Digital Alabama News

4980 bookmarks
Custom sorting
Bidens National Security Strategy Focuses On China Russia And Democracy At Home
Bidens National Security Strategy Focuses On China Russia And Democracy At Home
Biden’s National Security Strategy Focuses On China, Russia And Democracy At Home https://digitalalabamanews.com/bidens-national-security-strategy-focuses-on-china-russia-and-democracy-at-home/ The document, which every new administration is required to issue, was delayed last winter as it became clear that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was imminent. Send any friend a story As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share. In his strategy document, President Biden returned to a theme he has established since his second month in office, describing a coming struggle as one of autocracies versus democracies. Credit…Erin Schaff/The New York Times Oct. 12, 2022Updated 7:31 p.m. ET President Biden declared on Wednesday that the overwhelming challenge for the United States in the coming years would be “outcompeting China and restraining Russia” while focusing on restoring a damaged democracy at home. In his 48-page national security strategy, which every new administration is required to issue, Mr. Biden made clear that over the long term he was more worried about China’s moves to “layer authoritarian governance with a revisionist foreign policy” than he was about a declining, battered Russia. More than six months after the invasion of Ukraine, the Russian military appears less fearsome than it did when the first drafts of the document circulated in the White House in December. “Russia and the P.R.C. pose different challenges,” Mr. Biden wrote, using the acronym for the People’s Republic of China. “Russia poses an immediate threat to the free and open international system, recklessly flouting the basic laws of the international order today, as its brutal war of aggression against Ukraine has shown.” China “is the only country with both the intent to reshape the international order and, increasingly, the economic, diplomatic, military and technological power to advance that objective,” the president wrote. Mr. Biden’s strategy is notable for its erasure of the distinctions between domestic and foreign policy; it argues that the source of U.S. strength will come from a reaffirmation of the nation’s democratic traditions. But it also comes as China is on the rise and seeking to rewrite the rules of commerce, surveillance and influence over other countries and Russia is seeking to redraw national boundaries. Allies and adversaries alike will examine the strategy for indications of Mr. Biden’s commitment to standing up to both opponents. The president took some unusual positions, especially for a Democrat. He urged a speedier modernization of the military, though critics say his budget does not reflect his ambitions. And he took a dark view of the benefits of globalization, describing at length how it has fueled pandemics and disinformation and contributed to supply chain shortages. And Mr. Biden returned to a theme he has established since his second month in office, describing a coming struggle as one of autocracies versus democracies. He said the United States must invest with allies and private industry as part of a Western effort to reduce dependence on adversaries. The strategy document was delayed last winter, as it became clear that the Russian invasion of Ukraine was imminent and that the U.S. relationship with its European allies was about to undergo a tremendous test. The revised document celebrates a new coherence among NATO countries but also includes warnings to Moscow that were clearly inserted to refect a new era of containment, the word used during the Cold War to restrain the biggest challenge at the time: Soviet expansionism. Image Searching through rubble after a missile hit a residential building in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine. Russia launched a barrage of strikes against civilian targets in Ukraine this week as its military campaign has stalled.Credit…Nicole Tung for The New York Times “The United States will not allow Russia, or any power, to achieve its objectives through using, or threatening to use, nuclear weapons,” the new document says. But the sentence stands alone, with no clarification of the meaning of “not allow” or discussion of the U.S. and NATO response if President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia chooses to use a tactical nuclear weapon to make up for the failures of his conventional force in Ukraine. Mr. Biden declined to go into detail about his options when pressed on CNN on Tuesday in an interview with Jake Tapper. For every administration, the national security strategy is a combination of guidance, a signaling of intent to allies and adversaries, and, often, a self-celebratory ode to American power. President George W. Bush’s strategy was known for its establishment of a “pre-emption” doctrine that contributed to his administration’s justification for the invasion of Iraq. Mr. Obama used his to call for a move to a world without nuclear weapons, but also for an expansion of American soft power to conquer disease and global poverty. President Donald J. Trump declared that the era of counterterrorism was being replaced by a revival of superpower competition against what he called “revisionist” powers, though he usually ignored his document’s declarations about the value of NATO and other alliances. Mr. Biden’s strategy document delves into the workings of American democracy, absent from previous strategies. “As Americans, we must all agree that the people’s verdict, as expressed in elections, must be respected and protected,” the document says. It then discusses moves against “domestic terrorism” and says “America will not tolerate foreign interference in our elections.” How Times reporters cover politics. We rely on our journalists to be independent observers. So while Times staff members may vote, they are not allowed to endorse or campaign for candidates or political causes. This includes participating in marches or rallies in support of a movement or giving money to, or raising money for, any political candidate or election cause. The opening sections of the strategy focus on domestic issues, led by the reinvigoration of key technologies and starting with the ability to produce the most advanced semiconductors. “We have broken down the dividing line between foreign policy and domestic policy to make far-reaching investments here at home in our industrial and innovation base,” Jake Sullivan, the national security adviser, told reporters on Wednesday morning. Mr. Biden recently traveled to Ohio to help break ground on a new Intel facility and to an IBM site in upstate New York, celebrating investments made by the federal government through the newly passed CHIPS Act. But it will be years before those plants — and others built by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company and Samsung in the American Southwest — will be in production. Even then, they will account for a tiny fraction of the most advanced microelectronics that American industry consumes. Mr. Sullivan said the strategy was driven chiefly by a changed landscape, one the document describes bluntly: “The post-Cold War era is definitively over.” “We have entered a decisive decade with respect to two fundamental strategic challenges,” Mr. Sullivan told reporters on Wednesday. “The first is the competition between the major powers to shape the future of the international order,” he said, and the second to deal with transnational challenges such as “climate change, food insecurity, to communicable diseases, to terrorism, to the energy transition, to inflation.” The past few weeks have shown how difficult some of those will be. Mr. Biden was undercut by Saudi Arabia, which he visited over the summer, when the kingdom led a movement in OPEC last week to cut oil production after telling him it would increase it. The OPEC move contributes to inflation, and it also aids Russia’s effort to finance the war in Ukraine. Mr. Biden said on Tuesday that he would reconsider his relationship with the Saudis and make them pay a price. Image Mr. Biden made clear that over the long term he was more worried about China’s moves to “layer authoritarian governance with a revisionist foreign policy.”Credit…Tingshu Wang/Reuters China’s cooperation on climate issues has slowed to a near halt; “strategic stability” talks with Russia on limiting nuclear arsenals have ended. “Russia now poses an immediate and persistent threat to international peace and stability,” the document says, a sharp departure from decades of strategies that discussed working to integrate Russia and the West. “This is not about a struggle between the West and Russia. It is about fundamental principles of the U.N. Charter, which Russia is a party to, particularly respect for sovereignty, territorial integrity and the prohibition against acquiring territory through war.” Mr. Putin clearly sees it differently: He claims Ukraine was always part of Russia, back to the era of the czars, and has described this moment as driven by the West’s effort to contain and starve Russian power. But what leaps from the pages of Mr. Biden’s strategy, which was drafted by the National Security Council with input from around the administration, is a relentless focus on China. This was also the theme of a speech this week by Jeremy Fleming, the chief of Britain’s cyber and signals intelligence agency. Much of the military planning described in the administration’s document is meant to counter China in space, cyberspace and at sea. Each of those arenas require very different arms, software and strategies than the push to contain Russia on the ground in Europe. The document describes a more aggressive U.S. effort to enhance cybersecurity and urges work with allies and the private sector to “withstand attempts to degrade our shared technology advances” by limiting Chinese and other investment in the United States and controlling exports of key technologies to China. Image Mr. Biden’s strategy document rebukes President Vladimir ...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Bidens National Security Strategy Focuses On China Russia And Democracy At Home
Trump Predicts Romney Won
Trump Predicts Romney Won
Trump Predicts Romney Won https://digitalalabamanews.com/trump-predicts-romney-won/ October 12, 2022 07:27 PM Former President Donald Trump blasted Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT) on Wednesday, even going so far as to predict he won’t win reelection. Trump took to Truth Social to renew his endorsement of Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) and call out Romney for not doing the same. ROMNEY’S REVENGE: MITT HELPED CONVINCE BIDEN TO RUN FOR PRESIDENT, NEW BOOK REVEALS “Mitt Romney is the junior senator from the Great State of Utah, which I won twice in a landslide, once by beating the candidate Evan ‘McMuffin’ McMullin who is currently running against Senator Lee,” Trump wrote. “McMuffin does not represent the values of Utah, but neither, as you will see in two years, does Mitt Romney who refuses to endorse his fellow Republican Senator, Mike Lee.” FILE – In this Nov. 19, 2016, file photo, President-elect Donald Trump calls out to the media as Mitt Romney leaves the Trump National Golf Club Bedminster in Bedminster, N.J. A nationwide survey of midterm voters found that about two-thirds of Mormon voters nationwide favored Republicans in the midterm elections, but approval for President Donald Trump lags behind. And as new U.S. Sen. Mitt Romney prepares to join the new Congress in January, most voters in the predominantly Mormon state of Utah 64 percent would like to see the senator confront the president, AP VoteCast found. (Carolyn Kaster/AP) The social media post followed Lee’s appearance on Fox News host Tucker Carlson’s show Tuesday night. Lee confirmed that every one of the other 48 Republican senators have endorsed him, excepting Romney. Trump called the lack of endorsement “unprecedented” because it “rarely has happened in political History.” CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER McMullin is running against Lee this November as an independent candidate. Utah’s Democratic Party has opted not to nominate a candidate of its own, endorsing McMullin instead. Romney has not announced his candidacy for 2024. The senator recently hosted Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) during his trip to Utah. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Trump Predicts Romney Won
Could Outrage Over Tommy Tubervilles Comment Boost Support For Reparations?
Could Outrage Over Tommy Tubervilles Comment Boost Support For Reparations?
Could Outrage Over Tommy Tuberville’s Comment Boost Support For Reparations? https://digitalalabamanews.com/could-outrage-over-tommy-tubervilles-comment-boost-support-for-reparations/ The outcry over Sen. Tommy Tuberville’s assertion that Democrats want “reparation” because they support payments to criminals has drawn new attention to the issue of reparations, a term that refers to some form of compensation for Black Americans for the lingering economic consequences of slavery and the discriminatory policies that followed it. Ron Daniels, convener of the National African American Reparations Commission, told The Hill in the wake of Tuberville’s comment: “There is no better moment than a moment like this, when essentially Black people have been accused of being criminals and using criminality as a basis for reparations.” Tuberville mentioned “reparation” during his speech at a rally with former President Donald Trump in Nevada on Saturday night, a rally to support Republican candidates in that state. The senator was describing what he called the “pro-crime” views of Democrats. “They want crime because they want to take over what you got,” Tuberville said. “They want to control what you have. They want reparation because they think the people that do the crime are owed that.” Democrats in Alabama and elsewhere have denounced Tuberville’s statement as racist and nonsensical. Tuberville has not responded to questions about the condemnation of his remarks. Related: Lincoln Project cuts ad of Tuberville’s ‘reparation’ comment: ‘The GOP is flaunting their racism’ Tuberville’s ‘racist’ remark ‘embraced’ and ‘celebrated’ by MAGA Republicans, White House says The idea of reparations has been proposed for decades. Proponents note that although slavery was no longer officially sanctioned by the government after 1865, Black Americans remained locked out of much of the nation’s economy and the opportunities to build and pass on sustaining household wealth that white citizens take for granted, as well as denied equality in education and the criminal justice system. A bill to create a commission to study the issues and propose reparations was first introduced more than 30 years ago by the late Rep. John Conyers Jr. of Michigan. The legislation has never come close to passing. The main sponsor now is Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas. In April 2021, the House Judiciary Committee approved Lee’s bill on an 25-17 vote. That was the first time it ever won committee approval. It has not come up for a vote before the House. The only Black member of Alabama’s congressional delegation, Rep. Terri Sewell, D-Birmingham, is a co-sponsor of the bill, known as H.R. 40. Asked if the outcry over Tuberville’s statement could help generate momentum to bring H.R. 40 to the floor for a vote in the Democrat-controlled House, Christopher Kosteva, Sewell’s press secretary, said, “As for the timing of a vote on the House Floor, Rep. Sewell would leave that to House leadership to decide.” As for Tuberville’s claim that Democrats are “pro-crime,” Kosteva listed four bills House Democrats have passed this year that he said support community safety, crime reduction, and police funding. The co-author of a report by The Brookings Institution, “Why we need reparations for Black Americans,” said he hopes the firestorm over Tuberville’s comment will prompt people to learn more about the issue. Rashawn Ray is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and is executive director of the Lab for Applied Social Science Research at the University of Maryland. “I think Senator Tuberville’s comments are racist and inflammatory,” Ray said. “He made millions of dollars off the efforts of Black men on the football field (Tuberville was head coach at Auburn and three other universities) and then has the nerve to conflate reparations with crime. For Tuberville, criminal is synonymous with Black. Black people do not want crime in our neighborhoods. What Black people do want is racial justice.” The Brookings Institution report says the median net wealth for white families, $171,000, was 10 times that of Black families in America, according to the 2016 Survey of Consumer Finances. “Tuberville’s comments have put a bull’s eye on the need for reparations as well as truth and reconciliation,” Ray said. “Black people are demanding reparations because there is a debt owed. Restitution is paramount. People should definitely read about HR 40 as well as better understand background of reparations in the U.S. We aimed to provide some clarity in our article on reparations.” Rep. Lee, The sponsor of the bill to create a commission on reparations, has called on President Biden to follow through on what she said was a commitment to issue an executive order creating such a commission. Under Lee’s bill, a 13-member commission would issue a report to Congress on its findings and recommendations within a year after its first meeting. 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·
Could Outrage Over Tommy Tubervilles Comment Boost Support For Reparations?
