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What To Know About The Civil Fraud Lawsuit Donald Trump And Family Face In New York KION546
What To Know About The Civil Fraud Lawsuit Donald Trump And Family Face In New York KION546
What To Know About The Civil Fraud Lawsuit Donald Trump And Family Face In New York – KION546 https://digitalarizonanews.com/what-to-know-about-the-civil-fraud-lawsuit-donald-trump-and-family-face-in-new-york-kion546/ By Tierney Sneed An intricately detailed, 200-plus page civil lawsuit lays out New York Attorney General Letitia James’ case that former President Donald Trump, three of his children, his companies and his business executives defrauded lenders, insurers and other entities. “This conduct cannot be brushed aside and dismissed as some sort of good-faith mistake,” James told reporters Wednesday. “No one, my friend, is above the law,” she added. Trump and his company used “false and misleading” financial statements, her lawsuit alleged, “repeatedly and persistently to induce banks to lend money to the Trump Organization on more favorable terms than would otherwise have been available to the company, to satisfy continuing loan covenants, and to induce insurers to provide insurance coverage for higher limits and at lower premiums.” Trump responded to the lawsuit by calling James “a fraud who campaigned on a ‘get Trump’ platform, despite the fact that the city is one of the crime and murder disasters of the world under her watch.” Filing the lawsuit allows James to publicly air a wide-ranging assortment of financial fraud allegations, which the attorney general says played out for a decade and touched on nearly all aspects of Trump’s business empire. James said she’s also made referrals to federal law enforcement authorities. Here’s what to know about the new case James has brought: In 200-plus instances, James said, Trump embellished value of his assets According to the schemes alleged by James, the financial statements compiled by Trump — which were offered to banks and other entities Trump was doing business with — include values of assets that were blatantly contradicted by internal records or otherwise falsified. “All told, Mr. Trump, the Trump Organization, and the other Defendants, as part of a repeated pattern and common scheme, derived more than 200 false and misleading valuations of assets included in the 11 Statements covering 2011 through 2021,” the lawsuit said. James characterized one of the episodes as a “two sets of books” scenario: “one internal set of records reached one conclusion regarding market value, but the figure presented on Mr. Trump’s Statement was considerably higher.” James claims that Trump reaped a “substantial” financial benefit by putting forward faulty information in his financial statements, including $150 million in the form of favorable interest rates he obtained from the banks that James said his team misled. The alleged schemes touch a variety of Trump properties, including golf courses, hotels and Mar-a-Lago James said the misrepresentations on Trump’s financial statements affected “most if not all of” his and his company’s “real estate holdings in any given year, including several of Trump’s highest profile business ventures. Trump valued his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida as high as $739 million when the property was likely worth about a tenth of that, James alleged, while accusing Trump of further boosting the resort’s value by tacking on a “brand premium.” US accounting principles prohibit such premiums and the Trump financial statements “expressly claim to exclude brand value,” James said. Included in the 2011 valuation of Trump’s Westchester golf course in New York was the notion that new members would pay $200,000 in initiation fees, even though Trump instructed the club to reduce or waive those fees in a bid to increase club membership numbers, according to the lawsuit. The defendants are accused of skewing the worth of the Trump Park Avenue property, by putting a value on several units that was roughly six times more than what an outside firm calculated in an 2010 appraisal. James pointed to testimony from Donald Trump Jr., one of the defendants, that indicated the company was aware that the units were rent stabilized, which is the reason the appraiser had put them at the much lower value. Other Trump ventures — including his Doral golf resort in Florida, the Old Post Office property he leased for a hotel in Washington, and Trump International Hotel and Tower in Chicago — are implicated in the lawsuit, with James saying that loans were extended for those properties because of inaccurate representations the Trump team made to banks. James also claimed that the Trump financial statements describes profits from real estate properties as being part of Trump’s liquid assets when they were in fact cash held by a real estate trust, Vornado Partnerships, in which Trump had a minority stake. Doing so contradicted both US accounting principles (known as generally accepted accounting principles or GAAP), according to the complaint. “In some years these restricted funds accounted for almost one-third of all the cash reported by Mr. Trump,” the lawsuit said. Trump’s statements falsely claimed he had outside help for valuing assets, lawsuit says The lawsuit said that “no outside professionals were retained to prepare any of the asset valuations” that were presented in his annual financial statements, despite representations on those statements that the evaluations were done with “outside professionals.” “To the extent Mr. Trump and the Trump Organization received any advice from outside professionals that had any bearing on how to approach valuing the assets, they routinely ignored or contradicted such advice,” the complaint said. Jeffrey McConney — a Trump Organization executive and a defendant in the lawsuit — was asked by the attorney general’s office in a 2020 interview about the references to outside professionals on the Trump financial statements, according to the lawsuit. “After that interview, the Trump Organization changed the wording for the 2020 Statement, omitting any representation that any particular valuation was reached in consultation with ‘outside professionals’ and instead listing outside professionals as merely one factor that may have been ‘applicable’ in some unspecified manner,” James’ complaint said. McConney has not responded to a request for comment from CNN. What penalties does Trump face, if the lawsuit is successful James said that the conduct justifies canceling the Trump Organization’s corporate certificate, which would effectively force the company to cease operations in New York state. She is also seeking a financial penalty of what she estimated is $250 million in ill-gotten gains. Additionally James said Trump and his threree eldest children — Trump Jr., Eric and Ivanka — should be barred from serving as officers at any New York registered business. The lawsuit wants to impose several limits on what Trump’s businesses can do going forward, with proposals to bar them for the next five years from acquiring real estate in the state and from applying for loans from New York chartered banks. She also seeks the replacement of the current trustees of the Donald J. Trump Revocable Trust and the appointment of an independent monitor to oversee the Trump Organization’s financial dealings for the next five years. Trump responds with attacks on James Trump has been railing against James on social media since the lawsuit was unveiled Wednesday. “I never thought this case would be brought,” Trump wrote on Truth Social, accusing James of filing the wide-ranging lawsuit to reverse “her really bad poll numbers.” Trump’s hostility towards James has stretched for years, including when he was President and she was spearheading several lawsuits challenging the policies of his administration. His personal attorney Alina Habba said in a statement that the lawsuit was “neither focused on the facts nor the law,” but rather “on advancing the Attorney General’s political agenda.” “It is abundantly clear that the Attorney General’s Office has exceeded its statutory authority by prying into transactions where absolutely no wrongdoing has taken place,” Habba said. “We are confident that our judicial system will not stand for this unchecked abuse of authority, and we look forward to defending our client against each and every one of the Attorney General’s meritless claims.” What’s next in the lawsuit James’ complaint is a civil lawsuit, meaning it could take years for the case to work its way through the legal process in the New York state court system before it even goes to trial. The process will likely include months and months of litigation over what shape that trial should take — or if the case even warrants going to trial at all. James’ office and the defendants could settle the lawsuit, though James resisted that route in recent months when the Trump Organization, according to sources, offered to settle to ward off the lawsuit even as they denied any wrongdoing. James’ office made it clear it isn’t interested in the deal, people familiar with the matter said. However, at her news conference announcing the lawsuit, James said that her office’s “doors were open.” What does this mean for Trump’s criminal exposure? By launching a civil investigation against Trump, the New York attorney general’s office faced a lower burden of proof than what would have been necessary to bring a criminal case against Trump. To mount a criminal case, prosecutors would need evidence of Trump’s state of mind and whether he intended to mislead or defraud anyone when he approved the statements mischaracterizing the value of his assets. A criminal investigation by the office of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg is”active and ongoing,” Bragg said in a statement Wednesday. But those investigators, as CNN previously reported, have not secured a key insider from Trump’s world who could tie Trump to the allegedly false valuations. The district attorney’s office has brought charges against Trump companies and former Trump Organization ch...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
What To Know About The Civil Fraud Lawsuit Donald Trump And Family Face In New York KION546
Trump Allies Dont Understand Why He Continues To Embrace Q
Trump Allies Dont Understand Why He Continues To Embrace Q
Trump Allies Don’t Understand Why He Continues To Embrace Q https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-allies-dont-understand-why-he-continues-to-embrace-q/ Former President Donald Trump speaks at a Save America Rally to support Republican candidates running for state and federal offices in the state at the Covelli Centre on September 17, 2022 in Youngstown, Ohio. Republican Senate Candidate JD Vance and Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) spoke to supporters along with former President Trump. Photo credit (Photo by Jeff Swensen/Getty Images) As some key supporters of former President Donald Trump utilize his fanbase in the QAnon conspiracy theory movement, others are puzzled as to why he continues to embrace the theory. According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, QAnon is “the umbrella term for a sprawling spiderweb of right-wing internet conspiracy theories with antisemitic and anti-LGBTQ elements.” Those who adhere to “Q” also claim “the world is run by a secret cabal of pedophiles who worship Satan and are plotting against President Trump.” NBC News reporter Ben Collins has been chronicling the conspiracy theory for years. “The QAnon conspiracy theory was built around Q, an anonymous account that posts periodically on 8kun [online message boards], often with vague or symbolic language that is then interpreted by followers,” he explained in a recent article about Trump promoting QAnon accounts on his Truth Social platform. Collins noted that “none of the [Q] posts’ concrete predictions have come to fruition.” Rolling Stone reported Tuesday that Republican politician Devin Nunes, who serves as CEO of Truth Social appears to “intentionally court QAnon figures and followers in order to build out the user base of Trump’s personal social media platform.” A NewsGuard report from August found that Truth Social actively promotes QAnon. Other Trump supporters are not as willing to embrace the conspiracy, Rolling Stone said. “F*** if I know,” one Trump ally said when asked about Trump’s support of Q. Rolling Stone said others indicated the former president is “a Boomer internet troll who just loves to be liked,” and that he simply likes that the QAnon adherents view him as a “supposed god-emperor.” “To be fair, he says that they’re some of his biggest fans, which, you know, is his thing,” said an unnamed source. This source, which Rolling Stone describes as a person close to Trump, said that the real estate mogul thinks the Q memes are funny and that the media’s reaction to his Q promotion is funny as well. A Rolling Stone source identified as a former White House official said that Trump would say during his term in office that Q followers had “the right idea” and inferred that the conspiracy wasn’t that far-fetched. He also promoted QAnon tweets before he was blocked from Twitter. An article in The Atlantic this week also posited that Trump is leaning on QAnon because he is “stuck,” as he continues to gives signs of support to QAnon adherents, according to Rolling Stone. “The latest came during the final minutes of Trump’s rally in Youngstown, Ohio, last Saturday, when ‘Mirrors,’ a song by composer Will Van De Crommert that has become popular in the QAnon community, was played as the former president delivered a diatribe about how America is going to hell under President Joe Biden,” the outlet reported. Trump held up an index finger to the sky as the song played, which some think might be a sign to Q followers. His appearance at the rally was also in support of J.R. Majewski, “an Ohio House candidate with deep ties to the QAnon movement.” A Rolling Stone source “intimately familiar with this matter,” said Trump claimed this summer that the QAnon believers are just misunderstood. This echoes his “go home, we love you,” speech to a crowd that included QAnon followers at the Jan. 6, 2021 Capitol riot now under investigation by the House select committee. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Allies Dont Understand Why He Continues To Embrace Q
Best In The West: Sept. 23 2022 Spotlight
Best In The West: Sept. 23 2022 Spotlight
Best In The West: Sept. 23, 2022 Spotlight https://digitalarizonanews.com/best-in-the-west-sept-23-2022-spotlight/ Teams across the state have shown their worth and some teams are already halfway through their regular seasons. Let’s take a look at some of the games taking place across the West Valley this weekend. The Millennium Tigers have taken care of business to start the season as one of just nine teams in the 5A Conference with an undefeated record. Following back-to-back road games, the Tigers welcome a familiar face back to Goodyear as the Centennial Coyotes make their return to the southwest. After back-to-back Open Division Playoff appearances in 2019 and 2020, the Coyotes struggled in 2021. In their second season in the 6A Conference, CeHS ended the regular season with a 3-7 record, the lowest win total since 1999, and fell in the first round against Red Mountain. Although they fell short against Hamilton to open the season, Centennial has found a rhythm with a 28-7 victory against Brophy Prep and a 56-14 win on the road at Desert Vista. Senior running back, Kavaughn Clark, is the heartbeat of this offense with his pace of play and explosiveness. Senior, Demari Washington, has been a tremendous defensive asset with a pair of INTs and 17 total tackles through three games. Fellow senior, Dillon Gore, has also impressed with his backfield pressure, racking up two sacks and four TFL. Wasn’t the prettiest W but the boys got the job done. They handled all the adversity on Friday and stuck together that’s what having each other’s back mean. Proud coach great job boys. #ALLIN #WeAreMillennium. pic.twitter.com/jfTQAQXSyw — Lamar Early (@CoachEarly_MHS) September 5, 2022 The Millennium offense has scored 40 or more points in their games against Canyon View, Agua Fria, and Cienega. Junior running back, Zues Pinder, has put up staggering performances and has already rushed for a third of his total rush yards from last year alongside ten touchdowns so far. Senior receiver, Kyan Fields, has also been tremendous with his 275 reception yards and five TDs courtesy of senior quarterback, Derek Berry. Senior linebacker, Daniel Delponte, has been a tackling machine with his 29 total tackles, six tackles for loss, and a pair of sacks to open his season. Cole Marszalek has also disrupted offenses with two fumble causes alongside three TFL. It has been a tremendous start for Millennium but Centennial hopes to get back into Open Division form. While they were region rivals when Centennial was a 5A team, this is just the seventh all-time meeting between the Tigers and Coyotes. Millennium has never beat Centennial but came oh so close last year in a 13-12 joust. With only a single blemish on their 2022 schedule so far, the Paradise Honors Panthers host Odyssey Institute in Surprise. Both squads are making their cases as the tournament is quickly approaching for these 3A Conference teams. With only four games in the books, QB Gage Baker, is already setting the scoring system ablaze. The junior has already racked up 1,406 pass yards and 14 touchdowns. On top of that, Baker has shared the love as well. Four of the Panther’s receivers have already surpassed 200 reception yards. Junior, Josh Morales, has led the receiving room with 322 reception yards and five TDs. While the offense has set a blistering pace, the defense has been putting up strong numbers as well. Senior OLB, Noah Locke, has been a moving brick wall with a team-leading four sacks, 39 total tackles, and 7.5 TFL. Newest members of the club received some swag today. Congratulations to the 700, 800, 900 LB club members. Great work this off-season! pic.twitter.com/UPLvNxR1bo — Paradise Honors High School Football (@PHHS_Panthers) August 25, 2022 While it hasn’t been smooth sailing for the Odyssey Institute Minotaurs, they have been able to solidify the ground game with a 2-3 record. Junior, Toy Landers, leads the team with 351 rushing yards and six TDs with fellow junior, Marcus Knight, not far behind with 238 rushing yards and a pair of touchdowns. Also, keep an eye on junior receiver, Deiontae Tyson, who has racked up 492 receiving yards and seven trips to the endzone. Landers has also led the charge on defense by leading the team with 32 total tackles while also picking up a sack. This is the second game of 3A Metro Region play for both teams as the state tournament is coming up fast for the 3A schools.  