Dr. Anthony Fauci said on CNN Sunday morning that Gov. Kay Ivey “has every right to be frustrated” by Alabama’s worst-in-the-nation COVID-19 vaccination rate. But he said more politicians and influential people need to call on Americans to get the shot.

Asked by CNN’s Jake Tapper if he “share[s] Gov. Ivey’s anger” about unvaccinated people driving a surge in COVID cases in Alabama, Fauci, President Joe Biden’s top medical adviser, said he is “very frustrated” by the masses of Americans who have yet to get the vaccine.

“I can totally understand the governor’s frustration. So I don’t have any problem with that; she has every right to be frustrated,” Fauci said on Tapper’s Sunday morning talk show, State of the Union. “But what I would really like to see is more and more of the leaders in those areas that are not vaccinated to get out and speak out to encourage people to get vaccinated.”

Fauci added that he “was very heartened” to see politicians like U.S. Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana and Florida Gov. Ron Desantis, both Republicans like Ivey, calling for people to get vaccinated. But he said more must be done to slow the spread of the Delta variant.

“We’ve gotta get more people who relate well to the individuals who are not getting vaccinated to get out there and encourage them to get vaccinated as well as the trusted messengers in the community,” Fauci told Tapper. “We’ve just gotta do better, Jake, because we have the tools to do this. This is an unnecessary predicament we’re putting ourselves in.”

As of Thursday, Alabama was the only state in the nation in which fewer than 40% of eligible residents were fully vaccinated against COVID, according to federal data. Meanwhile, the seven-day average for new cases in Alabama has increased by over 500% since July 4, and hospitalizations due to COVID have surged by over 300%.

Source Article from https://www.al.com/news/2021/07/fauci-says-gov-ivey-has-every-right-to-be-frustrated-by-alabamas-low-vaccination-rate.html

Illinois Congressman Adam Kinzinger accepted House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s appointment to the Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol. He will join Wyoming’s Liz Cheney as the only two Republicans on the panel.

Amanda Andrade-Rhoades/AP


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Illinois Congressman Adam Kinzinger accepted House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s appointment to the Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol. He will join Wyoming’s Liz Cheney as the only two Republicans on the panel.

Amanda Andrade-Rhoades/AP

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has appointed Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, one of the rare vocal critics inside the Republican Party of former President Donald Trump, to serve on the special committee charged with investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

The Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol is set to hold its first hearing on Tuesday. Kinzinger will join Wyoming’s Liz Cheney as one of two Republicans chosen by Pelosi to serve on the nine-person panel. Both Cheney and Kinzinger voted in favor of impeaching Trump following the attack on the Capitol, and were the only GOP members to support the committee’s formation last month.

In a statement, Pelosi said that Kinzinger “brings great patriotism to the Committee’s mission: to find the facts and protect our Democracy.”

Kinzinger’s appointment follows Pelosi’s decision this past week to reject two of the five Republicans tapped for the panel by House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif. The two Republicans that Pelosi blocked — Jim Banks of Indiana and Jim Jordan of Ohio — are among Trump’s staunchest defenders in Congress and each voted against certifying the 2020 election results.

Pelosi said she was rejecting their nominations “with respect for the integrity of the investigation.” McCarthy, in turn, said that each of his picks would boycott the panel’s investigation.

The committee was formed largely along party lines last month after an earlier attempt to establish an independent commission was blocked by Republicans in the Senate. But Kinzinger says he believes an investigation into January 6th is imperative and goes beyond party lines.

“Let me be clear, I’m a Republican dedicated to conservative values, but I swore an oath to uphold and defend the Constitution—and while this is not the position I expected to be in or sought out, when duty calls, I will always answer,” Kinzinger said in a statement Sunday. “This moment requires a serious, clear-eyed, non-partisan approach. We are duty-bound to conduct a full investigation on the worst attack on the Capitol since 1814 and to make sure it can never happen again.”

McCarthy took to Twitter on Sunday and accused Pelosi of politicizing the investigation, saying that by appointing Cheney and Kinzinger, the Speaker was compromising the integrity of the committee.

The Speaker has structured the select committee to satisfy her political objectives—which destroys its credibility,” McCarthy said.

The January 6 insurrection resulted in approximately $1.5 million in damage to the Capitol building, according to the Justice Department said. An average of about three people per day have been arrested in just over six months since the attacks.

In all, more than 500 people have been arrested across the country for crimes related to the insurrection. That includes over 165 individuals charged with assaulting or impeding law enforcement, of which more than 50 have been charged with using a deadly or dangerous weapon or causing serious bodily injury to an officer.

The committee will hear on Tuesday from two members of the U.S. Capitol Police and another two from Washington, D.C.’s Metropolitan Police force. All four officers served at the Capitol during the January 6 insurrection.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/07/25/1020464213/nancy-pelosi-adam-kinzinger-january-6-committee

Already active in the local civil rights movement, he left for Mississippi after seeing scenes in the news of Black people picketing and sitting at lunch counters across the South. The images “hit me powerfully, in the soul as well as the brain,” he recalled in “Radical Equations.”

His natural confidence and calm demeanor drew people to him, and he soon became something of a civil rights celebrity. He was a hero of many books on the movement, and an inspiration for the 2000 movie “Freedom Song,” starring Danny Glover.

Eventually the fame got to be too much — not only because it added to the stress of an already overwhelming task, but also because he thought it was dangerous for the movement. He resigned from the Council of Federated Organizations in December 1964 and from S.N.C.C. two months later. He was, he said, “too strong, too central, so that people who did not need to, began to lean on me, to use me as a crutch.”

Mr. Moses grew active in the movement against the Vietnam War, and in April 1965 he spoke at his first antiwar protest, in Washington, D.C. “The prosecutors of the war,” he said, were “the same people who refused to protect civil rights in the South” — a charge that drew criticism from moderates in the civil rights movement and from white liberals, who worried about alienating President Lyndon B. Johnson.