The Best Laptop Deals From Amazons Fall Prime Day Event
The Best Laptop Deals From Amazons Fall Prime Day Event
The Best Laptop Deals From Amazon’s Fall Prime Day Event https://digitalalabamanews.com/the-best-laptop-deals-from-amazons-fall-prime-day-event/ Amazon is in its second and final day of its Prime Early Access Sale, and we’re here to help you make sense of which deals to buy and which deals to skip. While Black Friday and Cyber Monday are still to come, they can sometimes be a hectic time to shop. If products you have your eye on show up in the Prime Day Early Access Sale, you can get them earlier and skip the line. We’ve combed through all the laptops that are discounted today, and we’ve picked out the ones that are worth your attention. The items below can make great purchases for yourself, a friend, or a family member this holiday season. The best Prime Day Apple laptop deals Apple’s 2020 MacBook Air with the M1 processor, 8GB of RAM, and a 256GB SSD is on sale for $799 ($200 off). The MacBook Air is almost two years old, but it’s still a very fast laptop with a sturdy chassis that should last you quite a few years. This model has a backlit keyboard and a FaceTime HD camera. Read our review. $799 The MacBook Air is Apple’s entry-level laptop, which comes outfitted with the company’s new M1 chip in one of three different colors (silver, space gray, and gold). The 12.9-inch iPad Pro has a gorgeous Mini LED screen, and the space gray, cellular, 512GB model is discounted to just $1,398.99 ($200 off). Read our review. The 10.2-inch iPad with Wi-Fi, 64GB of storage, and a space gray finish is on sale for $268.99 ($60 off). The tablet has a speedy A13 Bionic chip and a 12MP front camera that supports Apple’s Center Stage feature. $269.99 Apple’s latest entry-level iPad represents a slight update, with a new A13 Bionic chip and a 12MP front camera that supports Apple’s Center Stage feature. Apple’s 2022 iPad Air with an M1 processor, 64GB of storage, and Wi-Fi is on sale at Amazon and Best Buy for around $519 ($80 off). This tablet features an excellent 10.9-inch screen, great stereo audio, and all-day battery life. Read our review. $518.99 The latest iPad Air retains the iPad Pro-esque redesign of the 2020 model but does away with the A14 Bionic processor in favor of Apple’s lightning-fast M1 chip. It also comes in one of five colors and boasts a 12MP front-facing camera with support for Apple’s Center Stage feature. Apple’s 2022 MacBook Air with the M2 processor with 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage is one of our best laptops of 2022 with its thin and light design, bright 500-nit screen, and sharp 1080p webcam. It’s selling for $1,049 ($150 off). (This is an anti-Prime Day deal from Best Buy.) Read our review. Apple’s 2021 iPad Mini with Wi-Fi is $549.99 ($100 off). It has a nice compact design and top-of-the-line A15 Bionic processor. (This is an anti-Prime Day deal from Target.) Read our review. Verge Deals on Twitter / Join over 50,000 followers and keep up with the best daily tech deals with @vergedeals Follow us! The best Prime Day Lenovo laptop deals The IdeaPad Gaming 3 is $649.99 ($250 off) and comes with a new AMD Ryzen 5 6600H processor, 8GB of DDR5 RAM, 256GB of storage space, and an Nvidia RTX 3050 graphics chip. This affordable device should be able to run most modern games at a playable frame rate, and it has a decent port selection and a full-size backlit keyboard. Read our review. The Legion 5i is $1,099.99 ($350 off). It has a phenomenal keyboard and a gorgeous 16:10 display. Read our review. The best Prime Day Dell laptop deals The Dell G15 is on sale for $1,189.99 ($210 off) and comes with an Intel Core i7-12700H, 16GB of RAM, and 512GB of storage. Read our review. $1189.99 Dell’s 15-inch G15 is a solid gaming laptop that features a more modest design aesthetic than Dell’s Alienware brand but still has performance where it counts. A 12th Gen Intel CPU and an RTX 3060 make for an excellent combo on the FHD 120Hz panel on this versatile laptop. The Dell Inspiron 14 5420 is $887.99 ($220 off). It doesn’t have a touchscreen, but it does have a high 2.2K resolution. This discounted model has an Intel Core i7-1255U, 16GB of RAM, and an Nvidia GeForce MX570 for light graphic use cases. The Dell Inspiron 14 Plus 7420 is $1,039 ($260 off) and is a more business-oriented version of the regular Inspiron 14 with a more powerful processor inside. The best Prime Day Microsoft laptop deals The best Prime Day HP laptop deals The HP Chromebook 14 is on sale for $222.85 ($67 off). This laptop is best for very lightweight school tasks or browsing, containing an Intel Celeron processor and 4GB of RAM. Read our review. HP’s Pavilion x360 14 is on sale today for $499.99 ($280 off) with an 11th Gen Intel i5-1135G7 processor, 8GB of RAM, and a 256GB SSD. The HP Pavilion 17 is on sale for $394 ($86 off) with 4GB of RAM, 256GB of storage, and UHD graphics. This 17-inch laptop has a 1600 x 900 display with extra room for your multitasking. Verge Deals / Sign up for Verge Deals to get deals on products we’ve tested sent to your inbox daily. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
The Best Laptop Deals From Amazons Fall Prime Day Event
Missoula Man Hits Two Employees While Attempting To Steal Beer
Missoula Man Hits Two Employees While Attempting To Steal Beer
Missoula Man Hits Two Employees While Attempting To Steal Beer https://digitalalabamanews.com/missoula-man-hits-two-employees-while-attempting-to-steal-beer/ Missoula, MT (KGVO-AM News) – On October 8, 2022, at approximately 9:37 p.m., officers with the Missoula Police Department responded to a casino on West Harrier after receiving a report of a robbery. The suspect male reportedly punched two females while attempting to steal beer and fled the scene in a silver vehicle. Police Public Information Officer Lydia Arnold picks up the story.  “Ryan Charlo is being held on charges of robbery,” Arnold said. “Officers responded to the casino for an in-progress robbery where a male, Charlo, entered the store and attempted to steal items from the establishment. When confronted, Charlo physically assaulted the person who confronted him.”  When the officer arrived, he located a large crowd of people standing in front of the casino. He identified the victims as two employees of the casino. They reported that they were outside taking a break when Charlo arrived at the casino. Charlo entered, and one employee went inside to assist him while the other remained outside.   Charlo went to a cooler and grabbed two packs of beer. Instead of paying for the beer, Charlo went to the front door. The employee inside attempted to stop him, but Charlo pulled free of her grasp and fled outside. The employee outside saw Charlo leaving and attempted to stop him, but Charlo struck her on the arm. The other employee then grabbed Charlo a second time, and Charlo punched her in the face.  Several people outside the Casino observed the altercation. A male attempted to intervene by tackling Charlo after witnessing him punch the employee in the face. Charlo struggled against the male and threatened to kill him. The male disengaged Charlo. Charlo ran to his vehicle and fled the scene.  “Charlo was seen leaving the area in a vehicle,” Arnold said. “The caller gave a detailed description of the vehicle and provided the full license plate associated with the vehicle. Later, the vehicle Charlo was in was located. Further investigation was done, including reviewing video surveillance and speaking with the victims and witnesses. Charlo was taken into custody and this case is still under investigation with the Missoula Police Department Detective Division.”  The surveillance video provided a clear enough image of the suspect’s face that multiple officers identified him as Ryan Charlo. Ryan has had frequent law enforcement contacts involving his silver vehicle.   Charlo was transported to the Missoula County Detention Center. On the way, he became upset and began making comments about “being jumped.” Without prompting from the officer, he asked questions about whether he had hit someone. He also made repeated statements that there was no video surveillance outside to prove he did anything.  Charlo is currently being charged with one count of felony attempted robbery. On October 11, 2022, Charlo made his initial appearance in Missoula Justice Court where his bail was set at $75,000.  The information in this article was obtained from sources that are publicly viewable. 20 Impressive Features at the New and Improved Missoula Airport Missoula’s new airport will include large windows for loved ones to watch planes depart and arrive, and the only escalator on this side of Montana! Plus, a keggerator system for the Coldsmoke Tavern. 14 Destinations to Visit With Direct Flights From Missoula Here’s a list of places to visit (and things to do while you’re there) with nonstop flights out of the Missoula Montana Airport. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Missoula Man Hits Two Employees While Attempting To Steal Beer
Collins Christian Chris Lynn (Trenton)
Collins Christian Chris Lynn (Trenton)
Collins, Christian “Chris” Lynn (Trenton) https://digitalalabamanews.com/collins-christian-chris-lynn-trenton/ Wednesday, October 12, 2022 On Thursday, October 6, Christian (Chris) Lynn Collins, a loving husband and father of three children and step-father of two children, passed away at the age of 53. Chris was born Oct. 16, 1968 in Boaz, Al. to Bobby Collins and Charlene Adams. Chris studied at Auburn University. He had a very long and successful career in the telecommunications industry that led to owning his own business. He was married to Georja Collins, with whom he built a beautiful life. He was a very proud and devoted father to Cole, Griffin and Olivia Collins and step-children Jade and Haven Howard. Chris enjoyed baseball at every level and college football. He was very engaged in helping his children and others have every opportunity to develop their skills in sports. If you didn’t find him on a ball field, you could check the beach. He enjoyed spending vacations with his family on the sandy beaches of the gulf. Chris lived with passion and joy. He knew the Lord’s love and grace and generously shared it with others. Chris is survived by his wife, Georja; three children, Cole, Griffin and Olivia; two step-children, Jade and Haven; mother, Charlene; step-mother, Margo; four siblings, Betty, April, Bobby and Tina; and many extended family members. He was preceded in death by his father, Bobby. Expressions of sympathy may be shared at ryanfuneralhome.net. Memorial services will be held Friday, Oct. 14 at Calvary Chapel Chattanooga at 3415 Broad St. in Chattanooga at 6 p.m., with receiving of friends and family beginning at 3 p.m. In lieu of flowers, please make donations to Calvary Chapel Chattanooga. Arrangements are by Ryan Funeral Home & Crematory, Trenton. October 12, 2022 Dillard, Zachary Scott (Cleveland) October 12, 2022 Orgovan, Vincent R. (Cleveland) October 12, 2022 Collins, Christian “Chris” Lynn (Trenton) Zachary Scott Dillard, 58, of Cleveland, passed away on October 11, 2022. He was born on May 12, 1964. He attended Copper Basin High School and Cleveland State Community College. He is preceded … (click for more) Vincent R. Orgovan, 95, a resident of Cleveland, went to be with the Lord on Tuesday morning, October 11, 2022, at Life Care Center of Cleveland. He was born in Uniontown, Pa. on May 10, 1927, … (click for more) On Thursday, October 6, Christian (Chris) Lynn Collins, a loving husband and father of three children and step-father of two children, passed away at the age of 53. Chris was born Oct. 16, 1968 … (click for more) Area Obituaries Dillard, Zachary Scott (Cleveland) Zachary Scott Dillard, 58, of Cleveland, passed away on October 11, 2022. He was born on May 12, 1964. He attended Copper Basin High School and Cleveland State Community College. He is preceded in death by his son, Nathan “Big Foot” Dillard. He is survived by his parents, Cal and Jean Dillard; brother, Rocky Dillard (Teresa); sister, Sherri Dillard Key (Jeff); very special … (click for more) Orgovan, Vincent R. (Cleveland) Vincent R. Orgovan, 95, a resident of Cleveland, went to be with the Lord on Tuesday morning, October 11, 2022, at Life Care Center of Cleveland. He was born in Uniontown, Pa. on May 10, 1927, a son of the late Charles John Orgovan & Julia Madeline (Kozak) Orgovan. Vincent served in the Navy at the end of WWII for 14 months achieving the rank of Yeoman 3rd class. He was a career … (click for more) Collins, Christian “Chris” Lynn (Trenton) Dotson, Floyd Russel (Cleveland) Green, Hunter Edward (Cleveland) Williams, Oscar (Lafayette) All Area Obituaries Articles Obituaries Kenneth Lee Wilkerson Kenneth Lee Wilkerson, 69, of Lakesite, Tennessee, passed away peacefully in his home on October 11, 2022, surrounded by his loved ones. Kenny was born on April 23, 1953 in Chattanooga, Tn. and graduated from Brainerd High School in 1971. He began his career serving as a Rescue Crew Chief in the United States Air Force 1971-1975. After returning to Chattanooga, he served as … (click for more) Holly Diane Korus Holly Diane Korus, 74, of Evensville, Tennessee, formerly of Gurnee, Illinois, passed away on Tuesday, October 12, 2022, in a local hospital. She was born March 16, 1948, in Waukegan, Il., to the late Robert and Loretta Siver. Her stepfather, Richard (Dick) Siver preceded her in death. Ms. Korus was a retired registered nurse. She had worked many years at Lake Forest … (click for more) Gary Glenn Parker, Sr. Opal J. Quarles Rufus Armour, Jr. Tony D. Julian All Obituaries Articles Breaking News 2 Students Carjacked At Gunpoint On UTC’s Campus On Tuesday Evening A carjacking incident was reported to UTC Police at 8:45 p.m. on Tuesday. According to a university spokesperson, the incident occurred in campus parking lot 51 near the intersection of Palmetto Street and McCallie Avenue. Two suspects are described as black males, possibly juveniles, wearing all black clothing including black hoodies and masks on their faces. … (click for more) Weston Wamp Says State’s Biggest TIF Project Set For Chattanooga County Mayor Weston Wamp said he and other local officials are in talks on what will be the state’s largest Tax Increment Financing (TIF) plan. He said the project may be in public discussion in some weeks. The county mayor said the 470-acre TIF for the Wheland/U.S. Pipe site, where a Southside Stadium is planned, is currently the state’s largest TIF. He said the one he was referring … (click for more) Trustee Hullander Says STVRs Bringing Over $100,000 To County Monthly In Hotel/Motel Tax Undertaker Long Lived Half A Century On The East Terrace AG Skrmetti Leads 13 State Coalition Demanding Department Of Justice Respect Free Speech Rights Chattanooga Woman Gets 8 Years In Fentanyl Overdose Death All Breaking News Articles Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Collins Christian Chris Lynn (Trenton)
Jan. 6 Panels Likely Final Hearing To Focus On Trumps state Of Mind
Jan. 6 Panels Likely Final Hearing To Focus On Trumps state Of Mind
Jan. 6 Panel’s Likely Final Hearing To Focus On Trump’s ‘state Of Mind’ https://digitalalabamanews.com/jan-6-panels-likely-final-hearing-to-focus-on-trumps-state-of-mind/ The House committee investigating last year’s attack on the Capitol will assemble Thursday for what could be its final public hearing ahead of the midterms, promising to delve into former President Trump’s state of mind in a presentation designed to tie up a host of loose ends before the panel dissolves at the end of the year. Through eight hearings in June and July, the committee had aired damning evidence revealing the extent to which Trump and members of his inner circle had sought to leverage the powers of the presidency to keep him in office despite his election defeat — a campaign that crescendoed in the violent rampage at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. But 16 months into the probe, investigators face the daunting task of crunching evidence gleaned from tens-of-thousands of documents and more than 1,000 witness interviews, packaging it into a concise closing argument and delivering it in the form of a compelling narrative capable of convincing voters that Trump and his supporters pose an ongoing threat to America’s democratic institutions. For more than two hours on Thursday, they will begin that process.  “We’re going to bring a particular focus on the former president’s state of mind and his involvement in these events as they unfolded,” a committee aide told reporters Wednesday.  “So what you’re going to see is a synthesis of some evidence we’ve already presented with that new never before seen information to illustrate Donald Trump’s centrality from the time prior to the election,” the aide said. Such information could be key for Trump’s legal culpability, as many potential charges relating to the insurrection rely on demonstrating intent. As a separate matter, the committee still has to decide whether it will make criminal referrals based on its findings to the Justice Department, which is conducting its own wide-ranging investigation.  “We have not reached a conclusion on that at this point,” Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.), a member of the committee, told CNN on Friday.  In a departure from prior hearings where one or two members were primarily responsible for walking through evidence and witness questions, in Thursday’s hearing, each participant on the nine-member panel will have a role. The panel is also not planning to have any live witness testimony for the hearing. “In June and July, we zeroed in for the most part on a particular topic as we laid out a multi-step plan to overturn the 2020 presidential election and block transfer of power,” the aide said. “Tomorrow what we’re going to be doing is taking a step back.”  The hearing comes after the panel rescheduled what was originally slated to be a late September event due to Hurricane Ian, delaying by two weeks their presentation and pushing it closer to the midterm elections.  