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El senador nacionalista Luis Lacalle Pou le respondió esta mañana en el programa a Diario de El País TV al presidente Tabaré Vázquez, quien había señalado que si pensaba que había “dos mundos” debería ir al psiquiatra.

“No fui al psiquiatra, de chiquito fui al psicólogo”, señaló el senador. A lo que agregó: “El ojo clínico del presidente me manda a tomar pastillas”.

Además agregó explicó prefiere estar “en el mundo de la gente y decir lo que no se cumplió” en las reuniones por seguridad, que seguir concurriendo para “sacarse fotos”.

Como conclusión, Lacalle Pou subrayó que “Vázquez no puede con la seguridad y no puede con su ministro”, en referencia a Eduardo Bonomi.

Para ver todas las entrevistas de El País TV haga click aquí.

Luis Lacalle Pou en El País TV.

Source Article from http://www.elpais.com.uy/informacion/lacalle-pou-responde-vazquez-psiquiatra.html

Scores of current and former law enforcement chiefs endorse Joe Biden and call Donald Trump a ‘lawless president’ despite wrapping his campaign in laws and order’ rhetoric

  • List includes 190 sheriffs, state attorneys general, prosecutors, former police chiefs, and U.S. attorneys
  • It comes as Trump continues to center his campaign around ‘law and order’ 
  • Names come from such states as Arizona, Colorado and Michigan, and Ohio 

Democrat Joe Biden‘s presidential campaign has amassed more than 190 endorsements from sheriffs, prosecutors and attorneys general even as Donald Trump centers his campaign around a call for ‘law and corder.

The list includes former sheriffs, state attorneys general, and U.S. attorneys. Many come from battleground states such as Colardao, Michigan, and Arizona, during a campaign when protests and violent clashes in cities has become an undercurrent of the campaign. 

Some of those lending the name to the effort, which was reported by Fox News, blasted Trump as a ‘lawless’ president.

Joe Biden’s campaign announced the backing of 190 former sheriffs, state attorneys general, and U.S. attorneys

Among them was Noble Wray, the retired police chief of Madison, Wisconsin. “It’s ironic that a lawless president claims to be the ‘law and order’ president,” Wray told the network. “We are at a crossroads with this nation, and we need a president that has always prioritized the safety of Americans and their families.”

Said the Biden campaign in a statement Friday morning: ‘Their endorsement comes on the heels of Donald Trump’s attempts to characterize himself as the ‘Law and Order’ president despite failing to condemn violence, his gross mismanagement of the coronavirus, and his incitement of chaos, destruction and violence as a way to rally his base and advance his political agenda. Additionally, 23 Democratic Attorneys-General have already endorsed Biden.’ 

Biden’s list came out a day after the former vice president toured Kenosha, Wisconsin and met with the family of Jacob Blake, who was shot in the back seven times by a police officer.

President Donald Trump listens to Kenosha County Sheriff David Beth (R) on September 1, 2020, at Mary D. Bradford High School in Kenosha, Wisconsin. – Trump visited Kenosha, the city at the center of a raging US debate over racism, despite pleas to stay away and claims he is dangerously fanning tensions as a reelection ploy

Trump has made support from law enforcement groups a pillar of his campaign

Both candidates toward Kenosha, the site of protests and destruction following the shooting of Jacob Blake

The Biden camp announced the endorsements after both he and Trump visited Kenosha, Wisconsin

Trump had visited a day earlier, where he toured small businesses turned to rubble and met with law enforcement members who support him – including Sheriff David Beth, who has already drawn controversy for his 2018 comments calling for a group of black shoplifters to be warehoused for life.

Late Thursday, Trump tweeted: ‘Why aren’t the Portland Police ARRESTING the cold blooded killer of Aaron “Jay” Danielson. Do your job, and do it fast. Everybody knows who this thug is. No wonder Portland is going to hell!’ He tagged the Justice Department and the FBI. 

Michael Reinoehl, 48, an Antifa gunman who had admitted shooting Danielson, a Patriot Prayer supporter, died later in a shootout with U.S. Marhsalls.

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Source Article from https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8698059/Scores-current-former-law-enforcement-chiefs-endorse-Joe-Biden.html

DEKALB COUNTY, GA. — A triple shooting at a DeKalb County grocery store in Georgia has left a cashier dead and a deputy and the gunman injured, ABC affiliate WSB-TV reported.

