Digital Alabama News

4980 bookmarks
Custom sorting
Rep. Greene Elevates From The Fringe To Top Billing
Rep. Greene Elevates From The Fringe To Top Billing
Rep. Greene Elevates From The Fringe To Top Billing https://digitalalabamanews.com/rep-greene-elevates-from-the-fringe-to-top-billing/ By Lisa Mascaro | Associated Press WASHINGTON — Marjorie Taylor Greene took her seat directly behind Republican House leader Kevin McCarthy, a proximity to power for the firebrand congresswoman that did not go unnoticed, as he unveiled the House GOP’s midterm election agenda in Pennsylvania. Days later, she appeared on stage warming up the crowd for Donald Trump, when the former president rallied voters in Michigan to cast ballots for Republicans, including for control of Congress. Once shunned as a political pariah for her extremist rhetoric, the Georgia congresswoman who spent her first term in the House stripped of institutional power by Democrats is being celebrated by Republicans and welcomed into the GOP fold. If Republicans win the House majority in the November election, Greene is poised to become an influential player shaping the GOP agenda, an agitator with clout. “No. 1, we need to impeach Joe Biden. No. 2, We need to impeach Secretary Mayorkas. And No. 3, we should impeach Merrick Garland,” Greene told The Associated Press outside the U.S. Capitol. Alejandro Mayorkas is the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security and Garland the attorney general. Scolding the media for having been “wrong about me” from the start, she said those who know better “take me very seriously.” “I’m going to be a strong legislator and I’ll be a very involved member of Congress,” she predicted. “I know how to work inside, and I know how to work outside. And I’m looking forward to doing that.” This is the outlook for the Republican Party in the Trump era, the normalizing of once fringe figures into the highest ranks of political power. It’s a sign of the GOP’s rightward drift that Greene’s association with extremists and nationalists, violent rhetoric and remarks about Jewish people have found a home in elected office. Her ascent brings into focus the challenge ahead for McCarthy, whose GOP ranks are filling with far-right political stars with the potential to play an oversized role in setting the policies, priorities and tone of the new Congress. “I’ve said for a long time there’s a battle for the heart and soul of the Republican Party,” said Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, the No. 2 Democrat in the House, at a briefing ahead of the midterm elections. When the congresswoman says outlandish things — as she did at the Trump rally earlier this month claiming “Democrats want Republicans dead, and they’ve already started the killings” — few Republican leaders dare a public or private rebuke of such incendiary language. In this case, she was exaggerating two local incidents involving politics, one that ended tragically in a fatality. Greene’s political currency stretches beyond her massive social media following and her ability to rake in sizable sums from donors. Her proximity to Trump makes her a force that cannot be ignored by what’s left of her mainstream GOP colleagues. McCarthy’s allowance for Greene to sit front and center with leadership for the campaign rollout was not by accident but design. The Republican lawmakers in attendance celebrated her presence, calling it a sign of the GOP’s “big tent” that welcomes all comers. But Greene’s arrival also signaled a stark normalizing of the most extreme elements in the Republican Party. Longtime political strategist Rick Wilson, a former Republican who left the party in the Trump era, calls Greene’s brand of politics “government by trolling” that marks a dangerous new era for the GOP and will make it difficult to govern. McCarthy is in line to become House speaker if Republicans regain the majority. “No matter what the trolling part of the Republican caucus does, you can’t ever satisfy them,” said Wilson, now at the Lincoln Project. With the departure of the last vestiges of the anti-Trump wing of the House GOP — Liz Cheney defeated by a primary opponent and Adam Kinzinger deciding to step down rather than seek reelection — “that’s it,” Wilson said. Greene swept onto the national stage in the 2020 election, catapulted forward even before she took office. As the lawmaker-elect from northwest Georgia, she attended a key organizing meeting at the Trump White House as lawmakers laid plans to object to the certification of Joe Biden’s election on Jan. 6, 2021. When she arrived to be sworn into Congress, she wore a “Trump Won” face mask. Democrats moved swiftly and unequivocally to reprimand Greene, voting to strip her of congressional committee assignments over her incendiary rhetoric, including trafficking in volatile conspiracy theories. Greene drew rebuke from her own party a few months later for comparing mandatory COVID-19 face masks to the treatment of Jewish people by Nazi Germany. While some have tried to compare Greene to outspoken far-left lawmakers, it became clear even to Republican leaders that Greene stood in a category of her own. At that time, McCarthy called her comments about the Holocaust “wrong” and “appalling.” Greene later apologized. In many ways, Greene’s arrival in the House traces the arc of the Republican Party’s rightward evolution from the Newt Gingrich revolution that brought conservatives to power in the 1994 election, to the “tea party” Republicans that regained the House majority in 2010. Jack Kingston, a former Republican congressman who rose during those earlier eras, said McCarthy was smart in welcoming Greene to unfurl the House GOP’s “Commitment to America” last month. “He’s got to work with her, and he knows that,” Kingston said. “Getting Marjorie Taylor Greene on board is very important,” he said. “If you don’t bring everybody in the tent, they’re going to find their own niche.” In the interview, Greene said she is certain she will be reinstated on her congressional committees if Republicans win the majority, eyeing the House Oversight panel, and is talking to leadership about other opportunities in the new Congress. Not only does Greene want to impeach Biden and Cabinet officials, she is eager to conduct investigations, including into the origins of COVID-19. Last month, Greene unveiled legislation that is another priority — her bill to prohibit some gender reassignment procedures on minors — flanked by a dozen Republican lawmakers and leaders in the conservative movement. Many of them praised the congresswoman for her work. “I want to thank Marjorie Taylor Greene — who is soon to get her full legislative powers back, by the way,” said Matt Schlapp, chairman of the Conservative Political Action Committee, who hugged her afterward. “If this is the type of thing that you’re going to have the courage to do, I think that’s something everybody needs to understand,” Schlapp said. McCarthy and Greene appear to have come to an understanding that they need each other. The leader needs Greene to come into the GOP fold rather than throw rocks from outside. She needs McCarthy’s blessing to regain committee assignments, enabling her to participate more fully in Congress and put her imprint on legislation. At the Pennsylvania event McCarthy batted away questions about his ability to govern if Republicans win the majority. “Name me one person in the conference that is opposed to this,” he said afterward of their platform. “Is that a difference? Yes.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Rep. Greene Elevates From The Fringe To Top Billing
Vote To Extend Trump Media Merger Deadline Postponed Again
Vote To Extend Trump Media Merger Deadline Postponed Again
Vote To Extend Trump Media Merger Deadline Postponed Again https://digitalalabamanews.com/vote-to-extend-trump-media-merger-deadline-postponed-again/ License Photo” height=”533″ src=”https://cdnph.upi.com/svc/sv/upi/2531665426429/2022/1/a05092c05ce42993d955a738844a704d/Vote-to-extend-Trump-Media-merger-deadline-postponed-again.jpg” title=”Former President Donald J. Trump, left, watches play at the 16th hole tee at LIV Golf Bedminster invitational, part of the new LIV Golf Invitational Series, at the Trump National Golf Club on July 29 in Bedminster, New Jersey. File Photo by Peter Foley/UPI | License Photo” width=”800″ Former President Donald J. Trump, left, watches play at the 16th hole tee at LIV Golf Bedminster invitational, part of the new LIV Golf Invitational Series, at the Trump National Golf Club on July 29 in Bedminster, New Jersey. File Photo by Peter Foley/UPI | License Photo Oct. 10 (UPI) — The special acquisition company set to merge with former President Donald Trump‘s media firm to take it public has again postponed a key shareholder meeting to vote on whether to extend the deadline for the merger. Digital World Acquisition Corp. announced in a press release that it is further adjourning its special meeting of stockholders “to solicit more votes toward the approval to further amend the company’s amended and restated certificate of incorporation.” The special meeting, which was scheduled for Sept. 6, was pushed back to Monday before the latest delay was announced. It is now slated for Nov. 3. “We continue to strongly believe that a stockholder vote to approve a one-year extension is important and in the best interests of our stockholders,” Patrick Orlando, the company’s CEO, said in a statement. “As of today, those who have voted have overwhelmingly voted ‘FOR’ the Extension Amendment, and we have added additional phone lines along with other resources to record the incoming participation.” The extension would require 65% of shareholders in DWAC to approve it and a failure to extend the merger deadline could force the special acquisition company to liquidate, CNBC reported. William Wilkerson, a senior vice president of operations at Trump Media, alleged that there have been securities violations involving the merger in a whistleblower complaint filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission in August. Wilkerson told the Miami Herald on Sunday that he questions the future of Trump’s Truth Social platform, that “one way or another, this company is going to go bankrupt” and that the social media site has become an “echo chamber” for the former president. Supporters of the former president have much riding on the merger with some sharing on Truth Social that they’d invested their life savings in the company. Shares in the company were down more than 5% on Monday after news of the delay. “Who knows? In any event, I don’t need financing, ‘I’m really rich!’ Private company anyone???” Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social last month. The deal is also the target of a criminal and an SEC probe into possible securities violations, CNBC reported. Trump Media recently said the company has considered legal action against the SEC for delaying the completion of the merger. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Vote To Extend Trump Media Merger Deadline Postponed Again
Fact Check: Trump Falsely Claims George H.W. Bush Took Millions Of Documents To A Former Bowling Alley And Chinese Restaurant | CNN Politics
Fact Check: Trump Falsely Claims George H.W. Bush Took Millions Of Documents To A Former Bowling Alley And Chinese Restaurant | CNN Politics
Fact Check: Trump Falsely Claims George H.W. Bush Took Millions Of Documents To A Former Bowling Alley And Chinese Restaurant | CNN Politics https://digitalalabamanews.com/fact-check-trump-falsely-claims-george-h-w-bush-took-millions-of-documents-to-a-former-bowling-alley-and-chinese-restaurant-cnn-politics/ Washington CNN  —  First, former President Donald Trump tried a false claim about the document-handling practices of former President Barack Obama. Now, Trump is making the same false claim about other former presidents. In August, after the FBI recovered classified documents and numerous other presidential records from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence and resort in Florida, Trump declared that Obama had taken millions of presidential documents to Chicago. The National Archives and Records Administration quickly debunked his assertion, explaining it was NARA itself, not Obama, that took the documents to a NARA-managed facility in the Chicago area. Then, at a rally in Arizona on Sunday, Trump not only repeated the false claim about Obama but added near-identical dishonesty about previous presidents George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton. Most dramatically, Trump said, “George H.W. Bush took millions of documents to a former bowling alley and a former Chinese restaurant; where they combined them. So they’re in a bowling alley slash Chinese restaurant.” Trump added, “A Chinese restaurant and a bowling alley. With no security and a broken front door.” Trump also claimed that “Bill Clinton took millions of documents from the White House to a former car dealership in Arkansas” and that “George W. Bush stored 68 million pages in a warehouse in Texas.” Facts First: All of these Trump claims are false. George H.W. Bush did not take millions of documents to a former bowling alley and Chinese restaurant. Rather, the National Archives and Records Administration took Bush’s presidential documents to this facility prior to the opening of the Bush presidential library in the same city. Trump’s claims about Clinton and George W. Bush are inaccurate in precisely the same way: NARA, not the former presidents themselves, put the documents in temporary storage at NARA-managed facilities at the former car dealership in Arkansas and the warehouse in Texas. And Trump was also wrong that there was “no security” at the facility where the elder Bush’s documents were housed: the facility was heavily secured, according to a news report at the time. So there is no equivalence between Trump’s handling of presidential documents and those of his predecessors. In the others’ cases, the presidential documents were in NARA’s possession and stored securely and professionally. In Trump’s case, the presidential documents found in haphazard amateur storage at Mar-a-Lago were in Trump’s own possession, despite numerous attempts by both NARA and the Justice Department to get them back. At the Sunday rally, Trump urged the authorities to “look into what took place” with George H.W. Bush and presidential documents. But there is nothing of substance to investigate: the National Archives and Records Administration has been forthright since the 1990s about where it temporarily stored Bush documents before his permanent library opened. In fact, the NARA official who was in charge of the transition of the Bush documents to the permanent library publicly joked about the temporary facility at the time. “I’ve told reporters this for the last four years: It’s not just a bowling alley; it’s a bowling alley and a Chinese restaurant,” David Alsobrook said. While the temporary College Station, Texas, location made for a fun story, there was nothing unusual about NARA’s use of such a building. NARA needs lots of space to house presidential documents before presidents’ permanent libraries are built, so it finds and modifies large nearby facilities that often have formerly housed other activities. Someone listening to Trump’s rally comments might have pictured documents from the first Bush administration being scattered carelessly in bowling lanes. But that’s not what happened. The Washington Post reported in 1993: “There aren’t any lanes anymore. No gutters, no pins, no beer. Thanks to a rush remodeling job after last November’s election, there are a few simple offices, a massive, fire-resistant vault and row after row of steel shelves filled with cardboard boxes and wooden crates.” There was also extensive security. The Associated Press reported in 1994: “Uniformed guards patrol the premises. There are closed-circuit television monitors and sophisticated electronic detectors along walls and doors. Some printed material is classified and will remain so for years; it is open only to those with top-secret clearances.” Robert Holzweiss, who began working on the George H.W. Bush library in 1996 and is now deputy director, told People magazine for an article in early 2022: “When I got involved the temporary facility for the Bush museum was in College Station, Texas, in an old bowling alley. Without the alleys it was perfect, it was like a warehouse. They just built a secure space within to house the classified material.” Bush died in 2018. His son Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor who ran against Trump in 2016 for the Republican presidential nomination, wrote on Twitter in response to Trump’s Sunday claim about the late president: “I am so confused. My dad enjoyed a good Chinese meal and enjoyed the challenge of 7 10 split. What the heck is up with you?” Trump’s claims at the rally about former presidents Clinton and George W. Bush are false for the exact same reason as Trump’s claims about Obama and the elder Bush are false. That former Balch Motor Company building in Little Rock, Arkansas, where millions of Clinton presidential documents were stored? Again, it was the National Archives and Records Administration that took the documents to this facility, which NARA managed, in advance of the opening of Clinton’s library in the same city. That warehouse in Lewisville, Texas where millions of the younger Bush’s presidential documents were stored? It was a NARA-managed facility, used to store documents while Bush’s permanent library was being readied in nearby Dallas. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Fact Check: Trump Falsely Claims George H.W. Bush Took Millions Of Documents To A Former Bowling Alley And Chinese Restaurant | CNN Politics
Amazon Sale: Prime Early Access Deals Live Roundup
Amazon Sale: Prime Early Access Deals Live Roundup
