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Donald Trump And The Espionage Act | News Ghana
Donald Trump And The Espionage Act | News Ghana
Donald Trump And The Espionage Act | News Ghana https://digitalarizonanews.com/donald-trump-and-the-espionage-act-news-ghana/ Donald Trump Raided By Fbi Can a World War I era law designed to silence critics of imperialist war and utilized to prosecute whistleblowers, organizers and journalists, be used to bar a former president from running for office? Historical Analysis During the early morning hours of August 8, the Florida home of the 45th President of the United States Donald J. Trump at Mar-a-Lago was raided by a team of Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agents. There was much speculation surrounding the raid on his private residence while Trump was away. Later it was announced that Trump was in possession of classified documents of a sensitive nature which could reasonably jeopardize the national security of the U.S. However, Trump through his lawyers and public speeches denied having the documents saying those requested materials had already been turned over to the national archives. This was the first time in history that a former U.S. head-of-state has been targeted in an FBI raid let alone threatened with prosecution under federal law. Richard Nixon, the disgraced president who resigned in August 1974 over the attempt to cover up the break in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate building in Washington, D.C., was pardoned by his successor President Gerald R. Ford. Trump may have anticipated attempts to prosecute him in connection with the January 6, 2021 insurrection at the Capitol Building in Washington, D.C. Just minutes prior to the attack on the Capitol, Trump and his allies had urged those who were invited to Washington to “stop the steal” of the national presidential elections of 2020. What has been remarkable are the reports which suggest that Trump could be prosecuted under the 1917 Espionage Act passed and signed under then President Woodrow Wilson. The purpose of the law was to imprison, deport, silence and neutralize critics of the U.S. involvement in World War I. The former president and his supporters accused President Joe Biden’s Justice Department of conducting a politically motivated prosecution of Trump in order to prevent him from running for office again in 2024. Media reports and documents released indicate that the investigation is centered around the possession by Trump of classified information related to nuclear weapons technology. Historic Prosecutions Under the Espionage Act There were many people who spoke out against U.S. involvement in the world’s first imperialist war between 1914-1918. During the first three years (1914-1917) people from various political tendencies opposed any effort to enter the war in Europe. By 1917, the sentiment among the ruling class and the Wilson administration had shifted to intervention. A draft was imposed and workers, nationally oppressed communities along with other social forces were expected to enthusiastically support the war. (https://depts.washington.edu/antiwar/WW1_reds.shtml) An opinion piece by Jameel Jaffer published in Politico analyzing the character of the 1917 Espionage Act notes the following: “The Espionage Act is wildly overbroad. We know this from experience. Former President Woodrow Wilson signed the measure into law in 1917 and immediately began using it as an instrument of political repression. During and after the First World War, his administration used the Espionage Act to prosecute thousands of people for legitimate political speech. One of those people was the socialist and labor activist Eugene Debs, who was sentenced to a decade in prison for an anti-war speech that allegedly obstructed military recruitment. (It’s perhaps worth noting, given questions about Trump’s future, that Debs later ran for president from his prison cell.)” (https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2022/08/17/the-espionage-act-has-a-dark-history-prosecuting-trump-would-be-legit-00052376) Since the advent of WWI, there have been attempted and successful prosecutions of people under the Espionage Act. Daniel Ellsberg in early 1973 was accused under the same law for making public a Pentagon study which documented the propagation of falsehoods told to the people of the U.S. to maintain public opinion in favor of the Vietnam War. Espionage Act of 1917 graphic After being charged, Ellsberg, a military analyst, was acquitted several months later in the failed attempt to send him to prison for 115 years. By the early 1970s it was common knowledge that the Pentagon and the White House were misrepresenting the actual situation in Vietnam and Southeast Asia as a whole. By 1973, most ground troops were taken out of South Vietnam and by April 30, 1975, the revolutionary forces had overrun the imperialist stronghold of Saigon, now known as Ho Chi Minh City. Even during the Trump presidency several people were prosecuted under the Espionage Act and sentenced to terms in prison. At least five of them gained some notoriety in the mainstream press such Reality Winner, Terry Albury, Joshua Shulte, Daniel Hale and Henry Kyle Frese. Winner, 26 a contractor with the National Security Agency (NSA) at the time of her indictment in 2017 plead guilty during the trial and was sentenced to five years in federal prison for leaking an NSA document. Albury, an FBI agent who is African American, was prosecuted and sentenced to four years in prison for leaking classified information. Shulte, Hale, and Frese were also sentenced during the Trump administration for leaking