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A 60-year-old Arkansas man who was photographed Wednesday with his feet up on a desk in the U.S. Capitol office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has been arrested, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Friday.

This undated photo provided by the Washington County, Arl., Sheriff’s Office shows Arkansas resident Richard Barnett, who was taken into custody Friday, Jan. 8, 2021, and is being held in the county jail after he was charged by federal prosecutors with three counts for storming the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday in Washington. Barnett was in a viral photo where he could be seen inside House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office. (Washington County Sheriff’s Office via AP)

Richard Barnett was taken into custody in Little Rock, Arkansas, and charged with the following: knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds; and theft of public money, property, or records, a Justice Department news release stated.

Ken Kohl, the top deputy federal prosecutor in Washington, said Barnett was charged for entering Pelosi’s office, where he “left a note and removed some of the speaker’s mail.”

An investigation began after U.S. Capitol Police learned that someone had illegally entered the speaker’s office and was photographed behind a desk, according to court documents.

“The shocking images of Mr. Barnett with his boots up on a desk in the Speaker of the House’s office on Wednesday was repulsive,” Acting U.S. Attorney General Jeffrey A. Rosen said in the release.

Barnett was identified as the man in the picture after the photo was circulated on various news media platforms, the release read.

Investigators also used video surveillance from inside the Capitol and a video interview Barnett gave to a New York Times reporter in which he said, “I didn’t steal (an envelope). … I put a quarter on her desk, even though she ain’t (expletive) worth it.”

Authorities then confirmed the identification by checking law enforcement databases.

Barnett was among supporters of President Trump who stormed the Capitol on Wednesday as Congress met to confirm Joe Biden’s election win, authorities said. Five people died because of the protest and violence, including a Capitol police officer.

“This case is just one in a number that demonstrate the brazen acts that were committed at the Capitol on Wednesday,” Michael Sherwin, the acting U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, said in the release. “My Office is committed to prosecuting all individuals who participated in these abhorrent acts to the fullest extent of the law.”

Barnett faces a maximum prison sentence of one year if convicted. He’s expected to appear in federal court on Friday before he is extradited to Washington D.C.

Source Article from https://ktla.com/news/nationworld/man-photographed-at-desk-in-pelosis-office-during-capitol-riots-is-arrested-doj-says/

This New Year’s Eve, as you take a cup of kindness to your lips and hum a stanza of “Auld Lang Syne” – because who really knows the words, right? – it may be propitious to take stock not just of the year gone by, but the one before and the one to come.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/12/27/predictions-brighter-2021-didnt-come-true-2022-better/8900480002/

Según el jefe de ministros, el objetivo de los acreedores de Grecia es que ese país “siga ajustando, lo cual implica (tomar) decisiones que afectan en forma directa al pueblo griego”.

“Lo que está pasando en Grecia es que, desde el mes de diciembre de 2013, (el fondo de inversión) Elliot viene comprando papeles de Grecia. Se están preparando para ir por la carroña a tratar de sacarle, espoliarle al pueblo griego”.

En este sentido, añadió: “No se dan cuenta lo que estamos gritando nosotros los argentinos en soledad hace muchos años y que logró despertar -de alguna manera- Naciones Unidas para sacar una convención que permita garantizar la posibilidad de reestructuración de deuda y no caer en manos de estos sinvergüenzas”.

Respecto del referendum que realizará Grecia el próximo domingo sobre la propuesta de acuerdo presentada por los acreedores, Fernández opinó que “el titular de la Comisión Europea, que es el brazo ejecutor de la Unión Europea, Jean-Claude Juncker, sostiene que Alexis Tsipras, debiera votar por el ‘Sí’, que significa que sigan ajustando”.

Source Article from http://www.pagina12.com.ar/diario/ultimas/20-276310-2015-07-03.html

A 19-year-old man charged in the death of his father who was pulled from a Duxbury pond told police he was “baptizing” his dad a the pond to exorcise his demons, prosecutors said.

Jake Callahan is facing a murder charge in the death of his father, 57-year-old Scott Callahan, who was found dead Monday in Island Creek Pond at Crooker Memorial Park.

During Jack Callahan’s arraignment in Plymouth District Court, prosecutors said the defendant told police he went to Boston to get his father, who was at a bar.

Both sides acknowledged today that Scott Callahan had a long history of substance abuse, and suffered from the aftermath of a traumatic brain injury. Jack Callahan said his mother did not want her intoxicated ex-husband at the family home that night, so an Uber dropped the pair off at Island Creek Pond around midnight, prosecutors said.

Prosecutors said the defendant told police his father hit him several times at the pond and that is when the younger Callahan decided to “baptize” his father.

“(Jack Callahan) believed he was baptizing his father. He described holding him on his back like a baby, that he continually dunked the father’s head in the water four to eight times,” Assistant District Attorney Shanan Buckingham said. “He did so until his father was no longer struggling and floating.”

Scott Callahan was found in the water a short time later, about 50 feet away from the shore of the pond. He was taken to Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center-Plymouth, where he was pronounced dead.

In court, the defense attorney said Jack Callahan had recently returned from Colorado to live with his mother for medical care.

Jack Callahan’s defense attorney requested a psychological valuation at Bridgewater State Hospital, but the judge denied the request.

