Officials escort murder suspect Alan Eugene Miller away from the Pelham City Jail in Ala., on Aug. 5, 1999. Miller, scheduled to be put to death by lethal injection on Sept. 22, 2022, for a workplace shooting rampage in 1999 that killed three men, says the state lost the paperwork he turned in selecting an alternate execution method.

Dave Martin/AP


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Officials escort murder suspect Alan Eugene Miller away from the Pelham City Jail in Ala., on Aug. 5, 1999. Miller, scheduled to be put to death by lethal injection on Sept. 22, 2022, for a workplace shooting rampage in 1999 that killed three men, says the state lost the paperwork he turned in selecting an alternate execution method.

Dave Martin/AP

Alabama is readying an untried method of execution to carry out its death sentences – nitrogen hypoxia.

The state approved the method in 2018, but it has not yet been used or tested.

The man awaiting a Sep. 22 execution, Alan Eugene Miller, was convicted of killing three men in a workplace shooting in 1999. He said he opted for nitrogen hypoxia instead of lethal injection due to a fear of needles, but corrections officers lost his paperwork.

While the Alabama attorney general’s office found no evidence of that, Miller could receive death by nitrogen hypoxia if a judge blocks the use of lethal injection.

What is nitrogen hypoxia?

Hypoxia is when there is not a sufficient amount of oxygen in the tissues for the body to perform its regular functions. It is different from hypoxemia, which occurs when there is low oxygen in the blood.

Nitrogen hypoxia is a form of inert gas asphyxiation. Nitrogen is safe to breathe – it makes up 78% of what we inhale – but only when mixed with suitable amounts of oxygen.

Inert gas asphyxiation uses gasses that are not typically poisonous, such as nitrogen, methane or helium, as a diluting agent for atmospheric gasses. This then reduces oxygen concentration to fatally low amounts, according to the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board.

Once oxygen levels fall below 16%, breathing becomes difficult. At 4% to 6%, a person can enter a coma in as little as 40 seconds.

There are concerns about the method

Oklahoma and Mississippi are the two other states that have authorized the method. Russell Bucklew, a man incarcerated in Missouri tried to get approved for nitrogen hypoxia, but was denied in a lawsuit that went to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Bucklew was initially scheduled for execution in 2014, but sued the director of the Missouri Department of Corrections asking for the use of nitrogen hypoxia instead of lethal injection due to a medical condition he had.

In the opinion of the Court, Justice Neil Gorsuch denied the request, saying that nitrogen hypoxia had been untested and Missouri could not properly prepare it.

Bucklew’s proposal should have included how the nitrogen gas should be administered, in what amounts, how long it would take to work and how to keep the execution team safe, he said.

The Court also ruled there was no evidence to support Bucklew’s claim that hypoxia would be less painful. He was executed in 2019 by lethal injection.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/09/13/1122620496/nitrogen-hypoxia-death-sentence-alabama

  • Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, said his country’s forces had taken back 6,000 sq km (2,400 square miles) of Russian-held territory in the country’s south and east. Ukraine’s forces have continued to press their counterattack in Kharkiv, seeking to take control of almost all of the province. Ukraine’s troops headed north, reportedly recapturing towns all the way to the Russian border, and a video circulated of a Ukrainian soldier at the centre of the strategic city of Izium.

  • Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/sep/13/russia-ukraine-war-latest-what-we-know-on-day-202-of-the-invasion

    More than 30 people associated with former President Donald Trump and alleged efforts to influence the 2020 election results have received federal grand jury subpoenas, four sources told CBS News. 

    The subpoenas, many of which were issued last week, mark a significant escalation in the Justice Department’s investigation into origins of the Jan. 6, 2021 Capitol riot and other alleged attempts to stop the transfer of power to then-President-elect Joe Biden. One source familiar with the case characterized the investigation as huge. 

    The Justice Department is examining how money was raised and spent on alleged attempts to overturn the 2020 election; efforts to submit fake “alternate” electors to Congress from states lost by Trump; and the “Stop The Steal” rally held at the Ellipse, adjacent to White House grounds, on Jan. 6, just before the Capitol riot.

    The Justice Department’s inquiry into potential mishandling of presidential and classified records found at Trump’s Florida estate is a separate matter.

    Those who were served subpoenas included employees and contractors for the Trump campaign and Republican National Committee — including poll watchers — according to two sources familiar with the subpoenas. The sources said the identities of those subpoenaed range from household names to mostly unknown, low-level field staffers.

    CBS News has confirmed that close Trump aide Will Russell received a subpoena by email last week. And The New York Times reported last week that former White House senior aides Stephen Miller and Brian Jack also received subpoenas.

    Jack and an attorney for Russell did not respond to a request for comment. Miller declined to comment through an intermediary.

    FBI personnel served several of the subpoenas early in the morning last Wednesday and Thursday, the sources said, adding that in at least two instances, agents executed search warrants that allowed them to seize individuals’ cell phones.

    Virginia-based attorney David A. Warrington, who said he represents approximately a dozen clients who have been issued subpoenas, said the FBI was “very professional” when serving his clients. He added that the subpoenas his clients received are nearly identical, describing them as lengthy documents divided into sections and subsections. They cover issues related to “alternate” electors and election certification deadlines on December 14 and January 6, fundraising by the Save America PAC and the January 6 “Stop the Steal” rally — but not the ensuing riot.

