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Steve Bannon Should Get 6-Month Sentence Justice Dept. Says
Steve Bannon Should Get 6-Month Sentence Justice Dept. Says
Steve Bannon Should Get 6-Month Sentence, Justice Dept. Says https://digitalalabamanews.com/steve-bannon-should-get-6-month-sentence-justice-dept-says/ By LINDSAY WHITEHURST, Associated Press Published: October 17, 2022, 3:48pm 3 Photos Former White House strategist Steve Bannon leaves court, Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2022, in New York. (AP Photo/John Minchillo) Photo Gallery WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department declared Monday that Steve Bannon should serve six months behind bars and pay a $200,000 fine for defying a congressional subpoena from the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. Convicted last summer, the longtime ally of former President Donald Trump should get a hefty sentence because he “pursued a bad-faith strategy of defiance and contempt” and he publicly disparaged the committee itself, undermining the effort to get to the bottom of the violent attack and keep anything like it from happening again, federal attorneys wrote. He has not yet provided any documents or answered any questions, they said. “The rioters who overran the Capitol on January 6 did not just attack a building — they assaulted the rule of law upon which this country was built and through which it endures,” federal attorneys wrote in court documents. “By flouting the Select Committee’s subpoena and its authority, the Defendant exacerbated that assault.” The Justice Department statement comes after the committee took the extraordinary step last week to subpoena Trump himself, something panel members said was necessary to get the full story of what happened during and before last year’s attack. It’s unclear how Trump will respond to the summons. Refusal to comply could open up a similar path in court — though holding a former president in contempt would be an unprecedented and fraught process. Bannon’s lawyers, meanwhile, deny he was acting in bad faith. They’re asking for probation, even though his two contempt convictions each carries a mandatory minimum of one month behind bars. They’re also asking for the sentence to be paused while an appeal plays out. “Imposing a sentence of incarceration under the circumstances of Mr. Bannon’s case would run contrary to the fundamental constitutional principles of individualized sentencing and sentencing proportionality,” defense attorneys wrote. Bannon is to be sentenced Friday on the two counts of contempt of Congress: one for refusing to sit for a deposition and the other for refusing to provide documents. The committee had sought Bannon’s testimony over his involvement in Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election. The former Trump adviser was convicted after a four-day jury trial in July. Outside the courthouse, he compared the trial to a battle and said “we’re not going to lose this war,” then referred to members of the committee as “gutless.” His lawyers acknowledged Monday he has “strong political views.” Bannon, 68, initially argued that his testimony was protected by Trump’s claim of executive privilege, but the House committee was skeptical because the adviser had been fired from the White House in 2017 and was thus a private citizen when he was consulting with the then-president before the riot. Trump’s own lawyer told Bannon’s lawyer in October 2021 that he didn’t believe there was immunity for him and the former president was not telling him to defy the subpoena, according to Monday’s sentencing memo. The Columbian is becoming a rare example of a news organization with local, family ownership. Subscribe today to support local journalism and help us to build a stronger community. Bannon, though, argues that Trump had raised executive-privilege objections for himself, so his onetime adviser wanted a lawyer for the ex-president to be there for any deposition. The committee wouldn’t allow that, so Bannon’s lawyer argued the subpoena was invalid. Many other former White House aides have testified with only their own counsel. Bannon’s attorneys argued during his trial that he actually didn’t refuse to cooperate, that the deadline dates “were in flux.” They pointed to the fact that Bannon had reversed course shortly before the trial kicked off — after Trump waived his objection — and had offered to testify before the committee. But that offer came with strings attached, federal attorneys wrote, including the dismissal of the criminal case against him. When it became clear that wasn’t in the cards, the possibility of cooperation faded, court records state. Federal attorneys are also asking for the maximum fine, saying Bannon refused to cooperate with routine questions about his finances and said he could pay whatever the court imposed. He also disparaged the committee in “exaggerated and sometimes violent” language in news conferences and on his “War Room” podcast, prosecutors wrote. “The defendant’s statements prove that his contempt was not aimed at protecting executive privilege or the Constitution, rather it was aimed at undermining the Committee’s efforts to investigate an historic attack on government,” federal attorneys said in court documents. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Steve Bannon Should Get 6-Month Sentence Justice Dept. Says
Trump's Secret Service Bills 'exorbitant'
Trump's Secret Service Bills 'exorbitant'
Trump's Secret Service Bills 'exorbitant' https://digitalalabamanews.com/trumps-secret-service-bills-exorbitant/ The Secret Service was charged room rates of over $US800 a night numerous times at Trump properties. (AP PHOTO) Donald Trump’s private company arranged for the US Secret Service to pay for rooms at his properties in excess of government-approved rates at least 40 times during his presidency, including two charges for more than $US1100 ($A1750) a night, according to documents released by a congressional committee. The Secret Service was charged room rates of more than $US800 a night at least 11 times when agents stayed at Mar-a-Lago in Florida, the Trump hotel in Washington, DC, and other properties, the Democratic-led House oversight committee says. It noted Trump made more than 500 trips to his properties while president. The “exorbitant” rates point to a possible “taxpayer-funded windfall for former President Trump’s struggling businesses,” committee chair Carolyn Maloney of New York wrote in a letter on Monday to the Secret Service requesting more information. The Secret Service said it had received the letter and was reviewing it. The Trump Organization denied the Secret Service charges were a problem and said it provided rooms and other services at cost, at big discounts or for free. “The Trump Family is likely the first family in American history to have not profited off of the United States government,” said Eric Trump in a statement. “President Trump funded the vast majority of his campaign with hundreds of millions of dollars of his own money and turned away billions of dollars in real estate deals worldwide.” In total, the Trump Organization charged the agency responsible for protecting the president and his family at least $US1.4 million, according to Secret Service records released by the committee. The committee said the total bill was likely higher because the panel only got records through September 2021 and payments for trips abroad were not included. The former president has been repeatedly criticised by Democrats and government watchdogs for what they say were brazen attempts make money from taxpayer funds during his presidency. As well as money from the Secret Service when he and his family visited his clubs and hotels, Trump played host to foreign officials at his properties, also requiring lodging for accompanying agents. Australian Associated Press Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Trump's Secret Service Bills 'exorbitant'
Which Players Made The Alabama-Mississippi All-Star Roster?
Which Players Made The Alabama-Mississippi All-Star Roster?
Which Players Made The Alabama-Mississippi All-Star Roster? https://digitalalabamanews.com/which-players-made-the-alabama-mississippi-all-star-roster/ Five Alabama commits and three Auburn commits headline Alabama’s roster for the 2022 Alabama-Mississippi All-Star Football Classic. The game will be played Dec. 10 at Hancock Whitney Stadium on the campus of the University of South Alabama in Mobile. Alabama commits selected to the squad are Florence DB Jahlil Hurley, Eufaula LB Yhonzae Pierre, Anniston OL Ryqueze McElderry, Hewitt-Trussville DL Hunter Osborne and Northridge OL Wilkin Forby. Auburn commits are Auburn High OL Bradyn Joiner, Montgomery Catholic RB Jeremiah Cobb and Loachapoka DB JC Hart. Auburn High’s Keith Etheredge is the Alabama head coach this year. The assistant coaches are Drew Gilmer (Clay-Chalkville), John McKenzie (Murphy), Patrick Browning (Greenville), Lee Ozmint (Arab), Pat Thompson (Sweet Water), Scott Basden (Muscle Shoals) and Stacy Luker (Clarke County). Gilmer is the offensive coordinator. Ozmint is the defensive coordinator. The squad includes 16 players who have already committed to play collegiately at an SEC school. Twenty-four of the 40 players have committed to Power 5 schools, and 11 are still uncommitted. The AHSACDA All-Star Selection Committee selected 40 seniors from nominations submitted by member school coaches at a meeting last week at the AHSAA Office. “We would like to thank the selection committee for doing their due diligence in picking this year’s team,” said AHSADCA Director Brandon Dean. “Picking from some such a deep talent pool was not an easy task. We believe this is an extraordinarily talented and high character group of student-athletes who will be outstanding representatives of their schools and communities. We look forward to competing against Mississippi in Mobile this December, on the campus of the University of South Alabama.” Among the other players selected to the Alabama roster are Clemson commits Christopher Vizzina and Peter Woods, the Carver-Montgomery due of Qua Russaw and James Smith, Hueytown QB Earl Woods and Hillcrest-Tuscaloosa QB Ethan Crawford. Alabama beat Mississippi 20-0 in Hattiesburg, Miss., last year. Alabama leads the overall series 24-11. ALABAMA ALL-STAR ROSTER Player, HS, Pos., College Rickey Gibson, Hewitt-Trussville, DB (Tennessee) Jacorius Hart, Loachapoka, DB (Auburn) Jahlil Hurley, Florence, DB (Alabama) TJ Metcalf, Pinson Valley, DB (Arkansas) Sylvester Smith, Munford, DB (Tennessee) Dallas Young, Gardendale, DB (Arkansas) Seth Hampton, Thompson, DE/LB Dakaari Nelson, Selma, DE/LB (Penn State) Karmelo Overton, Carroll, DE/LB Yhonzae Pierre, Eufaula, DE/LB (Alabama) Jaquavious Russaw, Carver-Montgomery, DE/LB Kelby Collins, Gardendale, DL (Florida) Keldric Faulk, Highland Home, DL (Florida State) Jyheam Ingram, Muscle Shoals, DL Hunter Osborne, Hewitt-Trussville, DL (Alabama) James Smith, Carver-Montgomery, DL Peter Woods, Thompson, DL (Clemson) Peyton Argent, Hoover, K/P Bentley Basden, Muscle Shoals, LS Avery Ferris, Auburn, OL Wilkin Formby, Northridge, OL (Alabama) Bradyn Joiner, Auburn, OL (Auburn) Koby Keenum, Mars Hill Bible, OL (Kentucky) Vysen Lang, Pike Road, OL Ryqueze McElderry, Anniston, OL (Alabama) Stanton Ramil, Thompson, OL (Michigan State) Maddox Sunderman, Bob Jones, OL Collin Dunn, Hillcrest-Tuscaloosa, OLB (Northwestern) Ethan Crawford, Hillcrest-Tuscaloosa, QB (Southern Miss) Christopher Vizzina, Briarwood Christian, QB (Clemson) Earl Woods, Hueytown, QB (Jacksonville State) Jeremiah Cobb, Montgomery Catholic, RB (Auburn) Khalifa Keith, A.H. Parker, RB (Kentucky) Drew Pickett, Russell County, RB (Wake Forest) Carter Kelley, Mountain Brook, TE Davion Dozier, Moody, WR (Arkansas) Braylyn Farrington, Calera, WR Harrison Knight, Foley, WR Kameran Shanks, Prattville, WR (Liberty) Amare Thomas, Pinson Valley, WR (Virginia) If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Which Players Made The Alabama-Mississippi All-Star Roster?
Hochul Slams Zeldins Pre-2020 Election Texts To Trump White House With His Ideas On Discrediting Voting Results | AmNewYork
Hochul Slams Zeldins Pre-2020 Election Texts To Trump White House With His Ideas On Discrediting Voting Results | AmNewYork
Hochul Slams Zeldin’s Pre-2020 Election Texts To Trump White House With His Ideas On Discrediting Voting Results | AmNewYork https://digitalalabamanews.com/hochul-slams-zeldins-pre-2020-election-texts-to-trump-white-house-with-his-ideas-on-discrediting-voting-results-amnewyork/ The campaign of Governor Kathy Hochul hit her Republican challenger, Lee Zeldin, hard on Monday for text messages the Long Island Congress member sent to a Trump administration official nearly three years ago regarding plans to discredit the 2020 presidential election.  The texts between Zeldin and former Trump White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, obtained from the House January 6 Committee, consist of two comprehensive plans or ideas sent from Zeldin to Meadows, indicating intentions to discredit the 2020 presidential election results ahead of the contest. “Mark, [two] ideas: 1) upload vetted voting irregularities (videos, etc) onto one narrowly focused, credible microsite with a donation link for the President’s legal fund for all of us to reference,” according to the text sent from Zeldin to Meadows sometime in November of 2020. “Needs to be done instantly. 