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California will continue to require masks in school settings, state health officials announced Friday, even though federal health authorities released new guidelines saying vaccinated students and teachers no longer need to wear masks inside campus buildings.

“Masking is a simple and effective intervention that does not interfere with offering full in-person instruction,” said California Health and Human Services Agency Secretary Mark Ghaly. “At the outset of the new year, students should be able to walk into school without worrying about whether they will feel different or singled out for being vaccinated or unvaccinated — treating all kids the same will support a calm and supportive school environment.”

The recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which also said schools should try and keep desks three feet apart, are not a mandate. The CDC guidance said prevention strategies, including indoor masking, should be utilized when it’s not possible to maintain a distance of at least three feet in the classroom.

Ghaly said that not all school facilities in the state can accommodate physical distancing and “we will align with the CDC by implementing multiple layers of mitigation strategies, including continued masking and robust testing capacity.” The state’s directive would also “ensure that all kids are treated the same,” the California Department of Public Health said.

With the highly contagious Delta variant of the coronavirus continuing to spread statewide, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health previously recommended that all residents wear masks in public indoor spaces — regardless of whether they’ve been vaccinated for COVID-19.

Here’s what parents and educators need to know:

Can parents demand the right to have their children attend schools without masks?
Not in most situations in California. There are some children with disabilities who cannot manage masks or who cannot wear masks safely. These parents already have the right to seek an accommodation that includes not wearing a mask.

What is the situation in the Los Angeles Unified School District?
All students, teachers and staff have been required to wear masks on campus even if they are vaccinated. This policy has been in place since schools began to reopen in April. The only exceptions are for students or others who have special health or physical reasons and are unable to wear a mask.

Will California children have to be vaccinated to attend school in person?
There is currently no vaccine authorized for emergency use in children under the age of 12, and it is unclear how soon that will change. Even after the Food and Drug Administration authorizes one or more COVID-19 vaccines for younger children, it could take several more months — or even years — for the vaccines to receive full approval in this age group. Once immunizations receive full federal approval, they could become mandatory for nearly all students.

Do students have to remain three or six feet apart?
Rules vary from district to district in California.

The CDC said Friday that schools should continue to space students — and their desks — three feet apart in classrooms and distancing is not required among fully vaccinated students or staff. In LAUSD, the nation’s second-largest school district, desks are three feet apart and are expected to stay that way in the fall.

The CDC does not deem any separation as needed among vaccinated children. Practically speaking, it could prove difficult to have different rules and procedures for different students. At middle schools, for example, some students will be eligible for shots and some won’t be. But even at high schools, not every student will be vaccinated.

Do masks have to be worn outdoors by unvaccinated people at schools?
Schools generally don’t require masks at recess or in most other outdoor situations. However, unvaccinated people are advised to wear masks if they are in a crowd for an extended period of time, like in the stands at a football game.

Are other school safety measures still needed?
Ventilation and hand-washing continue to be important. Students and staff also should stay home when they are sick.

And testing for infection remains an important way to prevent outbreaks. But the CDC said Friday people who are fully vaccinated do not need to participate in such screening.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-07-09/masks-wont-necessarily-come-off-students-in-l-a-schools-despite-cdc-guidelines

SALT LAKE CITY — Salt Lake police took one man into custody Friday in connection with the disappearance of missing University of Utah student Mackenzie Lueck.

The man and a second man were taken into custody about 9:20 a.m. at an apartment complex at 1028 S. West Temple. Police later said on Twitter that only one person was taken into custody in the case.

The men were seen outside the apartment complex walking toward a police SWAT team with their hands over their heads and they were then put into handcuffs.

A press conference is scheduled for 11:30 a.m.

Salt Lake police announced Thursday that the owner of a house in the Fairpark neighborhood, 31, is considered a “person of interest” in the disappearance of Lueck.

It was not immediately clear if one of the men is the homeowner.

Police spent an active Wednesday evening working through the night collecting evidence at a home in Salt Lake City at 547 N. 1000 West.

Police were even seen digging holes in the backyard. The holes were being dug in or near an area where at least one neighbor said a fire may have been set.

Lueck, 23, was last seen early on the morning of June 17 when she flew into Salt Lake City International Airport after attending a family funeral in her hometown of El Segundo, California. Surveillance video at the airport recorded Lueck making her way to baggage claim, and then getting into a Lyft vehicle.

The Lyft driver told police he dropped off Lueck at Hatch Park in North Salt Lake about 3 a.m. where another person in a car was waiting for her. As of Wednesday, Salt Lake police had not been able to identify that person or even the make and model of that car.

Texts and social media have become a focus on the investigation. There has been attention given to dating apps Lueck was allegedly on, including at least one that connects “sugar babies” with “sugar daddies.”

More information will be posted throughout the day as more information becomes available.

Live coverage of the Mackenzie Lueck case

Photos

Source Article from https://www.ksl.com/article/46583923/salt-lake-swat-team-takes-man-into-custody-in-missing-utah-student-case

With airports jammed with angry passengers, Republican senators blaming each other behind closed doors for the government shutdown, and President Trump’s poll numbers tanking, the writing was on the wall. Feeling pressure from his fellow Republicans to reopen the government, Trump announced Friday afternoon that a deal was reached for federal employees to come back to work as negotiations on border security are given a little more time.

A week ago, the White House was firm on its demand: Parts of the government will remain shuttered until Democratic lawmakers write a $5.7 billion check for a border wall. Trump’s capitulation (and make no mistake, it was a capitulation) is a complete reversal of the White House position and a blowout win for Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., in her first month back on the job.