Not long afterward, he received a notice that his draft number had been called. Because he was five years past the age limit for the draft, he suspected it was the work of government agents.

Mr. Moses and his wife, Janet, moved to Tanzania, where they lived in the 1970s and where three of their four children were born. After eight years teaching in Africa, Mr. Moses returned to Cambridge, Mass., to continue working toward a Ph.D. in the philosophy of mathematics at Harvard.

In addition to his wife and daughter, Mr. Moses is survived by another daughter, Malaika; his sons Omowale and Tabasuri; and seven grandchildren.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/25/us/bob-moses-dead.html

Clark County Prosecutor Tony Golik said Sunday he intends to prosecute the case with the aid of a team of prosecutors. He declined to comment on whether others will be charged in connection with the shooting.

Raya Leon told his companions that Brown, 46, fired at him first and that he shot back twice and ducked so he wasn’t hit. Multiple witnesses said they heard one shot, a pause and then several more gunshots — about five total, according to an affidavit of probable cause.

Brown and other law enforcement officers were conducting surveillance on an apartment unit. The subjects of the investigation were identified as Raya Leon, known as “Fish,” his brother, Abran Raya Leon, known as “Junior,” and Misty Raya, who is “Junior’s” girlfriend, according to the affidavit.

The exact reason why the three were under surveillance was not disclosed in the affidavit.

However, a warrant for Raya’s arrest was issued Wednesday in Clark County. Court records show she faces charges related to a burglary at a Vancouver storage building and firearms theft — multiple weapons including AK-47 and ammunition.

Source Article from https://www.columbian.com/news/2021/jul/25/suspect-in-clark-county-detectives-death-believed-he-was-being-followed/

Tunisian President Kais Saied announced Sunday that he had dismissed the country’s prime minister and frozen the parliament amidst mass protests in the country, Reuters reports.

Why it matters: The move, which comes on the 64th anniversary of Tunisia’s independence, escalates Saied’s longstanding feud with Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi and poses a challenge to the 2014 constitution that “split powers between president, prime minister and parliament,” per Reuters.

The big picture: Saied defended his decision as in line with the constitution and said he would assume executive authority alongside a new prime minister, per Reuters.

  • Saied also suspended the legal immunity of members of parliament.

State of play: Hours earlier, Tunisia was rocked by mass protests in several cities that were fueled by public dissatisfaction with the government’s handling of the coronavirus and a worsening economic crisis, Reuters reports.

  • In several cities, protesters and police clashed violently, as crowds stormed the offices of Ennahda, the biggest party in parliament, while demanding the prime minister’s resignation and the dissolution of parliament, according to Al Jazeera.
  • Sunday’s protests were the largest in months and the biggest to target Ennahda in years, per Reuters.

What they’re saying: “Many people were deceived by hypocrisy, treachery and robbery of the rights of the people,” Saied said in a statement on state media, per Reuters.

  • “I warn any who think of resorting to weapons… and whoever shoots a bullet, the armed forces will respond with bullets,” Saied added.

The speaker of Tunisia’s parliament and the leader of the Ennahda party, Rached Ghannouchi told Reuters that the president had launched a “coup against the revolution and constitution.”

Editor’s note: This story has been updated with new information.

Source Article from https://www.axios.com/tunisia-sacks-president-prime-minister-parliament-protests-ba56c0ce-eca3-4735-964f-e002bec411a2.html

The architect of the Florida condo building that collapsed last month — killing at least 97 people — was suspended for “gross incompetency” years earlier over other structural failures, according to a report.

William Friedman, who designed Champlain Towers South before it was built in 1981, was suspended for six months in 1967 after pylons on a sign atop another building collapsed after a major hurricane, the Real Deal reported.

The Florida Board of Architecture found that Friedman’s pylons were “insufficient and grossly inadequate,” and failed to meet “accepted standards,” according to the real-estate publication.

The five-member board in 1966 found Friedman, who died in 2008 at 88, guilty of “gross incompetency, in that he negligently, improperly and carelessly” designed the pylons.

Friedman appealed the decision but ultimately lost.

The architect began serving his suspension on June 1, 1967, the Real Deal said, according to documents obtained by the outlet.

William Friedman received the six-month suspension after pylons on top of another building collapsed during a hurricane.
Google

The pylons held up commercial signs on top of the building and gave way shortly after Hurricane Betsy blew through the region, the report said.

Officials have not determined the exact cause of the collapse of the 12-story Champlain tower in Surfside on June 24, nor whether Friedman’s architectural design played any role.

According to reports, the architect who designed Champlain Towers South was once suspended in 1967 for “gross incompetency.”Amy Beth Bennett/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP

But the revelation is the latest doubt to surface about the structural integrity of the building — including a 2018 engineer’s report that found “major structural damage.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/07/25/architect-of-collapsed-florida-condo-suspended-years-ago-for-structural-failure/

Arizona State Sen. Michelle Ugenti-Rita was booed off stage at a rally featuring former President Donald Trump.

Ugenti-Rita, a Republican, was immediately met with a chorus of loud boos after taking the stage at a “Protect Our Elections” rally hosted by Turning Point Action in Phoenix on Saturday.

“Why don’t you listen to what I have to say?” Ugenti-Rita, who is running for Arizona secretary of state, asked the crowd after several failed attempts to get her speech going.

“Listen. Fine, OK… I am running to be your next Secretary of State. I’m going to win the primary. Thank you very much,” she said, before walking off after around 90 seconds on stage.

Brahm Resnik, a reporter for KPNX, tweeted that the hostile reception Ugenti-Rita received may have been because she “opposed GOP lawmaker’s wish list for election changes.”

Resnik added: “FYI Trump base crowd was primed to boo @MichelleUgenti. Wasn’t anything she said. Boos rained all over room from start till she bailed out.”