2) The President should have one lead spokesperson organizing daily public press briefings that credibly lays out the facts communicated in an effective way to separate it from the opinions which also need to be shared. That person needs to give an update of the state of play state by state, including a top line summary of where each battleground state stands with the count, projections possible recounts, legal actions, vetted voting irregularities, unvetted alleged voting irregularities, (make clear that the campaign is intensively reviewing those claims for vetting purposes).” Trump lost the election to Joe Biden, but nonetheless claimed without valid evidence that the contest had been “stolen” from him through unfounded election fraud. Trump continued to propagate this “Big Lie” over the following three months, ultimately culminating in the Jan. 6, 2021 attack by a mob of his supporters upon the U.S. Capitol as the House and Senate convened to certify the election results in Biden’s favor. Hours after the failed insurrection, Zeldin was one of 149 Republican House members who later voted against certifying the electoral votes of six swing states that Trump lost. Zeldin later voted against Trump’s impeachment on an incitement of insurrection charge, and also voted against the creation of an independent commission to investigate the Jan. 6 attack. As recently as June of this year, Zeldin insisted, without evidence, that there was wrongdoing in the 2020 presidential election that Biden won and Trump lost. These texts between Zeldin and Meadows were leaked a day after Zeldin received an endorsement from former President Trump on the Truth social media website. “I have watched and known Congressman Lee Zeldin for many years,” the former President said on Oct. 16. “He is a great and brilliant lawyer who was a ‘must see’ for others in Congress when they had a complex legal problem that was holding up legislation.” Hochul’s campaign said the text underscored their belief that Zeldin’s alliance with Trump makes him “dangerous and disqualifying.” “Lee Zeldin’s aspirations to be Donald Trump’s number one ally are never ending. Zeldin’s text messages with Trump White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows reveal that he played a central role in the former president’s concerted effort to throw out the 2020 presidential election results,” said Governor Hochul’s Campaign Spokesman, Jerrel Harvey on Monday. “Zeldin’s record is already dangerous and disqualifying, and these new revelations show the extent of his involvement in pushing Donald Trump’s baseless conspiracy theories.” The Zeldin campaign, meanwhile, dismissed the revelation as a cynical campaign stunt, arguing that Hochul was more focused on highlighting the effort to undermine the 2020 presidential election rather than prioritizing the needs of her constituents. “You know Kathy Hochul is desperate when she’d rather obsess over a text message sent at the beginning of November before the election was even called, rather than focusing on the issues most important to New Yorkers, including rising crime on our streets and a skyrocketing cost of living,” said Zeldin spokesperson Katie Valdez to amNewYork Metro on Oct. 17. “Where is her statement calling for a special session on cashless bail? Where’s her statement announcing she’s refunding the campaign donations she solicited in exchange for New Yorkers’ tax dollars? The fact that Kathy Hochul spends all her time pathetically grasping at straws like this instead of making life easier, safer and more affordable for New Yorkers tells you everything you’ll ever need to know about Kathy Hochul.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Hochul Slams Zeldins Pre-2020 Election Texts To Trump White House With His Ideas On Discrediting Voting Results | AmNewYork
Transcarotid TAVR A Safe Alternative When Femoral Access Is Not An Option
Transcarotid TAVR A Safe Alternative When Femoral Access Is Not An Option
Transcarotid TAVR A Safe Alternative When Femoral Access Is Not An Option https://digitalalabamanews.com/transcarotid-tavr-a-safe-alternative-when-femoral-access-is-not-an-option/ Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) procedures performed using transcarotid (TC) access and transfemoral (TF) access are associated with comparable in-hospital and one-year outcomes, according to a new analysis published in the American Journal of Cardiology.[1] These similarities, researchers wrote, suggest TC access is a safe, effective alternative when TF TAVR is not recommended. “Despite the availability of lower profile vascular sheaths and valve delivery systems for TAVR, approximately 5% to 15% of patients with TAVR currently require alternative vascular access because of unsuitable iliofemoral anatomy that prevents the use of the conventional TF approach,” wrote first author Nicole E. Hoover, PA-C, of the Hartford HealthCare Heart and Vascular Institute in Hartford, Connecticut, and colleagues. Alternative TAVR access routes that have been described over the last two decades include the transapical, direct aortic, transcaval, subclavian/axillary (TAx) and TC approaches. Although each of these strategies may be suitable for a given patient based on anatomic constraints, there has been a gradual evolution in the use of different alternative access techniques.” Hoover et al. examined data from than 2,000 TAVR patients treated at a single high-volume medical center. While 1,926 patients with a mean age of 81.3 years old underwent conventional TF TAVR, 138 patients with a mean age of 80.7 years old underwent TAVR using TC access. All patients were treated using current-generation, balloon-expandable or self-expandable TAVR valves. Neuromonitoring was used during every TAVR case that involved TC access.   “Patients were considered for the TC approach if they had unfavorable femoral access either because of inadequate size of the iliofemoral arteries, presence of lower extremity prosthetic grafts, presence of extensive calcification or severe aortoiliac tortuosity, evidence of a hostile groin with infection or rash, or morbid obesity,” the authors wrote. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Transcarotid TAVR A Safe Alternative When Femoral Access Is Not An Option
Trump Hotels Charged Secret Service Far Above Government Rate Records Show
Trump Hotels Charged Secret Service Far Above Government Rate Records Show
Trump Hotels Charged Secret Service Far Above Government Rate, Records Show https://digitalalabamanews.com/trump-hotels-charged-secret-service-far-above-government-rate-records-show/ Woman walks in front of the Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C. MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images Records released Monday by the House Oversight Committee reveal how the Trump Organization charged the Secret Service well above the normal government rate to stay at company hotels while protecting former President Donald Trump and his family, multiple outlets have reported. The records are at odds with claims made by Eric Trump, the former president’s son and head of the company while his father was in office, who said the Trump Organization often provided the Secret Service with “at cost” or even free hotel rooms, per The Washington Post. Rather, the records indicate that in multiple instances, “the Trump Organization billed the Secret Service far higher amounts than the approved government rate — in one case charging agents $1,185 a night to stay at the Trump International Hotel in [Washington, D.C.],” the Post writes. Such “exorbitant rates … raise significant concerns about the former president’s self-dealing and may have resulted in a taxpayer-funded windfall for former President Trump’s struggling businesses,” Oversight Committee Chair Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) wrote to Kimberly Cheatle, director of the Secret Service. “This raises concerns that the Trump Organization was profiting off the presidency,” Maloney added in an interview with The New York Times. In a statement, Eric Trump doubled down on claims that “[a]ny services rendered to the United States Secret Service or other government agencies at Trump owned properties, were at their request and were either provided at cost, heavily discounted or for free,” adding that the Trump Organization would have been “substantially better off” serving “full-paying guests,” but wanted to support the government. Maloney noted in her letter to Cheatle that the committee is still awaiting more information, and has asked the Secret Service for additional documents on the matter, per The Wall Street Journal. The Oversight Committee obtained records from Trump’s four-year presidency through September 2021, but lacks those concerning agency visits to Trump’s private club at Mar-a-Lago, his resort in Bedminster, New Jersey, or any of his international properties, the Post adds. You may also like 5 cartoons about Alex Jones’ billion-dollar penalty Holiday season airfare could be among most expensive ever, report says Harvard’s record endowment shrinks for 1st time since 2016 Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Trump Hotels Charged Secret Service Far Above Government Rate Records Show
Construction Starts On Now-Larger Downtown Huntsville Hotel
Construction Starts On Now-Larger Downtown Huntsville Hotel
Construction Starts On Now-Larger Downtown Huntsville Hotel https://digitalalabamanews.com/construction-starts-on-now-larger-downtown-huntsville-hotel/ News Published: Oct. 17, 2022, 3:44 p.m. Rendering of the Autograph Collection Hotel by Marriott on Monroe Street in downtown Huntsville. (City of Huntsville) Construction has started on a new hotel in downtown Huntsville, a project long delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic. The hotel also grew bigger during the delay. The Autograph Collection by Marriott will be built at the southwest corner of the reconstructed parking garage on Monroe Street across from the Von Braun Center’s Propst Arena. The hotel, originally approved by the city council in March 2019, planned to have six floors and 187 rooms. Construction has started on the site of the Autograph Collection by Marriott hotel in downtown Huntsville (Paul Gattis | pgattis@al.com) Updated plans show the hotel with eight floors and more than 200 rooms. The $40 million project will have a rooftop bar overlooking Big Spring Park as well as two-full service restaurants and conference/banquet space. The hotel is expected to be completed by late next year or early 2024. Ascent Hospitality of Buford, Ga., is the project developer. The city council in 2020 sold 0.734 acres to the developers at a cost of $1.6 million. The land was formerly included in the original parking garage. The Autograph will be the latest in a hotel growth spurt in the downtown district while developers have announced plans for two more hotels at other nearby projects. Three hotels have opened downtown since March 2019 – AC Hotel by Marriott on Williams Street, Jefferson 106 (a Curio by Hilton brand) on Jefferson Street and Hampton Inn at Monroe Street and Clinton Avenue. Rendering of the Autograph Collection Hotel by Marriott overlooking Monroe Street in downtown Huntsville. (City of Huntsville) A hotel is also planned as part of a $325 million development known as Front Row at the former site of the Coca-Cola bottling plant on Clinton Avenue. And a Moxy hotel adjacent to the AC Hotel is planned for the third phase of CityCentre. City officials have worked for years to boost downtown Huntsville’s inventory of hotel rooms to accommodate larger conferences at the Von Braun Center. The rebuilt parking garage, which will wrap around parts of the Autograph hotel, included plans for guest parking at the hotel and the Hampton Inn on the northern side. If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Construction Starts On Now-Larger Downtown Huntsville Hotel
US Forecast
US Forecast
US Forecast https://digitalalabamanews.com/us-forecast-78/ City/Town, State;Yesterday’s High Temp (F);Yesterday’s Low Temp (F);Today’s High Temp (F);Today’s Low Temp (F);Weather Condition;Wind Direction;Wind Speed (MPH);Humidity (%);Chance of Precip. (%);UV Index Albany, NY;56;43;55;34;Sun and some clouds;S;6;60%;8%;3 Albuquerque, NM;54;42;64;47;Sunshine and warmer;S;7;56%;0%;5 Anchorage, AK;47;37;44;35;Cloudy;NE;7;77%;70%;1 Asheville, NC;68;32;46;28;Breezy and colder;NW;15;48%;2%;4 Atlanta, GA;74;38;56;34;Sunny, but cooler;NNW;12;36%;2%;5 Atlantic City, NJ;66;48;56;41;Cooler;W;12;46%;8%;4 Austin, TX;71;51;68;43;Mostly sunny;NNE;8;30%;2%;5 Baltimore, MD;71;43;57;39;Cooler with sunshine;W;9;44%;18%;4 Baton Rouge, LA;76;47;64;34;Mostly sunny;N;10;35%;4%;5 Billings, MT;71;44;77;46;Sunny and very warm;WSW;8;41%;2%;3 Birmingham, AL;72;35;56;31;Sunny, but cooler;NNW;10;37%;1%;5 Bismarck, ND;43;16;49;25;Plenty of sunshine;SSE;7;37%;0%;3 Boise, ID;76;45;78;44;Mostly sunny, warm;ENE;7;26%;0%;3 Boston, MA;59;56;62;43;Occasional a.m. rain;SW;9;67%;60%;1 Bridgeport, CT;64;47;57;38;Sun and some clouds;W;9;47%;11%;4 Buffalo, NY;53;39;46;38;Rain/snow showers;SSW;16;72%;98%;1 Burlington, VT;58;45;55;37;Sun and some clouds;SE;9;69%;36%;3 Caribou, ME;62;50;62;56;Showers;SE;13;85%;100%;1 Casper, WY;66;34;72;37;Sunny and warm;SSW;7;31%;0%;4 Charleston, SC;82;56;67;42;Partly sunny, cooler;NW;10;42%;12%;5 Charleston, WV;57;34;46;34;Colder with a shower;WSW;8;71%;72%;2 Charlotte, NC;78;40;58;32;Sunny, but cooler;NW;8;37%;4%;4 Cheyenne, WY;62;32;66;38;Sunny and pleasant;W;10;31%;0%;4 Chicago, IL;43;33;45;34;Mostly cloudy, windy;NW;20;58%;28%;1 Cleveland, OH;48;41;46;40;Afternoon showers;WSW;21;72%;100%;1 Columbia, SC;82;48;62;36;Sunny, but cooler;NNW;8;39%;10%;4 Columbus, OH;48;36;46;36;Rain and snow shower;WSW;12;65%;89%;1 Concord, NH;54;50;60;32;A shower in the a.m.;WSW;7;70%;60%;2 Dallas-Ft. Worth, TX;70;45;64;40;Sunshine;NNE;11;28%;2%;5 Denver, CO;65;40;69;43;Plenty of sun;SW;6;32%;2%;4 Des Moines, IA;43;20;42;22;Sunny, but chilly;NW;12;39%;2%;4 Detroit, MI;46;38;45;38;Rain/snow showers;WNW;19;73%;98%;1 Dodge City, KS;61;25;57;30;Sunny, but cool;ESE;7;29%;0%;4 Duluth, MN;36;25;42;29;Mostly sunny, chilly;NNW;12;57%;2%;3 El Paso, TX;62;49;66;47;Partial sunshine;ESE;8;65%;0%;4 Fairbanks, AK;39;22;39;27;Partly sunny;NNE;4;79%;9%;1 Fargo, ND;36;15;39;18;Sunny, but chilly;NNW;8;47%;2%;3 Grand Junction, CO;70;42;73;43;Sunny and pleasant;ENE;5;33%;0%;4 Grand Rapids, MI;46;37;44;40;Rain/snow showers;NW;20;80%;97%;1 Hartford, CT;58;50;59;36;Sun and some clouds;WSW;7;55%;15%;3 Helena, MT;70;35;70;39;Sunny and mild;WSW;4;40%;0%;3 Honolulu, HI;87;71;87;71;Nice with some sun;ENE;7;57%;16%;7 Houston, TX;73;54;70;45;Sunshine and nice;N;11;35%;7%;5 Indianapolis, IN;46;32;46;32;Mainly cloudy, cold;WNW;14;59%;17%;2 Jackson, MS;71;40;59;31;Sunny and cooler;NNW;10;31%;1%;5 Jacksonville, FL;83;63;76;46;Partly sunny;NNW;9;41%;24%;5 Juneau, AK;55;46;52;48;Breezy with rain;SSE;14;93%;100%;0 Kansas City, MO;51;26;47;25;Sunny, but chilly;NW;9;33%;1%;4 Knoxville, TN;67;33;51;30;Sunshine and cooler;WSW;7;48%;3%;4 Las Vegas, NV;85;61;88;61;Sunny and warm;NNW;5;25%;0%;4 Lexington, KY;55;33;50;31;Partly sunny, cold;W;15;56%;9%;3 Little Rock, AR;66;36;56;30;Sunny, but cooler;NNW;9;31%;0%;4 Long Beach, CA;78;63;84;66;Partly sunny;WNW;6;58%;0%;4 Los Angeles, CA;78;63;86;67;Partly sunny;ENE;6;55%;1%;4 Louisville, KY;53;36;51;34;Breezy in the p.m.;W;12;53%;5%;4 Madison, WI;40;30;45;28;Clouds and sun, cold;NW;15;55%;3%;3 Memphis, TN;60;35;54;33;Cool with sunshine;NW;10;36%;0%;4 Miami, FL;85;75;86;70;Some sun, a t-storm;W;7;77%;90%;4 Milwaukee, WI;45;34;45;35;Mostly cloudy, windy;NW;19;58%;32%;1 Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN;39;23;43;26;Sunny, but chilly;NNW;13;42%;2%;3 Mobile, AL;82;48;65;37;Partly sunny;N;12;37%;3%;5 Montgomery, AL;79;41;58;32;Sunny and cooler;N;10;39%;4%;5 Mt. Washington, NH;36;33;39;24;Windy;S;34;96%;85%;2 Nashville, TN;59;30;53;29;Mostly sunny, cool;WNW;10;43%;1%;4 New Orleans, LA;80;57;66;46;Breezy;N;15;37%;5%;5 New York, NY;68;47;57;40;Sun and some clouds;W;9;41%;9%;4 Newark, NJ;67;44;56;37;Partly sunny;W;8;44%;10%;4 Norfolk, VA;76;48;60;40;Partly sunny, cooler;W;9;42%;19%;4 Oklahoma City, OK;61;34;57;31;Sunny and cool;NNE;10;29%;1%;4 Olympia, WA;68;45;71;43;Low clouds breaking;NNE;5;74%;4%;3 Omaha, NE;46;19;44;18;Sunny, but chilly;NW;10;37%;2%;4 Orlando, FL;86;70;82;57;Partly sunny;NNW;9;61%;29%;5 Philadelphia, PA;69;45;56;38;Partly sunny, cooler;W;8;43%;8%;4 Phoenix, AZ;84;67;88;68;Sunshine;E;8;33%;0%;5 Pittsburgh, PA;53;35;44;36;Rain and snow shower;SW;10;68%;89%;1 Portland, ME;55;54;61;42;A couple of showers;SSW;11;82%;87%;1 Portland, OR;73;51;75;49;Low clouds breaking;N;5;60%;4%;3 Providence, RI;65;54;61;37;A bit of a.m. rain;SW;7;61%;59%;2 Raleigh, NC;78;43;58;35;Sunshine, but cooler;NW;8;42%;14%;4 Reno, NV;77;42;78;40;Clouds and sun, warm;W;4;30%;0%;4 Richmond, VA;70;40;59;37;Mostly sunny, cooler;WNW;8;42%;18%;4 Roswell, NM;55;48;63;43;Mostly sunny;SSW;6;64%;10%;4 Sacramento, CA;78;54;84;55;Partly sunny;NNW;6;50%;1%;4 Salt Lake City, UT;74;48;75;48;Sunny and warm;ESE;7;34%;0%;4 San Antonio, TX;69;56;69;45;Nice with some sun;N;10;32%;11%;5 San Diego, CA;74;63;80;65;Partly sunny;NNE;7;66%;0%;5 San Francisco, CA;69;55;72;57;Clouds and sun;WSW;6;67%;1%;3 Savannah, GA;83;54;68;41;Cooler but pleasant;NW;10;35%;10%;5 Seattle-Tacoma, WA;70;52;70;51;Low clouds breaking;NNE;6;63%;4%;3 Sioux Falls, SD;43;13;42;15;Sunny, but chilly;NNW;8;34%;2%;3 Spokane, WA;76;41;75;41;Plenty of sun;E;4;45%;1%;3 Springfield, IL;47;28;47;26;Sunny and cold;WNW;15;49%;1%;4 St. Louis, MO;48;30;50;28;Sunny, but cold;WNW;13;44%;1%;4 Tampa, FL;87;72;82;54;Partly sunny;NNW;8;69%;37%;5 Toledo, OH;45;37;45;40;Showers of rain/snow;WNW;19;71%;97%;1 Tucson, AZ;80;61;82;61;Breezy in the a.m.;ESE;13;42%;0%;5 Tulsa, OK;63;32;53;26;Sunny, but cooler;NNE;9;33%;2%;4 Vero Beach, FL;86;70;85;63;A p.m. t-storm;N;9;78%;88%;4 Washington, DC;69;43;57;39;Partly sunny, cooler;W;9;44%;16%;4 Wichita, KS;57;28;53;26;Sunny and cool;N;10;29%;1%;4 Wilmington, DE;67;42;57;36;Some sun and cooler;W;9;48%;6%;4 _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