Sandra Day O’Connor faced the ultimate test after a slight surprise to state to open the season. The Eagles had to hit the road and take on the reigning champion of Arizona, Saguaro, and fell 47-3. That siad, their pair of wins to open the season will keep teams on their toes due to their 24-10 win against Brophy Prep and a 28-14 victory against Red Mountain. Cesar Chavez also opened the season with a pair of wins before a loss last week to Mesa 47-28. Both SDO and Chavez now look to bounce back in this 6A bout. The CCHS Champions have been marching down the field with senior, Micah Boozer, and junior, Deven Highsmith. Boozer led the team in touchdowns through the first two games while Highsmith led the team in offensive yardage. @BoozerMicah takes it in from 5 yards out. Champions 7. @WestwoodFBMesa 0. 9:00 left in 1st. pic.twitter.com/hPEMjQxBv1 — Champion Athletics (@CChavezsports) September 3, 2022 Senior, Blake Ware, will be tasked with leading the O’Connor Eagles defensively to put a stop to the CC ground game. Seniors, Ben Currence and Izik Durazo, have been the primary offensive weapons for SDO in receiving and rushing. The duo has tallied nearly 500 yards of offense and five total touchdowns. Even though both teams reside in the 6A Conference, this will be the first meeting between these two programs. Call it an important game for both teams to bounce back and set themselves up for conference play looming over the horizon. More Notable Games: Willow Canyon @ Sierra Linda It has been a tremendous 3-0 start for the 4A Conference Sierra Linda Bulldogs in 2022. After a rout of Alhambra to open the season, the Bulldogs have been in a pair of thrillers against ALA- Ironwood and Empire with 35-33 and 14-12 victories. Now they host their biggest test of the year against 5A Conference Willow Canyon. WCHS has the earliest bye week of any team in the state with their restful Friday last week. The Wildcats sit at 2-0 after huge wins behind the stellar play of junior quarterback, Calvin Mathews, who is only behind senior running back, Brady Ferris, in rush yards while also throwing for another 231 yards in two games. Junior defensive end, Lennox Hicks, has set the tempo for the SLHS defense with his accumulation of five sacks, eight TFL, and 14 total tackles. Sophomore DE, Akhir Harris, has also been tremendous with seven tackles for loss, four sacks, and a team-leading 27 tackles. While the defense has shined, all eyes have also been on freshman quarterback, Camar Lee, who already tallied 660 pass yards with senior, Stephon Daily, receiving 353 of those yards. Lee joins names such as Spencer Rattler, Jack Miller, and Chase Cord, as Arizona high school quarterbacks who threw for five touchdowns in a single game as a freshman. And if that wasn’t lethal enough, junior, Kevin Tortolero, has already racked up 327 rush yards as well. After being stifled for most of the night @SLHS_Bulldog_FB WR and @CSUFootball commit @StephonDaily7 refused to go down and scored late in the 4th quarter to give the Bulldogs a 14-12 victory over @ehsravensfb @Sports360AZ #fridaynight360az pic.twitter.com/CJLUo6GPNP — Michael Rincon Photo (@MRinconPhoto) September 17, 2022 Thunderbird @ Greenway The 35th edition of Thunderbird vs. Greenway is set to take place this Friday night. The first meeting between these sister schools date back to 1974 when Thunderbird began a streak of seven straight wins to begin the rivalry series. But now, the script has flipped with Greenway in search of their sixth straight victory against their Glendale Union rivals. While Greenway is 0-2 and has only found the endzone twice this season, Thunderbird is coming off a pair of blowout victories against Dysart and Amphitheater. Titans quarterback, Carter Squires, has lit up the scoreboard through 638 passing yards and four touchdowns this season, giving THS life on offense. The defense has been led by sophomore, Ryan Kavalami, who leads the team with 19 total tackles, 8.5 tackles for loss, and 5.5 sacks. Similar to Willow Canyon, Greenway is coming off an early bye week. Demon sophomore QB, Tyler McNally, has been able to sling the ball occasionally with 323 passing yards so far this season but has two touchdowns to six interceptions. McNally’s primary receiver thus far has been junior, Matthew Johanson.  Even though they aren’t in the same 4A Conference region, it is fantastic to see this rivalry continue into 2022. Keep watch at Sports360AZ for all of our high school football content including Bleacher Talk, Zone Read, AZ Audibles, Recruiting Roundup, and more. Join the conversation on Twitter using #FridayNight360AZ and follow @Sports360AZ to keep up with the action from across the state on Friday nights! Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Best In The West: Sept. 23 2022 Spotlight
Craft Selects Sen. Wise As 2023 GOP Running Mate In Kentucky
Craft Selects Sen. Wise As 2023 GOP Running Mate In Kentucky
Craft Selects Sen. Wise As 2023 GOP Running Mate In Kentucky https://digitalarizonanews.com/craft-selects-sen-wise-as-2023-gop-running-mate-in-kentucky/ Kentucky Republican gubernatorial candidate Kelly Craft selected state Sen. Max Wise as her running mate Wednesday evening, making an early commitment to a political partnership with the conservative lawmaker that she hopes will boost her primary bid next spring. Craft — a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations during Donald Trump’s presidency — announced her choice for lieutenant governor during an event in Wise’s hometown of Campbellsville in rural south central Kentucky. “When I thought about selecting a partner to lead our state, I knew it had to be a person who inspires respect, who has already shown commitment to Kentucky and – most important in public life – someone in whom we can place full trust,” Craft said in prepared remarks. “As soon as I lined up those qualities, the first name that leaped to mind was Max Wise.” A 2020 change in Kentucky law allows candidates for governor to wait until after the primary election to pick their running mate. In the past, gubernatorial hopefuls selected their slate-mate by the January filing deadline of the election year. Craft opted to lock onto a political partner some eight months before the primary. Other Republican candidates have yet to make their pick, such as Attorney General Daniel Cameron, state Agriculture Commissioner Ryan Quarles, state Auditor Mike Harmon, state Rep. Savannah Maddox. Retired attorney Eric Deters, another GOP gubernatorial candidate, also has picked a running mate — Wesley Deters, a northern Kentuckian and a former city council member. They are not related. The race for the Republican gubernatorial nomination is likely to dominate the state’s political landscape until the primary in May. Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear is seeking a second term next year. Beshear has received strong approval ratings from Kentuckians in polling as he tries to overcome the state’s tilt toward the GOP. Lt. Gov. Jacqueline Coleman, who will be Beshear’s running mate again in 2023, has focused on education and economic development issues during her term. By choosing Wise, Craft will have the advantage of dispatching a teammate to promote her candidacy as the campaign intensifies. Wise immediately jumped into the fray, promoting Craft’s credentials while making much of Beshear’s often-rocky relationship with the GOP-led legislature. “We’ve all watched Kelly take Kentucky values throughout the world, first as President Trump’s ambassador to Canada and then as his delegate at the United Nations, where she looked dictators in the eye and didn’t blink,” Wise said in prepared remarks. Wise tried to connect Beshear to Democratic President Joe Biden — who was trounced by Trump in Kentucky in the 2020 election. And Wise slammed the governor’s leadership style, accusing Beshear of a “closed-door policy when it comes to working with the legislature.” “There is no ‘Team Kentucky’ with Andy Beshear,” Wise said, invoking the “Team Kentucky” phrase often used by the governor at press briefings. “Andy Beshear is a team of one and I have seen it firsthand as a legislator.” The criticism comes about a month after Beshear worked with the legislature on a nearly $213 million aid package for flood-ravaged portions of eastern Kentucky. It resembled the bipartisan cooperation on a similarly big relief package earlier this year for parts of western Kentucky devastated by tornadoes in December. The governor also has worked with the legislature on economic development initiatives. During his term, Beshear helped the state land two massive battery production projects for Kentucky to power future generations of electric vehicles. Responding to Craft’s announcement, Kentucky Democratic Party Chair Colmon Elridge said the early selection of Wise “confirmed” that Craft “does not have the experience to run or serve as governor on her own.” Wise has played a key role in shaping education policy as chairman of the Senate Education Committee. He was at the forefront as lawmakers passed school safety legislation in response to school shootings nationwide, including at a western Kentucky high school where two students were killed. He was a leading supporter of a measure designating a set of historical documents and speeches to incorporate into classroom work — a response to the national debate over critical race theory. In his statement, Elridge tied Wise to legislation paving the way for the introduction of charter schools, saying the result will be “taking money out of public education.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Craft Selects Sen. Wise As 2023 GOP Running Mate In Kentucky
3 Hudson Valley Properties Named In Civil Suit Against Ex-President Trump
3 Hudson Valley Properties Named In Civil Suit Against Ex-President Trump
3 Hudson Valley Properties Named In Civil Suit Against Ex-President Trump https://digitalarizonanews.com/3-hudson-valley-properties-named-in-civil-suit-against-ex-president-trump/ Sep 22, 2022, 12:28amUpdated 21m ago By: Jonathan Gordon New York Attorney General Letitia James has sued former President Donald Trump and his company, accusing them of years of fraud to financially benefit by lying about the value of his properties. Three Hudson Valley properties were named in the civil lawsuit, including Seven Springs Estate in Bedford and two Trump National Golf Clubs in Briarcliff and Hopewell Junction. Trump, his three oldest kids, and his organization are accused of inflating the perceived value of certain properties when it benefitted them, while downplaying the values of other assets for tax breaks. “This is an example of somebody thinking above the law and they can get away with anything they want to because of who they are and the status that they hold in society,” says Bennett Gershman, law professor at Pace University.  Trump has denied the allegations from the start. In a statement, a spokesperson for the Trump Organization called the lawsuit, “targeted…and meritless unethical political harassment.”  Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
3 Hudson Valley Properties Named In Civil Suit Against Ex-President Trump
Michael Cohen: New York
Michael Cohen: New York
Michael Cohen: New York https://digitalarizonanews.com/michael-cohen-new-york/ Former Donald Trump attorney Michael Cohen was jubilant Wednesday over New York Attorney General Letitia James’ announcement that she had filed a civil lawsuit against the former president and his three eldest children over an alleged tax fraud scheme. “I want to personally thank [James] for acknowledging my participation and assistance in bringing accountability to the Mandarin Mussolini!” Cohen tweeted. “My journey to the truth has been filled with sadness, pain and anger. Todays announcement makes it [all] worth it!!!” In a news conference to announce the lawsuit, James noted Cohen had played a major role in kicking off the three-year investigation, which she said involved a review of millions of documents and interviews with 65 witnesses. “Mr. Trump and his allies may say that these penalties are too harsh or that this is part of a witch hunt,” she said. “I will remind everyone that this investigation only started after Michael Cohen, his former lawyer, testified before Congress and shed light on this misconduct.” James’ office is seeking to bar Trump, Donald Trump Jr., Ivanka Trump and Eric Trump from conducting business in the state of New York, as well as making them pay about $250 million in restitution and limiting their access to loans. Her office is also making criminal referrals to federal prosecutors and the Internal Revenue Service, believing the Trumps to have broken federal law. I want to personally thank @TishJames for acknowledging my participation and assistance in bringing accountability to the Mandarin Mussolini! My journey to the truth has been filled with sadness, pain and anger. Todays announcement makes it al worth it!!! pic.twitter.com/1hQKXkGS6J — Michael Cohen (@MichaelCohen212) September 21, 2022 Cohen testified to Congress in 2019 that Trump grossly overstated his wealth before he was president, including inflating his assets in applying for a loan to buy the Buffalo Bills NFL team in 2014. He said Trump exaggerated his wealth when it served his purposes and also deflated the value of assets to reduce his real estate taxes. Cohen was once one of Trump’s closest advisers, but he turned on him after the attorney was indicted for facilitating a hush money payment to porn actor Stormy Daniels to keep her from disclosing an alleged affair with Trump less than two weeks before the 2016 election. Cohen said this was done at Trump’s direction. Cohen served time in prison after pleading guilty in 2018 to tax crimes, fraud, campaign finance violations and lying to Congress. Trump has not faced any consequences over the scheme. Cohen has gone scorched earth on his former boss since, routinely speaking out against him and working with various authorities investigating wrongdoing by the former president and his family. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Michael Cohen: New York
Trump Slams NYAG James' 'ridiculous' Case Says She Should 'focus On People Who Kill People' As Crime Spikes
Trump Slams NYAG James' 'ridiculous' Case Says She Should 'focus On People Who Kill People' As Crime Spikes
Trump Slams NYAG James' 'ridiculous' Case, Says She Should 'focus On People Who Kill People' As Crime Spikes https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-slams-nyag-james-ridiculous-case-says-she-should-focus-on-people-who-kill-people-as-crime-spikes/ NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! EXCLUSIVE: Former President Trump slammed New York Attorney General Letitia James’ lawsuit against him as “ridiculous,” maintaining he and his family have done nothing wrong. Trump added that crime in New York is at the “highest level it has ever been” because the attorney general has spent her time in office “fighting Trump” and urged officials to “focus on people who kill people.” James’ office on Wednesday filed a lawsuit against Trump and his children, Donald Jr., Ivanka and Eric, as well as his associates and businesses, alleging “numerous acts of fraud and misrepresentation” regarding financial statements. James alleged Trump “inflated his net worth by billions of dollars” and said his children helped him to do so. NEW YORK AG SUES TRUMP OVER FRAUD ALLEGATIONS Former President Trump in New York City after the FBI raid at his Mar-a-Lago home.  (Felipe Ramales/Fox News Digital) During an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital, Trump said he “never thought she was going to bring this case because she has no case.” Trump, in August, invoked his Fifth Amendment rights during a deposition as part of James’ civil investigation into the Trump Organization. The lawsuit, stemming from James’ probe, was to find out whether Trump and his company improperly inflated the value of assets on financial statements to obtain loans and tax benefits. “They wanted to settle the case. … It is a ridiculous case,” Trump said. “But I never thought she was going to bring the case until I looked at her poll numbers. NEW YORK CITY OVERALL CRIME INCREASES 31% WHILE INCARCERATION CONSERVATION RATE STOOPS TO 18% “Also, don’t forget, you know, there is an unwritten rule — almost, it is an unwritten law, you never bring a lawsuit within 90 days of an election,” Trump said. “And she brought this right before the midterm elections, which shows you just how degenerate she is. “She was going to do this from the day she started campaigning,” the former president said, pointing to James’ campaign promise to take on Trump. “We’re definitely gonna sue him, we’re gonna be a real pain in the a–,” James once told a supporter. James also once said Trump was an “existential threat,” and said “the No. 1 issue in this country is defeating Donald Trump.” New York Attorney General Letitia James and former President Trump  (David Dee Delgado/Getty Images I Jeff Swensen/Getty Images ) “Nothing else matters,” James said. Trump, though, told Fox News Digital it’s a “disgrace” that James has focused on him and his family. “This is why murderers are all over the city, and crime is at the highest level it has ever been,” Trump said, adding that James has done” nothing to stop people from murdering, but let’s take care of Trump. TRUMP INVOKES FIFTH AMENDMENT RIGHTS IN DEPOSITION FOR NEW YORK AG JAMES’ CIVIL INVESTIGATION “She spent most of her time in office — she spent three years — fighting Trump,” he added. “Focus on people that kill people.”  While citywide shootings and murders have decreased 24% and 32% year-over-year, respectively, six of seven major crime incident categories have reached a 21-year high, New York Police Department (NYPD) executives announced Thursday.  