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Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcO_WLUu_-0

Danielle Booker, left, hugs her mother, Sharon Booker, as the two remember Sean Booker, Danielle’s father and Sharon’s husband, at the National 9/11 Memorial and Museum during a ceremony on Saturday in Manhattan. Sean Booker was a technician on the 93rd floor of the World Trade Center’s north tower when he was killed during the 2001 attacks.

RJ Sangosti/MediaNews Group/Denver Post via Getty Images


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Danielle Booker, left, hugs her mother, Sharon Booker, as the two remember Sean Booker, Danielle’s father and Sharon’s husband, at the National 9/11 Memorial and Museum during a ceremony on Saturday in Manhattan. Sean Booker was a technician on the 93rd floor of the World Trade Center’s north tower when he was killed during the 2001 attacks.

RJ Sangosti/MediaNews Group/Denver Post via Getty Images

On the 20th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, multiple ceremonies commemorated the nearly 3,000 lives that were lost on that day.

From New York to Pennsylvania to the Pentagon, here are some of the scenes captured as people are remembering and reflecting on the lives lost and legacies left behind.

New York City

In New York City, those honoring those killed gathered Saturday morning in Lower Manhattan at the National Sept. 11 Memorial & Museum. The museum is located on the spot where the twin towers fell.

A family member grieves at the National 9/11 Memorial and Museum ceremony commemorating the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center, in New York City on Saturday.

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A family member grieves at the National 9/11 Memorial and Museum ceremony commemorating the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center, in New York City on Saturday.

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Family and friends carry photos of some of the more than 2,600 victims to the ceremony commemorating the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center.

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Family and friends carry photos of some of the more than 2,600 victims to the ceremony commemorating the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center.

Ed Jones/Getty Images

Family members and loved ones of victims attend Saturday’s ceremony in New York City. Six moments of silence were held, marking when each of the World Trade Center towers was struck and fell, and the times corresponding to the attack on the Pentagon and the crash of Flight 93.

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Family members and loved ones of victims attend Saturday’s ceremony in New York City. Six moments of silence were held, marking when each of the World Trade Center towers was struck and fell, and the times corresponding to the attack on the Pentagon and the crash of Flight 93.

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Former President Barack Obama (from left), former first lady Michelle Obama, President Biden, first lady Jill Biden and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg attend 9/11 commemoration ceremony in New York City.

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Bruce Springsteen performs “I’ll See You In My Dreams” during an unannounced appearance at the Sept. 11 anniversary ceremony in New York City.

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Arlington, Va.

In Arlington, Va., a ceremony was held at the National 9/11 Pentagon Memorial honoring the 184 people killed when American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into the west side of the Pentagon.

An attendee reacts during a 9/11 remembrance ceremony at the Pentagon in Arlington, Va., on Saturday.

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An attendee reacts during a 9/11 remembrance ceremony at the Pentagon in Arlington, Va., on Saturday.

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U.S. service members attend the 9/11 observance ceremony at the National 9/11 Pentagon Memorial in Arlington, Va.

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Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin (left) and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley stand for the national anthem during the Pentagon 9/11 observance ceremony.

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Shanksville, Pa.

Attendees gathered at the Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville, Pa., in a ceremony attended by Vice President Harris, second gentleman Doug Emhoff, and former President George W. Bush.

Charlie Greene places flowers for his father Donald Greene, who perished on Flight 93, during a ceremony Friday at Flight 93’s Memorial Plaza in Shanksville, Pa.

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People listen as Vice President Harris speaks on Saturday at the 20th anniversary remembrance of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks at the Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville.

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People listen as Vice President Harris speaks on Saturday at the 20th anniversary remembrance of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks at the Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville.

Jeff Swensen/Getty Images

An attendee puts her hand on the head of a child at the Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville.

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Bells are rung during a 9/11 commemoration at the Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville.

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Visitors line the Wall of Names at the Flight 93 National Monument during the Luminaria Ceremony on Friday in Shanksville. The ceremony honors the 40 victims of Flight 93.

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Visitors line the Wall of Names at the Flight 93 National Monument during the Luminaria Ceremony on Friday in Shanksville. The ceremony honors the 40 victims of Flight 93.

Jeff Swensen/Getty Images

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/pictureshow/2021/09/11/1036241598/9-11-september-11-memorials-photos-world-trade-center-pentagon-shanksville

The lawyers’ accounts prompted a significant public backlash, after which all but 30 of the roughly 300 children who were being housed in Clint were transferred elsewhere. Some 249 were placed in a shelter network for children run by the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Refugee Resettlement, while others were moved to a tent facility in El Paso run by Customs and Border Protection.

But on Tuesday, the C.B.P. official said that those moves had alleviated overcrowding in Clint, and allowed for the return of more than 100 children there. The spokesman said that no additional resources had been provided to the children who were sent back.

After the lawyers’ accounts about Clint were made public, volunteers from around the country began to mobilize, hoping to deliver supplies such as diapers, soap and food to the facility. But those who arrived there were not allowed in and their donations were not accepted, according to local media reports.

On the call with reporters on Tuesday, the Customs and Border Protection official said that the agency was reviewing its policy for accepting outside donations, but the official also disputed the idea that supplies were running low.

“We are looking at the possibility of using some of those donations going forward but those items, it’s important to note, are available now,” the official said.

Federal officials had previously told the office of Representative Terry Canales, a Democrat from Texas who requested a list of needed supplies, that the agency would not be able to accept outside donations, according to Curtis Smith, Mr. Canalas’s chief of staff.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/25/us/john-sanders-cbp.html

In this article

Twitter took down two tweets by Russia’s embassy in the United Kingdom on Thursday for what the social media giant called “the denial of violent events” during the ongoing Russian attack on Ukraine. 

In one of those tweets, Russia’s embassy claimed that a pregnant woman seen in a photo of casualties at a children’s hospital in the besieged port city of Mariupol that was destroyed by a Russian airstrike Wednesday was actually a Ukraine “beauty blogger” and suggested that the photo was staged propaganda.

That tweet contained two separate photos of women the embassy claimed are the same person. Another tweet referencing the claim remained online Thursday after two of the other tweets were taken down by Twitter.

“This Tweet violated the Twitter Rules,” the link to that tweet later read.

At least one child and two adults were killed at the hospital, and another 17 were injured, Ukraine officials have said. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, in a tweet containing video showing damage at the hospital, wrote, “children are under the wreckage.”

A Twitter spokesperson told CNBC in an email, “We took enforcement action against the Tweets you referenced as they were in violation of the Twitter Rules, specifically our Hateful Conduct and Abusive Behavior policies related to the denial of violent events.”

CNBC has requested comment from the embassy, and from a spokesperson at Russia’s embassy in Washington.

The Russian Embassy in Geneva claimed in a tweet that remains online that the Mariupol hospital was attacked because it was being used as a headquarters by a Ukraine paramilitary group, which was firing on the Russian military while using “#HumanShields.” Russia’s U.K. embassy retweeted that post.

Earlier Thursday, the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights said Russia’s invasion has killed at least 549 civilians in Ukraine, of whom 41 were children.

An additional 957 civilians have been injured since the attack began two weeks ago, the office said, while noting that the actual casualty total is believed to be “considerably higher.”

