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Feeding Our Future Founder Among 48 People Charged In $250 Million Federal Food Aid Fraud Scheme
Feeding Our Future Founder Among 48 People Charged In $250 Million Federal Food Aid Fraud Scheme
Feeding Our Future Founder Among 48 People Charged In $250 Million Federal Food Aid Fraud Scheme https://digitalalaskanews.com/feeding-our-future-founder-among-48-people-charged-in-250-million-federal-food-aid-fraud-scheme/ The director of the Feeding Our Future nonprofit and 47 other people were charged Tuesday in what federal prosecutors say was a “massive scheme” to defraud the government of more than $250 million meant to feed needy children during the pandemic. In a news conference, U.S. Attorney Andrew Luger described the scheme as the largest pandemic fraud in the country and said the charges amount to one of the largest federal fraud cases ever brought in Minnesota. “These 47 defendants engaged in a brazen scheme of staggering proportions,” Luger said, hours before charges against another defendant were unsealed. “Their goal was to make as much money for themselves as they could while falsely claiming to feed children during the pandemic.” The defendants were charged with crimes including wire fraud, conspiracy, money laundering and bribery. The indictments allege that conspirators shelled out tens of thousands of dollars to join the criminal enterprise, and later tried to cover their tracks by submitting fake invoices and enrollment forms with fictitious names pulled from such places as listofrandomnames.com. Luger described the wave of indictments unsealed Tuesday as “the first set of charges” in the continuing investigation. Several defendants were arrested Tuesday, but Luger said some have left the country. Prosecutors contend that the leader of the scheme was Aimee Bock, executive director of Feeding Our Future, whom they accuse of personally recruiting many of the conspirators and knowingly submitting more than 125 million false meal claims. Bock appeared in court Tuesday afternoon and pleaded not guilty. She was released with conditions. “The indictment is the beginning of the criminal process,” Bock’s attorney, Kenneth Udoibok, said in a written statement. “There’s relief in the allegations against my client because we now know the government’s position. The indictment is not evidence of guilt or innocence. I’m surprised that my client has been indicted because she did not commit any crimes.” Co-conspirators are accused of using tens of millions of dollars to fund international travel, buy luxury cars and purchase homes in Minnesota, Ohio, Kentucky and along the coasts of Kenya and Turkey. Tuesday’s arrests mark the latest high-profile chapter in a federal probe that started more than a year ago and included a sweeping FBI search warrant operation in January that spilled into public view. According to charges, the alleged scheme exploited changes in the federal child nutrition program that were intended to make sure needy children received adequate nutrition amid the pandemic. As part of the changes, the U.S. Department of Agriculture allowed for-profit restaurants to participate in the federal food aid program. Regulators also let parents bring meals home instead of requiring children to eat on site. Prosecutors said the rule changes made it more difficult to oversee the meals program, rendering it vulnerable to fraud and abuse. After becoming an approved sponsor in 2018, Feeding Our Future battled state regulators over its explosive growth plans, filing a lawsuit that ultimately forced the department to approve dozens of sites that had been held up in the approval process for months. Luger said the conspiracy began in March 2020, in the early days of the pandemic, when the conspirators saw an opportunity to defraud the government. As part of a “pay-to-play” scheme, Bock and other company employees solicited and received bribes from people and companies seeking to join the fast-growing criminal enterprise, according to the charges. Many of the bribes were paid directly to Abdikerm Abdelahi Eidleh, a Feeding Our Future employee who was accused of receiving kickbacks ranging from $49,000 to $225,000, the charges say. Eidleh could not be reached for comment and court records indicate he does not have an attorney yet. Eidleh is accused of depositing more than $5 million in kickbacks, bribes and other fraud proceeds into bank accounts opened in the name of his shell companies. Many of the kickbacks were paid in cash or disguised as “consulting fees” paid to shell companies created by Feeding Our Future employees to conceal the true nature of the payments and make them appear legitimate, the indictment alleges. Bock benefitted from the expanding fees collected by Feeding Our Future, which typically kept 10% to 15% of all reimbursement payments for administrative purposes, according to the charges. In 2021, when Feeding Our Future collected nearly $200 million in reimbursements, its share of the money amounted to $18 million, the charges say. The indictment says Feeding Our Future also opened its own federal food aid sites in Minneapolis and Burnsville that falsely claimed to serve meals to thousands of children a day, seven days a week. Altogether, Bock’s nonprofit sponsored more than 200 federal food program sites throughout Minnesota, according to the charges. “The sites fraudulently claimed to be serving meals to thousands of children a day within just days or weeks of being formed and despite having few, if any, staff and little to no experience serving this volume of meals,” the indictment reads. Bock told the Star Tribune earlier this year that she never stole money or saw evidence of fraud among her subcontractors. The scheme was so lucrative that some conspirators were able to rent out restaurants at exorbitant prices just to create additional meal sites, according to the charges. In Willmar, for instance, conspirators paid more than $570,000 to rent the Faafan Restaurant for 11 months, almost three times the restaurant’s annual sales before the pandemic. The site received more than $4 million in reimbursements, half of which was pocketed by the conspirators, according to the charges. “No one participating in this program legitimately would ever imagine they could … make millions of dollars,” Luger said. “It is not possible.” Prosecutors said the conspirators did a sloppy job of concealing their crimes, submitting fake attendance rosters that were filled with hundreds of made-up names that could not be verified by local schools. Typically, Luger said, just 1% to 2% of the names appeared to be legitimate. In some cases, conspirators consulted websites to find names. But investigators found impossible fluctuations in the ages of the students listed on the rosters, noting that some kids went from 8 to 12 years old in a matter of months. The meal sites allegedly submitted fake invoices purporting to document their food purchases. Some did purchase and serve small amounts of food but inflated the numbers, the indictment adds. The indictment charging Bock also includes charges against three men — Salim Ahmed Said, Abdulkadir Nur Salah and Abdirahman Mohamud Ahmed — who run the Safari Restaurant in Minneapolis. They claimed to have served 3.9 million meals to children between April 2020 and November 2021, propped up by fake attendance rosters, prosecutors contend. Said, Salah and Ahmed could not be reached for comment. According to charges, Safari received more than $16 million in federal money based on claims that it was feeding needy children. The charges noted that the restaurant generated no more than $600,000 in annual sales prior to the pandemic. Said and Salah sent much of the $16 million to co-conspirators via shell companies used to launder proceeds, according to the charges. Safari’s ownership also paid more than $350,000 in bribes and kickbacks to Bock and Eidleh for sponsorship, the charges say. Minnesota Department of Education (MDE) officials began questioning Bock about the sudden boom in sites that her organization sponsored in 2020. Feeding Our Future sued the state and claimed the education department was discriminating against a nonprofit that worked with racial minorities after the department halted payments to the nonprofit by early 2021. The FBI’s investigation into Feeding Our Future began in May 2021, after state education officials brought information to the bureau. Though some state legislators have faulted MDE for not acting more aggressively on its fraud suspicions, Luger declined to assess the department’s oversight. “That is not for me to say,” Luger said. “We are pleased by the thorough cooperation we got from MDE throughout this investigation.” Feeding Our Future’s three board members voted in February to dissolve the organization in part because its bank accounts had been frozen by the federal probe. According to court documents, the government has seized more than $3.5 million from a Feeding Our Future bank account and more than $185,000 held in Bock’s personal bank accounts. Authorities also took $13,462 in cash and a 2013 Porsche Panamera during the Jan. 20 search warrant operation at Bock’s home. Luger said that the government has so far seized $50 million in property tied to the scheme, including 60 bank accounts, 45 parcels of real property, 14 vehicles, jewelry and other items. At least one defendant — Fahad Nur — is accused of fleeing the United States shortly after the January FBI raids. Nur is charged with four others in one indictment that alleged a $25 million fraud scheme. Nur’s The Produce LLC was sponsored by Feeding Our Future and took in more than $11 million in federal funds as a vendor and food supplier to sites involved in the program. Nur could not be reached for comment. Prosecutors say he did not make any significant food-related purchases between initiating food operations around March 2021 through September of that year, yet received $3.5 million for food he claimed to have provided through the program. Days before registering the company with the state of Minnesota, Nur submitted fraudulent invoice...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Feeding Our Future Founder Among 48 People Charged In $250 Million Federal Food Aid Fraud Scheme
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Media Advisory
Media Advisory
Media Advisory https://digitalalaskanews.com/media-advisory/ ANCHORAGE – The Justice Department’s Office on Violence Against Women (OVW) will host nearly 600 participants, including a record 55 tribal leaders, for the 17th Annual Government-to-Government Violence Against Women Tribal Consultation, September 21 – 23, 2022. Throughout the consultation, tribal government leaders will provide recommendations on administering tribal funds and programs; enhancing the safety of Alaska Native and American Indian women from domestic and dating violence, sexual assault, homicide, stalking and sex trafficking, along with strengthening the federal response to these crimes; and improving access to local, regional, state, and federal crime information databases and criminal justice information systems. The consultation is required by law to address the federal administration of tribal funds and programs established under the Violence Against Women Act of 1994 (VAWA) and its subsequent reauthorizations. U.S. Attorney General Merrick B. Garland, Deputy Attorney General Lisa O. Monaco, and Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta will deliver pre-recorded remarks. WHO: Office on Violence Against Women Office of Justice Programs Office of Tribal Justice Health and Human Services’ Administration for Children and Families and the Indian Health Service Department of Interior’s Bureau of Indian Affairs – Office of Justice Services WHEN:    September 21 –22, from 8:30am – 5pm Alaska Standard Time     September 23rd, from 8:30am – 12 pm Alaska Standard Time WHERE:   Hotel Captain Cook, 939 West 5th Avenue Anchorage, Alaska 99501                     Join virtually: https://www.ovwconsultation.org/Attend/Register CONTACT: Media with any question regarding the consultation should reach out to Lisa K. Houghton at 907-350-0408 or lisa.houghton@usdoj.gov NOTES: OVW Acting Director Allison Randall; OVW Tribal Affairs Division Deputy Director Sherriann Moore; and U.S. Attorney Lane Tucker for the District of Alaska are available for interviews. Please contact Lisa Houghton for more information. For more information about the consultation schedule, please visit: https://www.ovwconsultation.org/Agenda/Agenda.   For frequently asked questions, including regarding COVID information, please visit: https://www.ovwconsultation.org/Attend/FAQS. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Media Advisory
Judge Rejects Trump Classification Tomfoolery: You Can't Have Your Cake And Eat It
Judge Rejects Trump Classification Tomfoolery: You Can't Have Your Cake And Eat It
Judge Rejects Trump Classification Tomfoolery: “You Can't Have Your Cake And Eat It” https://digitalalaskanews.com/judge-rejects-trump-classification-tomfoolery-you-cant-have-your-cake-and-eat-it/ I wonder if the phrase “TOP SECRET” written in big red letters means these documents are classified.Department of Justice/Zuma Fight disinformation: Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily newsletter and follow the news that matters. Donald Trump’s lawyers would like you to believe that the boxes the FBI seized from the former president’s Mar-a-Lago estate last month contain Schrödinger’s documents: simultaneously classified and unclassified. Trump has claimed he declassified the documents he took to Mar-a-Lago, but he has never produced a shred of evidence to support that claim. His lawyers have hinted he may have declassified the material, but they’ve been careful not to say so explicitly. In a court filing on Monday, they even asked Judge Raymond Dearie, the special master appointed to review the documents DOJ seized, not to make them address the issue, because Trump might be charged and they don’t want to tip their hand and detail “a defense to the merits of any subsequent indictment.” The Justice Department has a simpler position: Documents with classification markings are classified.  On Tuesday, Trump’s lawyers, while refusing to say whether the documents were classified, insisted the DOJ had not done its part to prove the documents were classified. Dearie was not having it. “If the government gives me prima facia evidence that they are classified documents, and you don’t advance any claim of declassification, I’m left with a prima facia case of classified documents, and as far as I’m concerned, that’s the end of it,” he said. “You can’t have your cake and eat it.” Judge Dearie asks “What business is it of the court” to decide whether a document is classified. At last, someone is applying the law! Classification is a core function of the executive branch, not the judiciary. If gov says it is classified, it is classified. https://t.co/yXpbxHQZkJ — Barb McQuade (@BarbMcQuade) September 20, 2022 Dearie seems to be on course to call Trump’s bluff. If Trump declassified documents, his lawyers need to prove it. But while Dearie seems skeptical of Trump’s arguments, the appointment of a special master—ordered by District Court Judge Aileen Cannon, Trump appointee—helped the former president by buying him time. Cannon drew fire from legal analysts, who noted she had given deference to a nonsensical claim of “executive privilege” by Trump, who is not the president. While such claims are usually asserted by sitting presidents to block executive branch deliberations from Congress or the public, here the executive branch seized the material from a citizen outside government. Cannon gave Dearie until November 30 to review thousands of documents and other items seized from Trump’s residence and private club. Dearie is supposed to decide whether any of the materials are covered by attorney-client privilege, and assess Trump’s claim they are covered by executive privilege. Dearie said Tuesday that he wants to hustle. “We have little time to complete the tasks assigned to the court,” he told the lawyers. “We are going to proceed with what I call responsible dispatch.” But Trump’s lawyers are pressing for further delay, even as the DOJ, in a separate proceeding, appeals Canon’s order to halt their investigation while the Dearie reviews the material. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Judge Rejects Trump Classification Tomfoolery: You Can't Have Your Cake And Eat It
Analysis | A Mar-A-Lago Brief By GOP Attorneys General Is Less Than Meets The Eye
Analysis | A Mar-A-Lago Brief By GOP Attorneys General Is Less Than Meets The Eye
