The city of Mekele is seen in May through a bullet hole in a stairway window of the Ayder Referral Hospital, in the Tigray region of northern Ethiopia. Ethiopia’s government said in a statement carried by state media Monday that it has “positively accepted” a call for a unilateral cease-fire.

Ben Curtis/AP


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Ben Curtis/AP

The city of Mekele is seen in May through a bullet hole in a stairway window of the Ayder Referral Hospital, in the Tigray region of northern Ethiopia. Ethiopia’s government said in a statement carried by state media Monday that it has “positively accepted” a call for a unilateral cease-fire.

Ben Curtis/AP

NAIROBI, Kenya — Ethiopia’s government on Monday declared an immediate, unilateral cease-fire in its Tigray region after nearly eight months of deadly conflict and as hundreds of thousands of people face the world’s worst famine crisis in a decade.

The cease-fire could calm a war that has destabilized Africa’s second most populous country and threatened to do the same in the wider Horn of Africa, where Ethiopia has been seen as a key security ally for the West. It comes as the country awaits the results of national elections that Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed promoted as the centerpiece of reforms that won him the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize.

Abiy’s transformation from making peace to waging war has appalled many observers since the fighting in Tigray erupted in November. Since then, the world has struggled to access much of the region and investigate growing allegations of atrocities including gang rapes and forced starvation.

Ethiopia’s statement was carried by state media shortly after the Tigray interim administration, appointed by the federal government, fled the regional capital, Mekele, and called for a cease-fire on humanitarian grounds so that desperately needed aid can be delivered.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in a statement that he had spoken with the prime minister and “I am hopeful that an effective cessation of hostilities will take place.”

A woman walks past Ethiopian government soldiers by the side of a road north of Mekele, in the Tigray region of northern Ethiopia in May.

Ben Curtis/AP


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Ben Curtis/AP

A woman walks past Ethiopian government soldiers by the side of a road north of Mekele, in the Tigray region of northern Ethiopia in May.

Ben Curtis/AP

Meanwhile, Mekele residents cheered the return of Tigray forces for the first time since Ethiopian forces took the city in late November and Abiy declared victory. The Tigray fighters, loyal to the former regional ruling party that for years dominated Ethiopia’s government before being sidelined by the new prime minister, undermined the declaration by waging a guerrilla war in the region’s rough terrain.

Ethnic Tigrayans, even those who didn’t support the former ruling Tigray People’s Liberation Front before the war, say they have been targeted harshly for suspected links with the Tigray fighters. Ethiopia has denied it.

But Abiy in an interview aired last week alarmed observers by recalling that aid to Tigray during Ethiopia’s devastating 1980s famine had bolstered the Tigray fighters who eventually overthrew the ruling regime. Such a thing will “never happen” now, he said.

Monday’s cease-fire declaration signaled a new approach, at least for a while.

The cease-fire “will enable farmers to till their land, aid groups to operate without any military movement around and engage with remnants (of Tigray’s former ruling party) who seek peace,” Ethiopia’s statement said, adding that efforts to bring Tigray’s former leaders “to justice” continue.

Ethiopia said the cease-fire will last until the end of the crucial planting season in Tigray. The season’s end comes in September. The government ordered all federal and regional authorities to respect the cease-fire — crucial as authorities and fighters from the neighboring Amhara region have been accused of atrocities in western Tigray.

“The government has the responsibility to find a political solution to the problem,” the head of the interim administration, Abraham Belay, said in calling for the cease-fire, adding that some elements within Tigray’s former ruling party are willing to engage with the federal government.

There was no immediate comment from the Tigray fighters, with whom Ethiopia had rejected talks. And there was no immediate comment from neighboring Eritrea, whose soldiers have been accused by Tigray residents of some of the worst atrocities in the war.

Thousands of people have been killed in the conflict as Ethiopian and allied forces pursue Tigray’s former leaders and their supporters, and as humanitarian groups plead for more access to the region of 6 million people.

The region in recent days has seen some of the fiercest fighting of the conflict. International pressure on Ethiopia spiked again last week after a military airstrike on a busy market in Tigray killed more than 60 people, and after Doctors Without Borders said three staffers had been murdered in a separate incident.

Amid the upheaval on Monday, the United Nations children’s agency said Ethiopian soldiers entered its office in Mekele and dismantled satellite communications equipment, an act it said violated the world body’s immunity. UNICEF last week warned that at least 33,000 severely malnourished children face “imminent risk of death” without more aid reaching Tigray’s people.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/06/28/1011053371/ethiopia-declares-an-immediate-unilateral-cease-fire-in-tigray

Authorities said Monday that the remains of 10 people have been found in the collapse of a 12-story beachfront condominium in Florida. The Associated Press has been reporting brief descriptions of the dead and the missing. 

Police said they identified the remains of Leon and Christina Oliwkowicz, an elderly couple from Venezuela with ties to Jewish communities in Florida and Chicago. They also found the bodies of Luis Bermudez, a young man with muscular dystrophy, and his mother Ana Ortiz, who were from Puerto Rico. 

Authorities said 151 other people remain unaccounted for as rescuers search through the rubble of Champlain Towers South. Among them are Linda March, whose penthouse apartment was ripped apart, leaving her office chair and a set of bunkbeds next to the abyss. 

Workers search the rubble at the Champlain Towers South Condo on Monday. (AP)

—- 

ANA ORTIZ and LUIS BERMUDEZ 

Luis Bermudez, of San Juan, Puerto Rico, had battled with muscular dystrophy for years and used a wheelchair. The 26-year-old man lived with his mother Ana Ortiz on the seventh floor of the Champlain Towers South. 

His father, also named Luis Bermudez, texted the AP saying “my son is a hero.” He also wrote on Facebook that he could not believe he’s gone. 

“Now rest in peace and without any obstacles in heaven,” he wrote. “I will see you soon my Luiyo.” 

Ortiz, 46, had just gotten married with Frankie Kleiman. Alex Garcia, the couple’s close friend, told The Miami Herald he had set them up on a blind date. Kleiman lived with his wife and stepson on the same floor as his brother Jay Kleiman, who was in town for a funeral, and their mother Nancy Kress Levin. The Kleimans and their mother are still missing. 

Ortiz was described as a woman who was committed to giving her son the best possible life. 

“She’s a rock star. And gorgeous,” Garcia told the Herald. “And on top of that a super mom.” 

Leo Soto, who created this memorial with grocery stores donating flowers and candles, pauses in front of photos of some of the missing people that he put on a fence, near the site of the disaster in Surfside, Fla., on Friday. (AP)

—- 

LEON and CRISTINA OLIWKOWICZ 

Leon Oliwkowicz, 80, and his wife Cristina Beatriz de Oliwkowicz, 74, lived on the 8th floor of the condo tower for several years, according to Venezuelan journalist Shirley Varnagy, a close friend of their family. 

They were among six Venezuelan natives caught in the building’s collapse. Still missing Monday were Moisés Rodán, 28; Andrés Levine, 27; Luis Sadovnik, 28, and his wife, Nicole Langesfeld, Varnagy said. 