But James, when bringing the suit against Trump Wednesday, said that over the course of her office’s investigation, it interviewed 65 witnesses and reviewed millions of documents. She said the evidence showed Trump submitted “more than 200 false and misleading asset valuations.” New York state Attorney General Letitia James was present for former President Trump’s deposition last month. (Reuters) The misrepresentations included stating that Trump had cash on hand that he did not have and ignoring restrictions that would impact property values, James said. The attorney general said she believes the allegations also violate state and federal criminal laws and that her office is making a referral to the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York and the IRS. The SDNY U.S. Attorney’s Office declined to comment on the matter. James said the investigation only began after former Trump attorney Michael Cohen told Congress Trump made misrepresentations in statements to financial institutions. MICHAEL COHEN DECLARES ‘THE END IS NEAR’ FOR TRUMP AFTER FBI RAID As for his financial statements, Trump told Fox News Digital his statement of financial condition “has a disclaimer right at the front.”  “It is extremely long and extremely strong, and it disclaims, and it says, ‘Go out and check for yourself. Do your own work, don’t rely on this,’” Trump explained. There are three levels of accounting review, sources told Fox News, with the statement of financial condition being the lowest. A source explained that the statement is a preparation of what an individual thinks things are valued at. Accountants said in the disclaimer that the statement of financial condition was not an authorized document or the result of any kind of audit, but rather prepared by an accounting firm in coordination with the Trump Organization. The disclaimer asks that banks do their own due diligence before approving a loan. Trump Tower in New York City  (Reuters) James said that, through the lawsuit, her office is requesting that the New York Supreme Court permanently bar Trump and his children from serving as officers for any New York corporation and bar Trump and the Trump Organization from participating in New York commercial real estate acquisitions or applying for loans in the state for five years. Asked about a possible settlement of the case, James said her office’s doors are open. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP Trump told Fox News Digital James “wanted to settle the case.” “I didn’t want to do anything. I didn’t want to pay anything because it is a ridiculous case,” Trump said, adding that he and his family will “just go through the process.” As for 2024 and a possible presidential run, Trump told Fox News Digital “everybody wants me to run.”  “In my mind, I’ve made a decision,” Trump said. “And I think people will be very happy, because, I will say this, our country is going to hell.” Brooke Singman is a Fox News Digital politics reporter. You can reach her at Brooke.Singman@Fox.com or @BrookeSingman on Twitter. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Slams NYAG James' 'ridiculous' Case Says She Should 'focus On People Who Kill People' As Crime Spikes
Brace Yourselves Electric Bills Could Increase 64% This Winter
Brace Yourselves Electric Bills Could Increase 64% This Winter
Brace Yourselves, Electric Bills Could Increase 64% This Winter https://digitalarizonanews.com/brace-yourselves-electric-bills-could-increase-64-this-winter/ LAST. JOHN ATWATER IS LIVE IN RANDOLPH WITH THE HIT TO YOUR WALLET. JOHN: ABOUT HALF OF THE POWER THAT COMES INTO OUR HOMES IS GENERATED AT GAS AND POWER PLANTS AND RIGHT NOW NATURAL GAS PRICES ARE SKYHIGH. I’M NOT SURPRISED WITH HOW THINGS ARE GOING IN THE WORLD TODAY. EVERYTHING IS GOING UP. JOHN: AND THIS WINTER IT’S GOING TO GET MUCH WORSE. WE’VE NEVER SEEN PRICES GO THIS HIGH. JOHN: NATIONAL GRID NOW PREPARING CUSTOMERS FOR ELECTRIC BILLS THAT WILL BE 64% HIGHER THIS WINTER, BECAUSE ABOUT HALF OF THE ELECTRICITY HERE IS GENERATED USING NATURAL GAS. WHEN THE WAR BROKE OUT, WE SAW WORLDWIDE ENERGY PRICES SKYROCKET, AND THEY’VE REMAINED HIGH. JOHN: THE UTILITY SAYS A TYPICAL ELECTRIC CUSTOMER WHO PAID $179 A MONTH FOR ELECTRICITY LAST YEAR WOULD PAY $293 A MONTH THIS WINTER. NATURAL GAS CUSTOMERS CAN EXPECT TO PAY ROUGHLY $50 MORE A MONTH. EVERYTHING’S GOING UP. CAN’T GOING TO GROCERY WITHOUT SPENDING $100. DEFINITELY NOT LOOKING FORWARD TO THE GAS BILL THIS WINTER. JOHN: EVERSOURCE NATURAL GAS RATES ARE ALSO GOING UP BETWEEN 25% AND 38%, ELECTRIC RATES ARE ALSO EXPECTED TO JUMP. LEAVING CUSTOMERS HOPING FOR AN EASY WINTER. WE’RE HOPING IT’S NOT GOING TO BE A VERY COLD WINTER SO WE DO NOT HAVE TO USE AS MUCH ENERGY AS WE DID IN THE PAST. JOHN: RATE HIKES WILL BE TOUGH FOR A LOT OF PEOPLE. UTILIT Electric bills could increase 64% this winter in Massachusetts, National Grid warns Natural gas heating customers could see 22-24% price hike Massachusetts electricity customers could be facing a steep increase in their winter bills, National Grid warned on Wednesday. Citing the high price of natural gas used in generating the power, the utility company said winter electricity rates taking effect on Nov. 1, will be sharply higher than they were last winter. “In total, the monthly bill of a typical residential electric customer using 600 kWh (kilowatt-hours) will increase from $179 in the winter 2021-2022 season, to approximately $293 for the winter 2022-2023 season,” National Grid said. That’s a 64% increase year-over-year. National Grid says most of the increase is driven by electric supply rates and that the company has “worked to keep the delivery portion of the bill essentially flat.”Eversource, the state’s other major electric utility, said it plans to file proposed rate changes with the Department of Public Utilities around mid-November, for changes to take effect on Jan. 1. Last winter, the Eversource proposed increase was about 25%. Rates are also seasonally adjusted for natural gas and National Grid said the average Boston Gas residential heating bill will increase $50 or 22% and the average Colonial Gas residential heating customer will see an increase of $47 or 24%, compared to rates last year. “With energy costs rising due to global conflict, inflationary pressures, and high demand as the winter heating season approaches, National Grid understands the impact this increased financial burden can have on our customers and communities, especially when we are all experiencing increased costs for other goods and services,” the company wrote in a statement. “National Grid buys energy on behalf of our customers from the wholesale market and passes through those costs without any markup or profit, so customers pay what National Grid pays for that energy.” Eversource said its proposed natural gas rates, scheduled to take effect on Nov. 1, would increase prices by about 38% or $86 for customers in the former NSTAR Gas service area and 25% or $61 for those in the former Columbia Gas territory. “These increases are mainly driven by the current high supply cost of natural gas worldwide,” Eversource said. To help customers, National Grid announced a “Winter Customer Savings Initiative” that highlights energy-saving tips and payment assistance programs. Eversource also shared its link to energy efficiency programs. Massachusetts also offers the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, which helps eligible households pay a portion of their winter bills. WALTHAM, Mass. — Massachusetts electricity customers could be facing a steep increase in their winter bills, National Grid warned on Wednesday. Citing the high price of natural gas used in generating the power, the utility company said winter electricity rates taking effect on Nov. 1, will be sharply higher than they were last winter. “In total, the monthly bill of a typical residential electric customer using 600 kWh (kilowatt-hours) will increase from $179 in the winter 2021-2022 season, to approximately $293 for the winter 2022-2023 season,” National Grid said. That’s a 64% increase year-over-year. National Grid says most of the increase is driven by electric supply rates and that the company has “worked to keep the delivery portion of the bill essentially flat.” Eversource, the state’s other major electric utility, said it plans to file proposed rate changes with the Department of Public Utilities around mid-November, for changes to take effect on Jan. 1. Last winter, the Eversource proposed increase was about 25%. Rates are also seasonally adjusted for natural gas and National Grid said the average Boston Gas residential heating bill will increase $50 or 22% and the average Colonial Gas residential heating customer will see an increase of $47 or 24%, compared to rates last year. “With energy costs rising due to global conflict, inflationary pressures, and high demand as the winter heating season approaches, National Grid understands the impact this increased financial burden can have on our customers and communities, especially when we are all experiencing increased costs for other goods and services,” the company wrote in a statement. “National Grid buys energy on behalf of our customers from the wholesale market and passes through those costs without any markup or profit, so customers pay what National Grid pays for that energy.” Eversource said its proposed natural gas rates, scheduled to take effect on Nov. 1, would increase prices by about 38% or $86 for customers in the former NSTAR Gas service area and 25% or $61 for those in the former Columbia Gas territory. “These increases are mainly driven by the current high supply cost of natural gas worldwide,” Eversource said. To help customers, National Grid announced a “Winter Customer Savings Initiative” that highlights energy-saving tips and payment assistance programs. Eversource also shared its link to energy efficiency programs. Massachusetts also offers the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, which helps eligible households pay a portion of their winter bills. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Brace Yourselves Electric Bills Could Increase 64% This Winter
Live Updates: Russia's War In Ukraine
Live Updates: Russia's War In Ukraine
Live Updates: Russia's War In Ukraine https://digitalarizonanews.com/live-updates-russias-war-in-ukraine-7/ 1 min ago Blinken welcomes prisoner exchange between Ukraine and Russia From CNN’s Jennifer Hansler US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Wednesday welcomed the prisoner exchange between Ukraine and Russia that led to the release of 10 people, including two Americans. “The United States is appreciative of Ukraine including all prisoners of war, regardless of nationality, in its negotiations, and we look forward to these U.S. citizens being reunited with their families,” Blinken said in a statement.   He also thanked Saudi Arabia for spearheading the initiative. “I conveyed my gratitude to Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan in a call this morning,” Blinken said. Family members of Americans Alexander John-Robert Drueke and Andy Tai Ngoc Huynh — captured in June while fighting for Ukraine north of Kharkiv — confirmed to CNN earlier Wednesday that they had been freed. Five Britons were also released, the British government said. Additionally, three others — Moroccan, Swedish and Croatian nationals — were freed in the swap, the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs said.  In his statement, Blinken reiterated that US citizens should not travel to Ukraine. “Americans who travel to Ukraine to participate in the fighting there face significant risks and the United States cannot guarantee their safety,” he said. “We encourage U.S. citizens to devote their energies towards the many other opportunities that exist to help the country of Ukraine and its people.” 36 min ago North Korea says it never sold weaponry to Russia, according to state media From CNN’s Yoonjung Seo and Larry Register North Korea says it never exported weapons or ammunition to Russia, according to the state-run Korean Central News Agency.  Earlier this month, a US official told CNN that Russia is purchasing millions of rockets and artillery shells from North Korea for use in Ukraine. The New York Times first reported the purchases. North Korea condemned the US “for thoughtlessly circulating the rumor against the DPRK to pursue its base political and military aim” and said the US should keep its mouth shut, according to KCNA. DPRK stands for the Democratic Republic of Korea, the formal name for North Korea. The state media cited a press statement from the Vice Director General of the General Bureau of Equipment of the Ministry of National Defense but did not provide a name for the Vice Director General. North Korea said the “development, production, possession of military equipment, but also their export and import are the lawful right peculiar to a sovereign state, and nobody is entitled to criticize it.” However, the statement said: “We have never exported weapons or ammunition to Russia before and we will not plan to export them.” It added that the rumors about exports to Russia were aimed at tarnishing North Korea’s image. 48 min ago Zelensky claims Russia is afraid of peace talks in Ukraine From CNN’s Jonny Hallam  Russia is afraid of real peace negotiations in Ukraine, President Volodymyr Zelensky said Wednesday during his address to the UN General Assembly. Instead, Russia lies to everyone, the president said. It “talks about the talks but announces a military mobilization.” Zelensky, in his pre-recorded remarks, added: “What is true then? The military mobilization in Russia is true. Sham referendums are also true. Russia wants war. It’s true.”  Zelensky ended his address by saying, “We are ready for peace. But true, honest and fair peace. That’s why the world is on our side.” 1 hr 27 min ago US doesn’t see any evidence of a heightened nuclear threat after Putin’s speech, official says From CNN’s Kevin Liptak Russian President Vladimir Putin’s attempt at “playing the nuclear card” in his national address earlier Wednesday along with his order for a partial mobilization was an act of weakness, a senior US administration official said Wednesday. “Declaring a mobilization, and then refining the declaration of mobilization to try to have it both ways — on the one hand, indicating you’re calling a bunch of people up, and on the other hand, saying we’re not calling too many people up — that also indicates a very pressurized environment in Russia,” the official said. “And the fact that he has to resort to something he clearly didn’t want to do is a reflection of the fact that his campaign in Ukraine is failing.” The official said the US does not see any signs that indicate a heightened nuclear threat from Russia, despite Putin’s rhetoric. “We have heard him before, wave around the nuclear card, and we heard it again in his speech today, and in fact, the language and formula he used today is quite similar to how he’s spoken before,” the official said. Still, President Biden and other US officials remain on alert for potential escalation as the conflict in Ukraine grinds ahead. “We are watching carefully to see for any signs of potential escalation, and we are sending very clear and strong messages to Russia about the consequences of escalation,” the official said. 2 hr 14 min ago Zelensky spoke to the UN. Here are the main points he made (Spencer Platt/Getty Images) Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky addressed the UN General Assembly on Wednesday in a pre-recorded speech that focused on the Russian war launched on Feb. 24.  He outlines five preconditions for peace during his speech: Punishment for aggression  Protection of life  Restoration of security and territorial integrity  Security guarantees  Determination to defend oneself  Here are the key lines from Zelensky’s remarks: The Ukrainian president called for Russia to be punished: “A crime has been committed against Ukraine and we demand just punishment. The crime was committed against our state borders. The crime was committed against the lives of our people,” Zelensky said. “Ukraine demands punishment for trying to steal our territory” and for the murder of thousands of people. Zelensky said the entire world wants peace, with the exception of Russia: “Ukraine wants peace, Europe wants peace, the world wants peace, and we have seen who is the only one who wants war,” he said, alluding to President Vladimir Putin, without mentioning his name. “There is only one entity among all UN member states, who would say now, if he could interrupt my speech that he’s happy with this war, with his war.” Zelensky said. Zelensky said he believed Ukrainian territories will be liberated over time: “We can return the Ukraine flag to our entire territory. We can do it with the force of arms, but we need time.” Russia should lose UN veto power: Zelensky called for Russia, one of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, to lose its veto power. “So long as the aggressor is party to decision making in the international organization you must be insulated from them, at least until aggression stops.” Special tribunal to punish Russia: Zelensky called for the creation of a special tribunal to punish Russia. “This will become a signal to all would-be aggressors, that they must value peace or be brought to responsibility by the world.” Zelensky received a standing ovation from most delegates after his speech. The Russian delegation remained seated and did not applaud. 2 hr 6 min ago IAEA chief met with Russian and Ukrainian ministers to discuss safety zone around Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant From CNN’s Jennifer Deaton International Atomic Energy Agency Director General Rafael Grossi said he met the foreign ministers of Ukraine and Russia on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly on Wednesday in an effort to establish a safety and security protection zone around the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant. “I’m working very very hard,” he said. “The wheels are in motion.” Grossi had meetings with Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dymtro Kuleba and Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. The issue needs to be resolved quickly, Grossi said. “Getting an agreement today would have been nice, but you can imagine that these are very complex issues that require perhaps a bit more than one meeting. But we are already working on the very concrete aspects that would be required to having the zone be established,” he said. Grossi added that beyond the differences, “there is the conviction that the establishment of this zone is indispensable. Let’s be clear. This nuclear power plant is being shelled now. And so we need to protect it in some way.” 2 hr 17 min ago Shelling damages cables providing power to Zaporizhzhia nuclear reactor, UN watchdog says From CNN’s Mohammed Tawfeeq A number of cables providing electricity to one of Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant’s reactors were damaged by shelling on Wednesday, the UN nuclear watchdog said in a statement. The International Atomic Energy Agency said the shelling had temporarily forced reactor number six “to rely on emergency diesel generators for the power it needs for essential safety functions.” The five other reactors were not affected and continued ” to receive power directly from the plant’s off-site power line that was restored last week,” IAEA added. The plant in southern Ukraine, with six reactors, is the largest nuclear power station in Europe. It was mostly built in the Soviet era and became Ukrainian property after its declaration of independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. “Work is underway to repair the damaged cables,” the IAEA’s statement said. “This once again demonstrates the urgent necessity to establish such a zone around the ZNPP. Until yesterday, there seemed to be less shelling at or near the plant, but this latest episode shows that the danger remains very real, It hasn’t gone away, and we can’t afford to lose any more time,” IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi said. 2 hr 33 min ago Zelensky calls for the UN to deprive Russia of its veto power in the Security Council From CNN’s J...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Live Updates: Russia's War In Ukraine
