“We can’t go anywhere,” she said. “All the roads out of here are kind of gone right now so we are stuck.”

Kevin Oviedo who works as a porter at the Lake Yellowstone Hotel, which sits inside the park, said in an interview that he’s been trying his best to keep busy at work over the past few days, mostly to pass the time.

“I’ve got nothing better to do,” said Mr. Oviedo, 20, who had no power at his home on Tuesday. “I would just be sitting in a dark room.”

In Paradise Valley, which connects Livingston to Gardiner on Yellowstone’s northern edge, residents watched as the Yellowstone River lapped at roads and took over properties in its path. A station where homeowners could fill sandbags was set up in the Park County fairgrounds.

“It’s a matter of life or death,” Christine Jupe, a Park County resident who was helping steer motorists away from the rising waters, told KBZK News, a television station in Bozeman, Mont.

Johnny Diaz and Jesus Jiménez contributed reporting.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/14/us/yellowstone-rain-flooding.html

Washington — By a wide bipartisan margin, the House approved on a bill on Tuesday to bolster security for Supreme Court justices and their families, a move that took on added urgency after a California man allegedly armed with a knife and handgun was arrested last week outside the Maryland house of Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

The bill passed the House by a vote of 396 to 27, and now heads to President Biden’s desk for his signature. Crafted by Sens. John Cornyn, a Republican of Texas, and Chris Coons, a Democrat from Delaware, the Senate passed the measure last month.

All 27 votes against the bill came from Democrats, including several prominent progressives. All but two Democrats from New Jersey voted against passage, arguing it should extend protection to federal judges as a whole. The family of a federal judge in New Jersey was targeted by a gunman in a deadly attack at their home in 2020.

The proposal, called the Supreme Court Police Parity Act, grants the marshal of the Supreme Court and Supreme Court police the authority to protect the justices’ family members or any officer of the court if protection is deemed necessary.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters Monday that Mr. Biden supports legislation to fund increased security for the Supreme Court and its members, and said the administration takes “very seriously” threats and intimidation against judges.

Senate Republicans implored House Speaker Nancy Pelosi not to wait any longer before bringing the measure to the House floor for a vote in the wake of the incident outside Kavanaugh’s house last week.

House Democrats sought to expand the measure to add protections for Supreme Court clerks, staff and their families. But Cornyn said the plan to amend the legislation made a “mockery” of his and Coons’ efforts, and accused House Democratic leaders of mounting a “transparent attempt to stall the legislation.”

“The line between legitimate public discourse and acts of violence has been crossed, and House Democrats cannot continue to turn a blind eye,” he said. “We don’t have time to spare when it comes to protecting the members of the court and their families.”

But House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer accused Cornyn and Senate Minority Leader McConnell of acting “either with ignorance of the facts or ignoring the facts” by rejecting changes sought by the House. 

“Employees are in there because they are associated with various justices and their families are obviously associated with them,” he said Tuesday, citing online threats directed at court employees. “It is what it is and we’re going to move the bill.”

Police detained 26-year-old Nicholas John Roske early in the morning after he called local law enforcement and said he had come from California to kill a “specific United States Supreme Court justice,” according to a FBI affidavit filed in federal court. The Supreme Court confirmed the threat was directed at Kavanaugh, and a man was taken into custody near the justice’s house in Montgomery County, Maryland.

The call to the Montgomery County Emergency Communications Center came after U.S. deputy marshals reported seeing a person dressed in black clothing and carrying a backpack and suitcase emerge from a taxi stopped in front of Kavanaugh’s house.

After Roske was arrested, police found in his belongings a black tactical chest rig and tactical knife, a Glock 17 pistol with two magazines and ammunition, pepper spray, zip ties, and numerous tools, as well as hiking boots with padding on the outside of the soles and other items, the affidavit states.

He allegedly told police he was upset about the draft Supreme Court opinion to overturn Roe v. Wade, the 1973 decision that legalized abortion nationwide, and the recent school shooting in Uvalde Texas. He allegedly said he believed Kavanaugh would rule in favor of gun rights.

Roske was charged with attempting to murder a Supreme Court justice.

In addition to the arrest and threats directed at Kavanaugh, demonstrators have also gathered outside the homes of several other justices, including Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett, to protest a rolling back of abortion rights and the draft decision leaked and published last month.

Following the release of the draft, the Supreme Court police reported a “significant increase in violent threats,” including threats made on social media and directed at members of the court, according to an intelligence bulletin from the Department of Homeland Security. Attorney General Merrick Garland also directed the U.S. Marshals Service to provide additional support to the marshal of the Supreme Court to ensure the safety of the justices amid the public backlash.

Rebecca Kaplan contributed reporting.


Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/supreme-court-security-bill-house-vote-brett-kavanaugh/

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Source Article from https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-06-14/biden-s-never-been-more-optimistic-despite-troubled-us-economy

The House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riot is postponing its third hearing, which was scheduled on Wednesday and was expected to detail how former President Donald Trump allegedly pushed the Department of Justice to spread his false claims that the 2020 election was rigged against him.

Former acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen and ex-DOJ officials Richard Donoghue and Steve Engel were expected to testify in person at the hearing, NBC News reported, citing Rosen’s attorney.

The committee hasn’t set a new date for the hearing, but it’s already scheduled to hold a separate hearing on Thursday, the committee said.