    The subpoenas require individuals provide documents and any communication between themselves and Trump allies like Rudy Giuliani, John Eastman, Sidney Powell and Bernie Kerik, Warrington said. The subpoenas also demand recipients to provide any communication with dozens of individuals who appeared on slates of fake electors.

    At least some of the subpoenas compel recipients to appear before a grand jury on September 23 at the Washington, D.C., district courthouse, Warrington said. 

    Mother and daughter Amy and Kylie Kremer were served subpoenas last week, according to Warrington. They are listed as “host(s)” on the National Park Service permit for the Ellipse rally on January 6, 2021.

    Both are part of Women for America First, which on its website tells visitors to “Help us fight back against the January 6th Committee and the DOJ!” Warrington said the Kremers are not connected to the riot at the capitol that ensued after the rally. 

    Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/30-trump-associates-grand-jury-subpoena-2020-election-results/

    WASHINGTON—The Justice Department said it would accept one of the Trump team’s proposed candidates to serve as a third-party arbiter to review documents the FBI seized from the former president’s Mar-a-Lago home last month.

    Raymond J. Dearie, a former chief federal judge in New York, has the qualifications to do the job of special master, prosecutors wrote in a court filing late Monday, as do the two candidates they had proposed, retired federal judges Barbara S. Jones and Thomas B. Griffith.

    Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/trump-lawyers-to-address-dojs-bid-to-review-classified-documents-11662980400

    The Brooklyn mom suspected of drowning her three young children Monday was facing eviction from her apartment, battling custody issues and grappling with mental-health woes before she allegedly killed the kids, The Post has learned. 

    Erin Merdy, 30, of Coney Island owed more than $10,000 in back rent for her Neptune Avenue apartment, where she lived with her children and had been threatened with getting booted out since January, after the state’s COVID-19 eviction moratorium expired, court records show. 

    The mom, who allegedly told kin she drowned her kids — 3-month-old Oliver, 4-year-old Liliana and 7-year-old Zachary – on a nearby beach early Monday, had stopped paying her $1,531-a-month rent in July 2021 and was served with an eviction notice days before the moratorium expired in January, records show. 

    Relatives reached by The Post on Monday said Merdy appeared unstable in recent years and had trouble maintaining consistent relationships. 

    “There was a time when Erin and I were in contact all the time, but in 2015, 2016, she disappeared off the Earth. I didn’t know how to get in touch with her,” Merdy’s uncle, Levy Stephen, told the Post.

    “Now I’m faulting myself for that. She obviously needed help, and you can’t help but think, ‘Maybe I could have…’

    Erin Merdy was struggling with her mental health and facing a custody battle.
    Paul Martinka
    The mother of three was backed up in rent since last year.
    Paul Martinka

    “I’m at a loss for words. It’s not every day you lose three family members in one day,” he said. “Nobody wants to go to the funeral and see those three bodies.” 

    Another uncle, Jean Stephen, 64, said Merdy didn’t appear to “have her life together. 

    “I don’t think she could handle a relationship or anything like that. She didn’t seem like she was that kind of person. She didn’t seem like she was stable,” the relative said.

    “Anybody can go out and just fool around, but a person that’s stable can settle down with one person. She didn’t have her life together enough to do that.” 

    Around 1 a.m. Monday, concerned relatives called police to report Merdy might be drunk and may have done something to harm her children. Hours later, the mom was found by police walking barefoot through the sand on the Coney Island beach wearing a bathrobe and appearing dazed. 

    Police officers discover one of the three children who were allegedly harmed by their mother.
    Robert Mecea
    An EMS supervisor renders medical attention to one of the children.
    Robert Mecea
    Family members of Merdy admit they were aware of her endless struggles.
    Robert Mecea
    Merdy allegedly drowned her three children – Oliver, Liliana and Zachary (pictured).
    Instagram/city-silverbacks

    Law-enforcement sources said that before cops found her, she told relatives she “drowned all three kids.” The children were later found unresponsive along the shoreline, just three blocks from their home on Neptune Avenue, and pronounced dead at Coney Island Hospital soon after. 

    Merdy’s aunt Dine Stephen said she knew her niece was struggling – but wasn’t aware just how badly. 

    “I knew she was struggling in the sense she was trying to find her way through life. In this family we do have a history of mental illness to varying degrees. A few of us have battled with bipolar disorder, but I didn’t know her mental struggles,” the aunt said. 

    “I just knew she was trying to find a way for her children, a way to get on her feet. … It was the mental issues that took over.”

    Another uncle, Eddy Stephen, said he was “speechless” when he heard from relatives that “Erin killed her three children.

    “She did a little crazy stuff, but nothing that would lead to harming her children or herself,” Eddy said. 

    “She used to like to party here and there, do a little drinking, but I didn’t see any drug abuse or see that she was really irresponsible. It’s just tragic. I don’t know. She never gave us the sign that she would hurt her children. She loved her children.”

    Relatives notified the police Merdy may have harmed her children.
    Paul Martinka

    Merdy’s uncle Levy said his niece was in the midst of a custody dispute with 7-year-old Zachary’s father before Monday’s horror.  

    “He had issues with the way she was raising the child, from what I understand,” Levy said. 

    “She kind of went off the grid after that, changed her numbers. She wasn’t on social media — at least not to the point that I could find her.” 

    Police investigate the tragic crime scene.
    Robert Mecea

    Law-enforcement sources noted Merdy had failed to bring her son to a custody exchange in July ahead of a six-week visit planned with the kid’s father. 

    In May, Merdy pulled Zachary off his youth football team without explanation, according to his coach.

