.

“I’m honestly relieved because I feel like justice was actually blind on this, they didn’t see color, they saw actually what happened,” said 20th Ward Alderman Jeanette Taylor.

WATCH | Politicians praise guilty verdict as step in right direction

Mayor Lori Lightfoot, speaking at an event honoring pandemic heroes of the past year, said Floyd’s death sparked a pivotal moment to end systemic racism.

“And in this same time, we felt a tidal wave of civil uprising following the murder of George Floyd and today, ladies and gentlemen, justice there was served,” she said.

Gov. Pritzker tweeted shortly after the verdict was read, saying, “No courtroom can ever replace a life, but it can and should deliver justice. Today, the jury in Derek Chauvin’s murder trial honored that truth.”

Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton released a statement reacting to the verdict, saying in part, “Now, in Minneapolis, a diverse jury of men and women with various lived experiences have handed down a guilty verdict that tells this nation, and the world, that the humanity of Black people matters. Finally, this is what accountability looks like. But make no mistake, George Floyd should be alive today and the system still needs to change.”

RELATED | George Floyd’s family calls verdict in Derek Chauvin trial a victory: ‘We won’

Former President Barack Obama and Michelle Obama said in part, “Today a jury in Minneapolis did the right thing.”

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul issued a statement, saying in part, “Today justice was served, and I hope this verdict brings some measure of peace to the family and friends of George Floyd, and allows them to begin recovering not just from Floyd’s tragic death but also from the trauma of the trial. I am also hopeful that this verdict will begin the healing our country needs.”

Illinois House Republican Leader Jim Durkin said, “While today’s verdict won’t bring back the life of George Floyd, it delivers a powerful statement that no one is above the law.”

WATCH | Activists celebrate verdict as they vow to keep fighting injustice

The verdict also gives further momentum to those calling for police reform.

“We’re relieved but we can’t celebrate because the killings keep coming,” Rev. Jesse Jackson said.

“We need to recognize that this is justice for George Floyd, but we’ve got to do more to prevent future cases like this one,” said 35th Ward Alderman Carlos Ramirez-Rosa.

“Hopefully this is not going to keep happening, you know, maybe this will help, but also we’re hoping as members of Congress that we pass a torch for justice and policing,” said Rep. Robin Kelly (D-Chicago), Illinois Democratic Party Chairwoman.

Activists are promising to keep marching ahead in their fight.

“We have to do everything in our power to push against the system of oppression and police are the protectors of that oppression,” said LaSaia Wade, executive director, Brave Space Alliance.

WATCH | Chicago activist’s message following guilty verdicts: ‘Be the voice for Black people’

Humboldt Park resident Andre Williams said that the guilty verdicts in the Chauvin trial “set a big tone for Chicago, especially.”

One year ago, Williams gave a speech at the culmination of a Black Lives Matter protest on the Northwest Side. He spoke to a group of mostly white, young protesters and pled with them to be activists in their own homes, with their parents and grandparents. In reaction to the verdicts, Williams promoted the same message.

“At some point, you’ve got to be the voice for Black people in your household,” Williams said. “And it has to start today.”

Chicago’s Fraternal Order of Police President John Catanzara said he doesn’t agree with any of the tactics Chauvin used that day and was not surprised by the guilty verdict.

“It was justified use of force until the point that Mr. Floyd stopped breathing. Then it became excessive. It really is that cut and dry,” Catanzara said. “The perception that this is some epidemic nationwide – it just has to stop.”

Catanzara said this sends a message to police that if they go over the line, they’ll get tried and convicted.

National Guard called in, downtown businesses board up ahead of verdict

Many downtown Chicago businesses were already boarded up early Tuesday morning. At the request of Mayor Lori Lightfoot, Pritzker said he will deploy 125 National Guard members to stand by to support the Chicago Police Department beginning Tuesday.

“The Illinois National Guard will carry out a limited mission to help manage street closures and will not interfere with peaceful protestors exercising their First Amendment rights, much the same role as Guard members played in previous deployments,” Pritzker’s office said in a written statement.

Soldiers assigned are from the 33rd Military Police Battalion and are specially trained in riot control operations, the statement said.

“It is critical that those who wish to peacefully protest against the systemic racism and injustice that holds back too many of our communities continue to be able to do so. Members of the Guard and the Illinois State Police will support the City of Chicago’s efforts to protect the rights of peaceful protestors and keep our families safe,” Pritzker said in a written statement Monday.

Pritzker’s office also said the Illinois State Police will support CPD with additional troopers.

ISP told the I-Team they’re in contact with the Chicago Police Department to help with peaceful protests and keep the community safe. They have not been asked to help in Minnesota, like some other nearby states have.

Some businesses along the Magnificent Mile and elsewhere in the city have been boarded up since last Thursday, when video of the fatal Chicago police shooting of 13-year-old Adam Toledo was released.

Chicago’s Office of Emergency Management and Communications also prepared for the jury’s decision, but said there’s “no actionable intelligence at this time.”

“Infrastructure assets” will be strategically staged to ensure safety, OEMC said.

Second Ward Alderman Brian Hopkins said the city is over-prepared.

“It means having the National Guard in place to do crowd control and traffic control, if necessary. It means having trained police officers who have been practicing for events like this, who now know what the appropriate response is to civil disobedience, whether it’s looting or whether it’s a protest that gets out of control,” Hopkins said.

Lightfoot commented on her request for guard troops at an unrelated news conference Tuesday morning, saying “we learned a lot over the course of last summer and fall about additional things we needed to be doing. Last week we activated our neighborhood protection plan, which puts officers on high alert. They are very visible.”

Black and Latinx organizers condemned the mayor’s plan to install National Guard troops ahead of the verdict.

They said protesters who marched last Friday night, outraged over the police killing of Toledo, were treated with a heavy hand by officers, and they believe that’s how protesters would be treated in the wake of any potential verdict of the Chauvin case.

“Last Friday, during peaceful protests that occurred, we saw clear indications that CPD plans to respond to protests that arise from the Adam Toledo and the George Floyd verdict with the same violence and racism,” Sheila Bed said.

Hopkins said there’s “no actionable intelligence at this time” of anything expected to happen downtown.

He also said the National Guard is stationed out-of-sight close by so they can respond within minutes.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://abc7chicago.com/when-will-chauvin-trial-wrap-up-jb-pritzker-national-guard-to-chicago-verdict/10530457/

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/04/20/derek-chauvin-guilty-handcuffed-led-out-minneapolis-courtroom/7308949002/

Jurors convicted former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin on Tuesday of all the counts filed against him — second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter — in the death of George Floyd, who died after being pinned under his knee for more than nine minutes last May.

Chauvin looked stern and glanced around the courtroom as the paper with the verdicts were removed from an envelope and read by Judge Peter Cahill.

The fired police officer had on a paper mask and showed no significant reaction to the results. When his bail was revoked, he stood up, put his hands behind his back, was handcuffed and gave a nod to defense attorney Eric Nelson as he was led out the back door of the courtroom by a Hennepin County sheriff’s deputy.

The Sheriff’s Office said Chauvin was transferred to the Minnesota Department of Corrections. The agency said Chauvin was booked into the state prison at Oak Park Heights, at 4:55 p.m. CDT, 48 minutes after the verdicts were read. Chauvin was transferred to the same prison for safety reasons after his initial arrest in the case last year.

Cahill thanked the jurors, who each confirmed their votes as correctly read. “”I have to thank you on behalf of the people of the State of Minnesota not only for jury service, but heavy duty jury service,” he said.

He asked the attorneys to file written arguments regarding aggravated sentencing factors that could add time to Chauvin’s sentence for restraining Floyd on the pavement of 38th and Chicago on May 25, an act captured on bystander video that went viral and played a vital role in the verdicts.