It was unclear from the panel’s statement whether those witnesses will be moved to Thursday or another date, and a spokesperson for the committee did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The committee kicked off a series of seven hearings Thursday detailing its initial findings from an almost yearlong investigation of the Jan. 6, 2021 attack, when a violent mob of Trump’s supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol. The riot sent members of Congress fleeing for safety and delayed lawmakers from confirming President Joe Biden’s Electoral College victory.

The nine-member panel seeks to show that Trump is chiefly to blame for the riot by placing him at the center of a multi-pronged conspiracy to overturn his loss in the 2020 election.

On Monday, the committee released details that focused heavily on the wide array of election-fraud conspiracies that Trump and some of his allies seized on and spread widely to try to convince the public that the election was stolen.

The committee played a lengthy series of clips from interviews with former Trump officials, including former Attorney General William Barr, who repeatedly told the former president that he lost to Biden legitimately and warned Trump against making meritless claims of fraud.

“I told him that it was crazy stuff and they were wasting their time on that and it was doing a grave disservice to the country,” Barr told investigators.

“I was somewhat demoralized, because I thought, boy, if he really believes this stuff, he has lost contact with — he’s become detached from reality if he really believes this stuff,” Barr said at another point. “There was never an indication of interest in what the actual facts were.”

The now-postponed hearing on Wednesday was supposed to show how Trump tried to “corruptly” wield the DOJ as part of his bid to challenge the 2020 election, and how the agency’s leaders pushed back on him, committee Vice Chair Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., said last week.

Cheney, one of two Republicans on the panel, suggested that hearing would detail Trump’s attempt to install Jeffrey Clark, a DOJ lawyer, as acting attorney general and have him send letters to key states falsely claiming that the government has found evidence that could impact the election results.

The hearing would reveal how top officials in the DOJ threatened to resign and confronted Trump and Clark in the Oval Office, Cheney said.

She also suggested that the hearing would shed new light on efforts by some Republican lawmakers to secure presidential pardons “for their roles in attempting to overturn the 2020 election.” She has already named Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., who allegedly tried to get Clark promoted. Perry has refused to testify before the committee.

It is unclear whether the topic at Thursday’s hearing will be the DOJ, or whether the committee will move on to its next scheduled area of focus: how Trump pressured then-Vice President Mike Pence to reject Electoral College votes.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/06/14/jan-6-capitol-riot-probe-trump-doj-hearing-postponed.html

But Democrats are putting up a fight to challenge Gov. Henry McMaster (R), and their internal debate over the best approach is where things get interesting. On Tuesday, they will nominate their candidate, and they have a stark choice between moderate former congressman Joe Cunningham, who won and then lost a red-leaning congressional seat, and state Sen. Mia McLeod, the first Black woman to run for South Carolina governor as a major-party candidate.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/06/14/primary-elections-south-carolina-nevada-maine-live-updates/

Police in Idaho say they prevented a possible domestic terror attack over the weekend, when 31 men were arrested Saturday allegedly on their way to wreak havoc at a Pride event in the city of Coeur d’Alene.

All had traveled from elsewhere, and police believe they’re members of a white supremacist group with links to previous violent rallies. When they were found standing in the back of a U-Haul truck, authorities recovered gear including shields, shin guards and a smoke grenade.

CBS News senior investigative correspondent Catherine Herridge reports the FBI is assisting local police in its investigation.

Police say 31 masked men found riding inside a U-Haul truck in Coeur d’Alene, Ida., had riot gear and a smoke grenade. 

KREM


For now, each of the 31 people arrested faces a misdemeanor conspiracy to riot charge.

Coeur d’Alene Police Chief Lee White said, “They came to riot downtown.”

A witness tipped off police after watching the group load into the back of a U-Haul truck at a hotel, and said they “looked like a little army.”

White said they appear to be affiliated with the group Patriot Front. Groups that monitor extremist ideology, such as Southern Poverty Law Center, say Patriot Front promotes fascism and the creation of a white ethno-state.

It was founded in 2017, after breaking off from a neo-Nazi organization that participated in the Charlottesville, Virginia “Unite the Right” rally.

The man convicted on federal hate crime charges for driving his car into a crowd of protesters, killing one of them, was affiliated with that original group.

Cynthia Miller-Idriss, who tracks domestic extremism at the Polarization and Extremism Research & Innovation Lab (PERIL) at American University, told “CBS Mornings” that Patriot Front’s members are overwhelmingly young, white men. “They are twisting and manipulating and misusing the idea of patriotism, by promoting a white supremacist version of patriotism,” she said.

The people arrested Saturday ranged in age from 21 to 36, and were from a dozen different states. None was local to Coeur d’Alene.

Mug shots of the men arrested on conspiracy to riot charges, including the alleged leader of Patriot Front, Thomas Rousseau (bottom). 

Kootenai County Sheriff’s Office


Herridge asked, “What does the incident in Idaho tell us about the overall threat picture?”

“We’re seeing this broadening out of the targets that people across the supremacist spectrum are choosing to intimidate or harass or harm,” Miller-Idriss replied. “It is part of a broader range of anti-democratic and extremist types of events that are happening.”

In this case, the apparent target was that Pride event, which organizers say was the largest north Idaho has ever seen.