Ruff Day! Overheated Dog Rescued From Hiking Trail In Scottsdale
Ruff Day! Overheated Dog Rescued From Hiking Trail In Scottsdale
Ruff Day! Overheated Dog Rescued From Hiking Trail In Scottsdale https://digitalarizonanews.com/ruff-day-overheated-dog-rescued-from-hiking-trail-in-scottsdale/ Paramedics carried Diego the German Shepard down a steep part of the trail and removed the hiker and the dogs utilizing a UTV. SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — A dog who became overheated was rescued from a hiking trail in Scottsdale Wednesday, a good reminder about protecting your four-legged friends during hot weather. Scottsdale firefighters said a female hiker was on the trail 3/4 of the way from the trailhead with her two dogs when “Diego” got overheated. Scottsdale paramedics started cooling and rehydration efforts to help the 125-pound German Shepard, who was showing signs of heat exhaustion.  Paramedics carried Diego down a steep part of the trail and removed the hiker and the dogs utilizing a UTV. A large sign is located at the beginning of Tom’s Thumb Trailhead, reminding hikers, “the desert heat can kill your dog.”  Paramedics said Diego was doing much better after five bottles of water Heat-related safety tips for you and your pup  Do’s: Verify the weather before you walk your dog outside: Try to avoid walking your dog mid-day when it’s the hottest. Try and limit your animal’s exercise if it’s above 85 degrees. Check the sidewalk or asphalt temperature: If it is too hot for you to touch, it is too hot for your dog’s paws! Walk your dogs in the cooler time of the day: Early in the morning before 10 am or after 5 or 6 p.m. Provide shade for your outdoor pets: In the AZ heat and sunshine, your dog will need shade for cover and hopefully a breezeway there as well. Don’t’s:  Leaving your dog or cat in the hot car CAN BE FATAL! Temperatures in an enclosed vehicle will heat up quickly, and even when you think it’s reasonably cool out, the temperature in the car is likely 15-25 degrees hotter! Don’t leave your dog outside in the summer heat. Not only can your dog’s skin burn in the heat, but they can get dehydrated and even suffer heatstroke. Never leave them outside in the heat for more than 30 minutes at a time if possible. Do not forget to give your pets PLENTY water before you leave the house. Dogs can become severely dehydrated, especially in the hotter summer months. So always be sure to keep enough water for your dogs or cats no matter what, and place the water bowl or bucket where it’s in the shade all day too!  Up to Speed Catch up on the latest news and stories on the 12News YouTube channel. Subscribe today. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Ruff Day! Overheated Dog Rescued From Hiking Trail In Scottsdale
Trump Suffers Setback As Appeals Panel Rejects Cannon Ruling
Trump Suffers Setback As Appeals Panel Rejects Cannon Ruling
Trump Suffers Setback As Appeals Panel Rejects Cannon Ruling https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-suffers-setback-as-appeals-panel-rejects-cannon-ruling/ Two of the three judges on the panel, Andrew Brasher and Britt Grant, were appointed to the court by Trump. The third, Robin Rosenbaum, was appointed by President Barack Obama. In the unanimous decision, the judges declared it “self-evident” that the public interest favored allowing the Justice Department to determine whether any of the records were improperly disclosed, risking national security damage. “For our part, we cannot discern why Plaintiff would have an individual interest in or need for any of the one-hundred documents with classification markings,” the appeals court wrote in an opinion that listed no individual judge as the author. While Cannon speculated in her ruling that allowing investigators continued access to the documents could result in leaks of their contents, the appeals panel brushed aside that concern. “Permitting the United States to retain the documents does not suggest that they will be released; indeed, a purpose of the United States’s efforts in investigating the recovered classified documents is to limit unauthorized disclosure of the information they contain,” the appeals judges wrote. “Not only that, but any authorized official who makes an improper disclosure risks her own criminal liability.” The 11th Circuit’s rules appear to preclude any attempt to ask the full bench of that court to reconsider the government’s motion, but Trump could seek emergency relief from the Supreme Court. Trump attorney Christopher Kise did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the ruling. The appeals court’s opinion was unsparing toward Cannon and replete with indications that the appeals judges took a vastly different approach to the document fight than she did. Trump’s legal team, Cannon and even a senior judge that she appointed as a special master have generally referred to the national-security documents at issue as “marked classified,” deferring at least to a degree to Trump’s claim that he declassified all the records found at Mar-a-Lago, despite a lack of evidence buttressing his assertion. But the appeals court panel took a different approach, often referring without qualification to the records as “classified.” They also characterized the public dispute over potential declassification of the documents as a “red herring,” contending that even if true, “that would not explain why [Trump] has a personal interest in them.” Throughout their ruling, the three judges made clear they had little patience for Trump’s freewheeling claims about the status of the 100 documents, noting that he had presented no evidence to support those public assertions. And they noted drily that there’s a common sense reason for documents to include classified markings “Classified documents are marked to show they are classified, for instance, with their classification level,” the panel observed. The timing of the appeals court’s decision, coming less than 24 hours after the parties’ completed legal briefing on the issue, also signaled that the panel viewed the question as straightforward. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Suffers Setback As Appeals Panel Rejects Cannon Ruling
Trump Docs Probe: Court Lifts Hold On Mar-A-Lago Records
Trump Docs Probe: Court Lifts Hold On Mar-A-Lago Records
Trump Docs Probe: Court Lifts Hold On Mar-A-Lago Records https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-docs-probe-court-lifts-hold-on-mar-a-lago-records/ WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal appeals panel has lifted a judge’s hold on the Justice Department’s ability to use classified records seized from former President Donald Trump’s Florida estate in its ongoing criminal investigation. The ruling from a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit is a victory for the Justice Department, clearing the way for it to immediately resume its use of the documents as it evaluates whether to bring criminal charges in its investigation into the presence of top-secret government records held at Mar-a-Lago after Trump left the White House. The government had argued that its investigation had been impeded by the order from U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon that temporarily barred investigators from continuing to use the documents in the probe. Cannon, a Trump appointee, had said the hold would remain in place pending a separate review by an independent arbiter she had appointed at the Trump team’s request. The FBI last month seized roughly 11,000 documents, including about 100 with classification markings, during a court-authorized search of the Palm Beach club. It has launched a criminal investigation into whether the records were mishandled or compromised. It is not clear whether Trump or anyone else will be charged. Cannon ruled on Sept. 5 that she would name an independent arbiter, or special master, to do an independent review of those records and segregate any that may be covered by claims of attorney-client privilege or executive privilege and to determine whether any of the materials should be returned to Trump. Raymond Dearie, the former chief judge of the federal court based in Brooklyn, has been named to the role. The Justice Department had argued that a special master review of the classified documents was not necessary. It said Trump, as a former president, could not invoke executive privilege over the documents, nor could they be covered by attorney-client privilege because they do not involve communications between Trump and his lawyers. Trump’s lawyers argued that an independent review of the records was essential given the unprecedented nature of the investigation. The lawyers also said the department had not yet proven that the seized documents were classified, though they notably stopped short of asserting — as Trump repeatedly has — that the records were previously declassified. They have resisted providing Dearie with their position on that question, signaling the issue could be part of their defense in the event of an indictment. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Docs Probe: Court Lifts Hold On Mar-A-Lago Records
Appeals Panel Says Judge Erred In Blocking DOJ Probe Of Mar-A-Lago Documents
Appeals Panel Says Judge Erred In Blocking DOJ Probe Of Mar-A-Lago Documents
Appeals Panel Says Judge Erred In Blocking DOJ Probe Of Mar-A-Lago Documents https://digitalarizonanews.com/appeals-panel-says-judge-erred-in-blocking-doj-probe-of-mar-a-lago-documents/ Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate is shown in Palm Beach, Fla., in July 2019. | AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee A three-judge appeals court panel has granted the Justice Department’s request to block aspects of U.S. District Court Judge Aileen Cannon’s ruling that enjoined a criminal investigation into highly sensitive documents seized from former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate. The panel ruled that Cannon erred when she prevented federal prosecutors from using the 100 documents — marked as classified — recovered from Trump’s estate as part of a criminal inquiry. “[Trump] has not even attempted to show that he has a need to know the information contained in the classified documents,” the panel ruled in a 29-page decision. “Nor has he established that the current administration has waived that requirement for these documents.” Two of the three judges on the panel, Andrew Brasher and Britt Grant, were appointed to the court by Trump. The third, Robin Rosenbaum, was appointed by President Barack Obama. In the unanimous decision, the judges declared it “self-evident” that the public interest favored allowing the Justice Department to determine whether any of the records were improperly disclosed, risking national security damage. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Appeals Panel Says Judge Erred In Blocking DOJ Probe Of Mar-A-Lago Documents
Good Afternoon News: Gonzalez' Sweetheart Deal Violates Election Law Climate Advocates Go After Gov. Brown And Trump Sued For Alleged Fraud Scheme
Good Afternoon News: Gonzalez' Sweetheart Deal Violates Election Law Climate Advocates Go After Gov. Brown And Trump Sued For Alleged Fraud Scheme
Good Afternoon, News: Gonzalez' Sweetheart Deal Violates Election Law, Climate Advocates Go After Gov. Brown, And Trump Sued For Alleged Fraud Scheme https://digitalarizonanews.com/good-afternoon-news-gonzalez-sweetheart-deal-violates-election-law-climate-advocates-go-after-gov-brown-and-trump-sued-for-alleged-fraud-scheme/ The Mercury provides news and fun every single day—but your help is essential. If you believe Portland benefits from smart, local journalism and arts coverage, please consider making a small monthly contribution, because without you, there is no us. Thanks for your support! GOOD AFTERNOON, PORTLAND! “Do you remember? The 21st night of September? Love was changin’ the minds of pretenders, while chasin’ the clouds away.” I remember, too. Now let’s get into some Earth, Wind, and NEWS! IN LOCAL NEWS: • The Portland business community’s sweetheart council candidate Rene Gonzalez has been slapped with a huge $77,000 fine for accepting and failing to report an enormous rent discount he was receiving from local money-bags Jordan Schnitzer. Normally the space would’ve gone for nearly $7,000 per month, while Rene was only paying… [checks notes] $250 a month?? Plus getting two free parking spaces?? WOW! I suppose Schnitzer actually does believe in affordable rent (at least for his puppet pals). Our Isabella Garcia has more! City council candidate Rene Gonzalez may have to pay $77,140 in fines for violating Portland’s small donor election laws. https://t.co/BfOmIs1MyQ — Portland Mercury (@portlandmercury) September 21, 2022 • Question: How did a tenant who was enrolled in the city’s affordable housing program suddenly get served with a 50 percent rent increase from her landlord? And what’s worse, why is this completely legal? Our Alex Zielinski takes a deep dive and provides answers. • Climate advocates are FAH-URIOUS over Gov. Kate Brown’s pick to lead the very powerful Oregon Transportation Commission, saying that outgoing Oregon Senator Lee Beyer is a) replacing a person of color, b) isn’t climate conscious, and c) will simply rubber stamp ODOT projects. Find out all the deets from our Isabella Garcia. Celebrating a decade of supporting small budget films and fledgling filmmakers, Portland Film Festival has been looking for a theater. Now, they think the best path forward is building one of their own.https://t.co/qPenGj0WHe — Portland Mercury (@portlandmercury) September 21, 2022 IN NATIONAL/WORLD NEWS: • New York Attorney General Letitia James is fed up with Trump’s criminal bullshit and is suing him and his family for a massive fraud scheme, in which he allegedly overvalued his assets by billions of dollars in order to pull a fast one on banks, insurance brokers, and the IRS. BREAKING: Appeals Court panel *grants* DOJ request for a stay of parts of Judge Cannon’s ruling. pic.twitter.com/dx2aGZGjDU — Kyle Cheney (@kyledcheney) September 21, 2022 • In a desperate attempt to cut the losses in the war he started, Russian prez Vladimir Putin is calling up a new round of troops to fight in Ukraine—and is facing protests at home and residents fleeing the country for his trouble. Oh, and did I mention he’s also making nuclear threats? He’s making nuclear threats. ron paul delivered selena. don’t know what to do with this information so i’m bringing it here. pic.twitter.com/O4ZvN2Jsyh — blaire erskine (@blaireerskine) September 21, 2022 • The House has passed a bill called the Presidential Election Reform Act, which would basically stop future wanna-be despots from pulling the same “wanna-be despot” bullshit that Trump pulled when he desperately tried to overturn the 2020 election. (Psst… only NINE Republicans voted in favor of it.) • Besides the classic Earth, Wind & Fire song, another historical milestone happened on September 21: On September 21, 1985, George Clooney made his debut on The Facts of Life. #80s #80stv pic.twitter.com/tjuwIfZBGy — Retro Clips (@RetroClips80s) September 21, 2022 • Ooooooh… check out these ghostly, super cool pics of Neptune, courtesy of the James Webb Space Telescope. • And finally… was September 21 the greatest day in history, or what?! 23 YEARS AGO TODAY!@MariahCarey released ‘Heartbreaker,’ featuring Jay-Z, as the lead single from ‘Rainbow’ on September 21, 1999! pic.twitter.com/UCdmNeqjzS — BROTHER (@BrotherHQ) September 21, 2022 Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Good Afternoon News: Gonzalez' Sweetheart Deal Violates Election Law Climate Advocates Go After Gov. Brown And Trump Sued For Alleged Fraud Scheme
Kylan Boswell Progressing Well Through Rehab After Foot Surgery Status For 2022-23 Season Still Uncertain
Kylan Boswell Progressing Well Through Rehab After Foot Surgery Status For 2022-23 Season Still Uncertain