If Cahill accepts the prosecution’s contention that aggravating factors should be applied at sentencing, the maximum term the 45-year-old Chauvin could receive would be 30 years, according to Ted Sampsell-Jones, a professor at the Mitchell Hamline School of Law and an appellate criminal defense attorney. The first 20 years would be served in prison and the balance on supervised release if he qualifies.

The state is already on the record that among the factors are: Floyd was especially vulnerable, Chauvin was a uniformed police officer acting in a position of authority, and his acts were witnessed by children, one of them 9 years old.

Attorney General Keith Ellison, whose office oversaw Chauvin’s prosecution, saluted the “bouquet of humanity” who attempted to intervene and recorded Floyd’s final moments.

“They didn’t know George Floyd, they didn’t know he had a beautiful family, they didn’t know that he was a proud father or had people in his life who loved him,” Ellison said to reporters as members of his legal team stood behind him. “They stopped and they raised their voices because they knew what they were seeing was wrong. They didn’t need to be medical or use of force experts. They knew it was wrong, and they were right.”

Darnella Frazier, who at age 17 shot the cellphone video that proved pivotal to Chauvin’s conviction, said on Facebook after the verdicts, “I just cried so hard. This last hour my heart was beating so fast, I was so anxious, anxiety [busting] through the roof. But to know GUILTY ON ALL 3 CHARGES!!! THANK YOU GOD THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU. George Floyd we did it!!! Justice has been served.”

Co-prosecutor Jerry Blackwell followed Ellison and said to reporters, “No verdict can bring George Perry Floyd back to us, but this verdict does give a message to his family that his life mattered, that all of our lives matter, and that’s important.”

Matthew Frank, another of the prosecutors, kept his comments brief and said, “First and foremost, this is for you, George Floyd, and for your family and friends.” A third member of the team, Steve Schleicher, said, “I want to thank the jury for their service, for doing what was right and decent and correct, speaking the truth, and finding the right verdict in this case.”

Nelson, who was hired by the Minnesota Police and Peace Officers Association to defend Chauvin, left the courtroom without comment and has so far not replied to a request for his reaction to the verdicts or whether an appeal might be filed.

A prepared statement from Benjamin Crump, the Floyd family attorney, read, “Painfully earned justice has arrived for George Floyd’s family and the community here in Minneapolis, but today’s verdict goes far beyond this city and has significant implications for the country and even the world. Justice for Black America is justice for all of America.

“This case is a turning point in American history for accountability of law enforcement and sends a clear message we hope is heard clearly in every city and every state. We thank Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison and his team for their fierce dedication to justice for George. But it does not end here. We have not forgotten that the other three officers who played their own roles in the death of George Floyd must still be held accountable for their actions, as well.”

One of Floyd’s brothers, Philonise Floyd, was in the courtroom for the verdicts. He hugged Blackwell, Ellison and another prosecutor. Ellison and Blackwell heartily shook hands.

The younger brother has been a steady presence on behalf of the family. About an hour after the verdicts were read, Floyd family members were spotted in downtown Minneapolis speaking on the phone with President Joe Biden, who has been keeping close tabs on the proceedings. “We’re all so relieved,” Biden said, speaking for himself and Vice President Kamala Harris.

Another brother, Terrence Floyd, said, “I will salute [George] every day of my life.

“I will salute him,” the brother said as he looked to the sky and made that gesture with his right hand, “because he showed me how to be strong. … What a day to be a Floyd, man.”

Brother Rodney Floyd thanked everyone for their constant support: “For George, this fight is not over. We’re going to stand here together, we’re going to try to get this George Floyd Act passed. It has to be passed.”

The Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis responded in a statement that “there are no winners in this case, and we respect the jury’s decision. We need the political pandering to stop and the race-baiting of elected officials to stop.

“In addition, we need to stop the divisive comments, and we all need to do better to create a Minneapolis we all love.” The statement added in a line geared toward residents of Minneapolis that the federation “stands with you and not against you.”

Ellison, during his statement, also addressed policing when he said, “The work of our generation is to put unaccountable law enforcement behind us. It’s time to transform the relationship between community and the people who are sworn to protect them from one that is mistrustful, suspicious, and in some cases terrifying, into one that is empathetic, compassionate and affirming. That will benefit everyone, including police officers who deserve to serve in a profession that is honored and [in] departments where they don’t have to worry about colleagues who don’t follow the rules.”

Reaction from other leading officeholders was swift, among them Mayor Jacob Frey, who said in a statement, “Today the jury joined in a shared conviction that has animated Minneapolis for the last 11 months: they refused to look away. They believed their own eyes and affirmed George Floyd should still be here today.”

A statement from Gov. Tim Walz said, “Today’s verdict is an important step forward for justice in Minnesota. The trial is over, but our work has only begun.”

The governor add that “no verdict can bring George back, and my heart is with his family as they continue to grieve his loss. Minnesota mourns with you, and we promise the pursuit of justice for George does not end today.”

The foreperson was Juror No. 19, a white man in his 30s who works as an auditor. He pledged during the jury selection process that he could examine the evidence “from a viewpoint of the law.”

He and his fellow jurors, whose identities have so far been kept undisclosed by the court, remained still and quiet and kept their eyes on the judge until called upon by the judge to affirm their verdicts individually. They departed the courtroom revealing no visible emotion.

Jurors, who were sequestered, reached their decision after hearing closing arguments from the prosecution and defense Monday. They started deliberations afterward. Jurors heard from 44 witnesses over 14 days of testimony. The trial began seven weeks ago on March 8 with jury selection, and it was livestreamed across the world by several media outlets on multiple platforms.

The jurors were asked to decide between the prosecution’s claims that Chauvin used excessive force and an unsanctioned maneuver when he knelt on Floyd’s neck for about 9 1/2 minutes last May 25, and the defense’s argument that Chauvin was following his training when he arrested an unruly Floyd, who died of a cardiac arrest that stemmed from drug use and pre-existing heart disease and clogged arteries.

The cause of death became a key issue, with prosecutors telling jurors Floyd, 46, died of asphyxia from low oxygen when Chauvin knelt on his neck as former officers J. Alexander Kueng knelt on his buttock and thigh area and Thomas Lane knelt and held onto his legs. Former officer Tou Thao kept angry bystanders at bay.

The officers were arresting him for using a fake $20 bill to buy cigarettes at Cup Foods in south Minneapolis.

Hennepin County Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Andrew Baker ruled that Floyd died of a homicide, an act caused by another person, and that the cause of death was “cardiopulmonary arrest complicating law enforcement subdual, restraint, and neck compression.” He also listed hardening and thickening of the artery walls, heart disease and drug use as “other significant conditions.” Fentanyl and methamphetamine were found in Floyd’s system.

Addressing the aggravating factors in an earlier filing, the prosecutors wrote:

• Floyd was “particularly vulnerable” because his hands were handcuffed behind him.

• Floyd was treated with “particular cruelty.” Prosecutors said at trial that Chauvin remained on Floyd’s neck even though he wasn’t breathing and didn’t have a pulse for nearly five minutes. Bystander video also captured Floyd repeatedly saying he couldn’t breathe before he became unresponsive.

• The officers abused their position of authority.

• The officers committed the act as a group.

• The officers’ actions occurred in front of children. The youngest witness was Judeah Reynolds, then 9. Her cousin, Darnella Frazier, then 17, recorded and shared video of the incident, which many credit for leading to the criminal prosecution.

Defense attorney Nelson argued at trial that the bystanders, which also included adults, were hostile toward the officers and created a potential threat.

Second-degree unintentional murder is punishable by up to 40 years in prison. Third-degree murder is punishable by up to 25 years in prison. However, Minnesota sentencing guidelines call for identical presumptive prison terms for both counts, starting at 12 1/2 years for someone with no criminal history.

Second-degree manslaughter is punishable by up to 10 years in prison and/or a fine of $20,000. The count carries a presumptive sentence of four years for someone with no criminal history.

