• “Preparations to protect life and property should be rushed to completion,” the National Hurricane Center said.
  • Officials in New Orleans told residents to be ready for prolonged power outages.
  • New Orleans officials expressed confidence the levees – rebuilt after Katrina – could withstand a storm of Ida’s magnitude.

Ida hurtled closer to the Gulf Coast on Saturday, a treacherous storm that could lash Louisiana within 24 hours as a Category 4 hurricane – 16 years to the day that Katrina delivered its devastating blow.

The system, fueled by exceptionally warm waters in the southeastern Gulf of Mexico, was expected to quickly intensify Saturday and could make a direct hit on the state Sunday afternoon or evening with possible life-threatening storm surge, fierce flooding and catastrophic 140-mph winds, forecasters warned.

“Today is it,” Jamie Rhome, acting deputy director of the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami, said Saturday. “If you’re in coastal Louisiana and Mississippi, you really, really have to get going because today is it in terms of protecting life and property.”

Many appeared to be heeding the warning: Traffic clogged routes westward early Saturday, particularly out of New Orleans, and gas stations were bustling.

A hurricane warning was issued for most of the Louisiana coast from Intracoastal City to the mouth of the Pearl River, including the New Orleans metropolitan area. A tropical storm warning was extended to the Alabama-Florida border.

“Rapid strengthening is forecast during the next 24 to 36 hours, and Ida is expected to be an extremely dangerous major hurricane when it approaches the northern Gulf coast on Sunday,” the National Hurricane Center said Saturday. 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/08/28/hurricane-ida-louisiana-could-get-direct-hit/5625118001/

Jim McCollum knew before he opened his door why two US Marines were at his Jackson, Wyoming, home.

“It was just as you see it in the movies,” the grieving dad told The Daily Beast. “As soon as I saw them on the porch, I knew he was gone.”

“He,” was his son, Lance Cpl. Rylee McCollum, one of the 13 US service members killed in Thursday’s Kabul airport attack. Newly married, with a baby due Sept. 22, the 20-year-old was on a path toward greatness, the elder McCollum said.

“He was the most patriotic kid,” Jim said. “The right from wrong and being on the side of right— that kind of drove him in. I couldn’t have been more proud.”

What little comfort he can find is knowing that his son died fulfilling his dream to serve.

Rylee McCollum was newly married with a baby due Sept. 22.Facebook

“He died doing what he loved and with the ones he cared about, doing the right thing,” Jim said. “He always wanted to be on the side of right, the side of righteousness. He did exactly what he lived his life doing.”

At least 169 Afghans also died in the suicide bombing claimed by ISIS-K, and officials warn of continued danger amid the continued evacuation, including warning people to leave the airport gates “immediately” late Friday, in an eerie echo of warnings before Thursday’s blast.

The ongoing operation leaves the devastated father worried about the Marines still in the war-torn country now mostly ruled by the Taliban.

Rylee McCollum’s dad knew before he opened his door why two US Marines were at his Jackson, Wyoming, home.
Instagram

“I’ve lost my son, but there are still Marines over there,” he said. “We gave them everything they need, and we are pinned down at the airport. I am scared sh-tless to see what’s going to happen next, and what’s going to come our way.”

The senior McCollum, speaking before the US launched a drone strike against the terror group, was upset there wasn’t an immediate retaliation for the attack and suggested American forces should take out the Afghan presidential palace rather than let the Taliban take it: “bomb the damn thing,” he said.

“He was the most patriotic kid,” McCollum’s father said of his late son.
Instagram

The Friday drone strike against ISIS-K was apparently successful in taking out one of the planners of the attack which killed Rylee McCollum.

“Initial indications are that we killed the target,” said Capt. Bill Urban of the Central Command.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/08/28/dad-of-marine-killed-in-kabul-scared-sh-less-for-what-comes-next/

“We conduct effective counterterrorism missions against terrorist groups in multiple countries where we don’t have permanent military presence,” Mr. Biden said this month. “If necessary, we’ll do the same in Afghanistan. We’ve developed counterterrorism over-the-horizon capability that will allow us to keep our eyes firmly fixed on the direct threats to the United States in the region, and act quickly and decisively if needed.”

Their original plan for Afghanistan, however, was premised on a scenario in which the United States would conduct airstrikes with the consent of President Ashraf Ghani, supporting his government’s efforts to resist any transnational terrorist groups, like Al Qaeda and the Islamic State, that sought to use the country as a base of operations. The Taliban, while separately vying for control of the country, would be neutral in that category of conflict, at least on the surface.

But instead, Mr. Ghani fled, the Afghan army abruptly abdicated and the Taliban swept into power as the de facto government. As a result, a playbook for any future counterterrorism operations in Afghanistan now needs to be redeveloped against the awkward backdrop of uncertainty about the Taliban’s intentions, including whether they will return to hosting terrorist camps as they did in the 1990s, the officials said.

The current and former officials briefed on the deliberations over the drone strike policy spoke about the delicate internal discussions only on the condition of anonymity. Asked for comment, the National Security Council’s press office re-sent The New York Times a statement it had provided in March for an article about the legal policy review, which was then in an early stage.

The Biden plans make sense both to raise standards for protecting civilians but also to maintain greater flexibility for different settings across the world, said Luke Hartig, who worked on drone strike policy for the Obama administration as a senior director for counterterrorism at the National Security Council.

