Along with Officer Torres, the deceased victims were identified by officials as Nicole Connors, 53, Susan Karnatz, 49, Mary Marshall, 34, and James Thompson,16.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-63253516

One of the three jurors in the Parkland school massacre case who was against the death penalty for Nikolas Cruz told CNN Friday she did not make her decision until the “very last minute.”

Ultimately, she was persuaded to vote for life without parole because she “felt that the system failed” Cruz repeatedly throughout his life, from the schools he attended to mental health professionals who evaluated him.

“I saw several pieces of evidence where several (experts had) recommended (Cruz) be in a residential facility. That never happened,” said Melody Vanoy, who was a juror in the case.

On Thursday, the jury kept Cruz from getting the death penalty, recommending life in prison without parole by default when it did not unanimously agree Cruz should get capital punishment for the 2018 South Florida killings. Some victims’ families were enraged by the decision, saying they felt the jury failed them.

Vanoy described a hostile environment which arose among the jurors – with whom she said had bonded during the monthslong trial – at the end of deliberations and after their paperwork was filled out.

“There were negative sarcastic remarks,” Vanoy said. “I heard comments like, ‘we’re going to let the families down.’”

“I felt disrespected, despite the relationships that we had built,” she added. “The energy was so heated that we wanted to get out of that room. They had to take us down for over 30 minutes to just give us fresh air so we can move around and separate. That’s how heated it got.”

“It got ugly,” Vanoy said.

Other jurors also described tension during deliberations, and in an interview, the jury foreman described disagreement among the panel, saying three of the 12 jurors opposed the death penalty in the case.

Cruz admitted to killing 14 students and three school staff members and injuring 17 others in the Valentine’s Day 2018 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. Because Cruz pleaded guilty to all counts – 17 counts of murder and 17 counts of attempted murder – the trial phase was skipped and the court went directly to the sentencing phase.

The judge is expected to issue the gunman’s formal sentence on November 1 and by law is unable to deviate from the jury’s recommendation of life.

Sheriff’s office investigating juror’s threat allegation

While CNN interviewed Vanoy Friday afternoon, a court hearing was also taking place after prosecutors asked the judge to compel law enforcement officers to interview a juror who alleged she felt threatened and investigate if a crime was committed.

Broward Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer said she would not direct the sheriff’s office to investigate the allegation, but added, “if that’s a matter that they feel is appropriate for a criminal investigation, that’s what they should do.”

The Broward County Sheriff’s Office said Friday afternoon it received information from the state attorney’s office regarding the juror’s allegations and will now investigate.

How Nikolas Cruz’s defense persuaded a jury to spare his life

Prosecutors in Friday’s hearing called the allegation a “safety issue.”

“Frankly, we don’t want to touch this with a ten-foot pole because we know that the defense will be jumping up and down and saying that we are trying to undermine the verdict, which we are not trying to do. The only reason we are doing this is that we cannot ignore a safety issue,” the prosecution said. The judge agreed.

The name of that juror was not made public. The juror called prosecutors Thursday after the jurors’ decision was read in court, according to a court filing obtained by CNN.

“Juror X spoke to a support staff member and informed the support staff member that during deliberations she received what she perceived to be a threat from a fellow juror while in the jury room,” the filing says. “The State did not call Juror X back and instead, filed a Notice to the Court.”

Deliberations were ‘tense,’ a juror wrote in letter to judge

On Thursday, another juror wrote a handwritten letter to the judge calling the deliberations “tense,” and saying some jurors became “extremely unhappy” when she mentioned she’d vote for life in prison.

In the letter, the juror also denied allegations she made up her mind to vote for life in prison before the trial began, saying she heard other jurors had made such accusations about her.

The juror who reported the perceived threat now being investigated is a different juror from the one who wrote the letter to the judge, according to Assistant State Attorney Carolyn McCann.

Of the 12 jurors, three voted against recommending the death sentence, jury foreman Benjamin Thomas told CNN affiliate WFOR, adding, “I don’t like how it turned out, but … that’s how the jury system works.”

“There was one with a hard ‘no’ – she couldn’t do it. And there was another two that ended up voting the same way,” Thomas said. The woman who was against it “didn’t believe, because he was mentally ill, he should get the death penalty,” Thomas said.

Vanoy also told CNN there were one woman on the jury panel who was “not moving” from her stance against the death penalty. “So whether we took 10 hours or five days (of deliberating), she didn’t feel she was going to be moved either way.”

To recommend death, the jury would have needed to unanimously agree aggravating factors – reasons the prosecution said he should be put to death – outweighed mitigating circumstances, or aspects of Cruz’s life and upbringing the defense said warranted only life in prison.

The jury did not unanimously agree on this, meaning Cruz must be sentenced to life in prison without possibility of parole.

During the sentencing trial, prosecutors argued any mitigating factors were overshadowed by what they described as Cruz’s exceptionally cruel and heinous acts. They presented detailed evidence to support their claims Cruz carefully planned and premeditated the attack. The prosecution rested their case after jurors toured the still bloodstained school building where the massacre happened.

Cruz’s attorneys painted the shooter as a severely “broken” person who suffers from a number of mental and developmental issues that were not adequately treated when he was growing up.

‘Yet another gut punch’ for devastated families

Victims’ loved ones were overwhelmed with rage and disbelief after hearing the verdict, and many denounced the decision as inadequate punishment given the extraordinary losses they have suffered.

Parkland school shooter avoids the death penalty after jury recommends life in prison

The 14 slain students were: Alyssa Alhadeff, 14; Martin Duque Anguiano, 14; Nicholas Dworet, 17; Jaime Guttenberg, 14; Luke Hoyer, 15; Cara Loughran, 14; Gina Montalto, 14; Joaquin Oliver, 17; Alaina Petty, 14; Meadow Pollack, 18; Helena Ramsay, 17; Alex Schachter, 14; Carmen Schentrup, 16; and Peter Wang, 14.

Geography teacher Scott Beigel, 35; wrestling coach Chris Hixon, 49; and assistant football coach Aaron Feis, 37, were also killed – each while running toward danger or trying to help students to safety.

Alyssa’s mother told CNN Friday she was shocked by how quickly the jury’s decision came – on the second day of deliberations.

“I just would have wanted the jurors to spend more time going through the evidence, really trying to convince … all 12 jurors that this animal should be getting the death penalty,” Lori Alhadeff said.

‘This jury failed our families.’ Loved ones of Parkland school massacre victims say justice eludes them

“They had time, and they really should have gone through the evidence. It almost makes me feel like that there was somebody that already had this notion … that they were never going to give the death penalty,” Alhadeff said.

Hixon’s widow, Debra Hixon, told CNN Thursday when she realized the killer wouldn’t receive the death penalty, she felt like she had been punched in the chest.

“What hurts the most is that there is a belief that any mitigating circumstances could outweigh what he did to our loved ones,” Hixon said, adding, “Because the way it comes out is that his life has more value than those that were murdered.”

Public defender Gordon Weekes urged the community to respect the jury’s decision.

“This day is not a day of celebration, but a day of solemn acknowledgment, and a solemn opportunity to reflect on the healing that is necessary for this community,” he told reporters.

But several families were insistent that the jury’s decision does not deliver them peace. The mother of Helena Ramsay, a 17-year-old senior, also denounced the jury’s recommendation.

“After spending months and months listening, and hearing testimonies, and looking at the murderer – his composure – I believe justice was not done,” Anne Ramsay said. “The wrong verdict was given out today.”

CNN’s Matthew Hilk, Dakin Andone, Alta Spells, Elizabeth Joseph, Carlos Suarez, Ray Sanchez, Kevin Conlon, Aditi Sangal, Matt Meyer and Denise Royal contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2022/10/14/us/parkland-nikolas-cruz-jury-verdict-friday/index.html

“Borrowers will not need to reapply if they submit their application during the beta test, but no applications will be processed until the site officially launches later this month,” a spokesperson for the department said. “This testing period will allow the Department to monitor site performance through real-world use, test the site ahead of the official application launch, refine processes, and uncover any possible bugs prior to official launch.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2022/10/14/student-loan-forgiveness-application-beta/

Journalists raise their hands for questions as Britain’s Prime Minister Liz Truss holds a news conference in the Downing Street Briefing Room in central London, Friday. Truss let go her finance chief Kwasi Kwarteng and reversed course on sweeping tax cuts.

Daniel Leal/AP


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Journalists raise their hands for questions as Britain’s Prime Minister Liz Truss holds a news conference in the Downing Street Briefing Room in central London, Friday. Truss let go her finance chief Kwasi Kwarteng and reversed course on sweeping tax cuts.

Daniel Leal/AP

LONDON — British Prime Minister Liz Truss fired her finance minister and close ally Kwasi Kwarteng. Then hours later, she announced a U-turn on their economic package, attempting to calm financial markets and reinforce her shaky leadership position little more than a month after taking office.