“Most of the civilian casualties recorded were caused by the use of explosive weapons with a wide impact area, including shelling from heavy artillery and multilaunch rocket systems, and missile and airstrikes,” that office said.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/03/10/twitter-removes-russian-uk-embassy-tweets-for-ukraine-denials.html

More than three weeks after fleeing Kabul by helicopter as the Taliban swept through the capital, former Afghan President Ashraf Ghani issued a statement late Wednesday in apology to his fellow countrymen.

“I owe the Afghan people an explanation for leaving Kabul abruptly on August 15 after Taliban unexpectedly entered the city,” Ghani began, in a letter posted to his Twitter account that was written only in English.

Three days after his speedy departure and amid apocalyptic scenes of panic at Kabul’s Hamid Karzai International Airport as desperate Afghans tried to flee the country, Ghani resurfaced in the United Arab Emirates, whose government confirmed it had welcomed him and his family on humanitarian grounds.

“I left at the urging of the palace security who advised me that to remain risked setting off the same horrific street to street fighting the city had suffered during the Civil War of the 1990s. Leaving Kabul was the most difficult decision of my life, but I believed it was the only way to keep the guns silent and save Kabul and her 6 million citizens,” the former academic and World Bank official, who had been Afghanistan’s president since 2014, wrote.

In what some are seeing as an attempt to avoid accountability, Ghani said, “Now is not the moment for a long assessment of the events leading to my departure,” adding that “I will address them in the near future.”

Taliban forces had made a series of stunning advances across the country of 39 million in the wake of the Biden administration and NATO announcing a full departure of U.S. and coalition forces by the end of August.

Amid the exodus of foreign troops, the Taliban were able to declare near complete control of the country within 10 days of seizing their first provincial capital. This was despite being vastly outnumbered by the Afghan military, which has been assisted by U.S. and coalition forces for the last 20 years.

Denying taking millions in cash with him

Analysts and many U.S. veterans of the war in Afghanistan note that the corruption in the Afghan government and in its military’s leadership often meant that money meant for soldiers’ salaries instead went to lining the pockets of senior officials. They told CNBC that the Afghan military’s rapid surrenders to the Taliban stemmed in part from a total lack of confidence that Ghani and the government in Kabul would support them.

“I offer my profound appreciate and respect for the sacrifice of all Afghans, especially our Afghan soldiers and their families, through the last forty years,” Ghani wrote in his letter’s closing paragraph.

“It is with deep and profound regret that my own chapter ended in similar tragedy to my predecessors — without ensuring stability and prosperity. I apologize to the Afghan people that I could not make it end differently. My commitment to the Afghan people has never wavered and will guide me for the rest of my life.”

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/09/09/ashraf-ghani-afghanistan-ex-president-issues-explanation-after-fleeing.html

Some observers question whether Ms. Wu’s policy platform will be enough to carry her through the general election in November.

“People just want the city to work for them, they don’t want nice policies,” said Kay Gibbs, 81, who worked as a political aide to Thomas Atkins, the city’s first Black city councilor, and to Representative Barney Frank. Boston’s next mayor, she said, will have her hands full with the basics, taking control of powerful forces within a sprawling city government.

“The electorate is smarter than we think they are, and they have certain interests that don’t extend to all these dreamy ideas of free public transport and Green New Deal,” she said. “They are going to choose the person they think is most able.”

Boston is growing swiftly, with rapid growth in its Asian and Hispanic populations. It has seen a shrinking percentage of non-Hispanic white residents, who now make up less than 45 percent of the population. And the percentage of Black residents is also dropping, falling to 19 percent of the population from about 22 percent in 2010.

Ms. Janey, who was then the City Council president, became acting mayor in March after Martin J. Walsh became the country’s labor secretary, and many assumed she would cruise into the general election. But she was cautious in her new role, sticking largely to script in public appearances, and damaged by criticism from her rival Ms. Campbell, a Princeton-educated lawyer and vigorous campaigner.

At a campaign stop on Monday, Ms. Janey said incumbency had not necessarily proved an advantage.

“I certainly would say, if anything, it’s a double-edged sword,” she said.

Municipal elections, especially preliminary ones, tend to draw a low turnout, whiter and older than the city as a whole. It is only in the last few years that change has begun to ripple through Massachusetts, which has seen a series of upsets for progressive women of color, said Steve Koczela, president of the MassInc Polling Group.

“This is the culmination of a lot of flexing of new political muscle,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/15/us/boston-mayor-election-michelle-wu.html


URGENTE | La SIDE amenaza con denunciar a NOTICIAS en la Justicia Federal

Es por publicar en la edición que sale hoy la lista de nuevos espías K


Hace instantes, un empleado de la Secretaría de Inteligencia se hizo presente en la planta de Editorial Perfil en Barracas para entregar un documento amenazante: de publicar la lista de nuevos espías K que sale en la edición de hoy de la Revista Noticias, seremos denunciados ante la Justicia Federal por violar el secreto que marca la vieja Ley de Inteligencia.

Luego de haberse amasado una “mafia” gracias a dicho secreto, denunciada por el propio Gobierno, es un medio de comunicación el que debe abstenerse de tomar la actitud republicana de transparentar de qué modo quedaría estructurado dicho organismo bajo el mandato del próximo presidente constitucional.

La edición de Noticias ya está impresa y en proceso de distribución.

Ampliaremos


 




Source Article from http://noticias.perfil.com/2015-03-13-59539-urgente-la-side-amenaza-con-denunciar-a-noticias-en-la-justicia-federal/

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Herman Cain is expected to remove his name from consideration for appointment to the Federal Reserve, according to a report Friday.

The former Republican presidential contender and Godfather’s Pizza CEO has come under repeated fire since President Donald Trump announced his intention to nominate Cain as a central bank governor. In recent days, at least four GOP senators said they would not support the move, seeming to torpedo the effort before it even become official.

ABC news reported that Cain will pull his name before it even gets that far. The network said it confirmed the withdrawal with multiple sources, including an administration official and a person close to the matter.

A White House official declined comment. CNBC also has reached out to Cain for comment.

Greg Valliere, chief U.S. policy strategist at AGF, said in a note Friday that he is “betting on this afternoon” for when Cain withdraws.

The potential nomination drew quick criticism from multiple corners.

Cain briefly was among the leaders in the race for the 2012 Republican primary before fading and giving way to former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who later lost to Barack Obama. Romney, now a senator from Utah, was among top Republicans who said they would not support Cain if his name came to the floor.

Among other issues, Cain likely would have faced questioning over sexual misconduct accusations from two women relating to his time as CEO of the National Restaurant Association in the late 1990s.

Trump also has announced his intention to nominate economic commentator Stephen Moore to the Fed board. That move, too, has come under fire from congressional leaders who have questioned Moore’s credentials, and as revelations have come up relating to delinquent taxes and child support payments.

However, Washington observers have indicated that Moore would likely have an easier time in the confirmation process than Cain.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/04/12/cain-reportedly-will-withdraw-his-name-as-potential-fed-nominee.html

The total damages of nearly $50 million was significantly less than the $150 million in damages Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis were seeking.

Jones faces two more Sandy Hook trials to determine damages later this year: One for parents of a 6-year-old boy in an Austin court, and another for eight families in Connecticut.