But, he added: “Afghanistan is going to have to be very fluid. I would hate to have to write guidance for Afghanistan right now.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/28/us/politics/biden-drones.html

Friday’s recommendation by a California panel that Robert Kennedy’s assassin, Sirhan Sirhan, be paroled after decades in prison has resulted in a divide among the late U.S. senator’s nine surviving children.

Six of the children of Robert and Ethel Kennedy issued a statement Friday saying they were “devastated” by the panel’s ruling – which still awaits a review by the California Parole Board and an ultimate decision by the state’s Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom.

“We are in disbelief that this man would be recommended for release,” the statement from the six siblings read in part. It was signed by Joseph P. Kennedy II, Courtney Kennedy, Kerry Kennedy, Christopher G. Kennedy, Maxwell T. Kennedy and Rory Kennedy.

LOS ANGELES COUNTY DA GASCON HAMMERED FOR NOT ARGUING AGAINST RELEASE OF ROBERT KENNEDY’S ASSASSIN

Joseph P. Kennedy II, 68, is a former Massachusetts congressman. Kerry Kennedy, 61, is the former wife of recently resigned New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

Two other RFK children, however, expressed support for Sirhan, 77, even though Sirhan fatally shot their father in a Los Angeles hotel on the night he won the California primary for the Democratic Party’s 1968 presidential nomination.

Those supporting Sirhan were journalist Douglas Kennedy, 54, and environmental lawyer Robert F. Kennedy Jr., 67.

Douglas Kennedy, who is a Fox News correspondent, addressed the two-person panel that recommended Sirhan’s freedom during a virtual hearing, The Associated Press reported.

ROBERT KENNEDY’S ASSASSIN SIRHAN SIRHAN GRANTED PAROLE BY CALIFORNIA BOARD

“I’m overwhelmed just by being able to view Mr. Sirhan face to face,” he said. “I’ve lived my life both in fear of him and his name in one way or another. And I am grateful today to see him as a human being worthy of compassion and love.”

Sirhan Sirhan arrives for a parole hearing on Friday in San Diego. (California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation via AP)

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has spoken in favor of releasing Sirhan, and claimed in a letter that he met with Sirhan in prison and the killer of his father “asked for forgiveness,” the AP reported.

Not immediately clear Friday were the stands of Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, 70, a former lieutenant governor of Maryland, and of Ethel Kennedy, RFK’s 93-year-old widow.

Sirhan Sirhan is led away from the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles after shooting Robert F. Kennedy in June 1968.

Two of Robert and Ethel Kennedy’s 11 children are deceased. David Kennedy died at age 28 in 1984 and Michael Kennedy died at age 39 in 1997.

Robert Kennedy — who served as U.S. attorney general in the administration of his older brother, former President John F. Kennedy, prior to being elected to the Senate from New York — was 42 years old when he was killed.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Five other people were wounded during Robert Kennedy’s assassination, according to the AP.

Sirhan – a Palestinian immigrant who arrived in the U.S. with his family as a child in the 1950s — claimed he had been drinking on the night of the assassination and doesn’t remember pulling the trigger, the report said. He was later convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death – but he eluded execution when the California Supreme Court briefly outlawed capital punishment in 1972, according to the AP.

This week marked Sirhan’s 16th attempt at parole, NBC News reported.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/rfks-children-divided-after-sirhan-sirhan-parole-recommendation

PHOENIX (AP) — Tenant advocates and court officials were gearing up Friday for what some fear will be a wave of evictions and others predict will be just a growing trickle after a U.S. Supreme Court action allowing lockouts to resume.

The high court’s conservative majority late Thursday blocked the Biden administration from enforcing a temporary ban placed because of the coronavirus pandemic. The action ends protections for about 3.5 million people in the United States who say they faced eviction in the next two months, according to U.S. Census Bureau data from early August.

“We are incredibly disappointed in the Supreme Court ruling and ask Congress and Governor (Doug) Ducey to take action to prevent what will likely be tragic outcomes for thousands of Arizona families,” said Cynthia Zwick, executive director of the nonprofit organization Wildfire that is helping distribute government rental assistance in Arizona.

“Lives are literally at risk as the pandemic continues to surge and families lose their homes, especially during this time of extreme heat,” she said, referring to Phoenix’s triple-digit temperatures.

Wildfire is encouraging tenants to keep applying for rental aid and “work with their landlords to develop plans for making payments until the assistance is available,” she said.

Ron Book, chairman of the Miami-Dade County Homeless Trust, worries about the thousands of older people who potentially could be affected by about 9,000 pending eviction cases in the county.

Book said he’s been trying to find people at risk new places to live, but many haven’t taken the situation seriously because the moratorium has been extended numerous times.

But some local officials around the U.S. say the court’s action is unlikely to set off the flood of evictions some advocates predict.

Scott Davis, spokesman for the Maricopa County Justice Courts that handle the bulk of Arizona’s evictions, said he does not expect anything dramatic overnight. He said how things play out will depend on how landlords and their attorneys decide to handle cases.

“We know that eviction case filings over the last 17 months are down about 50% from pre-pandemic,” Davis said. “ Some believe there will be a large flood of case activity; others believe it will be just a light sprinkle, which builds gradually over time. Again — it’s up to landlords.”

Davis emphasized no one can be evicted immediately without due process, and the cases could take weeks to be carried out in the courts.

The Apartment Association of Southeastern Wisconsin said Friday that landlords rarely evict anyone who is only a few hundred dollars behind on rent. It said the average eviction judgment for unpaid rent in Wisconsin is more than $2,600.