Analysis | A Mar-A-Lago Brief By GOP Attorneys General Is Less Than Meets The Eye https://digitalalaskanews.com/analysis-a-mar-a-lago-brief-by-gop-attorneys-general-is-less-than-meets-the-eye/ When Donald Trump’s residence at Mar-a-Lago was searched last month, the GOP sprang into action. Republicans were willing to go to great and often extremely speculative and unproven lengths to defend him even when we knew very little about the search. This wasn’t just a questionable search, in their view: It was an abuse of power and a political hit job, evidence might have been planted, and so forth. The fervent support and baseless accusations have died down somewhat since then, as the party grapples with the emerging facts, which paint an increasingly vivid picture of the former president taking highly sensitive documents to his luxury resort. Enter a group of GOP state attorneys general, who filed an amicus brief in the Mar-a-Lago documents case on Tuesday. The move by the attorneys general for Florida, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, South Carolina, Texas, Utah and West Virginia would seem, on its face, to be a significant show of support for Trump’s legal case. Dig a few inches deeper, though, and it’s significantly less than meets the eye. The document is devoted to attacking the Biden administration and its handling of legal matters; it does next to nothing to actually address the case at hand. The brief opens with some of the greatest hits of the GOP’s attacks on the search itself. The brief calls it an “unprecedented nine-hour search of former President Donald J. Trump’s private residence” and even characterizes it as the Biden administration “ransacking the home of its one-time — and possibly future — political rival.” (“Ransacking” often connotes stealing things or at least dealing with matter haphazardly and roughly.) But apart from that, the brief doesn’t deal with the search, Trump’s underlying conduct or even the order that’s being appealed at all. It instead devotes its entire argument to a series of cases in which the attorneys general participated — as well as other matters — that it argues demonstrate legal “gamesmanship.” Certainly, there’s some grist for that mill. The attorneys general cite how President Biden acknowledged last year that re-upping of the covid eviction moratorium would likely fail in court, but still was worth pursuing because it could help people before it would get struck down. The brief also cites Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. accusing the administration of legal gamesmanship in a long-running legal battle over immigration rules. But otherwise, the brief reads like a hastily assembled list of complaints you might see on a Fox News show. And the examples cited aren’t restricted to court battles; they also include public comments from Vice President Harris last week about the border being “secure,” the administration’s comments about not funding “gain of function” research, and its aborted launching of a “Disinformation Governance Board.” These far-ranging incidents are all gathered in the service, essentially, of one argument: The administration can’t be trusted in its representations of the facts about the Mar-a-Lago search. But the brief is as notable for what it doesn’t say and what it doesn’t argue. It doesn’t delve at all into Trump’s retention of government documents that could be highly sensitive. (It doesn’t even use the word “classified” at all, in fact.) Nor does it get into the actual legal disputes over the Mar-a-Lago search that had been raised in the case Judge Aileen M. Cannon heard. It’s a contrast to the amicus brief late last week from a group of GOP law enforcement officials, arguing that Cannon’s order be overturned and dissecting the legal reasoning closely. These attorneys general say they have an important perspective on the core issue of whether the administration should be treated with the “presumption of regularity” — that is, the idea that government officials “have properly discharged their official duties.” But that goal doesn’t preclude them from actually going to bat for Trump or at least the specifics of Cannon’s controversial order. Yet they opt not to do any of that. In many ways, this tactic reflects the last time GOP attorneys general stepped forward in a high-profile way to seemingly vouch for Trump. It was after the 2020 election, when Trump was making all manner of false claims about voters fraud, “stolen” elections and the like: Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and others sued various swing states to try to overturn their results. But rather than echo his claims with full force, the attorneys general — nearly all of the ones on this latest brief, in fact, plus some others — offered a more watered-down version that merely raised questions. It was rather quickly rejected by the Supreme Court. It’s also reflective of the tack seemingly taken by Trump’s own legal team, which has declined to vouch for many of his claims in court — most notably that Trump had declassified all the documents. And as always, what people say publicly should be measured against what they — and their allies — are willing to say in a court of law. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Analysis | A Mar-A-Lago Brief By GOP Attorneys General Is Less Than Meets The Eye
Trump Lawyers Pressed On Seized Mar-A-Lago Documents By Special Master In NYC
Trump Lawyers Pressed On Seized Mar-A-Lago Documents By Special Master In NYC
Trump Lawyers Pressed On Seized Mar-A-Lago Documents By Special Master In NYC https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-lawyers-pressed-on-seized-mar-a-lago-documents-by-special-master-in-nyc-2/ NEW YORK — The special master reviewing Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago papers signaled Tuesday that he wants to carry out a limited review, and pressed the former president’s lawyers for refusing to take a position on whether Trump declassified any of the documents. “My view is you can’t have your cake and eat it,” Judge Raymond Dearie told Trump’s lawyers at a hearing in Brooklyn Federal Court. Trump has said he declassified sensitive documents before taking them to his Palm Beach, Florida, estate following his presidency. But Trump’s lawyer Jim Trusty maintains he should not be required to show which documents were declassified, as that would tip the former president’s hand on his defense strategy should he face criminal charges. Trump has not provided any evidence that he declassified the papers. Dearie, a respected semiretired judge, has a Nov. 30 deadline to complete his examination of more than 10,000 documents — including about 100 marked classified. After he was tapped as special master by Judge Aileen Cannon — a Trump-appointed judge in the Federal District Court for the Southern District of Florida — Dearie appeared to carve out a relatively limited purview for himself, expressing his desire not to pry into sensitive documents if he can avoid it. “Let’s not belittle the fact that we are dealing with potentially legitimately classified information,” Dearie said. “The government has a very strong obligation, to all of us, to see to it that this information doesn’t get in the wrong hands.” He added, “If I can make my recommendation to Judge Cannon, right or wrong, without exposing myself or you to that material I will.” Julie Edelstein, a Justice Department lawyer, said “some of the documents are so sensitive that even members of the team investigating possible offenses here have not yet been provided clearance” to see them. In a back-and-forth with Trusty, the special master contended that if “for whatever reason (you) decide to advance any claim of declassification, which I understand is your prerogative, I’m left with the prima facie case of classified documents, and that’s the end of it,” using a legal term referring to sufficiently satisfying first impressions. Trusty countered that Trump as the former president had “unfettered access along with unfettered classification authority.” Dearie’s extensive experience includes a seven-year spell on the shadowy U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. At one point, Dearie said he was “taken aback” by comments from Trusty that the judge said indicated he was “going beyond” his instructions from Cannon. “I think I’m doing what I’m told,” Dearie said. Cannon, who was appointed by Trump in the final months of his administration, has barred the Justice Department from using the documents for criminal investigative purposes pending the special master review. The government is appealing at the Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit in Atlanta, where six of the 11 judges on the court are Trump appointees. Also Tuesday, Trump’s legal team filed court papers opposing the appeal, describing the case as a “document storage dispute that has spiraled out of control.” ——— (Daily News staff writer Molly Crane-Newman contributed to this story.) ——— Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump Lawyers Pressed On Seized Mar-A-Lago Documents By Special Master In NYC
Special Master In Mar-A-Lago Case Appears Skeptical Of Trump 'declassification' Claims
Special Master In Mar-A-Lago Case Appears Skeptical Of Trump 'declassification' Claims
Special Master In Mar-A-Lago Case Appears Skeptical Of Trump 'declassification' Claims https://digitalalaskanews.com/special-master-in-mar-a-lago-case-appears-skeptical-of-trump-declassification-claims/ The special master appointed to review documents seized by federal agents who searched former President Donald Trump’s Florida estate appeared doubtful Tuesday about Trump’s contention that he had declassified the various top secret and other highly sensitive documents found there. The special master, Senior U.S. District Judge Raymond J. Dearie, had previously asked Trump’s attorneys for more information about which of the over 100 sensitive documents federal agents found at his Mar-a-Lago estate might have been declassified. Trump’s attorneys had told the judge in a letter Monday night they didn’t want to disclose that information yet because it could force them to prematurely “disclose a defense to the merits of any subsequent indictment.” During a hearing in a Brooklyn federal court, Dearie noted the current case is a civil dispute, not a criminal one, but that he was taking the government’s concerns about national security seriously. “Let’s not belittle the fact that we are dealing with at least potentially legitimately classified information. The government has a very strong obligation, as do all of us, to see to it that that information doesn’t get in the wrong hands,” Dearie said. While Trump’s filing claimed neither side had provided a showing that the documents are classified, Dearie said the government had presented “prima facie evidence” that the documents are, because they bear classification markings. “As far as I’m concerned, that’s the end of it,” Dearie said, unless Trump’s team has some evidence to the contrary. Trump has claimed on social media that he declassified all the records he had in his possession, but his lawyers have yet to formally make that argument in any sworn court filings in the case. Trump attorney James Trusty maintained that “we should not be in a position to have to disclose declarations” and witness statements on the classification issue. Dearie suggested their not doing so could be problematic for their current case. “My view is you can’t have your cake and eat it,” Dearie said. Justice Department lawyer Julie Edelstein noted that some of the documents that were recovered “are so sensitive that even members of the team that is investigating possible offenses here have not yet been provided the clearances to see these documents.” She noted that while Trusty has a top-secret clearance, even that “would not be sufficient to see a number of the documents at issue in this case.” Trusty called Edelstein’s argument “kind of astounding.” “It’s kind of an amazing juncture to be dismissive of even one attorney having access to the documents that form the justification for their raid,” he said. The judge told Trump’s lawyer, “It is a matter of need to know. And if you need to know, you will know.” He also suggested he would try to avoid reviewing some of the most sensitive documents in the case – and would keep Trump’s lawyers from seeing them too. “I don’t want to see the material — it’s presumably sensitive material,” he said, adding if he can make his recommendations to the judge who asked him for his recommendations “without exposing myself or to you to that material, I will do it. On the other hand, if I can’t, we have to take another alternative.” Dearie said he would issue a scheduling order in the case later Tuesday, and noted that “there are 11,000 documents” at issue in the case and “we have a short period of time” to review them for privilege issues. Trusty urged Dearie not to move too quickly. He said Trump’s team is “starting from scratch” and would benefit from having “the time to look at all the documents.” Aileen Cannon, a Trump-nominated federal judge in Florida, granted the former president’s request to appoint a special master to review the evidence earlier this month, and ordered DOJ to halt the criminal investigation into the recovered documents while that review is pending. Cannon said a damage assessment into any mishandling of the documents could proceed, but the Justice Department said the criminal investigation is a necessary part of the assessment and appealed her order. In a court filing Tuesday, lawyers for Trump argued the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals should reject the government’s request for a stay of Cannon’s ruling, and called the probe “both unprecedented and misguided” and “a document storage dispute that has spiraled out of control.” The Trump bid was backed in a filing to the appeals court by a coalition of 11 Republican attorneys general, who suggested the “ransacking” of Trump’s home was politically motivated and argued Cannon’s order should be left as is because of the Biden administration’s “gamesmanship.” The bulk of those involved had previously backed a lawsuit challenging the 2020 election results that was dismissed by the U.S. Supreme Court. Dareh Gregorian is a politics reporter for NBC News. Adam Reiss Adam Reiss is a reporter and producer for NBC and MSNBC. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Special Master In Mar-A-Lago Case Appears Skeptical Of Trump 'declassification' Claims
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Compounding: Inspections Recalls And Other Actions
Compounding: Inspections Recalls And Other Actions
Compounding: Inspections, Recalls, And Other Actions https://digitalalaskanews.com/compounding-inspections-recalls-and-other-actions/ | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |  | Contract Testing Labs | Active Ingredient Suppliers | Abbott’s Compounding Pharmacy Inc., Berkeley, CA – 503A Facility ABC Pharmacy, Inc., Encino, CA – 503A Facility Abilene Nuclear LLC, (dba National Central Pharmacy), Abilene, TX – 503A Facility – Ceased Compounding Operations Abrams Royal Pharmacy, Dallas, TX – 503A Facility FMD-145 Letter Issued 09/28/2016 Warning Letter (07/14/2014) FDA Press Release: FDA Announces Voluntary Nationwide Recall of All Non-expired Sterile Drugs from Abrams Royal Compounding Pharmacy (12/21/2013) 483 Issued 12/20/2013 (PDF – 5.3MB) Firm Press Release: Abrams Royal Pharmacy Issues Voluntary Nationwide Recall of All Lots of Unexpired Sterile Products Due to Lack of Sterility Assurance (12/18/2013) Abrams Royal Pharmacy II, LLC, Plano, TX – 503A Facility Absolute Pharmacy, LLC, Lutz, FL – 503A Facility – De-registered as an Outsourcing Facility Absolute Veterinary Compounding Pharmacy, Weatherford, TX – 503A Facility AcariaHealth Pharmacy, Inc., Falls Chuch, VA – 503A Facility – Ceased Compounding Operations Accurate Rx Pharmacy Consulting, LLC (dba Accurate Rx Pharmacy), Columbia, MO – 503A Facility A Chem Rx, LLC, (dba Cortez Drugs), Brooksville, FL – 503A Facility ACRX Specialty Pharmacy Inc., Las Vegas, NV – 503A Facility Advanced Care Infusion-Shelby, (see Tri-Med, Inc.), Shelby Township, MI – 503A Facility Advanced Compounding Solutions, (see New England Life Care, Inc.), Woburn, MA – 503A Facility Advanced Infusion Solutions, Clinton, MS – 503A Facility Advanced Infusion Solutions, (see Bond Pharmacy, Inc.), Ridgeland, MS – 503A Facility Advanced Nutriceuticals, LLC, Indianapolis, IN – 503A Facility Advanced Physician Solutions, Inc., N Hollywood, CA – 503A Facility – Out of business Advanced Specialty Pharmacy (dba Meds IV), Bessemer, AL – 503A Facility DOJ Press Release: Federal Criminal Charges Filed Against Two Pharmacists for Adulteration of Drugs in Connection with Alabama-Based Compounding Pharmacy (1/28/2016) Warning Letter (03/16/2012) Aerosol Science Laboratories Inc., Camarillo, CA – 503A Facility Age Management, Santa Barbara, CA – 503A Facility Akina Pharmacy, Chantilly, VA – 503A Facility Akorn Pharmaceuticals Inc. Decatur, IL – 503A Facility Alexander Infusion, LLC (dba Avanti Health Care Services), New Hyde Park, NY – 503A Facility – De-registered as an Outsourcing Facility Alexandria Medical Arts Pharmacy & Compounding Laboratory, (see J & F International Inc.), Alexandria, VA – 503A