The shooting happened Monday afternoon at the Big Bear grocery store along Candler Road.

The incident started when a man walked into the store and refused to put on a mask.

[Man arrested, accused of shooting outside AMC Theatres at Concord Mills]

“I have a friend who works in this store and I think it was her who got shot and it’s just really sad,” witness Marquisha White said. “I don’t know what the world is coming to — period.”

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation said the cashier told Victor Lee Tucker, Jr., 30, of Palmetto, to put on a mask and that’s when the chaos unfolded.

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“Tucker left the store without making his purchase, but immediately returned inside. Tucker walked directly back to the cashier, pulled out a handgun and shot her,” the GBI said in a news release.

“The deputy returned fire, shooting the suspect who has also been transported to a local hospital,” said DeKalb County Sherriff Melody Maddox.

The GBI said two DeKalb County police officers arrested Tucker as he was attempting to crawl out the front door of the store.

Fernandes spoke with owner of Big Bear, who did not give his name.

He said he hired and off-duty deputy to help enforce the mask policy at the store.

After Monday’s triple shooting, he said he may not allow customers to carry any guns inside the store anymore.

“How come they carry all the guns in a public place like that?” he asked, calling the practice “bad.”

People who frequent the store say the gunman is well known at Big Bear and they believe he may have some mental health issues.

Tucker was taken to Grady Memorial Hospital where he was last listed as being in stable condition.

Another cashier was also grazed by a bullet. She was treated at the scene.

The deputy was taken to Atlanta Medical Center where he was last listed as being in stable condition.

Source Article from https://www.wsoctv.com/news/local/triple-shooting-over-masks-georgia-grocery-store-leaves-cashier-dead-deputy-man-injured/BUGEDLFUVVBXXLRET55FJC6ZEI/

The “battle for Donbas” looks to be underway in Ukraine, as Russia concentrates its war machine on the eastern region — a major strategic, political and economic target for the Kremlin.

Having mostly pulled back from northern parts of Ukraine, Russia’s long-anticipated offensive in the east appeared to begin in earnest on Monday, with its military forces unleashing attacks on a number of areas within the Donbas.

“It can now be stated that Russian troops have begun the battle for Donbas, for which they have been preparing for a long time,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Monday, adding that “a very large part of the entire Russian army is now focused on this offensive.”

CNBC takes a look at the three main reasons why Russia is now focusing on eastern Ukraine:

1. Russia needs a ‘victory’

A longtime focus for Russia, the Donbas region includes two Russian-backed separatist “republics” in Luhansk and Donetsk. They have been fighting Ukrainian forces for years.

Now, Russia’s apparent refocus on the area comes after few military successes in the rest of Ukraine despite almost two months of fighting.

“[Russian President Vladimir] Putin has given up on his more ambitious goals completely,” former U.S. Ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul commented Tuesday on Twitter, saying it was “very striking how they have changed the name of their war to ‘special military operation in defense of Donbas.'”

Russia’s forces appear to have been underprepared and ill-equipped to deal with the harsh fighting conditions in Ukraine and the strong resistance mounted by the country. Despite causing much destruction, Moscow has achieved relatively little — and it has failed to bring about the swift fall of the capital Kyiv and removal of Zelenskyy’s pro-Western government.

As such, analysts believe this has prompted Russia to refocus its efforts on the complete takeovers of key strategic cities in southern Ukraine and on the Black Sea, for example the port cities of Mykolaiv, Mariupol and Kherson. The latter two are almost completely in Russian control, despite pockets of fierce resistance from Ukrainian fighters.

Russia is also thought to be looking to take over Odesa further up the coast to the west, although that’s seen as a much harder task.

The Kremlin is seen to be striving to declare some kind of victory in Ukraine by May 9 — a day known as “Victory Day” that holds great national importance for Russia as it marks the Soviet Union’s defeat in 1945 of Nazi Germany in World War II.

The Kyiv Independent newspaper reported in March that Russian troops were being told that the war must end by May 9, citing intelligence from the general staff of the armed forces of Ukraine. The Russian Defense Ministry was unavailable to immediately comment on this when contacted by CNBC.

