President Biden touches a piece of steel from the World Trade Center at a memorial to the 9/11 attacks Monday at NATO headquarters in Brussels. NATO allies joined in a collective defense with the U.S. after the terror attacks.

Patrick Semansky/AP


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President Biden touches a piece of steel from the World Trade Center at a memorial to the 9/11 attacks Monday at NATO headquarters in Brussels. NATO allies joined in a collective defense with the U.S. after the terror attacks.

Patrick Semansky/AP

President Biden said he’s not focused on whether he can “trust” the Russian president ahead of their sit-down this week, but he’s hoping he will be able to find some areas where he can work with Vladimir Putin — while laying out “red lines” for other areas.

Biden spoke with reporters after a day of meetings with NATO allies in Brussels. He said that he discussed the upcoming U.S.-Russia summit with alliance members and that leaders were supportive of his outreach to Putin.

Biden has repeatedly said he wants a stable and predictable relationship with Russia. On Monday, he called Putin “tough” and “bright” and said he’s a “worthy adversary.”

“It’s not about trusting, it’s about agreeing,” Biden said. “When you write treaties with adversaries, you don’t say: ‘I trust you.’ You say: ‘This is what I expect.’ “

Biden said he hopes that Putin is interested in “changing the perception the world has of him” and that he would engage in “appropriate behavior for a head of state.”

Biden said he will stand up for Ukraine at the meeting but also said that Ukraine has not yet met the criteria to join NATO, saying the country still needs to clean up corruption issues.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan fist-bumps with Biden at the NATO summit Monday in Brussels. Biden and Erdogan met privately afterward to discuss some thorny issues.

Olivier Matthys/Pool/AP


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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan fist-bumps with Biden at the NATO summit Monday in Brussels. Biden and Erdogan met privately afterward to discuss some thorny issues.

Olivier Matthys/Pool/AP

The NATO summit is Biden’s latest stop on his multiday tour through Europe. On his first trip abroad as president, Biden has sought to reassure allies that the U.S. is committed to taking the lead in international institutions, in contrast with the last administration’s “America First” agenda.

Biden met Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the sidelines of the summit for nearly two hours. Afterward, both Erdogan and Biden said it was a productive session. Relations have been strained over Turkey’s purchase of a Russian missile defense system — and Biden’s decision to use the word genocide to describe the mass slaughter of Armenians by Turks more than a century ago. The Turkish government has adamantly renounced Biden’s statement.

Biden said he was “gratified” that NATO leaders agreed the alliance should adapt to address more modern threats such as climate change, cyberattacks and combating the growing influence of China — something for which he has been pushing.

The alliance agreed to back a new cyber defense policy aimed at deterring and defending against hacking threats.

On the China front, Biden scored a win during talks with the Group of Seven in Cornwall, England, over the weekend when the group agreed to help developing countries fund infrastructure projects to compete with China’s Belt and Road initiative and to push back against some of Beijing’s trade practices.

Biden has characterized the rise in power of autocracies such as China and Russia as a threat to the global order and the spread of democracy. He’s urged allies to act as a “model” for the strength of democratic norms.

Biden plans to meet European Union leaders on Tuesday in Brussels, then will head to Geneva, where he will hold talks Wednesday with Putin. The two leaders will hold two bilateral sessions with aides and advisers. Biden will then have a solo press conference before heading back to the United States.

It will be a sharp contrast with former President Donald Trump’s controversial joint press conference with Putin in Helsinki in 2018. Trump faced a firestorm of criticism after he backed Putin’s denial of election interference in 2016, even though U.S. intelligence agencies had reached the opposite conclusion.

Ahead of his talks with Putin, Biden briefly met on the sidelines of the NATO summit with the presidents of Poland and Romania. He held a separate session with leaders from Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania – the members of the alliance geographically closest to Russia and most nervous about its incursions into Ukraine.

A White House official told reporters they discussed the recent move by Moscow-backed Belarus to ground a commercial flight heading for Lithuania so that a critic of Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko could be arrested. The White House has said Biden intends to raise the issue with Putin on Wednesday.

NPR’s Franco Ordoñez contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/06/14/1006282205/biden-says-russias-putin-is-a-worthy-adversary-whether-or-not-he-trusts-him

Hurricane forecasters were monitoring a disturbance in the Gulf of Mexico that has a high chance of developing into a depression and is expected to bring several inches of rain to the region. 

According to the 7 p.m. Monday update from the National Hurricane Center, the disturbance has a 70% chance of becoming a tropical depression within the next five days. It’s also one of three systems forecasters were tracking on Monday evening, including a tropical depression off the East Coast.

Here’s what we know from the National Hurricane Center about the tropics as of 7 p.m. Monday.

Gulf of Mexico disturbance



Courtesy of the National Hurricane Center.


Forecasters said a low pressure system will likely develop into a tropical depression late in the week in the Gulf of Mexico. 

On Monday evening, an area of disorganized storms was over the Bay of Campeche and is expected to gradually strengthen while it meanders near the coast of Mexico.

By midweek, the system should begin to move north.

The NHC has not said if and where the system will hit the Gulf Coast, but Louisiana could get up to 4 to 10 inches of rain on Friday, with some areas seeing more than 10 inches, regardless of development.

TREE CHECK: Now that hurricane season has begun, it’s time to check all of the larger trees in your landscape. A tree that is sickly, low in v…

The shaded area on the graphic is where a storm could develop and is not a track. The National Hurricane Center releases a track when a tropical depression forms or is about to form.

The categories, in order of increasing strength, are tropical depression, tropical storm and hurricane (categories 1 through 5). Systems are named when they develop into a tropical storm.