“Contrary to dire predictions by tenant advocates, there will NOT be a ‘tsunami’ of eviction filings in Wisconsin or in most parts of the country,” the landlord trade association said. “There will NOT be 11 million people suddenly made homeless.”

The court’s action does not affect the temporary bans on evictions placed by a handful of states, including California.

The Treasury Department and Housing and Urban Development Secretary Marcia Fudge on Friday sent a letter to all governors, mayors and county officials, urging them to implement their own eviction bans, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said.

“Seven states have taken the steps. More states can take the steps,” Psaki said.

She noted that quicker disbursement of rental assistance money could also help stave off evictions.

In Detroit, Ted Phillips, executive director of the United Community Housing Coalition, said the court’s action could prompt more eviction cases.

“We suspect …, there’s probably a large number of cases where landlords never bothered applying for an order of eviction because, well, why bother if there’s a moratorium,” Phillips said.

The court’s move wasn’t a huge surprise. The justices had allowed an earlier pause on lockouts to continue through July, but they hinted in late June they would take this path if asked again to intervene. The moratorium had been scheduled to expire Oct. 3.

The court said in an unsigned opinion that the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which reimposed the moratorium Aug. 3, lacked the authority to do so under federal law without explicit congressional authorization. The three liberal justices dissented.

Congress is on recess for a few weeks and is unlikely take immediate action on legislation.

But key progressive lawmakers Friday urged House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, both Democrats, to consider passing legislation to extend the moratorium during the pandemic.

One option would be to include an evictions measure in the upcoming budget infrastructure packages that Congress will consider when lawmakers return in September.

“The impending eviction crisis is a matter of public health and safety that demands an urgent legislative solution to prevent further harm and needless loss of human life,” read the letter from Reps. Ayanna Pressley, D-Massachusetts, Cori Bush, D-Missouri, Jimmy Gomez, D-California, and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-New York. It was signed by 60 lawmakers.

Pelosi said Friday the House “is assessing possible legislative remedies.”

Congress has approved more than $46.5 billion in rental assistance, but so far state and local governments have distributed 11% of that money, just over $5 billion, the Treasury Department said Wednesday.

In Kansas, the state’s Housing Resources Corporation is pushing to process hundreds of rental relief applications after hiring and training more than 100 new employees to help. Still, most assistance money hasn’t been distributed.

Landlord organizations blamed the slow rollout on requirements imposed by Congress that many applicants find cumbersome.

Courtney Gilstrap LeVinus, president and CEO of the Arizona Multihousing Association, said many mom-and-pop rental owners are teetering on bankruptcy, with about $500 million in rent unpaid statewide.

“Despite such intense financial pressure, Arizona property owners have worked with residents to keep them in their homes, to keep them safe from the pandemic, and to help them qualify for eviction relief that has been slow to arrive for a year and a half,” LeVinus said. “We have strongly encouraged our members to keep working with residents to avoid evictions in every possible instance.”

___

Associated Press writers Todd Richmond in Madison, Wisconsin; John Hanna in Topeka, Kansas; Anna Nichols in Lansing, Michigan; David Fischer in Miami and Lisa Mascaro in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/business-health-coronavirus-pandemic-us-supreme-court-6e0841065389f4d2cf6f8b5aff38e994

The US drone strike in Afghanistan targeted a mid-level “planner” from the Islamic State’s local affiliate who was travelling in a car with one other person near the eastern city of Jalalabad, US official sources said on Saturday.

The strike came two days after Islamic State in Khorasan Province (ISKP) claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing outside Kabul airport, as western forces running the airlift braced for more attacks.

The US president, Joe Biden, has promised to hunt down those responsible, striking in a place and time of his choosing.

The drone strike is likely to be in part aimed at reassuring a shaken US public that its government’s counter-terrorist capabilities in Afghanistan remain intact despite the chaotic withdrawal.

There is no indication that the target of the drone was involved in Thursday’s blast, which killed around 180 people, including 13 US marines.

The attack focused attention on ISKP, which had previously been seen as only a minor actor in Afghanistan and one of the weaker IS affiliates around the world.

The group was founded in 2014 by a few dozen disaffected Taliban commanders and defectors from other militants from the region and made early gains in districts close to the border with Pakistan in the eastern Nangarhar province, where the drone strike occurred around midnight on Friday night. The name Khorasan was given by medieval Islamic imperial rulers to a region including modern Afghanistan.

Major offensives by government forces and the US inflicted heavy casualties on ISKP and forced them from their strongholds in Nangarhar. Fighters from the Taliban, which viewed the ISKP as a threat to its campaign to take control of Afghanistan, also attacked the group’s enclave and in recent months have made a series of unsuccessful efforts to retake two valleys in the remote and rugged Kunar province from the group.

In a report compiled from intelligence supplied by member nations earlier this year, the UN said ISKP had been reduced to 1,500 to 2,200 fighters in small areas of Kunar and Nangarhar provinces in eastern Afghanistan, and consisted “primarily of cells … across the country, acting in an autonomous manner while sharing the same ideology”.

The ISKP campaign of violence has intensified this year, targeting religious minorities, NGOs, journalists and Taliban officials. In recent months, ISKP commanders have been among the biggest clients of local arms dealers around Jalalabad, suggesting that some of its networks have survived.

On Friday, a senior Taliban commander in Jalalabad, Afghanistan’s fifth largest city, said some ISKP members there had been arrested in connection with the Kabul attack.

Map

“They are being interrogated by our intelligence team,” the commander told Reuters.