Trump, however, remained defiant. At the same time he asked lawmakers to work in unison for the benefit of the nation, he threatened to use the nuclear option if Congress can’t come up with a solution. “I have a very powerful alternative, but I did not want to use it at this time,” Trump said in the White House Rose Garden. “Hopefully, it will be unnecessary.”

That “very powerful alternative” Trump is referring to is a declaration of national emergency, a proclamation that would provide him with a way to get his border wall money without having to go through the normal legislative process. Ordinarily, the executive branch is constitutionally barred from spending any taxpayer money on any program unless Congress explicitly authorizes and appropriates the funds. Outside of declaring war or authorizing the use of military force, the ability to appropriate funds, or not, is the legislative branch’s most coveted power.

Lawmakers from both political parties protect the power of the purse with every fiber of their being because it’s one of the few tactics Congress can employ to pressure the president. Trump’s declaring of a national emergency would rip that power away. If lawyers in the executive branch can argue that there is indeed a dire national emergency along the southwestern border with Mexico, billions of dollars in the military construction budget will be made available for the border structure Trump so desperately wants. Trump could task the Army Corps of Engineers to start building right away.

Democrats, who are as strongly opposed to a border wall as Trump is enamored by it, would not be powerless bystanders if the president tried to do an end-run around Congress. They could technically prohibit any money from being used for construction of a border barrier through legislation, although GOP opposition would likely kill it. They could file a lawsuit against Trump, arguing that his emergency declaration is not, in fact, an emergency, but rather an instigation of an artificial crisis in order to justify an unjustifiable project.

A lawsuit would work itself through the court system and wind up in the Supreme Court, where the case could prove to be one of the most important trials of executive power since the fight over military commissions in the George W. Bush era. The border wall could become a proxy war between the executive and legislative branches, a classic battle over constitutional power that the judiciary would have to arbitrate. If Trump loses that fight, the precedent it would set would impact the flexibility of presidents in the future to tap into their emergency powers.

Trump may decide that a national emergency is too big of a step. The House Freedom Caucus, Trump’s most reliable support base on Capitol Hill, has already questioned whether an emergency proclamation is a smart idea. Lawmakers such as Freedom Caucus Chairman Mark Meadows are concerned that a declaration now could provide a future Democratic president with the power to do something similar on progressive priorities like climate change. The White House may gamble on another government shutdown, perhaps believing that the public would blame Democrats for being too obstructionist this time around.

Either way, the three-week government reopening shouldn’t be celebrated as a major breakthrough. The end of the longest shutdown in history may turn out to be the intermission to the meatier second act.

Daniel DePetris (@DanDePetris) is a contributor to the Washington Examiner’s Beltway Confidential blog. His opinions are his own.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/trumps-border-wall-drama-isnt-over-this-is-just-intermission

Stephen Moore says he ‘doesn’t see the case’ for the Fed to cut…

Stephen Moore, President Trump’s pick for the Federal Reserve Board, rebuked the president’s call for the central bank to sharply cut rates.

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Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/05/02/venezuela-crisis-guaido-defiant-after-failed-attempt-to-recruit-military.html

After the racing stewards spent nearly 20 minutes looking at video, they decided the misstep was enough to disqualify Maximum Security and declare the runner-up, a 65-1 shot named Country House, the improbable victor.

It was not a popular decision. In fact, it was the brave one.

As officials studied video, the trainer of Country House, Bill Mott, was trackside and said on national television what horseplayers know, dread and curse on a regular basis.

“There was definitely a foul in the race,” Mott, a Hall of Famer, said. “If this was a maiden claimer on a weekday the winner would come down.”

He did, and Mott, a horseman revered among his peers for being “half-horse,” had his first Derby victory. The rider of Country House, Flavien Prat, also notched his first Derby score, an experience he was bemused by.

Maximum Security finished one and three-quarter lengths in front of Country House, and Country House finished three-quarters of a length in front of Code of Honor.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/04/sports/kentucky-derby-live.html

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Once it begins, heavy, steady rainfall is likely to continue over central Louisiana through at least tomorrow afternoon, with intermittent heavy rain extending into Monday.
Ryan Truchelut, WeatherTiger

Hurricane Barry Saturday pushed ashore along the Louisiana coast west of New Orleans Saturday and quickly weakened to a tropical storm. But its torrential downpours still promise the risk of “life-threatening” inland floods in Louisiana and Mississippi, the National Weather Service said.

Barry, which earlier packed just enough sustained winds — 75 mph — to qualify as the nation’s first hurricane this season, went ashore near Intracoastal City, about 150 miles west of New Orleans, according to the National Hurricane Center.

Moving overland, Barry quickly dropped to 70 mph, falling back to tropical storm status while remaining a threat into next week from heavy rain. 

Forecasters said Barry could unload 10 to 20 inches of rain through Sunday across a swath of Louisiana that includes New Orleans and Baton Rouge, as well as southwestern Mississippi, with pockets in Louisiana getting 25 inches. 

Watch Live: Webcams show Barry’s landfall in New Orleans and the Louisiana coast

That is a lot of rain: How will Barry compare to Louisiana’s 2016 flooding?

NHC Director Ken Graham warned slow-moving rain cells would create especially dangerous flooding conditions in southeastern Louisiana, as well as Arkansas, Missouri, Mississippi and parts of Tennessee into next week.

“When you put that much rain down in areas around Baton Rouge and Mississippi, those rivers and creeks are filling quickly,” he said. Graham urged residents to heed local authorities and stay off the roads when the flooding begins.

“That is just an amazing amount of moisture,” he said on Facebook Live, pointing to a weather data board. “That is off the chart.”