As for the defendants, police say they’re scheduled to be arraigned later Monday. They include Patriot Front’s alleged leader, Thomas Ryan Rousseau, of Grapevine, Texas. According to White, further charges “might be pending.”

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/patriot-front-white-nationalists-arrested-idaho-pride-parade-riot-plan/

CHICAGO (WLS) — A supercell thunderstorm ripped through the Chicago area Monday evening, leaving a trail of wind damage that stretched from the far northwest suburbs to Indiana.

The storm traveled over 100 miles, slamming the northwest suburbs before it dove south, roaring through the city and maintaining its strength as it barreled through northwest Indiana.

The storm prompted tornado warnings to be issued across northern Illinois and Indiana. Widespread wind damage has been reported, but so far, no tornado touchdowns have been confirmed.

The National Weather Service is sending a survey team to the Streamwood/Schaumburg/Roselle area Tuesday morning to investigate two areas of potential tornado damage. They will also follow up on damage in the Westchester/Bellwood/Maywood areas.

In west suburban Bellwood, village officials said a microburst ripped off the roof of a multi-unit apartment building near 24th Street and Washington Boulevard. It happened around 7 p.m., just as families were sitting down to dinner.

SEE MORE: Local officials urge caution as heat wave moves into area

“We just heard people screaming that the roof was off, get out, get out,” resident Larhonda Neal said.

Village officials said one resident, a young woman, was taken to the hospital after she was hit by falling debris, but is expected to be OK.

“It was a lady on the third floor screaming; she needed help, and the roof caved in on her,” resident Ivoryana Neal said.

Isaiah Griffith, a second-floor resident, heard the woman’s screams and ran to the third floor to help. When he arrived at her unit, he saw electrical sparks.

“It looked like, I can’t explain, like it was spreading all around,” he said. “It was terrifying; it was terrifying.”

The Red Cross is staged at the Bellwood Village Hall to help any residents find a place to stay.

WATCH | Supercell storm downs trees in Roselle

“It could have been worse, so I just have to thank God,” Ivoryana Neal said.

Residents described what they heard as that roof was torn off, saying “we heard a whistling sound,” “I heard the thunderclap; it was like boom,” “then we heard a loud pop, like boom, like something crashed.”

“I thought our ceiling was was going to cave in, as much water was coming in,” Ivoryana Neal said.

Mayor Andre Harvey said a building inspector would be there Tuesday morning to assess the structure, adding that no one was seriously hurt.

“So, once we make sure it’s structurally sound, we will probably escort residents in to get their belongings so they can move on to other places to stay,” he said.

Families stopped by to grab some of their belongings, as the building is not habitable.

“It just disbelief, like, you can see the sky out of my living room and my bedroom,” resident Sheila Lilly said.

She was at work when her 18-year-old son called her, hysterical.

“He was like, ‘the ceiling, the ceiling fell.’ I’m like, ‘well, what do you mean the ceiling fell?’ So, he FaceTime to me and showed me, and I just left work and came here immediately,” Lilly said.

The mayor said it could take months to fix the building’s roof.

Village Hall is doubling as a cooling center for those who need it, too.

Miguel Martinez’s Bellwood home was struck by a huge tree that snapped in half and carved out a hole in the roof, while his family was in the living room.

“It could have been worse. I mean, just looking, especially because we were all in the living room, so it could’ve been really bad,” he said.

Mayor Harvey said the entire village has some kind of tree damage.

“So our Street Department and Public Works Department has been out all night long clearing streets; like I said, we have residents that were actually helping each other clear the streets,” Harvey said.

In the northwest suburbs, one of the oldest trees in Roselle gave way to the sudden strong winds. A favorable direction spared the village mayor’s own home.

“I was at Village Hall, got a lot of calls from my wife,” Mayor David Pileski said. “She was in our basement with our 1-year-old. We’re just grateful it fell away from the house.”

The spontaneous clean-up crew wandered up as soon as it was safe to step outside.

“I live two houses down; that’s what neighbors do,” Joe Kightlinger said. “Roselle, they take care of each other.

On Chicago’s North Side, the storm damaged a Toyota dealership in Lincoln Park. No one was reported injured.

Travelers took cover as 84 mph winds whipped outside O’Hare International Airport and all arriving and departing flights ground to a halt. Throngs of people looking for shelter scrambled to the airport’s lowest level.

And with good reason. The high winds flipped over several planes at nearby Schaumburg Regional Airport. And a single lightning strike ignited a fire at a north suburban Northbrook home.

Several Metra lines temporarily suspended service as the storm blew through.

On Tuesday morning, BNSF train numbers 1224, 1226, 1221 and 1254 will not operate due to lingering effects of Monday night’s storm.

There was debris on the tracks after the storm, a Metra spokesman said, and the tracks needed to be inspected, which led to long delays and hours for conductors.

Workers were also trying to get one side of the Bellwood Metra stop operational after serious flooding.

Even Brookfield Zoo was affected by the storm: It will not open until 1 p.m. Tuesday, as workers clean up debris, including downed trees.

In a statement, the zoo said its grounds sustained significant damage, and parts of the venue might not be open Tuesday.

And as of 10:30 a.m., ComEd reported 36,000 are without power due to the storm, down from a height of 125,000.