Ukraine’s Zelenskyy noted on Monday that an increasing number of attacks were recorded in the Donbas, near the cities of Izyum in the Kharkiv district and Sloviansk in the Donetsk district, as well as around Severodonetsk and Popasna in the Luhansk region, further east.

Separately, a senior U.S. Defense official confirmed on Monday that Russian forces have added to their footprint inside of Ukraine, with nearly all of their ground forces deployed to eastern and southern parts of the country.

2. Russia wants a land bridge

A “win” in eastern Ukraine is not only key for Russia in terms of its military strategy; it has significant economic value, too.

Firstly, the Donbas itself is a heavily industrialized region known for its coal mining industry and large coal reserves that Russia could potentially access if it annexed the entire region.

And secondly, control of the region would also enable Russia to create a “land bridge” to Crimea, which it annexed from Ukraine in 2014, and which is a vital military and trading hub for Moscow on the Black Sea.

This push to be able to access Crimea by land is a key reason that the southern port city of Mariupol — which is directly in the path of a possible land bridge — has been the focus for Russian attacks and Ukrainian resistance: winning or losing it has big consequences for both sides.

Eurasia Group founder and President Ian Bremmer noted that Russia was now in “phase two” of its invasion, with different strategic objectives.

This includes “capturing all of the Donbas” including the Donetsk and Luhansk provinces, he said in emailed comments Monday, and securing a land bridge from the region to Crimea.

He said Russia’s other goals included to fully control the city of Kherson — crucial to securing the freshwater canals to Crimea that the Ukrainians have cut off — and to seize “some buffer territory to hold it all comfortably.”

3. Russian identity politics

The Donbas region is also important to Russia when it comes to its own national identity and its influence over former Soviet territories — and the people within them that still identify as being Russian.

Indeed, Russia’s self-proclaimed “defense” of ethnic Russians in the Luhansk and Donetsk regions (which are overwhelmingly Russian-speaking) has formed a large part of its justification for invading Ukraine.

The area is no stranger to conflict; the self-proclaimed Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics have been the location of fighting between Russian-backed separatists and Ukrainian forces ever since Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine. Figures vary, but it’s believed that around 14,000 people were killed during the prolonged but lower-level conflict in the area.

Aside from the conflict, over the last eight years analysts say Russia has been sowing the seeds that would enable it to annex the Luhansk and Donetsk regions with attempts to “Russify” the areas, such as offering Russian passports and citizenship to residents there since 2019.

Political analysts saw this as a cynical precursor to an incursion, because Russia could defend such a move by saying it was seeking to “protect” its citizens from Ukraine. Russian state media has focused on Donbas residents fleeing in recent weeks, repeatedly accusing Ukraine’s military of war crimes in the region, allegations denied by Ukraine.

For its part, Russia has repeatedly denied backing rebels in the Luhansk and Donetsk areas, despite evidence of financial support for the breakaway “republics” and Russian weapons being used by separatists to fight Ukrainian forces.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/04/19/why-does-russia-want-the-donbas-region-so-much.html

Jeb Bush believes a Republican should challenge President Trump for the nomination in 2020 — slamming the president’s “dangerous” policies on trade and other issues.

In the latest salvo between the two former rivals, Bush, who ran unsuccessfully for the GOP presidential nomination in 2016, made the comments Saturday during an interview with ex-Obama adviser David Axelrod.

“I think someone should run just because Republicans ought to be given a choice,” Bush said on CNN’s “The Axe Files.”  “It’s hard to beat a sitting president, but to have a conversation about what it is to be a conservative, I think it’s important.”

BETO BOASTS OF HAVING REPUBLICAN MOM, DESPITE HER FREQUENT VOTES FOR DEMOCRATS

Bush, whose father George. H.W. Bush was the 41st president of the United States and his brother, George W. Bush, was the 43rd, reportedly added that Republican voters should be given more of a choice between different ideologies.

“And our country needs to have competing ideologies that people — that are dynamic, that focus on the world we’re in and the world we’re moving toward rather than revert back to a nostalgic time,” he said on CNN, seeming to take aim at Trump’s “Make America Great Again” 2016 slogan.

Bush elaborated about his disagreements with Trump during the interview.

“We haven’t had a major crisis to deal with, but this unilateralism or going-alone-ism I think is really dangerous,” Bush said of Trump’s foreign policy moves, according to The Hill.