Amazon Sale: Prime Early Access Deals Live Roundup https://digitalalabamanews.com/amazon-sale-prime-early-access-deals-live-roundup/ Refresh 2022-10-10T18:32:22.763Z (Image credit: Lenovo) Lenovo IdeaPad 3 11″ Chromebook: $219 $89.99 at Best Buy We’ve gotten pretty good at tracking down the best Chromebook deals, but every now and then, a deal will appear that simply stops us in our tracks. For example, take a look at this clearance offer from Best Buy that slashes a hefty $129 off the price of the Lenovo IdeaPad 3, a popular Chromebook with up to 10 hours of battery life, an ultra-fast AMD A6 processor, and an 11-inch HD display. All of this in a device that weighs only 2.42 pounds? Count us in.  2022-10-10T17:41:51.224Z (Image credit: Amazon) Amazon Fire HD 10 (2021): $149.99 $74.99 at Amazon If you’re in the market for a new tablet, you don’t need to wait until the Prime Early Access Sale to save some serious cash at Amazon. Right now, both the 32GB and 64GB versions of the Fire HD 10 tablet are half-off through the retailer, a discount that makes them cheaper than they’ve ever been! For less than $100, you’re getting a tablet with a lovely 1080p 10.1-inch display, 12 hours of battery life, and an octa-core processor that delivers impressively fast performance.  2022-10-10T17:05:00.573Z (Image credit: Sony) Sony 75″ XR Bravia Ultra HD Smart TV: $2,997.95 $1,298 at Walmart As we wait for Amazon’s sale to finally go live, Walmart is already out here with some of the best deals we’ve seen in months. Walmart’s sitewide rival sale is running through October 13th, and they’re slashing prices on loads of great tech, such as this stunning 75-inch smart TV that boasts enhanced Full Array LED technology, cognitive graphics and audio processing, and intelligent 4K upscaling so you always get the best viewing experience no matter what you’re watching. The TV is usually pretty steep at almost $3,000, so Walmart is taking a whopping $1,699 off the price tag. That’s a discount of 57%!  2022-10-10T16:42:36.705Z (Image credit: Nintendo) Nintendo Switch OLED (White): $339.90 $297.66 at Amazon The OLED version of the Nintendo Switch has been out for a while now, which means deals are becoming more common than ever before. You can currently grab one of these consoles from Amazon for just $297.66, a $42 drop from its regular retail price. Will the price drop even lower when the official sale goes live? Only time will tell, but in the meantime, we’re pretty happy with this budget-friendly deal. The console is the newest Switch to hit the market, coming complete with 64GB of internal storage, improved speakers, and a stunning 7-inch OLED screen.  2022-10-10T14:24:07.253Z (Image credit: Nicholas Sutrich / Android Central) Google Pixel 6a | $449 $349 at Amazon The Pixel 6a was already very, very affordable at $449, but this Amazon deal sees $100 knocked off for the lowest price we’ve ever seen. Even with those free gift cards mentioned elsewhere on this page for the new Pixel 7, it’s still quite a pricey phone. So if you’re after something more budget-friendly, but still with a good few years of software and security updates ahead, then the 6a is a great call. 2022-10-10T13:53:46.678Z (Image credit: Apoorva Bhardwaj / Android Central) Save $200 on a Z Flip 4 Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4 | $999 $799 at Best Buy Sorry, Amazon your sale price isn’t cutting it so far as it’s $53 more than this very tempting offer from Best Buy on one of our favorite phones of the year. The Flip 4 is $200 off right now and the best price we’ve seen without needing any sort of trade-in. The Flip 4 makes some neat improvements over last years model with a battery that lasts longer, a thinner hinge and better pictures. Bora Purple is just all sorts of gorgeous too. If you’d like to check out the trade-ins or network offers, head on over to our Galaxy Z Flip 4 deals rounup. 2022-10-10T13:34:40.459Z (Image credit: Chris Wedel / Android Central) Google Pixel 7 Pro with free $200 Amazon gift card – $899 Google Pixel 7 with free $100 Amazon gift card – $599 Our deals guru, Patrick, has been rounding up the best Pixel 7 preorders since the phone was shown off at a recent Google event. Truth be told, most of the best ones require you to trade in an old device to get the best prices. If you’re looking to buy outright (and don’t want to tie your soul to one of the pricey networks), then this is a great opportunity to get a cracking deal on an unlocked device. Rather than money off the phones, Amazon is throwing in an Amazon gift card for $100 with the Pixel 7 or $200 on the Pixel 7 Pro which will be very easy to spend over the next few months, especially with Black Friday coming next month. That’s the best offer we expect to see throughout this Amazon sale on the new phones, but we’d expect to see older Pixels and offers on Samsung phones tomorrow too. 2022-10-10T13:05:22.661Z (Image credit: Nick Sutrich / Android Central) Echo Show 5 | $84.99 $34.99 at Amazon Simply put the Echo Show is a smart speaker with a screen that has all sorts of extra uses. Video calling between other Echo Show devices is one of our favorites alongside the basics like using it for a clock, timers, photo displays, weather reports or even synced up to a smart doorbell’s camera. This model with a 5-inch display is great value at $50 off and is an excellent size for a bedside table. There is a larger 8-inch model, which might be a bit too big for the bedside, but fine on other surfaces around the home. It’s usually $129, which is a bit much compared to the 5-inch, but today you can get it for just $70 at Amazon. 2022-10-10T12:56:22.302Z (Image credit: Android Central) Amazon Echo Dot $39.99 $17.99 at Amazon If you’re yet to check out the world of smart speakers, this is an excellent deal. Or maybe you just need an extra Alexa speaker for one of the other rooms in your house? This is the last version of the Echo Dot in the puck design, newer models have a spherical design that produces better sound in all honesty as these ones can be a touch muffled. If you don’t mind spending $25 instead, you can get one of those 4th gen models over at Amazon’s full Echo sale. 2022-10-10T11:26:32.043Z (Image credit: Amazon) Kindle Paperwhite $139.99 $99.99 at Amazon The Kindle Paperwhite is $40 cheaper today, which brings it down to the same price as the entry-level Kindle. That’s a steal as you’re getting a much more modern design with a flush bezel-screen design that’s also waterproof. This generation of the Paperwhite also features the warm light feature usually reserved for much more expensive Kindles. If you’re going to buy a Kindle anytime soon, this is the one we’d go for. Check out Amazon’s full Kindle selection if you’d like to see the other models. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Amazon Sale: Prime Early Access Deals Live Roundup
Where Is Quinton? Many Questions Remain As Search For Missing Savannah Toddler Enters Sixth Day
Where Is Quinton? Many Questions Remain As Search For Missing Savannah Toddler Enters Sixth Day
Where Is Quinton? Many Questions Remain As Search For Missing Savannah Toddler Enters Sixth Day https://digitalalabamanews.com/where-is-quinton-many-questions-remain-as-search-for-missing-savannah-toddler-enters-sixth-day/ Police say 20-month-old Quinton Simon was last seen at his home in the 500 block of Buckhalter Road at 6 a.m. Wednesday. Where is Quinton Simon? Search for missing Savannah toddler enters sixth day Police say 20-month-old Quinton Simon was last seen at his home in the 500 block of Buckhalter Road at 6 a.m. Wednesday. Hey, good afternoon everybody you guys ready whenever you’re as we continue our search for Quentin Simon, I want to update you on our aggressive efforts to find him. I want to assure everyone that we are continuing to use every investigative resource available for us to locate little Quentin. We have conducted multiple interviews, executed multiple search warrants and we’ve canvassed numerous specific geographic areas. The day Quentin was reported missing, we requested the assistance of the FBI. They responded immediately and have been on the scene with our officers since that time Today. There are more than 40 FBI agents and personnel on the ground in Chatham county working with our department to find Quentin. This includes all agents assigned to the savannah and Brunswick resident agencies and professional staff agents from other FBI offices including members of the child abduction and rapid deployment unit and other subject matter experts working. They have been continuously working with Chatham County Police Department for the last five days we believe with the continued assistance of the FBI we will have *** resolution to this case. We understand that people far beyond Chatham county have become emotionally invested in this incident and the search for Quentin and they want answers. We are committed to finding those answers and we are committed to finding Quentin with that said I’ll be happy to answer *** few questions if you you know this has been going on for about five days now and I think everybody is kind of moving towards worst case scenarios at what point. Um you know if you say that there’s some criminal aspects to what’s going yes, and that’s *** very good and that’s *** very fair question. Um You know, we’re looking at it from multiple fronts and one of it being *** criminal investigation as well as you know, *** missing child at this point, we don’t have anything confirmed. So we can’t say anything. Uh Absolutely. Um but it is fair to say that you know, our efforts and in the cooperation with the FBI and then providing an abundance of resources to us um that we are looking at the criminal investigation aspect aspect of it as well. Looking at the Criminal Investigation, looking into turning towards family members, everybody is being looked at everybody is being interviewed. Everybody that had contact with Quentin in the most recent time of his disappearance is being looked at as being interviewed. Um And we are, that’s an enormous amount of work obviously that that takes. Um and we’re continuing to to to do everything that we can do to to to gather evidence if if it’s there. Um We have to we have to follow obviously an investigative process. We have to follow the law. We have to get search warrants. You know, um I know there’s *** lot of interest out there and and and probably some chatter. Why haven’t you done this and why haven’t you done that? Well, we have *** constitution to follow. We have the law to follow because we want to make sure we get it right. We want to make sure we do this as professionally and as expertly as we can. So if, and I say if we have to prosecute anyone in this case that we’ve done it right that we don’t lose evidence in *** in an evidentiary hearing or anything like that. So um, so we continue to work diligently um but we’re gonna work um within the framework that we have to work in and what are the updates in the areas? Where is it, where has it gone from? Well, we went back today and researched, researched um the home in which he um was last at, you know, trying to redouble our efforts uh and to kind of scrub no pun intended with uh scrub the area and make sure that we didn’t miss anything. They’re there to help us. Um It’s *** Chatham County Police Department investigation. They’re here in *** in *** support role and I can’t thank them enough, you don’t bring 40 people um and some from all over the country um without an enormous amount of effort and expense. Um you know those those agents left their homes and left their families to come here and help Chatham County um look for little Quentin and I can’t be any more appreciative of of that open records request for the 911 call the body camera video from that initial response. It was originally, they said it was *** criminal investigation kind of backtracked and then gave us the law that you usually use in the criminal investigation. Why don’t you want the public to hear this mother called 911. We have to protect the integrity of investigation. And that’s first and foremost I certainly understand and people’s interest in this case, your interest in this case and I can appreciate that. But my responsibility and our responsibility is to do *** professional investigation. That we don’t do anything that impedes that that we don’t do anything that tarnishes the integrity of the investigation and that’s my sole responsibility for that. Any of the family members, they still being cooperative, especially this mother and have any of them that they don’t want to. I can’t answer that question. Chief Chief where Leilani and Daniel right now we I mean they are the parents and the boyfriend of this young boy but we haven’t seen them pleading to the public for help. Where are they Right now? I don’t know where they are currently at this time. I do believe they’ve been staying at the residence but I don’t physically right now as I’m talking to you, I don’t know where they are. You know why it is that we have not seen them. They’re not talking to us. They’re not I don’t have an answer for that. As I just stated earlier, we were searching that residents again, I know you can’t speak specifically. But in cases like this. So you exhaust your first search and now you’re back into researching some of those you said targeted areas over the weekend. What happens next? If no one’s giving you tips, if there’s no piece of evidence that changes this case, how long do you exhaust this and then then what do your investigators do after today? Well after today. I mean I I anticipate us us working at least throughout the week. Um So um at some point if if following your train of logic that you know, we may have to sit down and and re evaluate where we’re at. If we’ve exhausted everything that we think that we can do. If we, if we ask ourselves that question and we think there’s nothing else for us to do at this moment then we gotta sit down and reevaluate. But we’re *** long ways away from that. I just want to start up the process of the investigation now going on to London. Um Do you feel like you all have gotten further along in the process of coming to some sort of conclusion. Do you have what makes you believe that if I can’t get any specifics of the case? I mean thank you. Thanks for that question. I appreciate that. Um They’re they’re tired but they’re determined and I couldn’t be any prouder of them. Um They have worked 18 hour days since last Wednesday morning. Um Along with the FBI and everybody else. I mean everybody is, they are all hands on deck. They are committed. Um They are working hard to try to bring *** resolution to this case and and find *** little Quentin. So, but thank you for asking. I appreciate that. Sounds like I believe we will I do if you set up *** tip or your department set up *** tip number over the weekend. Have you received any tips from it so far? Um I believe we’ve received some, but we have, you know, we have to verify those, you know, whether or not they uh, they’re accurate. Whether or not we can, you know, follow up on any of that information. I don’t have anything of substance. So, I got one more question from you. Okay, well, thank you so much, appreciate you being here. Thank you for asking about our detectives. And um, I promise when we get something to report, we’ll report it back out to you. Thank you so much. Let me ask you just one more question. Is there been any contact with his biological father? Uh, we have had contact with him at all. You know, is he *** suspect in this case? It’s clear he’s not *** suspect in this case. All right. Thank you GET LOCAL BREAKING NEWS ALERTS The latest breaking updates, delivered straight to your email inbox. Privacy Notice Where is Quinton Simon? Search for missing Savannah toddler enters sixth day Police say 20-month-old Quinton Simon was last seen at his home in the 500 block of Buckhalter Road at 6 a.m. Wednesday. Update 2:15 p.m.: The Chatham County Police Chief held a press conference this afternoon, providing updates on the investigation. Watch it in full above.Update 9 a.m.: Police say there have been no overnight developments in the case.Chatham County Police Chief Jeff Hadley is scheduled to speak to media this afternoon around 2 p.m.Initial report: It has been six days of searching since 20-month-old Quinton Simon went missing from his Buckhalter Road home in Savannah.Quinton was last seen at his home around 6 a.m. Wednesday, October 5.On Sunday, Chatham County Police said they would re-canvass areas already searched surrounding the investigation. And a tipline was established for information regarding the case: 912-667-3134.Chatham County Police Chief Jeff Hadley told county commissioners Friday that police have exhausted the physical search but they are still considering it a missing person’s case. On Saturday, police issued a statement saying the case remains a high priority for them and they are not in need...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Where Is Quinton? Many Questions Remain As Search For Missing Savannah Toddler Enters Sixth Day
Power 25 Rankings: 2 New Teams Enter This Week's Poll
Power 25 Rankings: 2 New Teams Enter This Week's Poll
Power 25 Rankings: 2 New Teams Enter This Week's Poll https://digitalalabamanews.com/power-25-rankings-2-new-teams-enter-this-weeks-poll/ The top 10 teams in this week’s AL.com Power 25 were almost unchanged following Week 8 games, but that won’t be the case next week. On Friday, top-ranked Auburn – the only unbeaten team remaining in Class 7A – travels to face No. 7 Central-Phenix City in a crucial Region 2 game. This week’s rankings were fairly stable with Center Point and Leeds both jumping into the top 25. The Power 25 ranks the top high school football teams in Alabama regardless of classification. Here are the rankings after eight weeks: 24. (TIE) Ramsay (6-2) Total points: 15 Previous ranking: Tied for 23 Last week: Defeated John Carroll 56-7 This week: vs. Hayden, Thursday 24. (TIE) Leeds (7-0) Total points: 15 Previous ranking: NR Last week: Defeated Alexandria 23-7 This week: at Moody, Friday 23. Deshler (8-0) Total points: 17 Previous ranking: 22 Last week: Defeated Central-Florence 45-21 This week: vs. Rogers, Friday 21. (TIE) Elba (7-0) Total points: 18 Previous ranking: 25 Last week: Defeated Georgiana 62-28 This week: vs. Florala, Friday 21. (TIE) Center Point (7-1) Total points: 18 Previous ranking: NR Last week: Defeated Pinson Valley 29-22 This week: Idle 20. Opelika (5-3) Total points: 20 Previous ranking: 18 Last week: Defeated Smiths Station 31-14 This week: vs. Enterprise, Friday 19. Gulf Shores (7-1) Total points: 22 Previous ranking: 21 Last week: Defeated Elberta 49-3 This week: Idle 18. Gardendale (5-2) Total points: 28 Previous ranking: Tied for 23 Last week: Defeated Minor 34-14 This week: vs. Woodlawn, Friday 17. Fyffe (7-0) Total points: 29 Previous ranking: 17 Last week: Defeated Sand Rock 70-14 This week: at Pisgah, Friday 16. Anniston (7-0) Total points: 30 Previous ranking: 16 Last week: Idle This week: at Talladega, Friday 15. Fairhope (6-1) Total points: 31 Previous ranking: 13 Last week: Defeated Daphne 26-7 This week: vs. Alma Bryant, Friday 14. Hewitt-Trussville (5-3) Total points: 33 Previous ranking: 14 Last week: Defeated Vestavia Hills 45-37 This week: at Spain Park, Friday 12. (TIE) Hartselle (8-0) Total points: 40 Previous ranking: 12 Last week: Defeated Athens 45-21 This week: vs. Decatur, Friday 12. (TIE) Andalusia (8-0) Total points: 40 Previous ranking: 15 Last week: Defeated Slocomb 49-0 This week: at B.T. Washington, Friday 11. UMS-Wright (7-0) Total points: 57 Previous ranking: 11 Last week: Defeated B.C. Rain 42-7 This week: at Citronelle, Friday THE TOP 10 10. Hillcrest-Tuscaloosa (8-0) Total points: 61 Previous ranking: 10 Last week: Defeated Bessemer City 47-16 This week: at Paul Bryant, Friday 9. Montgomery Catholic (8-0) Total points: 64 Previous ranking: 9 Last week: Defeated Bullock County 64-0 This week: at Dale County, Friday 8. Mountain Brook (6-1) Total points: 72 Previous ranking: 8 Last week: Defeated Parker 35-6 This week: at Mortimer Jordan, Friday 7. Central-Phenix City (6-2) Total points: 77 Previous ranking: 7 Last week: Defeated Lee-Montgomery 54-14 This week: vs. No. 1 Auburn, Friday 6. Clay-Chalkville (6-1) Total points: 79 Previous ranking: 6 Last week: Defeated Huffman 62-0 This week: vs. Oxford, Friday 5. Theodore (7-0) Total points: 83 Previous ranking: 5 Last week: Defeated Blount 35-0 This week: at McGill-Toolen 4. Hoover (7-1) Total points: 86 Previous ranking: Tied for 3 Last week: Defeated Tuscaloosa County 31-13 This week: at Chelsea, Friday 3. Saraland (8-0) Total points: 87 Previous ranking: Tied for 3 Last week: Defeated Baldwin County 48-7 This week: Idle 2. Thompson (6-2) Total points: 92 Previous ranking: 2 Last week: Defeated Oak Mountain 57-0 This week: at Tuscaloosa County, Friday 1. Auburn (7-0) Total points: 100 Previous ranking: 1 Last week: Idle This week: at No. 7 Central-Phenix City, Friday Also receiving votes: Austin (14), Helena (13), Muscle Shoals (10), Faith Academy (10), Pleasant Grove (8), Mars Hill (6), Carver-Montgomery (6), Moody (5), Piedmont (4), Excel (3), Gordo (2), Priceville (2), Handley (1), Patrician Academy (1), Mary G. Montgomery (1). If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Power 25 Rankings: 2 New Teams Enter This Week's Poll
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Message
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Message