Even with winds below hurricane strength, the storm still puts locals at risk. Graham stressed that in the past three years, inland flooding has accounted for 83% of the deaths during tropical cyclones, half of those in vehicles.

The hurricane brings a tornado threat, too. The highest-risk area is on the east side of the storm, along the Mississippi coast, and Mobile Bay, Graham said.

As the storm drew closer Saturday morning, the Coast Guard said it was rescuing more than a dozen people stranded by flooding on a remote Louisiana island that has been shrinking for years.

Petty Officer Lexie Preston told the Associated Press some of the people were on rooftops on the Isle de Jean Charles, about 45 miles south of New Orleans. He said four people and a cat had been removed by helicopter and a boat was heading to the area to help get the rest of the people off the island.

What about dogs?: Rescue dogs flown out of Louisiana ahead of Barry to avoid euthanasia. They’re adoptable

Anthony Verdun chose to ride it out in his home in Isle de Jean Charles despite watching the water rise eight feet in 10 minutes near his raised house.

Verdun, noting his refrigerator was still stocked with a fresh catch of fish from Friday, said he waved off a Coast Guard helicopter Saturday morning that hovered above his house, one of the highest on the island.

“I gave them the all good,” Verdun said via text message. “My son is in the (Coast Guard) and he told me how to signal so we signaled back, ‘All clear.’ “

Early Saturday, water spilled over a “back levee” in Plaquemines Parish, outside New Orleans. 

But Gov. John Bel Edwards assured residents the levees were “stronger than they’ve ever been” and the state was better prepared than ever.

The threat to New Orleans diminished late Friday. Officials said the levee system would crest Monday at only 17 feet at the critical Carrollton gauge. That is about three feet lower than a previous forecast and two feet below the levee’s height.

For the first time since Hurricane Katrina ravaged the city 14 years ago, the governor said all floodgates were sealed in Hurricane Risk Reduction System. The city did not offer any sandbags, although some businesses did make them available.

Residents of the Big Easy had been urged to “shelter in place” in lieu of evacuation orders, which are normally issued only for Category 3 hurricanes.

More than 100,000 people were without power as the storm hit Louisiana Saturday. 

Contributing: Doyle Rice, USA TODAY; Andrew J. Yawn, Leigh Guidry, Nick Siano, Lafayette Daily Advertiser; Greg Hilburn, Monroe News-Star; Associated Press

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/07/13/barry-storm-tracks-hurricane-where-landfall-louisiana/1722380001/

Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., left, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., maintain social distancing as they attend a press conference after meeting with Senate Republicans at their weekly luncheon on Capitol Hill in May.

Patrick Semansky/AP


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Patrick Semansky/AP

Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., left, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., maintain social distancing as they attend a press conference after meeting with Senate Republicans at their weekly luncheon on Capitol Hill in May.

Patrick Semansky/AP

Ever since the pandemic struck, state and local election officials across the country have made it clear: To avoid an election disaster in November, they need more money now.

Congressional Republicans are now signalling a new willingness to provide that, after initial fears from voting rights advocates that the federal government would provide no more support than the $400 million that came as part of a March relief package.

Experts expect as many as 70% of all ballots cast in November’s presidential election will be cast through the mail, a quick and radical shift that will require equipment upgrades and greatly increase costs for cash-strapped states and counties. During the 2018 midterms, about a quarter of ballots were cast by mail.

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Officials across the country, like Lynn Bailey, who is the board of elections executive director of Augusta, Ga., are looking ahead to November and wondering how they will pay for it.

Bailey testified Wednesday as part of an Election Assistance Commission hearing about the 2020 primaries. She said Georgia’s June 9 primary cost about 60 percent more than a normal election would have in her jurisdiction, due to adjustments made as a result of the pandemic.

“We had about a 35 percent turnout rate in our jurisdiction in this past election, and we know that in November that number will likely double,” Bailey said. “We can only expect therefore that our budget will likely double over what we spent this time, if not more.”

Similarly, the executive director of Kentucky’s state board of elections testified that the state had already spent the majority of money Congress allocated in March just on the state’s primary in late June.

“We can’t afford not to get the money [from Congress],” said Wendy Weiser, who directs the Democracy Program at NYU’s Brennan Center for Justice. “The consequences would be so dire. It would be so devastating, not just to our election, but to America’s standing in the world overall.”

New optimism

Democrats in Congress have supported a massive influx of elections funding virtually since the onset of the pandemic to help the country adjust to voting during a national emergency. The Brennan Center estimated the total cost of such adjustments to be $4 billion, which is how much was allocated in a proposal that passed the Democratic-controlled House in May.

What’s unclear now is how much Senate Republicans are actually willing to approve as part of the next relief package that Congress is expected to begin negotiating later this month.

After the CARES Act was passed in March, “there was a time it looked like more funding would be off the table,” Weiser said.

But, she added, it’s only become more apparent since, after a number of primaries saw huge lines and bungled mail voting expansions, why the funding is necessary.

“We’ve already had four months slip between our fingers,” said Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold. “The decision on whether to act or not is really the decision of whether you want your citizens to have to risk their health to have their voice heard in November.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also released new guidances for elections safety that noted that in addition to providing “a wide variety of voting options,” election administrators must also adjust their Election Day precincts to respond to the pandemic. They will need to provide adequate hygiene supplies and try to find bigger spaces that provide more room to social distance, all of which will cost more money.

While President Trump has made a series of false claims in an effort to discredit voting by mail, many state and congressional Republicans support efforts to expand it.

Senate Rules Committee chair Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., said on the Senate floor before lawmakers went on recess, that he was “prepared to look at more money for the states to use for elections this year.”

