The snow is ending and everyone should be drying out this afternoon after snow moved through central Pennsylvania Sunday morning.

Afternoon, evening travel

You can expect dry weather if traveling to any Super Bowl parties this afternoon and evening, and roads should be in good shape by then.

Temperatures fall below freezing tonight, so any standing water or slush will freeze overnight.

Icy spots will be possible tonight and early Monday during the morning commute.

Valentine’s Day forecast

Valentine’s Day will be even colder with highs in the upper 20s and winds chills in the teens all day long!

The cold weather doesn’t last as high temperatures rebound back into the 50s by Wednesday and Thursday.

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Source Article from https://www.wgal.com/article/snowy-start-super-bowl-sunday-central-pennsylvania/39062346

WINDSOR, Ontario/WASHINGTON/OTTAWA, Feb 13 (Reuters) – North America’s busiest trade link will reopen for traffic on Sunday, ending a six-day blockade, a top U.S. official said, after Canadian police cleared the protesters fighting to end COVID-19 restrictions.

Canadian police made several arrests on Sunday and cleared protesters and vehicles that occupied the Ambassador Bridge in Windsor, Ontario following a court order on Friday.

The blockade has choked the supply chain for Detroit’s carmakers, forcing Ford Motor Co (F.N), the second-largest U.S. automaker, General Motors Co (GM.N) and Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T) to cut production.

“Canadian authorities intend to reopen the Ambassador Bridge today after completing necessary safety checks,” White House Homeland Security adviser Liz Sherwood-Randall said in a statement.

The bridge carries about $360 million a day in two-way cargoes – 25% of the value of all U.S.-Canada goods trade.

“We stand ready to support our Canadian partners wherever useful in order to ensure the restoration of the normal free flow of commerce can resume,” the statement added.

Windsor Police said in a statement on Sunday they arrested several people on a charge of mischief, without saying how many. Police also seized vehicles within the demonstration area, the statement added.

Police stepped up their presence on Sunday with more than 50 vehicles, including cruisers, buses and an armoured car, as the number of protesters dropped to around 45 from roughly 100 on Saturday. Windsor Police tweeted “there will be zero tolerance for illegal activity”.

In Ottawa, counter protests started blocking vehicles trying to join the protests on Sunday, with residents losing patience over the three-week-old demonstrations.

The “Freedom Convoy” protests, started in the national capital Ottawa by Canadian truckers opposing a vaccinate-or-quarantine mandate for cross-border drivers, entered its 17th day on Sunday. But it has now morphed into a rallying point against broader COVID-19 curbs, carbon tax and other issues, with people joining in cars, pick-up trucks and farm vehicles.

“We’re fed up, we’re tired. We want Ottawa to be boring again,” said an Ottawa resident at a counter protest in front of the city’s police headquarters.

The Canadian government has discussed whether to invoke special emergency powers to deal with the protests in the capital, Emergency Preparedness Minister Bill Blair told CBC News on Sunday. Blair said the lack of police enforcement in Ottawa was “inexplicable.”

The rarely used Emergencies Act would allow the federal government to override the provinces and authorize special temporary measures to ensure security during national emergencies anywhere in the country. It has only been used once in peacetime — by Trudeau’s father, former Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau — in 1970.

Strangling bilateral trade, protests have spread to three border points, including in Alberta and Manitoba. Canadian police have said the protests have been partly funded by U.S. supporters, and Ontario froze funds donated via one U.S. platform GiveSendGo on Thursday.

The estimated loss so far from the blockades to the auto industry alone could be as high as $850 million, based on IHS Markit’s data, which puts the 2021 daily flow in vehicles and parts at $141.1 million a day.

“Today, our national economic crisis at the Ambassador Bridge came to an end,” Windsor City Mayor Drew Dilkens said in a tweet.

In Europe, a convoy of 150 cars protesting COVID-19 restrictions left Paris on Sunday morning and headed towards Brussels, protesters told Reuters.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/canada-protesters-police-deadlocked-tensions-simmer-blocked-border-bridge-2022-02-13/

Rudy Giuliani is in active discussions regarding testifying before the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol and potentially responding to some of the committee’s questions, sources familiar with the matter confirm to ABC News.

The extent of the cooperation remains to be seen and no deal is anywhere near final, the sources said. Sources have told ABC News that the negotiations could easily dissolve.

Giuliani was subpoenaed by the committee last month to appear for an interview last week.

“Mr. Giuliani’s appearance was rescheduled at his request,” a committee aide told ABC News on Sunday. “He remains under subpoena and the select committee expects him to cooperate fully.”

Committee investigators and Giuliani’s representation are expected to connect again in the coming days over Giuliani’s potential cooperation. It’s unlikely that Giuliani would agree to testify about or share records regarding his direct communications with former President Donald Trump, according to a person familiar with the situation.

Giuliani is still very close to Trump, having spent some time with the 45th president just last week in Florida, and was planning to watch the Super Bowl Sunday evening with Trump and other guests, a source told ABC News.

The former New York City mayor was on the front lines of Trump’s unsuccessful efforts to challenge the results of the 2020 election, working with allies Sidney Powell, Jenna Ellis, and a small team that filed numerous lawsuits and tried to assemble a slate of fake electors — all of which failed.

