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A stampede at an Italian nightclub killed several people, and injured dozens. Italian officials say they are investigating what triggered the stampede.

Andrew Medichini/AP


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Andrew Medichini/AP

A stampede at an Italian nightclub killed several people, and injured dozens. Italian officials say they are investigating what triggered the stampede.

Andrew Medichini/AP

At least six people are dead after a stampede at a nightclub in Italy, which left dozens of others injured. Most of those killed are minors who were attending a rap concert at the Lanterna Azzurra club in the town of Corinaldo on the Adriatic coast.

There were unconfirmed reports of pepper spray being used inside the club, triggering the stampede. A railing outside of the nightclub then collapsed, causing many people to fall over a ledge, and others to fall on top of them.

Seven people are in critical condition, according to The New York Times, and have been taken to the hospital, and fourteen people have been hospitalized in serious condition. CNN reports a hundred people were treated for injuries.

The New York Times reports 1,400 tickets were sold for the concert by Italian rapper Sfera Ebbasta, even though the club can only legally hold 870 people.

Interior Minister Matteo Salvini said investigators were looking into whether “ammonia, pepper spray, toxic substances” were used inside the club before the stampede, according to The New York Times.

Salvini tweeted hours after the stampede that he is visiting the night club, and that officials will provide answers as soon as possible.

In a statement Italian President Sergio Mattarella said he would work tirelessly to determine what was responsible for the deaths at the nightclub. “Citizens have the right to feel safe everywhere, in workplaces and in leisure areas. Therefore, safety must be assured with particular care in crowded meeting places, through rigorous controls,” Mattarella said. “No one should die this way.”

Ebbasta, the musician performing, said he is deeply saddened by the tragedy in an Instagram post.

Italy’s Deputy Prime Minister, Luigi Di Maio, published the names of victims, all between the ages of 14 and 16, on his Facebook page. Di Maio wrote that the government was doing everything in its power to determine, “if all the security measures had been respected.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2018/12/08/674968810/stampede-at-italian-nightclub-leaves-at-least-six-people-dead-and-many-injured

Key pieces of special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation appear to be falling into place.

In three court filings Friday, prosecutors for the first time connected President Trump to a crime involving hush money payments to a porn actress. They revealed new details about outreach from Russia early in Mr. Trump’s presidential campaign. They detailed how they say two central figures, lawyer Michael Cohen and onetime campaign chairman Paul Manafort, were continually tripped up by lies.

Here are some takeaways from the latest round of court documents from Mueller’s investigation:

Early Russian outreach

Mr. Trump announced his presidential candidacy in June 2015. By that November, the Russians were reaching out about “political synergy,” according to the sentencing memo for Cohen.

The court papers provide new details about one of the earliest known contacts between Russia and a Trump campaign associate. In fall 2015, Cohen was months into his work on a proposed Trump Tower in Moscow when an unidentified Russian national proposed a meeting between Mr. Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. This person, prosecutors say, claimed to be a “trusted person” in Russia who could offer the Trump campaign “political synergy” and “synergy on a government level.”

This person sought to connect the Trump business project with the campaign, saying the meeting could have a “phenomenal” impact on the proposed tower in Moscow. There is “no bigger warranty in any project than the consent of” Putin, the person told Cohen.

Prosecutors said Cohen didn’t follow up and that the meeting never occurred.

The memo also discussed Cohen’s lies to Congress about the extent of the Trump Tower negotiations, which the special counsel described as a “lucrative business opportunity that sought, and likely required, the assistance of the Russian government.”

The outreach is more evidence that Russia was eager to build relationships with the campaign and tried to use Mr. Trump’s business as an opening.

Mr. Trump directed Cohen’s crime

Prosecutors didn’t mince words: The campaign finance violations Cohen committed came “in coordination with and at the direction of” Mr. Trump, according to the new filings.

Those violations stemmed from payments Cohen made to buy the silence of porn actress Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal. Both women alleged they had affairs with Mr. Trump, which the White House denies. Daniels was paid $130,000 as part of a nondisclosure agreement signed days before the 2016 election.

Mr. Trump has denied knowing anything about the Daniels payment. But the filing directly contradicts that claim. It also, for the first time, directly ties Mr. Trump to a federal crime. Campaign finance law requires candidates to report any payments made to influence the election. The Trump campaign failed to report the payment at the time.

Prosecutors don’t say Mr. Trump broke the law and the Justice Department has maintained that a sitting president cannot be indicted.

Public statements matter to Mueller

At least such statements did matter to Mueller when Cohen lied to Congress, and that could have implications for other episodes under investigation in the Russia investigation.

Cohen has admitted lying to Congress about how long he worked on the Trump Tower Moscow project and repeating the falsehoods to the media. But Mueller’s team doesn’t just consider this self-protection. It was a “deliberate effort” to publicly present a “false narrative” in the hopes of limiting the scope of the various Russia investigations, prosecutors say in the court papers.

Mueller’s focus on public assertions and their impact on witnesses, lawmakers and ongoing investigations could serve as a warning to Mr. Trump.

The president also has spread falsehoods about his campaign’s ties to Russia. The special counsel has questioned witnesses about a statement Mr. Trump dictated on Air Force One last year that omitted several details about a June 2016 Trump Tower meeting with a Russian attorney.

The filing suggests Mueller intends to hold witnesses accountable for the statements made privately and publicly. If the lies are meant to influence the investigation, they may factor into Mueller’s investigation into whether Mr. Trump has tried to obstruct the probe.

Trump administration contacts

Despite their criminal cases, the Trump administration just can’t leave Manafort or Cohen behind, according to prosecutors.

In Cohen’s case, Mueller’s team said he has provided “relevant and useful” information about his contacts with people connected to the Trump White House in 2017 and 2018. With Manafort, prosecutors say he also had several recent administration contacts and lied about them.

After Manafort pleaded guilty and agreed to cooperate with the government, prosecutors say he told them he had “no direct or indirect” contact with people in the administration. But that was a lie, they say.

Instead, they found evidence, including electronic documents, showing contacts with multiple administration officials. That included communication with a “senior administration official” through February 2018. Manafort also directed a person to speak with an administration official on his “behalf” on May 26.

Neither Cohen’s nor Manafort’s filings detail the content of the conversations or identify the officials. Manafort has contended he was truthful with Mueller’s team.

Not just Cohen’s word

Since his guilty plea, Mr. Trump has attacked Cohen as a liar who is telling “stories” to get a reduced prison sentence. But prosecutors revealed Friday that they’re not just taking Cohen’s word for it.

The information Cohen told prosecutors in seven separate interviews “has been credible and consistent with other evidence obtained” in Mueller’s investigation, they note in the sentencing recommendation.

The special counsel’s filing said that Cohen has “gone to significant lengths to assist the Special Counsel’s investigation. He has met with the [special counsel’s office] on seven occasions, voluntarily provided the SCO with information about his own conduct and that of others on core topics under investigation by the SCO, and committed to continuing to assist the SCO’s investigation.”

Some of that information from Cohen, prosecutors say, concerns “certain discrete Russia-related matters” at the “core” of Mueller’s investigation, particularly those involving his contact with Trump Organization executives.

Mr. Trump said in a tweet on Friday evening that the filing “totally clears the president.” In a tweet on Saturday morning, Mr. Trump reiterated that there was “NO COLLUSION.”

‘Lucrative’ Moscow deal

Mr. Trump and his lawyers have played down the Trump Tower Moscow proposal. The president has said he never put any money into it and ultimately decided not to do it. But Mueller’s team reveals that if he did, they believe they know the windfall.

According to Cohen’s filing, the deal could have yielded “hundreds of millions of dollars from Russian sources in licensing fees and other revenues.”

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/key-takeaways-memos-michael-cohen-paul-manafort-muellers-investigation/

France is burning (again), and United States President Donald Trump is (again) making the overseas protests about his own agenda.

In a Saturday morning tweet, Trump weighed in on the weekend’s latest round of riots in Paris, claiming that protesters have been chanting “We Want Trump,” as well as arguing that the Paris climate agreement was to blame for the protests. (Trump withdrew the US from the landmark agreement last year, reaffirming that decision just last week when he refused to sign onto the G20’s non-binding joint statement promising to tackle climate change.)

The president implied that France’s protests, which started in response to rising taxes on gas and diesel, had something to do with people not wanting to “pay large sums of money, much to third world countries (that are questionably run), in order to maybe protect the environment.”

It’s a transparent attempt by the president to twist a major political crisis to his own advantage, with France experiencing ongoing riots which have led to hundreds of arrests, thousands of dollars in property damage, and multiple deaths.

