Firefighters battle a brush fire last week in Santa Barbara, Calif. Climate-driven droughts make large, destructive fires more likely around the world. Scientists warn that humans are on track to cause catastrophic global warming this century.

Santa Barbara County, Calif., Fire Department via AP


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Santa Barbara County, Calif., Fire Department via AP

Firefighters battle a brush fire last week in Santa Barbara, Calif. Climate-driven droughts make large, destructive fires more likely around the world. Scientists warn that humans are on track to cause catastrophic global warming this century.

Santa Barbara County, Calif., Fire Department via AP

The average temperature on Earth is now consistently 1 degree Celsius hotter than it was in the late 1800s, and that temperature will keep rising toward the critical 1.5-degree Celsius benchmark over the next five years, according to a new report from the World Meteorological Organization.

Scientists warn that humans must keep the average annual global temperature from lingering at or above 1.5 degrees Celsius to avoid the most catastrophic and long-term effects of climate change. Those include massive flooding, severe drought and runaway ocean warming that fuels tropical storms and drives mass die-offs of marine species.

The new report from the WMO, an agency of the United Nations, finds that global temperatures are accelerating toward 1.5 degrees Celsius of warming. The authors of the new report predict there is a 44% chance that the average annual temperature on Earth will temporarily hit 1.5 degrees Celsius of warming at some point in the next five years. That likelihood has doubled since last year.

“We’re seeing accelerating change in our climate,” says Randall Cerveny, a climate scientist at Arizona State University and a World Meteorological Organization rapporteur who was not involved in the report.

Annual temperatures on Earth fluctuate according to short-term climate cycles, which means some years are much hotter than others, even as the overall trend line goes up steadily. As climate change accelerates, it gets more and more likely that individual years will exceed 1.5 degrees Celsius of warming.

“We had had some hopes that, with last year’s COVID scenario, perhaps the lack of travel [and] the lack of industry might act as a little bit of a brake,” Cerveny says. “But what we’re seeing is, frankly, it has not.”

Years with record-breaking heat offer a glimpse of the future. For example, 2020 was one of the hottest years on record. Last year, global temperatures were about 1.2 degrees Celsius hotter than the late 1800s, according to the WMO.

Millions of people suffered immensely as a result. The U.S. experienced a record-breaking number of billion-dollar weather disasters, including hurricanes and wildfires. Widespread droughts, floods and heat waves killed people on every continent except Antarctica.

Recent climate disasters underscore the extent to which a couple degrees of warming can have enormous effects. For example, during the last ice age the Earth was only about 6 degrees Celsius colder than it is now, on average. An increase of 1.5 degrees Celsius “is a very, very, very, very big number,” Cerveny says. “We need to be concerned about it.”

The goal of the Paris climate accord is to keep the increase in global temperatures well below 2 degrees Celsius compared with pre-industrial levels, and ideally try to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius. Those thresholds refer to temperature on Earth over multiple years. Exceeding 1.5 degrees Celsius of warming in a single year wouldn’t breach the Paris Agreement.

But with every passing year of rising greenhouse gas emissions, it becomes more and more likely that humans will cause catastrophic warming. The report estimates there’s a 90% chance that one of the next five years will be the warmest year on record.

“It is yet another wakeup call that the world needs to fast-track commitments to slash greenhouse gas emissions and achieve carbon neutrality,” WMO Secretary-General Petteri Taalas said in a statement accompanying the report. The United Nations warns that, as of late 2020, humans were on track to cause more than 3 degrees Celsius of warming by the end of the century.

If the U.S. follows through on new promises to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions, it would help limit global warming to some extent, although other countries including China would also need to reduce their emissions dramatically in the next 10 years.

In April, the Biden administration pledged to cut U.S. emissions in half by 2030 compared with 2005 levels. Most of those cuts would need to come from electricity generation and transportation, including all but eliminating coal-fired power plants and transitioning to electric cars and trucks. Congress is considering infrastructure legislation that could help push those transitions forward.

Meanwhile, the fossil fuel industry is seeing more pressure to invest in clean energy. On Wednesday, a Dutch court ordered Shell to cut its carbon emissions more quickly, although the company says it expects to appeal the decision. And a small activist hedge fund successfully placed at least two new candidates on Exxon Mobil’s board of directors, with the goal of pushing the company to take climate change more seriously.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/05/26/1000465487/earth-is-barreling-toward-1-5-degrees-celsius-of-warming-scientists-warn

Before Mr. Larson, Mr. Gates’s financial consigliere was Andrew L. Evans, a longtime friend who had previously served a six-month prison sentence for bank fraud. (Mr. Gates visited him in jail.) But when Mr. Evans’s criminal record was spotlighted in a front-page Wall Street Journal article in 1993, Mr. Gates sought out a new money manager.

The next year, he hired Mr. Larson, who previously was a fund manager at Putnam Investments. In 1995, Cascade was incorporated in Washington State. The generic-sounding name with no reference to Mr. Gates allowed Mr. Larson to run a vast investment operation with a low public profile.