The verdict came at a time of heightened tensions in the metro area following the April 11 fatal shooting of Daunte Wright, a 20-year-old Black man who was fatally shot during a traffic stop by then-Brooklyn Center police officer Kimberly Potter.

Then-Brooklyn Center Police Chief Tim Gannon, who has since resigned, said Potter mistakenly fired her gun instead of a Taser while assisting in the arrest of Wright, who had been stopped for expired tabs and was found to have a warrant. Potter, who also resigned, was charged last week with second-degree manslaughter.

Wright’s death led to several nights of protests outside the Brooklyn Center Police Department, where police fired rubber bullets, tear gas and flash-bang grenades at demonstrators, alarming residents of an apartment building across the street who said they were being impacted. Police also accused some demonstrators of throwing objects, including cans and bricks, at police.

A coalition of at least nine local law enforcement agencies working as “Operation Safety Net” has coordinated with each other to provide security during Chauvin’s trial, and are expected to respond the public’s reaction to the verdict. Coalition partners have also responded to the protests in Brooklyn Center.

The death of Floyd, who is Black, under a white officer’s knee sparked demonstrations across the world and a racial reckoning that prompted calls for defunding the police. It led to alterations to the long-held names of popular musical acts and the rebranding of well-known products that had used racially insensitive terminology or mascots, among other changes.

Many activists and community members had looked to Chauvin’s trial as a test of the criminal justice system and a potential turning point in community-police relations, only to be disrupted by Wright’s killing.

Family attorney Crump, who helped negotiate a record $27 million settlement with the City of Minneapolis, is also representing Wright’s family.

Chauvin was the fourth officer tried in Minnesota for killing a civilian on the job. Former St. Anthony police officer Jeronimo Yanez was acquitted in 2017 for fatally shooting Philando Castile during a traffic stop. Former Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor was convicted in 2019 of third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter for fatally shooting Justine Ruszczyk Damond while responding to her 911 call about a possible sexual assault in an alley. Noor, who is serving a 12 1/2-year prison term, was acquitted of second-degree murder.

Noor’s conviction was upheld by the Minnesota Court of Appeals, a decision that the Minnesota Supreme Court will review in June.

Washington County sheriff’s deputy Brian Krook was acquitted last year for fatally shooting Benjamin Evans, who was intoxicated, suicidal and had a gun in his hand but had not threatened to harm officers.

J. Alexander Kueng, Thomas Lane and Tou Thao are scheduled to be tried Aug. 23 for aiding and abetting second-degree murder and manslaughter in Floyd’s death. All three, who were fired like Chauvin, are out on bond. Chauvin had also been out on bond during his trial.

Star Tribune staff writer Libor Jany contributed to this report. paul.walsh@startribune.com • 612-673-4482

Source Article from https://www.startribune.com/derek-chauvin-cuffed-after-murder-manslaughter-convictions-in-death-of-george-floyd/600047825/

A federal judge overseeing a sprawling lawsuit about homelessness in Los Angeles ordered the city and county Tuesday to offer some form of shelter or housing to the entire homeless population of skid row by October.

Judge David O. Carter granted a preliminary injunction sought by the plaintiffs in the case last week and now is telling the city and county that they must offer single women and unaccompanied children on skid row a place to stay within 90 days, help families within 120 days and finally, by Oct. 18, offer every homeless person on skid row housing or shelter.

It’s unclear whether the city and county will challenge the order, which also calls for the city to put $1 billion into an escrow account — an idea that has raised concerns among city officials.

The ruling argues that L.A. city and county wrongly focused on permanent housing at the expense of more temporary shelter, “knowing that massive development delays were likely while people died in the streets.” That element of the order underscores the judge’s skepticism of a core part of L.A.’s current strategy to tackle homelessness.

“Los Angeles has lost its parks, beaches, schools, sidewalks, and highway systems due to the inaction of city and county officials who have left our homeless citizens with no other place to turn,” Carter wrote in a 110-page brief sprinkled with quotes from Abraham Lincoln and an extensive history of how skid row was first created.

“All of the rhetoric, promises, plans, and budgeting cannot obscure the shameful reality of this crisis — that year after year, there are more homeless Angelenos, and year after year, more homeless Angelenos die on the streets.” Last year more than 1,300 homeless people died in Los Angeles County.

In the last homeless count in January 2020, more than 4,600 unhoused people were found to be living on skid row — about 2,500 in large shelters and 2,093 on the streets. They account for only slightly more than 10% of the city’s overall homeless population, and it’s not clear what Carter’s order might mean for other parts of the city.

The judge wrote that “after adequate shelter is offered,” he would allow the city to enforce laws that keep streets and sidewalks clear of tents so long as they’re consistent with previous legal rulings that have limited the enforcement of such rules. That appears to only apply to skid row.

He also ordered the county to offer “support services to all homeless residents who accept the offer of housing” including placements in “appropriate emergency, interim, or permanent housing and treatment services.” The costs would be split by the city and county, he said.

Rob Wilcox, a spokesman for the city attorney’s office, said Tuesday that city lawyers are reviewing the order. He declined to comment further.

Skip Miller, partner at the Miller Barondess law firm, which is outside counsel for the county in the lawsuit, said the county is “now evaluating our options, including the possibility of an appeal.”

Previously, the county had asked to be removed from the case, arguing that it was about the city and that the county was aggressively responding to homelessness without any direction from the court. It cited efforts that included spending hundreds of millions of dollars annually through the Measure H sales tax and developing innovative strategies such as Project Roomkey in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Project Roomkey is a state program that provides temporary funding for cities and counties to rent hotel rooms for homeless people during the pandemic.

The push for an injunction “is an attempt by property owners and businesses to rid their neighborhood of homeless people,” Miller said.

“There is no legal basis for an injunction because the county is spending hundreds of millions of dollars a year on proven strategies,” he added.

Matthew Umhofer, an attorney representing the plaintiffs, the L.A. Alliance for Human Rights, said he and his clients were ecstatic. Carter’s call for action was what they had been looking for when they filed the case, he said, and why they sought out Carter, who had overseen similar cases in Orange County in recent years, to preside over it.

“This is exactly the kind of aggressive emergency action that we think is necessary on the issue of homelessness in Los Angeles,” Umhofer said.

The Alliance is a coalition of downtown business owners and residents that filed the case in March 2020, accusing the city and county of breaching their duty to abate a nuisance, reducing property value without compensation, wasting public funds and violating the state environmental act and state and federal acts protecting people with disabilities.

Carter’s order came the day that Mayor Eric Garcetti released his budget for the next fiscal year, which includes nearly $1 billion in spending on homelessness. The longtime federal judge also ordered “that $1 billion, as represented by Mayor Garcetti, will be placed in escrow forthwith.”

Of the $1 billion in homeless spending planned by Garcetti, more than a third would come from Proposition HHH, the 2016 bond measure to build permanent housing for homeless residents. Garcetti aides said they expect the city will be building or developing 89 HHH projects over the next fiscal year, for a total of 5,651 housing units.

Whether Carter’s order will disrupt those activities is unclear. In his order, the judge said he wants a report in 90 days of every developer receiving funds from HHH, as well as new regulations to “limit the possibility of funds being wasted.”

At a press conference Tuesday afternoon, Garcetti declined to say whether the city would file an appeal of the order, saying he first wants to read it. But he suggested that Carter’s order could slow down the construction of HHH projects.

“Roadblocks masquerading as progress are the last things we need,” he said.

Because the $1 billion for homelessness doesn’t yet exist — some of it hasn’t arrived from Washington and none of it has been approved by the City Council for the coming year — Garcetti said he also fears the city will be asked instead to put some other source of money in the escrow account.

The mayor’s proposed budget, set for release Tuesday, comes at a moment of heightened frustration over the city’s handling of homelessness.

Carter has also asked for a number of reports from city and county officials about how money for combating homelessness has been and is currently being spent. He has also ordered that the city and county cease any sales or transfers of city or county property before such reports are provided.