The panel has pledged to offer up details on the evidence they collected throughout the summer, with Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) saying the committee was struggling with how to present an “avalanche” of new information. Among the details the committee is expected to share Thursday are new information gleaned from documents turned over by the Secret Service as well as clips from a documentary crew that followed Trump confidant Roger Stone. The Secret Service turned over more than a million digital communications to the committee, far exceeding the information the panel requested. Emails obtained by The Washington Post that were given to the committee by the Secret Service show that the agency was concerned about the armed supporters who were resistant to going through security to enter the Ellipse for Trump’s speech, a detail first revealed during the committee’s hearing with witness Cassidy Hutchinson, a former White House aide. The emails also reportedly show the extent the White House was warned of the deteriorating situation at the Capitol, including resistance to Trump’s desired plan to make the journey to Capitol Hill alongside his supporters. Other emails discuss Trump’s anger at being blocked from making the trip, though it is not clear whether the panel will be able to corroborate Hutchinson’s account – recounted to her in the presence of Trump’s lead security officer that day – that he lunged at his security detail on a drive from the Ellipse to the White House. Additional evidence collected over the summer includes footage obtained following an international journey by investigative staff, who traveled to Denmark in August to meet with a documentary film crew that spent three years following Stone. The crew was with Stone in Washington on Jan. 5 and Jan. 6, capturing some of his phone conversations as he stayed at the Willard Hotel, which the Trump team used as its “war room” ahead of Congress’s vote to certify the election results. A March report from The Washington Post details how Stone was arranging pardons, and expressed resentment toward “lily-livered, weak-kneed” lawyers in the special counsel’s office for blocking some of them, including preemptive pardons. Additional footage from the documentary obtained by CNN shows Stone condoning violence and stressing the need to claim victory in the election.  “F— the voting, let’s get right to the violence,” he says in another clip shot the day before the election. Days earlier, Stone laid out his strategy. “I really do suspect it’ll still be up in the air. When that happens, the key thing to do is to claim victory,” he said. “Possession is nine tenths of the law. ‘No, we won.’” That strategy was not limited to the fringes of the GOP, but adopted by Republicans up and down the ranks, including House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) who went on Fox News two days after the election to claim that “Trump won this election.” According to CNN, the committee secured an agreement with the filmmakers, Christoffer Guldbrandsen and Frederik Marbell, to show some eight minutes of footage at the hearing. For his part Stone has disputed “the accuracy and the authenticity of these videos and believe they have been manipulated and selectively edited.” He also said the clips “do not prove I had anything to do with the events of Jan. 6.”  “That being said,” he added, “it clearly shows I advocated for lawful congressional and judicial options.” The Stone footage could bring the panel one step closer to addressing loose ends. The Trump ally used Oath Keepers as security guards, suggesting at least a tangential connection between the former president and the far-right militia group. “Different members have been focused on different loose ends that might need to be wrapped up and out so, again, speaking just for myself, I would hope that the hearing would allow us to make some overall synthetic judgments about what took place and why and the culpability of different key actors,” Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) told reporters in September. “And I hope that we would be able to speak to the question of the ongoing threats that are still out there… I think that that is something that we need to address before it’s all over.” The panel is not, however, expected to release any information from its sit-down interview with Ginni Thomas, wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, Lofgren said this week. Expectations are high for the panel that went on hiatus during August recess after generating significant momentum with their slate of eight hearings earlier this year. “We need to meet or exceed hearings that we’ve had in the past. … It won’t be a repeat of any earlier hearings, and we’re trying to be as strategic as we can in not repeating ourselves,” Chair Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) told reporters in September. “Whatever we do will be new information. Some of it we continue to collect on almost a daily basis,” he said. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Jan. 6 Panels Likely Final Hearing To Focus On Trumps state Of Mind
Alex Jones Must Pay Sandy Hook Families Nearly $1 Billion For Hoax Claims Jury Says
Alex Jones Must Pay Sandy Hook Families Nearly $1 Billion For Hoax Claims Jury Says
Alex Jones Must Pay Sandy Hook Families Nearly $1 Billion For Hoax Claims, Jury Says https://digitalalabamanews.com/alex-jones-must-pay-sandy-hook-families-nearly-1-billion-for-hoax-claims-jury-says/ Oct 12 (Reuters) – Right-wing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones must pay at least $965 million in damages to numerous families of victims of the 2012 Sandy Hook mass shooting for falsely claiming they were actors who faked the tragedy, a Connecticut jury said on Wednesday. The verdict, which came after three weeks of testimony in a state court in Waterbury, Connecticut, far outstripped the $49 million Jones was ordered to pay in August by a Texas jury in a similar case brought by two other Sandy Hook parents. The Connecticut verdict applies to both Jones and his company, Free Speech Systems LLC, the owner of Jones’ Infowars website. FSS filed for bankruptcy in July. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com The plaintiffs in the Connecticut case included more than a dozen relatives of 20 children and six staff members who were gunned down at Sandy Hook Elementary School in December 2012. Jones claimed for years that the massacre was staged as part of a government plot to take away Americans’ guns. Jurors said the plaintiffs should also be awarded attorney’s fees, which are set to be determined in November. During a live broadcast as the verdict was read, Jones vowed to appeal and said his company’s ongoing bankruptcy will protect Infowars in the meantime. “We’re fighting Goliath,” he said. Jones’ lawyer did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Christopher Mattei, a lawyer for the families, said outside the courthouse that the verdict was “against Alex Jones, his lies and their poisonous spread, and a verdict for truth and for our common humanity.” Outside the courthouse, Robbie Parker, one of the plaintiffs in the case, thanked the jury for its verdict. “Everybody who took the stand told the truth,” Parker said. “Except for one. The one who proclaims that that’s what he does. But while the truth was being said in the courtroom, he was standing right here, lying.” Jones was found liable in a default judgment last year after he failed to comply with court orders. During closing arguments last week, Mattei said Jones cashed in for years on lies about the shooting, which drove traffic to his Infowars website and boosted sales of its various products. Infowars’ finances are not public, but according to trial testimony the site brought in revenue of $165 million between 2016 and 2018. An economist in the Texas case estimated that Jones is personally worth between $135 million and $270 million. Infowars founder Alex Jones speaks to the media after appearing at his Sandy Hook defamation trial at Connecticut Superior Court in Waterbury, Connecticut, U.S., October 4, 2022. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo The families suffered a decade-long campaign of harassment and death threats by Jones’ followers, Mattei said. “Every single one of these families (was) drowning in grief, and Alex Jones put his foot right on top of them,” Mattei told jurors. ANGUISHED TESTIMONY Jones’ lawyer countered during closing arguments that the plaintiffs had shown scant evidence of quantifiable losses. The attorney, Norman Pattis, urged jurors to ignore the political undercurrents in the case. “This is not a case about politics,” Pattis said. “It’s about how much to compensate the plaintiffs.” Douglas E. Mirell, a lawyer and defamation expert who was not involved in the case, said the sizable verdict sent a clear message of “revulsion” from the jury. “His refusal to own up to the mendacity and lies that he promulgated time and time again over many years has now caught up with him,” Mirell said of Jones. The trial was marked by weeks of anguished testimony from the families, who filled the gallery each day and took turns recounting how Jones’ lies about Sandy Hook compounded their grief. An FBI agent who responded to the shooting was also a plaintiff in the case. Jones, who has since acknowledged that the shooting occurred, also testified and briefly threw the trial into chaos as he railed against his “liberal” critics and refused to apologize to the families. In August, another jury found that Jones and his company must pay $49.3 million to Sandy Hook parents in a similar case in Austin, Texas, where the headquarters of Jones’ Infowars conspiracy theory website is located. Jones’ lawyers have said they hope to void most of the payout in the Texas case before it is approved by a judge, calling it excessive under state law. Connecticut does not place caps on damages, though Jones could appeal the verdict on other legal grounds. Mattei said the families would go to any court necessary to enforce the verdict “for as long as it takes, because that’s what justice requires.” Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Jack Queen in New York, Tom Hals in Wilmington, Del., and Jacqueline Thomsen in Washington Editing by Noeleen Walder, Mark Porter and Matthew Lewis Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Jacqueline Thomsen Thomson Reuters Jacqueline Thomsen, based in Washington, D.C., covers legal news related to policy, the courts and the legal profession. Follow her on Twitter at @jacq_thomsen and email her at jacqueline.thomsen@thomsonreuters.com. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Alex Jones Must Pay Sandy Hook Families Nearly $1 Billion For Hoax Claims Jury Says
Laxalts Relatives Endorse His Opponent; Biden Delivers Election-Year Gift For Bennet
Laxalts Relatives Endorse His Opponent; Biden Delivers Election-Year Gift For Bennet
Laxalt’s Relatives Endorse His Opponent; Biden Delivers Election-Year Gift For Bennet https://digitalalabamanews.com/laxalts-relatives-endorse-his-opponent-biden-delivers-election-year-gift-for-bennet/ MERION STATION, Pa. — Four years after the massacre at a Pittsburgh synagogue, believed to be the deadliest antisemitic attack in American history, Doug Mastriano, the Republican nominee for governor of Pennsylvania, has rattled a diverse swath of the state’s Jewish community, alarming liberal Jews with his remarks and far-right associations, and giving pause to more conservative ones. Some of those voters have recoiled from Mr. Mastriano’s opposition to abortion rights under any circumstance, or from his strident election denialism. But the race between Mr. Mastriano, a state senator, and his Democratic opponent, Attorney General Josh Shapiro — a Jewish day school alum who features challah in his advertising and routinely borrows from Pirkei Avot, a collection of Jewish ethics — has also centered to an extraordinary degree on Mr. Shapiro’s religion. Mr. Mastriano, who promotes Christian power and disdains the separation of church and state, has repeatedly lashed Mr. Shapiro for attending and sending his children to what Mr. Mastriano calls a “privileged, exclusive, elite” school, suggesting to one audience that it evinced Mr. Shapiro’s “disdain for people like us.” It is a Jewish day school, where students are given both secular and religious instruction. But Mr. Mastriano’s language in portraying it as an elitist reserve seemed to be a dog whistle. “Apparently now it’s some kind of racist thing if I talk about the school,” Mr. Mastriano said at a recent event as he cast himself as a champion of school choice for all. “It’s a very expensive, elite school.” The focus on Mr. Shapiro’s religion has freighted one of the nation’s most consequential elections with an unusually raw and personal dimension. “You have a candidate who is Jewish, an observant Jewish candidate, who puts his observance and his faith in his campaign ads,” said Jonathan Greenblatt, chief executive of the Anti-Defamation League. “And then you have someone who associates with unapologetic, unabashed antisemites running against him.” In a closely divided state where races are often won on the margins, Mr. Mastriano is now losing ground with a small but significant part of the Trump coalition, squandering opportunities with more conservative and religiously observant Jews who embraced the former president and his party because of his often-hawkish stance concerning Israel, but who now express grave reservations about Mr. Mastriano. This summer, Mr. Mastriano’s campaign came under scrutiny for paying $5,000 to the far-right social media platform Gab. The man accused of perpetrating the Pittsburgh shooting had posted antisemitic screeds on Gab, and Mr. Mastriano’s payment drew bipartisan condemnation. The platform’s founder, Andrew Torba, defended Mr. Mastriano and declared that “we’re not bending the knee to the 2 percent anymore,” an apparent reference to American Jewry. Only after significant pressure did Mr. Mastriano release a statement saying that he rejected “antisemitism in any form,” appearing to leave the site and stressing that Mr. Torba did not speak for him. But a late September campaign finance report showed that Mr. Mastriano had accepted a $500 donation from Mr. Torba in July. His campaign did not respond when asked whether he planned to return the money, and he and his aides ignored a reporter’s shouted questions about the donation during an event on a recent Friday. Mr. Mastriano has also spread the lie that George Soros, a Holocaust survivor and liberal billionaire often vilified on the right, was a Nazi collaborator. And Mr. Mastriano has baselessly accused Mr. Shapiro of holding a “real grudge” against the Roman Catholic Church. That may have been part of a misleading reference to debates over enforcement of contraception coverage. But Mr. Shapiro’s office also led a bombshell investigation into the Catholic Church’s cover-up of sexual abuse of children. Mr. Mastriano’s campaign did not respond when asked what he was referring to. In the final weeks of the midterm elections, candidates across the country are clashing bitterly over the threat posed by extremism. But no major contest this year has been shaped more prominently, persistently or explicitly by concerns over antisemitism than the Pennsylvania governor’s race. Taken together, Mr. Mastriano has left even conservative swaths of Pennsylvania’s otherwise liberal-leaning Jewish community feeling deeply uncomfortable. “The Orthodox community would generally swing more toward Republican,” said Charlie Saul, an Orthodox Jewish lawyer from the Pittsburgh area. A registered Democrat, Mr. Saul said he voted twice for former President Donald J. Trump and plans to back Mehmet Oz, the Republican Senate nominee, as well as Mr. Shapiro. “But in this situation,” he added, “because of the association of Mastriano with antisemites, I think that they’ll swing Democrat.” Matt Brooks, the executive director of the Republican Jewish Coalition, suggested that because of Mr. Shapiro’s “relationship with the Jewish community and the fact that Mastriano’s not doing any outreach to the Jewish community, and has these issues hanging over his head,” Mr. Shapiro stood to overperform with center-right Jewish voters. The coalition is supporting Dr. Oz but has criticized Mr. Mastriano over his Gab associations. Recent polls show Mr. Mastriano trailing Mr. Shapiro by double digits, though Pennsylvania polling has been substantially wrong before and the political environment is challenging for Democrats. His campaign did not respond to three requests for comment or provide the names of any Jewish surrogates. Representatives for the Republican National Committee did not respond to questions, and several other Republican leaders declined interviews. Former Senator Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, who has campaigned for Mr. Mastriano, defended the candidate, calling him a “strong Christian Zionist” and saying he did not see any “antisemitic concerns at all.” “I just don’t think, necessarily, being a strong Christian necessarily makes you someone who’s intolerant of other faiths,” he said. But he acknowledged he did not know Mr. Mastriano well. As explosive as antisemitism can be, and even as antisemitic incidents are on the rise, it is seldom openly displayed by candidates for high office. But responding to someone who uses tropes or dog whistles but stops short of baldfaced hate speech can be challenging, and there is the risk of getting derailed by focusing too much on one’s identity and not enough on what concerns the broader public. The key is to discuss such “corrosive” matters in a way that resonates with a broad audience, said the veteran Democratic strategist David Axelrod. He noted that former President Barack Obama positioned himself as both proudly of the Black community, and a president for all. “Josh Shapiro isn’t running to be the Jewish governor of Pennsylvania, he’s running to be the governor of Pennsylvania,” Mr. Axelrod said. “Your job, as prospective leader of a state, is to speak to it in a larger context.” To that end, Mr. Shapiro portrays Mr. Mastriano’s antisemitic associations as evidence that he is dangerously extremist, with a governing vision that excludes many Pennsylvanians, an argument he has amplified in ads. (During the primary, Mr. Shapiro also ran an ad that appeared to elevate Mr. Mastriano, a move he has defended.) “There is no question that he is courting antisemites and white supremacists and racists actively in his campaign,” Mr. Shapiro said in an interview, though he stopped short of calling his opponent an antisemite. He said that Mr. Mastriano “draws on his view of religion” to press policies that would have significant consequences for others, citing Mr. Mastriano’s blanket opposition to abortion rights, for instance. “Unless you think like him, unless you vote like him, unless you worship like him or marry like him, then you don’t count in his Pennsylvania,” Mr. Shapiro said last week. “I want to be a governor for all 13 million Pennsylvanians.” At the same time, Mr. Shapiro’s Jewish identity is a defining aspect of his public persona. His first television ad this year featured him at Sabbath dinner with his family, challah on the table and a hamsa — a hand-shaped symbol often seen in the Middle East, including in Israel — on the wall. “It was important to let people know who I am and what I’m all about,” said Mr. Shapiro, saying that his faith “has played a central role to me and has motivated me to do service.” “That’s an important part of who we are.” As he discusses civic engagement on the campaign trail, he frequently deploys a version of a line that, he said, resonated as he studied religious texts with a rabbi years ago: “No one is required to complete the task — but neither are we free to refrain from it.” It helps him connect with people of diverse faiths, and is a flash of his own day school roots. He keeps kosher, he said, is “always” home for Sabbath dinner and admires how former Senator Joseph I. Lieberman, an observant Jew, practiced his faith in his long career in politics, a subject the men have discussed over the years. He works on Saturdays — the Jewish day of rest — but observed Rosh Hashana in synagogue and fasted and attended Yom Kippur services last week. Mr. Shapiro will have a significant national platform if he wins. Asked whether he aspired to be the first Jewish president, he insisted, “No!” “God willing, I’ll have the chance to serve as governor,” he said, “and that is all I am focused on doing.” At Hymie’s Delicatessen in Merion Station, Pa., Democratic-leaning diners brought up antisemitism concerns unprompted during a recent lunchtime rush. Mindy Cohen, 64, said she opposed Mr. Mastriano “beca...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Laxalts Relatives Endorse His Opponent; Biden Delivers Election-Year Gift For Bennet