From the start, Cascade, whose sole function was to manage the Gateses’ money, was deeply entwined with the wider Gates universe, including Microsoft. The firm is in the same office park in Kirkland, Wash., as Mr. Gates’s personal office, Gates Ventures, and across the street from Ms. French Gates’s own group, Pivotal Ventures. Over the years, employees have moved among Cascade, the Gates Foundation, Microsoft, the two Gates ventures and K&L Gates, the law firm where Mr. Gates’s father had been a named partner. In 2005, when Cascade needed a new human resources executive, the company hired a Microsoft veteran.

Mr. Larson regularly hired people fresh out of college or in the early stages of their careers. Graduates of Claremont McKenna College, his alma mater, were a particular favorite. The college has several scholarships endowed by Mr. Larson.

Some employees saw working at Cascade as a way to make the world a better place. Because Cascade also oversees the Gates Foundation’s $50 billion endowment, helping it do well meant more money for things like fighting malaria and funding education. Others said they were star-struck by the idea of working for Mr. Gates, who founded Microsoft in 1975 with Paul Allen.

Throughout his tenure, Mr. Larson earned steady returns for Mr. Gates. He invested largely in undervalued, old-fashioned stocks, eschewing hot tech companies. When the dot-com bubble burst in 2000, the strategy paid off. Mr. Larson also shielded Mr. Gates’s assets from the steepest declines of the recession in 2008 and 2009.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/26/business/bill-gates-cascade-michael-larson.html

UK leader Boris Johnson wanted to get injected with COVID-19 on live TV to prove there was “nothing to be frightened of” — just weeks before it almost killed him, his controversial former chief adviser testified Wednesday.

“In February [2020], the prime minister regarded this as just a scare story,” axed aide Dominic Cummings told Parliament during seven hours of testimony into the UK’s pandemic response.

“He described it as the new swine flu,” Cummings claimed, blasting his former boss for taking a two-week vacation rather than “operating on a war footing” that month.

Instead, Johnson said he was going to get chief medical officer Chris Whitty to inject him “live on TV with coronavirus” so that “everyone realizes it’s nothing to be frightened of,” Cummings testified.

Weeks later, Johnson announced on March 27 that he had tested positive for COVID-19 — leading to a spell in intensive care during which he almost died, he later admitted.

Cummings also caught COVID-19 early in the pandemic — and sparked calls for his resignation after getting caught driving 250 miles across the country while infected, despite a nationwide stay-at-home order.

Dominic Cummings was quizzed by members of Parliament on lessons learned during the COVID pandemic.
Kirsty O’Connor/PA Wire via AP

He admitted to Parliament Wednesday that he did not tell the whole truth at the time, apologizing and calling it “a case study of how not to handle something like this.”

The self-styled political disruptor even admitted that he is “not smart” — calling it “completely crazy that I should have been in such a senior position” in government.

“It’s just completely crackers that someone like me should have been in there, just the same as it’s crackers that Boris Johnson was in there,” he said of the eccentric New York-born prime minister.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson gestures after receiving the first dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine on March 19, 2021, at St. Thomas’ Hospital in London.
Frank Augstein/Pool via AP

The government accused Cummings of downplaying the fact that he was at the heart of many of the decisions he was now publicly trashing. 

“He was there at the time — what his motives would be I will leave to others,” Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said.

However, Cummings — who was axed amid a power struggle in November — did admit to sharing the blame for early inaction.

“The truth is that senior ministers, senior officials, senior advisers like me, fell disastrously short of the standards that the public has a right to expect of its government in a crisis like this,” Cummings said.

Dominic Cummings arrives at Portcullis House in London to testify in front of an investigation into the UK’s pandemic response.
Kirsty O’Connor/PA Wire via AP

“People did not get the treatment they deserved. Many people were left to die in horrific circumstances. And I’d like to say to all the families of those who died, unnecessarily, how sorry I am for the mistakes that were made and for my own mistakes.”

He likened the response around the time of the UK’s first lockdown, last March 23, to an “out-of-control movie” that was “lions led by donkeys.”

It was “like a scene from ‘Independence Day’ with Jeff Goldblum saying ‘The aliens are here and your whole plan is broken,’” Cummings said.

“Number 10 [Downing Street] was not operating on a war footing in February on [COVID] in any way, shape or form. 

“Lots of key people were literally skiing in the middle of February,” he said, including Johnson, who “went away on holiday for two weeks.”

Johnson had allegedly believed coronavirus to be nothing more than a “scare story” in the early days of the pandemic.
Geoff Caddick/AFP via Getty Images

“When the public needed us most, the government failed,” Cummings said. “Tens of thousands of people died who didn’t need to die.”

As of Wednesday, the UK has recorded almost 128,000 coronavirus deaths, the highest toll in Europe, with nearly 4.5 million confirmed cases.

It also experienced one of the world’s deepest recessions in 2020 as three successive lockdowns hobbled the economy.

Johnson defended the government’s response Wednesday, saying “to deal with a pandemic on this scale has been appallingly difficult.”

“I don’t think anybody could credibly accuse this government of being complacent about the threat that this virus posed, at any point,” Johnson said in the House of Commons.

“We have at every stage tried to minimize loss of life, to save lives, to protect the [health service] and we have followed the best scientific advice that we can.”