Ugenti-Rita, who chairs the Arizona Senate Government Committee, took to Twitter late Saturday to explain why she killed the recent election bill.

“I’ll put my record of fighting for election integrity up against anyone,” she tweeted. “What I won’t do is vote for ‘show’ legislation that does nothing to strengthen election integrity and introduced for self serving reasons. There’s too much at stake.”

There’s too much at stake. Our election system is under constant assault by the left, and I won’t support bills that fail to strengthen our election system.

The same holds true for the audit. I supported the audit, but I do not support the Trump audit any longer. (3of5)

— Michelle Ugenti-RITA (@MichelleUgenti) July 25, 2021

She also explained why she no longer supports a months-long audit of the 2020 election in Arizona’s Maricopa County.

“I won’t support bills that fail to strengthen our election system. The same holds true for the audit. I supported the audit, but I do not support the Trump audit any longer,” she added.

“I wanted to review our election processes and see what, if anything, could be improved. Sadly, it’s now become clear that the audit has been botched.”

Ugenti-Rita’s campaign has been contacted for comment.

Trump appeared on stage later in the evening, where he repeated baseless conspiracy theories about the 2020 election and prompted boos for his former vice president, Mike Pence, after attacking him for not stopping the certification of President Joe Biden’s victory.

Trump also praised the Arizona audit and called on other states to embark on similar efforts.

The former president’s appearance came after a spat with Arizona State Sen. Paul Boyer, who is among state Republicans calling for the audit to end.

Trump released a statement on Thursday, describing Boyer as a “RINO”—a Republican In Name Only—and accusing him of “doing everything in his power to hold up the damning Forensic Audit of Maricopa County.”

Boyer responded on Twitter, which banned Trump after a mob of his supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol on January 6.

“Had Trump built the wall like he promised, perhaps he could’ve prevented the 40k #BambooBallots from being imported into Arizona,” Boyer wrote. “And if he hadn’t started an insurrection in D.C. and gotten kicked off here, I could’ve responded directly to him. So there’s that.”

Former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during the Rally To Protect Our Elections conference on July 24, 2021 in Phoenix, Arizona.
Brandon Bell/Getty Images

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/arizona-gop-lawmaker-booed-off-stage-trump-protect-our-elections-rally-1612845

Anthony Fauci, the White House chief medical adviser, said on Sunday top US health officials were discussing whether to revise mask guidance for Americans vaccinated against Covid-19.

“This is under active consideration,” Fauci told CNN’s State of the Union, though he also emphasized that local governments can issue their own rules under current guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Los Angeles county and St Louis, Missouri, have reinstated indoor mask requirements and other cities are weighing whether to do the same.

After a significant drop in Covid-19 cases because of the national vaccine campaign, infections are rising in all 50 states and Washington DC. The increases are highest in states with large groups of unvaccinated people. More than 610,000 have died from Covid-19 in the US.

At a White House on Thursday the surgeon general, Vivek Murthy, said 97% of hospital admissions and 99.5% of Covid deaths were occurring among unvaccinated people.

More than 162.7 million Americans are vaccinated – or 49% of the population, according to the CDC.

Fauci said local leaders, particularly in areas with low rates of vaccination, needed to lead outreach efforts to get people vaccinated.

He highlighted recent work by two prominent Republicans who have repeatedly criticized him: a Louisiana representative, Steve Scalise, and the governor of Florida, Ron DeSantis.

“​​I was very heartened to hear people like Steve Scalise come out and say, ‘Hey, we’ve got to get vaccinated,’” Fauci said. “Even Governor DeSantis right now in Florida is saying the same thing. We’ve got to get more people who relate well to the individuals who are not getting vaccinated to get out there and encourage them to get vaccinated.”

Among those reporting they definitely won’t get vaccinated, 23% are Republican, 16% are independent and 2% are Democrats, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation vaccine monitor.

DeSantis sells merchandise which mocks masks and Fauci, but cases in Florida are the highest they have been since January.

“These vaccines are saving lives,” DeSantis said last week.

Scalise, the House Republican whip, was vaccinated last week and told the New Orleans Times-Picayune he had waited because he thought he had some immunity from an earlier Covid-19 infection. But the rise of the Delta variant appeared to sway him.

“When you talk to people who run hospitals, in New Orleans or other states, 90% of people in hospital with Delta variant have not been vaccinated,” he said. “That’s another signal the vaccine works.”

Fauci said the administration was reviewing whether some vaccinated people may require booster shots. Vulnerable people such as organ transplant and cancer patients were “likely” to be recommended for booster shots, he said.

From Missouri, a local mayor told CBS’s Face the Nation some prominent local figures were still speaking out against the vaccine.

“We continue to have to push back against negative messaging,” said Quinton Lucas, mayor of Kansas City.

Lucas said the focus in Kansas City was on getting people vaccinated and that his city did not currently have plans to re-introduce mask requirements, though it was something he had considered.

“I think every mayor in a major city in America is wondering if it is time to return to mandates,” Lucas said.

Jerome Adams, the US surgeon general under Donald Trump, told CBS the CDC should change guidance to vaccinate and mask in places with lower vaccination rates, an argument he also made in an editorial for the Washington Post.

Adams wrote that he initially agreed with the CDC’s guidance in May that vaccinated people no longer needed to wear masks, hoping it would encourage vaccinations.

“In hindsight, it’s clear that the message many Americans heard was that, vaccinated or not, masks were gone for good,” Adams wrote.

On CBS, Adams compared the situation to when public health officials last year told people to not use N95 masks because they needed to be reserved for medical professionals.

In hindsight, he said, he wished that guidance had been less definitive because many interpreted it as a signal that masks didn’t work.