The lengthy ruling also skewered corruption scandals involving housing projects, “excessive delays and skyrocketing costs” under the HHH bond measure, and L.A.’s failure to seek federal reimbursement for Project Roomkey rooms.

Councilman Kevin de León, whose district includes skid row, welcomed the judge’s decision. Although L.A. needs more clarity about setting aside $1 billion, he said, the tight timeframe to offer shelter or housing to skid row residents “lights a fire under the city to act with a real sense of urgency and to match the rhetoric with real outcomes to save lives.”

“It’s a strong shot across the bow — and he is expecting action,” de León said. “Not continued negotiations or studying everything to death.”

Pete White, executive director of the skid row-based Los Angeles Community Action Network, which is an intervenor in the case, said his organization had “grown concerned that politicians are using this litigation to justify investment in emergency shelters instead of housing.”

“We all know that shelters won’t solve our housing crisis, and they definitely won’t address the structural racism that got us here in the first place.”

Skid row activist and resident Jeff Page echoed White , saying the tight window for moving people means they won’t be going to permanent housing but instead to “dorm style living that in and of itself is problematic.” What’s needed, he said, is more permanent housing in the neighborhood to be built as quickly as possible.

“We need more housing here. We need more services,” he said.

In his order, Carter outlined historic forms of discrimination that had cut Black people out of housing opportunities, including redlining, segregated systems of assistance during the Great Depression, highway construction that displaced Black families, and criminalization that has disproportionately affected Black communities.

Racial inequity has continued to color government handling of the crisis, Carter concluded, opining that current city and county policies “compound and perpetuate structural racism, threatening the integrity of Black families in Los Angeles and forcing a disproportionate number of Black families to go unhoused.”

The judge has previously compared the situation to the aftermath of the seminal civil rights case Brown vs. Board of Education, saying there are times when the federal judiciary may need to act “after a long period of inaction by local government officials.”

Laurie Levenson, a professor at Loyola Law School, called the 110-page order a “deep dive into the problems of homelessness in Los Angeles and an expression of Carter’s frustration with how the city and county have responded to this crisis.” She noted that judges in the South during the 1950s and 1960s had used similarly expansive injunctions to make desegregation a reality and in other cases to implement prison reform.

She wasn’t sure how a higher court might rule if this case ends up getting appealed but said it was “certainly a landmark decision.”

“It is an open question whether the appellate court will step in,” she said. “As Judge Carter acknowledges, there is usually a hearing before such an order. However, he has loaded up his decision with facts that he says obviate the need for a hearing. The judge has made a bold move.”

News of the injunction had not trickled down to the streets of skid row Tuesday, but people reacted favorably when informed of it. Hasan Saleem, 58, who was sitting outside his tent on 6th Street, said he would take housing “right away” if offered, even if it takes 180 days. Still, he remained skeptical.

“I wouldn’t mind waiting if it was true,” he said. “I don’t know if it’s true or not.”

“It’s better than how they used to do it when they just take your stuff and put you to jail,” said Peaceful Bolden, who was standing with a small group across the street from the Los Angeles Mission. “At least they’re trying.”

But Bolden said she did not think housing alone would be enough.

“Some of these people are just refugees from whatever life they used to have,” she said. “They need mental health. They need hospice, some of them. A lot of them don’t want to leave because they don’t want to be under anyone’s rules.”

Andy Bales, president and CEO of the Union Rescue Mission, had heard the news and hailed it as the “wall of reality” that the city and county are finally running into.

“It’s what I came to Union Rescue Mission to accomplish,” Bales said. “I’ve always wanted to decentralize skid row and regionalize Services throughout the County. My hope is this will do that.”

Times staff writers David Zahniser and Dakota Smith contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/homeless-housing/story/2021-04-20/judge-carter-la-city-county-shelter-skid-row-homeless-fall

BEIJING — Chinese President Xi Jinping will give a speech Thursday via video conference at a global leaders climate summit organized by U.S. President Joe Biden, state media said Wednesday.

Many expected the leaders of the world’s two largest economies — and the largest carbon polluters — to have their first meeting on the sidelines of the summit as tensions between the two countries simmer. Since taking office in January, Biden has called China the “most serious competitor” to the U.S. as he maintains former President Donald Trump’s tough stance on Beijing.

Xi and Biden spoke by phone in February, just ahead of China’s Spring Festival.

Reducing carbon emissions is one of the few areas China and the U.S. have said they could cooperate on, and aligns with Xi’s announcement last year that the Asian nation aims to reach peak carbon emissions by 2030.

Over the weekend, the U.S. and China jointly issued a broad statement on how the two countries would work together to “tackle the climate crisis.”

The statement followed two days of talks in Shanghai between U.S. special envoy for climate John Kerry and his Chinese counterpart Xie Zhenhua.

On Tuesday, Xi said at the opening ceremony of the Boao Forum for Asia that China would support “green” development, particularly regarding the Belt and Road Initiative. Critics say the infrastructure development program is part of Beijing’s attempt to increase its influence among less developed countries in the region.

Xi did not mention the U.S. by name in his speech, but said big countries should behave responsibly and that China would not seek hegemony or “a sphere of influence.”

The announcement Wednesday that Xi would attend the climate summit comes more than three weeks since Biden invited 40 world leaders to attend the two-day meeting set for Thursday and Friday.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/04/21/chinas-xi-jinping-to-speak-at-a-us-led-climate-summit-on-thursday.html

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis sat down with host Tucker Carlson in a new episode of Fox Nation’s “Tucker Carlson Today” to discuss the state of the media in the United States.

“I think it’s a big problem. The corporate media has always had a liberal bias…If you go back 20, 30 years, it would always be through a liberal prism – but they wouldn’t just do some of the stuff that they do now,” DeSantis said.

CBS News‘ “60 Minutes” was recently under fire for suggesting DeSantis gave the Publix grocery store chain preferable treatment to offer the coronavirus vaccine based on its donations to his PAC.

“60 Minutes” correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi painted DeSantis as a villain who prioritized senior citizens over teachers during the report that was peppered with jabs at the Republican governor.

Publix called the notion that it received special access “absolutely false and offensive.”

’60 MINUTES’ PANNED FOR SEGMENT USING VIEWER MAIL TO JUSTIFY DESANTIS REPORT: ‘THIS IS EMBARRASSING

“The irresponsible suggestion that there was a connection between campaign contributions made to Governor DeSantis and our willingness to join other pharmacies in support of the state’s vaccine distribution efforts is absolutely false and offensive. We are proud of our pharmacy associates for administering more than 1.5 million doses of vaccine to date and for joining other retailers in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia to do our part to help our communities emerge from the pandemic,” a Publix spokesperson told Fox News.

Democratic state officials, conservative pundits, Floridians and journalism professors alike have called for CBS News to retract or correct the story. Instead, the network put out multiple statements defending the report but never responded to specific criticism tied to pay-for-play allegations. The long-running news magazine acknowledged the backlash on Sunday without offering an apology or correction.

In his interview with Carlson, DeSantis said that there is no accountability for the corporate press because they can continue to omit information to serve a narrative with “impunity.”

DeSantis stated his belief that the media is “actively partisan.” He went on to say that they “craft a narrative regardless of the facts – if there’s a fact that’s “inconvenient to the narrative, they’ll smother and ignore the fact to be able to continue with the narrative.”

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DeSantis listed a few so-called “bombshell” stories that were eventually proven to be false – such as actor Jussie Smollett faking a hate crime, and the Russia collusion narrative.

“The phone call that Trump supposedly had with Georgia, where they fabricated the quotes. Those aren’t even real quotes. And so I think it’s a big problem for democracy.”

“I think their model is kind of smearing their opponents for clicks. And I think that worked very well for them when Trump was president because they were really playing to an enraged left-wing base,” DeSantis said. 

“Now that we’re in a different environment,” he continued, “you see the ratings going down.”