The protests began on November 17, when French drivers led a demonstration protesting President Emmanuel Macron’s gas taxes, which were meant to minimize France’s reliance on fossil fuels. But the “gilets jaunes” movement — so named for the “yellow vests” demonstrators wear — has since escalated into anti-elitist riots that some say have “escaped from its progenitors.”

While the government has shelved its plans for fuel tax increases, the protesters are now demanding a redistribution of tax revenue to the working class and the creation of a democratic citizen’s assembly, as well as a number of political and institutional reforms, according to a list of demands presented to France’s minister of ecology François de Rugy.

Paris is on lockdown today, with anywhere from 1,500 to 8,000 protesters gathered on the famed Champs Elysées and around the city for a Saturday protest that has been dubbed “Round 4.” Tear gas and rubber bullets have already been used to dispel protesters around the country, while in Paris, several cars have been set ablaze, mainly in the wealthier arrondissements, as police try to contain small groups of violent protesters.

But nowhere in those riots have “We want Trump” chants been heard, reported Le Monde, France’s leading newspaper. In an update responding to Trump’s tweet, the paper wrote that none of their journalists covering the protests had heard that slogan uttered. Chants that have been reported include “Macron resign!” and “Go home, bourgeois!”

One video circulating online does show protesters chanting, “We want Trump,” while a man in a rubber Trump mask dances on top of a bus, but as Vox’s Jennifer Williams and Alex Ward point out, the video is from the United Kingdom — and it’s not even clear the chant is completely serious.

Trump is using a political crisis to push his own agenda

This isn’t the first time Trump has made the Paris protests about himself and his agenda.

On Tuesday, he retweeted a wildly inaccurate tweet from Charlie Kirk, a 25-year-old conservative and Trump supporter. Kirk claimed that the riots were “because of radical leftist fuel taxes” and that it was a “middle class rebellion against cultural Marxism”:

As Vox’s Jennifer Williams and Alex Ward point out, the fuel tax is far from a “radical leftist” one, as Macron isn’t using the tax to support or expand social welfare. The protests have more to do with Macron’s elitism and perceived disdain for the working class:

While the protests may have started over the fuel tax, they have since morphed into a broader indictment of Macron’s handling of the French economy and his perceived elitist disregard for the effects his policies are having on France’s working class.

France’s economy is growing, but very slowly. Most of the growth is centered in its major cities, like Paris, and those on the periphery and in rural communities haven’t seen as many gains. What’s more, France’s rural population relies much more on cars than its urban dwellers do, which is why many in those regions seem the angriest with the gas tax.

Kirk also claimed that “we want Trump” was being chanted in the streets, which is likely where Trump picked up this idea. It hasn’t become any more accurate in the several days since then.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2018/12/8/18131757/trump-france-riots-paris-agreement

December 7 at 5:44 PM

At 8:29 a.m. last Friday, a magnitude 7.0 earthquake jolted Anchorage. There were no deaths or major injuries reported, but the quake caused rock slides, prompted thousands of aftershocks and devastated portions of several roads.

One, the northbound off-ramp of Minnesota Boulevard near Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport, crumbled like a jigsaw puzzle. Photos of the damage showed mangled piles of snow-dusted rubble disappearing into gaping holes in the earth.

Less than a week later, however, Alaska Department of Transportation officials announced that the road had been repaired. Lest no one believe them, they posted drone video of the same stretch of road, showing freshly painted lines, neat rows of traffic cones and smooth asphalt ready for traffic.

Barely 100 hours after the earthquake, it was as if nothing had ever happened.

“The before and after footage speaks volumes to the level of work our crews have been putting in 24/7 this past week,” Alaska DOT wrote in the caption.

The collective response was one of awe mixed with state pride. (“Alaskans know how to rock, roll and repair!” one commenter wrote.) Followed by: How?! After all, everyone knows about that one roadway that has been under perpetual construction since at least the Clinton administration.

Alaska DOT spokeswoman Shannon McCarthy was quick to emphasize that this was emergency repair work and not a regular transportation project.

The latter requires permitting, survey operations, geotechnical work and a host of other prerequisites — and those finished roadways are designed to last, say, 20 years, she said.

“All of those things take a lot of time,” McCarthy told The Washington Post. “This is not that kind of project. This is a project to restore essential travel.”

While the repaired road is safe for drivers, it will require additional work after the spring arrives, she added.

That said, McCarthy credited recent planning for a speedy response time in this case, which was necessary because of the limited number of roads in the area. It helped, too, that the Federal Highway Administration approved a “quick release” of $5 million in emergency funds to Alaska, although the total cost of this particular road repair has yet to be finalized.

McCarthy recalled that the earthquake struck last Friday just as she was about to go into an 8:30 a.m. meeting. By 11 a.m., crews were on the scene clearing rubble from the off-ramp, she said.

The biggest challenge was obtaining asphalt in the midst of Alaska’s winter, when road construction projects are typically suspended.

“One of the first things that happened on Friday morning was one someone from our construction staff called some of the owners of the asphalt plants and said, ‘We’re going to need asphalt in about five days. Can you get up and running?’ ” McCarthy said. “It’s really hard to keep an asphalt plant up and running when it’s cold out . . . The oil has to be wicked hot, and the aggregate has to be dry.”

Fortunately, the asphalt plants were able to restart operations right away. From that point on, a crew of 14 — seven contract laborers, five contract truck drivers and two Alaska DOT project engineers — worked “day and night” to haul out the rubble, bring in the asphalt, repave the road and paint it again, McCarthy said.

The repairs were completed before sunrise on Dec. 4, less than five days after the quake hit.

“Everything’s a blur right now,” McCarthy said.

After the repairs, a few suspicious people on Facebook tried to truth-squad the photos, claiming they had been doctored. They were quickly countered by residents who posted photos of the good-as-new roads.

“Not fake,” one person wrote. “We call it Alaskan!”

Aftershocks in the area are expected to persist for months, the Anchorage Daily News reported. Transportation crews will continue to monitor the roadway in the meantime, as well as other earthquake-damaged roads in Anchorage that were reopened in less than a week.

“It’s been a great effort,” Alaska’s transportation commissioner, John MacKinnon, said in a Facebook video. “When things get bad like this, it brings out the best in people.”

Read more:

Your face is your boarding pass at this airport

A man on Ryanair yelled racist insults at a black woman. She was the one who had to change seats.

Alaska Airlines accused of forcing gay couple to sit apart so straight couple could sit together

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/transportation/2018/12/07/an-earthquake-created-highway-hellscape-alaska-days-later-road-reopened-good-new/

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is backing Saudi Prince Khalid bin Salman, the younger brother of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, as the kingdom’s ambassador to the U.S., rejecting calls for his expulsion over the monarchy’s murder of a dissident journalist.

“Khalid bin Salman’s role as Saudi ambassador to the United States remains unchanged and we will continue to work with him on important regional and bilateral issues,” a State Department spokesperson told the Washington Examiner on Friday.

That note of solidarity draws another protective line around the administration’s relationship with Saudi Arabia, putting a brake on bipartisan outrage over the execution in Istanbul of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, which the CIA has concluded was ordered by Crown Prince Mohammed.

[Read more: Lindsey Graham: I feel ‘played,’ ‘used’ by Saudi crown prince]

The crown prince is the oldest of six brothers from his father King Salman’s third marriage. Prince Khalid is the third son from that marriage. In addition, the crown prince has five half brother’s from his father’s first marriage and one from his father’s second.

Prince Khalid misled senators about the murder of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi and punishing him was an obvious way for lawmakers to escalate the rebuke of the Saudis beyond the sanctions Pompeo already announced.

“As the Secretary has said, we will continue to work to ascertain the facts, assess all information, and hold those responsible for the murder of Jamal Khashoggi accountable, and we urge the Saudis to do the same as they continue their investigation,” the spokesperson said.

Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin, D-Ill., took aim at the ambassador within a day of Prince Khalid’s return to the U.S.

“We should formally expel the Saudi ambassador to the United States given the crown prince’s direct involvement in the kidnapping and murder of Jamal Khashoggi. And we should call on our allies to do the same,” Durbin said Thursday. “Unless the Saudi kingdom understands that civilized countries around the world reject this conduct and make sure that a price is paid, the Saudis will continue to do it.”

The Khashoggi killing has whet the appetite on Capitol Hill for anti-Saudi legislation. The Senate is poised to vote on a resolution that would direct the president to end support for a Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen, where rival Iran has backed an insurrection. That policy is a thorny one for lawmakers, who oppose Iran’s play for influence in the country but are angry about Saudi Arabia’s killing of civilians in the course of the fighting. The debate on that bill could provide an opportunity for votes on a number of legislative amendments, which could produce alternative ways to rebuke the oil-rich monarchy.