“We need to learn from what happened in the past,” Adams said.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jul/25/fauci-covid-mask-guidance-vaccinated-booster-shots

Firefighters in southern Oregon increased the containment of the Bootleg Fire – the nation’s largest wildfire – Saturday, but the raging flames continued to spread as officials declared weather warnings in the area.

“This fire is resistant to stopping at dozer lines,” said Jim Hampton, a fire behavior analyst. “With the critically dry weather and fuels we are experiencing, firefighters are having to constantly re-evaluate their control lines and look for contingency options,” he noted in a statement posted on InciWeb, the clearinghouse for fire information in the US.

The fire is currently 46% contained, an increase from Friday. But the fire also got bigger, scorching 408,930 acres as of Sunday, a more than 6,000-acre expansion since Friday.

Saturday’s dry and unstable conditions prompted a Red Flag Warning at the fire’s site, according to InciWeb. The National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) said the warning is issued when there is “severe fire weather like strong sustained winds, gusts and low humidity, combined with a high fire danger rating.”

Additionally, smoke and haze from other nearby fires lingered throughout Saturday as temperatures remained warmer.

“The smoke is expected to keep temperatures down a couple degrees … which may help overall fire activity. Unfortunately, this smoke may impede air operations on the fire,” according to InciWeb.

Meanwhile, extreme fire behavior from the Bootleg Fire helped create a tornado last weekend, according to a post on the Bootleg Fire Info Facebook page Saturday.

The July 18 tornado was confirmed with the Medford National Weather Service Forecast Office, the post said.

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown told CNN’s Jake Tapper Sunday morning that the state is getting federal support from the Biden administration to help fight the Bootleg Fire, but future fire prevention is key.

“It’s incredibly important with climate change that we get into these forests and start doing the fitting and harvest and prescriptive burning, so that we can create healthier landscapes that are more resilient, for wildfire,” Brown said.

Brown signed legislation this past week that would arm the state with tools and resources to make communities “more adaptive” to wildfires.

The legislation includes resources for adequate firefighting tools and prescriptive and mitigation efforts. Brown also recently signed the 100% clean energy bill, which she described as “the most aggressive clean energy bill in the country.”

Overall, crews are battling 88 large wildfires throughout the US, with six new large fires reported Saturday, the NIFC said.

Nearly 22,000 firefighters and support personnel have been deployed to tackle the fires, which have collectively burned more than 1.4 million acres, the agency said. Most of the fires are spread across Western US states, where extreme drought conditions have been reported.

The climate crisis is making deadlier and more destructive wildfires the new normal, devastating homes, forcing thousands to evacuate and even destroying trees intended to offset carbon emissions.

Hundreds more fires are burning in the Canadian province of British Columbia, where a state of emergency was declared July 20.

One hundred firefighters from Mexico arrived in British Columbia Saturday to help combat the wildfires burning in the region, Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General of British Columbia Mike Farnworth said during a news conference welcoming the crews.

Over the next 30 days, Mexican firefighters will work alongside wildfire service crews and firefighters in British Columbia to battle the 275 forest fires burning in the area, Farnworth said.

“The crews here from Mexico are top rate, incredibly skilled … We cannot thank the Mexican government enough for assisting us,” Farnworth added.

Thousands evacuated as wildfires spread

The rapid spread of the Bootleg Fire put more than 2,000 people in the surrounding area under some form of evacuation orders as the fire has grown to become Oregon’s third-largest since 1900.

“It’s kind of a dubious honor,” Oregon Department of Forestry spokesperson Marcus Kauffman said Thursday of the fire that was started July 6 by lighting.

Meanwhile, the Tamarack Fire along the California-Nevada border has destroyed more than 66,744 acres as of Saturday and at least 10 structures in those states.

Additional evacuations were announced Friday, bringing the total to 2,439 evacuees, according to InciWeb.

Nevada on Thursday received a grant from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to fight the fire after requesting assistance earlier that day.

“At the time of the request, the fire threatened approximately 800 homes in and around Holbrook Junction,” FEMA said Friday in a news release. “The fire also threatened a water treatment plant, power distribution lines and substations, cellular communications towers, and U.S. Highway 395.”

Wildfires prompt additional emergency declarations

In California, where nine large fires are currently active, Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday declared a state of emergency in four northern California counties due to the hasty spread of flames.

Butte and Lassen counties are under states of emergency prompted by the state’s largest fire, the Dixie Fire, the governor said in a news release. The Dixie and Fly fires have pushed officials to put Plumas County under the emergency declaration as well as Alpine County due to the Tamarack Fire.

The Tamarack Fire also prompted Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak to put Douglas County under an emergency declaration Friday.

“Now, more than ever we must stand united and use all our available resources to combat this growing threat in order to help our fellow Nevadans receive the aid they need,” Sisolak said in a news release.

A state of emergency allows officials to access more funds and resources.

CNN’s Sahar Akbarzai, Alexandra Meeks, Sarah Moon, Stella Chan, Jenn Selva, Andy Rose, and Claudia Dominguez contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/07/25/weather/us-western-wildfires-sunday/index.html

Former President Donald Trump escalated his baseless voter fraud claims in Phoenix on Saturday, saying that Democrats can’t win any elections without cheating—after Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs urged the Republican to get over his 2020 election loss.

Hobbs, a Democrat, encouraged Trump to “take your loss, accept it and move on” Friday night, a day before the former president spoke at the “Rally of Save Our Elections” event organized by Turning Point Action, a conservative group.

“Nothing that’s going on here is going to change the outcome, and, really, this is nothing more than being a sore loser,” she told CNN.

As the state Senate continues a months-long audit of the ballots in Maricopa County, Trump opened his speech at the rally by claiming there’s “no way Democrats win elections without cheating.”

Former President Donald Trump escalated his baseless voter fraud claims in Phoenix on Saturday, saying that Democrats can’t win any elections without cheating. In this photo,Trump leaves Trump Tower in Manhattan on July 19, 2021 in New York City.
James Devaney/Getty Images

Pushing back against Hobbs, Trump told the crowd that he would accept losing an election.

