Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2022/10/11/ukraine-russia-invasion-live-updates/10464667002/

The final expected trial of special counsel John Durham’s inquiry begins Tuesday and will focus on the infamous “Steele dossier,” which roiled US politics after the 2016 election, fueled the FBI probe of potential Trump-Russia collusion and continues to be cited by former President Donald Trump as proof of a grand conspiracy to destroy his political career.

On trial is Igor Danchenko, a Russian expat who lives in the Washington, DC, area and has worked as a foreign policy analyst. He was the primary source of information for the dossier and is accused of lying in 2017 to FBI agents who were trying to corroborate the dossier. He pleaded not guilty.

The jury was seated Tuesday morning.

The charges against Danchenko are extremely narrow and pertain to alleged false statements he made about where he got the material that he passed to retired British spy Christopher Steele, who wrote the dossier. But in many ways, Durham and his prosecutors have used the Danchenko case as a vehicle to put the entire dossier on trial and expose serious flaws in Steele’s work.

A Trump-era holdover, Durham was tapped in 2019 by then-Attorney General Bill Barr to “investigate the investigators,” and look for government misconduct in the Trump-Russia probe.

During jury selection, Durham said he wanted to steer mostly clear of politics.

“We’re going to try to avoid political overtones,” Durham said, during an exchange about a potential juror, who had said they were biased against the Trump administration.

Durham hasn’t delivered anything in three-plus years resembling the Watergate-level charges that Trump has repeatedly said are coming. He secured just one guilty plea from an FBI lawyer. Durham’s only other case, against a Hillary Clinton campaign attorney, ended with an acquittal.

The Danchenko trial in Arlington, Virginia, is likely Durham’s final courtroom showdown. In the coming months, Durham is expected to finish his report, which will be submitted to Attorney General Merrick Garland for review. Garland has previously pledged to publicly release “as much as possible.”

Rehashing 2016 election shenanigans

On paper, the case revolves around Danchenko – an analyst who was best known for exposing that Russian President Vladimir Putin likely plagiarized much of his Ph.D. thesis, before he got caught up with the Steele dossier and Durham probe. But throughout the pre-trial proceedings, Durham has shadowboxed against Steele and the Democratic operatives linked to the dossier.

Steele’s work was indirectly funded by the Clinton campaign: They paid a law firm, which hired an opposition research company, which hired Steele. In 2016, Steele and Danchenko quietly collected what they called “raw intelligence” on Trump’s ties to Russia. Steele put their findings into a series of memos, which he shared with some Clinton aides and reporters. Those memos, known as “the dossier,” became public in January 2017, when BuzzFeed News posted it online.

The dossier contained unverified allegations about Trump’s connections to Russia, including his alleged business dealings, rumors of lurid trysts in Moscow and claims that his campaign collaborated with the Kremlin to win the 2016 election. Trump vehemently denied the claims, though Democratic partisans and some media figures latched onto hope that they were true.

But the credibility of the dossier has steadily declined over time. The Justice Department inspector general revealed in a 2019 report that many of Steele’s claims were little more than gossip or speculation. Durham further undermined the dossier by highlighting the previously unknown involvement of some Democratic partisans.

As recently as last month, Trump railed against the dossier at a rally in Ohio, where he singled out Danchenko by name and claimed Danchenko “fabricated” the “smears” in the dossier. But the Danchenko case isn’t nearly as sweeping as Trump described it – and Durham has never accused Danchenko or anyone of engaging in a conspiracy to undermine Trump.

Danchenko’s alleged lies to the FBI

Danchenko faces five felony charges of making a false statement to the FBI. Prosecutors claim Danchenko lied about two topics, both generally about his sourcing for dossier material.

First, prosecutors say Danchenko falsely denied speaking with Democratic operative Charles Dolan in 2016 about anything that was in the dossier. They also allege Danchenko falsely told investigators on four separate occasions that he believed he got a phone call in 2016 from Belarusian-American businessman Sergei Millian.

Millian has publicly stated that he never communicated with Danchenko. But Durham won’t have the benefit of putting Millian on the witness stand to make that denial in front of the jury. In a blow to prosecutors, Millian has refused to return to the US from overseas to testify.

Prosecutors have argued that Danchenko’s alleged lies mattered because they obscured the truth about where some of the dossier material came from, while the FBI was trying to corroborate Steele’s work.

In recent court filings, Danchenko’s lawyers have asserted that their client “truthfully answered the specific questions the FBI asked him” during his sit-downs with investigators in 2017.

Narrow case, big implications

There are some recent indications that Durham’s team is on wobbly ground as the federal trial kicks off in Alexandria, Virginia. Just two weeks ago, District Judge Anthony Trenga, who is presiding over the trial, barely allowed the case to proceed, calling it an “extremely close call,” after Danchenko argued that Durham’s evidence was too weak to sustain a false-statement charge.

A Bush appointee, Trenga has also significantly narrowed the scope of the case that Durham can present to the jury. He recently blocked Durham from delving into the dossier’s infamous and unproven “pee tape” claims – that the Russians had blackmail on Trump, in the form of sexually explicit footage of him with women at the Ritz-Carlton Moscow hotel.

Durham had argued that getting into this topic would help show Danchenko’s alleged pattern of misleading statements about the dossier. But Trenga said the material was off-limits for the trial.

“The relevancy and probative value of the Ritz-Carlton allegations is questionable,” Trenga wrote in a ruling last week, saying that the connections between that material and Danchenko’s alleged lies are “highly attenuated” and would very likely create “confusion and unfair prejudice” with the jury.

Murky intel underworld

Danchenko has a complex relationship with the US government. He was a paid informant for the FBI from 2017 to 2020, according to court filings. But he was previously the subject of an FBI counterintelligence probe from 2009 to 2011 over his possible links to Russian agents. (The Justice Department never charged Danchenko in connection with that investigation.)

The Justice Department watchdog report that came out in 2019 extensively referenced Danchenko, though only as Steele’s “primary sub-source.” That report unraveled many of the dossier’s key claims, and revealed that Danchenko told the FBI in 2017 that the information he gave to Steele was mostly “hearsay,” “just talk,” “word of mouth,” and came from “conversations he had with friends over beers.”

His role as the primary source for Steele wasn’t publicly known until summer 2020. Egged on by Trump’s congressional allies, Barr released old FBI memos about the Danchenko interviews. His identity was redacted, but Internet sleuths connected the dots and outed Danchenko.

One year later, in November 2021, Durham closed in on Danchenko. After Danchenko was charged, his lawyer at the time said the special counsel’s 39-page indictment “presents a false narrative designed to humiliate and slander a renowned expert in business intelligence.”

Trump and his staunchest GOP supporters see Danchenko as a key player in a “deep state” plot to foment a false narrative about Trump’s Russia ties. Trump sued Danchenko, Steele and other political opponents, alleging a civil conspiracy, but a judge threw out that case last month.

This story has been updated with additional developments.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2022/10/11/politics/danchenko-trial-preview-durham-probe/index.html

As previously reported, the same woman also says Walker pressured her to have an abortion again when she became pregnant a second time; she chose to give birth to her son, who is now 10. The woman sued Walker in New York in 2013 for child support after he allegedly refused to provide it, according to a person familiar with the case, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive details. Walker, who now says he is a multimillionaire, said in that case that he made about $140,000 per year, the person said.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/10/11/herschel-walker-abortion-payment/

Joe Biden has said he believes Vladimir Putin is a “rational actor” who badly misjudged his prospects of occupying Ukraine, but does not believe he would resort to using a tactical nuclear weapon.

The US president told CNN in remarks released ahead of a rare TV interview on Tuesday that he believed his Russian counterpart had underestimated the ferocity of Ukrainian defiance in the face of invasion.

“I think … he thought he was going to be welcomed with open arms, that this was the home of Mother Russia in Kyiv, and that where he was going to be welcomed, and I think he just totally miscalculated,” Biden said.

“I think he is a rational actor who has miscalculated significantly.”

When asked by interviewer Jake Tapper how realistic he believed it would be for Putin to use a tactical nuclear weapon, Biden responded: “Well, I don’t think he will.”

The president spoke as his administration looks for what he has described as an “off-ramp” for Putin to de-escalate his invasion of Ukraine before he resorts to weapons of mass destruction.

Biden warned last week that the world risks “Armageddon” in unusually direct remarks about the dangers posed by Putin’s thinly veiled threats to use nuclear weapons to assist Russia’s faltering attempt to take over swathes of Ukraine.

Putin’s state of mind has been the subject of much debate after the Russian president suffered a series of recent military set-backs in the invasion, which he launched in February.

On Tuesday, Biden suggested that he believed Putin to be rational overall but questioned the language used when announcing the invasion of Ukraine back in February.

