INDIANAPOLIS — Thursday night’s mass shooting at the FedEx ground facility claimed eight lives and left many more critically wounded.

The Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department identified the suspect in a shooting at an Indianapolis FedEx facility as Brandon Scott Hole, 19, of Indiana. Police say Hole took his own life after killing eight people and injuring several others at a FedEx Ground facility.

On Friday, the Marion County Sheriff’s Department identified the eight victims, including:

  • 32-year-old Matthew R Alexander
  • 19-year-old Samaria Blackwell
  • 66-year-old Amarjeet Johal
  • 64-year-old Jaswinder Kaur
  • 68-year-old Jaswinder Singh
  • 48-year-old Amarjit Skhon
  • 19-year-old Karli Smith
  • 74-year-old John Weisert

The granddaughter of Amarjeet Johal sent us a statement, saying her family is traumatized by Thursday night’s events.

 I have several family members who work at the particular facility and are traumatized. My nani, my family, and our families should not feel unsafe at work, at their place of worship, or anywhere. Enough is enough–our community has been through enough trauma. 

Komal Chohan

Of the victims, the SikhsPAC says half of the fatalities were members of the Sikh community. The Sikh Coalition, the largest Sikh civil rights organization in the United States, reacted to the shooting. Their executive director sent a statement reading in part:

“We are deeply saddened to learn that Sikh community members are among those injured and killed by the gunman in Indianapolis last night. Our hearts and prayers are with their families, and we are in touch with community leaders, government and law enforcement officials to learn more. While we don’t yet know the motive or identity of the shooter, we expect that authorities will continue to conduct a full investigation–including the possibility of bias as a factor.”

Satjeet Kaur, Sikh Coalition Executive Director

Chairman of SikhsPAC, Gurinder Singh Khalsa, also sent a statement following the shooting, reading in part:

“This situation is very unfortunate and extremely heartbreaking. The loss from this devastating event is unfathomable and irrecoverable. One of the most upsetting things about this tragedy is that it is not an isolated event. Situations like these are becoming a part of everyday life as an American. We are the most powerful nation on the face of the earth, and have been founded on liberty and justice for all people. The issue of mass shootings has affected people from all walks of life, regardless of someone’s age, race, or social status.

Gurinder Singh Khalsa

It is unclear when families will be notified if their loved ones are okay, in the hospital or if the worst has happened.

Families of FedEx workers still waiting to know if loved ones are safe

They continue to wait and hold onto any ounce of hope they can.

No motive has been released at this time. IMPD Chief Randal Taylor said Friday morning they may never know “all the ins and outs about why this occurred.”

Source Article from https://fox59.com/news/these-are-the-victims-of-the-indianapolis-fedex-mass-shooting/

The episode marked a rare flip-flop-flip for the president, and it yielded a barrage of denunciations from key allies who’d previously heaped praise on the administration for promising to rebuild the refugee resettlement program. Faith-based organizations that had lent valuable weight to Biden’s moral case against Trump during the election, said they still felt betrayed even after the White House issued its clarifying statement.

“He’s basically broken his promise, and he’s abandoned his commitment,” Jenny Yang, senior vice president of advocacy and policy at World Relief, said in an interview earlier on Friday. She later called the White House statement a “walk back” that changed little.

“Who knows if they’ll follow through on it which means 15K may remain in place,” Yang said in a text. “[And] they could have done this two months ago to recategorize the allocations.”

Prior to Psaki’s clarification, the White House had defended keeping the current cap in place, stressing that the determination reversed Trump’s restrictions on refugees from regions like Africa and the Middle East and would also expedite the current processing backlog.

Biden had promised during the campaign to increase the number of refugees allowed into the United States to 125,000. In February, he changed that number to more than 60,000 for the current fiscal year. When his administration said on Friday that it would not follow through on that reduced cap, faith-based organizations and resettlement agencies, some of whom have contracts with the government to process and receive refugees, sharply criticized it for what they said was tortured logic.

The White House said the refugee admission program required a major overhaul before the country began processing a greater number of refugees in subsequent years, though World Relief and Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service both said they are able to handle an increase in refugee admissions.

The White House also said that its initial determination was due, in part, to an increase of migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border and the “decimated” system left behind by the prior administration. The Office of Refugee Resettlement under the Health and Human Services Department is responsible for both unaccompanied children and refugee resettlement, said an administration official, adding that the increase of migrants required more time to ensure the agency has adequate resources to handle both.

The assertion from the administration that refugees and migrants seeking asylum at the border were correlated, drew the ire of refugee advocates who noted that they are processed in different systems. They called the administration’s argument Trump-like.

“That is the same excuse the Trump administration used,” said Nate Bult, vice president of government affairs for Bethany Christian Services, an evangelical nonprofit. When issuing its refugee admission determinations the Trump administration would add up “the total number of refugees resettled with the number of people seeking asylum in the US, and tried to conflate the two categories,” said Bult. “The Biden administration knows that asylum seekers and refugees are vastly different populations processed under two completely different paths, using different staff members and different federal agencies.”

Bult said many of the evangelicals he’s spoken to who voted Democrat for the first time in 2020 because Biden promised to rebuild the refugee program “are feeling betrayed.”