“If I lost the election, I’m okay with it. Seriously,” he said. “I’ll start building buildings. I’ll keep myself busy, but they stole it from us.”

The former president continued to push his voter fraud conspiracy theory throughout the address, thanking Republicans who have indicated support for his effort to overturn the election and condemning those who have fought against it, including former Vice President Mike Pence.

Trump also repeated several specific allegations that were rejected by courts in dozens of failed lawsuits seeking to overturn President Joe Biden‘s win. Among them, that “74,000 mail-in ballots were counted with no clear record of them being sent”—a claim that Maricopa County election officials have dismissed as misinformation.

On January 6, a mob of pro-Trump supporters attacked the U.S. Capitol following a rally in which Trump pushed baseless voter fraud claims. Some Republicans, including Senator Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, broke from Trump following the insurrection, but others have sought to align with the former president in an effort to capture his loyal base.

Arizona GOP Representative Andy Briggs drew loud applause from the crowd earlier in the day when he suggested that Trump could be reinstated before 2024—a false claim that supporters have continued to promote online.

“In 2024, if not sooner, Donald J. Trump will be back in the presidency,” he said.

Officials in Maricopa County, the most populous in the state, concluded a formal audit of the results without uncovering any discrepancies in November. But GOP state senators have pushed forward with their own review. Audits and recounts in key battleground states have only reaffirmed Biden’s win, even in areas where the election was overseen by pro-Trump Republicans.

Newsweek reached out to Hobbs’ office for comment.

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/trump-escalates-voter-fraud-claims-after-arizona-sos-urges-him-accept-loss-1612829

Jerusalem (CNN)Audacious Mossad spy operations around the world. The plucky “startup nation” home to reams of billion-dollar ideas. These are two drivers of Israel’s image abroad that its political and business leaders have long been happy to push.

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{CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout(‘restoreFreewheel’);}navigateToNextVideo(contentId, containerId);},onContentEnd: function (containerId, cvpId, contentId) {if (Modernizr && !Modernizr.phone && !Modernizr.mobile && !Modernizr.tablet) {if (typeof videoPinner !== ‘undefined’ && videoPinner !== null) {videoPinner.setIsPlaying(false);}}},onCVPVisibilityChange: function (containerId, cvpId, visible) {CNN.VideoPlayer.handleAdOnCVPVisibilityChange(containerId, visible);}};if (typeof configObj.context !== ‘string’ || configObj.context.length 0) {configObj.adsection = window.ssid;}CNN.autoPlayVideoExist = (CNN.autoPlayVideoExist === true) ? true : false;CNN.VideoPlayer.getLibrary(configObj, callbackObj, isLivePlayer);});CNN.INJECTOR.scriptComplete(‘videodemanddust’);

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/07/25/tech/pegasus-hack-israel-reputation-intl-cmd/index.html

    (CNN)With the more dangerous Delta variant of Covid-19 sweeping across the nation, state and health officials continue to warn the public that the pandemic is far from over despite summertime reopenings and optimism.

      Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/07/25/health/us-coronavirus-sunday/index.html

      INDIAN FALLS, Calif. (AP) — Flames racing through rugged terrain in Northern California destroyed multiple homes Saturday as the state’s largest wildfire intensified and numerous other blazes battered the U.S. West.

      The Dixie fire, which started July 14, had already leveled over a dozen houses and other structures when it tore through the tiny community of Indian Falls after dark.

      An updated damage estimate was not immediately available, though fire officials said the blaze has charred more than 181,000 acres (73,200 hectares) in Plumas and Butte counties and was 20% contained.

      The fire was burning in a remote area with limited access, hampering firefighters’ efforts as it charged eastward, fire officials said. It has prompted evacuation orders in several small communities and along the west shore of Lake Almanor, a popular area getaway.

      Meanwhile, the nation’s largest wildfire, southern Oregon’s Bootleg fire, was nearly halfway surrounded Saturday as more than 2,200 crew members worked to corral it in the heat and wind, fire officials said. The growth of the sprawling blaze had slowed, but thousands of homes remained threatened on its eastern side, authorities said.

      “This fire is resistant to stopping at dozer lines,” Jim Hanson, fire behavior analyst, said in a news release from the Oregon Department of Forestry. “With the critically dry weather and fuels we are experiencing, firefighters are having to constantly reevaluate their control lines and look for contingency options.”

      In California, Gov. Gavin Newsom has declared a state of emergency for four northern counties because of wildfires that he said were causing “conditions of extreme peril to the safety of persons and property.” The proclamation opened the way for more state support.

      Such conditions are often from a combination of unusual random, short-term and natural weather patterns heightened by long-term, human-caused climate change. Global warming has made the West much warmer and drier in the past 30 years.

      On Saturday, fire crews from California and Utah headed to Montana, Gov. Greg Gianforte announced. Five firefighters were injured Thursday when swirling winds blew flames back on them as they worked on the Devil’s Creek fire burning in rough, steep terrain near the rural town of Jordan, in the northeast part of the state.

      They remained hospitalized Friday. Bureau of Land Management spokesperson Mark Jacobsen declined to release the extent of their injuries, and attempts to learn their conditions Saturday were unsuccessful. Three of the firefighters are U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service crew members from North Dakota, and the other two are U.S. Forest Service firefighters from New Mexico.

      Another high-priority blaze, the Alder Creek fire in southwest Montana, had charred over 6,800 acres (2,750 hectares) and was 10% contained Saturday night. It was threatening nearly 240 homes.

      Elsewhere in California, the Tamarack fire south of Lake Tahoe continued to burn through timber and chaparral and threatened communities on both sides of the California-Nevada state line. The fire, sparked by lightning July 4 in Alpine County, has destroyed at least 10 buildings.