His spokesman said the government would not be engaging with every accusation made by Cummings.

With Post wires

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/05/26/boris-johnson-wanted-to-get-injected-with-covid-on-tv-ex-aide/

“Putting politics aside, wouldn’t they want to know the truth of what happened on January 6? If not, they do not deserve to have the jobs they were elected to do,” she added.

A measure to set up the commission passed the House last week with the support of every single Democrat and 35 Republicans. But that legislation is on shaky ground in the Senate, where 10 Republicans would need to get on board in order to circumvent a filibuster. So far, only a few GOP lawmakers — including Sens. Mitt Romney of Utah, Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska — have signaled support for the proposal. Even then, they want to see changes made.

Several Republicans indicated they’d be willing to sit down with Sicknick’s mother, including Collins, Romney and Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, as well as South Carolina Sens. Lindsey Graham and Tim Scott.

Others, such as Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas or Sen. Joni Ernst of Iowa, deferred comment to their offices or said they had not received the meeting request yet.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has warned his members behind closed doors that the release of the commission’s findings could drag into the height of the 2022 election cycle, when both the Senate and House majorities are up for grabs. Former President Donald Trump has also come out swinging against the commission and slammed the House Republicans who voted for it.

But Republicans are facing mounting political pressure, including from some in the law enforcement community, to get behind the proposed commission. D.C. Police officer Michael Fanone, who was severely injured on the job while responding to the Jan. 6 attack, has been seeking a meeting with House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy.

Last week, an anonymous and unsigned statement was released on Capitol Police letterhead and said to be authored by multiple officers on the force, delivering a rare and scathing public rebuke of top Republicans for opposing the commission bill.

“On Jan 6th, where some officers served their last day in US Capitol Police uniform, and not by choice, we would hope that Members whom we took an oath to protect, would at the very minimum support an investigation to get to the bottom of EVERYONE responsible and hold them 100 percent accountable no matter the title of position they hold or held,” reads the letter, which was not written or issued formally by the department.

Burgess Everett, Marianne LeVine and Olivia Beavers contributed.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/05/26/capitol-police-sicknick-jan-6-490943

SAN JOSE — In one of the Bay Area’s worst mass shootings, a Valley Transportation Authority employee opened fire early Wednesday morning at a VTA light rail yard building, killing eight people and wounding others before taking his own life, authorities said.

Sheriff Laurie Smith, whose office headquarters are near the rail yard, said deputies entered the building as shots were still being fired.

“We have some very brave officers and deputies,” Smith said

Law enforcement officers retrieve gear from a vehicle near the scene of a mass shooting at the VTA light rail yard in San Jose, Calif., on Wednesday, May 26, 2021. (Randy Vazquez/Bay Area News Group) 

The gunman was identified by multiple sources as Samuel Cassidy, a 57-year-old VTA maintenance worker. What motivated the massacre remains unknown.

There was a heavy police presence at Cassidy’s house in San Jose, where a fire erupted before the shooting and was reported shortly after. Bomb squad technicians were at the scene.

California has a “red flag” law that lets family members and law enforcement ask a judge to temporarily confiscate guns from a person acting in a threatening manner. Legislation by Assemblyman Phil Ting, D-San Francisco, expanded the “gun violence restraining order” law in September to allow employers and coworkers to also petition to disarm a threatening person. Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen said Wednesday he does not believe the law was used in regard to the VTA shooter.

Explosive devices also were reported in the VTA building, and bomb dogs alerted to the devices, Smith said. Bomb squads were there as well.

About 100 VTA workers, mostly men and some family members, were escorted from the Sheriff’s Office to a larger auditorium across the street in the county administration. Inside the auditorium, screams and wailing broke out.

Rochelle Hawkins, a VTA mechanic, said when she heard shots she dropped her phone.

“I was running so fast, I just ran for my life,” she said as she led the meeting. “I would hope everyone would just pray for the VTA family. Just pray for us.”

VTA workers cross West Hedding Street in San Jose, Calif., on Wednesday, May 26, 2021. (Randy Vazquez/Bay Area News Group) 

Workers said they were told not to talk to news reporters, but one worker said he was shaken to the core.

“The whole crew is gone, the whole shift is gone,” the worker, who didn’t want to be identified, said. “It’s horrible.”

Another VTA worker who didn’t want to be identified said that a woman had just learned her son was one of the fatalities.

“I just witnessed someone’s mom who just found out her son died,” the VTA worker said. “It was ugly.”

Governor Gavin Newsom said in a Tweet that his office was “in close contact with local law enforcement and monitoring this situation closely.”

Police officers wait near the intersection of West Hedding and San Pedro streets at the scene of a mass shooting in San Jose, Calif., on Wednesday, May 26, 2021. (Randy Vazquez/Bay Area News Group) 

The massacre ranks among the region’s worst mass shootings, leaving as many dead as the July 1993 mayhem at a 101 California Street law firm in San Francisco by a disgruntled client who also took his own life, a horror that inspired a since-expired federal ban on military style firearms.

The reported shooting first reported at 6:34 a.m. occurred in the area of the 100 block of W. Younger Avenue and San Pedro Street.