ISKP sees the Taliban as apostates, accusing Afghanistan’s new rulers of being “filthy nationalists” who have compromised their faith by negotiating with the US and other international powers.

Many ISKP fighters come from outside Afghanistan, with a high proportion drawn from Pakistan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. This has led to internal divisions over strategies, with some factions favouring efforts to win over rather than simply coerce local communities.

The US military said “initial indications” suggested that the target of the drone strike, who has not been identified, was killed and there were no known civilian casualties

However, a community elder in Jalalabad said three people were killed and four were wounded in the airstrike at around midnight on Friday, adding he had been summoned by the Taliban investigating the incident.

“Women and children are among the victims,” said Malik Adib, though he did not have information about their identity.

There was no confirmation of either claim.

Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said the US believed there were still “specific, credible” threats against the airport after the bombing at one of its gates.

“We certainly are prepared and would expect future attempts,” Kirby told reporters in Washington. “We’re monitoring these threats, very, very specifically, virtually in real time.”

While Kabul’s airport has been in chaos, the rest of the city has been generally calm. The Taliban have told residents to hand over government equipment including weapons and vehicles within a week, spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/aug/28/afghanistan-drone-strike-targeted-islamic-state-planner-in-car-us-says

(CNN)After slamming Cuba twice in less than 24 hours, Hurricane Ida is expected to pummel Louisiana on Sunday, forcing evacuations in New Orleans and the surrounding coastal region.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/08/28/weather/hurricane-ida-saturday/index.html

    A Florida judge on Friday ruled against Gov. Ron DeSantis’ ban on school mask mandates, claiming the Republican governor had overstepped his authority. 

    Leon County Circuit Judge John Cooper called DeSantis’ executive order unconstitutional and said the governor cannot enforce it – in a win for a group of parents who brought a lawsuit. 

    The governor’s executive order allowed parents to decide if they want their kids to wear masks to school rather than have local school districts make the decision. 

    Cooper said DeSantis’ order “is without legal authority.”

    School boards in 10 districts in the state had voted to defy the order, choosing to require masks because of the coronavirus resurgence, and they faced possibly having their salaries withheld. The Biden administration had promised federal funds for any district that lost money for requiring masks. 

    Cooper said government actions necessary to protect public health are exempted from a new Florida law, the “Parents’ Bill of Rights,” that DeSantis and others had argued gave parents the final authority. 

    FLORIDA SCHOOL DISTRICTS DEFY DESANTIS WITH MASK MANDATES FOR MOST STUDENTS 

    The judge said a school district’s decision to require student masking to prevent the spread of the virus falls within that exemption.

    Students sit in an algebra class at Barbara Coleman Senior High School on the first day of school in Miami Lakes, Fla., Aug. 23, 2021. (Associated Press)

    The law “doesn’t ban mask mandates at all,” Cooper said during a two-hour hearing that was conducted online because of the pandemic. “It doesn’t require that a mask mandate must include a parental opt-out at all.”

    Cooper also issued an injunction against the state board of education because of its enforcement of the order, according to FOX 13 of Tampa. 

    He added the law doesn’t allow for the state to penalize school boards for their defiance, saying they deserve due process. 

    “Parents’ rights are very important but they’re not without some reasonable limitations,” Cooper said, according to FOX 13. 

    Appeal planned

    The governor’s office said the state plans to appeal the ruling. 

    “It’s not surprising that Judge Cooper would rule against parents’ rights and their ability to make the best educational and medical decisions for their family, but instead rule in favor of elected politicians,” spokeswoman Taryn Fenske said in a statement. “This ruling was made with incoherent justifications, not based in science and facts — frankly not even remotely focused on the merits of the case presented.”

    “It’s not surprising that Judge Cooper would rule against parents’ rights and their ability to make the best educational and medical decisions for their family.”

    — Taryn Fenske, DeSantis spokeswoman

    Amy Nell, who lives in the Tampa area and was one of the parents to sue, said Cooper’s ruling made her feel heard for the first time in a while. 

    “Since the beginning of the school year it has felt like bizarro world,” she said. “We are being told that science — what we think it is and everything we know about viruses — may be not true.” Her son is in elementary school. 

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks in Pembroke Pines, Florida, Aug. 18, 2021. (Associated Press)

    Cooper also noted that two Florida Supreme Court decisions from 1914 and 1939 found that individual rights are limited by their impact on the rights of others. For example, he said, adults have the right to drink alcohol but not to drive drunk, because that endangers others. There is a right to free speech, but not to harass or threaten others or yell “fire” in a crowded theater, he said.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    In that same vein, he said, school boards can reasonably argue that maskless students endanger the health of other students and teachers.

    The delta variant caused the virus to resurge in the state over the summer with record highs for new cases. 

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/florida-judge-desantis-mask-mandates-schools

    Two Marines from Riverside County were among 13 U.S. service members killed in the suicide bombing attack at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, officials confirmed Friday.

    Lance Cpl. Kareem Mae’Lee Grant Nikoui and Cpl. Hunter Lopez both died in Thursday’s attack, officials said.

    Nikoui, 20, graduated from Norco High School in 2019 and served in the Junior ROTC, according to a statement by the city. He is survived by his parents and siblings.

    Hours before he died, he sent videos to his family showing himself interacting with children in Afghanistan.

    A bombing killed more than 100 people outside the airport in Kabul, Afghanistan.

    In one of the clips, he asked a young boy to say hello.