New episodes of “Tucker Carlson Today” are available every Monday, Wednesday and Friday exclusively on Fox Nation. Join Fox Nation today to watch Tucker’s full interview with Scott Yenor and other great episodes.

Fox Nation programs are viewable on-demand and from your mobile device app, but only for Fox Nation subscribers. Go to Fox Nation to start a free trial and watch the extensive library from your favorite Fox News personalities.

Fox News’ Brian Flood and Joseph A. Wulfsohn contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/ron-desantis-mainstream-media-has-lost-credibility-tucker-carlson-today

Washington — President Biden said he hopes the jury in the trial of Derek Chauvin, the former police officer charged in George Floyd’s death, reaches the “right verdict,” weighing in on the case as it approaches its conclusion.

Mr. Biden called Floyd’s family on Monday, with the White House bracing for the verdict. The jury began deliberations after the conclusion of closing arguments on Monday, and continued on Tuesday morning.

Mr. Biden told reporters on Tuesday that he has come to know Floyd’s family, and waited to call until the jury entered deliberations.

“I can only imagine the pressure and the anxiety they’re feeling,” he said. “They’re a good family and they’re calling for peace and tranquility.”

Mr. Biden said that he is “praying the verdict is the right verdict, which is — I think it’s overwhelming, in my view.”

President Biden waits for a meeting with the Congressional Hispanic Caucus in the Oval Office of the White House April 20, 2021.

BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images


White House press secretary Jen Psaki defended Mr. Biden’s comments, which took place after the president said he would not weigh in before the jury. “I don’t think he would see it as weighing in on the verdict,” she said. 

Asked what changed to make Mr. Biden weigh in when he said he wouldn’t, Psaki said, “Well the jury is now sequestered, which is a significant change.”

Psaki tweeted on Tuesday that Mr. Biden spoke with Floyd “to check in with them and also share that the family was in his prayers.” Psaki said Monday that the White House is in contact with state and local authorities and encouraging protests remain peaceful.

Philonise Floyd, the brother of George Floyd, said in an interview with NBC News that Mr. Biden called him earlier this week.

“He knows how it is to lose a family member and he knows the process of what we’re going through. So he was just letting us know that he was praying for us and hoping everything would come out to be okay,” Floyd said.

The country is bracing for the verdict against Chauvin, who is charged with second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. Chauvin was filmed pinning his knee on Floyd’s neck for over nine minutes.

Floyd’s death ignited a series of protests across the country against police brutality and racial violence, and further unrest is expected after the verdict is announced.

Mr. Biden has toed a delicate line in his response to recent demonstrations, offering his support for the cause while urging protesters to remain nonviolent. There was a surge in protests after Daunte Wright, a 20-year-old Black man, was fatally shot by police during a traffic stop in a Minneapolis suburb earlier this month.

“Daunte Wright in Minnesota — that godawful shooting resulting in his death, in the midst of an ongoing trial over the killing of George Floyd. And Lord only knows what’s happened based on what the verdict will or will not be there,” Mr. Biden said in remarks from the Oval Office.

But Mr. Biden also called for “peace and calm” last week, and condemned any looting or violence.

“I want to make it clear again: There is absolutely no justification — none — for looting. No justification for violence. Peaceful protest, understandable,” Mr. Biden said. “We do know that the anger, pain, and trauma that exists in the Black community in that environment is real, it’s serious, and it’s consequential. But it will not justify violence and/or looting.”

NAACP CEO and President Derrick Johnson told “CBS This Morning” co-host Gayle King that “the world is watching” for the verdict in the Chauvin trial.

“When you think about Selma, that was about voting reform, to allow our democracy to work,” Johnson said. “Right now we’re talking about our criminal justice system — the reform to ensure trust and we can feel safe.”

There is significant tension around the outcome of the trial, particularly in Minnesota, where Governor Tim Walz has declared a public safety emergency. Democratic Congresswoman Maxine Waters has come under fire for encouraging protesters in Minnesota to “stay on the street” and “get more confrontational” if they don’t see a guilty verdict returned in the trial.

Chauvin’s defense attorney moved for a mistrial over Waters’ comments, a request that was denied by Judge Peter Cahill.

“I will give you that Congresswoman Waters may have given you something on appeal that may result in this whole trial being overturned,” Cahill told defense attorney Eric Nelson. He warned jurors not to allow “bias, prejudice, passion, sympathy or public opinion” to influence their decision.

Waters did not back down from her comments in an interview with The Grio on Monday and said she is “nonviolent.” But House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy is introducing a resolution to censure Waters, and she has been widely criticized by Republicans.

— Kathryn Watson contributed reporting

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/george-floyd-joe-biden-derek-chauvin-trial-verdict/

UPDATE:

In an unprecedented move, Columbus police showed body camera footage of the shooting by a Columbus police officer of a 16-year-old girl just hours after the incident.

The video shows an officer approaching a driveway with a group of young people standing there. In the video, it appears that the 16-year-old, identified now as Ma’Khia Bryant, who was moments later shot by police pushes or swings at a person who falls to the ground.

Ma’Khia then appears to swing a knife at a girl who is on the hood of a car, and the officer fires his weapon what sounds like four times, striking the girl.

Columbus police stressed that the Bureau of Criminal Investigation is leading the investigation into the case, but the city wanted to release the body camera to give the public more information.

Source Article from https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/crime/2021/04/20/one-person-killed-officer-involved-shooting-east-side/7309088002/

Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was found guilty of second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter by a jury Tuesday for his role in the murder of George Floyd last May outside of a local convenience store.

Floyd’s death, and the video that showed Chauvin kneeling on Floyd’s neck for about nine minutes, became a catalyst for the sports world’s racial and social justice movement last summer.

A jury of six white, four Black and two multiracial jurors deliberated nine hours over two days — five hours on Monday; four hours Tuesday — before rendering a verdict. ABCNews.com has full coverage of the decision.

Chauvin faces a 40-year maximum sentence for the second-degree unintentional murder conviction, a 25-year sentence for third-degree murder and a 10-year sentence for second-degree manslaughter. Chauvin’s bail was immediately revoked, and his sentencing will be in eight weeks.

“One year ago, George Floyd was murdered, causing unimaginable pain and trauma for his family, the Minneapolis community, and communities across the nation,” the NBA’s Minnesota Timberwolves and WNBA’s Minnesota Lynx said in a joint statement Tuesday. “Our deepest thoughts have been with the Floyd family since this unjust tragedy. Throughout our history, racial and social inequalities have been ingrained in our society.

“We are hopeful that today’s decision will serve as a step forward, but it does not ease the physical and emotional pain that continues in an environment where systemic racism exists.”

Floyd’s death led to nationwide protests and prompted athletes throughout the sports world to speak out about social and racial injustice. Former NBA player Stephen Jackson traveled to Minnesota the week Floyd died and said, “I’m hurt, I’m angry, but I ain’t scared” in an emotional speech alongside fellow NBA players Karl-Anthony Towns and Josh Okogie. Jaylen Brown of the Boston Celtics drove 15 hours to march at a protest in Atlanta.

NBA and WNBA players spoke out frequently, and both leagues resumed their seasons with “Black Lives Matter” painted on the court. “Through peaceful protest, we must demand strong leadership at all levels that is equally committed to achieving true social justice,” the Women’s National Basketball Players Association said in a statement the week of Floyd’s death.

As news of Floyd’s death spread, LeBron James posted a Twitter message with a photo of Floyd alongside an image of Colin Kaepernick and wrote, “Do you understand NOW!!??!!??” Magic Johnson tweeted, “How many times do we have to see Black men killed on national television?” Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr tweeted, “This is murder. Disgusting. Seriously, what the hell is wrong with US????”

On Tuesday, James tweeted just one word: “ACCOUNTABILITY.”