    “She never gave a flat out answer of why he stopped playing,” C.I.T.Y. Silverbacks football team head coach Allen McFarland told The Post. “She seemed as if she was juggling a lot.”

    During the 2021 football season, coaches in the youth mentorship sports program regularly picked up Zachary for practice, fed him dinner after games and dropped him home, McFarland, 34, said.

    They tried to convince Merdy to bring Zachary, who McFarland said loved football, back to the team to no avail.

    “We felt it would be a positive thing for him, to get him out of the house and involved,” the head coach said. “We practice four times a week for three hours a day. That would have been a good relief for the household.”

    The children’s exact cause of death is yet to be determined.

    McFarland choked back tears imagining the terror Zachary must have endured at the end of his life.

    “The person you should trust the most in the world is your mom,” he said. “A 7-year-old would have been excited to go to the beach. I can only imagine what that kid was thinking in that moment.”

    The coach broke the tragic news to the boy’s former teammates at practice Monday night. The young football players released balloons with Zachary’s jersey number 15 into the sky over Coney Island and yelled “Zachary, we love you” as a final goodbye.

    No charges have been filed against Merdy, who was transported to NYU Langone Hospital late Monday morning for a psychiatric evaluation.

    “How does she come back from this? Even if you get your mind back, how do you get over the fact that you killed your children?” Levy said.

    “That’s a shadow that’s going to be over her for the rest of her life. That’s what I’m worried about. I don’t think there’s a support group for people who commit such a heinous crime. Are there people who are functional that have done this?”

    Source Article from https://nypost.com/2022/09/12/brooklyn-mom-suspected-of-drowning-her-3-kids-was-facing-eviction/

    “Some of the problems we face every day — especially in health and disease — are so large they can seem insurmountable,” Dr. Wegrzyn said in a statement provided by the White House. “I have seen firsthand the tremendous expertise and energy the U.S. biomedical and biotechnological enterprise can bring to solve some of the toughest health challenges.”

    Congress has appropriated $1 billion for ARPA-H, which is housed within the National Institutes of Health but reports directly to Xavier Becerra, the secretary of health and human services — an arrangement that is intended to keep the new agency from getting too caught up in the federal bureaucracy. While its director is not a Senate-confirmed position, Mr. Biden may face pushback from Republicans, some of whom have argued that the agency duplicates the N.I.H.’s efforts.

    The agency already has an acting deputy director, Adam H. Russell, also a DARPA alumnus, who has been laying the technical infrastructure and other groundwork to get the new agency off the ground. Dr. Collins said Dr. Wegrzyn will begin work on Oct. 1. Her main goal will be to hire program managers who will bring bold ideas that the agency wants to pursue, and she will spend a limited time, perhaps three years, at the agency, he said.

    “They will arrive, they will do a little bit of due diligence, and then they’ll have to pitch the idea to Dr. Wegrzyn,” Dr. Collins said. “If she says thumbs-up, then off they go with money to spend, to figure out how to put together the appropriate partners to get the work done.”

    Coming up with successful new innovations, he said, will take time. But Steve Brozak, an investment banker whose company, WBB Securities, specializes in biotechnology, said that if the agency were going to be a success, Dr. Wegrzyn would have to move quickly to distinguish its work from the rest of the federal bureaucracy.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/12/us/politics/biden-cancer-arpa-h.html

    WASHINGTON, Sept 12 (Reuters) – Russia has largely ceded its gains near Kharkiv and many of the withdrawing Russian soldiers have exited Ukraine, moving over the border back into Russia, a senior U.S. military official said on Monday.

    As it pulls back, the United States has seen anecdotal reports of Russian forces abandoning their equipment, “which could be indicative of Russia’s disorganized command and control,” the U.S. military official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

    The remarks to Pentagon reporters followed a weekend of rapid gains for Ukrainian forces. Ukraine’s general staff said its soldiers had recaptured more than 20 towns and villages in just the past day, as Ukrainian forces swept deeper into territory seized from fleeing Russian troops.

    The U.S. military official was upbeat, but cautious, when describing the Ukrainian advances.

    “It’s clear they’re fighting hard,” the official said, citing progress in the south and east to reclaim territory.

    Ukraine said it repelled attempted Russian advances in two important areas of the Donetsk region – the city of Bakhmut and Maiorsk, near the coal-producing town of Horlivka, the general staff said in an evening update.

    But the senior U.S. military official said Russia was still focusing its firepower on Bakhmut.

    “We continue to see heavy use of artillery and airstrikes,” the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

    Vitaly Ganchev, the Russian-installed head of Moscow’s occupation administration in what remained of Russian-held territory in the Kharkiv region, acknowledged that Ukrainian forces had broken through to the frontier.

    The official did not say how many withdrawing Russian forces had left Ukrainian territory and exited to Russia but described a significant pullback.

    “On the ground in the vicinity of Kharkiv we assess that Russian forces have largely ceded their gains to the Ukrainians and have withdrawn to the north and east. Many of these forces have moved over the border into Russia,” the official said.

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

    Thomson Reuters

    National security correspondent focusing on the Pentagon in Washington D.C. Reports on U.S. military activity and operations throughout the world and the impact that they have. Has reported from over two dozen countries to include Iraq, Afghanistan, and much of the Middle East, Asia and Europe. From Karachi, Pakistan.

    Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/many-retreating-russian-troops-near-kharkiv-have-exited-ukraine-us-official-2022-09-12/

    The subpoenas seek information in connection with the fake electors plan.