“If you listen to the speech he made after, when, that decision was being made, he talked about the whole idea of – he needed to be the leader of Russia that united all of Russian speakers. I mean, it’s just, I just think it’s irrational,” Biden said.

Biden’s remarks were released after Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, asked G7 leaders for more air defence systems and a monitoring mission on the Belarusian border, as Russia continued to attack key infrastructure in Ukraine with a new wave of missile strikes.

In response to Zelenskiy’s speech, G7 leaders issued a statement saying they would “stand firmly with Ukraine for as long as it takes”.

In a separate video address on Tuesday night, Zelenskiy said: “The enemy launched a second wave of terrorist attacks against our country. As of this morning, there were 28 missiles, of which 20 were shot down. More than 15 drones, almost all of them are Iranian combat drones. Most were shot down.”

The White House national security council spokesperson, John Kirby, said on Tuesday the US was working to expedite the shipment of Nasams air defences capable of engaging Russian cruise missiles. Germany’s Der Spiegel magazine reported on Tuesday that Ukraine had received a delivery of the German Iris-T air defence system.

With Agence France-Presse

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/oct/12/putin-totally-miscalculated-russias-ability-to-occupy-ukraine-biden-says

WASHINGTON, Oct 11 (Reuters) – The U.S. Justice Department on Tuesday asked the Supreme Court to reject former President Donald Trump’s bid to again empower an independent arbiter to vet classified records seized from his Florida home as part of his legal battle against investigators probing his handling of sensitive government records.

Trump filed an emergency request on Oct. 4 asking the justices to lift a federal appeals court’s decision to prevent the arbiter, known as a special master, from vetting more than 100 documents marked as classified that were among the roughly 11,000 records seized by FBI agents at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach on Aug. 8.

In a filing on Tuesday, the Justice Department urged the Supreme Court to reject Trump’s request because he has not pointed to any “clear error” in the lower court’s decision or shown how he is harmed by it.

Trump went to court on Aug. 22 in a bid to restrict Justice Department access to the documents as it pursues a criminal investigation of him for retaining government records, some marked as highly classified including top secret, at Mar-a-Lago after leaving office in January 2021. Trump at the time asked a judge to appoint a special master, as the judge later did, to vet the seized documents and review whether any could be deemed privileged and potentially withheld from investigators.

The Supreme Court’s 6-3 conservative majority includes three justices appointed by Trump.

The Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Sept. 21 put on hold a decision by U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon, who is presiding over Trump’s lawsuit. Cannon had temporarily barred the Justice Department from examining the seized documents until the special master she appointed, Judge Raymond Dearie, had identified any that could be considered privileged.

Cannon had tasked Dearie to review all of the seized records, including classified ones, to locate anything subject to attorney-client confidentiality or executive privilege – a legal doctrine that shields some White House communications from disclosure – and thus off limits to investigators.

The three-judge 11th Circuit panel gave the department access to the documents marked as classified for its ongoing criminal investigation, and prevented Dearie from vetting those, noting the importance of limiting access to classified information and ensuring the department’s probe would not be harmed.

‘UNWARRANTED INTRUSION’

Cannon, who was appointed to the bench by Trump, on Sept. 5 barred the Justice Department from reviewing all of the seized materials for its criminal investigation, and named Dearie to review the records.

In Tuesday’s filing, the Justice Department said Trump’s request should be denied because he has not shown that the 11th Circuit erred in its conclusion that Cannon’s order “was a serious and unwarranted intrusion on the executive branch’s authority to control the use and distribution of extraordinarily sensitive government records.”

Trump’s lawyers previously told the Supreme Court that Dearie should be able to vet the records to “determine whether documents bearing classification markings are in fact classified, and regardless of classification, whether those records are personal records or presidential records.”

The Justice Department has “attempted to criminalize a document management dispute and now vehemently objects to a transparent process that provides much-needed oversight,” Trump’s lawyers added.

The department’s investigation seeks to determine who accessed classified materials, whether they were compromised and if any remain unaccounted for. At issue in the 11th Circuit’s ruling were documents bearing classified markings of confidential, secret or top secret.

The department also is examining whether Trump tried to obstruct the criminal investigation. Trump has denied wrongdoing and has called the investigation politically motivated.

The document investigation is one of several legal woes Trump is facing as he considers whether to run again for president in 2024.

On Sept. 15, Cannon rejected the department’s request that she partially lift her order as it related to the classified materials because it impeded the government’s effort to mitigate potential national security risks from possible unauthorized disclosure.

The 11th Circuit put that decision on hold, noting that classified records belong to the U.S. government and that Trump had not shown that he holds an “individual interest in or need for” any of the classified documents.

The 11th Circuit also rejected any suggestion that Trump had declassified the documents – as the former president has claimed – saying there was “no evidence” of such action and that the argument was a “red herring because declassifying an official document would not change its content or render it personal.”

The three statutes underpinning the search warrant used by the FBI at Mar-a-Lago make it a crime to mishandle government records, regardless of their classification status.

In an interview on Fox News last month, Trump asserted that he had the power to declassify documents “even by thinking about it.”

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/legal/us-justice-dept-opposes-trump-supreme-court-request-over-documents-2022-10-11/

Facing outrage over a controversial leaked audio recording, Los Angeles County Federation of Labor President Ron Herrera resigned Monday night, and the organization’s remaining leaders demanded Tuesday that the three City Council members involved in the scandal submit their resignations as well.

“Racism in any form has no place in the House of Labor. It is unconscionable that those elected to fight for our communities of color would engage in repulsive and vile anti-Black, anti-LGBTQ, anti-Asian and anti-Oaxacan remarks that pit our working communities against each other. These sentiments will not be tolerated by our organization or those who we represent,” the chair of the federation’s executive board Thom Davis, said in a statement.

A leaked recording of L.A. City Council members and a labor official includes racist remarks. Council President Nury Martinez apologizes; Councilmember Kevin de León expresses regret.

“The Executive Board of the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor also calls on those elected officials who were present to follow President Herrera’s example by immediately resigning as well,” Davis said after a meeting Monday night.

The federation, which represents 800,000 workers across 300 unions, has been at the epicenter of the crisis rocking Los Angeles’ political leadership over the past two days.

Herrera — along with Los Angeles City Councilmembers Nury Martinez, Kevin de León and Gil Cedillo — participated in an October 2021 closed-door conversation at the federation’s offices where Martinez said a white councilmember handled his young Black son as though he were an “accessory” and described Councilmember Mike Bonin’s son as “Parece changuito,” or “like a monkey.”

Other racist and derogatory remarks were made during the conversation, which largely focused on the city’s once-every-decade redistricting process and preserving and maintaining Latino political power.

The conversation remained private for roughly a year before exploding into public view Sunday after being reported on by The Times. The leaked audio was originally posted on Reddit.

The labor federation described the leaked audio as part of a “serious security and privacy breach” at its offices involving “illegal” recordings of “many private and confidential conversations in private offices and conference rooms,” in a Sunday email to affiliates, according to text provided to The Times.

The federation has not publicly addressed the source of the recordings apart from initially attacking The Times for publishing the contents of the leaks.

L.A. councilmembers’ leaked audio reveal racist conversations on Mike Bonin’s son, Oaxacans in Koreatown, George Gascón and Mark Ridley-Thomas.

Herrera’s resignation comes after snowballing demands that Martinez, De León and Cedillo step down from the City Council and that Herrera leave his own post at the head of one of the nation’s most powerful and influential labor organizations. Martinez, who had been City Council president, announced that she was resigning her leadership post Monday morning and said Tuesday that she was taking a leave of absence from the council.

Support for Herrera’s withdrawal had spread broadly across the labor movement Monday, including the leaders of eight SEIU California unions with Los Angeles-area members, United Teachers Los Angeles, Unite Here Local 11 and the California Nurses Assn.

Shortly before Monday night’s meeting, Herrera’s home local, Teamsters Local 396, had joined multiple Teamsters locals in calling for Herrera to quit his federation post.

“We are a movement of large organizations and deeply ingrained processes,” Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher, president of the California Labor Federation, which is separate from the local federation, said in a tweet Monday night. “But, we ultimately prioritize working class solidarity across all racial groups above all else. It’s now time for our labor movement to come together and start the hard work to heal.”

AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler put out a statement Sunday saying that “we will gather all the facts, but the hateful speech reported in that meeting is inexcusable.”

Audio of Councilmembers Nury Martinez, Kevin de León and Gil Cedillo speaking with labor leader Ron Herrera quickly became a new and incendiary issue in the Nov. 8 election.

“Until we have accountability, we cannot begin the healing process,” Gonzalez Fletcher wrote. “We have much work ahead of us to ensure the labor movement is a place where ALL workers can all come together in solidarity in our shared struggle.”