classified documents including some pertaining to the Chinese government and its military capabilities. Two other figures, Julian Assange, an Australian citizen, and Edward Snowden, a former contractor with U.S. intelligence, are still wanted by the current administration. Assange has resisted extradition to the U.S. saying that he could not have a fair trial there. The co-founder of WikiLeaks has obtained and released materials which highlight crimes being committed by successive administrations in Washington. After being granted asylum by the Ecuador government and later having it withdrawn, Assange awaits while in detention further decisions by the British courts on his status. Snowden is said to be living in the Russian Federation where he has been granted asylum. The former contractor has exposed many crimes which are being carried out by the intelligence services under the supervision of the White House and the Congress. According to the Intercept, there has been no motivation attributed to Trump’s actions. The documents in the former president’s possession, which are of a classified nature, would only be useful perhaps for monetary compensation from a foreign government. The Intercept report says: “Now, Trump has found himself on the other end of an Espionage Act investigation. (President Joe Biden’s Justice Department authorized a search of Mar-a-Lago that cited the Espionage Act in its justification, but no charges against Trump have been filed yet.) Unlike most of the people charged with the Espionage Act under the Trump administration, except perhaps Schulte, Trump’s theft of classified documents wasn’t aimed at exposing attacks on democracy, shining a light on government atrocities, or adding anything newsworthy to the public discourse.” (https://theintercept.com/2022/08/16/trump-espionage-act-classified-documents/) Under Section 793 of the Espionage Act Trump could theoretically be sentenced up to ten years in prison. If Trump’s supporters within the Republican Party use this Justice Department investigation and possible prosecution as a rallying cry for their candidates in November during the midterms and in the 2024 primaries and general election, the political atmosphere within the U.S. will become even more tense. Political Implications of the Raid on Trump’s Residence Of course, there is a political motivation inspiring the prosecution of Trump because this does take attention away from the failure of the Biden administration and the Congress to address some of the most pressing issues facing the U.S. during this period. Since the beginning of a full blown proxy war between Washington and the Russian Federation on February 24, unprecedented sanctions have been leveled at Moscow which are in effect weakening U.S. allies in Europe who are members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). The inflationary spiral is not limited to the U.S. in the form of rising food prices, gasoline, heating and cooling costs, rents and other commodities. In the European Union (EU) states a real threat of a cold winter has already been projected by French President Emmanuel Macron. It is highly unlikely that the situation will improve until there is some resolution to the Ukraine war. Yet the provocations continue in the Asia Pacific where the Biden administration is deliberately inflaming tensions with the People’s Republic of China. Whether Trump is prosecuted under the Espionage Act or some other federal law, will not determine the outcome of the situation involving Russia and Ukraine. The ever-expanding military budget to fund the war in Ukraine and a heightening of tensions with Beijing, will continue to take away the much-needed resources to feed, clothe, house, transport and educate millions of people in the U.S. Send your news stories to newsghana101@gmail.com Follow News Ghana on Google News Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Donald Trump And The Espionage Act | News Ghana
Asia-Pacific Markets Rise Ahead Of U.S. Inflation Report; South Korea's Kospi Up 2% On Return After Holiday
Asia-Pacific Markets Rise Ahead Of U.S. Inflation Report; South Korea's Kospi Up 2% On Return After Holiday
Asia-Pacific Markets Rise Ahead Of U.S. Inflation Report; South Korea's Kospi Up 2% On Return After Holiday https://digitalarizonanews.com/asia-pacific-markets-rise-ahead-of-u-s-inflation-report-south-koreas-kospi-up-2-on-return-after-holiday/ A man looks at an electronic quotation board displaying stock prices on the Tokyo Stock Exchange in Tokyo on August 2, 2022. Kazuhiro Nogi | AFP | Getty Images Asia-Pacific markets were higher on Tuesday as investors look ahead to the U.S. inflation report for the month of August. South Korea’s Kospi rose 2.74% to 2,449.54 on its return to trade after a holiday Monday – led by Samsung Electronics which advanced 4.5% and SK Hynix that rose 4.87%. The Nikkei 225 in Japan gained 0.25% to 28,614.63, and the Topix index ticked 0.32% higher to 1,986.57. In Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.65% to 7,009.70. Mainland China’s Shanghai Composite ticked fractionally higher to 3,263.80, while the Shenzhen Component added 0.385% to 11,923.47. The Hang Seng index in Hong Kong was 0.17% lower in the final hour of trade. