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Airlines are planning for the possibility that Boeing’s beleaguered 737 Max commercial jetliners will remain out of commission late into the fall, as the company works to fix a host of technical problems that have rendered the planes grounded since early March.

The three U.S. airlines that operate Max jets — American Airlines, United and Southwest — announced in recent days they will cancel 737 Max flights through Nov. 2, Nov. 3 and Oct. 1, respectively, affecting hundreds of flights every day. The new cancellation dates reflect a significant revision from an expected summer timeline presented as a conservative estimate.

The airlines are waiting for the Federal Aviation Administration to sign off on a Boeing-designed software fix for a flight control system that played a role in two deadly crashes. That fix was originally expected to be delivered no later than April, according to an FAA directive issued in early March, but the process has been complicated by the discovery of other technical problems.

A Boeing official, speaking on the condition of anonymity because the person was not authorized to publicly discuss the issue, said the company now expects to submit all of its required software updates for approval by the end of September. That could pave the way for the jets return to regular flight in November, the Boeing official said. American Airlines executives say the company remains confident the plane will be recertified to fly before the end of the year.

That timeline assumes, however, that regulators do not find additional problems with the jet or its related software fixes. The FAA has declined to offer a firm timeline or even estimate when it expects to lift its grounding order for the Max.

“The FAA is following a thorough process, not a prescribed timeline, for returning the Boeing 737 Max to passenger service,” FAA spokesman Lynn Lunsford said Sunday. “The FAA will lift the aircraft’s prohibition order when we deem it is safe to do so.”

The 737 Max is the newest version of a long-trusted Boeing jetliner. It was pitched as an even more fuel-efficient version of Boeing’s best-selling plane, an improvement that was made possible by changes to the plane’s engines.

There was a concern the new design would cause the plane’s nose to tip upward and lead to a stall. So Boeing added a new flight control system called the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS) that can, in certain rare but dangerous situations, override pilots’ controls and automatically tip the nose of the plane downward.

This change was not made known to pilots flying the planes until weeks after a deadly crash killed 189 people in Indonesia in October. Then, in early March, another Boeing Max jet went down in Ethiopia under similar circumstances, killing 157 people.

Regulators across the globe grounded the plane soon after the second crash, and Boeing and the FAA announced they had been working on a software fix designed to account for the MCAS. That update is finished, according to a Boeing official speaking on the condition of anonymity because the person was not authorized to discuss the issue publicly.

Then, in early April, Boeing disclosed to The Washington Post that it had discovered an additional software issue related to the plane’s flaps and other flight-control hardware. And in June, the FAA discovered an entirely new safety problem with the 737 Max, requiring the company to undertake yet another software fix.

The grounding has taken a sharp financial toll on U.S. airlines and their customers. Flight cancellations are expected to affect about 115 flights per day at American Airlines, 150 flights per day at Southwest and a total of roughly 5,000 flights at United during the expected grounding.

Fenit Nirappil contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2019/07/14/airlines-cancel-thousands-flights-boeing-works-fix-max-software-problems/

Convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, currently facing charges of sex trafficking and conspiracy, had powerful political friends and partners on a global scale, including former Prime Minister of Israel Ehud Barak.

On Israel’s version of “Meet the Press” Sunday morning, Barak defended his business ties with Epstein, saying he had no idea that the wealthy financier was convicted of prostitution involving a minor.

“He’d served his sentence for soliciting prostitution — the indictment didn’t say she was a minor,” Barak said, according to the Miami Herald. “The American system itself did not label him as a persona non grata…the secretary who just resigned in the Trump administration was the prosecutor and he said he’d been negligent — so you expect me to have noticed?”

The initial plea bargain Epstein signed, along with US Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta, who announced he will be stepping down Friday, had Epstein plead guilty to a count of soliciting prostitution and a count of soliciting prostitution from a minor in Palm Beach, Florida. He was allowed to avoid federal prosecution as a result of the deal.

The non-prosecution agreement was revealed to the public in 2009, after which dozens of accusers filed civil lawsuits against Epstein. Acosta’s resignation was accompanied by public backlash after the Miami Herald published a series exposing the nature of the plea deal and its ramifications.

FILE – In this July 30, 2008 file photo, Jeffrey Epstein, center, appears in court in West Palm Beach, Fla. The wealthy financier pleaded not guilty in federal court in New York on Monday, July 8, 2019, to sex trafficking charges following his arrest over the weekend. Epstein will have to remain behind bars until his bail hearing on July 15. (Uma Sanghvi/Palm Beach Post via AP, File)
Associated Press

Read more: Jeffrey Epstein paid $350,000 to 2 potential witnesses who might have testified against him, prosecutors say

Israeli news publication Haaretz reported that Epstein invested millions of dollar into an Israeli start-up company called Carbyne, of which Barak is the controlling shareholder and chairman of the board. Barak posted on Facebook indicating that he may cut financial ties with Epstein.

“For almost five years, a company associated with Epstein has been a passive investor in a limited partnership, legally registered in Israel and under my control,” Barak wrote, according to Haaretz. “Every investor in this partnership is bound by the same commercial contract.

Barak added, “As soon as the present charges related to Epstein became known, I instructed my lawyers to examine the options we have for expelling the company associated with Epstein from this partnership.”

Carbyne offers a live video and audio transmission service to emergency call centers that enables precise information regarding the location and reliability of callers to be transmitted.

The current Prime Minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, has tweeted about the link between Epstein and Barak, including one tweet where he said Barak should be investigated “immediately,” and others where he insinuated that Barak may have been involved in the assaults of underage girls or the sex trafficking operation itself.