The government said former Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt is taking over as chancellor of the Exchequer, the United Kingdom’s treasury. He is the fourth chancellor this year.

Shortly after sacking the finance minister, Truss held a news conference at Downing Street, and appeared visibly nervous, saying, “We need to act now to reassure the markets of our fiscal discipline.”

She announced she was canceling a proposed corporation tax cut, a central part of the new government’s economic plan that created turmoil in British politics and financial markets and sent the pound plunging late last month.

Truss’ course correction comes as her administration has sustained mounting criticism from opposition politicians and legislators within her own party, as well as international economists and investors who have continued to divest themselves of British assets.

U.K. Prime Minister Liz Truss and Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng visit a construction site in Birmingham earlier this month. The two met this morning over finance policy.

Stefan Rousseau/WPA Pool/Getty Images


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U.K. Prime Minister Liz Truss and Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng visit a construction site in Birmingham earlier this month. The two met this morning over finance policy.

Stefan Rousseau/WPA Pool/Getty Images

Kwarteng stood by her vision

Kwarteng had to depart early from Washington, D.C., Thursday evening, where he had been meeting with counterparts at the International Monetary Fund. He and Truss held urgent talks in Downing Street shortly after his return to London.

“When you asked me to serve as your Chancellor, I did so in full knowledge that the situation we faced was incredibly difficult, with rising global interest rates and energy prices,” Kwarteng said in his departure letter. “However, your vision of optimism, growth and change was right.”

Prior to her public speech, Truss’ office and her supporters had repeatedly said she would not change her broader approach to kick-starting economic growth, and that she and Kwarteng would continue to work together toward a common goal.

It isn’t the first economic plan reversal

Truss took over from former Prime Minister Boris Johnson in early September. Within days, then-finance minister Kwarteng had proposed a series of tax cuts and spending measures, without saying how they would be funded.

The proposal led the pound to weaken to a record low against the dollar. Millions of homeowners faced steep increases to their mortgage rates and government borrowing costs skyrocketed. That prompted the Bank of England to step in to prevent a crisis.

Earlier this month, the government backtracked on another part of its controversial economic package, by scrapping proposed tax cuts for higher earners.

As confidence and anticipation have grown for further changes, the pound inched up in value on Thursday and bond markets stabilized some. And in the minutes that followed Truss’ speech Friday, the currency rallied significantly — often a sign of increased investor confidence in a country’s economic future.

Her party’s reactions are mixed

Thérèse Coffey, the deputy prime minister and health secretary, who is one of Truss’ longest-standing allies in Parliament, tweeted her support for Friday’s decisions. She wrote that Truss was “right to act now to ensure our country’s economic stability,” particularly given the deteriorating economic picture worldwide, which she attributed to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Meanwhile, veteran Conservative lawmaker Roger Gale said it was hard to understand why Truss had forced out Kwarteng. He wrote on Twitter that the former finance chief was a “good man” who had simply been “promoting the policies upon which she [Truss] was elected” as Conservative leader by the party’s grassroots members.

Gale did, though, describe the new chancellor, Hunt, as “an experienced pair of hands on the financial tiller.”

But former Conservative leader William Hague told Times Radio he believes Truss is barely hanging on as prime minister.

“It’s been a catastrophic episode,” said Hague, a former foreign secretary. “And I think it hangs by a thread — is the honest answer to your question of her position — because, yes, these were her policies too. And plenty of warning was given by many of us about what would happen if we had unfunded tax cuts and whether it would be financially and politically sustainable.”

Still, Hague said he hoped she would survive because having yet another prime minister would be “stretching credibility too far” for the Conservative Party.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/10/14/1129013714/in-a-sign-she-may-change-course-on-taxes-the-u-k-s-truss-fires-her-finance-minis

She named Raymond J. Dearie, a semiretired judge in the Eastern District of New York suggested by Mr. Trump’s team, to fill the role. His job is to oversee a review of all the documents by the two sides and then to write a report by mid-December recommending how she should consider ruling on any privilege claims for which they disagree.

Judge Cannon also surprised experts by declaring that the review would not only see if the F.B.I.’s own filter team had missed any documents that may be protected by attorney-client privilege, which is routine, but also identify some as protected by executive privilege, which would be unprecedented.

In its new filing, the Justice Department challenged her orders on multiple grounds.

First, it argued that she had no jurisdiction to intervene, pointing to the 11th Circuit panel’s own analysis when it removed documents with classified markings from the special master’s review.

The three judges — including two Trump appointees — had said none of the legal factors that would justify judicial intervention were met in this situation. In particular, they noted that Judge Cannon herself had said one condition — whether the F.B.I. had acted in “callous disregard” of Mr. Trump’s rights — had not been met in this instance, and cited a precedent saying that factor was “indispensable” for creating a basis for a judge to step in.

The full appeal may not be heard by the same judges who ruled on the earlier stay motion. But the Justice Department urged the judges on the new panel to follow their colleagues’ reasoning and overturn her orders on jurisdictional grounds alone.

The department also argued that even if she did have did have sufficient jurisdiction, Judge Cannon was wrong to block criminal investigators from reviewing or using any of the seized records.

The government repeated its earlier arguments that it needed access to the documents marked classified both “to assess the full scope of the risk to national security posed by the improper storage of these records,” and because they may be “evidence of obstruction of justice” in light of the Trump team’s false claim to have fully complied with the subpoena.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/14/us/appeal-special-master-trump.html

“You have not gone after the people that created the fraud, but rather great American patriots who questioned it, as is their constitutional right,” Mr. Trump wrote in the screed. “These people have had their lives ruined as your committee sits back and basks in the glow.”

Instead of providing what he claimed was evidence, he included appendices filled with assertions of widespread election irregularities that have been debunked, some by his own former attorney general, William P. Barr, and other top Justice Department officials.

“A large percentage of American citizens, including almost the entire Republican Party, feel that the election was rigged and stolen,” Mr. Trump wrote, without mentioning that his false claims were the reason the lies spread among the populace and have come to define the G.O.P.


How Times reporters cover politics. We rely on our journalists to be independent observers. So while Times staff members may vote, they are not allowed to endorse or campaign for candidates or political causes. This includes participating in marches or rallies in support of a movement or giving money to, or raising money for, any political candidate or election cause.

He included aerial photographs purporting to show enormous throngs of people on the National Mall on Jan. 6, 2021 — reminiscent of the images that the White House released after his inauguration in 2017 — and again complained of what he claimed was media censorship that downplayed the size of the crowd.

The letter emerged as the House committee, which voted unanimously on Thursday to issue a subpoena to Mr. Trump, was at work preparing the demand, which would list specific documents that the former president must turn over and a date by when he must testify. People close to the committee’s work said the panel was poised to issue the subpoena as soon as Monday.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/14/us/politics/trump-jan-6-subpoena.html

Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooter Nikolas Cruz reacts at his trial in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on Thursday.

Amy Beth Bennett/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP, Pool


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Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooter Nikolas Cruz reacts at his trial in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on Thursday.

Amy Beth Bennett/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP, Pool

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Prosecutors in the case of Florida school shooter Nikolas Cruz are calling for an investigation after a juror said she felt threatened by another member of the jury during deliberations that ended Thursday with a life sentence for Cruz’s murder of 17 people.

The motion calls for law enforcement to interview the unnamed juror after she told the state attorney’s office “she perceived to be a threat from a fellow juror while in the jury room.” No further details were given. A hearing is set for Friday afternoon.

A divided jury spared Cruz the death penalty and instead decided to send him to prison for the rest of his life in a decision that left many families of the victims angered, baffled and in tears. Cruz, 24, pleaded guilty a year ago to murdering 14 students and three staff members, and wounding 17 others, at Parkland’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb. 14, 2018.

Under Florida law, a death sentence requires a unanimous vote on at least one count. The seven-man, five-woman jury unanimously agreed there were aggravating factors to warrant a possible death sentence, such as agreeing that the murders were “especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel.”

But one or more jurors also found mitigating factors, such as untreated childhood issues. In the end, the jury could not agree that the aggravating factors outweighed the mitigating ones, so Cruz will get life without parole. Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer will formally issue the life sentences Nov. 1. Relatives, along with the students and teachers Cruz wounded, will be given the opportunity to speak.

The jurors pledged during the selection process that they could vote for a death sentence, but some victims’ parents, some of whom attended the trial almost daily, wondered whether all of them were being honest.

A juror says the deliberations “were very tense”

Juror Denise Cunha sent a short handwritten note to the judge Thursday defending her vote for a life sentence and denying she intended to vote that way before the trial began.

“The deliberations were very tense and some jurors became extremely unhappy once I mentioned that I would vote for life,” Cunha wrote. She did not explain her vote and it is unknown if she is the juror who complained to the state attorney’s office.

Jury foreman Benjamin Thomas told local reporters that three jurors voted for life on the final ballot. Two were willing to reconsider, but one was a “hard no” for the death penalty.