      Heavy smoke from that blaze and the Dixie fire lowered visibility and may at times ground aircraft providing support for fire crews. The air quality south of Lake Tahoe and across the state line into Nevada deteriorated to very unhealthy levels.

      In north-central Washington, firefighters battled two blazes in Okanogan County that threatened hundreds of homes and again caused hazardous air quality conditions Saturday. And in northern Idaho, east of Spokane, Washington, a small fire near the Silverwood Theme Park prompted evacuations Friday evening at the park and in the surrounding area. The theme park was back open on Saturday with the fire half contained.

      Although hot weather with afternoon winds posed a continued threat of spreading blazes, weekend forecasts also called for a chance of scattered thunderstorms in California, Utah, Nevada, Arizona and other states. However, forecasters said some could be dry thunderstorms that produce little rain but a lot of lightning, which can spark new blazes.

      More than 85 large wildfires were burning around the country, most of them in Western states, and they had burned over 1.4 million acres (2,135 square miles, or more than 553,000 hectares).

      Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/fires-environment-and-nature-climate-change-wildfires-df25788889399b3f41d0415ec95abffd

      PHOENIX (AP) — In mid-May, partisan investigators hired by Arizona state lawmakers backed off their allegation that the state’s most populous county had destroyed its 2020 election database. Confronted with proof that the data still existed, they admitted everything was there.

      Two months later, the tale lives on. At an event Saturday, former President Donald Trump presented the debunked allegation as a key piece of evidence that the state’s electoral votes were stolen from him in 2020.

      It was one of a number of fabricated and familiar stories Trump told the crowd in his relentless effort to deny the well-established legitimacy of his defeat at the hands of President Joe Biden.

      Over nearly two hours, Trump revisited his touchstones of grievance, leveling allegations of fraud that election officials and judges have systematically refuted or brushed aside. It was Trump’s most explicit effort to insert himself into the widely discredited Arizona audit as he tries to increase the pressure on other states to embark on similar efforts.

      He spoke of untold thousands of dead people voting — no such phenomenon surfaced in postelection audits. He alleged 168,000 Arizona ballots were fraudulent — there is no support for that.

      A look at his remarks in Phoenix:

      TRUMP: “Unbelievably, the auditors have testified that the master database for the election management system, I’m sorry to tell you, has been deleted…. Meaning the main database for all of the election-related data in Maricopa for 2020 has been illegally erased. It’s been erased.”

      THE FACTS: Wholly false. The database was never deleted.

      At first, auditors hired by Republican state senators sympathetic to Trump reported that a database directory was deleted from an election management server. The official Twitter account tied to the audit said the deletion amounted to “spoliation of evidence.”

      The Republican-dominated Maricopa County Board of Supervisors responded by calling the auditors incompetent and threatening to file a defamation lawsuit. Board Chairman Jack Sellers said the auditors “can’t find the files because they don’t know what they’re doing.” Maricopa County Recorder Stephen Richer, a Republican who took over the elections office after defeating a Democrat, called the allegation “unhinged.”

      The next day, Ben Cotton, founder of a digital forensics firm working on the audit, confirmed he had recovered all of the files. “I have the information I need,” he acknowledged, and the auditors deleted their tweet.

      ___

      TRUMP: “There were 18,000 people who voted in Arizona in 2020 who were then purged from the rolls immediately after the election.”

      THE FACTS: This didn’t happen. His insinuation that people were stricken from the rolls because they voted for him is baseless.

      Actually, 13,320 voters were removed from the rolls in the two months after the election, not 18,000 right away, and there were routine reasons why.

      Voting rolls are updated constantly as people move, die, get convicted of felonies or have their voting rights revoked because of incapacitation. Trump was repeating a claim made by Doug Logan, CEO of Cyber Ninjas, the inexperienced firm leading the state Senate Republicans’ audit of the 2020 election.

      Maricopa County officials said their analysis of the data shows 7,916 voters were removed from the rolls because they moved out of the county or died between Nov. 3, which was Election Day, and Jan. 2. An additional 5,404 people were removed for other reasons, including felony convictions, incapacitation or the voters’ own request to cancel their registration.

      The county has about 2.6 million registered voters.

      Overall, Biden won Arizona by 10,457 votes out of 3.4 million cast. That’s vastly more than the number of votes where fraud is truly suspected.

      County election officials only identified 182 cases where voting problems were clear enough that they referred them to investigators for further review, according to an Associated Press investigation. So far, only four cases have led to charges. No one has been convicted. No person’s vote was found to have been counted twice.

      ___

      Woodward reported from Washington. Associated Press writers David Klepper in Providence, Rhode Island, and Jill Colvin in Washington contributed to this report.

      ___

      EDITOR’S NOTE — A look at the veracity of claims by political figures.

      ___

      Find AP Fact Checks at http://apnews.com/APFactCheck

      Follow @APFactCheck on Twitter: https://twitter.com/APFactCheck

      Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/joe-biden-government-and-politics-elections-ap-fact-check-election-2020-b3905c30c8bb585e20850da3c3f022e8

      A peak is shrouded in smoke from regional wildfires on July 14, at Grand Teton National Park, south of Yellowstone.

      Natalie Behring/Getty Images


      hide caption

      toggle caption

      Natalie Behring/Getty Images

      A peak is shrouded in smoke from regional wildfires on July 14, at Grand Teton National Park, south of Yellowstone.

      Natalie Behring/Getty Images

      Out-of-state crews are headed to Montana to help fight massive fires there as the western part of the country continues to be ravaged by flames and drought.

      Gov. Greg Gianforte announced Friday that crews from Utah and California — two states dealing with their own fires — were arriving over the weekend to help battle blazes that had become increasingly worrisome.

      Fire officials from Montana’s Department of Natural Resources and Conservation said on Wednesday that the over 6,800-acre Alder Creek Fire in the southwestern part of the state was the nation’s highest firefighting priority.