Tropical depression in the Atlantic



Courtesy of the National Hurricane Center.


A system off the coast of North Carolina strengthened into a tropical depression earlier Monday and will likely develop into the second named tropical storm of the year by tonight, forecasters said. It will be named Bill. 

The tropical depression is forecast to move away from the East Coast and therefore doesn’t pose an immediate threat to land.

The storm’s center was about 200 miles east of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, as of 7 p.m., according to the National Hurricane Center. It has winds of 35 mph and is moving northeast at 18 mph.

Last year’s hurricane season broke several records, including having the most named storms ever on record.

Forecasters said the system is only expected to strengthen slightly after becoming a tropical storm. It will dissipate by Wednesday south of Nova Scotia.

A strong tropical wave off of Africa’s west coast was also being monitored Monday evening. It has a 20% (low) chance of developing into a depression within the next five days. 

The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 through Nov. 30.

To see more hurricane forecast information, click here. 

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Source Article from https://www.nola.com/news/hurricane/article_fdc1e3a8-cd58-11eb-88a8-637606df2239.html

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., apologized Monday for a series of comments she made comparing coronavirus-related rules and restrictions to the treatment of Jewish people in Nazi Germany.

The display of contrition came hours after Rep. Brad Schneider, D-Ill., announced that he and other lawmakers would introduce a resolution to censure her for the remarks, which had been condemned as anti-Semitic by Republicans and Democrats alike.

“I know that words that I have stated were hurtful, and for that I’m very sorry,” Greene told reporters outside the U.S. Capitol.

Greene said she had visited the Holocaust Museum in Washington earlier Monday afternoon, and “there’s nothing comparable to it.”

“It happened, and, you know, over 6 million Jewish people were murdered,” she said.

The apology from the 47-year-old freshman member of Congress marked a complete reversal from her stance weeks earlier.

Greene on a podcast in May compared a mask mandate on the House floor to the Holocaust, saying, “We can look back in a time in history where people were told to wear a gold star and they were definitely treated like second-class citizens — so much so that they were put in trains and taken to gas chambers in Nazi Germany,” NBC News reported at the time.

Greene made a similar comparison on Twitter days later, tweeting, “Vaccinated employees get a vaccination logo just like the Nazi’s forced Jewish people to wear a gold star.”

She was responding to a report from a local Tennessee news outlet about supermarket chain Food City, which said it would have fully vaccinated employees display a logo on their name badge.

Greene quickly came under fire, with House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., who had previously rebuffed pressure from Democrats to censure Greene for a variety of extreme remarks and fringe views, condemning her analogies as “appalling.”

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said the comments were “outrageous” and “reprehensible.”

At the time, Greene had aggressively defended the remarks even in the face of heated criticism from other Republicans.

“I never compared it to the Holocaust, only the discrimination against Jews in early Nazi years. Stop feeding into the left wing media attacks on me,” Greene complained to one conservative commentator in a May 25 tweet.

Greene, whose other incendiary comments had already prompted Democrats to strip her of her committee assignments, was contrite at the presser Monday afternoon.

She began by noting that her father had passed away in April. He had taught her that “when you make a mistake, you should own it,” she said.

“I have made a mistake, and it’s really bothered me for a couple of weeks now.”

Greene maintained her belief that forcing people to wear masks or get vaccines constitutes “a type of discrimination, and I’m very much against that type of discrimination.”

“What I would like to say is I’m removing that statement completely away from what I had said before” about the Holocaust, she said.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/06/14/marjorie-taylor-greene-apologizes-for-holocaust-covid-comments.html

Already this year, a number of shootings have targeted multiple members of a family. In May, a man killed his parents, two police officers, and then himself during a shooting in North Carolina. A week later, a man entered a birthday party in Colorado Springs and killed his girlfriend and five members of her family. In April, a former NFL player killed six people, including a couple and two of their grandchildren. A man in Brooklyn killed his daughter’s mother and two sisters at a birthday party. That same day, two brothers in Dallas who had made a murder-suicide pact killed six family members.

Local newspapers noted how muted the public grieving over the South Carolina shootings has been because of the powerful nature of the Murdaugh family and because people in the community have been upset over how authorities handled Beach’s death.

“Three generations of Murdaughs have been state prosecutors, putting thousands of people in prison and sending more than a dozen to death row in a five-county, low-lying region of swamps, Spanish moss and forests where moonshiners once plied a thriving trade,” a 2019 profile in the State magazine states. “And year after year, the family law firm in Hampton has won millions of dollars in civil lawsuits, relentlessly pursuing those at fault in fatal collisions.”

Randolph Murdaugh III, a former chief prosecutor, turned up at the hospital on the night of the 2019 crash along with his son, Paul’s father, a prominent attorney who works at a firm started by his family a century ago. They stopped the teenagers from cooperating with law enforcement, authorities said, and none of the people on the boat took a sobriety test that night.

In an odd twist, Murdaugh III died on June 10, three days after his grandson and daughter-in-law were found shot and killed.

Beach’s mother, Renee Beach, had filed a wrongful death lawsuit against other members of Paul’s family, including his grandfather, father, and brother.

After initial reports that the state would close its investigation into Beach’s death after the death of the Murdaughs, authorities said they would keep it open.

“I can understand that they would not want to open the investigative file to disclosure because there may be information related to the murder investigation,” attorney Jim Griffin, who had represented Paul Murdaugh during preliminary hearings, told the Island Packet on Monday.

Beach’s family released a statement offering their condolences to the Murdaugh family after the shootings.

“Having suffered the devastating loss of their own daughter, the family prays that the Murdaughs can find some level of peace from this tragic loss,” it states. “It is their most sincere hope that someone will come forward and cooperate with authorities so that the perpetrator of these senseless crimes can be brought to justice.”