The Senate Rules Committee, which has jurisdiction over federal election law, is expected to hold a hearing about elections safety in late July, which may also be a precursor to more funding being approved.

“We continue to work toward an election that produces a result that people have confidence in,” Blunt said. “And done in a way that everybody that wants to vote, gets to vote.” On Friday he announced a Senate committee will hold a hearing on July 22 about preparing for the general election.

In addition to more money, Democrats had wanted broader policy changes, including mandated weeks of early voting and universal access to mail ballots nationwide, but Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has said that such requests are a non-starter.

While many congressional Republicans have voiced support for mail voting as an option for voters, they are loathe to have the federal government set national standards over U.S. elections, which are run mostly by the individual states and localities.

Senate Democrats now seem resigned to the fact that more money may be the most they can get. Still, they are pushing for individual states to greatly expand access to mail voting, and they see providing more funding as a means to allow that.

“I would rather put ballots in the mail, than voters in the hospital,” said Senate Rules Committee ranking member Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/07/10/888165568/after-pleas-from-officials-republicans-signal-openness-to-more-election-funding

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It’s hard to believe that the hole President Trump dug for himself could get deeper, but it has.

A record and widening majority of Americans disapprove of the job he’s doing when it comes to handling the coronavirus pandemic; he gets poor scores on race relations; he’s seen a suburban erosion despite efforts to win over suburban voters with fear; and all that has led to a worsened outlook for Trump against Democrat Joe Biden in the presidential election.

As a result, in the past month and a half, the latest NPR analysis of the Electoral College has several states shifting in Biden’s favor, and now has a 297-170 advantage over Trump with exactly three months to go until Election Day.

Here are our changes:

Colorado from Lean D to Likely D
Florida from Toss Up to Lean D
New Hampshire from Toss Up to Lean D
Nevada
from Toss Up to Lean D
Pennsylvania from Toss Up to Lean D
Georgia
from Lean R to Toss up

(Read more about our methodology and see the previous map here.)

If all of the states leaning in Biden’s direction currently wind up going his way this fall, he would secure more than enough electoral votes to win the presidency.

With Trump at what seems to be his lowest point politically, it would make sense that, if the election were held today, Biden would have the advantage, but Biden’s advantage in November may not be as solid as the total electoral votes show in this map.

Consider, for example, if Biden were to lose Florida, his total would drop to 268 votes, two short of the majority needed.

The Trump campaign believes its strength is being understated in polls, and polls have shown that, even in places Biden is ahead, voters think Trump will do better than surveys currently show.

The Biden campaign also expects the race to tighten, especially if Trump is seen to be doing even marginally better in handling the coronavirus as the fall approaches.

But right now, in order for the president to win reelection, he is going to have to win all of the current toss ups and make inroads in places that are leaning Biden’s direction. That’s not unheard of. Trump did the same thing in 2016.

NPR’s latest analysis of the Electoral College map shows a continued shift in former Vice President Joe Biden’s favor over President Trump.


NPR
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Why we made these moves:

Colorado (9 electoral votes, Lean D to Likely D): This state has moved more sharply in Biden’s direction as the coronavirus has become full blown nationally. Biden’s polling advantage has increased 12 percentage points, giving him an average lead of 53% to 39%.

Florida (29, Toss Up to Lean D): This was the biggest and most difficult move to make given Florida’s history of being one of the closest states in recent presidential elections, as well as going against the Democratic wave in 2018 by electing a Republican governor and senator. But it’s just hard to ignore that Biden has gone from a 49% to 48% polling advantage in early February to 50% to 44%, with some reputable surveys showing Biden with a double-digit lead. This is one state we expect to snap back to toss up, but right now it’s leaning in Biden’s direction.

New Hampshire (4, Toss Up to Lean D): Even though this was the closest state in 2016 by raw votes, Hillary Clinton won it. Democrats have had success here up and down the ballot, and Biden now leads the state by 10 points on average. There hasn’t been much polling in New Hampshire, so we will continue to watch if it tightens, but the best example of movement came from the University of New Hampshire poll. In May, Biden was up narrowly, 46% to 44%. In mid-July, his lead ballooned to 53% to 40%.

Nevada (6, Toss Up to Lean D): While Nevada was close in 2016, Biden’s advantage has remained steady, Democrats have had a lot of success there in recent elections, and they have a battle-tested ground game.

Pennsylvania (20, Toss Up to Lean D): It’s a similar story to Florida in terms of polling. Biden had a narrow 48% to 45% lead in an average of the polls at the end of February. Now, Biden is ahead 50% to 43%. Being at 50% in so many places is significant. This also had been a traditionally Democratic state, Biden’s campaign is headquartered there, and he’s been campaigning there in person. Again, this is one that could move back to toss up, but for now, it’s leaning towards the Democratic candidate.

Georgia (16, Lean R to Toss Up): If you had to bet, this one probably still tips in Trump’s direction on Election Day, but for months the polls have been tight, tight, tight. Republicans have continued to win statewide office after statewide office, but the demographic trends continue to move in Democrats’ favor.

Other states and factors to watch:

Maine, 2nd Congressional District: Biden’s lead has expanded in Maine overall, but in Maine’s 2nd Congressional District, where Trump won in 2016, a Colby poll had Biden ahead only 45% to 42%.

North Carolina: It also remains in the toss up category. Biden has a narrow polling advantage, but an NBC/Marist poll raised eyebrows last week when it showed Biden with a 7-point lead and over the 50% threshold: 51% to 44%. We’ll watch if that’s the beginning of a trend or an outlier.