“Our friends no longer believe they can trust the United States and our enemies, in many cases, feel emboldened by this approach,” he reportedly added. “I think it defies the…bipartisan kind of consensus on foreign policy that has, by and large, kept America safe.”

ANOTHER BIDEN GAFFE? FORMER VP CLAIMS HE’S ‘MOST PROGRESSIVE DEM’ RUNNING

According to The Hill, Bush also critiqued Trump’s ability to handle the more symbolic aspects of running the country, such as responding during moments of crisis.

However, he did praise Trump’s tax policy, regulatory changes and judicial nominations.

“You can honestly say he’s done good things in terms of policy and applaud them,” Bush said. “I think the symbolic, you know the kingly duties of the presidency, that’s where he falls short, and it’s important.”

The interview is the latest in a series of back-and-forth jabs between the two men.

Bush blasted Trump in September 2018 as a bad role model for young children, telling the Detroit Free Press: “He is not my role model as it relates to values I would share with my children and grandchildren.”

During a June 2018 interview with CNBC, Bush criticized Trump for going negative, saying that candidates must be civil with one another.

“The kind of campaign [Trump] ran would have never been successful a decade ago or in the age of [Ronald] Reagan and Bush, for example,” said Bush.

BEHIND THE BUDGET ‘GIMMICK’ THAT COULD HELP SECURE TRUMP’S BORDER WALL

The ends don’t justify the means, Bush said, referring to the way Trump goes negative. “It’s not worth disparaging people.”

Bush told Axelrod that Republicans need to “offer a compelling alternative” to Democratic ideas rather than just calling their ideas “bad.”

So far, the only person to hint at challenging Trump for the 2020 GOP nomination is former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld, who formed an exploratory committee in February.

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Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/jeb-bush-trump-should-be-challenged-by-a-republican-in-2020

Ronny Tong, a member of the Executive Council, the top advisory body to the chief executive, said on Thursday that he had been wary of invoking the emergency regulations because he feared the stigma it would bring to Hong Kong internationally. But he said he would “reluctantly endorse” a face mask ban as an alternative to a general curfew, an idea recently suggested by some pro-Beijing hard-liners.

Enforcement, too, could be difficult. France has such a ban, but it has not prevented many so-called yellow vest protesters from wearing them anyway.

“The government has been weighing the pros and cons, and those who are against it argue it wouldn’t help much,” said Jasper Tsang, the founder of the biggest pro-Beijing political party and the president of the legislature until 2016.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/04/world/asia/hong-kong-emergency-powers.html

Secret Service agents rushed President Trump to a White House bunker Friday night as hundreds of protesters gathered outside the executive mansion, some of them throwing rocks and tugging at police barricades.

Trump spent nearly an hour in the bunker, which was designed for use in emergencies like terrorist attacks, according to a Republican close to the White House who was not authorized to publicly discuss private matters and spoke on condition of anonymity. The account was confirmed by an administration official who also spoke on condition of anonymity.

The abrupt decision by the agents underscored the rattled mood inside the White House, where the chants from protesters in Lafayette Park could be heard all weekend and Secret Service agents and law enforcement officers struggled to contain the crowds.

Friday’s protests were triggered by the death last week of George Floyd, an unarmed black man who died after he was pinned at the neck by a white Minneapolis police officer for several minutes. The demonstrations in Washington turned violent and appeared to catch officers by surprise. They sparked one of the highest alerts on the White House complex since the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001.

“The White House does not comment on security protocols and decisions,” said White House spokesman Judd Deere. The Secret Service said it does not discuss the means and methods of its protective operations. The president’s move to the bunker was first reported by the New York Times.

The president and his family have been shaken by the size and venom of the crowds, according to the Republican. It was not immediately clear if First Lady Melania Trump and the couple’s 14-year-old son, Barron, joined the president in the bunker. Secret Service protocol would have called for all those under the agency’s protection to be in the underground shelter.

Trump has told advisors he worries about his safety, while both privately and publicly praising the work of the Secret Service.

Trump traveled to Florida on Saturday to view the first manned space launch from the U.S. in nearly a decade. He returned to a White House under virtual siege, with protesters — some violent — gathered just a few hundred yards away through much of the night.

Demonstrators returned Sunday afternoon, facing off against police at Lafayette Park into the evening.

Trump continued his effort to project strength, using a series of inflammatory tweets and delivering partisan attacks during a time of national crisis.