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Message https://digitalalabamanews.com/michigan-gop-statewide-candidates-stick-to-message/ By JOEY CAPPELLETTI Associated Press/Report for America WARREN, Mich. (AP) — With voting underway in Michigan’s general election, the Republican nominee for secretary of state stepped on stage as a warm-up act for former President Donald Trump and hit hard on the main theme of her campaign. Kristina Karamo repeated unfounded assertions about the 2020 presidential election that have been repeatedly debunked. She told the crowd at the recent rally at Macomb Community College that “authoritarians” are giving millions to her Democratic opponent — Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson — in an attempt to “corrupt battleground state election systems so they can control America.” “If you look at history, it shows you what tyrants do,” said Karamo, a former community college professor. “History is telling us, history is screaming to us, that if we don’t step up and fight now, we will lose the greatest country in human history.” It was an address designed to rev up the crowd of devoted Trump followers, some of whom have latched onto the baseless QAnon conspiracy theory. While Karamo’s speech drew cheers, relying on a general election strategy that appeals to the most far-right voters is a gamble for Michigan Republicans. Candidates who have to play to their party’s base during primaries or nominating conventions often shift toward the center, aiming to attract more voters for the general election. But that hasn’t happened this year for the Republicans seeking Michigan’s top three statewide offices — governor, attorney general and secretary of state. The Nov. 8 election will test whether campaigns designed to resonate with the far-right and highlight strong ties to Trump will be enough to win in a traditional swing state, where the Republican incumbent lost the White House race to Democrat challenger Joe Biden by more than 154,000 votes in 2020. All three GOP candidates stood behind Trump during the Oct. 1 rally at the college about 20 miles north of Detroit, joined by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, who has amplified Trump’s election falsehoods to audiences across the country. Trump falsely claimed the 2020 election was “rigged and stolen” in Michigan, citing “evidence” he said first originated with Karamo and Matthew DePerno, a tax lawyer who is the nominee for state attorney general. In his own address to the crowd, DePerno called Democrats “radical, cultural Marxists” who want to “silence you.” “If that doesn’t work, they want to put you in jail,” DePerno told the crowd, which fell into chants of “Lock her up.” All three Democratic incumbents are women. DePerno’s campaign also is clouded by an investigation into whether he should be criminally charged for attempting to gain access to voting machines after the 2020 election. John DeBlaay, a Grand Rapids real estate agent and precinct delegate who attended the rally, said he was thrilled with the candidates. “We’ve got the best America First ticket all the way from top to bottom that we’ve had in a long time now,” he said. Some moderate Republicans are skeptical that campaigns appealing mostly to base elements of the party will be enough to beat Democratic incumbents with wide name recognition and sizable fundraising advantages. The Democrats also are expected to benefit from having an amendment on the ballot that seeks to enshrine the right to abortion in the state constitution. These Republicans say inflation, gas prices and economic anxiety should be the GOP’s main talking points, not a continued alignment with Trump and his false claims about widespread fraud costing him reelection. They point to the unusual way Michigan selects its attorney general and secretary of state candidates, a process done through a party nominating convention rather than through a primary election in which voters make the choice. The most conservative Republicans who are loyal to Trump dominated that convention in April. The party’s co-chair, Meshawn Maddock, was one of 16 Republicans who submitted false certificates stating they were the state’s presidential electors despite Biden’s certified victory in the state. Three weeks before the convention, during another Trump rally, DePerno encouraged attendees — many of them precinct delegates — to “storm” the party gathering and said it was “time for the grassroots to unite.” Delegates overwhelmingly voted to nominate Karamo. DePerno won a runoff over former legislative leader Tom Leonard, who lost in the 2018 attorney general’s race by 3 percentage points to Democrat Dana Nessel. “Karamo and DePerno are among the most loyal to Donald Trump that you will find anywhere in the country,” said Jason Roe, a longtime Republican strategist. “That loyalty has been unshakable in this election process, regardless of how it might affect general election prospects.” Roe, whose father served as the Michigan GOP’s executive director for 10 years, became executive director of the state party in spring 2021. Six months later, he stepped down due to a “difference in opinion on how many conspiracy theories we should tolerate.” Soon after Roe left, Trump began calling party leaders to “force the party to embrace things formally that weren’t going to be helpful to the upcoming election,” Roe said. The party’s candidate for governor, Tudor Dixon, won the nomination during the primary in August after receiving Trump’s endorsement. Dixon, a conservative news show host who once acted in low-budget horror films, also benefited from support of the wealthy DeVos family. While seen as less extreme than Karamo and DePerno, Dixon indicated during debates that she thought the 2020 presidential election was stolen and she recently made light of a plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat. Dixon has since tried to pivot away from denying the results of the last election by focusing on topics such as inflation and education, but she also is repeating hard-right rhetoric on cultural issues. She has called for banning “pornographic” books in schools and has pitched an education agenda modeled after the Florida policy that critics have labeled “Don’t Say Gay.” While Democrats have attacked DePerno and Karamo for their continued denial of Biden’s victory in 2020, they have focused on what they describe as Dixon’s “extreme” abortion stance. Lackluster fundraising has made it difficult for her to push back. As of Aug. 22, Dixon had $524,000 in the bank compared with Whitmer’s $14 million, according to the latest available campaign finance reports. Some of that gap has been closed by the super PAC Michigan Families United, which has received $2.5 million in donations, including from the DeVos family. “I just don’t like that there’s no commercials on TV about Dixon. Everything you see is about the other people, and it’s all negative,” said Laura Bunting, an Ionia County resident who attended the Trump rally. Karamo and DePerno had a combined $422,554 cash on hand as of Sept. 16 compared with the $5.7 million combined for their Democratic opponents, according to campaign finance reports. Michigan-based pollster Bernie Porn said the Republican candidates have been defined by their extreme stances but that none has attracted enough money to get on TV and introduce themselves to a broader swath of voters. That, he said, “makes it difficult for folks to form a favorable opinion of you.” ___ Joey Cappelletti is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. ___ Follow AP for full coverage of the midterms at https://apnews.com/hub/2022-midterm-elections Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Message
Trump Takes Credit For Destroying Late Night Comedy And Boosting Gutfeld On Fox News
Trump Takes Credit For Destroying Late Night Comedy And Boosting Gutfeld On Fox News
Trump Takes Credit For ‘Destroying’ Late Night Comedy And Boosting Gutfeld On Fox News https://digitalalabamanews.com/trump-takes-credit-for-destroying-late-night-comedy-and-boosting-gutfeld-on-fox-news/ By Zachary LeemanOct 10th, 2022, 1:37 pm Screenshot via YouTube Former President Donald Trump took credit for tanking the ratings of late night comedy shows in a Truth Social message congratulating Fox News’ Greg Gutfeld —whose name Trump misspelled — for recent ratings victories. “It was my great honor to have destroyed the ratings of Late Night ‘Comedy’ shows. There is nothing funny about the shows, the three hosts have very little talent,” Trump wrote. Though he didn’t name the specific three comedians, his message was in response to a Fox News report with Stephen Colbert, Trevor Noah, and Jimmy Kimmel highlighted in a feature image. Noah recently announced he is leaving his gig as the host of The Daily Show to focus on standup comedy. The report noted the shrinking audience for hosts like Colbert and Kimmel since Trump left office, as well as the fact that Gutfeld’s comedy talk show Gutfeld! is often edging out these other shows in viewership. Trump did name one late night host he clearly has a problem with: Jimmy Fallon. The host of The Tonight Show invited Trump onto his show in the midst of the 2016 presidential campaigns, a move that earned plenty of fallout. Fallon would go on to offer an apology to those he offended with the lighthearted exchange. “It’s all in the fun of the show. I made a mistake. I’m sorry if I made anyone mad. And, looking back, I would do it differently,” the comedian said in response to the pushback against the interview, which included Fallon at one point tugging on Trump’s hair. The former president claimed Fallon apologized for helping to “humanize” him. “When Jimmy Fallon apologized for having humanized ‘Trump,’ and his ratings soared, the Radical Left forced him to apologize—that was effectively the end of The Tonight Show. In any event, congratulations to Greg Gutfield!” Trump wrote. Screenshot via Truth Social Have a tip we should know? tips@mediaite.com Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Trump Takes Credit For Destroying Late Night Comedy And Boosting Gutfeld On Fox News
Trump Wants Other Presidents Investigated
Trump Wants Other Presidents Investigated
Trump Wants Other Presidents Investigated https://digitalalabamanews.com/trump-wants-other-presidents-investigated/ Photo credit Getty Images Former President Donald Trump is claiming the Mar-a-Lago raid and subsequent investigations into his possible mishandling of classified documents a “hoax.” He also thinks other presidents should be under investigation. At a rally in Nevada on Saturday, Trump claimed that former presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, George H.W. Bush, and Barack Obama were all much worse than him about retaining documents. He said those presidents were given “all the time they needed” when it came to their documents — something he claims he was not afforded. “Just look at how every other president has been treated when they left office. Very interesting,” Trump said, according to Mediaite. “They’ve been given all the time, all the time needed, because you’re supposed to have as much time as you need, and complete deference when it came to their documents and their papers.” The former president then went on to single out Obama. “Barack Hussein Obama moved more than 20 truckloads, over 33 million pages of documents, both classified and unclassified, to a poorly built and totally unsafe former furniture store located in a rather bad neighborhood in Chicago. With no security, by the way,” he said. Trump also took aim at George W. Bush, saying he stored “68 million pages in a warehouse in Texas and lost 22 million White House emails.” He said Bill Clinton took “millions of documents from the White House to a former car dealership in Arkansas…and kept classified recordings in his sock drawer.” Trump also mentioned Hillary Clinton deleting “33,000 emails under congressional subpoena,” and George H.W. Bush taking “millions of documents to a former bowling alley and a former Chinese restaurant… with no security and a broken front door.” “When will they investigate and prosecute Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, George Bush, and look into what took place with George Bush’s father, a very nice man,” he asked rhetorically. “Are they under potential prosecution? I don’t think so. I don’t think they are.” “They should give me back everything that they’ve taken,” he added. Trump said in contrast, he only had a “small number of boxes in storage at Mar-a-Lago” which were guarded by the Secret Service. “The FBI with many, many people raided my house. It’s in violation, by the way, of the Fourth Amendment, and many other things also,” he said. “There is no crime… but they make it sound like the greatest crime in America was committed. And we’ve got all these warehouses that are just falling down buildings essentially, loaded up with just millions and millions of pages of previous presidents and nothing was ever said about it.” Featured Image Photo Credit: Getty Images Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Trump Wants Other Presidents Investigated
College Football TV Schedule For Week 7 Of 2022 Season
College Football TV Schedule For Week 7 Of 2022 Season
College Football TV Schedule For Week 7 Of 2022 Season https://digitalalabamanews.com/college-football-tv-schedule-for-week-7-of-2022-season/ Below is the college football TV and live stream schedule for Week 7 of the 2022 season. All times Central: Wednesday, Oct. 12 Louisiana at Marshall, 6:30 p.m., ESPN2 (ESPN+) Thursday, Oct. 13 Temple at Central Florida, 6 p.m., ESPN (ESPN+) Baylor at West Virginia, 6 p.m., Fox Sports 1 (Fox Sports) Morgan State at North Carolina Central, 6:30 p.m., ESPN2 (ESPN+) Friday, Oct. 14 Brown at Princeton, 6 p.m., ESPNU (ESPN+) Navy at SMU, 6:30 p.m., ESPN (ESPN+) Texas-San Antonio at Florida International, 7 p.m., CBS Sports Network (CBS Sports video) Saturday, Oct. 15 Iowa State at Texas, 11 a.m., ABC (espn3) Penn State at Michigan, 11 a.m., Fox (Fox Sports) Auburn at Ole Miss, 11 a.m., ESPN (ESPN+) Kansas at Oklahoma, 11 a.m., ESPN2 (ESPN+) Old Dominion at Coastal Carolina, 11 a.m., ESPNU (ESPN+) Minnesota at Illinois, 11 a.m., Big Ten Network (Fox Sports) Colgate at Army, 11 a.m., CBS Sports Network (CBS Sports video) Miami At Virginia Tech, 11:30 a.m., Bally Sports South (Bally Sports+) California at Colorado, 1 p.m., Pac-12 Network (Pac-12 Network Live) Oklahoma State at TCU, 2:30 p.m., ABC (espn3) Alabama at Tennessee, 2:30 p.m., CBS (SEC on CBS) Arkansas at BYU, 2:30 p.m., ESPN (ESPN+) Maryland at Indiana, 2:30 p.m., ESPN2 (ESPN+) Vanderbilt at Georgia, 2:30 p.m., SEC Network (ESPN+) Nort Carolina State at Syracuse, 2:30 p.m., ACC Network (ESPN+) Ohio at Western Michigan, 2:30 p.m., CBS Sports Network (CBS Sports video) Charlotte at UAB, 2:30 p.m., Stadium (Watch Stadium) Texas State at Troy, 2:30 p.m., no TV (espn3) Wisconsin at Michigan State, 3 p.m., Fox (Fox Sports) Tulane at South Florida, 3 p.m., ESPNU (ESPN+) Arizona at Washington, 4:30 p.m., Pac-12 Network (Pac-12 Network Live) LSU at Florida, 6 p.m., ESPN (ESPN+) Louisiana-Monroe at South Alabama, 6 p.m., NFL Network (NFL Network live) Utah State at Colorado State, 6 p.m., CBS Sports Network (CBS Sports video) Clemson at Florida State, 6:30 p.m., ABC (espn3) Stanford at Notre Dame, 6:30 p.m., NBC (Notre Dame on NBC) Memphis at East Carolina, 6:30 p.m., ESPNU (ESPN+) Mississippi State at Kentucky, 6:30 p.m., SEC Network (ESPN+) Nebraska at Purdue, 6:30 p.m., Big Ten Network (Fox Sports) USC at Utah, 7 p.m., Fox (Fox Sports) North Carolina at Duke, 7 p.m., ACC Network (ESPN+) Washington State at Oregon State, 8 p.m., Pac-12 Network (Pac-12 Network Live) Air Force at UNLV, 9:30 p.m., CBS Sports Network (CBS Sports video) San Jose State at Fresno State, 9:45 p.m., Fox Sports 1 (Fox Sports) Select games are also available via FUBO.tv. Click HERE for subscription information. 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·
College Football TV Schedule For Week 7 Of 2022 Season
US Justice Department To Monitor Midterms Avoid Appearance Of Partisanship
US Justice Department To Monitor Midterms Avoid Appearance Of Partisanship
US Justice Department To Monitor Midterms, Avoid Appearance Of Partisanship https://digitalalabamanews.com/us-justice-department-to-monitor-midterms-avoid-appearance-of-partisanship/ Washington —  Carrying on a long-established tradition, the U.S. Justice Department (DOJ) plans to deploy teams of federal observers around the country on Election Day next month while requiring the FBI to receive high-level approval for politically sensitive investigations that might call into question the integrity of the election. At stake in the Nov. 8 congressional races is not only control of Congress but also the legitimacy of U.S. elections — fallout from former President Donald Trump’s attempt to undo the outcome of the 2020 presidential vote. Many Americans are questioning the credibility of elections. At the same time, new laws passed by Republican state legislators have thrown up barriers to voting, rights advocates say, prompting the Justice Department to challenge the new measures in court. The Justice Department, which under the Biden administration has made voting rights a central plank of its law enforcement agenda, says federal monitors will observe the midterm elections in an effort “to ensure that all qualified voters have the opportunity to cast their ballots and have their votes counted free of discrimination, intimidation and suppression.” “The Civil Rights Division undertakes its important work to protect the right to vote all throughout each year, and this year’s work continues longstanding department tradition,” the Justice Department said in a statement Tuesday. The U.S. has a decentralized election system, with voting administered at the county level. But the federal government has a role too. The Justice Department’s civil rights division is responsible for enforcing a string of federal laws designed to protect the right to vote. These include the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the National Voter Registration Act, and the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act. Federal election monitors, drawn from the Justice Department’s civil rights division as well as U.S. attorney’s offices across the country, will observe compliance with these laws, according to the Justice Department. In the past two election cycles, the Justice Department dispatched election monitors to about 20 states. It is likely to cover the same number of states this year, according to Sylvia Albert, director of voting and elections at the watchdog group Common Cause. “I’ve been given no indication that they are going to stray greatly from prior behavior, and they told us that they are continuing to do their job as they’ve always done,” Albert said. The locations to be monitored are determined based on whether “they have a history of problems and voters or community groups in the area making them [the DOJ] aware,” Albert said. “You always use the institutional knowledge, the history of the location, any complaints from voters and voter advocates to monitor,” Albert said. The Justice Department releases its election-monitoring plan on the eve of the midterms. A representative did not have any additional details about the department’s monitoring plan beyond the press statement. Zack Smith, a legal fellow at The Heritage Foundation, said the Justice Department observers play an important role in ensuring equal access to voting. “Their goal is to really be kind of a quick reaction force if issues come up to us to potentially address those issues in real time,” Smith said. In addition to the Justice Department monitors, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), of which the U.S. is a participating state, will deploy observers throughout the country to “closely monitor all aspects of the elections, including pre- and postelection developments.” “The mission will assess the elections for their compliance with OSCE commitments and other international obligations and standards for democratic elections, as well as with national legislation,” the OSCE said in a statement Sept. 29. Staying above politics While taking steps to protect the right to vote, the Justice Department is keeping up another of its long-standing traditions: avoiding the appearance of partisanship during an election year. In a May 25 staff email entitled “Election Year Sensitives,” Attorney General Merrick Garland urged Justice Department employees to be “particularly sensitive to safeguarding the Department’s reputation for fairness, neutrality, and non-partisanship.” “Simply put, partisan politics must play no role in the decisions of federal investigators or prosecutors regarding any investigation or criminal charges,” Gartland wrote. The exhortation was a mere restatement of long-standing DOJ policies. But to the outrage of many on the left, Garland went on to say that he was keeping in place a 2020 directive issued by his predecessor, William Barr. The Barr directive says the FBI must get the attorney general’s written approval before opening criminal or counterintelligence investigations of “politically sensitive individuals or entities.” Garland’s decision to extend that policy gave fodder to critics who say he hasn’t moved aggressively enough to charge Trump and his associates for their alleged roles in the events leading up to the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. But the attorney general has said that “no person is above the law” and that the Justice Department “will follow the facts and the law, wherever they lead.” Garland is a former federal judge and Supreme Court nominee. Defenders say he has restored the Justice Department’s traditional role as an independent law enforcement agency after four years of the Trump administration, during which the attorney general was accused of doing the president’s bidding. But Republicans say that it is under Biden that the Justice Department has become politicized. They point to the FBI’s unprecedented investigation of Trump’s handling of presidential records as well as Justice Department lawsuits filed against “election integrity” laws enacted by Republican state lawmakers. “I think there certainly is the perception, if not the reality that there’s a disconnect between what Merrick Garland is saying and what the department is actually doing,” Smith said. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