Trump Worker Told FBI About Moving Mar-A-Lago Boxes On Ex-Presidents Orders
Trump Worker Told FBI About Moving Mar-A-Lago Boxes On Ex-Presidents Orders
Trump Worker Told FBI About Moving Mar-A-Lago Boxes On Ex-President’s Orders https://digitalalabamanews.com/trump-worker-told-fbi-about-moving-mar-a-lago-boxes-on-ex-presidents-orders/ A Trump employee has told federal agents about moving boxes of documents at Mar-a-Lago at the specific direction of the former president, according to people familiar with the investigation, who say the witness account — combined with security-camera footage — offers key evidence of Donald Trump’s behavior as investigators sought the return of classified material. The witness description and footage described to The Washington Post offer the most direct account to date of Trump’s actions and instructions leading up to the FBI’s Aug. 8 search of the Florida residence and private club, in which agents were looking for evidence of potential crimes including obstruction, destruction of government records or mishandling classified information. The people familiar with the investigation said agents have gathered witness accounts indicating that, after Trump advisers received a subpoena in May for any classified documents that remained at Mar-a-Lago, Trump told people to move boxes to his residence at the property. That description of events was corroborated by the security-camera footage, which showed people moving the boxes, said the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation. Spokespeople for the Justice Department and FBI declined to comment. Trump spokesman Taylor Budowich declined to answer detailed questions for this article. “The Biden administration has weaponized law enforcement and fabricated a Document Hoax in a desperate attempt to retain political power,” Budowich said in a statement. “Every other President has been given time and deference regarding the administration of documents, as the President has the ultimate authority to categorize records, and what materials should be classified.” Budowich accused the Justice Department of a “continued effort to leak misleading and false information to partisan allies in the Fake News,” and said that to do so “is nothing more than dangerous political interference and unequal justice. Simply put, it’s un-American.” The employee who was working at Mar-a-Lago is cooperating with the Justice Department and has been interviewed multiple times by federal agents, according to the people familiar with the situation, who declined to identify the worker. In the first interview, these people said, the witness denied handling sensitive documents or the boxes that might contain such documents. As they gathered evidence, agents decided to re-interview the witness, and the witness’s story changed dramatically, these people said. In the second interview, the witness described moving boxes at Trump’s request. The witness is now considered a key part of the Mar-a-Lago investigation, these people said, offering details about the former president’s alleged actions and instructions to subordinates that could have been an attempt to thwart federal officials’ demands for the return of classified and government documents. Multiple witnesses have told the FBI they tried to talk Trump into cooperating with the National Archives and Records Administration and the Justice Department as those agencies for months sought the return of sensitive or historical government records, people familiar with the situation said. The former president was adamant in private conversations that he would resist those efforts. Among the chief proponents of the cooperation strategy was Alex Cannon, a Trump lawyer who repeatedly argued his client should hand the documents back, people familiar with the matter said. But entreaties from advisers and lawyers fell on deaf ears with Trump, who grew even angrier this spring after a House Oversight Committee investigation was launched, telling aides they’d “screwed up” the situation, according to people who heard his comments. “They’re my documents,” Trump said, according to an aide who spoke to him. The details shared with The Post reveal two key parts of the criminal probe that until now had been shrouded in secrecy: an account from a witness who worked for and took directions from Trump, and the way that security footage from Mar-a-Lago has played an important role in buttressing witness accounts. Together, those pieces of evidence helped convince the FBI and Justice Department to seek the court-authorized search of Trump’s residence, office and a storage room at Mar-a-Lago, which resulted in the seizure of 103 documents that were marked classified and had not been turned over to the government in response to the May subpoena. Some of the documents detail top-secret U.S. operations so closely guarded that many senior national security officials are kept in the dark about them. The Aug. 8 search also yielded about 11,000 documents not marked classified. The failure or possible refusal to return the classified documents in response to the subpoena is at the heart of the Justice Department’s Mar-a-Lago investigation, which is one of several high-profile, ongoing probes involving Trump. The former president remains the most influential figure in the Republican Party and talks openly about again running for the White House in 2024. Within Trump’s orbit, there have been months of dueling accusations and theories about who may be cooperating with the federal government. Some of the former president’s closest aides have continued to work with Trump even as they have seen FBI agents show up at their houses to question them and serve subpoenas. Within the Justice Department and FBI, the witness’s account has been a closely held secret as agents continue to gather evidence in the high-stakes investigation. In addition to wanting to keep the information they have gathered so far under wraps, people familiar with the situation said, authorities are also concerned that if or when the witness’s identity eventually becomes public, that person could face harassment or threats from Trump supporters. In a filing to the Supreme Court on Tuesday, Justice Department lawyers appeared to allude to witness accounts and the video footage when they wrote: “The FBI uncovered evidence that the response to the grand jury subpoena was incomplete, that additional classified documents likely remained at Mar-a-Lago, and that efforts had likely been taken to obstruct the investigation.” Since the Aug. 8 search, Trump has offered a number of public defenses of why documents with classified markings remained at Mar-a-Lago — saying he declassified the secret documents, suggesting that the FBI planted evidence during the search, and suggesting that as a former president he may have had a right to keep classified documents. National security law experts have overwhelmingly dismissed such claims, saying they range from far-fetched to nonsensical. Officials at the National Archives began seeking the return of documents last year, after they came to believe that some presidential records from the Trump administration – such as letters from North Korean leader Kim Jong Un – were unaccounted for, and perhaps in Trump’s possession. After months of back-and-forth, Trump agreed in January to turn over 15 boxes of material. When archivists examined the material, they found 184 documents marked classified, including 25 marked top secret, which were scattered throughout the boxes in no particular order, according to court filings. That discovery suggested to authorities that Trump had not turned over all the classified documents in his possession. In May, a grand jury subpoena demanded the return of classified documents with a wide variety of markings, including a category used for secrets about nuclear weapons. In response to that subpoena, Trump’s advisers met with government agents and prosecutors at Mar-a-Lago in early June, handing over a sealed envelope containing another 38 classified documents, including 17 marked top secret, according to court papers. According to government filings, Trump’s representatives claimed at the meeting that a diligent search had been conducted for all classified documents at the club. That meeting, which included a visit to the storage room where Trump’s advisers said the relevant boxes of documents were kept, did not satisfy investigators, who were not allowed to inspect the boxes they saw in the storage room, according to government court filings. Five days later, senior Justice Department official Jay Bratt wrote to Trump’s lawyers to remind them that Mar-a-Lago “does not include a secure location authorized for the storage of classified information.” Bratt wrote that it appears classified documents “have not been handled in an appropriate manner or stored in an appropriate location.” “Accordingly, we ask that the room at Mar-a-Lago where the documents had been stored be secured and that all of the boxes that were moved from the White House to Mar-a-Lago (along with any other items in that room) be preserved in that room in their current condition until further notice.” Agents continued to gather evidence that Trump was apparently not complying with either government requests or subpoena demands. After significant deliberation, aware that it would be highly unusual for federal agents to search a former president’s home, they decided to seek a judge’s approval to do so. That Aug. 8 search turned up, in a matter of hours, 103 documents marked classified, including 18 marked top secret, according to court papers. The stash included at least one document that described a foreign country’s military defenses, including its nuclear capabilities. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Trump Worker Told FBI About Moving Mar-A-Lago Boxes On Ex-Presidents Orders
Obituaries In West Lafayette IN | Journal And Courier
Obituaries In West Lafayette IN | Journal And Courier
Obituaries In West Lafayette, IN | Journal And Courier https://digitalalabamanews.com/obituaries-in-west-lafayette-in-journal-and-courier/ Adam Dubois – (Geek, Boy) passed away peacefully at Community North Hospital on Friday evening October 7, 2022, surrounded by wife, family, and friends. He was born September 28, 1974, in Lafayette, IN to the late Ellis Wayne Dubois and Janet (Taulman) Dubois. Preceded in death were also his two brothers, Cary W. Dubois and Eric A. Dubois. He graduated from Jefferson High School in 1993 and attended Tri-County High School his freshmen year. He attended Vincennes University where he received his degree. He then went onto receive certificates of computer technology, at My Computer Career Program. He was currently employed with Everstream where he spent two years as a NOC supervisor, and prior to that worked for Lightbound LLC, as a NOC tier III technician. Adam spent time in Mobile, AL working for Caraustar Industries while living with his big brother Cary, and his sister-in-law Kimmie. He then met his wife, Samantha Dubois (Hill) during this time. They spent many miles to see each other in a long-distance relationship prior to their marriage. Adam married Samantha, May 3, 2008, in West Lafayette, IN. They have 3 daughters, Addison, Brooke and Ciara. Adam is survived by his wife and daughters, 2 sister-in-law’s, 4 nieces, and many loving aunts, uncles, and cousins. In lieu of flowers, please make donations to American Lung Association, Ascension St. Vincent Seton Specialty Hospital. Visitation: October 17, 2022 4:00 – 8:00 pm Traders Point Christian Church 6590 S. Indianapolis Rd. Whitestown, IN 46075 Funeral Service: October 18, 2022 11:00 am Traders Point Christian Church 6590 S. Indianapolis Rd. Whitestown, IN 46075 Posted online on October 12, 2022 Published in Journal & Courier Service Information Visitation Traders Point Christian Church, 6590 S. Indianapolis Rd., Whitestown, IN 46075 October 17, 2022 at 4:00 PM – 8:00 PM Funeral Traders Point Christian Church, 6590 S. Indianapolis Rd., Whitestown, IN 46075 October 18, 2022 at 11:00 AM Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Obituaries In West Lafayette IN | Journal And Courier
Gov. Kay Ivey Declares October HBCU Month In Alabama
Gov. Kay Ivey Declares October HBCU Month In Alabama
Gov. Kay Ivey Declares October HBCU Month In Alabama https://digitalalabamanews.com/gov-kay-ivey-declares-october-hbcu-month-in-alabama/ Alabama Crimson Tide Sports Updated: Oct. 12, 2022, 4:28 p.m.| Published: Oct. 12, 2022, 4:02 p.m. Gov. Kay Ivey signed a proclamation Oct. 3 declaring the month as HBCU Month. The signing makes Alabama the first state in the country, leaders say, to dedicate a month to recognize Historically Black Colleges and Universities. “The recognition of these elite historic institutions by Governor Ivey is significant,” Dr. Quinton Ross, President of Alabama State University in Montgomery, said in a press release Wednesday. “No other State has dedicated an entire month in recognition of HBCUs. This speaks volumes to the Governor’s understanding of the value of these institutions to the state and nation.” Alabama has the largest number of HBCUs in the nation. HBCUs make up more than a quarter of the state’s four-year institutions and enroll 40% of all Black undergraduates. Read More: US News and World Report 2022: Here are Alabama’s best universities, HBCUs But despite the role that HBCUs have played in educating the nation’s workforce, many were blocked for decades from federal programming and additional funding – and some say they’re still struggling to fill funding gaps. “Our institutions have not — and still are not — being treated the same,” Alabama A&M University President Andrew Hugine Jr. told CBS News last year. Efforts to address the issue began in 1980 with a White House initiative to provide support for HBCUs. In September, President Joseph Biden signed an Executive Order to re-establish the initiative, which largely aimed to support HBCUs throughout the pandemic. He also issued a proclamation recognizing the second week of September as National HBCU Week. In Alabama, Ivey’s proclamation comes amid a few recent initiatives to boost job growth and workforce diversity at the state level. The Alabama Office of Minority Affairs, for example, was established in 2016 to advise the governor on issues affecting women and minorities in the state. The agency now has a HBCU Co-Op Program focuses on establishing a pipeline of diverse talent between the state’s HBCUs and Alabama’s workforce. Nichelle Williams Nix, Director of the Alabama Office of Minority Affairs, said the recognition is a welcome addition to current efforts to strengthen and diversify the state’s workforce. “Governor Ivey supports the important role that Alabama HBCUs play in their respective communities and in the State, and this Proclamation highlights that,” she said in a press release. 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·
Gov. Kay Ivey Declares October HBCU Month In Alabama
Residents Get Look At Highway 52 Proposal
Residents Get Look At Highway 52 Proposal
Residents Get Look At Highway 52 Proposal https://digitalalabamanews.com/residents-get-look-at-highway-52-proposal/ HARTFORD – Highway expansion projects rarely satisfy everybody. So when property owners came out to public involvement meeting in Hartford this week to see a proposed route to expand State Highway 52, it would not be surprising if they left feeling a range of emotions – relief that the proposed route won’t affect their property and frustration that it could. The public involvement meeting held Tuesday evening in Hartford’s community center drew about 60 people. Representatives with the Alabama Department of Transportation (ALDOT) stood near project maps waiting to answer questions about the state’s proposal to add lanes to a seven-mile stretch from Hartford to Slocomb. Local and state elected officials have long seen the widening of Highway 52 as an economic development driver for the county and the Wiregrass. But residents have questions regarding the new right of way ALDOT requires to expand a two-lane portion of the highway to five lanes – Why not take new right of way from both sides along the entire proposed corridor? Based on the project maps, most of the homes that could be impacted by right-of-way purchases fall within a stretch from Shiloh Road in Hartford to Slocomb, where plans call for the current two-lane section to be widened to five lanes. In some cases, the new right-of-way line runs directly through homes or right up to them. But, as the project is still in a preliminary phase, the proposed right of way could change – it could move closer to some homes and further away from others, according to ALDOT. Until she saw the project map on Tuesday, Starla Outlaw was under the impression she was going to lose her house, which sits on Highway 52 just west of Hurricane Creek. She has land on both sides of the highway that could be impacted by the proposed route. Based on the map, the new road lanes and required right of way take from Outlaw’s front yard but fall short of her house. Her front yard trees and the shadows they cast in the aerial photo used for the route map make it hard to tell exactly how close to her house the new right of way will be located. Outlaw said she wants to see prosperity for Geneva County and her hometown of Hartford. Like other property owners, she also wants to see a final decision on where the right of way will land in front of her home. “I love my land, and I also want the road if it’s going to help,” Outlaw said. “… The fact of the matter is the property, even if it lands at my doorstep it’s still not my property out front. I won’t own it.” Some questions couldn’t be answered easily. When will residents know for sure how much of their property will be taken for the project? That timeframe is unclear because ALDOT has to receive authorization and funds have to be released by the state for ADLOT to buy rights of way. When will construction begin? Well, the construction start date is fluid depending on right-of-way acquisition. ALDOT can’t bid the project until it has all the necessary right of way. Some questions couldn’t be answered at all. How will the highway expansion move through Hartford when efforts to expand the other leg of Highway 52 get underway? Will it remain two lanes as it passes through the town’s business district and past its historic downtown square? For Tonya Everett and one of her neighbors, the project map they saw Tuesday night at Hartford’s community center didn’t directly affect their properties located within two blocks of where the project begins at First Avenue. Everett was more concerned about any future expansion of the corridor and what impact it could have on her quiet neighborhood. There were no answers for her as that leg of the Highway 52 expansion is not even a part of the current project. “There’s some kind of a vision for where you’re going, and we would kind of like to know what it is,” Everett said. Residents have until Nov. 4 to submit their comments on the project to ALDOT. Comments can be submitted online at www.ALDOTinvolved.com and by email at hartfordbypass@dot.state.al.us. Residents can also call 334-807-8793 to leave their comments in voice mail with a three-minute limit or mail comments to: ALDOT – Southeast Region Office, 100 Capitol Commerce Blvd., Suite 210, Building B, Montgomery, AL 36117. On the Slocomb end of the project, Mark Yager moved to his Highway 52 home last December after living in Central Florida, working in road construction and relocating underground utilities. He had worried he was going to lose a large chunk of a pecan orchard in front of his house, which turned out not to be the case based on ALDOT’s map. He’s not worried based on the proposed route. “It looks like they’re going to take a little bit of property and probably my first row of pecans,” Yager said. Peggy Ussery is a Dothan Eagle staff writer and can be reached at aussery@dothaneagle.com or 334-712-7963. Support her work and that of other Eagle journalists by purchasing a digital subscription today at dothaneagle.com. Get local news delivered to your inbox! Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Residents Get Look At Highway 52 Proposal