According to Sheriff’s Office spokesman Russell Davis, some of the shooting victims are VTA employees. KTVU reported that it spoke to the mother of an employee who reported that the shooting happened at a union meeting. It was not known immediately if the shooting happened inside or outside, Davis said.

The VTA provides bus, light rail, and paratransit services and is a funding partner in regional rail service including Caltrain, Capital Corridor, and the Altamont Corridor Express. The mass shooting occurred in the VTA maintenance yard, where vehicles are dispatched — not in the organization’s operations center, according to the board chair. The VTA will suspend its light rail service at noon today, but continue bus service.

SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA – MAY 26: San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo, left, speaks with officials following a press conference after a shooting at the VTA light rail yard in San Jose, Calif., on Wednesday, May 26, 2021. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group) 

San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo said on Twitter just after 8 a.m. that several people were being treated. Liccardo also said the “shooter is no longer a threat” and that the facility was evacuated. Liccardo
said later that the city is in a “very dark moment,” but that he is “heartened by the response of the
VTA family to come together and help their coworkers.”

One VTA employee who did not want to be identified said workers were told, “Run outside the building now! There’s an active shooter!” Another said he saw people scattering around the maintenance yard as shots rang out.

Rochelle Hawkins said when she heard shots she dropped her phone. “I was running so fast. I just ran for my life,” said Rochelle, wearing her mechanic’s uniform as she led the meeting.”I would hope everyone would just pray for the VTA family. Just pray for us.”

SAN JOSE – MAY 26: Michael Hawkins Sr., left, and son Michael Jr., right, reconnect with their wife and mother Rochelle, center, a mechanic with VTA, near the scene of a shooting in San Jose, Calif., on Wednesday, May, 26, 2021. (Randy Vazquez/ Bay Area News Group) 

Two male shooting victims were transferred to Valley Medical Center in San Jose, one person was dead on arrival and another is in critical condition, Valley Medical spokeswoman Joy Alexiou said. There were no further details on their condition.

“We’d be the closest to get the most seriously injured patients,” Alexiou said. “People with lesser injuries can be transferred to other hospitals.”

Michael Hawkins, 19, stood behind the yellow police tape, hoping to see his mom, Rochelle Hawkins. She had called her son earlier Wednesday from a coworker’s phone to say she was alright.

“She got down with the rest of her coworkers,” when the shooting began and dropped her phone, he said. She didn’t see the shooter, he said, and was uncertain how close she may have been to the tragedy. “She was terrified.”

The shooting happened during the busiest time of day at the maintenance facility, when operators and maintenance workers are getting ready for the start of the day’s service, according to Raj Singh, the recording and financial secretary for Amalgamated Transit Union local 265, which represents VTA operators.

SAN JOSE – MAY 26: A law enforcement officer walks across West Younger Avenue near the scene of a shooting in San Jose, Calif., on Wednesday, May, 26, 2021. (Randy Vazquez/ Bay Area News Group) 

Singh said the shooting had not happened at an official ATU union meeting, as those meetings are held at the union hall in Campbell. He said he’s received calls from members expressing shock and from family members unable to get in touch with their loved ones.

“This is unspeakable,” he said. “You hear about it happening somewhere else and you think never here.”

Light rail service initially continued but VTA later announce the trains would stop running at noon.

Authorities were asking people to stay away from the area of E. Taylor Street, W. Hedding Street and E. Mission Street. They were holding a staging area for families who may have relatives at 70 Hedding Street in the area at the sheriff’s office headquarters, which are next door to the VTA light rail yard.

No other information was available immediately.

Please check back for updates.

Staff writers Nico Savidge, Maggie Angst, Aldo Toledo and Kate Selig contributed to this story.

Source Article from https://www.mercurynews.com/2021/05/26/active-shooter-response-underway-near-san-jose-vta-light-rail-yard/

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Source Article from https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2021/05/president-belarus-rationale-hijacking-ryanair.html

Former Secretary of the Navy and Sen. John Warner, R-Va., and his then wife, actress Elizabeth Taylor, at an awards dinner in New York in 1977. Warner, a former Navy secretary and one of the Senate’s most influential military experts, has died at 94.

AP


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Former Secretary of the Navy and Sen. John Warner, R-Va., and his then wife, actress Elizabeth Taylor, at an awards dinner in New York in 1977. Warner, a former Navy secretary and one of the Senate’s most influential military experts, has died at 94.

AP

John Warner served for 30 years in the U.S. Senate, much of it as chairman of the powerful Armed Services Committee, and as a centrist Republican he established himself at the center of American politics.

But before all that, Warner, who died Tuesday at 94, became famous as the sixth man to walk down the aisle with violet-eyed movie star Elizabeth Taylor.

The two met on a blind date in 1976 when the British ambassador asked Warner to escort Taylor to an embassy party honoring another Elizabeth, the Queen of England, who was visiting Washington. They married that December on Warner’s farm near Middleburg, Virginia.

“Well, I thought we would get married, live on the farm, raise horses,” Taylor told Larry King on his show in 2001. “… And I thought it would be all very sort of farmish, and jobby, horsey, and I could have animals, and I would go out and brand the cattle.”