“It’s a work in progress right now,” Sen. Jim Risch, R-Idaho, who will chair the Foreign Relations Committee in the next Congress, told the Washington Examiner. “It’s a lot of proposals kicking around right now. It’s going to be a give and take. And like everything that gets through here, if it gets through here, it’ll be a bipartisan compromise.”

Pompeo will seek to balance that frustration against the administration’s diplomatic priorities. “We will maintain the important strategic relationship between the United States and Saudi Arabia,” the State Department spokesperson said.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/policy/defense-national-security/state-department-rejects-calls-to-expel-saudi-ambassador-to-us-over-his-brothers-role-in-khashoggi-murder

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) — A man who drove his car into counterprotesters at a 2017 white nationalist rally in Virginia was convicted Friday of first-degree murder, a verdict that local civil rights activists hope will help heal a community still scarred by the violence and the racial tensions it inflamed nationwide.

A state jury rejected defense arguments that James Alex Fields Jr. acted in self-defense during a “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville on Aug. 12, 2017. Jurors also convicted Fields of eight other charges, including aggravated malicious wounding and hit and run.

Fields, 21, drove to Virginia from his home in Maumee, Ohio, to support the white nationalists. As a large group of counterprotesters marched through Charlottesville singing and laughing, he stopped his car, backed up, then sped into the crowd, according to testimony from witnesses and video surveillance shown to jurors.

Prosecutors told the jury that Fields was angry after witnessing violent clashes between the two sides earlier in the day. The violence prompted police to shut down the rally before it even officially began.

Heather Heyer, a 32-year-old paralegal and civil rights activist, was killed, and nearly three dozen others were injured. The trial featured emotional testimony from survivors who described devastating injuries and long, complicated recoveries.

After the verdict was read in court, some of those who were injured embraced Heyer’s mother, Susan Bro. She left the courthouse without commenting. Fields’ mother, Samantha Bloom, who is disabled, left the courthouse in a wheelchair without commenting.

A group of about a dozen local civil rights activists stood in front of the courthouse after the verdict with their right arms raised in the air.

“They will not replace us! They will not replace us!” they yelled, in a response to the chants heard during the 2017 rally, when some white nationalists shouted: “You will not replace us! and “Jews will not replace us.”

Charlottesville City Councilor Wes Bellamy said he hopes the verdict “allows our community to take another step toward healing and moving forward.”

Charlottesville civil rights activist Tanesha Hudson said she sees the guilty verdict as the city’s way of saying, “We will not tolerate this in our city.”

“We don’t stand for this type of hate. We just don’t,” she said.

White nationalist Richard Spencer, who had been scheduled to speak at the Unite the Right rally, described the verdict as a “miscarriage of justice.”

“I am sadly not shocked, but I am appalled by this,” he told The Associated Press. “He was treated as a terrorist from the get-go.”

Spencer had questioned whether Fields could get a fair trial since the case was “so emotional.”

“There does not seem to be any reasonable evidence put forward that he engaged in murderous intent,” Spencer said.

Spencer popularized the term “alt-right” to describe a fringe movement loosely mixing white nationalism, anti-Semitism and other far-right extremist views. He said he doesn’t feel any personal responsibility for the violence that erupted in Charlottesville.

“Absolutely not,” he said. “As a citizen, I have a right to protest. I have a right to speak. That is what I came to Charlottesville to do.”

The far-right rally in August 2017 had been organized in part to protest the planned removal of a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. Hundreds of Ku Klux Klan members, neo-Nazis and other white nationalists — emboldened by the election of President Donald Trump — streamed into the college town for one of the largest gatherings of white supremacists in a decade. Some dressed in battle gear.

Afterward, Trump inflamed tensions even further when he said “both sides” were to blame, a comment some saw as a refusal to condemn racism.

According to one of his former teachers, Fields was known in high school for being fascinated with Nazism and idolizing Adolf Hitler. Jurors were shown a text message he sent to his mother days before the rally that included an image of the notorious German dictator. When his mother pleaded with him to be careful, he replied: “we’re not the one (sic) who need to be careful.”

During one of two recorded phone calls Fields made to his mother from jail in the months after he was arrested, he told her he had been mobbed “by a violent group of terrorists” at the rally. In another, Fields referred to the mother of the woman who was killed as a “communist” and “one of those anti-white supremacists.”

Prosecutors also showed jurors a meme Fields posted on Instagram three months before the rally in which bodies are shown being thrown into the air after a car hits a crowd of people identified as protesters. He posted the meme publicly to his Instagram page and sent a similar image as a private message to a friend in May 2017.

But Fields’ lawyers told the jury that he drove into the crowd on the day of the rally because he feared for his life and was “scared to death” by earlier violence he had witnessed. A video of Fields being interrogated after the crash showed him sobbing and hyperventilating after he was told a woman had died and others were seriously injured.

Wednesday Bowie, who was struck by Fields’ car and suffered a broken pelvis and other injuries, said she felt gratified by the guilty verdict.

“This is the best I’ve been in a year and a half,” Bowie said.

The jury will reconvene Monday to recommend a sentence. Under Virginia law, jurors can recommend from 20 years to life in prison on the first-degree murder charge.

Fields is eligible for the death penalty if convicted of separate federal hate crime charges. No trial has been scheduled yet.

By Denise Lavoie, Associated Press

Source Article from https://www.al.com/news/2018/12/charlottesville-tries-to-heal-after-driver-at-rally-convicted-of-murder.html

Federal prosecutors in Manhattan said Friday in a new court filing that Michael Cohen acted “in coordination with and at the direction of” President Donald Trump when making hush money payments to two women during the 2016 presidential election.

The statement echoes Cohen’s own admission in August, after he pleaded guilty in federal court to tax evasion, making false statements to a bank, and campaign-finance violations related to money he paid former Playboy model Karen McDougal and porn actress Stormy Daniels, two women who claimed to have affairs with Trump.

Prosecutors wrote in the initial charging documents in August that Cohen had “coordinated with one or more members of the campaign, including through meetings and phone calls, about the fact, nature and timing of the payments.”

Now, in the sentencing memo submitted to the court on Friday, prosecutors indicate that at least one of those members of the campaign was Trump himself, or “Individual-1” as he’s referred to in the memo. (This is also how he’s consistently referred to in court documents, including in those related to special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation.)


This is a big deal. Prosecutors are indicating that what Cohen admitted was true — Trump did coordinate and direct the payments that constituted illegal campaign contributions.

As former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti pointed out in a series of tweets about the case, this is likely a sign that prosecutors have some level of “corroborating evidence.” In other words, authorities are not just taking Cohen at his word.

Federal prosecutors also make clear in the sentencing memo that Cohen made the payments to the women in an attempt to silence them so they would not speak about their alleged affairs with Trump and that Cohen acted with the purpose of influencing the 2016 election.

This is bad for Trump — but not as bad as it could be

This memo is part of a federal case against Cohen that is separate from special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation; as such, there is no mention of collusion with Russia.

It’s still bad news for the president: Federal prosecutors have offered compelling evidence that Cohen, at the behest of Trump, made illegal payments to protect then-candidate Trump.

But this is not, in and of itself, evidence that Trump’s conduct itself was necessarily criminal.

As Eric Columbus, a former Justice Department official during the Obama administration, noted on Twitter, “I don’t think we know yet that prosecutors have concluded Trump violated campaign finance law, given that Trump would have to know that his conduct was illegal.”

What’s next for Trump isn’t clear. Department of Justice guidelines say a sitting president can’t be indicted — and, to be clear, the federal prosecutors in Manhattan are not arguing he should be. But Trump lied about his knowledge of the hush money payments, and this latest filing makes it hard to see otherwise.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2018/12/7/18131259/michael-cohen-trump-illegal-hush-money

The FBI and Lumberton police have made an arrest in the kidnapping and murder of 13-year-old Hania Noelia Aguilar.

Michael Ray McLellan, 34, is charged with first-degree murder, first-degree forcible rape, statutory rape of a person under 15 years of age or younger, first-degree sexual offense, statutory sex offense with a person 15 years or younger, first-degree kidnapping, felony larceny, felony restraint, abduction of child and concealment of a death.

McLellan had already been in custody since Nov. 13, when he was arrested on charges stemming from a separate case.

According to the arrest warrant, McLellan was charged with possession of a firearm by a felon, second-degree kidnapping and attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon stemming from an incident on Oct. 15 in which he allegedly pointed a gun at a woman and attempted to steal her car and money.

The arrest warrants states that McLellan had already been convicted of a felony in 2007 after he committed a burglary while armed with a gun.

Since mid-November, McLellan had been housed at the Robeson County Detention Center. However, according to Fairmont Police Chief Jon Edwards, he was recently moved to the Central Prison in Raleigh due to misconduct.