Should he testify, Giuliani would arguably be one of the closest to Trump’s efforts to undo the election results to meet with the committee.

News of Giuliani’s possible cooperation with the committee was first reported by the New York Times.

Trump has maintained that the committee’s efforts are a partisan witch hunt, and several top Trump allies have refused to cooperate with the probe.

Ex-White House strategist Steve Bannon was indicted on two federal counts of contempt of Congress for refusing to cooperate with the committee. A trial has tentatively been set for July.

Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows reversed course after originally cooperating with the panel, leading the full House to hold him in criminal contempt. A referral to the Justice Department has yet to be acted upon.

An attorney for Giuliani did not respond to ABC News’ request for comment.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/US/giuliani-discussions-testifying-jan-committee-sources/story?id=82863180

Democratic and Republican voters are split about having President Biden or former President Donald Trump leading their tickets in 2024, but they have few candidates in mind who can replace them, according to a poll released on Sunday. 

The CNN survey conducted between Jan. 10 and Feb. 6 found that 51 percent of Democratic and Democratic-leaning independent voters wanted somebody other than Biden in 2024, while 45 percent hope he’ll be renominated. 

Asked the same question, 50 percent of Republican or Republican-leaning independent voters wanted Trump to be their standard-bearer, while 49 percent are wishing for another candidate to enter the fray. 

Among Democrats who prefer somebody other than Biden, 31 percent said they don’t want him to be re-elected, 35 percent said they don’t believe he could beat the Republican candidate, and 34 percent cited a different reason, including 19 percent who said the president is too old, 4 percent who want a better candidate, and 3 percent who want somebody different.

Biden will turn 82 Nov. 20. 2024.

Questioned about who they would prefer instead of Biden, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) got 5 percent support, followed by former first lady Michelle Obama (4 percent), Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg (2 percent), and Vice President Kamala Harris (2 percent).

45 percent hope President Biden will be renominated. 
CNN by SSRS

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the progressive firebrand from New York, garnered 1 percent of support along with media mogul Oprah Winfrey and New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker.

No one else got more than 1 percent of support. Seven percent opted for “other/unsure.”

As for Republicans who oppose Trump in 2024, 39 percent said they just don’t want him to be president, 22 percent think he can’t win against a Democrat and 38 percent went with another reason. 

5 percent of Democrats said they would prefer Sen. Bernie Sanders over President Biden in 2024.
Win McNamee/Getty Images

Those include “someone new/better” (9 percent), “too polarizing” (7 percent ), and “someone with different traits” (6 percent).

“Dislike the vitriol,” “Democrats won’t let him win,” and too old came in at 3 percent. 

Trump will be 78 in November 2024.

49 percent of Republicans wish someone other than Trump would run in 2024.
Win McNamee/Getty Images
50 percent of Republicans want to see Donald Trump run in 2024.
CNN by SSRS

Asked who should run instead, Fla. Gov. Ron DeSantis easily topped the list with 21 percent. 

A slew of others – Donald Trump Jr., Rep. Dan Crenshaw of Texas, Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, former UN ambassador Nikki Haley, former Vice President Mike Pence, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina- all came in at 1 percent. 

“Other/unsure” got 12 percent. 

21 percent of Republicans prefer Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis over former President Donald Trump.
Michael Reaves/Getty Images

The poll surveyed 1,527 voters, and it has a plus/minus 3.3 percentage points margin of error. 

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2022/02/13/parties-split-on-biden-trump-running-again-in-2024/

Sonny Subia, a volunteer with the League of United Latin American Citizens, introduces Michael Schneider, FBI special agent in charge, to a group largely composed of Latino middle and high school students in Greeley, Colo., on Jan. 28.

AAron Ontiveroz for NPR


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Sonny Subia, a volunteer with the League of United Latin American Citizens, introduces Michael Schneider, FBI special agent in charge, to a group largely composed of Latino middle and high school students in Greeley, Colo., on Jan. 28.

AAron Ontiveroz for NPR

Sonny Subia is one of those people who seems to know most people around town and is trying to meet all the rest. At a restaurant in Greeley, Colo., last month, he was chatting with a stranger at the bar who was celebrating his 21st birthday.

The restaurant owner is a friend, who Subia noted is “as right-wing as you can get.”

“I have friends all the way on the right and all the way on the left. And you just have to around northern Colorado,” Subia said.

Subia is a school expulsion officer, and in his spare time, he’s the volunteer Colorado state director for LULAC, the League of United Latin American Citizens.

He’s also a committed Democrat. And he’s worried.

“This congressional district is the largest Latino population of any district in the state — and it’s a toss-up,” he said, exasperated. “How is that? It just doesn’t make sense.”

Sonny Subia is a school expulsion officer. In his spare time, he’s the volunteer Colorado state director for LULAC, the League of United Latin American Citizens.

AAron Ontiveroz for NPR


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Sonny Subia is a school expulsion officer. In his spare time, he’s the volunteer Colorado state director for LULAC, the League of United Latin American Citizens.

AAron Ontiveroz for NPR

That district is Colorado’s 8th, which stretches from Denver’s northern suburbs up to the more-conservative area around Greeley, a 45-minute drive away. It is a new district in the wake of the 2020 census, and it’s the most heavily Latino in the state at nearly 40%. Expected to be one of the country’s closest congressional races in November, it’s also an area that reflects key national trends that could shape the midterm elections.