But soon after they wed, Warner set his sights on an open U.S. Senate seat. And Taylor, a former Democrat, campaigned with her new husband, drawing huge crowds.

“It’s no question being married to Elizabeth Taylor increased interest in him,” said Donald W. Huffman, who once led the state Republican Party. “She traveled with him, and people turned out.”

Years later, Taylor laughed at how she was told not to dress ostentatiously during the campaign.

“I ended up in a tweed suit,” she told Harper’s Bazaar in 2006. “Me. Little tweed suits. What I won’t do for love.”

When Warner got to the Senate in 1979, he was the butt of some jokes, including being immortalized as “Sen. Elizabeth Taylor” in the “Doonesbury” comic strip. And once he established himself as a senator, Taylor rarely got involved.

“I don’t think I’ve ever been so alone in my life as when I was Mrs. Senator, and I don’t blame my ex-husband,” Taylor wrote in her 1987 book “Elizabeth Takes Off.” “He never pretended to be anything but a man devoted to public service, and once that service began in earnest, I had to take a backseat to his constituency.”

Unfamiliar in a supporting role, she said she felt worthless, eating and drinking with abandon. Her usual 120-pound figure ballooned to more than 180 pounds. But Taylor also credited Warner with helping her get on track with her weight loss — making her hoist an 11 pound turkey to see how heavy it felt. The observation struck home, she said.

The two grew apart, though, and, after a 14-month separation, divorced in 1982.

“I never took it as a personal rejection on John’s part, certainly not on a conscious level,” Taylor wrote in her book. “John wasn’t doing anything more or less than what any other senator did. I just couldn’t bear the intense loneliness, the lack of sharing with the person with whom I most wanted to share.”

Warner, for his part, also blamed his work.

“Elizabeth is one who loved to fully share life with her person,” Warner told The Washington Post in 1984. “You get into the Senate and lose control of the hours and the regularity, and you get tremendously involved in the pressures of that office. She opted for her own career and all of a sudden the fork in the road came.”

A year after the divorce, Taylor entered the Betty Ford Center for treatment for drug and alcohol dependency.

Both eventually remarried, and they claimed long after their divorce that they were better friends as exes than as Mr. and Mrs. She later enlisted his help in getting more funds for AIDS research, a cause she took up after her friend Rock Hudson died of complications from the disease.

“He knows he wasn’t the love of my life. And I know I wasn’t the love of his life,” Taylor told The New York Times in 2002. “But we loved each other. We got along wonderfully until he decided to be a politician. And then he married the Senate.”

Warner’s former celebrity lifestyle became an issue in his 1996 campaign. His opponent, James Miller, portrayed him as an arrogant socialite. “John Warner likes to run around in the fast lane with movie and media stars,” Miller criticized.

But Warner, who after his divorce had dated Barbara Walters, answered only, “I haven’t been in Hollywood in 20 years.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/05/26/1000491796/longtime-gop-sen-john-warner-of-virginia-dies-at-94

ST. ANTHONY — Lori Vallow Daybell’s initial court appearance was continued Wednesday morning following a sidebar between Magistrate Judge Faren Eddins and her attorney Mark Means.

As a result, Lori, who appeared in the hearing via Zoom wearing a mask, did not hear her charges read in court, and the hearing was adjourned after only a few minutes.

The only other notable event during the hearing, was that Special Prosecutor Rob Wood objected to the continuance.

It’s not clear why the continuance was issued by Eddins. Based on previous court hearings we know that all of Lori’s future court proceedings were put on hold in March for an undetermined amount of time, and for an unknown reason.

Prior to Lori’s hearing, her husband Chad Daybell appeared in court over Zoom from the Fremont County Jail with his attorney John Prior. The charges were read against Chad, and the judge affirmed that Chad would be held without bail. Prior did not object to that decision.

The two court appearances come following the convening of a grand jury in Fremont County last week. On Monday the grand jury indicted the couple on variety of charges including first-degree murder for the deaths of Chad’s first wife Tammy Daybell, 16-year-old Tylee Ryan and 7-year-old Joshua “JJ” Vallow — Lori’s two children.

The couple was served warrants Tuesday. Both Chad and Lori were already behind bars on $1 million bail for charges related to the concealment and destruction of the bodies of the children.

Wood and Fremont County Prosecutor Lindsey Blake announced the indictment at a news conference Tuesday afternoon. The Daybells are charged with the following:

  • Lori and Chad Daybell were indicted on the charge of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder and grand theft by deception for the death of Tylee Ryan.
  • Lori and Chad Daybell were indicted on the charge of first-degree murder for the death of Tylee Ryan.
  • Lori and Chad Daybell were indicted on the charge of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder and grand theft by deception for the death of JJ Vallow.
  • Lori and Chad Daybell were indicted on the charge of first-degree murder for the death of JJ Vallow.
  • Lori and Chad Daybell were indicted on the charge of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder in the death of Tammy Daybell.
  • Chad Daybell was indicted on the charge of first-degree murder in the death of his wife Tammy Daybell.
  • Lori Daybell was indicted on the charge of grand theft related to Social Security Survivor benefits over $1,000 allocated for the care of minors Tylee Ryan and JJ Vallow that were appropriated after the children were missing and ultimately found deceased.
  • Chad Daybell was indicted on the charge of insurance fraud related to a life insurance policy he had on Tammy Daybell for which he was the beneficiary and received funds after her death.
  • Chad Daybell was indicted on the charge of insurance fraud related to another life insurance policy he had on Tammy Daybell for which he was the beneficiary and received funds after her death.