Ohio: There’s an argument for putting Ohio in the toss up category, strictly based on the closeness of polling. But this is a state Trump should win based on demographic and voting trends. If Ohio is really close on election night, it likely means a sizable Biden victory overall. The Biden campaign started spending on TV ads in Ohio for the first time last week.

Iowa: This is another state Trump should win, but where his advantage has declined. The state’s demographics — being almost all white — still favor the president.

Texas: This traditionally Republican state didn’t go as strongly for Trump in 2016 as it had for past Republicans, and current polling indicates a toss up. But Biden hasn’t gotten to 50% in a poll in the state yet. If he did, it would be a real eye-opener. On the ground, Republicans still retain an advantage in voter mobilization.

For more on our methodology, which is based on a mix of public surveys, conversations with the campaigns, historical voting and demographic trends, and our on-the-ground reporting, as well as detailed paths to election for both candidates, click here.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/08/03/897202359/2020-electoral-map-ratings-trump-slides-biden-advantage-expands-over-270-votes

Justice Gorsuch rejected that alternative. Nitrogen gas, he wrote, is not authorized by Missouri law and had never been used to carry out an execution in the United States. In dissent, Justice Breyer said that three states have authorized the use of nitrogen gas in executions.

Justice Gorsuch wrote that Mr. Bucklew had also not proved he would suffer less pain from nitrogen gas.

In a concurring opinion, Justice Thomas wrote that the court had made things too complicated. The Eighth Amendment bars only the deliberate infliction of pain, he wrote, and there was no evidence that Missouri had designed its lethal injection protocol to hurt Mr. Bucklew.

In dissent, Justice Breyer, joined by Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan, wrote that Mr. Bucklew may face an “excruciating and grotesque” punishment.

“Bucklew cites evidence,” Justice Breyer wrote, “that executing him by lethal injection will cause the tumors that grow in his throat to rupture during his execution, causing him to sputter, choke and suffocate on his own blood for up to several minutes before he dies.”

In a separate dissent, Justice Sonia Sotomayor criticized the majority’s emphasis on addressing delays in carrying out death sentences.

“There are higher values than ensuring that executions run on time,” she wrote. “If a death sentence or the manner in which it is carried out violates the Constitution, that stain can never come out. Our jurisprudence must remain one of vigilance and care, not one of dismissiveness.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/01/us/politics/supreme-court-death-penalty.html

President Biden has tested positive for COVID-19 again, just days after he recovered from his previous case of the virus, the White House physician said in a statement Saturday. He is not experiencing any symptoms but will self-isolate again. 

In a tweet, the president said he is “still at work” but isolating “for the safety of everyone around me.” He will not go on his upcoming trips to Wilmington, Delaware, or Michigan, the White House said.

Later Saturday afternoon, the president proved his point — sharing a photo of himself masked up and signing a document that will add individual assistance to the major disaster declaration he approved after Kentucky suffered deadly and damaging flooding. He also shared a video of himself at the White House with his dog, Commander.

A photo was also posted to Mr. Biden’s Instagram account Saturday evening showing him using his phone to FaceTime with “families fighting to pass burn pits legislation.” 

That is in reference to a bill, which failed to advance in the Senate this week, which would provide benefits to an estimated 3.5 million veterans exposed to toxic burns in the Afghanistan and Iraq wars.

The president, who is vaccinated and double boosted, feels “quite well” and his physician, Col. Kevin O’Connor, said he will not begin any sort of treatment at this time. 

Mr. Biden is experiencing what O’Connor called “‘rebound’ positivity,” which can happen to a small percentage of patients who are treated with the drug Paxlovid. 

Mr. Biden was first diagnosed with COVID less than two weeks ago. The president, who is 79 years old, entered isolation and started taking Paxlovid, an antiviral treatment made by Pfizer, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in a statement announcing his diagnosis. He experienced only mild symptoms.

After five days, Mr. Biden tested negative Tuesday evening, and ended his isolation period. He subsequently tested negative on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, his doctor said. However, an antigen test came back positive Saturday morning.

His positive test nine days ago was the first known time Mr. Biden has contracted the coronavirus.

Vice President Kamala Harris tested negative for COVID on Friday, her spokesperson Kirsten Allen said. Meanwhile, first lady Dr. Jill Biden, who has been staying at the couple’s Delaware home since her husband first tested positive, also remains negative, according to communication director Elizabeth Alexander.

Back in May, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) warned of potential “COVID-19 rebound” after a five-day course of Paxlovid

“If you take Paxlovid, you might get symptoms again,” CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky told CBS News. “We haven’t yet seen anybody who has returned with symptoms needing to go to the hospital. So, generally, a milder course.”

After a patient recovers, a rebound has been reported to occur two to eight days later. Still, the CDC says the benefits of taking Paxlovid far outweigh the risks. Among unvaccinated people at high risk for severe disease, it reduced the risk of hospitalization and death by nearly 90%, according to the CDC. 

At the time, Pfizer said it was seeing a rebound rate of about 2%, but was continuing to monitor patients.

White House COVID-19 coordinator Dr. Ashish Jha told reporters on Monday that data “suggests that between 5 and 8% of people have rebound” after Paxlovid treatment.

Kathryn Watson and Jon LaPook contributed reporting.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/joe-biden-tests-positive-for-covid-19-again-will-isolate-white-house-physician-says/

Amnesty International, meanwhile, described the alleged poisoning as “undeniably similar to incidents involving other hardline critics of the Russian authorities,” including the politician Vladimir Kara-Murza Jr. and Pussy Riot punk band producer Pyotr Verzilov.

“Navalny himself became seriously ill previously during his administrative arrest a year ago. None of these incidents were investigated,” the group added.