Friends and loved ones also posted on social media about the loss of the two Murdaugh family members.

“It’s not blood that makes you family, it’s love and respect,” wrote Ashley Boulware Romero on Facebook. “The Murdaugh’s are family. We laugh hard, but love even harder. A life without Mrs. Maggie and Paul is so hard to imagine, but I am so thankful for all the memories to cherish and reflect on.”

An obituary for Maggie Murdaugh, whose joint funeral with her son was on Friday, talked about her love for family.

“Maggie had a heart of pure generosity, and loved welcoming friends and family into her home on any given occasion,” it states. “She adored her family, and cherished spending time on the boat with her two sons. She will be remembered as a ‘second mom’ to her sons’ many friends. She made the most out of every situation, and lived each and every day to the fullest.”

Source Article from https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/amberjamieson/paul-maggie-murdaugh-killings

An Atlanta-area sheriff’s deputy was shot and a woman died Monday after a shootout at a grocery store that stemmed from an argument over wearing a mask, authorities said.

A DeKalb County Sheriff’s Office Reserve Unit deputy, a 30-year law enforcement veteran who is retired from the agency, was shot twice and was listed in stable condition, DeKalb County Sheriff Melody Maddox said during a news conference. The suspect, identified as Victor Lee Tucker, 30, was struck multiple times and taken to a hospital, authorities said. 

He was listed in stable condition.

<strong>An Atlanta-area sheriff’s deputy was shot Monday when a man opened fire at the Big Bear supermarket during a dispute with a woman, authorities said.  (WAGA-TV)</strong>
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Tucker was checking out of the Big Bear Supermarket near The Gallery at South DeKalb mall in the Atlanta suburb of Decatur just after 1 p.m. when he got into an argument with a female cashier about his face mask, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation said. 

He left the store without completing his purchase and “immediately” returned, authorities said. 

“There was some confrontation, an argument… in reference to the wearing of a mask at which time the subject pulled out a weapon and shot the cashier at the location,” Maddox said.

The cashier was taken to a hospital where she was pronounced dead. A second cashier was grazed by a bullet and treated at the scene. Maddox said she did not know what the grocery store’s mask policy was at the time of the shooting. 

“We understand that with the wearing of the masks and the not wearing the mask, people will have their own opinions,” she said. 

The reserve deputy, who was employed as a part-time security guard with the store, intervened during the shooting and returned fire, the sheriff’s office said.

“He is a stand-out professional individual and he loves what he does,” Maddox said. “As you can see, he’s continuing to do what he does to make sure that everybody is safe, once again, as they go in and out of that store.”

Investigators with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation at the scene of a supermarket shooting Monday in which a cashier died and the suspected gunman and a reserve deputy were wounded.  
(Georgia Bureau of Investigation)

Two responding DeKalb County Police Department officers arrested Tucker as he was attempting to crawl out of the front door of the supermarket, the GBI said. 

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Members of the DeKalb sheriff’s reserve unit consist of retired deputies, police officers and citizens who donate a minimum of 20 hours of volunteer time each month state, juvenile and superior courts, the county jail or community relations office, according to the Sheriff’s Office website.

The DeKalb County Police Department will be handling the arrest warrants for Tucker, the GBI said. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/atlanta-deputy-injured-upermarket-shooting

Vermont crossed a major vaccine milestone Monday as more than 80% of the state’s eligible population has at least one shot, according to state health department data.

As of Monday afternoon, over 444,000 Vermont residents over the age of 12 have received at least one vaccine dose, the Vermont Department of Health said. Vermont is the first state to cross this threshold, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Gov. Phil Scott celebrated the occasion by bringing the Green Mountain State one step closer to its pre-pandemic life. He signed an order that removed the mandate for masks, social distancing and capacity limits for indoor places.

“Our work continues, but Vermonters can be proud of what they’ve done,” Scott tweeted.

Vermont businesses can still issue COVID-19 related restrictions without any penalty from the state if they wish to do so, according to the governor’s order.

More than 390,000 residents, roughly 70% of the population, are fully vaccinated, according to the Vermont Health Department.

As of Monday, the national average for vaccinations among Americans 12 and up is 61.4% with at least one dose and 51.1% with both doses, according to the CDC. Seven other states have over 70% of their population above the age of 12 with at least one dose, according to the CDC.

Health experts and the governor credited the high vaccination numbers for greatly reducing the number of Vermont coronavirus cases.

Vermont opened up vaccinations to all eligible residents in April. The seven-day average of new cases has dropped from a peak of 213 at the end of March to just eight on June 13, state data showed.

Scott encouraged all eligible residents to get their shots if they haven’t already.

Vermont is following in line with the rest of the nation with declining vaccine demand. The seven-day average of new daily doses administered in the state has shrunk from 8,933 on May 26 to 3,187 on June 14, state data showed.

Three Vermont counties — Essex, Orleans and Caledonia — are the only ones where the rates of eligible residents with one shot are below 70%, according to the state data. Essex County is the lowest with 57% as of Monday.

Anyone who needs help scheduling a free vaccine appointment can log onto vaccines.gov.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Health/vermont-relaxes-covid-19-restrictions-crossing-major-vaccine/story?id=78271851

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden issued a warning to Russian President Vladimir Putin ahead of their Wednesday summit that the death of jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny would hurt Russia’s relationships with the rest of the world.

“Navalny’s death would be another indication that Russia has little or no intention of abiding by basic fundamental human rights,” Biden said at a press conference Monday following the NATO summit.

“It would be a tragedy. It would do nothing but hurt his relationships with the rest of the world, in my view, and with me,” he said.