Subia is reflecting anxiety that is felt throughout the Democratic Party over its standing with Latino voters after Republican gains in 2020.

A development takes shape in January in Thornton, Colo., with the Rocky Mountains in the distance.

AAron Ontiveroz for NPR


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A development takes shape in January in Thornton, Colo., with the Rocky Mountains in the distance.

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“This 8th seems like such a different race, but it actually represents where all the growth has really been in every city around America, where you have this booming Latino population outside of Charlotte, Philly, Atlanta, and you can just go on down the line,” said Chuck Rocha, a Democratic strategist who is working with 8th District candidate Chaz Tedesco.

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National political trends obscure local concerns

On the whole, the Latino voting-age population in the U.S. is more Democratic, younger, less likely to be registered to vote and faster-growing than the U.S. population as a whole. But what it means to be a Latino voter is particular to any given place.

Because living in Colorado’s 8th means living in a fast-growing area, housing is a big issue.

State Rep. Yadira Caraveo, who has served as a Colorado state representative since 2018, is running for Congress in Colorado’s 8th Congressional District.

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State Rep. Yadira Caraveo, who has served as a Colorado state representative since 2018, is running for Congress in Colorado’s 8th Congressional District.

AAron Ontiveroz for NPR

“It’s getting increasingly more expensive, and it’s changed a lot in the last 20 years,” said Yadira Caraveo, a pediatrician and Democratic candidate. “And so, you know, parents talk to me all the time about how many jobs they’re working to be able to afford to live here, how much their rent costs.”

That topic of affordability also came up with voters.

At a meeting of local businesspeople, financial planner Emilio Valdez said the cost of living in the area has accelerated.

“You take a look at my daughter, for instance. Her and her husband just bought a house and they paid a half a million for it,” he said. “And when that house sold eight years ago, it was $230,000. So, you know, a big difference in what the housing prices are doing.”

Emilio Valdez (center) speaks with congressional candidate Erik Aadland at Rails End Beer Co. on Jan. 28. Valdez, a Republican voter, said he likes to know what candidates stand for before signing petitions in support of them.

AAron Ontiveroz for NPR


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Emilio Valdez (center) speaks with congressional candidate Erik Aadland at Rails End Beer Co. on Jan. 28. Valdez, a Republican voter, said he likes to know what candidates stand for before signing petitions in support of them.

AAron Ontiveroz for NPR

Valdez is a Republican, and he came out to see Jan Kulmann, a GOP candidate and the mayor of Thornton, one of the Denver suburbs contained in the 8th District.

Sitting at a coffeehouse in the development of Reunion, Kulmann noted how quickly the suburban development had expanded.

“None of this was here just a few years ago,” she said, gesturing to an area next to a small lake outside the window.

Financial planner Emilio Valdez says the cost of living in the area has accelerated.

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That means many of the voters these candidates are trying to reach in this new district are also new to the area. “Every year that I’m knocking on doors and talking to new people, it’s always new voters over and over again,” Kulmann said. “So I think the bigger challenge is really making sure that they know that there’s another election coming, because it feels like there’s one every single year because there is one.”

There’s plenty of room to grow the electorate here. A Colorado Sun analysis found that the 8th has the lowest share of active, registered voters of any district in the state.

Much of the 8th has for the last decade been a Republican-leaning district, represented by Ken Buck. The new district’s competitiveness may be one way to get voters enthused, says Subia.

“Once we can go out and inform the people around northern Colorado that, ‘Hey, this is a totally new ballgame. We’re in a new game and we can win this,’ once we start doing that — we got to do it now because it’s coming around the corner, and it comes fast,” he said.

Economic concerns go beyond finding a job

That means motivating people who don’t always vote, like Alfredo Gonzalez. He’s a cook at a hotel, and an independent who didn’t vote in 2020. So what does he need to hear from candidates this year?

“Well, for our documents, you know,” he said, “to be in this country legally.”

But he also said that the economy is his top issue — even while he personally isn’t suffering.

“In fact, I have a good job. I’m doing fine. I mean, what matters is me having a job and security,” he said.

The hustle and bustle of Commerce City, Colo., unfolds in the foreground as Colorado’s Rocky Mountains stand tall in the distance.

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The hustle and bustle of Commerce City, Colo., unfolds in the foreground as Colorado’s Rocky Mountains stand tall in the distance.

AAron Ontiveroz for NPR

The tension between having employment and being concerned about the economy has been readily visible throughout the district lately. “Help wanted” signs abound — and so have labor strikes. Workers at local supermarket chain King Soopers were demonstrating in recent weeks, demanding better pay, benefits and conditions (the strike ended with the ratification of a new contract).

The so-called working class — blue-collar, pink-collar and other service-industry workers in jobs that often don’t require a college degree — has been slipping from the Democrats to the Republican Party in recent years.

Republican strategist Mike Madrid says that winning more of those voters will mean winning over Latino voters.

There is hope in the GOP that Democrats’ advantage is slipping. Donald Trump won only around 3 in 10 Latino voters in 2016, but nearly 4 in 10 in 2020 — right around George W. Bush’s 2004 high-water mark.