Facility Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children, Wilmington, DE – 503A Facility Algunas, Inc. (dba Woodland Hills Compounding Pharmacy), Woodland Hills, CA – 503A Facility Allegheny Health Network Home Infusion, LLC, Sharpsburg, PA – 503A Facility Alwan’s Pharmacy (see American Pharmacy of Illinois, Inc.), Peoria, IL – 503A Facility Ambient Healthcare of Central Florida Inc., Ocala, FL – 503A Facility American Family Pharmacy, LLC, Indianapolis, IN – 503A Facility American Hormones Inc. Poughkeepsie, NY – 503A Facility American Hormones, Inc., Wappingers Falls, NY – 503A Facility American Pharmacy of Illinois, Inc. (dba Alwan’s Pharmacy), Peoria, IL – 503A Facility American Specialty Pharmacy, Dallas, TX – 503A Facility – Out of business American Specialty Pharmacy, Plano, TX – 503A Facility – Ceased Compounding Operations American Specialty Pharmacy, Inc., (dba ASP Cares), San Antonio, TX – 503B Facility Americare Compounding, LLC, Garden City South, NY – 503A Facility Ameridose, LLC, Westborough, MA – 503A Facility Amex Pharmacy, (see Pacifico National Inc.), Melbourne, FL – 503A Facility Anazaohealth Corporation, Tampa, FL – 503A Facility Anazaohealth Corporation, Las Vegas, NV – 503B Facility Anchor Drugs Pharmacy, (see Jajco, Inc.), South San Francisco, CA – 503A Facility Anderson Compounding Pharmacy, Inc. dba Anderson Compounding Pharmacy, Bristol, TN – 503A Facility Anderson Holdings Inc. (dba Wingate’s Pharmacy and Compounding), Nashua, NH – 503A Facility Apex Pharmacy, LLC, Beckley, WV – 503A Facility Apollo Care LLC, Columbia, MO – 503B Facility ApothéCure, Inc., Dallas, TX – 503A Facility 483 Issued 04/17/2013 (PDF – 1.6MB) Firm Press Release: ApothéCure, Inc. Recalls All Lots of All Sterile Products Compounded, Repackaged, and Distributed by ApothéCure, Inc. Due to Sterility Assurance Concerns (04/15/2013) FDA Press Release: FDA issues Alert About Lack of Sterility Assurance of Drug Products from ApothéCure, Inc. and NuVision Pharmacy and of Forthcoming Recall (04/15/2013) DOJ Press Release: Dallas Compounding Pharmacy Owner Pleads Guilty in Connection with Misbranded Drug Shipment (4/24/2012) APS Pharmacy, (see Drug Depot, Inc.), Palm Harbor, FL – 503A Facility ARJ Infusion Services, Inc., Lenexa, KS – 503A Facility Ark Pharmacy, PC (dba Regency Medical Pharmacy), Newbury Park, CA – 503A Facility Arnold Professional Pharmacy, Arnold, MD – 503A Facility ASP Cares, (see American Specialty Pharmacy, Inc.), San Antonio, TX – 503B Facility Aspirar Pharmacy, LLC, Cary, NC – 503A Facility Assurance Infusion, (see Nanobots Healthcare, LLC), Houston, TX – 503A Facility Asteria Health, (see FH Investments Inc.), Birmingham, AL – 503A Facility Athena Pharmacy (see Paradigm Healthcare Solutions, LLC), Mount Juliet, TN – 503A Facility Athenex Pharma Solutions, LLC, Clarence, NY – 503B Facility Atlas Pharmaceuticals, LLC, Phoenix, AZ – 503B Facility Auro Pharmacies, Inc., La Habra, CA – 503A Facility – Out of business Avanti Health Care Services, (see Alexander Infusion, LLC), New Hyde Park, NY – 503A Facility Avella of Deer Valley, Inc. (dba Avella Specialty Pharmacy), Phoenix, AZ – 503A Facility – De-registered as an Outsourcing Facility Avella Specialty Pharmacy, (formerly Advanced Pharma, Inc.), Houston, TX – 503A Facility – Out of business Untitled Letter Issued 08/14/2018 (PDF – 88KB) Firm Press Release: Advanced Pharma, Inc. d/b/a Avella of Houston Issues Voluntary Nationwide Recall of Specific Lots of Potassium Phosphate and Succinylcholine Repacked and/or Compounded at its Houston Location as a Result of Hospira, Inc’s June 15, 2017 Recall of Such Products Due to a Potential Lack of Sterility Assurance (06/22/2017) Firm Press Release: Advanced Pharma, Inc. D/B/A Avella of Houston Issues Voluntary Nationwide Recall of All Unexpired Nitroglycerin Injection In 5% Dextrose USP Products Produced At Its Houston Location From March 3, 2017 Through May 31, 2017 Due To Sub-Potency (06/15/2017) Firm Press Release: Avella Specialty Pharmacy Issues Voluntary Nationwide Recall of all Sterile Products Produced at Advanced Pharma Houston Location from September 1, 2016 through February 16, 2017 Due to Potential Inaccuracy of Latex Free Label Reference (02/23/2017) 483 Issued 07/22/2016 (PDF – 920KB) 483 Issued 03/17/2014 (PDF – 638KB) Avenue Pharmacy, Inc., (dba Pathway Pharmacy), Ocala, FL – 503A Facility Axia Pharmaceuticals, (see Fusion IV Pharmaceuticals Inc.), Los Angeles, CA – 503A Facility Axis Pharmacy Northwest, (see Shiraz Specialty Pharmacy Inc.), Mountlake Terrace, WA – 503A Facility Axium Healthcare Pharmacy (dba Balanced Solutions Compounding), Lake Mary, FL – 503A Facility – Out of business Warning Letter (07/16/2013) FDA Press Release: FDA Announces Voluntary Nationwide Recall by Balanced Solutions Compounding Pharmacy (04/21/2013) Firm Press Release: Balanced Solutions Compounding Pharmacy, LLC. Announces a Voluntary Nationwide Recall of All Sterile Compounded Products Due to a Lack of Sterility Assurance (04/17/2013) 483 Issued 03/15/2013 (PDF – 638KB) B & B Pharmacy, (see BBS Pharmacy, Inc.), Bellflower, CA – 503A Facility Balanced Solutions Compounding, (see Axium Healthcare Pharmacy), Lake Mary, FL – 503A Facility – Out of business Ballard Plaza Pharmacy 1 Inc., Seattle, WA – 503A Facility – Out of business Banner Pharmacy Services, LLC, Chandler, AZ – 503A Facility – De-registered as an Outsourcing Facility Baptist Health Medical Towers Pharmacy and Infusion Services, Little Rock, AR – 503A Facility Barclay Luke & Pillai Specialty Pharmacy PLLC (dba Meta Pharmacy Services), Las Vegas, NV – 503A Facility Baycare Integrated Service Center, LLC dba BayCare Central Pharmacy, Temple Terrace, FL – 503B Facility Bayview Pharmacy, Inc., Saunderstown, RI – 503A Facility BBS Pharmacy, Inc. (dba B&B Pharmacy), formerly Pacific Healthcare, Inc., Bellflower, CA – 503A Facility Beacon Hill Medical Pharmacy, P.C. (dba Rxtra Solutions), Southfield, MI – 503A Facility Beacon Prescriptions (see DCA Inc.), Southington, CT – 503A Facility Bedford Pharmacy, Inc. (dba Mytilini Enterprises LLC), Bedford, NH – 503A Facility Bella Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Glenview, IL – 503A Facility – Ceased Compounding Operations Bellevue Pharmacy Solutions, St Louis, MO – 503A Facility Belmar Pharmacy, Lakewood, CO – 503A Facility Belmar Select Outsourcing, (see BSO, LLC), Lakewood, CO – 503B Facility Best Value Drug, (see Farmville Discount Drug, Inc.), Farmville, NC – 503A Facility Bhaumik Diversified LLC dba Texas Star Pharmacy, Dallas, TX – 503A Facility Biomed PA Inc. (dba Soleo Health), Sharon Hill, PA – 503A Facility Bioscrip Infusion Services, (see HomeChoice Partners, Inc.), Augusta, GA – 503A Facility Bioscrip Infusion Services, (see InfuScience, Inc.), Chantilly, VA – 503A Facility BioScrip Pharmacy (NY), Inc., Lake Success, NY – 503A Facility Blount Discount Pharmacy, Inc., Alcoa, TN – 503A Facility Blue Ridge Pharmacy and Compounding Center, Raleigh, NC – 503A Facility BMD Skincare, Inc., Canoga Park, CA – 503A Facility – Out of business Bond Pharmacy, Inc. (dba Advanced Infusion Solutions), Clinton, MS – 503A Facility Bond Pharmac...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Compounding: Inspections Recalls And Other Actions
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Trump Lawyers Pressed On Seized Mar-A-Lago Documents By Special Master In NYC
Trump Lawyers Pressed On Seized Mar-A-Lago Documents By Special Master In NYC
Trump Lawyers Pressed On Seized Mar-A-Lago Documents By Special Master In NYC https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-lawyers-pressed-on-seized-mar-a-lago-documents-by-special-master-in-nyc/ The special master reviewing Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago papers signaled Tuesday that he wants to carry out a limited review, and pressed the former president’s lawyers for refusing to take a position on whether Trump declassified any of the documents. “My view is you can’t have your cake and eat it,” Judge Raymond Dearie told Trump’s lawyers at a Tuesday hearing in Brooklyn Federal Court. Judge Raymond Dearie (Edwine Seymour/for New York Daily News) Trump has said he declassified sensitive documents before taking them to his Palm Beach, Fla., estate following his presidency. But Trump’s lawyer Jim Trusty maintains he should not be required to show which documents were declassified, as that would tip the former president’s hand on his defense strategy should he face criminal charges. Trump has not provided any evidence that he declassified the papers. Dearie, a respected semiretired judge, has a Nov. 30 deadline to complete his examination of more than 10,000 documents — including about 100 marked classified. Former President Donald Trump at a rally in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., on Saturday, Sept. 3, 2022. (Mary Altaffer/AP) After he was tapped as special master by Judge Aileen Cannon — a Trump-appointed judge in the Federal District Court for the Southern District of Florida — Dearie appeared to carve out a relatively limited purview for himself, expressing his desire not to pry into sensitive documents if he can avoid it. “Let’s not belittle the fact that we are dealing with potentially legitimately classified information,” Dearie said. “The government has a very strong obligation, to all of us, to see to it that this information doesn’t get in the wrong hands.” He added, “If I can make my recommendation to Judge Cannon, right or wrong, without exposing myself or you to that material I will.” Julie Edelstein, a Justice Department lawyer, said “some of the documents are so sensitive that even members of the team investigating possible offenses here have not yet been provided clearance” to see them. In a back-and-forth with Trusty, the special master contended that if “for whatever reason [you] decide to advance any claim of declassification, which I understand is your prerogative, I’m left with the prima facie case of classified documents, and that’s the end of it,” using a legal term referring to sufficiently satisfying first impressions. Trusty countered that Trump as the former president had “unfettered access along with unfettered classification authority.” Donald Trump’s attorneys Linsey Halligan, James Trusty, and Chris Kise arrive at Brooklyn Federal Court on Tuesday, Sept. 20, 2022, in New York. (Brittainy Newman/AP) Dearie’s extensive experience includes a seven-year spell on the shadowy U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. At one point, Dearie said he was “taken aback” by comments from Trusty that the judge said indicated he was “going beyond” his instructions from Cannon. “I think I’m doing what I’m told,” Dearie said. Cannon, who was appointed by Trump in the final months of his administration, has barred the Justice Department from using the documents for criminal investigative purposes pending the special master review. People protest about Donald Trump’s lawyers chanting ‘No one is above the law’ outside of Brooklyn Federal Court on Tuesday, Sept. 20, 2022, in New York. (Brittainy Newman/AP) The government is appealing at the Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit in Atlanta, where six of the 11 judges on the court are Trump appointees. Also Tuesday, Trump’s legal team filed a court papers opposing the appeal, describing the case as a “document storage dispute that has spiraled out of control.” With Molly Crane-Newman Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump Lawyers Pressed On Seized Mar-A-Lago Documents By Special Master In NYC
Trump Rape Accuser E. Jean Carroll Plans New Claims Against Former President
Trump Rape Accuser E. Jean Carroll Plans New Claims Against Former President
Trump Rape Accuser E. Jean Carroll Plans New Claims Against Former President https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-rape-accuser-e-jean-carroll-plans-new-claims-against-former-president/ FILE PHOTO – U.S. President Donald Trump rape accuser E. Jean Carroll departs from her hearing at federal court during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S., October 21, 2020. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com NEW YORK, Sept 20 (Reuters) – A onetime Elle magazine columnist who accused Donald Trump of raping her more than a quarter-century ago plans to file a new lawsuit against the former U.S. president over the incident, her lawyer said. E. Jean Carroll plans to bring claims of battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress under a New York law giving adult survivors of sexual misconduct a one-year window to bring civil claims that would otherwise be time-barred, Carroll’s lawyer Roberta Kaplan said in a letter filed on Tuesday. Trump has denied raping Carroll and accused her of concocting the rape claim to sell her book. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York Editing by Chris Reese Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
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Trump Rape Accuser E. Jean Carroll Plans New Claims Against Former President
GOP's Hard-Line Tactics On Migrants Refocus Midterm Debate
GOP's Hard-Line Tactics On Migrants Refocus Midterm Debate
GOP's Hard-Line Tactics On Migrants Refocus Midterm Debate https://digitalalaskanews.com/gops-hard-line-tactics-on-migrants-refocus-midterm-debate/ MIAMI (AP) — They’ve delivered migrants on planes and buses to Washington, D.C., New York City — even Martha’s Vineyard. And the Republican governors of Florida and Texas may be just getting started. Govs. Ron DeSantis of Florida and Greg Abbott of Texas insist such dramatic steps are need to highlight a genuine crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border, where thousands of migrants stream into the country illegally each day. But weeks away from their own competitive reelections, friends and foes alike acknowledged that such hard-line tactics have effectively refocused November’s midterm elections — at least, temporarily — away from abortion rights and toward an issue more favorable to Republicans. A defiant DeSantis on Tuesday blasted the Biden administration’s inaction on the Southern border and celebrated his own policies for making illegal immigration “a front-burner issue” ahead of the midterms. “It will be a big issue in the elections, I can tell you that,” DeSantis said. “It’s already made more of an impact than anyone thought it could possibly make. But we’re going to continue to make more of an impact.” Indeed, DeSantis and Abbott are pressing forward with — and even expanding on — controversial campaigns to ship thousands of immigrants from Texas to Democratic-led states and cities. Beyond shifting the national debate, their divisive moves could also serve to strengthen their national brands — and help legitimize their controversial policies — as they consider 2024 presidential bids. “I personally thought it was a good idea,” Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said Tuesday. The governors’ rhetoric is reminiscent of former President Donald Trump’s dire warnings ahead of the 2018 midterms that a migrant caravan threatened the Southern border. Trump’s GOP lost 40 seats in the House and gained two Senate seats that year. Democrats from Connecticut to California have generated momentum in recent weeks by campaigning on the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade — and the GOP’s subsequent push to outlaw abortion in dozens of states. Republicans, meanwhile, want to make the midterms a referendum on President Joe Biden and concerns about the economy, crime and immigration. This week, at least, immigration is leading the national debate. “What they’re doing is raising the salience and relevance of the immigration issue, which is important to Republican voters and can help drive turnout,” said veteran Republican pollster Neil Newhouse. “For the voters we’re appealing to, for the most part, the benefits outweigh the risks by a considerable margin.” There are real risks, however, particularly for DeSantis, who has taken credit for two weekend charter planes that carried about 50 migrants from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard, a small, wealthy island off Massachusetts’ coast. The immigrants were told they were going to Boston. A Texas sheriff on Monday opened an investigation into DeSantis’ flights, though the law enforcement official, an elected Democrat, did not say what laws may have been broken in putting 48 Venezuelans on private planes from San Antonio, the first stop for many migrants who cross the border. Rep. Joaquin Castro, a Democrat who represents San Antonio, has called on the Justice Department to investigate the flights as well. “These guys are immature, sadistic Trump imitators. That’s what they are,” Castro said of Abbott and DeSantis. “This is sadistic behavior. Whatever political point they were trying to make has been made a long time ago.” DeSantis, who has stepped up travel on behalf of GOP candidates in the midterm elections, vowed to spend “every penny” of $12 million set aside by the state