In addition to the charges, additional details surrounding the deaths of Tylee, JJ and Tammy, were also released. Charging documents indicate investigators believe Lori’s brother Alex Cox was a co-conspirator in the alleged crimes.

Both Chad and Lori could face the death penalty with the first-degree murder charges. If prosecutors decide to not seek the death penalty, the couple could receive multiple life sentences with a mandatory minimum of 10 years.

The arraignment for Chad is scheduled for June 9. It’s not clear when Lori’s initial appearance will resume.

Source Article from https://www.eastidahonews.com/2021/05/chad-daybell-hears-murder-charges-read-in-court-lori-daybell-given-a-continuance/

Dr. Anthony Fauci is facing increasing calls from Republican lawmakers for his termination over what they say is a shift in his position on whether the U.S. government funded research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

Fauci, the chief medical advisor to the White House, told lawmakers Tuesday that the National Institutes of Health funded the Wuhan Institute of Virology through the nonprofit EcoHealth Alliance with $600,000 over a period of five years. Funding to the nonprofit was eventually halted by the NIH.

He denied that the funding was specifically used for so-called gain of function research, which is altering a virus to make it either more transmissible or deadly to better predict new pathogens and ways to fight them.

On Wednesday during a Senate hearing, Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., further questioned Fauci’s faith in the Wuhan lab’s scientists. “How do you know they didn’t lie to you and use the money for gain of function research anyway?” Kennedy asked Fauci.

Fauci said there was no way to guarantee that the scientists and grantees did not lie. “You never know,” he said.

He added that scientists at the lab are “trustworthy” and that he would expect they complied with the conditions of the grant, which was to study the transmission of coronaviruses from bats to humans to better understand the SARS-CoV-1 epidemic in the early 2000s.

“I don’t have enough insight into the Communist Party in China to know the interactions between them and the scientists,” Fauci said when asked whether the Chinese government influences its scientists. He also said he has no way of knowing the influence of the Chinese government on the World Health Organization after Kennedy implied that the WHO is in the pocket of the Chinese government.

President Joe Biden announced Wednesday that he has ordered a closer intelligence review of what he said were two equally plausible scenarios of the origins of the Covid-19 pandemic — that it originated in a lab or from an animal. The director of national intelligence previously agreed that the two scenarios are equally likely.

Biden revealed that he tasked the intelligence community earlier this year with preparing “a report on their most up-to-date analysis of the origins of Covid-19, including whether it emerged from human contact with an infected animal or from a laboratory accident.”

“As of today, the U.S. Intelligence Community has ‘coalesced around two likely scenarios’ but has not reached a definitive conclusion on this question,” Biden said in a statement.

Federal health officials maintain that it is more likely that the virus has a natural origin, but do not exclude a lab leak as a possibility.

Rep. Warren Davidson, R-Ohio, recently introduced the Fauci Incompetence Requires Early Dismissal Act, which called for Fauci’s termination.

“Dr. Fauci represents everything that President Eisenhower warned us about in his farewell address: the scientific-technical elite steering the country toward their own ends,” Davidson said in a statement.

The Republican lawmakers also said they believe Fauci misled the American people early in the pandemic in regard to mask guidance. Fauci said in early March 2020: “Right now in the United States, people should not be walking around with masks.” He later clarified he meant that masks should be prioritized for health workers, but Republican lawmakers maintain that Fauci lied.

GOP lawmakers also claim that Fauci misled Americans when he said there would be an explosion of coronavirus cases after Texas lifted its mask mandate.

“It is long past time for Dr. Fauci to stop talking to the American public. Fauci should resign or be fired immediately,” said Rep. Guy Reschenthaler, R-Pa.

Correction: Warren Davidson, R.-Ohio, is a member of the House of Representatives. An earlier version misstated his title.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/05/26/fauci-facing-criticism-for-shifting-position-on-wuhan-lab-funding-.html

Portland police on Tuesday declared a riot amid a destructive downtown demonstration held on the one-year anniversary of George Floyd’s murder.

About 200 people gathered Tuesday night outside the Multnomah County Justice Center. Some in the crowd lit fireworks and a dumpster fire, tagged the Justice Center with graffiti and broke windows at nearby Portland City Hall.

Some also threw water bottles and fireworks directly at police officers.

Police declared a riot about 10 p.m.

Marchers later smashed windows at locations including a jewelry and precious metals business, Starbucks shops, a credit union and Ruth’s Chris Steak House.

Portland Police said they made targeted arrests downtown after the protest was declared a riot Tuesday evening. Five people were booked at Multnomah County Corrections:

  • Elizabeth Hall, 30, who was charged with Criminal Mischief II
  • Emery Hall, 30, who was charged with Criminal Mischief II and Escape III
  • Rhiannon Millar-Griffin, 23, who was charged with Criminal Mischief I and Riot
  • Jacob Myers, 22, who was charged with Criminal Mischief I
  • Jarrid Huber, 21, charged with Arson I, Criminal Mischief I, five counts of Criminal Mischief II and Riot

Portland Police said they found frozen water bottles, eggs and metal spikes after clearing the protest Tuesday evening.