Bult was reached once again after the White House issued its clarification. “At this point,” he said, “there are too many broken promises to give them the benefit of the doubt.”

As the White House now gets set to meet a self-imposed May 15 deadline for releasing a new refugee cap, it is planning to meet with the nine non-governmental agencies that work with the government to resettle refugees. The meeting, Yang said, would come next week and would include World Relief, a Christian humanitarian organization.

Psaki said that Friday’s presidential determination came after consulting with advisers about how many refugees could “realistically” be admitted. “The President was urged to take immediate action to reverse the Trump policy that banned refugees from many key regions, to enable flights from those regions to begin within days; today’s order did that,” she said.

The White House did not provide an explanation for why it didn’t say in its initial announcement that the president would issue a “final, increased refugee cap” by May 15.

“The administration needs to shed light on the improvements that are making and the goals they strive for,” Ali Noorani, executive director of the National Immigration Forum said Friday evening. “Americans, from the right to the left, do not want the president to play politics with refugees’ lives.”

Before announcing the clarification, the White House’s decision to keep Trump’s cap in place drew backlash from a number of Democratic lawmakers. Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) accused the White House of “caving to the politics of fear.” Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) called the decision “unacceptable.”

“These refugees can wait years for their chance and go through extensive vetting,” Durbin said in a statement. “Thirty-five thousand are ready. Facing the greatest refugee crisis in our time there is no reason to limit the number to 15,000. Say it ain’t so, President Joe.”

Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), head of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said “President Biden has broken his promise to restore our humanity.” Former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julian Castro and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez both blasted the Biden administration’s move as a continuation of Trump’s policies.

Further, Castro and a number of nonprofit refugee organizations accused the Biden White House of limiting the number of refugees due to politics and optics at the border — suggesting that Biden had caved to GOP attempts to blame his approach and policies for the increase in migrants.

Though the White House faced strong backlash for its initial determination, refugee resettlement agencies and Democrats did credit it for lifting geographic limitations implemented by the Trump administration. The White House allocated 7,000 slots for refugees from Africa, 1,000 for East Asia, 1,500 for Europe and Central Asia, 3,000 for Latin America and the Caribbean, 1,500 for Near East and South Asia, and 1,000 for an unallocated reserve of refugees.

Michael Wear, senior adviser to Not Our Faith PAC and former religious outreach director for President Barack Obama’s reelection campaign, defended the administration’s decision and said he expects Biden to ultimately follow through on raising the cap.

“Because the situation at the border is so significant and fluid, and because circumstances might force the White House’s hand when it comes to making policy decisions, it makes the refugee cap decision a more complicated one than it would otherwise be — both politically and from a policy perspective,” Wear said in an email, adding that “some on the left have sought to downplay what is happening at the border.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/04/16/biden-backtracks-refugee-policy-482606

“So if you put your hands up, they shoot. If you put your hands down, they shoot,” Gonzalez said. “If you walk, you run, you hide, you sleep, you do exactly as they say, they still shoot. … What the hell are we supposed to do?”

Source Article from https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/criminal-justice/ct-adam-toledo-shooting-review-experts-20210416-hwb6u4o6h5dixhmvu3cxyj4ggi-story.html

WASHINGTON—A member of the right-wing Oath Keepers militia pleaded guilty to federal charges connected to the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol, becoming the first among the more than 400 people facing such charges to formally admit to wrongdoing.

Jon Schaffer, 52 years old, a guitarist in the heavy-metal band Iced Earth, pleaded guilty Friday to two counts of obstructing an official proceeding and remaining in a restricted building with a dangerous weapon, and agreed to cooperate in the continuing investigation into the riot. He entered the plea via videoconference before a federal judge in Washington, acknowledging that he entered the Capitol armed with bear spray and worked to stop lawmakers’ certification of President Biden’s Electoral College win over former President Donald Trump.

The first plea, 100 days after the attack, comes as some 410 members of the pro-Trump mob have been arrested across the country on charges including assaulting officers, obstructing Congress and conspiracy. Many cases remain in the early stages as prosecutors and defense lawyers spar over whether some should be imprisoned while awaiting trial, as Mr. Schaffer and several dozen others have been. Investigators have scoured through hundreds of thousands of videos and photos to identify rioters, including 200,000 digital-media tips people have submitted to the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Mr. Schaffer, of Columbus, Ind., faces up to 20 years in prison based on the obstruction charge. Prosecutors estimated that the guidelines would recommend a sentence of between three and four years but said they could ask for a more lenient sentence depending on the extent of his cooperation. The agreement requires him to provide testimony and witness interviews, and to accommodate any other requests from law enforcement. Under the plea deal, Mr. Schaffer could also ask to enter the witness-protection program.

Mr. Schaffer was among the first to be arrested in the days after the riot. He was photographed wearing a tactical vest and baseball cap at the riot bearing the words “Oath Keepers Lifetime Member.”