Times staff writer Julia Wick contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2022-10-10/ron-herrera-resigns-los-angeles-labor-federation-head-amid-leaked-recording-furor-sources-say

Air raid sirens blared across the eastern Ukrainian city, but no one in the shelter seemed particularly concerned, even though dozens of Russian missiles hit 19 cities the day before across the country, including Dnipro, killing at least 19 and wounding scores more.

Ocean of Kindness, an organization that provides temporary housing to disabled Ukrainians, helps secure permanent shelter for those who have been displaced because of the war. It is best equipped to handle relocations within Ukraine, but it also helps families apply for residency abroad, although it can be a challenge to find countries willing to accept those with special needs, according to the organization’s chief.

On Tuesday, in one dimly lit room of the shelter, Tetiana Samokhvalova, 50, helped her 13-year-old daughter, Daria, out of bed. The room’s windows were covered with cardboard to catch flying glass, should a missile land nearby. Daria, who has cerebral palsy, fled from the southern city of Nikopol last week with her mother, bringing only her diary, an apple and some biscuits.

Outside the shelter, Aleksandr Feydyenko, 46, who is blind, smoked a cigarette beneath a leafy tree. Mr. Feydyenko is from Toretsk, a city in the eastern Donetsk region that has been repeatedly shelled.

In another room, Natalia Boritko, 42, who has multiple sclerosis, was aided by her husband, Hryhoriy Boritko, 41, who also has limited mobility, as she moved across the room to a bed.

Mrs. and Mr. Boritko, along with their 14-year-old daughter, Kateryna, have been displaced multiple times by unrest in Ukraine, moving from city to city in the war-battered eastern part of the country. The family is originally from the eastern town of Avdiivka, but fled about 70 miles to Sloviansk in 2014 because of the war in the area. This April, they had to uproot themselves again for safety concerns, leaving Sloviansk for the Kramatorsk district and later Dnipro.

Ocean of Kindness is hoping to help the family relocate to Germany.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/live/2022/10/11/world/russia-ukraine-war-news

President Joe Biden and U.S. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona announced a sweeping plan for student debt relief in August.

Bonnie Cash/Bloomberg via Getty Images


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President Joe Biden and U.S. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona announced a sweeping plan for student debt relief in August.

Bonnie Cash/Bloomberg via Getty Images

It’s hard to imagine a more anticipated form than the one tens of millions of federal student loan borrowers will need to complete to qualify for President Biden’s debt relief plan. On Tuesday, senior administration officials revealed new details about the application. Here’s what we know:

When the application is coming: The Biden administration has said repeatedly its debt relief application would be available in early October. In a call with reporters, senior administration officials dropped the “early” but promised, “We will make the form available in October,” and said they are “working hard to make sure the form can handle the traffic we anticipate.”

In a legal filing on Friday, the department said it “will not discharge any student loan debt under the debt relief plan prior to October 23, 2022.”

The application will be available through Dec. 31, 2023.

Where the application will be posted: Officials said the application will be housed at a .gov website, and published in both English and Spanish.

What the application will ask for: As U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona told NPR a few weeks ago, the application, which officials shared with reporters on Tuesday, is quite simple. It requires only basic information, including name, birth date, Social Security number, phone number and an e-mail address.

Borrowers will not need what’s known as an FSA ID to log into the application, nor will they need to upload any documents, including tax records.

Will borrowers need to prove they meet the plan’s income requirements? Instead of having to provide documents that verify that you, as an individual, earned less than $125,000 in 2020 or 2021 or, as a couple, less than $250,000, the application simply asks borrowers to check a box to “certify under penalty of perjury under the laws of the United States of America that all of the information provided on this form is true and correct.”

A senior administration official told reporters that the U.S. Department of Education will closely match the information applicants provide with loan and income information it already has on file. In case of discrepancies, the department “will work with borrowers to secure additional documentation.”

The official said roughly 95% of borrowers should meet those income thresholds, though it’s not clear how many the department will flag for additional income verification.

How long will it take the department to process each application? When asked by NPR how long borrowers who fill out the application will have to wait before they see their debts canceled, one senior administration official said, “a matter of weeks.”

Timing matters because the department wants to discharge as many debts as possible before student loan payments resume in January.

In September, Cardona told NPR, “I will tell you, [by] January 1 when [loan repayment resumes], we have to have all that set up. So we know that, between October and before the loans restart, not only is the information going to be needed by all borrowers, but we’re going to have to be done with that process.”

On Tuesday’s call with reporters, a senior administration official backed-up Cardona’s timeline, saying the department plans to quickly process applications in November and December to discharge debts and limit borrower confusion come January.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/10/11/1128046324/biden-student-loans-debt-forgiveness-application

In response, the alliance plans to discuss how best to protect Ukrainian infrastructure from the deadly strikes, Ambassador Julianne Smith said. Air defenses have emerged as the likeliest delivery in the near future.

“We are now shifting again to air defense,” Smith said in a briefing organized by her office, noting that in previous phases, NATO’s response centered on what Ukraine needed at specific moments of the war, namely munitions and coastal defense. Air defenses will form the “crux of the conversation tomorrow,” the first of two days of meetings at NATO headquarters in Brussels.

The events will include a meeting of the NATO defense ministers, as well as the Ukraine Defense Contact Group, a gathering of military leaders headed by U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin.

The challenge: The West has few air defense systems available for immediate donation, said Tom Karako, a senior fellow with the Center for Strategic and International Studies. For example, Ukraine has asked for the U.S. Patriot missile defense system, but Washington has repeatedly said no due to the relative scarcity of the system, among other reasons.

Other immediate possibilities include the German InfraRed Imaging System Tail, a short to medium-range infrared homing air-to-air missile, or the U.S. Counter-Rocket, Artillery, Mortar system. Israel’s Iron Dome would also fit the bill, but Tel Aviv is expected to nix that proposal.

“There’s nowhere near enough to go around,” Karako said.

The vast majority of the strikes in Ukraine over the weekend were conducted using cruise missiles launched from bombers flying far off in Russian airspace, John Kirby, spokesperson for the National Security Council, told reporters on Tuesday. Ukrainian air defenses were able to shoot down some of the incoming missiles, Kirby said, but noted that “there is no one silver bullet weapon system” to counter the threat.

The U.S. military still has not fully solved the problem of how to protect its own people from missile and drone attacks, particularly in the Middle East. Iranian drones and cruise missiles pose a continuous threat to American personnel and infrastructure.

The West could “MacGyver” together an air defense solution for Ukraine by combining different capabilities, Karako said. But the question is what the different countries will be willing to give up from their own supply.

“We and the Ukrainians are now paying the cost of the last two decades of inattention to air defense and cruise missile defense,” Karako said. “We’ve taken air superiority for granted for way too long and this is what it looks like when you come up against an enemy with lots of air and missile power. Lo and behold air defense is in very high demand.”

Still, Zelenskyy is heaping pressure on G-7 nations to provide air defenses quickly. NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said it was “urgent” that those systems make their way to Ukraine.

“There are a range of priority capabilities that this and the next phase of the war would suggest putting a premium on, and certain more advanced air defenses would be among them,” the RAND Corporation’s Barry Pavel said.

Following its successful counteroffensives in the east and south, Kyiv has reshuffled its wish list for weapons as it prepared for Russia to strike civilian targets, POLITICO reported last week, with air defenses shooting to the top of the list.

Kyiv re-upped its urgent request for those capabilities on Monday, according to a congressional aide and Ukrainian adviser, who were not authorized to speak on the record. Foreign Policy first reported the news. Ukraine is specifically pushing the U.S. to speed delivery of two National Advanced Surface-to-Air-Missile Systems that are scheduled to arrive in the next month.

Kyiv has also asked for the C-RAM and the Avenger, a vehicle-mounted mobile, short-range air defense system, according to the congressional aide.

U.S. officials said they are moving equipment to Ukraine as quickly as possible, and noted that Ukraine is already using existing systems to defend against missile attacks. For example, a video on Twitter showed the Ukrainian army shooting down an incoming cruise missile with the shoulder-fired Igla surface-to-air missile system.

Kirby pointed out that the U.S. and Western allies have already provided air defenses to Ukraine, including shoulder-fired U.S. Stinger anti-air missiles and an S-300 missile system from Slovakia. The U.S. also contracted with Raytheon to build eight additional NASAMS, Kirby said, but the Pentagon has said the systems won’t arrive for years.

“We will continue to work with them on additional needs going forward and that would include continuing to talk to them about additional air defense capabilities,” Kirby said. “I don’t have any other announcements to make.”