    “Want to take a video together, buddy?” Nikoui said, leaning in to take a video of himself with the boy. “All right, we’re heroes now, man.”

    Paul Arreola, a close family friend, told the Associated Press the videos show “the heart of this young man, the love he has.”

    “The family is just heartbroken,” he said. Arreola described Nikoui as an “amazing young man” full of promise who always wanted to be a Marine and set out to achieve his goal.

    “He loved this country and everything we stand for. It’s just so hard to know that we’ve lost him,” he said, crying.

    Norco city officials said Friday they planned to enshrine Nikoui’s name on the “Lest We Forget Wall” at George A. Ingalls Veterans Memorial Plaza.

    A Gold Star Families Memorial Monument is being constructed at the same location, city officials said. More information can be found at woodywilliams.org/monuments/norco-ca.html.

    Rep. Ken Calvert (R-Corona) praised Nikoui for his service, saying “words are incapable of expressing our grief and mourning for the loss of Lance Cpl. Nikoui and the other U.S. service members who were killed.”

    “As a proud Marine, Lance Cpl. Nikoui and his unit put themselves in harm’s way in order to provide safety to others. That’s the definition of courage,” Calvert said. “That’s the embodiment of the Marine Corps motto, ‘Semper fidelis.’ I have spoken to the Nikoui family and expressed my condolences. The burden they bear is unimaginable.”

    Lopez, 22, of Coachella Valley is the son of two Riverside County sheriff’s deputies, Capt. Herman Lopez and Deputy Alicia Lopez, according to a statement by Sheriff Chad Bianco.

    Lopez’s father commands the Sheriff’s Department’s La Quinta station in Thermal, according to a statement by city officials.

    “Our La Quinta family is in mourning today with the tragic loss of Hunter Lopez,” the statement said. “We are all so humbled by the service and ultimate sacrifice that Hunter gave to protect our country. He was a brave and selfless soldier who answered the call to be a United States Marine. Like his parents, Hunter wanted to help serve others and protect his community.”

    Lopez graduated from La Quinta High School in 2017 and served with the Sheriff’s Department’s explorer program from September 2014 to August 2017, Bianco said.

    Lopez joined the Marine Corps on Sept. 5, 2017, and was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 1st Marines, the sheriff said.

    He planned on following in his parents’ footsteps and becoming a Riverside County sheriff’s deputy after returning home from his deployment, Bianco said.

    The Lopez family requested that donations in Hunter’s memory be made to the Riverside County Deputy Sheriff Relief Foundation in the name of the Lopez family. Donations can be sent to 21810 Cactus Ave., Riverside, CA 92518.

    City News Service and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-08-27/2-riverside-county-marines-among-those-confirmed-dead-at-kabul-airport-attack

    U.S. Senator Robert F. Kennedy’s assassin, Sirhan Sirhan, was recommended for parole Friday after two of RFK’s sons spoke in favor of his release and prosecutors declined to argue he should be kept behind bars.
     
    The decision was a major victory for the 77-year-old prisoner, though it does not assure his release.
     
    The ruling by the two-person panel at Sirhan’s 16th parole hearing will be reviewed over the next 90 days by the California Parole Board’s staff. Then it will be sent to the governor, who will have 30 days to decide whether to grant it, reverse it or modify it.
     
    Douglas Kennedy, who was a toddler when his father was gunned down in 1968, said he was moved to tears by Sirhan’s remorse and he should be released if he’s not a threat to others.
     
    “I’m overwhelmed just by being able to view Mr. Sirhan face to face,” he said. “I think I’ve lived my life both in fear of him and his name in one way or another. And I am grateful today to see him as a human being worthy of compassion and love.”
     
    The New York senator and brother of President John F. Kennedy was a Democratic presidential candidate when he was gunned down June 6, 1968, at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles moments after delivering a victory speech in the pivotal California primary.
     
    Sirhan, who was convicted of first-degree murder, has said he doesn’t remember the killing.
     
    His lawyer, Angela Berry, argued that the board should base its decision on who Sirhan is today.
     
    Prosecutors declined to participate or oppose his release under a policy by Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón, a former police officer who took office last year after running on a reform platform.
     
    Gascón, who said he idolized the Kennedys and mourned RFK’s assassination, believes the prosecutors’ role ends at sentencing and they should not influence decisions to release prisoners.

    Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/rfk-assassin-sirhan-sirhan-granted-parole/

    Keith and Lynn Chapman at their StoryCorps recording in Frederick, Md., on Aug. 20.

    StoryCorps


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    StoryCorps

    The last conversation Keith Chapman had with his younger brother Nathan Chapman was on Christmas Day 2001. Nathan had called up his family from Afghanistan.

    Although the 31-year-old, a sergeant first class with the U.S. Army’s 1st Special Forces Group, couldn’t disclose his location, his family put it together based on what time Nathan said it was where he was calling from.

    “I don’t remember that we said very much,” Keith said during a StoryCorps interview in Frederick, Md., last week with their mother, Lynn Chapman.

    That wasn’t so unusual. The brothers, just two and a half years apart in age, had always had a complicated dynamic that was born from their two very different personalities.

    A couple weeks after that phone call, Keith heard on his car radio that an American soldier had been killed in Afghanistan. He thought, “Well, yes, Nathan is there, but he’s one of who knows how many? So, I put it out of my mind.”

    That is, until he got home that evening.

    “My wife greets me at the door and says, ‘I have bad news.’ ” he said.