ComEd said workers are making the rounds, mostly in the north and northwest suburbs and the city, trying to restore electricity and order before sweltering temperatures make the task unbearable.

WATCH | ABC7 AccuWeather Forecast

A Roselle substation was also damaged.

Chicagoans who need to report a power outage or a downed power line should contact ComEd at 800-334-7661.

WATCH: ComEd trying to restore power after storm, before heat wave

For large, fallen limbs or downed trees that are blocking the public way, residents should call 311 and report a “Tree Emergency.” Chicagoans should visit 311.chicago.gov to report water in their basement, standing water on their street, tree debris and out traffic lights. Residents are also encouraged to download the CHI 311 app in the App Store or Google Play to make 311 reports.

As the warm front that set off the storm lifts north, temperatures will soar well into the 90s on both Tuesday and Wednesday.

Weather Alerts | Live Doppler Radar

Cook County Radar | DuPage County Radar | Will County Radar | Lake County Radar (IL) | Kane County Radar | Northwest Indiana Radar

Source Article from https://abc7chicago.com/chicago-weather-forecast-tornado-warning-severe/11957499/

At 4:20 p.m. on Dec. 28, 2020, he sent an email that has been a central mystery in the Clark episode. The email to Clark, obtained by The Post, has the subject line, “email to you,” and an attachment titled “Draft Letter JBC 12 28 20.docx.” The email text simply said “Attached.” The attached letter, which has been previously released, was titled “Pre-Decisional & Deliberative/Attorney-Client or Legal Work Product – Georgia Proof of Concept.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/06/14/inside-explosive-oval-office-confrontation-three-days-before-jan-6/

On Monday night, Jimmy Kimmel dedicated his late-night monologue to what he called “Episode 2 of CSI: I Can’t Believe Donald Trump’s Not in Jail Yet”—otherwise known as the Jan. 6 congressional hearings.

Trump’s bizarre decision to “reject the advice” of members of his team and declare victory on Election Night, despite even Fox News saying he’d lost, allegedly came from “an apparently inebriated” Rudy Giuliani.

“Apparently inebriated—which, by the way, is the title of Rudy Giuliani’s biography,” joked Kimmel. “Rudy Giuliani told him to go out and say he won. The way that you can tell Rudy is drunk is his breath smells more like booze than cigars and cat turds for a change.”

The allegation that Giuliani was a drunken mess was backed up by former Trump aide Jason Miller who, when asked whether there was anyone that night who “in your observation had had too much to drink,” replied, “Um… Mayor Giuliani.”

Kimmel couldn’t help but laugh. “OK, so Rudy was drunk. The big question is: What’s Donald Trump’s excuse? He doesn’t even drink! I mean, this testimony from his lawyers, his staffers, his campaign advisers, his own family—there are really only two options here: Either Donald Trump was lying and committed multiple crimes trying to strong-arm an election, or he’s off his freakin’ rocker. I guess it could be both.”

When Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner was asked during his testimony if he’d ever shared his perspective on Giuliani’s drunken plan with the president, he stammered and responded, “Um… I guess… Uh… Yes.”

Source Article from https://www.thedailybeast.com/jimmy-kimmel-goes-to-town-on-inebriated-giulianis-election-night-scheme

Former Attorney General William Barr repeatedly, and colorfully, dismissed the wide array of voter-fraud conspiracies being floated by Trump and some of his allies after his 2020 election loss, video from his interviews with the committee shows.

Barr ripped some of those conspiracy theories as “bulls—,” “nonsense,” “idiotic” and “crazy stuff,” and said he told Trump to his face after the election that that the claims are “not panning out.” He ran the Department of Justice from Feb. 14, 2019 to Dec. 23, 2020,

The panel played a clip of Barr recounting an Oval Office meeting a few weeks after the Nov. 3, 2020, election, in which he had to tell Trump that the DOJ “is not an extension of your legal team” and can’t be used to “take sides in elections” by investigating fraud claims.

“We’ll look at something if it’s specific, credible, and could have affected the outcome of the election, and we’re doing that and it’s just not meritorious, they’re not panning out,” he said.

After seeing Trump spread those claims on Fox News, Barr on Dec. 1, 2020, told an Associated Press reporter that the DOJ has not seen fraud on scale that could affected outcome of election. When he next met with Trump, Barr said he thought he was going to be fired, telling the committee, “the president was as mad as I’ve ever seen him.” The then-president accused him of making the statement “because you hate Trump.”

Elsewhere, Barr recalled, “I told him that the stuff that his people were shoveling out to the public was bulls—. I mean, that the claims of fraud were bulls—. And he was indignant about that.”

“I reiterated that they’d wasted a whole month on these claims on these Dominion voting machines, and they were idiotic claims.” Barr said he found those claims, that Dominion voting machines were rigged to flip votes to Joe Biden, were “disturbing” in that “I saw absolutely zero basis” for them.

“But they were made in such a sensational way that they were obviously influencing a lot of members of the public,” even though they were “complete nonsense,” Barr said.

“I told him that it was crazy stuff and they were wasting their time on that and it was doing a grave disservice to the country,” Barr said.

Kevin Breuninger

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/06/13/trump-capitol-riot-hearing-jan-6-investigators-hold-second-day-of-testimony.html

When “a little army” of men with shields and other riot gear was spotted near a Pride parade in Idaho on Saturday, authorities soon linked the men to a relatively new White nationalist group and charged them with conspiracy to riot.