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/oath-keeper-becomes-first-to-plead-guilty-in-capitol-riot-11618596401

“Republicans believe in equal opportunity, freedom, and justice for all. We teach our children the values of tolerance, decency and moral courage,” Cheney tweeted. “Racism, nativism, and anti-Semitism are evil. History teaches we all have an obligation to confront & reject such malicious hate.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2021/04/16/trump-loyalists-start-america-first-caucus-promote-us-uniquely-anglo-saxon/

HAVANA — Raul Castro said Friday he is resigning as head of Cuba’s Communist Party, ending an era of formal leadership by he and his brother Fidel Castro that began with the 1959 revolution.

The 89-year-old Castro made the announcement Friday in a speech at the opening of the Eighth congress of the ruling party, the only one allowed on the island.

He said he was retiring with the sense of having “fulfilled his mission and confident in the future of the fatherland.”

Castro didn’t say who he would endorse as his successor as first secretary of the Communist Party. But he previously indicated that he favors yielding control to 60-year-old Miguel Diaz-Canel, who succeeded him as president in 2018 and is the standard bearer of a younger generation of loyalists who have been pushing an economic opening without touching Cuba’s one-party system.

His retirement means that for the first time in more than six decades Cubans won’t have a Castro formally guilding their affairs, and it comes at a difficult time, with many on the island anxious about what lies ahead.

Raul Castro, first secretary of the Communist Party and former president, attends an opening congress session at the Convention Palace in Havana, Cuba on April 16, 2021.
Ariel Ley Royero/ACN via AP

The coronavirus pandemic, painful financial reforms and restrictions imposed by the Trump administration have battered the economy, which shrank 11% last year as a result of a collapse in tourism and remittances. Long food lines and shortages have brought back echoes of the “special period” that followed the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s.

Discontent has been fueled by the spread of the internet and growing inequality.

Much of the debate inside Cuba is focused on the pace of reform, with many complaining that the so-called “historic generation” represented by Castro has been too slow to open the economy.

Then-Cuban President Raul Castro commemorates the 59th anniversary of the attack of the Moncada barracks in 1953 in Guantanamo, Cuba on July 12, 2012.
Mambo photo/Getty Images

In January, Diaz-Canel finally pulled the trigger on a plan approved two congresses ago to unify the island’s dual currency system, giving rise to fears of inflation. He also threw the doors open to a broader range of private enterprise — a category long banned or tightly restricted — permitting Cubans to legally operate many sorts of self-run businesses from their homes.

This year’s congress is expected to focus on unfinished reforms to overhaul state-run enterprises, attract foreign investment and provide more legal protection to private business activities.

The Communist Party is made up of 700,000 activists and is tasked in Cuba’s constitution with directing the affairs of the nation and society.

French President Francois Hollande welcomes Cuban President Raul Castro (left) at the Elysee Presidential Palace in Paris, France on February 01, 2016.
Chesnot/Getty Images

Fidel Castro, who led the revolution that drove dictator Fulgencio Batista from power in 1959, formally became head of the party in 1965, about four years after officially embracing socialism.

He quickly absorbed the old party under his control and was the country’s unquestioned leader until falling ill in 2006 and in 2008 handing over the presidency to his younger brother Raul, who had fought alongside him during the revolution.

Raul succeeded him as head of the party in 2011. Fidel Castro died in 2016

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/04/16/raul-castro-resigns-ending-era-of-family-rule-over-cuba/

President Biden Friday demanded the Republicans in the Senate move on passing gun background check legislation, calling the string of mass shootings and gun violence a “national embarrassment.”

Biden pushed the Senate to take a vote on House-passed legislation that would expand background checks and close certain loopholes.

“I strongly, strongly urge my Republican friends in the Congress who refuse to bring up the House-passed bill to bring it up now,” Biden said. “This has to end. It’s a national embarrassment.”

BIDEN SAYS US, JAPAN ‘COMMITTED TO WORKING TOGETHER’ ON CHALLENGES FROM CHINA, NORTH KOREA

Speaking at a joint White House press conference Friday with Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, Biden was pressed on whether he needs to prioritize police reform and gun control measures in the wake of more mass shootings and police-related deaths.

Japan’s Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga and U.S. President Joe Biden hold a joint news conference in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington, U.S., April 16, 2021. REUTERS/Tom Brenner
(Reuters)

Biden rejected the notion that guns have taken a backseat to his infrastructure and coronavirus agenda in Congress and he doubled down on his support for banning assault weapons and high-capacity magazines. 

“I strongly support the universal background checks, which I continue to push. And Congress has to step up and act. The Senate has to act,” Biden said. “I strongly support and … never stopped supporting the ban on assault weapons and magazines that hold more than 10 bullets.”

BIDEN CALLS ON SENATE TO PASS GUN CONTROL MEASURES ‘IMMEDIATELY’ AFTER BOULDER SHOOTING

Biden said “no one has worked harder” than him on ending gun violence and he pointed to his work in the Senate to pass the now-expired 1994 assault weapons ban. He said he’s committed to passing such gun restrictions again. 

“Who in God’s name needs a weapon that can hold 100 rounds, or 40 rounds, or 20 rounds,” Biden said. “It’s just wrong. And I’m not going to give up until it’s done.”

AS BIDEN CALLS FOR GUN BAN, MANCHIN SAYS HE DOESN’T SUPPORT BACKGROUND CHECK LEGISLATION

The first hurdle, though, will be getting support for a universal background check bill in the Senate that’s split 50-50. The House already passed legislation to expand federal gun background checks on all firearms sales and extend the background check review period from three days to a minimum of 10 business days. 