“He was banging his head on the floor and the police had to put their boot under his head to kind of soften the blow. I did talk with him myself. I do believe he poses a risk of danger to himself,” said attorney Kevin Reddington.

Jack Callahan was ordered held without bail pending a dangerousness hearing.

Source Article from https://www.wcvb.com/article/19-year-old-charged-with-murder-after-man-pulled-from-duxbury-pond/36872712

PRESTONBURG, Ky. (AP) — Some residents of Appalachia returned to flood-ravaged homes and communities on Saturday to shovel mud and debris and to salvage what they could, while Kentucky’s governor said search and rescue operations were ongoing in the region swamped by torrential rains days earlier that led to deadly flash flooding.

Rescue crews were continuing the struggle to get into hard-hit areas, some of them among the poorest places in America. Dozens of deaths have been confirmed and the number is expected to grow.

In the tiny community of Wayland, Phillip Michael Caudill was working Saturday to clean up debris and recover what he could from the home he shares with his wife and three children. The waters had receded from the house but left a mess behind along with questions about what he and his family will do next.

“We’re just hoping we can get some help,” said Caudill, who is staying with his family at Jenny Wiley State Park in a free room, for now.

Caudill, a firefighter in the nearby Garrett community, went out on rescues around 1 a.m. Thursday but had to ask to leave around 3 a.m. so he could go home, where waters were rapidly rising.

“That’s what made it so tough for me,” he said. “Here I am, sitting there, watching my house become immersed in water and you got people begging for help. And I couldn’t help,” because he was tending to his own family.

The water was up to his knees when he arrived home and he had to wade across the yard and carry two of his kids out to the car. He could barely shut the door of his SUV as they were leaving.

In Garrett on Saturday, couches, tables and pillows soaked by flooding were stacked in yards along the foothills of the mountainous region as people worked to clear out debris and shovel mud from driveways and roads under now-blue skies.

Hubert Thomas, 60, and his nephew Harvey, 37, fled to Jenny Wiley State Resort Park in Prestonburg after floodwaters destroyed their home in Pine Top late Wednesday night. The two were able to rescue their dog, CJ, but fear the damages to the home are beyond repair. Hubert Thomas, a retired coal miner, said his entire life savings was invested in his home.

“I’ve got nothing now,” he said.

Harvey Thomas, an EMT, said he fell asleep to the sound of light rain, and it wasn’t long until his uncle woke him up warning him that water was getting dangerously close to the house.

“It was coming inside and it just kept getting worse,” he said, “like there was, at one point, we looked at the front door and mine and his cars was playing bumper cars, like bumper boats in the middle of our front yard.”

As for what’s next, Harvey Thomas said he doesn’t know, but he’s thankful to be alive.

“Mountain people are strong,” he said. “And like I said it’s not going to be tomorrow, probably not next month, but I think everybody’s going to be okay. It’s just going to be a long process.”

At least 25 have people died — including four children — in the flooding, Kentucky’s governor said Saturday.

“We continue to pray for the families that have suffered an unfathomable loss,” Gov. Andy Beshear said. ”Some having lost almost everyone in their household.”

Beshear said the number would likely rise significantly and it could take weeks to find all the victims of the record flash flooding. Crews have made more than 1,200 rescues from helicopters and boats, the governor said.

“I’m worried that we’re going to be finding bodies for weeks to come,” Beshear said during a midday briefing.

The rain let up early Friday after parts of eastern Kentucky received between 8 and 10 1/2 inches (20-27 centimeters) over 48 hours. But some waterways were not expected to crest until Saturday. About 18,000 utility customers in Kentucky remained without power Saturday, poweroutage.us reported.

It’s the latest in a string of catastrophic deluges that have pounded parts of the U.S. this summer, including St. Louis earlier this week and again on Friday. Scientists warn climate change is making weather disasters more common.

As rainfall hammered Appalachia this week, water tumbled down hillsides and into valleys and hollows where it swelled creeks and streams coursing through small towns. The torrent engulfed homes and businesses and trashed vehicles. Mudslides marooned some people on steep slopes.

President Joe Biden declared a federal disaster to direct relief money to more than a dozen Kentucky counties.

The flooding extended into western Virginia and southern West Virginia.

Gov. Jim Justice declared a state of emergency for six counties in West Virginia where the flooding downed trees, power outages and blocked roads. Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin also made an emergency declaration, enabling officials to mobilize resources across the flooded southwest of the state.

The deluge came two days after record rains around St. Louis dropped more than 12 inches (31 centimeters) and killed at least two people. Last month, heavy rain on mountain snow in Yellowstone National Park triggered historic flooding and the evacuation of more than 10,000 people. In both instances, the rain flooding far exceeded what forecasters predicted.

Extreme rain events have become more common as climate change bakes the planet and alters weather patterns, according to scientists. That’s a growing challenge for officials during disasters, because models used to predict storm impacts are in part based on past events and can’t keep up with increasingly devastating flash floods and heat waves like those that have recently hit the Pacific Northwest and southern Plains.

“It’s a battle of extremes going on right now in the United States,” said University of Oklahoma meteorologist Jason Furtado. “These are things we expect to happen because of climate change. … A warmer atmosphere holds more water vapor and that means you can produce increased heavy rainfall.”