US Forecast
Biden Launches Student Loan Forgiveness Application | CNN Politics
Biden Launches Student Loan Forgiveness Application | CNN Politics
Biden Launches Student Loan Forgiveness Application | CNN Politics https://digitalalabamanews.com/biden-launches-student-loan-forgiveness-application-cnn-politics/ CNN  —  President Joe Biden on Monday announced the formal launch of the federal application for Americans seeking student loan forgiveness, the latest phase of his plan that is expected to provide debt relief to as many as 43 million borrowers. “Today, I’m announcing millions of people working and middle-class folks can apply and get this relief. And it’s simple and it’s now. It’s easy,” Biden said in remarks from the White House alongside Education Secretary Miguel Cardona. “This is a game changer for millions of Americans … and it took an incredible amount of effort to get this website done in such a short time.” Individuals seeking to apply for student debt relief can now fill out the form in English or Spanish at Studentaid.gov. The form includes information on the debt relief, who qualifies for it and how it works. It asks applicants for information including their full name, Social Security number, date of birth, phone number and an email address. Borrowers have until December 31, 2023, to submit an application. Biden in August announced his decision to cancel up to $10,000 in student loan debt for individuals making less than $125,000 a year or as much as $20,000 for eligible borrowers who were also Pell Grant recipients. Borrowers must have federally held student loans to qualify. In addition to federal Direct Loans used to pay for an undergraduate degree, federal PLUS loans borrowed by graduate students and parents may also be eligible if the borrower meets the income requirements. The Biden administration has said that applicants who are “more likely to exceed the income cutoff” will be required to submit additional information, like a tax transcript. And while borrowers will not have to pay federal income tax on the student loan debt forgiveness, it’s possible that some borrowers may have to pay state income tax on the amount of debt forgiven. The Department of Education has also said it already had income information for nearly 8 million borrowers, likely because of financial aid forms or previously submitted income-driven repayment plan applications. Those borrowers will automatically receive the debt relief if they meet the income requirement, unless they choose to opt out. The department has said it will email borrowers who will be considered for debt relief but don’t need to apply. The formal launch of the application marks the next phase of a massive technical undertaking for federal agencies and student loan servicers to provide broad relief to tens of millions of borrowers. A beta version of the website was launched on Friday evening and Biden said over 8 million Americans used the website over the weekend to fill out their applications. The President credited “a talented group of data scientists and engineers across the federal government” who “built and tested and launched this new application in just weeks.” In the few days of beta testing the application, Biden said, the website “handled more than 8 million applications without a glitch or difficulty.” “As millions of people fill out the application, we’re going to make sure the system continues to work as smoothly as possible so that we can deliver student loan relief for millions of Americans as quickly and as efficiently as possible,” he added. The Department of Education is facing several lawsuits challenging the student loan forgiveness policy. A US district judge could soon decide whether to temporarily block the program from taking effect after hearing a motion for a preliminary injunction last week. That could put student loan cancellation on hold until the judge issues a final ruling on the case. Asked at the end of his remarks about litigation challenging the plan, Biden said he thinks the administration’s plan will hold up in court. He also took aim at Republican critics of his student debt relief plan, calling their outrage “wrong” and “hypocritical.” “I will never apologize for helping working Americans and middle-class people as they recover from the pandemic. Especially not the same Republicans who voted for a $2 trillion tax cut in the last administration, mainly benefited the wealthiest Americans and the largest corporations and didn’t pay for a penny of it and racked up the deficit,” he added. Borrowers whose federal student loans are guaranteed by the government but held by private lenders, many of which were made under the former Federal Family Education Loan program and Federal Perkins Loan program, are currently excluded – unless a borrower applied to consolidate those loans into Direct loans by September 29. The Education Department initially said these privately held loans would be eligible for the one-time forgiveness action – but reversed course in September when six Republican-led states sued the Biden administration, arguing that forgiving the privately held loans would financially hurt states and student loan servicers. Asked by CNN’s MJ Lee about those with privately held loans being ineligible for the mass relief, Cardona said the administration is “moving as quickly as possible to provide relief to as many people as possible.” This story has been updated with additional reporting. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Biden Launches Student Loan Forgiveness Application | CNN Politics
Jeremy Hunt Scraps Almost All Mini-Budget As Liz Truss Battles To Remain PM
Jeremy Hunt Scraps Almost All Mini-Budget As Liz Truss Battles To Remain PM
Jeremy Hunt Scraps Almost All Mini-Budget As Liz Truss Battles To Remain PM https://digitalalabamanews.com/jeremy-hunt-scraps-almost-all-mini-budget-as-liz-truss-battles-to-remain-pm/ Media caption, The lower rate of 20p tax will remain “until economic circumstances allow for it to be cut” says the chancellor. By Becky Morton & Andre Rhoden-Paul BBC News Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has axed most of Liz Truss’s mini-budget, as the prime minister tries to remain in power. Mr Hunt announced he was scrapping “almost all” of the tax cuts announced by the government last month, in a bid to stabilise the financial markets. A minister had to deny Ms Truss was hiding “under a desk” after the prime minister did not attend a clash with Sir Keir Starmer in the Commons. Five of her own MPs have now called on her to resign. Many more Conservative MPs are calling on the prime minister to quit in anonymous briefings. Downing Street insisted the prime minister remains in charge. The BBC’s political editor Chris Mason said the chancellor’s tearing up of her economic strategy showed “the Truss programme for government is dead”. That pledge will now only last until April, after which a new approach will be found “that will cost the taxpayer significantly less than planned”. A penny cut in income tax due in April will now not happen. The chancellor said the rate would remain at 20p “indefinitely until economic circumstances allow for it to be cut”. Other mini-budget measures to be axed include: Cuts to dividend tax rates The reversal of off-payroll working reforms introduced in 2018 and 2021 VAT-free shopping for international tourists The freeze on alcohol duty rates And the new chancellor made clear there will be cuts in public spending to come – something the prime minister said last week she was “absolutely” not planning. The government had already abandoned plans to scrap the 45p rate of income tax for top earners and had U-turned on a promise not to increase corporation tax. However, he said the cuts to stamp duty paid on house purchases and the scrapping of the National Insurance rise would continue. The plan to remove the cap on bankers’ bonuses is another of the mini-budget policies to survive. Mr Hunt, speaking during an emergency statement in the Commons with Ms Truss behind him, said the UK “funds our promises and pays our debts”. He said “when that is questioned – as it has been – this government will take the difficult decisions necessary to ensure there is trust and confidence in our national finances”. “That means decisions of eye-watering difficulty.” In response to the chancellor’s new strategy, financial markets – which had been spooked by the prospect of unfunded tax cuts along with emergency interventions in the energy market and the cost of Covid-19 support – appeared to calm. The pound rose and the cost of government borrowing fell. Mr Hunt told the Commons a new Economic Advisory Council would be formed to provide independent expert advice, alongside that from the Office for Budget Responsibility. Asked if he would introduce a “proper” windfall tax on energy companies, Mr Hunt said he was “not against the principle” of taxing profits that are “genuine windfalls”, adding that “nothing is off the table”. Ms Truss had previously ruled out a further windfall tax on energy companies. Before the prime minster appeared at the chancellor’s statement, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer accused her of “hiding away, dodging questions” at an Urgent Question in the Commons. Instead, Ms Truss sent Commons Leader Penny Mordaunt in her place for the clash. In a series of tense exchanges, Ms Mourdant told MPs the “prime minister is not under a desk” hiding to avoid difficult decisions. She also denied there had been a “coup” to remove her. Image source, House of Commons Image caption, Prime Minister Liz Truss appeared alongside the chancellor for his statement Meanwhile, Sir Charles Walker became the fifth Conservative MP to publicly call for Ms Truss to stand down. He told Sky News: “I think her position is untenable. She has put colleagues, the country, through a huge amount of unnecessary pain and upset and worry”. He joins Tory MPs Angela Richardson, Crispin Blunt, Andrew Bridgen and Jamie Wallis in openly calling for the PM to go. Many others are privately saying Ms Truss cannot remain prime minister. Former chief whip Andrew Mitchell said the prime minister had just a fortnight to save her premiership and “if she cannot do the job, she will be replaced”. Under current Conservative Party rules, Ms Truss is safe from a no confidence vote by Tory MPs to oust her for a year. The rules could be changed, however sources suggested to the BBC that the 1922 committee of backbench MPs, who set the rules, would prefer the prime minister to jump before she is pushed. Before her appearance at the chancellor’s statement, the prime minister had met with 1922 Committee chairman Sir Graham Brady, who is likely to have brought up her lack of support among Tory MPs. Allies of Ms Truss have acknowledged it was a crucial 24 to 48 hours for her premiership. However, there is little agreement over who should take over from Ms Truss if she is removed. Labour said the Conservatives had “lost all credibility”. “The chancellor said that growth requires ‘confidence and stability’ yet it’s clear that the Tories can’t provide this,” shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves said. The Liberal Democrats’ Treasury spokeswoman Sarah Olney called for a general election to ensure “stability”. SNP Treasury spokeswoman Alison Thewlis said the now virtually scrapped mini-budget had caused “huge economic pain”, adding that she was worried about suggestions of a further “tightening to purse strings”. What is your reaction to the chancellor’s announcement? Do you have any questions for our experts? Please get in touch by emailing: haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk. Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can also get in touch in the following ways: If you are reading this page and can’t see the form you can email us at HaveYourSay@bbc.co.uk. Please include your name, age and location with any submission. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Jeremy Hunt Scraps Almost All Mini-Budget As Liz Truss Battles To Remain PM
US Forecast
US Forecast