Heslin and Lewis have testified that Jones’ constant push of false claims that the shooting was a hoax or staged made the last decade a “living hell” of death threats, online abuse and unrelenting trauma inflicted by Jones and his followers.

After years of false hoax claims, Jones admitted under oath that the shooting was “100% real” and even shook hands with the parents.

But the bombastic version of Jones was always lurking under the surface — or even on full display away from the courthouse.

During a break on the first day, he held an impromptu news conference just a few feet from the courtroom doors, declaring the proceedings a “kangaroo court” and “show trial” railroading his fight for free speech under the First Amendment. On the first day, he arrived at the courthouse with “Save the 1st” written on silver tape over his mouth.

When he came to the courthouse, it was always with a security detail of three or four guards. Jones, who wasn’t in court for the verdict, often skipped testimony to appear on his daily Infowars program, where the attacks on the judge and jury continued. During one show, Jones said the jury was pulled from a group of people who “don’t know what planet they live on.”

That clip was shown to the jury. So was a snapshot from his Infowars website showing Judge Maya Guerra Gamble engulfed in flames. She laughed at that.

Jones was only slightly less combative in court. He was the only witness to testify in his defense. Gamble warned Jones’ lawyers before it even started that if he tried to turn it into a performance, she would clear the courtroom and shut down the livestream broadcasting the trial to the world.

When Jones arrived for Lewis’ testimony, Gamble asked if he was chewing gum, a violation of a strict rule in her courtroom. She’d scolded his attorney Andino Reynal several times already.

That led to a testy exchange. Jones said he wasn’t chewing gum. Gamble said she could see his mouth moving. Jones opened wide and leaned over the defense table to show her a gap in his mouth where he’d had a tooth extracted. Jones insisted he was only massaging the hole with his tongue.

“Don’t show me,” the judge said.

Some legal experts said they were surprised by Jones’ behavior and questioned whether it was a calculated risk to boost his appeal to fans.

“It’s the most bizarre behavior I have ever seen at a trial,” said Barry Covert, a Buffalo, New York, First Amendment lawyer. “In my opinion, Jones is a money-making juggernaut — crazy like a fox,” Covert said. “The bigger the spectacle, the better.”

Kevin Goldberg, a First Amendment specialist at the Maryland-based Freedom Forum, said he found it hard to imagine what Jones might be thinking and what benefit he could derive from his behavior.

“I don’t know what it is designed to accomplish other than being on brand for Alex Jones,” said Goldberg. “This seem to be a man who has built his brand … on disrespecting the institutions of government … and this court.”

Defendants at trial are often given some leeway because they have so much at stake — prison in criminal cases and, in Jones’ civil trial, potential financial ruin. Monetary sanctions or even post-trial contempt charges are also a possibility.

Gamble had to be careful how she handled it all, Covert said.

“Jones’ bizarre behavior is putting the judge in a very difficult box,” said Covert. “She doesn’t want to appear to put her finger on the scales of justice.”

Jones skipped Heslin’s testimony when he described for the jury holding his dead son in his arms with a “bullet hole through his head.”

Heslin said he wanted to confront Jones face-to-face and called his absence that day “cowardly.” Jones was instead appearing on his daily broadcast.

Jones was in the room when Lewis took the stand, sitting barely 10 feet (3 meters) away as she looked directly at him.

“My son existed. I am not ‘deep state,’ she said of the conspiracy theory of a shadowy network of federal workers running the government.

“I know you know that,” Lewis said.

When Lewis asked Jones if he thought she was an actor, Jones answered, “No,” but was cut off by Gamble, who scolded him for speaking out of turn.

At the end of that day, Jones and the parents shook hands. Lewis even handed Jones a sip of water to help calm a persistent cough Jones said was caused by a torn larynx. Her attorney Wesley Ball quickly stepped in to break it up.

“No,” Ball snapped at Jones, “You are NOT doing this.”

Jones was the only witness in his defense. His testimony pushed the rules of the court so often that the plaintiffs openly questioned whether Jones and his attorneys were trying to sabotage the proceedings and force a mistrial. They filed a motion for sanctions against them after Jones claimed he was bankrupt, which attorneys dispute and was off limits in testimony.

At one point, Jones appeared flabbergasted when the family’s attorneys announced that Jones’ legal team had mistakenly sent them two years’ worth of data from his cellphone — a massive data dump they said should have been produced in discovery but wasn’t. They said it proved he’d been receiving texts and emails about Sandy Hook and his media company’s finances that he hadn’t turned over under court orders.

“This is your Perry Mason moment,” Jones snapped.

Plaintiff’s attorney Mark Bankston said Thursday that the House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol had requested those materials and that he intended to give it to them.

The Jan. 6 committee first subpoenaed Jones in November, demanding a deposition and documents related to his efforts to spread misinformation about the 2020 election and a rally on the day of the attack.

During the trial, Jones often spoke out of turn, and was cut off when he veered into conspiracies, ranging from the Sept. 11 terror attacks being staged to a fake effort of the United Nations on world depopulation. He continued to call into question some of the biggest events and significant government institutions in American life.

“This,” the judge told him, “is not your show.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2022/08/06/alex-jones-trial-behavior-00050208

California’s deepening drought has worsened into a crisis, as a second dry year in a row has diminished the state’s water supply and another difficult fire season looks inevitable. Nearly three-quarters of the state is in extreme to exceptional drought. With the wet season all but over and a hot, dry summer probably ahead, water shortages and fire danger are poised to intensify.

The past several weeks have shown dramatic change in drought status: Extreme drought has expanded through the northern Sierra’s crucial water region and in the agricultural San Joaquin Valley.

Exceptional drought, the worst category in the federal government’s U.S. Drought Monitor, has descended upon the Bay Area and the nearly snow-free southern Sierra. Moderate drought conditions or worse cover all of California.

Extreme drought conditions prevail

throughout the southwest

Exceptional

drought

Extreme

drought

Severe

drought

Moderate

drought

The governor has declared a drought emergency in

41 counties due to extreme dry conditions in most of the state.

Chico

Sacramento

NEVADA

San

Francisco

Las Vegas

Fresno

CALIFORNIA

Bakersfield

Los Angeles

San Diego

Extreme drought conditions prevail

throughout the southwest

Exceptional

drought

Extreme

drought

Severe

drought

Moderate

drought

The governor has declared a drought emergency in

41 counties due to extreme dry conditions in most of the state.

Oroville

Reservoir

Chico

Sacramento

NEVADA

San Francisco

Fresno

Las Vegas

CALIFORNIA

Bakersfield

Pacific

Ocean

Los Angeles

San Diego

100 MILES

Extreme drought conditions prevail throughout the southwest

Exceptional drought

Extreme

Severe

Moderate

Abnormally dry

The governor has declared a drought emergency in

41 counties due to extreme dry conditions in most of the state.

Oroville

Reservoir

Chico

Reno

NEVADA

Sacramento

San Francisco

Fresno

Las Vegas

CALIFORNIA

ARIZ.

Bakersfield

Los Angeles

San Diego

Extreme drought conditions prevail throughout the southwest

Exceptional drought

Extreme

Severe

Moderate

Abnormally dry

The governor has declared a drought emergency in

41 counties due to extreme dry conditions in most of the state.