US Justice Department To Monitor Midterms Avoid Appearance Of Partisanship
John Oliver Puts Brookside PD AL.com In Spotlight During Last Week Tonight
John Oliver Puts Brookside PD AL.com In Spotlight During Last Week Tonight
John Oliver Puts Brookside PD, AL.com In Spotlight During ‘Last Week Tonight’ https://digitalalabamanews.com/john-oliver-puts-brookside-pd-al-com-in-spotlight-during-last-week-tonight/ John Oliver put Alabama back in the spotlight during his HBO show “Last Week Tonight,” this time even praising the work of this site’s journalists covering crime in the state. The HBO host spends the half-hour discussing crime reporting, focusing on the incentives driving the outlets that cover it, the flawed sources they rely upon and the greater harm it can do to all of us. “You’ve undoubtedly noticed that crime makes up a significant part of your local news’ programming, but the scale of that coverage has a real impact,” he said. “Research has shown that viewing local TV news is related to increase fear of and concern about crime, and the TV news viewers are also more likely to support tougher crime policies.” Oliver then says that research might explain “why our perceptions of crime can sharply be at odds with the reality of it.” After lampooning several local outlets’ coverage of various stories — including the dangers of finding “rainbow fentanyl” while trick-or-treating — Oliver singled out the in-depth investigative work on the Brookside Police Department by AL.com’s John Archibald. Archibald worked with reporters Ashley Remkus and Ramsey Archibald, and editor Challen Stephens to expose how Brookside, a small town north of Birmingham, multiplied its police force and saw revenue from traffic stops soar in recent years. The reporting uncovered that, in 2018, total revenue for the town of Brookside was $586,000. By 2020 – due almost entirely to aggressive policing – it rose to $1.2 million. Fines and forfeitures made up 49 percent of the town revenue, and most of it went right back to the police and courts. Traffic tickets increased more than 600 percent in a single year, arrests almost 450 percent, according to their reporting. And while the town paid officers as little as $12 an hour, Brookside PD Chief Mike Jones used state-disbursed federal grant money to lure new hires with thousands of hours of overtime. The reporting prompted multiple state investigations and led to immediate promises of change in police policies in Brookside, such as reduced patrol zones and clearly marked vehicles. Oliver led the segment by referencing a TV news station “excitedly reporting on a new initiative from their police department, which police said was getting real results.” He also gave credit to ABC 33/40′s 2019 reporting on drivers questioning tickets they had received from Brookside PD before noting AL.com’s coverage. “But it wasn’t until two years later, that in-depth investigation from AL.com revealed what had actually been happening, and that is that Brookside, a town of just 1,200 people, was having its finances rocket-fueled by tickets and aggressive policing, with bulls–t traffic tickets being issued at a truly ridiculous rate,” Oliver said. Oliver then joked about ways Brookside PD used the cash, including buying two drug-sniffing dogs, one of which they named “K9 Cash.” “I will say, he does look like a ‘K9 Cash,’ and that’s not a compliment! Bad dog!” he said. “The point is, what was actually happening in Brookside turned out to be a pretty far cry from the initial coverage of ‘Hey, great news! This small-town police force is apparently Miami Vice all of the sudden. Anyway, no further questions,’” he continued. “By presenting police uncritically, you’re not just helping them dodge accountability, you’re giving them a huge lobbying platform. Oliver also referenced Alabama during a May 2022 episode, criticizing Gov. Kay Ivey and the new law banning certain medical treatments for minors with gender dysphoria. “No one should ever face criminal punishment for providing health care to young people,” Oliver said before spotlighting Ivey’s role in passing the bill into law. He introduced the governor to his audience as “a woman who, as you can see, always looks like she’s saying ‘ham.’” Oliver then shared footage of trans people and others reacting to the bill, including comments heard in a recent video produced by AL.com. “You can’t help thinking that this whole thing is just right-wing virtue signaling sending a hateful message to a conservative base with no thought given to the pain it will case,” Oliver said. “And no matter what the eventual fate of this law is, actual trans people and their advocates in Alabama have heard the message it was meant to send, loud and clear.” Watch the “Last Week Tonight” segment above, and watch AL.com’s documentary featuring Brookside below. 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·
John Oliver Puts Brookside PD AL.com In Spotlight During Last Week Tonight
Stocks Ease As Investors Eye Economic Data Rate Hikes
Stocks Ease As Investors Eye Economic Data Rate Hikes
Stocks Ease As Investors Eye Economic Data, Rate Hikes https://digitalalabamanews.com/stocks-ease-as-investors-eye-economic-data-rate-hikes/ Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., October 7, 2022. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid MSCI global index drops for a fourth day Russian bombings across Ukraine fuel nervousness Markets braced for U.S. data, earnings season Chips push Nasdaq lower on U.S. China restrictions NEW YORK/LONDON, Oct 10 (Reuters) – The MSCI global index of stocks (.MIWD00000PUS) lost ground on Monday while the dollar gained slightly as investors waited for economic data and earnings season and after Russian missiles pounded cities across Ukraine. Any lingering hopes that the Federal Reserve could shift to a softer stance toward monetary policy appeared to be extinguished on Friday as the September jobs report pointed to a persistently tight labour market. read more The dollar held steady against a basket of currencies, while a number of market-based measures of investor risk nervousness showed another increase. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com On Monday, Russian missiles killed civilians and knocked out power and heat in cites across Ukraine in apparent revenge strikes after President Vladimir Putin declared a blast on Russia’s bridge to Crimea to be a terrorist attack. read more read more “In general investors in the U.S. and aropausehe world are taking a puase and waiting for the next round of economic data and earnings,” said Oliver Pursche, adviser at Wealthspire Advisors in Westport, Connecticut. The U.S. third-quarter earnings seset to kick off with four of the biggest biggest banks reporting on Friday. The largest U.S. banks are expected to report a decline in profits as the economy slowed and volatile markets put the brakes on dealmaking. read more The MSCI All-World index (.MIWD00000PUS) was last down 1.0% and poised for a fourth straight day of losses. The pan-European STOXX 600 (.STOXX) was down 0.3%, having skimmed one-week lows. Emerging market stocks (.MSCIEF) lost 1.63%. Wall Street’s three major indexes were losing ground, with the chip sector pushing Nasdaq down the most after the Biden administration published a sweeping set of export controls on Friday. They included a measure to cut off China from certain semiconductors made anywhere in the world with U.S. equipment. read more read more The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) fell 108.18 points, or 0.37%, to 29,188.61, the S&P 500 (.SPX) lost 31.94 points, or 0.88%, to 3,607.72 and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) dropped 145.30 points, or 1.36%, to 10,507.11. Wall Street had already declined on Friday after the upbeat payrolls report cemented expectations for another large rate hike. read more Chicago Fed President Charles Evans said on Monday that U.S. Fed officials are closely aligned on the need to raise the target policy rate to around 4.5% by early next year, unless data upends current projections. Minutes of the Fed’s last policy meeting will be published this week and could offer a steer on rate-setters’ thinking about the likely path of monetary policy. The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies, was recently up 0.3% while the euro was down 0.43% to $0.9699. The Japanese yen weakened 0.26% versus the greenback at 145.71 per dollar. Sterling was last trading at $1.1045, down 0.35% on the day after the Bank of England announced a surprise decision to shore up the gilt market ahead of the end of an emergency bond-buying programme on Friday and the government brought forward the publication of independent budget forecasts. read more read more Oil prices were lower as investors weighed potentially tight supply against economic storm clouds that could foreshadow a global recession and erosion of fuel demand. read more U.S. crude recently fell 0.18% to $92.47 per barrel and Brent was at $97.55, down 0.38% on the day. Gold prices fell as an elevated dollar and solidifying bets for an aggressive Fed interest rate hike pushed the non-yielding bullion to its lowest level in a week. Spot gold dropped 1.6% to $1,667.49 an ounce. U.S. gold futures fell 1.91% to $1,668.00 an ounce. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Sinead Carew in New York and Amanda Cooper in London Additional reporting by Wayne Cole in Sydney Editing by Andrew Heavens and Matthew Lewis Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Stocks Ease As Investors Eye Economic Data Rate Hikes
Belarus's Lukashenko Warns Ukraine Deploys Troops With Russia
Belarus's Lukashenko Warns Ukraine Deploys Troops With Russia
Belarus's Lukashenko Warns Ukraine, Deploys Troops With Russia https://digitalalabamanews.com/belaruss-lukashenko-warns-ukraine-deploys-troops-with-russia/ Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko chairs a meeting on security in Minsk, Belarus, October 10, 2022. Maxim Guchek/BelTA/Handout via REUTERS LONDON, Oct 10 (Reuters) – Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said on Monday he had ordered troops to deploy with Russian forces near Ukraine in response to what he said was a clear threat to Belarus from Kyiv and its backers in the West. The remarks from Lukashenko, who has held power in Belarus since 1994, indicate a potential further escalation of the war in Ukraine, possibly with a combined Russian-Belarus joint force in the north of Ukraine. “Strikes on the territory of Belarus are not just being discussed in Ukraine today, but are also being planned,” Lukashenko said at a meeting on security, without providing evidence for the assertion. “Their owners are pushing them to start a war against Belarus to drag us there.” Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com “We have been preparing for this for decades. If necessary, we will respond,” Lukashenko said, adding that he had spoken to Russian President Vladimir Putin about the situation while at a meeting in St Petersburg. Lukashenko said he had agreed with Putin to deploy a regional military group, and had started pulling forces together two days ago, apparently after an attack on Russia’s road and rail bridge to Crimea early on Saturday. Lukashenko said that a warning was delivered to Belarus through unofficial channels that Ukraine planned “Crimean Bridge 2”, though he did not give details. “My answer was simple: ‘Tell the president of Ukraine and the other lunatics: if they touch one metre of our territory then the Crimean Bridge will seem to them like a walk in the park’.” Belarus’s army has about 60,000 people. Earlier this year, Belarus deployed 6 battalion-tactical groups, totaling several thousand people, to the border areas. On Sunday, the head of Belarus’s border guards accused Ukraine of provocations at the border. Russian forces used Belarus as a staging post for their Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine, sending troops and equipment into northern Ukraine from bases in Belarus. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Reuters; editing by Guy Faulconbridge Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Belarus's Lukashenko Warns Ukraine Deploys Troops With Russia
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene Rises From GOP Fringe To Front
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene Rises From GOP Fringe To Front
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene Rises From GOP Fringe To Front https://digitalalabamanews.com/rep-marjorie-taylor-greene-rises-from-gop-fringe-to-front/ WASHINGTON — (AP) — Marjorie Taylor Greene took her seat directly behind Republican House leader Kevin McCarthy, a proximity to power for the firebrand congresswoman that did not go unnoticed, as he unveiled the House GOP’s midterm election agenda in Pennsylvania. Days later, she appeared on stage warming up the crowd for Donald Trump, when the former president rallied voters in Michigan to cast ballots for Republicans, including for control of Congress. Once shunned as a political pariah for her extremist rhetoric, the Georgia congresswoman who spent her first term in the House stripped of institutional power by Democrats is being celebrated by Republicans and welcomed into the GOP fold. If Republicans win the House majority in the November election, Greene is poised to become an influential player shaping the GOP agenda, an agitator with clout. “No. 1, we need to impeach Joe Biden. No. 2, We need to impeach Secretary Mayorkas. And No. 3, we should impeach Merrick Garland,” Greene told The Associated Press outside the U.S. Capitol. Alejandro Mayorkas is the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security and Garland the attorney general. Scolding the media for having been “wrong about me” from the start, she said those who know better “take me very seriously.” “I’m going to be a strong legislator and I’ll be a very involved member of Congress,” she predicted. “I know how to work inside, and I know how to work outside. And I’m looking forward to doing that.” This is the outlook for the Republican Party in the Trump era, the normalizing of once fringe figures into the highest ranks of political power. It’s a sign of the GOP’s rightward drift that Greene’s association with extremists and nationalists, violent rhetoric and remarks about Jewish people have found a home in elected office. Her ascent brings into focus the challenge ahead for McCarthy, whose GOP ranks are filling with far-right political stars with the potential to play an oversized role in setting the policies, priorities and tone of the new Congress. “I’ve said for a long time there’s a battle for the heart and soul of the Republican Party,” said Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, the No. 2 Democrat in the House, at a briefing ahead of the midterm elections. When the congresswoman says outlandish things — as she did at the Trump rally earlier this month claiming “Democrats want Republicans dead, and they’ve already started the killings” — few Republican leaders dare a public or private rebuke of such incendiary language. In this case, she was exaggerating two local incidents involving politics, one that ended tragically in a fatality. Greene’s political currency stretches beyond her massive social media following and her ability to rake in sizable sums from donors. Her proximity to Trump makes her a force that cannot be ignored by what’s left of her mainstream GOP colleagues. McCarthy’s allowance for Greene to sit front and center with leadership for the campaign rollout was not by accident but design. The Republican lawmakers in attendance celebrated her presence, calling it a sign of the GOP’s “big tent” that welcomes all comers. But Greene’s arrival also signaled a stark normalizing of the most extreme elements in the Republican Party. Longtime political strategist Rick Wilson, a former Republican who left the party in the Trump era, calls Greene’s brand of politics “government by trolling” that marks a dangerous new era for the GOP and will make it difficult to govern. McCarthy is in line to become House speaker if Republicans regain the majority. “No matter what the trolling part of the Republican caucus does, you can’t ever satisfy them,” said Wilson, now at the Lincoln Project. With the departure of the last vestiges of the anti-Trump wing of the House GOP — Liz Cheney defeated by a primary opponent and Adam Kinzinger deciding to step down rather than seek reelection — “that’s it,” Wilson said. Greene swept onto the national stage in the 2020 election, catapulted forward even before she took office. As the lawmaker-elect from northwest Georgia, she attended a key organizing meeting at the Trump White House as lawmakers laid plans to object to the certification of Joe Biden’s election on Jan. 6, 2021. When she arrived to be sworn into Congress, she wore a “Trump Won” face mask. Democrats moved swiftly and unequivocally to reprimand Greene, voting to strip her of congressional committee assignments over her incendiary rhetoric, including trafficking in volatile conspiracy theories. Greene drew rebuke from her own party a few months later for comparing mandatory COVID-19 face masks to the treatment of Jewish people by Nazi Germany. While some have tried to compare Greene to outspoken far-left lawmakers, it became clear even to Republican leaders that Greene stood in a category of her own. At that time, McCarthy called her comments about the Holocaust “wrong” and “appalling.” Greene later apologized. In many ways, Greene’s arrival in the House traces the arc of the Republican Party’s rightward evolution from the Newt Gingrich revolution that brought conservatives to power in the 1994 election, to the “tea party” Republicans that regained the House majority in 2010. Jack Kingston, a former Republican congressman who rose during those earlier eras, said McCarthy was smart in welcoming Greene to unfurl the House GOP’s “Commitment to America” last month. “He’s got to work with her, and he knows that,” Kingston said. “Getting Marjorie Taylor Greene on board is very important,” he said. “If you don’t bring everybody in the tent, they’re going to find their own niche.” In the interview, Greene said she is certain she will be reinstated on her congressional committees if Republicans win the majority, eyeing the House Oversight panel, and is talking to leadership about other opportunities in the new Congress. Not only does Greene want to impeach Biden and Cabinet officials, she is eager to conduct investigations, including into the origins of COVID-19. Last month, Greene unveiled legislation that is another priority — her bill to prohibit some gender reassignment procedures on minors — flanked by a dozen Republican lawmakers and leaders in the conservative movement. Many of them praised the congresswoman for her work. “I want to thank Marjorie Taylor Greene — who is soon to get her full legislative powers back, by the way,” said Matt Schlapp, chairman of the Conservative Political Action Committee, who hugged her afterward. “If this is the type of thing that you’re going to have the courage to do, I think that’s something everybody needs to understand,” Schlapp said. McCarthy and Greene appear to have come to an understanding that they need each other. The leader needs Greene to come into the GOP fold rather than throw rocks from outside. She needs McCarthy’s blessing to regain committee assignments, enabling her to participate more fully in Congress and put her imprint on legislation. At the Pennsylvania event McCarthy batted away questions about his ability to govern if Republicans win the majority. “Name me one person in the conference that is opposed to this,” he said afterward of their platform. “Is that a difference? Yes.” ___ Follow AP for full coverage of the midterms at https://apnews.com/hub/2022-midterm-elections Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene Rises From GOP Fringe To Front