Lawmakers also called Tuesday for the Biden administration to send more sophisticated weapons to Kyiv immediately following the barrage of Russian missile attacks. Sen. Jim Risch (R-Idaho) urged Biden to send longer-range air defenses and fighter jets.

“Putin’s barrage of strikes on civilian structures in Ukraine today, including a children’s playground and water and electric plants, is proof that Russia is a terrorist state committing acts of genocide,” Risch said in a statement. “Better arming and equipping of Ukraine will help save lives and give Ukraine the capacity to end this war faster. The Biden administration can and must do more to defend Ukraine.”

Meanwhile, Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas) urged the West to send longer-range artillery and additional air defense systems.

“Putin must be made to understand such brutal escalation and war crimes will not break the United States’ and the free world’s support of Ukraine,” he said in a statement.

Andrew Desiderio contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2022/10/11/nato-sending-ukraine-air-defenses-russian-missile-attacks-00061223

Students at the University of Florida protested the visit of Republican Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska – the likely new president of the university – to the school Monday.

Students protested Sasse during an open forum on the university’s campus in Gainesville on Monday afternoon, according to the university’s newspaper, The Independent Florida Alligator. Sasse plans to resign from the Senate by the end of the year to take a job as the president of the University of Florida, CNN reported last week

Sasse was scheduled to host three open forums Monday afternoon, according to the university’s website.

According to the Independent Florida Alligator, Sasse left a forum about 15 minutes early at which point about 300 protesters entered the ballroom where the event was taking place.

Protesters called Sasse homophobic and racist, The Independent Florida Alligator reported.

In one of the three forums held during the day, Sasse discused his stance on LGBTQ+ rights after he condemned the US Supreme Court decision that guaranteed same-sex marriage at the federal level in 2015. The Independent Florida Gator quoted him a saying that the decision was “the law of the land,” adding that it wasn’t going to change in the near future.

“Your question is: Do I support and affirm everybody in this community?” Sasse said in response to another question Monday, according to the student newspaper. “Absolutely.”

When asked about promoting diversity at the university, Sasse was quoted as saying, “I want us to figure it out by listening to our community and our conversation, who is not feeling included and how do we tackle those problems and reduce those barriers.”

Video obtained by CNN shows protesters chanting “Hey hey. Ho ho. Ben Sasse has got to go,” during Sasse’s visit.

Last week, the university’s presidential search committee voted unanimously to name Sasse as its sole finalist for president of the university, a source told CNN. Sasse would replace Kent Fuchs, who is leaving the position after eight years to become a professor at the school.

Sasse was president of Midland University, a Lutheran liberal arts school in Nebraska, before his election to the Senate in 2014.

Ethan Eibe is a sophomore at the University of Florida who was covering the protest for the Independent Florida Alligator. He told CNN that he talked to several people who participated in the protest.

“Many are concerned with Sasse’s past comments that show he is not in favor of same-sex marriage and abortion. When it comes to a community as diverse as UF, students overall don’t feel he is a good fit,” Eibe told CNN Monday. “They consider him a political appointee essentially. They believe it’s a bad look on the board of trustees that named him the sole finalist out of 700 candidates.”

The University of Florida would not comment on Sasse’s visit to the school Monday.

Meanwhile, CNN has reached out to Sasse’s office but has not received a response.

According to the university’s handbook, the president serves as the chief executive officer of the school and oversees all university activities.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2022/10/11/us/university-of-florida-president-ben-sasse/index.html

When Trump first called for the appointment of a special master in late August, his lawyers argued that he has retained some executive privileges since leaving office, which the Justice Department has argued a former president can no longer assert. In Tuesday’s filing, the solicitor general noted that Trump’s lawyers have “abandoned” that argument in recent filings, suggesting that the former president’s attorneys realize he cannot invoke that privilege.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2022/10/11/trump-supreme-court-special-master-justice-department/

Multiple children at a Pennsylvania day care were sickened Tuesday morning after carbon monoxide leaked in the building, officials said.

Fire trucks and ambulances responded to Happy Smiles Learning Center in Allentown just before 7 a.m.

Lehigh Valley Hospital – Cedar Crest is treating 14 children and one adult, all of whom were in stable condition, a Lehigh County Hospitals spokesman told Fox News Digital. An additional four children were rushed to Lehigh Valley Hospital 17th Street, the spokesman said. Their conditions were not immediately known.

According to WFMZ-TV, 28 children and four adults were rushed to four nearby hospitals, where they all were in stable condition.

BOX COVERING CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS STATUE IN PHILLY PAINTED COLORS OF ITALIAN FLAG

All of Allentown’s ambulances were responding to the leak, according to the station. Multiple children were reportedly carried out of the day care on stretchers and taken to hospitals across the Lehigh Valley.

Multiple children were sickened after carbon monoxide leaked in a day care in Allentown, Pennsylvania.
(FOX29 Philadelphia WTFX)

As some children remained at the scene awaiting transportation, a neighboring day care was allowing the children to stay there and keep warm, the report said. 

All the ambulances in Allentown, Pennsylvania, reportedly responded to the incident.
(FOX29 Philadelphia WTFX)

Officials said that parents have been notified of the incident. 

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The emergency call was prompted when one child fell unconscious. Responding firefighters detected carbon monoxide and initiated a full evacuation.

Officials told the station that the building had no carbon monoxide detector.

Fox News’ Paul Mitchell Picasso and Haley Chi-Sing contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/more-than-2-dozen-pennsylvania-children-teaching-aides-hospitalized-carbon-monoxide-leak-day-care

LIVE UPDATES

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

Air raid sirens are sounding out across multiple regions in Ukraine again on Tuesday with the emergency services warning of more Russian strikes, a day after a series of Russian attacks left at least 19 people dead and over a hundred injured.

Ukrainian officials reported that energy infrastructure in the western city of Lviv had been hit earlier, while the city of Zaporizhzhia in the south was also targeted this morning.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his nightly address Monday that Ukraine will not be intimidated by the strikes that took place Monday and which targeted various regions including the capital Kyiv. Urgent work was being done to repair and restore power supplies damaged during the strikes, he added.

The multiple attacks by Russia came several days after a blast partially destroyed the Kerch Bridge that links the Russian mainland to Crimea, which Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.

Kyiv has not said whether it was responsible for the attack on the bridge, although the blast was widely seen as humiliating for Moscow and President Vladimir Putin.

The leaders of the Group of Seven of the world’s most developed economies are holding an emergency meeting Tuesday to discuss Russia’s war in Ukraine. Addressing the meeting via videolink, Zelenskyy asked for more air defense weapons.

Top officials in the United States, European Union and at the United Nations expressed shock and horror Monday over the strikes. U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was “shocked” by the attacks, saying through a spokesperson that they represented an escalation of the war.

The strikes have damaged significant parts of Ukraine’s energy grid, prompting the nation’s energy ministry to announce it would halt exports of electricity to the EU starting Tuesday.

Russia adds U.S. tech giant Meta to its banned list, blocking Facebook and Instagram use in the country

Russia’s financial monitoring agency, Rosfinmonitoring, added U.S. tech giant Meta to its list of “terrorists and extremists,” Interfax news agency reported.

A Russian court banned Meta and its activities in Russia, including Facebook and Instagram.

The court’s decision does not prohibit the activities of WhatsApp messenger, which is also owned by Meta, because it does not publicly disseminate information.

Meta considered the decision unreasonable and challenged it, but it was unsuccessful.

— Amanda Macias

Zelenskyy asks G-7 leaders for more air defense weapons

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy addressed U.S. President Joe Biden and other G-7 leaders as they met virtually on Tuesday, asking the group to urgently provide Ukraine with more air defense weapons, Reuters reported.

Kyiv was widely expected to seek additional air defense weapons during the emergency meeting after Moscow ramped-up its missile strikes on various locations across Ukraine on Monday and Tuesday.

The attacks were unleashed after an explosion last weekend partially destroyed Russia’s prized Kerch Strait bridge linking the mainland and Crimea, which Moscow annexed in 2014.

G-7 leaders are also expected to discuss the global energy crisis and how to implement an international cap on the Russian oil price.

Russia dismissed the G-7 meeting with Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov saying the mood of the G-7’s emergency meeting was “obvious and predictable.” “The confrontation will continue,” Peskov said.

— Holly Ellyatt

Russia lashes out at Ukraine, but it’s ill-equipped to continue the war

Russia has dramatically ramped up its missile attacks on Ukraine in the last 48 hours, but experts say the country is running out of options — as well as supplies and munitions — on the battlefield.

Air raid sirens were once again sounding out across multiple regions in Ukraine Tuesday, with emergency services warning that more Russian strikes were highly likely. Ukrainian officials reported that energy infrastructure in the western city of Lviv had been hit earlier, while the city of Zaporizhzhia in the south was also targeted this morning.