Varnagy said the Oliwkowicz’s daughter had been outside the building waiting for some information about their fate. Her husband answered their phone and asked to be left alone. 

The couple’s daughter, Mrs. Leah Fouhal, works as a secretary at a Jewish school in the Rogers Park neighborhood of Chicago, where the couple donated a Torah in 2019 in a procession that included a vintage fire truck, music and a giant velvet and gold crown, according to COLlive.com, an Orthodox Jewish news outlet that covers Chabad-Lubavitch communities around the world. 

Meanwhile, the parents of Rodán, Levine and Sadovnik live in Venezuela and traveled to the U.S. Friday. “Some did not have a visa, others had an expired passport, but with diplomatic collaboration they were able to arrive,” Varnagy said. 

___ 

People pray late Saturday during a prayer vigil for the victims and families of the Champlain Towers collapsed building, at the nearby St. Joseph Catholic Church in Miami Beach, Fla.  (AP)

LINDA MARCH 

Among the missing was Linda March, who eagerly traded a cramped New York apartment for fresh air and ocean views after surviving a COVID-19 infection. She even bought a bright pink bicycle to cruise around Miami with, best friend Rochelle Laufer said. 

March rented Penthouse 4, and was using the second bedroom of the furnished apartment as her office, Laufer told The Associated Press on Sunday. 

Thursday’s partial collapse of the condominium building left the penthouse’s interior exposed, with bunk beds and an office chair still intact just inside the broken edge where the rest of the 12-story structure crumbled into a pile of debris. 

Another friend, Dawn Falco, said she had been talking on the phone with March until just two hours before the disaster. Falco said she immediately began searching for word on her friend, who she said never leaves the house “without a smile.” 

This undated photo provided by Dawn Falco shows Linda March, who is still missing in the collapse of a partial building in Surfside, outside Miami. Falco, said she and March had been talking on the phone until just two hours before the building crumbled.  (AP/Dawn Falco)

“My heart is breaking as I see the office chair that she just purchased next to the bunkbeds,” Falco said. 

Florida was a new start for the 58-year-old attorney. In the past decade, she’d lost her sister and mother to cancer, her father died a few years later and she and her husband divorced. She had no children. 

“She would say to me, ‘I’m all alone. I don’t have family,’ and I would say, ‘You’re my sister, you don’t have to be born sisters. And I said you always have me,’” Laufer recounted through tears. 

Laufer said March loved the ocean views but hated the incessant noise from nearby construction and had decided to break her lease. “She was looking for another apartment when this happened,” Laufer said sadly. 

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Still, Laufer had been planning to visit her friend this fall. 

“I joked I’m going to take the top bunk when I visit,” she said. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/miami-condo-collapse-officials-confirm-10th-victim

Tourists visiting Times Square on Monday expressed fears for their safety — and the city’s future — following the second shooting there in as many months.

“Worrying about getting killed in a crossfire was not on my itinerary when I booked this trip with my girlfriends — especially while touring the biggest attraction,” said Pat Flanagan of Cleveland.

“It’s actually more sad than scary because I want to see New York pick up again.”

Flanagan, 44, added: “Crime can be controlled if you control it. New York learned how to do it in the past, so why not now? It’s got the biggest police department in the country and it can’t stop people from firing guns in Times Square?”

“Right now, tourism is making a comeback after COVID,” she said.

“Don’t kill it by letting crime run rampant.”

Police at the scene of a shooting near 45th St. and 7th Avenue in Times Square.
William C. Lopez/NYPOST

Retired teacher Arthur Escalera of Harrisburg, Penn., who was vacationing with his wife, said Sunday’s shooting made it seem like “you’re in a city that’s lost the power to police itself.”

“We remember Times Square the way it was in the ‘70s and ‘80s, and if we had tickets to a Broadway show we would consider it a sort of walk on the wild side to walk down 42nd Street at night,” he said.

“But we never feared for our lives. Getting mugged was a fear, but death by a stray bullet? Never.”

Police patrol in Times Square following another daytime shooting yesterday in the popular tourist destination on June 28, 2021.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Meghan Nash, a dental hygienist from Charlotte, N.C. — who’s staying at a Hampton Inn just blocks from the scene of Sunday’s shooting — was unaware of the incident until learning about it from a reporter.

“That’s insane. That’s really terrible,” said Nash, 30.

The NYPD released additional footage of the suspect.
DCPI

“I knew crime was up but I didn’t think things had gotten so bad that people were firing guns in Times Square.”

Nash added, “I probably would have picked a different destination. I really just wanted to have fun, not worry about getting randomly killed by a stray bullet.”

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/06/28/tourists-react-to-times-square-shooting/

Investigators believe the man who killed a retired Massachusetts State Police trooper and a U.S. Air Force veteran in Winthrop on Saturday was motivated by hate and acted alone.

Suffolk County District Attorney Rachael Rollins said that David L. Green and 60-year-old Ramona Cooper were “executed” by 28-year-old Nathan Allen. He was later fatally shot by police after he crashed a stolen work truck into a building.

The shootings are being investigated as possible hate crimes because Rollins said “troubling white supremacist rhetoric” in Allen’s handwriting was discovered by investigators. That handwriting contained antisemitic statements and racist statements against Black people, according to Rollins.

Rollins said the only people killed by Allen were Black.

“It’s easy for you to possibly think, ‘This type of thing only happens in Charlotte, or, when we saw the insurrection on Jan. 6, that those were individuals from down south. This happened in Suffolk County,” Rollins said Monday. “This person had some very disturbing beliefs, white supremacist beliefs, regarding… members of our Jewish population as well as Black individuals.”

From the outside and on social media, sources tell 5 Investigates Allen exhibited no warning signs and had no criminal background.

They say there was nothing to indicate Allen was tied to any established hate group. Investigators believe he worked alone.

In response to the attack, officials announced several resources and events being made available to the community. Meredith Hurley, Winthrop’s Director of Public Health, said her office’s crisis intervention team will go door-to-door in the neighborhood and there will be drop-in services offered Wednesday at the Senior Center from 7 p.m. through 8 p.m.

A vigil is also scheduled for 7 p.m. Thursday at Winthrop Town Hall.

Winthrop police Chief Terence Delehanty said his department received a call shortly before 2:45 p.m. Saturday about the crash involving the stolen truck that leveled a building. He confirmed that no one was inside the building at the time of the crash.

After the crash, authorities said Allen exited the vehicle and proceeded to get away. At some point shortly thereafter, Allen is believed to have shot Cooper and Green. Green was pronounced dead at the scene, while Cooper was transported to Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, where she was later pronounced dead.

Delehanty said one victim, later identified as Cooper, was found by Winthrop police on Shirley Street, about a half-block away from the scene of the crash. Green, meanwhile, was engaged by the suspect in an alleyway between two houses that was further down the street.

According to Rollins, Cooper was shot three times in the back and Green was shot four times in the head and three times in his torso.