Kylan Boswell Progressing Well Through Rehab After Foot Surgery, Status For 2022-23 Season Still Uncertain https://digitalarizonanews.com/kylan-boswell-progressing-well-through-rehab-after-foot-surgery-status-for-2022-23-season-still-uncertain/ Under normal circumstances, Kylan Boswell should be preparing for his final season of high school basketball, one he hoped would culminate with a national championship and some All-American honors. Team titles and personal accolades are still possible this next year, but now they’d be at the collegiate level. And they’ll require him to return to his old form after undergoing foot surgery over the summer. “I felt like I made the smartest move, for sure,” Boswell said of his decision to reclassify, graduating a year early from high school and enrolling at Arizona as a 17-year-old. “It took me a minute to get over the fact that all those days in the gym, just working for the senior year high school stuff, McDonald’s (All-American), Jordan Brand (Classic), and stuff like that. It was really just (about) long-term situations. Sacrifice for something bigger in the future.” Boswell, who guided Phoenix’s AZ Compass Prep to the GEICO High School Nationals earlier this year, said he injured his right foot during the second session of the Nike Elite Youth Basketball League in April, getting diagnosed with a stress fracture not long after. Once surgery was deemed necessary, the process began for being able to reclassify out of the 2023 recruiting class—where he was ranked as the No. 4 point guard in the country—to 2022. He said his family found an online program that would enable him to graduate a year early. It required taking several classes in June in order to meet reclassification deadlines, but because of his injury Boswell had plenty of free time. “We couldn’t really do anything with my foot so we just had to let it rest,” he said. “But the academics for that month were very difficult.” By reclassifying, and thus joining Arizona over the summer, Boswell has been able to do the bulk of his rehab with the Wildcats’ training and medical staff. He credits head basketball trainer Justin Kokoskie and strength coach Chris Rounds with getting him to where he believes he’s ahead of schedule in his recovery. “The rehab here, I don’t feel like I could have got it anywhere else,” he said. “So I would definitely take that over anything else.” When news broke of the injury in August, UA coach Tommy Lloyd made it seem like Boswell wouldn’t be able to play until midway through the 2022-23 season. That timeline may end up getting accelerated, based on how Boswell’s recovery is going, though he’s not ready to make any promises. “I don’t want to give out dates and stuff yet,” Boswell said. “I mean, of course there’s goals, but we’re not really sure. So far, it’s just been smooth sailing, I’m kind of back sooner than I thought it would be, too, which is nice.I’m allowed to progress more and more each day. Right now I’ve gotten back into just on-court stuff. I just recently got cleared to start jumping on my foot. It’s basically just how I feel, if I’m confident and stuff like that, but (there’s) not really a time stamp.” In all fairness, Arizona doesn’t need Boswell in 2022-23 with the return of starting point guard Kerr Kriisa and the addition of Texas graduate transfer Courtney Ramey. When Boswell committed to the UA in February he did so with the understanding that by the time he joined the team for the 2023-24 season every ball handler on the current roster could be gone. Now that everything has changed, so has his approach to his first college season. “I feel like how I play can mold with anybody, really,” he said. “So I felt like it didn’t really matter who was on the team or not. I just really like this group, and I feel like we can do something special. Just right now trying to get the chemistry and stuff down, but I feel like my game could play with anyone on the team.” Boswell said he’s gotten to watch Kriisa and Ramey practice, which has allowed him to pick up on their tendencies. “I can know what to apply in my game and help them out, too,” he said. “They’ve been in the weight room, great friends, great guys. They’re good leaders for me to look up to, mold certain stuff from them to my game. Overall Kerr and Courtney are just good people.” Though he can’t practice yet, Boswell said his past experience with Lloyd’s system—he ran it in eighth grade, he said—will help with the learning curve. Ironically, when he first started getting recruited by Lloyd between his sophomore and junior seasons, when Boswell was still playing in California and Lloyd had yet to coach a game, he had no idea what type of offense his future coach would use. “When I first talked to Tommy I didn’t really know who he was and what his philosophies were, I just liked how he was, I can tell he was a good person,” Boswell said. “And then now watching, from that past year from my sophomore year and then committing my junior year, I definitely wanted to come because of recognizing this type of offense and playing it in the past. It definitely kind of influenced me.” The 6-foot-2 Boswell is listed at 195 pounds on Arizona’s online roster, but he said his goal is to be playing at 205 to 210 pounds (while also maintaining only 5 to 6 percent body fat). That’s on the stockier side for a player of his height, but he said that’s always been the case for him. “I feel like the Samoan side of me has always been a part of my game, just being a little bit thicker and stronger,” he said. “Never tried to take away from that, that’s who I am as a player, but just trying to stay in shape is the goal.” Read More…
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Kylan Boswell Progressing Well Through Rehab After Foot Surgery Status For 2022-23 Season Still Uncertain
Shamrock Foods Buys 81 Acres In Marana For Distribution Center AZ Big Media
Shamrock Foods Buys 81 Acres In Marana For Distribution Center AZ Big Media
Shamrock Foods Buys 81 Acres In Marana For Distribution Center – AZ Big Media https://digitalarizonanews.com/shamrock-foods-buys-81-acres-in-marana-for-distribution-center-az-big-media/ Shamrock Foods Company, a 100-year-old, multi-billion-dollar, family-owned Phoenix-based company, has acquired 81 acres from Crown West Residential Group at The Crossroads at Gladden. The planned distribution center will serve southern Arizona markets.  Tangerine 2021, LLC, an affiliate of Crown West Residential Group, acquired the Crossroads at Gladden property adjacent to the Gladden Farms master-planned community in 2021 and the Town of Marana approved zoning for a variety of land uses.  READ ALSO: 57.8 acres of land in Marana sells for $14.2 million READ ALSO: Glendale, Tucson among 10 best cities to buy a second home The land sale to Shamrock Foods follows the sale earlier this summer of 128 acres to Flint Development for warehouse and distribution logistics buildings. The Crossroads at Gladden has 63 acres of property remaining for a mix of uses, with plans underway for a shopping center with over 50,000 square feet of retail, restaurant, and lodging on the corner of Tangerine Road and Clark Farms Boulevard.   “We are excited to welcome Shamrock Foods to The Crossroads at Gladden,” said Crown West Vice President Dean Wingert. “Shamrock, along with a complimentary mix of commercial and retail uses, will bring amenities and employment opportunities to the Gladden Farms community and northwest Pima County.” The broker for The Crossroads at Gladden sale to Shamrock Foods was Tim Healy at CBRE Advisory & Transaction Services in Tucson. About Shamrock Foods Company Shamrock Foods Company specializes in the manufacturing and distribution of quality food and food-related products through a family of companies including Shamrock Foods, one of the top 10 food service distributors, and Shamrock Farms, one of the largest milk companies in the country. Shamrock Foods Company is family-owned and continues its commitment to treating associates like family and customers and suppliers like friends. For more information, visit www.shamrockfoods.com. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Shamrock Foods Buys 81 Acres In Marana For Distribution Center AZ Big Media
James' Lawsuit Against Trump Is Latest In Longstanding Battle Between Them
James' Lawsuit Against Trump Is Latest In Longstanding Battle Between Them
James' Lawsuit Against Trump Is Latest In Longstanding Battle Between Them https://digitalarizonanews.com/james-lawsuit-against-trump-is-latest-in-longstanding-battle-between-them/ “Another Witch Hunt by a racist Attorney General, Letitia James, who failed in her run for Governor, getting almost zero support from the public, and now is doing poorly against Law & Order A.G. candidate, highly respected Michael Henry,” Trump said Wedneday in a post on his social media site, Truth Social, referring to James’ Republican opponent. “I never thought this case would be brought – until I saw her really bad poll numbers,” Trump added. “She is a fraud who campaigned on a ‘get Trump’ platform, despite the fact that the city is one of the crime and murder disasters of the world under her watch!” James dismissed the attacks and Trump’s argument that her case is politically motivated, noting that courts have rejected the claims before. “With regards to the name calling, as you know, they basically attempted to delay this investigation. Two judges have dismissed those claims of a witch hunt. So I give no credence to the names that he has referred to me,” she said at a press conference at her lower Manhattan office where she announced the suit. James, who previously served as New York City public advocate, won her office in 2018, after her predecessor, Eric Schneiderman, resigned in a domestic violence scandal. During that campaign, she made it clear that Trump would be her top target — remarks that have left the former president, a New York native, stewing ever since. “I will never be afraid to challenge this illegitimate president,” James said in a video during the campaign. “I believe that this president is incompetent. I believe that this president is ill-equipped to serve in the highest office of this land. And I believe that he is an embarrassment to all that we stand for.” She went on to say Trump should be indicted on criminal charges and charged with obstruction of justice. She even pulled Trump into her victory speech, saying her win “was about that man in the White House who can’t go a day without threatening our fundamental rights.” “As the next attorney general of his home state,” James said, “I will be shining a bright light into every dark corner of his real estate dealings, and every dealing, demanding truthfulness at every turn.” James toned down her rhetoric, to a degree, after taking office and launching an investigation into Trump — as well as fighting him in court on a host of policy matters while he was in the White House. Trump, on the other hand, only ramped up his own attacks. He lashed out at James and then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo in a series of tweets in 2019, accusing them, among other things, of “harassing all of my New York businesses in search of anything at all they can find to make me look as bad as possible.” He complained about how his company and children were “spending a fortune on lawyers.” James, who was only referred to in the barrage as Cuomo’s AG, responded that she would “follow the facts of any case, wherever they lead.” “Make no mistake: No one is above the law, not even the President,” she said. “P.S. My name is Letitia James. (You can call me Tish.).” As James’ investigation progressed, the legal and verbal sparring escalated. Trump sued James last year seeking to halt her probe, alleging it was “baseless” and motivated solely by her desire to harass a political opponent. A judge dismissed the suit in May. At a campaign rally in Texas in January, Trump called for massive protests if James and three other Black prosecutors investigating him “do anything illegal.” He said: “These prosecutors are vicious, horrible people. They’re racists and they’re very sick — they’re mentally sick.” But Trump’s tirades have not swayed the courts. He was held in contempt of court in April and fined $10,000 a day for refusing to turn over financial documents James requested in her investigation. The contempt order was lifted after he agreed to turn over the documents — but James said in her suit Wednesday that documents covered by the subpoena which he never turned over were found at his Mar-a-Lago estate. Trump lost another court skirmish when he was ordered to appear for questioning under oath in James’ investigation, losing an attempt to block the deposition. He sat for the deposition at the AG’s office last month, but took the Fifth Amendment and declined to answer every question. “When your family, your company, and all the people in your orbit have become the targets of an unfounded, politically motivated Witch Hunt supported by lawyers, prosecutors, and the Fake News Media, you have no choice,” Trump said last month. Later Wednesday, she sent out a fundraising email to campaign supporters: “These men think they can rattle me and scare me off my path, but the truth is, they have only reaffirmed why I went into this work in the first place.” James hopes to have the last word in the longstanding war if she triumphs in her case, which seeks to bar him and his family from being officers of any business in New York and ban them from participating in real estate transactions or getting loans in the state. “The complaint demonstrates that Donald Trump falsely inflated his net worth by billions of dollars to unjustly enrich himself and to cheat the system, thereby cheating all of us,” she told reporters. “Claiming you have money you do not have does not amount to the art of the deal. It’s the art of the steal,” she said. “No one, no one is above the law.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
James' Lawsuit Against Trump Is Latest In Longstanding Battle Between Them
Trump Ally Tom Barrack Used Access To White House To Help Foreign Government Prosecutor Says
Trump Ally Tom Barrack Used Access To White House To Help Foreign Government Prosecutor Says
Trump Ally Tom Barrack Used Access To White House To Help Foreign Government, Prosecutor Says https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-ally-tom-barrack-used-access-to-white-house-to-help-foreign-government-prosecutor-says/ Tom Barrack used his longtime friendship with Donald Trump to “illegally provide” government officials from the United Arab Emirates with access to the then-president and senior administration officials, and he did so for “money and power,” prosecutors said Wednesday. Barrack, a California billionaire, and his former assistant Matthew Grimes “met with and took directions from” the UAE during a two-year period starting in 2016, Assistant U.S. Attorney Hiral Mehta told jurors in Brooklyn federal court. The pair are standing trial for acting as unregistered foreign agents. “They did so in the corrupt pursuit of money and power,” Mehta alleged in his opening statement at their criminal trial. Barrack’s lawyer, Michael Schachter, said that his client was never under anyone’s control, dismissing charges that Barrack was acting as a foreign agent as “nothing short of ridiculous.” “He did things because he wanted to” and not because he was being urged to do so by a foreign government, Schachter said. He “is an innocent man.” In court filings, prosecutors said the former president and Barrack have been friends for decades and UAE officials moved to take advantage of that relationship when Trump was running for president during the 2016 campaign cycle. At the behest of UAE officials, Barrack leveraged his friendship with Trump to get language about the importance of working with “our Gulf allies” inserted in a Trump campaign speech about energy in 2016, Mehta told jurors. When he served as chair of Trump’s inaugural committee, Emirati officials also pressed Barrack for details on who he’d pick for various high level jobs, including CIA director and at the State and Defense departments, the prosecutor said. He also provided UAE officials with sensitive information, including internal discussions within the Trump administration concerning the blockade of Qatar by the UAE, Mehta said. And as Barrack was assisting the Emirati government, it was investing tens of millions of dollars in his private equity fund, the prosecutor added. When he was asked by the FBI about his dealing with UAE officials and the actions he’d taken, Barrack “started lying” and “lied and lied again.” Schachter argued that the feds were blowing up “meaningless, inconsequential acts,” including Barrack praising the UAE as an “important ally” during a TV interview. “Barack Obama has said the same thing,” Schachter told the jury. He also said the amount of money the country invested in his client’s $40 billion fund was relatively small, and Barrack had backed Qatar’s position over the UAE’s during the blockade. The UAE and Saudi Arabia blockaded Qatar from 2017 to 2021. Trump tweeted approval of the blockade in 2017. “This is a decent man wrongly accused of crimes he did not commit,” Schachter said. Grimes’ lawyer, Abbe Lowell, denied that his client knowingly acted as a foreign agent and contended that he was essentially an intern for Barrack. While Grimes did set up appointments for Barrack, including with UAE officials, he did so at his boss’ request, Lowell said, adding that he’d also get Barrack his coffee and smoothies and babysit his kids. “All he was doing was his U.S. job, for his U.S. company, for his U.S. boss,” Lowell said. The trial is expected to last about five weeks. This article was originally published on NBCNews.com Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Ally Tom Barrack Used Access To White House To Help Foreign Government Prosecutor Says
Zelenskyy Calls Russia A State Sponsor Of Terrorism; Biden Calls On U.N. To Stand With Ukraine
Zelenskyy Calls Russia A State Sponsor Of Terrorism; Biden Calls On U.N. To Stand With Ukraine