A separate demonstration held earlier Tuesday featured a rally at Southeast Portland’s Revolution Hall, a march and a silent sit-in on the Burnside Bridge.

Tuesday marked the passing of a year since a Minneapolis police officer murdered Floyd, sparking an unprecedented push to address anti-Black racism across the country.

The killing, which was captured on video, touched off a wave of racial justice protests throughout the country and world, with Portland’s demonstrations spanning more than 100 consecutive nights.

— The Oregonian/OregonLive

Source Article from https://www.oregonlive.com/portland/2021/05/portland-police-declare-riot-as-marchers-break-windows-on-anniversary-of-george-floyds-murder.html

Former President Donald Trump claimed in an interview Tuesday that “it was obvious to smart people” that the coronavirus emerged from a lab in the Chinese city of Wuhan.

“I had no doubt about it,” Trump told Newsmax host and former adviser Steve Cortes. “I was criticized by the press because China has a lot of people taken care of. They took care of Hunter [Biden]. They took care of Joe. They took care of everybody, didn’t they? And people didn’t want to say China. Usually, they blame it on Russia. It’s always Russia, Russia, Russia, but I said right at the beginning it came out of Wuhan.”

Trump took a victory lap earlier Tuesday after Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra called on the World Health Organization (WHO) to undertake a “transparent, science-based” investigation of the origins of the virus.

“Now everybody is agreeing that I was right when I very early on called Wuhan as the source of COVID-19, sometimes referred to as the China Virus,” the former president said in a statement. “To me it was obvious from the beginning but I was badly criticized, as usual. Now they are all saying ‘He was right.’ Thank you!”

Former President Donald Trump walks on board Marine One by the White House on Jan. 12, 2021.
AP Photo/Gerald Herbert
Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra says LGBTQ people should have equal access to health care in Washington, DC on May 5, 2021.
AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin
Former President Donald Trump claims he did the exact opposite of Dr. Anthony Fauci’s advice amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Greg Nash/CNP/startraksphoto.com

The theory that the coronavirus leaked from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, once dismissed as fringe by the mainstream media, has gained traction in recent weeks following a widely-criticized WHO probe that argued the virus likely emerged naturally from animals. On Sunday, the Wall Street Journal reported that three researchers at the lab sought hospital treatment for a serious illness in November 2019, when most experts believe the virus was spreading across the city of 11 million.

Later in the interview, Trump defended his administration’s record in confronting the pandemic and threw in a jab at White House chief medical adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci.

An aerial view of the P4 laboratory at the Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan, China on April 17, 2020.
AFP via Getty Images
A view of the P4 lab inside the Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan, China on Feb. 3, 2021.
AP Photo/Ng Han Guan

“Remember, I closed our country to China way earlier – much earlier than [House Speaker Nancy] Pelosi or anybody wanted it to happen, including Dr. Fauci, who I always got along with pretty well, but I usually did the opposite of what he wanted,” Trump said. “He said the vaccine would take three to five years and probably wouldn’t even happen. And I got it done in less than nine months.”

“I think the best bet ever made was I bought millions and billions of dollars of vaccine before we knew it worked, before we had it approved, because otherwise we’d be waiting until October of this year …,” the former president added. “We did an incredible job with this horrible, with getting the ventilators and getting the outfits and the goggles and the masks and all of the things you had to do.

Then President Donald Trump hosts a meeting on reopening schools in the White House on July 7, 2020.
AP Photo/Alex Brandon
Dr. Anthony Fauci testifies before the US Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee hearing on future pandemic protocols at Capitol Hill on June 23, 2020.
AFP via Getty Images
Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra answers questions during his Senate Finance Committee nomination hearing on Capitol Hill on February 24, 2021.
REUTERS/File Photo

“We did an incredible job.”

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/05/25/trump-it-was-obvious-to-smart-people-covid-came-from-wuhan-lab/

Warner represented Virginia for 30 years, from 1979 until 2009, and was its last Republican senator as the commonwealth has shifted toward the left in recent years. He was succeeded by current Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), who ran against him and lost in 1996. (The two are not related.)

“John Warner was a consummate statesman and a public servant who always put Virginia before politics; who put the nation’s security before partisanship; who put the country’s needs above his own,” Warner said in a statement, adding that the two drew close to one another since that 1996 contest. “I will miss his friendship, because I loved him.”

“I am stunned at the loss of John Warner,” Tim Kaine (D-Va.) said in a statement Wednesday. “Virginia has lost an unmatched leader, and my family has lost a dear friend.”

Prior to serving in the Senate, Warner was a veteran of both World War II and the Korean War and was secretary of the Navy under former President Richard Nixon. As a lawmaker, Warner chaired the Senate Rules committee from 1995 to 1999 and later served as chair of the Senate Armed Services committee for several years.