legislature for such “relocation programs.” On Tuesday, local officials in a Delaware community close to Biden’s vacation home were preparing to receive another one of DeSantis’ planes full of migrants from Texas, although the Florida governor refused to confirm the development. Despite fierce criticism and potential legal liabilities, there has been little evidence of widespread political backlash in either state. Democratic sympathizers in Florida staged news conferences in recent days condemning the governors while others compared DeSantis to late Cuban leader Fidel Castro on Spanish radio. But the number of Venezuelan voters in the state remains relatively small. Much of the community that exists has formed a coalition with Cubans, a crucial bloc in Florida that has increasingly voted Republican. “Governors Abbott and DeSantis have had enough of it and decided to do something for people to pay attention,” said Ernesto Ackerman, a Republican who heads the Independent Venezuelan American Citizens. “This is a country of laws, not of scoundrels and tramps.” In Texas, Abbott has spent the past two years pushing a series of provocative immigration measures that have elevated his national profile and kept critics on his right at bay. The two-term governor converted a former prison near Texas’ southern border into a jail for migrants, gave the National Guard extraordinary arrest powers and gridlocked some of America’s busiest ports for a week by mandating additional inspections for 18-wheelers crossing into the U.S. The Abbott administration has been busing migrants to Washington, Chicago and New York City for months. The busing campaign includes two busloads of people who were dropped off outside Vice President Kamala Harris’ residence last weekend. Longtime Abbott adviser Dave Carney said Texas would expand its operation this week to include new drop-off locations in other states. “We’ve been focused on this for two years. It’s got nothing to do with politics. The communities are screaming bloody murder,” Carney said, referring to border towns flooded with immigrants apprehended at the border and subsequently released. Republicans cast the border crisis as a failure of the Biden administration. The federal government this week reported that authorities stopped migrants 2.15 million times from October through August, the first time that measure has ever topped 2 million and a 39% increase from the same period a year earlier. Border crossings have been fueled partly by repeat crossers because there are no legal consequences for getting caught under a pandemic-era rule that denies a right to seek asylum. Even so, the numbers are extraordinarily high. While Abbott and DeSantis have also highlighted their accomplishments on issues related to the economy, neither has taken steps to moderate their immigration policies as the November election nears. Abbott is running against Democrat Beto O’Rourke, a former congressman and failed candidate for Senate and president. O’Rourke has outraised Abbott in a contest that represents the toughest challenge of the governor’s political career. Immigration remains a crucial issue for Democrats who have long believed Texas’ booming cities and shifting demographics would eventually turn America’s biggest red state blue. But in overwhelmingly Hispanic counties on the border, Republicans are making an aggressive play for three congressional seats this fall after Trump made major gains in the region in 2020. It was much the same in South Florida, where Trump’s GOP performed better than expected in the last election. DeSantis is running against former Rep. Charlie Crist, who has tried to make abortion rights a focal point. Florida’s Republican-controlled state legislature recently adopted a law that restricts abortions after 15 weeks without exceptions in cases of rape, incest or human trafficking. In recent days, the Crist campaign charged that DeSantis “shot himself in the foot” by shipping immigrants from Texas to Massachusetts. The move sparked a fundraising surge for Crist that exceeded $1 million over a 48-hour period, according to spokesperson Samantha Ramirez. Republican candidates up and down the November ballot don’t seem worried. “I think it is a valid maneuver to use in order to try to wake up or at least expose the hypocrisy of progressive Democrats that say the border is secure and there’s no problem down here whatsoever,” said Joseph Swiger, one of dozens of Republicans running for local office in Texas border counties where the GOP seldom bothered to recruit candidates in the past. ___ Peoples reported from New York; Weber reported from Austin, Texas. Associated Press writer Farnoush Amiri in Washington contributed to this report. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
GOP's Hard-Line Tactics On Migrants Refocus Midterm Debate
WATCH: Trump Supporters React To Biden Calling Them Domestic Enemies
WATCH: Trump Supporters React To Biden Calling Them Domestic Enemies
WATCH: Trump Supporters React To Biden Calling Them Domestic Enemies https://digitalalaskanews.com/watch-trump-supporters-react-to-biden-calling-them-domestic-enemies/ E-transfer (Canada): [email protected] – password RebelNews if required Cheques made out to Rebel News: Rebel News Network Ltd. PO Box 61056 Eglinton/Dufferin RO Toronto, ON M6E 5B2 Crypto On Sept. 1, President Biden delivered a remarkably divisive speech in Pennsylvania calling former President Donald Trump and his supporters enemies of the state. During his speech, Biden called on Americans to rally against their ideological opponents and treat “MAGA” as an extremist movement. While standing in darkness guarded by United States marines, Biden made these threatening claims as an official White House statement towards the 81 million Americans that supported Trump in the 2020 Presidential Election. The divisive speech came ahead of November’s mid-term elections where 90% of Trump-endorsed Republican candidates won their primaries. Rebel News journalist Katie Daviscourt traveled to the ReAwaken America Tour in Post Falls, Idaho to interview conservatives about what they thought of President Biden’s speech and if it would deter them from supporting Trump if he were to decide to run in 2024. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
WATCH: Trump Supporters React To Biden Calling Them Domestic Enemies
AP News Summary At 4:10 P.m. EDT
AP News Summary At 4:10 P.m. EDT
AP News Summary At 4:10 P.m. EDT https://digitalalaskanews.com/ap-news-summary-at-410-p-m-edt/ UN chief: World is ‘paralyzed’ and equity is slipping away UNITED NATIONS (AP) — In an alarming assessment, the head of the United Nations is telling world leaders that nations are “gridlocked in colossal global dysfunction” and aren’t ready or willing to tackle major challenges. Speaking at the opening of the General Assembly’s annual high-level meeting, Antonio Guterres pointed to the war in Ukraine and multiplying conflicts around the world, the climate emergency and “suicidal war against nature,” the dire financial situation of developing countries, and many reversals in U.N. goals for 2030 including to end extreme poverty and provide quality education for all children. 4 Ukrainian regions schedule votes this week to join Russia KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — The separatist leaders of four Russian-controlled areas of Ukraine say they are planning to hold referendums this week for the territories to become part of Russia as Moscow loses ground in the war it launched. The votes will be held in the Luhansk, Kherson and partly Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia and Donetsk regions. The announcement of the balloting starting Friday came after a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin said Tuesday that they were needed. Former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev also said that folding Luhansk and Donetsk in eastern Ukraine into Russia itself would make their redrawn frontiers “irreversible” and enable Moscow to use “any means” to defend them. Feds: 47 exploited pandemic to steal $250M from food program MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Federal authorities have charged 47 people in what they’re calling the largest fraud scheme yet to take advantage of the COVID-19 pandemic by stealing and defrauding the government of $250 million. Documents made public Tuesday charge the defendants with counts including conspiracy, wire fraud, money laundering and bribery. Prosecutors say the defendants created companies that claimed to be offering food to thousands of low-income children across Minnesota, then sought reimbursement through a federal program. But prosecutors say few meals were actually served, and the defendants used the money to buy luxury cars, property and jewelry. This year, the U.S. Justice Department has made prosecuting pandemic-related fraud a priority and has stepped up enforcement actions. Fiona swipes Turks and Caicos, Puerto Rico faces big cleanup CAYEY, Puerto Rico (AP) — Hurricane Fiona is blasting the Turks and Caicos Islands as a Category 3 storm after devastating Puerto Rico, where most people remain without electricity or running water. The U.S. National Hurricane Center says the storm’s eye passed close to Grand Turk, the British territory’s capital island. The government imposed a curfew and urged people to flee flood-prone areas. The storm could raise seas by 5 to 8 feet above normal. Fiona had maximum sustained winds of 115 mph and was moving north-northwest at 9 mph early Tuesday. The Hurricane Center says the storm is likely to strengthen into a Category 4 hurricane as it approaches Bermuda on Friday. Trump legal team balks at judge’s declassification questions WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald Trump’s legal team has told a special arbiter it doesn’t want to answer questions about the declassification status of documents seized from the Trump’s Florida home. It says that issue could be part of Trump’s defense if he’s indicted. Lawyers for Trump and for the Justice Department are to appear in federal court in Brooklyn on Tuesday before the arbiter to review the roughly 11,000 documents — including about 100 marked as classified — taken during the FBI’s Aug. 8 search of Mar-a-Lago. Trump’s lawyers also asked a federal appeals court to leave in place an order that temporarily barred the Justice Department from using the classified documents in its criminal investigation. ‘Serial’ host: Evidence that freed Syed was long available The creator of a true-crime podcast that helped free a Maryland man imprisoned for murder said that she feels a mix of emotions over how long it took authorities to act on evidence that’s long been available. Podcast host Sarah Koenig released a new episode of “Serial” on Tuesday, a day after a judge vacated Adnan Syed’s conviction and allowed him to walk out of court after more than two decades. Koenig noted that all of the evidence cited in prosecutors’ motion to overturn the conviction was available since 1999. She argued that the case against Syed involved “just about every chronic problem” in the system. Stocks close lower ahead of Fed decision on interest rates Stocks closed lower on Wall Street ahead of a key decision on interest rates by the Federal Reserve. The S&P 500 fell 1.1% Tuesday. The Nasdaq composite and the Dow Jones Industrial Average also lost ground. Treasury yields were mostly higher. Traders are waiting to see how high the Fed will raise interest rates at its meeting that ends Wednesday. The Fed has been raising the cost of borrowing money in hopes of slowing down the hottest inflation in four decades. Traders worry the Fed may overshoot its goal and slow down the economy so much it causes a recession. Ad spending shows Dems hinging midterm hopes on abortion WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrats are pumping an unprecedented amount of money into advertising related to abortion rights. The spending underscores how central the message is to the party in the final weeks before midterm elections. The most intense period of campaigning is only just beginning, and Democrats have already invested more than an estimated $124 million this year in television advertising referencing abortion. That’s twice as much money as the Democrats’ next top issue and almost 20 times more than Democrats spent on abortion-related ads in the 2018 midterms. The spending figures are based on an Associated Press analysis of data provided by the nonpartisan research firm AdImpact. Mexico’s earthquake coincidence drives anxiety for many MEXICO CITY (AP) — The parents of children killed when a school collapsed during Mexico’s 2017 earthquake were celebrating a Mass in their memory, And then the ground began to shake again, as people cried out: “No, not again! My God, not again!” In the end, the magnitude 7.6 quake caused relatively little damage in the capital on Monday, though it killed two in the Pacific coast state of Colima. Three powerful earthquakes have struck Mexico on Sept. 19 — in 1985, 2017 and 2022. That unlucky coincidence has made many feel the date is somehow cursed, though scientists say it’s purely coincidence. Beyond Meat executive charged with biting a man in fight A top executive at plant-based food company Beyond Meat has been charged with felony battery after a fight outside a college football game in which he was accused of biting a man’s nose. Doug Ramsey was also charged with making a terroristic threat after the attack Saturday in a parking garage outside a University of Arkansas football game. According to a police report, Ramsey was angered when another driver inched in front of him in a traffic lane and made contact with the front passenger wheel on Ramsey’s SUV. Beyond Meat hasn’t responded to requests for comment. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
AP News Summary At 4:10 P.m. EDT
Former Trump Aides 'tasked' With Following Former President And 'giving Him Positive Reinforcement': NY Times Reporter
Former Trump Aides 'tasked' With Following Former President And 'giving Him Positive Reinforcement': NY Times Reporter
Former Trump Aides 'tasked' With Following Former President And 'giving Him Positive Reinforcement': NY Times Reporter https://digitalalaskanews.com/former-trump-aides-tasked-with-following-former-president-and-giving-him-positive-reinforcement-ny-times-reporter/ President Donald Trump rides on a golf cart. New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman claimed on Tuesday that former President Donald Trump has his own team of people following him around and providing him with “positive reinforcement” from social media. Trump has spent the past two years since leaving the White House continuing to promote his conspiracy theories around the 2020 presidential race and falsely claiming that he has been the victim of a “stolen” election. That philosophy is apparently being reinforced by a “cast” of people “tasked” with hanging out with Trump, particularly on the golf course. IN OTHER NEWS: Trump’s first day with the special master isn’t going very well Haberman didn’t indicate whether these people were being paid or if they were former aides who have nothing else to do. She also didn’t say who “tasked” the people with the duty of playing the role of the touching friend or ardent ally. Trump was photographed on the golf course in Virginia last week, driving around in carts in the rain and chatting with people. Prior to that he was at his club in Bedminster, New Jersey where he often spends the summer. He returned to Florida this week, he said, to survey the scene five weeks after the FBI executed the search warrant on the Palm Beach estate. Report typos and corrections to: corrections@rawstory.com. Stories Chosen For You Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Former Trump Aides 'tasked' With Following Former President And 'giving Him Positive Reinforcement': NY Times Reporter
Serial Podcast Reveals What Led Prosecutors To Rethink Adnan Syed Case Follow Live
Serial Podcast Reveals What Led Prosecutors To Rethink Adnan Syed Case Follow Live