Madrid says the GOP made those gains, in part, by getting away from Trump’s racist 2016 messaging.

“All they need to do is get out of their own way and continue articulating their own populist economic messages that are resonating with white, non-college educated workers, because they are increasingly working with Latino, non-college educated workers,” Madrid said.

To Kulmann, connecting to the Latino community in the district means speaking to the issues that young families have. That means speaking to the economy, the pandemic and COVID’s effects on schools.

“What you see particularly in Thornton with the Latino community, is you have two working parents — and we have that in my family as well, two working parents,” she said. “And so every time a school is shut down, a parent has to stay home and they can’t go to their job because not everybody can work remotely in their job. And so the frustration I’m hearing from working families is that they can’t stay home anymore with their kids.”

Chaz Tedesco, who serves on the Adams County Commission, asks for a petition signature from neighbor Ryan Goff as he canvasses on Jan. 29. Tedesco is running for Colorado’s 8th Congressional District.

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Chaz Tedesco, who serves on the Adams County Commission, asks for a petition signature from neighbor Ryan Goff as he canvasses on Jan. 29. Tedesco is running for Colorado’s 8th Congressional District.

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Tedesco canvasses his neighborhood on a Saturday.

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And there is an ongoing battle over which is the party of working families. Candidate Chaz Tedesco believes that Democrats are that party, but that they need to do a better job communicating it.

“I want to make sure that when we look at legislation and when we put legislation in, that it has a clear and defined direction toward working families, and we can outline that, we can express that, we can explain that,” he said.

But it’s not just about what the candidates here say; politics are increasingly nationalized. And while President Biden has been trying to portray his party as the party of American workers, organizer Sonny Subia in Greeley says he needs more results before November’s election.

“I voted for Biden. I listen to Biden and it’s like, wait a minute. You can’t even get your own party to back your plans,” he said. “How are you going to motivate me to go out and recruit and get people to vote and talk to my family?”

Two people sit in the foreground as Colorado’s Rocky Mountains stand tall in the distance of Westminster, Colo., on Jan. 29.

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Two people sit in the foreground as Colorado’s Rocky Mountains stand tall in the distance of Westminster, Colo., on Jan. 29.

AAron Ontiveroz for NPR

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/02/13/1075600036/congress-midterm-election-colorado-eighth-district-latino-voters

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police in Surrey, British Columbia, southeast of Vancouver, said Saturday night that there was still “significant traffic congestion” on the main road leading to the Pacific Highway Border Crossing into Blaine, Wash. The crowd was “beginning to dissipate” but there were “still a number of individuals on foot,” the police said. An incident involving “a few vehicles” crossing police barricades and driving the wrong way down a street was under investigation, the police said, noting there were no injuries.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2022/02/13/canada-freedom-convoy-border-blockades-truckers/

President Joe Biden warned Russian President Vladimir Putin Saturday that the United States will “respond decisively and impose swift and severe costs” should Russia invade Ukraine. The warning comes as U.S. officials say a Russian invasion could begin “at any time.”

With an escalated Russian military buildup on the borders of Ukraine, Mr. Biden emphasized on a phone call with Putin that an invasion “would produce widespread human suffering and diminish Russia’s standing.”

“President Biden was clear with President Putin that while the United States remains prepared to engage in diplomacy, in full coordination with our Allies and partners, we are equally prepared for other scenarios,” the White House said Saturday. 

The Biden administration has urged American citizens to leave Ukraine and on Saturday, the U.S. Department of State ordered non-emergency employees at the U.S. embassy in Kyiv to leave the country. 

“Today, the [State Department] ordered non-emergency U.S. employees at the Embassy to depart due to continued reports of a Russian military build-up on the border with Ukraine, indicating potential for significant military action,” the embassy tweeted early Saturday morning. 

Thousands of American troops have been ordered to Poland, where they are expected to be in place by early next week to join 2,000 troops already stationed throughout the region, according to a senior defense official. 


Ukrainians take to streets for anti-war prote…

01:56

National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters Friday that the U.S. is firmly convinced that Russia is looking hard at the creation of a false-flag operation to justify an invasion, “something that they generate and try to blame on the Ukrainians as a trigger for military action.” Sullivan said that any subsequent attack would likely begin with “aerial bombing and missile attacks” ahead of “the onslaught of a massive force.” 

Russian forces are already positioned to send troops pouring across Ukraine’s northern border with Belarus and launch a maritime assault from the Black Sea. Moscow is also capable of sending troops over Ukraine’s eastern border. 

U.S. officials have said Russia already has intelligence operatives on the ground that could create a pretext for an invasion by assisting in creating a false flag. Last month, U.S. officials said this could involve Russian operatives “trained in urban warfare and in using explosives to carry out acts of sabotage against Russia’s own proxy forces.” 

Margaret Brennan contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/biden-putin-warning-russia-invades-ukraine/

Feb 13 (Reuters) – Australia said on Sunday it was evacuating its embassy in Kyiv as the situation on the Russia-Ukraine border deteriorated quickly, with Prime Minister Scott Morrison calling on China to not remain “chillingly silent” on the crisis.

