WASHINGTON, D.C. – Ohio’s Rep. Jim Jordan got into a shouting match at a Wednesday hearing of the House Select Committee on the Coronavirus where he repeatedly asked National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Dr. Anthony Fauci when Americans will “get their freedoms back.”

“Fifteen days to slow the spread turned into one year of lost liberty,” Jordan said before asking Fauci: “What metrics, what measures, what has to happen before Americans get more freedoms?”

After Fauci told him that precautions to prevent spreading he virus can be lifted after the nation vaccinates as many people as soon as it can and infections decrease, Jordan again demanded “What measure, what standard, what objective outcome, do we have to reach before before Americans get their liberty and freedoms back?” He declared “First Amendment rights,” and rights to attend church, petition one’s government, freedom of the press and freedom of speech have “all been assaulted.”

“I don’t look at this as a liberty thing,” Fauci replied as Jordan interjected “That’s obvious.”

“It’s a public health thing,” Fauci continued, accusing Jordan of turning the issue into a “personal thing… We have about 60,000 infections a day which is a very large risk for a surge. We’re not talking about liberties. We’re talking about a pandemic that has killed 560,000 Americans.

“What you’re going to see as more and more people get vaccinated, and we get over 3 million people a day, you’re going to see the level of infection come down and down and gradually there will be more flexibility for doing the things that you’re talking about,” Fauci continued.

The Champaign County Republican repeatedly demanded that Fauci supply him with concrete criteria for lifting restrictions, even after his time for questioning Fauci expired and the committee’s chairman, South Carolina Democratic Rep. Jim Clyburn, gaveled down Jordan.

“You need to respect the chair and shut your mouth,” California Democratic Rep. Maxine Waters said to Jordan.

Click here to watch video of their exchange.

Read more:

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HUD Secretary Marcia Fudge releases $5 billion to fight homelessness

Democratic Rep. Marcy Kaptur joins Capitol riot lawsuit against Donald Trump, Proud Boys and Oath Keepers

Sen. Sherrod Brown wants repeal of corporate tax provisions he says export jobs

Nina Turner collects $2.2 million for congressional bid

Jim Jordan’s campaign explains large errors on its Federal Election Commission reports

Former Ohio GOP chair Jane Timken raises $2.1 million for U.S. Senate bid\

Planned Parenthood sues Ohio over its telemedicine abortion ban

Source Article from https://www.cleveland.com/open/2021/04/rep-jim-jordan-clashes-with-anthony-fauci-over-freedom-at-house-hearing.html

The moves marked the first actions the United States has announced it has taken against Russia in reaction to last year’s massive cyber hack against U.S. federal agencies, known as the SolarWinds breach, and for the “bounties” it had reportedly offered in Afghanistan. The U.S. for the first time formally blamed Russia for the hack, and it also for the first time said its intelligence agencies had determined Russia to be behind the bounties.

The White House said the U.S. would expel 10 personnel from Russia’s diplomatic mission in Washington, including, “representatives of Russian intelligence services.”

The U.S. also sanctioned “16 entities and 16 individuals who attempted to influence the 2020 U.S. presidential election at the direction of the leadership of the Russian Government,” according to the U.S. Treasury Department. They include “disinformation outlets controlled by Russian intelligence services,” the Russian “financier” and an “enabler” of the “troll farm” previously sanctioned for 2016 election interference, as well as a “known Russian agent,” the administration said. The sanctions, the Treasury Department said, target “the private and state-owned companies” that “enable the Russian Intelligence Services’ cyber activities.”

In addition, the Treasury Department targeted Russia’s sovereign wealth, prohibiting U.S. financial institutions from certain dealings with Russian sovereign debt.

The U.S. also said it was sanctioning “five individuals and three entities related to Russia’s occupation of the Crimea region of Ukraine and its severe human rights abuses against the local population.”

The sanctions came amid heightened concern about a massive buildup of Russian forces along Ukraine’s border and in Crimea, the Ukrainian peninsula that has been occupied by Russia since 2014.

President Joe Biden planned to deliver remarks about Russia at the White House at 4:30 p.m. Thursday, the White House said.

Biden told Russian President Vladimir Putin about the coming sanctions during a phone call on Tuesday, according to U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan.

Sullivan said Thursday morning that Biden invoked a conversation earlier this year in which Biden had warned his Russian counterpart that the United States would “respond” if it determined Russia was behind recent cyber intrusions and election interference in the United States.

“When he spoke to him this week,” Sullivan told reporters, “he said, ‘I told you that I was going to look into this, I made a determination that Russia has, in fact, conducted these actions, and I’m a man of my word, I am ready to respond, but I’m not looking to escalate. I’m looking to provide proportionate responses, and I believe that it is in our interest to find a stable and predictable way forward in this relationship.'”

In that context, Sullivan noted, Biden had proposed he and Putin meet in person in the coming months. The White House announced that summit proposal earlier this week, an a senior administration official said Thursday Biden had proposed it take place in a third nation in Europe.