Analysis | Important To Tubervilles Comments On Race: He Represents Alabama
Analysis | Important To Tubervilles Comments On Race: He Represents Alabama
Analysis | Important To Tuberville’s Comments On Race: He Represents Alabama https://digitalalabamanews.com/analysis-important-to-tubervilles-comments-on-race-he-represents-alabama/ The Auburn University Tigers went 13-0 in 2004, one of the best seasons in the school’s history. But they were boxed out of the championship game after ending the season ranked third, a decision that Coach Tommy Tuberville decried loudly and often. Even a decade later, after he’d moved on to the University of Cincinnati, Tuberville expressed his frustration at the season’s outcome. But Tuberville himself came out of the season well-positioned. He was named coach of the year and secured a new seven-year contract paying him $2 million a year in salary and endorsements. Leading one of Alabama’s leading programs to national glory turned Tuberville into something of a legend in the state. He did not repeat that success in future years at Auburn, though. Of course, college football, unlike the NFL, depends on a rotating pool of players who are making their way through college. And that 2004 team had a number of exceptional players — four who were drafted into the NFL in the first round and three others who would eventually go on to play in the NFL’s Pro Bowl. Relevant to the moment: All seven of those players, the ones that helped Tuberville cement his legacy, were Black. Tuberville was elected to the Senate from Alabama in 2020, easily ousting Democratic incumbent Doug Jones. He earned the endorsement of Donald Trump and soon established himself as staunchly loyal to the president. Even before he was seated in the Senate, he announced his intention to object to the results of the 2020 presidential contest. So, on Saturday, Tuberville was offered a speaking slot at Trump’s rally for Republican candidates in Nevada. And in that speech he falsely claimed that Democrats actually support criminal activity. “Some people say, well, they’re soft on crime. No, they’re not soft on crime. They’re pro-crime. They want crime,” Tuberville falsely claimed, to applause. “They want crime because they want to take over what you got. They want to control what you have. They want reparation because they think the people that do the crime are owed that.” “Reparation,” of course, has a specific meaning in the context of American politics: the idea that providing monetary or other benefits to Black Americans might help dismantle the long-term effects of centuries of enslavement of Black people. In other words, Tuberville is clearly suggesting that “the people that do the crime” are Black, in addition to suggesting that the entirety of the Democratic Party thinks that violence and robbery are acceptable proxies for addressing systemic racial gulfs. Casting Democrats in the most toxic, negative light possible is, of course, standard fare for right-wing politicians in particular. But Tuberville let that other idea slip: that crime is a function of Black Americans. It’s a grotesque, racist proposition from anyone. That’s certainly more true of a sitting U.S. senator. And more still from one whose celebrity was dependent on the unpaid work of college athletes, many of whom were Black. But it’s also important coming from a senator from Alabama. This is one of the leading government officials in the state, someone who has no lengthy track record in state politics but someone who nonetheless represents the state in a literal sense on the national stage. And his position is that Black people “do the crime.” Alabama was in the news recently for another reason. The state is challenging a district court’s ruling that the way it drew congressional boundaries in the wake of the 2020 Census violated the Voting Rights Act. That challenge came before the Supreme Court in the case Merrill v. Milligan, with justices hearing oral arguments last week. The state, awarded seven seats in the House, drew district lines that created one district in which half the population was Black — a tactic called “packing.” With so many Black voters in one district, there are fewer in the other six, decreasing the likelihood that those districts might elect Democrats (given how heavily Democratic Black voters are) and therefore decreasing the likelihood that another Black representative might win election. In a state that’s about a quarter Black. The Voting Rights Act exists because of systemic efforts, mostly in Southern states like Alabama, to exclude Black voters from participating in electoral politics in the decades before the Civil Rights movement. In an amicus brief filed by a group of Alabama-based historians, the lingering effects of both enslavement and historic limits on political power are thoroughly documented. But state leaders and legislators would rather send six Republicans to Washington, and if the Voting Rights Act (hobbled in 2013 on the dubious grounds that it was no longer needed) stands in the way, so be it. Meanwhile, state prisoners in Alabama recently launched a work stoppage, protesting conditions in the facilities. The Department of Justice filed suit against the state in December 2020 alleging that the state “violated and is continuing to violate the Constitution because its prisons are riddled with prisoner-on-prisoner and guard-on-prisoner violence.” Speaking to the New Yorker, journalist Beth Shelburne explained that “the problems of overcrowding, understaffing, violence, and corruption are fundamental to our carceral system, and exist in every jail and prison across the United States, but in Alabama they’re all on steroids.” This disproportionately affects Black people because Blacks are overrepresented in the state prison population (as they are in most states). This Shelburne attributes to overrepresentation of “people who have been most impacted by the lack of social services, poor education, and widespread poverty tend to be those whom politicians don’t care about” — often meaning, in Alabama, Black people. (See the aforementioned amicus brief.) Enter the state’s junior senator. Speaking at a rally hosted by the former president, he suggested that crime is not only perpetrated by Blacks but that Democrats encourage the idea so that Black people can “take over what you got” — framing the idea not Only in grotesque racial and political terms but also as a specific threat to his almost exclusively White audience. The point of the recent focus on race in the political conversation by Black activists has been to call attention to ways in which racism manifests not as people wearing blackface — as Alabama’s governor did in college — but as embedded, structural biases against Black Americans. Things like disproportionate imprisonment or uneven representation. But sometimes racial hostility also manifests as a U.S. senator blaming Black people for crime. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Analysis | Important To Tubervilles Comments On Race: He Represents Alabama
Russian-Speaking Hackers Knock Multiple US Airport Websites Offline. No Impact On Operations Reported | CNN
Russian-Speaking Hackers Knock Multiple US Airport Websites Offline. No Impact On Operations Reported | CNN
Russian-Speaking Hackers Knock Multiple US Airport Websites Offline. No Impact On Operations Reported | CNN https://digitalalabamanews.com/russian-speaking-hackers-knock-multiple-us-airport-websites-offline-no-impact-on-operations-reported-cnn/ CNN  —  More than a dozen public-facing airport websites, including those for some of the nation’s largest airports, appeared inaccessible Monday morning, and Russian-speaking hackers claimed responsibility. No immediate signs of impact to actual air travel were reported, suggesting the issue may be an inconvenience for people seeking travel information. “Obviously, we’re tracking that, and there’s no concern about operations being disrupted,” Kiersten Todt, Chief of Staff of the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), said Monday at a security conference in Sea Island, Georgia. The 14 websites include the one for Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport. An employee there told CNN there were no operational impacts. The Los Angeles International Airport website was offline earlier but appeared to be restored shortly before 9 a.m. Eastern. A spokesman did not immediately return a request for comment. The hacking group known as Killnet listed multiple US airports as targets. It stepped up activity to target organizations in NATO countries after Russia’s February invasion of Ukraine. The loosely organized “hacktivists” are politically motivated to support the Kremlin but ties to Moscow are unknown. The group claimed responsibility last week for knocking offline US state governments websites. Killnet is blamed for briefly downing a US Congress website in July and for cyberattacks on organizations in Lithuania after the country blocked shipment of goods to the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad in June. The type of cyberattack used by Killnet is known as “distributed denial of service” (DDoS), in which hackers flood computer servers with phony web traffic to knock them offline. “DDoS attacks are favored by actors of varying sophistication because they have visible results, but these incidents are usually superficial and short lived,” John Hultquist, a vice president at Google-owned cybersecurity firm Mandiant, told CNN. A Transportation Security Administration spokesperson said the agency is monitoring the issue and working with airport partners. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Russian-Speaking Hackers Knock Multiple US Airport Websites Offline. No Impact On Operations Reported | CNN
French Palestinian Jailed In Israel On Hunger Strike
French Palestinian Jailed In Israel On Hunger Strike
French Palestinian Jailed In Israel On Hunger Strike https://digitalalabamanews.com/french-palestinian-jailed-in-israel-on-hunger-strike/ The French Foreign Ministry on Oct. 5 reiterated its former statements, saying it is closely following the situation of French Palestinian Salah Hamouri who has been detained in Israel since March and on a hunger strike for two weeks now. The ministry called upon Israel to release Hamouri and enable his wife, Elsa Lefort, banned from entering Israel and the West Bank since 2016, to be united with her husband. The ministry had stated on Sept. 5 that “the situation of Mr. Salah Hamouri is and will continue to be followed closely. The President of the Republic addressed the situation of Mr. Hamouri during his call with Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid on Aug. 22. We have approached Israeli authorities several times in recent months, in Paris addressing the Israeli ambassador and in Israel addressing the Israeli Foreign Ministry, the prime minister’s office and the Israeli presidency, requesting that all of Mr. Hamouri’s rights be respected and that he be able to benefit from all means of appeal.” In its Oct. 5 communique, the French ministry entered into more details, stating that both French consuls — the one in Tel Aviv and the one in Jerusalem — had visited Hamouri in jail. It said five such visits have already taken place. It also said that family members of Hamouri have been received many times at the Foreign Ministry in Paris to discuss the situation, with the last such meeting taking place on Oct. 3. Israel’s Foreign Ministry declined to comment or confirm that French President Emmanuel Macron raised in person the issue with Israel’s Prime Minister Yair Lapid last August, saying only the issue has come up on a number of occasions in discussions between Israeli and French authorities. Hamouri, 37, who resides in East Jerusalem, was detained by Israeli security forces on March 10. On June 7, an Israeli court agreed to prolong his detention by three months. Israeli authorities claim that Hamouri is linked with a terror group. He is under administrative detention, which means that no date has been fixed for a trial. According to Israeli law, administrative detention can be used in cases when suspects are considered dangerous, affiliated with terror groups and/or planning terror attacks. Hundreds of Palestinians are presumably held in administrative detention, but few, if any, apart from Hamouri also carry European citizenship. The decision to prolong Hamouri’s detention was communicated directly to his lawyer, but the charges are reportedly unknown to them. After seven months of detention, Hamouri’s lawyer has no idea if and when his client will stand trial.  Hamouri’s case came into the spotlight mostly at the beginning of April when a complaint was filed on his behalf claiming his mobile phone had been hacked via the Israeli-developed Pegasus NSO software. A report published last November claimed that the phones of several Palestinian activists, including Hamouri, were tapped using Pegasus. Apparently lacking evidence, the report did not point the finger directly at Israel. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
French Palestinian Jailed In Israel On Hunger Strike
Detulleo To Transition To Front Office At Season's End
Detulleo To Transition To Front Office At Season's End
Detulleo To Transition To Front Office At Season's End https://digitalalabamanews.com/detulleo-to-transition-to-front-office-at-seasons-end/ HUNTSVILLE, AL – The Huntsville Havoc have announced that head coach Glenn Detulleo will be retiring from coaching at the conclusion of the 2022-23 season. Following his retirement, Detulleo will be transitioning into a front-office role with the team as Executive General Manager. The upcoming season will be his 11th year at the helm in Huntsville already notching a total of 278 wins. Detulleo has led the Havoc to two championships during his time as head coach. He is also the longest-tenured and the winningest coach in franchise history. “Coaching in Huntsville over the last 10 seasons has been a dream come true,” Detulleo said. “My coaching career might be coming to an end, but I am thrilled to continue my journey with such a great organization.” Upon Detulleo’s retirement, Assistant Coach Stuart Stefan will take over as head coach. He will become the seventh head coach in the Havoc’s 19-year history. Stefan played seven seasons with the Havoc before becoming an assistant coach in 2018. As a player, Stefan scored 84 goals and tallied 164 assists for Huntsville. He was also a part of the team’s two most recent championships as a player as well as a coach. “I have learned so much from Glenn and I’m extremely grateful for this opportunity,” Stefan said. “I’m excited to get to work and continue the winning tradition here in Huntsville.” The Havoc begin their season on October 20th at Pensacola before returning to Huntsville on October 28th for the home opener. Tuesday, October 11 Package & Season Ticket Pick-Up Begins – Roanoke Rail Yard Dawgs Detulleo to Transition to Front Office at Season’s End – Huntsville Havoc The opinions expressed in this release are those of the organization issuing it, and do not necessarily reflect the thoughts or opinions of OurSports Central or its staff. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Detulleo To Transition To Front Office At Season's End
JD Vance Tim Ryan Will Meet For First Ohio Senate Debate As Polls Show Tight Race
JD Vance Tim Ryan Will Meet For First Ohio Senate Debate As Polls Show Tight Race
JD Vance, Tim Ryan Will Meet For First Ohio Senate Debate As Polls Show Tight Race https://digitalalabamanews.com/jd-vance-tim-ryan-will-meet-for-first-ohio-senate-debate-as-polls-show-tight-race/ (CLEVELAND) — After weeks of back and forth negotiating on the time, the hosts and the venue, Ohio Senate nominees Rep. Tim Ryan and J.D. Vance will be facing off on Monday for their first debate. A second showdown is scheduled a week later. Ryan and Vance, the Democratic and Republican candidates vying for retiring Republican Sen. Rob Portman’s seat, will be arguing their case on stage hosted by Fox 8 News in Cleveland. Monday’s hour-long debate at the Fox 8 studios starts at 7 p.m. ET and will be moderated by two reporters, one from the Fox affiliate and the other from the local NBC affiliate. The debate can be watched on all Nexstar Media Television stations and respective streaming channels in Ohio. FiveThirtyEight’s polling average shows Ryan and Vance in a close race. The winner could determine the balance of power in the Senate, which is currently split 50-50. Heading into Election Day, Vance has campaigned heavily on the issue of crime in Ohio. ABC News spoke with the “Hillbilly Elegy” author and former investor at a recent event in Perrysburg, Ohio, where he was joined by former President Donald Trump’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr. “Let’s declare war on the violent crime on our streets. Let’s let the police go and do their jobs and let’s support them as we do it,” Vance said to supporters at a banquet hall. He told ABC News afterward, while speaking with reporters, that if elected he would prioritize increasing funding for police. “We need to probably hire 100,000 additional cops in this country,” he said. Referring to special legal protections for law enforcement that some Democrats argue are too broad, Vance disagreed and said: “We really have to protect local police officers with qualified immunity.” ABC News also spoke with Rep. Ryan, most recently at a kick-off event for his statewide bus tour in Warren, Ohio. When asked how he’s prepping before Monday’s debate, Ryan said that he wished the face-off was held sooner. “We want to get this thing kicked off. But, you know, we’re doing good work,” he said. He also told ABC News that he can’t “overstate” how important the two debates between him and Vance are going to be because it will show voters what he said is a “contrast” between the two. “JD has given up on Ohio and I’ve been here fighting like hell for this state, and we’re starting to see some real results. And so that contrast of his extremism versus my pragmatism is going to be very apparent in the next two debates,” Ryan said. While the party in power often suffers setbacks in midterm races, swing-state Democrats like Ryan have campaigned by seeking to separate themselves from Washington. He told ABC News that he’s an “independent-minded person,” while Vance has labeled him a “fake moderate.” In an emailed statement to ABC News, Vance campaign spokesperson Luke Schroeder wrote that “JD is well prepared for the upcoming debates and has found time to prepare between rallies and events. He will have no problem wiping the floor with Tim Ryan.” Paulina Tam is one of seven ABC News campaign reporters embedded in battleground states across the country. Watch all the twists and turns of covering the midterm elections every Sunday on Hulu’s “Power Trip” with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos. Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
JD Vance Tim Ryan Will Meet For First Ohio Senate Debate As Polls Show Tight Race
Billionaire Caruso On Spending Binge To Sway LA Mayor's Race