The United States and Europe stepped up their warnings of an imminent attack by Russia on Ukraine, while the Kremlin, jostling for more influence in post-Cold War Europe, rejected a joint EU-NATO diplomatic response to its demands to reduce tensions as disrespectful. read more

Australia’s embassy staff in Kyiv was directed to a temporary office in Lviv, a city in western Ukraine, around 70 kilometres (44 miles) from the border with Poland, Foreign Minister Marise Payne said in a statement.

“We continue to advise Australians to leave Ukraine immediately by commercial means,” Payne said.

Morrison said that the situation “is reaching a very dangerous stage” and added that “the autocratic unilateral actions of Russia to be threatening and bullying Ukraine is something that is completely and utterly unacceptable.”

Morrison, whose government has frigid ties with China, called also on Beijing to speak up for Ukraine, after China criticised a meeting of the U.S., Australian, Japanese and Indian foreign ministers in Melbourne last week. read more

“The Chinese government is happy to criticise Australia … yet remains chillingly silent on Russian troops amassing on the Ukrainian border,” Morrison told a news conference.

“The coalition of autocracies that we are seeing, seeking to bully other countries, is not something that Australia ever takes a light position on.”

Relations between Australia and China, its top trade partner, soured after Canberra banned Huawei Technologies (HWT.UL) from its 5G broadband network in 2018, toughened laws against foreign political interference, and urged an independent investigation into the origins of COVID-19.

(This story refiles to correct typo in headline)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/australia-evacuates-embassy-kyiv-ukraine-2022-02-13/

The blockade of the Ambassador Bridge, a key trade corridor that connects Windsor, Ontario, to Detroit, which has disrupted traffic and the flow of goods since Monday, has not ended. Disruptions are still plaguing other vital cross-border arteries — from Coutts, Alberta, which connects to Montana, to Surrey, British Columbia, which connects to Washington state.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2022/02/13/canada-freedom-convoy-border-blockades-truckers/

  • Former press secretary Stephanie Grisham said Trump wasn’t one for following the rules.
  • She said staff followed his lead, thinking they wouldn’t get in trouble since he was president.
  • The Washington Post interviewed Grisham for a story about Trump’s handling of presidential documents.

Former press secretary Stephanie Grisham said following the rules wasn’t exactly a priority in the Trump White House for the president or his staffers.

In an interview with The Washington Post, Grisham described the mindset that contributed to former President Donald Trump’s attitude towards dealing with official documents and other laws concerning the executive branch.

“He would roll his eyes at the rules, so we did, too,” Grisham said. “We weren’t going to get in trouble because he’s the president of the United States.”

Grisham, who also served as chief of staff to the former first lady, turned on Trump after the January 6 insurrection at the Capitol. She’s since become an outspoken critic of the former president.

The Post interviewed Grisham as part of their reporting on Trump’s treatment of documents. Earlier in the week the outlet reported Trump brought boxes of presidential records – including some that were “top secret” – with him to Mar-a-Lago when he left office.

Other reports said Trump had a habit of tearing up documents, which would violate the Presidential Records Act. The law requires all presidential records to be preserved and handed over to the National Archives and Records Administration, which collects and sorts documents related to presidential duties.

A representative for Trump did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment. He has previously denied any wrongdoing.

In a statement to The Post on Saturday, a spokesman for Trump said: “This unfortunate attempt by the media to twist a story, along with the help of anonymous sources, is just another sensationalized distraction of an otherwise uneventful effort to persevere the legacy of President Trump and a good faith effort to ensure the fulfillment of the Presidential Records Act.”

Grisham also told The Post she once told Trump about a potential violation of the Hatch Act, which bans some executive branch employees from engaging in certain political activities. She said he responded: “Who’s the boss of the Hatch Act? It’s me. So say whatever you want.”

Grisham previously said Hatch Act violations were laughed off in the Trump White House, Insider reported. She said such violations were considered a “badge of honor.” Her comments came after the Office of the Special Counsel, an independent federal watchdog agency, released a report in November that said 13 Trump administration officials violated the Hatch Act.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/stephanie-grisham-trump-rolled-eyes-rules-so-we-did-too-2022-2

Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign paid an internet company to “infiltrate” servers at Trump Tower and the White House in order to link Donald Trump to Russia, a bombshell new legal filing alleges.

The Friday filing from a Department of Justice prosecutor tasked with investigating the origins of the FBI’s Russian probe served to throw cold water on Democrats’ longstanding allegations of collusion.

Special Counsel John Durham filed a motion related to potential conflicts of interests in connection with the case of Clinton campaign lawyer Michael Sussmann, who is charged with lying to the feds, according to Fox News.

Sussmann allegedly told the FBI he was not working on behalf of Clinton when he presented the agency with documents that supposedly linked the Trump Organization to a Kremlin-tied bank two months before the election.

The lawyer has pleaded not guilty to the charge of making a false statement to a federal agent.

Durham’s motion reportedly alleged Sussmann “had assembled and conveyed the allegations to the FBI on behalf of at least two specific clients, including a technology executive (Tech Executive 1) at a U.S.-based internet company (Internet Company 1) and the Clinton campaign.”