The latest strikes come a day after a series of Russian attacks — launched in response to the bombing last weekend of Russia’s prized Kerch Strait bridge to Crimea — hit various Ukrainian cities, including the capital Kyiv. The strikes left at least 19 people dead and over a hundred injured, the emergency services said.

Despite Moscow’s recent show of strength in the last day or so, experts say Russia’s forces are looking increasingly desperate and ill-equipped.

Read more here: Russia unleashes its anger on Ukraine with brutal strikes — but it has big problems on the battlefield

— Holly Ellyatt

Russia continues to pound Ukraine’s energy infrastructure

Parts of Ukraine are still struggling with power outages as Russia says it is continuing to target energy infrastructure across the country.

President Zelenskyy said overnight that several hundred settlements remained without electricity after missile attacks yesterday and that authorities had made it a priority to restore power. Officials in Lviv, a major city in the west of Ukraine, reported more power outages Tuesday after Russian missiles targeted the city and wider region’s energy infrastructure.

“Missile attack on a critical infrastructure facility in Lviv. Part of the city is again blacked out,” Lviv Mayor Andriy Sadovyi said on the Telegram messenger app.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Kulebahas said such attacks were “creating unbearable conditions for civilians.”

Russia openly admits targeting such facilities.

On Tuesday, the country’s defense ministry issued a military update on Telegram stating that its forces continue to launch “massive” attacks “using high-precision long-range air and sea-based armament at the facilities of military control and energy system of Ukraine.”

— Holly Ellyatt

Top Russian official warns of the ‘danger of uncontrolled escalation’ in the war

A top Russian official warned of the danger of “uncontrolled escalation” if the West continues to support Ukraine, marking the latest threat to be issued by Moscow to Kyiv’s international allies.

Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said Russia “will be forced to take adequate countermeasures, including of an asymmetric nature,” Ryabkov told Russian state-owned news agency RIA Novosti Tuesday, without detailing what those measures could be.

He said Moscow regretted “the ongoing large-scale assistance to Kyiv” from the West and said that while “a direct clash with the United States and NATO is not in Russia’s interests” there was a hope in Moscow “that Washington and other Western capitals are aware of the danger of uncontrolled escalation.”

Ryabkov’s comments are just the latest instance in a long line of saber-rattling by officials in Moscow, including President Putin, who has threatened to use nuclear weapons if the West continues to support Ukraine in the war, or if Russia deems there to be an existential threat to its territory.

— Holly Ellyatt

Russia is running out of supplies and munitions, UK intelligence chief will say

The director of GCHQ, one of Britain’s top intelligence agencies, will say in an address today that Russia is running out of supplies and munitions while their forces are exhausted as Ukraine turns tide in the conflict.

GCHQ’s chief Jeremy Fleming is due to speak at the annual RUSI lecture in London on Tuesday afternoon. While his speech will largely focus on China and its impact on global security, he will touch upon the war in Ukraine and is expected to say:

“We know – and Russian commanders on the ground know – that their supplies and munitions are running out,” Fleming will say, according to pre-released comments sent to CNBC by the intelligence, cyber and security agency.

“Russia’s forces are exhausted. The use of prisoners to reinforce, and now the mobilisation of tens of thousands of inexperienced conscripts, speaks of a desperate situation,” he will say, adding that the Russian population is beginning to understand the reality surrounding the war. 

“They’re seeing just how badly Putin has misjudged the situation. They’re fleeing the draft, realising they can no longer travel. They know their access to modern technologies and external influences will be drastically restricted. And they are feeling the extent of the dreadful human cost of his war of choice.”

Fleming is expected to say that far from “the inevitable Russian military victory that their propaganda machine spouted,” it’s becoming clear that Ukraine’s bravery on the battlefield and in cyberspace, counteracting Russian propaganda, is “turning the tide” in the war.

In the meantime, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s decision-making is looking increasingly flawed with “a high stakes strategy … leading to strategic errors in judgement.”

“Their gains are being reversed.  The costs to Russia – in people and equipment are staggering,” Fleming is set to say.  

— Holly Ellyatt

Using nuclear weapons against Ukraine will ‘cement’ Putin as a pariah, says former ambassador

The chances of Russian President Vladimir Putin deploying nuclear weapons against Ukraine is low, and would isolate him globally as a pariah, former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine William Taylor told CNBC.

“If President Putin were to use nuclear weapons against a nuclear disarmed Ukraine, this would turn the world against him,” said Taylor.

Taylor said he believes that China and India, along with the rest of the world, would “draw back in horror” if Russia were to resort to nuclear arms.

“This would, I think, further cement President Putin as a pariah. I think there’s no military reason to do it. There’s a lot of political reasons that he shouldn’t do it.”

When asked if there are any traction towards peace talks, Taylor said he does not reckon so, mainly because “the Russians are not at all interested.” There are also no indications that Putin is too committed to the invasion, he added.

— Lee Ying Shan

Missiles shot down over Kyiv region, official says

Several missiles have been shot down over the Kyiv region, according to the governor of the region Oleksiy Kuleba.

Warning residents to stay in shelters while air raid alerts were ongoing, Kuleba said on Telegram Tuesday morning that “air defense forces shot down a rocket in one of the districts of the region.”

In a further post, he said there had been “another downed missile.”

CNBC was unable to verify the information but air raid warnings are in operation across Ukraine this morning.

— Holly Ellyatt

Air raid sirens ring out across Ukraine, warning of more Russian strikes

Ukraine’s emergency services warned citizens of the likelihood of more Russian attacks on Tuesday, with air raid sirens ringing out across multiple regions.

The emergency services issued a warning on Telegram Tuesday. “Warning. During the day there’s a high probability of missile strikes on the territory of Ukraine. Please remain in shelters for your own safety, do not ignore air raid signals,” the services said, according to Reuters.

The warning came as the emergency services said that the death toll from Monday’s mass shelling had reached 19, with 105 now known to be injured in the strikes across the country.

This map shows the breadth and duration of air raid alerts on Tuesday, with the capital Kyiv and other major cities including Lviv and Dnipro experiencing more warnings this morning.

— Holly Ellyatt

Death toll from Russian missile strikes rises

Ukraine’s emergency services said the death toll has risen after Russia’s mass shelling across the country on Monday.

The latest information from the services found that 19 people were killed in the strikes across Ukraine, and 105 were injured.

The services said on Telegram on Tuesday that, as a result of shelling, objects of critical and civil infrastructure were hit in the capital Kyiv as well as 12 other regions. More than 30 fires, caused by the strikes, had to be extinguished by the emergency services.

The power supply has been restored to 3,571 settlements in the Poltava, Sumy, Ternopil, Lviv, Kyiv and Khmelnytskyi regions, although over 300 settlements in those regions still have no electricity.

The emergency services said it had involved 22 power stations to provide power to health-care facilities in the Dnipropetrovsk, Zaporizhzhia, Sumy, Kharkiv, and Chernihiv regions, as well as seven power plants for critical infrastructure facilities.

“More than 1,000 people and about 120 units of emergency services equipment were involved in extinguishing fires and emergency rescue operations,” the services said.

— Holly Ellyatt

Zaporizhzhia city hit by more Russian strikes

The city of Zaporizhzhia in southern Ukraine has been hit by more Russian strikes on Tuesday morning, officials say.

“As a result of the morning rocket attack, an educational institution, a medical institution and residential buildings were also damaged,” Anatolii Kurtev, the secretary to the Zaporizhzhia city council, said on Telegram, adding that “unfortunately, there are casualties,” without providing more details.

Oleksandr Starukh, the head of the Zaporizhzhia Regional Military Administration, said on Telegram that “several powerful explosions” had rocked the city and that Russian forces “attacked the regional center with missiles. The enemy targeted infrastructure facilities.”

Information on damage and victims was being clarified, he said. CNBC was unable to independently verify the information.

The city was targeted on Monday as Russia conducted missile strikes across Ukraine. The image below shows destruction to a residential building following a missile attack.

— Holly Ellyatt

Ukraine will not be intimidated by strikes, president says

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his nightly address Monday that Ukraine will not be intimidated by multiple strikes across the country on Monday and that it would respond on the battlefield, vowing to make it “more painful” for Russian forces.

“Ukraine cannot be intimidated. We united even more instead. Ukraine cannot be stopped. We are convinced even more that terrorists must be neutralized. Now the occupiers are not capable of opposing us on the battlefield already, that is why they resort to this terror,” he said.

He said that urgent work was being done to repair and restore damaged infrastructure and power supplies that had been lost during the strikes.