Serial Podcast Reveals What Led Prosecutors To Rethink Adnan Syed Case – Follow Live https://digitalalaskanews.com/serial-podcast-reveals-what-led-prosecutors-to-rethink-adnan-syed-case-follow-live/ Adnan Syed gets new trial Adnan Syed, the subject of the hit podcast series Serial, walked out of court to cheers after a Maryland judge overturned his murder conviction and ordered his release after over 23 years behind bars. Baltimore City Circuit Judge Melissa Phinn vacated the 41-year-old’s conviction and granted him a new trial on Monday. The quashing of his conviction came after prosecutors said that an almost year-long investigation had cast doubts about the validity of cellphone tower data and uncovered new information about the possible involvement of two alternate unnamed suspects. Officials now have 30 days to decide whether they will fully drop the charges against Mr Syed. There’s reason to believe they will. In the meantime, Mr Syed will remain on home detention with a GPS bracelet monitoring his movements. Mr Syed was convicted in 2000 of first-degree murder, robbery, kidnapping and imprisonment of his ex-girlfriend Hae Min Lee. Lee, 18, vanished after leaving her high school on 13 January 1999. Her strangled body was found in a shallow grave in a Baltimore park around a month later. Mr Syed has always maintained his innocence. Registration is a free and easy way to support our truly independent journalism By registering, you will also enjoy limited access to Premium articles, exclusive newsletters, commenting, and virtual events with our leading journalists Email Please enter a valid email Please enter a valid email Password Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number First name Please enter your first name Special characters aren’t allowed Please enter a name between 1 and 40 characters Last name Please enter your last name Special characters aren’t allowed Please enter a name between 1 and 40 characters You must be over 18 years old to register You must be over 18 years old to register Year of birth I would like to be emailed about offers, events and updates from The Independent.  Read our Privacy notice You can opt-out at any time by signing in to your account to manage your preferences. Each email has a link to unsubscribe. Already have an account? sign in Registration is a free and easy way to support our truly independent journalism By registering, you will also enjoy limited access to Premium articles, exclusive newsletters, commenting, and virtual events with our leading journalists Email Please enter a valid email Please enter a valid email Password Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number First name Please enter your first name Special characters aren’t allowed Please enter a name between 1 and 40 characters Last name Please enter your last name Special characters aren’t allowed Please enter a name between 1 and 40 characters You must be over 18 years old to register You must be over 18 years old to register Year of birth I would like to be emailed about offers, events and updates from The Independent.  Read our Privacy notice You can opt-out at any time by signing in to your account to manage your preferences. Each email has a link to unsubscribe. Already have an account? sign in Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Serial Podcast Reveals What Led Prosecutors To Rethink Adnan Syed Case Follow Live
Hurricane Fiona Slams Turks And Caicos After Devastating Puerto Rico And Leaving At Least 5 Dead Across The Caribbean
Hurricane Fiona Slams Turks And Caicos After Devastating Puerto Rico And Leaving At Least 5 Dead Across The Caribbean
Hurricane Fiona Slams Turks And Caicos After Devastating Puerto Rico And Leaving At Least 5 Dead Across The Caribbean https://digitalalaskanews.com/hurricane-fiona-slams-turks-and-caicos-after-devastating-puerto-rico-and-leaving-at-least-5-dead-across-the-caribbean/ The storm was threatening more deadly flooding Tuesday as it slammed the Turks and Caicos islands. Fiona, a Category 3 storm with sustained winds of 115 mph, was battering the Turks and Caicos while centered about 40 miles off Grand Turk Island around 2 p.m. ET. Its heavy rains could deliver “life-threatening flooding” through the afternoon in parts of the British territory of about 38,000 people, the Miami-based National Hurricane Center said. Still dealing with Fiona’s ruinous path are the Dominican Republic — where the storm’s outer bands still could cause flooding after it traversed the Caribbean nation Monday — and Puerto Rico, which Fiona crossed a day earlier, causing a near blackout and leaving damage not seen there since Hurricane Maria made landfall five years ago Tuesday, officials said. At least two people died in the severe weather in the Dominican Republic, according to Major General Juan Manuel Méndez García, director of the country’s emergency operations center. Aurielys Esther Jimenez, 18, was traveling by motorcycle when she was struck by a power pole that fell due to strong winds, the director said. She was taken to a hospital where she was later pronounced dead. Officials there on Monday also confirmed the death of a man in Nagua, in northeastern Dominican Republic, who died after powerful winds knocked down a tree that hit him. There was also one death reported in the French territory of Guadeloupe, which Fiona hit late last week, and two in Puerto Rico. In Puerto Rico, a 58-year-old man was swept away by a swollen river behind his home in Comerío and another man in his 30s died in a fire accident that occurred when he was trying to put gasoline in his generator while it was turned on, officials said. In Puerto Rico, parts of which will have seen rain totals of more than 30 inches, Fiona pushed rivers to overflow and high water to collect in parts of the territory, flooding homes, streets and fields. Rushing waters wiped away a bridge, carrying its structure downstream, one video shows. Mudslides blocked some roads leading from coastal areas to the interior, a CNN crew saw. The damage is catastrophic in the territory’s center, south and southeast regions, Puerto Rico Gov. Pedro Pierluisi said Tuesday. A large portion of the population should have power by late Wednesday, but greater damage in the southern part of the island means restoration will take longer there, the governor said. More than 1.17 million of the island’s roughly 1.47 million utility customers still were without power as of early Tuesday, according to estimates from PowerOutage.us, which notes updated information on restoration efforts is limited. Fiona strengthens as it pushes north Fiona intensified into a Category 3 storm as it moved away from the Dominican Republic’s northern coast early Tuesday. This is the first major hurricane — Category 3 or higher — of this year’s Atlantic hurricane season. Heavy rains around the center of Fiona will threaten the Turks and Caicos with “continued life-threatening flooding” through Tuesday afternoon, the hurricane center said. Those islands could see 4 to 8 inches of rain Tuesday on top of what they received earlier, as well as storm surges — ocean water pushed onto land — of 5 to 8 feet, according to the hurricane center. Hurricane conditions could be seen in Turks and Caicos into Tuesday afternoon, and tropical storm conditions — winds of at least 39 mph — were expected to spread over the southeastern Bahamas on Tuesday morning. Strengthening is expected as Fiona turns from the Turks and Caicos. It could be a Category 4 storm — with sustained winds of 130 to 156 mph — by late Wednesday over the Atlantic. It is forecast to pass near or well west of Bermuda late Thursday or early Friday, and could still be at Category 4 when it does, forecasters say. Over the weekend, Fiona might make landfall in eastern Canada as a hurricane. It is too early to know exactly where or how strong it might be. Fiona leaves behind devastated Puerto Rico Tuesday marks five years since Hurricane Maria’s catastrophic landfall in Puerto Rico and some who lived through the 2017 crisis say Fiona’s flooding destruction could be even more severe. Juan Miguel Gonzalez, a business owner in Puerto Rico, told CNN that his neighborhood had still not finished its recovery from Maria when Fiona struck. But this time, he says, the flooding brought even more damage to their homes. “A lot of people — more than (during) Maria — lost their houses now … lost everything in their houses because of the flooding,” Gonzalez told CNN on Monday. “Maria was tough winds. But this one, with all the rain, it just destroyed everything in the house.” Water service also was interrupted for most, because river flooding affected filtration processes and must recede before safe treatment can resume, officials said. On Tuesday morning, about 60% of customers on the island had no running water, the territory’s aqueduct and sewer authority said. More than 1,200 people were staying in about 70 shelters on the island Tuesday, Pierluisi said. Emergency crews battled against unrelenting rain to rescue approximately 1,000 people as of midday Monday, said Maj. Gen. José Reyes, adjutant general of the Puerto Rico National Guard. School buildings will be inspected to make sure they are safe for students to return to class in the coming days, the governor said Tuesday. In addition to the hundreds of Puerto Rican National Guard members aiding in rescue and recovery efforts, the White House said Monday that President Joe Biden told Pierluisi during a phone call that federal support will increase in the coming days. “As damage assessments are conducted, the President said that number of support personnel will increase substantially,” the White House said. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul also announced the state would send 100 state troopers to assist relief efforts in Puerto Rico. She also said teams from New York Power Authority are available to help with power restoration. More than 1 million customers left without water service in Dominican Republic In the Dominican Republic, where up to 20 inches of rain fell in places, emergency workers brought nearly 800 people to safety, the country’s emergency management director of operations, Juan Manuel Mendez, said Monday. At least 519 people were taking refuge in the country’s 29 shelters Monday, he said. As of Monday afternoon, at least 1,018,564 customers across the Dominican Republic had no access to running water as 59 aqueducts were out of service and several others were only partially functioning, according to Jose Luis German Mejia, a national emergency management official. Some in the Dominican Republic were also without electricity Monday as 10 electric circuits went offline, emergency management officials said. It’s unclear how many people are impacted by the outages. CNN’s Leyla Santiago in Puerto Rico and CNN’s Nikki Carvajal, Robert Shackelford, Melissa Alonso, Artemis Moshtaghian, Taylor Ward, Holly Yan and Jamiel Lynch contributed to this report Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Hurricane Fiona Slams Turks And Caicos After Devastating Puerto Rico And Leaving At Least 5 Dead Across The Caribbean
Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival Announces Lineup For 31st Edition
Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival Announces Lineup For 31st Edition
Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival Announces Lineup For 31st Edition https://digitalalaskanews.com/hot-springs-documentary-film-festival-announces-lineup-for-31st-edition/ The critically acclaimed Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival announced THE LINEUP of films and honorees for its 31st edition, which returns to the Arlington Hotel & Spa as part of this year’s screenings and presentations, taking place October 7-15. Screenings will kick off with the Opening Night presentation of Mark Fletcher’s Patrick and the Whale, followed by the Centerpiece Selections of Ben Klein and Violet Columbus’ The Exiles and Shaunak Sen’s ALL THAT Breathes, with Kathlyn Horan’s The Return of Tanya Tucker – Featuring Brandi Carlile screening on Closing Night. World premieres include Carlos Montalva and Alex Meza’s Pasta Bueno, Nick Collier’s Scout Master, and Alexander Jeffery and Paul Petersen’s You Have No Idea. As previously announced Christine Choy (Who Killed Vincent Chin?) will receive the film festival’s Impact Award, and Brent Renaud will posthumously be honored with the Career Achievement Award. “This year’s edition of the film festival will kick off our fourth decade celebrating the impact that documentary filmmaking has on us as we view our world through the lenses of these incredible filmmakers’ work,” said HSDFF Festival Director, Sheryl Santacruz. “Each year fills us with a renewal of enthusiasm and appreciation for the stories we get to experience in each screening, complimented by the participation of the artists and subjects themselves. The conversations, events, activities, parties, and more are going to make for a fantastic film festival and cultural event next month. THE GALA FILM SELECTIONS THE EXILES ALL THAT BREATHES The Exiles, ALL THAT Breathes Mark Fletcher’s Patrick and THE WHALE will make its U.S. Premiere when it screens Opening Night on Friday, October 7. The film gives audiences a rare view – with amazing cinematography of the whale’s world under the sea. As the U.S. Centerpiece, Ben Klein and Violet Columbus’ The Exiles, reconnects noted documentarian Christine Choy with an unfinished project of hers from the late 80s via a group of Chinese dissidents who sought asylum in the states following the Tiananmen Square massacre at that time. Could reviving and releasing that film force Choy into an exile of her own? The International Centerpiece Selection of Shaunak Sen’s ALL THAT Breathes explores the connection between man and nature via two brothers raised with a tradition of the community feeding birds of prey known as kites. Now threatened by pollution, the brothers have made it their mission to care for and rehabilitate the birds. Kathlyn Horan’sThe Return of Tanya Tucker – Featuring Brandi Carlile will close out the film festival on Saturday, October 15 with the exhilarating story of COUNTRY MUSIC legend Tanya Tucker’s return to THE BIG STAGE spurred and encouraged by rising star Brandi Carlile. WORLD PREMIERES Three films will make their world premieres at HSDFF. Those films include Carlos Montalva and Alex Meza’s Pasto Bueno, about a group of Peruvian and American miners who bond in a tragic search for one of the country’s most prized gemstones, rhodochrosite. Neil Collier’s Scout Master investigates the 1987 investigation of murders that shook a small town in Arkansas and led to the arrest of a former Boy Scout unraveling SECRETS AND LIES at the heart of one of the largest sex abuse scandals in American history. Alexander Jeffery and Paul Petersen’s You Have No Idea looks at a mother whose son was diagnosed with Autism in the early 90s when treatment options were limited. Rejecting doctors’ advice to limit his personal interaction, she instead worked to provide her son with a life filled with purpose and friendship. HSDFF HONOREES Christine Choy Brent Renaud 2 Christine Choy, Brent Renaud A pioneer Asian American filmmaker, HSDFF Impact Award honoree Christine Choy has made more than 85 films and received over sixty international awards, including her Oscar nominated film, Who Killed Vincent Chin? (1987).She has been a recipient of numerous fellowships, among them: John Simon Guggenheim, Rockefeller, Asian Cultural Council, Fulbright Senior Research, and an award for best cinematography from the Sundance International Film Festival. Choy’s latest collaborative documentary film, The Exiles, won the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance in 2022. Before being killed in Ukraine in March of 2022, HSDFF Career Achievement Award honoree Brent Renaud had spent over two decades traveling the world making character driven verité documentaries. Along with his brother Craig, Renaud won almost every major award in television journalism. He won a Peabody for the Vice series Last Chance High, a Columbia Dupont Award for a New York Times story that followed the lives of children injured by the earthquake in Haiti, and another Columbia DuPont Award the following year for a documentary about the drug war in Mexico. The Renaud Brothers’ ten-part series Off to War was the first time a group of soldiers had been filmed for an entire deployment at war and won an Overseas Press Club Award, and an International Documentary Association Award. Brent Renaud also co-founded the Little Rock Film Festival, was a visiting distinguished professor of journalism ethics at the University of Arkansas, and a Harvard Nieman Fellow. An award presentation will be made with special guests and going forward the award will be known as the “Brent Renaud Career Achievement Award.” ADDITIONAL HIGHLIGHTS BOYCOTT FINDING HER BEAT Boycott, Finding Her Beat Among the additional highlights within a schedule packed with them, are Julia Bacha’s Boycott, which profiles individuals and organizations caught in the crosshairs of new laws restricting political boycotts of Israel on its human rights record including Alan Leveritt of the Arkansas Times, Bahia Amawi in Texas, and Mik Jordahl in Arizona. Quinn Grovey and Tracy Anderson’s Growing Up Grovey looks at the life journey of the only Arkansas quarterback to ever guide the Razorbacks to back-to-back conference championships who faced his toughest opponent off the field as the full-time caregiver for his mother, Bobby Jean, who was diagnosed with dementia and the onset of Alzheimer’s. Dawn Mikkelson and Keri Pickett’s Finding Her Beat focuses on a dynamic group of women who smash gender roles in the world of Taiko drumming. AND STILL I SING IT RUNS IN THE FAMILY MARIUPOLIS 2 And Still I Sing, It Runs in the Family, Mariupolis 2 On the international front, Fazila Amiri’s And Still I Sing will make its U.S. Premiere