US Forecast https://digitalalabamanews.com/us-forecast-77/ City/Town, State;Yesterday’s High Temp (F);Yesterday’s Low Temp (F);Today’s High Temp (F);Today’s Low Temp (F);Weather Condition;Wind Direction;Wind Speed (MPH);Humidity (%);Chance of Precip. (%);UV Index Albany, NY;56;43;55;34;Sun and some clouds;S;6;60%;8%;3 Albuquerque, NM;54;42;64;47;Sunshine and warmer;S;7;56%;0%;5 Anchorage, AK;47;37;44;35;Cloudy;NE;7;77%;70%;1 Asheville, NC;68;32;46;28;Breezy and colder;NW;15;48%;2%;4 Atlanta, GA;74;38;56;34;Sunny, but cooler;NNW;12;36%;2%;5 Atlantic City, NJ;66;48;56;41;Cooler;W;12;46%;8%;4 Austin, TX;71;51;68;43;Mostly sunny;NNE;8;30%;2%;5 Baltimore, MD;71;43;57;39;Cooler with sunshine;W;9;44%;18%;4 Baton Rouge, LA;76;47;64;34;Mostly sunny;N;10;35%;4%;5 Billings, MT;71;44;77;46;Sunny and very warm;WSW;8;41%;2%;3 Birmingham, AL;72;35;56;31;Sunny, but cooler;NNW;10;37%;1%;5 Bismarck, ND;43;16;49;25;Plenty of sunshine;SSE;7;37%;0%;3 Boise, ID;76;45;78;44;Mostly sunny, warm;ENE;7;26%;0%;3 Boston, MA;59;56;62;43;Occasional a.m. rain;SW;9;67%;60%;1 Bridgeport, CT;64;47;57;38;Sun and some clouds;W;9;47%;11%;4 Buffalo, NY;53;39;46;38;Rain/snow showers;SSW;16;72%;98%;1 Burlington, VT;58;45;55;37;Sun and some clouds;SE;9;69%;36%;3 Caribou, ME;62;50;62;56;Showers;SE;13;85%;100%;1 Casper, WY;66;34;72;37;Sunny and warm;SSW;7;31%;0%;4 Charleston, SC;82;56;67;42;Partly sunny, cooler;NW;10;42%;12%;5 Charleston, WV;57;34;46;34;Colder with a shower;WSW;8;71%;72%;2 Charlotte, NC;78;40;58;32;Sunny, but cooler;NW;8;37%;4%;4 Cheyenne, WY;62;32;66;38;Sunny and pleasant;W;10;31%;0%;4 Chicago, IL;43;33;45;34;Mostly cloudy, windy;NW;20;58%;28%;1 Cleveland, OH;48;41;46;40;Afternoon showers;WSW;21;72%;100%;1 Columbia, SC;82;48;62;36;Sunny, but cooler;NNW;8;39%;10%;4 Columbus, OH;48;36;46;36;Rain and snow shower;WSW;12;65%;89%;1 Concord, NH;54;50;60;32;A shower in the a.m.;WSW;7;70%;60%;2 Dallas-Ft. Worth, TX;70;45;64;40;Sunshine;NNE;11;28%;2%;5 Denver, CO;65;40;69;43;Plenty of sun;SW;6;32%;2%;4 Des Moines, IA;43;20;42;22;Sunny, but chilly;NW;12;39%;2%;4 Detroit, MI;46;38;45;38;Rain/snow showers;WNW;19;73%;98%;1 Dodge City, KS;61;25;57;30;Sunny, but cool;ESE;7;29%;0%;4 Duluth, MN;36;25;42;29;Mostly sunny, chilly;NNW;12;57%;2%;3 El Paso, TX;62;49;66;47;Partial sunshine;ESE;8;65%;0%;4 Fairbanks, AK;39;22;39;27;Partly sunny;NNE;4;79%;9%;1 Fargo, ND;36;15;39;18;Sunny, but chilly;NNW;8;47%;2%;3 Grand Junction, CO;70;42;73;43;Sunny and pleasant;ENE;5;33%;0%;4 Grand Rapids, MI;46;37;44;40;Rain/snow showers;NW;20;80%;97%;1 Hartford, CT;58;50;59;36;Sun and some clouds;WSW;7;55%;15%;3 Helena, MT;70;35;70;39;Sunny and mild;WSW;4;40%;0%;3 Honolulu, HI;87;71;87;71;Nice with some sun;ENE;7;57%;16%;7 Houston, TX;73;54;70;45;Sunshine and nice;N;11;35%;7%;5 Indianapolis, IN;46;32;46;32;Mainly cloudy, cold;WNW;14;59%;17%;2 Jackson, MS;71;40;59;31;Sunny and cooler;NNW;10;31%;1%;5 Jacksonville, FL;83;63;76;46;Partly sunny;NNW;9;41%;24%;5 Juneau, AK;55;46;52;48;Breezy with rain;SSE;14;93%;100%;0 Kansas City, MO;51;26;47;25;Sunny, but chilly;NW;9;33%;1%;4 Knoxville, TN;67;33;51;30;Sunshine and cooler;WSW;7;48%;3%;4 Las Vegas, NV;85;61;88;61;Sunny and warm;NNW;5;25%;0%;4 Lexington, KY;55;33;50;31;Partly sunny, cold;W;15;56%;9%;3 Little Rock, AR;66;36;56;30;Sunny, but cooler;NNW;9;31%;0%;4 Long Beach, CA;78;63;84;66;Partly sunny;WNW;6;58%;0%;4 Los Angeles, CA;78;63;86;67;Partly sunny;ENE;6;55%;1%;4 Louisville, KY;53;36;51;34;Breezy in the p.m.;W;12;53%;5%;4 Madison, WI;40;30;45;28;Clouds and sun, cold;NW;15;55%;3%;3 Memphis, TN;60;35;54;33;Cool with sunshine;NW;10;36%;0%;4 Miami, FL;85;75;86;70;Some sun, a t-storm;W;7;77%;90%;4 Milwaukee, WI;45;34;45;35;Mostly cloudy, windy;NW;19;58%;32%;1 Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN;39;23;43;26;Sunny, but chilly;NNW;13;42%;2%;3 Mobile, AL;82;48;65;37;Partly sunny;N;12;37%;3%;5 Montgomery, AL;79;41;58;32;Sunny and cooler;N;10;39%;4%;5 Mt. Washington, NH;36;33;39;24;Windy;S;34;96%;85%;2 Nashville, TN;59;30;53;29;Mostly sunny, cool;WNW;10;43%;1%;4 New Orleans, LA;80;57;66;46;Breezy;N;15;37%;5%;5 New York, NY;68;47;57;40;Sun and some clouds;W;9;41%;9%;4 Newark, NJ;67;44;56;37;Partly sunny;W;8;44%;10%;4 Norfolk, VA;76;48;60;40;Partly sunny, cooler;W;9;42%;19%;4 Oklahoma City, OK;61;34;57;31;Sunny and cool;NNE;10;29%;1%;4 Olympia, WA;68;45;71;43;Low clouds breaking;NNE;5;74%;4%;3 Omaha, NE;46;19;44;18;Sunny, but chilly;NW;10;37%;2%;4 Orlando, FL;86;70;82;57;Partly sunny;NNW;9;61%;29%;5 Philadelphia, PA;69;45;56;38;Partly sunny, cooler;W;8;43%;8%;4 Phoenix, AZ;84;67;88;68;Sunshine;E;8;33%;0%;5 Pittsburgh, PA;53;35;44;36;Rain and snow shower;SW;10;68%;89%;1 Portland, ME;55;54;61;42;A couple of showers;SSW;11;82%;87%;1 Portland, OR;73;51;75;49;Low clouds breaking;N;5;60%;4%;3 Providence, RI;65;54;61;37;A bit of a.m. rain;SW;7;61%;59%;2 Raleigh, NC;78;43;58;35;Sunshine, but cooler;NW;8;42%;14%;4 Reno, NV;77;42;78;40;Clouds and sun, warm;W;4;30%;0%;4 Richmond, VA;70;40;59;37;Mostly sunny, cooler;WNW;8;42%;18%;4 Roswell, NM;55;48;63;43;Mostly sunny;SSW;6;64%;10%;4 Sacramento, CA;78;54;84;55;Partly sunny;NNW;6;50%;1%;4 Salt Lake City, UT;74;48;75;48;Sunny and warm;ESE;7;34%;0%;4 San Antonio, TX;69;56;69;45;Nice with some sun;N;10;32%;11%;5 San Diego, CA;74;63;80;65;Partly sunny;NNE;7;66%;0%;5 San Francisco, CA;69;55;72;57;Clouds and sun;WSW;6;67%;1%;3 Savannah, GA;83;54;68;41;Cooler but pleasant;NW;10;35%;10%;5 Seattle-Tacoma, WA;70;52;70;51;Low clouds breaking;NNE;6;63%;4%;3 Sioux Falls, SD;43;13;42;15;Sunny, but chilly;NNW;8;34%;2%;3 Spokane, WA;76;41;75;41;Plenty of sun;E;4;45%;1%;3 Springfield, IL;47;28;47;26;Sunny and cold;WNW;15;49%;1%;4 St. Louis, MO;48;30;50;28;Sunny, but cold;WNW;13;44%;1%;4 Tampa, FL;87;72;82;54;Partly sunny;NNW;8;69%;37%;5 Toledo, OH;45;37;45;40;Showers of rain/snow;WNW;19;71%;97%;1 Tucson, AZ;80;61;82;61;Breezy in the a.m.;ESE;13;42%;0%;5 Tulsa, OK;63;32;53;26;Sunny, but cooler;NNE;9;33%;2%;4 Vero Beach, FL;86;70;85;63;A p.m. t-storm;N;9;78%;88%;4 Washington, DC;69;43;57;39;Partly sunny, cooler;W;9;44%;16%;4 Wichita, KS;57;28;53;26;Sunny and cool;N;10;29%;1%;4 Wilmington, DE;67;42;57;36;Some sun and cooler;W;9;48%;6%;4 _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
US Forecast
Trump Administration Blocked CDC Transit Mask Mandate Report Shows
Trump Administration Blocked CDC Transit Mask Mandate Report Shows
Trump Administration Blocked CDC Transit Mask Mandate, Report Shows https://digitalalabamanews.com/trump-administration-blocked-cdc-transit-mask-mandate-report-shows/ By David Shepardson WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Former President Donald Trump’s administration at a crucial time in the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 blocked the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) from adopting a federal mandate requiring face masks on airline flights and other forms of transit, a congressional report released on Monday said. Marty Cetron, a senior CDC official, is cited in the report as saying the federal public health agency began working on the proposed order in July 2020 after its experts determined that there was scientific evidence to support requiring masks in public and commercial transportation. The report was released by a Democratic-led House of Representatives subcommittee examining pandemic-related issues. The proposed order would have required masks on public and commercial transportation modes and hubs like airports, airplanes, trains and ride-sharing vehicles, Cetron said. By July 2020, major airlines, regional transit systems and some airports had taken action on their own to mandate masks to try to curb the spread of COVID-19. But the report stated that CDC had heard from the transit industry that it wanted the federal government to issue a mandate. Cetron, who heads the CDC’s division of global migration and quarantine, said the agency was told by Trump administration officials that a mask requirement on mass transportation “would not happen,” according to the report. Cetron also told the panel that masking requirements “could have made a significant contribution” to saving U.S. lives from COVID-19 in 2020. The report quoted Cetron as saying Alex Azar and Robert Redfield, who at the time headed the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the CDC respectively, both had expressed support for the proposed order. With more than a million deaths, the United States leads the world in reported COVID-19 fatalities. Democrats have accused Trump of overseeing a disjointed response to the pandemic. Trump himself was hospitalized with COVID-19 later in 2020. Days after President Joe Biden took office in January 2021, the CDC issued a sweeping order requiring face masks on nearly all forms of public transportation. Cetron, who remains at the CDC, and an agency spokesperson declined to comment on Monday. Reuters reported in July 2020 that the Trump administration had held extensive talks about whether the CDC should issue an order requiring transportation masking. The Trump White House instead announced that it opposed any efforts by Congress to require masks in transit. Trump was seeking re-election at the time. Many U.S. conservatives opposed government mandates requiring masks during the pandemic. Representative James Clyburn, who chairs the House committee, said the report shows that Trump’s administration “engaged in an unprecedented campaign of political interference in the federal government’s pandemic response, which undermined public health to benefit the former president’s political goals.” The Biden administration’s transportation mask mandates were challenged in court. A Florida-based federal judge in April declared the order unlawful and lifted it. The administration has appealed the ruling. A U.S. appeals court has tentatively set arguments in the case for January. The House report also said Trump’s administration rejected a CDC plan to extend a no-sail order for cruise ships through the winter of 2020-2021 and instead issued a conditional order requiring the cruise industry to complete incremental steps before resuming operations. The report cited Redfield as saying then-Vice President Mike Pence made the decision not to extend the no-sail order following lobbying from the industry and its allies. (Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Will Dunham) Copyright 2022 Thomson Reuters. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Trump Administration Blocked CDC Transit Mask Mandate Report Shows
Trump Has A Deposition In E. Jean Carroll's Defamation Lawsuit. Here's What To Know About The Case.
Trump Has A Deposition In E. Jean Carroll's Defamation Lawsuit. Here's What To Know About The Case.
Trump Has A Deposition In E. Jean Carroll's Defamation Lawsuit. Here's What To Know About The Case. https://digitalalabamanews.com/trump-has-a-deposition-in-e-jean-carrolls-defamation-lawsuit-heres-what-to-know-about-the-case/ Former President Donald Trump is scheduled to sit for a deposition Wednesday in a federal defamation lawsuit brought by E. Jean Carroll, an author who says he raped her in the dressing room of a New York department store in the 1990s. What are the latest developments? Last week a federal judge in Manhattan rejected a request by Trump’s lawyers to delay the deposition while a federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., weighs whether the case should be thrown out in its entirety. U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan ruled that Trump must answer questions under oath from Carroll’s attorneys. Carroll herself was scheduled to be deposed by Trump’s team on Friday. In his ruling, Kaplan noted that Trump, 76, and Carroll, 78, and other witnesses “already are of advanced age” and that Trump “should not be permitted to run the clock out” on the suit. Kaplan also denied Trump’s request to substitute the United States government into the case as a defendant on the grounds that the alleged defamation occurred when he was president. What are Carroll’s allegations? E. Jean Carroll arrives at court in New York in March 2020. (Seth Wenig, File/AP) In a book excerpt published by New York magazine in 2019, Carroll wrote that Trump raped her in a dressing room at the Bergdorf Goodman department store in Manhattan in the mid-1990s. Carroll, a longtime advice columnist, said she ran into Trump at the store and he asked for advice on buying a gift for “a girl.” They eventually ended up in the lingerie department, Carroll said, where Trump coerced her into a dressing room. “The moment the dressing-room door is closed, he lunges at me, pushes me against the wall,” she wrote. “He seizes both my arms and pushes me up against the wall a second time, and, as I become aware of how large he is, he holds me against the wall with his shoulder and jams his hand under my coatdress and pulls down my tights.” Trump has been accused by more than 20 women of sexual misconduct ranging from inappropriate touching to rape. He denies the various allegations. In Carroll’s case, Trump also told a reporter that he did not know Carroll, that “she’s not my type” and that she concocted the rape claim to sell her book. Carroll then filed her defamation suit. What other challenges is Trump facing? Former President Donald Trump. (STAR MAX/IPx via AP) The former president is currently facing legal battles in numerous criminal and civil proceedings — including the Justice Department’s investigation into his handling of classified documents found at Mar-a-Lago, as well as a state prosecutor’s probe of efforts by Trump and his allies to overturn the 2020 presidential election results in Georgia — in addition to the House select committee’s investigation into the violence of the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot. But according to Maggie Haberman, author of the recent book “Confidence Man: The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America,” Trump is fixated on this case. “For whatever reason, he is very focused on this lawsuit,” Haberman said on CNN on Thursday. What is Trump saying ahead of the deposition? Trump departs Trump Tower in New York on Aug. 10, two days after FBI agents searched his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida. (David “Dee” Delgado/Reuters) Following the judge’s recent ruling, Trump issued a lengthy statement calling the case a “complete con job” and the U.S. legal system a “broken disgrace.” Trump also repeated his claims that he does not know Carroll and that she is not his “type.” “She completely made up a story that I met her at the doors of this crowded New York City Department Store and, within minutes, ‘swooned’ her,” he said in his statement. “It is a Hoax and a lie, just like all the other Hoaxes that have been played on me for the past seven years. And, while I am not supposed to say it, I will. This woman is not my type! “E. Jean Carroll is not telling the truth, is a woman who I had nothing to do with, didn’t know, and would have no interest in knowing her if I ever had the chance,” Trump said, adding: “Now all I have to do is go through years more of legal nonsense in order to clear my name of her and her lawyer’s phony attacks on me. This can only happen to ‘Trump’!” Roberta Kaplan, Carroll’s attorney, said the statement “obviously does not merit a response.” What’s next? Carroll addresses reporters outside a courthouse in New York in March 2020. (Seth Wenig/AP) The defamation lawsuit is scheduled to go to trial on Feb. 6. But Carroll is planning to file a sexual battery lawsuit against Trump after New York passed a law — the Adult Survivors Act — giving adult sexual assault victims a one-year window to file such civil suits even if the statutes of limitations have long expired. In a court filing made public last month, Carroll’s attorney said she plans to file her new case on Nov. 24, the start of the window under the new law. She also plans to ask the judge to have the two cases tried together. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Trump Has A Deposition In E. Jean Carroll's Defamation Lawsuit. Here's What To Know About The Case.