___

AP journalist Patrick Orsagos contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/floods-storms-kentucky-211cfd992341efe964ca996051916796

President Trump on Thursday lashed out at Rex Tillerson after the former secretary of state reportedly told members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee that Russian President Vladimir Putin out-prepared Trump during their first meeting in Germany.

Trump responded by calling Tillerson incompetent.

“Rex Tillerson, a man who is ‘dumb as a rock’ and totally ill prepared and ill equipped to be Secretary of State, made up a story (he got fired) that I was out-prepared by Vladimir Putin at a meeting in Hamburg, Germany,” he tweeted. “I don’t think Putin would agree. Look how the U.S. is doing!”

If Tillerson was “totally ill prepared and ill equipped” to be the nation’s top diplomat, Trump himself would be to blame: He appointed the former ExxonMobil CEO to be secretary of state shortly after his inauguration after interviewing multiple candidates, including now-Sen. Mitt Romney. Tillerson was confirmed by the Senate eight days later.




In December 2016, when Trump was considering Tillerson for the position, the then-president-elect tweeted about him glowingly.

“Whether I choose him or not for ‘State,’” Trump wrote, “Rex Tillerson, the Chairman & CEO of ExxonMobil, is a world class player and dealmaker.”

Tillerson’s’ 14-month tenure — ending when Trump fired him last March — was fraught. In October 2017, he issued a public statement complimenting the president after multiple reports said that he had privately called Trump “a moron.” Shortly after taking the job, Tillerson told an interviewer that he never wanted the job as secretary of state and didn’t seek the post.

“My wife told me I’m supposed to do this,” Tillerson when asked why he had accepted the position as America’s top diplomat.

Trump also called Tillerson “dumb as a rock and lazy as hell” in a December tweet.

___

Read more from Yahoo News:

Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/05/23/trump-declares-man-he-appointed-secretary-of-state-totally-ill-prepared-and-ill-equipped-for-the-job/23733748/

Unless a judge intervenes, health officials will force a Missouri facility to stop offering the procedure this week.

Jim Salter/AP


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Jim Salter/AP

Unless a judge intervenes, health officials will force a Missouri facility to stop offering the procedure this week.

Jim Salter/AP

Missouri is within days of losing its last remaining health center that provides abortions. Unless a court intervenes, it will become the first state in the nation without such a clinic.

Planned Parenthood officials say they are filing a lawsuit in state court Tuesday, asking for a restraining order to prevent its St. Louis clinic from being forced to stop offering the procedure after a state license expires Friday.

Planned Parenthood officials say they’ve been unable to reach an agreement with officials at the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services, who want to require several doctors who perform abortions at the health center to submit to questioning as a condition of renewing the license.

“This means that more than 1.1 million women of reproductive age in Missouri will live in a state where they cannot receive the health care they need,” Planned Parenthood President, Dr. Leana Wen, said in a statement to NPR. “This is a world we haven’t seen in nearly half a century.”

Planned Parenthood says state officials have indicated the questioning could lead to criminal proceedings or board review for those physicians, who provide the procedure at Reproductive Health Services of Planned Parenthood of the St. Louis Region.

In her statement, Wen described the state’s actions as “harassment” meant to “intimidate” physicians who perform abortions.

Bonyen Lee-Gilmore, director of State Media Campaigns for Planned Parenthood, said the situation in Missouri has been unfolding for years and is the result of what she describes as a “weaponized inspections process.”

“This didn’t happen overnight. It’s been a slow drip of restriction after restriction, and we’ve been warning for some time that abortion access is on the line,” Lee-Gilmore said.

The news comes just days after Missouri’s Republican governor, Mike Parson, signed a law criminalizing abortion after eight weeks of pregnancy. In a statement upon signing, Parson said the abortion ban sends “a strong signal to the nation that, in Missouri, we stand for life, protect women’s health, and advocate for the unborn.”

That law makes Missouri the latest in a growing number of states to ban the procedure in the early stages of pregnancy, often before women even know they’re pregnant. Doctors convicted of violating the Missouri law could face prison time. Several states have passed similar early bans in recent weeks, but none have taken effect so far. Legal challenges are underway, and federal judges in Mississippi and Kentucky have already blocked such laws.

But even without banning the procedure, restrictive health regulations can force clinics to stop offering abortions or close altogether. A Planned Parenthood clinic in Columbia, Mo., stopped performing the procedure in October 2018, after it was unable to fulfill a state requirement that doctors performing the procedure have admitting privileges at a hospital within about 15 minutes of the clinic. Planned Parenthood officials say there are some hospitals in Missouri that will perform abortions under rare circumstances, such as a medical emergency.

Missouri is now one of six states with only one remaining clinic, according to data from the Guttmacher Institute, which supports abortion rights.

The St. Louis clinic will continue to provide services such as birth control and health screenings, but will have to stop offering abortions unless a judge grants a restraining order. Patients seeking abortions in Missouri would then have to travel hundreds of miles, to clinics in Kansas or Illinois, Wen said.

Wen said it would be the first time in decades that an entire state would be without a health center offering abortions.

“This is a tragedy for Missouri women and doctors. And it’s a disturbing preview of what anti-choice politicians are trying to implement across the country,” Wen said.