“It really came down to a specific (juror) that he (Cruz) was mentally ill,” Thomas said. He did not say whether that person was Cunha.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/10/14/1129072936/parkland-school-shooting-juror-threat-investigation

He had been attending a meeting of the International Monetary Fund, his first appearance as chancellor at a major economic summit. He told reporters in Washington that he was “not going anywhere,” despite the market turbulence he conceded was caused in part by the government’s fiscal plan. Asked if he and his boss, the prime minister, would have their jobs in a month’s time, the chancellor replied, “Absolutely, 100 percent.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2022/10/14/uk-truss-kwarteng-budget-tory/

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2022/10/13/alexandra-pelosi-speaker-pelosi-daughter-jan-6/10491098002/

Oct 14 (Reuters) – Right-wing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones has vowed to fight a nearly $1 billion defamation verdict against him, but experts say neither bankruptcy nor an appeal of a Connecticut jury’s findings on Wednesday are likely to salvage his personal fortune and media empire.

A jury in Waterbury, Connecticut, state court found Jones and the parent company of his Infowars website must pay $965 million to numerous families of the 20 children and six staff members slain at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, in 2012 for claiming they were actors who faked the tragedy as part of a government plot.

The verdict could grow substantially when a judge decides how much to award in punitive damages next month. It also comes three months after a Texas jury awarded two Sandy Hook parents $49.3 million in a similar case.

Jones has said he will fight the verdict on appeal and use the recent bankruptcy of his company, Free Speech Systems LLC, to avoid paying. It is unclear if he and his companies could ever pay the verdicts in full, but attorneys for the plaintiffs have vowed to prevent him from shielding any of his assets.

“We’re confident we will recover as much of the verdict as we can in the near-term, and in the long-term, this verdict isn’t going anywhere,” Chris Mattei, an attorney for the plaintiffs, said.

Infowars’ finances are not public, but according to trial testimony the site brought in revenue of at least $165 million between 2016 and 2018. An economist in the Texas case estimated that Jones is personally worth between $135 million and $270 million.

Free Speech Systems filed for bankruptcy in July. The Sandy Hook families have intervened in the case and accused Jones of withdrawing up to $62 million from Free Speech Systems while burdening it with $54 million in “concocted” debt owed to a different company owned by Jones and his parents.

Bankruptcy courts have wide discretion to decide which creditors get paid first and are vigilant in cases where companies try to siphon out funds via debt held by shell entities, UConn School of Law professor Minor Myers said.

“No bankruptcy judge would allow Alex Jones and his dad to stand in line in front of the plaintiffs,” Myers said.

‘EGREGIOUS’ CONDUCT

Infowars founder Alex Jones speaks to the media after appearing at his Sandy Hook defamation trial at Connecticut Superior Court in Waterbury, Connecticut, U.S., October 4, 2022. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo

Plaintiffs with judgments against bankrupt entities typically recover only a portion of what they are owed, along with other creditors whose debts are ranked in priority by the court.

For judgments involving intentional infliction of harm, however, courts will often rule that plaintiffs can continue seeking payment after the bankruptcy is concluded by going after wages and other assets, experts say.

Jones’ “underlying conduct was egregious, and that’s the kind of thing that could get you beyond the limits of a bankruptcy,” Brian Kabateck, an attorney who was not involved in the case, told Reuters.

In the near-term, Jones is unlikely to prevail if he asks a judge or appeals court to reduce the verdict on the grounds that it is excessive, according to several Connecticut attorneys.

Unlike some states, Connecticut does not cap compensatory damages, and judges there rarely question jury verdicts because the legal standard for doing so is high, attorney Mike D’Amico said.

While the verdict is eye-popping, it includes more than a dozen plaintiffs who say they suffered years of harassment, death threats and stalking at the hands of Jones’ followers.

D’Amico said a billion-dollar verdict is appropriate given the uniquely tragic circumstances of the case and egregious nature of Jones’ conduct.

“This was a tragedy unspeakable in terms of its impact and involves conduct that is just so abhorrent,” D’Amico said. “This is the kind of award you would expect.”

Jones may have also hurt his chances by repeatedly violating court orders, claiming the trial was a sham and erupting into a tirade against “liberals” during his testimony. Syracuse University College of Law professor Roy Gutterman said that Jones’ “contempt for the system” will likely undermine any appeal.

“It’s going to be a big ask for the defendant to come back to the court and say, ‘Will you now please reduce this to something a little more reasonable?” Gutterman said.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/markets/rates-bonds/alex-jones-faces-long-odds-hiding-assets-after-1-billion-sandy-hook-verdict-2022-10-14/

LIVE UPDATES

This is CNBC’s live blog tracking developments on the war in Ukraine. See below for the latest updates. 

SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk has confirmed that SpaceX will no longer fund donated Starlink internet terminals in Ukraine.

It follows a CNN report that SpaceX was pulling funding for the terminals, citing documents obtained from the Pentagon. The company is asking the U.S. government to pay for the terminals instead, according to the report.

At the same time, Russian President Vladimir Putin said Moscow’s mobilization of reservists would end in two weeks. He added that there is no need for large new strikes on Ukraine.

Meanwhile, Ukrainian forces continue to gain ground in territory occupied and illegally annexed by Russia, prompting Russian-installed authorities there to urge civilians in the southern Kherson region to evacuate.

Evacuees are to begin arriving in Russia today. Ukrainian officials say Russian authorities are not carrying out an evacuation but a “forced deportation” of Ukrainians. CNBC has not been able to verify either side’s claims.

Numerous rights groups as well as Ukrainian and Western officials have accused Russia of forcefully deporting Ukrainian civilians, including children, into Russia, which constitutes a war crime. Moscow insists the people came to Russia of their own accord.

Kyiv says it has liberated 600 settlements from Russian occupation this month, including 75 in Kherson.

Don’t back Putin into a corner, Belarusian leader warns as nuclear fears grow

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has a warning for the West: Do not push Russian President Vladimir Putin into a corner.

Russia has nuclear weapons for a reason and crossing Putin’s “red lines” in Ukraine would be a mistake, the strongman and close Kremlin ally said in an exclusive interview Friday.

“If you back a person or a country into the corner, there is only one way out — forward,” Lukashenko told NBC’s Keir Simmons on the sidelines of a regional summit of post-Soviet leaders in Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan.

“That’s why don’t cross red lines, you cannot cross them.” 

Read the full NBC News exclusive here.

— NBC NEWS

Three vessels to leave Ukraine carrying more than 84,000 metric tons of agricultural products

The organization overseeing the export of grain from Ukraine said it has approved three vessels to leave the besieged country.

The Black Sea Grain Initiative, a deal among Ukraine, Russia, the United Nations and Turkey, said the vessels are carrying 84,500 metric tons of grain and other crops.

Two ships are set to leave from Ukraine’s port of Odesa and are destined for Tunisia and Spain. The third vessel is departing from Chornomorsk to Algeria.

Read more about the Black Sea Grain Initiative here.

— Amanda Macias

Russian troops will arrive in Belarus over the coming days, says Belarus defense ministry

The Belarus Ministry of Defense announced that Russian troops will arrive in Belarus in the coming days for its joint force operation, according to Reuters.

“Troops from the Russian component of the Regional Grouping of Forces will start arriving in Belarus in the next few days,” the Minsk defense ministry said.

This follows Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko’s announcement earlier this week that several thousand Russian soldiers would be stationed in Belarus, which he referred to as a “regional grouping of troops.”

Lukashenko, a longtime ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, indicated his willingness to respond to any threats from Ukraine, hinting at a possible escalation of the war. The announcement followed the blast that damaged the bridge linking Crimea to Russia, for which Putin blamed Ukraine.

— Rocio Fabbro

More than 7.6 million Ukrainians have become refugees from Russia’s war, U.N. estimates

More than 7.6 million Ukrainians have become refugees and moved to neighboring countries since Russia invaded Ukraine in late February, the U.N. Refugee Agency estimates.

More than 4.3 million of those people have applied for temporary resident status in neighboring Western European countries, according to data collected by the agency.

“The escalation of conflict in Ukraine has caused civilian casualties and destruction of civilian infrastructure, forcing people to flee their homes seeking safety, protection and assistance,” the U.N. Refugee Agency wrote.

— Amanda Macias

Putin says no need for massive new strikes on Ukraine

Russian President Vladimir Putin said there was no need for massive new strikes on Ukraine and that Russia was not looking to destroy the country.

Putin told a news conference at the end of a summit in Kazakhstan that his call-up of Russian reservists would be over within two weeks and there were no plans for a further mobilization.

He also repeated the Kremlin position that Russia was willing to hold talks, although he said they would require international mediation if Ukraine was prepared to take part.

Taken together, Putin’s comments appeared to suggest a slight softening of his tone as the war nears the end of its eighth month, after weeks of Ukrainian advances and significant Russian defeats. Wall Street shares opened higher as traders interpreted them as easing geopolitical tensions, though they dipped later in the day.