Russia Arrests 8 Including 5 Russians In Crimean Bridge Bombing: US Allies Bolster Ukraine
Russia Arrests 8 Including 5 Russians In Crimean Bridge Bombing: US Allies Bolster Ukraine
Russia Arrests 8, Including 5 Russians, In Crimean Bridge Bombing: US, Allies Bolster Ukraine https://digitalalabamanews.com/russia-arrests-8-including-5-russians-in-crimean-bridge-bombing-us-allies-bolster-ukraine/ Five Russians are among eight suspects detained in connection with the explosion that has gnarled rail and vehicle traffic on the $3.6 billion Crimea bridge, Russia’s domestic intelligence service said Wednesday. Ukraine’s military intelligence agency was behind the attack Saturday on the 12-mile bridge, Europe’s longest, the FSB said in a statement. Ukraine authorities have lauded the incident but have not formally accepted responsibility for the blast, which Russia says killed three people. “At the moment, five citizens of Russia, three citizens of Ukraine and Armenia, who participated in the preparation of the crime, have been detained as part of a criminal case,” the FSB said, adding that several other suspects were involved in the plan. The FSB said the explosives were shipped out of the Ukrainian city of Odesa in August, and three Ukrainians, two Georgians and an Armenian national were behind the plan to arrange the delivery from Bulgaria through Georgia into Russia. A Ukrainian citizen and the five detained Russians had prepared documents for a nonexistent Crimean firm to receive the explosives, the agency said. The investigation was continuing. Other developments: ►NATO defense ministers were meeting Wednesday in Brussels to coordinate plans for providing Ukraine with more weaponry. ►Russian President Vladimir Putin was meeting Wednesday with Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in Kazakhstan on the sidelines of a regional summit, Kremlin spokesman Dmitriy Peskov said. Erdoğan has offered to host talks between Russia and the West. No indication Putin is preparing to use nuclear weapons, Pentagon says The Pentagon has not seen indications that Russian President Vladimir Putin is preparing to use nuclear weapons as his forces falter in Ukraine, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said Wednesday. Austin made his remarks in a briefing to reporters in Brussels, where NATO allies met to discuss supplying military aid to Ukraine. “Nuclear saber rattling is reckless and irresponsible,” Austin said. “We don’t expect to see and hear that kind of behavior from a major nuclear power. And so that’s very dangerous.” Army Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said that Ukraine’s top needs for the war include air defense systems, cannon artillery, rocket artillery, tanks and infantry fighting vehicles. Milley blasted the recent Russian missile strikes on Ukrainian cities, calling the “indiscriminate and deliberate attacks” a “war crime.” — Tom Vanden Brook Ukraine receives artillery, air defense systems from US, Germany The U.S. and its allies are taking quick steps to respond to Ukraine’s request for air defense systems that may prevent major damage from missile strikes such as the ones Russia launched Monday and Tuesday.  Ukraine received its first IRIS-T air defense system from Germany and four more High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS) from the U.S., Ukraine Foreign Minister Oleksii Reznikov said Wednesday. The deliveries were expedited after this week’s Russian barrage across much of Ukraine, a retaliatory attack for a truck bomb that damaged a crucial, Russian-built bridge in Crimea on Saturday. The U.S. also announced plans to send Ukraine eight National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile Systems (NASAMS); two are expected to be delivered soon. In addition, the Netherlands said it would deliver $14.5 million worth of air defense missiles, and France said it would also contribute to Ukraine’s air defense. “A new era of air defense has begun,” Reznikov tweeted. “There is a moral imperative to protect the sky over in order to save our people.” Shelling again causes dangerous blackout at Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant For the second time in five days, Europe’s second-largest nuclear power plant was knocked off the grid by shelling, once again risking a radiation emergency. The Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant lost its electric supply Wednesday when a Russian missile damaged a substation north of it, the facility’s operator said. Even though the plant’s six reactors are inactive, they need to be cooled for long stretches to prevent overheating.  Energoatom said the external power source was repaired after about eight hours and that the plant’s emergency diesel generators — which rely on uncertain fuel deliveries in the war zone — provided backup power in the meantime, but pointed out a similarly hazardous interruption could happen at any time. Experts have raised alarm about the danger of continued fighting near the plant, which has been occupied by Russian forces since early in the war but is operated by Ukrainian employees. Repeated power outages over brief stretches only increase the risks, analysts say. The International Atomic Energy Agency has repeatedly called for the establishment of a protection zone around the facility — IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi made his case to Putin directly Tuesday — but so far hostilities in the plant’s periphery have not ceased. Biden: No progress in effort to free Brittney Griner from Russian prison U.S. officials have made no progress toward freeing WNBA basketball star Brittney Griner from a Moscow prison, President Joe Biden said Wednesday. Asked by reporters if there was any movement in the Griner case, Biden replied, “Not with Putin.”  In an interview Tuesday with CNN, Biden said he had “no intention” of meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the G20 summit next month in Indonesia – but that he would consider a conversation if Putin said he wanted to talk about Griner. Griner, who plays basketball in Russia during the WNBA offseason, was arrested at Sheremetyevo Airport outside Moscow in February on drug charges. Griner admitted having vape canisters containing cannabis oil in her luggage, but testified she had inadvertently packed them and had no criminal intent. She was sentenced to nine years in prison; her appeal hearing is set for Oct. 25. – Francesca Chambers, USA TODAY Putin blames US for pipeline blasts, says Russia ready to resume gas flow Putin said Wednesday that Russia is ready to restart the flow of gas to Europe over the single remaining link of the Nord Stream gas pipelines – and again blamed the U.S. for blasts that crippled the system. German government spokeswoman Christiane Hoffmann rejected the proposal, saying Russia has been an unreliable gas supplier since the war began.  European authorities are investigating the explosions that ripped through both links of the Nord Stream 1 pipeline and one of the two links of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. U.S. officials have dismissed Putin’s claim that the U.S. wanted to disrupt the flow to encourage Europe to import more expensive liquefied natural gas. Experts discuss Putin’s threat to use nukes in Ukraine What does Putin’s threat to use nuclear weapons mean for the security of millions of people in Ukraine and around the world, including the United States, which Russian nuclear-tipped missiles can certainly reach?  USA TODAY spoke with former top intelligence officer Rolf Mowatt-Larssen, a former CIA official and a host of other nuclear security experts and analysts for answers. All of them agreed with President Joe Biden’s assessment that the current situation is fraught with potential danger, including the possibility an increasingly cornered Putin decides to deploy one of the smaller nuclear weapons in his massive arsenal. Here is what else the experts had to say. – Josh Meyer, USA TODAY Kremlin blasts plan to rebuild Ukraine with frozen Russian assets A proposal by leading industrial nations to use frozen Russian assets to finance the rebuilding of Ukraine has drawn sharp criticism from Moscow. “It’s just pure international racketeering,” Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Wednesday.  The G-7 statement released after Tuesday’s virtual meeting called for “ensuring Ukraine’s recovery and reconstruction, including exploring avenues to do so with funds from Russia.” After the invasion began in February, the West imposed sanctions against the Bank of Russia. In addition to freezing Russia’s gold and foreign exchange reserves, all transactions related to the management of reserves and assets of the Bank of Russia, as well as transactions with any legal entity, fell under the ban. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Russia Arrests 8 Including 5 Russians In Crimean Bridge Bombing: US Allies Bolster Ukraine
Group Trying To Disbar Ted Cruz Over 2020 Wants Ban On Election Lies By Lawyers
Group Trying To Disbar Ted Cruz Over 2020 Wants Ban On Election Lies By Lawyers
Group Trying To Disbar Ted Cruz Over 2020 Wants Ban On Election Lies By Lawyers https://digitalalabamanews.com/group-trying-to-disbar-ted-cruz-over-2020-wants-ban-on-election-lies-by-lawyers/ WASHINGTON — A legal watchdog group seeking to disbar Sen. Ted Cruz and others who tried to help Donald Trump overturn his defeat called Wednesday for rules to forbid lawyers – including those in elected office – from lying about elections. “As the January 6 committee’s work has confirmed, lawyers played a central role in then President Trump’s attempts to stay in power despite losing the 2020 presidential election,” said Michael Teter, managing director of the 65 Project, launched last spring to deter abuse of the legal system to overturn fair elections. The group has sought disciplinary action against 55 lawyers, including a number of state attorneys general and members of Trump’s inner circle. In May, the 65 Project filed a complaint against Cruz with the Texas bar, seeking to strip his law license for aiding an “anti-democratic” plot to keep Trump in power despite his defeat. At the time, a Cruz aide dismissed the group as “a far-left dark money smear machine run by a who’s who of shameless Democrat hacks.” Related:65 Project wants Ted Cruz disbarred for efforts to keep Trump in power That complaint apparently is still pending. The Texas bar says it typically tells accusers and targets within 30 days if a complaint has been dismissed or deemed to have enough merit to become a formal inquiry. “We have not heard from the state bar with regard to our complaints against Senator Cruz,” Teter said. “We have not heard one way or the other.” The group describes itself as bipartisan. It says that none of its complaints nationwide have been dismissed, and at least a dozen are being pursued. John Dean, the White House counsel to President Richard Nixon who served prison time for his role in the Watergate scandal, recently joined the effort as a senior advisor. The House committee investigating the attack on Congress on Jan. 6, 2021, holds what is likely its last hearing on Thursday. Well over half the Republicans in the U.S. House voted not to certify all of Biden’s electoral votes that day, including most of the Texans. Cruz opened himself to possible attack under rules of conduct for lawyers by offering to represent Trump before the U.S. Supreme Court. By contrast, Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., who worked with Cruz to round up Senate support for overturning the election, was not acting as a lawyer, even though he invoked his legal credentials to bolster the legitimacy of the effort. The 65 Project views that as a gaping loophole. “You can’t have it both ways,” Teter said. “He needs to speak honestly about American democracy.” Lawyers have a special responsibility to uphold the rule of law, said Paul Rosenzweig, a member of the group’s advisory board and a senior homeland security official in the George W. Bush administration who called himself a “genuine conservative.” “We cannot ever forget that a lawyer may, as Sidney Powell did, submit false and fictitious information to a court and then justify her filing on the grounds that no one would actually believe that she was trying to tell the truth that it was just a political exercise. That is not what the courts and the legal system are about,” he said. Powell, a former Justice Department official from Dallas, faces misconduct allegations filed March 1 by the Texas bar, which says she pushed frivolous claims and knowingly lied in court to overturn the election. Sidney Powell, a lawyer for President Donald Trump, speaks during a news conference at the Republican National Committee headquarters on Nov. 19, 2020, in Washington.(Jacquelyn Martin) A non-jury trial is set for April 24. Rozensweig downplayed concerns about hamstringing politicians’ free speech. Courts insist on factual accuracy, he noted, and judges impose gag orders to suppress public comments, truthful or otherwise. When it comes to the “peaceful transition of power according to the people’s will… I don’t have much problem with the idea of carving out specific restrictions,” he said, adding that politicians would still be able to promote “the general lie…that your taxes will go up, or your Medicare payments will go down, or that gas prices aren’t Biden’s fault.” Renee Knake Jefferson, a legal ethics expert at the University of Houston Law Center who also advises the 65 Project, said ethics rules should apply even when a lawyer isn’t representing a party in a dispute. “Lawyer lies designed to sabotage valid election results should not be considered protected political speech,” she said, summarizing views she published in the Yale Law Review. “I am not here to suggest in any way a wholesale ban on lies,” she said. But if an officeholder or candidate is so troubled about not being able to speak dishonestly, they can always give up their law license. “They don’t have to continue being a lawyer,” she said. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Group Trying To Disbar Ted Cruz Over 2020 Wants Ban On Election Lies By Lawyers
Donald Trump Jr. To Join Ted Budd At Keep NC Red Rally In Greensboro
Donald Trump Jr. To Join Ted Budd At Keep NC Red Rally In Greensboro
Donald Trump Jr. To Join Ted Budd At ‘Keep NC Red’ Rally In Greensboro https://digitalalabamanews.com/donald-trump-jr-to-join-ted-budd-at-keep-nc-red-rally-in-greensboro/ Donald Trump Jr. waves at campaign rally before President Donald Trump appears Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2020 in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri) Donald Trump Jr. waves at campaign rally before President Donald Trump appears Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2020 in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri) by: Justyn Melrose Posted: Oct 12, 2022 / 04:41 PM EDT Updated: Oct 12, 2022 / 04:41 PM EDT Donald Trump Jr. waves at campaign rally before President Donald Trump appears Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2020 in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri) Donald Trump Jr. waves at campaign rally before President Donald Trump appears Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2020 in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri) by: Justyn Melrose Posted: Oct 12, 2022 / 04:41 PM EDT Updated: Oct 12, 2022 / 04:41 PM EDT GREENSBORO, N.C. (WGHP) — Former President Donald Trump’s son Donald Trump Jr. will campaign alongside Ted Budd, who is running for Richard Burr’s Senate seat, at a “Keep NC Red” rally in Greensboro. The Greensboro rally is scheduled for 10 a.m. Thursday at Illuminating Technologies. Trump Jr., the former president’s oldest son, has been a vocal supporter of his father’s political efforts as well as Republican candidates. And this will not be his first time in North Carolina’s political arena, previously appearing for ‘Make American Great Again’ events in 2020 and a campaign rally in Lexington in 2018. The appearance comes a month after the former president stumped for Budd at a rally in Wilmington. Budd, who has represented the 13th Congressional District since 2016, and Cheri Beasley, former chief justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court, have been locked in a virtual tie in their bids to replace retiring Republican Richard Burr of Winston-Salem, a race Democrats see as key in their efforts to maintain control of the Senate. Libertarian Shannon Bray, a Department of Defense employee from Apex, and Green Party candidate Matthew Hoh, a retired State Department employee from Wake Forest, also are on the ballot. Following his appearance in Greensboro, Budd will head to Edenton to tour the town with the Edenton mayor. Your Local Election Headquarters MOST POPULAR Must-See Stories Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Donald Trump Jr. To Join Ted Budd At Keep NC Red Rally In Greensboro
Trump Supporters Convicted Of Bringing Guns To Philadelphia After 2020 Election