Billionaire Caruso On Spending Binge To Sway LA Mayor's Race
Billionaire Caruso On Spending Binge To Sway LA Mayor's Race https://digitalalabamanews.com/billionaire-caruso-on-spending-binge-to-sway-la-mayors-race/ Los Angeles (AP) — Rick Caruso, billionaire developer and underdog candidate for Los Angeles mayor, is mounting what might become the city’s largest-ever voter-turnout operation to try to defeat U.S. Rep. Karen Bass, who could be the first Black woman to lead the nation’s second-most-populous city. Caruso is deploying several hundred paid canvassers and droves of volunteers to knock on doors, make phone calls and send texts and emails. Their targets are identified by campaign staff who rely on demographic research and polling to ferret out potential supporters among undecided Latinos, Asians and independents. Of particular interest are people who sat out the June primary when Bass topped the field and outdistanced Caruso by 7 points, setting up a runoff. Latinos make up about half the city’s population of about 4 million and they tilted toward Caruso in the primary, but can be inconsistent voters. Bass has been fighting for their votes, too, and has lined up endorsements including former Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, City Council President Nury Martinez and labor leader Dolores Huerta. Longtime Democratic consultant Roy Behr sees an opening for Caruso if he can win over enough voters who would otherwise have skipped the election. The outcome is “really dependent on both the turnout and the choices of Latino voters,” Behr said. Consultant Dveen Babaian, who oversees Caruso’s paid canvassers, said in lower-income neighborhoods typically overlooked by campaigns “our door knocks are the first door knocks some of these voters have ever gotten.” “This campaign will be won by engaging marginalized communities,” Babaian said. On a recent afternoon in a heavily Latino neighborhood of modest homes in the city’s San Fernando Valley, a Caruso canvasser was knocking on doors and distributing flyers in English and Spanish. The results were mixed. At some homes no one came to the door, but she was able to get others to pledge support for Caruso and agree to post yard signs. In a conversation that jumped from English to Spanish, one woman said she was supporting Caruso because of frustration with high crime. “I don’t believe that he is a Democrat,” she said of Caruso. “But I don’t care if you are going to do something.” Caruso, in his first race for elected office, was a longtime Republican who switched and became a Democrat near the deadline to enter the race in a city where the GOP is virtually invisible. He’s tapped into his estimated $5.3 billion fortune to build a $60 million war chest, most of it his own money, an amount that easily eclipses fundraising by all candidates in the previous three mayoral races. Despite the financial advantage, even his internal polling shows he’s trailing. Time is running out and the race has taken on an increasingly hostile tone as mail-in ballots go out for an election that concludes Nov. 8. “It’s not the power of the money, it’s the power of the people,” Bass, a lifelong Angeleno and former state Assembly speaker, told cheering supporters at a recent outdoor rally. The contours of the race have been set for months: finding solutions for the long-running homeless crisis, rising crime and runaway rents and housing prices. The centrist Caruso, the son of Italian immigrants, is testing if the famously liberal city might swing to the political right for the first time in decades. He’s promising to expand the police department and quickly get homeless encampments off the streets. The progressive Bass has positioned herself as a coalition-builder and emerged as the Democratic establishment pick, with her supporters including President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, a former California U.S. senator and attorney general. The winner will replace outgoing two-term Democratic Mayor Eric Garcetti, who has been largely absent in the contest. His nomination to become U.S. ambassador to India — made by Biden more than a year ago — appears stalled in the Senate over sexual harassment allegations against a former Garcetti top adviser. Bass, who was on Biden’s short list for vice president, has been sharpening her attacks on Caruso, lampooning his decision to become a Democrat. She calls the campaign “a fight for the soul of our city,” echoing a line Biden used against then-President Donald Trump. She also is underlining donations he has made to candidates who oppose abortion rights, including congressional Republican leaders Mitch McConnell and Kevin McCarthy. Caruso says he’s a supporter of reproductive rights. Along with her own campaign infrastructure, she’s counting on the support of powerful labor unions that are working to turn out voters for her. Bass “is actively reaching out to pro-choice Democrats,” campaign spokeswoman Sarah Leonard Sheahan said. At the rally, a long line of speakers described Bass as the only authentic Democrat on the ballot and the only one with an unquestioned record defending reproductive rights. In the crowd, Bass supporter Jennifer Yi, a Democrat who works on homeless initiatives at United Way of Greater Los Angeles, recoiled at Caruso’s campaign spending. “I think he is trying to buy Los Angeles,” Yi said. Caruso has resumed relentless TV and digital advertising, which include attempts to raise doubts about Bass’ character. Bass has faced questions over a roughly $100,000, full-tuition scholarship she received from the University of Southern California’s social work program. Last October, a longtime Bass friend, suspended City Councilman Mark Ridley-Thomas, and a former USC dean were charged with a bribery scheme in which Ridley-Thomas promised to steer millions of dollars in contracts to the school if his son got a scholarship and a teaching job. The former dean has pleaded guilty. Federal prosecutors have said Bass is not a target of their investigation. But the Los Angeles Times reported in September that prosecutors said Bass’ scholarship and her dealings with USC are “critical” to their case. Caruso said he was “troubled” and warned Bass would bring “corruption” to City Hall. Bass has said the case “has nothing to do with me.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Billionaire Caruso On Spending Binge To Sway LA Mayor's Race
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message | EDGE Media Network
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message | EDGE Media Network
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message | EDGE Media Network https://digitalalabamanews.com/michigan-gop-statewide-candidates-stick-to-far-right-message-edge-media-network/ Former President Donald Trump, left, brings Michigan Republican gubernatorial candidate Tudor Dixon onstage, during a rally at the Macomb Community College Sports & Expo Center in Warren, Mich., Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022. (Todd McInturf/Detroit News via AP)   With voting underway in Michigan’s general election, the Republican nominee for secretary of state stepped on stage as a warm-up act for former President Donald Trump and hit hard on the main theme of her campaign. Kristina Karamo repeated unfounded assertions about the 2020 presidential election that have been repeatedly debunked. She told the crowd at the recent rally at Macomb Community College that “authoritarians” are giving millions to her Democratic opponent — Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson — in an attempt to “corrupt battleground state election systems so they can control America.” “If you look at history, it shows you what tyrants do,” said Karamo, a former community college professor. “History is telling us, history is screaming to us, that if we don’t step up and fight now, we will lose the greatest country in human history.” It was an address designed to rev up the crowd of devoted Trump followers, some of whom have latched onto the baseless QAnon conspiracy theory. While Karamo’s speech drew cheers, relying on a general election strategy that appeals to the most far-right voters is a gamble for Michigan Republicans. Candidates who have to play to their party’s base during primaries or nominating conventions often shift toward the center, aiming to attract more voters for the general election. But that hasn’t happened this year for the Republicans seeking Michigan’s top three statewide offices — governor, attorney general and secretary of state. The Nov. 8 election will test whether campaigns designed to resonate with the far-right and highlight strong ties to Trump will be enough to win in a traditional swing state, where the Republican incumbent lost the White House race to Democrat challenger Joe Biden by more than 154,000 votes in 2020. All three GOP candidates stood behind Trump during the Oct. 1 rally at the college about 20 miles north of Detroit, joined by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, who has amplified Trump’s election falsehoods to audiences across the country. Trump falsely claimed the 2020 election was “rigged and stolen” in Michigan, citing “evidence” he said first originated with Karamo and Matthew DePerno, a tax lawyer who is the nominee for state attorney general. In his own address to the crowd, DePerno called Democrats “radical, cultural Marxists” who want to “silence you.” “If that doesn’t work, they want to put you in jail,” DePerno told the crowd, which fell into chants of “Lock her up.” All three Democratic incumbents are women. DePerno’s campaign also is clouded by an investigation into whether he should be criminally charged for attempting to gain access to voting machines after the 2020 election. John DeBlaay, a Grand Rapids real estate agent and precinct delegate who attended the rally, said he was thrilled with the candidates. “We’ve got the best America First ticket all the way from top to bottom that we’ve had in a long time now,” he said. Some moderate Republicans are skeptical that campaigns appealing mostly to base elements of the party will be enough to beat Democratic incumbents with wide name recognition and sizable fundraising advantages. The Democrats also are expected to benefit from having an amendment on the ballot that seeks to enshrine the right to abortion in the state constitution. These Republicans say inflation, gas prices and economic anxiety should be the GOP’s main talking points, not a continued alignment with Trump and his false claims about widespread fraud costing him reelection. They point to the unusual way Michigan selects its attorney general and secretary of state candidates, a process done through a party nominating convention rather than through a primary election in which voters make the choice. The most conservative Republicans who are loyal to Trump dominated that convention in April. The party’s co-chair, Meshawn Maddock, was one of 16 Republicans who submitted false certificates stating they were the state’s presidential electors despite Biden’s certified victory in the state. Three weeks before the convention, during another Trump rally, DePerno encouraged attendees — many of them precinct delegates — to “storm” the party gathering and said it was “time for the grassroots to unite.” Delegates overwhelmingly voted to nominate Karamo. DePerno won a runoff over former legislative leader Tom Leonard, who lost in the 2018 attorney general’s race by 3 percentage points to Democrat Dana Nessel. “Karamo and DePerno are among the most loyal to Donald Trump that you will find anywhere in the country,” said Jason Roe, a longtime Republican strategist. “That loyalty has been unshakable in this election process, regardless of how it might affect general election prospects.” Roe, whose father served as the Michigan GOP’s executive director for 10 years, became executive director of the state party in spring 2021. Six months later, he stepped down due to a “difference in opinion on how many conspiracy theories we should tolerate.” Soon after Roe left, Trump began calling party leaders to “force the party to embrace things formally that weren’t going to be helpful to the upcoming election,” Roe said. The party’s candidate for governor, Tudor Dixon, won the nomination during the primary in August after receiving Trump’s endorsement. Dixon, a conservative news show host who once acted in low-budget horror films, also benefited from support of the wealthy DeVos family. While seen as less extreme than Karamo and DePerno, Dixon indicated during debates that she thought the 2020 presidential election was stolen and she recently made light of a plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat. Dixon has since tried to pivot away from denying the results of the last election by focusing on topics such as inflation and education, but she also is repeating hard-right rhetoric on cultural issues. She has called for banning “pornographic” books in schools and has pitched an education agenda modeled after the Florida policy that critics have labeled “Don’t Say Gay.” While Democrats have attacked DePerno and Karamo for their continued denial of Biden’s victory in 2020, they have focused on what they describe as Dixon’s “extreme” abortion stance. Lackluster fundraising has made it difficult for her to push back. As of Aug. 22, Dixon had $524,000 in the bank compared with Whitmer’s $14 million, according to the latest available campaign finance reports. Some of that gap has been closed by the super PAC Michigan Families United, which has received $2.5 million in donations, including from the DeVos family. “I just don’t like that there’s no commercials on TV about Dixon. Everything you see is about the other people, and it’s all negative,” said Laura Bunting, an Ionia County resident who attended the Trump rally. Karamo and DePerno had a combined $422,554 cash on hand as of Sept. 16 compared with the $5.7 million combined for their Democratic opponents, according to campaign finance reports. Michigan-based pollster Bernie Porn said the Republican candidates have been defined by their extreme stances but that none has attracted enough money to get on TV and introduce themselves to a broader swath of voters. That, he said, “makes it difficult for folks to form a favorable opinion of you.” ___ Joey Cappelletti is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. ___ Follow AP for full coverage of the midterms at https://apnews.com/hub/2022-midterm-elections Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Far-Right Message | EDGE Media Network
White-Collar Workers Are Feeling The Brunt Of The Fed's Rate Hikes. Here's Why | CNN Business
White-Collar Workers Are Feeling The Brunt Of The Fed's Rate Hikes. Here's Why | CNN Business
White-Collar Workers Are Feeling The Brunt Of The Fed's Rate Hikes. Here's Why | CNN Business https://digitalalabamanews.com/white-collar-workers-are-feeling-the-brunt-of-the-feds-rate-hikes-heres-why-cnn-business/ A version of this story first appeared in CNN Business’ Before the Bell newsletter. Not a subscriber? You can sign up right here. You can listen to an audio version of the newsletter by clicking the same link. New York CNN Business  —  September’s hotly anticipated jobs data ended up cooling markets on Friday. Stocks fell sharply as investors evaluated the report, which showed more jobs than expected were added to the US economy and indicated that more pain-inflicting interest rate hikes from the Federal Reserve lie ahead. But a breakdown of the numbers shows that the Fed’s plans to weaken the labor market to fight persistent inflation may already be working, just not for everybody. White-collar office workers appear to be feeling the brunt of the Fed’s actions: The financial and business sector saw a large decline in employment last month. Legal and advertising services also experienced drops. Service and construction workers, meanwhile, are still thriving. What’s happening: The US economy added 263,000 jobs in September, higher than analyst estimates of 250,000. The unemployment rate came in at 3.5%, down from 3.7% in August. Leading the gain in jobs was the leisure and hospitality industry, which added 83,000 jobs in September — and employment in food services and drinking places made up 60,000 of those jobs alone. Manufacturing and construction also came in hot, adding 22,000 and 19,000 jobs, respectively. The largest non-governmental losses in jobs came from the financial industry, which shed 8,000 between August and September. Large banks hire in cycles, extending offers to recent graduates in the early fall months. That makes this September’s drop particularly significant. Business support services — such as telemarketing, accounting and administrative and clerical jobs — are also bleeding jobs. The sector lost 12,000 in September. Meanwhile, legal services lost 5,000 jobs, and advertising services also dropped 5,000 jobs. What it means: The Federal Reserve’s hawkish policy appears to be cooling certain parts of the economy, but not others. Finance workers are likely beginning to worry as their industry depends on stock and lending markets which have been particularly hard hit by Fed actions. Friday’s numbers indicate that we’re beginning to see that impact in the employment data. What remains to be seen is whether the Fed can cool the economy just by loosening employment in white-collar industries or if these losses will trickle down to other industries, hurting lower-income workers. Coming up: Earnings season begins in earnest this week with big banks like JPMorgan, Citigroup (C), Morgan Stanley (MS) and BlackRock (BLK) reporting. Investors will be watching closely for any guidance on hiring and layoff plans. Two key inflation indicators, PPI and CPI are also set to be released. Expect markets to react poorly if inflation comes in hot. A panel of top US economists just released its economic outlook for the next year, and it’s not great. The panel of 45 forecasters, led by the National Association for Business Economics (NABE), said they expected slower growth, higher inflation, higher interest rates, and weakening employment in both 2022 and 2023 than they previously expected. Most of the worries come down to the Federal Reserve’s interest rate policy. “More than three-quarters of respondents believe the odds are 50-50 or less that the economy will achieve a ‘soft landing’,” said NABE Vice President Julia Coronado. “More than half the panelists indicate that the greatest downside risk to the U.S. economic outlook is too much monetary tightness.” NABE panelists downgraded their median forecast for real GDP for the fourth quarter of 2022 to a 0.1% increase, compared to a 1.8% increase in the May 2022 survey. The vast majority of respondents placed more than a 25% probability of a recession occurring in 2023, with the most likely start date in the first quarter. The latest report comes as a growing number of economists are predicting that recession is imminent. Former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers told CNN on Thursday that it’s “more likely than not” the US will enter a recession, calling it a consequence of the “excesses the economy has been through.” Friday’s jobs report showed that the share of workers telecommuting or working from home because of the pandemic ticked lower — falling to just 5.2% in September from 6.5% in August. Fully remote work in the United States, which many predicted would remain the norm long after the pandemic, appears to be edging away, especially as the job market loosens for white collar workers and employees have less leverage. Last week, a KPMG survey of US-based CEOs found that two-thirds believed in-office work would be the norm within the next three years. Still, it may not be enough to help an ailing commercial real estate market, where the outlook is dire. New York City office properties declined by nearly 45% in value in 2020 and are forecast to remain 39% below their pre-pandemic levels long-term as hybrid policies continue, according to a recent study from the National Bureau of Economic Research. Looking forward: The Bureau of Labor Statistics has noted that while hybrid work may still be popular, Covid-19 is no longer fueling work from home trends. The October report will rephrase its telework questions to remove references to the pandemic. Since May 2020, each jobs report has asked: “At any time in the last four weeks, did you telework or work at home for pay because of the Coronavirus pandemic?” In May 2020, 35.4% answered yes. Starting next month, the question will be revised. “At any time in the last week did you telework or work at home for pay?” it will ask, limiting the timeline and eliminating any reference to the pandemic. The US bond market is closed for Columbus Day/Indigenous Peoples’ Day. Coming later this week: ▸ Third quarter earnings season begins. Expect reports from big banks like JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Wells Fargo (WFC), Citigroup (C), Morgan Stanley (MS), PNC (PNC) and US Bancorp (USB) and consumer staples like Pepsi (PEP), Walgreen (WBA)s and Domino’s (DMPZF).  ▸ CPI and PPI, two closely watched measures of inflation in the US are also due to be released.  Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