But Putin – who has said he would be ready to use nuclear weapons to defend Russia’s “territorial integrity” – also warned of a “global catastrophe” in the event of a direct clash of NATO troops with Russia.

He was speaking after a week when Russia has staged its heaviest missile attacks on Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities since the start of its invasion of Feb. 24 – an action that Putin has said was retaliation for an attack that damaged a Russian bridge to unilaterally annexed Crimea.

— Reuters

Two NATO allies still have to approve Sweden and Finland’s entry into the alliance

Two NATO member countries have not yet signed ratification protocols for Finland and Sweden to join the military alliance.

Out of NATO’s 30 member countries, Hungary and Turkey are the last not to grant Sweden and Finland membership. Slovakia was the latest NATO ally to sign ratification documents on Sept. 27.

On Thursday, U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin called on the last two remaining NATO members to ratify Finland and Sweden’s membership.

“I encourage all of our valued allies to ratify the protocols for accession as soon as possible so that we can welcome both of these highly-capable democratic partners into the alliance,” Austin told reporters at NATO.

In May, both nations began the formal process of applying to NATO as Russia’s war in Ukraine raged. All 30 members of the alliance have to ratify the countries’ entry into the group.

In August, U.S. President Joe Biden signed ratification documents following a 95-1 Senate vote to bring Finland and Sweden into NATO.

— Amanda Macias

Russian mobilization of reservists will end in two weeks, Putin says

Russian President Vladimir Putin said he thinks a mobilization of army reservists he ordered last month to bolster his country’s troops in Ukraine will to be completed in two weeks.

Putin told reporters after attending a summit in Kazakhstan that 222,000 of the 300,000 reservists the Russian Defense Ministry said would get called up have been mobilized. A total of 33,000 of them are already in military units and 16,000 are involved in the military operation in Ukraine.

The Russian leader initially described the mobilization as “partial” and said only those with combat or service experience would be drafted. However, a decree he signed outlined almost no specific criteria. Russian media reports have described attempts to round up men without the relevant experience, including those ineligible for service for medical reasons.

The call-up, announced by Putin in September, has proved hugely unpopular in Russia, where almost all men under the age of 65 are registered as reservists. In the wake of the president’s mobilization order, tens of thousands of men left Russia.

— Associated Press

U.S. Treasury warns of sanctions, consequences for those who support Russia

U.S. Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo outlined the next steps the U.S. will take in imposing economic restrictions on Russia for its war in Ukraine.

“Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control is issuing guidance making clear that we are willing and able to sanction people, companies, or countries that provide ammunition to Russia or support Russia’s military-industrial complex,” he said in a meeting with representatives from 33 countries held to discuss Russian sanctions.

Additionally, OFAC and the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security will jointly release a outline of their actions against Russia’s military-industrial complex and the risks for those providing material support for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“Not only have we been able to impose costs on the Kremlin for its actions, but our economic restrictions placed on the Russian military-industrial complex have had a direct effect on the battlefield,” Adeyemo said of past efforts.

Since Russia invaded Ukraine, the U.S. and Western allies have implemented sweeping sanctions across the financial, technological and export sectors to punish Russian aggression and isolate the nation economically and diplomatically.

— Rocio Fabbro

U.S. Joint Chiefs Chairman Milley speaks with Ukrainian counterpart on the sidelines of NATO defense meting

U.S. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley spoke with his Ukrainian counterpart on the sidelines of the NATO defense ministerial meeting in Brussels.

“They discussed the unprovoked and ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine and exchanged perspectives and assessments,” according to a Pentagon readout of the call with Ukrainian Armed Forces Gen. Valery Zaluzhny.

Milley reaffirmed U.S. commitment to Ukraine’s fight against Russia and recognized Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.

Meanwhile, in Brussels, Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov joined the NATO meeting and the U.S.-led Ukraine Defense Contact Group.

— Amanda Macias

U.S. national security advisor Jake Sullivan meets with Lithuanian officials to discuss Ukraine and NATO

U.S. national security advisor Jake Sullivan met with Lithuanian officials to discuss the war in Ukraine.

Sullivan met with Asta Skaisgiryte, Lithuania’s chief foreign policy advisor and his counterpart Kestutis Budrys, Lithuania’s chief national security advisor.

“They discussed their shared commitment to continuing to provide Ukraine with security assistance to defend its sovereignty and territorial integrity and to maintain sanctions pressure to hold Russia accountable,” the White House said in a readout.

Sullivan also reiterated U.S. commitment to NATO’s collective defense and discussed plans for the 2023 NATO Summit, which Lithuania will host.

— Amanda Macias

Kherson plan is for ‘deportation,’ not ‘evacuation,’ Ukrainian official says

Calls by a Russian-installed official for residents to flee the Russian-occupied Kherson region of southern Ukraine and go to Russia amount to “deportation,” a Ukrainian regional official said.

Vladimir Saldo, who was appointed head of the region by Moscow after Russian forces seized it early in the war in Ukraine, publicly asked for government help on Thursday in moving civilians out.

Saldo made his appeal following advances by Ukrainian forces in southern Ukraine.

“We understand that there can be no evacuation, this is nothing more than deportation that Saldo calls for,” Serhiy Khlan, a member of Kherson’s regional council, told a briefing.

“This ‘evacuation’ announced by Saldo is an evacuation for collaborators and traitors in the region… they want to take these collaborators to Russia,” Khlan said.

Most of the Kherson region was seized in the first days of Russia’s invasion as it sent in troops from adjoining Crimea.

— Reuters

Putin says clash between NATO troops and Russia would mean ‘global catastrophe’; says he does not regret actions in Ukraine

A direct clash between Russia and NATO troops would result in a “global catastrophe,” Russian President Vladimir Putin said from a conference in Astana, Kazakhstan, warning against such an eventuality.

“I hope that those who are saying this are smart enough not to take such steps,” Putin said, according to Reuters.

Asked during a news conference at the same event whether he regretted any of Russia’s actions in Ukraine, the Russian president said “no,” adding that Russia’s aim was not to destroy Ukraine.

Russian troops have been fighting in their neighboring country since Moscow launched its full-scale invasion on Feb. 24. Since then, Russia’s military has killed thousands of people, sent more than 11 million people out of Ukraine as refugees, internally displaced many more, destroyed billions of dollars worth of civilian, military, and critical infrastructure, and has been accused of committing numerous war crimes.

Moscow denies it has targeted civilians or civilian infrastructure.

— Natasha Turak

Putin threatens to close humanitarian corridors, says there is ‘no need’ to talk with Biden

Russian President Vladimir Putin will close humanitarian corridors used for Ukrainian grain transportation if they are used for “acts of terror,” he said while speaking at a press conference in Kazakhstan.

He added that he had not yet decided if he would attend the G20 summit in Bali, Indonesia in November, but said that there was “no need” for talks with American President Joe Biden.

— Natasha Turak

U.S., Germany to delivery anti-aircraft weaponry to Ukraine this month, Kyiv says

Germany and the U.S. will send advanced anti-aircraft systems to Ukraine this month to help it defend itself against drone and missile attacks from Russia, Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov said.

“There is a U.S. decision to supply us with a very well-known NASAMS system, the first few batches. Our specialists are already being trained. And they will be delivered this month,” Reznikov said on Ukrainian television.

NASAMS are ground-based, short to medium-range air defense systems built by U.S. arms giant Raytheon and Norway’s Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace. They are designed to take out unmanned and fixed-wing aircraft, helicopters, and cruise missiles among other things.

Reznikov said Germany would send Ukraine its IRIS-II air defense system this month.

— Natasha Turak

WHO records at least 620 attacks on vital health services in Ukraine, since the start of Russia’s invasion

Since Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, there have been at least 620 attacks on vital health services in the country, the World Health Organization’s Surveillance System for Attacks on Health Care estimates.

The organization reports that healthcare facilities were damaged 538 times, ambulances were targeted in 82 cases and at least 154 attacks affected crucial medical supplies. The group also estimated that attacks on health services led to at least 100 deaths and 129 injuries.

The Kremlin has previously denied that it targets civilian infrastructure like hospitals, schools and apartment buildings.

— Amanda Macias

Turkey, Russia to act on Putin’s gas hub offer

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Friday that Turkey and Russia have instructed their respective energy authorities to immediately begin technical work on a Russian proposal that would turn Turkey into a gas hub for Europe.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has floated the idea of exporting more gas through the TurkStream gas pipeline running beneath the Black Sea to Turkey after gas deliveries to Germany through the Baltic Sea’s Nord Stream pipeline were halted.

Erdogan said Russian and Turkish energy authorities would work together to designate the best location for a gas distribution center, adding that Turkey’s Thrace region, bordering Greece and Bulgaria, appeared to be the best spot.