“Restoration work is currently underway across the country. We will restore all objects that were damaged by today’s attack by Russian terrorists. It’s only a matter of time,” he commented on Telegram as well as in a video address from the streets of Kyiv, where a variety of locations were hit, including a playground, cultural centers and office and residential buildings. 

Zelenskyy said that out of 84 Russian missiles launched against Ukraine, 43 had been shot down on Monday, and out of 24 Russian drones, 13 were shot down.

The president called on Ukrainians to restrict their power use between certain hours to relieve pressure on the energy system.

— Holly Ellyatt

Zelenskyy will address G7 after Russian missiles rock Ukrainian cities

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will address a virtual emergency G7 leaders meeting on Tuesday after Russian missile strikes rocked Ukrainian cities.

Since Russia’s late-February invasion of Ukraine, the G7 has imposed a slew of coordinated sanctions against Moscow. The group kicked Russia out of the G8 following its illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014.

The G7 leaders on Tuesday are also expected to discuss the mounting global energy crisis and ways to implement an international cap on the price of Russian oil.

The emergency meeting of the G7 follows a series of deadly missile strikes across Ukraine, killing at least 14 people and wounding 97.

— Amanda Macias

Putin confirms he ordered attack on Ukrainian cities; vows ‘harsh’ response to ‘terrorist’ acts

Russian President Vladimir Putin confirmed that he ordered long-range missile strikes on a number of locations in Ukraine targeting military, energy and communications facilities.

“If attacks continue against Russia, the response will be harsh. The responses will be of the same scale as the threats to Russia,” Putin said during a meeting of his national security council.

“In the event of further attempts to carry out terrorist acts on our territory, Russia’s response will be harsh.”

Putin did not mention that the missile strikes hit several civilian areas and resulted in numerous casualties. The EU has said Russia’s indiscriminate attacks on civilians in Ukraine constitute a war crime.

Putin has blamed Ukraine for the explosion on Russia’s Kerch bridge Saturday morning — the only bridge connecting the country to Crimea, which it illegally annexed from Ukraine in 2014 — and called it a terrorist attack. Kyiv has not claimed responsibility for the blast that destroyed part of the bridge.

— Natasha Turak

Multiple cities across Ukraine hit by missile attacks

Several Ukrainian cities have been hit by what officials are describing as a wave of missile attacks — as far west as the city of Lviv, largely considered one of the safest parts of the country.

Kyiv, Dnipro, Zaporizhzhia, Lviv and Vinnytsia, among other cities, have all reported explosions.

“Kyiv region and Khmelnytsky region, Lviv and Dnipro, Vinnytsia, Frankiv region, Zaporizhzhia, Sumy region, Kharkiv region, Zhytormyr region, Kirovohrad region, the south,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy wrote on Telegram. He described Russian President Vladimir Putin as a “terrorist” targeting civilians.

At least 8 people in Kyiv have been killed and two dozen injured, according to the city’s emergency services.

— Natasha Turak

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/10/11/russia-ukraine-live-updates.html

Facing outrage over a controversial leaked audio recording with top L.A. city officials, Los Angeles County Federation of Labor President Ron Herrera offered his resignation at a Monday night meeting with the federation’s executive board, which accepted, according to two sources close to the situation.

Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher, head of the California Labor Federation and former head of the AFL-CIO’s San Diego and Imperial Counties Labor Council, confirmed to The Times that Herrera offered his resignation to the board. “We are focused on rebuilding solidarity and trust in the worker movement,” she said.

A spokeswoman for the county federation did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The sources requested anonymity to describe sensitive internal matters. One source said that the organization would make a formal statement Tuesday.

Earlier in the day, reports circulated that Herrera had reportedly been “placed on administrative leave, pending an LA Federation of Labor Executive Board meeting to be held this evening,” the California Labor Federation said in a Monday email to state labor leaders obtained by The Times.

L.A. councilmembers’ leaked audio reveal racist conversations on Mike Bonin’s son, Oaxacans in Koreatown, George Gascón and Mark Ridley-Thomas.

Herrera — along with Los Angeles City Councilmembers Nury Martinez, Kevin de León and Gil Cedillo — participated in an October 2021 closed-door conversation where Martinez said a white councilmember handled his young Black son as though he were an “accessory” and described Councilmember Mike Bonin’s son as “Parece changuito,” or “like a monkey.”

Other racist and derogatory remarks were made during the conversation, which largely focused on the city’s once-every-decade redistricting process and preserving and maintaining Latino political power.

The conversation remained private for roughly a year before exploding into public view Sunday after being reported on by The Times. The leaked audio was originally posted on Reddit.

The county federation’s move comes in the wake of growing calls for Herrera’s resignation from his top labor post, as well as demands that Martinez, De León and Cedillo step down from the City Council. Martinez, who had been City Council president, announced that she was resigning her leadership post Monday morning, but she remains on the council.

The leaders of eight SEIU California unions with Los Angeles-area members issued a statement Monday morning calling on Martinez, De León and Cedillo to step down from their council seats and Herrera to step down from his post. Shortly before Monday night’s meeting, Herrera’s home local, Teamsters Local 396, had joined the snowballing calls in the labor movement for Herrera to quit his federation post.

The political implosion, unparalleled in recent L.A. history, was set off by a leaked audio recording reported Sunday by The Times.

The email from the state federation’s leader, Gonzalez Fletcher, stressed that the county federation was distinct from and separate from the state-level federation.

“We do not have authority over Central Labor Councils — they are independently chartered with the AFL-CIO,” Gonzalez Fletcher said in the message. “We have been in contact with the AFL-CIO and the Los Angeles Federation of Labor about this egregious matter.

AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler put out a statement Sunday saying that “we will gather all the facts, but the hateful speech reported in that meeting is inexcusable.”

“Until we have accountability, we cannot begin the healing process,” Gonzalez Fletcher wrote. “We have much work ahead of us to ensure the labor movement is a place where ALL workers can all come together in solidarity in our shared struggle.”

The Labor Federation described the leaked audio as part of a “serious security and privacy breach” at L.A. County Federation of Labor offices involving “illegal” recordings of “many private and confidential conversations in private offices and conference rooms,” in a Sunday email to affiliates, according to text provided to The Times.

Times staff writer Julia Wick contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2022-10-10/ron-herrera-resigns-los-angeles-labor-federation-head-amid-leaked-recording-furor-sources-say

LAX officials told NPR that FlyLAX.com was partially disrupted early Monday morning. The service interruption did not compromise internal airport systems and there were no operational disruptions, according to authorities.

Ashley Landis/AP


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Ashley Landis/AP

LAX officials told NPR that FlyLAX.com was partially disrupted early Monday morning. The service interruption did not compromise internal airport systems and there were no operational disruptions, according to authorities.

Ashley Landis/AP

A pro-Russian hacker group is taking credit for temporarily taking down several U.S. airport websites on Monday, though there appeared to be no impact on flight operations.

The cyberattacks claimed by Killnet impacted the websites for Los Angeles International, Chicago O’Hare, and Hartsfield-Jackson International in Atlanta, among others.

The group posted a list of airports on Telegram, urging hackers to participate in what’s known as a DDoS attack — a distributed denial-of-service caused when a computer network is flooded by simultaneous data transmissions.

The group’s call to action included airports across the country, including Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, and Missouri.

It was not immediately clear how many of the airports were actually hit and whether all victims’ sites suffered any disruptions.

In a statement, LAX officials told NPR that FlyLAX.com was partially disrupted early Monday morning.

“The service interruption was limited to portions of the public facing FlyLAX.com website only. No internal airport systems were compromised and there were no operational disruptions,” a spokeswoman said in an emailed statement.

She added that the airport’s information technology team has restored all services and is investigating the cause. Officials have also notified the FBI and the Transportation Security Administration.

By about 1 p.m. in Atlanta, authorities said ATL.com was “up and running after an incident early this morning that made it inaccessible to the public.” But people on Twitter continued to complain about parts of the site being inaccessible for several hours after the announcement had been made.

Atlanta airport officials said no airport operations had been impacted.

In an earlier post on Monday, Killnet noted other vulnerable U.S. sites that could succumb to similar DDoS strikes, include sea terminals and logistics facilities, weather monitoring centers, health care systems, subway systems, and exchanges and online trading systems.

The group congratulated a handful of teams they claimed helped push the sites offline, writing, “Who is participated in the liquidation of the United States of America, Do not stop!!”

The attacks come on the heels of another spate of cyberattacks allegedly launched by the group last week. In that instance, the group has taken credit for rallying hackers to down state government sites.

Both campaigns appear to have been prompted by anti-U.S. sentiment for the country’s involvement in the ongoing war in Ukraine, as Russian President Vladimir Putin presses on with the invasion despite severe economic sanctions.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/10/10/1127902795/airport-killnet-cyberattack-hacker-russia

The debate between Democrat Tim Ryan and Republican J.D. Vance in Ohio’s closer-than-expected Senate contest began with a testy exchange on the economy and quickly devolved from there into a contentious – and at times personal – clash.