Concern over Navalny’s imprisonment and worsening health condition is the latest drumbeat in the already tense relations between Moscow and the West.

A joint NATO statement on Monday said that Russia’s “aggressive actions constitute a threat to Euro-Atlantic security.” It cited Moscow’s military buildup, its use of cyberattacks and hybrid warfare, the annexation of Crimea and Kremlin-funded disinformation campaigns as some of the actions.

As Biden prepares to meet one on one with Putin, the White House insists that the Geneva summit does not amount to a reward for Putin, placing him on a par with the United States.

Instead, the meeting will be a businesslike review of the bilateral relationship. Biden will raise several pressing concerns but will also seek areas where Russia and the United States can work together.

Biden praised Putin as well on Monday, saying he is “bright, he’s tough, and I have found that he is, as they say, a worthy adversary.”

This is not the first time Biden has pressed Putin about Navalny’s situation. Shortly after he was sworn in, Biden spoke to Putin by phone and said he told his counterpart that Navalny’s imprisonment was “of deep concern” to the United States.

“Mr. Navalny, like all Russian citizens, is entitled to his rights under the Russian constitution,” Biden said in a speech to U.S. diplomats. “He’s been targeted — targeted for exposing corruption. He should be released immediately and without condition.”

In January, Navalny flew to Russia from Berlin, Germany, where he had spent nearly half a year recovering after having been poisoned last summer. He was arrested at passport control as soon as he landed.

A month later, a Russian court sentenced Navalny to more than two years in jail for parole violations, charges he said were politically motivated.

The German government said that Navalny was poisoned by a chemical nerve agent in August of 2020, and that toxicology reports provided “unequivocal evidence” of the poison.

The nerve agent was in the family of Novichok, which was developed decades ago by the Soviet Union. Toxicology tests conducted in France and Sweden came to the same conclusion.

The Kremlin has repeatedly denied playing a role in Navalny’s poisoning.

In March, the Biden administration slapped sanctions on seven members of the Russian government for the alleged poisoning of Navalny.

Washington also imposed sanctions on 14 entities involved in the chemical and biological industrial base in Russia.

At the time, Secretary of State Antony Blinken wrote in a statement that the sanctions would “send a clear signal” to Russia that use of chemical weapons and human rights abuses carry hefty consequences.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/06/14/biden-warns-putin-ahead-of-summit-navalnys-death-would-hurt-russias-standing.html

Flames and smoke are seen from an explosion at a chemical plant in Rockton, Ill., on Monday.

Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune via AP


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Flames and smoke are seen from an explosion at a chemical plant in Rockton, Ill., on Monday.

Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune via AP

ROCKTON, Ill. — An explosion at a chemical plant in northern Illinois sparked massive fires that sent flames and huge plumes of thick black smoke high into the air and debris raining onto the ground Monday morning, prompting evacuations.

Emergency crews rushed to the scene of the 7:30 a.m. fire near Rockton, northwest of Chicago, at Chemtool Inc., a company that manufactures lubricants, grease products and other fluids, and is, according to the company, the largest manufacturer of grease in the Americas.

Rockton Fire Department Chief Kirk Wilson said about 70 employees were at the plant when firefighters arrived and that all of them were evacuated safely. He also said one firefighter suffered a minor injury.

Following reports that the plumes of smoke were so big they were being picked up on weather radar, the Rockton Police Department at 8:46 a.m., posted an alert, warning that fire officials had ordered a mandatory evacuation near the plant. It told people to evacuate homes and businesses, and to await further instructions.

Wilson said that “at this point and time there is no danger to air quality at ground level,” but that given the enormous plumes of smoke, officials ordered the evacuation as a precautionary measure.

“We don’t want an environmental nightmare to occur,” he said.

Trisha Diduch, the planning and development administrator for Rockton, said she estimates about 1,000 people are affected by the evacuation order and the downtown area, which is just about a mile from the plant, is being evacuated. The order is for a 1-mile (1.6-kilometer) radius, she said.

One of those residents was Alyssa King, 29. She said after she walked outside to see black smoke and what appeared to be pieces of cardboard boxes and “small chunks of the building,” falling from the sky she called the police department’s non-emergency line. “You gotta go,” she said she was told.

A man watches the smoke from the chemical plant fire in Rockton, Ill.

Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune via AP


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A man watches the smoke from the chemical plant fire in Rockton, Ill.

Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune via AP

There were no immediate reports of injuries, and in a statement Chemtool said: “We have confirmed all on site are safe and accounted for. Our concern right now is for the safety of all our employees and the surrounding community.”

The company said it will share additional details as they’re known.

“We do not yet know what caused this incident, but we will be working with local authorities and with our own risk management team to determine what happened and identify any corrective actions,” it said.

King, who lives in an apartment less than a mile from the site, said she woke up to what sounded like slamming doors.

“It woke me up. It was shaking the whole apartment building,” said King, who was at home with her 8-year-old daughter at the time.

King and her daughter went to her mother’s house about 2 miles (3 kilometers) away. King then returned to the apartment to collect the family’s rabbit, Oreo. As she drove near the plant, King saw smoldering embers along the roadway, and there was “burned material” all over the yard of the apartment building, she said. The air had a chemical smell, she added.

“It was awful,” she said. “I’m terrified I won’t have a home to go back to.”

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency investigators from Chicago were headed to the scene and would issue a statement later Monday, spokeswoman Rachel Bassler said. They were coordinating with the Illinois EPA, which also was sending a team, according to spokeswoman Kim Biggs.