Police then engaged Allen, who Delehanty said was armed with two weapons, and at least one officer, a Winthrop police sergeant, shot him at the intersection of Shirley Street and Veterans Road. Allen was transported to Mass General, where he died of his injuries.

At this time, investigators believe Allen acted alone in the crash and shootings. Rollins said Allen was “not on my radar” and that he had a lawful license to carry that transferred to another town, meaning he had nothing on his background check.

In a statement, MSP Superintendent Col. Christopher Mason said Green was murdered outside of his Beach Road home.

According to Mason, Green had an honorable 36-year career in law enforcement and retired on Dec. 31, 2016. He became a Metropolitan District Commission police officer in 1980 and became a state trooper 12 years later when the MDC police were merged into the MSP.

Green spent much of his MSP career assigned to the Boston State Police Barracks at Leverett Circle, Mason said.

Rollins said law enforcement stood around Green’s body at the scene of the shooting. Police officers, firefighters and emergency medical technicians lined Albany Street in Boston as Green’s body was being transported to the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.

People also left flowers at the site of the crash and the spot where Green was fatally shot.

“Trooper David Green more than upheld the ideals of integrity, professionalism, and service to others that are the hallmarks of a great Trooper. We are heartbroken by his loss and offer our condolences to his family and friends,” Mason said in his statement.

Nick Tsiotos, a longtime friend of Green’s, says he had coffee with him Saturday morning and that the retired trooper, who was also a military veteran, was sitting with friends when he heard the crash and decided to help.

“He thought there was a crash and did not have his weapon with him, obviously,” Tsiotos said. “He went out and tried to do what he was doing for 36 years with the state police: trying to help save lives and help save people.”

Witnesses say once Green realized Allen was armed, he tried to stop the gunman from hurting his friends and neighbors, ultimately losing his life in the process.

“I really believe he saved people’s lives because this gunman was deranged,” Tsiotos said. “Dave probably stopped him from going into homes and killing people.

“There was no better human being than Dave Green,” Tsiotos added. “He really fulfilled everything that was good, the best of humanity.”

Cooper’s son said she was a mother, grandmother and sister, adding, “My mother was a good person. She would help anyone who needed it. She was caring and selfless.”

Rollins said Cooper rose to the rank of staff sergeant in the Air Force and that she was still involved in the military.

One of Cooper’s neighbors, who is also a military veteran, tells NewsCenter 5 that Cooper was a Veterans Affairs employee.

“This is a sad day,” Rollins said Sunday. “These two people protected our rights. They fought for us to be safe and to have the opinions that we have, and they were executed. We will find out why and find out more about this man that did this.”

Another vehicle was involved in the crash with the stolen truck. The two occupants of that vehicle were transported to an area hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

According to Rollins, Allen was traveling at a rate twice the speed limit in the stolen truck and was heading in the direction of Jewish temples.

“We don’t know where he was going. That is mere speculation,” Rollins said Sunday. “We do know that he had antisemitic rhetoric written in his own hand.”

Sources tell 5 Investigates Allen went out Friday night and never came home.

Allen’s license to carry a weapon was renewed in Winthrop last year, according to 5 Investigates’ sources.

A Winthrop police sergeant who shot Allen was taken to an area hospital to be evaluated, but Delehanty said the officer was not seriously injured.

“It was extremely heroic. He’s a great police officer. He’s a great sergeant. He isolated a significant threat to this community and ended that threat,” Delehanty said Sunday.

“It’s something that we don’t wake up in the morning wishing to do,” the police chief added. “Again, (no officer) was physically harmed, but we are emotionally harmed by our actions that are necessary to protect the community. We want to make sure he’s taken care of today, tomorrow and in the future.”

The sergeant will be placed on administrative leave while Rollins’ office investigates the shooting, per standard procedure. Rollins did say that investigators believe the officer who shot Allen told the suspect to put his gun down multiple times.

The Winthrop Police Department, Massachusetts State Police and Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office are investigating the shooting.

Source Article from https://www.wcvb.com/article/winthrop-massachusetts-shooting-june-28-2021/36860219

“We asked, ‘Is there anything else?’” Fischetti told POLITICO. “They said, ‘No.’”

“It’s crazy that that’s all they had,” he added.

When asked if the meeting touched on allegations made by Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen and by adult film star and director Stormy Daniels, Fischetti replied, “Nothing. Not a word on that.”

Fischetti also said that Vance’s team told him they will not bring charges against Trump himself when the first indictment comes down.

“They just said, ‘When this indictment comes down, he won’t be charged. Our investigation is ongoing,’” he said.

A spokesperson for Vance’s office declined to comment.

Vance’s team has told lawyers for Trump that they will proceed with charges unless persuaded otherwise today, according to The Washington Post. Fischetti told POLITICO he expects charges to come this week or next.

“It’s like the Shakespeare play Much Ado About Nothing,” Fischetti added. “This is so small that I can’t believe I’m going to have to try a case like this.”

Vance has spent years investigating the Trump Organization. His team went to the Supreme Court to get authorization to seize Trump’s personal tax returns — meaning his investigators know more than just about anyone about the former president’s finances. The Washington Post reported last month that Vance’s office convened a grand jury to decide whether or not to bring charges against the Trump Organization or Trump himself.

In recent weeks, the probe has drawn increased media attention. The former daughter-in-law of the Trump Organization’s chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, has shared reams of documents with investigators.

Since the earliest days of Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, his finances have generated intense interest and speculation. The president refused to publicly release his tax returns, but The New York Times obtained records indicating he used “questionable measures” to lower his tax bills.

In February 2019, Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen testified to Congress that Trump exaggerated his wealth to lower his insurance premiums, as The Washington Post detailed. Those allegations set off alarm bells among legal observers, who said they could land Trump in serious legal jeopardy. But in the years since, federal authorities have not brought charges against Trump or his associates related to the allegations. And now, Trump’s personal lawyer says Manhattan authorities have indicated they won’t bring such charges in the immediate future.

Trump’s finances also faced intense scrutiny after news broke that Cohen allegedly paid “hush money” to Stormy Daniels and another woman so they would not speak publicly about affairs with Trump. (Trump denies having had affairs with the women.) Outside legal experts said the payments could have been legally problematic for Trump, and Cohen pleaded guilty to breaking campaign laws when he made the payments.

CNN reported that Vance’s investigators have been looking at Cohen’s and Daniels’s allegations. Vance’s team could still charge the Trump Organization with those related crimes. But for now, according to Trump’s lawyer, those charges do not appear to be immediately forthcoming.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/06/28/trump-lawyer-manhattan-da-wont-charge-496768

Amazon is turning part of its Seattle headquarters into a public cooling center as the Pacific Northwest grapples with a record-breaking heat wave.

The air-conditioned cooling center is set up at the Amazon Meeting Center, which is part of the company’s South Lake Union campus in downtown Seattle. The site has room for up to 1,000 individuals, according to the city of Seattle’s website. Many homes in the area lack air conditioning, as Seattle’s climate is usually temperate.