This race was not a contest Republicans believed would require as much money and attention as it has, given the Republican tilt of the state, which former President Donald Trump comfortably carried twice. Inside Elections with Nathan L. Gonzales rates the seat “Lean Republican,” while top-tier Senate campaigns in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Georgia, and Nevada are all still seen as more competitive. Still, Ryan’s bid to replace retiring Republican Sen. Rob Portman has proven a strong match for an underfunded GOP nominee that Trump pulled through the primary.

Monday night’s acrimony highlighted the urgency of the moment for both candidates.

Analysis: Senate control is the biggest unknown with four weeks until the midterms

For Ryan, millions in ads will be spent against the congressman in the coming weeks, testing the so far relatively resilient Democratic campaign in a state that’s trending red. For Vance, the Republican has found his footing after a tough summer, leaning on the natural political lean of the state by accusing his Democratic opponent of faking his moderate bona fides.

In a debate where neither candidate was afraid to directly go after his opponent – Ryan called Vance an “ass kisser,” while Vance compared Ryan to a toddler – it was clear both candidates felt they had ground to make up in the race with less than four weeks to go until Election Day.

Here are four takeaways from Ohio’s first Senate debate:

Abortion was a flash point

Abortion has come to shape political campaigns across the country in the wake of the Supreme Court overturning national abortion protections, and the Ohio Senate contest has been no different.

Ryan sought to cast himself as the moderate on the issue in Monday’s debate, saying he backed “going back to Roe v. Wade” and arguing for “some moderation on this issue.” He then turned the issue on Republicans, calling efforts to pass stricter abortion laws “the largest government overreach in the history of our lifetime.”

The 10 Senate seats most likely to flip in 2022

Vance, who said he was “pro-life” but “always believed in reasonable exceptions,” responded by delivering one of his most scathing lines of the night, seemingly blaming Ryan for the rape of the 10-year-old Ohio girl who sought an abortion in neighboring Indiana by noting she was allegedly raped by an undocumented immigrant and that Ryan had voted against border wall funding.

“If you had done your job, she would have never been raped in the first place,” Vance said, turning to Ryan. “Do your job on border security, don’t lecture me about opinions I don’t actually have.”

Later in the debate, Ryan said he supported walls along the US-Mexico border where it made sense but not one wall from “sea to shining sea.”

Ryan seeks distance from Democratic Party

As he has done on the campaign trail and in paid ads, Ryan sought throughout the debate to tout his independent bona fides, noting how he broke from his own party and at times backed Trump on trade.

“I think everybody is to blame,” Ryan said when asked if President Joe Biden is to blame for rising inflation. “Kamala Harris is absolutely wrong on that,” he added when asked if the vice president was correct when she said the border was secure.

Ryan then used this argument to hammer his opponent, arguing that he “can’t stand up to anyone” because even after Trump said at a recent campaign rally that Vance was “kissing my ass” to get him to campaign for him, the Republican nominee didn’t stand up to the former President after he took his “dignity from him.”

“He was called an ass kisser by the former President,” Ryan said, adding later, “Ohio needs an ass kicker, not an ass kisser.”

Vance went with a timely response. After noting Halloween is close, he added, “Tim Ryan has put on a costume where he pretends to be reasonable moderate.”

And the Republican did little to distance himself from Trump, his party’s standard bearer. When asked if Trump had done anything that concerns him, Vance urged letting “the criminal investigation play out” on the mishandling of classified documents stored at Mar-a-Lago and criticized the focus on past scandals around the former President.

Vance paints Ryan as a creature of Washington

Vance closed the debate by contrasting his personal choice two decades ago – to enlist in the Marines – with Ryan’s decision to successfully run for Congress.

To Vance, the race between him and Ryan is a referendum on “failed leadership” in Washington, positioning that allows the Republican to carry himself as the political outsider and Ryan as the career politician.

“He has been failing at his basic job for 20 years,” Vance said of Ryan, who was first elected to Congress in 2002. “Talks a big game but the record of accomplishment just isn’t there.”

Although Ryan pushed back against this narrative – “I’m not going to apologize for spending 20 years slogging away to try to help one of the hardest economically hit regions of Ohio,” the Democrat said – Vance’s strategy was clear.

“Ohioans deserve certain things from their federal leadership,” Vance said, capturing his entire electoral argument. “They deserve to go to the grocery store and be able to afford food without it breaking the bank. They deserve streets you can walk down safely. They deserve a country that has a border.”

Wide gulf between candidates on foreign policy

Some of the biggest differences of the night came on foreign policy.

When asked how the United States should respond to the potential Russian use of nuclear weapons, Ryan said it would call for an “aggressive response” but added, “I don’t think we are at that point where (Russian President) Vladimir Putin will.”

Ryan than tried to turn the issue on Vance, noting that the Republican once said he doesn’t “really care what happens to Ukraine.”

“J.D. Vance would let Putin roll right through Ukraine,” Ryan said, noting the large Ukrainian population in Ohio. “J.D. Vance is weak on this.”

Vance, however, did not shy away from those comments, saying, “The answer is that no one knows how we would respond,” and mocking Ryan for saying the use of nuclear weapons would call for an “aggressive response.”

“What exactly does that mean? Does that mean we should be in a nuclear shooting war?” Vance said, accusing Ryan of being part of the “bipartisan foreign policy establishment.”

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2022/10/10/politics/ohio-senate-debate-takeaways/index.html

Donald Trump accused former president George HW Bush of hiding classified documents in a “bowling alley” during a rally in Arizona on Sunday.

Mr Trump claimed that many former presidents had stored millions of pages of documents in warehouses “with damaged main doors”.

The former president said that senior Bush “took millions and millions of documents to a former bowling alley pieced together with what was then an old and broken Chinese restaurant”.

“They put them together. And it had a broken front door and broken windows. Other than that it was quite secure,” Mr Trump added.

In fact, he even demanded to know why the former president was not prosecuted for “hiding” documents.

Mr Trump himself is currently under investigation for taking government documents to his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida. The US Department of Justice found 48 documents marked classified at his estate after the FBI conducted a search in August. The department suggested that Mr Trump could be holding many other classified documents.

Mr Trump’s reference to a bowling alley where Bush, according to him, hid classified documents was a likely referrance to reports from 1994 about the site of a future George Bush Presidential Library and Museum at Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas. The Presidential Library and Museum was being considered in an old bowling alley and some of it was part of the kitchen of a Chinese restaurant.

The George Bush Presidential Library and Museum is administered by the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). The Bush Library and Museum’s archives hold more than 40 million pages of official records and personal papers documenting the life of the 41st president of the United States.

The website of the presidential library and museum mentions that the “presidential records of George Bush (1989-1993) comprise the core of the archival holdings. The library also contains the vice presidential records of both George Bush (1981-1989) and Dan Quayle (1989-1993) as well as donated historical materials that document George Bush’s private and public career”.

In addition to these records, the Bush Library has an extensive audiovisual collection containing more than two million photographs and 10,000 videotapes.

Mr Trump’s accusation that Bush hid the documents is rooted in the story of how the Bush library and museum came into being in the first place.

It was in an old bowling alley, that things from the former president’s life were gathered. In 1994, when the future museum and library were coming together, a news agency reported that stuff like “an old infielder’s mitt, the door of a Kuwaiti palace, even a huge likeness of Bush’s head from a Republican convention” were brought to the bowling alley.

Currently, the George Bush Presidential Library and Museum contains more than 100,000 artefacts in its three-dimensional holdings, housed and preserved for posterity, research and exhibit, the website notes.

The bowling alley was apparently not enough for the millions of pages of documents, so some of the documents were kept next door to the bowling alley in what used to be the kitchen of a Chinese restaurant.

All the stuff for the future library and museum at the time was not just from the Bush presidency years, but other items came from his eight years as vice president as well. Many also were from his tenure as a Texas congressman.

The documents and memorabilia were all guarded by security at the future Bush library. At the time Associated Press reported  that some of the “printed material is classified” and will remain so for years and that “it is open only to those with top-secret clearances.”

At the time when the National Archives was just setting up the library and the museum, the director of the Center of Presidential Studies at Texas A&M University, George Edwards said: “We’re not just taking a presidential library and saying, ‘Gee, isn’t this pretty and prestigious’. We want to integrate the library into the intellectual life of the campus.”

Meanwhile, Mr Trump’s comment about Bush and the bowling alley drew a sharp response on Twitter from Bush’s son, Jeb Bush. “I am so confused,” he said: “My dad enjoyed a good Chinese meal and enjoyed the challenge of 7 10 split. What the heck is up with you?”