The United States’ prohibition on American companies trading Russia’s sovereign debt with the country’s central bank — an expansion of previous limits — caused Russia’s ruble currency to slide Thursday.

Russia summoned the U.S. ambassador to Moscow and warned that it will respond.

Russia’s foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova in a televised briefing said Ambassador John Sullivan had been summoned for a “difficult conversation.”

Zakharova also said that a Russian response to the sanctions was “unavoidable.”

“Such aggressive behavior, without question, will receive a decisive push back, a response to the sanctions is unavoidable,” she said. “In Washington, they must realize that it’s necessary to pay for the degradation of bilateral relations. Responsibility for what is happening lies entirely on the U.S.”

Senior Biden administration officials Thursday morning presented the sanctions against Russia as both “economically impactful” but also “proportionate,” “tailored” and “measured.”

“We have no desire to be in an escalatory cycle with Russia,” an official told reporters. “We intend these responses to be proportionate and tailored to the specific past activities, past actions that Russia has taken. We have indicated that we seek a stable and predictable relationship going forward.”

As the sanctions were announced, the United States also for the first time officially attributed the SolarWinds hack to Russia. The breach compromised nine federal government agencies.

“Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) actors (also known as APT29, Cozy Bear, and The Dukes) frequently use publicly known vulnerabilities to conduct widespread scanning and exploitation against vulnerable systems in an effort to obtain authentication credentials to allow further access,” an advisory from the Federal Bureau of Intelligence, the Department of Homeland Security and National Security Agency said. “This targeting and exploitation encompasses U.S. and allied networks, including national security and government-related systems.”

They said that Russia was still involved in cyber actions against the United States and other allies.

The U.S. government, “critical infrastructure” and “allied networks are consistently scanned, targeted, and exploited by Russian state-sponsored cyber actors,” they said.

Also for the first time, a senior administration official said that the U.S. intelligence community had assessed that Russia was behind financial incentives for killing U.S. troops in Afghanistan – one of the impetuses for today’s sanctions – although the official noted the assessment was made with “low to moderate confidence” since it relied on information that detainees had shared and “the challenging operating environment in Afghanistan.”

“The United States intelligence community assesses with low-to-moderate confidence that Russian intelligence officers sought to encourage Taliban attacks against U.S. and coalition personnel in Afghanistan in 2019, and perhaps earlier, including through financial incentives and compensation,” the official said.

“Our conclusion is based on information and evidence of connections between criminal agents in Afghanistan and elements of the Russian government,” the official added. “This information puts a burden on the Russian government to explain its actions and take steps to address this disturbing pattern of behavior.”

ABC News’ Patrick Reevell, Luke Barr and Conor Finnegan contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/us-announces-sweeping-sanctions-russia-cyber-hack-election/story?id=77089976

Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your day …

GOP’s Jim Jordan pans Democrats’ Supreme Court ‘packing’ proposal
Democratic lawmakers are set to unveil legislation Thursday to expand the number of justices on the Supreme Court.

U.S. Sen. Ed Markey of Masachusetts and U.S. Reps. Jerry Nadler and Mondaire Jones of New York and Hank Johnson of Georgia plan to introduce the proposal outside the Supreme Court building.

Given Democrats’ control of the White House and Senate, the legislation could allow them to supersede the court’s current conservative majority by “packing” the court with liberal justices

But some Republicans quickly derided the proposal.

“Does expanding the Supreme Court count as infrastructure too?” U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, wrote on Twitter.

The legislation will propose expanding the court to 13 justices from the current nine, The Intercept reported. Spokespeople for the lawmakers’ offices did not respond Wednesday to Fox News’ requests for further details. 

The Supreme Court has had nine justices since the 19th century. The number of justices is not addressed in the Constitution. CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON OUR TOP STORY.

In other developments:
– GOP reps announce constitutional amendment to keep Supreme Court at 9 ‘before it’s too late’
– Cotton says Dems will do anything for power amid Supreme Court packing move
– Shannon Bream: Democrats will face ‘a lot of questions’ over plan to add four Supreme Court justices
– FLASHBACK: That time Biden called court-packing a ‘bonehead idea’
– Judge Jeanine rips Democrats’ proposal to expand Supreme Court, tells Tucker ‘this is madness’
– FLASHBACK: FDR’s attempt to ‘pack the court’ in 1937

Ex-Minnesota police officer in Daunte Wright case posts bond, released from jail
Kimberly Potter, the former Minnesota police officer charged in the shooting death of a Black motorist, posted bond and was released from custody Wednesday pending further legal action, according to jail records.

Potter, 48, was released from a Hennepin County jail just before 5:40 p.m. local time after posting a $100,000 bond. She is charged with second-degree manslaughter in Sunday’s shooting death of Daunte Wright in the Minneapolis suburb of Brooklyn Center. Her first court appearance is scheduled for Thursday.