The meeting center is a stone’s throw from the Amazon Spheres, or the glass orbs that anchor its downtown Seattle campus. Amazon previously converted the meeting center into a pop-up clinic to administer Covid-19 vaccines earlier this year.

Unprecedented heat waves are sweeping the Pacific Northwest, pushing daytime temperatures into the triple digits and causing power outages in some parts of the region. Temperatures in Seattle ticked above 100 degrees on Monday, marking the first time on record the city has had three consecutive triple-digit days, according to the National Weather Service.

Prior to this week, the city only had three days in the last 126 years where the temperature hit 100, according to an National Weather Service spokesperson quoted by Scientific American. Scientists say that climate change is making such extreme high temperatures more common.

Even with the intense heat, Amazon warehouses in Kent, Washington, remained open, The Seattle Times reported on Sunday. One facility in the Kent warehouse complex ran “power hours” in some departments, where workers were asked to move as quickly as possible for an hour, in order to juice productivity, the Times reported, citing workers at the facility. Amazon spokesperson Maria Boschetti denied that the company ran power hours at that facility.

Elsewhere, Portland on Sunday saw temperatures reach a record high of 112 degrees, just one day after hitting a high temperature of 108 degrees. The National Weather Service expects that temperatures in Portland could climb as high as 114 degrees on Monday, breaking the heat record for the third consecutive day.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/06/28/amazon-turns-headquarters-into-cooling-center-amid-seattle-heat-wave.html

Tourists visiting Times Square on Monday expressed fears for their safety — and the city’s future — following the second shooting there in as many months.

“Worrying about getting killed in a crossfire was not on my itinerary when I booked this trip with my girlfriends — especially while touring the biggest attraction,” said Pat Flanagan of Cleveland.

“It’s actually more sad than scary because I want to see New York pick up again.”

Flanagan, 44, added: “Crime can be controlled if you control it. New York learned how to do it in the past, so why not now? It’s got the biggest police department in the country and it can’t stop people from firing guns in Times Square?”

“Right now, tourism is making a comeback after COVID,” she said.

“Don’t kill it by letting crime run rampant.”

Police at the scene of a shooting near 45th St. and 7th Avenue in Times Square.
William C. Lopez/NYPOST

Retired teacher Arthur Escalera of Harrisburg, Penn., who was vacationing with his wife, said Sunday’s shooting made it seem like “you’re in a city that’s lost the power to police itself.”

“We remember Times Square the way it was in the ‘70s and ‘80s, and if we had tickets to a Broadway show we would consider it a sort of walk on the wild side to walk down 42nd Street at night,” he said.

“But we never feared for our lives. Getting mugged was a fear, but death by a stray bullet? Never.”

Police patrol in Times Square following another daytime shooting yesterday in the popular tourist destination on June 28, 2021.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Meghan Nash, a dental hygienist from Charlotte, N.C. — who’s staying at a Hampton Inn just blocks from the scene of Sunday’s shooting — was unaware of the incident until learning about it from a reporter.

“That’s insane. That’s really terrible,” said Nash, 30.

The NYPD released additional footage of the suspect.
DCPI

“I knew crime was up but I didn’t think things had gotten so bad that people were firing guns in Times Square.”

Nash added, “I probably would have picked a different destination. I really just wanted to have fun, not worry about getting randomly killed by a stray bullet.”

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/06/28/tourists-react-to-times-square-shooting/

WASHINGTON — In November 2014, Gavin Grimm, then a high school sophomore, approached the lectern at a meeting of the school board in Gloucester County, Virginia. Standing with his hands in his pockets, he explained that as a transgender teen, being forced to use bathrooms at school besides the one that matched his gender was “alienating” and “humiliating.”

“All I want to do is be a normal child and use the restroom in peace,” he said, noting that no students had given him trouble about this, only adults. “I’m just a human. I am just a boy.”

Seven years later, Grimm won. The US Supreme Court released an order on Monday rejecting a petition from the school board to hear the case after Grimm prevailed in the lower courts; the order leaves in place a federal appeals court decision last summer finding the school board violated his constitutional rights. The justices usually don’t specify how they voted when they decline to hear a case, but Justices Samuel Alito Jr. and Clarence Thomas noted that they would have agreed to take it up, a sign that they were open to the school board’s position.

Speaking by phone shortly after Monday’s order, Grimm, now a 22-year-old activist and educator, said he didn’t regret taking on the board at such a young age and felt “joy” and “honor” about his role in the fight. But now that he could look back on the experience as an adult, he said it was also “really important that we highlight that that should not have happened to a child.”

“What an ugly horrible world we live in that that happened to a child. What a nightmare it is that this child has now become the mouthpiece of a movement countering hatred against his very personhood, the validity of his happiness and joy and who he is,” Grimm said.

Asked if he had advice for other teen activists, he warned about burnout and urged them to take care of themselves, too: “You have to preserve yourself to push forward.”

Grimm said he isn’t sure what is next for him, but in the short term, he is taking care of his sick cat and hopes to get his driver’s license by the end of the year; long-term, he said he wants to pursue a career as an English teacher, but he isn’t enrolled in school for that yet.

“My life has been unexpected from moment to moment for a very long time,” he said. “At this point, I need a crystal ball to tell you what happens with me.”

In a series of tweets immediately responding to the court’s order, Grimm thanked the “too many people [who] played integral roles in our success and too many people who loved me so much.”

The school board released a statement declining to comment on the Supreme Court’s order.

The Supreme Court’s decision not to hear the case means there won’t be any nationwide resolution from the court for now about how schools must treat transgender students. The order comes as Republicans have shifted the fight from bathrooms to sports, attempting to ban transgender student-athletes from playing on teams the correspond to their gender in several states.

Monday’s order left intact an August 2020 decision from the US Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit that featured strong language supporting constitutional protections for transgender children against discriminatory treatment at school. The precedent set by the court in Grimm’s case covers states that fall within the circuit — Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, and West Virginia — and will provide a roadmap for courts elsewhere in future fights over transgender rights.

“The proudest moments of the federal judiciary have been when we affirm the burgeoning values of our bright youth, rather than preserve the prejudices of the past,” 4th Circuit Judge Henry Floyd wrote in last summer’s decision. “How shallow a promise of equal protection that would not protect Grimm from the fantastical fears and unfounded prejudices of his adult community.”

Grimm, represented by the American Civil Liberties Union, sued the school board near the end of his sophomore year in June 2015. He’d gotten permission from his high school to use the boys’ bathroom, and did so for the first few weeks of his sophomore year without a problem, according to court records in his case. But then adults in the community learned about him and complained.

At public school board hearings, community members insulted Grimm and threatened to oust board members if they supported him. The board voted 6–1 in favor of a policy that banned Grimm from using the boys’ bathroom. His high school eventually added unisex single-stall bathrooms, but they weren’t located where he took most classes and he told the court that he felt “stigmatized and isolated”; he had multiple urinary tract infections from avoiding the bathroom at school and was at one point hospitalized because of suicidal ideation.