Zelenskyy Calls Russia A State Sponsor Of Terrorism; Biden Calls On U.N. To Stand With Ukraine https://digitalarizonanews.com/zelenskyy-calls-russia-a-state-sponsor-of-terrorism-biden-calls-on-u-n-to-stand-with-ukraine/ Zelenskyy calls Russia a state sponsor of terrorism Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy speaks during an interview with Reuters, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine September 16, 2022.  Valentyn Ogirenko | Reuters Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy demanded that global leaders hold Russia accountable for its monthslong assault on his nation. “Russia should pay for this war,” Zelenskyy said, calling for a special U.N. tribunal to “punish Russia.” “We must finally recognize Russia as a the state of sponsor of terrorism,” Zelenskyy said at the 77th U.N. General Assembly in New York City. Zelenskyy’s dramatic remarks to world leaders came on the heels of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s decision to mobilize hundreds of thousands of troops for war. Zelenskyy, who has not left his war-weary nation since Russia’s full-throttle invasion in February, appeared virtually after an introduction by Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba at the 77th U.N. General Assembly. — Amanda Macias NATO Secretary General says allies will ‘continue to step up support’ for Ukraine as Putin mobilizes more troops for war NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg met with Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in New York City. “The Ukrainian people and forces inspire us all with their courage and determination,” the NATO chief wrote on Twitter. “As president Putin escalates Russia’s war, it is even more important that NATO allies continue to step up support,” he added, referencing the Kremlin’s recent announcement to mobilize additional troops for the war in Ukraine. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is expected to deliver a dramatic speech at the U.N. later on Wednesday. — Amanda Macias IAEA still working on Ukraine power plant plan despite Putin bluster A serviceman with a Russian flag on his uniform stands guard near the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant outside the Russian-controlled city of Enerhodar in the Zaporizhzhia region, Ukraine, on Aug. 4, 2022. Alexander Ermochenko | Reuters The head of the United Nations atomic agency said he would not abandon a plan to create a protection zone around the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant despite Russian plans to mobilize new troops and hold a referendum in the region. Russia and Ukraine have blamed each other for shelling at the site of Europe’s biggest nuclear power plant that has damaged buildings close to its six reactors and risked nuclear catastrophe, including by cutting power lines essential to cooling fuel in the reactors even though they are all shut down. Ukrainian staff are operating under the orders of Russian forces at the site. Western states have called on Moscow to withdraw its troops. “Even in the worst of conditions diplomacy should never stop. We can’t throw our hands up and say look at what’s being said, go away and hope that something will happen to solve this situation,” Rafael Grossi, chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency, told reporters on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly. “It’s our responsibility to do it by proposing pragmatic, realistic and physical proposals on the table.” — Reuters Biden meets U.K. Prime Minister Liz Truss in first formal bilateral since her ascension to the office Elizabeth Truss, Foreign Minister of Great Britain, sits in a bilateral discussion with her Japanese counterpart during the summit of foreign ministers of the G7 group of leading democratic economic powers at the Schlossgut Weissenhaus. The G7 countries of Germany, Great Britain, France, Italy, Canada and Japan are joined by the foreign minister of Ukraine. Marcus Brandt | Picture Alliance | Getty Images President Joe Biden met with U.K. Prime Minster Liz Truss on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly. The two leaders were originally slated to meet last week in London at No. 10 Downing Street. Biden began the bilateral meeting by offering his condolences for the passing of Queen Elizabeth II. Truss thanked Biden and first lady Jill Biden for attending the state funeral for the late monarch. She also thanked Biden for his leadership as a “steadfast ally.” Truss said that she enjoyed working with his Secretary of State Antony Blinken in her previous role as U.K. foreign minister. Truss, ascended to the prime minster role earlier this month, following Boris Johnson’s resignation. The president did not respond to questions from reporters. — Amanda Macias Biden meets with U.N. chief following General Assembly address US President Joe Biden and United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres hold a bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly 76th session General Debate at the United Nations Headquarters, in New York, September 20, 2021. Brendan Smialowski | AFP | Getty Images President Joe Biden met with U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on the heels of his address to the 77th United Nations General Assembly in New York City. Biden said he did not have an additional response to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s order to mobilize some 300,000 additional troops to fight in Ukraine when asked by reporters at the top of the meeting. During Biden’s address, he slammed Moscow’s full-throttle assault on Ukraine and pledged to continue to support the war-torn nation with weaponry and humanitarian aid. Biden and Guterres are expected to address other issues aside from the war in Ukraine during their closed-door meeting. — Amanda Macias Biden calls for U.N. member states to stand with Ukraine and oppose Russian aggression U.S. President Joe Biden addresses the 77th Session of the United Nations General Assembly at U.N. Headquarters in New York City, September 21, 2022. Brendan McDermid | Reuters President Joe Biden called for U.N. member states to stand with Ukraine and oppose Russian aggression, warning that the Kremlin’s invasion of its smaller neighbor threatened the independence and sovereignty of nations around the world. “This war is about extinguishing Ukraine’s right to exist as a state plain and simple, and Ukraine’s right to exist as a people,” Biden told the U.N. General Assembly. “Whoever you are, wherever you live, whatever you believe — that should make your blood run cold.” Biden condemned Russia’s invasion as a clear violation of the U.N. charter. The U.S. president said the nations of the world had an obligation to put their political differences aside and defend the global body’s founding principles by standing in solidarity with Ukraine. “If nations can pursue their imperial ambitions without consequences, then we put at risk everything this very institution stands for,” Biden said. The president called for the U.N. to be “clear, firm and unwavering in our resolve.” “Ukraine has the same rights that belong to every sovereign nation. We will stand in solidarity with Ukraine, we will stand in solidarity against Russia’s aggression – period,” Biden said. — Spencer Kimball Zelenskyy set to deliver dramatic remarks to U.N. as Russia mobilizes more troops for war President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy visits the Kharkiv region for the first time since Russia started the attacks against his country on February 24, in Kharkiv region, Ukraine on May 29, 2022.(Photo by Ukrainian Presidency/Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images) Ukrainian Presidency | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will deliver dramatic remarks to world leaders Wednesday, only hours after Russia moved to mobilize hundreds of thousands of troops for its months long assault on its ex-Soviet neighbor. Zelenskyy, who has not left his war weary nation since Russia’s full throttle attack in late February, will speak after a stunning Ukrainian counteroffensive reclaimed vast swaths of land lost early in the war. While nearly every leader who has stepped behind the famed U.N. speaker’s rostrum has condemned Russia for its ongoing assault, Zelenskyy is expected to urge leaders to publicly establish where they stand on the war. He will call on countries such as China, the world’s second largest economy, to abandon its neutrality. — Amanda Macias Biden expected to slam Russia’s war in Ukraine in U.N. speech President Joe Biden speaks during the First State Democratic Dinner in Dover, Delaware. Saul Loeb | AFP | Getty Images President Joe Biden is expected to slam Russia’s ongoing war in Ukraine and galvanize allies to support Kyiv in its era-defining fight for sovereignty. Biden’s address to the 77th United Nations General Assembly comes as Russia’s war in Ukraine marches past its 200th day, while governments continue to grapple with the fallout of the Covid-19 pandemic and as climate change uncertainties mount. Following his speech before the international forum, Biden will meet with U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and then separately with U.K. Prime Minister Liz Truss. Linda Thomas-Greenfield, Biden’s ambassador to the United Nations, told reporters last week that a U.S. delegation will meet with a Ukrainian delegation on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly. She said that no such meeting was planned with the Russian delegation. — Amanda Macias Pope says Ukrainians subjected to ‘savageness, monstrosities and torture’ Pope Francis holds his homily in St. Peter’s Square during his general weekly audience on June 15, 2022 in Vatican City, Vatican. Franco Origlia | Getty Images The Pope in a weekly address prayed for the tortured corpses left in the aftermath of Russia’s war in Ukraine. “I would like to mention the terrible situation in tormented Ukraine. Cardinal Krajewski went there for the fourth time. Yesterday he telephoned me, he is spending...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Zelenskyy Calls Russia A State Sponsor Of Terrorism; Biden Calls On U.N. To Stand With Ukraine
Trump Accused Of Vast Fraud In Suit By NY Attorney General
Trump Accused Of Vast Fraud In Suit By NY Attorney General
Trump Accused Of Vast Fraud In Suit By NY Attorney General https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-accused-of-vast-fraud-in-suit-by-ny-attorney-general/ FILE – This aerial image taken with a drone, shows Trump National Golf Club, in Briarcliff Manor, NY., on Oct. 20, 2021. New York’s attorney general sued former President Donald Trump and his company, on Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2022, alleging business fraud involving some of their most prized assets, including properties in Manhattan, Chicago and Washington, D.C. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump Accused Of Vast Fraud In Suit By NY Attorney General
Why Jim McMahon And Other Former NFL Players Promote Cannabis Use AZ Big Media
Why Jim McMahon And Other Former NFL Players Promote Cannabis Use AZ Big Media
Why Jim McMahon And Other Former NFL Players Promote Cannabis Use – AZ Big Media https://digitalarizonanews.com/why-jim-mcmahon-and-other-former-nfl-players-promote-cannabis-use-az-big-media/ A group of Mint Dispensary customers surrounded a towering man wearing a flat-brim hat with a cross emblem and a T-shirt that had the familiar image of a marijuana leaf emblazoned on the front. The customers might not have recognized that the guy in the hat with the pot leaf on his shirt was a former NFL standout, but they might have recognized another NFL great standing nearby wearing his trademark sunglasses: the “punky QB” himself, Jim McMahon. READ ALSO: Here’s why Arizona cannabis sales are expected to blossom Former NFL quarterback Jim McMahon, a Scottsdale resident, joined former NFL linemen Kyle Turley and Eben Britton for a recent event at the Tempe dispensary hoping to remove some of the negative stigma that comes with cannabis use. They came together to tell their stories and showcase how cannabis can be a new addition to the athlete’s gym bag. For McMahon, cannabinoids haven’t just been a temporary fix. They have been a life-altering solution. “God got us all off of these (pain) pills that we were taking for years,” said McMahon, the legendary quarterback who played seven of his 15 seasons with the Chicago Bears and had a short stint with the Arizona Cardinals. “(Cannabis) is a much, much better thing for us. Everybody has a cannabinoid system in their bodies, and we’re supposed to be using this plant.” Professional athletes endure a plethora of mental and physical obstacles while competing at the highest level. Finding the necessary pain-management solution that aligns with the collective bargaining agreement between the NFL and its players has been a controversial topic for decades. With the NFL season in full swing, the level of punishment for cannabis use compared to other league violations is a major topic of discussion for players. Back in 2018, retired NFL tight end Martellus Bennett estimated during a Bleacher Report podcast that cannabinoids are used by more than 70% of the league’s players to manage pain. “There are times of the year where your body just hurts so bad,” Bennett said. “There are anti-inflammatory drugs you take so long that they start to eat at your liver, kidneys and things like that. A human made that. God made weed.” Current and former athletes have been at the forefront of the push to allow the use of cannabis, and the NFL and NBA have recently started to change their overall stance on marijuana. During the 2021 offseason, the NFL and the NFL Players Association (NFLPA) agreed on changes to the league’s marijuana policy. Players now are only required to test for marijuana once per year at the start of training camp. Players that fail the test are subject to a fine, but not the lengthy suspension they faced in the past. Meanwhile, the NBA extended its current policy of not drug testing players at all for marijuana. Finding ways to cope with the pain has been a common problem for athletes across the sports landscape. For McMahon, Turley and Britton, creating a company that could encapsulate their stories and offer healthy cannabinoid alternatives was of utmost importance. So the three created their own cannabis company, Revenant. The brand launched two years ago, and the company is hoping to create a recognizable movement around healthy, lab-tested cannabis products that are both affordable and easy to find. Through every head-to-head collision, forceable tackle and painful stumble, each of the three players dealt with severe injuries, and the pain still lingers today. McMahon, who led the 1985 Bears to a Super Bowl XX victory over the New England Patriots, suffered from severe chronic pain after he retired. In order to deal with the pain, he became attached to pills, claiming that at one point he would take 100 Percocet pills a month. McMahon’s story is not unique among former NFL players, including Turley, who said he suffered from chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) as a result of numerous hits to his head as a player. “I wanted to have a brand in the cannabis space that could speak to this experience that I had, where cannabis truly saved my life. And I can honestly say that to anyone,” said Turley, an offensive lineman who played in the league for nine seasons. Turley pointed to a meeting he had with high-ranking NFL officials and league doctors when he was asked about the recent changes to the NFL policy surrounding cannabis. He reflected on his experience on and off the field to explain why cannabinoids are a healthier option for players than opioids, which can cause severe long-term health issues. “Well, how do you address anything if you don’t go to the source first?” Turley asked. “The source is the endogenous cannabinoid system. It’s in the center of your brain. Everything else falls from it. “I spoke to (the NFL’s) doctors about this, and I showed them that my condition, in what they know about me and who I am, can be resolved and medically medicated and mediated through cannabis. “They told me after that meeting that I was right. I said, ‘Why does this have to take any time for you guys to do this?’” Injuries have always plagued athletes and the COVID-19 pandemic that began in 2020 resulted in condensed seasons and hectic schedules that only made the need for new medical solutions more crucial. On Feb. 1, the NFL pledged $1 million toward funding research into the benefits of cannabis and cannabidiol (CBD) on pain management for the players. The University of California San Diego and the University of Regina were chosen by the league to conduct a three-year study. There are now 37 states that have legalized medical use of cannabis, and proponents like Turley believe that dispensaries have a proven track for other benefits, including curing diseases and infections. “No offense, but these dispensaries are better than the multi-billion dollar hospitals down the street,” Turley said. “You can cure cancer here. You can cure diabetes here. “I cured neuropathy using Rick Simpson Oils (a cannabis extract developed by Canadian engineer Rick Simpson) off a two-and-a-half month treatment program watching Rick Simpson’s videos. I started curing all this stuff, and I’ve given it now to so many more people like Jim and Eban and the guys around this that have had the same experience, universally.” The fight to break down barriers around the use of cannabis in sports is ongoing, but thanks to athletes like Turley, McMahon and Britton, who have portrayed their lived experiences, policies and rules are changing. One story at a time. Story by Sam Stern, Cronkite News Read More Here
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Why Jim McMahon And Other Former NFL Players Promote Cannabis Use AZ Big Media
Tempe Prep Falls To Phoenix Country Day And Scottsdale Christian
Tempe Prep Falls To Phoenix Country Day And Scottsdale Christian