Wright’s death has ignited four consecutive nights of protests accompanied by riots and clashes between demonstrators and authorities. Potter, a 26-year veteran of the police force and head of its police union, resigned Tuesday along with police Chief Tim Gannon, who claimed Potter mistakenly grabbed her service weapon under the belief it was a stun gun when she shot Wright during a traffic stop.

She was on administrative leave at the time of her resignation. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.

In other developments:
– Brooklyn Center mayor letting ‘political activists’ control him, police union leader claims
– Minnesota protester tells Fox reporter: Only way things change is ‘if people start throwing things’
– Greg Gutfeld: The toxic, media-driven narrative about policing rides again
– CNN crew chased away by Minnesota rioters after crew member hit in the head with water bottle
– Terrell rips Minnesota mayor’s remark about cops not needing guns at traffic stops
– Minnesota Democrat group threatens government shutdown if police reforms aren’t passed: report

Suspected MS-13 members caught lugging blanket-wrapped body to car: sources
Four alleged MS-13 gang members who were under federal investigation were taken into custody Wednesday after New York Police Department (NYPD) officers saw them carrying a long object that turned out to be a woman’s body wrapped in a blanket, police and law enforcement sources told Fox News.

The NYPD officers were working with Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) agents early Wednesday when the officers saw four men exit a building in Far Rockaway, Queens, around 1:50 a.m., police and law enforcement sources said. The men appeared to be carrying a “large, unknown object” and placed it in the trunk of a Nissan Altima, the sources added.

Police followed the vehicle for just under a mile before conducting a traffic stop. When the NYPD officers approached the car, they smelled an odor and discovered a “human body with severe trauma” wrapped in a blanket in the trunk, sources said. Police had not yet ID’d the dead woman. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.

In other developments:
– MS-13 gang member caught entering US illegally, Border Patrol announces
– High school hoops coach killed in drug cartel shootout in North Carolina
– Rachel Campos-Duffy: Drugs, cartel members and gangs coming across the border
– Sister of gang violence victim slams LA County DA Gascón’s push to eliminate juvenile strikes

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

TODAY’S MUST-READS:
– US poised to announce sanctions on Russia: report
– Chicago braces for release of video in Adam Toledo’s shooting death
– Daughter of fallen Capitol Police officer may long remember Rotunda tribute — thanks to a toy
– Army drill sergeant charged over viral video involving Black man
– 9/11 families demand release of FBI documents detailing Saudi role in terrorist attack
– NYC sees some disillusioned Dems switch to Republican Party

THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS:
– Dell plans spinoff of $52 billion stake in VMware
– Study finds that blocking middle seats on planes reduces virus risk
– GameStop CEO forfeits more than 587,000 shares for not meeting targets
– Prolonged layoffs at Kansas GM, Ford plants fueled by parts shortage
– IRS to issue tax refunds on $10,200 in unemployment benefits in May: What to know
– Coinbase stock jumps in Nasdaq debut

#TheFlashback: CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”

SOME PARTING WORDS

Tucker Carlson claimed on Wednesday’s “Tucker Carlson Tonight” that liberals were turning a blind eye to Black Lives Matter and Antifa chaos.

“Laws have no meaning if they are no longer applied equally,” Carlson said. “When they are not applied equally, they are not even laws – they’re purely tools of persecution. And you don’t want live in a country like that — even if people you don’t like are the ones being persecuted.

“But Rashida Tlaib does want to live in a country like that,” he added, “Tlaib is a member of Congress so her security is never in question – it’s never in doubt. But in your neighborhood Rashida Tlaib would like to see the police eliminated. We’re not making this up, we’re not misquoting her – she’s demanding this as a member of Congress – and many are.”

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Fox News’ Go Watch page is now available, providing visitors with Pay TV provider options in their area carrying Fox News Channel & Fox Business Network.

Fox News First was compiled by Fox News’ Jack Durschlag. Thank you for making us your first choice in the morning! We’ll see you in your inbox first thing Friday.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/gops-jim-jordan-pans-democrats-supreme-court-packing-proposal

BROOKLYN CENTER, Minn. – The former Brooklyn Center police officer charged with second-degree manslaughter in the shooting of 20-year-old Daunte Wright will make her first court appearance Thursday.

Kim Potter, 48, fatally shot Wright during a traffic stop Sunday. In charging documents, prosecutors said Potter’s “culpable negligence” caused Wright’s death and “created an unreasonable risk” when she shot him instead of using her Taser.

Body-worn camera footage shows Potter pointing her firearm at Wright as she shouts “Taser,” and the city’s former police chief described the incident as “an accidental discharge.”

However, Wright’s family has rejected police’s characterization of their son’s death, saying he was murdered and demanding the officer be held accountable to the “highest” standard.

Potter faces up to 10 years in prison and a $20,000 fine if found guilty. She was arrested Wednesday and released on a $100,000 bond.

What we know:Ex-officer Kim Potter released on $100,000 bond, faces second-degree manslaughter charge in Daunte Wright’s death

“Certain occupations carry an immense responsibility and none more so than a sworn police officer,” said Imran Ali, Washington County assistant criminal division chief. “We will vigorously prosecute this case and intend to prove that Officer Potter abrogated her responsibility to protect the public when she used her firearm rather than her taser. Her action caused the unlawful killing of Mr. Wright and she must be held accountable.”