“Together with Mr. Putin, we have instructed our Ministry of Energy and Natural Resources and the relevant institution on the Russian side to work together,” Erdogan was quoted as saying. “They will conduct this study. Wherever the most appropriate place is, we will hopefully establish this distribution center there.”

“There will be no waiting,” Erdogan said in his first statement on the Russian proposal.

The Turkish leader made the comments on Thursday on his return from a regional summit in Kazakhstan where he met with Putin. His words were reported by Hurriyet newspaper and other media.

— Associated Press

Zelenskyy promises victory as Ukraine marks ‘Defenders Day’

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy marked Ukraine’s Defenders Day holiday by promising victory over Russia and freedom for Ukraine.

In a video address delivered on hills outside the capital Kyiv, Zelenskyy thanked Ukraine’s armed forces for defending their country. He said everything that had been taken away from Ukraine would be returned, and no soldier left in captivity.

“By defeating this enemy, we will respond to all enemies who encroached on Ukraine – on those who lived, who live and who will live on our land. This will be a victory for all our people. This will be a victory for the Armed Forces of Ukraine,” Zelenskyy said.

“The world sees that Ukrainians do not lose their humanity under any circumstances. The enemy can strike at our cities, but never at our dignity,” Zelenskyy added, marking the Oct. 14 public holiday.

— Text by Reuters and photos by Sergei Supinsky | AFP | Getty Images

Six vessels to leave Ukraine carrying more than 150,000 metric tons of agricultural products

ISTANBUL, TURKIYE – AUGUST 09: An aerial view of “Glory” named empty grain ship as Representatives of Russia, Ukraine, Turkiye and the United Nations (UN) of the Joint Coordination Center (JCC) conduct inspection on vessel in Istanbul, Turkiye on August 09, 2022. The UN, Russia, and Ukraine signed a deal on July 22 to reopen three Ukrainian ports — Odessa, Chernomorsk, and Yuzhny — for grain that has been stuck for months because of the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, which is now in its sixth month. (Photo by Ali Atmaca/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

The organization overseeing the export of grain from Ukraine said it has approved six vessels to leave the besieged country.

The Black Sea Grain Initiative, a deal among Ukraine, Russia, the United Nations and Turkey, said the vessels are carrying 153,505 metric tons of grain and other crops.

Two ships are destined for Turkey and are carrying wheat and corn. One ship will depart from Ukraine’s Yuzhny-Pivdennyi port for Iraq and is carrying 33,000 metric tons of sunflower oil. Another ship will leave from Chornomorsk to China and is carrying 62,860 metric tons of sunflower meal.

The fifth vessel will sail to Germany and is carrying 30,817 metric tons of rapeseed. One ship will leave for Lebanon carrying 7,000 metric tons of corn.

Read more about the Black Sea Grain Initiative here.

— Amanda Macias

Russia to begin evacuating civilians from Kherson

Russia is set to begin evacuating civilians from Ukraine’s embattled Kherson, in the latest sign that Ukrainian forces are successfully breaching more of the Russian-occupied territory.

“We suggested that all residents of the Kherson region, if they wish, to protect themselves from the consequences of missile strikes… go to other regions,” Vladimir Saldo, Russian-installed administration chief in Kherson, said in a video message, stressing that people should “leave with their children.”

Evacuees from Kherson, in Ukraine’s south, are planned to start arriving in Russia on Friday, Reuters reported. That’s despite Russia announcing the annexation of the territory in early October, along with three other Ukrainian regions, after holding a sham referendum that claimed that a majority of people in Kherson wanted to join the Russian Federation.

The annexations were condemned by 143 countries in a U.N. vote on Thursday.

— Natasha Turak

Elon Musk confirms that SpaceX will no longer fund Starlink terminals in Ukraine

Elon Musk appears to have confirmed that his company SpaceX will no longer fund donated Starlink internet terminals in Ukraine.

He said Friday that SpaceX cannot continue fund Starlink terminals in Ukraine “indefinitely.”

It follows a CNN report that SpaceX was pulling funding for the terminals, citing documents obtained from the Pentagon. SpaceX is asking the U.S. government pay for the terminals instead, according to the report.

Musk himself appeared to confirm this in a tweet Friday, replying to a Twitter post that referenced the Ukrainian ambassador telling Musk earlier this month to to “f— off.”

“We’re just following his recommendation,” Musk replied.

The CNN report said that documents it had obtained “show that last month Musk’s SpaceX sent a letter to the Pentagon saying it can no longer continue to fund the Starlink service as it has.”

“The letter also requested that the Pentagon take over funding for Ukraine’s government and military use of Starlink, which SpaceX claims would cost more than $120m for the rest of the year and could cost close to $400m for the next 12 months,” it added.

According to the report, SpaceX’s director of government sales told the Pentagon in a letter in September: “We are not in a position to further donate terminals to Ukraine, or fund the existing terminals for an indefinite period of time.”

Musk, SpaceX’s founder and CEO, is one of the richest men on earth.

— Natasha Turak

More than 320 ships carrying 7.2 million metric tons of grain and agricultural products have left Ukraine so far

The organization overseeing the export of grain from Ukraine said that since August more than 320 vessels have left the besieged country.

The Black Sea Grain Initiative, a deal among Ukraine, Russia, the United Nations and Turkey, said the voyages have exported more than 7.2 million metric tons of grain and other crops.

Read more about the Black Sea Grain Initiative here.

— Amanda Macias

Treasury to host meeting on continued efforts to impose sanctions on Russia

The U.S. Treasury will host a meeting on Friday of countries imposing economic restrictions on Russia for its illegal invasion of Ukraine.

Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally Adeyemo, along with Deputy Secretary of Commerce Don Graves and Deputy Director of National Intelligence Morgan Muir will convene top officials from finance ministries and other government agencies that are imposing sanctions and export controls against Russia.

“Economic restrictions placed on the Russian military-industrial complex have had a direct effect on the battlefield,” Treasury wrote in a statement.

“Together, these collective actions have rendered the Russian defense industry unable to produce and maintain critical equipment for operations in Ukraine, including unmanned aerial vehicles, tanks, and missiles,” the statement said, adding that Russia’s defense industry is “hobbling.”

— Amanda Macias

Russia accuses Ukraine of blowing up an ammunition depot inside of Russia

The Russian governor of Belgorod says that Ukrainian armed forces blew up an ammunition depot, according to an update on the Telegram messaging app.

“In a village in the Belgorod district, as a result of the shelling of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, an ammunition depot was blown up. The detonation occurred,” wrote Vyacheslav Gladkov, Belgorod’s governor.

He said that there were no victims or injuries. It was not immediately clear if Ukraine claimed responsibility for the shelling near the ammunition depot.

— Amanda Macias

‘Putin has never been more isolated,’ Blinken says

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the U.N. General Assembly’s vote to condemn Moscow for its attempt to annex more areas of Ukraine shows that “the world has never been more united in its repudiation of Russia’s war.”

“[Russian President Vladimir] Putin has never been more isolated,” Blinken said at the State Department.

“The U.N. resolution is also a resounding affirmation of global support for everything that President Putin is actually trying to destroy. It’s about affirming the right of every nation, big and small, to have its sovereignty, its independence, its territorial integrity,” Blinken added.

— Amanda Macias

Read CNBC’s previous live coverage here:

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/10/14/russia-ukraine-live-updates.html

One of the first things that most pundits will tell you about Thursday’s January 6 committee broadcast – the first since August, and probably the last before the November midterms – is that the committee’s subpoena of Donald Trump won’t go anywhere.

Sure, there were other notable moments in Thursday’s hearing. The committee presented a thorough summary of their findings, seemingly aiming to remind voters ahead of the midterms of the depth of Donald Trump’s commitment to his plan to overthrow our democracy in the service of his own ego.

It bolstered its long-established findings with new evidence: we heard, for the first time, testimony from multiple sources who said that Trump acknowledged privately that he knew he had lost the election.

We discovered, for the first time, that both the Secret Service and the FBI had much greater and much earlier knowledge of the plan to attack the Capitol than had previously been acknowledged (a revelation that calls those agencies’ actions on that day into question).

We saw, for the first time, footage of the Democratic congressional leaders Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer in hiding from the mob, secured in an off-site location while the looters raged and defecated through the Capitol, calling the Department of Justice and governors of the nearby states in an attempt to get some of the police and military’s help to clear the crowd that was not coming from the Trump administration.

All of this was newly specific and remarkable, even if it wasn’t exactly new information. But the real event of the hearings was the subpoena vote. The committee leaked the news strategically, just before the broadcast, with the push notifications from various news outlets alighting on phone screens across America, reminding voters to tune in.

The committee made much of their decision to subpoena Trump, performing a roll-call vote on camera (unanimously “aye”) and emphasizing throughout Wednesday’s hearing that he was the primary instigator and designer of the violent and cockamamie attempt to overturn the 2020 election by force.