Barak responded on Twitter, with the Miami Herald translating Barak’s tweet as “You don’t have to investigate — I confess. I gave a second chance, both to Epstein and to Bibi [Netanyahu]. Both are now neck-deep in criminality. I expect both to recuse themselves until the truth is ascertained.”

Barak also said during his Israel TV appearance that Netanyahu’s comments were political “spin,” and warned the left not to “fall into this trap,” The Times of Israel reported.

Epstein’s accusers have testified that the financier recruited underaged girls around the world, and that he leveraged his wealth and connections to extend his sex trafficking operation.

Epstein’s circle includes former US President Bill Clinton and current President Donald Trump, along with high-profile business owners, socialites, celebrities, and scientists. Epstein is the only person accused of crimes in the current indictment.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/epstein-former-israel-prime-minister-barak-defends-business-ties-with-2019-7

PHILADELPHIA — Rep. Rashida Tlaib stood firm in her conviction that President Trump will be impeached while speaking to an audience of liberals Saturday.

“We’re going to impeach the MF’er, don’t worry!” she said to huge applause at Netroots Nation, echoing a line from January that drew criticism for its profanity.

“I will not back down impeaching this lawless president. He will not be above the law and get away with it on my watch,” the Michigan Democrat said. “Stay strong. Stay strong on this. If we don’t call him out, if we don’t push for this … who is going to be the next crooked CEO that runs for president? You know they’re coming.”

Tlaib made waves in January when just hours after being sworn in she told a liberal gathering, “We’re gonna go in and impeach the motherf—er.”

Rep. Ilhan Omar, who appeared with Tlaib on stage, called Trump “the king of distraction.”

“It’s a constant pile of garbage that comes out of his mouth,” the Minnesota Democrat said. “He has pushed us down to a level of elementary — I think it’s not even elementary. It’s preschool playground.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has so far resisted an impeachment inquiry into Trump, believing it could be risky for Democrats in the upcoming election.

Oregon Sen. Jeff Merkley said Friday he’s worried time is running out to impeach Trump but acknowledged that the Republican-controlled Senate is unlikely to hold a trial or convict Trump even if he is impeached by the House, which is majority Democrat.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/rashida-tlaib-were-going-to-impeach-the-mfer-dont-worry

As tensions rise between Iran, the United States and its allies, the BBC has been given rare access to Iran.

Iranians remain furious that President Donald Trump pulled out of the nuclear deal last year and has imposed crushing sanctions on the country.

Our correspondent Martin Patience, along with cameraman Nik Millard and producer Cara Swift, have been in Tehran and the holy city of Qom, talking to Iranians about the escalating crisis.

While in country, recording access was controlled – as with all foreign media the team was accompanied by a government representative at all times.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-48981874/inside-iran-iranians-on-trump-and-the-nuclear-deal

The Trump administration has begun immigration raids as part of an operation expected to target 2,000 immigrants over the few days, a senior U.S. official told NBC News on Sunday.

So far, the pace has started slow; the official confirmed a handful of arrests had taken place, but the exact number was not immediately clear. The raids are expected to target as many as 10 cities.

Earlier Sunday afternoon, there was little evidence of massive immigration enforcement operations, as immigrant communities prepared for their arrival.

Two senior Department of Homeland Security officials told NBC News last week that the raids, which had been postponed several weeks ago, were scheduled to take place on Sunday. But the administration altered its plans from a large-scale sweep to a smaller set of arrests over the coming week after news reports informed immigrant communities about the raids, The New York Times reported Sunday, citing several current and former Department of Homeland Security officials familiar with the operation.

Ruthie Epstein, the deputy director for immigration policy at the American Civil Liberties Union, told NBC News that the group had not heard anything from its networks as of Sunday afternoon, but were closely monitoring the situation.

In New York City, Mayor Bill de Blasio said Sunday afternoon that there was “literally no activity yet today” on the expected raids.

“At this moment, nothing,” he said.

There were three confirmed situations involving Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents on Saturday, he said. It was unclear if those incidents were part of the planned nationwide raids.

“We’re convinced that’s what it was,” de Blasio said, adding that the agents did not find the individuals they were seeking.

De Blasio tweeted Saturday that his office received reports of “reportedly unsuccessful ICE enforcement actions” in the neighborhoods of Harlem and Sunset Park. Volunteers also handed out flyers in those neighborhoods explaining immigrants’ rights.

Melissa Chua, associate director of immigrant protection at the New York Legal Assistance Group, said Sunday that her group and its partners had not heard any reported raids in New York City as of the early afternoon.

Trump administration defends raids

Trump administration officials earlier Sunday defended the need for planned immigration raids even as they remained tight-lipped about details on the widespread action.

Ken Cuccinelli, acting director of U.S. Customs and Immigration Services, said Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union” that he would not divulge any operational details of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids, additionally choosing not to answer a question about whether immigrant families will be separated.

“In the same way I wasn’t willing to talk about operational details, that would be an operational detail that I’m not going to comment on,” he said. “There are a million people, including families, with removal orders. They’re — the priority remains for ICE to get at criminals.”

Cuccinelli emphasized that the agency was prioritizing violent criminals, as opposed to the undocumented immigrant population in general.

ICE did not respond to requests for comment about the expoected raids.

Acting ICE Director Matt Albence told Fox News on Sunday that while he would not discuss the specifics of the raids, the agency is “doing targeted enforcement actions against specific individuals who have had their day in immigration court and have been ordered to be removed by an immigration judge.”