    For months, associates of Mr. Trump have received subpoenas related to other aspects of the investigations into his efforts to cling to power. But in a new line of inquiry, some of the latest subpoenas focus on the activities of the Save America political action committee, the main political fund-raising conduit for Mr. Trump since he left office.


    What we consider before using anonymous sources. Do the sources know the information? What’s their motivation for telling us? Have they proved reliable in the past? Can we corroborate the information? Even with these questions satisfied, The Times uses anonymous sources as a last resort. The reporter and at least one editor know the identity of the source.

    The fact that the Justice Department is now seeking information related to fund-raising comes as the House committee examining the Jan. 6 attack has raised questions about money Mr. Trump solicited under the premise of fighting election fraud.

    The new subpoenas encompass a wide variety of those in Mr. Trump’s orbit, from low-level aides to his most senior advisers.

    The Justice Department has spent more than a year focused on investigating hundreds of rioters who were on the ground at the Capitol on Jan. 6. But this spring, it started issuing grand jury subpoenas to people like Ali Alexander, a prominent organizer with the pro-Trump Stop the Steal group, who helped plan the march to the Capitol after Mr. Trump gave a speech that day at the Ellipse near the White House.

    While it remains unclear how many subpoenas had been issued in that early round, the information they sought was broad.

    According to one subpoena obtained by The New York Times, they asked for any records or communications from people who organized, spoke at or provided security for Mr. Trump’s rally at the Ellipse. They also requested information about any members of the executive and legislative branches who may have taken part in planning or executing the rally, or tried to “obstruct, influence, impede or delay” the certification of the presidential election.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/12/us/politics/trump-aides-jan-6-doj.html

    EDINBURGH, Scotland — King Charles III, dressed in a Field Marshal’s ceremonial uniform, and his three siblings, Princess Anne, Prince Andrew and Prince Edward marched behind a hearse carrying their mother’s coffin Monday in a solemn procession attended by thousands along the Royal Mile in the historic heart of the Scottish capital of Edinburgh.

    The hearse was flanked by a bearer party of the Royal Regiment of Scotland and a detachment of The King’s Body Guard in Scotland, the Royal Company of Archers. Following the procession, a memorial service for Queen Elizabeth II was held at St Giles’ cathedral in Edinburgh.

    The coffin, with the Crown of Scotland resting on a cushion on top of it, is to stay in the 12th-century cathedral through Tuesday. Soon after the service ended, the cathedral opened members of the public who wish to pay their respects to the late queen.

    Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/entertainment/celebrities/2022/09/12/king-charles-queen-consort-camilla-elizabeth-scotland-vigil-live-updates/8060790001/

    It’s “starting to look like” the Trump Organization is trying to stall its upcoming criminal trial in New York until after the midterm elections, a judge said Monday during a pre-trial hearing.

    Former President Donald Trump’s family real estate firm is scheduled to stand trial starting Oct. 24 for fraud and tax evasion.

    “We are not delaying” the start of the trial, Judge Juan Merchan said Monday.

    A prosecutor, Joshua Steinglass, had accused attorneys for the Trump Organization of “gamesmanship” by failing to disclose the names of expert witnesses the defense will call to testify, as required under the rules of discovery.

    “The name of the game has been ‘Delay,'” Steinglass said.

    Defense attorney Susan Necheles said she was “sandbagged” by the accusation, and explained that the defense’s approach to the case had changed after last month’s guilty plea by longtime Trump Organization CFO Allan Weisselberg.

    Weisselberg pleaded guilty last month to all 15 counts in an indictment that accused him of failing to pay taxes on nearly $2 million in fringe benefits the Trump Organization allegedly paid him off the books. As part of his plea deal, he agreed to testify against the Trump Organization in next month’s trial.

    “We are now restructuring our defense,” Necheles said. “This is all a result of Mr. Weisselberg pleading guilty.”

    “The case against the Trump Organization is dramatically strengthened,” by the guilty plea, Steinglass claimed.

    The judge gave the defense until next Monday to provide the names of the experts they would call to testify, what they would testify to, and how that testimony is relevant to the case.

    The judge also told the defense not to make arguments to the jury that imply the company was charged by the Manhattan District Attorney’s office merely because it is owned by the former president.

    “No selective prosecution,” Merchan said, adding he would also preclude arguments at trial that suggest this is a “novel” prosecution.

    “Those are not defenses,” Merchan said. “I will have very little patience at trial.”

    The trial is expected to last about a month.

    Weisselberg’s plea agreement contains no requirement for the longtime CFO to cooperate in the criminal fraud case against Trump himself, which is separate from the case against the Trump Organization.

    Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/US/trump-organization-seeking-stall-fraud-trial-prosecutors-allege/story?id=89758799

    The Justice Department said it is open to a judge appointing one of the candidates that former President Donald Trump’s legal team put forward as a special master to review the documents seized from Mar-a-Lago, according to a court filing Monday evening.

    DOJ said senior Judge Raymond Dearie is acceptable, along with its two previously proposed selections: retired federal judges Barbara Jones and Thomas Griffith.

    “Each have substantial judicial experience, during which they have presided over federal criminal and civil cases, including federal cases involving national security and privilege concerns,” prosecutors wrote.

    Takeaways from the Trump and DOJ Mar-a-Lago special master court filing

    Dearie, originally a nominee of former President Ronald Reagan, has served as a federal judge in New York since the 1980s. He retired in 2011 and is now a senior judge on the circuit.