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But Republicans have resisted the legislation and moderate West Virginia Democrat Joe Manchin also said he can’t support new background checks measures on private sales. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/biden-says-gun-violence-is-a-national-embarrassment-demands-gop-move-on-background-check-bill

In his statement, the president ordered U.S. flags flown at half-staff as he did in the wake of the shootings in Atlanta and Boulder.

Biden said he had been briefed on the shooting, as had Vice President Kamala Harris. Indianapolis Police Deputy Chief Craig McCartt said the gunman, who died by apparent suicide, “appeared to randomly start shooting.”

Last week, Biden announced a spate of executive actions aimed at slowing gun violence, which included reforms to reign in so-called ghost guns and requiring the Department of Justice to issue a new report on gun trafficking annually. He also called for the Justice Department to put out a “model” red flag law, also known as an extreme risk protective order, for states to adopt.

In the statement Friday, Biden renewed his calls for the Senate to take up House-passed legislation aimed at closing the so-called Charleston loophole, adding universal background checks and reauthorizing the Violence Against Women Act.

“Too many Americans are dying every single day from gun violence,” Biden said in the statement. “It stains our character and pierces the very soul of our nation. We can, and must, do more to act and to save lives.”

House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.) said last week that he thinks that Congress can get bipartisan legislation through, but such legislation faces an uphill battle in the Senate, which Democrats hold by the slimmest possible majority and would need 10 Republicans to get on board. Democrat-backed efforts to enact gun reform legislation have failed in recent years.

“We can’t give up just because it’s hard, just because the politics are perplexing,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday.

The push comes as Congress is weighing Biden’s multi-trillion dollar infrastructure package, as well as proposals on racial justice. Psaki said Friday that “leaders can do more than one thing at one time.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/04/16/biden-gun-reform-indianapolis-shooting-482420

Biden plans to keep the refugee cap at 15,000, according to the official. That figure is a historic low set by then-President Donald Trump last fall. Earlier this year, Biden had proposed to Congress lifting the cap to 62,500. He has pledged to raise it to 125,000 for the following fiscal year, which begins in October.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/biden-administration-to-keep-refugee-cap-at-trumps-level-far-less-than-what-it-proposed-to-congress/2021/04/16/02c099da-9ece-11eb-b7a8-014b14aeb9e4_story.html

Raúl Castro, first secretary of the Cuban Communist Party and the country’s former president, clasps hands with Cuban President Miguel Mario Díaz-Canel Bermúdez during the closing session at the National Assembly of Popular Power in 2019 in Havana.

Ramon Espinosa/AP


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Ramon Espinosa/AP

Raúl Castro, first secretary of the Cuban Communist Party and the country’s former president, clasps hands with Cuban President Miguel Mario Díaz-Canel Bermúdez during the closing session at the National Assembly of Popular Power in 2019 in Havana.

Ramon Espinosa/AP

A generation of Cuban revolutionaries who seized power more than six decades ago, directly challenging the U.S. and later pushing Washington and Moscow to the brink of nuclear war, is set to exit the stage.

At a party conference that started Friday, 89-year-old Raúl Castro, the brother of the late revolutionary leader Fidel Castro, said he will step down as head of the Cuban Communist Party. Three years ago, he resigned the presidency and handed the reins to a much younger Miguel Mario Díaz-Canel Bermúdez.

The move, at Cuba’s Eighth Party Congress, will mark the first time since the 1959 communist revolution that a Castro will not hold one of the most powerful roles in Cuba’s government.

It also comes on the symbolic 60th anniversary of the failed Bay of Pigs, a CIA-led operation to use Cuban exiles in an invasion that sought to overthrow the communist regime. The following year, American spy planes discovered evidence that Soviet-supplied, nuclear-armed missiles were being installed on the island — leading to a showdown between the U.S. and the Soviet Union that many historians regard as the closest the superpowers ever came to a full-scale conflict.

But those events will likely dim as the country’s “historic generation,” as many Cubans refer to the old guard, also fade. On Friday, Castro’s longtime deputy, 90-year-old José Ramón Machado Ventura, is also expected to step down, leaving the 17-member Politburo without any revolutionary veterans.

Many Cubans who don’t remember a time when a Castro wasn’t running their daily affairs are nervous about the future, especially since the transition comes as the country appears to be at a crossroads.

Following the end of the Cold War, Moscow’s patronage all but dried up, leaving Cuba to find new benefactors. After a glimmer of rapprochement between Havana and Washington during the Obama administration, the Trump White House did an about-face, imposing U.S. sanctions.

The sanctions — together with the loss of support from Venezuela and spiraling inflation — has brought a return to food shortages not seen since the 1990s. More recently, the isolated communist government has had to face the coronavirus pandemic, which, among other things, has meant going it alone on vaccine development.

President Biden has said he wants a reset on Cuba policy but so far has offered few details on how his administration will handle the perennially thorny issue.

After Raúl Castro took over for his brother in 2008, he brought big economic changes to the island – expanding private enterprise, ushering in the use of cellphones, allowing access to the Internet and seeking more relaxed relations with the United States.