Asked on “Fox News Sunday” how many people ICE is targeting, White House counselor Kellyanne Conway also said she wouldn’t “discuss operational details” and added that ICE “does this every single day; it’s called enforcement action.”

Communities brace for enforcement action

Meanwhile, community organizations began to make preparations for the expected raids. In Houston, a string of churches, a number of them African American, opened their doors for anyone wanting to take refuge. The churches also assembled supplies to deliver to families too afraid to leave their residences for groceries or other necessities.

R.C. Stearns, a pastor at Living Water International Apostolic Ministries, said Saturday that he and other church leaders are offering the refuge because “it’s what Christ would do.”

Stearns said he and others were praying that the president would have a change of heart.

In the weeks since Trump announced planned raids, and then delayed them, Congress passed a $4.6 billion emergency spending bill to provide resources and support for the influx of asylum-seekers on the southern border.

“We’re in the midst of food, water, baby supplies, household utensils and a place of refuge,” Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas, said at a news conference Saturday announcing the churches’ preparations. “We are standing with pastors who have committed to opening their doors if there are people who are in jeopardy where they are.”

“This order of mass deportation is being used as a political toy,” she said.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/immigration/acting-uscis-head-ken-cuccinelli-defends-ice-raids-mum-details-n1029721

Tyler Holland guides his bike through the water as winds from Tropical Storm Barry push water from Lake Pontchartrain over the seawall Saturday.

David J. Phillip/AP


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Tyler Holland guides his bike through the water as winds from Tropical Storm Barry push water from Lake Pontchartrain over the seawall Saturday.

David J. Phillip/AP

A weakened Tropical Storm Barry continued to drench parts of Louisiana on Sunday as it creeped northward over the western part of the state, with officials warning of strong wind gusts and flooding as tens of thousands remained without power.

Although Barry was losing steam since it touched down on the Louisiana coast Saturday, the National Weather Service still warned of ongoing dangers posed by storm surges and the possibility of tornadoes in areas including parts of Louisiana and Mississippi.

“This storm still has a long way to go before it leaves the state,” Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said. “We still have a significant amount of rain coming our way.”

Forecasters say rainfall estimates over south-central Louisiana now stand around 6 to 12 inches, with isolated maximum rainfall reaching as much as 20 inches, causing the potential for “dangerous, life-threatening flooding.”

Barry was briefly a Category 1 hurricane but the system weakened to a tropical storm. And on Sunday, maximum sustained winds were expected to remain around 45 mph, mostly near the coast.

The NWS expect Barry to weaken to a tropical depression later Sunday.

With the slow-moving system carrying such heavy downpours into the saturated ground and along rivers and streams already at high levels, Louisiana Gov. Edwards said now is not the time for residents to act like the they are out of the woods just yet.

“Some people may think that the threat is over. Some people may be tempted to think that because it was a Category 1 when it came ashore and has already been downgraded to a tropical storm, that it does not present a threat,” Edwards said. “That is not the case.”

As Barry moved inland, water was spilling over levees in Terrebonne and Plaquemines parishes, according to AccuWeather, which has been tracking the storm. Mandatory evacuations were ordered for all areas along Louisiana Highway 315.

Gov. Edwards said Saturday night that levees overtopping have been addressed and are no longer a concern.

More than 130,000 customers in Louisiana remained without power early Sunday, according to poweroutage.us. Many businesses remain closed, air travel experienced delays and conventions planned in the area have been cut short. The Coast Guard closed the Mississippi River to shipping traffic.

The storm is also impacting America’s energy industry. About 300 offshore oil and gas rigs and platforms have been evacuated, resulting in a 70% drop in oil production and the about a natural gas usually produced in the Gulf has been cut in half, according to Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement.

As the storm moved north, officials at the Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport announced Sunday that most airlines are resuming normal operations. “If you have travel scheduled today, check with your airlines directly for the most accurate info. Arrive 2+ hours early as we may see long lines,” airport officials said.

Louisiana’s National Guard had some 3,000 soldiers deployed around the state. And Coast Guard helicopters have conducted rescues, as people on Saturday sought safety on rooftops and other high places as downpours pounded the area.

NPR’s Debbie Elliott contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/07/14/741586366/a-weakened-tropical-storm-barry-creeps-north-but-heavy-rain-remains-a-major-conc

ICE plans to sweep major cities on Sunday in a series of raids as part of an effort to detain 2,000 immigrants who have been issued final orders of removal.

The raids were originally scheduled for June at President Donald Trump’s request; however, the president postponed them shortly before they were set to begin to give Congress time to craft immigration reform legislation. Trump threatened to move forward with the raids if the legislative branch failed to make progress within two weeks.

That deadline has now passed, and ICE officials announced last week that the agency would raid cities including Atlanta, Baltimore, Chicago, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, New Orleans, New York, and San Francisco beginning Sunday. Because of Tropical Storm Barry, the raids on New Orleans and Houston will reportedly be postponed.

The original raids were scheduled to being in the early morning; however Sunday’s planned raids seemingly got off to a quiet start, with with immigration advocates saying that many targeted communities had seen little movement from authorities.

“I can’t help but feel like we are waiting for the other shoe to drop,” Adonia Simpson, director of family defense for the nonprofit Americans for Immigrant Justice told the Miami Herald. “Given the anxiety I have been feeling, I can only imagine the fear our immigrant communities feel this morning.”

Ahead of the raids, local governments and pro-immigrant groups created advisories to inform immigrants of their rights when dealing with ICE.