In the years that followed, the case moved up and down in the appeals courts. Judges weighed how to apply guidance issued by the Department of Education under former president Barack Obama directing schools to “treat transgender students consistent with their gender identity” under Title IX, the federal law that prohibits sex discrimination in federally funded education — and what it meant for Grimm’s case when the Trump administration later rescinded that policy.

Finally, in August 2019, a federal district judge ruled that the school board’s bathroom policy and its refusal to issue records that reflected Grimm’s correct gender violated his constitutional rights. The school board appealed to the 4th Circuit, which issued the 2–1 decision in Grimm’s favor a year later finding the policies were sex-based discrimination in violation of the Constitution’s equal protection guarantee as well as Title IX.

4th Circuit Judge James Wynn Jr., who joined Floyd’s majority opinion, wrote separately to compare Grimm’s treatment to previous eras of racial discrimination.

“No less than the recent historical practice of segregating Black and white restrooms, schools, and other public accommodations, the unequal treatment enabled by the Board’s policy produces a vicious and ineradicable stigma,” Wynn wrote.

Josh Block, a senior staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union LGBTQ & HIV Project, said in a statement that the Supreme Court’s order allowing the 4th Circuit ruling to stand was an “incredible victory” for transgender students, and vowed that the organization would continue to challenge laws targeting transgender teens.

Source Article from https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/zoetillman/gavin-grimm-transgender-student-rights-supreme-court

The bodies of 10 people have been recovered after an oceanfront condominium building suddenly buckled and collapsed on Thursday, June 24, in Surfside, Florida. 

As of Monday, June 28, there were 151 people unaccounted for, as desperate families continued their vigil in the beachfront barrier island community.

Workers continued, in relentless 12-hour shifts, sifting through the rubble and listening for signs of life in the search for possible survivors. As the search for survivors continues, authorities have begun to release the identities of the deceased.

This list will be updated as USA TODAY Network reporters continue to share more stories about those who died after the tower collapsed. 

Stacie Dawn Fang

The first victim to be identified; her 15-year-old son was pulled alive from the wreckage 

Stacie Fang, 54, was the vice president of Customer Relationship Management Conference, a company that produces an annual event in Chicago for customer relationship management retail and marketing executives. She had worked at the Surfside-based firm for 12 years. 

A spokesperson for the Miami-Dade Medical Examiner Department told the New York Times that Fang had been pulled from the wreckage of the condo and taken to Aventura Hospital and Medical Center, where she was later pronounced dead of blunt force trauma.

Fang’s teen son is a sophomore, junior-varsity baseball player at a local high school, according to Miami’s WSVN. The boy was rescued by a man who was walking his dog near the building at the time of the collapse.

Read more about Stacie here. 

Antonio and Gladys Lozano

The couple would have celebrated their 59th wedding anniversary in July

Antonio, 83, and Gladys, 79, lived in unit 903 in the South tower. The couple was among a group of older Cubans who lived in the condo complex.

Their son, Sergio Lozano, said if there’s any solace in their deaths, it’s in knowing the two “went together and went quickly.”

Sergio was able to have dinner with his parents just hours before the collapse Thursday morning. He lives in the Champlain Towers sister condo building across the way and could see his parents’ place from his balcony.

The couple is survived by their sons, Sergio and Antonio Jr., grandson Brian and other family members. 

Read more about the Lozanos here.

Manuel ‘Manny’ LaFont

The father of two said he wanted his life to mean something

Manuel LaFont, 54, once told a reporter, “When I die, I want to say that my life meant something. I want to help people. I want to do something good in this world.”

LaFont grew up in Houston before moving to South Florida. He owned condo unit 801 and was hailed as a devoted father, a coach and a business consultant, according to the Miami Herald. 

LaFont’s ex-wife said on social media she had picked up their two children, Mia, 13, and Santi, 10, at Champlain Towers only hours before the collapse.

According to the Miami Herald, Manny LaFont could often be found on the baseball diamond, playing with his son, whose team — The Astros at North Shore Park — he coached. Together, they shared a passion for the game. He told Adriana he planned to take Santi fishing soon. 

LaFont worked at Lindsay Transportation Solutions, where he led a roadway safety division. He also was a parishioner at St. Patrick Catholic Church in Miami Beach.

Read more about Manuel here. 

Related coverage 

Here are links to some of our recent stories about this tragedy.

How to help victims of Surfside devastation, things to know

‘We were racing against time’: New Jersey family lives to tell of harrowing escape from collapsing Florida condo building

Collapsed Miami condo had been sinking into Earth as early as the 1990s, researchers say

Inspection reports for collapsed Miami-area condo detail ‘major structural damage’ over garage

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/in-depth/news/nation/2021/06/28/victims-surfside-florida-condo-building-collapse-obituaries/7783658002/

Last year, the Supreme Court for the first time ruled in favor of transgender rights, saying that a federal employment discrimination law applied to L.G.B.T.Q. workers. But Justice Neil M. Gorsuch, writing for the majority, said the ruling did not address access to restrooms.

“We do not purport to address bathrooms, locker rooms or anything else of the kind,” he wrote.

Mr. Grimm welcomed the Supreme Court’s rejection of the school board’s appeal in the case, Grimm v. Gloucester County School Board, No. 20-1163.

“I am glad that my yearslong fight to have my school see me for who I am is over,” he said. “Being forced to use the nurse’s room, a private bathroom and the girls’ room was humiliating for me, and having to go to out-of-the-way bathrooms severely interfered with my education. Trans youth deserve to use the bathroom in peace without being humiliated and stigmatized by their own school boards and elected officials.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/28/us/politics/supreme-court-transgender-bathroom-rights.html

PORTLAND, Ore., June 28 (Reuters) – Temperatures were expected to shatter records in the Pacific Northwest again on Monday, bringing the city of Portland to a standstill as residents hunkered down in air conditioned homes or cooling centers.

One day after Portland saw temperatures reach 112 degrees F (44.5 degrees Celsius) on Sunday, the hottest recorded there since daily record-keeping began in 1940, the National Weather Service predicted more of the same for Monday.

“To put it in perspective, today will likely go down in history as the hottest day ever recorded for places such as Seattle, WA and Portland, OR,” the weather service said in its forecast for the region.

The heat has been attributed to a dome of atmospheric high pressure over the upper U.S. Northwest and Canada, similar to conditions that punished California and southwestern states earlier this month.

The Canadian city of Vancouver also set an all-time heat record on Sunday and was not expected to cool off until Tuesday.

Portland, known for rainy weather and sparse sunshine, was especially ill-prepared to handle the high temperatures. Stores sold out of air conditioning units and ice was hard to find.

Bars and restaurants closed because kitchen vents could not keep up with the rising temperatures, creating dangerous conditions for cooks.

“It’s completely shutting down our life; my kids are stuck inside,” said Jake Edgar, 30, a chef at a Portland restaurant.