But since then, reforms have mostly stalled, said Ted Henken, a Cuba specialist at Baruch College in New York.

The government, he said, is “very cautious because they know that economic freedom can lead to political freedom and loss of political control.”

Authorities have also failed to overhaul bloated state-run companies and government agencies that most of the population rely on for income.

“Laying off a lot of people could lead to social and political problems,” William LeoGrande, an American University expert on Cuba, told The Associated Press.

LeoGrande also points to growing inequality in a system that promised Cubans precisely the opposite.

“Back in 1990s, there was a sense that we’re all in this together,” he said. “Today, the inequality is not only worse, but it’s also more manifest.”

The island’s economy contracted 11% last year, even as Díaz-Canel broadened private enterprise, allowing Cubans to run almost any small business from their homes for the first time.

The economic disarray is spurring political discontent, with historic protests in Cuba, fueled in large part by the access to information from the outside world via the Internet. The emergence of a new artist revolt, started by Afro-Cuban rappers before widening to mainstream artists, is particularly astonishing.

Despite the unease, there are no signs that the end of the Castro era brings Cuba any closer to the end of communist rule, said Arturo Lopez-Levy, a Cuba expert at Holy Names University in California.

“This is not a family business; it is more sophisticated and more resilient than a government that is part of a same clan or a family,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/04/16/988019067/cuba-without-a-castro-the-islands-old-guard-exits-the-stage

WASHINGTON (AP) — A member of the far-right Oath Keepers militia group and heavy metal guitarist on Friday became the first defendant to plead guilty to federal charges in connection with the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

Jon Ryan Schaffer, the frontman of the band Iced Earth, has agreed to cooperate with investigators in hopes of getting a lighter sentence, and the Justice Department will consider putting Schaffer in the federal witness security program, U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta said.

This signals that federal prosecutors see him as a valuable cooperator as they continue to investigate militia groups and other extremists involved in the insurrection on Jan. 6 as Congress was meeting to certify President Joe Biden’s electoral win.

Schaffer, a supporter of former President Donald Trump, was accused of storming the Capitol and spraying police officers with bear spray. He pleaded guilty in a deal with prosecutors in federal court in Washington to two counts: obstruction of an official proceeding, and entering and remaining in a restricted building with a dangerous or deadly weapon.

An email seeking comment was sent to an attorney for Schaffer.

Schaffer, of Columbus, Indiana, was wearing a tactical vest and baseball hat that read “Oath Keepers Lifetime Member” on Jan. 6, and acknowledged in his plea agreement that he is a “founding lifetime member” of the extremist group, prosecutors said.

The 53-year-old was not charged in the case involving Oath Keepers members and associates, who are accused of conspiring with one another to block the certification of the vote. The case is the largest and most serious brought by prosecutors so far in the attack.

Authorities say those defendants came to Washington ready for violence and intent on stopping the certification. Many came dressed for battle on Jan. 6 in tactical vests and helmets and some discussed stationing a “quick reaction force” outside the city in the event they needed weapons, prosecutors have said.

In his deal with prosecutors, Schaffer admitted to being one of the first people to force their way into the Capitol after the mob broke open a set of doors guarded by Capitol Police. Schaffer was sprayed in the face with a chemical irritant that overwhelmed officers deployed and left the Capitol while holding bear spray, authorities said.

Schaffer has voiced various conspiracy theories, once telling a German news station that a shadowy criminal enterprise is trying to run the world under a communist agenda and that he and others are prepared to fight, with violence.

In court documents, the FBI said Schaffer “has long held far-right extremist views” and that he had previously “referred to the federal government as a ‘criminal enterprise.’”

He turned himself in to the FBI a few weeks after the riot, after his photograph was featured on an FBI poster seeking the public’s help in identifying rioters.

More than 370 people are facing federal charges in the deadly insurrection, which sent lawmakers into hiding and delayed the certification of Biden’s win. The Justice Department has indicated it is in separate plea negotiations with other defendants.

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/joe-biden-capitol-siege-courts-0f41a0e86a6e3e1e4be41f432a71111e

MOSCOW—Russia said it would expel 10 U.S. diplomats and bar a number of senior U.S. officials from entering the country in response to measures against Moscow over alleged election interference, cyberattacks and other damaging activity, raising the stakes in relations between the two nations.

“The latest attack on our country undertaken by the Biden administration, of course, cannot remain unanswered,” Russia’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement. “Washington, it seems, doesn’t want to put up with the fact that in the new geopolitical realities there is no place for unilateral dictatorship.”

The Foreign Ministry said it was indefinitely barring entry to eight high-ranking current and former U.S. officials and figures involved in what it described as “the development and implementation of an anti-Russian” agenda.

The officials included U.S. Attorney General Merrick Brian Garland; Michael D. Carvajal, the director of the U.S. Federal Bureau of Prisons; Alejandro Nicholas Mayorkas, U.S. Secretary of Homeland security; Susan Rice, President Joe Biden’s domestic policy adviser and a former U.N. ambassador and national security adviser under former President Barack Obama; Federal Bureau of Intelligence Director Christopher Wray; and Avril Haines, director of U.S. National Intelligence.