at HSDFF. The film focuses on Sadiqa Madadgar and Zahra Elham as they compete to make history as the first female winner of the popular reality TV show Afghan Star and face increasing public scrutiny and danger as the season hurtles toward its final episodes. Victoria Linares’ It Runs in THE FAMILY shines a light on Oscar Torres, the filmmaker’s unknown and once world-famous queer filmmaker cousin, sending us on a journey through reconstructions of his intimate memories living in the 1950’s authoritarian Caribbean. Mantas Kvedaravicius’ Mariupolis 2 is a ragged, on-the-ground look at the present-day war in Ukraine, as seen by those who are living it. It is the final film by the late Mantas Kvedaravičius, who was captured and killed by Russian Forces while making it. Passes are on sale now. For more information on purchasing and additional details on the Hot Springs Documentary Film festival, please visit: hsdfi.org. The 2022 Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival official selections: OPENING NIGHT Patrick and The Whale Director: Mark Fletcher Country: USA; Running Time: 72 min Marine videographer Patrick Dykstra explores the wondrous world of whales in this breathtaking and revealing documentary. CLOSING NIGHT The Return of Tanya Tucker – Featuring Brandi Carlile Director: Kathlyn Horan Country: USA; Running Time: 108 min Trailblazing, hell-raising COUNTRY MUSIC legend Tanya Tucker defied the standards of how a woman in COUNTRY MUSIC was supposed to behave. Decades after Tanya slipped from the spotlight, rising Americana music star Brandi Carlile takes it upon herself to write an entire album for her hero based on Tanya’s extraordinary life, spurring the greatest comeback in COUNTRY MUSIC history. Taking stock of the past while remaining vitally alive in the present and keeping an eye on the future, The Return of Tanya Tucker is a rousing exploration of an unexpected friendship built on the joy of a perfectly timed creative collaboration. U.S. CENTERPIECE The Exiles Directors: Ben Klein, Violet Columbus Country: USA; Running Time: 95 min Meet Christine Choy, a New York City iconoclast and unforgettable filmmaker. Born in China, Christine relocated to America at the age of fourteen, and later became a documentarian. Working as both a director and cinematographer, she developed a distinct style crafting socially conscious films, including the Oscar-nominated, Who Killed Vincent Chin. When Christine finds a box of old film reels in storage, she rediscovers an unfinished project she began in 1989: a documentary about a group of Chinese dissidents who sought asylum in the United States following the Tiananmen Square massacre. Christine decides to revive this project, traveling to Taiwan, Maryland, and Paris in order to reconnect with three prominent leaders of the Chinese democracy movement. Her new interviews with the exiles bleed into her original archival footage, as we cut back and forth between 1989 and the present day. The exiles reflect on the decisions that changed the course of their lives forever, while Christine begins to wonder if releasing this film will force her into an exile of her own. INTERNATIONAL CENTERPIECE All That Breathes Director: Shaunak Sen Country: India; Running Time: 97 min Brothers Saud and Nadeem were raised looking a...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival Announces Lineup For 31st Edition
Ford Stock Suffers Worst Day Since 2011 After Cost Warning Shedding $7 Billion In Market Value
Ford Stock Suffers Worst Day Since 2011 After Cost Warning Shedding $7 Billion In Market Value
Ford Stock Suffers Worst Day Since 2011 After Cost Warning, Shedding $7 Billion In Market Value https://digitalalaskanews.com/ford-stock-suffers-worst-day-since-2011-after-cost-warning-shedding-7-billion-in-market-value/ Ford F-150 Lightning at the 2022 New York Auto Show. Scott Mlyn | CNBC DETROIT – Ford Motor’s stock suffered its worst day in more than 11 years, after the automaker pre-released part of its third-quarter earnings report and warned investors of $1 billion in unexpected supplier costs. Shares of Ford closed Tuesday at $13.09 apiece, down by 12.3%. The Detroit automaker lost roughly $7 billion off its market value. related investing news It was also the stock’s worst day on a percentage basis since Jan. 28, 2011, when the automaker’s fourth-quarter earnings disappointed investors and the stock shed 13.4% to close at $16.27 a share, according to data compiled by FactSet. Ford, after the markets closed Monday, said supply problems have resulted in parts shortages affecting roughly 40,000 to 45,000 vehicles, primarily high-margin trucks and SUVs that haven’t been able to reach dealers. Despite the problems and extra cost, Ford affirmed its guidance for the year but set expectations for third-quarter adjusted earnings before interest and taxes to be in the range of $1.4 billion to $1.7 billion. That would be significantly below the forecasts of some analysts, who were projecting quarterly profit closer to $3 billion. Ford cited recent negotiations resulting in inflation-related supplier costs that will run about $1 billion higher than originally expected. While no major Wall Street analysts downgraded the stock in light of the update, several were caught off guard by Ford’s announcement. Expectations were that supply chain problems were easing. What’s more, Ford had recently been avoiding such problems better than some of its competitors. Goldman Sachs analyst Mark Delaney said his firm was “surprised by the 3Q pre-announcement given the progress that Ford had previously made on supply chain bottlenecks.” BofA Securities analyst John Murphy echoed those feelings in a note to investors Tuesday: “Ultimately, this news is somewhat surprising as broader macro news suggest supply chains have gotten incrementally better over the last few months.” Several analysts questioned whether this was a Ford-specific problem, or a red flag for additional problems for the automotive industry. GM CEO Mary Barra on Tuesday told CNBC that the company’s supply chain problems have been easing. “We are seeing an improved situation,” Barra said. “We keep working, solving issues, looking for efficiencies as a normal course, and we’re going to continue to do that.” Barra said GM is on track to complete about 95,000 vehicles in its inventory by the end of this year that were manufactured without certain components due to supply chain problems. In July, GM warned investors that supply chain issues would materially affect its second-quarter earnings, while similarly maintaining its guidance for 2022. Ford said its unfinished vehicles are expected to be completed and sent to dealers in the fourth quarter. In response to the Tuesday decline, Ford spokesman T.R. Reid said the company continues to deliver on its Ford+ restructuring plan. “Markets are efficient over time,” he said. “We’ve got a great plan at Ford+ to create value for customers, and investors and other stakeholders over time. It’s our obligation to execute against it and create that opportunity.” Ford’s stock is down more than 36% year to date but still up about 2% in the last 12 months. — CNBC’s Christopher Hayes and Michael Bloom contributed to this report. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Ford Stock Suffers Worst Day Since 2011 After Cost Warning Shedding $7 Billion In Market Value
Campaign Report Republicans Trump Problem
Campaign Report Republicans Trump Problem
Campaign Report — Republicans’ Trump Problem https://digitalalaskanews.com/campaign-report-republicans-trump-problem/ Welcome to The Hill’s Campaign Report, tracking all things related to the 2022 midterm elections. You can expect this newsletter in your inbox each week leading up to November’s election.  Email us tips and feedback: Max Greenwood, Julia Manchester and Caroline Vakil. Someone forward this newsletter to you? Subscribe here. Trump complicates GOP hopes for November As Republicans gear up for the last seven weeks of the midterm cycle, there are emerging signs that former President Trump could be complicating their prospects in key congressional races. Recent polling has shown that he’s struggling with voters, including the key demographic of independents.  As our Brett Samuels writes, more than two-thirds of independents surveyed in a NPR-Marist poll out on Sept. 7 said they did not want Trump to seek reelection. And when it comes to the issue of how he handled classified White House documents after leaving office, 52 percent of independent voters alone believe he should be prosecuted. Meanwhile, an NBC News poll out earlier this week showed that only 34 percent say they have a positive view of the former president.  At the same time, Trump is in the midst of several investigations, including the FBI’s search into classified documents found at Mar-a-Lago.  The FBI probe: The Justice Department has sought to gain access to the documents taken out of Mar-a-Lago, arguing that it could jeopardize national security if their investigation is delayed. The Hill’s Rebecca Beitsch reported today that the former president’s lawyers are seeking to stop a special master review from being bypassed by federal prosecutors as they seek to recover those documents.  The Georgia DA probe: The former president is also mired by a probe in Georgia by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis over whether he and his allies attempted to overturn the election results in the state. Part of the investigation encompasses a call that Trump held with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensberger (R), in which he asked the Georgia official to “find” more than 11,000 votes to change the outcome of the election. Trump rages: In response to a recent interview the Georgia prosecutor gave suggesting that people could face prison time, Trump reiterated his position that his call with Raffensberger was “PERFECT” and that those on the call “had no problems with the call, and didn’t voice any objections or complaints about anything that I said on the call which could be construed as inappropriate.” But taken together, the polling and multiple probes threaten to make Trump more a drag than an assist for Republicans in competitive midterm races.  “These candidates have to fight kind of two-fold battles,” GOP strategist John Thomas told Brett. “Can you move your base turnout margin ever so slightly? I think Trump has utility there. And can you win with independent swing voters on issues that aren’t Trump-related?” Meanwhile, the former president sees himself as an asset to candidates. What Trump’s saying: “ALL Republican candidates want Rallies. Without the Rallies and, even more importantly, the Endorsements, most would lose. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!!!”  Walker tamps down expectations for debate Georgia Senate candidate Herschel Walker (R) and Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.) are gearing up to debate each other next month. Candidates throughout this election cycle, including Walker and Warnock, have haggled over whether to participate in debates, and if so, where and when. But the Georgia Senate debate scheduled for Oct. 14 was also in the news this week following comments Walker made to reporters when he was asked what he was doing to prepare for the face-off with Warnock. A record-scratch moment: “Talking to the voters, talking to you. You told me I gotta prepare, so I’m preparin’,” he said to the reporters. “I’m this country boy, you know, I’m not that smart. And he’s that preacher. He’s a smart man, wears these nice suits. So he going to show up there, embarrass me at the debate, October the 14th. And I’m just waiting, you know, I’ll show up and I’m [going to] do my best.” A spokesperson for Walker’s campaign, Will Kiley, argued that the former football star’s comments, which initially suggested he was downplaying the debate, were sarcasm and noted that “Herschel is going to be ready on October 14 in Savannah to debate Raphael Warnock, who has to stand there and explain his horrendous voting record to the people.”  Polls show tightening race: The midterms are roughly seven weeks away and the Georgia Senate race is considered one of the most critical for determining which party controls the upper chamber next year. An Atlanta Journal-Constitution poll, which was conducted by the University of Georgia’s School of Policy and International Affairs and released on Tuesday, showed Walker leading Warnock by 2 percentage points at 46 percent and 44 percent respectively. It falls within the poll’s margin of error, effectively tying the two.  POLL WATCH In Georgia: A poll out from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, conducted by the University of Georgia’s School of Policy and International Affairs. on Tuesday shows Gov. Brian Kemp (R) holding an 8-percentage point lead over Democratic contender Stacey Abrams (D) with 50 percent of likely voters in the state supporting the incumbent compared to 42 percent for Abrams.  In Wisconsin: A Spectrum News-Siena College poll out on Tuesday shows Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes (D) receiving support from 49 percent of likely Wisconsin voters compared to Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) with 48 percent. The polling falls within the margin of error, effectively tying the two.  POLL WATCH SCOOP: The Hill has obtained a new ad from Washington Sen. Patty Murray’s reelection campaign which targets Murray’s challenger Tiffany Smiley over abortion. The 30-second television spot features a woman who said she had to travel fourteen hours to receive an abortion after Texas enacted its abortion ban earlier this year.  “I’m from Texas,” a young woman, Madi, says in the ad. “Because abortion is illegal in my state, I had to travel fourteen hours for reproductive health care. I have never been more terrified in my life. MAGA Republican Tiffany Smiley agrees with Texas law. Republicans are already trying to ban abortion nationwide — even here in Washington. They need Tiffany Smiley in the Senate to do it. Oppose Tiffany Smiley so Washington women don’t suffer like I have.” The ad is the latest instance in which Democrats have worked to put Republican Senate candidates on defense over the issue. Smiley has said she is against abortion, but not in favor of a federal ban on the procedure.  Murray’s ad comes hours after Smiley rolled out her own ad tying Murray to rising crime rates in Seattle. Like Democrats have zeroed in on abortion as a key issue, Republicans have looked to elevate combatting crime as a major issue on the campaign trail.  Could these women make history? A number of women could make history in November if they win their races, including possibly the first Black woman to serve as governor in the country, the first woman to serve Arkansas as governor, the first woman to represent Vermont in Congress and some of the first Latinas to represent their states on Capitol Hill. As our Caroline Vakil notes, these firsts represent the inroads women are making in their states to seek higher-level offices while also indicating some of the barriers that still exist for female candidates in achieving those aspirations. Some of the women to watch for: Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams (D): She ran against Gov. Brian Kemp (R ) in 2018 and lost by a percentage point, and now she’s taking him on in a rematch this November. She’s among a handful of Black women running for the governorship this cycle, but her race is considered the most competitive. But if she won, she’d be the first Black woman in the U.S. to serve as governor in their state. New Hampshire House candidate Karoline Leavitt (R): She could be possibly the first Gen Z female candidate to win election. She turned 25 years old last month, the minimum age required to serve in the House. She takes on Rep. Chris Pappas (D-N.H.) in November, which has been rated a “toss up” by the nonpartisan Cook Political Report. Vermont House candidate Becca Balint (D): Balint is likely to become the first female representative from the state of Vermont after she notched the Democratic nod in her primary in August. She would also be the first openly gay lawmaker from Vermont if she wins in November. She currently serves as state Senate pro tempore. Arkansas gubernatorial candidate Sarah Huckabee Sanders (R): The former White House press secretary is poised to become the first female governor from Arkansas, serving in the seat that her father, former Gov. Mike Huckabee (R), once held. Cook Political Report rates the seat “solid Republican,” making her the heavy favorite in November. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Campaign Report Republicans Trump Problem
Special Master Expresses Skepticism With Trump Teams Assertions
Special Master Expresses Skepticism With Trump Teams Assertions