Planned Parenthood officials say they have reached agreements with state health officials on other rules, including a requirement that physicians perform two pelvic examinations on women seeking surgical abortions.

Dr. Colleen McNicholas, an abortion provider at the St. Louis clinic, said in a statement provided by Planned Parenthood that repeat pelvic exams are “medically unnecessary and invasive.”

“For some patients, this can even be re-traumatizing,” McNicholas said in the statement. “In this case, we had to weigh this against abortion access for an entire state — a nearly impossible decision and state officials know it.”

Planned Parenthood has stopped offering medication abortions in Missouri because of that requirement.

Dr. Sarah Horvath, a fellow at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists who is aware of the negotiations in Missouri, said via email that such policies “harm the patient-physician relationship and erode patient trust.”

Asked about the state’s move to question abortion providers, Horvath said the procedure is “highly over-regulated due to stigma and politics. … Doctors should be able to provide health care without fearing interrogation.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/05/28/727323584/missouri-could-soon-become-first-state-without-a-clinic-that-performs-abortions

Manifestantes encapuchados agredieron este domingo a un equipo periodístico del canal Todo Noticias que cubría la protesta frente al escuadrón 35 de Gendarmería de El Bolsón, por los dos meses de la desaparición de Santiago Maldonado. que se encuentra a 1,5 kilómetro de distancia del centro de esa ciudad patagónica.

Un grupo radicalizado protestó frente al escuadrón de Gendarmería Nacional El Bolsón, a 2 meses la desaparición Santiago Maldonado (Foto Juano Tesone)

La protesta se produjo bajo un clima de intensa tensión: manifestantes encapuchados quemaron un muñeco que simulaba ser un gendarme y también escribieron con aerosoles en los escudos de los efectivos que custodian el cuartel la palabra “Asesinos”. Luego, la emprendieron contra el móvil de TN que encabezaba el periodista Rodrigo Saliva, quien fue increpado por manifestantes.

Encapuchados queman una representación de un camión de Gendarmería hecho en cartón, esta tarde (Foto: Juano Tesone).

El cuartel se encuentra rodeado por una alambrada perimetral. En el ingreso hay apostados unos 30 gendarmes con escudos y cascos.

En el lugar hay al menos 6 gendarmes filmando y sacando fotos de los manifestantes.

De la protesta participan unas 500 personas. “Yo sabía, a Santiago se lo llevó Gendarmería”, cantan. Adentro del cuartel tiraron panfletos con la foto del joven artesano.

La ciudad donde reside Santiago Maldonado también se sumó al reclamo por su aparición con vida. En una tarde agradable, algo nublada y con chispas intermitentes de lluvia, en El Bolsón más un millar de personas se habían dado cita en la plaza Pagano, convocados por la Asamblea Permanente por los Derechos Humanos local.

Movilización frente al escuadrón de Gendarmería de El Bolsón (Foto: Juano Tesone).

Después de ese acto en la plaza, una columna de manifestantes empezó a marchar al cuartel de Gendarmería local, ubicado a 1,5 kilómetro de distancia. Avanzan al canto de “No estamos todos, falta Santiago”.

Hace un mes, la anterior movilización por la aparición del joven terminó con serios incidentes: un grupo de encapuchados que se desprendió de la protesta arrojó bombas molotov contra el cuartel local de la Gendarmería.

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Lanzan bombas molotov contra un cuartel de Gendarmería en El Bolsón

“Nada positivo se puede construir sin alegría”, habían dicho antes los organizadores desde el micrófono para dar comienzo al acto en la plaza, animado por una banda de música.

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En París, Estela de Carlotto pidió por Santiago Maldonado

El escenario se montó al aire libre con los cerros de picos nevados como telón de fondo, en la plaza que también alberga la tradicional feria de artesanías de la ciudad.

Acto en la Plaza de El Bolsón por Santiago Maldonado a dos meses de su desaparición (Foto: Juano Tesone).

“Hicimos está convocatoria en consonancia con los organismos de derechos humanos de todo el país”, expresó a Clarín el abogado de la APDH Pedro Prytula, primer orador en el acto. Desde el escenario cuestionó que “se acrecienta la persecución institucional a los pueblos originarios “.

También pidió la liberación del lonko Facundo Jones Huala preso en Esquel, y la implementación de la ley de Tierras Indígenas, que las protege de los desalojos.

Mirá también

A dos meses de su desaparición, miles de personas piden por Santiago Maldonado en Plaza de Mayo

En las adhesiones de sectores políticos opositores, se oyeron críticas al gobierno de Mauricio Macri y a la Gendarmería.

Acto en la plaza Pagano de El Bolsón por Santiago Maldonado (Foto: Juano Tesone).

Source Article from https://www.clarin.com/politica/acto-banderas-partidarias-bolson-reclaman-santiago-maldonado_0_Hk0HcaRsZ.html


Gov. Andrew Cuomo speak during a news conference alongside Mayor Bill de Blasio. | Getty Images

NEW YORK — A visibly shaken Mayor Bill de Blasio pleaded with community and religious leaders to help curb the destruction that has begun to spiral out of control in recent days as his longtime adversary Gov. Andrew Cuomo chastised the NYPD’s response and openly speculated about removing the mayor from office.