Salt Lake City

Oroville

Reservoir

Chico

Reno

NEVADA

UTAH

Sacramento

San Francisco

Fresno

Las Vegas

CALIFORNIA

ARIZONA

Bakersfield

Pacific

Ocean

Los Angeles

Phoenix

San Diego

100 MILES

Extreme drought conditions prevail throughout the southwest

Exceptional drought

Extreme drought

Severe drought

Moderate drought

Abnormally dry

The governor has declared a drought emergency in

41 counties due to extreme dry conditions in most of the state.

Salt Lake City

Oroville

Reservoir

Chico

Reno

UTAH

COLO.

Sacramento

NEVADA

San Francisco

N.M.

Fresno

Las Vegas

CALIFORNIA

Flagstaff

Bakersfield

ARIZONA

Los Angeles

Phoenix

Pacific

Ocean

San Diego

Tucson

100 MILES

Cindy Matthews, senior hydrologist with the National Weather Service’s Sacramento office, said the recent drought progression is a result of the dry winter, which has been followed by a very warm and dry spring. Most of the state has received less than a half-inch of rain since April 1.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) has declared a drought emergency in 41 counties, a move that will help to conserve water in reservoirs, although many sectors will vie for that limited supply downstream, including households, farmers and freshwater ecosystems.

“There is not enough water available, so reservoir operators have reduced their allocations to those who have rights to that water,” Matthews said in an interview. There are reports of farmers allowing fields to go fallow this spring because there probably will not be enough water to sustain some crops through the season. Freshwater fish species such as salmon are also threatened by low stream levels.

In just over a year, a parched and burned

landscape and lower reservoir levels

May 2020: Reservoir at 70% of capacity

3 MILES

Oroville

Reservoir

Enterprise

Bridge

Oroville Dam

May 2021: Reservoir at 42% of capacity

3 MILES

Area burned by

North Complex Fire

in August/October

of 2020

Fire perimeter

In just over a year, a parched and burned

landscape and lower reservoir levels

May 2020: Reservoir at 70% of capacity

3 MILES

Oroville

Reservoir

Enterprise

Bridge

Oroville Dam

May 2021: Reservoir at 42% of capacity

3 MILES

Area burned by

North Complex Fire

in August/October

of 2020

Fire perimeter

In just over a year, a parched and burned landscape

and lower reservoir levels

May 2020:

Reservoir at 70% of capacity

May 2021:

Reservoir at 42% of capacity

Area burned by

North Complex Fire

in August/October

of 2020

Oroville

Reservoir

Fire perimeter

Enterprise

Bridge

Oroville Dam

3 MILES

In just over a year, a parched and burned landscape and lower reservoir levels

May 2020:

Reservoir at 70% of capacity

May 2021:

Reservoir at 42% of capacity

3 MILES

Area burned by

North Complex Fire

in August/October

of 2020

Oroville

Reservoir

Fire perimeter

Enterprise

Bridge

Oroville Dam

In just over a year, a parched and burned landscape and lower reservoir levels

May 2020:

Reservoir at 70% of capacity

May 2021:

Reservoir at 42% of capacity

3 MILES

Area burned by

North Complex Fire

in August/October

of 2020

Oroville

Reservoir

Fire perimeter

Enterprise

Bridge

Oroville Dam

The drought is hitting especially hard in the wetter northern half of the state, where major reservoirs are fed by mountain snowmelt. The two largest of those, Lake Shasta and Lake Oroville, are at 46 percent and 40 percent, respectively, of their total capacity this week and are lower than they were at this date during the 2012-2016 drought. Because of climate change, the prolonged dry spells of the past 10 years are much warmer and therefore more severe than those that occurred decades ago.

Disappearing snowpack

The state’s snowpack, which represents 30 percent of its water supply, stores water high in the mountains and delivers it to surrounding forests, rivers and eventually to reservoirs, in late spring and summer. Most of the streamflow in the Sierra Nevada region comes directly from snowmelt.

Sierrra Nevada snowpack

evaporates in two months

March 28: Peak snowpack,

but only 63% of normal

Pacific

Ocean

Medford

OREGON

Cloud cover

Eureka

NORTHERN SIERRA

70%

Redding

Chico

SACRAMENTO

VALLEY

Reno

NEVADA

Sacramento

Lake Tahoe

CENTRAL SIERRA

San

Fran.

67%

San Jose

SAN JOAQUIN

VALLEY

Big

Sur

Fresno

SOUTHERN SIERRA

45%

Cloud

cover

Bakersfield

M O J A V E

D E S E R T

50 MILES

Los Angeles

May 10: Snowpack is down to 8%;

a week later it is 4%

Medford

Pacific

Ocean

OREGON

Eureka

NORTHERN SIERRA

9%

Redding

Chico

SACRAMENTO

VALLEY

Reno

NEVADA

Sacramento

Lake Tahoe

CENTRAL SIERRA

San

Fran.

9%

San Jose

SAN JOAQUIN

VALLEY

Big

Sur

Fresno

SOUTHERN SIERRA

4%

Cloud

cover

Bakersfield

M O J A V E

D E S E R T

Cloud

cover

50 MILES

Los Angeles

Sierrra Nevada snowpack evaporates in two months

March 28: Peak snowpack, but only 63% of normal

Pacific

Ocean

Medford

Cloud cover

OREGON

Eureka

NORTHERN SIERRA

70%

Redding

Chico

SACRAMENTO

VALLEY

Reno

NEVADA

Sacramento

Lake Tahoe

CENTRAL SIERRA

San

Francisco

67%

San Jose

SAN JOAQUIN

VALLEY

Salinas

Big

Sur

Fresno

SOUTHERN SIERRA

45%

Cloud

cover

Bakersfield

M O J A V E

D E S E R T

50 MILES

Los Angeles

May 10: Snowpack is down to 8%; a week later it is 4%

Medford

Pacific

Ocean

OREGON

Eureka

NORTHERN SIERRA

9%

Redding

Chico

SACRAMENTO

VALLEY

Reno

NEVADA

Sacramento

Lake Tahoe

CENTRAL SIERRA

San

Francisco

9%

San Jose

SAN JOAQUIN

VALLEY

Salinas

Big

Sur

Fresno

SOUTHERN SIERRA

4%

Cloud

cover

Bakersfield

M O J A V E

D E S E R T

Cloud

cover

50 MILES

Los Angeles

The Sierrra Nevada snowpack evaporates in two months

March 28:

Peak snowpack,

but only 63% of normal

May 10:

Snowpack is down to 8%;

a week later it is 4%

Pacific

Ocean

OREGON

OREGON

Cloud cover

Eureka

Eureka

NORTHERN SIERRA

NORTHERN SIERRA

70%

9%

Redding

Redding

Chico

Chico

SACRAMENTO

VALLEY

SACRAMENTO

VALLEY

Reno

Reno

NEVADA

NEVADA

Sacramento

Sacramento

Lake Tahoe

Lake Tahoe

San

Fran.

San

Fran.