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/04/15/daunte-wright-kim-potter-appear-court-brooklyn-center-shooting/7234074002/

A slight plurality of Americans support President Joe Biden‘s $2.25 trillion infrastructure plan and favor raising corporate taxes to pay for it.

But the plan is much less popular than the relief bill passed earlier this year, and there are growing deficit concerns.

The CNBC All-America Economic Survey, a poll of 802 Americans nationwide, shows 36% of the public gives the infrastructure plan a thumbs-up compared with 33% who oppose it. The edge is within the poll’s 3.5% margin of error and it’s about half the level of support garnered by Biden’s $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act that Congress passed in March.

A large 31% slice of the public say they don’t know enough to venture an opinion, suggesting an opportunity for each political party to make headway.

But Americans overwhelmingly support nearly all the details of the plans.

For example, 87% of the public backs the proposal in the plan to fix roads and bridges, while 82% approves of increasing pay for elderly caregivers and 78% supports expanding high-speed broadband.

Eight of the 9 parts of the plan surveyed — including fixing the electrical grid and retrofitting buildings and homes to make them more energy efficient — received support from more than 70% of the public. The least popular part — tax rebates and incentives for electric cars and building charging stations — still had majority support.

The plan is strongly favored by Democrats and opposed by Republicans, as might be expected. Independents support the plan by a 32% to 28% margin, with a large 40% saying they are unsure.

A bare 50% majority of the public supports hiking the corporate tax rates to 28% from 21% to pay the plan. It’s opposed by 42% of the public.

But when asked generally about raising corporate taxes, 46% say it’s a bad idea because it would raise wages, cost jobs and hike prices. Some 43% back the idea that corporate tax hikes should be raised to pay for the plan and because companies “do not pay their fair share.”

The survey’s Republican pollster, Micah Roberts, from Public Opinion Strategies, noted that only 23% of the public support the plan strongly, compared with overall 36% support. He adds that while Americans may support individual parts of the plan, it is being proposed as a whole, making the modest support it receives the best gauge of its overall support.

But Jay Campbell, the Democratic pollster for the survey, from Hart Research Associates, said the support for the individual parts of the plan plus the large percentage not expressing an opinion suggests scope for Biden to sell the plan.

One other factor in play: concern about deficits. The bigger worry for 55% of the public is that the government will spend too much and drive up deficits, compared with 32% who worry more that the government will spend too little to support the economy.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/04/15/cnbc-survey-shows-support-for-infrastructure-spending-much-less-than-previous-stimulus.html

The Biden administration imposed a raft of new sanctions against Moscow on Thursday over alleged interference in the 2020 election, a colossal cyberattack against U.S. government and corporation networks, illegal annexation and occupation of Crimea, and human rights abuses.

“Today, the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) took sweeping action against 16 entities and 16 individuals who attempted to influence the 2020 U.S. presidential election at the direction of the leadership of the Russian Government,” the Treasury said in a statement.

It also announced sanctions on five individuals and three entities linked to Russia’s occupation of Ukraine’s Crimea region and human rights abuses.

In addition to the broad sanctions issued by Treasury, the State Department announced it will expel 10 officials from Russia’s diplomatic mission in the United States.

The sanctions come following President Joe Biden’s phone call this week with Russian leader Vladimir Putin, and as Russian force amass near the Ukraine border.

Washington formally accused Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service, or SVR — its top spy agency — of being behind the SolarWinds cyberattack publicized late last year, described by cybersecurity experts as one of the largest and most sophisticated hacking operations in history.

“The U.S. Intelligence Community has high confidence in its assessment of attribution,” the Treasury release said. The attack saw hackers gain access to the software used by thousands of government bureaus and companies. 

The penalties are also in response to a March report by the U.S. Director of National Intelligence that concluded Russia’s President Vladimir Putin authorized attempts to interfere in the 2020 election in former President Donald Trump’s favor.

The Russian government denies all of the allegations.

Biden also signed an executive order Thursday that allows Washington to sanction any sector of Moscow’s economy, significantly broadening the scope of sanctions authorities.

Under this new authorization, U.S. financial institutions are prohibited from conducting transactions in the primary market for new ruble or non-ruble denominated bonds issued after June 14.

“The President signed this sweeping new authority to confront Russia’s continued and growing malign behavior,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in a statement applauding the measure.

“Treasury is leveraging this new authority to impose costs on the Russian government for its unacceptable conduct, including by limiting Russia’s ability to finance its activities and by targeting Russia’s malicious and disruptive cyber capabilities,” she added.

One of those named in the new actions is Konstantin Kilimnik, a Russian agent with ties to former Trump campaign boss Paul Manafort, who has been charged in special counsel Robert Mueller‘s investigation of Russian meddling in the 2016 election.