    “It was my birthday and I said, ‘Oh, you burned the cake.’ She says, ‘No — your father called.’ “

    That’s when it became clear to Keith: The fallen soldier was his own brother.

    Nathan was killed in action near the town of Khost on Jan. 4, 2002. He was the first American soldier to be killed by enemy fire in the war in Afghanistan.

    Chapman’s death was just over a month after the first American death in combat in the war. Johnny “Mike” Spann, a 32-year-old CIA paramilitary officer from Alabama, was killed in late November 2001 during a revolt of Taliban prisoners in northern Afghanistan.

    Words left unsaid

    Keith said that growing up with his brother, “I felt like he was too different from me to really understand what was really good about him.”

    Keith was studious and didn’t easily make friends. Nathan was the outgoing one.

    “He didn’t withdraw from me,” Keith said. “I think, if anything, I withdrew from him.”

    From left to right: Nathan, Lynn and Keith Chapman, pictured in 1981 in Contra Costa County, Calif.

    The Chapman family


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    The Chapman family

    From left to right: Nathan, Lynn and Keith Chapman, pictured in 1981 in Contra Costa County, Calif.

    The Chapman family

    Since his death, Keith has struggled to process the relationship he had with his brother.

    “All these memories now are 40-plus years old and they’re all very thin in my mind,” Keith said. “I haven’t had the last 20 years of time when an adult might share time with his brother.”

    “And I think that that’s probably, if not slowed down my improved understanding, it’s maybe accelerated my loss of understanding.”

    The past two decades have given Keith time to think about what he wishes he had said to Nathan. Lynn asked her son what he would have told his brother, if given the chance.

    “There was an opportunity at his funeral to provide words to be spoken,” Keith told her. “But I wasn’t able to come up with what was really important.

    “The thing that I would say instead was that — there were times when I thought of Nathan as less than me. And that I was wrong. There were times when I thought — and even said to him — that he would never amount to anything. And I was wrong. Everything he wanted to do was important and meaningful.”

    “I don’t see him as a symbol”

    Nathan Chapman took to the Army right away. By 1989 he participated in his first combat mission, in Panama, and he would go on to deploy in Saudi Arabia during Operation Desert Storm. In September 1991, he volunteered for Special Forces training.

    Nathan Chapman in Haiti, 1995.

    The Chapman family


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    The Chapman family

    “The fact that he was in Special Forces was a natural fit for him,” Lynn said. As a “very, very social guy,” she said, he developed a close bond with his small unit in which it was crucial to have each other’s backs.

    He also served in Haiti in 1995 before spending three years in Okinawa, Japan.

    Nathan was highly decorated, with honors including the Bronze Star with “V” device, denoting “Valor” for his heroism in combat, and a posthumous Purple Heart. It later emerged that Chapman had also been working for the CIA and was honored on the CIA’s memorial wall.

    But to Lynn, her son is far more than a celebrated example of American sacrifice and heroism.

    “People take on larger than life quality when things like this happen,” she said. “But I think of him as a son and a child — and then a soldier.

    “I don’t see him as a symbol. In some way, that takes him away from me.”

    Along with Lynn and Keith, Nathan is survived by his wife, Renae, his two kids Amanda and Brandon, his father Wilbur, and his half-brother Kevin.

    Audio produced for Weekend Edition by Eleanor Vassili.

    StoryCorps is a national nonprofit that gives people the chance to interview friends and loved ones about their lives. These conversations are archived at the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress, allowing participants to leave a legacy for future generations. Learn more, including how to interview someone in your life, at StoryCorps.org.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/08/28/1031709986/american-soldier-killed-afghanistan-war-storycorps-nathan-chapman

    • ISIS-K killed more than 170 people in a bomb attack near Kabul’s airport on Thursday.
    • President Biden vowed to respond with “force and precision” against those responsible for the bombing.
    • A US military official said the drone strike killed the intended target.

    Following a bombing near Kabul’s airport that killed more than 170 people, US forces carried out a drone strike on Friday against the Islamic State in eastern Afghanistan, the Washington Post reported.

    President Biden vowed earlier in the day to hunt down the ISIS-K terrorists who claimed responsibility for the attacks. 

    “U.S. military forces conducted an over-the-horizon counterterrorism operation today against an ISIS-K planner. The unmanned airstrike occurred in the Nangarhar Province of Afghanistan. Initial indications are that we killed the target. We know of no civilian casualties,” Navy Capt. Bill Urban, a US military spokesman, said in a statement.

    An anonymous US official told Reuters that a reaper drone took off from the Middle East and struck its target: an Islamic State militant planning future attacks. The strike killed the militant and another Islamic State associate, the official said.

    This is a breaking news story. Check back for updates.

    Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/us-military-drone-strikes-the-islamic-state-in-afghanistan-2021-8

    The United States military struck back at the Islamic State on Saturday, bombing an IS member in Afghanistan less than 48 hours after a devastating suicide bombing claimed by the group killed as many as 169 Afghans and 13 American service members at the Kabul airport.

    U.S. Central Command said the U.S. conducted a drone strike against an Islamic State member in Nangahar believed to be involved in planning attacks against the U.S. in Kabul. The strike killed one individual, and spokesman Navy Capt. William Urban said they knew of no civilian casualties.

    “U.S. military forces conducted an over-the-horizon counterterrorism operation today against an ISIS-K planner. The unmanned airstrike occurred in the Nangahar Province of Afghanistan. Initial indications are that we killed the target. We know of no civilian casualties,” Urban said in his statement.