White-Collar Workers Are Feeling The Brunt Of The Fed's Rate Hikes. Here's Why | CNN Business
Northridge Bands To Play Concert Tuesday Honoring Alabama Men Captured By Russian Forces
Northridge Bands To Play Concert Tuesday Honoring Alabama Men Captured By Russian Forces
Northridge Bands To Play Concert Tuesday Honoring Alabama Men Captured By Russian Forces https://digitalalabamanews.com/northridge-bands-to-play-concert-tuesday-honoring-alabama-men-captured-by-russian-forces/ TUSCALOOSA, AL — The Northridge High School Jazz & Symphonic Bands will host a concert Tuesday honoring two Alabama men who recently returned to the United States after being captured by Russian forces while volunteering in the fight for Ukraine. Click here to subscribe to our free daily newsletter and breaking news alerts. As Patch previously reported, the families of Andy Tai Ngoc Huynh, 27, of Trinity and Alexander Drueke, 39, of Tuscaloosa, lost contact with the two soldiers in June, before news eventually surfaced that the two men had been captured by Russian forces amid its invasion of the eastern European country. Find out what’s happening in Tuscaloosawith free, real-time updates from Patch. Thankfully, the two men were released from Russian military custody on Sept. 21 and have returned to Alabama. Drueke and Huynh detailed their 104 days in captivity in an interview with the Washington Post, where they described being interrogated, physically and psychologically abused, and given little food or clean water. Find out what’s happening in Tuscaloosawith free, real-time updates from Patch. To honor the two men, the concert will be played at the Moody Music Building on the University of Alabama campus at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 11. A reception will immediately follow the concert. 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·
Northridge Bands To Play Concert Tuesday Honoring Alabama Men Captured By Russian Forces
Steele Dossier Source Heads To Trial In Possible Last Stand For Durham
Steele Dossier Source Heads To Trial In Possible Last Stand For Durham
Steele Dossier Source Heads To Trial, In Possible Last Stand For Durham https://digitalalabamanews.com/steele-dossier-source-heads-to-trial-in-possible-last-stand-for-durham/ Former president Donald Trump said that special counsel John Durham’s investigation into the origins of the FBI’s 2016 Russia probe should “reveal corruption at a level never seen before in our country.” But the special counsel’s nearly three-and-a-half-year examination seems destined for a less dramatic conclusion this month in a federal courthouse in Alexandria, Va., where Durham will put on trial a private researcher he says lied to the FBI. Igor Danchenko — a researcher who fed information to former British spy Christopher Steele, and whose contributions ended up in the now-infamous “Steele dossier” of allegations about Trump’s ties to Russia in 2016 — goes on trial Tuesday. The trial is expected to last one week. Danchenko was indicted on charges of lying to FBI agents who interviewed him in 2017 about the sources behind his claims to Steele. Defense attorneys argue that Danchenko made a series of “equivocal” statements to the FBI and should not be penalized for giving wishy-washy answers to vaguely worded questions. Whatever the outcome, the Danchenko trial is shaping up to be Durham’s last stand in court. A grand jury Durham had been using in Alexandria is now inactive, according to two people familiar with the matter, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the pending legal proceedings. It is not clear whether Durham is still using a grand jury in D.C. Durham was tasked with writing a report summarizing his investigation, as former special counsel Robert S. Mueller III did at the close of his earlier probe into Trump and Russia. But it would be up to Attorney General Merrick Garland how much, if any, of Durham’s report to make public. “The public is waiting ‘with bated breath’ for the Durham Report, which should reveal corruption at a level never seen before in our country,” Trump wrote in August on his social media platform, Truth Social, after FBI agents raided his Mar-a-Lago complex. Durham, a longtime federal prosecutor who served as the U.S. attorney in Connecticut in the Trump administration, was asked by then-Attorney General William P. Barr in 2019 to dig into the origins of the FBI’s “Crossfire Hurricane” investigation into possible coordination between Trump and Russia in the 2016 presidential campaign. A report by the Justice Department’s inspector general in 2019 criticized the FBI for failing to note doubts about the veracity of the information it used to seek court approval of secret surveillance on a former Trump campaign adviser, though the inspector general said he found no evidence of political bias in the agency’s decision-making. Barr, a Trump appointee, had complained that the 2016 probe was initiated on the “thinnest” of evidence. Barr later appointed Durham as a special counsel and directed him to write a final report “in a form that will permit public dissemination.” The special counsel trained his sights in large part on the FBI’s use of reports Steele produced, which are now commonly referred to as the “Steele dossier.” Steele had been hired to produce the reports by research firm Fusion GPS, which had been retained by a law firm that represented Trump’s opponent, Hillary Clinton, and the Democratic National Committee. Fusion GPS initially had been hired to dig into Trump’s background by a website funded by a deep-pocketed GOP donor. Years after they began digging, Durham and his team have found only mixed success. The Danchenko case marks the second time that the prosecutor who was supposed to root out dishonesty and misconduct within the ranks of the FBI and intelligence agencies will instead try to portray the FBI as victims, not perpetrators, of lies and deception. “This case is likely the last real test for Durham’s office to justify its years-long investigation into possible collusion with Russia in the 2016 election,” said Robert Mintz, a former federal prosecutor now in private practice, adding that it “will only add fodder to critics of Durham’s office who believe that his prosecutions have failed to get to the core of his mandate to investigate the genesis of the Russian collusion allegations, but instead have only charged individuals with more technical violations.” A former FBI lawyer, Kevin Clinesmith, pleaded guilty in 2020 to altering a government email to justify secret surveillance of the former Trump campaign adviser, Carter Page. Clinesmith was sentenced to a year of probation. In May, a jury in D.C. federal court acquitted the only other defendant who went to trial as part of Durham’s investigation, cybersecurity lawyer Michael Sussmann, who also was accused of lying to the FBI. The Danchenko indictment has gotten a skeptical reception from the federal judge presiding over the matter, and much of the case Durham wanted to present won’t be weighed by the jury. At a hearing last month, U.S. District Judge Anthony J. Trenga allowed the case to proceed to trial but said it was “an extremely close call” whether Danchenko’s statements to the FBI could even be prosecuted. This month, Trenga ruled that Durham’s team cannot raise the most salacious allegations in the Steele dossier — concerning Trump, the Ritz-Carlton in Moscow and unproven claims about a “pee tape” featuring prostitutes — that investigators say they traced back to Danchenko and his purported sources. Trenga, a senior judge who was nominated to the bench by President George W. Bush, and who sits on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, also barred other pieces of evidence Durham had hoped to show jurors. “Danchenko’s allegedly false statements regarding his sourcing of the Ritz-Carlton allegations do not qualify as direct evidence,” Trenga wrote in an order Oct. 4. He added: “Why Steele characterized the sources for the Ritz-Carlton allegations as he did in the Report or, indeed, whether the listed sources, in fact, came from Danchenko are subject to a significant degree of speculation.” Steele himself might be able to shed light on Danchenko’s claims, but he is not expected to testify. Neither is Sergei Millian, the former president of the Russian American Chamber of Commerce, who prosecutors say Danchenko lied about during his FBI interviews. That poses another challenge for Durham: narrating a complex story to the jury about claims Danchenko made to the FBI, about previous claims he made to Steele, about information he supposedly received from Millian and others — all of it without Millian or Steele providing their own versions of events. Durham and his team did not respond to a request for comment. The indictment and filings submitted in the case are dense and technical, with some focusing on the proper grammatical way to parse FBI questions and Danchenko’s responses. For example, Danchenko’s attorneys argue that some of his statements to the FBI in 2017 — that he “believed” it was Millian who reached out to him anonymously in a phone call and shared information about Trump and Russia — were “literally true” and thus not a crime. Stuart A. Sears, an attorney for Danchenko, argued at a hearing last month: “If Rudy Giuliani says he believes the 2020 election was fraudulent, that doesn’t make it a false statement. He believes it.” Mintz said: “This will be a difficult case for prosecutors because there is ambiguity in the facts, and prosecutors will have to prove Danchenko intended to mislead the FBI during his questioning as part of its investigation. While lying to federal agents is a crime, without more serious underlying charges it may be difficult to convince jurors that this case matters.” Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Steele Dossier Source Heads To Trial In Possible Last Stand For Durham
James P. Mitchell Jr. | BainbridgeGA.com
James P. Mitchell Jr. | BainbridgeGA.com
James P. Mitchell, Jr. | BainbridgeGA.com https://digitalalabamanews.com/james-p-mitchell-jr-bainbridgega-com/ June 6, 1930 – October 8, 2022 James P. Mitchell, Jr., 92, of Brinson, GA, passed away Saturday, October 8, 2022. The funeral service will be held at 2:00 p.m. on Tuesday, October 11, 2022, at Brinson Baptist Church with Rev. Robert Crapps and Rev. Ellis Harwick officiating.  A private interment will be held at Brinson Cemetery with his grandsons serving as active pallbearers. The family will receive friends immediately following the service. Online visitors may sign the guest register at www.bryantfuneralga.com. Memorial donations may be made to Brinson Cemetery Fund, PO Box 693, Brinson, GA 39825 or Agape Care Group, C/O Serenity Gives Foundation, 1111 A Hillcrest Parkway, Dublin, GA 31021. James Powell Mitchell, Jr. was born June 6, 1930, in Jakin, GA, the son of James, Sr. & Naomi Carter Mitchell. He was a graduate of Brinson High School, Class of 1949. James proudly served his country in the United States Air Force, retiring with 22 years. He married Nell Cobb in 1977, and life took on new meaning. He was a member of Brinson Baptist Church. Quiet and humble, a man’s man, strong in his faith, James did not boast or brag and treated everyone equally. He had quite a distinguished military career but preferred not to make a big deal about it. In fact, some commendations and medals were recently discovered that he never spoke of. Brinson was home, the hub of family, for James. His first trip outside of “home” was upon his enlistment in the USAF. The world became his oyster; he traveled the globe taking in the sights & sounds for decades. His mind was a steel trap and always looking for solutions to problems he encountered. James was an inventor and held patents for inventions like a missile dolly and machinery that picked up downed fighter jets among others. Again, no big deal. His military retirement was a decision he made out of love for his family. James couldn’t bear the thought of being deployed to Germany with a daughter headed to college. Family was first. He continued to work the cogs of his mind in residential construction noting the importance of the slightest details. The inventor, the family protector, the outdoorsman who enjoyed fishing on “the Creek” was the same man spoiled rotten by the love of his life, Nell. (Word is Nell didn’t know James was pretty self-sufficient when she met him. Another one of those stories he didn’t speak much of.) He was the living example of “do right” and love your people. Survivors include his wife of 44 years, Nell Cobb Mitchell; his children, Gail (Jerry) Tack of Bradenton, FL, Lisa (Thom) DaSilva of Brinson, GA, Kathy (Gary) Shierling of Ft. Myers, FL, Susan Brock of Brinson, and Denise (Ricky) Cutts of Dothan, AL; his grandchildren, Shana Schmitz, Alexa Tack, Sara DaSilva & Jacob, Aaron & Erin DaSilva, Zach & Amanda Brock, Cannon & Jenna Shierling, Sloan Shierling & Amber, Tyler Cutts, and Kaylee & Kaleb Cubbage; his twelve great-grandchildren; his siblings Ed Mitchell, Harold Mitchell and his wife, Gloria, Joe Mitchell, and Earl Mitchell and his wife, Jennie; and numerous nieces and nephews. In addition to his parents, James was preceded in death by his siblings, Edna Jackson, Edith Storey, and Annie Mitchell; and his brothers & sisters-in-law, Fran Mitchell, Ann Mitchell, Robert Jackson, and George Storey. Bryant Funeral Home, located at 105 N. Florida Street, is assisting the family with arrangements. (229-246-3321) Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
James P. Mitchell Jr. | BainbridgeGA.com
The Daily Catch: Oct 10 2022
The Daily Catch: Oct 10 2022
The Daily Catch: Oct 10, 2022 https://digitalalabamanews.com/the-daily-catch-oct-10-2022/ I’m Shay Weintraub and I don’t have enough airline points to fly home for free this weekend to watch Seattle’s home playoff games with friends. Check out today’s treasures: OCTOBER 03: Jarred Kelenic #10 and Julio Rodriguez #44 of the Seattle Mariners looks on during batting practice before the game against the Detroit Tigers at T-Mobile Park on October 03, 2022 in Seattle, Washington. Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images OCTOBER 04: Luis Torrens #22 of the Seattle Mariners celebrates a 7-6 win over the Detroit Tigers in 10 innings at T-Mobile Park on October 04, 2022 in Seattle, Washington. Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images OCTOBER 04: Jarred Kelenic #10 and Julio Rodriguez #44 of the Seattle Mariners pose for a pretend photo by Carlos Santana #41 after a 9-6 win against the Detroit Tigers at T-Mobile Park on October 04, 2022 in Seattle, Washington. Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images OCTOBER 05: Manager Scott Servais #9 of the Seattle Mariners signs an autograph on a picture of himself before the game against the Detroit Tigers at T-Mobile Park on October 05, 2022 in Seattle, Washington. Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images OCTOBER 07: Cal Raleigh #29 of the Seattle Mariners hits a two run home run against the Toronto Blue Jays during the first inning in Game One of their AL Wild Card series at Rogers Centre on October 7, 2022 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Photo by Mark Blinch/Getty Images OCTOBER 08: The Seattle Mariners celebrate after defeating the Toronto Blue Jays in game two to win the American League Wild Card Series at Rogers Centre on October 08, 2022 in Toronto, Ontario. The Seattle Mariners defeated the Toronto Blue Jays with a score of 10 to 9. Photo by Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images OCTOBER 08: Julio Rodriguez #44 and Scott Servais #9 of the Seattle Mariners celebrate on the field after defeating the Toronto Blue Jays in game two to win the American League Wild Card Series at Rogers Centre on October 08, 2022 in Toronto, Ontario. Photo by Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images Poll Vote for your favorite photo of this past week: OCTOBER 03: Jarred Kelenic #10 and Julio Rodriguez #44 of the Seattle Mariners looks on during batting practice before the game against the Detroit Tigers at T-Mobile Park on October 03, 2022 in Seattle, Washington. OCTOBER 04: Luis Torrens #22 of the Seattle Mariners celebrates a 7-6 win over the Detroit Tigers in 10 innings at T-Mobile Park on October 04, 2022 in Seattle, Washington. OCTOBER 04: Jarred Kelenic #10 and Julio Rodriguez #44 of the Seattle Mariners pose for a pretend photo by Carlos Santana #41 after a 9-6 win against the Detroit Tigers at T-Mobile Park on October 04, 2022 in Seattle, Washington. OCTOBER 05: Manager Scott Servais #9 of the Seattle Mariners signs an autograph on a picture of himself before the game against the Detroit Tigers at T-Mobile Park on October 05, 2022 in Seattle, Washington. OCTOBER 07: Cal Raleigh #29 of the Seattle Mariners hits a two run home run against the Toronto Blue Jays during the first inning in Game One of their AL Wild Card series at Rogers Centre on October 7, 2022 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. OCTOBER 08: The Seattle Mariners celebrate after defeating the Toronto Blue Jays in game two to win the American League Wild Card Series at Rogers Centre on October 08, 2022 in Toronto, Ontario. OCTOBER 08: Julio Rodriguez #44 and Scott Servais #9 of the Seattle Mariners celebrate on the field after defeating the Toronto Blue Jays in game two to win the American League Wild Card Series at Rogers Centre on October 08, 2022 in Toronto, Ontario. 0% OCTOBER 03: Jarred Kelenic #10 and Julio Rodriguez #44 of the Seattle Mariners looks on during batting practice before the game against the Detroit Tigers at T-Mobile Park on October 03, 2022 in Seattle, Washington. (0 votes) 0% OCTOBER 04: Luis Torrens #22 of the Seattle Mariners celebrates a 7-6 win over the Detroit Tigers in 10 innings at T-Mobile Park on October 04, 2022 in Seattle, Washington. (0 votes) 0% OCTOBER 04: Jarred Kelenic #10 and Julio Rodriguez #44 of the Seattle Mariners pose for a pretend photo by Carlos Santana #41 after a 9-6 win against the Detroit Tigers at T-Mobile Park on October 04, 2022 in Seattle, Washington. (0 votes) 0% OCTOBER 05: Manager Scott Servais #9 of the Seattle Mariners signs an autograph on a picture of himself before the game against the Detroit Tigers at T-Mobile Park on October 05, 2022 in Seattle, Washington. (0 votes) 0% OCTOBER 07: Cal Raleigh #29 of the Seattle Mariners hits a two run home run against the Toronto Blue Jays during the first inning in Game One of their AL Wild Card series at Rogers Centre on October 7, 2022 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (0 votes) 0% OCTOBER 08: The Seattle Mariners celebrate after defeating the Toronto Blue Jays in game two to win the American League Wild Card Series at Rogers Centre on October 08, 2022 in Toronto, Ontario. (0 votes) 0% OCTOBER 08: Julio Rodriguez #44 and Scott Servais #9 of the Seattle Mariners celebrate on the field after defeating the Toronto Blue Jays in game two to win the American League Wild Card Series at Rogers Centre on October 08, 2022 in Toronto, Ontario. (0 votes) 0 votes total Vote Now Keys to the Mariners’ improbable 10-9 victory over the Blue Jays – Kate Pruesser Lookout Landing Podcast 204: Legends of the Fall – Evan James Looking for a Mariners Watch Party for the ALDS? Sign up here. – Shay Weintraub Division series schedule set through Thursday, Mariners playoff games dates and times – Kate Pruesser Dave Sims social media posts are just so pure. Check out some of these IG stories of some Mariners after the game on Saturday Poll Which baseball team did NOT make the playoffs in 2001? Yesterday’s Question: The Mariners played their first postseason game after winning a record 116 regular season games and won against/lost to Cleveland in Game 1, ultimately winning the series 3-2 in a best-of-5. Did the Mariners win or lose Game 1? Answer: Lost Poll Have you ever been to Houston? 