      U.S. Forest Service spokesperson Jason Nedlo confirmed that status to The Great Falls Tribune. “What that means is that as resources become available, the Alder Creek Fire will be one of the top priorities for those resources to be sent to,” said Nedlo. “What I don’t know is what resources are currently available. There’s not a lot of resources left unassigned.”

      Although small in size compared to a slew of fires raging elsewhere in the West, the Alder Creek Fire, just 7% contained, threatens the nearly 240 homes nearby according to the newspaper.

      In the northeast portion of the state, five firefighters were injured on Thursday while trying to contain the Devils Creek Fire, a 1,300-acre blaze.

      Meanwhile, the Bootleg Fire in Oregon — the largest in the country right now —continues to grow. Progress was made over the weekend as crews worked to contain over 40% of the fire. The wildfire has become so large that it has started generating its own weather.

      The growing threats of intense wildfires are far-reaching

      Eighty-eight large fires are currently burning in 13 states, nearly all of them in the West, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. So far this year, over 36,000 wildfires have burned some 2.7 million acres in the U.S., an increase from last year at this time.

      The smoke from these fires can be seen from space. Back on Earth, cities in the northeastern United States — some 3,000 miles away — recently experienced high levels of particulate matter, microscopic pollutants that linger in the air and can pose health risks by entering the lungs and bloodstream.

      Climate change makes large, destructive wildfires more likely because of hotter temperatures and drier vegetation, which also increase the length of fire season. About 40% of the U.S. is in moderate to exceptional drought, according the U.S. Drought Monitor.

      Fire seasons are lasting longer and burning bigger and hotter, requiring more manpower. Nearly 22,000 individuals are currently assigned to wildfires, many of whom are seasonal employees.

      Longer fire seasons stoke worries of firefighter burnout

      Typically, wildfires move from one geographical location to another, starting from the southwest and gradually moving north. This allows states to work together methodically, sending crews out of state to hot zones as needed. But that’s not what is happening anymore, says Carrie Bilbao, a public affairs specialist for the NIFC who also works with the Bureau of Land Management’s fire prevention program. Instead, fires are breaking out across the West at the same time, stretching resources thin.

      Bilbao said there are concerns about firefighters burning out.

      “We started about a month ahead of time for fire activity, this is stuff we would normally see in August,” she said. “It’s a physically demanding job and it puts a lot of stress on them so there is that fear of wearing out our firefighters before all this is over.”

      Storms bringing rain and snow typically produce a season-ending event in the fall, giving crews the help they need to control the fires. But with more extreme fire behaviors, Bilbao said the BLM and the IFC worry that these fire seasons are becoming a year-round problem.

      Gabe Nevin, a squad leader with the Montana-based West Yellowstone Smokejumpers, says that the state’s unusually early fire season this year could potentially sap the stamina of a small crew that rotates in 16-hour shifts: “So what is that going to look like for other guys on the crew towards the end of the year after they’ve been doing this for several months?”

      NPR’s Emma Bowman contributed to this story.

      Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/07/24/1020207430/montana-wildfire-fight-draws-help-from-other-states-as-much-of-the-west-burns

      PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) — The Clark County deputy killed in the line of duty Friday night in Vancouver is a 15-year veteran who was involved in another shooting in 2020.

      Jeremy Brown, 46, spent time as a corrections officer, patrol deputy and was a detective at the time of his death, the Clark County Sheriff’s Office said in a Saturday release.

      He also spent time on the Drug Task Force that worked with Vancouver police officers and was one of the deputies who fatally shot Kevin Peterson in October 2020.

      Law enforcement officials at the Pointe Apartments complex in Vancouver where a deputy was shot Friday evening, July 23, 2021. (KOIN)

      Brown was shot around 7 p.m. Friday at The Pointe Apartments in east Vancouver. A heavy police presence appeared immediately at the scene and as the search for at least 3 suspects ramped up, authorities closed down I-205 near Padden Parkway.

      The Clark County Sheriff’s Office announced around 1:20 a.m. Saturday two of the 3 suspects were taken into custody. The search for the third suspect continues at this time.

      Authorities have not identified the suspects in custody or the one at large.

      The Vancouver Police Major Crimes Department Major Crimes Unit is investigating, and the investigation is ongoing, officials said.

      Condolences from law enforcement

      Law enforcement agencies around the region were swift to show their solidarity.

      Multnomah County Sheriff Mike Reese
      Overnight, the public safety community lost one of our own. Our thoughts and prayers are with @ClarkCoSheriff, and we will do everything we can to assist our partners during this difficult time.

      Oregon State Police
      Our thoughts and prayers are with @ClarkCoSheriff as they mourn the deputy who was killed in the line of duty last night. We grieve with the deputy’s family, our law enforcement partners, and the community.

      Washington County Sheriff’s Office
      Our thoughts are with @ClarkCoSheriff as they mourn the deputy who was killed in the line of duty last night. We grieve with the deputy’s family, our law enforcement partners, and the SW Washington community.

      Portland Police Bureau
      We extend sincere sympathy and support to the family, friends, and colleagues of the
      @ClarkCoSheriff deputy, shot and killed in the line of duty last night.

      Clackamas Fire
      Our thoughts and prayers are with the @ClarkCoSheriff family with the loss of one of their own.

      The Peterson connection

      Deputies shot and killed Kevin Peterson, 21, on Oct. 29 near the U.S. Bank on NE Highway 99 in Hazel Dell.

      Based on surveillance video and interviews with officers who were at the scene, SWIRT investigators claim Peterson did have a .40 caliber semiautomatic handgun and pointed it at deputies at times, but that it does not appear Peterson fired the gun. No .40 caliber casings were recovered at the scene.

      Officers with the regional drug task force were investigating Peterson for conspiracy to deliver controlled substances, according to court documents.