The FBI is offering $250,000 for information leading to Kilimnik’s arrest, who is believed to be in Russia. Moscow prohibits the extradition of a Russian national to any country.

Worsening U.S.-Russia relations

Taking a tougher stance on Russia was one of Biden’s foreign policy campaign pledges. The measures announced Thursday join a series of past moves: the Obama administration’s debt financing restrictions for major Russian companies like Rosneft, and the Trump administration’s ban on U.S. entities buying Russia’s foreign currency government loans.

“Today’s U.S. sanctions continue the general trend of worsening relations witnessed ever since the annexation of Crimea,” Maximilian Hess, head of political risk at London-based law firm Hawthorn Advisors, told CNBC.

“The key portion” of these sanctions, he said, “is the barring of U.S. entities from the primary market for ruble-denominated debts by the Russian government.”

However, Hess noted, this “will not have a major impact, particularly given Russia’s manageable debt load.”

For Timothy Ash, senior emerging markets strategist at Bluebay Asset Management, the measures are far from harsh.

“It’s like guys, come on, you need to do better than this,” Ash wrote in a note following the announcement.

“Sovereign primary still allows U.S. entities to hold this debt. So U.S. institutions cannot buy Russian sovereign debt in primary issuance, but can get their Russian bank friends to buy it for them in primary, give them a fee, and then buy it in the secondary.”

The rouble pared some of its day’s losses against the greenback shortly after the sanctions news, trading at 76.3025 to the dollar at 4 p.m. local time compared to 77.0718 just before the sanctions details were announced.

Russian troop buildup on Ukraine border

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/04/15/biden-administration-sanctions-russia-for-cyber-attacks-election-interference.html

The 26-year veteran officer, who is White, resigned from the Brooklyn Center, Minn., police department on Tuesday along with Chief Tim Gannon, who announced his resignation later that day.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/04/14/daunte-wright-minneapolis-police-shooting/

The judge presiding over former Minneapolis police Officer Derek Chauvin’s murder trial denied an acquittal request Wednesday by the officer’s defense team.

Chauvin is accused of murdering George Floyd on May 25, 2020, by pressing a knee on Floyd’s neck for more than nine minutes during an arrest after Floyd allegedly tried to use a counterfeit $20 bill in a store.

The acquittal request came during the second day of the defense presenting its case in a Minneapolis courtroom after prosecutors rested their case Tuesday following 11 days of testimony that included video evidence.

CHAUVIN TRIAL EXPERT BLAMES GEORGE FLOYD’S DEATH ON HEART RHYTHM PROBLEM

Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill rejected Chauvin attorney Eric Nelson’s argument that prosecutors had failed to prove Chauvin was guilty.

“The court’s duty at this point is to look at the evidence in a light most favorable to the state and even when there are inconsistencies, major or minor, between witnesses, the jury is free to believe some and not the others,” Cahill said in his decision, according to The Hill.

Requests for acquittal are commonly made halfway through a trial and are almost always denied, the outlet noted.

In this image from video, Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill discusses motions before the court Monday, April 12, 2021, in the trial of former Minneapolis police Officer Derek Chauvin at the Hennepin County Courthouse in Minneapolis. (Associated Press)

During their portion of the trial, prosecutors called forth numerous medical experts who testified that Floyd, 46, died from a lack of oxygen resulting from the placement of Chauvin’s knee on his neck for a period of time.

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On Wednesday, the defense team countered that Floyd’s heart disease contributed to his death, with witness David Fowler, a former Maryland medical examiner, suggesting that Floyd’s drug use and exposure to exhaust from a nearby police vehicle also may have been factors, The Hill reported.

If convicted of second-degree murder, Chauvin could face up to 40 years in prison, authorities have said.
 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/judge-denies-derek-chauvin-defense-teams-acquittal-request-in-george-floyds-death

On Thursday, a social media video showed protesters outside the home of a white man who was captured on video aggressively pushing and harassing a Black man on a sidewalk Monday in a South Carolina neighborhood.

The alleged aggressor is reported to be U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Captain Jonathan Pentland, whose social media accounts showed Pentland has been stationed as a drill sergeant at Fort Jackson since 2019, according to the Associated Press.

According to multiple reports, Pentland has been arrested and charged with third-degree assault.

In the video, a Black female masked protester outside of what believed to be Pentland’s home, shouts, “We just want to talk, we want to understand some things, that’s it. What you gonna do? You gonna stay in here every day?”

“No justice, no peace!” another protester can be heard shouting in the background.

The three-minute video was first posted to Facebook on Monday by Shirrell Johnson and had been shared around 17,000 times. It also has been shared widely on Twitter and it does not capture what prompted the altercation.

On Facebook, Johnson identified the Black man as “Deandre,” and said that the incident occurred in the Summit, a housing development near the city of Columbia, South Carolina, where Johnson said the man lives.

Initially, the video shows the man, reportedly Pentland, asking Deandre what he is doing in the neighborhood before repeatedly telling him to “go away.”

Deandre tells him to call the police, and a woman who is identified by the aggressor as his wife says that they have already been called.