Tempe Prep Falls To Phoenix Country Day And Scottsdale Christian https://digitalarizonanews.com/tempe-prep-falls-to-phoenix-country-day-and-scottsdale-christian/ A look over Phoenix Country Day’s pool before the start of Tuesday’s meet. (Erin Patterson photo/AZPreps365) Erin Patterson is an ASU Cronkite School of Journalism student assigned to cover Tempe Preparatory Academy for AZPreps365.com The Tempe Prep swim team may not have come out on top Tuesday, but their teamwork and dedication shone through. TPA faced off against Phoenix Country Day School and Scottsdale Christian Academy at Phoenix Country Day. PCDS won the meet with 141 points, SCA placed second with 23 points and TPA was a close third with 20 points. Sophomore Jaimie Jastrzebski suffered a shoulder injury right before the girls 200 freestyle relay. The 200 relay B team was pulled due to the injury, but Jastrzebski was still supposed to swim for the girls 400 freestyle relay. Instead of also scratching the 400 relay, junior Niamh Waddell stepped up for her team. “It was so awesome,” TPA coach Maria Zello said. “The girls really came together. I’m pretty impressed that they chose to continue with the relay, persevere through that injury and find somebody to sub for her.” Waddell swam in the girls 200 medley relay, the 200 IM, the 100 breaststroke and the 400 freestyle relay. In the 400 relay, Waddell swam alongside senior Naomi Palmer, sophomore Maeve Waddell and sophomore Lillian Henderson. The relay ended up placing fourth with a time of 5:30.17. “I feel like since I’m an upperclassman I have to jump in more and not just wait for Maria to tell me to get up there,” Waddell said. “To volunteer and notice that someone is hurt is something that is really important.” Zello wasn’t the only one impressed. Senior captain Sophie Youngs also expressed her thoughts on Waddell’s actions. “Sometimes people are nervous and don’t want to be in the relay so it’s definitely really great to see somebody step in, especially for an injury,” Youngs said, “I’m just really proud of my teammate.” Youngs swam in the girls 200 medley relay, the 50 freestyle, the 100 freestyle and the 200 freestyle relay. “I had the 50 fly leg in the 200 medley,” Youngs said, “I’ve never swam butterfly but it felt pretty good. In my 50 freestyle and 100 freestyle, they haven’t been my best times but I’m only two seconds off my PR from last year so that’s pretty good for it being only the beginning of the season.” On top of the teamwork displayed Tuesday, the Knights also had multiple swimmers set new personal records. Freshman Jackson Gulseth dropped four seconds off his PR in boys 200 freestyle finishing with a time of 2:29.40. In the same event, freshman Ethan Rynish dropped two seconds off his PR finishing with a time of 2:53.70. The other two personal records set were in the girls 200 freestyle relay A team and senior Jonas Santini in the boys 50 freestyle. Santini swam a 29.39, and not only was the time a personal best but was also the first time he went sub-30 this season. “That was really a big achievement for him this year and was probably our most exciting race of the meet,” Zello said. The girls 200 freestyle relay was swam by sophomore Stella Andersson, sophomore Autumn Evdokimo, senior Naomi Palmer and senior Sofie Youngs. The team finished second overall in the race with a new PR of 2:06.98. PCDS will host Chandler Preparatory Academy, Gilbert Christian High School and Wickenburg High School at 4 p.m. Tuesday. SCA will swim against Chandler High School, Notre Dame Preparatory and AZ College Preparatory at Chandler High School at 4 p.m. Oct. 6. TPA will host Seton Catholic Preparatory and Valley Christian High School at 4 p.m. Oct. 6. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Tempe Prep Falls To Phoenix Country Day And Scottsdale Christian
Video: 'The System Protects The Rich': Michael Cohen Addresses New Fraud Lawsuit Against Trump CNN Video
Video: 'The System Protects The Rich': Michael Cohen Addresses New Fraud Lawsuit Against Trump CNN Video
Video: 'The System Protects The Rich': Michael Cohen Addresses New Fraud Lawsuit Against Trump – CNN Video https://digitalarizonanews.com/video-the-system-protects-the-rich-michael-cohen-addresses-new-fraud-lawsuit-against-trump-cnn-video/ The New York state attorney general filed a sweeping lawsuit against former President Donald Trump alleging he and three of his adult children were involved in expansive fraud lasting over a decade. In a statement to CNN, Trump’s attorney said, “Today’s filing is neither focused on the facts nor the law — rather, it is solely focused on advancing the Attorney General’s political agenda.” CNN speaks to former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen about the lawsuit. Source: CNN Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Video: 'The System Protects The Rich': Michael Cohen Addresses New Fraud Lawsuit Against Trump CNN Video
Dow Closes 500 Points Lower After The Fed Delivers Another Aggressive Rate Hike
Dow Closes 500 Points Lower After The Fed Delivers Another Aggressive Rate Hike
Dow Closes 500 Points Lower After The Fed Delivers Another Aggressive Rate Hike https://digitalarizonanews.com/dow-closes-500-points-lower-after-the-fed-delivers-another-aggressive-rate-hike/ Stocks slide, Dow closes 522 points lower in volatile trading session Stocks wavered on Wednesday but finished the session deep in the red after the Federal Reserve announced another 75 basis point rate hike. The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 522.45 points, or 1.7%, to close at 30,183.78. The S&P 500 slid 1.71% to 3,789.93 and the Nasdaq Composite dove 1.79% to 11,220.19. — Samantha Subin Travel and entertainment companies lead biggest decliners in S&P 500 Eighteen of the 20 stocks that slid the most in the S&P 500 were companies in the entertainment and travel industries — sectors that get hit hardest during an economic downturn. Hotel-and-casino giant Caesars led the pack, down about 7.5%. The companies sliding the most represented a wide swath of sub-industries, including: Hotels and resorts (Hilton, Marriott, Wynn, Host Hotels & Resorts, Las Vegas Sands) Live events (Live Nation) Casinos (MGM) Online travel booking services (Expedia, Booking Holdings) Cruise lines (Carnival, Royal Caribbean) Entertainment brands (Warner Bros. Discovery, Paramount, Fox) Airlines (United, Delta) Mining company Freeport-McMoRan and health tech company Catalent were the only companies in the top 20 decliners not within the entertainment and travel industries. — Alex Harring Stocks hit session lows in final trading hour Stocks stooped to session lows heading into the close following a volatile trading session after the Federal Reserve’s rate decision. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 430 points, or 1.42%, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite slumped 1.5% each. — Samantha Subin Parts of the equity market don’t buy that Fed will keep hiking Even though the Federal Reserve just delivered its third consecutive 0.75 percentage point rate hike to tamp down inflation, markets are looking for any reason for a dovish read, said Kevin Gordon, senior investment research manager at Charles Schwab. “Parts of the equity market don’t buy that they’re going to continue to keep their foot on the brake,” he said. He added that it’s clear that markets react – and often rally – any time that Fed chair Powell mentions any softening of economic data or signs of lower growth. That’s because investors are hoping that the Fed pauses and pivots to rate cuts sooner rather than later. That’s unlikely, though, according to Gordon. “Pain is sort of a code word for recession,” he said, commenting on Powell’s use of the word in his Wednesday press conference that he first used in his Jackson Hole speech in August. —Carmen Reinicke Investors should stay underweight on equities, Glenmede’s Pride says Following Wednesday’s 75 basis point increase, Glenmede estimated the federal funds rate now sits close to neutral and could surpass it with future rate hikes. That should give investors pause, said one of its investing chiefs. “Given the stubborn inertia of inflation and the Fed’s will to fight it, prevailing premium valuations on equities do not appear justified given the material risks facing the economy and corporate profits,” said Jason Pride, Glenmede’s private wealth chief investment officer. “As a result, investors should maintain an underweight to equity/market risk.” Pride also noted that the Fed’s economic projections show the median respondent expecting slower economic growth and an increased unemployment rate. That is “essentially an admission that economic pain will likely be tolerated as an incidental effect from rising interest rates meant to combat inflation,” he said. — Alex Harring Markets are mostly pricing in recession scenario Stocks are finally coming around to the idea that the Federal Reserve is willing to push the economy into a recession to tame inflation, according to Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer of Independent Advisor Alliance. “The market is beginning to believe that the Fed is willing to cause a recession in order to bring inflation back down,” said Zaccarelli. He added that it seems that a recession scenario is about two-thirds priced in because stocks are down about 20% from all-time highs, instead of 30%. “We would continue to exercise caution in the near term as the Fed is determined to keep raising rates until inflation begins to drop closer to their Fed Funds target,” he said. —Carmen Reinicke Tech leads S&P 500 bounce Tech stocks led a bounce in the S&P 500 that pushed the broad market index up about 1% on the day at one point. As of 2:49 p.m. ET, the S&P 500 tech sector was up 1%, with Nvidia, DXC Technology and Skyworks among the best performers. Megacap tech stock Microsoft was also up more than 1%. — Fred Imbert Market rebounds in volatile trading as Powell speaks Stocks rebounded from their session lows as Powell began his news conference. The Dow and S&P 500 hovered around the flatline as of 2:40 p.m., while the Nasdaq Composite traded 0.1% higher. The major averages were down sharply after the Fed announced its decision to raise rates by 75 basis points — giving up gains from earlier in the day. — Fred Imbert Aggressiveness Fed is signaling is a surprise, could risk recession, BofA says The Federal Reserve raised interest rates by 0.75 percentage point Wednesday, its third consecutive hike of that size, to cool down high inflation. The central bank also raised its terminal rate – how far it expects to hike before pausing – to 4.6% in 2023. By the end of the year, it will get to 4.4%, which means there’s at least one more 0.75 percentage point hike coming. That’s more than some expected and potentially signals that the Fed is willing to push the U.S. economy into a recession. “The extent of the aggressiveness that the Fed is signaling did indeed surprise us,” said Mark Cabana, head of U.S. short rates at Bank of America. “This is very consistent with the recent shift in commentary from the Fed, and it certainly sounds like a Fed that is absolutely okay risking recession, bringing inflation lower with restrictive monetary policy.” —Carmen Reinicke, Patti Domm Market reverses after Fed announcement The major averages gave up gains from earlier in the day after the Fed raised rates and said it sees the terminal rate going to 4.6%. The Dow, which was up more than 100 point heading into the announcement, was last down more than 200 points. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq were also lower. —Fred Imbert Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Freyr Battery, Stitch Fix and more Here are some of the stocks making the biggest moves during midday trading: Freyr Battery — Shares of the electric vehicle battery maker shot up 17.6% after Morgan Stanley said the company’s price target was double where it is now. The bull estimate for the price was three times over its current price. Stitch Fix — Stitch Fix was up about 12%, even after the company posted downbeat quarterly numbers. The online styling company lost 89 cents per share in the previous quarter on a net revenue that was down 16% from the same quarter a year ago. General Mills — Shares of the food producer jumped 7% after the company posted a better-than-expected quarterly profit. General Mills also raised its full-year sales forecast amid higher prices and strong demand for cereal, snacks and pet food. Read the the full list of stocks here. — Sarah Min Expect a ‘short-lived’ relief rally coming off of Fed decision, Wolfe Research’s Senyek says Prepare for a brief market rally after the Federal Reserve doles out its rate hike decision on Wednesday, Wolfe Research’s Chris Senyek says. “Our sense is that markets could be set up for a short-lived relief rally if the Fed hikes by +75bps and Powell doesn’t ratchet up his hawkish rhetoric even further,” he wrote in a note to clients. “That said, we don’t anticipate having to change our intermediate-term bearish call.” Going forward, Senyek expects core inflation to remain sticky. That will likely force the Fed to raise the fed funds rate to 5% or greater if it hopes to achieve its long-term goal of 2%. Vital Knowledge’s Adam Crisafulli agreed with Senyek’s sentiment. “The consensus view is that stocks will squeeze after the Fed this afternoon before surrendering the whole move and then some Thurs, Fri, and beyond,” he said in a note to clients Wednesday. — Samantha Subin Yield on 2-year Treasury note tops 4% for first time since October 2007 The yield on the 2-year Treasury note hit above 4% for the first time since 2007 on Wednesday as traders questioned whether the Federal Reserve will need to hike even further to tame surging inflation. The 2-year Treasury yield rose 4 basis points to 4.006%. It last touched that level in October 2007. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury was last trading at 3.561%, down by roughly 1 basis points, after notching an 11-year high this week. According to some investors, the inversion — which continues to put short-term rates above long-term rates — indicates rising risks of a recession ahead. — Fred Imbert, Samantha Subin Only two stocks hit new 52-week highs on Wednesday General Mills and Northrop Grumman were the only two stocks in the S&P 500 to hit new 52-week highs during Wednesday morning trading. General Mills is trading at all-time highs dating back to 1927, and Northrop Grumman is at its highest point since the 1994 merger between Northrop Aircraft and Grumman Aerospace. Meanwhile, eight stocks in the broader market index hit new 52-week lows, including Match Group, which is trading at an all-time low since its 2015 IPO. Here are the new S&P 500 52-week lows: Charter Communications trading at lows not seen since March 2020 Meta Platforms trading at lows not seen since March 2020 Match Group trading at all-time lows back to its IPO in November 2015 Verizon trading at lows not seen since August ...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Dow Closes 500 Points Lower After The Fed Delivers Another Aggressive Rate Hike
The Mar-A-Lago Special Master Wants Answers From Trump. The Dispute Over
The Mar-A-Lago Special Master Wants Answers From Trump. The Dispute Over
The Mar-A-Lago Special Master Wants Answers From Trump. The Dispute Over https://digitalarizonanews.com/the-mar-a-lago-special-master-wants-answers-from-trump-the-dispute-over/ The special master in former President Donald Trump’s case over seized Mar-a-Lago documents told his attorneys Tuesday to supply evidence that Trump declassified records stored there, or to otherwise stop making the argument – simply put, the neutral third-party said, “you can’t have your cake and eat it.” A federal judge in Florida has effectively put the Justice Department’s criminal probe in the case on hold until the special master she appointed at Trump’s request completes a review for privileged information. The DOJ has partially appealed her decision saying it urgently needs to review the 100 or so sets of documents, or more than 700 pages labeled as classified. Here’s what you need to know about the special master’s role and this case: What and who is the special master? A special master is a neutral third-party arbiter who in this case is in charge of assessing whether any of the documents seized by the Justice Department when executing an Aug. 8 search warrant on Mar-a-Lago were governed by executive privilege or attorney-client privilege. In this case it’s a senior federal judge in the Eastern District of New York, Raymond Dearie, who has spent a lifetime handling high-profile cases. Why are we talking about classified or declassified records? Trump’s attorneys argued that the president has broad powers to declassify information, but in court filings have tiptoed around actually saying whether the president did or did not declassify documents. Trump himself has said he had a standing order to “automatically declassify” all documents he took home from the Oval Office. Why does it matter if the records are declassified? The DOJ has argued that roughly 100 “secret” and “top secret” documents seized from Mar-a-Lago belong to the government and are also part of an ongoing criminal investigation. The DOJ said their release could cause “immediate and serious harms to the government and the public.” Multiple ongoing, complex cases After the FBI executed a court-approved search warrant on Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home, Trump’s attorneys filed suit in federal court, arguing the government violated his rights and committed overreach. That case is before Trump-appointed U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon in Florida. A grand jury in Washington has also subpoenaed Trump aides and associates in an investigation of the Capitol attack on Jan. 6, 2021, for issues such as fake electors and Trump’s fundraising. In the documents case, Cannon approved Trump’s request for a special master – which came weeks after the search itself – and appointed Dearie. The DOJ previously said its own “filter team” had gone through the documents to assess whether any documents were covered by attorney-client privilege. The team found about 500 pages of personal or privileged documents. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence is conducting its own review of the national security risk of possible unauthorized disclosure of the classified records and any harm that may have occurred, according to DOJ court filings. Big Picture:Trump has argued he declassified Mar-a-Lago documents. In DOJ probe, it might not matter The DOJ asked Cannon to put a partial stay on her order blocking investigators from reviewing the highly classified records, but she rejected the request. Instead, Cannon told the DOJ it could not review the classified documents seized for its criminal investigation until the special master’s review is complete. The order essentially puts a pause on the investigation. Dearie has estimated it will take until Nov. 30 to complete his review. The DOJ has partially appealed Cannon’s order to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, arguing it urgently needs the ability to review about 100 classified documents, making up more than 700 pages, for potential criminal violations. If a three-judge panel of the appeals court refuses to lift the temporary pause on the investigation, DOJ officials have said they will consider other appeal options, including petitioning the Supreme Court. Outlines on the DOJ criminal probe The federal laws used to justify the search do not require the documents to be classified for a crime to be committed. In fact, the provisions of federal law contained in the Espionage Act, obstruction and the mishandling of government records and reports mentioned in the search affidavit don’t even include the words “classified” or “confidential.” The first two laws – should charges be brought – would carry the heftiest penalties of fines and up to 10 and 20 years in prison, respectively. In approving the search warrant, a federal magistrate agreed there was probable cause FBI agents would uncover evidence that these three provisions of federal law were violated. That’s why some legal experts have called the argument by Trump’s team over declassification a “red herring.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