Special Counsel John Durham’s filing alleges the Clinton campaign targeted servers in Trump Tower and the White House.
Getty Images

Records showed he “repeatedly billed the Clinton Campaign for his work on the Russian Bank-1 allegations,” which involved an investigative firm, a tech executive, cyber researchers and numerous employees at internet companies, the motion reportedly stated.

In 2017, Sussmann provided “an updated set of allegations” about then-President Trump’s Russian connection to another government agency, the motion said, according to the outlet.

Among the accusations leveled at that time was that suspicious DNS lookups by Russian-affiliated IP addresses “demonstrated Trump and/or his associates were using supposedly rare, Russian-made wireless phones in the vicinity of the White House and other locations,” the motion reportedly said.

The allegations “relied, in part, on the purported DNS traffic” that Tech Executive-1 and others “had assembled pertaining to Trump Tower, Donald Trump’s New York City apartment building, the EOP, and the aforementioned healthcare provider,” according to Fox’s report.

Durham said his office found “no support for these allegations,” claiming the supposed evidence Sussmann provided was incomplete and skewed.

Trump said he was vindicated by Durham’s filing in a Saturday evening statement, adding there was a time that Sussmann’s alleged crime “would have been punishable by death.”

Former President Donald Trump said Clinton campaign lawyer Michael Sussmann’s alleged crime is “a scandal far greater in scope and magnitude than Watergate” in a statement released Saturday night.
AP

The document “provides indisputable evidence that my campaign and presidency were spied on by operatives paid by the Hillary Clinton Campaign in an effort to develop a completely fabricated connection to Russia,” the Republican former president’s statement read.

“This is a scandal far greater in scope and magnitude than Watergate and those who were involved in and knew about this spying operation should be subject to criminal prosecution.”

Republican Rep. Kash Patel, who was chief investigator of the House’s probe into Trump’s alleged Russian ties, told Fox News Durham’s filing was “definitive” evidence that Clinton’s campaign orchestrated “a criminal enterprise to fabricate a connection between President Trump and Russia.”

Former FBI lawyer Kevin Clinesmith was the first person charged with making a false statement in connection with Durham’s investigation. He pleaded guilty in 2020 to falsifying a document used by the FBI to surveil a Trump aide.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2022/02/13/hillary-clinton-campaign-paid-tech-workers-to-dig-up-donald-trump-russia-connections/

LEXINGTON (CBS) — A man was shot and killed by Lexington Police on Saturday afternoon after allegedly threatening another person and a police officer with a knife.

The man killed, who has not been publicly identified yet, lived on Hancock Street at a house run by Eliot Community Services. Officers were aware that it was a group home for residents dealing with mental health issues.

READ MORE: Light Snow Sunday, Winter Weather Advisory Issued For Slippery Roads On South Shore, Cape And Islands

Middlesex District Attorney Marian Ryan said shortly after 12:30 p.m. that a jogger going past the house saw a man in the window begging people to call the police. The man in the window said someone inside was trying to kill him. The jogger then called Lexington Police.

When officers arrived, they found a 35-year-old resident of the house on the driveway. Ryan said the man was carrying a knife. Officers asked him to drop the knife, but he did not do so.

“He continued to advance forward on the property, out into the street. At that point, the officers continued those demands to put the knife down,” Ryan said. “They continued to try and create distance between themselves and the individual with the knife. Despite the repeated requests to put down the knife, the man declined to do that.”

One officer fired non-lethal beanbag rounds that caused the man to fall, but he was able to get back up.

READ MORE: Vigil Held In Sherborn For Teenager Killed In Dover Car Crash

A Lexington officer then fell to the ground, and the man moved towards the officer with the knife in his hand.

According to Ryan, that’s when a fellow officer shot him.

“When the man with the knife advanced on that officer who had fallen, another Lexington officer fired their service weapon, striking the man,” Ryan said.

He was taken to hospital where he was pronounced.

As of early Saturday evening, the investigation is still active and ongoing.

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It is still unclear how many shots were fired by police. Ryan is asking witnesses to come forward to tell police what they saw.

Source Article from https://boston.cbslocal.com/2022/02/12/lexington-police-shooting-man-knife-hancock-street-eliot-community-services/

MULTAN, Pakistan — An enraged mob stoned to death a middle-aged man for allegedly desecrating the Quran in a remote village in eastern Pakistan, police said Sunday.

The custodian of a local mosque said he saw the man burning the Muslim holy book inside the mosque Saturday evening and told others before informing police, according to police spokesman Chaudhry Imran. The violence took place in a village in the district of Khanewal in Punjab province.

Imran said police rushed to the scene, where a man was found surrounded by an angry crowd. Officer Mohammad Iqbal and two subordinates tried to take custody of the man but the group began throwing stones at them, seriously injuring Iqbal and slightly injuring the other two officers.

Munawar Gujjar, chief of Tulamba police station, said he rushed reinforcements to the mosque but they did not arrive before the mob had stoned to death the man and hung his body from a tree.

Gujjar said the victim was identified as Mushtaq Ahmed, 41, of a nearby village.

“The ill-fated man has been mentally unstable for the last 15 years and according to his family often went missing from home for days begging and eating whatever he could find,” he said. He said the body was handed over to the family.