Trump Supporters Convicted Of Bringing Guns To Philadelphia After 2020 Election
Trump Supporters Convicted Of Bringing Guns To Philadelphia After 2020 Election https://digitalalabamanews.com/trump-supporters-convicted-of-bringing-guns-to-philadelphia-after-2020-election/ WASHINGTON — Two Donald Trump supporters who traveled to Philadelphia with guns after the 2020 presidential election were convicted on weapons charges on Wednesday, but acquitted on three election-related counts. Joshua Macias and Antonio LaMotta, both of Virginia, were arrested in Philadelphia on Nov. 5, 2020, near the Philadelphia Convention Center, where votes were being counted following the presidential election. The pair traveled to Philadelphia in a silver Hummer bearing a QAnon sticker and were found to be carrying a Beretta 9mm pistol and a concealed Beretta .40 caliber handgun, while storing an AR-15 style weapon inside their truck, along with around 160 rounds of ammunition. A judge convicted both Macias and LaMotta on gun charges on Wednesday, but the duo were acquitted on the election-related counts, according to Lauren Mayk of NBC10 in Philadelphia, who was in the courtroom. The pair had faced three elections-related charges: interference with primaries/elections, hindering performance of duty, and conspiracy-interference with primaries/elections. The Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office said it believed the case was the most serious state election-related prosecution in Pennsylvania that grew out of the 2020 election. LaMotta, as NBC News previously reported, was arrested on separate charges in August after online sleuths spotted him in footage that showed him inside the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. Macias has not been charged in connection with the Capitol attack, but was present at a meeting between Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes and Proud Boys head Enrique Tarrio that took place in a Washington, D.C., parking garage the night of Jan. 5, 2021. Ryan J. Reilly is a justice reporter for NBC News. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Trump Supporters Convicted Of Bringing Guns To Philadelphia After 2020 Election
Auburns Allen Flanigan Returns To Practice After 2-Week Absence
Auburns Allen Flanigan Returns To Practice After 2-Week Absence
Auburn’s Allen Flanigan Returns To Practice After 2-Week Absence https://digitalalabamanews.com/auburns-allen-flanigan-returns-to-practice-after-2-week-absence/ Auburn Basketball Updated: Oct. 12, 2022, 2:50 p.m.| Published: Oct. 12, 2022, 2:47 p.m. Mar 5, 2022; Auburn, AL, USA; Wendell Green Jr. (1) reacts with Allen Flanigan (22) after the game between Auburn and South Carolina at Neville Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jacob Taylor/AU AthleticsJacob Taylor/AU Athletics Auburn senior Allen Flanigan returned to practice Wednesday following a two-week absence. Flanigan had been away from the team since the start of preseason practices two weeks ago while dealing with what coach Bruce Pearl called a personal family matter. Flanigan’s return came as Auburn hosted its annual pro day at Neville Arena, and with just less than four weeks until the Tigers open their season against George Mason on Nov. 7. Read more Auburn hoops: Chance Westry, Bruce Pearl undergo knee procedures Tipoff times, TV networks set for Auburn’s West Coast trip Bruce Pearl excited about Auburn’s depth, wants to see “cream rise to the top” A 6-foot-6 wing, Flanigan has played in 80 games for Auburn over the last three seasons, averaging 7.8 points, 3.9 rebounds and 1.5 assists per game for his career. He experienced a breakout sophomore season in 2020-21, when he averaged 14.3 points, 5.5 rebounds and 2.9 assists per game while starting all 27 games for the Tigers. Flanigan was prepared to build off that as a junior, but he sustained a preseason Achilles injury that sidelined him for three months. Upon his return in late-December, he struggled to regain his form while appearing in 22 games, with 20 starts, but averaging just 6.3 points on 39.5 percent shooting and a paltry 20.5 percent from 3-point range. He also averaged 3.5 rebounds and 1.3 assists per game for an Auburn team that climbed to No. 1 in the AP poll for the first time in program history, went wire-to-wire to win the SEC regular-season title and earned a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament. Flanigan tested the NBA Draft waters in the offseason but ultimately decided to return to the Plains for his senior season. Pearl noted at the start of preseason practices that Flanigan is “physically almost back to 100 percent” where he was before the partially torn Achilles. “He’s physically much better,” Pearl said. “…I think that’s where you’re going to have to evaluate him. When your strength is your size, your athleticism, the physical-ness of his game — and then when you take some of that away, he can’t be the same player until he gets all that back, and I think he’s much closer to, or actually right where he was before his injury.” While Flanigan returned in time for pro day, Auburn was without two key players during its annual showcase for NBA scouts. Senior guard Zep Jasper was out while dealing with a stomach virus, according to Pearl, while freshman guard Chance Westry remained sidelined following a knee scope he underwent last week in Pensacola, Fla. Westry is expected to miss two to three more weeks before he returns. Tom Green is an Auburn beat reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Tomas_Verde. 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·
Auburns Allen Flanigan Returns To Practice After 2-Week Absence
Justice Department Questions Trump Attorney Bobb Over Classified Records At Mar-A-Lago
Justice Department Questions Trump Attorney Bobb Over Classified Records At Mar-A-Lago
Justice Department Questions Trump Attorney Bobb Over Classified Records At Mar-A-Lago https://digitalalabamanews.com/justice-department-questions-trump-attorney-bobb-over-classified-records-at-mar-a-lago/ Federal investigators have questioned Christina Bobb, a member of former President Donald Trump’s legal team, after she signed a statement attesting that the Trump legal team found only a small number of government files at Mar-a-Lago two months before an FBI search recovered thousands of records, a person familiar with the matter told USA TODAY. Christina Bobb’s meeting with federal investigators last week related to her role in a June 3 meeting with Justice Department officials in which she signed a document claiming that no other relevant government records remained at Trump’s Florida estate,  said the source who is not authorized to comment publicly. On Aug. 8, an FBI search of the property resulted in the seizure of 11,000 government documents, including more than 100 records marked as classified. Bobb’s meeting with investigators was first reported by NBC News. Christina Bobb: How Trump lawyer Christina Bobb, an ex-OAN host, took spotlight in Mar-a-Lago case Separately, The New York Times reported that Bobb had been asked to sign the document by fellow Trump lawyer Evan Corcoran, indicating that a search of the property had resulted in the recovery of a limited number of documents which were then turned over to federal authorities. Prosecutors are examining whether Bobb, a former anchor for the right-wing One America News network, obstructed justice or other crimes after the FBI found classified files in the search at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in August, according to the Times report. Bobb, who has said she believes that the 2020 election was stolen, met with Department of Justice lawyers on Friday. She said she did not fully grasp what was going on when she met with Corcoran, who asked her to sign the statement, according to the Times report, which cited two unnamed sources who heard her account.  “Wait a minute – I don’t know you,” Bobb said in an exchange with Corcoran, according to a person who she later told about the request, the report said. More: Stay in the conversation on politics: Sign up for the OnPolitics newsletter Corcoran told Bobb he had searched a storage facility for the documents, which she said she believed was true.  She signed her name, but added, “The above statements are true and correct to the best of my knowledge,” before handing the document to a Justice Department official, according to the Times.  Bobb, the newspaper reported, told the Department of Justice she was working as part of a legal team when she signed the statements.  The Justice Department declined comment. Corcoran did not respond to requests for comment. Bobb’s lawyer, John Lauro, also did not return messages seeking comment. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Justice Department Questions Trump Attorney Bobb Over Classified Records At Mar-A-Lago
Good Dog Tuscaloosa Eyes Winter Opening For Dog Park Bar & Pet Resort
Good Dog Tuscaloosa Eyes Winter Opening For Dog Park Bar & Pet Resort
Good Dog Tuscaloosa Eyes Winter Opening For Dog Park, Bar & Pet Resort https://digitalalabamanews.com/good-dog-tuscaloosa-eyes-winter-opening-for-dog-park-bar-pet-resort/ Skip to main content Pelham, AL Hoover, AL Vestavia Hills, AL Birmingham, AL Mountain Brook, AL Trussville, AL Meridian, MS Montgomery, AL Huntsville, AL Dallas-Hiram, GA Alabama Top National News See All Communities TUSCALOOSA, AL — Good Dog Park & Bar is gearing up to open its first location in Tuscaloosa in the coming months, which will provide the city with its first-ever combination concept consisting of a dog resort, daycare, dog park and bar … all in one convenient spot. Click here to subscribe to our free daily newsletter and breaking news alerts. The innovative concept — with similar operations in Auburn and the Birmingham metro — is dubbed Good Dog Tuscaloosa and will be located at 1706 16th Street at Queen City Avenue. Interested in local real estate?Subscribe to Patch’s new newsletter to be the first to know about open houses, new listings and more. Good Dog Tuscaloosa Co-Owner Clint Carmichael said in an interview with Patch the dog park and bar will be under the Good Dog Tuscaloosa brand, while the pet resort, daycare and boarding facility will be under the Pawms Pet Resort Tuscaloosa moniker. As it stands, the owners plan to open the new location this winter, either in December or January. Interested in local real estate?Subscribe to Patch’s new newsletter to be the first to know about open houses, new listings and more. Carmichael explained that the company currently operates four locations in Birmingham, with three being strictly pet resorts and a 1/4 location that also features the dog park and bar. The pet resorts offer services including daycare, lodging, grooming, bathing, training and more. “We acquired a pet resort in Auburn last year and we added a bar to it,” he explained. “So that’s the second Good Dog facility … It’s been a lot of fun there. Tuscaloosa will be our sixth facility and our third bar” An overhead view of the Good Dog facility in Auburn (Good Dog Tuscaloosa) Carmichael said the Tuscaloosa facility will feature a 6,500-square-foot pet resort, in addition to a 15,000-square-foot turf area that will be fenced in. As part of the outdoor turf area, which will be constructed over an adjacent parking lot at the current location, 5,000 square feet will be dedicated to a covered daycare yard to provide shade throughout the day, while the rest of the turf area will be the home of the new outdoor dog park that will feature tunnels, activity ramps, picnic tables and more. “About half of it is going to be covered by the canopy and it’s free for people to come in,” Carmichael said. “Everyone thinks they need a dog to come. That’s not the case. It’s even fun to go without a dog.” As for the four-legged patrons, pet owners will be charged $10 for one dog and $5 additional dogs, with membership options also available. A look inside of the company’s Birmingham dog park and bar locations (Good Dog Tuscaloosa) “It’s basically the nicest dog park you’ve ever been to, with far more safety precautions,” Carmichael said. “It’s fully fenced in. We check to make sure your dog is current on their vaccination records. Your dogs have to be spayed or neutered if they’re over six months old and we don’t allow children in the outdoor area.” Along with the offerings for pets, Carmichael said Good Dog Tuscaloosa will sell beer, wine and seltzers, along with providing large TVs for sports fans to enjoy fall Saturdays less than a mile from Bryant-Denny Stadium. rBut apart from the business and its amenities, Carmichael mentioned the overall mission for the location, which is providing a quality experience, while also giving back to the community. In doing so, 1% of the revenue generated by alcohol sales and park memberships will be given to the Humane Society of West Alabama and the Tuscaloosa Metro Animal Shelter. Following the opening of its new Tuscaloosa location in the coming months, Good Dog Bar & Dog Park plans to open a location in Huntsville next year. “It just hits different [than other dog parks],” Carmichael said, before encouraging the community to come out and experience it for themselves once it opens. “There’s dogs running around everywhere, so it’s just really a happy place.” Have a news tip or suggestion on how I can improve Tuscaloosa Patch? Maybe you’re interested in having your business become one of the latest sponsors for Tuscaloosa Patch? Email all inquiries to me at ryan.phillips@patch.com Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts. The rules of replying: Be respectful. This is a space for friendly local discussions. No racist, discriminatory, vulgar or threatening language will be tolerated. Be transparent. Use your real name, and back up your claims. Keep it local and relevant. Make sure your replies stay on topic. Review the Patch Community Guidelines. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Good Dog Tuscaloosa Eyes Winter Opening For Dog Park Bar & Pet Resort
Opinion | Kanye. Elon. Trump. What Do These Men Have In Common?
Opinion | Kanye. Elon. Trump. What Do These Men Have In Common?
Opinion | Kanye. Elon. Trump. What Do These Men Have In Common? https://digitalalabamanews.com/opinion-kanye-elon-trump-what-do-these-men-have-in-common/ “Kanye. Elon. Trump.” These three names hovered in the ether late last week. They had emanated, somewhat implausibly, from the Twitter account of the House Judiciary Committee GOP — but what they were supposed to mean remained somewhat cryptic. Until, suddenly, the code cracked before our eyes. Kanye West: rapper, record producer, apparent antisemite. Now legally named Ye, he was in the news for wearing a “White Lives Matter” shirt to his runway show at Paris Fashion Week, telling Tucker Carlson in an extended interview that he thought the garb was “funny.” Yet things really took off later — after the GOP tweet — when he complained on Instagram that another rapper who disapproved of him was being controlled by Jewish people. Instagram didn’t like this, and it disabled his account. So he tried Twitter, just before bedtime: “I’m a bit sleepy tonight but when I wake up I’m going death con 3 On JEWISH PEOPLE.” Oh. Next comes Elon Musk, serial entrepreneur and richest man in the world. Lately, he has been attracting attention for his on-again-off-again agreement to purchase Twitter for $54.20 per share (a marijuana joke, by the way, ha ha) so that he can restore “free speech” to the social-media site. Plus, there’s those wacky suggestions about how Ukraine and Russia might miraculously resolve the ongoing war — mostly, it seems, by Ukraine giving up almost everything and Russia giving up almost nothing. Follow Molly Roberts’s opinionsFollow Add Again, however, it wasn’t until after the GOP tweet that Musk and West became co-stars in the Defcon 3 drama. “Welcome back to Twitter, my friend!” Musk greeted West when the songwriter initially reappeared on the platform, only hours before he announced his intention to raise the national state of alert. Later: “Talked to ye today & expressed my concerns about his recent tweet, which I think he took to heart.” We’ll see! And Donald Trump? Trump needs no introduction. Precisely what he was doing at the time — retrospectively praising insurrectionists, or crying out to “BRING BACK COLUMBUS DAY,” or declassifying documents through telepathy — doesn’t really matter because he is doing more or less those same things all the time. What matters is what he represents: the MAGA agenda of grievance blended with grandiosity, where owning the libs is the highest calling. That’s where Ye’s T-shirt trolling fits in. It’s where Musk’s purported crusade against cancel culture, embodied in his “welcome back” to a man booted from peer platforms for an antisemitic conniption, is most at home. This is what really cracks the code. How on earth could the House Judiciary Committee GOP, of all entities, have foreseen the confluence of events that would cast Kanye and Elon so neatly in the roles of MAGA avatars? Obviously it couldn’t have. But it didn’t have to. Think of one of those tweets where someone seems to have correctly predicted the score of a far-off Super Bowl — but it turns out the person also posted hundreds or even thousands of other guesses of different outcomes, then deleted all but the ultimately correct one. Now think of the exact opposite: one guess, endless ways for it to be right. West and Musk’s MAGA status doesn’t depend on their actions, their words or any other day-to-day occurrence — not anymore. The right-wing has already claimed them, thanks to Ye’s would-have-voted-for-Trump vow and Musk’s slow-burn flirtation with extreme online conservatism. The two could have tweeted memes about brainwashed wokeism instead; or quit all social media in a stand against cancel culture; or, let’s face it, said anything to Tucker Carlson. The House Judiciary tweet would have still eventually have made sense. So instead of asking why the House Judiciary GOP tweeted those names, ask: Why not? Whichever aide is in charge of posting basically reached into the MAGA grab-bag and pulled these two guys out. Because once you’re in the bag, you’re never getting tossed out, no matter how many Jews you vow to go “death con 3” on or how many dictators you propose to appease. Better yet, with the die-hards, your sins will redound to your credit. After all, MAGA Republicanism has never been about substance, and it certainly hasn’t been about anything as highfalutin as values. Personality is the word. West and Musk are nothing if not personalities. They are always making news, and nowadays whatever news they make tends to look a lot more MAGA than it used to. And it looks even more so when their names are on the lips of the House Judiciary Committee GOP, spoken in succession with no other words to accompany them, as if they were saints. Kanye. Elon. Trump. They’re all part of each other’s stories, now. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Opinion | Kanye. Elon. Trump. What Do These Men Have In Common?