Secret Service Made To Pay Up To $1185 A Night For Trump Hotel Stays Files Show
Secret Service Made To Pay Up To $1185 A Night For Trump Hotel Stays Files Show
Secret Service Made To Pay Up To $1,185 A Night For Trump Hotel Stays, Files Show https://digitalalabamanews.com/secret-service-made-to-pay-up-to-1185-a-night-for-trump-hotel-stays-files-show/ The US Secret Service was made to pay as much as $1,185 a night to stay at properties belonging to former president Donald Trump, a congressional committee said on Monday as it released documents that appeared to show the former president profiting from his protection details in and out of office. All told, the Secret Service, which is mandated by law to protect the president and his family, spent $1.4m at Trump-owned properties in the US, according to records obtained by the Democratic-led House oversight committee as part of its investigation into Trump conflicts of interest. “The exorbitant rates charged to the Secret Service and agents’ frequent stays at Trump-owned properties raise significant concerns about the former president’s self-dealing and may have resulted in a taxpayer-funded windfall for former president Trump’s struggling businesses,” the committee chair, the New York representative Carolyn Maloney, said in a statement. The documents contradicted statements from the former president’s son Eric Trump. In 2019, he claimed the Secret Service was charged “like, $50” for hotel rooms. The following year, he said: “We provide the rooms at cost and could make far more money renting them to members or guests.” According to the House committee, between January 2017 and September 2021 there were at least 40 instances where the government paid room fees in excess of normal rates. The charges could be up to three times as much the per diem rate, Maloney wrote in a letter to the Secret Service director, Kimberly Cheatle. The committee produced documents in which agents staying for protection purposes at properties including the Trump International Hotel in Washington and Mar-a-Lago in Florida repeatedly wrote “per diem rates could not be obtained”. The committee began investigating potential entanglements between Trump businesses and the activities of the president in February 2020. It noted: “The Secret Service’s productions have been incomplete and do not provide the committee with a complete picture of its spending at Trump-owned properties.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Secret Service Made To Pay Up To $1185 A Night For Trump Hotel Stays Files Show
President Trump's Friend Deserves The BEST Protection! Controversial Author Blasts Tom Brady's Teammates For Woeful Buccaneers Season
President Trump's Friend Deserves The BEST Protection! Controversial Author Blasts Tom Brady's Teammates For Woeful Buccaneers Season
“President Trump's Friend Deserves The BEST Protection!” – Controversial Author Blasts Tom Brady's Teammates For Woeful Buccaneers Season https://digitalalabamanews.com/president-trumps-friend-deserves-the-best-protection-controversial-author-blasts-tom-bradys-teammates-for-woeful-buccaneers-season/ Tom Brady had a 62% completion rate and just 243 passing yards in the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ 20-18 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday. Nick Adams, a conservative author who doesn’t shy away from his support of former president Donald Trump, wasn’t happy about it. Adams originally tweeted that when Brady loses a game, the whole country loses. In response to that, he then went on to communicate his dislike for the Buccaneers offensive line. He stated that the line needed to protect the quarterback better: “Tom Brady’s offensive line needs to get their act together. President Trump’s friend deserves the BEST protection!” The Buccaneers’ offensive line does look a lot different compared to the previous two seasons. Veteran center Ryan Jensen suffered a knee injury at the start of training camp. Second-year lineman Robert Hainsey has been the starting center all season. Offensive guard Ali Marpet retired from the NFL at just 28 years old. Offensive guard Alex Cappa, who was also on the Super Bowl-winning team in 2020, signed with the Cincinnati Bengals this offseason. Playing the first six games of this season without those three key members on the line have brought some issues in terms of passing and rushing. Brady has constantly been under pressure in the passing game as he doesn’t have a stellar running game to lean on. Tom Brady has outburst on sidelines during Sunday’s loss Just before halftime of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers, quarterback Tom Brady had some choice words for his offensive line. The offense had just returned to the sidelines after the quarterback was sacked and fumbled the ball. Although the Bucs were able to recover the ball, he was still visibly upset. The veteran quarterback was seen during the national telecast walking up to his linemen who were sitting on the bench and yelling at all of them. The 45-year-old quarterback was clearly unhappy with his offense’s lackluster performance in the first half. Up to that point, all of their points came off the foot of kicker Ryan Succop. In all, the Buccaneers’ woes continued throughout the second half even after the Steelers lost starting quarterback Kenny Pickett to a concussion. Backup Mitchell Trubisky then came in and went 9 for 12 with 144 passing yards and a passing touchdown. The Bucs’ performance proved how much their defense needed to improve similar to their offense. Edited by Nicolaas Ackermann Thank You! Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
President Trump's Friend Deserves The BEST Protection! Controversial Author Blasts Tom Brady's Teammates For Woeful Buccaneers Season
Auburn & Alabama Named To First AP Top 25 Men's Basketball Poll Of '22-23 Season
Auburn & Alabama Named To First AP Top 25 Men's Basketball Poll Of '22-23 Season
Auburn & Alabama Named To First AP Top 25 Men's Basketball Poll Of '22-23 Season https://digitalalabamanews.com/auburn-s-basketball-poll-of-22-23-season/ The Iron Bowl rivals come into new year at No. 15 and No. 20, respectively; UAB received votes. HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — The first Associated Press top-25 men’s college basketball poll was released today and the Iron Bowl rivals Auburn and Alabama each were named to the list. Auburn comes in at No. 15 while Alabama is No. 20. Yellowhammer State neighbor Alabama-Birmingham received a vote as well. This is the second consecutive year both teams were named to the preseason poll. Last year, the Crimson Tide were No. 14 while the Tigers began at No. 22. Auburn has been in the preseason poll in four of the last five years. Preseason AP Top 25 Rank | Team | Conference | Points (1st place votes) North Carolina | Atlantic Coast (ACC) | 1,532 (47) Gonzaga | West Coast (WCC) | 1,479 (12) Houston | American Athletic (AAC) | 1,404 (1) Kentucky | Southeastern (SEC) | 1,364 (2) Kansas | Big 12 | 1,200 Baylor | Big 12 | 1,200 Duke | ACC | 1,168 UCLA | Pac-12 | 1,093 Creighton | Big East | 1,060 Arkansas | SEC | 1,026 Tennessee | SEC | 880 Texas | Big 12 | 844 Indiana | Big 10 | 745 Texas Christian | Big 12 | 735 Auburn | SEC | 623 Villanova | Big East | 578 Arizona | Pac-12 | 543 Virginia | ACC | 462 San Diego State | Mountain West (MWC) | 394 Alabama | SEC | 281 Oregon | Pac-12 | 260 Michigan | Big 10 | 229 Illinois | Big 10 | 215 Dayton | Atlantic 10 (A10) | 170 Texas Tech | Big 12 Receiving Votes (League, votes) Texas A&M (SEC, 112) Connecticut (Big East, 101) Miami (FL) (ACC, 66) Purdue (Big 10, 56) Saint Louis (A10, 36) Michigan State (Big 10, 35) Florida State (ACC, 32) Xavier (Big East, 29) Wyoming (MWC, 25) Ohio State (Big 10, 23) Iowa (Big 10, 13) Rutgers (Big 10, 4) Florida (SEC, 3) Southern California (Pac-12, 3) Virginia Tech (ACC, 1) Memphis (AAC, 1) Toledo (Mid-American Athletic Conference [MAC], 1) Notre Dame (ACC, 1) Alabama-Birmingham (Conference USA [C-USA], 1) North Carolina enters as the preseason No. 1 after losing in the national championship to Kansas, who begins the year as the No. 5 team. Gonzaga (No. 2, 12 first place votes), Houston (No. 3, 1) and Kentucky (No. 4, 2) round out the top five. Two other teams from the Southeastern Conference – Nos. 10 Arkansas and 11 Tennessee – join Kentucky, Auburn and Alabama in the top 25. Auburn went 28-6 last season and 15-3 in the SEC. Their season ended in the NCAA Tournament’s Round of 32 as a No. 2 seed in a loss to 10th-seeded Miami. They begin the 2022-23 season at home on Nov. 7 against George Mason. The SEC schedule begins Dec. 28 against Florida. Ten teams on their schedule are either in the top-25 poll or received votes. Their full schedule can be found here. Alabama finished 19-14 overall and 9-9 in league play. They earned a No. 6 seed in the NCAA Tournament before losing in the first round to Notre Dame. They will look to improve on last year’s finish when they open at home on Nov. 7 against Longwood. They begin conference play Dec. 28 at Mississippi State. They are set to play nine teams named to the top-25 or received votes in the initial poll. Their full schedule can be found here. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Auburn & Alabama Named To First AP Top 25 Men's Basketball Poll Of '22-23 Season
Trump Hotels Charged Secret Service
Trump Hotels Charged Secret Service
Trump Hotels Charged Secret Service https://digitalalabamanews.com/trump-hotels-charged-secret-service/ October 17, 2022 02:50 PM The Secret Service paid as much as five times the government rate for agents staying at former President Donald Trump’s properties to protect the president and his family, reaching upwards of $1.4 million over four years, new billing records show. Trump’s company billed agents up to $1,185 a night to stay at the Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C., one of dozens of cases in which the Secret Service paid above the government-approved range. BIDEN HAS SPENT MORE THAN ONE-FOURTH OF HIS TIME IN OFFICE IN DELAWARE The records obtained by Congress indicate a cost to U.S. taxpayers of at least $1.4 million, according to figures first reported by the Washington Post. Secret Service supervisors frequently requested waivers to allow the agency to pay more than the government-approved rate for stays at Washington, D.C., hotels, the Washington Post reported. The documents cover Trump’s four years in office and through September 2021. They do not include all payments to Trump’s companies. “The exorbitant rates charged to the Secret Service and agents’ frequent stays at Trump-owned properties raise significant concerns about the former President’s self-dealing and may have resulted in a taxpayer-funded windfall for former President Trump’s struggling businesses,” House Oversight Committee Chairwoman Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-NY) wrote in a letter to the agency director on Monday. Trump frequently traveled to hotel properties operated by his company while in office, including Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, and the Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey. Not all officers stayed at his properties. The records call into question a claim by Trump’s son Eric Trump that the Trump Organization often provided the Secret Service hotel rooms at cost, at a steep discount, or free. In 2019, Eric Trump said that when Trump travels, agents “stay at our properties free.” CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER He said in 2020 that rooms were provided to the government at below-market rates. “We provide the rooms at cost and could make far more money renting them to members or guests,” Eric Trump said. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Trump Hotels Charged Secret Service
White House Sharply Condemns Trump Kanye West For Antisemitic Remarks
White House Sharply Condemns Trump Kanye West For Antisemitic Remarks
White House Sharply Condemns Trump, Kanye West For Antisemitic Remarks https://digitalalabamanews.com/white-house-sharply-condemns-trump-kanye-west-for-antisemitic-remarks/ WASHINGTON – The White House sharply condemned former U.S. President Donald Trump and Kanye West on Monday for their antisemitic comments made over the weekend. The former president had decried American Jews’ failure to appreciate him as evangelical Christians or Israelis do, posting on Truth Social that “U.S. Jews have to get their act together and appreciate what they have in Israel. Before it is too late.” “Donald Trump’s comments were antisemitic as you all know, and insulting both to Jews and to our Israeli allies,” White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said. “But let’s be clear: For years now, Donald Trump has aligned with extremist and antisemitic figures and it should be called out just like we called out our Democratic friends and colleagues last week,” she added, referring to the White House’s condemnation of Los Angeles City Council members who were revealed to have made a series of racist and antisemitic comments. Trump’s comments have been widely decried by leading U.S. Jewish organizations, officials and Democratic lawmakers, who accused the former president of trafficking in tropes of dual loyalty — itself an antisemitic canard. “We need to root out antisemitism everywhere it rears its ugly head, we need to call this out. With respect to Israel, our relationship is ironclad and it’s rooted in shared values and interests, Donald Trump clearly doesn’t understand that, either,” Jean-Pierre continued. When asked about West’s comments and his announced purchase of the right-wing Parler social media platform, the press secretary said she could not address those sorts of purchases. She did say, however, that she could speak to “antisemitism which is hateful and dangerous. We are going to continue to condemn that type of language because at the end of the day, it is disgusting. There is no room, absolutely no room, no place in our political discourse, to be having that type of really vile conversation or comments being made.” Kanye West’s shocking antisemitism is actually very familiar Trump divided U.S. Jews on Israel, ‘flirted with the forces of antisemitism’ ZOA to award Donald Trump with its highest honor The rapper rejected an invitation from the Holocaust Museum in Los Angeles following his antisemitic rants of the past several days, doubling down on his recent anti-Jewish tropes and conspiracy theories. West was locked out of his social media accounts after suggesting that mogul Sean “Puffy” Combs is controlled by Jews and vowing to go “death con 3” on “JEWISH PEOPLE.” It was soon revealed after his postings that Carlson intentionally removed an array of West’s antisemitic comments, including tropes related to “financial engineering” and Jewish people being bad at dancing. Democratic members of Congress and Jewish establishment organizations roundly condemned West after his rants, though conservative pundits have attempted to defend West to varying degrees. The incident has brought further scrutiny on Carlson’s platforming of West, and his own history of helping spread antisemitic conspiracy theories. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
White House Sharply Condemns Trump Kanye West For Antisemitic Remarks
Oldest President Ever Spends More Than 25 Percent Of Time At Home Washington Free Beacon
Oldest President Ever Spends More Than 25 Percent Of Time At Home Washington Free Beacon
Oldest President Ever Spends More Than 25 Percent Of Time At Home – Washington Free Beacon https://digitalalabamanews.com/oldest-president-ever-spends-more-than-25-percent-of-time-at-home-washington-free-beacon/ Biden Administration Secret Service won’t release visitor logs for Joe Biden’s two houses in Delaware Getty Images Karl Salzmann • October 17, 2022 2:45 pm President Joe Biden has spent more than a quarter of his year and a half in office at home in Delaware, CNN reported Monday. Biden, the oldest person ever elected president, has spent 174 days—including almost every weekend—at his two houses in Delaware. By comparison, former president Donald Trump, whom the media widely criticized for being away from the White House, had only spent 135 days at home by this point in his presidency. While a White House spokesman told CNN that Biden is “constantly on the job,” the administration has stonewalled journalists on who visits the president in Delaware. The Secret Service has repeatedly denied New York Post Freedom of Information Act requests for “any records that identify visitors to President Biden’s Delaware residences,” claiming that it could find “no responsive records.” Biden promised soon after taking office that his administration would uphold the “highest standards of transparency.” The Post‘s editorial board blasted the Secret Service’s denial, saying the claim makes “the president look guilty as hell.” While vice president, Biden had meetings with his son Hunter’s shady “business dealings with the Chinese,” former Hunter Biden associate Tony Bobulinski said. The Justice Department is reportedly investigating Hunter Biden over taxes and business practices in China and Ukraine. The report also comes as members of the president’s own party worry about his age. The president will turn 80 on Nov. 20, causing “trepidation in the West Wing,” the Washington Free Beacon reported. Biden last month faced scrutiny after he called on a congresswoman to stand up, not realizing the congresswoman had died months earlier. Historian Tim Naftali told CNN that Biden’s decision to head home so often causes another self-imposed headache for the president. “People will assume the worst if he’s not visible,” Naftali said. “That is something that comes with being the oldest president in office.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Oldest President Ever Spends More Than 25 Percent Of Time At Home Washington Free Beacon
Oil Edges Marginally Lower On Recession Fears
Oil Edges Marginally Lower On Recession Fears