“It is clear to us based on the gear that the individuals had with them, the stuff they had in their possession, the U-Haul with them along with paperwork that was seized from them, that they came to riot downtown,” Coeur d’Alene Police Chief Lee White said.

Among those arrested was Thomas Ryan Rousseau – the leader of Patriot Front, the sheriff’s office said. In total, 31 people from at least 12 states were arrested and charged with conspiracy to riot. All have been released on bond.

Most of the men arrested had logos on their hats “consistent with the Patriot Front group,” and some had other clothing associated with the White supremacist group, White said.

Here’s what we know about Patriot Front – and what makes it different from other groups:

How did Patriot Front start?

Patriot Front “is a white nationalist hate group that formed in the aftermath of the deadly ‘Unite the Right’ rally in Charlottesville, Virginia,” the Southern Poverty Law Center said.

“The organization broke off from Vanguard America (VA), a neo-Nazi group that participated in the chaotic demonstration,” the SPLC said.

The rally turned deadly with the killing of anti-racism demonostrator Heather Heyer. Later that month, Rousseau – who led Vanguard America members at “Unite the Right” – rebranded the group’s website and launched a new group called Patriot Front, the Anti-Defamation League said.

What do Patriot Front members believe?

“Patriot Front is a white supremacist group whose members maintain that their ancestors conquered America and bequeathed it to them, and no one else,” the ADL said.

“Patriot Front justifies its ideology of hate and intolerance under the guise of preserving the ethnic and cultural origins of its members’ European ancestors.”

The group’s manifesto claims those in America who are not of European ancestry are not truly American.

“An African may have lived, worked, and even been classed as a citizen in America for centuries, yet he is not American. He is, as he likely prefers to be labeled, an African in America,” Patriot Front’s website said.

“The same rule applies to others who are not of the founding stock of our people, or do not share the common unconscious that permeates throughout our greater civilization, and the European diaspora.”

Who is Patriot Front’s leader?

Rousseau, who grew up in suburban Dallas, founded Patriot Front when he was a teenager, according to the SPLC.

“While working for his high school newspaper, Rousseau frequently wrote opinion columns in support of conservative topics including the controversial ‘campus carry’ law in Texas and North Carolina’s since gutted ‘bathroom bill.’ He was also an ardent supporter of Donald Trump during the 2016 election,” the SPLC said.

“Under Rousseau’s direct leadership, Patriot Front’s Texas chapter is its most active – relying mostly on flyering, banner drops and occasionally demonstrations. When the organization ventures off the internet, its activities are primarily conducted in the dead of night, anonymously.”

After the arrests in Idaho on Saturday, CNN reached out to the Patriot Front and people believed to be associated with Rousseau but did not immediately hear back.

What are the goals of Patriot Front?

“I think when you look at the past actions of the Patriot Front, they’re varied,” former FBI Deputy Assistant Director Peter Strzok told CNN on Monday.

“A lot of what they do is designed for image – for creating propaganda that they can use to spread their message to recruit more followers,” Strzok said.

“So in the past, what we’ve seen from a lot of their activities (is) not so much intent on engaging in violence as much as engaging in protests. Certainly, hateful speech, for sure, but this is much more a group that’s designed for image and for creating a public spectacle.”

But Strzok said there’s always a key question with such groups: “Is there a trigger point where their intention is to move from simply protesting to violence?”

He said it’s not clear what may have happened at the Pride parade in Idaho.

“The real question in my mind is their intention for what they were going to do that day,” Strzok said.

How is Patriot Front different from other White nationalist or White supremacist groups?

Members of Patriot Front are “comparatively young,” Strzok said.

“A central tactic to Patriot Front is ‘flash demonstrations’ – privately planned and unannounced events that allow groups to promote their beliefs while limiting the risk of individual exposure, negative media coverage, arrests and public backlash,” the ADL said.

“These flash demonstrations are mainly orchestrated for a quick photo and video opportunity that is then turned into online content.”

And Patriot Front “has declined to participate in large rallies with other hate groups, preferring instead to work with small, local chapters that allow Patriot Front to remain the center of attention while controlling their message and presentation,” the SPLC said.

Strzok said he’s worried the country might be in a new phase of extremism.

“I think there’s certainly a lot of personal grievances out there across America. And what particularly concerns me right now is you see a lot of people – both political leaders as well as some in the media – who are tacitly encouraging not violence, but certainly these extremist beliefs,” the former FBI official said.

“Whether it’s replacement theory, which plays into a lot of the White nationalist propaganda, whether it’s political figures using images of violence, I think that’s encouraging or accepting behavior that in the past we had moved away from,” Strzok said. “So I am worried that people who are inclined to violence … might be driven to violence.”

Correction: A previous version of this story incorrectly stated that CNN had reached out to Thomas Ryan Rousseau’s legal representative. It’s unclear if he has legal representation yet.

CNN’s Chuck Johnston and Andy Rose contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2022/06/13/us/patriot-front-beliefs-history-explainer/index.html

HELENA, Mont. (AP) — A torrent of rain combined with a rapidly melting snowpack caused a deluge of flooding that forced the evacuation of some parts of Yellowstone National Park, cutting off electricity and forcing park officials to close all entrances indefinitely, just as the summer tourist season was ramping up.