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan gained 0.61%. Headline inflation in the U.S. is expected to decline in August, according to a Dow Jones survey. But core inflation, excluding energy and food, is projected to rise. Headline CPI is expected to come in at 8%, compared with 8.5% in July. — CNBC’s Jesse Pound, Carmen Reinicke and Patti Domm contributed to this report. Goldman Sachs doesn’t expect China to shift from Covid-zero this year Goldman Sachs doesn’t expect China to immediately shift away from its Covid-zero policy after the upcoming party congress meeting in October, analysts said in a report. “Policymakers might only pivot away from the ‘Dynamic Zero Covid’ policy after Two Sessions next year,” the economists said in the report. The “two sessions” annual parliamentary meeting usually takes place in early March. “We expect medium- to long-term policy goals to be maintained,” the report said, including “manufacturing upgrading/supply chain security, de-carbonization, and promoting common prosperity.” –Jihye Lee The ‘rapid’ depreciation of the Indian rupee will continue, Nomura says The “rapid” depreciation of the Indian rupee will continue, and it could weaken to 82 against the dollar by year-end, chief economist at Nomura Sonal Varma said. She added “higher prices of not just oil, but non-oil commodities like coal, chemicals, [and] fertilizers, [are] also putting an upward pressure on the import bill,” she said. Varma said although the Reserve Bank of India has been “extremely active” in trying to protect the currency, the rupee is expected to face growing depreciation pressures. The Indian rupee last traded at 79.03 against the greenback. — Charmaine Jacob China’s tourism revenue is still running well below 2019 levels, data shows National tourism revenue for the Mid-Autumn Festival reached 28.68 billion yuan ($4.16 billion) — just 60.6% of the 2019 pre-pandemic levels, according to official data. The revenue has remained below 2019 levels since the pandemic hit in early 2020. Movie-ticketing site Maoyan showed the long-weekend box office came in at 370 million yuan ($53.44 million), the lowest since 2017. Online shopping, meanwhile, held up in terms of value, according to data from China’s postal authority. Read the story here. –Evelyn Cheng Ramsay Health Care shares plunge 14% after takeover talks hit roadblock Australian hospital operator Ramsay Health Care’s shares dropped as much as 14.6% after the company announced a KKR-led consortium is “not in a position to improve the terms” of a takeover proposal. Ramsay Health rejected the proposal earlier this year, saying the offer was “meaningfully inferior.” The company’s shares later recovered slightly but were still 11% lower. — Abigail Ng Nio jumps more than 20% at open after Deutsche Bank report Hong Kong-listed shares of Chinese electric vehicle-maker Nio jumped as much as 21% at the open following a bullish report by Deutsche Bank. Reiterating his buy rating, analyst Edison Yu made minor changes to forecasts and said Nio remains Deutsche Bank’s top China EV pick in a note dated Sept. 12. “The company’s efforts around user experience, battery swapping, overseas expansion, and internal battery cell development go very much underappreciated and will eventually show clear differentiation as the local Chinese market gets increasingly competitive,” Yu wrote. The company’s shares were last 17% higher. –Jihye Lee CNBC Pro: Forget oil — coal is hot right now. Here are 2 stocks to play it, according to the pros Coal mining in Wyoming. Brian Brainerd | The Denver Post | Getty Images Coal prices are at record highs and market watchers see prices going even higher as a global energy crisis looms. “It’s almost like any or all companies are a buy,” analyst Peter O’Conner said of the booming coal sector, and reveals his favorite stock. CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here. — Zavier Ong Nintendo shares jump 5% ahead of games announcement livestream Squid Game-related stock up 10% at the open over Emmys hopes Bucket Studio Co., which holds a stake in a private company that represents “Squid Game” lead actor Lee Jung-jae, jumped more than 10% as the show eyed a historic victory in the drama series race. The company’s shares jumped more than 20% immediately after Netflix in June posted a letter from the director, Hwang Dong-hyuk, announcing the series will return with a second season. Other content-related stocks CJ ENM and CJ CGV were also up more than 2.5% in the morning session, and Showbox rose 1.5%. –Jihye Lee CNBC Pro: Want to invest in real estate? These REITs are among analysts’ favorites Real estate investment trusts — or REITs — are coming back to the spotlight after a volatile year for many asset classes. Analysts from Morgan Stanley and Citi highlight REITs from two sectors that they say could outperform the wider market, and remain resilient in a recession. CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here. — Weizhen Tan Sign up for CNBC’s newsletter here: Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Asia-Pacific Markets Rise Ahead Of U.S. Inflation Report; South Korea's Kospi Up 2% On Return After Holiday
US Justice Dept Agrees To Trump 'special Master' Suggestion
US Justice Dept Agrees To Trump 'special Master' Suggestion