Dasha Burns Defends NBC News Interview With John Fetterman
Dasha Burns Defends NBC News Interview With John Fetterman
Dasha Burns Defends NBC News Interview With John Fetterman https://digitalalabamanews.com/dasha-burns-defends-nbc-news-interview-with-john-fetterman/ News Television CNN announced that it was ending Vault by CNN, a program that sold historical footage from the cable news channel’s vault.  Published 9 hours ago on October 12, 2022 The non-fungible tokens business has come and gone, which is why CNN is jumping out of the digital market.  CNN announced that it was ending Vault by CNN, a program that sold historical footage from the cable news channel’s vault.  The cable news channel began selling the NFTs, which it calls Moments, in June 2021, after the unique digital tokens took off in popularity. Vault by CNN stated that while working alongside collectors, artists and journalists worldwide was a privilege, it was time to “say goodbye” to the program. “Vault was originally launched as a 6-week experiment, but the support and engagement from our community let us expand this project into something much larger,” the group said in a statement.  “Thank you to each of you for your interest and engagement in what we built together.” Despite Vault by CNN dissolving, the NFT collection intends to “live on,” the statement said, and more details on the digital tokens are available on the program’s Discord channel. Eduardo Razo is the Assistant Content Editor for BNM, which includes writing daily news stories on the news media industry. He can be found on Twitter @eddierazo_ or you can reach him by email at eddie1991razo@gmail.com. News Television Lipof has been with ABC News since Aug. 2021 Published 15 hours ago on October 12, 2022 ABC News announced on Tuesday that it has a new full-time New York-based correspondent as Phil Lipof takes over the position.  Lipof has been with ABC News since Aug. 2021 but was working as a freelance reporter for the network, but that all is changing.  Nonetheless, during his time as a freelancer, he reported for “World News Tonight with David Muir,” “Good Morning America,” ABC News Live, “Nightline,” and more.  “Phil is a smart, dogged journalist,” ABC News President Kim Godwin said in a press release. “Just days before the war in Ukraine started, Phil traveled to Poland to report on what developed into a devastating refugee crisis.  “While in Poland, he spent three weeks anchoring in the field for ABC News Live, reporting on those seeking safety as they crossed the border. Phil was also on the ground in Uvalde, Texas, in the wake of the tragic school shooting.” Before arriving at ABC News, Lipof spent time as the main anchor of the Boston NBC affiliate. Additionally, he served as an anchor/reporter for Boston’s WCVB and WABC in New York for eight years.  Eduardo Razo is the Assistant Content Editor for BNM, which includes writing daily news stories on the news media industry. He can be found on Twitter @eddierazo_ or you can reach him by email at eddie1991razo@gmail.com. News Television Trump filed a $475 million defamation lawsuit against CNN on Oct. 3, but he might not be down going after media outlets. Published 15 hours ago on October 12, 2022 Former United States President Donald Trump filed a $475 million defamation lawsuit against CNN on Oct. 3, but he might not be down going after media outlets.  Although Trump didn’t name any news media platforms in particular, in an email to his supporters (h/t Next TV), the former president did say that some are with CNN regarding the defamation they have brought upon him. Trump stated that these outlets are providing “lies, defamation, and wrongdoing,” including as it pertains to “The Big Lie, “a vague explanation of Trump’s unsupported claim that he won the 2020 presidential election.  As for CNN, Trump’s lawsuit claims that the network is using its influence to defeat him politically by recently ramping up their attacks on their network. “As a part of its concerted effort to tilt the political balance to the left, CNN has tried to taint the Plaintiff with a series of ever-more scandalous, false, and defamatory labels of ‘racist,’ ‘Russian lackey,’ ‘insurrectionist,’ and ultimately ‘Hitler,’” the lawsuit claims. Former CNN president Jeff Zucker stated on Friday that the network wasn’t anti-Trump during his time as the leader of the cable news channel.  “As I said all the time, we were not anti-Trump,” Zucker said at The Un-Convention 2022. “We were pro-truth. If that came off as anti-Trump because he didn’t tell the truth, I’m not going to apologize for that. You gotta hold both sides accountable. And kick the shit out of both sides.” Eduardo Razo is the Assistant Content Editor for BNM, which includes writing daily news stories on the news media industry. He can be found on Twitter @eddierazo_ or you can reach him by email at eddie1991razo@gmail.com. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Dasha Burns Defends NBC News Interview With John Fetterman
Zelenskyy Asks For Aid To Rebuild Ukraine; Power Restored At Occupied Nuclear Power Plant
Zelenskyy Asks For Aid To Rebuild Ukraine; Power Restored At Occupied Nuclear Power Plant
Zelenskyy Asks For Aid To Rebuild Ukraine; Power Restored At Occupied Nuclear Power Plant https://digitalalabamanews.com/zelenskyy-asks-for-aid-to-rebuild-ukraine-power-restored-at-occupied-nuclear-power-plant/ Nine vessels to leave Ukraine carrying more than 150,000 metric tons of agricultural products An aerial view shows ships at the anchorage area of the Bosphorus southern entrance in Istanbul, on October 12, 2022. Yasin Akgul | AFP | Getty Images The organization overseeing the export of grain from Ukraine said it has approved nine vessels to leave the besieged country. The Black Sea Grain Initiative, a deal among Ukraine, Russia, the United Nations and Turkey, said the vessels are carrying 150,459 metric tons of grain and other crops. Two ships are destined for Turkey and are carrying wheat and rapeseed. One ship will depart from Ukraine’s Yuzhny-Pivdennyi port for France and is carrying 5,700 metric tons of sunflower seed. Another ship will leave from Chornomorsk to Lebanon and is carrying 13,400 metric tons of corn. The fifth vessel will sail to Italy from Odesa and is carrying 7,560 metric tons of corn. One ship will leave for India carrying 42,000 metric tons of sunflower oil and another will depart for Spain carrying 27,100 metric tons of corn. Two more vessels will depart from Odesa for Greece and Egypt carrying rapeseed meal and soy beans. Read more about the Black Sea Grain Initiative here. — Amanda Macias Zelenskyy asks for financial support for reconstruction projects in Ukraine Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Lviv, Ukraine on August 18, 2022. Emin Sansar | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called on financial leaders to provide more support to his war-weary country as it fights off Russia’s assault. Zelenskyy asked those at the second ministerial roundtable discussion for $2 billion in order to rebuild the electric energy infrastructure destroyed during the war. He also asked for financial credit in order to purchase gas and coal for future heating systems, as reliance on Russia is not an option. He also asked for the World Bank to guarantee approximately $17 billion to finance reconstruction projects across Ukraine. The government of Ukraine, European Commission and the World Bank assessed that it will cost at least $349 billion to reconstruct Ukraine after Russia’s invasion. — Amanda Macias Putin’s nuclear saber rattling ‘reckless and irresponsible,’ U.S. Defense secretary says US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin arrives for a two-day meeting of the alliance’s Defence Ministers at the NATO Headquarter in Brussels on October 12, 2022. Kenzo Tribouillard | Afp | Getty Images U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin called Russian President Vladimir Putin’s nuclear saber rattling “reckless and irresponsible.” “We don’t expect to see and hear that kind of behavior from a major nuclear power. And so that’s very dangerous,” Austin told reporters at NATO headquarters, adding that “we take this very seriously.” Austin said that the U.S. was watching the situation closely but had not found cause to change Washington’s strategic nuclear posture. “We’ve not seen any indicators at this point that would lead us to believe that. But again, it’s not something we look at once and leave alone. This is something we remain focused on 24 hours a day, seven days a week,” Austin said, referring to Putin’s decision on whether to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine. — Amanda Macias U.S. Joint Chiefs Chairman Milley slams Russia’s strikes against civilians, saying they could be war crimes US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Mark Milley arrives for a two-day meeting of the alliance’s Defence Ministers at the NATO Headquarter in Brussels on October 12, 2022. Kenzo Tribouillard | AFP | Getty Images U.S. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley slammed Russia’s attacks on civilian infrastructure as the Kremlin’s brutal assault in Ukraine marches into its eighth month. “Russia has purposely struck civilian infrastructure with the intent to harm civilians,” Milley told reporters at NATO headquarters. Milley added that targeting civilians, an allegation Moscow has previously denied, is a war crime under the international rules of war. On Monday, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered a retaliatory strike for an explosion over the weekend on the Kerch bridge, which links Russia to the Crimean Peninsula. The Kremlin placed the blame squarely on Ukraine and vowed a “harsh” response. — Amanda Macias IAEA chief Grossi will return to Kyiv following meetings in Russia International Atomic Energy Agency chief Rafael Grossi said that he will return to Kyiv after meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin.   “The work on the establishment of a nuclear safety and security protection zone around the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant continues,” Grossi wrote in a tweet, pictured next to a Ukrainian train. Earlier on Wednesday, Ukraine’s state nuclear energy company, Energoatom, said in a statement that the nuclear power plant was running on diesel generators after a Russian rocket damaged part of the facility. In an update, Grossi said that power had been restored to Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant after a brief outage. — Amanda Macias A Russian nuclear strike would almost certainly draw ‘physical response,’ NATO official says Russian President Vladimir Putin attends the plenary session of the 2022 Eastern Economic Forum (EEF) in Vladivostok, Russia September 7, 2022. Sergey Bobylev | Tass Host Photo Agency | via Reuters A Russian nuclear strike would change the course of the conflict and almost certainly trigger a “physical response” from Ukraine’s allies and potentially from NATO, a senior NATO official said on Wednesday. Any use of nuclear weapons by Moscow would have “unprecedented consequences” for Russia, the official warned. It would “almost certainly be drawing a physical response from many allies, and potentially from NATO itself,” he said. The official added that Moscow was using its nuclear threats mainly to deter NATO and other countries from directly entering its war on Ukraine.  — Reuters U.S. Defense Secretary Austin hails Ukrainian counteroffensive at NATO US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin (L) shakes hand with Ukraine’s Defence minister Oleksiy Reznikov (R) ahead of a meeting of the Ukraine Defence contact group as part of a NATO Defence Ministers Council at the Alliance headquarters in Brussels on October 12, 2022. Stephanie Lecocq | Afp | Getty Images U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley held the sixth meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group at NATO headquarters. The Ukraine Defense Contact group, a coalition of nearly 50 countries supporting Ukraine’s military needs, has met six times since it was formed in April. During opening remarks, Austin hailed Ukraine’s counteroffensive as Russia’s brutal assault enters its eighth month. “He [Russian President Vladimir Putin] assumed that he could roll into Kyiv. He assumed that Ukraine could never mount a counteroffensive to retake its sovereign territory in Kharkiv and beyond. He assumed that the world would stand idly by as he attempted to annex four additional regions of Ukraine and he assumed that we wouldn’t summon the unity and resolve to stand up to his imperial war of choice,” Austin said before the group. “Despite Putin’s new assaults, Ukrainian forces have changed the dynamics of this war. They’ve liberated hundreds of towns from Russian occupation and they’ve retaken thousands of square kilometers of their land,” he added. — Amanda Macias Death toll from Russian missile strikes rises to 20, Ukraine’s State Emergency Service says A firefighter extinguishes a fire after a flat was hit by a missile strike in Bakhmut, Donetsk region, on Sept. 15, 2022. Juan Barreto | Afp | Getty Images Russian missile strikes on Monday have killed 20 people and injured at least 108 others, said Ukraine’s State Emergency Service in a Telegram post providing the latest figures on the human toll of the multi-city attacks. “In total, 205 objects were damaged – 45 buildings, 30 high-rise buildings and other objects of various fields, including critical infrastructure,” said Oleksandr Horunzhy, press officer for the State Emergency Service of Ukraine, according to an NBC News translation. Separately, the spokesman of the State Emergency Service noted that restoration works are still ongoing. — Amanda Macias Power restored at Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, IAEA says This photo taken on Sept. 11, 2022, shows a security person standing in front of the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant in Enerhodar, Zaporizhzhia, amid the Ukraine war. Stringer | Afp | Getty Images The International Atomic Energy Agency said the power at the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant was restored following a brief outage. “I’ve been informed by our team on site that external power to Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant is restored,” IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi said in a tweet. “Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant operator says this morning’s outage was caused by shelling damage to a far off sub-station, highlighting how precarious the situation is. We need a protection zone ASAP,” he added. Earlier on Wednesday, Ukraine’s state nuclear energy company, Energoatom, said in a statement that the nuclear power plant was running on diesel generators after a Russian rocket damaged part of the facility. As a result of the shelling, the transmission line was disconnected and the plant went into “full black-out mode.” — Amanda Macias Putin suggests U.S. stood to benefit from Nord Stream pipeline leaks Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with members of the Security Council via a video link in Saint Petersburg, Russia, October 10, 2022.  Gavriil Grigorov | Sputnik | Reuters Russian President Vladimir Putin sugges...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Zelenskyy Asks For Aid To Rebuild Ukraine; Power Restored At Occupied Nuclear Power Plant
Residents Encouraged To Get Security Systems Symphony Tickets
Residents Encouraged To Get Security Systems Symphony Tickets
🌱 Residents Encouraged To Get Security Systems + Symphony Tickets https://digitalalabamanews.com/%f0%9f%8c%b1-residents-encouraged-to-get-security-systems-symphony-tickets/ Skip to main content Vestavia Hills, AL Mountain Brook, AL Birmingham, AL Pelham, AL Trussville, AL Tuscaloosa, AL Montgomery, AL Huntsville, AL Dallas-Hiram, GA Douglasville, GA Alabama Top National News See All Communities Hi all. I’m back with your fresh copy of the Hoover Daily. Here’s all the local news you need to know right now. But first, today’s weather: Partly sunny. High: 78 Low: 47. Find out what’s happening in Hooverwith free, real-time updates from Patch. Attention, real estate pros in Hoover! We’re now offering an exclusive sponsorship opportunity for an agent interested in attracting local clients and standing apart from the competition. Click here to learn more. Here are the top three stories today in Hoover: Find out what’s happening in Hooverwith free, real-time updates from Patch. A “No Contact Advisory” has been issued for portions of Patton Creek. The advisory was issued due to sewer line construction issues. The overflow was successfully stopped but Jefferson County is asking the public to avoid contact with the Patton Creek tributary in an abundance of caution. The affected portions are between 5622 Grove Blvd and Hoover 35226. (ABC 3340 News) The Hoover Police Department is encouraging residents to install security systems. The statement is due to a series of home burglaries that began last Feb. The department has reason to believe that a group of serial burglars is responsible for the series of home thefts in the Hoover area. One of the burglars is currently in custody but the others might still be out there. (WBRC) The Alabama Symphony Orchestra will be launching a pilot program at the Hoover Public Library. Library patrons will be able to check out Alabama Symphony Orchestra tickets for free with a library card. The number of tickets will vary. If demand is high, more tickets may become available. (280 Living) From our sponsor, Wise Bread: The best no-hassle travel cards have the highest rewards, no annual or foreign transaction fees and a $250 bonus offer for travel. A long-time credit card writer says these are some of the best deals he’s seen in his years of writing for top financial websites. Start turning your travel dreams into reality. Click here for details. Today in Hoover: October Coffee & Contacts At The Hoover Chamber of Commerce (7:30 AM) From my notebook: Are you growing increasingly frustrated with online home listings and are seeking an alternative? Consider this list of five upcoming in-person open houses occurring in the Hoover area this weekend. Click for the full list that includes times, dates, property dimensions, prices, and photos. (Hoover Patch) The annual Hoover Hayride will be this Saturday at Veterans Park! Don’t forget to dress in a costume. The rides will be from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. (Hoover (AL) Police Department via Facebook) Hoover High School Band is encouraging the Hoover community to attend the Hoover Invitational Marching Festival. The event is on Saturday at the Hoover Metropolitan Complex at 12:30 p.m. Let’s fill the stadium! (Hoover High School Band via Facebook) That’s it for today! I’ll see you around. — Miranda Fraraccio About me: Miranda Fraraccio is a born and raised Rhode Islander, now living in New York. She works as a staff writer for content creation agency Lightning Media Partners and is a graduate of The University of Rhode Island, where she earned a degree in Writing & Rhetoric and Communication Studies. In her free time, you can find her traveling, drinking tea, or photographing her neighborhood as a street photographer. Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts. The rules of replying: Be respectful. This is a space for friendly local discussions. No racist, discriminatory, vulgar or threatening language will be tolerated. Be transparent. Use your real name, and back up your claims. Keep it local and relevant. Make sure your replies stay on topic. Review the Patch Community Guidelines. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Residents Encouraged To Get Security Systems Symphony Tickets