While numerous homes and other structures were destroyed, there were no immediate reports of injuries. Yellowstone officials said they were assessing damage from the storms, which washed away bridges, caused mudslides and left small cities isolated, forcing evacuations by boat and helicopter.

It’s unclear how many visitors are stranded or have been forced to leave the park and how many people who live outside the park have been rescued and evacuated.

Some of the worst damage happened in the northern part of the park and Yellowstone’s gateway communities in southern Montana. National Park Service photos of northern Yellowstone showed a mudslide, washed out bridges and roads undercut by churning floodwaters of the Gardner and Lamar rivers.

The flooding cut off road access to Gardiner, Montana, a town of about 900 people near the confluence of the Yellowstone and Gardner rivers, just outside Yellowstone’s busy North Entrance. Cooke City was also isolated by floodwaters and evacuations were also issued for residents in Livingston.

Officials in Park County, which encompasses those cities, said on Facebook Monday evening that extensive flooding throughout the county had made drinking water unsafe in many areas. Evacuations and rescues were ongoing and officials urged people who were in a safe place to stay put overnight.

The Montana National Guard said Monday it sent two helicopters to southern Montana to help with the evacuations.

Cory Mottice, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Billings, Montana, said rain is not in the immediate forecast, and cooler temperatures will lessen the snowmelt in coming days.

“This is flooding that we’ve just never seen in our lifetimes before,” Mottice said.

Scientists say climate change is responsible for more intense and more frequent extreme events such as storms, droughts, floods and wildfires, although single weather events usually cannot be directly linked to climate change without extensive study.

The Yellowstone River at Corwin Springs crested at 13.88 feet (4.2 meters) Monday, higher than the previous record of 11.5 feet (3.5 meters) set in 1918, according the the National Weather Service.

At a cabin in Gardiner, Parker Manning got an up-close view of the water rising and the river bank sloughing off in the raging Yellowstone River floodwaters just outside his door.

“We started seeing entire trees floating down the river, debris,” Manning, who hails from of Terra Haute, Indiana, told The Associated Press. “Saw one crazy single kayaker coming down through, which was kind of insane.”

On Monday evening, Manning watched as the rushing waters undercut the opposite riverbank, causing a house to fall into the Yellowstone River and float away mostly intact.

Floodwaters inundated a street in Red Lodge, a Montana town of 2,100 that’s a popular jumping-off point for a scenic, winding route into the Yellowstone high country. Twenty-five miles (40 kilometers) to the northeast, in Joliet, Kristan Apodaca wiped away tears as she stood across the street from a washed-out bridge, The Billings Gazette reported.

The log cabin that belonged to her grandmother, who died in March, flooded, as did the park where Apodaca’s husband proposed.

“I am sixth-generation. This is our home,” she said. “That bridge I literally drove yesterday. My mom drove it at 3 a.m. before it was washed out.”

On Monday, Yellowstone officials evacuated the northern part of the park, where roads may remain impassable for a substantial length of time, park Superintendent Cam Sholly said in a statement.

But the flooding affected the rest of the park, too, with park officials warning of yet higher flooding and potential problems with water supplies and wastewater systems at developed areas.

The rains hit during the high tourism season: June, at the onset of an annual wave of over 3 million visitors that doesn’t abate until fall, is one of Yellowstone’s busiest months.

Yellowstone got 2.5 inches (6 centimeters) of rain Saturday, Sunday and into Monday. The Beartooth Mountains northeast of Yellowstone got as much as 4 inches (10 centimeters), according to the National Weather Service.

In south-central Montana, flooding on the Stillwater River stranded 68 people at a campground. Stillwater County Emergency Services agencies and crews with the Stillwater Mine rescued people Monday from the Woodbine Campground by raft. Some roads in the area are closed because of flooding and residents have been evacuated.

“We will be assessing the loss of homes and structures when the waters recede,” the sheriff’s office said in a statement.

The flooding happened while other parts of the U.S. burned in hot and dry weather. More than 100 million Americans were being warned to stay indoors as a heat wave settles over states stretching through parts of the Gulf Coast to the Great Lakes and east to the Carolinas.

Elsewhere in the West, crews from California to New Mexico are battling wildfires in hot, dry and windy weather.

___

Associated Press writers Thomas Peipert in Denver, Mead Gruver in Fort Collins, Colorado, and Lisa Baumann in Bellingham, Washington, contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://apnews.com/3753caa39435d9f3f45d8b582381a0c6

Tornado warnings sounded as storms ripped through the Chicago area Monday evening, with winds reaching up to 90 mph in Chicago and tearing off the roof of a suburban apartment building.

More than 53,000 ComEd customers in the Chicago area lost power, with suburban Maywood taking the brunt of the hit with 44,000 outages, according to ComEd. More than 43,000 remained without power Tuesday morning.

Despite the rotational nature of the storm cell, there was no confirmed tornado, National Weather Service Meteorologist Ricky Castro said.

“It’s possible there was a tornado in the northern suburbs, but it’s not something we can conclusively say until we can a get crew to survey the area; that will likely happen Tuesday,” Castro said.

Winds gusted to 84 mph at O’Hare Airport and 69 mph at Midway Airport, Castro said. A ground stop was ordered at O’Hare by the Federal Aviation Administration.