    Biden authorized the drone strike and it was ordered by Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, a defense official said, speaking on condition of anonymity to provide details not yet publicly announced.

    It wasn’t clear if that individual was involved specifically in the Thursday suicide blast outside the gates of the Kabul airport, where crowds of Afghans were desperately trying to get in as part of the ongoing evacuation from the country after the Taliban’s rapid takeover.

    Two U.S. defense officials familiar with the strike told NBC News that the target of the drone strike was riding in a vehicle with an associate at the time of the strike, and that they were driving in an isolated area. The officials told NBC News the strike was carried out by an MQ-9 Reaper drone and munitions that were selected for precision and in order to minimize any civilian casualties.

    The airstrike fulfilled a vow President Joe Biden made to the nation Thursday when he said the perpetrators of the attack would not be able to hide. “We will hunt you down and make you pay,” he said. Pentagon leaders told reporters Friday that they were prepared for whatever retaliatory action the president ordered.

    “We have options there right now,” said Maj. Gen. Hank Taylor of the Pentagon’s Joint Staff.

    The U.S. Embassy in Kabul also issued a new security alert advising citizens to avoid four airport gates.

    “Because of security threats at the Kabul airport, we continue to advise U.S. citizens to avoid traveling to the airport and to avoid airport gates. U.S. citizens who are at the Abbey gate, East gate, North gate or the New Ministry of Interior gate now should leave immediately.”

    Biden was warned Friday that another terror attack in Kabul is “likely,” one day after the suicide bombing.

    The stark warning from the president’s national security team came as the United States entered the final days of a monthslong military withdrawal from Afghanistan, on track to meet Biden’s Aug. 31 deadline for a full withdrawal.

    NBC News’ Courtney Kube and CNBC’s Riya Bhattacharjee and Christina Wilkie and NBC News contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/08/27/us-airstrike-targets-islamic-state-member-in-afghanistan.html

    The man who killed Robert F Kennedy was granted parole on Friday after two of the former attorney general, senator and presidential hopeful’s sons spoke in favor of release and prosecutors declined to argue he should be kept behind bars.

    The decision was a major victory for Sirhan Sirhan, 77, though it did not assure his release.

    The ruling by the two-person panel at Sirhan’s 16th parole hearing will be reviewed over 90 days by the California parole board. Then it will be sent to the governor, who will have 30 days to decide whether to grant it, reverse it or modify it.

    Douglas Kennedy, a toddler when his father was killed in 1968, said he was moved to tears by Sirhan’s remorse and said he should be released if he’s not a threat to others.

    “I’m overwhelmed just by being able to view Mr Sirhan face-to-face,” he said. “I think I’ve lived my life both in fear of him and his name in one way or another. And I am grateful today to see him as a human being worthy of compassion and love.”

    Robert Kennedy, a New York senator and brother of President John F Kennedy, was a Democratic presidential candidate when he was killed on 6 June 1968 at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, moments after delivering a victory speech in the pivotal California primary.

    Sirhan, convicted of first-degree murder, has said he doesn’t remember the killing. His lawyer, Angela Berry, argued that the board should base its decision on who Sirhan is today.

    Prosecutors declined to participate or oppose his release, under a policy by Los Angeles county district attorney George Gascon, a former police officer who took office last year. Gascon, who said he idolized the Kennedys and mourned RFK’s assassination, believes the prosecutors’ role ends at sentencing and they should not influence decisions to release prisoners.

    As Douglas Kennedy spoke, Sirhan, in a blue prison uniform with a paper towel folded like a handkerchief and tucked into his pocket, smiled as Kennedy spoke. Sirhan said he had learned to control his anger and was committed to living peacefully.

    Bobby Kennedy addresses campaign workers moments before being shot in Los Angeles in 1968. Photograph: Dick Strobel/AP

    “I would never put myself in jeopardy again,” he said. “You have my pledge. I will always look to safety and peace and non-violence.”

    Some Kennedy family members, Los Angeles law enforcement officers and the public submitted letters opposing Sirhan’s release, parole board commissioner Robert Barton said at the start of the proceeding, which was held virtually.

    “We don’t have a DA here but I have to consider all sides,” Barton said.

    Sirhan, a Christian Palestinian from Jordan, has served 53 years. He has acknowledged he was angry at Kennedy for his support of Israel. When asked how he feels about the Middle East conflict today, Sirhan broke down crying and temporarily couldn’t speak.

    “Take a few deep breaths,” said Barton, who noted the conflict had not gone away and still touched a nerve.

    Sirhan said he doesn’t follow what’s going on in the region but thinks about the suffering of refugees.

    “The misery that those people are experiencing. It’s painful,” Sirhan said.

    If released, Sirhan could be deported to Jordan. Barton said he was concerned he might become a “symbol or lightning rod to foment more violence”.

    Sirhan said he was too old to be involved in the Middle East conflict and would detach himself from it.

    “The same argument can be said or made that I can be a peacemaker, and a contributor to a friendly nonviolent way of resolving the issue,” Sirhan said.

    Paul Schrade, who was wounded in the shooting, also spoke in favor of his release. Robert F Kennedy Jr, who has spoken in favor of Sirhan’s release in the past, wrote in favor of parole.

    Sirhan was sentenced to death but that sentence was commuted to life when the California supreme court briefly outlawed capital punishment in 1972. At his last parole hearing in 2016, commissioners concluded after more than three hours of intense testimony that Sirhan did not show adequate remorse or understand the enormity of his crime.