    Dearie also served a seven-year term on the US Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, or FISA court. He was one of the judges who approved an FBI and DOJ request to surveil Carter Page, a Trump campaign foreign policy adviser, as part of the federal inquiry into whether Russia interfered in the 2016 election.

    It is unclear when US District Judge Aileen Cannon will decide who the special master is.

    Cannon last week granted Trump’s request for a third-party attorney outside of the government to review the seized materials and asked that each side submit proposed candidates. Cannon also ordered criminal investigators at the Justice Department to stop using the seized materials as part of their ongoing probe until the special master finishes his or her review.

    Trump opposes DOJ nominees, but didn’t say why

    Earlier Monday, Trump said he opposes the Justice Department’s two proposed candidates to be the special master, but didn’t explain why.

    “Plaintiff objects to the proposed nominees of the Department of Justice. Plaintiff believes there are specific reasons why those nominees are not preferred for service as Special Master in this case,” the Trump lawyers wrote.

    The Justice Department nominated Griffith, who served as a judge on US Circuit Court of Appeals in Washington, DC, from 2005 to 2020, and Jones, a former federal prosecutor who has been a special master in several recent high-profile investigations.

    The Trump team also has suggested lawyer Paul Huck Jr., a former partner at the Jones Day law firm. The Justice Department opposed Huck Jr., noting he “does not appear to have similar experience” to the three judges.

    The Trump lawyers argued Monday that the court didn’t ask for detailed reasoning, and they are trying to be “more respectful to the candidates from either party.”

    Woman arrested for allegedly threatening judge in Mar-a-Lago documents case

    “Plaintiff also submits it is more respectful to the candidates from either party to withhold the bases for opposition from a public, and likely to be widely circulated, pleading,” Trump’s lawyers wrote. “Therefore, Plaintiff asks this Court for permission to specifically express our objections to the Government’s nominees only at such time that the Court specifies a desire to obtain and consider that information.”

    Trump and the Justice Department have also disagreed on other key aspects of the special master’s responsibilities, including how long the review should take, who is responsible for paying the special master, and what type of documents are subject to review.

    In a nod to the government’s hope for a speedy review of the thousands of documents seized by the FBI, the Justice Department wrote that “in selecting among the three candidates, the government respectfully requests that the Court consider and select the candidate best positioned to timely perform the special master’s assigned responsibilities.”

    This story has been updated with additional details.

    CNN’s Hannah Rabinowitz contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2022/09/12/politics/special-master-nominee-responses/index.html

    After ascending to the throne following the death of Britain’s longest-serving monarch, Queen Elizabeth II, King Charles III is exempt from paying taxes on his royal inheritance. 

    The king will not have to pay estate taxes on the newly inherited Duchy of Lancaster property valued at over $750 million. The 45,000-acre estate brought in more than $27 million for the queen last year and includes a luxurious hotel.

    A law passed by Parliament in 1993 exempts the king from paying taxes on property inherited from the passing of another monarch. In the United Kingdom, the inheritance tax is 40% and applies to estates valued at over $377,000. 

    Since 1993, however, Queen Elizabeth did pay capital gain taxes on Lancaster, but it is unclear if the king will continue in his mother’s footsteps. Without the 1993 law, Charles would have paid nearly $200 million in taxes on the property. 

    QUEEN ELIZABETH II REMEMBERED AS KING CHARLES III ASCENDS THE BRITISH THRONE

    Royal accounts show the British monarchy’s publicly-funded spending rose to 102.4 million pounds ($124 million) in the past year, with the renovation of Buckingham Palace taking up a large part of the expenses. The palace’s annual Sovereign Grant rep (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth, file / AP Images)

    Meanwhile, Prince William inherited the Duchy of Cornwall from his father, which is estimated to be worth more than $1 billion. 

    HOW MUCH MONEY DOES THE BRITISH ROYAL FAMILY MAKE?

    The entire Crown Estate has more than $30 billion in assets from various properties and holding that includes Buckingham Palace. Additionally, the Royal Family has an annual income funded by British taxpayers via the Sovereign Grant. 

    In exchange for surrendering all property profits to the UK government, the monarch is paid an equivalent of 25% of the Crown’s estate profits by the treasury. 

    CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ON FOX BUSINESS

    Source Article from https://www.foxbusiness.com/economy/king-charles-iii-pay-inheritance-taxes-750-million-property

    Kyiv — Ukrainian troops have made sweeping gains, raising their flag again in multiple towns and villages in the northeast of the country that were, until recently, occupied by Russia’s invading forces. The Ukrainian military says it’s reclaimed an area the size of Rhode Island since the beginning of September alone.

    As CBS News correspondent Debora Patta reports, the Ukrainians’ recent battlefield successes around their country’s second largest city of Kharkiv have been among their most significant since they crushed the bid by Vladimir Putin’s military to seize capital Kyiv near the start of the war. Their counteroffensive, focused largely around Kharkiv, has already taken back about 1,000 square miles of the territory that Ukraine had lost since Putin launched his invasion on February 24.

    Ukrainian forces have swept through the northeast at breath-taking speed, and as Patta reports, they’re being greeted like conquering heroes, with civilians rushing to offer flowers, embraces, and tears of joy.


    Ukrainian ambassador vows forces will “liberate all Ukraine” amid counteroffensive

    07:00

    Ukraine’s blue and yellow flag once again flies high in liberated towns and villages across the region, as the country’s advancing troops push north, just 30 miles from the Russian border.