Multnomah County, which includes Portland, has opened 11 emergency “cooling shelters,” most of them in public libraries, where residents without air conditioning could escape the sweltering heat.

Oregon Governor Kate Brown, a Democrat, eased COVID-19 restrictions for theaters, swimming pools and shopping malls and residents flocked to public pools and even fountains to cool off.

But Portland Parks and Recreation closed down public swimming pools on Monday after several lifeguards experienced heat-related illnesses, the agency said.

Some companies with AC stayed open as informal cooling shelters for employees, said Sarah Shaoul, co-founder of Bricks Need Mortar, a business advocacy and consulting group.

In Seattle, Washington state’s largest city, the mercury climbed on Sunday to an all-time high of 104 degrees F, surpassing a 2009 record of 103 degrees.

The state capital of Olympia likewise set a new benchmark high of 105 degrees, exceeding its 2009 record by 1 degree, according to the Weather Service.

The heat wave was expected to ease somewhat west of the Cascade range by Tuesday but persist through the week to the east of those mountains, it added.

Experts say extreme weather events such as the heatwaves that have descended on parts of the United States this year cannot be linked directly to climate change.

But more unusual weather patterns could become more common amid rising global temperatures, weather service meteorologist Eric Schoening told Reuters in an interview this month.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/us/pacific-northwest-cities-grind-halt-record-heat-2021-06-28/

“We asked, ‘Is there anything else?’” Fischetti told POLITICO. “They said, ‘No.’”

“It’s crazy that that’s all they had,” he added.

When asked if the meeting touched on allegations made by Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen and by adult film star and director Stormy Daniels, Fischetti replied, “Nothing. Not a word on that.”

Fischetti also said that Vance’s team told him they will not bring charges against Trump himself when the first indictment comes down.

“They just said, ‘When this indictment comes down, he won’t be charged. Our investigation is ongoing,’” he said.

A spokesperson for Vance’s office declined to comment.

Vance’s team has told lawyers for Trump that they will proceed with charges unless persuaded otherwise today, according to The Washington Post. Fischetti told POLITICO he expects charges to come this week or next.

“It’s like the Shakespeare play Much Ado About Nothing,” Fischetti added. “This is so small that I can’t believe I’m going to have to try a case like this.”

Vance has spent years investigating the Trump Organization. His team went to the Supreme Court to get authorization to seize Trump’s personal tax returns — meaning his investigators know more than just about anyone about the former president’s finances. The Washington Post reported last month that Vance’s office convened a grand jury to decide whether or not to bring charges against the Trump Organization or Trump himself.

In recent weeks, the probe has drawn increased media attention. The former daughter-in-law of the Trump Organization’s chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, has shared reams of documents with investigators.

Since the earliest days of Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, his finances have generated intense interest and speculation. The president refused to publicly release his tax returns, but The New York Times obtained records indicating he used “questionable measures” to lower his tax bills.

In February 2019, Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen testified to Congress that Trump exaggerated his wealth to lower his insurance premiums, as The Washington Post detailed. Those allegations set off alarm bells among legal observers, who said they could land Trump in serious legal jeopardy. But in the years since, federal authorities have not brought charges against Trump or his associates related to the allegations. And now, Trump’s personal lawyer says Manhattan authorities have indicated they won’t bring such charges in the immediate future.

Trump’s finances also faced intense scrutiny after news broke that Cohen allegedly paid “hush money” to Stormy Daniels and another woman so they would not speak publicly about affairs with Trump. (Trump denies having had affairs with the women.) Outside legal experts said the payments could have been legally problematic for Trump, and Cohen pleaded guilty to breaking campaign laws when he made the payments.

CNN reported that Vance’s investigators have been looking at Cohen’s and Daniels’s allegations. Vance’s team could still charge the Trump Organization with those related crimes. But for now, according to Trump’s lawyer, those charges do not appear to be immediately forthcoming.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/06/28/trump-lawyer-manhattan-da-wont-charge-496768

As the highly contagious delta variant of the coronavirus gained traction around the world, the World Health Organization urged vaccinated people to continue to wear masks and social distance, according to reports. 

“Vaccine alone won’t stop community transmission,” Dr. Mariangela Simao, WHO’s assistant director-general for access to medicines and health products, said during a briefing in Geneva, according to CNBC. “People need to continue to use masks consistently, be in ventilated spaces, hand hygiene … the physical distance, avoid crowding. This still continues to be extremely important, even if you’re vaccinated when you have a community transmission ongoing.”

Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus on Friday called the delta variant “the most transmissible of the variants identified so far … and is spreading rapidly among unvaccinated populations,” the Voice of America reported. 

The recommendation comes weeks after the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said vaccinated people can go most places without masks. However, federal mandates remain on airplanes, for example. 

The recommendation comes weeks after the CDC said vaccinated people can go most places without masks.AFP via Getty Images

The US has a higher vaccination rate than many countries struggling with the variant and daily infection rates have fallen sharply in the US in the last few months as more Americans have gotten the vaccine. 

At least 53.9 percent of the US population has received at least one dose of the vaccine, 63 percent of Americans over 12 as of Saturday, according to the CDC. Children under 12 are not yet eligible for the vaccine. 

Nearly all virus-related deaths by May were from unvaccinated people, an analysis from The Associated Press found. Deaths of vaccinated people was 0.1 percent of the total. 

The Delta variant has primarily taken hold in countries that haven’t been able to beef up their vaccine numbers but it has spread to the US. 

In the United Kingdom, the variant is now responsible for 90 percent of all new infections. In the US, it represents 20 percent of infections and health officials say it could become the country’s dominant type as well.

The vaccines are considered “highly effective” against the delta variant, according to a recent study by the British government, although slightly less than the original strain. 

But the WHO urged those vaccinated to “play it safe” and wear a mask because so many remain unvaccinated globally and the variant has become the main spreader in several countries, CNBC reported. 

Australia, New Zealand, Bangladesh, Portugal and Israel have all been forced to return to some form of lockdown because of the variant, which originated in India, according to Voice of America

It’s not clear yet whether the variant makes people sicker since more data needs to be collected, said Dr. Jacob John, who studies viruses at the Christian Medical College at Vellore in southern India.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/06/28/who-recommends-masks-even-for-vaccinated-people-because-of-delta-variant/

  • Mitch McConnell jeopardized Joe Biden’s bipartisan infrastructure deal on Monday.
  • Biden said last Thursday that the deal was tied to another, Democratic-only reconciliation bill.
  • After Biden walked those comments back, McConnell insisted Pelosi and Schumer have to follow suit.
  • See more stories on Insider’s business page.

President Joe Biden toiled for months on bipartisan negotiations before saying “we have a deal” on a $1 trillion infrastructure package last week. But when the president explicitly linked that deal to a separate Democratic-only spending package, it looked in danger just a day later.

Biden walked back his comments over the weekend, reassuring many Republicans and saving the deal. But Mitch McConnell had a fresh demand on Monday.

On Monday morning, the Senate Minority Leader called on Biden to ensure Congressional Democrats follow his lead.