Mian Mohammad Ramzan, the mosque custodian, said he saw smoke inside the mosque, which is adjacent to his home, and rushed over to investigate. He found one Quran burned and saw a man attempting to burn another. He said people were starting to arrive for evening prayers as he was shouting for the man to stop.

Witnesses said a police team that reached the village before the stoning began took custody of a man but the mob snatched him away from them and beat the police as they tried to rescue him.

Later, more officers and constables reached the scene and took custody of the body, they said.

Gujjar, the area police chief, said investigators were scanning available videos to try to identify the assailants. He said police had so far detained about 80 men living in the mosque’s surroundings but that about 300 suspects took part.

Prime Minister Imran Khan expressed his anguish over the incident and said he was seeking a report from Punjab’s chief minister on the police handling of the case. He said they “failed in their duty.”

“We have zero tolerance for anyone taking the law into their own hands and mob lynching will be dealt with with the full severity of the law,” he said in a tweet hours after the incident.

Khan also asked the Punjab police chief for a report on the actions taken against perpetrators of the lynching.

The killing comes months after the lynching of a Sri Lankan manager of a sporting goods factory in Sialkot in Punjab province on Dec. 3 who was accused by workers of blasphemy.

Mob attacks on people accused of blasphemy are common in this conservative Islamic nation. International and national rights groups say blasphemy accusations have often been used to intimidate religious minorities and settle personal scores. Blasphemy is punishable by death in Pakistan.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/man-accused-blasphemy-stoned-death-mob-pakistan-82858123

WASHINGTON/MOSCOW, Feb 12 (Reuters) – U.S. President Joe Biden told Russia’s Vladimir Putin on Saturday that the West would respond decisively to any invasion of Ukraine, adding such a step would produce widespread suffering and isolate Moscow.

In the latest effort to manage growing hostility, the two men spoke by phone for an hour a day after Washington and its allies warned that the Russian military, which has 100,000 troops massed near Ukraine, could invade at any moment. Moscow has dismissed those warnings as “hysteria.”

Neither side said there had been any breakthroughs. A senior Biden administration official said the call was professional and substantive, but that there was no fundamental change.

The Kremlin said Putin told Biden Washington has failed to take Russia’s main concerns into account, and it had received no “substantial answer” on key elements including NATO’s expansion and the deployment of offensive forces to Ukraine.

The senior Biden administration official said it was unclear whether Putin was committed to diplomacy even as he agreed to stay in touch with Biden.

The call took place as Israel, Portugal and Belgium joined the list of countries that have urged their citizens to leave Ukraine immediately.

Earlier on Saturday, the U.S. State Department ordered most of its embassy staff to leave Ukraine. The Pentagon said it was withdrawing about 150 military trainers.

Biden planned to compare notes with French President Emmanuel Macron, who spoke with both Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy on Saturday, according to the White House. Biden’s top military and diplomatic officials spoke with their Russian counterparts.

Putin also spoke with Alexander Lukashenko, leader of Ukraine’s northern neighbor Belarus, which is engaged in major joint military drills with Russia.

After Macron’s call with Putin, a French presidency official said there were no indications from what Putin told Macron that Russia is preparing an offensive against Ukraine.

“We are nevertheless extremely vigilant and alert to the Russian (military) posture in order to avoid the worst,” the French official said.

Russia said on Saturday that it had decided to “optimize” its diplomatic staff numbers in Ukraine, fearing “provocations” by Kyiv or others. It said its embassy and consulates in Ukraine continued to perform their key functions.

SECURITY GUARANTEES

A U.S. official on Saturday said there was no telling what Putin has decided, but that the steps Russia is taking “in plain sight” make them fear the worst.

Biden told Putin during their call that the United States is pushing for diplomacy but ready for “other scenarios,” the White House said.

In Kyiv, several thousand Ukrainians filed through the center of the city, chanting “Glory to Ukraine” and carrying banners that said “Ukrainians will resist” and “invaders must die.” read more

Zelenskiy, who attended police drills in the southern Kherson region, echoed Washington’s assessment that a Russian attack could happen at any time, but stressed that it was important for Ukrainians to remain calm.

“The best friend of our enemies is panic in our country,” he said.

Putin, jostling for influence in post-Cold War Europe, is seeking security guarantees from Biden to block Kyiv’s entry into NATO and missile deployments near Russia’s borders.

Washington regards many of the proposals as non-starters but has pushed the Kremlin to discuss them jointly with Washington and its European allies.

Moscow has repeatedly disputed Washington’s version of events, saying it has massed the troops near the Ukrainian border to maintain its own security against aggression by NATO allies.

Also on Saturday, the Russian military said it had used “appropriate means” to make a U.S. submarine depart from Russian waters in the far east after the vessel ignored a Russian request to leave, Interfax news agency reported.

The submarine was detected near the Pacific Kuril islands in Russia’s waters as Russia conducted naval exercises, the military was quoted as saying. The U.S. government did not immediately comment.