There were reports of wind damage along the path of storm, stretching from northern Kane County across Chicago to northwest Indiana. There were also reports of hail one inch in diameter.

National Weather Service

Thousands were jolted by Weather Service warnings sent to cellphones that read: “Take shelter now in a basement or an interior room on the lowest floor of a sturdy building. If you are outdoors, in a mobile home, or in a vehicle, move to the closest substantial shelter and protect yourself from flying debris.”

The storm moved through the northern suburbs at around 30 mph before turning southeast and increasing in speed slightly before making its way through the city around 7 p.m., Castro said.

“Warnings went out well in advance,” Castro said.

Videos posted to Twitter showed severe damage to a parking garage wall at the Toyota dealer in Lincoln Park.

Part of a wall collapsed at the Toyota of Lincoln Park dealership at 1561 N. Freemont St., but no one was injured, a Chicago Fire Department spokesman said.

The city also received numerous reports of felled trees, making some roads impassable and covering cars with branches. Accompanying damages was reported but no reports of injuries caused by the storm, the Fire Department spokesman said.

Strong winds partially tore off the roof of an apartment building in west suburban Bellwood, displacing 30 families, according to CBS News Chicago. And two parked aircraft at Schaumburg Regional Airport were reportedly blown over.

The weather also delayed the start time for a Cubs game against the San Diego Padres at Wrigley Field as fans sought shelter in the Friendly Confines.

The storms ushered in rising temperatures that are expected to rise into the 90s Tuesday and Wednesday. The city has opened its cooling centers as forecasters predict heat indexes in excess of 105 degrees.

Source Article from https://chicago.suntimes.com/2022/6/13/23166734/tornado-warning-chicago-northern-cook-county

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/06/14/more-than-100-gop-primary-winners-back-trumps-false-fraud-claims/

On Monday night, Jimmy Kimmel dedicated his late-night monologue to what he called “Episode 2 of CSI: I Can’t Believe Donald Trump’s Not in Jail Yet”—otherwise known as the Jan. 6 congressional hearings.

Trump’s bizarre decision to “reject the advice” of members of his team and declare victory on Election Night, despite even Fox News saying he’d lost, allegedly came from “an apparently inebriated” Rudy Giuliani.

“Apparently inebriated—which, by the way, is the title of Rudy Giuliani’s biography,” joked Kimmel. “Rudy Giuliani told him to go out and say he won. The way that you can tell Rudy is drunk is his breath smells more like booze than cigars and cat turds for a change.”

The allegation that Giuliani was a drunken mess was backed up by former Trump aide Jason Miller who, when asked whether there was anyone that night who “in your observation had had too much to drink,” replied, “Um… Mayor Giuliani.”

Kimmel couldn’t help but laugh. “OK, so Rudy was drunk. The big question is: What’s Donald Trump’s excuse? He doesn’t even drink! I mean, this testimony from his lawyers, his staffers, his campaign advisers, his own family—there are really only two options here: Either Donald Trump was lying and committed multiple crimes trying to strong-arm an election, or he’s off his freakin’ rocker. I guess it could be both.”

When Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner was asked during his testimony if he’d ever shared his perspective on Giuliani’s drunken plan with the president, he stammered and responded, “Um… I guess… Uh… Yes.”

Source Article from https://www.thedailybeast.com/jimmy-kimmel-goes-to-town-on-inebriated-giulianis-election-night-scheme

Former Attorney General William Barr repeatedly, and colorfully, dismissed the wide array of voter-fraud conspiracies being floated by Trump and some of his allies after his 2020 election loss, video from his interviews with the committee shows.

Barr ripped some of those conspiracy theories as “bulls—,” “nonsense,” “idiotic” and “crazy stuff,” and said he told Trump to his face after the election that that the claims are “not panning out.” He ran the Department of Justice from Feb. 14, 2019 to Dec. 23, 2020,

The panel played a clip of Barr recounting an Oval Office meeting a few weeks after the Nov. 3, 2020, election, in which he had to tell Trump that the DOJ “is not an extension of your legal team” and can’t be used to “take sides in elections” by investigating fraud claims.

“We’ll look at something if it’s specific, credible, and could have affected the outcome of the election, and we’re doing that and it’s just not meritorious, they’re not panning out,” he said.

After seeing Trump spread those claims on Fox News, Barr on Dec. 1, 2020, told an Associated Press reporter that the DOJ has not seen fraud on scale that could affected outcome of election. When he next met with Trump, Barr said he thought he was going to be fired, telling the committee, “the president was as mad as I’ve ever seen him.” The then-president accused him of making the statement “because you hate Trump.”

Elsewhere, Barr recalled, “I told him that the stuff that his people were shoveling out to the public was bulls—. I mean, that the claims of fraud were bulls—. And he was indignant about that.”

“I reiterated that they’d wasted a whole month on these claims on these Dominion voting machines, and they were idiotic claims.” Barr said he found those claims, that Dominion voting machines were rigged to flip votes to Joe Biden, were “disturbing” in that “I saw absolutely zero basis” for them.

“But they were made in such a sensational way that they were obviously influencing a lot of members of the public,” even though they were “complete nonsense,” Barr said.