Source Article from https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/trump-bush-classified-documents-chinese-restaurant-b2199285.html

JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel’s prime minister said Tuesday that the country has reached a “historic agreement” with neighboring Lebanon over their shared maritime border after months of U.S.-brokered negotiations.

The agreement would mark a major breakthrough in relations with the two countries, which formally have been at war since Israel’s establishment in 1948. But the deal still faces some obstacles, including key legal and political challenges in Israel. There was no immediate confirmation by Lebanon that a deal had been reached.

At stake are rights over exploiting undersea natural gas reserves in areas of the eastern Mediterranean that the two countries — which do not have diplomatic relations — claim.

Premier Yair Lapid called the deal an “historic achievement that will strengthen Israel’s security, inject billions into Israel’s economy, and ensure the stability of our northern border.”

The agreement is expected to enable additional natural gas production in the Mediterranean. Lebanon hopes gas exploration will help lift its country out of its spiraling economic crisis.

Lebanon and Israel both claim some 860 square kilometers (330 square miles) of the Mediterranean Sea. Under the agreement, those waters would be divided along a line straddling a strategic natural gas field.

According to a senior Israeli official, Lebanon would be allowed to produce gas from that field, called “Qana,” but pay royalties to Israel for any gas produced from the Israeli side. Lebanon has been working with the French energy giant Total on preparations for exploring the field.

The agreement would also leave in place an existing “buoy line” that serves as a de facto border between the two countries, the official said. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was discussing behind-the-scenes negotiations.

Many leading security figures, both active and retired, have hailed the deal because it could lower tensions with Lebanon’s Hezbollah militant group, which has repeatedly threatened to strike Israeli natural gas assets in the Mediterranean. With Lebanon now having a stake in the region’s natural gas industry, experts believe the sides will think twice before opening up another war.

The two sides fought a monthlong war in 2006, and Israel considers the heavily armed Hezbollah to be its most immediate military threat.

“It might help create and strengthen the mutual deterrence between Israel and Hezbollah,” said Yoel Guzansky, a senior fellow at Israel’s Institute for National Security Studies. “This is a very positive thing for Israel.”

An Israeli official said the deal would go before Israel’s Security Cabinet and then the full Cabinet on Wednesday and be presented to Parliament for a 14-day review. After the review, the Cabinet would reconvene to give final, formal approval, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss government policy.

The process will take place less than three weeks before Israel goes to the polls Nov. 1 for the fifth time in under four years.

Approval is not guaranteed. Former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, has claimed Lapid does not have the authority to sign an agreement and vowed to cancel what he calls a “disgraceful deal” if re-elected.

The Kohelet Policy Forum, an influential conservative think tank, already has filed a challenge to the Supreme Court trying to block the deal.

Eugene Kontorovich, the forum’s director of international law, claimed the agreement requires parliamentary approval. He accused the government of trying to rush through an agreement under pressure from Hezbollah. “This means Hezbollah now overrides Israel’s democracy,” he said.

Senior U.S. energy envoy Amos Hochstein, whom Washington appointed a year ago to mediate talks, delivered a modified proposal of the maritime border deal to lead Lebanese negotiator, Deputy Speaker Elias Bou Saab late Monday night, according to local media and officials.

President Michel Aoun’s office said the latest version of the proposal “satisfies Lebanon, meets its demands, and preserves its rights to its natural resources,” and will hold consultations with officials before making an announcement.

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/middle-east-business-israel-lebanon-economy-a9b25a78e40e516bc9cbffe48f48b993

  • Nato’s secretary general, Jens Stoltenberg, condemned the “horrific and indiscriminate” missile attacks by Russia on civilian targets in Ukraine. The president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, said she was “shocked and appalled”. Her European Council counterpart, Charles Michel, unequivocally labelled the actions by Russia as war crimes.

  • Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/oct/11/russia-ukraine-war-latest-what-we-know-on-day-230-of-the-invasion

    KYIV, Oct 11 (Reuters) – Ukraine vowed to strengthen its armed forces after Russia launched its biggest aerial assaults on cities since the beginning of the war, forcing thousands to flee to bomb shelters and prompting Kyiv to halt electricity exports to Europe.

    Missiles hit targets across Ukraine early on Monday, killing 14 people and wounding 97, emergency services said, as they tore into intersections, parks and tourist sites.

    Explosions were reported in Kyiv, Lviv, Ternopil and Zhytomyr in western Ukraine, Dnipro and Kremenchuk in the centre, Zaporizhzhia in the south and Kharkiv in the east, Ukrainian officials said.

    The barrage of dozens of cruise missiles fired from air, land and sea was the most widespread wave of air strikes to hit away from the front lines, at least since the initial volleys on the war’s first day, Feb. 24.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin said he ordered “massive” long-range strikes after accusing Ukraine of an attack on a bridge linking Russia to annexed Crimea on Saturday, but the United States said the scale of the attacks meant they had likely been planned for longer.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy spoke to U.S. President Joe Biden on Monday and wrote on Telegram afterwards that air defence was the “number 1 priority in our defence cooperation”.

    “We will do everything to strengthen our armed forces,” he said in a late Monday address. “We will make the battlefield more painful for the enemy.”

    Biden told Zelenskiy the United States would provide advanced air defence systems. The Pentagon said on Sept. 27 it would start delivering the National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile System over the next two months or so.

    Russia’s ambassador to the United States, Anatoly Antonov, said more help to Ukraine raised the risk of a wider war.

    “Such assistance, as well as providing Kiev with intelligence, instructors and combat guidelines, leads to further escalation and increased the risks of a clash between Russia and NATO,” Antonov told media.

    Monday’s rush-hour attacks were deliberately timed to kill people and knock out Ukraine’s power grid, according to Zelenskiy.

    Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal reported 11 major infrastructure targets were hit in eight regions, leaving parts of Ukraine with no electricity, water or heat. He promised to restore utilities as quickly as possible.

    As it tried to end blackouts, Ukraine halted electricity exports to the European Union, at a time when the continent already faces surging power prices that have stoked inflation and hampered industrial activity.

    BATTLEFIELD SETBACKS

    Russia’s air strikes come three days after a blast damaged the bridge it built after seizing Crimea in 2014. Russia blamed Ukraine and called the deadly explosion “terrorism”.

    “To leave such acts without a response is simply impossible,” said Putin, alleging other, unspecified attacks on Russian energy infrastructure. He threatened more strikes if Ukraine hits Russian territory.

    The United States, however, said Russia’s attacks on such a scale could not have been put together in just a couple of days.

    “It likely was something that they had been planning for quite some time,” White House national security spokesperson John Kirby told CNN. “That’s not to say that the explosion on the Crimea bridge might have accelerated some of their planning.”

    Ukraine, which views the bridge as a military target sustaining Russia’s war effort, celebrated the blast without claiming responsibility.

    After weeks of setbacks on the battlefield, Russian authorities are facing the first sustained domestic criticism of the war, with commentators on state television demanding ever tougher measures.

    Putin responded to Ukrainian advances by ordering a mobilisation of hundreds of thousands of reservists, proclaiming the annexation of occupied territory and threatening to use nuclear weapons.

    On Saturday, Russia made its third senior military appointment in the space of a week with air force General Sergei Surovikin taking over as commander of forces in Ukraine. He previously commanded Russia’s brutal air campaign in Syria.

    Russia says it is waging a “special military operation” in Ukraine to rid it of nationalists and protect Russian-speaking communities. Ukraine and the West say it is an unprovoked war of aggression.

    Ukraine’s defence ministry said in a Monday evening update Russia had staged at least 84 missile and air strikes, and Ukraine’s air defences had destroyed 43 cruise missiles and 13 drones.

    Russia’s defence ministry said it had hit all its intended targets. Reuters could not independently verify battlefield accounts.

    DIPLOMATIC FRONT

    Russia also suffered a setback on the diplomatic front, with the UN General Assembly voting to reject its call for the 193-member body to hold a secret ballot this week on whether to condemn Russia’s annexations of four partially occupied regions in Ukraine. read more

    The General Assembly decided, with 107 votes in favor, that it would hold a public vote.

    The president of the United Arab Emirates, a member of the group of oil producers known as OPEC+ that rebuffed the United States last week by announcing steep production cuts, will travel to Russia on Tuesday to meet Putin and push for “military de-escalation”, UAE state news agency WAM reported.

    Biden and Group of Seven leaders will hold a virtual meeting on Tuesday to discuss their commitment to support Ukraine, the White House said.

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

    Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/ukraine-vows-strengthen-its-armed-forces-after-major-russian-air-strikes-2022-10-10/