What we know

  • ICE agents began operations in Harlem and Brooklyn Saturday evening. The ICE officials were reportedly turned away by residents because they did not have warrants.
  • Agents were reportedly seen in Immokalee, a Florida community 35 miles east of Fort Myers, Friday evening knocking on doors in an immigrant community.
  • Acting director of US Citizenship and Immigration Services Ken Cuccinelli refused to tell CNN’s Jake Tapper if the raids have officially started: “I can’t speak to operation specifics and won’t.”
  • Cuccinelli also said the raids would prioritize the deportation of people Tapper referred to as “dangerous criminals;” however, the acting director said those criminals “will not be the exclusive limit of any operation.”
  • Finally, Cuccinelli declined to say whether ICE will make efforts to ensure parents are not separated from their children during raids.
  • ICE facilities and offices in cities like Chicago and Baltimore reportedly showed no signs of activity as of early Sunday morning. Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms told MSNBC her city was on alert, but that as of 9 am EST, “We’ve not heard anything.”

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2019/7/14/20693654/ice-raids-deportation-10-cities-donald-trump-immigration-what-we-know

New York City tried to regain its footing Sunday after the restoration of power from a massive blackout late into Saturday night amid questions of how the outage happened. 

Utility company Con Edison said in a statement the final impacted customers from the outage – which affected more than 72,000 customers along 30 blocks from Times Square to the Upper West Side – had their power restored just before midnight after blackouts that began at 6:47 p.m. on Saturday.  

“Over the next several days and weeks, our engineers and planners will carefully examine the data and equipment performance relating to this event, and will share our findings with regulators and the public,” the company said in a statement on Sunday. 

Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who deployed New York state troopers during the outage, said Sunday that he was going to tour the transformer that caused the power failure with Con Edison Chairman John McAvoy to figure out exactly what happened. 

“We have to have a system that is designed to handle disruptions and rather than domino, we have a redundancy in this system so this doesn’t happen,” Cuomo said. “… And that’s what we’re going to work on and I want to see with my own Queens eyes the transformer that started it all.”

Mayor Bill de Blasio said police confirmed there was no foul play involved and that the outage was caused by a “mechanical issue.” 

New York City power outage: Here’s what we know about the widespread blackout

Power restored: Partial New York City blackout leaves thousands without electricity

The outage, which came 42 years to the day after The Great Blackout of 1977 dimmed most of Manhattan, shut down Broadway shows and a Jennifer Lopez concert at Madison Square Garden, gridlocked streets as drivers attempted to navigate without traffic lights and left stunned tourists and residents wandering darkened sidewalks.  

Jay Apt, professor and co-director of the Carnegie Mellon Electricity Industry Center, told USA TODAY there will always be some unreliability in the electric power system.

“Power outages are a factor of our life in the power system,” Apt said. “There’s no way to make the power system completely invulnerable.”

Apt said some cities especially prone to longer power outages, for example those afflicted by hurricanes, decide to have power backup for services like ATMs. New York City officials need to decide whether services such as traffic lights, which failed in the outage Saturday, are essential to backup, Apt said. 

“Every city has to make an assessment about whether emergency preparedness requires backup and things aren’t perfect,” Apt said. 

Some Broadway casts and Carnegie Hall performers declared the show must go on. One Twitter user tweeted a video of the cast of Hamilton singing out the windows of the Rogers theater after the show was canceled. 

Another user tweeted a video of an impromptu Carnegie Hall concert on the street for patrons after being evacuated from the concert hall. 

Many New Yorkers out and about on the West side of Manhattan got caught in the chaos. Karen Janowsky, a vendor selling ponchos at a street fair in Rockefeller Center, said her setup equipment was stolen while she went to her car to pack her ponchos. The power went out just before she got to the car.

“I was alone and I couldn’t get to everything, so they stole my stuff,” she said. “It was chaos, with fire engines and people packing the streets. When the lights went out, I was one minute from getting my car in the garage.” 

May Martinez, an Inwood resident, told The New York Times she got stuck on an A train during the power outage. 

“It was scary,” she said. “We were just wondering — are we going to sleep here?”

 The Metropolitan Transportation Authority said the outage caused “extensive delays on many subway lines.”

“Thank you all for sticking with us tonight,” the subway service tweeted Saturday. “Thank you to the thousands of public servants across New York City who worked hard to get everything back the way it should be for everyone. Have a good night and take care.” 

Contributing: The Associated Press

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/07/14/new-york-city-outage-power-restored-but-questions-remain/1728170001/

LONDON (AP) — A U.K. newspaper published more leaked memos from Britain’s ambassador in Washington on Sunday, despite a police warning that doing so might be a crime.

In one 2018 cable published by the Mail on Sunday, U.K. ambassador Kim Darroch says President Donald Trump pulled out of an international nuclear deal with Iran as an act of “diplomatic vandalism” to spite his predecessor, Barack Obama.

The memo was written after then-Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson visited Washington in a failed attempt to persuade the U.S. not to abandon the Iran nuclear agreement.

RELATED: Boris Johnson




“The outcome illustrated the paradox of this White House: you got exceptional access, seeing everyone short of the president; but on the substance, the administration is set upon an act of diplomatic vandalism, seemingly for ideological and personality reasons – it was Obama’s deal,” Darroch wrote.

Darroch announced his resignation last week after the newspaper published cables in which he’d branded the Trump administration dysfunctional and inept. The White House responded by refusing to deal with him, and Trump branded the ambassador a “pompous fool” in a Twitter fusillade.

U.K. police are hunting the culprits behind the leak — and, contentiously, have warned journalists that publishing the documents “could also constitute a criminal offence.”