Then, the man is seen shoving Deandre.

“Walk away!” he screams. “I need you to walk away, or I’m going to carry your a** out of here.”

Afterward, Deandre, who remains calm throughout the video, says, “You better not touch me,” which prompts the aggressor to ask, “Or what? What are you going to do?”

“You’re in the wrong neighborhood m*****f*****,” he said before adding that Deandre was harassing the neighborhood while continuing to threaten him to leave.

According to the Associated Press, Johnson did not respond to a request for additional details about the video.

Johnson wrote on Facebook that a young lady recorded the video for Deandre’s safety and authorized Johnson to post it. She mentioned a second instance of assault not captured on video in which the man believed to be Pentland slapped Deandre’s phone out of his hand and shattered it.

When an officer arrived on the scene and was informed by Johnson and the woman who recorded the video that Deandre was assaulted, the officer said that the man could only be charged with malicious injury to property and not assault, according to Johnson.

“The only thing he did was be black while walking!!!,” Johnson wrote, concluding her post.

After @Angry_Staffer tweeted on Tuesday, “Hey @fortjackson / @fortjacksoncg, do you condone this behavior from Staff Sergeant Pentland?,” Fort Jackson and its Commanding Brig. Gen. Milford H. Beagle Jr. issued a reaction.

“This type of behavior is not consistent with our Army Values and will not be condoned,” the account for Fort Jackson said on Twitter and Facebook on Wednesday, noting that they are aware of the video.

“We will get to the bottom of this ASAP,” Beagle responded to @Angry_Staffer on Tuesday.

This is by no means condoned by any service member. We will get to the bottom of this ASAP.

— Fort Jackson Commanding General (@fortjacksoncg) April 14, 2021

Fort Jackson is the largest U.S. Army basic training base.

Newsweek has reached out to Fort Jackson for comment but did not hear back in time for publication.

A person holds a ‘no justice no peace’ sign at the Rally Held On Birthday Of Trans Activist Marsha P. Johnson in Washington Square Park on August 24, 2020 in New York City. “No justice, no peace,” was shouted on Thursday by a protester outside of a home of a man who was captured on video harassing a Black man in a South Carolina neighborhood on Monday.
Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/protesters-surround-house-believed-army-captains-seen-video-harassing-black-man-1583701

(CNN)At Pastor Tony Spell’s Sunday sermon this week, he preached a different kind of message than usual to his congregants: Don’t trust Covid-19 vaccines.

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    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/04/14/us/covid-vaccine-evangelicals/index.html

    BATON ROUGE, La. (KLFY) – Authorities have confirmed that the body recovered in the Mississippi River on Tuesday, April 13, in St. John the Baptist Parish has been identified as missing LSU student Kori Gauthier.

    “Since Kori was first reported missing, the LSU Police Department, Baton Rouge Police Department and other law enforcement agencies and volunteers have taken exahsutive measures to locate her and, in the process, to determine what led to her disappearance,” said LSU Chief of Police Bart Thompson.

    “This is a difficult conclusion for all of us, but we hope this will bring closure for the Gauthier family.”

    He added, “based on cell phone tracking, video footage and a timeline of the events related to this case – combined with other evidence we shared with Kori’s parents that we are not at liberty to disclose publicly out of respect for their privacy –  we have concluded that there was no criminal activity or foul play involved.”

    A number of agencies and volunteer groups were involved in the ongoing search efforts, including LSU Police, Baton Rouge Police Department, East Baton Rouge Sheriff’s Office, Louisiana State Attorney General, Louisiana State Police, K9 Mercy, Southeast Louisiana Rescue/Search, Iberville Sheriff’s Office, Livingston Sheriff’s Office, St. Charles Sheriff’s Office, United Cajun Navy WBR Sheriff’s Office, Cajun Navy 2016/Pinnacle SAR, Louisiana Wildlife & Fisheries, EBR ABC Office, New Orleans Harbor Police, U.S. Coast Guard, St. John the Baptist Parish Sheriff’s Office, along with other volunteer groups and individual volunteers.

    “On behalf of the men and women of the Baton Rouge Police Department, I want to extend our prayers to Kori’s family and friends,” said Baton Rouge Police Chief Murphy Paul. 

    “Over the last few days, we’ve held her close in our hearts, as we’ve worked with other agencies, volunteers, and loved ones to find Kori. We will continue praying for Kori’s family and friends during this difficult time.”

    The Gauthier family asked to extend their sincerest thanks to all law enforcement officials and volunteers who helped in the investigation and the search. And also they thank everyone for their support during this time, and ask to please respect their privacy in the days and weeks going forward.

    Family and friends of Kori Gauthier gather for prayer vigil in her hometown

    LSU and Baton Rouge officials offered their sympathies to the Gauthier family as well:

    “Our LSU community is devastated to learn of the loss of Kori Gauthier,” said Interim LSU President Tom Galligan. “Our thoughts are with her parents, her family, and all who knew her during this very difficult time. We offer our deepest condolences to her family and friends.”