Just before the climactic vote, the committee played a montage of members of the Trump inner circle – John Eastman, the fringe law professor who became Trump’s legal guru in a series of failed attempts to undo his election loss; Roger Stone, the Republican operative and self-described “dirty trickster” with ties to both the Trump administration and the violent far-right militias that led the Capitol violence – all taking the fifth in depositions with the committee, and refusing to provide vital information.

The idea of this montage was to justify the subpoena of Trump himself. Look, the committee seemed to be saying to the American people, his friends won’t talk, so we need to go after the big guy. But the fifth amendment wasn’t just a justification, it was also a prediction: of course, Trump isn’t going to talk either.

It’s this reality – that Trump probably won’t testify, that he will issue a series of legal challenges, lies, or, at best, non-answers that shed little light on his actions that day – that gets jumped on by members of the political commentariat who like to prove their own seriousness by pointing out all the ways that the Democrats can never accomplish anything. “The January 6 panel moves to subpoena Trump, an aggressive move that will likely be futile,” was the headline in the New York Times, a phrasing that almost suggested contempt for the attempt to embark on a fact-finding exercise at all. Some people are so determined not to come off as naive that they adopt a withering cynicism, or even a kind of learned helplessness – and unfortunately, a lot of those people work in political media, or for the Democratic party.

But the vote to subpoena Trump, and the willingness to embark on the legal and political fights that will ensue, suggests that congressional Democrats may have a little fighting spirit in them yet. After a halting start to the Biden administration, in which it looked, for a while, as if the Democrats’ agenda would be hamstrung by the intransigence of Senator Joe Manchin, the party has had a remarkable series of wins over the past few months – especially, it should be noted, since the supreme court’s disastrous reversal of Roe v Wade in June angered women voters across the political spectrum and galvanized enthusiasm in the Democratic base.

With this wind of popular outrage at their backs, the Democrats were able to pass the deceptively named Inflation Reduction Act – really an infrastructure and climate bill – and to muster support for Biden’s student debt relief and mass federal marijuana pardon. But the January 6 committee hearings have been one of the feathers in the Democrats’ cap, and it is one of the rare achievements that the House Democratic caucus has made not as assistants and handmaids to the administration’s agenda, but on their own.

This independence and risk-taking in going after Trump may be a sign of a congressional Democratic party that is shaking off its old habits of learned helplessness and beginning to feel more confident in a political landscape that is less about procedural victories – like, say, whether Trump will ever actually sit down for a deposition with the January 6 committee or not – and more about public demonstrations of commitment and confidence.

According to a new book, the House committee that took the bold step of issuing a subpoena to Donald Trump, for instance, is very different from the group of House impeachment managers who made the gun-shy and timorous decision not to call witnesses in the January 6 impeachment trial under pressure from a Biden White House that wanted to move on.

The January 6 committee hearings have been, altogether, a much bolder affair than the impeachment, much more cognizant of their audience – the American public – much better at communicating with them, and much more willing to state facts plainly. Maybe Trump will never testify. But subpoenaing him is still the right thing to do. The stakes are high, and when it comes to Donald Trump, the Democrats finally seem to realize that accountability is more important than risk aversion.

  • Moira Donegan is a Guardian US columnist

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/oct/14/the-vote-to-subpoena-trump-shows-democrats-have-found-their-fighting-spirit

Police are searching for answers after a teenager allegedly killed five people, including a police officer, in a mass shooting along a nature trail in Raleigh, North Carolina.

Among the victims was Raleigh police officer Gabriel Torres, 29, who was on his way to work when he was shot and killed, according to Raleigh police chief Estella Patterson.

The four others killed were identified as Nicole Conners, 52; Susan Karnatz, 49; Mary Marshall, 35; and James Roger Thompson, 16. Police did not say what — if any — connection the victims had to the suspect.

Two others were injured.

“We must stop this mindless violence in America and we must address gun violence,” Raleigh Mayor Mary-Ann Baldwin told reporters.

The unnamed suspect, who local police described as a 15-year-old boy, was taken into custody with life-threatening injuries, according to a memo issued by the Department of Homeland Security and obtained by ABC News. It’s not clear if the suspect’s injuries were self-inflicted, the memo said.

The suspect was still hospitalized in critical condition as of Friday morning, according to the police chief.

The shooting remains under investigation and a motive is still unknown, according to Patterson, who told reporters that a five-day report will be released.

She would not say what type of firearm was used in the shooting or how the suspect obtained the weapon.

“My heart is heavy because we don’t have answers as to why this tragedy occurred,” Patterson said during a press conference. “But what I can tell you is that the Raleigh Police Department and the Raleigh community is resilient and we stand strong and we will heal.”

The deadly shooting took place in the vicinity of the Neuse River Greenway Trail, near Osprey Cove and Bay Harbor drives in Raleigh. The crime scene spans over 2 miles. The suspect first shot two people in the streets of the neighborhood before fleeing toward the nature trail, where he opened fire, killing three more people and wounding two others, according to Patterson.

The police chief told reporters that the arrest of the suspect came after a “long standoff” and was a “team effort” by multiple agencies.

A 59-year-old was among the two shot and injured and remains hospitalized in critical condition, according to Patterson.

Raleigh police officer Casey Joseph Clark, 33, was also injured; he has been treated and released from the hospital.

North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper called it an “infuriating and tragic act of gun violence.”

“We’re sad, we’re angry and we want to know the answers to all the questions,” Cooper said during the press conference on Friday morning. “Those questions will be answered — some today and more over time.”

ABC News’ Will Gretsky, Aaron Katersky and Josh Margolin contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/US/active-shooting-reported-trail-raleigh-north-carolina-police/story?id=91345863

Journalists raise their hands for questions as Britain’s Prime Minister Liz Truss holds a news conference in the Downing Street Briefing Room in central London, Friday. Truss let go her finance chief Kwasi Kwarteng and reversed course on sweeping tax cuts.

Daniel Leal/AP


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Daniel Leal/AP

Journalists raise their hands for questions as Britain’s Prime Minister Liz Truss holds a news conference in the Downing Street Briefing Room in central London, Friday. Truss let go her finance chief Kwasi Kwarteng and reversed course on sweeping tax cuts.

Daniel Leal/AP

LONDON — British Prime Minister Liz Truss fired her finance minister and close ally Kwasi Kwarteng. Then hours later, she announced a U-turn on their economic package, attempting to calm financial markets and reinforce her shaky leadership position little more than a month after taking office.

The government said former Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt is taking over as chancellor of the Exchequer, the United Kingdom’s treasury. He is the fourth chancellor this year.

Shortly after sacking the finance minister, Truss held a news conference at Downing Street, and appeared visibly nervous, saying, “We need to act now to reassure the markets of our fiscal discipline.”

She announced she was canceling a proposed corporation tax cut, a central part of the new government’s economic plan that created turmoil in British politics and financial markets and sent the pound plunging late last month.

The plan sent the pound dropping to a record low against the dollar and prompted the Bank of England to intervene.

Truss’ course correction comes as her administration has sustained mounting criticism from opposition politicians and legislators within her own party, as well as international economists and investors who have continued to divest themselves of British assets.

U.K. Prime Minister Liz Truss and Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng visit a construction site in Birmingham earlier this month. The two met this morning over finance policy.

Stefan Rousseau/WPA Pool/Getty Images


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U.K. Prime Minister Liz Truss and Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng visit a construction site in Birmingham earlier this month. The two met this morning over finance policy.

Stefan Rousseau/WPA Pool/Getty Images

Kwarteng had to depart early from Washington, D.C., Thursday evening, where he had been meeting with counterparts at the International Monetary Fund. He and Truss held urgent talks in Downing Street shortly after his return to London.

“When you asked me to serve as your Chancellor, I did so in full knowledge that the situation we faced was incredibly difficult, with rising global interest rates and energy prices,” Kwarteng said in his departure letter. “However, your vision of optimism, growth and change was right.”

Prior to her public speech, Truss’ office and her supporters had repeatedly said she would not change her broader approach to kick-starting economic growth, and that she and Kwarteng would continue to work together toward a common goal.

Truss took over from former Prime Minister Boris Johnson in early September. Within days, then-finance minister Kwarteng had proposed a series of tax cuts and spending measures, without saying how they would be funded.

The proposal led the pound to weaken to a record low against the dollar. Millions of homeowners faced steep increases to their mortgage rates and government borrowing costs skyrocketed. That prompted the Bank of England to step in to prevent a crisis.

Earlier this month, the government backtracked on another part of its controversial economic package, by scrapping proposed tax cuts for higher earners.

As confidence and anticipation have grown for further changes, the pound inched up in value Thursday and bond markets stabilized some. In the minutes that followed Truss’ speech Friday, the currency rallied significantly — often a sign of increased investor confidence in a country’s economic future.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/10/14/1129013714/in-a-sign-she-may-change-course-on-taxes-the-u-k-s-truss-fires-her-finance-minis

Washington — The House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol unanimously voted Thursday to issue a subpoena to former President Donald Trump for documents and testimony.