Rockton is located in Winnebago County, near the Wisconsin border, about 95 miles (150 kilometers) northwest of Chicago.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/06/14/1006282457/illinois-chemical-plant-explosion-fires-prompt-evacuations-chemtool-rockton

Public health officials in the U.K. say they are increasingly confident that vaccines offer significant protection against the Delta variant of coronavirus, a hopeful sign as the highly transmissible strain spreads across the world.

Separate studies from researchers in England and Scotland published Monday found that while protection against infection was somewhat diminished against Delta compared with more established variants, two doses of vaccine offered considerable protection against severe illness and hospitalization.

The findings are the latest indicating that Covid-19 vaccines are able to protect people against new variants, despite early concerns that the variants might be able to elude them.

“Vaccine effectiveness against Delta is still very, very substantial,” said Aziz Sheikh, director of the University of Edinburgh’s Usher Institute of medicine and the lead author of one the two analyses.

An analysis of more than 14,000 Delta cases by England’s public health agency found a double dose of the shot developed by Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE reduces the risk of hospitalization after infection with Delta by 96%. Two doses of the vaccine developed by the University of Oxford and AstraZeneca reduces the risk by 92%, Public Health England said.

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/vaccines-offer-significant-protection-against-covid-19-delta-variant-u-k-analysis-shows-11623690999

Neither former Attorney General Jeff Sessions nor former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein were aware of any Justice Department subpoena for records of Trump administration White House counsel Don McGahn while they were in office, a source close to Sessions and Rosenstein told Fox News.

The New York Times reported on Sunday that Apple informed McGahn that they had received a subpoena in February 2018 in connection with an email account McGahn had. Sessions and Rosenstein ran the Justice Department at the time, and current and former DOJ official told Fox News that normally such a move would be brought to the attention of the attorney general and deputy attorney general.

TOP DOJ NATIONAL SECURITY OFFICIAL STEPPING DOWN AMID COMMUNICATION RECORD CONTROVERSY

“You would absolutely want the top-cover,” one former senior DOJ official said. “The idea that you would do something that sensitive without alerting senior leadership is…suicide.”

Current and former officials also noted that McGahn may not have been the target of an investigation, and that it could have been focused on someone he had been in communication with.  

DOJ INSPECTOR GENERAL LAUNCHES REVIEW OF TRUMP-ERA SEIZURE OF MEMBERS OF CONGRESS’ COMMUNICATIONS

A Times source told the publication that Apple did not tell McGahn what they had turned over.

The Times report noted that Apple received the McGahn subpoena weeks after another subpoena related to an investigation of leaked information related to the Russia probe. That subpoena, reported by the Times last week, covered information including records belonging to California Democratic Reps. Adam Schiff and Eric Swalwell, both fierce critics of Trump while he was in office.

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Neither Sessions nor Rosenstein had been aware of this either at the time, a source close to both said. Sessions had recused himself from all matters related to Russia.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/sessions-rosenstein-unaware-mcgahn-subpoena-source

Former President TrumpDonald TrumpBiden prepares to confront Putin Biden aims to bolster troubled Turkey ties in first Erdoğan meeting Senate investigation of insurrection falls short MORE’s team has been warning Republican candidates running for various offices not to fake endorsements from the former president before he officially announces who he is backing in the race.

Politico reported that Trump and his team are “aggressively” telling candidates up and down the ballot not to falsely illustrate their relationships with Trump in an effort to make it look like they have his support.

A number of Republican candidates vying for 2022 nominations have painted themselves as staunch Trump supporters, showcased photos they’ve taken with Trump and revealed private conversations they’ve had with the former president, according to Politico, in an effort to win the support of Trump loyalists.

While Trump’s team has for a while pushed back on candidates creating the appearance that they are backed by the former president, advisers told Politico that the problem has gotten worse since he left office.

Trump spokesman Jason Miller confirmed Politico’s report in a statement to The Hill, writing, “Don’t fake the endorsement if you don’t have it!”

Trump’s team stepped in last month after Pennsylvania state Sen. Doug Mastriano, who is mulling a run for governor, said publicly that Trump “asked” him to run.

Miller wrote on Twitter that “President Trump has not made any endorsement or commitments yet in this race.

In April, Miller posted another disclaimed on Twitter, this time noting that Trump had not made an endorsement in a Texas special congressional election after candidate Dan Rodimer branded himself as “the Trump candidate” in ads and said he was the “only” candidate in the race “that has ever been endorsed by President Trump,” according to Politico.

“This is a very strong pro-Trump district and President Trump is the most powerful endorsement in all of politics, but he has not yet weighed in,” Miller wrote on Twitter.

Most recently, Miller took to Twitter last week after a fake statement from Trump circulated saying that the former president was endorsing “MAGA Conservative” Hirsh Singh in New Jersey’s Republican gubernatorial primary against “NEVER TRUMPER” Jack Ciattarelli.

“This posting is FAKE. President Trump has NOT endorsed in the race for Governor in New Jersey,” Miller wrote on Twitter.

Singh denied that he was behind the statement, instead pinning the blame on one of his primary rivals, according to Politico.

The apparent spike in Republican candidates mischaracterizing their relationships with Trump shows the strong influence he still has in GOP politics, despite being out of office for months.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/558308-republicans-being-warned-not-to-fake-trump-endorsements-report

California is set to fully reopen its economy Tuesday.

So what will really change? Lots.

Even in the yellow tier — the least restrictive category in the state’s COVID-19 pandemic reopening framework, which is set to be retired Tuesday — there have been plenty of business restrictions.

Indoor capacity at restaurants, for instance, has been capped at 50%. L.A. County eateries also had to observe requirements that kept tables a certain number of feet away from one another. Both those requirements will be retired, and restaurants and bars will once again be allowed full capacity.

Changes at all sorts of public spaces will be dramatic, said Dr. Barbara Ferrer, Los Angeles County public health director.