Michael Ray McLellan

Aguilar was kidnapped from her home at the Rosewood Mobile Home Park in Lumberton on Nov. 5. Police say McLellan forced Hania into an SUV while she was warming up her family’s car to go to school.

Two days after she went missing, the FBI released surveillance video of the stolen SUV seen in Lumberton moments after her kidnapping.

The following day, the SUV was located but Hania wasn’t in it.

A body was discovered on Nov. 27 in Robeson County in a place not visible from the road.

The next day, the FBI announced it believed the body was that of 13-year-old Aguilar.

Results of tests from the FBI’s lab at Quantico on the stolen SUV recovered and preliminary results from the North Carolina State Crime Lab on Hania’s body resulted in the charges, the FBI Charlotte said in a news release. At this time, autopsy and toxicology reports are not complete.

After the body was found, unconfirmed reports that McLellan had been arrested and even confessed in the case began circulating on social media. However, in a news conference on Nov. 28, Lumberton Police Chief Michael McNeil said, “we will not stop until we find the person or persons responsible and we bring them to justice.”

Watch that full news conference here:

“We have to find out how she died, who did this to her and we have to bring the person or persons responsible to justice,” FBI Supervisory Resident Agent Andy de la Rocha said at the same news conference. “Please call us if you have information to help. Don’t post rumors on social media. Don’t share your speculation about this case.”

“By putting things out there that are blatantly false and that are not released by the Lumberton Police Department, the FBI, the SBI, the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office, the North Carolina Highway Patrol are false, they’re misleading, they’re simply inaccurate,” de la Rocha said.

He said there was “no person of interest at this time.”

The following day, the FBI reiterated in a news release that no arrests had been made.

FBI spokesperson Shelley Lynch told ABC11 on Saturday that, at the time of the news conference and the subsequent press release, no arrests had been made.

She said the arrest related to Hania’s case was made Friday evening and added that there still has not been a confession made in the case.

McLellan is being held on no bond.

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Source Article from https://abc11.com/arrest-made-in-kidnapping-and-murder-of-13-year-old-hania-aguilar/4859400/

PARIS — Anticipating a fourth straight weekend of violent protests, France on Friday mobilized armored vehicles and thousands of police, cordoned off Paris’ broad boulevards and made plans to shut down tourist sites like the Eiffel Tower and Louvre. Some 8,000 officers and 12 armored vehicles will be deployed in Paris alone, where shops have been boarded up and sites like the Eiffel Tower closed, BBC News reports. 

The heavy security will put central Paris in a virtual lockdown Saturday against what the interior minister called “radicalized and rebellious people,” who authorities believe will join members of the “gilets jaunes,” or “yellow vest,” movement that has been holding anti-government demonstrations.

Nationwide, about 89,000 police will fan out in the streets, an increase from 65,000 last weekend, when more than 130 people were injured and over 400 arrested as the protests degenerated into the worst street violence to hit the French capital in decades.

Fearing increasing violence, hundreds of businesses planned to close Saturday, preferring to lose a key holiday shopping day rather than have stores smashed and looted, like they were a week ago when protests over rising taxes turned into a riot. Workers hammered plywood over the windows of shops and businesses, making the plush Champs-Elysees neighborhood appear to be bracing for a hurricane. 

“According to the information we have, some radicalized and rebellious people will try to get mobilized tomorrow,” Interior Minister Christophe Castaner told a news conference. “Some ultra-violent people want to take part.” 

BBC News’ Lucy Williamson in Paris reports the “gilets jaunes” protesters’ core aim is to highlight the economic frustration and political distrust of poorer working families. The group still has widespread support: An opinion poll on Friday saw a dip in that support, but it still stood at 66 percent. 

President Emmanuel Macron met Friday night with about 60 anti-riot security officers who will be deployed in Paris. He made the unannounced visit, without the press, to a fort used as military accommodation in Nogent-sur-Marne, east of Paris, and thanked the officers for their work.

The barricade-busting armored vehicles could be used for the first time in a French urban area since riots in 2005.

“These vehicles can be very useful to protect buildings,” said Stanislas Gaudon, head of the Alliance police union. “And in case they set up barricades, we can quickly clear out the space and let our units progress.”

Police removed any materials from the streets that could be used as weapons, especially at construction sites in high-risk areas. Those included the renowned Champs-Elysees, which would normally be packed with tourists and shoppers.

“It’s with an immense sadness that we’ll see our city partially brought to a halt, but your safety is our priority,” said Mayor Anne Hidalgo. “Take care of Paris on Saturday because Paris belongs to all the French people.”

As it did last weekend, the U.S. Embassy advised Americans to avoid the demonstrations.

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe met Friday night with representatives of the movement to try to open a dialogue.

The seven “yellow vest” invited to the meeting said they were satisfied from the discussion. One participant, Christophe Chalancon, told reporters the prime minister “listened to us.”

Since the unrest began Nov. 17 in response to a sharp increase in diesel taxes, four people have been killed in protest-related accidents. Now the demands of the “yellow vest” movement – named for the fluorescent safety gear that French motorists keep in their cars – is pressing for a wider range of benefits from the government to help workers, retirees and students.

Macron on Wednesday agreed to abandon the fuel tax increase, but the protesters’ anger at his government has not abated. Macron, since returning from the G-20 meeting last weekend, has kept largely out of sight, a move that has puzzled supporters and critics.

He has left his unpopular government to try to calm the nation. In response, “Macron, resign!” has become the main slogan of the “yellow vest” demonstrators.

The 40-year-old leader mostly spent the week holding closed-door meetings in the Elysee presidential palace, and many protesters consider him to be hiding from the people.

Students opposing changes in key high school tests protested again Friday, a day after video that was shared widely on social media showed the arrest of high school pupils outside Paris and prompted an outcry. Trade unions and far-left parties have lashed out at perceived police brutality.

The images, filmed Thursday at Mantes-la-Jolie, showed students on their knees with their hands behind their head, being watched over by armed, masked police.

Castaner, the interior minister, said 151 people were arrested in the small town, some carrying weapons. He said no students were injured.

The rioting has also had an economic impact at the height of the holiday shopping season. Rampaging groups last weekend threw cobblestones through Paris storefronts and looted valuables in some of the city’s richest neighborhoods.

The national Federation of French markets said that Christmas markets have been “strongly impacted” and that its members registered “an average fall of their estimated figures between 30 and 40 percent since the beginning of the yellow vest movement.”

Six French league soccer matches were canceled around the country. The Nicolas wine chain, one of France’s biggest retailers, canceled all its wine tasting sessions scheduled for Saturday.

In addition to the closure of the Eiffel Tower, many shops and museums across Paris, including the Louvre, the Orsay Museum and the Grand Palais, will be shut on Saturday for safety reasons. Music festivals, operas and other cultural events in the capital were canceled.

“We need to protect culture sites in Paris but also everywhere in France,” Culture Minister Franck Riester told RTL radio.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/gilets-jaunes-yellow-vest-protests-paris-prepares-this-weekend-2018-12-07/

Source Article from https://www.policeone.com/officer-down/articles/482306006-Sheriff-Police-bullet-killed-LEO-in-Thousand-Oaks-shooting/

Federal prosecutors on Friday recommended a “substantial term of imprisonment” for President Trump’s former personal attorney Michael Cohen, saying his efforts to cooperate with Special Counsel Robert Mueller were “overstated.”

The U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York filed a sentencing memo as part of its criminal investigation and grand jury probe into Cohen’s personal business dealings. Cohen pleaded guilty to several counts of tax and business fraud. He also pleaded guilty to making an excessive campaign contribution.

The memo stated that the range of imprisonment for Cohen and his crimes is 51 to 63 months. It also noted that the court’s Probation Department had recommended a sentence of 42 months, “albeit for different reasons.”

READ THE MICHAEL COHEN SENTENCING MEMO

“This range reflects Cohen’s extensive, deliberate, and serious criminal conduct,” prosecutors said in the memo. It added that while Cohen “should receive credit for his assistance” in Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation, he should still be given a “substantial term of imprisonment, one that reflects a modest downward variance from the applicable guidelines range.”

The filing acknowledged that while Cohen had cooperated with officials and disclosed important information to Mueller’s team, his cooperation was “overstated.”

“To be clear: Cohen does not have a cooperation agreement…and therefore is not properly described as a ‘cooperating witness,’ as that term is commonly used in this District,” the memo read.

The sentencing memo from the Southern District of New York comes just one week after Cohen pleaded guilty to making false statements to Congress about an abandoned Trump real estate project in Moscow as part of Mueller’s investigation into Russian meddling and potential collusion with Trump campaign associates in the 2016 presidential election.