CENTRAL SIERRA

CENTRAL SIERRA

67%

9%

San Jose

San Jose

SAN JOAQUIN

VALLEY

SAN JOAQUIN

VALLEY

Big

Sur

Big

Sur

Fresno

Fresno

SOUTHERN SIERRA

SOUTHERN SIERRA

45%

4%

Cloud

cover

Cloud

cover

Bakersfield

Bakersfield

M O J A V E

D E S E R T

M O J A V E

D E S E R T

Cloud

cover

50 MILES

Los Angeles

Los Angeles

The Sierrra Nevada snowpack evaporates in two months

March 28:

Peak snowpack,

but only 63% of normal

May 10:

Snowpack is down to 8%;

a week later it is 4%

Medford

Medford

Pacific

Ocean

Cloud cover

OREGON

OREGON

Eureka

Eureka

NORTHERN SIERRA

NORTHERN SIERRA

70%

9%

Redding

Redding

Chico

Chico

SACRAMENTO

VALLEY

SACRAMENTO

VALLEY

Reno

Reno

NEVADA

NEVADA

Sacramento

Sacramento

Lake Tahoe

Lake Tahoe

San

Francisco

San

Francisco

CENTRAL SIERRA

CENTRAL SIERRA

67%

9%

San Jose

San Jose

SAN JOAQUIN

VALLEY

SAN JOAQUIN

VALLEY

Salinas

Salinas

Big

Sur

Big

Sur

Fresno

Fresno

SOUTHERN SIERRA

SOUTHERN SIERRA

45%

4%

Cloud

cover

Cloud

cover

Bakersfield

Bakersfield

Santa Barbara

Santa Barbara

M O J A V E

D E S E R T

M O J A V E

D E S E R T

Cloud

cover

50 MILES

Los Angeles

Los Angeles

The Sierrra Nevada snowpack evaporates in two months

March 28: Peak snowpack, but only 63% of normal

May 10: Snowpack is down to 8%; a week later it is 4%

Medford

Medford

Pacific

Ocean

Cloud cover

OREGON

OREGON

Eureka

Eureka

NORTHERN SIERRA

NORTHERN SIERRA

70%

9%

Redding

Redding

Chico

Chico

SACRAMENTO

VALLEY

SACRAMENTO

VALLEY

Reno

Reno

NEVADA

NEVADA

Sacramento

Sacramento

Lake

Tahoe

Lake

Tahoe

San

Francisco

San

Francisco

CENTRAL SIERRA

CENTRAL SIERRA

67%

9%

San Jose

San Jose

SAN JOAQUIN

VALLEY

SAN JOAQUIN

VALLEY

Salinas

Salinas

Big

Sur

Big

Sur

Fresno

Fresno

SOUTHERN SIERRA

SOUTHERN SIERRA

45%

4%

Cloud

cover

Cloud

cover

Bakersfield

Bakersfield

Santa Barbara

Santa Barbara

M O J A V E

D E S E R T

M O J A V E

D E S E R T

Cloud

Note: Topography

and hydrography

were added to the

satellite imagery.

cover

50 MILES

Los Angeles

Los Angeles

This year, though, an already paltry snowpack has melted off at breakneck speed. And instead of flowing into rivers, much of the meltwater has seeped into parched soil or simply evaporated.

“We saw massive, rapid melt-off of the snowpack at the lower and middle elevations,” Chris Orrock of the California Department of Water Resources said in an interview. Statewide snowpack, which peaked March 25 at 64 percent of average, is only 2 percent of average for the date.

April was exceedingly warm over the Sierra, and the loss of snow and streamflow illustrates how higher temperatures due to climate change can compound the effects of droughts.

There was also simply much less snow available this year. Both the northern and central Sierra are on track to record their third-driest year on record, while the southern Sierra probably will see its driest.

Over the past two years combined, some regions have missed an entire season’s worth of precipitation.

“We’ve lost a whole year of runoff in the water project that supplies water across California,” Orrock said, referring to the State Water Project, a storage and delivery system that serves 27 million Californians and irrigates Central Valley farmland.

Although major cities such as San Francisco have diverse water supply portfolios and can draw from numerous sources and backup supplies, smaller cities rely on their local reservoirs and therefore depend on rain that falls in their local watersheds.

Marin County, just north of San Francisco, draws its water from the Russian River watershed, which sits at the epicenter of the current drought. On Tuesday, the county’s board of supervisors declared a drought emergency and further tightened mandatory water restrictions, such as limiting outdoor sprinkler use, to preserve reservoir storage through the long dry season ahead.

Another challenging fire season underway early

An active fire season is already underway in California, as drought and warm conditions have led to summerlike flammability in May.

At an event earlier this month to kick off the state’s Wildfire Preparedness Week, Cal Fire Director Thom Porter said, “We are seeing conditions right now, this year, that are a month or two down the road.”

The agency has increased staffing in preparation for another challenging season as both the number of fires and the number of acres burned so far this year are well above the five-year average.

In an ominous sign, some fires are growing large even in the absence of typical fire weather. On Sunday, the Palisades Fire northwest of Santa Monica spread in cool, humid breezes from the ocean — an indication of how flammable the landscape is. Lisa Phillips, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Oxnard, said current low moisture levels in the area’s live chaparral vegetation are not usually seen until July.

Most of Los Angeles and Ventura counties are in “extreme” drought; Los Angeles International Airport recorded only five inches of rain for the water year — less than half of normal.

Drought within a ‘megadrought’

Although California has always had highly variable year-to-year precipitation, in the past two decades, dry years have become more frequent, occurring three times more often than wet years. Scientists have found that the southwestern United States has been mired in a “megadrought,” the second-worst such era in the past 1,200 years. These long-term dry periods, which can last decades, are marked by low precipitation, as well as low soil moisture and snowpack.

A two-decade trend of more heat

and less rain for Californians

California mean temperature anomaly

4°F

Above average temperature

3

2

1

‘50s

‘60s

‘70s

‘90s

‘00s

‘10s

‘80s

-1

Below average temperature

-2°F

Note: The average value for 12-month periods from

1950 to 2000 ending in September was 57.2° F.

California mean precipitation anomaly

20

Above average

precipitation

15

10

5

0

‘50s

‘60s

‘70s

‘90s

‘00s

‘10s

‘80s

0

-5

-10

Below average

precipitation

-15

Note: The average value for 12-month periods

from 1950 to 2000 ending in September

was 24.28 inches.

Source: PPIC Water Policy Center

A two-decade trend of more heat

and less rain for Californians

California mean temperature anomaly

4°F

Above average temperature

3

2

1

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

2010s

-1

Below average temperature

-2°F

Note: The average value for 12-month periods from 1950 to

2000 ending in September was 57.2° F.

California mean precipitation anomaly

20

inches

Above average

precipitation

15

10

5

0

1950s

1960s

1970s

1990s

2000s

2010s

1980s

0

-5

-10

Below average

precipitation

-15

inches

Note: The average value for 12-month periods from 1950 to

2000 ending in September was 24.28 inches.

Source: PPIC Water Policy Center

A two-decade trend of more heat and less rain for Californians

California mean temperature anomaly

4°F

Above average temperature

3

2

1

1950s

1960s

1970s

1990s

2000s

2010s

1980s

-1

Below average temperature

-2°F

Note: The average value for 12-month periods from 1950 to 2000 ending in September was 57.2° F.

California mean precipitation anomaly

20

inches

Above average precipitation

15

10

5

0

1950s

1960s

1970s

1990s

2000s

2010s

1980s

0

-5

-10

Below average precipitation

-15

inches

Note: The average value for 12-month periods from 1950 to 2000 ending in Sept. was 24.28 inches.