“It’s huge,” she said. For “restaurants, bars, nightclubs, card rooms, family entertainment centers, there will not be specific protocols. … There will be no capacity limits and no distancing requirements.”

Restaurants in Los Angeles prepare to reopen at 100% capacity and with no social distancing on June 15, but some remain cautiously optimistic about the dining landscape.

Californians who are fully vaccinated for COVID-19 will be able to stop wearing face masks in most situations, unless a business or venue decides to keep masks mandatory for everyone.

Fully vaccinated employees, however, may have to wait a little longer before removing their masks in the workplace. The California Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board suggested it would approve a new rule allowing fully vaccinated employees to stop wearing masks in most workplaces effective June 28.

Masking requirements won’t keep most businesses from resuming full operations, Ferrer said.

“It’s feeling a bit unreal that … Tuesday most of the restrictions that we’ve lived under for a year plus will all be lifted. Businesses, offices, venues can all be at 100%,” San Francisco Supervisor Matt Haney tweeted last week.

L.A. County will issue “best practices” guidance for businesses, but they will not be requirements.

Here’s how things will change Tuesday in various spaces and situations now governed by yellow-tier restrictions.

Amusement parks and fairs, held to 35% of capacity, will be allowed to reopen at full capacity.

Restaurants, gyms, movie theaters, bowling alleys, ice-skating rinks and arcades can reopen at full capacity, up from 50%.

Bars that don’t serve food — now at 25% of capacity or 100 people, whichever is fewer — can reopen at full capacity.

Conferences, receptions and meetings can resume at full capacity with no limitations, as long as the event is not an indoor mega-event with 5,000 or more people or an outdoor mega-event with 10,000 or more.

Everything you couldn’t do in 2020, you can (for the most part) do again June 15. Here’s your guide to all things Southern California sports.

Venues that will still have special restrictions include schools, day cares, camps, healthcare facilities, high-risk congregate living facilities, public transit and mega-events.

Organizers of indoor events with more than 5,000 people, such as a basketball game, will be required to verify that attendees are either fully vaccinated or have tested negative within 72 hours of the event’s start time.

At outdoor events with more than 10,000 attendees, organizers will recommend — but not require — the same vaccination or negative-test information, though venues in those instances will have the option of allowing unvaccinated and untested attendees, provided those people wear a mask at all times.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-06-14/california-june-15-covid-reopening-how-will-rules-change

During a press conference on Monday, Gov. Phil Scott announces that 80% of the Vermont population 12 and over has been vaccinated against Covid-19. Restrictions on gatherings have been lifted immediately, and the state of emergency will end at midnight on Tuesday, June 15. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

Updated at 4:28 p.m.

Eighty percent of eligible Vermonters have received a Covid-19 vaccine, clearing the way for the state to reopen, Gov. Phil Scott declared Monday. 

The announcement effectively brings an end to the pandemic-related restrictions imposed in March 2020. 

It’s safe to lift restrictions, Scott said, “because Vermonters have done their part to keep the virus from spreading.

“No state in the nation is in a better position to do this than we are,” he said. 

State officials at Monday’s press conference, where Gov. Phil Scott lifted state Covid-19 restrictions effective immediately. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

Effective immediately, there are no limits on the number of people who can congregate in restaurants, performance spaces or other indoor venues. Previously, gatherings were capped at 300 unvaccinated people, plus any number of vaccinated individuals.

The state’s “universal guidance,” which encourages unvaccinated Vermonters to continue to wear masks and practice social distancing, remains in effect. Masking had previously been required only for people who have not been inoculated. People should continue to practice good hygiene and think carefully before traveling, according to the state’s guidance, though quarantining and testing are not required. 

Businesses also have leeway in instituting their own rules, and some federal restrictions remain in effect. 

Yet for all practical purposes, Vermont has returned to its pre-pandemic norms. The state of emergency will be lifted at the end of the night on Tuesday, June 15.

That’s an emotional milestone for the governor and his team, who have been preoccupied by the Covid-19 crisis. The breadth of the pandemic had no precedent in modern times, and political leaders worked closely with scientists to discern the best path.

At a Montpelier press conference held to announce the news Monday morning, Scott thanked members of his team, the Vermont National Guard and frontline workers for their help combatting the pandemic.

“The people who deserve the most credit are everyday Vermonters,” he said. “You stuck together even when you were physically separated. … The dedication of all Vermonters to their families and communities has been incredible, and you should be very proud. I know I am.”

Vermont, with more than 643,000 residents as of the 2020 Census, currently has one of the highest vaccination rates in the nation. About 390,000 people ages 12 and older are fully vaccinated, and another 54,000 have started the process, according to state figures.

The number of people who are eligible for vaccination will likely grow in the coming months. Pfizer is expected to seek emergency use authorization to inoculate kids ages 5 and up this fall. Currently, only those age 12 and older can get the Pfizer vaccine. 

However, though the state has reached a milestone, Scott has urged Vermonters to keep up their guards.

“Even after we hit 80%, we’re not going to declare victory,” Scott said last week. “The better we do now, the better position we’ll be for the long term.”

He said the Department of Health, pharmacies, hospitals and emergency workers will continue to offer walk-in vaccine clinics around the state. Primary care offices have also started offering doses.

Dr. Mark Levine speaks after Gov. Phil Scott announced that 80% of the Vermont population 12 and over has been vaccinated against Covid-19. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

Nearby states have already rolled back their Covid-19 restrictions. Massachusetts, Connecticut and Maine all reopened within the past month. In New Hampshire, Gov. Chris Sununu allowed the state’s mask mandate to expire in mid-April and lifted business restrictions May 8. 