In July last year, Navalny was hospitalized from a detention center, where he was held on administrative arrest after organizing peaceful demonstrations. Authorities said Navalny had suffered an allergic reaction, although the politician himself believes he was poisoned. 

Navalny, like many other lawmakers in Russia, has frequently been detained by authorities and harassed by pro-Kremlin groups. In 2017, he was attacked by several men as they threw anti-septic in his face, damaging one eye.

A staunch critic of Putin, Navalny had campaigned to challenge the president in the 2018 election, but he was blocked from standing for office.

“If true, the suspected poisoning of Russian oppositionist Aleksey #Navalny represents a grave moment for Russia, and the Russian people deserve to see all those involved held to account,” Rebecca Ross, spokesperson at the U.S. embassy in Moscow, said in a Twitter post on Friday.

“Our thoughts are with his family,” she added.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/08/21/navalnys-doctors-refuse-to-let-putin-critic-leave-russian-hospital.html

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Trump y Clinton llegaban como favoritos al Supermartes y los resultados confirmaron la tendencia a su favor.

Los resultados de las primarias que se celebraron este martes en una docena de estados de Estados Unidos, en lo que se conoce como Supermartes, dieron como claros vencedores a la precandidata presidencial demócrata Hillary Clinton y al republicano Donald Trump.

La ex secretaria de Estado se apuntó la victoria en siete estados, igual que el polémico millonario.

Todavía se ha de conocer quién es el vencedor del caucus republicano celebrado en Alaska.

Mira la tabla de resultados del supermartes de republicanos y demócratas

Los resultados del Supermartes confirman la tendencia vista en las primarias efectuadas en las últimas semanas en los estados de Iowa, New Hampshire, Carolina del Sur y Nevada, en las que Clinton y Trump comenzaron a sacar ventaja a sus rivales.

En el bando demócrata, este martes al senador de Vermont Bernie Sanders le fue mejor de lo esperado, logrando la victoria en cuatro estados, mientras que en el republicano, Ted Cruz debió conformarse con declararse vencedor en dos estados y Marco Rubio en uno.

Los candidatos republicanos Ben Carson y John Kasich no lograron imponerse en ninguno de los territorios en juego.

El Supermartes es la jornada más importante del calendario estadounidense de primarias.

En esta fecha, demócratas y republicanos midieron fuerzas en 11 estados cada uno de manera simultánea.

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La elección presidencial estadounidense se realizará el 8 de noviembre de 2016.

Por el momento, tanto Clinton como Trump superan cómodamente a sus rivales en el número de delegados obtenidos en el proceso de primarias que se inició el pasado 1 de febrero.

Estos delegados serán los encargados de votar a favor de los precandidatos presidenciales que ganaron las primarias o caucus de sus respectivos estados en las convenciones demócrata y republicana que se celebrarán el próximo mes de julio.

Demócratas

En el Supermartes Clinton se impuso en las primarias de Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Massachusetts, Tennessee, Texas y Virginia.

Mientras, Bernie Sanders triunfó en Colorado, Minnesota, Oklahoma y Vermont.

La ex secretaria de Estado celebró los resultados en Miami, Florida, junto a sus seguidores.

Sin mencionarlo, Clinton volvió a aludir a Donald Trump, al que criticó por su “retórica divisoria” y por “dar la espalda a los trabajadores y a la clase media”.

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Hillary Clinton celebró los resultados del Supermartes en Miami.

La carrera demócrata por lograr la nominación a la candidatura presidencial continuará en el estado de Luisiana, donde las primarias se celebrarán el 5 de marzo.

Republicanos

En el caso de las primarias republicanas, los resultados señalan que el millonario Donald Trump ganó en Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Massachusetts, Tennessee, Vermont y Virginia.

Desde Florida, Trump no tuvo reparos en afirmar que “amplió al Partido Republicano” con la promesa de atraer votos demócratas e independientes.

“Vamos a ser un partido mucho más grande. Vamos a ser más inclusivos y unidos”, aseguró Trump.

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“Vamos a ser un partido mucho más grande. Vamos a ser más inclusivos y unidos”, aseguró Trump.

Uno de los competidores del magnate, el cubanoestadounidense Ted Cruz, logró imponerse en las primarias de Oklahoma y Texas.

En un encendido discurso después de conocer su victoria en esos dos estados, Cruz aseguró que es el único candidato que puede frenar a Donald Trump.

Marco Rubio, mientras tanto, logró ganar las primarias republicanas en Minnesota, en la que es su primera victoria de este ciclo electoral.

Desde Miami, Rubio se dirigió a sus electores que le esperaban con gritos de “Marco, Marco”.

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Marco Rubio logró ganar las primarias republicanas en Minnesota.

El próximo 15 de marzo vota Florida, estado del que es senador y en el que tiene puestas sus esperanzas.

“No hay ningún lugar en EE.UU. que entienda el sueño americano mejor que esta comunidad y este gran estado de Florida”, dijo acompañado de su esposa y sus hijos.

Igual que los demócratas, los rivales republicanos volverán a verse las caras el próximo 5 de marzo en las primarias de Luisiana.

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Demócratas y republicanos celebraron primarias simultáneas en 11 estados este martes.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2016/03/160301_supermartes_resultados_primarias_estados_unidos_democratas_republicanos_bm

Cyrus Vance Jr., who has been Manhattan’s district attorney since 2010, said Friday that he will not seek reelection. Vance is seen in a photo taken Feb. 24, 2020.

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Cyrus Vance Jr., who has been Manhattan’s district attorney since 2010, said Friday that he will not seek reelection. Vance is seen in a photo taken Feb. 24, 2020.