Source: PPIC Water Policy Center

A two-decade trend of more heat and less rain for Californians

California mean temperature anomaly

4°F

Above average temperature

3

2

1

1950s

1960s

1970s

1990s

2000s

2010s

1980s

-1

Below average temperature

-2°F

Note: The average value for 12-month periods from 1950 to 2000 ending in September was 57.2° F.

California mean precipitation anomaly

20 inches

Above average precipitation

15

10

5

0

1950s

1960s

1970s

1990s

2000s

2010s

1980s

0

-5

-10

Below average precipitation

-15 inches

Note: The average value for 12-month periods from 1950 to 2000 ending in September was 24.28 inches.

Source: PPIC Water Policy Center

Increasing temperatures due to climate change have doubled down on the megadrought, meaning more water is being lost to the atmosphere, and more precipitation is falling as rain instead of snow. This warming has also translated into greatly increased wildfire risk.

“It’s obvious we’re seeing smaller amounts of snow, and it’s melting earlier — that’s the big change,” Jeffrey Mount, a senior fellow in water and climate change policy at the Public Policy Institute of California, said in an interview.

Mount described 2011 as an example of a “really good cold wet year” with rushing snowmelt in June. Such years are needed to replenish reservoirs and groundwater, but they’ve been few and far between since 1999.

A great snow pack year

compared to current conditions

Snow water equivalent (in inches)

2

4

6

10

20

30

40

80

May 10, 2011

May 10, 2021

NEV.

Reno

Reno

Sacramento

Sacramento

San Jose

San Jose

Fresno

Fresno

100 MILES

CALIF.

A great snow pack year

compared to current conditions

Snow water equivalent (in inches)

2

4

6

10

20

30

40

80

May 10, 2011

May 10, 2021

NEV.

Reno

Chico

Reno

Chico

Sacramento

Sacramento

San Jose

San Jose

Fresno

Fresno

100 MILES

CALIFORNIA

A great snow pack year compared to current conditions

Snow water equivalent (in inches)

2

4

6

10

20

30

40

80

May 10, 2011

May 10, 2021

NEVADA

NEVADA

Chico

Chico

Reno

Reno

Lake Tahoe

Sacramento

Sacramento

CALIFORNIA

CALIFORNIA

San Jose

San Jose

Fresno

Fresno

Monterey

Monterey

Pacific

Ocean

50 MILES

A great snow pack year compared to current conditions

Snow water equivalent (in inches)

2

4

6

10

20

30

40

80

May 10, 2011

May 10, 2021

NEVADA

NEVADA

Chico

Chico

Reno

Reno

Lake Tahoe

Sacramento

Sacramento

CALIFORNIA

CALIFORNIA

San Jose

San Jose

Fresno

Fresno

Monterey

Monterey

Pacific

Ocean

50 MILES

“We have an elaborate system to store and manage water, but it’s all based on 1950s hydrology — not modern hydrology,” he said. In other words, it was built around a past climate, when wet years were more reliable and less water was lost through evaporation.

“Maybe we’ll get lucky and next year we’ll go into a wet period like we had in the mid-90s, and everything will be great,” he said. “But that’s highly unlikely.”

About this story

U.S. Drought Monitor data was used for May 20. Satellite images of Lake Oroville via ESA Sentinel 2 satellite and fire perimeter data via CalFire. ESA Sentinel 3 imagery was used in the two-month comparison graphic, and California Department of Water Resources for the capacity data. Megadrought analysis provided by PPIC Water Policy Center. Snow water equivalent data via NOAA.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/2021/05/21/california-drought-emergency-fires/

La polémica portada del New York Post con la esposa de Donald Trump desnuda, así como las complicaciones en la salud de Guillermo Anderson, destacan en las noticias de este domingo.

En este resumen de noticias te presentamos las que mayor impacto tuvieron en Honduras y el planeta entero:


Diario de Nueva York publica fotos en las que aparece desnuda la esposa de Donald Trump

Un periódico de Nueva York abrió hoy su portada con unas fotografías desnuda de Melania Trump, esposa del candidato republicano, Donald Trump, que fueron publicadas por una revista francesa en los años noventa.
Las imágenes, algunas de ellas inéditas, fueron tomadas durante una sesión de fotos en Manhattan en 1995 y aparecieron publicadas en la revista francesa Max, según el diario New York Post.
“Era una foto para una revista europea antes de conocerla. Y en Europa, este tipo de imágenes estaban de moda y eran comunes”, dijo a ese periódico el candidato a la Casa Blanca.
La modelo eslovena, que tenía entonces 25 años y era conocida por su nombre profesional Melania K, posó para el fotógrafo francés Alé de Basse-ville. (Ver fotos originales en historia del Post)

“Melania estuvo genial, tenía una personalidad fantástica y fue muy amable conmigo”, dijo al periódico neoyorquino el fotógrafo, que recordó que la exmodelo nunca se sintió incómoda posando desnuda.


Trasladan de emergencia a Guillermo Anderson

El cantautor hondureño Guillermo Anderson fue trasladado de emergencia este domingo desde Guatemala tras sufrir una complicación de salud, informaron autoridades hondureñas.
Según trascendió, el artista de renombre internacional fue trasladado desde el vecino país centroamericano hacia la ciudad de La Ceiba, Caribe de Honduras.
El comisario Rodríguez Montoya, de la Policía de Tránsito, informó que fue llevado al Hospital D’ Antoni de ese municipio. Se informó que su traslado obedece a problemas de salud con pronóstico reservado.

El cantante fue llevado en la ambulancia policial PN-LA04 conducida por el policía Saúl Padilla, acompañado por el doctor Elías Canahuati y el enfermero Héctor Alonso Rodríguez.


Buscaba pokemones y encontró pareja en la intimidad

Un jovencito que se divertía jugando pokemones Go mantiene revueltas las redes sociales y no precisamente por atrapar a uno de estos famosos animalitos.  
El adolescente estaba en plena caza de un Pokémon frente a un edificio, de inmediato se llevó la sorpresa de su vida. Observó como una pareja mantenía relaciones sexuales a plena vista.
De inmediato y olvidándose del juego por unos minutos, el joven filmó a la pareja que tenía intimidad, al parecer ambos son compañeros de trabajo en una oficina.

El clip divulgado inicialmente en WhatsAap saltó a las demás redes y ahora ha causado otros problemas porque en un inicio identificaron a una mujer erróneamente, ahora la chica pide se haga la corrección porque no es ella la que aparece en el video, sino su compañera. Tras salir a la luz el video y llegar a manos de las autoridades del corporativo, los directivos lanzaron un comunicado donde reprobaban los hechos y aseguraron que se levantaría una investigación para identificarlos.

Policía alquilaba su arma a u delincuenta por 500 pesos la noche

Un policía argentino de la localidad de Rosario fue acusado de un insólito delito: Alquilarle su arma a un delincuente.
El hecho salió a la luz luego que el malhechor fuese capturado tras robar a una mujer en un barrio de la ciudad capital de la provincia de Santa Fe.
El asaltalte delató al policía, diciendo que cada vez le cobraba más caro por alquilarle su arma de reglamento, cuyo modelo no fue precisado.

De acuerdo con el reporte, el uniformada cobraba unos 500 pesos argentinos por noche (unos 762 lempiras) y lo hacía sobre todo los fines de semana, cuando se hallaba de franco.