Yet both Johnson and Jeremy Hunt, the two contenders to become Britain’s next prime minister, have defended the media’s right to publish.

“We have to make sure that we defend the right of journalists to publish leaks when they are in the national interest,” Hunt said.

British officials have said they have no evidence that hacking was involved in the documents’ release, and that the culprit is likely to be found among politicians or civil servants in London.

Police are investigating the leak as a potential breach of the Official Secrets Act, which bars public servants from making “damaging” disclosures of classified material. Breaking the act carries a maximum sentence of two years in prison, though prosecutions are rare.

Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/07/14/leaked-uk-memo-says-trump-axed-iran-deal-to-spite-obama/23769228/

Justice Clarence Thomas sits for an official photo with other members of the Supreme Court.

Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images


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Justice Clarence Thomas sits for an official photo with other members of the Supreme Court.

Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

On the U.S. Supreme Court, where nine justices often disagree but try to meld their views into majority decisions, one justice stands out.

Clarence Thomas, the longest-serving member of the current court — and its only African American — has views that perhaps can be described only as unique.

Some court watchers, however, use other terms: idiosyncratic, eccentric, provocative, thoughtful and yes, wacky.

“He’s gone through all sorts of different ideologies in his life,” observes Yale Law School professor Akhil Amar. “In law school, he was a Black Panther type, a black power extremist of a certain sort. Now, he defines the right wing of the United States Supreme Court.”

As he has in the past, Thomas this term has charted a course that is, at times, breathtakingly different from those of his colleagues. While he wrote eight majority opinions for the court this term, it was his 18 dissenting and concurring opinions that raised eyebrows.

An array of extraordinary opinions

In Thomas’ most eye-catching separate decisions this term, he only occasionally attracted the vote of even one other justice. Here’s a selection:

  • He dissented when the court invalidated the conviction of a black man tried six times for the same crime by the same prosecutor with juries that were either all white or nearly all white.
  • He once again wrote that the constitution’s ban on government establishment of religion does not apply to the states — in other words, that states are free to prefer or endorse one religion over another.
  • He twice called on the court to reverse its abortion decisions, in one case going further to link birth control and Planned Parenthood to the eugenics movement of a century ago.
  • For the first time, he called for overturning Gideon v. Wainwright, the 1963 landmark decision requiring that criminal defendants too poor to pay for a lawyer be provided an attorney paid for by the government.
  • In another first, he called for overturning the 1964 landmark freedom-of-the-press decision New York Times v. Sullivan, which set in place standards to make it more difficult for public figures to sue for libel without proof that falsehoods were knowingly published.

The Trump-Thomas duo

Thomas’ newfound objection to a landmark libel decision that has been reaffirmed countless times was not joined by any other justice, but it does coincide with President Trump’s views.

Trump, as a private citizen, repeatedly and unsuccessfully tried to sue his critics in the media. And he has made no secret of his fury over the state of the nation’s libel laws.

At a campaign rally in 2016, Trump attacked the New York Times and the Washington Post, declaring, “I’m gonna open up our libel laws, so when they write purposely negative and horrible and false articles, we can sue them and win lots of money.”

It is a pledge he has frequently repeated since then.

Trump has been particularly solicitous of Thomas and his wife, Ginni, a vocal conservative activist. The Thomases dined with the Trumps at the White House earlier this year; soon thereafter, Ginni Thomas led a one-hour meeting between the president and a group of her fellow hard-line socially conservative activists.

The Trump-Thomas relationship may have been responsible for retirement rumors, fueled by some conservatives, who apparently wanted the 71-year-old Thomas to step down so that Trump could replace him with a younger conservative appointee for decades longer.

If that was the plan, it didn’t work, as Thomas made clear during an appearance at Pepperdine University when he was asked what he might say at his retirement party in 20 years.

“But I’m not retiring,” he told the interviewer, who queried, “Not in 20 years?”

“No,” replied Thomas with a laugh.

“Not in 30 years?” the interviewer persisted.

“No,” added Thomas, emphatically.

Now, nobody really thinks Thomas will still be on the Supreme Court when he is 101, but in this and other appearances, he has quite clearly rejected the idea of retiring anytime soon.

Theories from black nationalism to originalism

In each of his 28 years on the nation’s highest court, Thomas has seen critics and supporters alike positing different theories about his jurisprudence.

Brooklyn College professor Corey Robin, author of the forthcoming book The Enigma of Clarence Thomas, contends that Thomas’ overriding legal philosophy stems from his views as a “black nationalist.”

“The way I understand Thomas is that he believes that the American state, in particular, is imbued with race and racial consciousness,” Robin said, “and he thinks it’s kind of a fool’s errand to try to change that.”

In Robin’s view, Thomas’ dissent in this term’s jury discrimination case fits in perfectly. The solution to white prosecutors trying to exclude black jurors because of their race is to allow defense lawyer to exclude white jurors because of their race too.

An entirely different view of Thomas comes from Ralph Rossum, a professor at Claremont McKenna College and author of Understanding Clarence Thomas. Rossum said Thomas disdains prior Supreme Court rulings, because they get him further and further away from the original Constitution.

“If you have a finely wrought piece of furniture, and you put layer and layer of paint on it, pretty soon all the detail is lost under the coats of paint,” Rossum said, “and what Thomas wants to do is scrape back to bare wood, to the original text” of the Constitution.

But even the man who made originalism popular, the late Justice Antonin Scalia, did not have such a purist view. Unlike Thomas, he did believe in precedent. As he famously put it, “I am an originalist, but I’m not a nut.”