Cohen’s guilty plea in Mueller’s investigation signaled his apparent willingness to cooperate with the special counsel and provide potentially valuable testimony to investigators regarding his relationship with the president and Trump’s actions in exchange for leniency when sentenced to prison—a move Trump himself has blasted in recent days.

Soon after the filing was made public, Trump tweeted that the document “Totally clears the President. Thank you!”

White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said the filings “tell us nothing of value that wasn’t already known.

“Mr. Cohen has repeatedly lied and as the prosecution has pointed out to the court, Mr. Cohen is no hero,” Sanders added.

Federal prosecutors said that Cohen was “motivated” by “personal greed” and “repeatedly used his power and influence for deceptive ends.”

“Cohen, an attorney and businessman, committed four distinct federal crimes over a period of several years,” the memo read. “The crimes committed by Cohen were more serious than his submission allows and were marked by a pattern of deception that permeated his professional life (and was evidently hidden from the friends and family members who wrote on his behalf.)”

“He was motivated to do so by personal greed, and repeatedly used his power and influence for deceptive ends,”

— The U.S. Attorney General’s Office for the Southern District of New York

As part of his guilty plea in the criminal investigation led by the Southern District of New York, Cohen admitted to making an excessive campaign contribution, which refers to the $130,000 hush money payment to porn star Stormy Daniels in the weeks leading up to the 2016 presidential election in exchange for her silence over an alleged one-time sexual encounter with Trump, who is referred to as “Individual-1” in the documents. At issue was also a payment to Playboy model Karen MacDougal.

The memo revealed that Cohen arranged for one of the payments “through a media company and disguised it as a services contract, and executed the second non-disclosure agreement with aliases and routed the six-figure payment through a shell corporation.  After the election, he arranged for his own reimbursement via fraudulent invoices for non-existent legal services ostensibly performed pursuant to a non-existent ‘retainer’ agreement.”

The memo states that when payments began to surface, Cohen “told shifting and misleading stories about the nature of the payment, his coordination with the candidate, and the fact that he was reimbursed.”

Trump repeatedly denied having knowledge of the payment to Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford. He and his attorney, Rudy Giuliani, have provided conflicting accounts of whether the president was aware in the transaction.

Daniels’ lawyer, Michael Avenatti, tweeted that Cohen “lied to my client, the American people and investigators for years. He is a thug and deserves to be severely punished.”

The memo also revealed that during the 2016 presidential campaign, Cohen “privately told friends and colleagues, including in seized text messages, that he expected to be given a prominent role and title in the new administration.”

“When that did not materialize, Cohen found a way to monetize his relationship with and access to the president.  Cohen successfully convinced numerous major corporations to retain him as a “consultant” who could provide unique insights about and access to the new administration, the memo read. “Some of these corporations were then stuck making large up-front or periodic payments to Cohen, even though he provided little or no real services under these contracts.  Bank records reflect that Cohen made more than $4 million dollars before the contracts were terminated.”

In a separate memo, Mueller’s office detailed Cohen’s cooperation with the special counsel’s investigation. They described the information Cohen provided as “credible and consistent with other evidence obtained in the … ongoing investigation.”

The memo said Cohen had investigators that he had spoken with “a Russian national who claimed to be a ‘trusted person'” and offered the Trump campaign “‘political synergy’ and ‘synergy on a government level'” in November 2015. Cohen told investigators that the unidentified Russian repeatedly proposed a meeting between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, which the person said “could have a ‘phenomenal’ impact ‘not only in political but in a business dimension as well.'” Ultimately, Cohen “did not follow up” with the individual.

Rudy Giuliani, President Trump’s attorney, told Fox News that Cohen corresponded with the individual on his own and the person’s offers were not conveyed to then-candidate Trump.

Two months earlier, in September 2015, Cohen suggested in a radio interview that Trump meet with Putin during the Russian leader’s trip to the United Nations General Assembly. The special counsel memo said Cohen admitted that he had “conferred with [Trump] about contacting the Russian government before reaching out to gauge Russia’s interest in such a meeting.”

Cohen is scheduled to be sentenced Dec. 12.

Fox News’ Bill Mears, Jake Gibson, Matt Leach and John Roberts contributed to this report. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/federal-prosecutors-recommend-substantial-term-of-imprisonment-for-michael-cohen

For months, it’s seemed curious that Paul Manafort has been kept in solitary confinement since the beginning of the summer. At least since July, Manafort has spent 23 hours a day locked up with the sole exception of visiting his attorneys, the sort of treatment usually reserved for uniquely dangerous criminals, not white-collar felons. As of October, Manafort was wheelchair-ridden due to health problems, never explicated or directly tied to his confinement, but 23 hours a day in solitude certainly couldn’t have helped.

Legal reports claimed that Manafort was stuck in solitary to guarantee his safety. Special counsel Robert Mueller’s latest filing points to a more plausible reason: The White House couldn’t stop sticking its neck out for Manafort.

“In a text exchange from May 26, 2018, Manafort authorized a person to speak with an Administration official on Manafort’s behalf,” Mueller writes. “Separately, according to another Manafort colleague, Manafort said in February 2018 that Manafort had been in communication with a senior Administration official up through February 2018.”

The White House needs to stop cavorting with criminals in general, but this one in particular. Manafort was a dangerous hire, and once President Trump wanted to fire Manafort, he should have done so and then instructed everyone in his circle to cease all contact with him.

That members of Trump’s administration continued not only to subvert the law in contacting Manafort, but then to speak on his behalf even after the court placed a gag order on him is unconscionable.

Stop talking to Manafort. Stop talking for Manafort. Every shred of evidence points to Manafort’s independent guilt, a kind that doesn’t seem to directly implicate Trump in any way. Stick your neck out for a crook unnecessarily, and you just might find yourself under a guillotine.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/why-would-anyone-in-the-trump-administration-want-to-help-paul-manafort

Prosecutors on Friday unveiled their sentencing recommendation for former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen who has been cooperating with prosecutors conducting the Russia investigation and others.

Mary Altaffer/AP


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Mary Altaffer/AP

Prosecutors on Friday unveiled their sentencing recommendation for former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen who has been cooperating with prosecutors conducting the Russia investigation and others.

Mary Altaffer/AP

Updated at 8:51 p.m. ET

Federal prosecutors have requested a “substantial term of imprisonment” for Donald Trump’s former personal lawyer Michael Cohen but asked that a judge consider his cooperation with the special counsel’s Russia probe and other investigations in his sentencing.

The recommendation came from a pair of much-anticipated sentencing memos submitted by the government Friday evening. Those documents also provide new details on the “relevant and truthful” information Cohen has provided special counsel Robert Mueller in his investigation into contacts between the 2016 Trump campaign and Russia.

In a statement Friday night, the White House said the “government’s filings in Mr. Cohen’s case tell us nothing of value that wasn’t already known.” Press secretary Sarah Sanders continued: “Mr. Cohen has repeatedly lied and as the prosecution has pointed out to the court, Mr. Cohen is no hero.”

Cohen has pleaded guilty to financial crimes, campaign finance violations and lying to Congress. The cases were handled by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York and Mueller’s office.

In their filing, prosecutors in New York argued against leniency for Cohen, saying he had committed four federal crimes over the course of several years.

Cohen, they say, was “motivated by personal greed,” and they argue that he “repeatedly used his power and influence for deceptive ends.”

The New York prosecutors asked a judge to impose a sentence moderately less than the potential maximum of 63 months in prison that Cohen faces. The Probation Department has recommended a 42-month term.

The campaign finance violations that Cohen pleaded guilty to in New York federal court related to so-called hush-money payments made to two women who said they had affairs with Trump. Trump has acknowledged the payments to one of the women but has denied their underlying allegations of sexual relationships.

Cohen has said those payments were directed by Trump.

Although Cohen has been cooperating with investigators in New York City and with the office of Justice Department special counsel Robert Mueller, he does not have a full cooperation agreement with the government.

Mueller’s office, in a separate filing, did not take a position on what sentence Cohen should receive when he appears before a judge next week in New York City.

Mueller’s filing did, however, outline Cohen’s help in the Russia investigation. It said that over the course of seven meetings with investigators, he has provided new information about contacts between Trump’s presidential campaign and Russians, including outreach as early as November 2015 from people seeking to arrange meetings between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The meeting did not take place.

Cohen has also provided information about “certain discrete Russia-related matters core” to the special counsel’s investigation. Mueller’s filing says he obtained that information “by virtue of his regular contact with Company executives during the campaign,” which appears to be a reference to the Trump Organization.