“I told him that it was crazy stuff and they were wasting their time on that and it was doing a grave disservice to the country,” Barr said.

Kevin Breuninger

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/06/13/trump-capitol-riot-hearing-jan-6-investigators-hold-second-day-of-testimony.html

KYIV, June 14 (Reuters) – Russian forces cut off all routes for evacuating citizens from the eastern Ukrainian city of Sievierodonetsk by destroying the last bridge linking it to a Ukrainian held city on the other side of the river, a Ukrainian official said.

Russian troops were “trying to gain a foothold in the central part of city”, the Ukrainian military said on Tuesday in its daily roundup of the conflict in various parts of the country.

“The situation in Sievierodonetsk is extremely aggravated – the Russians are destroying high-rise buildings and Azot,” Serhiy Gaidai, governor of the Luhansk region, said in a post on Telegram. A day earlier he said hundreds of civilians were sheltering in the grounds of the Azot chemical plant, which had been shelled by Russian forces.

Ukraine has issued increasingly urgent calls for more Western heavy weapons to help defend Sievierodonetsk, which Kyiv says could hold the key to the battle for the eastern Donbas region and the course of the war, now in its fourth month.

On Monday Gaidai had said on social media that some 70% of the city was under enemy control, and the destruction of the last bridge across the river to the twin city of Lysychansk meant any civilians still in Sievierodonetsk were trapped, and it was impossible to deliver humanitarian supplies.

The latest Ukrainian military situation report was filled with forboding over Russian forces building up in several parts of the Donbas.

It reported the enemy was “creating conditions for the development of the offensive on Sloviansk”, and an offensive on the towns of Lyman, Yampil and Siversk – all west of Sievierodonetsk and Lysychansk.

Late on Monday, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said the battle for the eastern Donbas would go down as one of the most brutal in European history. The region, comprising the provinces of Luhansk and Donetsk, is claimed by Russian separatists.

“For us, the price of this battle is very high. It is just scary,” he said.

“We draw the attention of our partners daily to the fact that only a sufficient number of modern artillery for Ukraine will ensure our advantage.”

Russia’s main goal is to protect Donetsk and Luhansk, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said on Monday, after the leader of one of the separatist regions asked for additional forces from Moscow. read more

Ukraine needs 1,000 howitzers, 500 tanks and 1,000 drones among other heavy weapons, Presidential Adviser Mykhailo Podolyak said on Monday.

Moscow issued the latest of several recent reports saying it had destroyed U.S. and European arms and equipment.

Russia’s defence ministry said high-precision air-based missiles had struck near the railway station in Udachne northwest of Donetsk, hitting equipment that had been delivered to Ukrainian forces.

Ukraine’s interior ministry on Telegram said that Udachne had been hit by a Russian strike overnight Sunday into Monday, without mentioning whether weapons had been targeted.

Moscow has criticised the United States and other nations for sending Ukraine weapons and has threatened to strike new targets if the West supplied long-range missiles.

The European Commission will recommend granting Ukraine official status as an EU candidate country, Politico reported late on Monday, citing several unnamed officials.

Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Saturday that the EU executive’s opinion on Ukraine’s request to join would be ready by the end of this week.

MARIUPOL AGAIN?

Russia’s RIA news agency quoted a pro-Moscow separatist spokesperson Eduard Basurin as saying Ukrainian troops were effectively cut off in Sievierodonetsk and should surrender or die.

The situation risked becoming like Mariupol, “with a large pocket of Ukrainian defenders cut off from the rest of the Ukrainian troops”, according to Damien Magrou, spokesperson for the International Legion for the Defence of Ukraine that has had forces in Sievierodonetsk.

During the fall of Mariupol last month, hundreds of civilians and badly wounded Ukrainian soldiers were trapped for weeks in the Azovstal steelworks.

Russia has denied targeting civilians in what it calls a “special operation” to restore Russian security and “denazify” its neighbour.

Ukraine and its Western allies call this a baseless pretext for an invasion which has killed thousands of civilians and raised fears of wider conflict in Europe.

More than 5 million people have fled and the world has been hit by a food and energy crisis, dividing Western nations over how to handle it. read more

After failing to take the capital Kyiv following the Feb. 24 invasion, Moscow focused on expanding control in the Donbas, where pro-Russian separatists have held territory since 2014. Russia has also tried to capture more of Ukraine’s Black Sea coast.

“The entire front is being subjected to constant shelling,” Donetsk regional governor Pavlo Kyrylenko told Ukrainian TV on Monday evening.

The towns of Maryinka, Krasnohorivka, Vuhledar were hit in the coal-producing belt and Avdiivka, home to a big coking plant, he said.

Officials in the Russian-backed separatist-controlled Donetsk region said at least three people, including a child, were killed and 18 were wounded by Ukrainian shelling that hit a market in Donetsk city.

The Donetsk News Agency showed pictures of burning stalls at the central Maisky market and several bodies on the ground. The news agency said 155-mm calibre NATO-standard artillery munitions hit parts of the region on Monday.

Russian news agencies reported a shell had fallen on a maternity hospital in Donetsk, triggering a fire and prompting staff to send patients into the basement. read more

Reuters could not independently verify the reports. There has been no immediate reaction from Kyiv to the reports.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/russian-forces-cut-off-last-routes-out-eastern-ukraine-city-2022-06-13/