The Mar-A-Lago Special Master Wants Answers From Trump. The Dispute Over
Trump News Live: Trump Reacts Furiously To failed New York Attorney Generals Fraud Lawsuit Against Him
Trump News Live: Trump Reacts Furiously To failed New York Attorney Generals Fraud Lawsuit Against Him
Trump News – Live: Trump Reacts Furiously To ‘failed’ New York Attorney General’s Fraud Lawsuit Against Him https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-news-live-trump-reacts-furiously-to-failed-new-york-attorney-generals-fraud-lawsuit-against-him/ Fomer president Donald Trump speaking in Ohio New York Attorney General Letitia James is suing Donald Trump and the Trump Organization for engaging in “numerous acts of fraud and misrepresentation” in preparing annual financial statements between 2011 and 2021. The lawsuit says the fraud was approved at the highest levels of the company, including by Mr Trump himself as well as his children Donald Trump Jr, Eric Trump, and Ivanka Trump. The fraud and misrepresentation also grossly inflated Mr Trump’s personal net worth by billions of dollars. False and misleading statements were used “repeatedly and persistently” to induce banks to lend money on favourable terms, to satisfy loan covenants, and to induce insurers to provide coverage for higher limits and lower premiums. Meanwhile, on Tuesday, the independent arbiter and special master tasked with inspecting all 11,000 documents seized by the FBI from Mar-a-Lago last month cast doubt on Mr Trump’s claims that he declassified the files. Judge Raymond Dearie expressed doubt about Mr Trump’s reluctance to prove the declassification and remarked:“My view of it is: you can’t have your cake and eat it”. 1663795801 How lawsuit penalties could cripple Trump businesses Donald Trump and his family business are in serious legal and financial jeopardy, after New York attorney general Letitia James filed a $250m civil lawsuit on Wednesday accusing the Trump Organization of serially lying about the value of its assets to lenders and insurers to obtain financial benefits. The suit, the result of an investigation that began in 2018, accuses the former president, his three eldest children, and the Trump Organization of breaking state laws and suggests that the conduct uncovered also goes against federal statues. If Ms James is successful, the suit could kneecap the Trump business empire in New York and beyond. Josh Marcus reports. Oliver O’Connell21 September 2022 22:30 1663794001 Could a shuttered auto plant in Ohio doom Democrats from picking up a key Senate seat? There were a lot of single-issue voters in Youngstown, Ohio, last weekend when Donald Trump and JD Vance rolled into town. Thousands of the former president’s supporters poured into the Covelli Centre as the sun set over a warm summer evening, neglecting an intra-state matchup between Ohio State and Toledo which kicked off around the same time. And though Mr Trump delivered one of his trademark rambling addresses, aiming denouncements at the “radical left” and the FBI for the ongoing investigation into his retention of apparently classified documents at Mar-a-Lago, there was one subject on the mind of just about everyone in the room: the 2019 retreat of General Motors from Lordstown, the massive industrial complex and auto plant just a few miles away. John Bowden travelled to Youngstown for The Independent. Oliver O’Connell21 September 2022 22:00 1663792201 After failing to change DNA with Covid, Michael Flynn claims globalists will try to turn humans into cyborgs Donald Trump’s former national security adviser Michael Flynn has claimed that globalists will try to turn humans into cyborgs after failing to change their DNA with Covid vaccines. The retired three-star general has become a leading figure in the QAnon conspiracy theory movement and has previously suggested that the US military consider a Myanmar-style coup. Graeme Massie reports on this absolute insanity. Oliver O’Connell21 September 2022 21:30 1663791301 Is Trump’s time finally up? Are the walls really closing in? The Independent’s Andrew Buncombe looks at the multiple challenges facing the former president on many fronts. Oliver O’Connell21 September 2022 21:15 1663790401 All 20 major lawsuits and investigations Trump is facing Most recently, there’s the bombshell $250m lawsuit from New York attorney general Letitia James against Mr Trump and three of his children for a host of allegedly fraudulent business practices. But there are plenty more. Josh Marcus and Louise Hall run through the former president’s myriad of legal problems. Oliver O’Connell21 September 2022 21:00 1663789501 How a question from AOC opened the door to the Trump lawsuit On Wednesday, New York Attorney General Letitia James announced her $250m civil lawsuit against former president Donald Trump, she specifically cited former Trump attorney Michael Cohen’s testimony in 2019 where he revealed that the former president fraudulently inflated the value of his assets. “I will remind everyone that this investigation only started after Michael Cohen, the former lawyer, his former lawyer testified before Congress shed light on this misconduct,” she said. The question that triggered Mr Cohen’s response came in 2019 from Ms James’s fellow New Yorker, Democratic Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Eric Garcia reports on the question and answer that led to so much more. Oliver O’Connell21 September 2022 20:45 1663788601 Songwriter hits out at work being used at Trump rally and compared to QAnon theme The writer of a song played at Donald Trump’s rally in Ohio last week, which sounded similar to a QAnon theme, has objected to the use of his creation by the former president. The song that played on Saturday as Mr Trump appeared in Youngstown, Ohio has already garnered much attention for its similarities with the QAnon’s unofficial theme “Wwg1wga”, which stands for the QAnon slogan “Where we go one, we go all”. Stuti Mishra reports. Oliver O’Connell21 September 2022 20:30 1663787701 Voices: Trump and his children are in a lot of trouble… …more than we ever expected, writes Ahmed Baba. Oliver O’Connell21 September 2022 20:15 1663786801 Jon Stewart blasts DeSantis over ‘d***ish’ migrant flights During his YouTube show, The Problem with Jon Stewart, he discussed the political stunt with writers Jay Jurden and Tocarra Mallard. Graig Graziosi reports on the comedian’s comments. Oliver O’Connell21 September 2022 20:00 1663785901 Delighted reaction as lawsuit against Trump family announced Gustaf Kilander reports. Oliver O’Connell21 September 2022 19:45 Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump News Live: Trump Reacts Furiously To failed New York Attorney Generals Fraud Lawsuit Against Him
Breakdown Of The Trump Properties Mentioned In New York Attorney General's Lawsuit Against The Former President And His Family ABC17NEWS
Breakdown Of The Trump Properties Mentioned In New York Attorney General's Lawsuit Against The Former President And His Family ABC17NEWS
Breakdown Of The Trump Properties Mentioned In New York Attorney General's Lawsuit Against The Former President And His Family – ABC17NEWS https://digitalarizonanews.com/breakdown-of-the-trump-properties-mentioned-in-new-york-attorney-generals-lawsuit-against-the-former-president-and-his-family-abc17news/ By Ariella Phillips, Kaanita Iyer and Curt Devine, CNN New York Attorney General Letitia James on Wednesday filed a civil fraud lawsuit against former President Donald Trump, three of his children and his business. In more than 200 pages, the lawsuit alleges that the defendants were involved in an expansive fraud lasting over a decade that the former President used to enrich himself, and that the fraud touched all aspects of the Trump business, including its properties and golf courses. Here’s a breakdown of some of the notable properties mentioned in the lawsuit: 1. Mar-a-Lago The New York attorney general‘s lawsuit alleges Trump’s Mar-a-Lago property in Florida was valued “as high as $739 million based on the false premise that it was unrestricted property and could be developed and sold for residential use,” and continues, “in reality, the club generated annual revenues of less than $25 million and should have been valued at closer to $75 million.” 2. Trump Tower James said that Trump inflated the square footage of his Trump Tower triplex apartment in order to misrepresent the value at over $300 million. “Mr. Trump represented that his apartments spanned more than 30,000 square feet, which was the basis for valuing the apartment. In reality, the apartment had an area of less than 11,000 square feet, something that Mr. Trump was well aware of,” James said. “Based on that inflated square footage, the value of the apartment in 2015, in 2016, was $327 million. To this date, no apartment in New York City has ever sold for close to that amount.” 3. Trump Park Avenue Trump Park Avenue was appraised in 2010 to be worth approximately $72.5 million, according to the lawsuit. But Trump’s company claimed in subsequent financial statements that the property was worth roughly $292 million, according to the lawsuit. The property near Central Park includes high-end residential units, commercial spaces and storage spaces. 4. Trump Old Post Office (Now: Waldorf Astoria Washington DC) The lawsuit from James accuses former President Donald Trump of using allegedly doctored financial statements in his and Ivanka Trump’s personal pursuit to open a luxury hotel in Washington, DC, in the years before he ran for the presidency. It became a hub for his supporters and close contacts, and bookings grew because of the connection to the sitting president. 5. Trump International Hotel and Tower — Las Vegas, Nevada The Trump hotel in Las Vegas — a hotel condominium of which Trump owns half — had misleading financial statements between 2013 and 2021, the suit alleges, due to income projections based on the sale of residential units that assumed prices much higher that what units were selling for, among other reasons. 6. 40 Wall Street James also highlighted what she says happened with 40 Wall Street, a property in New York City’s financial district, which is referenced dozens of times in the lawsuit. Trump’s company got appraisals for the property in 2010 and 2012, which found that it was worth $200 million and $220 million respectively, according to the lawsuit. But Trump’s company repeatedly claimed that the property was worth a lot more in its official financial statements, according to the lawsuit. 7. Trump golf courses The lawsuit argues the Trump Organization also used a variety of deceptive or inappropriate methods to inflate the value of Trump’s golf courses. For example, the organization added 30% to the value of various golf courses to account for a Trump “brand premium,” despite what the suit describes as rules against such practices. Trump claimed a club, Trump National Golf Club, Jupiter, purchased for $5 million in 2012 jumped to a worth of a $62 million in 2013. 8. Licensing deals Many of the Trump Organization’s ventures involve licensing deals, in which another party owns the property and pays Trump to use his brand. The lawsuit alleges that Trump’s business inflated the value of its overall licensing business by including “speculative and non-existent deals” between 2015 and 2018. Some of those speculative deals involved potential overseas arrangements. The suit argues that including them in the valuations in 2016 and 2017 was misleading because the Trump Organization purportedly stopped seeking foreign deals after Trump took office. The licensing deals’ value were further boosted by including deals between business entities owned by the Trump Organization, according to the suit. According to former Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg, “licensing was generally handled by Ivanka” and brothers Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump were well aware of the actual revenue derived from licensing in general, according to the lawsuit. The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. CNN’s Marshall Cohen, Katelyn Polantz and Tierney Sneed contributed to this report. Read More Here
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Breakdown Of The Trump Properties Mentioned In New York Attorney General's Lawsuit Against The Former President And His Family ABC17NEWS
Dolores Konner McGill
Dolores Konner McGill
Dolores Konner McGill https://digitalarizonanews.com/dolores-konner-mcgill/ Dolores Konner McGill, of Chandler, AZ, formerly of Ansonia, passed away on Friday, September 16, 2022 after a long illness. Dolores was the beloved wife of Ian Russell (Russ) McGill for 53 years before his passing in 2015. She was born on March 2, 1936 in New York, NY, daughter of the late Michael and Estelle (Popowski) Konner. Prior to her retirement in 1999, Dolores was employed in the Engineering Department at Sikorsky Aircraft for 15 years. Her career also included many years as a 2nd Grade teacher at St. Michael’s School in Derby where she devoted her time to numerous parish programs including Holy Communion preparation classes and managing fund raising events.  Dolores enjoyed cooking (especially for the Holidays) and spending time with family and friends, however she especially loved visits from her grandchildren and great grandchildren. Dolores’s eyes lit up at the sight of her little ones and they will miss seeing ​“Grammy” and getting plenty of her hugs and kisses. Dolores is survived by her son, Russell (Susan) of Minneapolis, MN, daughter Lynn Clark (Kevin) of Berlin, MD, son-in-law Chris Newcomb of Chandler, AZ, six grandchildren – Meghan (Dean), Daniel, Ian (Carrie), Cody (Kamy), Allison (Nicolas) and Cassidy, and six great grandchildren – Harper, Dean, Maeve, Milo, Malcolm, and Caleb. She was predeceased by her daughter Annelle Newcomb, brother Joseph Konner, sister-in-law Phyllis Konner, and close friend Lorraine Czarnecki. She also leaves many loving cousins, nieces and nephews who she missed dearly after relocating to Arizona. The McGill family would like to thank Marilyn Fostanes and ​“Mama” at Angels Assisted Living and the staff at Hospice of the Valley in Gilbert, AZ for the extraordinary love, care, and attention they provided Dolores during the final stages of her illness. A private ceremony will be held at a later date in Ansonia, CT. Contributions in Dolores’s memory can be made to: Angels Assisted Living, LLC 4496 E La Costa Dr Chandler, AZ 85249 Read More Here
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Dolores Konner McGill
Phoenix Startup Anthym Selected To Present At TechCrunch Disrupt The Business Journals
Phoenix Startup Anthym Selected To Present At TechCrunch Disrupt The Business Journals
Phoenix Startup Anthym Selected To Present At TechCrunch Disrupt – The Business Journals https://digitalarizonanews.com/phoenix-startup-anthym-selected-to-present-at-techcrunch-disrupt-the-business-journals/ Phoenix startup Anthym selected to present at TechCrunch Disrupt  The Business Journals Read More…
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Phoenix Startup Anthym Selected To Present At TechCrunch Disrupt The Business Journals
News Releases | City Of Yuma AZ
News Releases | City Of Yuma AZ
News Releases | City Of Yuma, AZ https://digitalarizonanews.com/news-releases-city-of-yuma-az/ The City of Yuma announced it will begin incorporating inclusive play areas at some current and future playgrounds. With public involvement, inclusive play equipment could arrive soon. While the City currently has features in several parks that are “accessible” to users with disabilities, an “inclusive” play space provides an environment where children of all abilities can play and interact together at the same time. Inclusive playgrounds exceed the minimum standards of accessibility to ensure every child can fully engage with the equipment without limitations, and without having to be moved outside of their mobility device. Examples of the inclusive play equipment, the City’s plans for it, and ways to get involved are listed online at www.yumaaz.gov/inclusiveplay. Director of Parks and Recreation Eric Urfer introduced the inclusive play concept to the Yuma City Council at its regularly scheduled worksession Sept. 20. The next installation is targeted for the Stewart Vincent Wolfe Creative Playground at West Wetlands Park, 282 N. 12th Ave. Urfer said Parks and Recreation plans to introduce individual inclusive play pieces to existing playgrounds when possible, and will design future playgrounds, splash pads and support facilities with full inclusion in mind. East Mesa Community Park, currently in planning stages, would be the City’s first large-scale inclusive play space. This idea got a boost from parents Isaac and Alexis Liggett, who say they currently must drive three hours outside of Yuma to find play equipment where their wheelchair-bound son isn’t merely a spectator to his older sister. “Most wheelchair users are most comfortable, and safest, in their wheelchairs,” said Alexis Liggett. The Liggetts studied inclusive playground equipment options and approached Parks and Recreation about introducing them. Other members of the community expressed their interest and willingness to help. Expense is a factor in establishing inclusive play spaces. An inclusive play space – covering the equipment, surface, and additional ADA parking facilities – can cost 75% more than traditional playground spaces. Parks and Recreation will seek grant funding where available, but resident involvement will be key. The inclusive play page on the City’s website lists ways that residents can get involved, including direct donations, sponsorships, in-kind contributions, community presentations, volunteering and spreading the word. To get involved, visit www.yumaaz.gov/inclusiveplay or contact Eric Urfer, Director of Parks and Recreation, at 928-373-5208 or email eric.urfer@yumaaz.gov. END Read More Here
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News Releases | City Of Yuma AZ