The Kentucky Republican released a statement saying Biden had “appropriately” reversed course from his comments on Thursday linking the two bills. 

McConnell demanded Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi should also “walk-back their threats” to only move the bipartisan agreement and a Democrat-only package side-by-side.

He added that Biden’s attempt to reassure the GOP “would be a hollow gesture” if Pelosi and Schumer didn’t adopt the same approach. “The President cannot let congressional Democrats hold a bipartisan bill hostage over a separate and partisan process,” he said.

McConnell further explained his position from Louisville, Kentucky. “I appreciate the president saying that he’s willing to deal with infrastructure separately, but he doesn’t control the Congress, and the speaker and the majority leader of the Senate will determine the order,” he said.

The pair of remarks are the latest salvo hitting the $1 trillion infrastructure deal only four days after it was tentatively forged between Biden and a centrist faction of Democratic and GOP senators. McConnell hasn’t explicitly said he either favors or opposes the plan, and he’s largely attacked it on procedural grounds so far.

But he’s attempting to ward off a separate plan that Democrats are poised to muscle through reconciliation, a strenuous legislative procedure allowing the Senate to clear budgetary bills on a simple majority vote. It will likely include tax hikes on wealthy Americans and corporations, along with spending on childcare, education, and healthcare.

McConnell’s opposition may potentially derail the package, as it could depress support among Republicans for the deal. A total of 11 Senate Republicans signed onto the deal, and securing its passage will be tougher with any defections.

On Saturday, Biden backed down from his threat to reject the package and said he had never meant to give that impression. “I gave my word to support the infrastructure plan, and that’s what I intend to do,” Biden said in a statement.

Still, Schumer and Pelosi have long said they are operating on two tracks: approving the bipartisan deal and the follow-up party-line package. Progressives like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez are pressing Democrats to not scale down their political and economic ambitions to secure GOP votes.

Pelosi on Thursday said “There ain’t gonna be no bipartisan bill, unless we are going to have the reconciliation bill.”

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/mitch-mcconnell-bipartisan-infrastructure-deal-biden-congress-2021-6

SURFSIDE, Fla.—Rescue crews combed the dense rubble of the collapsed Miami-area condo tower Monday morning, searching for survivors from above and below as the recovery efforts entered their fifth day.

The death toll from the partial collapse of Champlain Towers South is 10, with 151 people unaccounted for. The Miami-Dade Police Department released the names late Sunday of four more previously recovered residents who died in the collapse: Leon Oliwkowicz, 80 years old; Luis Bermudez, 26; Anna Ortiz, 46; and Christina Beatriz Elvira, 74.

Investigators pressed ahead Monday with efforts to identify the cause of the failure. Emails released by the town Sunday included correspondence from the condo board and town officials in recent years that show residents were concerned about the effects of nearby construction.

On Monday morning, streets were blocked and a section of beach was barricaded both north and south of the collapsed tower. At one roadblock, someone posted a handwritten note thanking rescue workers, saying. “Please Don’t Give Up.”

Miami-Dade County Commission Chair Jose “Pepe” Diaz said he and other elected officials met Monday with families waiting for news of the missing. “The pain in their face, their expressions, it’s unlike anything I’ve seen before,” he said. “It’s very difficult to know that a loved one could still be alive….and just sit there and wait.”

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/miami-condo-collapse-rescue-fifth-day-11624887471

Last year, the Supreme Court for the first time ruled in favor of transgender rights, saying that a federal employment discrimination law applied to L.G.B.T.Q. workers. But Justice Neil M. Gorsuch, writing for the majority, said the ruling did not address access to restrooms.

“We do not purport to address bathrooms, locker rooms or anything else of the kind,” he wrote.

Mr. Grimm welcomed the Supreme Court’s rejection of the school board’s appeal in the case, Grimm v. Gloucester County School Board, No. 20-1163.

“I am glad that my yearslong fight to have my school see me for who I am is over,” he said. “Being forced to use the nurse’s room, a private bathroom and the girls’ room was humiliating for me, and having to go to out-of-the-way bathrooms severely interfered with my education. Trans youth deserve to use the bathroom in peace without being humiliated and stigmatized by their own school boards and elected officials.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/28/us/politics/supreme-court-transgender-bathroom-rights.html

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnellAddison (Mitch) Mitchell McConnellTrump calls Barr ‘a disappointment in every sense of the word’ Headaches mount for Biden in spending fight Biden adviser on president signing bill: ‘I don’t think it’s a yes-or-no question’ MORE (R-Ky.) on Monday demanded that Senate Majority Leader Charles SchumerChuck SchumerThe Innovation and Competition Act is progressive policy Infrastructure deal: Major climate win that tees up more in reconciliation bill Democrats seek to calm nervous left MORE (D-N.Y.) and House Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy PelosiPhotos of the Week: Infrastructure, Britney Spears and Sen. Tillis’s dog Headaches mount for Biden in spending fight Wallace has contentious interview with GOP lawmaker: Aren’t you the ones defunding the police? MORE (D-Calif.) de-link a bipartisan infrastructure deal from a sweeping Democratic-only bill.

McConnell’s statement is the first he’s made since President BidenJoe BidenTrump calls Barr ‘a disappointment in every sense of the word’ Last foreign scientist to work at Wuhan lab: ‘What people are saying is just not how it is’ Toyota defends donations to lawmakers who objected to certifying election MORE walked back his pledge that he wouldn’t sign the bipartisan deal if it was the only thing that came to his desk, saying over the weekend that the veto threat wasn’t his “intent.”

But McConnell, in his statement, argued that without a similar de-linking of the two parts of the Democratic infrastructure plan by congressional leadership that Biden’s remarks would be a “hollow gesture,” in the latest sign that the bipartisan deal isn’t yet back on firm footing.

“Unless Leader Schumer and Speaker Pelosi walk-back their threats that they will refuse to send the president a bipartisan infrastructure bill unless they also separately pass trillions of dollars for unrelated tax hikes, wasteful spending, and Green New Deal socialism, then President Biden’s walk-back of his veto threat would be a hollow gesture,” McConnell said in a statement.

“The President cannot let congressional Democrats hold a bipartisan bill hostage over a separate and partisan process,” he added. 

McConnell’s rhetoric was immediately picked up by other Republicans, who are hoping to squeeze Democrats on their infrastructure strategy. 

“Joe Biden reversed his threat to veto a bipartisan infrastructure bill if it isn’t accompanied by a $6 trillion socialist boondoggle. Will Speaker Pelosi do the same?” the National Republican Campaign Committee, the House GOP’s campaign arm, asked in an email blast to reporters on Monday.

Democrats are pursuing a two-track infrastructure plan: On one track is the bipartisan deal that would cost approximately $1.2 trillion over eight years with more than $570 billion in new spending. 

On the second track is a sweeping multitrillion-dollar bill that Democrats plan to use under reconciliation, which allows them to bypass the 60-vote legislative filibuster. To unlock that option, Democrats will need all 50 members of their Senate caucus united so they can move without Republicans. 