And finally, the special counsel’s team says Cohen gave them information about his contacts with people connected to the White House, as well as providing detail about how his false statements to Congress were put together.

Cohen pleaded guilty to lying to Congress about negotiations between Trump’s business and powerful Russians about a possible deal for a Trump Tower in Moscow, a building that ultimately was never built.

Cohen initially told Congress that the talks had stopped by January 2016. Actually, he said in his guilty plea, they continued well into the campaign, past the point at which Trump became the Republican front-runner.

The crafting of that narrative was a “deliberate effort to use his lies as a way to set the tone and shape the course of the hearings in an effort to stymie the inquiries,” the special counsel’s office said.

Cohen wanted to obscure from Congress and the public that if the project had been completed, Trump’s company “could have received hundreds of millions of dollars from Russian sources in licensing fees and other revenues,” prosecutors wrote.

They continued: “The fact that Cohen continued to work on the project and discuss it with [Trump] well into the campaign was material to the ongoing congressional and [special counsel] investigations, particularly because it occurred at a time of sustained efforts by the Russian government to interfere with the U.S. presidential election.”

Mueller’s office has been tasked with investigating whether anyone in Trump’s campaign conspired with the Russians who were waging those “active measures” against the United States and the West.

Trump says his campaign had nothing to do with the Russian election interference and has denounced Mueller’s investigation as a “hoax” and a “witch hunt.”

Trump repeated his criticism again on Friday and said on Twitter that his attorneys have already begun work on a rebuttal to Mueller in case the special counsel’s report is damaging to Trump and becomes public.

The Trump camp also has focused its criticism on Cohen, with Trump’s attorney calling Cohen “a liar” who is making up stories to persuade the government to ease his sentence.

The president has acknowledged “lightly” looking into a Trump Tower project in Moscow but said that doing so broke no law and that he was perfectly within his rights to continue to operate his real estate business at the same time his presidential campaign was picking up steam.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2018/12/07/674368228/ex-trump-lawyer-michael-cohen-should-get-substantial-prison-term-feds-say

Federal prosecutors on Friday recommended a “substantial term of imprisonment” for President Trump’s former personal attorney Michael Cohen, saying his efforts to cooperate with Special Counsel Robert Mueller were “overstated.”

The U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York filed a sentencing memo as part of its criminal investigation and grand jury probe into Cohen’s personal business dealings. Cohen pleaded guilty to several counts of tax and business fraud. He also pleaded guilty to making an excessive campaign contribution.

The memo stated that the range of imprisonment for Cohen and his crimes is 51 to 63 months. It also noted that the court’s Probation Department had recommended a sentence of 42 months, “albeit for different reasons.”

READ THE MICHAEL COHEN SENTENCING MEMO

“This range reflects Cohen’s extensive, deliberate, and serious criminal conduct,” prosecutors said in the memo. It added that while Cohen “should receive credit for his assistance” in Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation, he should still be given a “substantial term of imprisonment, one that reflects a modest downward variance from the applicable guidelines range.”

The filing acknowledged that while Cohen had cooperated with officials and disclosed important information to Mueller’s team, his cooperation was “overstated.”

“To be clear: Cohen does not have a cooperation agreement…and therefore is not properly described as a ‘cooperating witness,’ as that term is commonly used in this District,” the memo read.

The sentencing memo from the Southern District of New York comes just one week after Cohen pleaded guilty to making false statements to Congress about an abandoned Trump real estate project in Moscow as part of Mueller’s investigation into Russian meddling and potential collusion with Trump campaign associates in the 2016 presidential election.

Cohen’s guilty plea in Mueller’s investigation signaled his apparent willingness to cooperate with the special counsel and provide potentially valuable testimony to investigators regarding his relationship with the president and Trump’s actions in exchange for leniency when sentenced to prison—a move Trump himself has blasted in recent days.

Soon after the filing was made public, Trump tweeted that the document “Totally clears the President. Thank you!”

White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said the filings “tell us nothing of value that wasn’t already known.

“Mr. Cohen has repeatedly lied and as the prosecution has pointed out to the court, Mr. Cohen is no hero,” Sanders added.

Federal prosecutors said that Cohen was “motivated” by “personal greed” and “repeatedly used his power and influence for deceptive ends.”

“Cohen, an attorney and businessman, committed four distinct federal crimes over a period of several years,” the memo read. “The crimes committed by Cohen were more serious than his submission allows and were marked by a pattern of deception that permeated his professional life (and was evidently hidden from the friends and family members who wrote on his behalf.)”

“He was motivated to do so by personal greed, and repeatedly used his power and influence for deceptive ends,”

— The U.S. Attorney General’s Office for the Southern District of New York

As part of his guilty plea in the criminal investigation led by the Southern District of New York, Cohen admitted to making an excessive campaign contribution, which refers to the $130,000 hush money payment to porn star Stormy Daniels in the weeks leading up to the 2016 presidential election in exchange for her silence over an alleged one-time sexual encounter with Trump, who is referred to as “Individual-1” in the documents. At issue was also a payment to Playboy model Karen MacDougal.

The memo revealed that Cohen arranged for one of the payments “through a media company and disguised it as a services contract, and executed the second non-disclosure agreement with aliases and routed the six-figure payment through a shell corporation.  After the election, he arranged for his own reimbursement via fraudulent invoices for non-existent legal services ostensibly performed pursuant to a non-existent ‘retainer’ agreement.”

The memo states that when payments began to surface, Cohen “told shifting and misleading stories about the nature of the payment, his coordination with the candidate, and the fact that he was reimbursed.”

Trump repeatedly denied having knowledge of the payment to Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford. He and his attorney, Rudy Giuliani, have provided conflicting accounts of whether the president was aware in the transaction.

Daniels’ lawyer, Michael Avenatti, tweeted that Cohen “lied to my client, the American people and investigators for years. He is a thug and deserves to be severely punished.”

The memo also revealed that during the 2016 presidential campaign, Cohen “privately told friends and colleagues, including in seized text messages, that he expected to be given a prominent role and title in the new administration.”

“When that did not materialize, Cohen found a way to monetize his relationship with and access to the president.  Cohen successfully convinced numerous major corporations to retain him as a “consultant” who could provide unique insights about and access to the new administration, the memo read. “Some of these corporations were then stuck making large up-front or periodic payments to Cohen, even though he provided little or no real services under these contracts.  Bank records reflect that Cohen made more than $4 million dollars before the contracts were terminated.”

In a separate memo, Mueller’s office detailed Cohen’s cooperation with the special counsel’s investigation. They described the information Cohen provided as “credible and consistent with other evidence obtained in the … ongoing investigation.”

The memo said Cohen had investigators that he had spoken with “a Russian national who claimed to be a ‘trusted person'” and offered the Trump campaign “‘political synergy’ and ‘synergy on a government level'” in November 2015. Cohen told investigators that the unidentified Russian repeatedly proposed a meeting between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, which the person said “could have a ‘phenomenal’ impact ‘not only in political but in a business dimension as well.'” Ultimately, Cohen “did not follow up” with the individual.

Rudy Giuliani, President Trump’s attorney, told Fox News that Cohen corresponded with the individual on his own and the person’s offers were not conveyed to then-candidate Trump.

Two months earlier, in September 2015, Cohen suggested in a radio interview that Trump meet with Putin during the Russian leader’s trip to the United Nations General Assembly. The special counsel memo said Cohen admitted that he had “conferred with [Trump] about contacting the Russian government before reaching out to gauge Russia’s interest in such a meeting.”

Cohen is scheduled to be sentenced Dec. 12.

Fox News’ Bill Mears, Jake Gibson, Matt Leach and John Roberts contributed to this report. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/federal-prosecutors-recommend-substantial-term-of-imprisonment-for-michael-cohen


A memorial to Heather Heyer and the other victims of last year’s hit and run is seen a few blocks away the first day of jury selection for James Fields’s murder trial at the Charlottesville Circuit Court, November 26, 2018 in Charlottesville, Virginia. | Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

charlottesville

12/07/2018 06:18 PM EST

A man who drove his car into a crowd of counterprotesters at a white nationalist rally in Virginia was convicted Friday of first-degree murder for killing a woman in an attack that inflamed long-simmering racial and political tensions across the country.

A state jury rejected arguments that James Alex Fields Jr. acted in self-defense during a “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville on Aug. 12, 2017. Jurors also convicted Fields of eight other charges, including aggravated malicious wounding and hit and run.

Story Continued Below

Fields, 21, drove to Virginia from his home in Maumee, Ohio, to support the white nationalists. As a large group of counterprotesters marched through Charlottesville singing and laughing, he stopped his car, backed up, then sped into the crowd, according to testimony from witnesses and video surveillance shown to jurors.