Supreme Court precedents are the building blocks of the law and of an ordered society, said University of Baltimore law professor Garrett Epps. He sees Thomas’ view of precedent as arrogant.

As an example, he points go a 1995 concurring opinion in which Thomas referred to James Madison’s views on separation of church and state as “extreme” and said that “in any event the views of one man do not establish the original meaning of the First Amendment” religion clauses.

“Wait a minute,” said Epps, his voice rising, “you just called James Madison, the father of the Bill of Rights … you just called him an extremist, particularly in the area of religious freedom, which is the area he is most identified with.”

Epps maintains that if you read Thomas’ jurisprudence, the views of only one man count — his own. Thomas “alone knows the original meaning of these provisions,” Epps said, “and even Madison, who wrote them, can be disregarded.”

Epps added, “Now that, takes a level of confidence or megalomania that I find really breathtaking.”

The measure of success

It is, however, important not to dismiss Thomas’ views. Yale’s Amar acknowledges that Thomas has not written many high-visibility majority opinions for the court, but that may not be what matters most at this moment with a newly conservative court majority.

“If you think that the measure of success of a justice is how many majority opinions he writes, well then Thomas ranks somewhat lower,” Amar said. “But if instead the game is scored by how many new ideas someone gets into the conversation, and eventually wins on, well, then Thomas is way high in the pecking order.”

Thomas, for instance, did not write the court’s landmark decision in 2008 declaring for the first time that the Second Amendment right to bear arms includes an individual right to own a gun in one’s home for self defense. Scalia wrote that decision, but the first justice to propose that idea was Thomas, in a concurring opinion 11 years earlier.

Still, Amar draws a distinction between the gun-rights decision and other decisions that Thomas criticized this term. The right to a fair trial guaranteed by the Constitution is so “foundational,” Amara said, and so embraced by courts and scholars that he thinks it “unimaginable” that the Supreme Court would repudiate either Gideon v. Wainwright‘s right to counsel decision or a line of decisions barring race discrimination in jury selection.

Similarly, he thinks it “unimaginable” that the Supreme Court would repudiate its landmark libel decision, or that it would rethink its religion doctrine to allow state governments to prefer one religion over another.

But: “The one area where Justice Thomas might very well have five votes is abortion,” Amar said, adding, “That is the proverbial elephant in the room.”

But if the new conservative Supreme Court majority starts rethinking major and long-established precedents in other areas, Thomas will be leading the way.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/07/14/740027295/clarence-thomas-from-black-panther-type-to-supreme-court-s-most-conservative-mem

NEW YORK (AP) — A power outage crippled the tourist-filled heart of Manhattan just as Saturday night Broadway shows were set to go on, sending theater-goers spilling into the streets, knocking out Times Square’s towering electronic screens and bringing subway lines to a near halt.

The New York City Fire Department said a transformer fire at West 64th Street and West End Avenue affected hundreds of thousands of customers along a 30-block stretch from Times Square to about 72nd Street and Broadway.

The fire started just before 7 p.m. Saturday, authorities said.

Con Edison officials restored electricity to customers and businesses primarily on Manhattan’s Upper West Side just before midnight.

The temperature was in the low 80s as the sun set, but not as steaming as Manhattan can get in July, challenging the city’s power grid.

Power went out early Saturday evening at much of Rockefeller Center, reaching the Upper West Side and knocking out traffic lights.

The outage comes on the anniversary of the 1977 New York City outage that left most of the city without power.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a statement that although no injuries were reported, “the fact that it happened at all is unacceptable.” He said the state Department of Public Service will investigate.

Most Broadway musicals and plays canceled their Saturday evening shows, including “Hadestown,” which last month won the Tony Award for best musical. Several cast members from the musical “Come From Away” held an impromptu performance in the street outside the theater for disappointed audience members.

Emily Totero, 30, planned to bring out-of-town guests to see “Moulin Rouge.” But once they got to the theater district, they saw the power go out.

“You could see all the theater lights across the street, all the marquees went out. That’s what we noticed first,” she said.




The outage also hit Madison Square Garden, where Jennifer Lopez was performing Saturday night. Attendees said the concert went dark about 9:30 p.m. in the middle of Lopez’s fourth song of the night. The arena was later evacuated. And at Penn Station, officials were using backup generators to keep the lights on.

When the lights went out early Saturday evening, thousands of people streamed out of darkened Manhattan buildings, crowding Broadway next to bumper-to-bumper traffic.

People in the neighborhood commonly known as Hell’s Kitchen began directing traffic themselves as stoplights and walking signs went dark.

Ginger Tidwell, a dance teacher and Upper West Side resident, was about to order at a West Side diner on Broadway and West 69th Street just before 7 p.m.

“When the lights started flickering, and then were out, we got up and left, walking up Broadway with all the traffic lights out and businesses dark,” she said.

But once they got to West 72nd Street, they found another diner that was open and had power.

“It was still sunny and everyone just came out to the street because they lost power and air conditioning; it was super-crowded,” she said. “Everyone was hanging out on the street on a nice night. All you could hear was firetrucks up and down Broadway. All of Broadway was without traffic lights.”

Karen Janowsky, a vendor selling ponchos at a street fair on Sixth Avenue in Rockefeller Center, got caught in the blackout just as she was wrapping up for the day and taking some of the goods to her car parked in a garage two blocks away on West 49th Street. That kept her from driving her car to get the tables, chairs and racks — all gone before she could rush back to get them

“I was alone and I couldn’t get to everything, so they stole my stuff,” she said, adding that she had no idea who the people who took her things may have been. “It was chaos, with fire engines and people packing the streets. When the lights went out, I was one minute from getting my car in the garage.”