As cities burned night after night and images of violence dominated television coverage, Trump’s advisors discussed the prospect of an Oval Office address in an attempt to ease tensions. The notion was quickly scrapped for lack of policy proposals and the president’s own seeming disinterest in delivering a message of unity.

Trump did not appear in public Sunday. Instead, a White House official who was not authorized to discuss the plans ahead of time said Trump was expected in the coming days to draw distinctions between the legitimate anger of peaceful protesters and the unacceptable actions of violent agitators.

On Sunday, Trump retweeted a message from a conservative commentator encouraging authorities to respond with greater force.

“This isn’t going to stop until the good guys are willing to use overwhelming force against the bad guys,” Buck Sexton wrote in a message amplified by the president.

In recent days security at the White House has been reinforced by the National Guard and additional personnel from the Secret Service and the U.S. Park Police.

On Sunday, the Justice Department deployed members of the U.S. Marshals Service and agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration to supplement National Guard troops outside the White House, according to a senior Justice Department official. The official could not discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/world-nation/story/2020-05-31/trump-took-shelter-in-white-house-bunker-as-protests-raged

The Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) kicks off Thursday, featuring a slew of Republicans who are eyed as potential 2024 presidential contenders and who will seek to make their appeals to the base — but none will command as much attention as former President Donald Trump.

Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, along with Sens. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., Ted Cruz, R-Texas and Josh Hawley, R-Mo., will all be in attendance in Orlando, Fla. Their speeches will be closely watched for any early signs they might run in 2024.

But any potential 2024 run for those possible contenders may have to compete with Trump, who has flirted with the possibility of running again to retake the White House in 2024 after losing in November to now-President Biden.

CPAC READIES FOR FLORIDA GATHERING AMID COVID-19, AS CONSERVATIVES READY FOR TRUMP BONANZA

Early polling at this stage suggests Trump would hold a commanding lead over the 2024 field if he decides to run, and even those who have opposed Trump at various stages within his own party concede that he could easily get the nomination again.

“I don’t know if he’ll run in 2024 or not, but if he does I’m pretty sure he will win the nomination,” Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, told The New York Times.

CPAC SCHEDULE: WHO IS SPEAKING AT THE CONSERVATIVE POLITICAL ACTION CONFERENCE IN FLORIDA

Trump will address CPAC on Sunday, and it’s expected he will draw the most attention of any speaker. Sources familiar with his speech told Fox News that he will hammer Biden on everything from immigration to China.

The 45th president is expected to go between “warming up to the idea of a 2024 run, and walking right up to the line of announcing another campaign” — though he is not expected to make an actual announcement.

It will be Trump’s first public appearance since leaving office. It is unclear to what extent Trump will relitigate the 2020 election, which he has repeatedly claimed to have won.

TRUMP, AT CPAC, EXPECTED TO HAMMER BIDEN ON IMMIGRATION, CHINA 

Trump’s speech will be closely watched both for indications of a possible 2024 run — where early polls show him the comfortable front-runner in the Republican primary if he chooses to run again — and also whether he intends to target political opponents within the Republican Party.

A source familiar with Trump’s speech told Fox News last week that Trump will speak about the future of the Republican Party and the conservative movement, as well as Biden’s policies on amnesty and the border. 

But the conference will be a sign as to how the presidential primary field may shape up, with speeches closely watched for who is and isn’t well-received by the conservative base, and what issues are discussed.

TRUMP CPAC MESSAGE TO INCLUDE ‘BIG THANK YOU’ TO SUPPORTERS, LARA TRUMP EXPECTS

So far, Republicans have zeroed in, in particular, on the brewing crisis at the border and efforts to reopen schools after they were shut down in many — but not all — states in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Additionally, how to deal with China, taxation, illegal immigration, crime and energy policy will all be mentioned by speakers in various capacities.

And, as previews of Trump’s speech have indicated, criticism of the Biden administration is expected to be a regular feature of conference speeches.

Fox News’ John Roberts and Tyler Olson contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/cpac-republicans-2024-campaigns-including-trump

A California woman accused of punching a flight attendant in the face and breaking her teeth during a Southwest Airlines flight has pleaded guilty to a federal felony charge, officials announced this week.