    “Our entire community is heartbroken by the loss of this amazing young woman,” said Mayor-President Sharon Weston Broome.

    “I send my most heartfelt condolences to Kori’s family and loved ones. Please keep them in your prayers during this time.”

    “Don’t fall victim to any of these scams:” Family of Kori Gauthier says beware of social media scams

    Source Article from https://www.klfy.com/louisiana/body-found-in-mississippi-river-identified-as-missing-lsu-student-kori-gauthier/

    WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden said Wednesday he will withdraw remaining U.S. troops from the “forever war” in Afghanistan, declaring that the Sept. 11 terror attacks of 20 years ago cannot justify American forces still dying in the nation’s longest war.

    His plan is to pull out all American forces — numbering 2,500 now — by this Sept. 11, the anniversary of the attacks, which were coordinated from Afghanistan. Soon after Biden made his announcement, NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg in Brussels said the alliance had agreed to withdraw its roughly 7,000 forces from Afghanistan, matching Biden’s decision to begin a final pullout by May 1.

    The U.S. cannot continue to pour resources into an intractable war and expect different results, Biden said.

    The drawdown would begin rather than conclude by May 1, which has been the deadline for full withdrawal under a peace agreement the Trump administration reached with the Taliban last year.

    “It is time to end America’s longest war,” Biden said, but he added that the U.S. will “not conduct a hasty rush to the exit.”

    “We cannot continue the cycle of extending or expanding our military presence in Afghanistan hoping to create the ideal conditions for our withdrawal, expecting a different result,” said Biden, who delivered his address from the White House Treaty Room, the same location where President George W. Bush announced the start of the war. “I am now the fourth United States president to preside over an American troop presence in Afghanistan. Two Republicans. Two Democrats. I will not pass this responsibility to a fifth.”

    Biden’s announcement, which he followed with a visit to Arlington National Cemetery, marks perhaps the most significant foreign policy decision in the early going of his presidency.

    He’s long been skeptical about the U.S. presence in Afghanistan. As Barack Obama’s vice president, Biden was a lonely voice in the administration who advised the 44th president to tilt towards a smaller counterterrorism role in the country while military advisers were urging a troop buildup to counter Taliban gains. Biden has also made clear he wants to recalibrate U.S. foreign policy to face bigger challenges posed by China and Russia.

    Withdrawing all U.S. troops comes with clear risks. It could boost the Taliban’s effort to claw back power and undo gains toward democracy and women’s rights made over the past two decades. It also opens Biden to criticism, from mostly Republicans and some Democrats, even though former President Donald Trump had also wanted a full withdrawal.

    “This administration has decided to abandon U.S. efforts in Afghanistan which have helped keep radical Islamic terrorism in check,” said Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell. “And bizarrely, they have decided to do so by September 11th.”

    While Biden’s decision keeps U.S. forces in Afghanistan four months longer than initially planned, it sets a firm end to two decades of war that killed more than 2,200 U.S. troops, wounded 20,000, and cost as much as $1 trillion.

    Biden spoke with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on Wednesday ahead of his speech. The White House said in a statement that Biden told Ghani the United States would continue to support the Afghan people through development, humanitarian and security assistance.

    “The Islamic Republic of Afghanistan respects the U.S. decision, and we will work with our U.S. partners to ensure a smooth transition,” Ghani said in a Twitter posting.

    Biden spoke, too, with former President Bush ahead of announcing his decision. He also spoke with allies, military leaders, lawmakers and Vice President Kamala Harris to help make his decision, according to the White House. Bush, through his spokesman, declined to comment about his conversation with Biden.

    Biden emphasized that his administration will continue to support peace talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban and assist international efforts to train the Afghan military.

    He noted that the “forever war” has led to service members who weren’t even alive at the time of the Sept. 11 attacks serving, as well as young troops following in the steps of their mothers and fathers in deploying to Afghanistan.

    “The war in Afghanistan was never meant to be a multigenerational undertaking,” Biden said.

    Obama, who had hoped but ultimately failed to end the war during his time in office, said in a statement that he supported Biden’s decision, that “it is time to recognize that we have accomplished all that we can militarily, and that it’s time to bring our remaining troops home.”

    Following his speech, Biden visited Arlington National Cemetery to honor those who died in recent American conflicts. After paying his respects, Biden told reporters it was “absolutely clear” to him that ending the war was the right decision. Biden, in his speech and during his visit to the hallowed cemetery, reflected on his own late son Beau Biden’s service. The president’s son, who died of cancer in 2015, had deployed to Iraq with the Delaware Army National Guard.

    “I’m always amazed that generation after generation, women and men give their lives to this country,” Biden said. “It means I have trouble these days showing up to this cemetery and not thinking about my son.”

    CIA Director William Burns acknowledged at a hearing Wednesday that America’s ability to contain the terrorist threat from Afghanistan has benefited from the military presence there, and that when that presence is withdrawn, “the U.S. government’s ability to collect and act on threats will diminish.”