In addition, John Bolton, a former U.N. ambassador and national security adviser, and Robert Woolsey Jr., a former director of the CIA have also been banned from coming to Russia, according to a statement on the ministry’s website.

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/russia-to-expel-10-u-s-diplomats-from-embassy-in-moscow-11618592354

The president of the Chicago police union has called the police officer who shot 13-year-old Adam Toledo “heroic” and defended the officer’s actions in the wake of newly released bodycam footage.

John Catanzara, president of Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7, spoke to CNN‘s Cuomo Prime Time on Thursday following the release of the video that appeared to show Toledo was not holding a weapon when he was shot.

The police union president told Chris Cuomo that the officer’s behavior was “100 percent justified” and said “that officer’s actions were actually heroic.”

Catanzara highlighted the short time involved in the officer’s decision to shoot Toledo.

“In reality, an average human being could not block someone from slapping him in the face in less time than that,” Catanzara said.

“It’s a good reason why the officer only shot once. He would have been justified to shoot multiple times.”

“What do you think the officers who responded to that scene and were rendering aid and trying to save his life are now stuck with for the rest of their life?” Catanzara went on.

“And they got to bring that home to their families, and then their families are affected by this,” he said.

“The poor young kid misguided made a horrible decision that cost him his life, but it was justified,” Catanzara said. He claimed Toledo was a member of a gang called the Latin Kings. This has not been established but the area where Toledo was shot is a stronghold of the gang, according to The Chicago Sun-Times.

“I will say, he’s 13 years old,” Catanzara said. “We talk about the public school system in Chicago specifically. He should have been in school. But we’re not in school learning, now are we?”

“I started my dissertation with saying it is 100 percent justified,” Catanzara said in response to a comment from Cuomo.

“That officer’s actions were actually heroic. There’s a very good reason why he only shot once. Like I said, he could have been shot multiple times but the officer assessed in a split second. Unfortunately he committed to the first shot already. Justifiably so.”

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Toledo’s family called for calm ahead of the release of the bodycam footage on Thursday.

“Simply put, we failed Adam,” Lightfoot said. “And we cannot afford to fail one more young person in our city.”

“We live in a city that is traumatized by a long history of police violence and misconduct,” she said. “So while we don’t have enough information to be the judge and jury of this particular situation, it is certainly understandable why so many of our residents are feeling that all too familiar surge of outrage and pain.”

The video has led to calls for systemic reform to policing in the U.S. and the passage of the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, which was approved by the House of Representatives but has not yet been passed by the Senate.

Newsweek has asked Catanzara for comment on this article.

A Chicago Police officer monitors the scene after a shooting in Chicago, Illinois, on March 14, 2021. Chicago Police released footage on Thursday of the shooting of 13-year-old Adam Toledo.
KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI/AFP/Getty Images

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/cop-who-shot-adam-toledo-heroic-says-chicago-police-union-chief-1584088

The shooter who slaughtered eight people at an Indiana FedEx facility killed himself as police closed in, officials said Friday.

Investigators are still trying to identify the man who opened fire at the plant just outside Indianapolis around 11 p.m. Thursday.

“We are not able to make positive identification of the suspect,” said Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department Deputy Chief Craig McCartt at a press conference.

Police officials said the gunman was found dead of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound at the scene and used some type of rifle to carry out the killings.

“By the time officers entered, the situation was over. The suspect took his own life very shortly before officers entered the facility,” said McCartt, adding that the gunfire only lasted “a couple of minutes.”

The deputy chief could not say whether the shooter was a FedEx employee.

Eight people died in the shooting spree that also left five others injured. The wounded are expected to survive.

“He just appeared to randomly start shooting, and that began in the parking lot, and he did go into the facility for a brief period of time before he took his own life,” McCartt said of the killer.

People embrace after learning that their loved one was safe after a mass casualty shooting at the FedEx facility in Indianapolis, Indiana, on April 16, 2021.
via REUTERS

The deputy chief said the investigation is still in its “infancy.”

Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett said the shooting thrust the city into the spotlight “in ways that we would never have hoped for.

“Last night, Indianapolis was revisited by the scourge of gun violence that has killed far too many in our community and in our country,” Hogsett said at the briefing. “No piece of information will restore the lives that were taken or the peace that was shattered.”

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/04/16/indianapolis-fedex-shooting-authorities-give-update-after-shooting/

Rioters clash with law enforcement as they attempt to enter the U.S. Capitol building on Jan. 6.

Eric Lee/Bloomberg via Getty Images


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Eric Lee/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Rioters clash with law enforcement as they attempt to enter the U.S. Capitol building on Jan. 6.

Eric Lee/Bloomberg via Getty Images

A heavy metal musician and founding member of the Oath Keepers extremist group pleaded guilty Friday to charges connected to the storming of the U.S. Capitol and agreed to cooperate with investigators — a first in the massive probe into the deadly Jan. 6 assault.

Jon Schaffer, a guitarist and songwriter for the heavy metal band Iced Earth, entered his plea during a hearing in federal court in Washington, D.C. The plea agreement, which comes 100 days after a mob of Trump supporters violently overran the Capitol, marks a significant step for prosecutors in the case.