Washington plans to send 3,000 extra troops to Poland, Ukraine’s western neighbor, in coming days to try to help reassure NATO allies, four U.S. officials told Reuters. They are in addition to 8,500 already on alert for deployment to Europe if needed. read more

Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt, Idrees Ali, Simon Lewis, Vladimir Soldatkin, Pavel Polityuk, Valentyn Ogirenko, Dmitry Antonov, Leigh Thomas, Mike Stone, Makini Brice and Humeyra Pamuk; Writing by Trevor Hunnicutt and Frances Kerry, Editing by Angus MacSwan and Daniel Wallis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/biden-putin-speak-ukraine-warnings-mount-2022-02-12/

Canadian police moved in Saturday to remove protesters who have disrupted Canada-U.S. trade at a major bridge border crossing. Officials began issuing tickets and towing vehicles that remained parked in the area of the protest, Windsor police tweeted Saturday afternoon.

Demonstrators had spent the night at the Ambassador Bridge spanning the river between Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, in defiance of new warnings to end the blockade, which disrupted the flow of traffic and goods and forced the auto industry on both sides to roll back production. However, many of them drove away as scores of police approached shortly after dawn on Saturday.

Surrounded by dozens of officers, a man with “Mandate Freedom” and “Trump 2024” spray-painted on his vehicle left as other protesters began dismantling a small tarp-covered encampment. A trucker honked his horn as he, too, drove off, to cheers and chants of “Freedom!”

Anti-vaccine mandate protestors yell at a television crew as they record a live interview at a roadway near the Ambassador Bridge U.S.-Canada border crossing, in Windsor, Ontario, Canada on February 11, 2022.

GEOFF ROBINS/AFP via Getty Images


The demonstrations at the Ambassador Bridge, downtown Ottawa and elsewhere have targeted vaccine mandates and other coronavirus restrictions and vented fury toward Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who has called the protesters a “fringe” of Canadian society.

The protests have reverberated outside the country, with similarly inspired convoys in France, New Zealand and the Netherlands, and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security warned that truck protests may be in the works in the United States.

Windsor police tweeted that no one had been arrested as of mid-morning but urged people to stay away from the bridge: “We appreciate the cooperation of the demonstrators at this time and we will continue to focus on resolving the demonstration peacefully. Avoid area!”

Daniel Koss was among those who stayed overnight. Shortly before police advanced, he said the protest had succeeded in bringing attention to demands to lift COVID-19 mandates and he was happy it remained peaceful.

“It’s a win-win,” Koss said. “The pandemic is rolling down right now, they can remove the mandates, all the mandates, and everyone’s happy. The government does the right thing, and the protesters are all happy.”

He said he believed most people would disperse in an orderly fashion, “because we don’t want to cause a big problem.” 

Police clear a roadway at the Ambassador Bridge US-Canada border crossing blocked by truckers as they protest anti-vaccine mandates in Windsor, Ontario, Canada on February 11, 2022.

GEOFF ROBINS/AFP via Getty Images


More protesters arrived to the area late Saturday morning, though, carrying flags and yelling. Police continued to back people away from the bridge, and there were no visible physical confrontations.

The previous day, a judged ordered an end to the blockade of mostly pickup trucks and cars, and Ontario Premier Doug Ford declared a state of emergency allowing for fines of 100,000 Canadian dollars and up to one year in jail for anyone illegally blocking roads, bridges, walkways and other critical infrastructure.

“The right to protest does not outweigh the right to get food, fuel and goods across our border,” he tweeted Friday.

“That’s why we are ensuring our police have the tools and powers to resolve this situation and restore order.”

The Ambassador Bridge is the busiest U.S.-Canadian border crossing, carrying 25% of all trade between the two countries. 

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/canada-us-border-crossing-protest-police/

A 911 call early Friday morning that a woman had been shot at a home in southwest Phoenix turned into a barricade standoff where nine officers were injured in a hail of gunfire. Two people inside the house died. 

“I cannot recall an incident in city history where so many officers were injured,” said Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego at a Friday afternoon news conference. 

Phoenix police said five officers were shot and four others injured by shrapnel at a home near 51st Avenue and Broadway Road. The man believed to be the shooter was later found dead inside the home. A woman inside the home — believed to be his ex-girlfriend — was critically injured and later died, police said.

Saturday update:Officials focus on ‘incredibly complex’ investigation

Here’s what is known so far:

Police ID suspect, woman 

Police identified the suspect as 36-year-old Morris Jones, who was pronounced dead at the scene of an apparent gunshot wound.

The woman was identified on Saturday afternoon as 29-year-old Shatifah Lobley.

 A motive wasn’t entirely clear. 

“As we speak, investigators are working to uncover what led to this terrifying act, some of which was caught on tape and on camera by the media. I saw that video and it still gives me chills,” Phoenix police Chief Jeri Williams said. 

Phoenix police ambush: What happened first

Phoenix police arrived at the home about 2:15 a.m. Friday after a 911 call that a woman had been shot by an intruder and that there were “multiple armed suspects inside the house,” police spokesman Sgt. Andy Williams said in a Friday evening news release.

Police later determined there were four people inside the home at the time: Two men, a woman and a baby girl. 

Source Article from https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/phoenix/2022/02/11/phoenix-police-shooting-ambush-what-we-know/6750450001/

Across Ukraine, foreign citizens are now making hurried plans. Stuart McKenzie, who’s lived in Kyiv for 28 years and runs a successful business, hopes to get his wife and two sons out on a flight. But he is ready, if necessary, to pack the family into the car and drive 300 miles to Poland. He loves Ukraine and can’t quite believe it’s come to this.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-60361983