Prosecutors told the jury that Fields was angry after witnessing violent clashes between the two sides earlier in the day. The violence prompted police to shut down the rally before it even officially began.

Heather Heyer, a 32-year-old paralegal and civil rights activist, was killed, and nearly three dozen others were injured. The trial featured emotional testimony from survivors who described devastating injuries and long, complicated recoveries.

The far-right rally had been organized in part to protest the planned removal of a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. Hundreds of Ku Klux Klan members, neo-Nazis and other white nationalists — emboldened by the election of President Donald Trump — streamed into the college town for one of the largest gatherings of white supremacists in a decade. Some dressed in battle gear.

Afterward, Trump inflamed tensions even further when he said “both sides” were to blame, a comment some saw as a refusal to condemn racism.

According to one of his former teachers, Fields was known in high school for being fascinated with Nazism and idolizing Adolf Hitler. Jurors were shown a text message he sent to his mother days before the rally that included an image of the notorious German dictator. When his mother pleaded with him to be careful, he replied: “we’re not the one (sic) who need to be careful.”

During one of two recorded phone calls Fields made to his mother from jail in the months after he was arrested, he told her he had been mobbed “by a violent group of terrorists” at the rally. In another, Fields referred to the mother of the woman who was killed as a “communist” and “one of those anti-white supremacists.”

Prosecutors also showed jurors a meme Fields posted on Instagram three months before the rally in which bodies are shown being thrown into the air after a car hits a crowd of people identified as protesters. He posted the meme publicly to his Instagram page and sent a similar image as a private message to a friend in May 2017.

But Fields’ lawyers told the jury that he drove into the crowd on the day of the rally because he feared for his life and was “scared to death” by earlier violence he had witnessed. A video of Fields being interrogated after the crash showed him sobbing and hyperventilating after he was told a woman had died and others were seriously injured.

The jury will reconvene Monday to determine a sentence. Under the law, jurors can recommend from 20 years to life in prison.

Fields is eligible for the death penalty if convicted of separate federal hate crime charges. No trial has been scheduled yet.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/story/2018/12/07/james-alex-fields-charlottesville-counterprotesters-convicted-murder-1052213

George Conway, the husband of White House counselor Kellyanne ConwayKellyanne Elizabeth ConwayRoger Stone attacks Schiff as ‘full of schiff’ over perjury allegations Conway’s husband fires back at Eric Trump by sharing tweet about alleged Trump affair with Stormy Daniels The Hill’s Morning Report — Presented by T-Mobile — Washington poised to avert shutdown crisis, for now MORE and a prominent conservative lawyer, responded to President TrumpDonald John TrumpKobach ‘very concerned’ voter fraud may have happened in North Carolina Trump Jr. makes fun of Ocasio-Cortez by sharing meme that suggests socialists eat dogs Trump’s 2020 campaign will be headquartered at Trump Tower: report MORE‘s tweet Friday evening that claimed new court filings involving his former longtime lawyer Michael Cohen exonerated him.

“Except for that little part where the US Attorney’s Office says that you directed and coordinated with Cohen to commit two felonies,” Conway wrote in response to Trump. “Other than that, totally scot-free.”

Federal prosecutors in New York submitted a new file in a case involving Cohen on Friday, in which they recommended “substantial” prison time for the former Trump lawyer despite his cooperation agreement on multiple investigations, including the special counsel probe.

The document states that Cohen “acted in coordination with and at the direction of” Trump in steering payments to silence Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal, two women claiming they had affairs with Trump, before the 2016 presidential election.

Prosecutors argue that the payments were meant to influence the election, thereby violating campaign finance laws. Cohen had previously implicated Trump when he pleaded guilty in August to violating campaign finance laws in relation to the payments.

Friday’s filing does not specifically name Trump, but refers to an “Individual 1” that prosecutors say Cohen worked for before they launched a White House bid and said he worked for them as a personal attorney after they “had become the President of the United States.”

Conway joined several other legal pundits, including former acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal and former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti, in saying that actions described in the filings amounted to two felony charges for Trump.

Conway has been a vocal critic of Trump’s, and has recently co-authored op-eds in the New York Times and The Washington Post saying the president’s actions have crossed legal lines. Earlier this week he also feuded with the president’s son Eric TrumpEric Frederick TrumpConway’s husband fires back at Eric Trump by sharing tweet about alleged Trump affair with Stormy Daniels Eric Trump accuses George Conway of ‘utter disrespect’ toward Kellyanne Eric Trump offers to replace Trump supporter’s flag after it was burned, left on porch MORE.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/420379-conways-husband-jokes-about-trumps-tweet-other-than-that-totally-scot

SAN FRANCISCO — A divided U.S. appeals court late Friday refused to immediately allow the Trump administration to enforce a ban on asylum for any immigrants who illegally cross the U.S.-Mexico border.

The ban is inconsistent with an existing U.S. law and an attempted end-run around Congress, a panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said in a 2-1 decision.

“Just as we may not, as we are often reminded, ‘legislate from the bench,’ neither may the Executive legislate from the Oval Office,” 9th Circuit Judge Jay Bybee, a nominee of Republican President George W. Bush, wrote for the majority.

A spokesman for the U.S. Department of Justice, Steven Stafford, did not have comment. But he referred to an earlier statement that called the asylum system broken and said the department looked forward to “continuing to defend the Executive Branch’s legitimate and well-reasoned exercise of its authority to address the crisis at our southern border.”

At issue is President Donald Trump’s Nov. 9 proclamation that barred anyone who crossed the U.S.-Mexico border between official ports of entry from seeking asylum. Trump issued the proclamation in response to caravans of migrants approaching the border.

A lower court judge temporarily blocked the ban and later refused to immediately reinstate it. The administration appealed to the 9th Circuit for an immediate stay of Judge Jon Tigar’s Nov. 19 temporary restraining order.

In a dissenting opinion Friday, 9th Circuit Judge Edward Leavy said the administration “adopted legal methods to cope with the current problems rampant at the southern border.” Nothing in the law the majority cited prevented a rule categorically barring eligibility for asylum on the basis of how a person entered the country, Leavy, a nominee of Republican President Ronald Reagan, said.

In his Nov, 19 ruling, Tigar sided with legal groups who argued that federal law is clear that immigrants in the U.S. can request asylum regardless of whether they entered legally.

The president “may not rewrite the immigration laws to impose a condition that Congress has expressly forbidden,” the judge said in his order.

The ruling led to an unusual public dispute between Trump and Chief Justice John Roberts after Trump dismissed Tigar — an appointee of Trump’s predecessor — as an “Obama judge.”

Roberts responded with a statement that the federal judiciary doesn’t have “Obama judges or Trump judges, Bush judges or Clinton judges.”

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/u-s-appeals-court-won-t-immediately-allow-trump-asylum-n945536

ROME — Six people, all but one of them minors, were killed and dozens more injured in a stampede of panicked concertgoers early Saturday at a disco in a small town on Italy’s central Adriatic coast, authorities said. A teenage survivor told ANSA that when he tried to flee, he discovered that at least one of the emergency exits was locked.

The dead included three girls and two boys and an adult woman, a mother who had accompanied her daughter to the disco in Corinaldo, near Ancona, where a rapper was set to perform, Ancona Police Chief Oreste Capocasa said.  

The club was hosting a concert by Sfera Ebbasta, one of the best known Italian rappers, and up to 1,000 people were thought to be inside, BBC News reports.  The Lanterna Azzurra club was packed at the time and many of the injured suffered crushing wounds.

The bodies of the trampled victims were all found near a low wall inside the disco, Ancona Firefighters Cmdr. Dino Poggiali told Sky TG24 News.

Asked about survivors’ accounts that at least one emergency exit door was blocked or didn’t work, Poggiali said that it was too early in the investigation to know if any safety violations might have played a role. He said that when rescuers arrived, all the doors of the discos were open.

He said he didn’t have any immediately confirmation from survivors that the use of an irritating spray, like pepper spray, had set off the panic.

Fourteen of the injured were in serious condition, and some 40 others less seriously injured, Poggiali said. Some of those with minor injuries were treated and released from a hospital, he said. Firefighters had concentrated on giving first aid to survivors, stretched out on the road outside the club, before starting their investigation, Poggiali said.

The Italian news agency ANSA said the audience at Italian rapper Sfera Ebbasta’s concert at the Lanterna Azzurra nightclub panicked and ran for the exits after someone sprayed a substance similar to pepper spray.

“It was a mess. The bouncers were getting the persons out,” one unidentified witness told RAI state radio. “I went out the main door. People fell, one after the other, on top of each other. Absurd.”