Fanático de Pokemón GO pinta su perro de Pikachu

Los amantes de los perros pueden acariciarlos, mirarlos y tomarles fotos por horas.
Y cuando eso se mezcla con otras cosas de las que somos fanáticos la cosa se puede poner un poco extraña y los disfraces de ranas, marineros u otras cosas divertidas pueden salir a flote.
Pero hay un límite que la mayor parte de las personas no están dispuestas a cruzar: teñir a sus mascotas.

Es lo que hizo un fanático de Pokémon GO, el que luego se ganó una ola de críticas. No se le ocurrió nada mejor que teñir a un perrito con los colores y marcas de Pikachu.

Source Article from http://www.diez.hn/notodoesfutbol/985394-99/resumen-de-noticias-publican-fotos-de-donald-trump-desnuda

More than 500 new coronavirus cases were reported in South Korea, where authorities are considering keeping schools closed for a month. The virus has spread from China to 47 countries.
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Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vZOYGE2Prj0

El jefe de Gabinete, Marcos Peña, afirmó el jueves que en enero próximo esperan tener “buenas noticias” respecto a la situación de precios, mientras que el presidente de la Cámara Argentina de Comercio (CAC), Carlos De la Vega, estimó que “los únicos precios que van a bajar son los que se han fijado a un precio con un dólar de 14, 15 y 16 (pesos)”. El directivo de la CAC también manifestó su escepticismo sobre el acuerdo económico y social que quiere alcanzar el macrismo.


El problema de la suba de precios fue analizado durante la segunda reunión de Gabinete Nacional que encabezó el presidente Mauricio Macri desde que asumió su gestión. Peña, quien ofició de vocero tras el encuentro, admitió que  la inflación “no se va a corregir de un día para el otro” porque “viene de arrastre”, y remarcó que se está “trabajando” para ir “logrando que no haya más aumentos”.


El ministro coordinador dijo que el gobierno tiene “expectativa” de poder alcanzar un acuerdo con empresarios y consideró que es posible ir “logrando políticas razonables y de colaboración para cuidar el bolsillo de los argentinos”. En este sentido, comentó que se está “trabajando con cada uno de los sectores para ir logrando de mínima que no haya más aumentos y de máxima de poder ver que haya retrocesos de aumentos, que en algunos casos fueron un poco excesivos en términos de especulación”. “Somos optimistas en el marco del diálogo social con los  sectores económicos, no se puede hacer de un día para el otro, pero creemos que en enero vamos a seguir teniendo buenas noticias en términos de sector por sector, de ir trabajando para lograr una política más razonable y de cooperación, porque acá todos tienen que colaborar para cuidar el bolsillo de los argentinos y el poder  adquisitivo”, recalcó.


Por su parte, sobre la meta planteada por el Gobierno de retrotraer los precios a los valores de noviembre, De la Vega estimó que “los únicos precios que van a bajar son los que se han fijado a un precio con un dólar de 14, 15 y 16” pesos, ya que “ni el consumidor ni el mercado le van a convalidar esos precios exagerados”. Al evaluar los primeros días de gestión de Macri, el empresario consideró que “fue impecable la instrumentación de la devaluación” y “todo ha transcurrido con tranquilidad y sin sorpresas”. En declaraciones a radio La Red, De la Vega sostuvo que “es  altamente conveniente que se instrumente un acuerdo tripartito entre empresarios, Estado y trabajadores para que puedan transcurrir los próximos meses sin sobresaltos”. No obstante, manifestó su escepticismo sobre el acuerdo económico y social que quiere alcanzar el macrismo, y confesó: “Para ser franco, esto se ha intentando muchas veces, se ha hablando muchas veces” sin éxito.


Destacó que los empresarios se han “sentado en los últimos 25, 30 años y a último momento fue el Estado el que ha bajado el objetivo de ponernos de acuerdo”.

Source Article from http://www.eldia.com/el-pais/precios-desde-el-gobierno-esperan-buenas-noticias-para-enero-105418

Los manifestantes exigieron que el Parlamento local convocara a una sesión extraordinaria y ordenara la realización de un referendo, que decida la ruptura de la provincia con Ucrania y el ingreso a la Federación Rusa, como ocurrió en Crimea.

Los prorrusos amenazaron con disolver el actual gobierno provicial y elegir a nuevos diputados que representen a “todos los sectores políticos” de la región oriunda del destituido presidente Yanukovich.

Durante la movilización, los manifestantes se dirigieron a los edificio gubernamentales y, pese a estar protegidos por policías antimotines, lograron ingresar a algunas de las sedes, donde izaron la bandera rusa.

Por su parte, las autoridades provinciales no intentaron recuperar el control de los edificios por la fuerza y se limitaron a abrir una causa penal contra los manifestantes.

La moderación demostrada por las autoridades designadas por el nuevo gobierno interino en Kiev se puede explicar por el temor que aún existe de que Moscú utilice la represión o muerte de algún rusoparlante como excusa para intervenir en el este de Ucrania, una región que posee importantes comunidades de origen ruso.

El presidente Vladimir Putin repitió más de una vez que está dispuesto a utilizar “todos los medios necesarios” para defender a las comunidades de origen ruso en el este de Ucrania.

Source Article from http://www.pagina12.com.ar/diario/ultimas/20-243543-2014-04-06.html

Just days after two teenage girls in Washington, D.C., were charged with a botched carjacking that led to the brutal death of an Uber Eats delivery driver, D.C. police arrested two more teens in another armed carjacking.

The two boys, ages 13 and 14, and both from Southeast D.C., were arrested Thursday evening and charged with armed carjacking, the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department said.

The carjacking occurred Thursday around 8:50 p.m. in the 100 Block of 42nd Street, Northeast, police said.

The victim was in the driver’s seat of their vehicle when two suspects approached. One suspect opened the vehicle door and assaulted the victim, police said. The victim got out and the second suspect also started to assault the victim.

One of the suspects produced a knife and they both got into the victim’s vehicle and fled the scene. Responding officers located the vehicle and arrested the two suspects. Police said there were additional suspects who fled the scene on foot.

MPD told Fox News that the vehicle was returned and towed by the owner. No additional arrests were made and the case is still under investigation. 

MARYLAND POLICE RELEASE BODYCAM VIDEO SHOWING OFFICERS BERATE KINDERGARTENER WHO RAN FROM SCHOOL

The boys’ arrest comes after horrifying video has emerged of the deadly botched carjacking by two teenage girls that also took place in D.C. last Monday. The footage is so graphic that Fox News has decided not to share it. 

The video, taken by a witness, shows the moment after two teen girls had entered the car of Mohammad Anwar, a 66-year-old Uber Eats delivery driver, with a Taser.

“This is my car!” Anwar can be heard shouting.

Other witnesses on the street can be heard calling for the cops. The car then drives forward, with Anwar halfway out of the car, pinned between the driver’s seat and door.

“She’s stealing the car!” witnesses can be heard shouting off-camera.

The car drives to an intersection, where it makes a sharp turn and crashes between two parked cars. Anwar was lunged forward and could be seen laying lifelessly on the pavement.