    “That’s simply a fact,” Burns said. “It is also a fact, however, that after withdrawal, whenever that time comes, the CIA and all of our partners in the U.S. government will retain a suite of capabilities, some of it remaining in place, some of them that we will generate, that can help us to anticipate and contest any rebuilding effort.”

    A senior administration official said the September withdrawal date was an absolute deadline that won’t be affected by security conditions in Afghanistan.

    The long conflict has largely crippled al-Qaida and led to the death of Osama bin Laden, the architect of the Sept. 11 attacks. But an American withdrawal also risks many of the gains made in democracy, women’s rights and governance, while ensuring that the Taliban, who provided al-Qaida’s haven, remain strong and in control of large swaths of the country.

    As Biden announced his decision, his top national security aides — Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin — were consulting in Brussels to coordinate NATO’s withdrawal from Afghanistan with the planned pullout of American troops.

    Stoltenberg, the NATO chief, said the alliance’s full withdrawal would be completed “in months” but did not mention the 20th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

    “We went into Afghanistan together, we have adjusted our posture together and we are united in leaving together,” he said.

    ___ Lee reported from Brussels. Associated Press writers Eric Tucker, Alexandra Jaffe, Zeke Miller and Darlene Superville contributed reporting.

    Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/joe-biden-troop-withdrawal-afghanistan-september-11-d2c7426736f9f530e0e62f2295a44d28

    COLUMBIA, S.C. (WIS) – The Richland County Sheriff’s Department has shut down access to a Northeast neighborhood after peaceful protests have turned disruptive.

    Source Article from https://www.wistv.com/2021/04/15/police-shut-down-summit-neighborhood-remove-pentland-family-amidst-protests-2/

    “Now, you’re not telling the jury, are you, sir, that Mr. Floyd died from a paraganglioma, are you?” Blackwell said, and Fowler answered, “No.”

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/04/14/derek-chauvin-trial/

    The Department of Justice will not bring charges against the Capitol Police officer who shot and killed an Air Force veteran as she climbed through a doorway inside the U.S. Capitol on January 6. Ashli Babbitt was killed as rioters broke into the Capitol while lawmakers inside were confirming the Electoral College results certifying Joe Biden’s presidential victory.

    An investigation found insufficient evidence to support criminal prosecution and determined that the officer could reasonably believe it was necessary to shoot Babbitt out of self-defense or in defense of those evacuating the House Chamber.

    Babbitt, a 35-year-old from Ocean Beach California, was part of a mob that attempted to break through doors that led to the Speaker’s Lobby, an area near the Chamber of the U.S. House of Representatives, where Capitol Police had been evacuating members from the House Chamber. 

    Multiple videos posted to social media depicted the tense scene where Babbitt was shot, as a mob used flagpoles, helmets and their own hands to smash through doors, which Capitol Police had barricaded in an effort to block the crowd from reaching the evacuating House Members. 

    Ashli Babbitt

    Twitter


    In video, Babbitt can be seen climbing through the doorway when a shot rings out. The Justice Department said a Capitol Police officer fired one round from his service pistol, striking Babbitt in the left shoulder. 

    Videos show the officer, wearing a suit and surgical mask, fire in Babbitt’s direction as she falls backward, out of the doorway.

    She was given aid by a Capitol Police emergency response team and was taken to the hospital, where she died of her injuries, the Justice Department said.

    The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia’s Public Corruption and Civil Rights Section and the Civil Rights Division, along with the Metropolitan Police Department’s Internal Affairs Division, conducted the investigation by examining video footage, statements from the officer involved and other officers and witnesses, physical evidence from the scene of the shooting and autopsy results. 

    The officer who shot Babbitt was not identified.

    “Acknowledging the tragic loss of life and offering condolences to Ms. Babbitt’s family, the U.S. Attorney’s Office and U.S. Department of Justice have therefore closed the investigation into this matter,” the Justice Department said.

    Babbitt had served in the military for more than a decade, including active duty in the Air Force and years in the Air Force Reserve and Air National Guard. 

    Her uncle, Anthony Mazziott Jr., said she was a Trump supporter and a military police officer who had deployed to Afghanistan several times. “She loved people, loved her friends, and loved her country,” Anthony Mazziott Jr. told CBS affiliate KFMB.

    The station reported that she left the military last year and ran a pool service company with her husband and her social media presence indicated she consumed far-right misinformation. 

    Babbitt was one of five people who died during the attack on the U.S. Capitol. The D.C. Officer of the Chief Medical Examiner said last week that two men at the riot, 55-year-old Kevin Greeson and 50-year-old Benjamin Phillips, died of complications from hypertensive heart disease, and a 34-year-old woman, Roseanne Boyland, died of acute amphetamine intoxication.  

    The medical examiner has not yet released the cause of death for Officer Brian Sicknick, who died after responding to the riots on January 6. Two men were arrested for allegedly assaulting Sicknick using a chemical spray. 

    Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/ashli-babbitt-investigation-clears-officer/