A 16-year-old boy told ANSA that disco patrons were dancing while awaiting the start of the concert when the stampede erupted. The boy, who was being treated at a hospital, said that at least one of the emergency exits was locked when he tried to flee.

Authorities didn’t immediately say how old the victims were, but RAI state radio said the deceased mother was 40, and that about 1,000 people were inside when the stampede began.

Carabinieri paramilitary police were investigating the cause, in addition to fire officials.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/lanterna-azzurra-stampede-sfera-ebbasta-corinaldo-italy-today-2018-12-08/

Federal prosecutors on Friday recommended a “substantial term of imprisonment” for President Trump’s former personal attorney Michael Cohen, saying his efforts to cooperate with Special Counsel Robert Mueller were “overstated.”

The U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York filed a sentencing memo as part of its criminal investigation and grand jury probe into Cohen’s personal business dealings. Cohen pleaded guilty to several counts of tax and business fraud. He also pleaded guilty to making an excessive campaign contribution.

The memo stated that the range of imprisonment for Cohen and his crimes is 51 to 63 months. It also noted that the court’s Probation Department had recommended a sentence of 42 months, “albeit for different reasons.”

READ THE MICHAEL COHEN SENTENCING MEMO

“This range reflects Cohen’s extensive, deliberate, and serious criminal conduct,” prosecutors said in the memo. It added that while Cohen “should receive credit for his assistance” in Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation, he should still be given a “substantial term of imprisonment, one that reflects a modest downward variance from the applicable guidelines range.”

The filing acknowledged that while Cohen had cooperated with officials and disclosed important information to Mueller’s team, his cooperation was “overstated.”

“To be clear: Cohen does not have a cooperation agreement…and therefore is not properly described as a ‘cooperating witness,’ as that term is commonly used in this District,” the memo read.

The sentencing memo from the Southern District of New York comes just one week after Cohen pleaded guilty to making false statements to Congress about an abandoned Trump real estate project in Moscow as part of Mueller’s investigation into Russian meddling and potential collusion with Trump campaign associates in the 2016 presidential election.

Cohen’s guilty plea in Mueller’s investigation signaled his apparent willingness to cooperate with the special counsel and provide potentially valuable testimony to investigators regarding his relationship with the president and Trump’s actions in exchange for leniency when sentenced to prison—a move Trump himself has blasted in recent days.

Soon after the filing was made public, Trump tweeted that the document “Totally clears the President. Thank you!”

White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said the filings “tell us nothing of value that wasn’t already known.

“Mr. Cohen has repeatedly lied and as the prosecution has pointed out to the court, Mr. Cohen is no hero,” Sanders added.

Federal prosecutors said that Cohen was “motivated” by “personal greed” and “repeatedly used his power and influence for deceptive ends.”

“Cohen, an attorney and businessman, committed four distinct federal crimes over a period of several years,” the memo read. “The crimes committed by Cohen were more serious than his submission allows and were marked by a pattern of deception that permeated his professional life (and was evidently hidden from the friends and family members who wrote on his behalf.)”

“He was motivated to do so by personal greed, and repeatedly used his power and influence for deceptive ends,”

— The U.S. Attorney General’s Office for the Southern District of New York

As part of his guilty plea in the criminal investigation led by the Southern District of New York, Cohen admitted to making an excessive campaign contribution, which refers to the $130,000 hush money payment to porn star Stormy Daniels in the weeks leading up to the 2016 presidential election in exchange for her silence over an alleged one-time sexual encounter with Trump, who is referred to as “Individual-1” in the documents. At issue was also a payment to Playboy model Karen MacDougal.

The memo revealed that Cohen arranged for one of the payments “through a media company and disguised it as a services contract, and executed the second non-disclosure agreement with aliases and routed the six-figure payment through a shell corporation.  After the election, he arranged for his own reimbursement via fraudulent invoices for non-existent legal services ostensibly performed pursuant to a non-existent ‘retainer’ agreement.”

The memo states that when payments began to surface, Cohen “told shifting and misleading stories about the nature of the payment, his coordination with the candidate, and the fact that he was reimbursed.”

Trump repeatedly denied having knowledge of the payment to Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford. He and his attorney, Rudy Giuliani, have provided conflicting accounts of whether the president was aware in the transaction.

Daniels’ lawyer, Michael Avenatti, tweeted that Cohen “lied to my client, the American people and investigators for years. He is a thug and deserves to be severely punished.”

The memo also revealed that during the 2016 presidential campaign, Cohen “privately told friends and colleagues, including in seized text messages, that he expected to be given a prominent role and title in the new administration.”

“When that did not materialize, Cohen found a way to monetize his relationship with and access to the president.  Cohen successfully convinced numerous major corporations to retain him as a “consultant” who could provide unique insights about and access to the new administration, the memo read. “Some of these corporations were then stuck making large up-front or periodic payments to Cohen, even though he provided little or no real services under these contracts.  Bank records reflect that Cohen made more than $4 million dollars before the contracts were terminated.”

In a separate memo, Mueller’s office detailed Cohen’s cooperation with the special counsel’s investigation. They described the information Cohen provided as “credible and consistent with other evidence obtained in the … ongoing investigation.”

The memo said Cohen had investigators that he had spoken with “a Russian national who claimed to be a ‘trusted person'” and offered the Trump campaign “‘political synergy’ and ‘synergy on a government level'” in November 2015. Cohen told investigators that the unidentified Russian repeatedly proposed a meeting between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, which the person said “could have a ‘phenomenal’ impact ‘not only in political but in a business dimension as well.'” Ultimately, Cohen “did not follow up” with the individual.

Rudy Giuliani, President Trump’s attorney, told Fox News that Cohen corresponded with the individual on his own and the person’s offers were not conveyed to then-candidate Trump.

Two months earlier, in September 2015, Cohen suggested in a radio interview that Trump meet with Putin during the Russian leader’s trip to the United Nations General Assembly. The special counsel memo said Cohen admitted that he had “conferred with [Trump] about contacting the Russian government before reaching out to gauge Russia’s interest in such a meeting.”

Cohen is scheduled to be sentenced Dec. 12.

Fox News’ Bill Mears, Jake Gibson, Matt Leach and John Roberts contributed to this report. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/federal-prosecutors-recommend-substantial-term-of-imprisonment-for-michael-cohen

Both the Southern District of New York and special counsel Robert Mueller’s office dropped their respective sentencing memos for President Trump’s since-fired personal attorney Michael Cohen just before 5 p.m. on Friday. Although Robert Mueller called Cohen’s crime of lying about Trump’s proposed Moscow project “serious,” it seems as though Cohen’s campaign finance violations in the hush money payments issued to Trump’s ex-flings Karen McDougal and Stormy Daniels are far more damning.

The primary tell that this is the case comes from Mueller’s conclusion, in which the Special Counsel’s Office defers to the SDNY Court.

The Special Counsel’s Office wrote:

The office said as much after asserting that they do “not take a position with respect to a particular sentence to be imposed.”

The Special Counsel’s Office does say Cohen lied when he claimed that his previous public comments that Trump should meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin in a September 2015 radio interview were spontaneous. Instead, Mueller says that Cohen admitted that he “had in fact conferred about contacting the Russian government before reaching out to gauge Russia’s interest in a meeting.” Furthermore, Cohen lied to Congress when he said that planning for Trump’s Moscow project was canceled before the Iowa caucus. Yet the Special Counsel’s Office obfuscates whether these lies were covering up any improper contact between the Trump Organization or campaign and the Russian government.

The SDNY report is far more direct.

“A Substantial Term of Imprisonment Is Warranted,” the SDNY writes. “[Cohen] was motivated to [commit four distinct federal crimes] by personal greed, and repeatedly used his power and influence for deceptive ends. Now he seeks extraordinary leniency — a sentence of no jail time — based principally on his rose-colored view of the seriousness of the crimes; his claims to a sympathetic personal history; and his provision of certain information to law enforcement. But the crimes committed by Cohen were more serious than his submission allows and were marked by a pattern of deception that permeated his professional life (and was evidently hidden from the friends and family members who wrote on his behalf).”

Cohen confessed to taking direction from Trump in initiating the Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal deals in conjunction with AMI, the company that owns the National Enquirer. The SDNY clearly found this to be a violation of campaign finance laws as both deals are considered undisclosed in-kind contributions intended to influence the election.

The most damaging aspect for Trump in all of this is not that he may have attempted semi-corrupt business dealings in Moscow that ultimately did not pan out, but rather that he personally instructed Cohen to violate federal law, if Cohen and the filings are to be believed.

The Achilles’ heel for Trump and Michael Cohen doesn’t look like it’ll be Russia. Instead, it’s women who are their weakness.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/trumps-alleged-affairs-hurt-michael-cohen-more-than-the-moscow-project