On the fifth night of demonstrations in New York City, images of looters and police being attacked splashed across social media into the early hours Tuesday morning, even as the city imposed its first curfew in decades and large groups of protesters peacefully demonstrated. The more chaotic elements of the evening drew recriminations hours later from the White House to Albany with President Donald Trump tweeting “CALL UP THE NATIONAL GUARD” and Cuomo calling for more police presence amid what he saw as a failed response.

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“I am disappointed and outraged in what happened in New York City last night,” Cuomo said during a news briefing Tuesday. “The police in New York City were not effective at doing their job last night. Period. They have to do a better job.”

Cuomo has put state police and 13,000 members of the National Guard on standby and even mused about invoking his statutory power to remove the mayor, but said the police had the capacity to handle the situation on their own.

De Blasio — at a tense news conference during which he snapped at reporters and called on local leaders to take a more active role in the protests — forcefully denounced the idea of allowing organized troops onto city streets, arguing their presence would only ratchet up tensions and heighten the chaos he is trying to tamp down.

“Someone needs a history lesson: When outside armed forces go into communities, no good comes of it,” he said.

Police Commissioner Dermot Shea lit into Cuomo later in the day when asked about the governor’s comments during an interview on Fox News.

“Any comments placing the blame for where we are with this situation on the backs of the men and women of this police department that are putting their lives on the line … I think is disgraceful and he should be ashamed of himself,” Shea said. “There is politics and there is what is right. And that is a disgraceful comment.”

Shea also defended de Blasio’s handling of the situation and said more political leaders should show similar support for the NYPD.

“I can tell you definitively that he has the backs of the men and women of this police department,” Shea said. “It is an extremely difficult time. You heard him on the news and you may have heard his comments denouncing the actions of those attacking the cops. And again, what we need is probably less press conferences by many people and more support and more coming out and making difficult decisions that may not be the most popular.”

The mayor has shifted his tone multiple times since the start of the protests, which have been accompanied by violence from the NYPD, attacks on officers and increasingly destructive break-ins on Sunday and Monday night along commercial strips. The mayor at first defended the police department and then chastised officers for an excess of force. He originally said the violence stemmed from “out of town” agitators, then conceded there were homegrown “anarchists” at work. He then on Tuesday blamed gangs and “career criminals” for exploiting protests that have flooded streets and parks in the wake of George Floyd’s death at the hands of Minneapolis police.

On Tuesday, de Blasio seemed desperate for community leaders to take control of protests and channel more peaceful forces while exiling anyone looking to incite violence.

“Members of the clergy, come out now. I’m calling you out. Civic leaders, block associations, come out now and stand up for peace, stand up for anyone who would do looting, stand up against anyone who would attack a police officer,” he said.

It was unclear whether the administration had laid any of the groundwork to coordinate gatherings before de Blasio’s plea. The mayor’s office has a community affairs unit dedicated to forging and maintaining relationships with residents and organizations across the five boroughs.

Gwen Carr, whose son Eric Garner was killed in a chokehold at the hands of a police officer in 2014, demanded Tuesday that protesters remain peaceful and chided those seeking to exploit the situation.

“This is our movie, and we’re not going to be an extra in our movie,” she said during a press conference. “I am mad and angry about what happened to George Floyd, I am not mad about the protests. I am mad about the looters.”

De Blasio also slammed news outlets and politicians for focusing on looting over peaceful protesters who advocated against destruction. He snapped at the suggestion that police were looking the other way as looters targeted the Macy’s flagship store in Midtown, as well as other commercial strips. He said the NYPD is fully capable of preventing the break-ins and thefts that swept through the city and that a curfew beginning at 8 p.m. Tuesday will be extended through Sunday, the day before the city is set to begin the first phase of reopening.

“There is no such thing as being able to loot with impunity. I am so sick of these efforts to mischaracterize reality,” he told one reporter who asked about images of cops standing by while looters ransacked businesses. “I’ll go right back at you and everyone else who wants to mischaracterize reality.”

With the coronavirus pandemic still raging, de Blasio encouraged protesters to stay home, assured them that their message had been heard and said that reforms are already in motion. The police department would be hastening the disciplinary process and shifting it to identify officers who should not be in a particular location or on the force altogether, though the mayor did not go into detail about what exactly those changes would entail.

When asked about reforms being weighed by the city council to curb police aggression, specifically making it illegal for cops to use the deadly chokehold that killed Garner in 2014, de Blaiso said that he would work with lawmakers and would support legislation as long as it provided officers the ability to use the maneuver in life-threatening situations. The Council is planning to bring the measure, which would also ban other types of neck restraints, for a vote later this month, and earlier in the day Council Speaker Corey Johnson said that he had secured enough votes to override a veto — something the mayor threatened the last time the notion was proposed six years ago.

Cuomo said the mayor seemed out of touch with the gravity of the crisis.

“I believe the mayor underestimates the scope of the problem,” the governor said. “I believe he underestimates the duration of the problem and I don’t think they used enough police to address the situation.”

But to deploy additional troops, Cuomo said he’d have to dramatically reduce the power of the mayor’s office.

“Technically the governor could remove a mayor — you’d have to file charges,” Cuomo said, but added he’s not ready to take that step. “I believe in the inherent capacity of the NYPD if managed and if deployed. That’s what I think hasn’t worked. … That has to be fixed and that has to be fixed today.”