The NBA and National Basketball Players Association issued a joint statement Tuesday, saying, “we are pleased that justice appears to have been served” but also adding that “there is much work to be done.” The WNBA said the verdict was “a step toward justice.”

Atlanta Hawks interim coach Nate McMillan on Tuesday said there was uncertainty over whether the team’s game against the Orlando Magic would’ve been played had the ruling been different.

“We, as a league, we really didn’t know if we were going to play this game,” McMillan said. “… I feel that the jury did their jobs. You got to hold everybody accountable for their actions. The jury found him guilty on all three charges. I thought they did their jobs.”

Last spring, a group of NFL players, including Patrick Mahomes, appeared in a Twitter video that started with “It’s been 10 days since George Floyd was brutally murdered. How many times do we need to ask you to listen to your players? What will it take? For one of us to be murdered by police brutality?” and asking, “What if I was George Floyd?”

When the NFL season opened in September, the Minnesota Vikings honored Floyd’s family at their opener with a moment of silence and silencing the team’s signature Gjallarhorn in his honor. The league had every team play “Lift Every Voice And Sing,” often called the Black national anthem, before season openers, and players wore the names of Floyd, Breonna Taylor and other Black men and women killed by police on the back of their helmets.

“The past year following George Floyd’s death has been extremely painful for the Minnesota community, particularly for the State’s Black residents,” the Vikings said in a statement Tuesday. “While today’s decision does not minimize the anguish or solve the intolerable issues of racism and hate, we hope it can mark the beginning of community healing.

“Now, more than ever, it is crucial to respectfully listen, communicate and engage in order for us to move forward toward an equitable society. … Our work is just beginning. Our commitment is unwavering.”

Tennis player Naomi Osaka wore the names of Black people killed by police on her masks in her seven matches at the US Open. When a reporter asked her what message she wanted to send, she said: “Well, what was the message that you got was more the question. I feel like the point is to make people start talking.”

On Tuesday, Osaka said she had varying emotions regarding the ruling.

“I was going to make a celebratory tweet but then I was hit with sadness because we are celebrating something that is clear as day,” Osaka posted on Twitter. “The fact that so many injustices occurred to make us hold our breath toward this outcome is really telling.”

The USC football team said it postponed Tuesday’s practice to instead take the time to “discuss the racial injustices prevalent in our society and in our daily lives.”

The Major League Baseball Players Association on Tuesday said it remains committed “to the difficult work of healing and advancing the cause of civil rights and equal justice under the law.”

Floyd was killed on May 25 after Minneapolis police officers responded to a call shortly after 8 p.m. about a possible forgery at a corner grocery store. Floyd, saying he was claustrophobic as officers tried to put him in a squad car, ended up handcuffed and face-down in the street.

Chauvin used his knee to pin Floyd’s neck as bystanders shouted at him to stop. Bystander video shows Floyd crying, “I can’t breathe” multiple times before going limp. He was pronounced dead at a hospital. He was 46.

Police initially issued a statement saying Floyd died of a “medical incident.” Bystander video was posted online the next day, and in the face of growing protests in Minneapolis and nationwide, police said the FBI would investigate. Chauvin and three other officers were eventually fired as Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey called for criminal charges against Chauvin.

Chauvin, age 45 and a 19-year veteran of the Minneapolis police force, was arrested on May 29 and charged with third-degree murder and manslaughter. The charges were later upgraded to second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter.

As protests in Minneapolis and around the country grew, the county medical examiner ruled on June 1 that Floyd’s heart stopped as police restrained him and compressed his neck, noting that Floyd had an underlying health issue and listing fentanyl and methamphetamine use as “other significant conditions.”

At trial, prosecutors argued that Chauvin was responsible for Floyd’s death by keeping a knee on his neck. The defense argued that he died because of drugs in his system and preexisting health conditions.

Three other officers were also arrested and will stand trial together this summer.

Source Article from https://www.espn.com/espn/story/_/id/31297673/jury-finds-derek-chauvin-guilty-second-degree-murder-third-degree-murder-second-degree-manslaughter-george-floyd-murder

NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea blasted Rep. Maxine Waters’ comments urging Minnesota protesters to “get more confrontational” as “incredibly reckless” — and said he has “even stronger feelings” he won’t air publicly. 

The top cop was questioned on “Good Day New York” early Tuesday about the Democratic rep’s fiery comments over the weekend as she joined throngs of protesters against the police killing of Daunte Wright — and whether he thought her statements would incite violence in the Big Apple. 

“I absolutely do,” the top cop said. “I think it’s incredibly reckless. I do. I have even stronger feelings than that but I’ll keep them to myself.”

WATERS BRUSHES OFF JUDGE’S CRITICISM OVER ‘CONFRONTATIONAL’ COMMENT, CLAIMS HE SAID HE WORDS ‘DON’T MATTER’ 

“Why are you going to keep them to yourself, Commissioner?” host Rosanna Scotto asked Shea.

“We just had an officer having Molotov cocktails thrown at their car last week,” he replied. “We had similar hate speech last year, and we had an officer sitting in his car shot across his face. We’ve seen this multiple times. For an elected official in this country to be advocating [for] getting tougher on cops at this time, is beyond me. I cannot repeat what I think.”

Waters (D-Calif.) stood alongside demonstrators in Brooklyn Center early Sunday — breaking a curfew set by police — to encourage them to make their voices heard following the fatal shooting of Wright, and ahead of closing arguments in the trial of former police officer Derek Chauvin for the death of George Floyd.

“We’ve got to stay in the streets, and we’ve got to demand justice,” she urged the crowd, who earlier had been chanting, “No good cops in a racist system!,” “F–k your curfew!” and “No justice, no peace!”

‘LEARN MY NAME’: REP. MCCLAIN SLAMS PELOSI’S ‘THAT WOMAN’ REMARK, DEMS’ DOUBLE STANDARD ON MAXINE WATERS 

“We’re looking for a guilty verdict” in the Chauvin case, Waters said. “And if we don’t, we cannot go away, we’ve got to get more confrontational.”

The judge in Chauvin’s murder trial, Hennepin County District Judge Peter Cahill, said Waters’ comments could lead to the whole case “being overturned.”

Waters brushed off the criticism, arguing that “the judge says my words don’t matter.”

She went on to blame Republicans for the outcry over her remarks.

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Asked specifically about her comments, Waters claimed she was talking about “confronting the justice system” and “legislation.”

“I talk about confronting the justice system, confronting the policing that’s going on, I’m talking about speaking up,” she said. “I’m talking about legislation. I’m talking about elected officials doing what needs to be done to control their budgets and to pass legislation.”

This report originally appeared in the New York Post. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/nypd-dermot-shea-maxine-waters-minnesota-protests

Cities across the country are preparing for protests as the jury in the murder trial of the former police officer Derek Chauvin entered its second day of deliberations on Tuesday. With the memory of last summer’s protests after George Floyd’s death still fresh, some states have ordered National Guard troops to be on standby in anticipation of large protests if there is an acquittal.

Police chiefs are urging protesters to be peaceful, and businesses in many cities, from Indianapolis to Los Angeles to New York, are boarding up windows. The courthouse where the trial is being held is surrounded by razor-wire, fencing, concrete barriers and dozens of National Guard troops.

It will be up to each governor to decide whether troops or law enforcement will be necessary to help with possible protests. So far, Illinois, Minnesota and Washington, D.C., have done so.

Here’s how cities are preparing:

  • Minneapolis: On Monday, Gov. Tim Walz declared a “peacetime emergency” and said that state troopers from Nebraska and Ohio would come to Minneapolis to help overwhelmed local and state law enforcement. There are already 3,000 National Guard troops in Minneapolis and 1,000 law enforcement officers, including state troopers. The force is patrolling the downtown and metropolitan areas.