Cases have not increased in those states after they abolished restrictions, Mike Pieciak, commissioner of the Department of Financial Regulation, told VTDigger last week.

Vermont reached its full reopening about two weeks ahead of schedule. The governor had initially said he planned for a full reopening on July 4.

In Vermont, Covid-19 cases have continued to decline. They’ve dropped about 90% from their peak in April, and deaths are at a roughly seven-month low.

The state reported only one new case of the virus on Monday, no new deaths, and two people hospitalized with the virus. 

Dr. Mark Levine, the state health commissioner, has said there is strong evidence that vaccines are effective at preventing transmission and curbing severe instances of the disease.

“The vaccine is the reason we’ve gotten to where we are today,” Levine said at a press conference last week. “It’s how we can live once again with fewer restrictions than in the pandemic.”

During Monday’s press conference, Scott reflected on the early days of the pandemic, when he rushed to the office to respond to Vermont’s first Covid case in March 2020. “I never thought I’d be the governor ordering businesses closed, or closing schools,” he said.

But the state’s more extensive preparations for waves of hospitalizations and deaths were not really needed, he said, because “Vermonters’ commitment to community never wavered.”

Quick questions about reopening

Scott and other members of his team also clarified what the new guidance means for different aspects of reopening.

Gov. Phil Scott speaks at Monday’s press conference. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

Monday’s announcement means that Scott has dropped the state restrictions in his emergency order for the pandemic, effective immediately. Some federal restrictions still apply — for example, to nursing homes and airline travel.

Scott said he’d go into more detail about how the emergency order would wind down at another press conference scheduled for Tuesday. The process would be orderly, he said, and there would be no “cliffs.” 

“Nothing is going to happen abnormally as of tomorrow night,” he said. “We will have a gradual slope away from the state of emergency.”

Businesses still have leeway to require masks for employees and customers, and can ask for proof of vaccination if they choose, Scott said. He equated it to the “no shirt, no shoes, no service” policy commonly found at store entrances. 

Individuals can also choose to wear masks if they feel more comfortable doing so, Scott said. While unvaccinated individuals aren’t required to wear masks, Levine said he recommended unvaccinated people, including children, continue to wear masks in crowded indoor spaces.

Scott did not say if the order would also lift municipal restrictions on masking. However, Burlington, South Burlington, Montpelier and Brattleboro have all recently lifted their own mask orders.

Correction: An earlier version of this story misstated the date for the state’s most recent Covid-19 case numbers and misquoted Gov. Scott.

Gov. Phil Scott leaves the podium after announcing that 80% of the Vermont population 12 and over has been vaccinated against Covid-19 and that the state of emergency will end at midnight on June 15 at a press conference in Montpelier on Monday, June 14, 2021. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

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Source Article from https://vtdigger.org/2021/06/14/vermont-reopens-scott-lifts-restrictions-as-state-reaches-80-vaccination-goal/

President Biden on Sunday declared that “America is back to the table” after leaving his first Group of Seven summit, where world leaders vowed to confront China, boost global infrastructure and donate 1 billion vaccine doses to the rest of the world. 

“I conveyed to each of my G-7 counterparts the U.S. is going to do our part. America is back to the table,” the president said in a press conference at the conclusion of the meeting with U.S. allies. “The lack of participation in the past and full engagement was noticed significantly, not only by the leaders of those countries but by the people in the G-7 countries.”

Mr. Biden called the meeting, his first with the group since assuming the presidency, “extraordinary collaborative and productive,” and said ending the coronavirus pandemic and ensuring an “equitable and inclusive” global economic recovery were the foremost priorities for the U.S. and its allies.

President Biden takes part in a press conference on the final day of the G-7 summit at Cornwall Airport Newquay on June 13, 2021.

BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images


In a 25-page communique issued on the last day of the three-day meeting, the leaders of the G-7 countries — the U.S., the U.K., Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan — committed to cracking down on the use of forced labor, fighting ransomware and combating corruption while calling out China and Russia for human rights abuses.

“We know that corruption undermines the trust in government, siphons off public resources, makes economies much less competitive and constitutes a threat to our security,” the president said.

Mr. Biden left the summit Sunday morning and plans to meet with Queen Elizabeth at Windsor Castle on Sunday before heading to Brussels for meetings with NATO and European Union leaders. He will conclude his first trip overseas at a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Geneva on Wednesday. 

The president told reporters he agrees with Putin that U.S.-Russia relations are at a “low point,” but acknowledged there are areas in which the two countries can work together.


Biden speaks at close of G-7 summit

30:07

“Russia has engaged in activities which we believe are contrary to international norms but they have also bitten off some real problems they’re going to have trouble chewing on,” Mr. Biden said.

On the issue of forced labor, the communique said the U.S. and the G-7 nations will “continue to work together including through our own available domestic means and multilateral institutions to protect individuals from forced labour and to ensure that global supply chains are free from the use of forced labour.” The group also said it will “promote our values, including by calling on China to respect human rights and fundamental freedoms, especially in relation to Xinjiang” and Hong Kong.

“I think we’re in a contest, not with China per se, but a contest with autocrats, autocratic governments around the world as to whether democracies can compete with them in the rapidly changing 21st century,” Mr. Biden said. “And I think how we act and whether we pull together as democracies is going to determine whether our grandkids look back 15 years from now and say, ‘Did they step up? Are democracies as relevant and as powerful as they have been?'”

The G-7 countries backed a 15% global minimum tax on multinational corporations on a “country-by-country basis” to create “a fairer tax system fit for the 21st century, and reversing a 40-year race to the bottom.”