Oil Edges Marginally Lower On Recession Fears https://digitalalabamanews.com/oil-edges-marginally-lower-on-recession-fears/ HOUSTON, Oct 17 (Reuters) – Oil prices edged slightly lower on Monday in choppy trading as fears that high inflation and energy costs could drag the global economy into recession offset China’s continuation of loose monetary policy. Brent crude futures were down 50 cents, or 0.5%, to $91.16 a barrel by 2 p.m. EDT (1800 GMT), recovering from a 6.4% fall last week. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was down 56 cents, or 0.5%, at $85.06 after a 7.6% decline last week. “U.S. inflation remains a front topic and with the Fed set to raise rates at least into next year, there are fears that demand destruction will escalate,” said Dennis Kissler, senior vice president of trading at BOK Financial. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com China’s central bank rolled over maturing medium-term policy loans on Monday while keeping its key interest rate unchanged for a second month, in a signal that loose monetary policy would be maintained. Beijing will also greatly increase domestic energy supply capacity and step up risk controls in key commodities including coal, oil, gas and electricity, a senior National Energy Administration official said on Monday. China will further increase reserve capacities for key commodities, another state official told a news conference in Beijing. Chinese trade and third-quarter GDP data, along with September activity data, are due to be released on Tuesday, with quarterly growth possibly rebounding from the previous quarter but annual growth threatening to be China’s worst in almost half a century. Meanwhile, a strong U.S. dollar and the likelihood of further interest rate increases by the Federal Reserve are helping to contain price gains. St. Louis Fed President James Bullard on Friday said inflation had become “pernicious” and difficult to arrest, warranting continued “frontloading” through larger rate increases of three-quarters of a percentage point. Inflation in the United States remains stubborn and growth in European Union countries is expected to weaken to 0.5%, International Monetary Fund official Gita Gopinath said on Monday. “It’s been another turbulent few weeks in oil markets from global growth concerns to super-sized OPEC+ output cuts and it seems they’re yet to fully settle down,” said Craig Erlam, senior markets analyst at OANDA. “Brent has seen lows of $82 and highs of $98, so perhaps what we’re now seeing is it finding its feet somewhere in the middle.” Oil supply is likely to remain tight after OPEC and allies including Russia pledged on Oct. 5 to cut output by 2 million barrels per day while a war of words between OPEC’s de facto leader Saudi Arabia and the United States could foreshadow more volatility. OPEC+ output cuts attracted portfolio investors and funds back to the oil markets, with continued heavy buying of crude oil futures and options for a second straight week after OPEC+ cut its production target more than expected. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Additional reporting by Noah Browning in London, Mohi Narayan in New Delhi and Florence Tan in Singapore; Editing by Susan Fenton, Kirsten Donovan, David Goodman, Ed Osmond and Paul Simao Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Oil Edges Marginally Lower On Recession Fears
$5 Million Baldwin County Forensic Building Could Become Reality
$5 Million Baldwin County Forensic Building Could Become Reality
$5 Million Baldwin County Forensic Building Could Become Reality https://digitalalabamanews.com/5-million-baldwin-county-forensic-building-could-become-reality/ BALDWIN COUNTY, Ala. (WKRG) — With a potential increase in the deaths in the county, the Baldwin County Coroner’s Office could see a $5 million expansion to its office to better fit the county’s needs.  Back in March, the county approved a $25,000 feasibility study, contracting an architectural firm to look at the office’s needs.  Based on the growth of the last 10 years, Baldwin County Coroner Dr. Brian Pierce said they are looking at a growth in cases from 663 in 2021 to 750 in 2025 and 893 in 2030.  “Moving forward, it is important for us to understand the Functional Population of Baldwin County so we can fit the level of service to the need of the community,” Pierce said. “In collaboration with ADPH, I have arrived at a daily functional population for Baldwin County that ranges between 298,302, in the fourth quarter of the year, to 454,694, in the busy second quarter of the year. Keeping in mind, this is based on 2019 data, these figures are likely slightly higher. We have certainly seen an uptick in the gross number of deaths, as well as the number of cases referred to our office since 2019.”  Pierce said they need to be ready for a shift in deaths moving out of the COVID-19 pandemic and moving into the fentanyl epidemic. This year, Pierce said 2,540 people have died in Baldwin County.  “If you look at the last ten years, you can see an upward trend,” Pierce said. “Although we did trend down this year, it is because we are coming out of the COVID pandemic. You can expect these numbers to go upward as the population increases. A lot of people don’t realize the number of people that die in the borders of Baldwin County. This year, we have had 2,540 people die. That is a lot of folks. At the coroner’s office we are only going to see about 25 percent of those, because only 25 percent of those deaths require further investigation.”  There are four main areas of concern that Pierce said they need to focus on in the coming years. Those four areas are staffing, technology, mass fatality and facilities.  “With staffing, we want to look to move to a mix of full and part time staff,” Pierce said. “Right now, we are fully part time. Appropriately compensated, this should provide for good longevity.”  Pierce said they are currently in the hiring process for two new full-time death investigator positions that are county positions, not appointed.  “This gives us the stability we need for the office,” Pierce said. “My plan is to have these positions ready to work by Jan. 1. We have established a pretty good vetting process, and to me, that is the most important step.”  In the technology area, Pierce said they have initiated a new case management system that has reduced their office supply costs and increased their ability to share information with county, state and federal agencies.  “Implementation of this new case management system is intended to streamline efficiency, such as office workflow, reporting to law enforcement and public health, as well as provide more real time data on fatalities related to drug overdoses, natural disasters and pandemics.”  Since going live in June 2022, the CMS is performing well, according to Pierce.  “This CMS may have some future revenue potential as intellectual property,” Pierce said. “The system can not only track case reports in real time, but is being developed to provide queries of all collected data.”  Pierce said the current facility they use is aging and they are outgrowing the building. In addition to the current 1,500 square foot building, the office operates out of two Conex containers that house supplies, equipment and medical waste.  The potential $5 million forensics building would be a 13,000 square foot facility that would house the coroner’s office and part of the sheriff’s department. Pierce said they toured many other forensic buildings in the state, including Montgomery County’s, which is 8,000 square feet, Jefferson County’s, which is 8,300 square feet, and Mobile County’s, which is 11,000 square feet.  For Baldwin County’s Forensic Building, 7,200 square feet would be dedicated to the Baldwin County Coroner, 3,000 square feet would be dedicated to the Baldwin County Sheriff’s Office and 2,900 square feet would be dedicated to a common space.  A layout of the potential $5 million Baldwin County Forensic Building. In the coroner’s office section, there would be an autopsy area, viewing space, conference room, a death investigator’s office, evidence room, and a cooler to store bodies. In the sheriff’s department’s space, they would have several different offices, an evidence room, digital imaging room and a fentanyl processing room.  Below is a breakdown of costs of the new facility, provided by Adams Stewart Architects:  Bonds and Insurance – $28,000 General Conditions – $205,000 Sitework – $356,000 Site Utilities – $64,000 Site Electrical/Generator – $146,000 Ext. Finishes – $215,000 Concrete – $460,000 Structural Steel – $186,000 Masonry – $986,000 Metal Stud Framing – $84,000 Carpentry – $46,000 Building Insulation – $125,000 Interior Doors and Hardware – $135,000 Exterior Doors and New Storefront at Entry – $103,000 Drywall and Acoustical – $86,000 Flooring – $210,000 Painting – $124,000 Plumbing – $194,500 HVAC – $285,000 Electrical – $704,000 Wall Tile-Restrooms – $29,500 Toilet Partitions and Accessories – $26,500 Casework and Glass Int. Wall – $145,000 Contingency Allowance – $100,000 Furnishings, Fixtures and Equipment – TBD Total Preliminary Budget – $5,043,000 Pierce said there are several ways that they can offset the costs of the facility, including tissue donation, rental space for services, college intern programs, a training center, community outreach programs for substance abuse, virtual autopsies and providing of death investigation services to other counties. They have also applied for grants that could offset the cost.  Baldwin County Sheriff Huey Mack said if they don’t build this facility, they are going to have to come back to the commission and request an add-on to the investigations command building.  “With this building, we are able to put everything under one roof,” Mack said. “Quite honestly, my staff can supplement Dr. Pierce’s staff in a collaborative effort to maybe alleviate some of the full-time staff members.”  Pierce said making the building a forensic office serves the county the best.  “The property is already owned by the county, it’s something we don’t even have to search for,” Pierce said. “We are generating funds now. We will continue to do that. Being able to build this at one time will keep us from piecing it together, hodge-podge. This is a need.”  Stay ahead of the biggest stories, breaking news and weather in Mobile, Pensacola and across the Gulf Coast and Alabama. Download the WKRG News 5 news app and be sure to turn on push alerts. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
$5 Million Baldwin County Forensic Building Could Become Reality
Trump Charged Secret Service exorbitant Rates At His Hotels Records Show
Trump Charged Secret Service exorbitant Rates At His Hotels Records Show
Trump Charged Secret Service ‘exorbitant’ Rates At His Hotels, Records Show https://digitalalabamanews.com/trump-charged-secret-service-exorbitant-rates-at-his-hotels-records-show/ Former president Donald Trump’s company charged the Secret Service as much as five times more than the government rate for agents to stay overnight at Trump hotels while protecting him and his family, according to expense records newly obtained by Congress. The records show that in 40 cases the Trump Organization billed the Secret Service far higher amounts than the approved government rate — in one case charging agents $1,185 a night to stay at the Trump International Hotel in D.C. The new billing documents, according to a congressional committee’s review, show that U.S. taxpayers paid the president’s company at least $1.4 million for Secret Service agents’ stays at Trump properties for his and his family’s protection. “The exorbitant rates charged to the Secret Service and agents’ frequent stays at Trump-owned properties raise significant concerns about the former President’s self-dealing and may have resulted in a taxpayer-funded windfall for former President Trump’s struggling businesses,” Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney (D-N.Y.) wrote to Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle. The records contradict the repeated claim made by Eric Trump, the president’s son and the Trump Organization’s executive vice president, that the family’s company often gave the Secret Service agents the hotel rooms “at cost” or sometimes free, providing steep discounts for the security team to stay at Trump properties. Eric Trump disputed that the Trump Organization profited off Secret Service stays at his family’s properties. “Any services rendered to the United States Secret Service or other government agencies at Trump owned properties, were at their request and were either provided at cost, heavily discounted or for free,” he said in a statement. “The company would have been substantially better off if hospitality services were sold to full-paying guests, however, the company did whatever it took to accommodate the agencies to ensure they were able to do their jobs at the highest levels.” While the documents do not cover all Secret Service expenses at Trump properties during his presidency and reflect only a fraction of those expenses since he left office, they offer a more detailed financial accounting than previously known of what taxpayers paid for Trump’s frequent choice to stay at his properties. Trump visited his properties more than 500 times during his presidency. Documents obtained in February 2020 under the Freedom of Information Act revealed the rates the Secret Service paid at then-President Donald Trump’s properties. (Video: Zach Purser Brown/The Washington Post) Maloney, chairwoman of the House Oversight and Reform Committee, obtained the records as part of her investigation into how Trump may have profited off his security agents’ duty to follow him wherever he traveled. She wrote a letter Monday to Cheatle demanding a complete accounting of what taxpayers have paid — and continue to pay — the Trump Organization. “Given the long-standing concerns surrounding the former President’s conflicts of interest and efforts to profit off the presidency, the committee has a strong interest in obtaining a complete accounting of federal government spending at Trump properties,” Maloney wrote. “The Committee continues to examine potential legislation to prevent presidential self-dealing and profiteering, as well as to curb conflicts of interest by ensuring that future presidents are prevented from exercising undue influence on Secret Service spending. ” Secret Service spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said the agency is aware of Maloney’s request for a fuller account. “We received the letter and we are reviewing it and we aim to respond to the committee by their deadline,” he said. “While we don’t comment on any protective operations, agents must be within arms’ reach of their protectees 24 hours a day.” In 2019, Eric Trump said the Trump Organization was saving the Secret Service agents — and taxpayers who paid the bill — huge sums. “If my father travels, they stay at our properties free,” he said. “So everywhere that he goes, if he stays at one of his places, the government actually spends, meaning it saves a fortune because if they were to go to a hotel across the street, they’d be charging them $500 a night, whereas, you know we charge them, like $50.” In 2020, Eric Trump reiterated that Trump Organization was giving these public servants — and ultimately taxpayers — discounted rates. “We provide the rooms at cost and could make far more money renting them to members or guests,” he said. But the reality was different, the records reveal. During Trump’s presidency, Secret Service supervisors frequently asked for special waivers to let the agency pay far more than the government-approved nightly rate for a hotel in D.C. — usually $195 to $240. Instead, they paid the higher costs the Trump Organization was charging. In April 2017, when Eric Trump and his wife, Lara, were staying at the Trump International Hotel in D.C., the president’s company charged the Secret Service agents $1,160 — more than four times the government rate at the time — the records show. In November 2017, when Donald Trump, Jr., stayed at the same hotel, the government was charged $1,185 a night for his security detail staying overnight at the hotel to protect him — almost six times the government rate, which varies based on time and location. Maloney stressed that the Secret Service continues to pay the Trump Organization while protecting Trump since he left office, and she is concerned by reports of excessive fees the agency is charged for the former president’s travels. Her committee obtained records that stretch over his four-year presidency and continue from President Biden’s inauguration to September 2021. Maloney noted in her letter to the Secret Service director that records turned over to her committee do not include the agency’s payments for a series of visits to Trump’s private club at Mar-a-Lago; some visits to his property at Bedminster, N.J.; and for stays at Trump properties outside the United States during frequent foreign travel by Trump and his family. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Trump Charged Secret Service exorbitant Rates At His Hotels Records Show
HSEC Grateful For Support Donations! This Is Veterinarian Technician Assistant Week
HSEC Grateful For Support Donations! This Is Veterinarian Technician Assistant Week
HSEC Grateful For Support, Donations! This Is Veterinarian Technician Assistant Week https://digitalalabamanews.com/hsec-grateful-for-support-donations-this-is-veterinarian-technician-assistant-week/ Humane Society of Elmore County News Top Photo: Wind Creek Wetumpka donated $11,383.37 to Humane Society of Elmore County as part of their “Make a Change” program.” THIS Tuesday, 18 October at 6 pm is our Humane Society’s Annual Membership Meeting at the Wetumpka Civic Center, 410 S. Main St, Wetumpka, AL 36092. We will be reviewing the past year, electing Board Officers and looking ahead to 2023. Hope to see our members there!    Thank you so very much to all the wonderful people who brought donations for the area shelters Friday night at the Alabama National Fair. We are incredibly grateful to the Kiwanis Club of Montgomery members and Alabama National Fair for their hard work making the Alabama National Fair such a success and for helping our River Region Animal Shelters like this. Thank you all so very much!   More thanks to everyone at Lily Pad Place & the Thirsty Turtle in Millbrook for including us in their Open House on Saturday while also taking in donations to help our Shelter! We greatly appreciate everyone’s support. A couple of weeks ago we found our dry dog food supply uncomfortably low and asked for help. Boy oh boy did everyone help! THANK YOU so very much to everyone who donated food for our pups! The delivery folks for USPS, UPS & FEDEX made multiple deliveries, often same day, as the orders from Chewy, Amazon & Walmart came in – on top of all the food hand-delivered to the Shelter by donors. We are out of the danger zone thanks to so many dog loving supporters and we are truly humbled by the response – thank you, thank you, thank you. We had one other major surprise recently – the wonderful folks at Wind Creek Wetumpka added us to their “Make a Change” program and then asked us to come over to receive our check.  We were certainly shocked and pleasantly surprised when they gave us a check for $11, 383.37! This was one of those ‘WOW’ moments and we cannot thank Wind Creek and everyone who dropped their tickets in the barrel enough! Just a reminder for our supporters who work for the Alabama State Government and want to donate financially, no better way than through the 2022 Alabama State Combined Campaign (SCC) and our Agency Code is 106803. The SCC makes donating to deserving charities easy either one time or via monthly payroll deduction and we want to thank all who so generously donate to help not only our shelter, but non-profit agencies everywhere. This week is National Veterinary Technician Appreciation Week and behind every awesome Veterinarian is an equally awesome team of Veterinary Technicians. Veterinary Technicians show their love for animals as they work tirelessly in exam rooms, labs, and operating rooms, using their training and knowledge to assist their Veterinarian in improving and saving beloved pets lives.  Please give thanks to all who work in Veterinary Hospitals as they work tirelessly to help our pets live longer and healthier lives. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