Republican Rep. Pete King chastised Cuomo in defense of the city’s response.

“Time for @NYGovCuomo to realize the NYPD is doing its job. Governor is failing in his,” King said in a tweet. “NYPD is on battlefield risking their lives to protect us. Cuomo sits back in sheltered world second guessing NYPD heroes. Shameful!”

Caitlin Oprysko contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/states/new-york/albany/story/2020/06/02/shaken-de-blasio-pleads-for-community-help-as-cuomo-chides-nypd-response-to-protests-1290088

WASHINGTON (AP) — Attorney General William Barr says law enforcement officers were already moving to push back protesters from a park in front of the White House when he arrived there Monday evening, and he says he did not give a command to disperse the crowd, though he supported the decision.

Barr’s comments in an interview with The Associated Press on Friday were his most detailed explanation yet of what unfolded outside the White House earlier this week. They come after the White House and others said repeatedly that the attorney general ordered officers to clear the park. Shortly after officers aggressively pushed back demonstrators, President Donald Trump — accompanied by Barr, Pentagon leaders and other top advisers — walked through Lafayette Park to pose for a photo at a nearby church that had been damaged during the protests.

The episode played out on live television and prompted an outcry from some Republicans and former military leaders, including Gen. Jim Mattis, Trump’s first defense secretary. Barr told the AP that much of the criticism was unwarranted and that Mattis’ rebuke was “borne of ignorance of the facts.”

Still, administration officials have spent much of the week trying to explain how the situation escalated and why smoke bombs, pepper balls and police on horseback were needed to clear the largely peaceful crowd.

Earlier in the week, White House spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany told reporters it was Barr who made the decision to push back the security perimeter outside the White House on Monday morning. McEnany said that when Barr arrived at Lafayette Park later that day to survey the security situation, he was surprised to see that action had not yet been taken.

“So he said that we needed to get going with moving that perimeter. He told the officers that out there,” McEnany said Wednesday. A person familiar with the matter also said earlier this week that Barr told law enforcement to take action to move the perimeter when he arrived in the park.

On Friday, Barr told the AP that both he and U.S. Park Police were in agreement on the need to push back the security perimeter. He said he attended a meeting around 2 p.m. Monday with several other law enforcement officials, including Metropolitan Police Chief Peter Newsham, where they looked at a map and decided on a dividing line. Under the plan, the protesters would be moved away from Lafayette Park and federal law enforcement officials and members of the National Guard would maintain the perimeter line, Barr said.

Barr said the plan was supposed to be put into action soon after the meeting, but additional officers and National Guard troops had to be called in because of a high number of officers who had been injured throughout the weekend. It had not yet been implemented when he arrived at the park later in the evening and the crowd had grown much larger than it was in the afternoon, Barr said.

Still, he said he did not give the officers the orders to proceed — they were already in the process of doing so when he showed up.

“They told me they were about to make the announcement and I think they stretched the announcements over 20 minutes. During the time I was there, I would periodically hear announcements,” Barr said. “They had the Park Police mounted unit ready, so it was just a matter of execution. So, I didn’t just say to them, ‘Go.’”

Barr said it was a Park Police tactical commander — an official he never spoke to — who gave the order for the law enforcement agencies to move in and clear the protesters.

“I’m not involved in giving tactical commands like that,” he said. “I was frustrated and I was also worried that as the crowd grew, it was going to be harder and harder to do. So my attitude was get it done, but I didn’t say, ‘Go do it.’”

Barr insisted there was no connection between the heavy-handed crackdown on the protesters and Trump’s walk soon after to St. John’s Church. The attorney general said he had learned in the afternoon that Trump wanted to go outside, and said that when he went to the White House in the evening, he learned of the president’s intended destination.

Several different groups, including the Secret Service and Park Police, were involved in the pushback on the protesters. Members of the National Guard were present but didn’t engage with the protesters, Barr said. Trump also threatened that night to deploy active-duty military forces to the states if local and state authorities could not adequately quell the demonstrations, which have occasionally turned violent.

Mattis, who left the administration in 2019, said Wednesday that Trump was setting up a “false conflict” between the military and civilian society, and took particular issue with the show of force outside the White House.

“We know that we are better than the abuse of executive authority that we witnessed in Lafayette Square. We must reject and hold accountable those in office who would make a mockery of our Constitution,” Mattis said.

Source Article from https://www.snopes.com/ap/2020/06/05/barr-says-he-didnt-give-tactical-order-to-clear-protesters/

Image copyright
Dale Zanine-USA TODAY/Reuters

Image caption

Mr Carter is said to be “resting comfortably” with his wife, Rosalynn, by his side

Former US President Jimmy Carter, 95, has been admitted to hospital in Atlanta for a procedure to relieve brain pressure.

The pressure comes from bleeding caused by recent falls, the Carter Center said in a statement.

The procedure is scheduled to take place at the Emory University Hospital on Tuesday morning local time.

“President Carter is resting comfortably, and his wife, Rosalynn, is with him,” the statement said.

Mr Carter is the country’s oldest living leader.

The Democrat was the 39th president, serving one term from 1977 to 1981. He was defeated in his re-election bid by Ronald Reagan.

Since leaving the White House, he has remained active, carrying out humanitarian work with his Carter Center in recent years.