She lost about $400 worth of setup equipment for her goods.

“I’ve been stranded for the last three hours,” Janowsky. “I have another fair tomorrow, and I don’t know what I’m going to do.”

___

Associated Press reporters Michael Sisak and Leezel Tanglao contributed to this report.

___

This story has been corrected to show the impromptu performance was by “Come From Away” cast members, not “Hadestown.”

Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/07/14/power-outage-kos-broadway-times-square/23769161/

Barry Williams talks to a friend on his smartphone as he wades through storm surge from Lake Pontchartrain on Lakeshore Drive in Mandeville, La., as Hurricane Barry approaches Saturday, July 13, 2019. After briefly becoming a Category 1 hurricane, the system quickly weakened to a tropical storm as it made landfall near Intracoastal City, Louisiana, about 160 miles (257km) west of New Orleans, with its winds falling to 70 mph (112km), the National Hurricane Center said. (AP Photo/Matthew Hinton)

Source Article from https://madison.com/gallery/news/national/see-how-barry-is-drenching-the-gulf-coast-but-sparing/collection_9b279cf6-1ee4-5ff3-b453-5360c898400f.html

CLOSE

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Republican leader Kevin McCarthy clashed Thursday over a planned nationwide immigration enforcement operation expected to begin this weekend targeting people who are in the United States illegally. (July 11)
AP, AP

MIAMI — As the sun rose over the East Coast on Sunday, immigrants were relieved to find that the federal raids promised by President Donald Trump had not yet materialized.

The president confirmed the raids would start Sunday, leading many to worry that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents would follow their usual procedure of conducting pre-dawn raids to round up immigrants. But as night turned to day on Sunday, immigration attorneys and advocates around the country said they had not heard any reports of ICE activity.

“All quiet so far,” said Melissa Taveras of the Florida Immigrant Coalition, which is running a hotline for immigrants but had only received a couple of calls Sunday morning from immigrants asking about their legal rights if ICE agents came knocking on their door.

In Baltimore, the only noise around an ICE field office in downtown came from a fountain at the center of a plaza. No ICE agents scurrying about, no immigrants being brought in, just a few people asleep on benches outside.

“We’ve not heard anything,” Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said on MSNBC shortly after 9 a.m. on Sunday.

ICE officials have been quiet about their plans, leaving immigrants and the advocates who have mobilized around the country to protect them unsure about when, or if, the raids would start.

Those advocates have been warning that the raids would tear apart families and sow further mistrust of the government. In preparation, advocates staffed hotlines, printed fliers with legal information and activated networks of volunteers to monitor and document the raids.

San Francisco Mayor London Breed said Friday that the city’s police would not cooperate with any ICE operations and that the city was gearing up to protect its immigrants. “If you want to come after them, you’re going to have to come through us,” she said.

In Denver and other cities, government human-service workers were on standby to find foster homes for any children left behind if their parents were detained and marked for deportation. In many cases, immigrants who lack legal permission to remain in the United States have minor children who are U.S. citizens. 

Immigration reform advocates expected that communities around Atlanta, Baltimore, Chicago, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, New York and San Francisco would be targeted in the raids expected to last through at least Thursday. Trump said convicted criminals in the country illegally are being targeted first.

“It starts on Sunday and they’re going to take people out and they’re going to bring them back to their countries,” Trump told reporters at the White House on Friday. “We are focused on criminals as much as we can before we do anything else.”

The Trump administration argues the nation’s immigration laws have long been ignored, and that tougher enforcement is necessary because Democrats in Congress have failed to pass comprehensive immigration reform, while critics say the president’s hardline stance is aimed at bolstering his support among conservatives who make up his base. They called the raids heartless and unwarranted, citing the United States’ long history of welcoming refugees and immigrants.

The ACLU filed a lawsuit to stop the raids and subsequent deportations, arguing that many of the targeted people were unaware they were subject to what’s known as a “final order of removal” because federal officials did a poor job of proving accurate court dates and appointment updates.

“These refugees failed to appear because of massive bureaucratic errors and, in some cases, deliberate misdirection by immigration enforcement agencies,” the ACLU said in a lawsuit filed Thursday. “The agencies’ flagrant and widespread errors made it impossible for people to know when their hearings were being held.”

Contributing: Morgan Hines in Baltimore.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/07/14/anxious-immigrants-across-country-fear-ice-deportation-raids/1717524001/

Updated 6:07 AM ET, Sun July 14, 2019

Chat with us in Facebook Messenger. Find out what’s happening in the world as it unfolds.

This story contains descriptions of sexual violence.

Maryville, Tennessee (CNN)Kaitlin Hurley shook her head in quiet disbelief as the defense attorney made one last attempt to save her rapist from a lengthy sentence.

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/13/us/antigua-rape-trial-extradition/index.html

That last phrase was filled with its own meaning. It echoed a blow delivered on Tuesday to the White House adviser Kellyanne Conway by Representative Ayanna S. Pressley of Massachusetts, a member of Ms. Ocasio-Cortez’s “squad,” who wrote, “Keep my name out of your lying mouth.”

To further make the point, Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s deputy chief of staff, Drew Hammill, retweeted the slap.

Mr. Chakrabarti, a former Silicon Valley start-up founder turned left-wing political organizer, has defiantly retained his outsider streak even after becoming a chief of staff at one of the nation’s most establishment institutions, the House. That has riled ranks of Democratic lawmakers and aides. While convention on Capitol Hill holds that aides are to be seen and not heard, he has publicly and repeatedly criticized Ms. Pelosi. Perhaps most galling to lawmakers, he has also encouraged his Twitter followers to support liberal candidates trying to oust sitting Democrats, an uneasy reminder of his work with Justice Democrats.