Vyvianna Quinonez, 28, of Sacramento pleaded guilty Wednesday to one count of interfering with a flight crew, according to the U.S. attorney’s office in San Diego.

The attack happened on a May 23 flight from Sacramento to San Diego. During the flight’s final descent, the flight attendant approached Quinonez and asked her to fasten her seatbelt, stow her tray table and wear her face mask properly. Her failure to do so was in violation of federal rules and regulations, officials said.

Instead of complying, Quinonez began recording the flight attendant on her cellphone and then pushed the flight attendant, according to admissions in the plea agreement.

Around that time, another passenger, Michelle Manner, began recording the altercation on her cellphone. That video, which circulated widely, showed Quinonez punching the flight attendant, who then appeared dazed and bloodied while other passengers tried to intervene.

“It was scary. It was ridiculous. It was totally avoidable,” Manner said via phone Thursday. “It’s just unfortunate that it happened and went down this route.”

A video of the altercation appears to show the woman punching an attendant, who lost two teeth as a result, a union leader for airline employees said.

Union leaders condemned the attack, in which the flight attendant suffered three chipped teeth, two of which had to be replaced by crowns, officials said.

The flight attendant’s left eye was also bruised and swollen, and a cut under her eye required three stitches. She had a bruise in the shape of fingers on her right forearm.

Southwest Airlines spokesman Dan Landson said Thursday that the company appreciated federal and local authorities’ work to “bring this case to justice.”

“Southwest Airlines has a zero tolerance policy when it comes to physical or verbal abuse against its employees,” he said.

The altercation occurred against the backdrop of an alarming rise in incidents of bad behavior aboard aircraft. According to the Federal Aviation Administration, the number of investigations related to unruly passengers has skyrocketed since early 2020, with nearly 5,800 unruly passenger reports in 2021.

More than 4,100 of the cases this year were related to face masks.

Jaclyn Stahl, one of the prosecutors in the case against Quinonez, said the incidents can be difficult to prosecute because of jurisdictional issues and because witnesses scatter upon landing and crime scenes can literally fly away.

She said officials were happy with the plea agreement reached this week.

“We feel like this is a just and fair outcome considering all the factors, including the victim’s injuries and the defendant’s characteristics,” Stahl said. “The defendant took responsibility early by pleading and not going to trial.”

Unruly passengers continue to be a problem, according to a survey of flight attendants.

The initial charges against Quinonez included one count of assault, which Stahl said the government will likely move to dismiss at the time of sentencing.

An attorney for Quinonez, Knut Johnson, declined to comment Thursday.

Due to the assault, the flight attendant was not able to perform her normal duties, and the captain had to delay taxiing the airplane to the gate to wait for law enforcement officers to respond, federal officials said.

“The flight attendant who was assaulted was simply doing her job to ensure the safety of all passengers aboard the plane,” acting U.S. Atty. Randy Grossman said in a statement about the plea. “It’s inexcusable for anyone to use violence on an airplane for any reason, particularly toward a flight attendant who is there to keep all the passengers safe. We are not going to tolerate violence or interference with the flight crew, and we will pursue criminal charges against those who break the law.”

The maximum penalty for the charge against Quinonez includes 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

The ultimate sentence is up to the U.S. District Court judge, but Stahl said the parties have agreed to jointly recommend a $5,000 fine and restitution in excess of $20,000, which includes financial reimbursement to Southwest Airlines as well as paying for the victim’s physical injuries and lost wages.

They are also jointly recommending three years of supervised release, which includes no flying on commercial airlines, anger management classes and community service, she said.

Quinonez is scheduled to be sentenced March 11.

Manner, the witness who recorded the video, said that Quinonez was wrong to hit the flight attendant but that the situation had grown more “heated” than was called for and that she also wished the flight attendant had responded differently.

She commended the airline for how it handled the situation on the ground.

“It’s terrible, and there’s so much tension,” she said. “Everybody’s unsettled the past couple of years.”

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-12-23/california-woman-who-punched-flight-attendant-pleads-guilty

December 10 at 9:50 AM

President Trump asserted Monday that payments to buy the silence of two women about alleged affairs were not illegal campaign contributions, as federal prosecutors contend, but instead a “simple private transaction.”

In morning tweets, Trump sought to counter assertions in a court filing Friday that he had directed his former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, to try to silence the women in a bid to influence the 2016 presidential election.