The seven nations, the wealthiest liberal democracies in the world, also pledged to sending 1 billion COVID-19 vaccine doses around the globe. Half of those will come from the U.S., Mr. Biden said. 

“The fact is that we, the U.S. contribution, is the foundation to work out how we’re going to deal with 100 nations that are poor and having trouble finding vaccines and having trouble dealing with reviving their economies,” the president said.

The G-7 allies also called for “a timely, transparent, expert-led, and science-based” Phase II study convened by the World Health Organization that examines the origins of COVID-19, including in China.

The president said it’s crucial for the world to know whether the pandemic was a consequence of human contact with infected animals or the result of a leak from a lab in Wuhan, China.

“Lack of transparency might produce another pandemic,” he said. “We have to have access. The world has to have access.”

After Sunday’s press conference, Mr. Biden will have tea with Queen Elizabeth before heading off to Brussels. On Friday, Mr. Biden and first lady Jill Biden participated in a reception with other leaders and their spouses as well as members of the British royal family.

Bo Erickson and Fin Gomez contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/biden-g7-summit-china-infrastructure-vaccine/

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2021/06/14/covid-vaccination-infection-cdc-variant-deaths/7678685002/

ROCKTON, Ill. (WIFR) – One firefighter was injured and several fire crews are at the scene of a structure fire at Chemtool on Prairie Hill Road in Rockton Monday morning.

Around 7 a.m. multiple area fire departments were called to 1165 Prairie Hill Road in Rockton for reports of smoke showing at Chemtool Incorporated. Some neighbors reported hearing small explosions and fire burns with smoke being seen for miles.

According to the Rockton Fire Chief, an area within a one-mile radius of the Chemtool plant in Rockton is under a mandatory, full-scale evacuation.

Those within the evacuation zone map, head to Rockton Middle School and Roscoe Middle School, according to the Village of Rockton and the Rockton Police Department.

All residents and businesses within a one-mile radius of Chemtool are directed to evacuate to Roscoe Middle School at 6121 Elevator Rd. immediately, according to an emergency alert sent out to mobile devices. Williams Tree Farm and Stephen Mack School have shifted their evacuees to Roscoe Middle School.

As of 10:50 a.m., the fire in Rockton has caused smoke to cover the eastern third of Ogle County. Close windows and doors if you live east of Meridian Road and monitor your indoor air quality. Please do NOT call 911 unless you are having an emergency, according to the Ogle County Health Department.

Doctors are recommending that people around the Rockford Region wear a mask all day Monday and possibly Tuesday to protect themselves from the chemicals in the air from the Chemtool fire in Rockton, Kristin Camiliere reports.

Here is a statement from The Lubrizol Corporation, which owns the Chemtool facility in Rockton.

“At approximately 7 a.m. today, local emergency personnel responded to a fire at the Lubrizol Corporation’s Chemtool Facility in Rockton, Ill. We have confirmed all on site are safe and accounted for. Our concern right now is for the safety of all our employees and the surrounding community. As a precaution, authorities have evacuated residents in a one-mile radius of the site.

We do not yet know what caused this incident, but we will be working with local authorities and with our own risk management team to determine what happened and identify any corrective actions. We will share more details as they are known. We are grateful to our employees, first responders and safety forces responding to this incident,” Alicia Gauer, Senior Director, Global Communications for the Lubrizol Corporation said.

Statement in response to the event at the Chemtool site in Rockton.(The Lubrizol Corporation, a Berkshire Hathaway company)

Doctors are recommending that people around the Rockford Region wear a mask all day today and possibly tomorrow to protect themselves from the chemicals in the air from the Chemtool fire in Rockton. At this time, it is unclear what caused the fire and if there are any hazardous chemicals involved.

The Village of Rockton asks the public to avoid Rt. 2 and E. Rockton Road so first responders from other communities can quickly respond to the fire.

“Please do your part in helping fight this fire. No landscape watering today and any unnecessary water use,” according to the Village of Rockton.

Salvation Army staff and volunteers are responding to the Chemtool fire, sending a mobile feeding unit, including a field kitchen and rapid response unit to provide meals, snacks and beverages to first responders, according to the Salvation Army of Winnebago County.

Frisellabrations, on Yale Bridge in South Beloit, is opening their doors for anyone evacuated who would like shelter and AC.

The Rockford Fire Department told WIFR they are fully aware and are monitoring the situation. Rockford fire officials are recommending people in the area to stay inside (no mandatory order at this time) or to do what they feel comfortable with.

A statement was released by the Northern Illinois PIO.

“At a news conference this morning, it was stated that at this time there is ‘no danger to air quality at ground level.’ This information is based on an initial limited test of VOCs, or volatile organic compounds, done by local agencies. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is now arriving on scene and working with the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency and other local partners. They are setting up to do more in-depth testing to measure the impact to air, water and land. We will communicate as soon as we have more information.

The County Emergency Operations Center is actively tracking the smoke plume and wind direction. The specific area impacted at this time is two miles south of Chemtool. If you are within the one-mile evacuation zone around Chemtool, please evacuate. If you are two miles directly south of Chemtool, please stay indoors as a precaution, close your windows and doors, and turn off your air conditioner/HVAC units. The Illinois Department of Public Health is advising people to wear a mask if they are within the evacuation zone.

At this time, these recommendations are only for Rockton-area residents. Anyone outside of the Rockton area does not need to take action at this time, but continue to monitor local media outlets for additional information.

Reminder: Evacuating residents can go to Rockton Middle School,” according to the Northern Illinois PIO.

This is a developing story. Stay with 23 News as updates become available.

Copyright 2021 WIFR. All rights reserved.

Source Article from https://www.wifr.com/2021/06/14/structure-fire-chemtool-rockton-early-monday-morning/