Food That Satisfies The Soul
Food That Satisfies The Soul
Food That Satisfies The Soul https://digitalalabamanews.com/food-that-satisfies-the-soul/ PRICHARD, Ala. (WBRC) – Carolyn Jackson never intended to be a BBQ master. In fact, she had a long successful career at a local paper mill in Mobile county, but in 1979 two things happened. There was a labor strike at the company and Hurricane Frederic struck in Mobile. That set a chain of events in motion which would someday make Carolyn’s barbecue famous and Absolutely Alabama. Carolyn remembers the days of Hurricane Frederic. “Everything over here was torn up like everywhere else. So, I built a pit out of cinder blocks and wire and after I went back to work, and Daddy said, ‘Baby, people still coming wanting that barbecue. What did you do?’ So, he decided to put our first pit in. This was like a little convenience store, and he sold cars, and he worked on cars in the back, too.  He decided not to get anymore gas. He wouldn’t do that anymore. So, he decided to go in the barbecue business,” said Jackson. Carolyn Jackson never intended to be a BBQ master. In fact, she had a long successful career at a local paper mill in Mobile county, but in 1979 two things happened. There was a labor strike at the company and Hurricane Frederic struck in Mobile. That set a chain of events in motion which would someday make Carolyn’s barbecue famous and Absolutely Alabama.(WBRC) Carolyn Jackson’s father was R.C. McMillan, known as Mr. Mac, a man known, loved and respected by the entire community. “And I don’t care what day it is. You’re going to hear a story about my father. Daddy was very well known, and everybody loved him.” How would you describe McMillan’s Bar-B-Que? Mr. Mac described it as “food that satisfies the soul.” Carolyn Jackson never intended to be a BBQ master. In fact, she had a long successful career at a local paper mill in Mobile county, but in 1979 two things happened. There was a labor strike at the company and Hurricane Frederic struck in Mobile. That set a chain of events in motion which would someday make Carolyn’s barbecue famous and Absolutely Alabama.(WBRC) “People really like our collard greens, and our chopped beef, beef on buns, you know? And especially the ribs and the smoked chicken. There was a little boy, I would say nine or ten years old. He came in, and he said, ‘Miss Carolyn, your greens taste like my Grand momma’s greens that she used to cook. They were so good.’ And he was so young, and I appreciate that, and it sticks with me all the time that a young person that age, you know? But I can’t tell you Fred what I put in them. We love our customers. We really do, and I think they love us to keep coming, Fred. I think they love us.” Food That Satisfies The Soul(WBRC) Carolyn’s dad passed away in 2014. She still comes here every day for those customers, but mostly for Mr. Mac. “My father deserved a billboard and that’s what I put him. I want people to see him every day. And I built that gazebo,  and I go out there, and I tell the workers when I get tired. I said, I’m going to talk to Daddy now. You never think about your parents passing. You never think about what’s going to happen, and it was just a shock when he passed, and I was helping him all along, but I never thought I would be where I am now, and I’m just trying to keep his legacy alive every day.” Food That Satisfies The Soul(WBRC) Get news alerts in the Apple App Store and Google Play Store or subscribe to our email newsletter here. Copyright 2022 WBRC. All rights reserved. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Food That Satisfies The Soul
Kay Reynolds Beaty Valdosta Today
Kay Reynolds Beaty Valdosta Today
Kay Reynolds Beaty – Valdosta Today https://digitalalabamanews.com/kay-reynolds-beaty-valdosta-today/ Kay Reynolds Beaty, 85, resident of Auburn, Alabama, passed away on October 9, 2022, at Langdale Hospice House, Valdosta, GA. She was born in Hanover, AL, on October 21,1936. Visitation will be held Saturday, October 15, 2022 from 11:00-1:00 CST at Jeffcoat-Trant Funeral Home, Opelika, AL, followed by funeral service at 1:00 PM CST at Jeffcoat-Trant Funeral Home with Dr. George Mathison and Dr. Cory Smith officiating. Graveside service will be held at Andrews Chapel Cemetery, Hanover, AL, Saturday October 15, 2022 at 4:00 PM CST with Brad Hughes officiating. Kay was preceded in death by her parents, Cecil H. and Edna Forester Reynolds, infant son Thomas Joel Beaty, her brother, Charles H. Reynolds, and devoted husband of 63 years, Thomas A. Beaty. Kay graduated from Sylacauga High School, and after marrying her childhood sweetheart, she worked in the Botany Lab at Auburn University while her husband ,Tom, pursued his degree in Agriculture. While residing in Dawson, GA, she attended college and obtained a Fine Arts degree in Music from Darton College, Albany, GA. Years later, Kay attended Troy State University, Dothan, AL, earning a Bachelor of Science degree followed by a Master’s degree in Psychology. An esteemed musician, Kay enriched the lives of many through the years while serving as pianist and organist in her local churches in Dawson, GA, Blakely, GA, and, more recently, the McGhee-Lacy Sunday School class where she and Tom were members at Auburn United Methodist Church. She also imparted her deep love and knowledge of music as a piano and organ teacher, impacting the lives of many children and young adults. Her faith in the Lord was strong, and her love and devotion to family and friends were evident in her life. Kay is survived by two daughters, Susan Beaty Bowden (Johnny) of Valdosta, GA, and Stacey Beaty Freeman (Andy) of Auburn, AL, one sister, Ruth Sinclair of Hanceville, AL, one brother, Larry Reynolds of Sylacauga, AL, grandchildren, Kelley Cherry Stinson (Erik), Karley Cherry, Kristina Bowen Mulligan (Mike), Katy Thomas, Kathryn Bowen Kim (Chris), great grandchildren, Jackson Stinson, Jacob Stinson, Keyton McGill, Molly Mulligan, Cruz Kim, Marshall Mulligan, and Eila Kim, and bonus grandchildren, Courtney Bowden and Jake Bowden. In addition, she has many beloved cousins, nieces and nephews. The family would like to extend heartfelt gratitude to the loving, caring staff at Langdale Hospice House. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to Langdale Hospice House, 2263 Pineview Dr., Valdosta GA 31602. Condolences to the family may be conveyed online at www.mclanecares.com. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Kay Reynolds Beaty Valdosta Today
The 1.7 Mile Inverness Greenway/Valleydale Trail Is Completejust In Time For Fall Weather | Bham Now
The 1.7 Mile Inverness Greenway/Valleydale Trail Is Completejust In Time For Fall Weather | Bham Now
The 1.7 Mile Inverness Greenway/Valleydale Trail Is Complete—just In Time For Fall Weather | Bham Now https://digitalalabamanews.com/the-1-7-mile-inverness-greenway-valleydale-trail-is-complete-just-in-time-for-fall-weather-bham-now/ construction has been completed. Keep reading to find out how you can enjoy this beautiful new 1.7 miles of trails. Inverness Greenway connects parks + trails to the surrounding homes Gresham Smith, consists of 1.1 miles of an 8-to-10 foot concrete pathway and .6 miles of 10-to-12 foot asphalt path. There is also a timber 250ft bridge that goes through the Hoover Nature Park. The purpose of this trail is to connect the surrounding neighborhoods along Valleydale Rd and Inverness Pkwy. Although the trail was just announced as being finished, people have already gotten a chance to enjoy it by walking the parts that were finished and turning once they reached construction. Now, everyone will be able to experience the whole trail that bleeds into the Hoover Inverness Nature park, which is a 77 acre park including multiple trails and parks such as Veterans Park. Time to get your steps in Inverness is a great suburb located within Hoover and Shelby County and is a hot place to live and shop. The Inverness Greenway adds to the attraction. The trail promotes recreational activities such as cycling and running but also serves a purpose as a different mode of transportation between the surrounding neighborhoods and parks. Whether you’re an avid dog-walker, cyclist or trying to reach your destination using your own two feet, the Inverness Greenway/Valleydale trail is the perfect solution. You can locate the trail + park at 272 Inverness Pkwy, Birmingham, AL 35242. What do YOU think about the newest addition to Inverness Nature Park? Let us know on Instagram + Facebook. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
The 1.7 Mile Inverness Greenway/Valleydale Trail Is Completejust In Time For Fall Weather | Bham Now
Trump Lawyer Targeting Effort Opens New Strategy With Bar Rules
Trump Lawyer Targeting Effort Opens New Strategy With Bar Rules
Trump Lawyer Targeting Effort Opens New Strategy With Bar Rules https://digitalalabamanews.com/trump-lawyer-targeting-effort-opens-new-strategy-with-bar-rules/ A lawyer group that brought ethics complaints against Trump attorneys is trying to make it tougher for lawyers to use the legal system to overturn elections. The group, called the 65 Project, aims to change bar rules of professional conduct in 50 states and the District of Columbia to eliminate “fraudulent and malicious lawsuits” against fair election results. “Lawyers purport to be self-regulatory and special stewards of the rule of law,” Paul Rosenzweig, a group advisory board member, told reporters Wednesday. “They failed in that responsibility” with the 2020 election. The effort is a new front in the group’s self-described battle to protect democracy from abuse of the legal system. 65 Project has already filed 55 state bar ethics complaints against lawyers for former President Donald Trump over their efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election. The group’s targets have included former Foley & Lardner partner Cleta Mitchell, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and lawyers Joseph diGenova and Boris Epshteyn. Part of 65 Project’s new effort includes proposing rules to prevent attorneys in public office from violating attorney standards by amplifying false statements about elections. The group is focusing initially on about a dozen states, including Ohio, Wisconsin, Texas, and Pennsylvania, and DC, said Michael Teter, a former Utah assistant attorney general who is Project 65’s managing director. Changing ethics rules at the American Bar Association, which puts forth model rules of professional conduct, and at the state level can be convoluted, Teter said, though the group aims to have new ethics rules in place for the 2024 election. The 65 Project has sought to disbar Trump lawyer John Eastman and asked the U.S. Supreme Court to intervene in the matter. It has also targeted former and current state attorneys general in Missouri, Kansas, Alabama and Utah with complaints. Each of the group’s complaints is active, Teter said. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Trump Lawyer Targeting Effort Opens New Strategy With Bar Rules
Judge Clears Way For Trump To Be Deposed In Defamation Case
Judge Clears Way For Trump To Be Deposed In Defamation Case
Judge Clears Way For Trump To Be Deposed In Defamation Case https://digitalalabamanews.com/judge-clears-way-for-trump-to-be-deposed-in-defamation-case/ NEW YORK — A federal judge has denied a request by former president Donald Trump to pause proceedings in a defamation case brought against him in 2019 by an author who said he raped her in a department store dressing room decades ago. The decision clears the way for Trump, who denies the claim, to be deposed as scheduled next week. In the lawsuit brought against Trump by former Elle magazine columnist E. Jean Carroll, Trump recently won a temporary reprieve from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit, which sent the case to the appeals court in D.C. to resolve whether Trump was a federal employee as defined by the law when he publicly rebutted Carroll’s story. On Trump’s behalf, the Justice Department previously tried to intervene in the case on the grounds that he was technically an employee of the U.S. government when he occupied the White House and had legal protections from civil litigation because he was acting under the scope of his employment when he denied Carroll’s account and made disparaging comments about her. U.S. District Judge Lewis A. Kaplan had rejected the Justice Department’s intervention attempt, which would have had the effect of extinguishing the case because immunity from liability probably would have applied. Kaplan’s ruling was reversed last month by the 2nd Circuit, but the D.C. appeals court ultimately could uphold the original decision to exclude the Justice Department. In Kaplan’s decision Wednesday, the judge said depositions of Trump and Carroll are essentially all that remains for the parties to complete the pretrial discovery process. Carroll is slated to give testimony Friday, while Trump is scheduled to do so Oct. 19. “Completing those depositions — which already have been delayed for years — would impose no undue burden on Mr. Trump, let alone any irreparable injury,” Kaplan said. Carroll publicly accused Trump of sexually assaulting her in a Bergdorf Goodman dressing room in the 1990s, a claim the former president adamantly denies. She is expected to file additional claims alleging battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress under the New York’s Adult Survivors Act, which is opening a window of time for sexual assault accusers to sue for alleged events that are past the statute of limitations. “We are pleased that Judge Kaplan agreed with our position not to stay discovery in this case,” said Carroll attorney Roberta Kaplan, who is not related to the judge in the case. “We look forward to filing our case under the Adult Survivors Act and moving forward to trial with all dispatch.” Trump still could appeal Wednesday’s decision before his deposition next week. It was not immediately clear whether his lawyer planned to do so. “We look forward to establishing on the record that this case is, and always has been, entirely without merit,” Trump attorney Alina Habba said in a statement. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Judge Clears Way For Trump To Be Deposed In Defamation Case
Biden Addresses Putins Nuclear Threats Possible Rematch Against Trump In New CNN Interview
Biden Addresses Putins Nuclear Threats Possible Rematch Against Trump In New CNN Interview
Biden Addresses Putin’s Nuclear Threats, Possible Rematch Against Trump In New CNN Interview https://digitalalabamanews.com/biden-addresses-putins-nuclear-threats-possible-rematch-against-trump-in-new-cnn-interview/ In a wide-ranging interview with Jake Tapper that aired Tuesday night on CNN, President Joe Biden said he doesn’t think Russian President Vladimir Putin will use tactical nuclear weapons in the war against Ukraine, but called Putin’s threats “irresponsible.”  “I think it’s irresponsible for him to talk about it, the idea that a world leader of one of the largest nuclear powers in the world says he may use a tactical nuclear weapon in Ukraine,” Biden said.  Biden declined to call Putin irrational, insisting instead that he was a “rational actor” who was behaving in an irrational way. As Ukrainian forces have regained territory in the parts of Ukraine that Putin has said Russia would annex, Putin has escalated his threats against the West and Ukraine, including by insinuating he would be willing to use nuclear weapons in the conflict.  Tapper pressed Biden on how the U.S. or NATO would respond if Putin crossed the nuclear “red line,” but Biden said he was “not going to get into that.” He did say the Pentagon was gaming out ways the U.S. might respond to different scenarios.  On the new partnership between Russia and Saudi Arabia, and their announcement that OPEC+ would cut oil production, Biden said he would reevaluate the U.S.’s relationship with Saudi Arabia and that Saudi Arabia would face “consequences,” but declined to give details on what those would be. Gas prices will likely rise in the U.S. because of the OPEC+ decision, a move Biden has been trying to forestall.  Tapper brought up Biden’s trip to Saudi Arabia, where he spoke to leaders there about keeping oil flowing, and Biden’s fist-bump with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, for which he was roundly criticized.  “Let’s get straight why I went,” Biden told Tapper. “I didn’t go about oil, I went about making sure that we made sure that we weren’t going to walk away from the Middle East.”  Biden also responded to Tapper’s questions about his plans for 2024. He reiterated again that he would not make a decision on whether or not he’ll run until after the November midterm elections.  Tapper wished Biden an early happy birthday — he’’ll turn 80 on Nov. 20 — and reminded him he’s the oldest president in history.  “What’s your message to Democrats who like you, who like what you’ve done, but who are concerned about your age and the demands of the job?” Tapper asked.  Jake Tapper speaks before the first of two Democratic presidential primary debates hosted by CNN on July 30, 2019, in the Fox Theatre in Detroit. Tapper recently interviewed President Joe Biden. Paul Sancya, Associated Press Biden responded by bringing up the bills he’s helped pass in recent months, including a bill that raises taxes on corporations and cuts prescription drug costs, and a bipartisan infrastructure bill.   Tapper also asked Biden if he thought he was the only Democrat who could beat Trump.  “I believe I can beat Donald Trump again,” Biden responded.  In response to a question about Biden’s son Hunter, who could face criminal charges for a gun purchase and for possible tax violations, Biden said he was “proud” of his son, who has been fighting a drug addiction. Tapper did not ask the president about Hunter Biden’s ties to businesses overseas, which is also part of the U.S. Attorney in Delaware’s investigation.  Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Biden Addresses Putins Nuclear Threats Possible Rematch Against Trump In New CNN Interview