    Construction workers boarded up dozens of additional buildings downtown on Tuesday morning. The local police and sheriff’s deputies patrolled the streets in squad cars near the courthouse, focusing on shopping centers. And businesses set up additional concrete barriers and fencing, making it harder to access parking lots and entrances. Some businesses have taken to spray painting or posting signs to alert customers that they are open, even if windows appear covered. On one corner downtown, at least six National Guard Humvees were parked with about a dozen guards.

  • Washington, D.C.: On Monday, the National Guard was called up in case of protests through May 9, according to a news release. Last summer, the Guard used chemical irritants, including tear gas, and a helicopter to try to clear Lafayette Square, the plaza in front of the White House, drawing criticism about the heavy-handed policing of the protests.

  • Chicago: Gov. JB Pritzker ordered state troopers and 125 National Guard troops to help law enforcement in Chicago. The authorities in Chicago were already on edge after the police released a video of an officer shooting Adam Toledo, an unarmed 13-year-old boy, on April 16. The protests so far have been peaceful. But last summer, the city took to raising the bridges in downtown Chicago to prevent protests from reaching major retailers, fearing violence similar to that in Minneapolis.

  • New York: Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo hasn’t ordered National Guard troops to New York City. Last summer, the city’s Police Department, which has more than 30,000 officers, handled the protests after Mr. Floyd’s death. The first nights of protests last year ended in sporadic violence and looting in SoHo and Midtown.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/20/us/national-guard-cities-protests.html

Los Angeles is poised to become the latest city to try universal basic income.

Mayor Eric Garcetti included a $24-million Basic Income Guaranteed program in his city budget to be released Tuesday. L.A. would become the biggest city to try the concept, possibly joining Stockton, Compton and others.

Here is a primer:

What would the L.A. program do?

If approved by the Los Angeles City Council, the program would provide $1,000 a month to 2,000 Los Angeles families for a year. There will be no obligation on how to spend the money, according to the mayor’s office.

“When you give money to people who are poor, it creates better outcomes,” the mayor said. “It covers child care. It puts food on the table. It leads to more high school graduations and better checkups.”

Already, the Los Angeles City Council has unveiled plans to spend more than $11 million in funds diverted from the Los Angeles Police Department budget on such programs in South L.A. and the San Fernando Valley.

In the South L.A. district represented by Councilman Curren Price, a program will provide $1,000 per month for a year to 500 households headed by single parents. It’s expected to launch this summer.

Additional programs are being floated in the districts represented by Councilman Marqueece Harris-Dawson, Council President Nury Martinez and Councilman Mark Ridley-Thomas.

A Garcetti spokesman said the $24-million allocation for a citywide program would be in addition to those proposed efforts.

Mayor Eric Garcetti’s $24-million Basic Income Guaranteed program, which will be included in his city budget to be released Tuesday, would provide $1,000 a month to 2,000 Los Angeles families for a year.

More Coverage

What has been the reaction?

The proposal drew praise from Michael Tubbs, the former mayor of Stockton, who championed a guaranteed basic income program in his own city. Tubbs said Garcetti is giving a major boost to the movement, which is built around the idea that “we don’t have to have poverty in this country.”

“The world cares about what L.A. does,” Tubbs said. “To have the mayor of the second-largest city come out so boldly is significant.”

Jon Coupal, president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn., offered a more critical take, saying programs that “give away free money” will simply give L.A.’s elected officials a new way to buy votes when they run for reelection.

“When you can rob Peter to pay Paul, you can always count on the vote of Paul,” he said.

Where else is this being tried?

Stockton was the first major city to try it, led by Tubbs.

Young, sincere and raised on the edge of poverty, Sukhi Samra has a mother who worked two minimum-wage jobs when she was a kid — days at a gas station and nights at a Subway.

In a social experiment that is as much public relations as rigorous research, that program began with 130 residents getting $500 every month, with no strings — such as employment or sobriety requirements — attached.

Times columnist Michael Hiltzik reported that early research showed positive signs in the Stockton experiment:

A preliminary analysis of the first year of the program, through February 2020, found that recipients were “healthier, showing less depression and anxiety and enhanced well-being” than those in a control group not receiving the stipends. They also experienced less month-to-month fluctuations in household income. Most notably, they had greater success finding full-time work or upgrading their employment.

The city of Compton launched the Compton Pledge, which will pay $300 to $600 a month to 800 Compton residents for two years.

As of April, the group said it has enrolled the 800 families, saying that makes it the biggest program of its kind in the nation. The goal is to distribute more than $9 million over the next three years.

“There can be no peace without understanding identity, operating in purpose, and the inalienable right of human dignity. I want residents to be empowered by the greatness from where they came,” said Aja Brown, Mayor of Compton, in a statement earlier this month.

The program is sponsored by the Fund for Guaranteed Income, a charity headed by Nika Soon-Shiong, daughter of Los Angeles Times owner Patrick Soon-Shiong and a co-director of the Compton Pledge.

Pilot programs have also been launched in St. Paul, Minn.; Richmond, Va.; Pittsburgh; and Oakland, among other communities.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-04-20/garcetti-la-guaranteed-basic-income-plan-what-to-know

A federal judge overseeing a sprawling lawsuit about homelessness in Los Angeles ordered the city and county on Tuesday to offer some form of shelter to the entire homeless population of skid row by October.

Judge David O. Carter granted a preliminary injunction sought by the plaintiffs in the case last week and now is telling the city and county that they must find single women and unaccompanied children on skid row a place to stay within 90 days, followed by helping families within 120 days and finally, by Oct. 18, offering every homeless person on skid row housing or shelter.

“Los Angeles has lost its parks, beaches, schools, sidewalks, and highway systems due to the inaction of city and county officials who have left our homeless citizens with no other place to turn,” Carter wrote in a 110-page brief laced with quotes from Abraham Lincoln and an extensive history of how skid row was first created.

“All of the rhetoric, promises, plans, and budgeting cannot obscure the shameful reality of this crisis — that year after year, there are more homeless Angelenos, and year after year, more homeless Angelenos die on the streets.”

Carter also wrote that “after adequate shelter is offered,” he would allow the city to enforce laws that keep streets and sidewalks clear of tents so long as they’re consistent with previous legal rulings that have limited the enforcement of such rules.

He also ordered the county to offer “support services to all homeless residents who accept the offer of housing” including placements in “appropriate emergency, interim, or permanent housing and treatment services,” through the county’s Department of Mental Health and Department of Public Health. The costs for this work would be split by the city and county, he said.

Rob Wilcox, a spokesman for the city attorney’s office, said Tuesday that city lawyers are reviewing the order. He declined to comment further.

Skip Miller, partner at the Miller Barondess law firm, which is outside counsel for the county in the lawsuit, said the county is “now evaluating our options, including the possibility of an appeal.”

Previously, the county had asked to be removed from the case, arguing that it was about the city and that the county was aggressively responding to homelessness without any direction from the court. It cited efforts that included spending hundreds of millions of dollars annually through the Measure H sales tax and developing innovative strategies such as Project Roomkey in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Project Roomkey is a state program that provides temporary funding for cities and counties to rent hotel rooms for homeless people during the pandemic.

This injunction “is an attempt by property owners and businesses to rid their neighborhood of homeless people,” Miller said.

“There is no legal basis for an injunction because the county is spending hundreds of millions of dollars a year on proven strategies that have produced measurable results throughout the region, not just on skid row,” he added.

Matthew Umhofer, an attorney representing the plaintiffs in the case, said he and his clients were ecstatic by Carter’s call for action. This was what they had been looking for when they filed the case in March 2020, he said, and why they sought out Carter, who had overseen similar cases in Orange County in recent years, to preside over it.

“This is exactly the kind of aggressive emergency action that we think is necessary on the issue of homelessness in Los Angeles,” Umhofer said. “The city and the county and all the forces of the status quo have had decades to try to fix it and have not. So the moment cries out for extraordinary emergency action and this is exactly that.”