Media captionJimmy Carter makes public appearance with black eye and stitches

In 2002, he received the Nobel Peace Prize for his humanitarian work.

In May, Mr Carter underwent surgery for a broken hip after falling at his home in Georgia.

After a separate fall at his home, he made a public appearance at a charity event in October with a black eye.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-50384658

Members of Congress and their staffers who scrambled to help Americans and their Afghan allies get out of Afghanistan before this week’s withdrawal deadline have revealed some of the frantic messages they received from people desperate to leave in recent days.

Multiple outlets, including The Post, reported on the difficulties facing would-be evacuees who attempted to get to Kabul’s Hamid Karzai International Airport through a gauntlet of Taliban checkpoints.

Now, the messages obtained by the Washington Examiner show how fraught the situation became in the final days before the last flight left Aug. 30.

One Afghan-American who worked with the office of Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.) said the Islamic fundamentalist group’s fighters “were creating as much problem as they could.”

Taliban militants searching a car at a checkpoint in Kabul, Afghanistan on August 25, 2021.
AP Photo/Khwaja Tawfiq Sediqi

The man recalled being told by the State Department to go to the Interior Ministry in Kabul, where he was confronted by a Taliban guard. After the man explained the situation, the Taliban fighter responded: “Go and tell the State Department to f— themselves.”

The evacuee said he made it into the airport by making a break for it during a firefight at a checkpoint on Aug. 27, the day after an ISIS-K suicide bomber killed at least 13 US service members and at least 169 Afghans at the airport’s Abbey Gate.

“I know it was stupid, but I took just my chance,” he said. “I ran towards the soldiers. I had my passport in my hand — shouting that I’m an American citizen.” The man is back in the US, along with his wife and their four children.

Taliban guards in front of Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul on August 31, 2021.
AP Photo/Khwaja Tawfiq Sediqi

The Examiner reports that lawmakers, staffers and would-be evacuees found that the Taliban did not want to let Afghan-Americans through the checkpoints, even when people brandished their dark-blue US passports.

One Afghan-American woman sent the office of Rep. Mike Garcia (R-Calif.) a video of her sitting in a car at a checkpoint, holding her children’s passports and asking what she can do.

“This is why you don’t rely on the Taliban to be the ones monitoring the checkpoints,” Garcia told the Examiner.

An Afghan-American who worked with Rep. Don Bacon’s office claimed the Taliban “were creating as much problem as they could.”
AP Photo/Nati Harnik, File

The Biden administration has repeatedly portrayed the Taliban as an equal partner in the evacuation operation. State Department officials stated that the Taliban had guaranteed safe passage to anyone who wished to leave Afghanistan, despite widespread reporting that people who attempted to cross the checkpoints were being assaulted and beaten.

On Monday, US Central Command commander Gen. Kenneth “Frank” McKenzie — who reportedly turned down an offer from the Taliban that would have allowed the US military to secure Kabul in the final weeks before the withdrawal deadline — described the Taliban’s conduct as “very pragmatic and very businesslike” in helping to secure the facility.

That may have been news to one American who contacted Bacon’s deputy chief of staff, Felix Ungerman, while trying to reach the airport. At one point, a Taliban militant opened fire.

“He goes, ‘Oh my god, he’s shooting.’ And I said, ‘Please get away from there, go get to safety,’” Ungerman recalled to the Examiner. “His phone cut off while I could hear gunshots going off, and I couldn’t get in touch with him again. I tried calling his cellphone every couple of hours to see if I could get him, tried an email, sent him a text message. And it wasn’t until [Tuesday] morning that he actually texted me back and said, ‘Yeah, I’m OK, but now what do I do?’

“I’m like, ‘You get to somewhere safe, and you stay there until we can — our government can offer some solutions to help you.’”

In fact, Garcia claimed, his office had the most success getting people out of Afghanistan when “we weren’t necessarily beholden or waiting on the State Department.”

“In fact, all of our successes — we ended up getting roughly 97 folks out successfully — these were all folks that we were able to do so through our own channels and folks on the ground there that were supporting mostly American citizens and SIVs [Special Immigrant Visa holders] who otherwise would have been stopped by the bureaucracy, frankly, by the State Department,” he said.

Armed Taliban fighters speaking with a driver at a checkpoint in Kabul on August 25, 2021.
AP Photo/Khwaja Tawfiq Sediqi

Now that the withdrawal is over, the US has declined to rule out having some kind of relationship with the Taliban. On Wednesday, Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, admitted it was “possible” that the US may coordinate anti-terror operations with the Taliban targeting the ISIS-K militant group.

President Biden himself, in his various remarks about the Afghanistan withdrawal, has described ISIS-K as an “enemy” of the Taliban, suggesting a common interest between Washington and Afghanistan’s new rulers.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/09/02/tell-the-state-dept-to-f-k-themselves-taliban-taunted-evacuees/

San Francisco’s stay-at-home order, which was tentatively expected to lift as of January 7 2021, has been extended “indefinitely,” Mayor London Breed and Director of Health Dr. Grant Colfax announced Thursday. In addition, officials say, the city might keep its stay-at-home in place even after the state lifts it, depending on “key health indicators.” That means that activities including outdoor dining will remain forbidden in San Francsico for an unforeseen length of time.