Schaffer, who originally faced six counts, pleaded guilty to two charges — obstructing an official proceeding and entering restricted grounds with a dangerous weapon.

In his plea deal, Schaffer acknowledged that on Jan. 6 he was among the first people to force their way through police lines and into the Capitol. He also acknowledged wearing a tactical vest and carrying bear spray as he did so.

At Friday’s hearing, U.S. District Court Judge Amit Mehta walked Schaffer through the plea agreement and the charges.

“Are you pleading guilty, Mr. Schaffer, because you are in fact guilty, sir?” Mehta asked.

“Yes,” Schaffer replied.

Mehta said the agreement stipulates that Schaffer fully cooperate with investigators, including providing testimony and witness interviews.

It is unclear what Schaffer may be able to tell investigators, but authorities are working to understand what exactly transpired on Jan. 6 and whether it was an organized and coordinated assault.

The FBI is closely scrutinizing the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys as they seek to answer that question.

Prosecutors have brought conspiracy charges against both groups in connection with Jan. 6. The biggest of those cases so far is against a dozen members or associates of the Oath Keepers who are accused to coordinating their actions on Jan. 6 to try to disrupt the certification of the Electoral College count.

Schaffer was arrested in mid-January after turning himself in to the FBI in Indiana. He’s been in government custody since then.

The two charges against him carry a maximum sentence of 20 years and 10 years, respectively, although Judge Mehta said that — in light of the plea agreement — Schaffer is facing from 3 1/2 to four years under sentencing guidelines.

No sentencing date has been set.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/04/16/988120319/justice-department-secures-1st-guilty-plea-of-capitol-riot-investigation

President Biden will limit the number of refugees allowed into the United States this year to the historically low level set by the Trump administration, walking back an earlier promise to welcome more than 60,000 people fleeing war and persecution into the country.

President Biden in February committed to raising the cap of 15,000 refugees set by the prior administration. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken notified Congress on Feb. 12 that the administration planned to allow up to 62,500 refugees to enter the country in the fiscal year ending Sept. 30.

The reversal on Mr. Biden’s promise to welcome in thousands of families fleeing war and religious persecution signals the president’s hesitant approach to rebuilding an immigration system gutted by his predecessor. But the delay in officially designating the refugee admissions has already left hundreds of refugees cleared to travel to the United State stranded in camps around the world and infuriated resettlement agencies that accused Mr. Biden of breaking an earlier promise to restore the American reputation as a sanctuary for the oppressed.

A senior administration official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the decision-making, said the administration grew concerned that the surge of border crossings by unaccompanied minors was too much and had already overwhelmed the refugee branch of the Department of Health and Human Services. But migrants at the border seeking asylum are processed in an entirely separate system than refugees fleeing persecution overseas.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/16/us/biden-refugees-cap.html

MOSCOW (AP) — Russia on Friday responded to a barrage of new U.S. sanctions by saying it would expel 10 U.S. diplomats and take other retaliatory moves in a tense showdown with Washington.

Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov also said Moscow will add eight U.S. officials to its sanctions list and move to shut down those U.S. nongovernment organizations that remain in Russia to end what he described as their meddling in Russia’s politics.

The top Russian diplomat said the Kremlin suggested that U.S. Ambassador John Sullivan follow the example of his Russian counterpart and head home for consultations. Russia will also move to deny the U.S. Embassy the possibility to hire personnel from Russia and third countries as support staff, limit visits by U.S. diplomats serving short-term stints at the embassy, and tighten requirements for U.S. diplomats’ travel in the country.

On Thursday, the Biden administration announced sanctions on Russia for interfering in the 2020 U.S. presidential election and involvement in the SolarWind hack of federal agencies — activities Moscow has denied. The U.S. ordered 10 Russian diplomats expelled, targeted dozens of companies and people, and imposed new curbs on Russia’s ability to borrow money.

While the U.S. wields the power to cripple the Russian economy, Moscow lacks levers to respond in kind, although it potentially could hurt American interests in many other ways around the globe.

Lavrov noted that while Russia could take “painful measures” against American business interests in Russia, it wouldn’t immediately move to do that and “save them for future use.”

He warned that if Washington moves to further crank up the pressure, Russia might ask the U.S. to reduce the number of its embassy and consular staff from about 450 to 300. He said Russia and the U.S. each have about 450 diplomats, but for Russia the number includes some 150 U.N. personnel that he argued shouldn’t be part of the equation.

Russia’s economic potential and its global reach are limited compared with the Soviet Union that competed with the U.S for international influence during the Cold War. Still, Russia’s nuclear arsenal and its leverage in many parts of the world make it a power that Washington needs to reckon with.

Aware of that, President Joe Biden called for de-escalating tensions and held the door open for cooperation with Russia in certain areas. Biden said he told Putin in Tuesday’s call that he chose not to impose tougher sanctions for now and proposed to meet in a third country in the summer.

Lavrov said Russia had a “positive attitude” to the summit offer and was analyzing it, but a statement issued by the Foreign Ministry shortly after noted that it ”was being studied in the context of the evolving situation.”

While the new U.S. sanctions further limited Russia’s ability to borrow money by banning U.S. financial institutions from buying Russian government bonds directly from state institutions, they didn’t target the secondary market.