    It’s a humiliating defeat for Putin’s men as they’re forced to flee, abandoning key supply hubs like Kupyansk and Izyum as they go. 

    “The Russians were here,” said local resident Dmytro Hrushchenko. “Then they suddenly started shouting wildly and running away, charging off in their tanks.”

    A Ukrainian soldier passes by a Russian tank damaged in a battle in just-freed territory on the road to Balakleya, in the Kharkiv region, Ukraine, September 11, 2022.

    AP


    For those who’ve lived under Russia’s occupation, it has been more than half a year of hell.

    “I was very scared all this time,” said Maria Hryhorora, another resident of a liberated town. “I can still see an image of a huge puddle of blood in front of my eyes.”

    As the Russian troops fled, fearing they would be surrounded and captured, they left behind the usual trail of destruction, devastation — and the possibility of new crime scenes for police to investigate as they begin the now horribly familiar task of digging up the bodies of civilians allegedly killed by the invading forces.

    Ukrainian police work during the exhumation of unidentified bodies of people allegedly killed by Russian troops in the village of Grakovo, recently freed by the Ukrainian army, in the Kharkiv region, September 9, 2022.

    Andrii Marienko/AP


    As Moscow ordered its soldiers to withdraw from around Kharkiv — with the face-saving explanation that it was to reinforce the front line further to the southeast — they fired off a gruesome parting gift: A missile strike hit a thermal power plant that left the area under a partial blackout overnight.

    Patta says that while Ukrainians have certainly been emboldened by the steady supply of Western military aid, nobody in the country is under the illusion that the war is going to be over quickly, and they say they need more heavy weapons to keep the momentum going.

    Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/ukraine-russia-war-news-power-outage-counteroffensive-kharkiv-liberated-towns/

    EDINBURGH, Sept 12 (Reuters) – The coffin of the late Queen Elizabeth was taken along the Royal Mile in the Scottish capital Edinburgh on Monday in a solemn procession watched by thousands of people lining the street to pay their respects to Britain’s longest reigning monarch.

    The skirl of bagpipes was the only sound as kilted soldiers from the Royal Regiment of Scotland bore the coffin from the Palace of Holyrood House and placed it in the hearse.

    King Charles and his siblings – Anne, Andrew and Edward – then walked behind the hearse up the historic street. The coffin will lie in St Giles’ Cathedral for an overnight vigil before being flown to London on Tuesday.

    A gun salute crashed out from a battery on Edinburgh Castle as the hearse began its journey. Then there was just silence.

    Elizabeth died on Thursday morning in her holiday home at Balmoral, in the Scottish Highlands, at the age of 96 after a 70-year reign, plunging the nation into mourning.

    Charles became king on her death and was formally proclaimed as monarch on Saturday.

    Tina Richardson, 63, a retiree from Dunbar, was among those standing on the centuries-old Royal Mile beside the Cathedral. She said her middle name was Elizabeth after the late queen.

    “She’s like a member of my own family. There’ll never be anyone like her,” she told Reuters. “She was such a beautiful lady who gave us all so much. She dedicated her whole life to the country. In good times and bad she was there, especially during COVID. She united everybody.”

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

    Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/uk/king-charles-fly-scotland-join-sombre-procession-queens-coffin-2022-09-11/

    A version of this story first appeared in CNN Business’ Before the Bell newsletter. Not a subscriber? You can sign up right here. You can listen to an audio version of the newsletter by clicking the same link.

    In the past week, Ukrainian troops have dealt a huge blow to Russia’s grip on parts of the east of their country with a fast-moving offensive. The stunning campaign has kicked off a new phase of the war and could force Vladimir Putin to reconsider his strategy and objectives.

    What’s happening: Ukrainian forces have recaptured more than 1,160 square miles of territory in recent days.

    The developments are helping lift stock markets. The war has been a major drag on Wall Street since Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in February sent the price of energy and other commodities soaring. That made it harder to estimate when inflation would start to ease, and consequently to determine what central banks like the Federal Reserve would do next.

    But investors remain cautious as they look ahead, warning that there are still too many unknowns to launch into a full-scale celebration.

    “It’s very difficult to know exactly what is going to go on in the war and what the next steps will be from the Russia side, so I think we can’t really invest on the basis of that,” Willem Sels, global chief investment officer at HSBC Private Banking and Wealth Management, told me.

    On the radar: The situation is very fluid. Russia launched fresh air strikes on the Kharkiv region on Monday, targeting the city center and residential districts.

    And regardless of what comes next, it may be too late to save Europe’s economy from recession as the sharp run-up in energy prices compels households to spend less on non-essentials and forces heavy industry to shut factories.

    Economic output in the United Kingdom stagnated in the three months to July, according to data released Monday. Meanwhile, Germany’s Ifo Institute has slashed its estimate for growth in Europe’s biggest economy.

    “We are heading into a winter recession,” the institute’s head of forecasts said Monday.

    Government packages aimed at supporting consumers could help prop up spending. The United Kingdom and Germany, along with other EU countries, have announced €500 billion ($507 billion) in subsidies for bills and other interventions aimed at softening the impact.

    But central banks will likely need to keep aggressively hiking interest rates to get inflation under control. That will keep economic growth in check.

    “It’s likely that monetary policy will need to tighten much further to tackle the UK and Europe’s generalized inflation problem effectively,” Neil Shearing, group chief economist at Capital Economics, said in a note to clients on Monday.