The announcement was a surprise to those who attended Colfax’s final address of the year, which was delivered on December 29. While he warned that New Year’s Eve gatherings could be “catastrophic” for the area’s COVID-19 case rate, he also said that the increase in positive coronavirus tests was leveling off. He did not, we should note, make any indication that the city expected its current lockdown — which the region entered voluntarily on December 6, and was made official by the state on December 16 — would continue past next week.

In a press release sent by San Francisco’s Department of Emergency Management on December 31, the officials wrote that “due to ongoing regional ICU capacity limitations and continuing increase of cases, San Francisco does not expect the Bay Area will meet the State’s thresholds for lifting the order” by January 7. That’s probably a reasonable expectation: The state requires the full Bay Area region, which includes Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Santa Clara, Monterey, Napa, San Mateo, Santa Cruz, Solano, and San Francisco counties, as well as the city of Berkeley, to demonstrate that 15 percent of its intensive care unit hospital beds are free. At present, while San Francsico has around 32 percent availability, the region at a whole is at 7.5 percent.

The stay-at-home extension announcement was a disappointment to Laurie Thomas, the executive director of local dining lobby the Golden Gate Restaurant Association. “This is not the news we had hoped to hear,” she said Thursday morning, even then acknowledging that “given the 7.5 percent regional ICU capacity number posted yesterday,” she knew then that the Bay Area was “unlikely to be released from that order on January 8th.”

That said, Thomas says that she’s glad the announcement was made now, as opposed to next week, when many assumed the order would be lifted. “We appreciate the city’s effort to provide businesses with more advance notice for planning purposes,” Thomas says, and “we appreciate the recently passed federal COVID relief bill,” but “we continue to stress that we need more financial relief from the city of San Francisco, the state of California and the federal government.”

In addition, officials say, a public health order implemented on December 17 that requires “anyone traveling, moving, or returning to San Francisco from anywhere outside the Bay Area” to quarantine for 10 days has been extended past the initial end date of January 4. It’s a decision that “responds to the significant prevalence of the coronavirus throughout the State and Country,” officials say, and is intended to protect “against the spread of a new variant of the virus detected recently in the United Kingdom, Colorado, and California.”

Even after the region’s ICU bed numbers allow the stay-at-home order to be lifted, the city might still be shut down, Breed and Colfax say. “Once the State lifts its Regional Stay at Home order,” only then will SF “reassess the key health indicators to determine if they support relaxing the current restrictions on businesses and activities, and resuming the measured re-opening process,” they say. In other words, even after the state says that activities like outdoor dining can resume, San Francisco might continue to restrict restaurants to takeout and delivery.

One reason San Francisco might keep the stay-at-home in place is that, so far, it seems to be working. “Though cases continue to climb, they are increasing at a slower rate than when the orders were implemented,” the city said via statement. “As a result of our collective actions, more than 400 deaths may have prevented.”

“We have been proactive in putting the stay at home order and travel quarantine in place to protect San Franciscans and in the hopes that by acting quickly, we could flatten the curve and re-open faster,” Breed says. “This seems to be working but we need more time to determine that we are moving in the right direction and that the December holidays don’t set us back. There are glimmers of hope and now is not the time to let up.”

See the full stay-at-home extension announcement here:

Source Article from https://sf.eater.com/2020/12/31/22208293/san-francisco-lockdown-quarantine-shutdown-outdoor-dining-sf

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Jueves, 23 de Julio 2015  |  1:32 pm




Créditos: RPP

En dilogo con RPP Noticias, la procuradora cambi de parecer, saludando el respaldo y confianza que le ha brindado -dijo- la poblacin.







La procuradora de lavado de activos Julia Príncipe aclaró que no va a renunciar a su cargo, luego del entredicho que tuvo con el ministro de Justicia, Gustavo Adrianzén, quien le llamó la atención por declarar sobre determinados casos.

“No voy a renunciar, de ninguna manera”, señaló a RPP Noticias, tras aclarar que cambió de opinión por el respaldo y confianza que le ha brindado -dijo- la población.

“Lo que me motiva a continuar trabajando es el respaldo y la confianza que me ha brindado toda la población, a quienes les agradezco infinitamente y porque a lo largo de mi carrera yo no he sido cuestionada en mi desempeño funcional”, mencionó.

Príncipe dijo que, por su lado, no hay “ningún enfrentamiento” con Adrianzén, pero adelantó que, como ciudadana, tiene el derecho a la libertad de opinión.

“Lo que he salido a aclarar es con respecto a nuestra autonomía funcional, a la autonomía funcional de los procuradores”, mencionó.

El esposo de Keiko
En otro momento, Julia Príncipe mencionó que está evaluando la información aparecida en los medios de comunicación en torno al origen del patrimonio de Mark Vito Villanella, esposo de Keiko Fujimori, lideresa de Fuerza Popular.

“Lo que estamos haciendo es evaluar la información que ha aparecido en los medios de comunicación y en esa medida procederemos a recopilar, a acopiar mayor información, para ver si hay elementos suficientes para trabajar una denuncia”, sentenció.








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Source Article from http://www.rpp.com.pe/2015-07-23-julia-principe–no-voy-a-renunciar-de-ninguna-manera-noticia_819800.html