Special Master Expresses Skepticism With Trump Team’s Assertions https://digitalalaskanews.com/special-master-expresses-skepticism-with-trump-teams-assertions/ Former President Donald Trump’s attorneys James Trusty and Evan Corcoran arrive at Brooklyn Federal Court on Tuesday, Sept. 20, 2022, in New York. | Brittainy Newman/AP Photo NEW YORK — The senior federal judge tasked with reviewing the materials seized by the FBI from Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate sharply questioned the former president’s attorneys Tuesday during their first hearing before his courtroom. Judge Raymond Dearie pushed Trump’s lawyers repeatedly for refusing to back up the former president’s claim that he declassified the highly sensitive national security-related records discovered in his residence. “You can’t have your cake and eat it too,” said Dearie, the “special master” picked by U.S. District Court Judge Aileen Cannon to vet Trump’s effort to reclaim the materials taken by federal investigators. Trump has argued that the 11,000 documents taken from Mar-a-Lago were rightfully in his possession, including about 100 bearing classification markings that suggest they contain some of the nation’s most closely guarded intelligence. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Special Master Expresses Skepticism With Trump Teams Assertions
AP News Summary At 3:16 P.m. EDT
AP News Summary At 3:16 P.m. EDT
AP News Summary At 3:16 P.m. EDT https://digitalalaskanews.com/ap-news-summary-at-316-p-m-edt/ UN chief: World is ‘paralyzed’ and equity is slipping away UNITED NATIONS (AP) — In an alarming assessment, the head of the United Nations is telling world leaders that nations are “gridlocked in colossal global dysfunction” and aren’t ready or willing to tackle major challenges. Speaking at the opening of the General Assembly’s annual high-level meeting, Antonio Guterres pointed to the war in Ukraine and multiplying conflicts around the world, the climate emergency and “suicidal war against nature,” the dire financial situation of developing countries, and many reversals in U.N. goals for 2030 including to end extreme poverty and provide quality education for all children. 4 Ukrainian regions schedule votes this week to join Russia KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — The separatist leaders of four Russian-controlled areas of Ukraine say they are planning to hold referendums this week for the territories to become part of Russia as Moscow loses ground in the war it launched. The votes will be held in the Luhansk, Kherson and partly Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia and Donetsk regions. The announcement of the balloting starting Friday came after a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin said Tuesday that they were needed. Former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev also said that folding Luhansk and Donetsk in eastern Ukraine into Russia itself would make their redrawn frontiers “irreversible” and enable Moscow to use “any means” to defend them. Feds: 47 exploited pandemic to steal $250M from food program MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Federal authorities have charged 47 people in what they’re calling the largest fraud scheme yet to take advantage of the COVID-19 pandemic by stealing and defrauding the government of $250 million. Documents made public Tuesday charge the defendants with counts including conspiracy, wire fraud, money laundering and bribery. Prosecutors say the defendants created companies that claimed to be offering food to thousands of low-income children across Minnesota, then sought reimbursement through a federal program. But prosecutors say few meals were actually served, and the defendants used the money to buy luxury cars, property and jewelry. This year, the U.S. Justice Department has made prosecuting pandemic-related fraud a priority and has stepped up enforcement actions. Trump legal team balks at judge’s declassification questions WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald Trump’s legal team has told a special arbiter it doesn’t want to answer questions about the declassification status of documents seized from the Trump’s Florida home. It says that issue could be part of Trump’s defense if he’s indicted. Lawyers for Trump and for the Justice Department are to appear in federal court in Brooklyn on Tuesday before the arbiter to review the roughly 11,000 documents — including about 100 marked as classified — taken during the FBI’s Aug. 8 search of Mar-a-Lago. Trump’s lawyers also asked a federal appeals court to leave in place an order that temporarily barred the Justice Department from using the classified documents in its criminal investigation. ‘Serial’ host: Evidence that freed Syed was long available The creator of a true-crime podcast that helped free a Maryland man imprisoned for murder said that she feels a mix of emotions over how long it took authorities to act on evidence that’s long been available. Podcast host Sarah Koenig released a new episode of “Serial” on Tuesday, a day after a judge vacated Adnan Syed’s conviction and allowed him to walk out of court after more than two decades. Koenig noted that all of the evidence cited in prosecutors’ motion to overturn the conviction was available since 1999. She argued that the case against Syed involved “just about every chronic problem” in the system. Fiona wallops Turks and Caicos, Puerto Rico still stunned CAYEY, Puerto Rico (AP) — Hurricane Fiona is blasting the Turks and Caicos Islands as a Category 3 storm after devastating Puerto Rico, where most people remain without electricity or running water. The U.S. National Hurricane Center says the storm’s eye passed close to Grand Turk, the British territory’s capital island. The government imposed a curfew and urged people to flee flood-prone areas. The storm could raise seas by 5 to 8 feet above normal. Fiona had maximum sustained winds of 115 mph and was moving north-northwest at 9 mph early Tuesday. The Hurricane Center says the storm is likely to strengthen into a Category 4 hurricane as it approaches Bermuda on Friday. US stocks fall broadly ahead of key Fed decision on rates Stocks are falling broadly on Wall Street and Treasury yields are mostly rising ahead of a key decision on interest rates by the Federal Reserve. The S&P 500 fell 1.4% Tuesday. The Nasdaq and the Dow Jones Industrial Average also fell. Traders are waiting to see how far the Fed will raise interest rates at its meeting that ends Wednesday. The Fed has been raising the cost of borrowing money in hopes of slowing down the hottest inflation in four decades. Traders worry the Fed may overshoot its goal and slow down the economy so much it causes a recession. Ad spending shows Dems hinging midterm hopes on abortion WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrats are pumping an unprecedented amount of money into advertising related to abortion rights. The spending underscores how central the message is to the party in the final weeks before midterm elections. The most intense period of campaigning is only just beginning, and Democrats have already invested more than an estimated $124 million this year in television advertising referencing abortion. That’s twice as much money as the Democrats’ next top issue and almost 20 times more than Democrats spent on abortion-related ads in the 2018 midterms. The spending figures are based on an Associated Press analysis of data provided by the nonpartisan research firm AdImpact. Mexico’s earthquake coincidence drives anxiety for many MEXICO CITY (AP) — The parents of children killed when a school collapsed during Mexico’s 2017 earthquake were celebrating a Mass in their memory, And then the ground began to shake again, as people cried out: “No, not again! My God, not again!” In the end, the magnitude 7.6 quake caused relatively little damage in the capital on Monday, though it killed two in the Pacific coast state of Colima. Three powerful earthquakes have struck Mexico on Sept. 19 — in 1985, 2017 and 2022. That unlucky coincidence has made many feel the date is somehow cursed, though scientists say it’s purely coincidence. Beyond Meat executive charged with biting a man in fight A top executive at plant-based food company Beyond Meat has been charged with felony battery after a fight outside a college football game in which he was accused of biting a man’s nose. Doug Ramsey was also charged with making a terroristic threat after the attack Saturday in a parking garage outside a University of Arkansas football game. According to a police report, Ramsey was angered when another driver inched in front of him in a traffic lane and made contact with the front passenger wheel on Ramsey’s SUV. Beyond Meat hasn’t responded to requests for comment. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
AP News Summary At 3:16 P.m. EDT
Trump Legal Team Files Letter Requesting Delay And Modification Of Special Master Process
Trump Legal Team Files Letter Requesting Delay And Modification Of Special Master Process
Trump Legal Team Files Letter Requesting Delay And Modification Of Special Master Process https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-legal-team-files-letter-requesting-delay-and-modification-of-special-master-process/ Former President Donald Trump’s legal team Tuesday filed a letter with the US District Court for the Eastern District of New York asking to delay a conference scheduled for Tuesday with the special master overseeing documents seized from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago, Florida, residence. The conference with special master Raymond Dearie, a US District Court judge for the Eastern District of New York, was set to occur Tuesday in Brooklyn federal court. A schedule detailed in Trump’s legal team’s filing details the various steps involved in the special master’s process such as government production of documents and Trump’s claims of privilege. The process must be completed by November 30, according to an order from the Florida federal court overseeing the matter. Trump’s legal team disputed the special master process because it requires Trump to present a defense as to why he had possession of the documents. According to Trump’s legal team, the defense was not originally required under the Florida federal court’s order. Trump’s legal team also disputes the proposed special master schedule, which would have the process completed by October 7. They ask that the court extend the deadlines to allow “for a more realistic and complete assessment of the areas of disagreement.” The FBI first raided Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence on August 8. The judge overseeing the case granted Trump’s request for a special master on September 5. The judge then appointed Dearie on September 15. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump Legal Team Files Letter Requesting Delay And Modification Of Special Master Process
Mail Ballot Fight Persists In Key States Sure To Slow Count
Mail Ballot Fight Persists In Key States Sure To Slow Count
Mail Ballot Fight Persists In Key States, Sure To Slow Count https://digitalalaskanews.com/mail-ballot-fight-persists-in-key-states-sure-to-slow-count/ HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Former President Donald Trump and his allies seized on the drawn-out processing and counting in Pennsylvania during the 2020 election to fuel his false claims that fraud cost him victory in the battleground state. Election officials worry that a replay could be on the horizon for November’s midterm elections, with high-stakes races on the state’s ballot for governor and U.S. Senate. And it’s not just Pennsylvania. Michigan and Wisconsin are other crucial swing states that allow no-excuse mail-in ballots but give local election offices no time before Election Day to process them. Election workers’ inability to do that work ahead of time means many of the mailed ballots may not get counted on Election Day, delaying results in tight races and leaving a gaping hole for misinformation and lies to flood the public space. “That time between the polls closing on election night and the last vote being counted is really being exploited by people who want to undermine confidence in the process,” said Al Schmidt, a Philadelphia election commissioner during the 2020 presidential election who is now president and CEO of the good-government group Committee of Seventy. The first step in processing mailed ballots, or pre-canvassing, is a routine but crucial administrative task that allows election workers to verify voters’ signatures and addresses, or spot problems that could be fixed by voters. Once ballots are deemed valid, they are removed from their envelopes — another time-consuming task — so they are ready to be counted on Election Day. Not in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, vote-count outliers. Thirty-eight 38 other states — including Republican-controlled ones such as Florida, Georgia and Texas — allow mailed ballots to be processed before Election Day, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, even brags about producing results on election night — a pointed criticism he made during a recent stop in Pennsylvania. For the three critical battleground states, such objections fall flat. Efforts since 2020 to give local election workers more time before Election Day to process mailed ballots have died in Republican-controlled legislatures. Instead, Republicans in those states have sought to tighten restrictions on voting by mail — provisions vetoed by Democratic governors. “Counting the ballots should be driven by security, not speed,” Wisconsin state Rep. Janel Brandtjen, a Republican, said earlier this year as lawmakers were considering legislation on the issue. “Why would we want to give bad actors the chance to see ballots prior to Election Day?” Republicans helped kill a bipartisan bill that would have allowed more time for processing mailed ballots in Wisconsin amid claims that it would give partisans more time to cheat or leak vote counts early — another unfounded conspiracy theory promoted as a way to explain Trump’s loss. Like Pennsylvania, election workers in Michigan and Wisconsin must wait until Election Day to start the pre-canvassing of mailed ballots. For now, in Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, requests for absentee ballots are running below 2020’s rate, relieving some of the burden on local election offices. Still, Claire Woodall-Vogg, executive director of the Milwaukee Election Commission, said it’s “a total guess” when counting will finish in Wisconsin’s most populous county. She hopes it will wrap up by 11 p.m. on election night. A late rush of dropped-off ballots — as happened in 2020 — isn’t expected this year, she said, because courts banned the use of drop boxes. In Michigan in 2020, lawmakers agreed to give clerks in more populous cities and towns 10 hours on the day before Election Day to process mailed ballots. Clerks unsuccessfully sought a similar provision for this year. The Republicans who control the Pennsylvania Legislature have refused to allow early processing of mailed ballots unless it comes packaged with provisions Democrats don’t want, such as banning drop boxes and expanding voter identification requirements. County election officials say they are grateful the state approved $45 million in election administration grants to help them buy ballot processing equipment and pay for workers to help. But they still face the work of processing well over 1 million mailed ballots just as they are running the November election. A number of them do not expect to finish processing mailed ballots until at least the day after the election — even after working through the night. The Pennsylvania House Republicans’ lead lawmaker on election legislation said allowing counties to process ballots before Election Day must be combined with “election integrity” measures. “Once a ballot is opened, you remove the outside envelope from the ballot, you remove any ability to question anything in that election system,” said Republican state Rep. Seth Grove. “So you have to guard the front end of it a lot better.” Those who advocate for earlier processing say observers can watch the pre-canvassing of mailed ballots, increasing transparency, and note that it is allowed by many other states. “If people want to observe the process,” said Lee Soltysiak, the chief operating officer of Montgomery County in Pennsylvania, “they’re more likely to do it at 3 p.m. and not 3 a.m.” All three states flipped to support Democrat Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election and are still being buffeted by conspiracy theories about Trump’s loss. Among those is that election workers falsified ballots in the middle of the night in Philadelphia, Detroit, Milwaukee and other Democratic-leaning cities across battleground states lost by Trump, despite no such evidence emerging for nearly two years since the election. Death threats to election officials followed the arguing, as did a flurry of litigation designed to keep Trump in office. In the middle of the counting, two men inspired by Trump’s election lies and armed with guns drove from Virginia to where ballots were being tallied in Philadelphia. Trump continues to peddle the conspiracy theories, repeating this month during a rally in Wilkes-Barre that Pennsylvania’s vote in 2020 was “a rigged election.” Fearing a repeat of the false claims from two years ago, Democrats in the Pennsylvania Legislature continued to push Republicans to bring up a pre-canvassing bill — without any poison pills — for a vote. “That bill will not run,” said Democratic state Rep. Scott Conklin. “Why won’t it run? Because if it runs, it takes away the conspiracy theories. It takes away the fact that what they’re saying is nonsense and not true.” ___ Follow Marc Levy on Twitter: twitter.com/timelywriter. ___ Follow AP for full coverage of the midterms at https://apnews.com/hub/2022-midterm-elections and on Twitter, https://twitter.com/ap_politics. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Mail Ballot Fight Persists In Key States Sure To Slow Count