    The United States is more insulated from the Ukraine war, but it’s still under recession watch as the Federal Reserve signals it will stay tough. China, meanwhile, is battling a real estate crisis and the impact of harsh coronavirus restrictions that continue to weigh on growth.

    “Sky-high gas prices and aggressive monetary policy tightening have pushed the global economy to the brink” of a contraction later this year and early next year, Ben May, director of global macro research at Oxford Economics, said in a recent research note. “We expect a global recession to be avoided, but a sustained and substantial improvement in growth also seems unlikely.”

    That makes it hard for investors to get too energized, though they’re hopeful there will be opportunities to use the ongoing turbulence to their advantage.

    “We’re also playing the volatility,” Sels said. “You’re going to have lots of ups and downs.”

    Looming rail strike could cost $2 billion per day

    Around the world, transportation workers getting hammered by the surging cost of living and long hours are going on strike, adding to uncertainty about when global supply chains will start operating more normally.

    See here: Unions representing tens of thousands of essential workers at US freight railroads could strike this week. This could bring nearly 30% of the nation’s freight to a halt, according to data from the Bureau of Transportation Statistics.

    That would have big ramifications for businesses across the country and the broader economy. A complex network of logistics firms help move goods from Point A to Point B, but trains remain a crucial cog in the system.

    A prolonged standoff could mean empty shelves in stores, temporary closures at factories that don’t have the parts they need to operate and higher prices due to the limited availability of various consumer goods, my CNN Business colleague Chris Isidore reports.

    The Association of American Railroads estimates that a nationwide rail service interruption could cost the economy more than $2 billion per day. Shipments typically increase in the fall as companies stock up ahead of the holiday season.

    “We’re hearing more and more that shippers and the railroads are getting anxious,” said John Drake, vice president for transportation, infrastructure and supply chain policy for the US Chamber of Commerce, a business lobby.

    A central dispute is over the rules that govern workers’ schedules. Many of the engineers and conductors who make up the two-person crews on each train have to be “on call” to report to work seven days a week, preventing them from making their own plans and feeding staff turnover.

    Watch this space: Since railroad workers are under a different labor law than the one that controls labor relations at most businesses, it’s possible that Congress could act to prevent or quickly stop a strike. But that would require a level of bipartisanship that is rare in Washington just weeks ahead of midterm elections.

    Preparations to “manage and secure the shipments of hazardous and security-sensitive materials” will begin Monday, the Association of American Railroads said, and warned some customers “may also start to experience delayed or suspended service.” Unions claim this is a “completely unnecessary” maneuver by railroads aimed at boosting pressure on Congress.

    Better days on Wall Street help crypto, too

    Want evidence that crypto prices remain closely connected to what’s happening in the stock market? Take a look at bitcoin, which has rallied in recent days as the S&P 500 has gained ground.

    The latest: Bitcoin is back above $22,000 for the first time in about a month. Crypto companies are seeing their stocks rally, too. Coinbase shares are up 2% in premarket trading on Monday after leaping nearly 11% on Friday.

    But losses this year remain eye-watering. The price of bitcoin has plunged by 54% in 2022. Stock in Coinbase, which pulled off one of the hottest initial public offerings in 2021, is 68% lower. The declines have been closely correlated with the sell-off in stocks and moves away from riskier assets, despite hopes among crypto enthusiasts that digital currencies would serve as an effective hedge or store of value like gold.

    As ever, future prospects are murky and could hinge on where the broader market goes from here. Investors are looking ahead to Tuesday’s US inflation release, which could set the tone for the rest of the month.

    “The recovery in bitcoin since the end of last week has been very strong,” said Craig Erlam, senior market analyst at Oanda. “Things may be looking up in the short term, although once more, that may well depend on the inflation data.”

    Up next

    Oracle

    (ORCL)
    reports results after US markets close.

    Coming tomorrow: Has inflation in the United States peaked? Economists polled by Refinitiv expect to learn that consumer prices increased by 8.1% in the year to August, down from 8.5% the previous month.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2022/09/12/investing/premarket-stocks-trading/index.html

    The Justice Department has said in court filings that among the 100-plus classified documents taken in August, some were marked “HCS,” a category of highly classified government information that refers to “HUMINT Control Systems,” which are systems used to protect intelligence gathered from secret human sources. There were also dozens of empty folders marked classified, according to a government inventory filed in court, and documents marked confidential, secret and top-secret.

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2022/09/12/trump-classified-special-master/

    Troops parade for Queen Elizabeth II as she arrives in Kingston, Jamaica, in 2002.

    PA Images via Getty Images


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    Troops parade for Queen Elizabeth II as she arrives in Kingston, Jamaica, in 2002.

    PA Images via Getty Images

    Queen Elizabeth II’s death has garnered a spectrum of feelings around the world about her life, legacy and the monarchy.

    When she took the throne in 1952, more than a quarter of the world’s population was under British imperial power. That was more than 700 million people — including in parts of Africa, Asia, the Middle East and the Pacific islands.

    While her 70-year reign saw the British Empire become the Commonwealth of Nations — and the decline of the United Kingdom’s global influence — the scars of colonialism linger. Many note the enslavement, violence and theft that defined imperial rule, and they find it difficult to separate the individual from the institution and its history.

    Moses Ochonu, a professor of African studies at Vanderbilt University, told NPR the queen’s death brought attention to “unfinished colonial business.”

    “There is a sense in which Britain has never fully accounted for its crimes,” Ochonu said.