0% Yes, I live there (or near there) (0 votes) 0% I’ve been to Texas but not Houston (0 votes) 0% I’ve never been to Texas (0 votes) 0 votes total Vote Now Yesterday’s results: (cool ad, bro) We had a ton of questions yesterday for the podcast (which you should totally go check out) that we couldn’t get to, so here’s some rapid fire answers! Lookout Landing Podcast. Deleted my last question because I have a better one. How is Playoff Scott managing differently from Regular Season Scott? — AnnaClimbsMtns PLAYOFF DROUGHT OVER (@annaclimbsmtns) October 9, 2022 In the two games so far, I think the keyword is “trust.” It seems like Scott’s placing a lot of trust in his guys, letting them go out and get the job done. In Saturday’s game, I was sure that Castillo was finished twice, but Scott kept sending him out, leading to Luis’ longest appearance as a Mariner so far. He also let Andres Muñoz stay out and collect five outs. Robbie and Paul may not have been worth that trust on Sunday, but then you’ve got guys like George Kirby pitching out of the bullpen in a one-run game. So, yeah, I’m not sure there is much difference. Servais trusts his guys to live up to the moment and do their jobs. I think that’s the perfect postseason attitude. Speaking of Robbie: We all saw a rough Robbie Ray outing coming. Where does yesterday’s game leave Ray for the rest of the playoffs? — A B (@juanthebaker) October 9, 2022 It’s hard to say. While I think Robbie may be a great bullpen guy (like anyone else with 2 or 3 pitches), I think Scott’s gonna keep him as a starter. The series get long from here on out, and so you need to have rest days for your best starters. I don’t see Robbie going 8 1⁄3 innings like Castillo, but I think he’ll still start games. The veteran acquisitions came up sooooo clutch. And can we just do a minute of JP Crawford appreciation? His defense was unreal yesterday, too. — devon (@avengedevonfold) October 9, 2022 For his contributions, J.P. gets the highest possible honor I can bestow: Here’s hoping I can make plenty more after the ALDS. Happy birthday to two former Mariners – Jonathan Aro (32) and Jim Weaver (63)! JUNE 20: Jonathan Aro #49 of the Seattle Mariners pitches against the Detroit Tigers at Comerica Park on June 20, 2016 in Detroit, Michigan. Photo by Duane Burleson/Getty Images Jim Weaver, then with the Calgary Cannons — Seattle’s Triple-A affiliate in the year Weaver was with the team (1989) Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
The Daily Catch: Oct 10 2022
Statistically Speaking: Auburn's Defense Folding In The Red Zone
Statistically Speaking: Auburn's Defense Folding In The Red Zone
Statistically Speaking: Auburn's Defense Folding In The Red Zone https://digitalalabamanews.com/statistically-speaking-auburns-defense-folding-in-the-red-zone/ Auburn’s mantra on defense this season has been to try to “defend every blade of grass” on the field, but those blades of grass between the goal line and the 20-yard line have proven particularly tricky for the Tigers’ defense at the season’s midway point. As Auburn enters the second half of its 2022 slate, it does so with a defense that has struggled in the red zone. The Tigers are 12th in the SEC and 96th nationally in red-zone defense, as opponents have scored on 87.5 percent of their trips inside Auburn’s 20-yard line. Auburn’s defense has also given up touchdowns on two-thirds of its opponents’ 24 red-zone trips this season after Georgia was exceptionally efficient in that area during its 42-10 win Saturday in Athens, Ga. The Bulldogs scored touchdowns on each of their five red-zone trips against the Tigers, with touchdown runs of 1, 1, 2, 7 and 15 yards in their latest win in The Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry. Read more Auburn football: Bryan Harsin left searching for answers, “hope” after blowout loss to Georgia Bryan Harsin justifies failed fake punt attempt against Georgia Scarbinsky: Auburn will be hopeless and helpless until it is Harsin-less Of the 16 red-zone touchdowns Auburn has surrendered this season, 14 of them have been on the ground. Auburn’s last four opponents — Penn State, Missouri, LSU and Georgia — have scored on 14 of their 16 red-zone opportunities, with 13 touchdowns, all of them rushing. Auburn’s overall red-zone defense is on pace to be the program’s worst since 2011, when teams scored on 88 percent of their red-zone opportunities against the then-defending national champions. Auburn’s red-zone touchdown defense is on par with that of the 2020 team, which allowed touchdowns on 65.79 percent of opponents’ trips inside the 20-yard line (25-of-38). Of course, red-zone numbers can shift consierably from week-to-week; it takes just one really good bend-don’t-break performance to change the outlook of a team’s red-zone defensive efficiency, so Auburn could very well manage to correct course in that aspect of the field. Still, Auburn’s defensive struggles with its back to the goal line are notable. The Tigers are tied for 91st among FBS teams in opponents’ red-zone touchdown rates, and only five Power 5 programs have allowed more red-zone touchdowns this season than Auburn’s 16: Oklahoma (17), Oregon (18), Arizona (19), Colorado (20) and Arizona State (20). Of those teams, only Oregon (5-1) has a winning record through six weeks. Here’s a look at those numbers, as well as where Auburn ranks among SEC and FBS teams in various other statistical categories through six weeks: —- RUSHING OFFENSE (SEC rank, FBS rank) 2013: 328.3 (1st, 1st) 2014: 255.5 (2nd, 13th) 2015: 196.4 (5th, 35th) 2016: 271.3 (1st, 6th) 2017: 218.3 (4th, 26th) 2018: 167.5 (10th, 68th) 2019: 199.1 (4th, 33rd) 2020: 162.5 (7th, 67th) 2021: 161.5 (9th, 66th) After Mercer: 285.0 (3rd, 14th) After San Jose State: 247.5 (3rd, 14th) After Penn State: 204.7 (6th 40th) After Missouri: 174.0 (10th, 57th) After LSU: 159.4 (10th, 66th) After Georgia: 148.3 (10th, 75th) Why: Auburn ran for 93 yards against Georgia. . PASSING OFFENSE 2013: 173.0 (11th, 106th) 2014: 229.5 (7th, 66th) 2015: 173.6 (12th, 110th) 2016: 169.5 (14th, 112th) 2017: 233.4 (5th, 65th) 2018: 222.5 (9th, 74th) 2019: 207.5 (9th, 87th) 2020: 220.3 (10th, 71st) 2021: 240.0 (8th, 59th) After Mercer: 212.0 (11th, 84th) After San Jose State: 190.0 (12th, 103rd) After Penn State: 225.3 (9th, 87th) After Missouri: 202.8 (12th, 103rd) After LSU: 229.6 (9th, 82nd) After Georgia: 218.8 (11th, 97th) Why: Auburn threw for 165 yards against Georgia. . PASS EFFICIENCY OFFENSE 2013: 149.63 (6th, 24th) 2014: 156.79 (1st, 8th) 2015: 124.47 (10th, 79th) 2016: 135.17 (6th, 54th) 2017: 153.59 (5th, 13th) 2018: 140.11 (8th, 51st) 2019: 128.35 (9th, 89th) 2020: 122.96 (11th, 89th) 2021: 126.85 (12th, 94th) After Mercer: 143.37 (9th, 61st) After San Jose State: 123.23 (12th, 94th) After Penn State: 121.20 (12th, 104th) After Missouri: 121.09 (13th, 105th) After LSU: 122.98 (13th, 101st) After Georgia: 113.77 (14th, 114th) Why: Robby Ashford completed 13-of-38 passes for 165 yards and a touchdown against Georgia. . TOTAL OFFENSE 2013: 501.3 (2nd, 11th) 2014: 485.0 (2nd, 16th) 2015: 370.0 (10th, 94th) 2016: 440.8 (6th, 43rd) 2017: 451.6 (3rd, 26th) 2018: 389.9 (11th, 78th) 2019: 406.5 (6th, 64th) 2020: 382.8 (9th, 77th) 2021: 401.5 (10th, 67th) After Mercer: 497.0 (7th, 49th) After San Jose State: 437.5 (9th, 57th) After Penn State: 430.0 (8th, 61st) After Missouri: 376.8 (12th, 89th) After LSU: 389.0 (10th, 80th) After Georgia: 367.2 (12th, 94th) Why: Auburn had 258 yards of offense against Georgia. . SCORING OFFENSE 2013: 39.5 (2nd, 12th) 2014: 35.5 (4th, 35th) 2015: 27.5 (8th, 75th) 2016: 31.2 (6th, 49th) 2017: 33.9 (4th, 27th) 2018: 30.9 (8th, 47th) 2019: 33.2 (3rd, 28th) 2020: 25.1 (9th, 89th) 2021: 27.8 (11th, 71st) After Mercer: 42.0 (7th, 34th) After San Jose State: 33.0 (9th, 67th) After Penn State: 26.0 (11th, 91st) After Missouri: 23.8 (13th, 100th) After LSU: 22.4 (13th, 107th) After Georgia: 20.3 (14th, 112th) Why: Auburn scored 10 points in Week 6. . SACKS ALLOWED 2013: 18 sacks, 1.29 per game (3rd, 22nd) 2014: 15 sacks, 1.15 per game (3rd, 15th) 2015: 19 sacks, 1.46 per game (4th, 33rd) 2016: 19 sacks, 1.46 per game (3rd, 27th) 2017: 36 sacks, 2.57 per game (10th, 100th) 2018: 23 sacks, 1.77 per game (6th, 39th) 2019: 18 sacks, 1.38 per game (4th, 18th) 2020: 20 sacks, 1.82 per game (6th, 41st) 2021: 22 sacks, 1.69 per game (5th, 31st) After Mercer: 0 sacks, 0.00 per game (1st, 1st) After San Jose State: 1 sack, 0.50 per game (2nd, 12th) After Penn State: 8 sacks, 2.33 per game (10th, 84th) After Missouri: 12 sacks, 3.00 per game (12th, 112th) After LSU: 15 sacks, 3.00 per game (12th, 111th) After Georgia: 15 sacks, 2.50 per game (11th, 95th) Why: Auburn did not give up a sack against Georgia. . THIRD-DOWN CONVERSIONS 2013: 46.5 percent (4th, 24th) 2014: 52.5 percent (1st, 2nd) 2015: 41.3 percent (6th, 49th) 2016: 41.8 percent (4th, 53rd) 2017: 45.5 percent (3rd, 15th) 2018: 36.9 percent (11th, 90th) 2019: 40.5 percent (6th, 60th) 2020: 44.9 percent (6th, 32nd) 2021: 40.2 percent (8th, 61st) After Mercer: 50.0 percent (7th, 40th) After San Jose State: 42.1 percent (8th, 57th) After Penn State: 38.2 percent (10th, 78th) After Missouri: 32.0 percent (13th, 114th) After LSU: 33.8 percent (12th, 105th) After Georgia: 32.9 percent (14th, 114th) Why: Auburn converted five of its 17 third-down attempts in Week 6. . RED ZONE OFFENSE 2013: 88.5 percent (2nd, 21st) 2014: 87.9 percent (4th, 31st) 2015: 90.2 percent (2nd, 13th) 2016: 85.5 percent (5th, 52nd) 2017: 88.1 percent (6th, 36th) 2018: 81.1 percent (11th, 88th) 2019: 90.4 percent (3rd, 21st) 2020: 85.0 percent (6th, 50th) 2021: 84.8 percent (7th, 55th) After Mercer: 100.0 percent (1st, 1st) After San Jose State: 100.0 percent (1st, 1st) After Penn State: 83.3 percent (11th, 73rd) After Missouri: 85.7 percent (8th, 62nd) After LSU: 82.4 percent (10th, 75th) After Georgia: 83.3 percent (7th, 64th) Why: Auburn scored a field goal on its lone red-zone trip against Georgia. RUSHING DEFENSE 2013: 162.1 (10th, 62nd) 2014: 168.8 (10th, 67th) 2015: 182.7 (11th, 81st) 2016: 132.8 (3rd, 27th) 2017: 137.0 (5th, 35th) 2018: 135.9 (6th, 32nd) 2019: 123.2 (4th, 25th) 2020: 163.4 (8th, 62nd) 2021: 128.1 (5th, 29th) After Mercer: 74.0 (3rd, 25th) After San Jose State: 64.0 (1st, 10th) After Penn State: 124.3 (8th, 55th) After Missouri: 126.5 (10th, 52nd) After LSU: 138.2 (9th, 65th) After Georgia: 163.8 (11th, 92nd) Why: Georgia ran for 292 yards and six touchdowns against Georgia. . PASSING DEFENSE 2013: 258.6 (13th, 100th) 2014: 230.1 (12th, 68th) 2015: 222.5 (11th, 63rd) 2016: 229.2 (9th, 67th) 2017: 182.4 (5th, 18th) 2018: 219.5 (7th, 58th) 2019: 213.8 (8th, 47th) 2020: 242.6 (4th, 79th) 2021: 245.8 (12th, 96th) After Mercer: 197.0 (7th, 56th) After San Jose State: 236.0 (11th, 83rd) After Penn State: 234.7 (11th, 81st) After Missouri: 220.8 (10th, 65th) After LSU: 193.6 (7th, 35th) After Georgia: 196.0 (8th, 32nd) Why: Georgia threw for 208 yards against Auburn. . PASS EFFICIENCY DEFENSE 2013: 126.88 (9th, 63rd) 2014: 124.19 (10th, 52nd) 2015: 116.99 (8th, 31st) 2016: 116.83 (4th, 22nd) 2017: 113.84 (4th, 19th) 2018: 118.12 (6th, 31st) 2019: 120.71 (9th, 32nd) 2020: 139.34 (7th, 75th) 2021: 136.73 (9th, 75th) After Mercer: 122.63 (9th, 66th) After San Jose State: 120.06 (10th, 63rd) After Penn State: 129.03 (11th, 73rd) After Missouri: 125.83 (10th, 58th) After LSU: 115.38 (6th, 29th) After Georgia: 116.79 (6th, 27th) Why: Stetson Bennett completed 22-of-32 passes for 208 yards against Auburn. . TOTAL DEFENSE 2013: 420.7 (12th, 86th) 2014: 398.8 (9th, 64th) 2015: 405.2 (13th, 71st) 2016: 361.9 (5th, 28th) 2017: 319.4 (5th, 14th) 2018: 355.4 (8th, 38th) 2019: 337.0 (7th, 28th) 2020: 406.0 (6th, 63rd) 2021: 373.8 (9th, 61st) After Mercer: 271.0 (3rd, 35th) After San Jose State: 300.0 (6th, 40th) After Penn State: 359.0 (10th, 56th) After Missouri: 347.2 (9th, 49th) After LSU: 331.8 (6th, 35th) After Georgia: 359.8 (9th, 56th) Why: Auburn gave up 500 yards of offense to Georgia. . SCORING DEFENSE 2013: 24.7 (9th, 48th) 2014: 26.7 (10th, 62nd) 2015: 26.0 (11th, 54th) 2016: 17.1 (4th, 7th) 2017: 18.5 (3rd, 12th) 2018: 19.2 (4th, 14th) 2019: 19.5 (6th, 17th) 2020: 24.7 (4th, 38th) 2021: 21.8 (5th, 27th) After Mercer: 16.0 (8th, 48th) After San Jose State: 16.0 (6th, 42nd) After Penn State: 24.3 (9th, 66th) After Missouri: 21.8 (9th, 58th) After LSU: 2...
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Statistically Speaking: Auburn's Defense Folding In The Red Zone
Jeb Bush Calls Out Trump For Accusing His Father Of Stealing Classified Documents
Jeb Bush Calls Out Trump For Accusing His Father Of Stealing Classified Documents
Jeb Bush Calls Out Trump For Accusing His Father Of Stealing Classified Documents https://digitalalabamanews.com/jeb-bush-calls-out-trump-for-accusing-his-father-of-stealing-classified-documents/ Jeb Bush struck out to defend his late father, George H W Bush, after Donald Trump initiated calls to investigate the 41st president. At a rally in Arizona on Sunday, Trump attacked several former presidents for being guilty of the same act that earned him a visit from federal agents this past summer at his Mar-a-Lago resort: storing classified documents after their tenure in office. He initially accused President Barack Obama of transporting over 30 million pages of documents to a former furniture store in Chicago, a claim that has regularly been refuted by the National Archives who noted that the federal agency was responsible for relocating unclassified documents to a secure federal facility in Chicago. He then went on to accuse former president Bush, who died in 2018, of hoarding millions of documents inside a combination bowling alley-meets-Chinese restaurant. “[He] took millions and millions of documents to a former bowling alley pieced together with what was then an old and broken Chinese restaurant,” the former president said of his predecessor during a rally held in Mesa, Arizona. “They put them together. And it had a broken front door and broken windows. Other than that it was quite secure.” When tossing out these examples of previous commander-in-chief’s being “guilty” of the same acts that he’s allegedly been engaged in, he pressed on about why they too hadn’t been investigated. These remarks, though unsubstantiated by the one-term president, were inflammatory enough to prompt the son of the 41st president to respond to them online. “I am so confused. My dad enjoyed a good Chinese meal and enjoyed the challenge of 7 10 split. What the heck is up with you?” tweeted Jeb Bush on Sunday, while resharing a clip of Trump making the accusatory remarks about his late father. (A 7-10 split is a bowling term that describes when a player takes out all but the last two pins in the line-up.) This isn’t the first time the two Republicans have come to public blows, as during the lead-up to the 2016 Republican Party presidential primaries – a race that both men had thrown their names in the hat for – Mr Trump would frequently attack the former Florida governor. Among the various insults that the former president has lobbed in the direction of Jeb over the years, he has at times called him “an embarrassment to his family”, accused him of being “weak” to his face and has tied his reputation to his brother, George W Bush, and suggested that he bore responsibility for the war in Iraq, calling it “a big, fat mistake”. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Jeb Bush Calls Out Trump For Accusing His Father Of Stealing Classified Documents
Nevada News Outlets Ignore Jim Marchants Latest Comments Pledging To Steal The 2024 Election For Trump
Nevada News Outlets Ignore Jim Marchants Latest Comments Pledging To Steal The 2024 Election For Trump
Nevada News Outlets Ignore Jim Marchant’s Latest Comments Pledging To Steal The 2024 Election For Trump https://digitalalabamanews.com/nevada-news-outlets-ignore-jim-marchants-latest-comments-pledging-to-steal-the-2024-election-for-trump/ Nevada Republican nominee for secretary of state Jim Marchant pledged during a rally with defeated former President Donald Trump that a coalition of secretary of state candidates he created will steal the next presidential election for Trump if they’re elected. Yet news organizations in the state ignored these alarming comments. Marchant leads the America First Secretary of State Coalition, which consists of Republicans who are running for offices that oversee voting in their respective states. They support the lie that the 2020 election was stolen from Trump; the coalition also collaborates with QAnon conspiracy theorists, and Marchant himself has ties to the QAnon community. During an October 8, 2022, rally with Trump in Minden, Nevada, Marchant virtually admitted his coalition’s goal is to seize control of enough electoral votes to throw presidential elections to their chosen candidates. Or, in his words, if they win, “we will take our country back.” JIM MARCHANT: Last year, I established a MAGA America First coalition of secretary of state candidates around the country, and I’m speaking mainly now for the people that are watching livestream and on TV. We’re going to elect Mark Finchem of Arizona and Kari Lake in Arizona. They are MAGA. We’re going to elect Kristina Karamo in Michigan — she’s one of our coalition members; Audrey Trujillo in New Mexico; Chuck Gray in Wyoming; Diego Morales in Indiana. If we get all of it — and Kayla [Rayla] Campbell in Massachusetts, believe it or not. If we get all of our secretaries of state elected around the country like this, we take our country back. MARCHANT: Is this the greatest president in American history or not? So, we have something in common. President Trump and I lost an election in 2020 because of a rigged election. I’ve been working since November 4, 2020, to expose what happened. And what I found out is horrifying. And when I’m secretary of state of Nevada, we’re going to fix it. And when my coalition of secretary of state candidates around the country get elected, we’re going to fix the whole country and President Trump is going to be president again in 2024. On MSNBC’s The Katie Phang Show, former Republican strategist Matthew Dowd commented that Marchant’s comments revealed that “they have a national plan to basically put people in power, and to ensure that whoever doesn’t win the election will win the election in their mind in these key states around the country.” Dowd framed this as a threat to democracy. Yet local news coverage ignored these alarming comments. Several Nevada newspapers and news sites did cover the rally, including the Las Vegas Review-Journal and The Record-Courier, but they completely ignored Marchant’s comments, mentioning him only to note that he was one of the speakers. The Reno Gazette Journal covered comments from Trump and multiple candidates for Nevada offices – but failed to mention Marchant, even though a photo of him speaking is presented at the top of the article. And the Las Vegas Sun, aside from carrying an Associated Press story about Sen. Tommy Tuberville’s (R-AL) comments, didn’t cover the rally. As of publication, there were no mentions of Marchant outside of paid political ads on the Las Vegas TV stations KTNV, KSNV, KLAS, and KVVU, or the Reno TV stations KOLO, KRNV, KTVN, and KRXI since the rally, according to a transcript search of the Kinetiq video database. Read More…
·digitalalabamanews.com·
Nevada News Outlets Ignore Jim Marchants Latest Comments Pledging To Steal The 2024 Election For Trump