He has cultivated a remarkably high profile for a congressional aide. He “isn’t just running her office,” a Washington Post Magazine profile of him said, “he’s guiding a movement.” A headline from Elle magazine crowed, “You Need to Know Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s Chief of Snacks Saikat Chakrabarti.”

Mr. Chakrabarti has also remained defiant. He dismissed the rebuke from Democratic leadership Friday night, arguing that “Everything I tweeted 2 weeks ago was to call out the terrible border funding bill that 90+ Dems opposed.”

“Our Democracy is literally falling apart,” Mr. Chakrabarti tweeted. “I’m not interested in substance-less Twitter spats.”

Justice Democrats, the group he founded, and over a dozen other progressive groups backed him on Saturday, releasing a statement expressing concern that “senior Democratic Party leaders and their aides have been escalating attacks on new leaders in the party” and urging them to focus on “the real crisis at hand” at the border.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/13/us/politics/alexandria-ocasio-cortez-democrats.html

Federal immigration authorities attempted raids in at least two neighborhoods in New York City on Saturday, according to a person familiar with the matter, a day prior to when President Trump had said Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents would begin national roundups of people illegally in the U.S.

In New York City, ICE agents went to residences in the Harlem section of Manhattan and Brooklyn’s Sunset Park neighborhood, the person said. The agents were rejected by people at the residences because they didn’t have warrants,…

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/immigration-enforcement-raids-begin-in-new-york-11563062969

Tropical Storm Barry, which the National Weather Service said has brought 75 mph winds to the Gulf Coast, was upgraded to a Category 1 hurricane Saturday morning as it made landfall in Louisiana. By Saturday afternoon, it had been downgraded to a tropical storm. (To be considered a hurricane, a storm’s winds must reach at least 74 mph.)

A tropical storm warning remains in effect for much of the Louisiana coast.

“On the forecast track, the center of Barry will move through southern Louisiana today, into central Louisiana tonight, and into northern Louisiana on Sunday,” the NWS said in a public advisory.

Forecasters expected a two-foot storm surge (when high winds force water ashore above normal tide levels), heavy rains, and strong winds to affect the Gulf Coast and warned residents to stay inside.

“Eighty-three percent of fatalities from these systems have been from inland rain,” National Hurricane Center Director Ken Graham said Saturday. “So let’s stay off the roads. Let’s prevent these preventable fatalities.”

The heavy rain is more dangerous than usual because Louisiana has suffered intense flooding over the past week due to other storms. A number of streets in New Orleans were already at dangerous water levels ahead of the hurricane, and some feared Barry could swell the Mississippi River so much that it would top the city’s levees (which vary in height from 20 to 25 feet).

Those fears have been allayed somewhat; the Mississippi River rose to 17.1 feet after a storm surge Friday, forecasters now expect its levels to decrease and the levees to hold.

Other rivers are also of concern, however.

The Comite River in Baton Rouge, for instance, is forecasted to rise to well over 30 feet Saturday, which would break the record of its previous flooding three years ago. At that time, the flooding killed 13 people, and damaged 140,000 homes resulting in at least $10 billion in property damage, according to meteorologist Bill Karins.

What we know

  • Flooding is expected to affect the Mississippi River Valley through next week. Beyond Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi, Missouri, and Tennessee could be affected.
  • Barry was upgraded from a tropical storm to a Category 1 hurricane Saturday morning.
  • It was downgraded to a tropical storm Saturday afternoon (storms must have winds of at least 74 mph to be hurricanes).
  • Airlines have cancelled flights into and out of Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport. Normal operations are expected to resume Sunday.
  • Power began to go down ahead of Barry’s landfall. More than 110,000 Louisianians are currently without power.
  • The first major rescue was successfully executed early Saturday morning when the Coast Guard rescued multiple people in Isle of de Jean Charles, 45 miles south of New Orleans.
  • A levee in Plaquemines Parish south of New Orleans overflowed Saturday but officials said these are not the levees that protect the Mississippi River. Louisiana Lt. Gov. Billy Nungesser told CNN “the water is coming over the levee pretty good,” but said the levee can hold up to several hours of overflow. Should the overtopping last more than a few hours, however, major flooding would become likely.
  • National Hurricane Center Director Ken Graham said Saturday afternoon levees along the Mississippi River, are expected to hold; Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards confirmed that river won’t rise beyond 17.1 feet, well below the height of its levees.
  • Coastal communities in Mississippi and Alabama are seeing heavy rains despite their distance from Barry’s center; some are under flash flood warnings. Saturday afternoon, Mobile, Alabama saw rainfall of two to three inches per hour.
  • According to the National Hurricane Center, Barry’s winds continue to slow — as of Saturday evening maximum sustained wind speeds were measured at 65 mph. The storm is moving slowly northwest at 6 mph; the majority of it is projected to remain in the Gulf of Mexico until Saturday night.
  • Water overflowing a levee in Terrebonne Parish, a coastal community southwest of New Orleans, has led to an evacuation order there — the Terrebonne sheriff stressed “the levee has not broke,” but all residents have been ordered to leave before conditions worsen.

What we don’t know

  • How rainfall will affect rivers other than the Mississippi River.
  • The extent of the damage.
  • The number of casualties.
  • When power will return.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2019/7/13/20692948/hurricane-barry-2019-louisiana-mississipi-river-levee-new-orleans-what-we-know