    Elizabeth was associated with colonial and de-colonized Britain

    The memory of Elizabeth is complicated by the fact that during her rule, more than 20 countries gained independence, Ochonu said.

    “It’s her dual status as the face of colonialism, but also a symbol of decolonization that defines how she is perceived in many former British African colonies.”

    Ochonu’s own feelings toward the queen’s death are mixed — in part because of his childhood. He was born in Nigeria, a little over a decade after the country saw an end to colonial rule.

    He recalled how the queen continued to be fondly associated with prestige and grandeur. Images of Elizabeth as a young woman visiting parts of Africa humanized the crown and the monarch.

    Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip wave from an open Land Rover to a crowd of schoolchildren at a rally held in Nigeria in 1956. The country would gain independence four years later.

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    Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip wave from an open Land Rover to a crowd of schoolchildren at a rally held in Nigeria in 1956. The country would gain independence four years later.

    Fox Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

    But coupled with that nostalgia is “residual anger” over the brutal price paid for many countries’ independence. Ochonu said in Nigeria, many are still haunted by Britain’s role in their civil war, when the global power secretly tried to prevent the Republic of Biafra’s secession efforts. In Kenya, Britain tortured thousands of rebels in detention camps, for which it apologized in 2013.

    That’s why Ochonu said her death prompts a time of reflection rather than mourning.

    Elizabeth was a symbol of Britain’s denial for colonial crimes

    Others find it difficult to celebrate the queen’s life — in part because they feel she should be held accountable for what her country did.

    “We essentially have to respect her for her very long service, but as the monarch, she cannot be disentangled from colonization of South Asia,” Mou Banerjee, a professor of South Asian history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, told NPR.

    Banerjee is from India, which gained independence from Britain in 1947. Although Elizabeth was crowned five years later, Banerjee said many Indians hoped the queen would express remorse for the damages of colonialism.

    That was the case in 1997 during what would be the queen’s last visit to India. Elizabeth told Indians “history cannot be rewritten” in reference to the 1919 massacre in Jallianwala Bagh, where hundreds of Indians were shot and killed by British troops.

    Those sentiments have resurfaced as many wonder what will happen to the queen’s crown jewel following her death. During colonial times, India was forced to hand over the 105-carat Kohinoor diamond to Britain. Many are also calling for the return of the Cullinan diamond back to South Africa.

    “The jewels represent a history of coercion, subjugation, loot, loss, grief,” Banerjee said.

    Similarly, the queen’s death has also reminded many people of the lack of reparations to former colonies.

    People calling for slavery reparations protest outside the entrance of the British High Commission during the visit of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge in Kingston, Jamaica, earlier this year.

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    People calling for slavery reparations protest outside the entrance of the British High Commission during the visit of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge in Kingston, Jamaica, earlier this year.

    Ricardo Makyn/AFP via Getty Images

    Opal Palmer Adisa, the former director of the Institute for Gender and Development Studies at the University of the West Indies, told All Things Considered Britain has yet to even apologize to the African diaspora.

    Over 2.2 million enslaved people were taken to British colonies in the Caribbean.

    Palmer Adisa said in Jamaica, children were not taught specifics about what happened under British rule — even when discussing slavery.

    “The implications and the horrendous actions of the British … were never delineated,” she said.

    Many people are wondering why the British monarchy still exists

    For some, the queen’s death has reignited conversations around the purpose and place for a monarch today.

    Banerjee has been skeptical of the crown from a young age, when she would hear her grandparents’ anecdotes of the Bengal famine of 1943, where at least 3 million people died of starvation as a result of Britain’s overseas economic policies.

    Although Elizabeth’s eldest son now sits on the throne, Banerjee believes this can still be a time of reckoning over the institution.

    “They say, the sun never sets on the British Empire. I think it has set with the death of Queen Elizabeth,” Banerjee said.

    “It is time that we come to terms with that history of enslavement, that history of colonization.”

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/09/12/1122238140/queen-elizabeth-ii-death-commonwealth-countries-colonial-history

    Meteorologists have predicted that a “triple-dip” La Niña is expected to occur through the remainder of 2022 and possibly into early 2023.

    In an update on Thursday, the National Weather Service reported a 91 percent chance of La Niña conditions in the months of September through November, decreasing to 54 percent January through March of 2023. 

    According to the Word Meteorological Organization (WMO), La Niña is a climate pattern caused by large-scale cooling of the ocean surface temperatures in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean. 

    The current La Niña has spanned three consecutive northern hemisphere winters starting in September 2020, making this the century’s first “triple-dip“ La Niña, WMO said. 

    La Niña is also the opposite of the widely-known El Niño, which only occurs when the Pacific Ocean water is higher than normal. 

    The weather conditions will mean less rain and drier conditions this fall for most of the U.S.

    WMO’s Secretary-General Petteri Taalas said the weather event is slowing the rise in temperatures around the globe, “but it will not halt or reverse the long-term warming trend.” 

    Every state in the U.S., apart from those closer to the Canadian border, are expecting to see above-average temperatures forecast through the fall season. 

    Another season of La Niña could spell trouble for California, which has suffered through intense, prolonged drought seasons in the past few years. 

    States such as New York, Texas, Pennsylvania, Utah, and Colorado are also expected to see hotter than usual temperatures during the fall season. 

    According to ABC News, La Niña has had a devastating impact outside the U.S., causing droughts in South America and eastern parts of Africa and floods in Asia.

    Source Article from https://thehill.com/policy/equilibrium-sustainability/3638209-what-is-triple-dip-la-nina/