The 9-0 vote occurred before the conclusion of a formal committee business meeting the panel convened Thursday, during which all of its nine members delivered presentations about the campaign by Trump to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election and prevent the transfer of power. NBC News was first to report the news of the committee’s plans to vote on subpoenaing Trump.

“Thanks to the tireless work of our members and investigators, we have left no doubt, none, that Donald Trump led an effort to upend American democracy that directly resulted in the violence of Jan. 6,” said Rep. Bennie Thompson, the committee’s chairman. “He tried to take away the voice of the American people in choosing their president and replace the will of the voters with his will to remain in power. He is the one person at the center of the story of what happened on Jan. 6. So we want to hear from him.” 

Thompson, a Mississippi Democrat, said it is the committee’s “obligation” to seek Trump’s testimony.

Representative Bennie Thompson, a Democrat from Mississippi and chairman of the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, center, speaks during a hearing in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, Oct. 13, 2022.

Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images


“This is a question about accountability to the American people. He must be accountable,” he continued. “He is required to answer for his actions. He is required to answer to those police officers who put their lives and bodies on the line to defend our democracy. He is required to answer to the millions of Americans whose votes he wanted to throw out as part of his scheme to remain in power. And whatever is underway to ensure his accountability under the law, this committee will demand a full accounting to the American people of the events of January 6th.”

Rep. Liz Cheney, the committee’s vice chair, offered the resolution that the committee direct the chairman to issue the subpoena to Trump for documents and testimony in connection with the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol building.

“Our duty today is to our country, and our children, and our Constitution,” she said. “We are obligated to seek answers directly from the man who set this all in motion. And we are entitled to the answers today, so we can act now to protect our republic.”

In a post on his social media platform Truth Social, Trump questioned why the select committee did not ask him to testify sooner.

“Why did they wait until the very end, the final moments of their last meeting? Because the Committee is a total ‘BUST’ that has only served to further divide our Country which, by the way, is doing very badly — A laughing stock all over the World?” he wrote.

Late Thursday night, he posted there again, saying, “The Unselect Committee is a giant Scam, presided over by a group of Radical Left losers, and two failed Republicans, the likes of which our Country has rarely seen before. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!” and promising to convey more of his thoughts Friday morning.

Thompson told reporters ahead of the proceedings that the committee had “not ruled out” subpoenaing Trump.  While delivering an opening statement at the start of the hearing, he noted it was a formal committee business meeting, allowing members to “potentially hold a committee vote on further investigative action based upon that evidence.”

The vote to compel the former president to provide evidence is a dramatic escalation in the committee’s investigation, across which the panel conducted more than 1,000 interviews and depositions, including with a range of White House officials, members of Trump’s Cabinet, and campaign aides. Thompson noted the gravity of the decision to subpoena Trump, calling it “a serious and extraordinary action” that warranted a vote in public view. 

Committee members repeatedly said over the course of its probe publicly they were weighing whether to ask Vice President Mike Pence to appear before them, but had not yet decided whether to do so. But asked whether the committee would subpoena the former vice president, Thompson on Thursday said “no.” Before Thursday they also had not yet said whether they had decided to issue a subpoena to the former president.

Trump will likely challenge the select committee’s subpoena. In the past, he has asked the federal courts to intervene in efforts by the congressional Democrats to obtain his tax returns and financial records, as well as the select committee’s attempt to get Trump’s White House records from the National Archives and Records Administration.

In January, the Supreme Court turned down Trump’s request to block the release of his White House documents, and the committee received the records soon after. Only Justice Clarence Thomas noted he would have granted Trump’s request to shield the records from House investigators. 

As the committee held its meeting Thursday, the Supreme Court declined a request from Trump for it to intervene in a dispute over documents he brought with him from the White House to his South Florida residence, Mar-a-Lago, at the end of his presidency in Jan. 2021. There were no noted dissents.

Over the course of its year-long investigation, the select committee mapped out what it has described as the multi-pronged effort by the former president to stay in office despite losing the 2020 election to President Biden.

Those efforts, which were rooted in his baseless claims the election was rife with voter fraud, culminated in the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the U.S. Capitol.

House investigators held eight public hearings through the summer, with Thursday’s proceeding, their ninth, likely to be its last. Cheney said during opening remarks that the focus of the meeting is Trump’s “state of mind, his intent, his motivations, and how he spurred others to do his bidding.” 

“The vast weight of evidence presented so far has shown us that the central cause of Jan. 6 was one man, Donald Trump, who many others followed,” she said. “None of this would have happened without him. He was personally and substantially involved in all of it.” 

In her final remarks before the vote on the subpoena to Trump, Cheney said the committee has “sufficient information” to answer questions about the Jan. 6 assault, as well as “sufficient information” to consider criminal referrals to several people.

“But,” she said, “a key task remains: We must seek the testimony under oath of January 6th’s central player.”

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/jan-6-select-committee-trump-subpoena-vote/

WASHINGTON, Oct 13 (Reuters) – The U.S. House of Representatives committee probing the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol by Donald Trump’s supporters voted unanimously on Thursday to subpoena the former president, a move that could lead to criminal charges if he does not comply.

The House select committee’s seven Democratic and two Republican members voted 9-0 in favor of issuing a subpoena for Trump to provide documents and testimony under oath in connection with the storming of the Capitol.

“He must be accountable. He is required to answer for his actions. He is required to answer for those police officers who put their lives and bodies on the line to defend our democracy. He is required to answer to those millions of Americans whose votes he wanted to throw out as part of his scheme to remain in power,” the panel’s Democratic chairman, Representative Bennie Thompson, said.

The vote came after the committee spent more than two hours making its case – via statements from members, documents, and recorded testimony – that Trump planned to deny his 2020 election defeat in advance, failed to call off the thousands of supporters who stormed the Capitol, and followed through with his false claims that the election was stolen even as close advisers told him he had lost.

Federal law says that failure to comply with a congressional subpoena is a misdemeanor, punishable by one to 12 months imprisonment. If the select committee’s subpoena is ignored, the full House must vote on whether to make a referral to the Department of Justice, which has the authority to decide whether to bring charges.

LOOMING MID-TERMS

The subpoena is expected within days, and would typically give Trump a date by which he should comply. It was not clear when the full House – which is out of Washington until mid-November – could vote on whether to make a criminal referral.

Trump responded to the vote with angry comments on his social media service Truth Social. “Why did they wait until the very end, the final moments of their last meeting? Because the Committee is a total ‘BUST’ that has only served to further divide our Country which, by the way, is doing very badly – A laughing stock all over the World?” he wrote.

One former Trump adviser, Steve Bannon, is due to be sentenced next week after a jury found him guilty of contempt of Congress charges for not complying with a committee subpoena. But the Justice Department declined to charge another, Mark Meadows, who the House had also suggested should be prosecuted.

Federal prosecutors are also investigating the former president’s removal of classified documents from the White House at the end of his term, and have warned that they believe they have not yet recovered all the documents taken.

The House select committee has been investigating the attack on the Capitol, which left more than 140 police officers injured and led to several deaths, for more than a year, interviewing over 1,000 witnesses.

Thompson said he recognized that subpoenaing a former president was a serious action, but argued that the stakes were high for the future of U.S. democracy.

Thursday’s meeting followed eight hearings earlier this year and one in July 2021. There were no live witnesses on Thursday, but the panel presented videotaped testimony to build a case that Trump’s efforts to overturn his November 2020 presidential election defeat constituted illegal conduct, far beyond normal politics.

FEARS OF VIOLENCE

The committee presented evidence from Secret Service agents and intelligence officials who said before Jan.6 that they expected violence at the pro-Trump rally and believed there were caches of weapons around Washington.

“Their plan is to literally kill people. Please please take this tip seriously and investigate further,” a Dec. 26 Secret Service email said.

Thursday’s vote could be the committee’s last public action before the Nov. 8 midterm elections that will determine whether President Joe Biden’s fellow Democrats or Trump’s Republicans control Congress.

The committee is also due to release a report on its findings within the coming weeks.

Representative Liz Cheney, the panel’s Republican vice chairperson, said the panel might ultimately decide to make a series of criminal referrals to the Department of Justice.

The hearings held this year may have convinced some Republicans that Trump bears some responsibility for the attack. A two-day Reuters/Ipsos poll concluded on Wednesday showed two in five Republicans view Trump as at least partly responsible for the attack.

Previous hearings focused on Trump’s inaction before and during the storming of the Capitol, his pressure on Vice President Mike Pence to deny Biden’s victory, militias whose members participated in the attack, and Trump’s interactions with close advisers questioning his false allegations of massive voter fraud.

The one-time reality television star has denied wrongdoing and hinted he will seek the White House again in 2024. He regularly holds rallies where he continues to claim falsely that he lost the election because of widespread fraud.

More than 880 people have been arrested in connection with the violence, with more than 400 guilty pleas so far.