Cohen has pleaded guilty to the alleged crime, saying he acted at Trump’s direction.

In his tweets, Trump suggested that the payments were being scrutinized only because investigators have not been able to find evidence of collusion between his 2016 campaign and Russia.

He also blamed Democrats for the scrutiny — a day after some high-profile members of the party appeared on Sunday talk shows and suggested Trump faces serious legal jeopardy.

“So now the Dems go to a simple private transaction, wrongly call it a campaign contribution, which it was not,” Trump wrote.

He further asserted that even if the payments could be considered campaign contributions, he should be facing a civil case rather than a criminal case. And he said, Cohen should be held responsible, not him.

“Lawyer’s liability if he made a mistake, not me,” Trump wrote. “Cohen just trying to get his sentence reduced. WITCH HUNT!”

In the tweets, Trump also twice misspelled “smoking gun” as “smocking gun” as he quoted a commentator on Fox News talking about the Russia probe by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III.

Trump’s tweets were criticized Monday by several lawyers, both for their substance and for his public airing of a defense that could complicate matters if charges are ever brought against him.

Among those weighing in was George Conway, the husband of White House counselor Kellyanne Conway and a frequent critic of the president on Twitter and in op-eds. He seized on Trump’s assertion that Democrats were behind the scrutiny of the payments.

“No, the criminal campaign-finance violations were found by professional line prosecutors in a Republican-controlled United States Department of Justice,” Conway wrote. “It looks like a pretty good case. Kudos to them.”

At issue are the payments to two women who alleged sexual relationships with Trump before he ran for president.

In August 2016, Playboy model Karen McDougal reached an agreement with American Media Inc., publishers of the National Enquirer, that ensured she would not share her story about a lengthy relationship with Trump. In October of that year, adult film actress Stormy Daniels received $130,000 to similarly stay quiet about a liaison that she said had occurred a decade before.

Both of those agreements were facilitated by Cohen, as he admitted in court in August when he pleaded guilty to two campaign-finance charges, among others.

Prosecutors argue that because Cohen was an agent of the Trump campaign, the payments to McDougal and Daniels were campaign contributions in excess of federal limits and not unrelated expenditures.

“With respect to both payments, Cohen acted with the intent to influence the 2016 presidential election,” Friday’s filing from prosecutors in New York says. “Cohen coordinated his actions with one or more members of the campaign, including through meetings and phone calls, about the fact, nature, and timing of the payments. In particular, and as Cohen himself has now admitted, with respect to both payments, he acted in coordination with and at the direction of Individual-1.”

Elsewhere, filings from prosecutors make clear that Individual-1 refers to Trump.

During television appearances on Sunday, some high-profile Democrats suggested that Trump faces serious legal jeopardy.

Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Calif.), the incoming chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said on CBS’s “Face the Nation” that “there’s a very real prospect” that Trump may be indicted the day he leaves office and that he “may be the first president in quite some time to face the real prospect of jail time.”

Meanwhile, Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y), who will lead the Judiciary Committee starting next month, said that if the payments were found to violate campaign finance laws, it would be an impeachable offense. Nadler appeared on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

Trump has denied the allegations of affairs by McDougal and Daniels. In May, his lawyer, Rudolph W. Giuliani, said the payment to Daniels was made “to resolve a personal and false allegation in order to protect the president’s family,” adding: “It would have been done in any event, whether he was a candidate or not.”

In trying to make the case that the payments to McDougal and Daniels should be a civil matter, rather than a criminal case, Trump pointed Monday to a civil fine paid by President Barack Obama’s campaign in 2013.

In April 2012, the Federal Election Commission released an audit of Obama’s 2008 campaign that found that his committee did not disclose the identities of 1,312 donors responsible for nearly $2 million in contributions in the final weeks of the campaign.

Under federal election law, campaigns must file special notices to the FEC of last-minute contributions of $1,000 or more that are received in the final weeks before Election Day.

Eight months after the audit, Obama’s campaign agreed to pay a $375,000 fine, which was one of the largest penalties in the agency’s history.

Philip Bump and Michelle Ye Hee Lee contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-payments-to-silence-women-were-a-simple-private-transaction-not-illegal-campaign-contributions/2018/12/10/e1b198c2-fc6b-11e8-862a-b6a6f3ce8199_story.html

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