HSEC Grateful For Support Donations! This Is Veterinarian Technician Assistant Week
Kilgore College (Texas) Offensive Line Duo Commits To UAB
Kilgore College (Texas) Offensive Line Duo Commits To UAB
Kilgore College (Texas) Offensive Line Duo Commits To UAB https://digitalalabamanews.com/kilgore-college-texas-offensive-line-duo-commits-to-uab/ Wallace Unamba attended his first-ever NCAA Division I football game last week, taking an unofficial visit to witness the UAB football team in its annual Children’s Harbor homecoming game, and the Kilgore College (Texas) offensive lineman came away thoroughly impressed. So much so, that not only did he commit to playing for UAB, but his teammate Leon Bell did as well, following the Blazers’ 41-14 win over Middle Tennessee State at Protective Stadium. “It was amazing,” Unamba said. “The crowd, the scoreboard and video replays, I’ve never been a part of a program that had all of that going for them on a game day. It was unlike anything I’d ever seen. It was a great atmosphere, the team played really well and the coaching staff welcomes you in like family. It feels like home to me.” Unamba and Bell pledged their commitment to UAB following the win over the Blue Raiders and publically announced their intention on social media Friday. “We’re about to tear it up, we’re about to tear UAB up,” Bell said. “We’re going to come up there and get the job done. I’ve seen how they play and they have some dogs on the team. I love the players and I love watching them play. It was a great time.” Both offensive linemen have been getting the job done during their two-year stint at Kilgore, helping the Rangers to a 5-5 finish last year and a 4-2 record at the midway point of this season. Kilgore is currently ranked No. 13 in the NJCAA DI football poll and has the fifth-ranked rushing offense (202.3 ypg) in the NJCAA. The Blazers re-expanded their recruiting radius back into Texas after finding success in the Kansas and Mississippi junior college systems, along with a few west coast JUCO products. The lone Texas junior college player on UAB’s roster is senior receiver and former Blinn Junior College standout Trea Shropshire, who leads the Blazers with 362 yards and 2 touchdowns and a nation-leading 25.9 yards per catch. “It’s a grind every day,” Bell said. “There are some real dogs over here that not a lot of people know about. It’s hard work every day and I get the full experience. It’s set me up for another level and turned me into a man.” The transition from Kilgore to UAB should not be too hard for the blocking duo, considering the Blazers hang their hat on the running game. Unamba, who plays left guard, comes in at 6-foot-5 and 320 pounds and can provide immediate competition at the position with Matthew Trehern playing his final season on the Southside. Bell plays right tackle for Kilgore College, stacking up at 6-foot-8 and 305 pounds, and can also be a cog in the tackle competition next year with both tackles (Sidney Wells and Kadeem Telfort) finishing their college careers this season. “Most of the stuff they run is stuff that I like,” Unamba said. “They pass and run the ball equally. We’re pretty used to it (running the ball) up here at Kilgore (College). I can pick up the playbook pretty quickly once I get up there.” Bell and Unamba, along with Coahoma Community College (Miss.) defensive end Malik Puryear, bring UAB’s current recruiting class to nine commitments. UAB verbal commits (9) *Emmanuel Waller, 3-star DL (6-4 / 250) Oak Mountain | Birmingham, Ala. *Michael Towner, 3-star DL (6-2 / 245) Vigor | Mobile, Ala. *Christopher Pearson, 3-star S (6-1 / 190) Orange Beach | Orange Beach, Ala. *Jaxon Potter, 3-star QB (6-4 / 180) Santa Margarita | Santa Margarita, Calif. *Christopher Bracy, 3-star CB (6-1 / 185) St. Paul’s Episcopal | Mobile, Ala. *Jake Godfrey, 3-stat WR (5-9 / 175) Spanish Fort | Spanish Fort, Ala. *Malik Puryear, 3-star DE (6-5 / 260) Coahoma Community College (Miss.) | Greensboro, N.C. *Wallace Unamba, OG (6-5 / 320) Kilgore Community College (Texas) | Garland, Texas *Leon Bell, OT (6-8 / 305) Kilgore Community College (Texas) | Alvin, Texas If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Kilgore College (Texas) Offensive Line Duo Commits To UAB
Deaths After Fighter Jet Crashes Into Russian Building In Yeysk
Deaths After Fighter Jet Crashes Into Russian Building In Yeysk
Deaths After Fighter Jet Crashes Into Russian Building In Yeysk https://digitalalabamanews.com/deaths-after-fighter-jet-crashes-into-russian-building-in-yeysk/ At least four killed after a large blaze engulfed the building and witnesses said multiple floors were on fire. Published On 17 Oct 202217 Oct 2022 A supersonic military aircraft crashed into a residential building in the southern Russian city of Yeysk, engulfing the structure in flames and collapsing several upper floors. Footage on social media showed a large fireball erupting from the multistory building on Monday. Initial reports said four people were killed, 19 injured – four in serious condition – and six missing in the port city on the Sea of Azov. The aircraft was identified as a Sukhoi Su-34 fighter jet. The crew managed to eject before the plane crashed, according to the defence ministry. A large blaze engulfed the building, stoked by jet fuel, and witnesses were quoted by Russia’s Tass news agency as saying it was on fire from the first to the ninth floors. Firefighters battled the blaze as loud bangs from the apparent detonation of the warplane’s weapons were heard. “While climbing to perform a training flight from the military airfield of the southern military district, a Su-34 aircraft crashed,” a ministry statement said. “The cause of the crash of the aircraft was a fire in one of the engines during takeoff.” The Interfax news agency quoted emergency services as saying five floors of the apartment building were on fire, the upper floors had collapsed, and about 45 apartments were damaged. The blaze spread over 2,000sq m (21,500sq feet), it said. Yeysk, a city of about 90,000 people, is home to a large Russian air base. About 600 people usually live in the building, the local Krasnodar administration said on Telegram. “The governor ordered the whereabouts of each resident to be established,” it said. ‘Establishing the circumstances’ The Kremlin said President Vladimir Putin was immediately informed about the crash, and he ordered ministers of health and emergency services along with the local governor to head to the site. Hours after the crash, Governor Veniamin Kondratyev said emergency services managed to contain the fire. “Information about the dead and injured is being clarified. Ambulance crews are on the scene,” he said. Russia’s Investigative Committee, which deals with serious crimes, later announced it launched a criminal probe into the crash. “Military investigators are establishing the circumstances and causes of the incident,” it said. Yeysk is located on the Tangarog Gulf in the Sea of Azov, which separates southern Ukraine and southern Russia. Yeysk lies directly across the sea from the Ukrainian city of Mariupol, which is under Russian control after Moscow launched its invasion in February. The Su-34 is a supersonic twin-engine bomber equipped with sophisticated sensors and weapons that has been a key component of the Russian air force. The aircraft has seen wide use during the war in Syria and the fighting in Ukraine. Monday’s incident marked the 10th reported non-combat crash of a Russian warplane since Moscow sent its troops into Ukraine. Source : Al Jazeera and news agencies Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Deaths After Fighter Jet Crashes Into Russian Building In Yeysk
Donald Trump Wishes To Distance Himself From Kanye West Claims He's 'Crazy' And Needs 'Help'
Donald Trump Wishes To Distance Himself From Kanye West Claims He's 'Crazy' And Needs 'Help'
Donald Trump Wishes To Distance Himself From Kanye West, Claims He's 'Crazy' And Needs 'Help' https://digitalalabamanews.com/donald-trump-wishes-to-distance-himself-from-kanye-west-claims-hes-crazy-and-needs-help/ From antisemitic comments like wishing to go “death con 3” on “JEWISH PEOPLE” to theorizing that there are fake children being planted in his home to “manipulate” his own kids, Kanye West has seemingly gone off the rails with his freedom of speech — and former President Donald Trump has taken notice. Trump has recently told sources that West is too extreme for even the likes of him.  Why Donald Trump wants to distance himself from Kanye West: Rolling Stone reported that sources close to Trump revealed the former president thinks West is “crazy” and he needs “help.” According to Rolling Stone, “Former President Donald Trump has told multiple people that West is acting too ‘crazy’ and that he needs some professional ‘help,’ according to two sources with knowledge of the matter.” RELATED: 11 Harsh Rules Kanye West Made Kim Kardashian Follow During Their Marriage This might come as a surprise to many people since, in the past, Trump has shown his love and support for the rapper.  Over the course of many years, West has also been public about his support for the former president.  In November 2016 it started small with West proclaiming at a concert that he didn’t vote, but if he had he would’ve voted for Trump — he, of course, was booed by his adoring fans. The first of other soon-to-be meetings also took place in November, with West meeting with Trump in New York to discuss what he describes as “multicultural issues.” Then, of course, the infamous of them all — West’s tweets.  RELATED: It’s No Coincidence That Kanye West Unleashed His Antisemitism After Gaining Republican Support West shared his support over Twitter, sharing one of the now infamous Tweets in pop culture history.  “You don’t have to agree with trump but the mob can’t make me not love him. We are both dragon energy. He is my brother. I love everyone. I don’t agree with everything anyone does. That’s what makes us individuals. And we have the right to independent thought,” the tweet read.  Trump commented under the tweet, “Thank you Kanye, very cool.” RELATED: 8 Times Kanye West Was Controlling, Unfaithful & Possessive Over Kim Kardashian Before Their Divorce Then, West solidified his stance with the former president by visiting him in the Oval Office in 2018, even donning a MAGA hat.  But it seems despite their colorful history, Trump is going to distance himself from West.  According to sources, “Trump has also privately signaled that it’s best if he keeps his mouth shut about West for now.”  Related Stories From YourTango: This is somewhat surprising due to how Trump typically voices his opinion on many things, one of the more recent incidents being his comments on the Amber Heard-Johnny Depp trial.  It seems Trump isn’t the only one who thinks West is ‘losing it.’  “Darrell Scott, an Ohio pastor and staunch Trump ally who once counted West as an ‘acquaintance’ in the days of the Trump administration, has since blasted the rapper as a ‘clown’ who is spewing ‘some bullcrap’ these days,” Rolling Stone reported.  It’s unclear if the two have shared private communication.  RELATED: Kim Kardashian Is Paying For Extra Security At Her Kids’ School Because Of Kanye West, Claims Source Victoria Soliz is a writer with YourTango who covers news and entertainment content. Her work explores pop culture trends, film and TV, and celebrity news Sign up for YourTango’s free newsletter! Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Donald Trump Wishes To Distance Himself From Kanye West Claims He's 'Crazy' And Needs 'Help'
DOJ Seeking A 6-Month Jail Sentence For Trump Ally Steve Bannon
DOJ Seeking A 6-Month Jail Sentence For Trump Ally Steve Bannon
DOJ Seeking A 6-Month Jail Sentence For Trump Ally Steve Bannon https://digitalalabamanews.com/doj-seeking-a-6-month-jail-sentence-for-trump-ally-steve-bannon/ WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department said Monday that Steve Bannon should serve six months in prison and pay a $200,000 fine for defying a congressional subpoena from the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. The longtime ally of former President Donald Trump should serve a hefty sentence because he “pursued a bad-faith strategy of defiance and contempt” and he publicly disparaged the committee itself, undermining the effort to get to the bottom of the violent attack and keep anything like it from happening again, federal attorneys wrote. He has not yet provided any documents or answered any questions, they said. “The rioters who overran the Capitol on January 6 did not just attack a building—they assaulted the rule of law upon which this country was built and through which it endures,” federal attorneys wrote in court documents. “By flouting the Select Committee’s subpoena and its authority, the Defendant exacerbated that assault.” Bannon’s defense attorneys didn’t immediately respond to a message seeking comment. His lawyer, David Schoen, has said the case would be reversed on appeal. The Justice Department push comes shortly after the committee took the extraordinary step last week to subpoena Trump himself, something the members said was necessary to get the full story of what happened that day. It’s unclear how Trump will respond to the summons, but a refusal to comply could open up a similar path in court — though holding a former president in contempt would be an unprecedented and fraught process. Bannon, meanwhile, is set to be sentenced Friday on two counts of contempt of Congress: one for refusing to sit for a deposition and another for refusing to provide documents. The committee had sought Bannon’s testimony over his involvement in Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election. Bannon initially argued that his testimony was protected by Trump’s claim of executive privilege, but the committee was skeptical because the adviser had been fired from the White House in 2017 and was thus a private citizen when he was consulting with the then-president in the run-up to the riot on Jan. 6, 2021. Trump’s own lawyer, meanwhile, told Bannon’s lawyer in October 2021 that he didn’t believe there was immunity for him, and he should cooperate with the subpoena, according to Monday’s sentencing memo. Federal attorneys are also asking for the maximum fine, saying Bannon refused to cooperate with routine questions about his finances and said he could pay whatever the court imposed. Defense attorneys argued during the trial that he didn’t refuse to cooperate and that the deadline dates “were in flux.” They pointed to the fact that Bannon had reversed course shortly before the trial kicked off — after Trump waived his objection — and had offered to testify before the committee. But that offer came with strings attached, federal attorneys wrote, including the dismissal of the criminal case against him. When it became clear that wasn’t in the cards, the possibility of cooperation faded, court records state. Bannon was convicted after a four-day trial in July. Outside the courthouse, he compared the trial to a battle and said “we’re not going to lose this war,” then referred to members of the committee as “gutless.” It was not the only time Bannon disparaged the committee in “exaggerated and sometimes violent” language in news conferences and on his “War Room” podcast, prosecutors wrote. “The defendant’s statements prove that his contempt was not aimed at protecting executive privilege or the Constitution, rather it was aimed at undermining the Committee’s efforts to investigate an historic attack on government,” federal attorneys said in court documents. “To this day, he continues to unlawfully withhold documents and testimony that stand to help the Committee’s authorized investigation to get to the bottom of what led to January 6 and ascertain what steps must be taken to ensure that it never happens again. That cannot be tolerated.” ____ BY LINDSAY WHITEHURST, The Associated Press Must Watch In This Together: Teens Help At-Risk Individuals, Photo Series Celebrates Black Girls Read More…
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DOJ Seeking A 6-Month Jail Sentence For Trump Ally Steve Bannon
GOP Wants To Push To Extend Trump Tax Cuts After Midterm Elections
GOP Wants To Push To Extend Trump Tax Cuts After Midterm Elections