    Sirhan has stuck to his account that he does not remember the killing.

    Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/aug/27/sirhan-sirhan-bobby-kennedy-assassination-parole

    Liberal media members and pundits reacted angrily to the U.S. Supreme Court overturning the federal moratorium on evictions, despite the Biden administration’s admitting weeks ago it had no legal standing to extend the moratorium.

    The nation’s highest court voted Thursday in a 6-3 majority to overturn the moratorium, with the court’s three liberal-leaning justices dissenting. 

    The Biden administration previously admitted that it lacked the legal authority to extend the federal moratorium after it expired in July. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), however, issued a new moratorium that was set to expire in October.

    SUPREME COURT STRIKES DOWN BIDEN ADMINISTRATION’S EVICTION MORATORIUM

    Former President Donald Trump’s niece, Mary Trump, a regular at some liberal outlets, called for the court to be expanded to make the conservative-leaning members a “minority.” She described the six justices in favor of overturning the moratorium as “cruel” and “conscienceless.”

    “This week alone, the Supreme Court has attacked Biden’s eviction moratorium while pushing for the reinstatement of Trump’s Remain in Mexico policy. At what point do Democrats wake up, smell the coffee, get spines <choose your metaphor> and rebalance this packed Supreme Court?” wrote left-wing MSNBC host Mehdi Hasan, before adding that any action taken would require Congress and Democrats to have “spines.”

    PSAKI DISMISSED CONCERNS OVER LEGALITY OF BIDEN’S RENEWED EVICTION MORATORIUM

    Other critics from the media also took to Twitter to slam the decision, with some, including former Secretary of Labor and cable regular Robert Reich, joining the call to expand the court, and others expressing outrage over the court making the decision amid a pandemic.

    DEMOCRATS ATTACK SUPREME COURT FOR BLOCKING BIDEN EVICTION MORATORIUM

    Some critics lamented there was still unspent money for rental relief, while others predicted chaos as “millions” could be evicted. One critic even referred to the court as committing “another evil.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Smaller landlords had been hit hardest by the pandemic with as many as 58% having tenets behind on rent, according to the National Association of Realtors. Smaller landlords are owed more than half of all back rent.

    Fox Business’ Andrew Mark Miller contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/media-supreme-court-decision-joe-biden-eviction-moratorium

    One agency, on the other hand, assessed with “moderate confidence” that the first human infection “most likely was the result of a lab-associated incident, probably involving experimentation, animal handling, or sampling by the Wuhan Institute of Virology,” the summary said. That agency gave weight to “the inherently risky nature of work on coronaviruses,” the summary said.

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/wuhan-coronavirus-lab-leak/2021/08/27/8f20b024-0740-11ec-8c3f-3526f81b233b_story.html

    Refugees from Afghanistan are escorted to a bus after arriving and being processed Monday at Dulles International Airport in Virginia. The federal government is reportedly offering COVID-19 vaccines for Afghan arrivals at a site near the airport.

    Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images


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    Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

    Refugees from Afghanistan are escorted to a bus after arriving and being processed Monday at Dulles International Airport in Virginia. The federal government is reportedly offering COVID-19 vaccines for Afghan arrivals at a site near the airport.

    Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

    Afghans and U.S. citizens continue to leave Afghanistan’s capital in droves after the Taliban takeover and amid looming security threats. The U.S. is playing a role not only in mass evacuations but also in mass vaccination efforts, too.

    The Federal Emergency Management Agency has opened a COVID-19 vaccination site near Dulles International Airport in Virginia, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday, according to The Associated Press.

    The site, which offers the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine, has reportedly already started vaccinating Afghans. It has State Department interpreters available to answer questions.

    The federal government also reportedly has opened a mobile vaccination unit at Dulles to administer shots to American citizens and green card holders arriving from Afghanistan.

    Dulles has been the only point of entry for evacuees so far, with thousands arriving there daily. Civilian flights with refugees are set to begin arriving in Philadelphia as soon as Friday, and a senior Biden administration official told the AP a second mass vaccination site is expected at Philadelphia International Airport in the coming days. The official was not authorized to comment publicly and spoke on the condition of anonymity.

    What happens when evacuees reach the U.S.

    Thousands of Afghans and Afghan U.S. citizens have arrived this month through Dulles via places such as Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, Germany, Spain and Bulgaria. Grant Neely, a spokesperson for Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, put that number at 8,600 on Wednesday.

    Arriving evacuees are tested for the coronavirus and isolated if they test positive. U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents who test negative are allowed to go home.

    Just 11 of the 900 Afghan evacuees who were tested on Tuesday appeared to be infected with the virus, Neely said, according to the AP.

    Afghans are taken to the Dulles Expo Center, then to military bases in Virginia, Texas, Wisconsin and New Jersey for processing.

    There, they undergo health screenings and get help applying for work authorization and other services, Reuters reported. The processing can take anywhere from one day to one week, at which point Afghans get connected with U.S. resettlement organizations.

    Virginia officials confirmed Friday that vaccination clinics are set up but said they are not being widely used.

    “These people are just coming out of a war zone,” Northam said. “They’re landing in a new country. And so I think a lot of it is going to be educational. I don’t think this is something you just automatically want to say, ‘You need to get a shot.’ So we’re trying to at least handle some of these individuals with respect and, you know, kid gloves, rather than saying, ‘Do this, do that.’ “

    Just 0.58% of Afghanistan’s population is fully vaccinated, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/08/27/1031827480/afghan-evacuees-vaccination-dulles-virginia