McConnell said during a separate press conference on Monday that there was “bipartisan support for a significant infrastructure package” and that he would “like to see us get there” but Democratic leaders had to agree to de-link the two plans. 

“I appreciate the president saying that he’s willing to deal with infrastructure separately but he doesn’t control the Congress. And the speaker and the majority leader of the Senate will determine the order,” McConnell said. 

McConnell, pointing back to negotiations Biden had with Republican senators, added that “there was no agreement” that the bipartisan plan be linked to a Democratic-only bill.  

Schumer has said the Senate will vote on the bipartisan bill and a budget resolution that greenlights and includes the instructions for a second, larger Democratic-only bill in July. The Senate would still need to pass the sweeping multitrillion-dollar bill, which could get pushed into the fall. 

Budget Committee Democrats are expected to talk on the phone this week as they try to hash out the details of the budget resolution, according to Sen. Tim KaineTimothy (Tim) Michael KaineHeadaches mount for Biden in spending fight Infrastructure breakthrough marks victory for political center Democrats hit wall on voting rights push MORE (D-Va.), a member of the panel. 

Under pressure from progressives — who worry their priorities like climate change and expanding Medicare will get left behind if the two tracks are uncoupled — Pelosi vowed that she will not move a bipartisan bill until the Senate passes the more sweeping plan. 

“Let me be really clear on this: We will not take up a bill in the House until the Senate passes the bipartisan bill and a reconciliation bill. If there is no bipartisan bill, then we’ll just go when the Senate passes a reconciliation bill,” Pelosi said late last week. 

A spokesman clarified that she was talking about the Democratic infrastructure plan itself and not just the budget resolution.

Republicans involved in the bipartisan negotiations signaled over the weekend that they were accepting Biden’s walk back.

Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) said on Sunday that he was “blindsided” by Biden’s comments but added that he was “very glad to see the president clarify his remarks because it was inconsistent with everything that we had been told all along the way.”

But other Republicans involved in the larger gang of 21 senators, who put out a statement endorsing the deal, have suggested they want commitments from Sens. Joe ManchinJoe ManchinGreen groups shift energy to reconciliation package Ocasio-Cortez says Sinema wrong with defense of filibuster Photos of the Week: Infrastructure, Britney Spears and Sen. Tillis’s dog MORE (D-W.Va.) and Kyrsten SinemaKyrsten SinemaGreen groups shift energy to reconciliation package Ocasio-Cortez says Sinema wrong with defense of filibuster Headaches mount for Biden in spending fight MORE (D-Ariz.) that the bipartisan deal and the reconciliation bill won’t be linked.

And McConnell, in his statement, urged Biden to try to get a similar commitment from Democratic leaders.

“The President has appropriately delinked a potential bipartisan infrastructure bill from the massive, unrelated tax-and-spend plans that Democrats want to pursue on a partisan basis. Now I am calling on President Biden to engage Leader Schumer and Speaker Pelosi and make sure they follow his lead,” McConnell said.

Some Senate Democrats immediately panned McConnell’s remarks.

“McConnell having a hard time coming to terms with the fact he’s not the Majority Leader anymore,” Sen. Chris MurphyChristopher (Chris) Scott MurphyHeadaches mount for Biden in spending fight Biden: ‘Not my intent’ to imply veto for bipartisan infrastructure package Biden says he won’t sign bipartisan bill without reconciliation bill MORE (D-Conn.) tweeted

“It’s a real shame we couldn’t pass everything in the bipartisan deal with 50 votes under reconciliation. So frustrating we have no process to allow us to pass this without Republicans if their demands become too unreasonable. No…wait a minute,” he added in a subsequent tweet.

Kaine also acknowledged that McConnell, after describing himself in listening mode, could come out against an infrastructure bill. 

“It’s not unlike him to sometimes pull the football out when the kicker is just about to kick it. I’ve seen him do that before,” Kaine said. 

Updated at 11:22 a.m.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/560498-mcconnell-to-schumer-pelosi-dont-hold-bipartisan-bill-hostage

New York City police are hunting for the gunman who opened fire in Times Square, resulting in the shooting of an innocent bystander, as officials on Monday announced their plan to “flood” the Crossroads of the World with more officers.

The New York Police Department (NYPD) released new video of the gunman believed suspected of shooting the recent military college graduate and second lieutenant in the back as he was walking through bustling Times Square on Sunday evening. He was the second bystander to be shot in only weeks, according to the NYPD.

NYPD officials have said the gunfire was preceded by a dispute between the shooter and several other people. Authorities believe the man was struck by a ricocheting bullet. 

NYC’S WASHINGTON SQUARE PARK PRIDE CHAOS: POLICE ARREST 8, VENDOR ATTACKED

Police have said they received a report of a man shot in the area of West 45th Street and Seventh Avenue at about 5:15 p.m. local time and arrived to find a 21-year-old man had been shot in the back by a stranger who then fled from the area.  

Surveillance footage from the scene shows the gunman wearing a distinctly patterned jacket as he pulls out his gun and appear to point it toward someone before running away. 

The victim was taken to a local hospital in stable condition. He was later identified by The Citadel, a South Carolina military college, as one of its Class of 2021 graduates, 2nd Lt. Samuel Poulin, who was with his wife and family at the time. 

Speaking to reporters on Monday morning, Mayor Bill de Blasio called the shooting in Times Square “absolutely unacceptable” and something the city “will not tolerate.”  

“Now we’ve seen patterns in Times Square that we are going to address very, very aggressively. That is the entire notion of precision policing,” de Blasio said. “It’s just an unacceptable state of affairs. This is a place that is so precious and so important to our city – it has to be safe.”

The mayor and the NYPD’s Chief of Department, Rodney Harrison, announced the Times Square Safety Action Plan, which will add more than 50 additional police officers to the area and bolster its enforcement in the areas of illegal street pedaling connected to gun violence. The new efforts will include the use of undercover police officers in the area, Harrison said. 

 “After this shooting and the shooting that we had a couple of weeks ago, it’s important that we put a lot more of a police presence over there, trying to engage some of the issues we’re seeing with these soliciting or aggressive panhandling of CDs,” Harrison said.

Harrison told reporters the department was still investigating the motive behind Sunday’s gunfire, but said investigators will “get down to the bottom of it.”

In early May, a 4-year-old girl who was buying toys, and two women, one of whom was a tourist, were in the area of West 44th Street and Seventh Avenue in Manhattan they, too, were struck by bullets meant for someone else. 

Police later arrested Farrakhan Muhammad, 31, in connection with the shooting after he allegedly fled to Florida. 

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Officials and sources said that two to four men began arguing around 5 p.m. on May 8 when one person, later identified as Muhammad, pulled out a gun and began shooting. Sources identified Muhammad as “a CD hustler.”

If you’ve got a tip, you can reach Stephanie.Pagones@fox.com. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/nypd-times-square-shooter-officials-plan-cops