GOP Wants To Push To Extend Trump Tax Cuts After Midterm Elections https://digitalalabamanews.com/gop-wants-to-push-to-extend-trump-tax-cuts-after-midterm-elections/ House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), right, in his office with former House speaker Newt Gingrich on Sept. 22, 2022. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post) Republicans plan to push to extend key parts of President Donald Trump’s tax cuts if they take control of Congress in this fall’s elections, aiming to force President Joe Biden to codify trillions of dollars worth of lower taxes touted by his predecessor. With Democrats likely to lose control of the House of Representatives and possibly the Senate, Republicans are preparing to advance legislation that would make permanent the GOP’s 2017 changes to the tax rates paid by individuals. Republican officials will also push for scrapping some of the law’s specific tax increases on corporations that were designed to offset the cost of their enormous overall cut to the corporate tax rate. Many economists say the GOP’s plans to expand the tax cuts flies against their promises to fight inflation and reduce the federal deficit, which have emerged as central themes of their 2022 midterm campaign rhetoric. Tax cuts boost inflation just like new spending, because they increase economic demand and throw it out of balance with supply. But Republicans say they believe these efforts would put Biden in a political bind, requiring him to choose between vetoing the tax cuts — giving the GOP an attack line in the 2024 presidential election — or allowing Republicans to win on one of their central legislative agenda items. Newt Gingrich, who served as the speaker of the House in the 1990s and is in communication with senior Republican leaders, said a similar strategy was successful at forcing both Bill Clinton and Barack Obama to enact tax cuts that they would not have otherwise supported, after both of those Democratic presidents lost control of Congress. Biden is likely to find himself in a similar position, Gingrich said. “The trick is to put the president in a position of either getting defeated in 2024 or signing your stuff into law,” Gingrich said. “Republicans will make it a priority to continue the Trump tax cuts, because it puts the Democrats in a position of being for tax increases and against economic growth.” Rep. Adrian Smith (R-Neb.), one of the contenders to lead the Ways and Means Committee in a GOP House, told C-SPAN last month that the first legislation he would aim to advance would be to extend the 2017 GOP tax cuts for individual taxpayers. Without a filibuster-proof majority, Republicans would likely have to peel off several Democrats to pass such measures through the Senate to force Biden’s hand. “We have temporary tax policies that have been good for the middle class — we need to make those permanent,” Smith said. The White House said a statement that it was undaunted by the GOP’s plans to push for extension of the Trump tax cuts and was prepared to resist efforts to expand the law. “While President Biden and congressional Democrats are fighting to make middle class families the heart of our economy … Republicans want to sell those families out to rich special interests and by doubling down on their 2017 tax giveaway to the ultrawealthy and corporations,” White House spokesman Andrew Bates said. The fight over Trump’s tax cuts could become a key feature of divided government should Republicans take control of one or both branches of Congress. Congressional lawmakers and the White House will have to come to agreements over funding the government, averting a breach of the debt ceiling and other spending bills — negotiations that will give the GOP an opportunity to press their policy demands. Democrats used control of the House after the 2018 midterm elections to push Trump into accepting many of their priorities, such as expanded domestic spending and paid leave for federal workers. The GOP’s plans to push hard on the tax cuts have come into fuller view in recent weeks. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) last month released an economic blueprint that said the party backs legislation spearheaded by Rep. David Schweikert (R-Ariz.) that would make permanent much of the 2017 tax law — including doubling the standard deduction claimed by most taxpayers and reducing the top rate paid by most taxpayers from 39.6 percent to 37 percent. McCarthy’s blueprint also calls for enacting the plan by Rep. Jason T. Smith (R-Mo.) to make permanent a 20 percent deduction claimed by firms operated as pass-through entities, as well as a half-dozen other GOP bills aimed at tax incentives for start-up businesses, tax breaks on intellectual property transferred to the U.S., deductions on business interest, and other measures aimed at making permanent or enacting new business tax breaks. Senate Republicans also largely support those efforts, according to interviews with a half-dozen congressional aides and outside policy experts. “It’ll be a battle royale in Washington over the next year over which of Trump’s tax cuts get extended,” said Stephen Moore, an economic adviser to Trump and many leading congressional Republicans. “This will be a central, driving theme of the Republican Congress — making those tax cuts permanent.” The legislative battles could start before the end of this year. Republicans are already pushing extension of three corporate tax breaks — including two that expired at the end of last year and a third that starts to expire next year. Collectively, these three measures would add roughly $600 billion to the federal deficit over 10 years if extended, according to nonpartisan estimates, outstripping the cost of Biden’s student debt relief program (the cost of which many Republicans have criticized) and increasing federal spending at a time of surging inflation. The 2017 GOP tax cut centered on a massive cut to the rate corporations pay, the cost of which was partially offset by ending corporate tax breaks with the expectation that lawmakers would later prevent them from actually being eliminated. Democrats tried to increase the corporate tax rate as part of their economic legislation this year, but failed in large part because of opposition from Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.). They instead passed a minimum tax only on very large corporations. “The Republicans did not want to look like they were giving too much away to businesses, so they had some of the business relief expire and had some offset by business tax increases,” said Steve Rosenthal, a policy analyst at the Tax Policy Center, a nonpartisan think tank. “Now to come back and extend business relief and reverse the increases would mean further tilting our tax system toward the rich and the powerful.” Republicans are also planning to push for reductions in government spending, although the exact contours of that policy appear less clear. Bloomberg Government reported Tuesday that the four House Republicans seeking to lead the House budget committee are all exploring changes to Social Security and Medicare to reduce costs to the federal budget, seeking to use the debt ceiling or government shutdown to force the issue. But analysts say it may be more likely that the extension of the tax cuts is paired with spending increases sought by Democrats. Senate Finance Chair Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) said in a statement, for instance, that additional business tax relief should only pass if Democrats secure funding for one of their policy priorities, such as Biden’s Child Tax Credit. That combination would increase the deficit even more than only adding spending or only cutting taxes would. “What I worry about is the kind of horse trading where Republicans get tax cuts, Democrats get expanded tax credits, and the American people are stuck with the bill,” said Marc Goldwein, senior vice president at the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a nonpartisan think tank that advocates for lower deficits. Still, the GOP’s push for tax cuts could also undermine their claims to be determined to bring down inflation. Jason Furman, a former Obama administration economist who has been critical of Biden’s spending record, said the GOP plans would increase inflation at a time of the fastest price hikes in decades. “The corporate tax cuts the Republicans are pushing would add to inflation, add to the deficit, and do little or nothing for economic growth,” said Furman, now a professor at Harvard. “They were a budget gimmick to start with. Extending them without paying for them now would be doubling down on the original gimmick.” But Republicans say they are committed to extending the cuts. “The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act has been providing real, substantial relief to families and businesses,” said Rep. Jason T. Smith (R-Mo.), of the House Budget Committee, in a statement. “We need to build on that success by making permanent those policies that are supporting families and workers while looking at what more needs to be done to the tax code.” The Washington Post’s Jacob Bogage contributed to this report. Read More…
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GOP Wants To Push To Extend Trump Tax Cuts After Midterm Elections
Sen. Tuberville Responds To Reparation Comment Controversy: Issue Is Crime Not Race
Sen. Tuberville Responds To Reparation Comment Controversy: Issue Is Crime Not Race
Sen. Tuberville Responds To Reparation Comment Controversy: ‘Issue Is Crime, Not Race’ https://digitalalabamanews.com/sen-tuberville-responds-to-reparation-comment-controversy-issue-is-crime-not-race/ News Published: Oct. 17, 2022, 9:10 a.m. MINDEN, NEVADA – OCTOBER 08: U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) looks on during a campaign rally at Minden-Tahoe Airport on October 08, 2022 in Minden, Nevada. Former U.S. President Donald Trump held a campaign style rally for Nevada GOP candidates ahead of the state’s midterm election on November 8th. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)Getty Images U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville is speaking out on the controversy regarding his recent comments during a Trump rally in Nevada. After days of silence on the matter, Tuberville, R-Alabama, provided a statement to Alabama Daily News. The statement comes after the former Auburn football coach received heavy criticism after saying Democrats were in favor of “reparation” because they were “pro-crime.” “They want crime. They want crime because they want to take over what you got. They want to control what you have,” Tuberville told the cheering crowd. “They want reparation because they think the people that do the crime are owed that. Bullshit. They are not owed that.” In his response, Tuberville said he was addressing the issue of crime and not race. “The issue is crime, not race, but the liberal media is intent on helping Democrats remain in power,” Tuberville said via a spokesperson. “Crime has spiked nationwide under Democrats and their ‘Defund the Police’ policies, and I was pointing out the frustration many Americans share when I spoke last weekend.” He added: “Antifa, Black Lives Matter, and rioters have caused over $2 billion in damage to our cities since 2020. Illegal immigrants and drugs are streaming across our southern border in record numbers. Progressive prosecutors across the nation refuse to enforce laws they personally disagree with, and our communities are suffering because of it. Even Alabama Democrats want to satisfy the outrageous demands of murderers and rapists currently on work-strike in state prisons. Democrats favor criminals over the victims through their actions and policies. “As a coach, building young people of character was one of my top priorities. As a Senator, I want to ensure that we create policies at the national level that reinforce values such as integrity and accountability. I will continue to fight for safer communities and accountability for criminals. Americans should not live in fear.” READ MORE: Former Auburn star on Tuberville’s ‘reparation’ remark: ‘Unnecessary, dead wrong, ugly’ Sen. Tommy Tuberville draws fire for ‘pro-crime’ reparations comment: ‘Straight up racism’ Black Alabama leaders wounded by Tuberville’s ‘misinformed, ignorant’ reparation remark Tuberville remains silent after days of outcry over ‘reparation’ comment Tuberville: ‘Pro-crime’ Democrats want ‘reparation’ for ‘people who do the crime’ NAACP: Tuberville ‘embarrasses’ Alabama with reparations comment, should apologize Alabama leader reacts to Tommy Tuberville: ‘The bull**** is that this guy is a US Senator’ Could outrage over Tommy Tuberville’s comment boost support for reparations? If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation. Read More…
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Sen. Tuberville Responds To Reparation Comment Controversy: Issue Is Crime Not Race
Power 25 Rankings: Thompson Back On Top With Big Week Ahead
Power 25 Rankings: Thompson Back On Top With Big Week Ahead
Power 25 Rankings: Thompson Back On Top With Big Week Ahead https://digitalalabamanews.com/power-25-rankings-thompson-back-on-top-with-big-week-ahead/ Three-time reigning Class 7A champion Thompson moved back to the No. 1 spot in this week’s AL.com Power 25 rankings. The Power 25 is a weekly ranking of the top high school football teams in Alabama regardless of classification. RELATED: Injured Tide WR commits expected to return Thompson, which has won seven straight games since opening the season with back-to-back losses to quality out of state teams, received two first-place votes. Hoover and Theodore received one each. Just three points separate the top three teams in this week’s poll – Thompson, Saraland and Hoover. Thompson and Hoover play Friday night in Alabaster. Saraland travels to play Theodore. Here are this week’s rankings: 25. Pleasant Grove (7-1) Total points: 8 Highest ranking: 18 Last week’s ranking: NR Last week: Defeated Carver-Birmingham 42-0 This week: at Jasper, Friday 24. Ramsay (7-2) Total points: 13 Highest ranking: 13 Last week’s ranking: Tied for 24th Last week: Defeated Hayden 49-0 This week: at Carver-Birmingham, Thursday 23. Muscle Shoals (7-1) Total points: 16 Highest ranking: 15 Last week’s ranking: NR Last week: Defeated Cullman 23-16 This week: Idle 21. (TIE) Gulf Shores (7-1) Total points: 17 Highest ranking: 16 Last week’s ranking: 19 Last week: Idle This week: at Vigor (Ladd-Peebles Stadium), Friday 21. (TIE) Elba (8-0) Total points: 17 Highest ranking: 15 Last week’s ranking: Tied for 21st Last week: Defeated Florala 55-27 This week: at Pleasant Home, Friday 20. Deshler (9-0) Total points: 25 Highest ranking: 14 Last week’s ranking: 23 Last week: Defeated Rogers 35-13 This week: at Brooks, Friday 19. Leeds (8-0) Total points: 26 Highest ranking: 15 Last week’s ranking: Tied for 24th Last week: Defeated Moody 14-13 This week: vs. Lincoln, Friday 18. Gardendale (6-2) Total points: 30 Highest ranking: 14 Last week’s ranking: 18 Last week: Defeated Woodlawn 37-20 This week: at No. 7 Mountain Brook, Friday 17. Fyffe (8-0) Total points: 33 Highest ranking: 11 Last week’s ranking: 17 Last week: Defeated Pisgah 40-6 This week: vs. Ider, Friday 16. Anniston (8-0) Total points: 36 Highest ranking: 14 Last week’s ranking: 16 Last week: Defeated Talladega 62-0 This week: vs. Cleburne County, Friday 15. Hewitt-Trussville (6-3) Total points: 37 Highest ranking: 8 Last week’s ranking: 14 Last week: Defeated Spain Park 35-10 This week: vs. Chelsea, Friday 14. Andalusia (9-0) Total points: 41 Highest ranking: 11 Last week’s ranking: Tied for 12th Last week: Defeated B.T. Washington 36-14 This week: vs. No. 9 Montgomery Catholic, Friday 12. (TIE) Hartselle (9-0) Total points: 45 Highest ranking: 10 Last week’s ranking: Tied for 12th Last week: Defeated Decatur 41-14 This week: Idle 12. (TIE) Fairhope (7-1) Total points: 45 Highest ranking: 11 Last week’s ranking: 15 Last week: Defeated Alma Bryant 37-7 This week: vs. Baker, Friday 11. UMS-Wright (8-0) Total points: 58 Highest ranking: 4 Last week’s ranking: 11 Last week: Defeated Citronelle 50-6 This week: vs. Faith Academy, Friday THE TOP 10 Hueytown’s Jakhael Rowser runs into a wall of Hillcrest-Tuscaloosa defenders during the second half of the Hillcrest-Tuscaloosa at Hueytown high school football game in Hueytown, Ala., Thursday, Sept. 8, 2022. (Vasha Hunt | preps.al.com)Vasha Hunt 10. Hillcrest-Tuscaloosa (9-0) Total points: 60 Highest ranking: 9 Last week’s ranking: 10 Last week: Defeated Paul Bryant 56-13 This week: at McAdory, Friday Montgomery Catholic prepares to take the field against Alabama Christian on Friday night. (Wesley Lyle |preps@al.com) 9. Montgomery Catholic (9-0) Total points: 64 Highest ranking: 5 Last week’s ranking: 9 Last week: Defeated Dale County 52-0 This week: at No. 14 Andalusia, Friday Mountain Brook running back Cole Gamble (19) during a game at Parker High school in Birmingham, Ala., Friday, Oct. 6, 2022. (Marvin Gentry | preps@al.com) 7. (TIE) Mountain Brook (7-1) Total points: 75 Highest ranking: 4 Last week’s ranking: 8 Last week: Defeated Mortimer Jordan 56-14 This week: vs. No. 18 Gardendale, Friday Central High-Phenix City’s Deontae Ware tackles Auburn High’s DV Williams during an AHSAA football game Friday, Oct. 14, 2022, in Phenix City, Alabama. (Julie Bennett | preps@al.com)Julie Bennett | preps@al.com 7. (TIE) Auburn (7-1) Total points: 75 Highest ranking: 6 Last week’s ranking: 1 Last week: Lost to No. 4 Central-Phenix City 38-17 This week: at Prattville, Friday Clay Chalkville’s Aaron Osley (21) carries the ball against Thompson during a game at Warriror Stadium in Alabaster, Ala., Friday, Sept. 23, 2022. (Marvin Gentry | preps@al.com) 6. Clay-Chalkville (7-1) Total points: 78 Highest ranking: 5 Last week’s ranking: 6 Last week: Defeated Oxford 25-20 This week: at Shades Valley, Friday Theodore’s run out banner prior to the game at McGill-Toolen. (Brad McPherson | preps@al.com) 5. Theodore (8-0) Total points: 83 Highest ranking: 1 Last week’s ranking: 5 Last week: Defeated McGill-Toolen 37-10 This week: vs. No. 2 Saraland, Friday Central High-Phenix City’s Romello Green outruns Auburn High’s Will Walker and Auburn High’s Rico Spinks during an AHSAA football game Friday, Oct. 14, 2022, in Phenix City, Alabama. (Julie Bennett | preps@al.com)Julie Bennett | preps@al.com 4. Central-Phenix City (7-2) Total points: 89 Highest ranking: 3 (twice) Last week’s ranking: 7 Last week: Defeated No. 7 Auburn 38-17 This week: Idle Hoover’s Bradley Shaw celebrates the stop of Tuscaloosa County’s Kevin Riley during a game at the Met in Hoover, Ala., Friday, Oct. 7, 2022. (Dennis Victory | preps@al.com) 3. Hoover (8-1) Total points: 91 Highest ranking: 1 Last week’s ranking: 4 Last week: Defeated Chelsea 38-0 This week: at No. 1 Thompson, Friday Saraland quarterback KJ Lacey rolls out to pass during a prep football game, Friday, August 26, 2022, in Saraland, Ala. (Scott Donaldson | al.com)Scott Donaldson/al.com 2. Saraland (8-0) Total points: 92 Highest ranking: 2 (twice) Last week’s ranking: 3 Last week: Idle This week: at No. 5 Theodore, Friday Thompson coach Mark Freeman talks with officials during a game at Thompson High School’s Warrior Stadium in Alabaster, Ala., Thursday, Oct. 6, 2022. (Dennis Victory | preps@al.com) 1. Thompson (7-2) Total points: 94 Highest ranking: 1 (twice) Last week’s ranking: 2 Last week: Defeated Tuscaloosa County 49-7 This week: vs. No. 3 Hoover, Friday Dropped out: Opelika, Center Point Also receiving votes: Center Point (6), Austin (6), Faith Academy (6), Moody (6), Vestavia Hills (6), Mars Hill (5), Piedmont (4), Excel (3), Mary G. Montgomery (3), Priceville (2), Gordo (2), Handley (1), Highland Home (1), Patrician Academy (1). If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation. Read More…
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Power 25 Rankings: Thompson Back On Top With Big Week Ahead