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Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/us/with-time-running-out-us-capitol-riot-panel-keeps-focus-trump-2022-10-13/

The shooting in Raleigh was the latest reminder of rampant gun violence across the country, including mass shootings at a supermarket in Buffalo that left 10 dead in May, another in May at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, that killed 19 children and two teachers, and another shooting at a Fourth of July celebration in Highland Park, Ill., that left seven dead.

Just a day earlier, two police officers were killed and a third was wounded in Connecticut in what the authorities described as an ambush after responding to a 911 call that may have been a hoax.

Thursday’s shooting was the deadliest shooting in North Carolina in 2022, according to the Gun Violence Archive. In 2009, a gunman opened fire at a nursing home in Carthage, N.C., killing seven elderly patients and a nurse and injuring several other people, including a police officer.

On Thursday, neighbors struggled to make sense of the Raleigh shooting.

Anne Berry, 52, who has lived in the Avington Place neighborhood of Raleigh for more than 20 years, said helicopters had intermittently been hovering above her home for more than three hours and that it was “loud enough to feel in your chest when they get close.”

A neighbor recounted to her that when he went to walk his dog, an officer stopped and asked him if he had seen anyone dressed in camouflage and then told him to head back inside, Ms. Berry said.

Another neighbor, Brad Redd, who has lived in the area for four years, described Hedingham as a multicultural and economically diverse place with a lake and a golf course. He said he was “flabbergasted” by the shooting.

“This is the last thing I would expect over here,” he said, adding “It’s going to shake this community.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/13/us/raleigh-shooting.html

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said on the day of the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection that she would “punch [then-President Trump] out” if he came to the Capitol after his rally at the Ellipse. 

CNN aired footage taken by filmmaker Alexandra Pelosi, the Speaker’s daughter, on “Anderson Cooper 360” on Thursday, showing how multiple congressional leaders reacted to the day’s events. 

Footage showed Pelosi remarking to her staff as Trump spoke at the Ellipse rally, which preceded the Capitol riot, that Trump should not come to the Capitol as Congress prepared to certify President Biden’s victory in the 2020 presidential election. 

“If he comes, I’m gonna punch him out,” Pelosi said. “I’ve been waiting for this, for trespassing on the Capitol grounds. I’m gonna punch him out, and I’m gonna go to jail and I’m gonna be happy.” 

The House select committee investigating the attack released some clips of the footage at its hearing on Thursday, but CNN aired a more expansive version of the recording. 

At one point, a staff member tells Pelosi that the Secret Service told Trump that they do not have the resources to protect him at the Capitol, so he seemed to not be coming. 

“Tell him if he comes here, we’re going to the White House,” Pelosi said after Trump told the attendees of his rally to walk to the Capitol and that he would join them.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/house/3687685-pelosi-said-before-insurrection-that-she-would-punch-trump-if-he-came-to-capitol-footage/

With two of its members refusing to resign over their involvement in a leaked racist recording, the Los Angeles City Council found itself in limbo Thursday, unable to muster enough members to meet Friday and lacking clarity about what happens next.

Acting City Council President Mitch O’Farrell canceled a meeting that had been scheduled for Friday after it became clear that neither Councilman Gil Cedillo nor Kevin de León would immediately follow the lead of former Council President Nury Martinez.

She resigned Wednesday from her office after a furious backlash over racist and derogatory comments she made in that recorded conversation.

Two other members — Mike Bonin and Marqueece Harris-Dawson — said they saw no point in having the meeting if Cedillo and De León refuse to step aside. Meanwhile, protesters outraged that Cedillo and De León were still in office threatened to shut down another meeting next week if the two don’t step down.

“Our elected officials need to be putting more pressure on these two individuals to resign,” said Jason Reedy, an organizer with the People’s City Council, which brought protesters to City Hall twice in the past week. “We haven’t seen them outside of their houses. We haven’t seen them in these streets.”

With L.A.’s political establishment reeling from a scandal involving racist remarks, a presidential visit took on the air of a unity tour.

The cancellation reflected the chaos enveloping the council, as the remaining members have a two-fold challenge: They must salve the soul of a city in great pain while somehow also keeping the mundane machinery of municipal government in motion.

The council typically meets Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Along with sweeping policy decisions, the legislative body is responsible for an array of workaday responsibilities that help keep the city running, such as approving contracts, weighing in on real estate projects and resolving lawsuits against the city.

And because council chambers is also a public forum, where Angelenos have expressed their fury and pain in loud and disruptive ways, the city’s legislative body is at something of an impasse.

But it’s unclear how — or if — they will proceed next week if De León and Cedillo do not tender their resignations.

Reedy said that if Cedillo and De León do not resign, he and other protesters will return to the council chamber Tuesday to do what they did earlier this week: “Shut down the meeting.”

Councilmember Curren Price criticized O’Farrell’s decision to cancel Friday’s meeting.

“While the councilman respects the opinion of the acting council president, he doesn’t believe the city should be held hostage by two councilmembers that fail to see the light. Again, it is our responsibility to take care of the people’s business,” Price spokesperson Angelina Valencia-Dumarot said.

Stuart Waldman, president of the Valley Industry and Commerce Assn., also criticized the decision to cancel, saying council members “need to get their act together” and “work on the business of the city.” Waldman, who lives in Martinez’s district, said he wants the council to meet so it can schedule a special election to replace her.

Martinez’s San Fernando Valley district is currently being represented by a nonvoting caretaker.

“We’re going to be disenfranchised until a special election is called,” said Waldman, who lives in Van Nuys. “And this is only going to lengthen that time.”

O’Farrell spokesperson Dan Halden said Thursday evening that his boss intends to hold the scheduled council meeting Tuesday.

“He is also hopeful that Councilmembers De León and Cedillo will do the right thing for Los Angeles and resign in advance of that,” Halden said.

Bonin and Harris-Dawson both declined to say whether they would attend Tuesday’s meeting if their colleagues have yet to resign.

“Hopefully [O’Farrell] knows something we don’t,” Harris-Dawson said of the possible resignations.

Bonin has been at the center of the maelstrom because Martinez made racist comments in the recording deriding his young son as the other participants laughed and occasionally chimed in.

“I pray to God that it’s not even a question by then and they’ve both resigned and done what Los Angeles needs,” Bonin said when asked whether he would attend Tuesday’s meeting.

Bonin, who participated in Wednesday’s council meeting by Zoom after testing positive for COVID-19, said he was “still trying to wrap my head around this week. So I’m having a hard time putting myself into next week.”

The surreptitiously recorded October 2021 conversation among Martinez, De León, Cedillo and a top labor leader — all Latino — took aim at a rainbow coalition of groups, with racist, derogatory or crude remarks about Black, Jewish, Armenian, Indigenous and gay people.

Ron Herrera, who is heard on the recording, also resigned Monday as president of the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor. President Biden, both California senators and virtually the entire local political establishment have issued calls for Cedillo and De León to resign.

Should they choose to stay put, holding off meeting indefinitely would likely come with legal and procedural hurdles for the rest of the council.

Need a primer on what’s going on with the L.A. City Council? Here’s a quick look at who’s who and where all 15 council members stand.

But the council also needs a quorum of 10 members in order to meet, an issue that prevented Wednesday’s council meeting from moving forward.

“City charters don’t really address this kind of standoff,“ said Raphael Sonenshein, a local governance expert who directs the Pat Brown Institute for Public Affairs at Cal State L.A.

Protests, anger and tears roiled Tuesday’s council meeting — the first since the leak was made public. Demonstrators drowned out O’Farrell’s attempts to call Wednesday’s meeting to order over the course of about an hour. The meeting eventually adjourned after Harris-Dawson left the room, causing the council to lose its quorum.

“He left the meeting because he felt like the council president lost control and that’s why he went upstairs,” Rhonda Mitchell, a spokesperson for Harris-Dawson, said Wednesday afternoon.

Halden also said that O’Farrell plans to hold a vote for a new council president during Tuesday’s meeting. There has been fervent politicking at City Hall in recent days around the next council president — a role that O’Farrell, as president pro tempore, stepped into this week on an acting basis.

“I certainly don’t think that we’re going to be able to get anything done until they’re gone,” Bonin said Thursday of Cedillo and De León. “And I certainly don’t think we can get serious about electing a new president until they’re gone.”

Councilmembers Price and Paul Krekorian have both expressed interest in becoming president, a move that would require support from eight of the council’s 14 members. But whoever wins the post may not hold it for long; at least four new council members will take office at the end of the year, and may have a very different idea of who should be in council leadership.

Times staff writers Ben Oreskes and Dakota Smith also contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2022-10-13/fridays-l-a-city-council-meeting-canceled-next-steps-unclear

The lead defence lawyer, Melisa McNeill, told the court: “He was doomed in the womb. And in a civilised society, do we kill brain damaged, mentally ill, broken people?”

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-63237156