      Clark County Sheriff deputies at the scene of a deputy-involved shooting that left Kevin Peterson Jr. dead, October 29, 2020 (KOIN)

      Another deputy said Peterson pointed the gun at him “while running northbound,” prompting him to fire at Peterson. Video from the bank showed Peterson fall, then sit up and point the gun, according to investigators.

      Peterson was in possession of a Glock model 23 handgun that had one round chambered and one round missing from the magazine, according to investigators. At this time, detectives do not have evidence that Peterson fired the gun while in the U.S. Bank lot, according to the SWIRT report.

      Source Article from https://www.koin.com/local/clark-county/slain-clark-county-deputy-identified-as-jeremy-brown/

      A peak is shrouded in smoke from regional wildfires on July 14, at Grand Teton National Park, south of Yellowstone.

      Natalie Behring/Getty Images


      hide caption

      toggle caption

      Natalie Behring/Getty Images

      A peak is shrouded in smoke from regional wildfires on July 14, at Grand Teton National Park, south of Yellowstone.

      Natalie Behring/Getty Images

      Out-of-state crews are headed to Montana to help fight massive fires there as the western part of the country continues to be ravaged by flames and drought.

      Gov. Greg Gianforte announced Friday that crews from Utah and California — two states dealing with their own fires — were arriving over the weekend to help battle blazes that had become increasingly worrisome.

      Fire officials from Montana’s Department of Natural Resources and Conservation said on Wednesday that the over 6,800-acre Alder Creek Fire in the southwestern part of the state was the nation’s highest firefighting priority.

      U.S. Forest Service spokesperson Jason Nedlo confirmed that status to The Great Falls Tribune. “What that means is that as resources become available, the Alder Creek Fire will be one of the top priorities for those resources to be sent to,” said Nedlo. “What I don’t know is what resources are currently available. There’s not a lot of resources left unassigned.”

      Although small in size compared to a slew of fires raging elsewhere in the West, the Alder Creek Fire, just 7% contained, threatens the nearly 240 homes nearby according to the newspaper.

      In the northeast portion of the state, five firefighters were injured on Thursday while trying to contain the Devils Creek Fire, a 1,300-acre blaze.

      Meanwhile, the Bootleg Fire in Oregon — the largest in the country right now —continues to grow. Progress was made over the weekend as crews worked to contain over 40% of the fire. The wildfire has become so large that it has started generating its own weather.

      The growing threats of intense wildfires are far-reaching

      Eighty-eight large fires are currently burning in 13 states, nearly all of them in the West, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. So far this year, over 36,000 wildfires have burned some 2.7 million acres in the U.S., an increase from last year at this time.

      The smoke from these fires can be seen from space. Back on Earth, cities in the northeastern United States — some 3,000 miles away — recently experienced high levels of particulate matter, microscopic pollutants that linger in the air and can pose health risks by entering the lungs and bloodstream.

      Climate change makes large, destructive wildfires more likely because of hotter temperatures and drier vegetation, which also increase the length of fire season. About 40% of the U.S. is in moderate to exceptional drought, according the U.S. Drought Monitor.

      Fire seasons are lasting longer and burning bigger and hotter, requiring more manpower. Nearly 22,000 individuals are currently assigned to wildfires, many of whom are seasonal employees.

      Longer fire seasons stoke worries of firefighter burnout

      Typically, wildfires move from one geographical location to another, starting from the southwest and gradually moving north. This allows states to work together methodically, sending crews out of state to hot zones as needed. But that’s not what is happening anymore, says Carrie Bilbao, a public affairs specialist for the NIFC who also works with the Bureau of Land Management’s fire prevention program. Instead, fires are breaking out across the West at the same time, stretching resources thin.

      Bilbao said there are concerns about firefighters burning out.

      “We started about a month ahead of time for fire activity, this is stuff we would normally see in August,” she said. “It’s a physically demanding job and it puts a lot of stress on them so there is that fear of wearing out our firefighters before all this is over.”

      Storms bringing rain and snow typically produce a season-ending event in the fall, giving crews the help they need to extinguish the fires. But with more extreme fire behaviors, Bilbao said the BLM and the IFC worry that these fire seasons are becoming a year-round problem.

      Gabe Nevin, a squad leader with the Montana-based West Yellowstone Smokejumpers, says that the state’s unusually early fire season this year could potentially sap the stamina of a small crew that rotates in 16-hour shifts: “So what is that going to look like for other guys on the crew towards the end of the year after they’ve been doing this for several months?”

      NPR’s Emma Bowman contributed to this story.

      Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/07/24/1020207430/montana-wildfire-fight-draws-help-from-other-states-as-much-of-the-west-burns

      Fire-rescue teams that have been working at the site of the Surfside condo collapse for nearly a month straight will hand off the search for survivors to police, Miami-Dade County announced Friday, according to reports.

      The search for bodies at the site of the collapsed condo officially concluded on Friday. The collapse killed 97, with at least one more missing person yet to be identified.

      Police will now handle the site of the Surfside collapse.
      Joe Raedle/Getty Images
      The view of the land where the partially collapsed Champlain Towers South building was located.
      AFP via Getty Images
      Items left behind by visitors are seen at the memorial site near Champlain Towers South.
      Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

      With the rubble having been moved offsite, police will now take over the search for remains and belongings, the Miami Herald reported.

      “The men and women of Miami-Dade Fire Rescue ran into a collapsed building on the early morning of June 24 and haven’t stopped since,” said Daniella Levine Cava, mayor of Miami-Dade County, said in a statement. “We’re also very grateful to [the] Miami-Dade Police Department, which has been leading the investigation since the beginning, and now continues the challenging work of continuing to sift through millions of pounds of debris, searching for remains and personal items to bring closure to families.”

      Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/07/24/police-take-over-surfside-search-after-firefighters-leave-site/