“It’s very important that there’re no sanctions on secondary debt because that means that non-U.S. persons can buy the debt and sell it to the U.S. persons,” said Tom Adshead, director of research at Macro-Advisory Ltd, an analytics and advisory company.

Tougher restrictions would also hurt Western businesses, inflict significant economic pain on the Russian population and allow Putin to rally anti-U.S. sentiments to shore up his rule.

Ramping up sanctions could eventually drive Russia into a corner and provoke even more reckless Kremlin action, such as a potential escalation in Ukraine, which has recently faced a surge in clashes with Russia-backed separatists in the east and a massive Russian troops buildup across the border.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was in Paris on Friday to discuss the tensions with French President Emmanuel Macron. After a joint call with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the three urged Russia to pull its troops back from the border to de-escalate the situation.

Fyodor Lukyanov, a top foreign policy expert who leads the Moscow-based Council for Foreign and Defense Policies, predicted Putin would likely accept Biden’s invitation to join next week’s call on climate change but could drag his feet on accepting the summit offer.

“There is no way to make any deals,” Lukyanov said. “There is a mutual antipathy and a total lack of trust.”

He charged that the only practical outcome of the summit could be an agreement to launch long and difficult talks on a replacement to the New START nuclear reduction agreement that Russia and the U.S. extended in February for another five years.

Lukyanov noted that the growing U.S. pressure will push Russia and China closer in the long run.

“Closer cooperation with China on coordinating actions to contain the United States will develop more quickly now as the Chinese are interested in that,” he said. While Russia lacks tools for a symmetrical answer to the U.S. sanctions, “it has ample capabilities to stimulate changes in the world order,” he added.

Konstantin Kosachev, the Kremlin-connected deputy speaker of the upper house of parliament, said that by hitting Russia with sanctions and proposing a summit at the same time, the U.S. sought to take a commanding stance.

“Russia’s consent would be interpreted as a reflection of its desire to soften the sanctions, allowing the U.S. to secure a dominant position at the meeting, while our refusal to meet would be a convenient pretext for more punitive measures,” Kosachev wrote on Facebook.

He argued that Russia should not rush to accept Biden’s summit offer.

“Revenge is a dish best served cold,” Kosachev wrote. “I believe the saying is quite adaptable to a situation when we talk not about revenge but a due answer to aggressive action by an opponent.”

Some predicted the U.S. sanctions could discourage Russia from cooperating with the U.S. on international crises.

“The Russian position will grow tougher on Syria, the Iranian nuclear deal and other issues,” Ivan Timofeev, program director at Russian International Affairs Council, said in a commentary. Instead of acting as a deterrent, he warned, the sanctions would “only anger Russia and make its policy even tougher.”

However, any attempt by Russia to undermine American interests would dangerously escalate tensions with the U.S. and trigger even harder sanctions — something the Kremlin certainly wants to avoid.

Despite the soaring tensions, Russia and the U.S. have shared interests in many global hot spots. For example, Moscow fears that instability could spread from Afghanistan to former Soviet republics in Central Asia, and it is interested in a political settlement there.

As for Iran, Moscow also doesn’t want to see it with nuclear weapons, despite its friendly ties with Tehran.

Lukyanov said Russia wouldn’t try to use global hot spots to hurt the U.S. and would wait patiently to see them erode U.S. domination.

“It’s not a matter of playing the spoiler here or there,” he said. “The ongoing developments will help accelerate the process of consolidation of leading powers against the U.S. domination.”

—-

Associated Press journalist Kostya Manenkov contributed.

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/russia-us-sanctions-sergey-lavrov-biden-4a935cd62c5db333ed082df447feddb8

SAN ANTONIO – A San Antonio police officer who was shot in the hand during a traffic stop on the city’s West Side Friday morning exchanged gunfire with the suspects, leading to the death of two people, according to Police Chief William McManus.

McManus, who stressed that the information he was giving was preliminary, said he had a chance to review the officer’s body camera without audio.

The officer, a five-year veteran with the department, conducted a traffic stop on a pickup occupied by three people in the 2300 block of Pinn Road.

McManus said the officer appeared to have a “casual conversation” with the driver for a few minutes until the driver pulled a gun and fired at the officer, striking him once in the hand and once on his radio.

The officer opened fire as he retreated backward, McManus said, striking and killing the driver and the passenger, both men believed to be in their 20s.

The third passenger, a woman, was shot in the torso and taken to the hospital, McManus said.

“The surprising thing to me was the conversation at the door…very casual,” the chief reiterated.

It’s the second time in two days that a San Antonio officer has opened fire on someone.

On Thursday, a park police officer shot a man who opened fire right outside of the San Antonio International Airport.

The suspect in that case was also believed to be responsible for a shooting earlier that day from a flyover overpass at Highway 281 and Loop 1604.

Police respond to a shooting on Pinn Road on Friday, April 16, 2021.

This is a developing story. Check back later for more information.

Source Article from https://www.ksat.com/news/local/2021/04/16/san-antonio-police-respond-to-shooting-reported-on-citys-west-side/

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/04/16/tamir-rice-family-asks-justice-department-reopen-investigation-death/7227771002/