Considered an esteemed, moderate figure in the Senate, Warner displayed a willingness at times to buck his own party, including on high-profile issues. The Virginia senator opposed Robert Bork’s nomination to the Supreme Court and worked to undermine Oliver North’s 1994 Senate bid to unseat Democratic Virginia Sen. Chuck Robb. He also supported several gun control measures.

“How fortunate, how blessed I have been,” Warner said in a five-page, hand-written note addressed to “my fellow Virginians” after he announced his retirement.

Upon leaving the Senate, he returned to Hogan Lovells as a senior adviser, four decades after departing the D.C.-based law firm to work in the Nixon administration. He retired less than a year ago, at the end of June 2020.

Warner began his legal career as a clerk at the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals and then as a prosecutor in the city for a handful of years before joining the firm, then called Hogan & Hartson.

Though he was a Republican, Warner made waves when he broke ranks to endorse his Democratic successor in 2014 and sided with Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump during the 2016 presidential election. Warner also endorsed President Joe Biden last year just before Virginia’s Super Tuesday primary.

“There comes a time when I have to stand up and assert my own views,” Warner said in his Clinton endorsement, adding that he was dismayed by Trump’s criticisms of the military.

Warner was also the sixth of actress Elizabeth Taylor’s eight husbands. They divorced in 1982.

Their relationship came about as a result of Warner’s role in helping to plan the celebrations around the U.S. Bicentennial prior to his first Senate run.

Despite his military credentials and marriage to a Hollywood star, Warner initially lost out on the GOP nomination in 1978 to a more conservative candidate, Richard Obenshain, but stepped in after Obenshain died in a plane crash returning from a campaign stop that August.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/05/26/former-virginia-senator-john-warner-dies-490917

Taiwan directly accused China for the first time on Wednesday of blocking a deal with Germany’s BioNTech SE (22UAy.DE) for COVID-19 vaccines, in an escalating war of words after Beijing offered the shots to the island via a Chinese company.

Taiwan has millions of shots on order, from AstraZeneca Plc (AZN.L) and Moderna Inc (MRNA.O), but has received only slightly more than 700,000 to date, and has only been able to vaccinate about 1% of its population as COVID-19 cases surge.

While Taiwan has previously said it had been unable to sign a final contract with BioNTech, it had only implied that Chinese pressure was to blame. read more

China claims Taiwan as its territory and frequently puts pressure on countries and firms to curtail their dealings with the island.

President Tsai Ing-wen told a meeting of her ruling Democratic Progressive Party that orders for the AstraZeneca and Moderna shots had been “smoothly” booked.

“As for Germany’s BioNTech, we were close to completing the contract with the original German plant, but because of China’s intervention, up to now there’s been no way to complete it,” she said.

Taiwan, which has a population of more than 23 million people, had bought nearly 30 million shots, Tsai said, without giving details.

BioNTech, which sells its vaccine in partnership with Pfizer Inc (PFE.N), declined to comment on Tsai’s remarks, but added “we are supportive of global vaccine supply”.

China has denied trying to block vaccines for Taiwan and has offered to provide them to the island as a goodwill gesture.

APPEALS FOR U.S., EU ASSISTANCE

Lily L.W. Hsu, secretary-general of Taiwan’s Foreign Ministry, called the Chinese offer “very divisive.”

At an online event hosted by the German Marshall Fund of the United States that also involved a U.S. and an EU official, Hsu said Taiwan was developing its own vaccine, but the earliest that would be ready for use was July. She repeated calls Taiwan has made for U.S and EU assistance.

“Because of the recent outbreak we desperately need vaccines … we do need assistance in getting vaccines before our domestic vaccine is ready for use, she said.

The top U.S. diplomat in Taipei, Brent Christensen, said on Wednesday he was confident Taiwan could control its spike in COVID-19 cases, noting its infection numbers remained quite low. He said the United States and Taipei were in talks on vaccines but did not say shots were on the way. read more

China’s Shanghai Fosun Pharmaceutical Group Co Ltd (600196.SS) said on Saturday it was willing to provide Taiwan with BioNTech COVID-19 vaccines. read more

Fosun signed a deal with BioNTech to exclusively develop and commercialise the vaccine developed using BioNTech’s mRNA technology in mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan.

But Tsai said the island would only buy directly from the original manufacturers, or discuss purchases with them via the COVAX global vaccine sharing scheme.

“Only by negotiating with the original manufacturer can you obtain the original manufacturer’s direct guarantee and responsibility for quality and safety, so as to avoid legal and political risks,” she said.

Fosun did not respond to requests for comment.

China’s foreign ministry said Taiwan’s channels to receive vaccines from them were “smooth”, while China’s Taiwan Affairs Office said Taipei was using excuses to stop the shots.

China was “happy to see” Fosun’s willingness to provide vaccines to Taiwan, the Chinese office added.

Several Taiwan politicians have said the need for the Fosun shots was so urgent the government should bring them in.

But Taiwan’s Health Minister Chen Shih-chung told a daily news briefing Taiwan had seen no supporting documentation about Fosun’s version of the vaccine.

“Bring out the official documents and we can talk about it again.”

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/china/taiwan-says-china-blocked-deal-with-biontech-covid-19-shots-2021-05-26/