Mohammad Anwar was a Pakistani immigrant who came to the U.S. in 2014 to “create a better life for him and his family,” his family says.
(GoFundMe)

Two National Guard members who happened to be at the scene pulled the girls out of the car. One of the girls can be heard trying to get her phone as she walks past what appears to be Anwar’s lifeless body on the pavement without looking at him.

The two teens are each charged with felony murder and armed carjacking and are being held in custody pending their next court date on March 31.

DC POLICE INVESTIGATING NOOSE FOUND IN TREE NEAR CAPITOL HILL CHURCH

D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser drew heat on Sunday for retweeting a video on “preventing auto thefts” amid her silence on the death of Anwar. 

A screengrab of a now-deleted tweet by D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser
(Twitter)

“Auto theft is a crime of opportunity. Follow these steps to reduce the risk of your vehicle becoming a target. Remember the motto, #ProtectYourAuto,” Bowser wrote in the caption, provoking an instantaneous backlash.

By Sunday afternoon her tweet appeared to have been deleted. 

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Carjackings have been increasing significantly over the last few years. Statistics provided to Fox News show there were 95 carjackings between Jan. 1, 2021, and March 23, 2021 – up from 21 in total from the same time period in 2020. Last year saw a 143% increase in carjackings from 2019, according to the statistics. 

Fox News’ Evie Fordham contributed to this report

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/dc-police-charge-teen-boys-carjacking-video-botched-teen-girls-deadly-carjacking

CLOSE

President Donald Trump described his former personal attorney Michael Cohen’s congressional testimony as a “fake hearing.” On Wednesday in Washington, Cohen claimed the president is a “conman” who lied about his business interests with Russia. (Feb. 28)
AP

HANOI, Vietnam – President Donald Trump criticized the congressional testimony of his former lawyer Michael Cohen as “shameful” and accused Cohen of lying “a lot.”

Trump’s remarks Thursday came just hours after Cohen, during extraordinary testimony before a House committee, branded Trump as a “con man” and a racist and accused him of criminal wrongdoing.

Speaking to reporters at the end of his summit with North Korean President Kim Jong Un i, Trump said he watched some of Cohen’s testimony before the House Oversight and Reform Committee on Wednesday.

“It was pretty shameful, I think,” Trump said.

Trump called the hearing “a fake hearing” and blasted the committee for holding it during his denuclearization talks with Kim.

“Having it during this very important summit is sort of incredible,” Trump said.

Cohen “lied a lot” in his testimony, Trump said. But he said he was surprised that Cohen did not accuse his presidential campaign of colluding with the Russians during the 2016 election.

“He didn’t lie about one thing: He said no collusion with the Russian hoax,” Trump said.

“I was actually impressed he didn’t say I think there was collusion for this reason or that,” Trump said. “… I was a little impressed by that frankly.”

In testimony that was both combative and contrite, Cohen tied the White House more directly than ever to multiple investigations that have shadowed Trump’s presidency.

Cohen told the congressional panel that Trump knew in advance that WikiLeaks planned to release stolen emails damaging to political rival Hillary Clinton.

Cohen said Trump personally reimbursed Cohen for an illegal hush-money payment to porn star Stormy Daniels and testified the president indirectly encouraged him to lie to Congress about his pursuit of a potentially lucrative Trump Tower development in Moscow – even as Trump repeatedly denied any business interests in Russia throughout the 2016 campaign.

CLOSE

President Donald Trump’s former personal lawyer tells Congress that Trump knew ahead of time that WikiLeaks had emails damaging to Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign, and he testified that Trump is a “racist,” a “conman” and a “cheat.” (Feb. 27)
AP

In another potentially damaging revelation, Cohen suggested that Trump knew in advance of a June 2016 meeting at Trump Tower, headed by Donald Trump Jr., in which a Russian lawyer promised to provide damaging information on Clinton.

Cohen provided the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee with documents that appeared to back up some of his claims, including a $35,000 check signed by Trump.

Cohen said the personal check, signed during the first year of his presidency, was one of 11 “installment” payments to reimburse him for the hush money payment to adult film star Daniels, who claims to have had an affair with Trump.

Trump’s defenders on the committee blasted Cohen as a pathological liar and pointed out repeatedly that he has pleaded guilty to a string of financial crimes and for lying to Congress. Cohen is to begin a three-year prison term on those charges on May 6.

More: ‘He was telling me to lie.’ Michael Cohen delivers searing testimony about President Trump

More: While in Hanoi, Donald Trump attacks Michael Cohen before testimony

More: From threatening schools to racist remarks: Takeaways from Michael Cohen’s testimony on Trump

More: Trump-Kim summit: Fact checking Donald Trump’s claims about North Korea

More: Here’s the evidence Michael Cohen shared with Congress, showing hush money payments and Trump’s finances

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/02/28/michael-cohen-trump-calls-ex-lawyers-testimony-shameful/3004723002/

The Republican ranking member of the Judiciary Committee sent a letter to the Democratic committee chairman on Saturday requesting extra witnesses be added to the panel Wednesday at the committee’s first impeachment hearing. Congressman Doug Collins also asked that Republicans have the opportunity to select some of the witnesses.

“To ensure fairness and restore integrity to the ongoing impeachment process, I request an expanded panel and a balanced composition of academic witnesses to opine on the subject matter at issue during the hearing,” Collins wrote in his letter to Chairman Jerry Nadler. Four academic experts are scheduled to appear on Wednesday, although the identities of those witnesses are not yet publicly known.

Collins noted in his letter that the House Judiciary Committee called two panels, consisting of ten and nine experts each, during the 1998 impeachment inquiry against former President Bill Clinton.

“I request that you expand the number of witnesses called upon to testify on December 4 to give the American people a wider array of perspectives regarding impeachment. I further request that you equally allocate those witnesses to the majority and minority’s choosing,” Collins said.

Collins hinted at the identity of one of the witnesses called by the Democrats on the committee, citing an article by Harvard Law Professor Laurence Tribe where Tribe called for Mr. Trump’s impeachment in 2017. Tribe also wrote a book on impeachment in 2018.

“The Committee must ensure it maintains its credibility and its historically preeminent role in the impeachment of presidents by not rushing to articles of impeachment or hearing only from scholars with demonstrated animosity towards the president,” Collins wrote, indicating that Tribe is one of the witnesses called to appear on Wednesday.

“An equal distribution of experts for the December 4 hearing would be a small concession to demonstrate to the American people this impeachment inquiry is not merely political theater,” Collins concluded.

Nadler sent a letter to President Trump inviting him and his counsel to participate in the hearing on December 4. He also sent a letter to Mr. Trump on Friday giving the president a deadline of December 6 to participate in any impeachment proceedings by the Judiciary Committee.

The White House is unlikely to send legal representation to the first impeachment hearing by the Judiciary Committee. The first day of hearings in the House Judiciary Committee, Mr. Trump is expected to be in London for the final day of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) summit.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/impeachment-inquiry-doug-collins-requests-extra-witnesses-at-first-judiciary-committee-hearing-2019-11-30/

Thomas Fuller
June 8, 2022

With 100,000 votes counted, the San Francisco Board of Elections put votes for the recall of Chesa Boudin, the district attorney, at 61 percent. At the pro-recall watch party, the crowd erupted with elation, shouting, “Sixty-one! Sixty-one!”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2022/06/07/us/elections/results-california.html