Carter’s order comes the day Mayor Eric Garcetti released his budget for the next fiscal year, which includes nearly $1 billion in spending on homelessness. The longtime federal judge also ordered “that $1 billion, as represented by Mayor Garcetti, will be placed in escrow forthwith, with funding streams accounted for and reported to the court within seven days.”

Of the $1 billion in homeless spending planned by Garcetti, more than a third would come from Proposition HHH, the 2016 bond measure to build permanent housing for homeless residents. Garcetti aides said they expect the city will be building or developing 89 HHH projects over the next fiscal year, for a total of 5,651 units. Whether Carter’s order will disrupt those activities is unclear. In his order, the judge said he wants a report in 90 days of every developer receiving funds from HHH, as well as new regulations to “limit the possibility of funds being wasted.”

Many of these projects have been delayed and this was the year Garcetti aides expected progress to pick up. Last year more than 1,300 homeless people died in Los Angeles County, and Carter said that the city and county had “decided to focus on housing at the expense of shelter, even knowing that massive development delays were likely while people died in the streets.”

The mayor’s proposed budget, set for release Tuesday, comes at a moment of heightened frustration over the city’s handling of homelessness.

Carter has also asked for a number of reports from city and county officials about how money for combating homelessness has been and is currently being spent. He wants these reports within 90 days and has ordered a “cessation of sales, transfers by lease or covenant, of the over 14,000 city properties pending the report by the Controller Ron Galperin to the court, and all similarly situated properties held by the county pending the report by the county counsel.”

The lengthy ruling also skewered corruption scandals involving housing projects, “excessive delays and skyrocketing costs” under the Proposition HHH bond measure, and L.A.’s failure to seek federal reimbursement for Project Roomkey rooms.

Councilman Mark Ridley-Thomas said that city officials are still trying to understand the implications of the court order, including how it would affect existing plans to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on homeless housing.

“There’s a lot of questions that we are seeking to sort through,” Ridley-Thomas said Tuesday after the decision was released. “Any time the court shows up, there is justifiable fear and trembling.” What is clear, he said, is that the court decision stems from the failures of the city and county to seriously address the crisis. “There’s no way to deny that,” he said.

In his order, Carter outlined historic forms of discrimination that had cut Black people out of housing opportunities, including redlining, segregated systems of assistance during the Great Depression, highway construction that displaced Black families, and criminalization that disproportionately affected Black communities.

Racial inequity has continued to color government handling of the crisis, Carter added. For instance, a report presented to county leaders found that Project Roomkey, a program to rent hotel rooms for homeless people, had been disproportionately provided to white people, “exacerbating the risks to a Black population that already disproportionately bears the harmful effects of the city and county’s failure to address homelessness,” Carter wrote.

Carter concluded that current city and county policies “compound and perpetuate structural racism, threatening the integrity of Black families in Los Angeles and forcing a disproportionate number of Black families to go unhoused.”

Times staff writer David Zahniser contributed to this report.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/homeless-housing/story/2021-04-20/judge-carter-la-city-county-shelter-skid-row-homeless-fall

After an hours-long manhunt, 30-year-old Gabriel DeWitt Wilson, a man authorities describe as being a person of interest in the deadly Long Island Stop & Shop shooting that took place Tuesday morning, has been taken into custody.

Although the authorities say they were actively searching for Wilson, they stopped short of calling him a suspect, rather describing him as “a person of interest” they believe to be the shooter.

Here is what we know so far as information slowly coming to light regarding who exactly Wilson is and his role in the deadly shooting:

News



A man wearing all black walked into an upstairs office area of a Long Island Stop & Shop late Tuesday morning and shot three people, killing one of them, in the town of West Hempstead before fleeing the scene, Nassau County police officials say. That man is alleged to have been Wilson, police say. He is believed to have had a small handgun.

It wasn’t immediately clear if the victims were targeted in some way. The one who died was a 49-year-old man. Two other victims were taken to area hospitals; their identities haven’t been released and the nature of their injuries wasn’t known.

According to Nassau County Police, Wilson has ties to the West Hempstead Stop & Shop store. Authorities say he was either a former employee or currently working at the store.

The shooting, according to authorities, took place at the management offices of the store. However, although it appears to be a work-related shooting, the motive is still unknown and under investigation.

Wilson, who police say they “believe” to be responsible for the 11:20 a.m. gunfire at the Cherry Valley Avenue store, was taken into custody around 3 p.m. after a four-hour manhunt, police confirmed.

Authorities said that Wilson fled the area after the shooting. Wilson remained at large for nearly four hours and was believed to have a small handgun. Earlier, a senior law enforcement official said he may have hopped on a bus to escape and was last seen heading westbound on Hempstead Turnpike.

Wilson was described as 6’2”, wearing a black hat, a black mask and a black sweatshirt.

“Do not approach if you see him; please call 911 immediately,” Nassau County police warned. “If you you have ANY information regarding this person of interest, please call Nassau County Crime Stoppers at 1-800-244-TIPS (8477).”

Details on his apprehension weren’t immediately known.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/who-is-gabriel-dewitt-wilson-suspect-in-long-island-stop-shop-shooting-what-we-know/3009311/

George W Bush has called the Republican party under Donald Trump “isolationist, protectionist and … nativist” – a judgment unlikely to make the former US president new friends on the American right.

Bush, who is promoting a new book, spoke to NBC on Tuesday.

Asked to describe the state of his party under Trump – who lost the Oval Office after one term but retains a firm grip on his party’s base – Bush said: “I would describe it as isolationist, protectionist and, to a certain extent, nativist.

“It’s not exactly my vision as an old guy, but I’m just an old guy that’s put out to pasture.”

Bush’s book is called Out of Many, One: Portraits of America’s Immigrants. He told NBC the country that includes the Latin for his kicker, E Pluribus Unum, on its great seal was “a beautiful country … and yet it’s not beautiful when we condemn, call people names and scare people about immigration”.

Trump continues to do that, calling on his successor, Joe Biden, to restore his draconian policies while followers on the extreme right of the party discuss forming an “America First Caucus” based on “Anglo-Saxon political traditions”.

Bush, the son of another president, is from a political dynasty about as Wasp (White Anglo-Saxon Protestant) as it is possible to get. But Trump took down the former Florida governor Jeb Bush, the former president’s younger brother, in vicious fashion in 2016.

George W Bush maintains friendly relations with former presidents including the Democrats Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, and to some has come to present a more reasonable face of Republican politics.

Others warn that progressives should not think too fondly of a man whose time in office included the invasion of Iraq and the bungled federal response to Hurricane Katrina.

“I’m hoping there’ll be some pushback against this because I think it’s an absolute scandal that man should be rehabilitated and tarted up as in any way progressive,” Jackson Lears, a cultural historian, told the Guardian this week.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/20/george-w-bush-trump-republican-party-isolationist-protectionist-nativist

A grocery store employee was killed and two others were wounded in a shooting at a Stop & Shop on New York’s Long Island Tuesday morning, police said. The two people injured were being treated at local hospitals, Nassau County Police Commissioner Patrick Ryder said.

Police are looking for a person of interest in the shooting, identified as Gabriel DeWitt Wilson. He was described as a 31-year-old Black man who is 6 feet, 2 inches tall. Police weren’t sure if the man was a current or past employee of the store in West Hempstead.

Ryder said the man was wearing a black baseball hat and a black sweatshirt and he was last seen heading west on the Hempstead Turnpike.

The Nassau County Police Department released a photo of Wilson.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/live-updates/stop-and-shop-shooting-west-hempstead-new-york/

Lew’s modesty was justified. Just three weeks later, Steris, an Ohio-based medical device maker, announced it was acquiring Synergy Health Holdings of the United Kingdom and changing its tax residence to the U.K. Burger King, likewise, went ahead with its takeover of Toronto-based Tim Hortons, which made the American hamburger giant a Canadian taxpayer in the eyes of the Internal Revenue Service.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/us-policy/2021/04/20/corporate-tax-loopholes-biden/