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Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. said Friday that he will not seek reelection for a fourth term that would begin next January. He has been investigating former President Donald Trump’s finances, and the Supreme Court last month cleared the way for the prosecutor’s office to receive Trump’s tax returns and other financial records.

“Representing the People of New York during this pivotal era for our city and our justice system has been the privilege of a lifetime,” the 66-year-old Vance said.

He succeeded the late Robert Morgenthau, who held the DA’s post for 35 years. Vance said that when he took office in 2010, he “didn’t aspire to be District Attorney for decades like my predecessors. … I believed then – and I believe now – that change is a fundamentally good thing for any institution.”

Last month, Vance’s office received Trump’s tax returns following a years-long battle with the former president, after the Supreme Court paved the way for a New York grand jury to obtain and review the financial documents. Trump broke decades of precedent when he refused to release his tax returns during and after the 2016 presidential campaign after first pledging to do so.

The grand jury subpoena requested eight years of tax records and related documents as part of a probe into possible insurance or financial fraud by Trump or his business, as well as alleged hush-money payments made to two women who said they had affairs with Trump before he took office.

Trump denounced the case as “political persecution” and a “fishing expedition.”

Even as he prepares to step aside, Vance hinted at the continuing work in the investigation of Trump. “Our investigations and trials – from the high-profile to the ones that never make the newspaper – will proceed,” Vance wrote in a memo to prosecutors and staff.

Vance cited “landmark victories” in 2020, including the Supreme Court’s decision that presidents are not immune under the law in a case involving Trump’s pre-presidential financial records, as well as the conviction of Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein for rape and sexual assault. (Vance faced criticism for declining to prosecute Weinstein years earlier.)

Vance also listed among his office’s memorable accomplishments the 2017 conviction in the long-unsolved murder case of 6-year-old Etan Patz. Vance wrote to his staff that “for each of us, there are cases that speak to us about why we do this work. For me, when I think back on all of the cases of our time together, I keep returning to Etan Patz and his family.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/03/12/976389679/manhattan-da-cyrus-vance-jr-who-is-investigating-trump-wont-seek-reelection

With some Democrats calling to abolish Immigration and Customs Enforcement, congressional negotiators want to cap the number of the agency’s detention beds.

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With some Democrats calling to abolish Immigration and Customs Enforcement, congressional negotiators want to cap the number of the agency’s detention beds.

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As the clock ticks toward a Friday deadline to avert another partial government shutdown, a new stumbling block has emerged in talks between congressional Democrats and the White House: Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention beds.

The Trump administration said last month that it wanted $4.2 billion to support 52,000 detention beds. “Given that in recent months, the number of people attempting to cross the border illegally has risen to 2,000 per day, providing additional resources for detention and transportation is essential,” the White House said.

But Democrats are seeking to cap the number of detention beds. In a statement Sunday, Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard, D-Calif., asserted that “A cap on ICE detention beds will force the Trump administration to prioritize deportation for criminals and people who pose real security threats, not law-abiding immigrants who are contributing to our country.”

Roybal-Allard chairs the House Appropriations subcommittee on homeland security and is a member of the House-Senate conference committee trying to reach agreement on spending levels.

Democrats want to limit to 16,500 the number of beds used in the interior of the country, where ICE places people it arrests who have overstayed their visas or committed misdemeanor crimes. Roybal-Allard charges the Trump administration with:

“pursuing an out-of-control deportation policy focused on removing immigrants with no criminal records, many of whom have deep roots in their communities. This approach is cruel and wrong. A cap on detention beds associated with interior enforcement will rein in the Trump administration’s deportation agenda.”

Democrats say a cap of 16,500 would restore immigration enforcement to levels in place at the end of the Obama administration. They further wish to limit the number of ICE detention beds to 35,520 overall, according to documents leaked to the Washington Post.

In a Sunday interview on Fox Business, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. said of the Democratic position, “not only is it enough they want to abolish ICE. They want to abolish the bed spaces available to the country to house violent offenders so they can be held and deported.” Graham added, “I promise you this. Donald Trump is not going to sign any bill that reduces the number of bed spaces available to hold violent offenders who come across our border. He can’t do that. He won’t do that, and you can take that to the bank.”

President Trump tweeted Monday that “The Democrats do not want us to detain, or send back, criminal aliens! This is a brand new demand. Crazy!

But Democrats say they want nothing of the sort. Roybal-Allard said the cap will ensure the Trump administration “targets violent felons and other people who pose security risks for deportation, instead of pursuing reckless mass deportation policies that actually make us less safe.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/02/11/693460861/ice-detention-beds-new-stumbling-block-in-efforts-to-prevent-another-shutdown

Ben Domenech, publisher of The Federalist, called out the double standard from mainstream media on President Biden‘s handling of the pandemic. On “The Brian Kilmeade Show,” Domenech pointed to constant updates on COVID cases and deaths during Trump’s presidency but a seemingly normal portrayal of American life on mainstream media outlets during Biden’s time in office.

MEDIA HIT FOR ‘SOPHOMORIC AND RIDICULOUS’ TAKE ON BIDEN’S TRAVEL BAN AFTER CALLING TRUMP’S RESTRICTIONS RACIST

BEN DOMENECH: I wonder sometimes whether Joe Biden actually watches television, whether he sees how people are living or what’s going on. Because it’s such a bizarre situation to hear all of these orders and mandates and the like and then flip over to a college football game or to a basketball game and see all these people who are living life as close to normal as we’ve seen yet. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

And to me, the real dynamic here too is a revelation about media hypocrisy. Under the previous administration, you had tickers going constantly on every newspaper and on every news channel, updating people on the level of deaths and suggesting that they were Donald Trump’s responsibility. Where are those today? 