Trump SPAC Digital World Stock Sinks 10% Amid Deal Financing Deadline (NASDAQ:DWAC)
Trump SPAC Digital World Stock Sinks 10% Amid Deal Financing Deadline (NASDAQ:DWAC)
Trump SPAC Digital World Stock Sinks 10% Amid Deal Financing Deadline (NASDAQ:DWAC) https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-spac-digital-world-stock-sinks-10-amid-deal-financing-deadline-nasdaqdwac/ Brandon Bell Trump SPAC Digital World Acquisition (NASDAQ:DWAC) dropped as a deadline for financing for its plans to take Trump’s social media company and app Truth Social public was set to expire on Tuesday. Investors in the SPAC’s $1 billion PIPE financing are in talks with DWAC CEO Patrick Orlando to try to get better terms that would move the risk to Trump and his backers and away from the investors, according to a Financial Times report. Under a plan being discussed, investors may be allowed to convert preferred stock if the share price falls to as low as $2/share, according to the FT, which cited people familiar. The lower conversion price, down from $56/share, would dilute other shareholders, including Trump. The report comes as DWAC has struggled to get the necessary 65% of shareholders needed to approve the combination with Trump’s media company and has adjourned a shareholder vote until Oct. 10 as it attempts to gain more votes. Only about 40% of holders have voted in favor of the transaction, according to the FT report from Saturday. DWAC has an additional lifeline to survive after SPAC’s sponsor deposited $2.88 million to extend the time company needs to complete its deal by three months until Dec. 8. This is the first of two three-month extensions under the company’s governing documents. DWAC has warned previously that if the deal isn’t extended, the SPAC may be forced to liquidate. The FT reported on Saturday that DWAC failed to pay the proxy firm that has been soliciting votes for its deal to take Trump Media & Technology Group public. Dear Readers: We recognize that politics often intersects with the financial news of the day, so we invite you to click here to join the separate political discussion. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump SPAC Digital World Stock Sinks 10% Amid Deal Financing Deadline (NASDAQ:DWAC)
Eight Injured In Explosion At West Side Apartment Building Officials Say
Eight Injured In Explosion At West Side Apartment Building Officials Say
Eight Injured In Explosion At West Side Apartment Building, Officials Say https://digitalalaskanews.com/eight-injured-in-explosion-at-west-side-apartment-building-officials-say/ At least eight people were injured when a four-story building partially collapsed due to an explosion on the city’s West Side Tuesday morning, according to authorities. The collapse reportedly occurred around 9 a.m. near North Central Avenue and West Washington Boulevard. The building next door was evacuated, according to the Chicago Fire Department. Level 1 Hazmat was sent to the scene, as was the ATF and the CPD bomb unit. At least 10 ambulances were dispatched to the scene, with six transports so far. The number of total injuries was not immediately clear, but according to fire officials, eight people were taken to area hospitals: Two men were taken to Loyola University medical center, one in serious to critical condition one in fair condition; A man and a woman were teach taken to Mt. Sinai Hospital in fair condition; A woman was taken to West Suburban medical center in fair condition; Afternoon Briefing Daily Chicago Tribune editors’ top story picks, delivered to your inbox each afternoon. One man was taken to Mt Sinai Hospital in serious to critical condition Two men were taken to Stroger in serious-to critical-condition. A Chicago firefighter checks a crushed car at the scene where a four-story building partially collapsed due to an explosion on Chicago’s West Side on Sept. 20, 2022. (E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune) Urban Alternatives, a property management company that manages the 35-unit building at 5601 W. West End Ave. released a statement Tuesday morning confirming the explosion. “This is a devastating event and we are heartbroken for all of our residents,” according to a statement attributed to Roman Viere, the building’s owner. “Our first concern is the health, well-being and safety of our residents. We are doing everything we can to cooperate with emergency services, and we are ready to do whatever we can to support our residents.” Check back for updates. adperez@chicagotribune.com Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Eight Injured In Explosion At West Side Apartment Building Officials Say
Ukraine Brushes Off Russian Plan To Annex Occupied Regions
Ukraine Brushes Off Russian Plan To Annex Occupied Regions
Ukraine Brushes Off Russian Plan To Annex Occupied Regions https://digitalalaskanews.com/ukraine-brushes-off-russian-plan-to-annex-occupied-regions/ Four Russia-occupied regions announce referendum plans Votes will be held on whether to become part of Russia Votes will be held from Sept. 23-27 Outcome of votes would be irreversible – Medvedev Ukraine and the West regard votes as sham and illegal KYIV, Sept 20 (Reuters) – Russian-installed leaders in occupied areas of four Ukrainian regions set out plans for referendums on joining Russia, a move Ukraine dismissed on Monday as a stunt by Moscow to try to reclaim the initiative after crushing losses on the battlefield. “The Russians can do whatever they want. It will not change anything,” Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said in response to reporters’ questions at the start of a meeting with U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield. In a tweet, he added: “Russia has been and remains an aggressor illegally occupying parts of Ukrainian land. Ukraine has every right to liberate its territories and will keep liberating them whatever Russia has to say.” Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said Washington and its allies would reject any such referendums, which he said would bring Russia no benefits on the battlefield. In the apparently coordinated move, Russian-backed officials announced planned referendums for Sept. 23-27 in the Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia provinces, representing around 15% of Ukrainian territory or an area about the size of Hungary. Russia already considers Luhansk and Donetsk, which together make up the Donbas region Moscow partially occupied in 2014, to be independent states. Ukraine and the West consider all parts of Ukraine held by Russian forces to be illegally occupied. In a post on social media addressed to Putin, the leader of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR), Denis Pushilin, wrote: “I ask you, as soon as possible, in the event of a positive decision in the referendum – which we have no doubt about – to consider the DPR becoming a part of Russia.” Some pro-Kremlin figures framed the referendums as an ultimatum to the West to accept Russian territorial gains or face an all out war with a nuclear-armed foe. “Encroachment onto Russian territory is a crime which allows you to use all the forces of self–defence,” Dmitry Medvedev, a former Russian president and now hawkish deputy chairman of Putin’s Security Council said on social media. Margarita Simonyan, editor-in-chief of the pro-Kremlin RT TV station, wrote: “Today a referendum, tomorrow recognition as part of the Russian Federation, the day after tomorrow strikes on Russian territory become a full-fledged war between Ukraine and NATO and Russia, untying Russia’s hands in every respect.” Reframing fighting in occupied territory as an attack on Russia could also give Moscow a justification to mobilise its 2 million-strong military reserves. Moscow has so far resisted such a move despite mounting losses in what it calls a limited “special military operation” rather than a war. Sullivan said Washington was aware of reports Putin might be considering ordering a mobilisation, which Sullivan said would do nothing to undermine Ukraine’s ability to push back Russian aggression. Vehicles drive past advertising boards, including panels displaying pro-Russian slogans, in a street in the course of Russia-Ukraine conflict in Luhansk, Ukraine September 20, 2022. REUTERS/Alexander Ermochenko Kuleba, the Ukrainian foreign minister, also referred to potential Russian mobilisation plans, tweeting: “Sham ‘referendums’ will not change anything. Neither will any hybrid ‘mobilisation’.” ‘LOUD AND CLEAR’ “As Russia moves ahead with fake referenda in occupied territories of Ukraine, let me say it loud and clear: We will never recognise this. Ukraine has every right to take back its territory,” Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas tweeted. Russia has declared capturing all of Luhansk and Donetsk provinces to be the main aim of its “special military operation” since its invasion forces were defeated in March on the outskirts of Kyiv. It now holds about 60% of Donetsk and had captured nearly all of Luhansk by July after slow advances during months of intense fighting. But those gains are now under threat after Russian forces were driven from neighbouring Kharkiv province this month, losing control of their main supply lines for much of the Donetsk and Luhansk front lines. The referendums were announced a day after Ukraine said its troops had recaptured a foothold in Luhansk, the village of Bilohorivka, and were preparing to advance across the province. Ukraine’s defence ministry taunted Moscow, which has claimed it abandoned the front in Kharkiv to “regroup” for fighting elsewhere. “Why did the chicken cross the road?” the Ukrainian ministry tweeted. “Because it was regrouping.” Russia controls most of Zaporizhzhia but not its regional capital. In Kherson, where the regional capital is the only major city Russia has so far captured intact since the invasion, Ukraine has launched a major counter-offensive. Unverified footage on social media showed Ukrainian forces in Bilohorivka, which lies just 10 km (6 miles) west of the city of Lysychansk, which fell to the Russians after weeks of some of the war’s most intense fighting in July. “There will be fighting for every centimetre,” the Ukrainian governor of Luhansk, Serhiy Gaidai, wrote on Telegram. “The enemy is preparing their defence. So we will not simply march in.” Pro-Russian officials have said the referendums could be held electronically. Russia staged a referendum in Crimea eight years ago before declaring it annexed. Western countries have dismissed such votes as illegal and fraudulent. In a move designed to shore up Russia’s military in Ukraine, Russia’s parliament on Tuesday also approved a bill to toughen punishments for a host of crimes such as desertion, damage to military property and insubordination, if they were committed during military mobilisation or combat situations. read more Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Reuters bureaus; Writing by Andrew Osborn and Alex Richardson; Editing by Angus MacSwan and Peter Graff Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Ukraine Brushes Off Russian Plan To Annex Occupied Regions
Omniverse Trailer | GeForce Beyond
Omniverse Trailer | GeForce Beyond
Omniverse – Trailer | GeForce Beyond https://digitalalaskanews.com/omniverse-trailer-geforce-beyond/ Omniverse – Trailer | GeForce Beyond  IGN Nvidia Omniverse ACE enables fast deployment of metaverse avatars  VentureBeat How GeForce Now is powering Nvidia’s metaverse  Digital Trends You didn’t ask for it but Nvidia’s gonna get you a metaverse-as-a-service cloud  The Register Nvidia launches Omniverse cloud services in 100 countries to power the metaverse  VentureBeat View Full Coverage on Google News Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Omniverse Trailer | GeForce Beyond
KCA Cup T20 2022 Squads Fixtures And All You Need To Know
KCA Cup T20 2022 Squads Fixtures And All You Need To Know
KCA Cup T20 2022 – Squads, Fixtures And All You Need To Know https://digitalalaskanews.com/kca-cup-t20-2022-squads-fixtures-and-all-you-need-to-know/ The second season of KCA Cup T20 is commencing on the 21st of September with KCA Lions and KCA Tigers locking horns against one another. The Final of the competition will be played on the 6th of October 2022. There are 6 teams participating in the competition namely KCA Eagles, KCA Lions, KCA Panthers, KCA Royals, KCA Tigers, and KCA Tuskers. A total of 31 matches will be played during the tournament. All of the games are scheduled to be played at the Sanatana Dharma College Ground in Alappuzha, Kerala, India. KCA Royals are the defending champions of the tournament and they will look to extend their silverware run in the upcoming KCA Cup T20 as well. Let’s have a look at the fixtures: Wednesday, September 21 KCA Lions vs KCA Tigers – 9:00 AM KCA Royals vs KCA Panthers – 1:30 PM Thursday, September 22 KCA Eagles vs KCA Tuskers – 9:00 AM KCA Royals vs KCA Lions – 1:30 PM Friday, September 23 KCA Panthers vs KCA Tuskers – 9:00 AM KCA Tigers vs KCA Eagles – 1:30 PM Saturday, September 24 KCA Tigers vs KCA Royals – 9:00 AM KCA Lions vs KCA Panthers – 1:30 PM Sunday, September 25 KCA Lions vs KCA Eagles – 9:00 AM KCA Royals vs KCA Tuskers – 1:30 PM Monday, September 26 KCA Eagles vs KCA Panthers – 9:00 AM KCA Tuskers vs KCA Tigers – 1:30 PM Tuesday, September 27 KCA Tigers vs KCA Panthers – 9:00 AM KCA Eagles vs KCA Royals – 1:30 PM Wednesday, September 28 KCA Lions vs KCA Tuskers – 9:00 AM KCA Tigers vs KCA Royals – 1:30 PM Thursday, September 29 KCA Lions vs KCA Panthers – 9:00 AM KCA Eagles vs KCA Tuskers – 1:30 PM Friday, September 30 KCA Royals vs KCA Panthers – 9:00 AM KCA Lions vs KCA Tigers- 1:30 PM Saturday, October 01 KCA Royals vs KCA Tuskers – 9:00 AM KCA Lions vs KCA Eagles – 1:30 PM Sunday, October 02 KCA Tigers vs KCA Eagles – 9:00 AM KCA Panthers vs KCA Tuskers – 1:30 PM Monday, October 03 KCA Royals vs KCA Lions – 9:00 AM KCAA Tigers vs KCA Panthers – 1:30 PM Tuesday, October 04 KCA Eagles vs KCA Royals – 9:00 AM KCA Lions vs KCA Tuskers – 1:30 PM Wednesday, October 05 KCA Tuskers vs KCA Tigers – 9:00 AM KCA Eagles vs KCA Panthers – 1:30 PM Thursday, October 06 KCA Presidents Cup final, TBC vs TBC – 9:00 AM Let’s have a look at the squads: KCA Lions Ponnam Rahul(c), Abhiram CH, Vishnu Mohan(wk), Akshay Manohar, Abdul Basith, Salman Nizar, Vinu Kumar Gopalakrishnan, Alfrin Francis, Midhun PK, Vinod Kumar, Vishweshwar Suresh, Abhishek Mohan, Riyas PA KCA Tigers Sachin Baby(c), Varun Nayanar(wk), Bharath Surya, Ajith KA, Aquib Fazal, Akash C Pillai, Muhammad Kaif (wk), Aditya Mohan, Akhil Acaria, Athul Raveendran, Fazil Fanoos, Akhil Anil, Sreesanth, Gautham Mohan. KCA Panthers Akshay Chandran(c), Adhidev TJ, Subin Suresh(wk), Sachin Mohan, Sanju Sajeev, Shaun Roger, Akhin Sathar, Vinoop Manoharan, M.Kiran Sagar, Anand Joseph, Rohan Kunnummal, Sachin Suresh(wk), Jose S Perayil, Basil Thampi, AK Sanjeev. KCA Lions Sijomon Joseph(c), M. Ajnas, KG Rojith, Abhishek J Nair, Albin Alias, Krishnaprasad, Unnikrishnan Manukrishnan, Harikrishnan KN, Shahanshah, KM Asif, N. Vishnu Raj(wk), M Arun, Atul Diamond, Abi Biju, N Jubin. KCA Eagles Mohammed Azharuddeen(c & wk), Basil Mathew, Shiv Ganesh, Rohan Prem, Ashwin Anand, J. Ananthakrishnan, Abhishek R Nair, Karimuttathu Rakesh, Aditya Krishnan, Sreehari S Nair, Sharafudheen, KC Akshay, N.P. Basil, Rabin Krishnan KCA Tuskers Vathsal Govind(c), Anand Krishnan, Joffin Jose, Arjun Aji, Vishnu Vinod(wk), Anuj Jotin, MN Neeraj Kumar, Sreeroop MP, Vaishak Chandran, Vishnu P Kumar, Mohit Shibu, Karaparambil Monish, MD Nidheesh, Ahmed Farzeen. Where to watch KCA Cup T20 2022: Live Cricket Streaming KCA Cup T20 2022 The live cricket streaming page which enables you to watch live cricket and Cricket World TV – Geo-restrictions apply *NB these predictions may be changed nearer the start of the match once the final starting teams have been announced and we will be running ‘In-Play’ features, so stay tuned. © Cricket World 2022 Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
KCA Cup T20 2022 Squads Fixtures And All You Need To Know