WATCH THE FULL INTERVIEW BELOW:

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/ben-domenech-mainstream-media-hypocrisy-pandemic-coverage-biden-presidency

CHICAGO — At least six people were shot, including two children, when gunfire erupted at a West Englewood baby shower, police and witnesses said.

According to the Chicago Police Department, the shooting occurred at a family gathering about 6:20 p.m. in the 6300 block of South Seeley Avenue.

Witnesses said it was a baby shower.

An 8-year-old boy was shot in the chest and back and taken to Comer Children’s Hospital, according to police.

A spokesman for the Chicago Fire Department said the boy suffered at least one collapsed lung — and that paramedics performed a life-saving needle decompression procedure in the ambulance.

Police said a 10-year-old girl was shot in the shin and taken to Comer, where her condition had stabilized.

A 29-year-old woman is in critical condition after being shot in the shoulder and chest. She was taken to Advocate Christ Medical Center.

A 42-year-old man was shot twice in the hip. A 23-year-old man was shot in the left foot. A 28-year-old man was shot in his right shoulder. All of their conditions had stabilized, authorities said.

Chicago police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said witnesses on the scene were not being cooperative.

No one was in custody. Detectives are investigating.

Source Article from https://wgntv.com/2019/04/06/at-least-5-wounded-in-west-englewood-shooting-police-say/


Detail of a scarf print from the Beyond Buckskin Boutique. Photo courtesy of shop.beyondbuckskin.com.
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Morris said by spearheading innovative partnerships and leveraging resources from ASU, tribes and community organizations, she hopes that Inno-NATIONS will create a “collision community,” causing a ripple effect of economic change in tribal communities.

The first collision takes place with the inaugural learning lab series, “Beyond Buckskin: Beyond Online” on March 1 followed by “Protection in All Directions: A Fashion & Resistance Awareness Event” on March 4. The latter will include discussions, multi-media discussions and a fashion show highlighting local Native American designers including Jared Yazzie of OxDX.

Both events are free and take place at The Department in downtown Phoenix.

Inno-NATIONS will also launch a three-day pilot cohort with approximately 20 Native American businesses starting in June.

“Beyond Buckskin” features Jessica Metcalfe, a Turtle Mountain Chippewa, Dartmouth graduate and entrepreneur, who grew a small online store into a successful boutique on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation in North Dakota.

The store promotes and sells Native American-made couture, streetwear, jewelry, and accessories from more than 40 Native American and First Nations artist, employing tribe members from the Turtle Mountain community.

ASU Now spoke to Metcalfe to discuss her work.

Jessica Metcalfe

Question: We’ve seen Native American fashion emerge and evolve. How did you get into the business?

Answer: I was writing my master’s thesis in 2005 and my advisor at the time had told me about some research she had done, which looked at Native American fashion in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. She had wondered if I was interested in picking up where her research left off. I looked into it and found that there were these breadcrumbs, little bits here in there, that something had been going on in the past 60-70 years, but hadn’t been looked at as a collective movement.

Through my doctoral dissertation, what I discovered was that Native American fashion has gone through waves of acknowledgements by the broader public, but what we’re experiencing now is perhaps the biggest wave yet.

You have designers like Patricia Michaels out at New York’s Style Fashion Week and the Native Fashion Now traveling exhibit touring the country, so there’s really a lot of exciting things happening lately. It’s coming from a collective movement. Designers basically grouping together to share costs but also to put together more events to cause a bigger ruckus.

Q: How did you build your online store into a brick-and-mortar business?

A: I first launched a blog in 2009 as an outlet for my dissertation research, and wanted to share it with more people and to also get more stories and experiences. My readers kept asking where could they see and buy these clothes? At that time, there wasn’t an easy way to access functions like a Native American Pow Wow or market in order to do that.

I had established a rapport with designers through my research and writing. They saw what I was doing through the blog and then a question popped into my head. “How would you feel about creating a business together?” There were 11 initial designers who said they needed the space, and I worked with them to sell their goods online. We just now opened our design lab on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation. We are creating a system where we can meet demand and maximize a need in Indian Country.

We employ Native Americans from ages 15 to 22. There aren’t a whole lot of opportunities for people that age on the reservation. They either work at the grocery store or the gas station. One of them is interested in film and photography and so they run our photo shoots. Another person is interested in business entrepreneurship, and they get to see how an idea goes from concept to execution.

Q: The subtext is that this isn’t just about fashion but, history, representation and cultural appropriation?

A: Our clothing is just more than just objects. It’s about how the material was gathered, what the colors represent, what stories are being told and how does that tie into our value system. One of the things I often discuss is the Native American headdress. Our leaders wear them as a symbol of their leadership and the dedication to their communities. These stories are a way to share our culture with non-Natives and protect our legacy for future generations.

Q: Why is it important for Native American businesses to branch out into other cultures?

A: Native American people desperately need to diversify their economic opportunities on and off the reservations. Up until recently, people haven’t thought of fashion or art as a viable career path.

A recent study conducted by First Peoples Fund that found a third of all Native American people are practicing or are potential artists. That is a huge resource we already have in Indian Country and we need to tap it and develop it, and push for Natives in various fields to look at themselves as entrepreneurs and launching businesses.

Now, Native American people have an opportunity to make a positive impact in their local communities by reaching people through their art and sharing our culture with the rest of the world.

Source Article from https://asunow.asu.edu/20170228-univision-arizona-asu-cronkite-school-partner-air-cronkite-noticias

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

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This story contains descriptions of sexual violence.

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

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