US Justice Dept Agrees To Trump 'special Master' Suggestion https://digitalarizonanews.com/us-justice-dept-agrees-to-trump-special-master-suggestion/ The US Department of Justice will accept the appointment of one of the judges proposed by Donald Trump as a “special master” in the investigation of classified documents seized from the former president’s Florida home last month, it said Monday. Despite pushback from the department, federal judge Aileen Cannon agreed last week to grant Trump’s request to name an independent reviewer for the case, assigned to look over the hundreds of classified documents taken from his Mar-a-Lago resort in an FBI raid August 8. Trump is facing mounting legal pressure, with the Justice Department saying top-secret documents were “likely concealed” to obstruct an FBI probe into his potential mishandling of classified materials. He has denied all wrongdoing, saying the raid was “one of the most egregious assaults on democracy in the history of our country.” On Friday, Trump’s legal team and the Justice Department each submitted to Judge Cannon the names of two candidates for the role. But in a court filing earlier Monday, Trump rejected both of the government’s nominations. The department said in its own court filing later Monday that it would agree to the appointment of Trump suggestion Judge Raymond Dearie, from the Eastern District of New York, in addition to its own nominees. Justice officials had originally suggested retired federal judges Barbara Jones and Thomas Griffith, and said they would accept any of the three due to their “previous federal judicial experience and engagement in relevant areas of law.” The filing also noted the department “respectfully opposes the appointment of Paul Huck, Jr,” the Trump team’s second nominee, a federal judge from Florida, “who does not appear to have similar experience.” Trump’s legal team did not include the reason for rejecting Jones and Griffith in its filing, saying “it is more respectful to the candidates from either party to withhold the bases for opposition from a public and likely to be widely circulated, pleading.” It is now up to Cannon to choose whether to name 78-year-old Dearie to the case. Government attorneys previously opposed Trump’s special master request altogether, arguing that an independent screening for privileged material could harm national security, and was also unnecessary as a team had already completed a screening. In addition to the documents probe, Trump faces investigations in New York into his business practices, as well as legal scrutiny over his efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election, and for January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol by his supporters. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
US Justice Dept Agrees To Trump 'special Master' Suggestion
Maricopa County Parks Offers BOGO Camping Passes
Maricopa County Parks Offers BOGO Camping Passes
Maricopa County Parks Offers BOGO Camping Passes https://digitalarizonanews.com/maricopa-county-parks-offers-bogo-camping-passes/ Starting October 1, the Maricopa County Parks and Recreation Department is bringing back its popular Buy One, Get One camping promotion, which allows park visitors who pay the camping fee at a participating desert mountain county park to receive a free night of equal or lesser value during that same stay. “This Buy One, Get One camping promotion allows our residents to enjoy the recreation of some of our most beautiful parks at a price that families can afford,” said Chairman Bill Gates, District 3. “There is no better place to staycation and enjoy quality time with your family.” The promotion runs almost six weeks, valid for stays Saturday, Oct. 1 through Thursday, Nov. 10. “As prices continue to rise on goods and services, our agency agrees it is more important than ever to continue the Buy One, Get One campaign this fall,” said R.J. Cardin, Maricopa County Parks and Recreation Director. “With the evening temperatures starting to cool down, everyone is eager to return to the outdoors and enjoy time with their family and friends. The Buy One, Get One promotion allows visitors to extend their stay an additional night on us so they can continue to enjoy quality time with their loved ones.” Participating parks include: •Cave Creek Regional Park. Located north of Phoenix, this park offers the illusion of being miles away from civilization. The campground has 55 individual developed campsites. •McDowell Mountain Regional Park. Nestled in the lower Verde River basin, this park is a desert jewel in the northeast Valley. This park has 76 developed campsites perfect for RV or tent camping. •Usery Mountain Regional Park. Located on the east side of the Valley at the western end of the Goldfield Mountains and adjacent to the Tonto National Forest, this park offers 74 individual developed campsites. Sites can accommodate an RV or tent camping.  •White Tank Mountain Regional Park. At nearly 30,000 acres, this is the largest regional park in Maricopa County. Most of the park is made up of the rugged and beautiful White Tank Mountains on the Valley’s west side. The park offers 40 individually developed campsites for tent or RV camping. Visitors interested in taking advantage of this offer must contact the park(s) directly at 602-506-2930 or book reservations online at maricopacountyparks.org. To receive the offer, one of the following coupon codes must be used: “1Free,” valid for one free night during a one to seven-day stay; or “2Free,” valid for two free nights during an eight to fourteen-day stay. Reservation extensions are eligible for the Buy One, Get One offer if booked during the identified promotion dates, either in person or online. This offer is valid for designated camping spaces, not for primitive camping, group campground reservations, or unit fees. Rain checks will not be issued if space is not available. This offer is not valid at Adobe Dam Regional Park, Estrella Mountain Regional Park, Hassayampa River Preserve, Lake Pleasant Regional Park, San Tan Mountain Regional Park, and Spur Cross Ranch Conservation Area. The offer is only valid for camping stays between Saturday, Oct. 1 and Thursday, Nov. 10, 2022. Some restrictions do apply. From hiking on a barrier-free trail to horseback riding along a creek, Maricopa County Parks offer visitors the best of the Sonoran Desert. At approximately 120,000 acres, Maricopa County is home to one of the largest regional park systems in the United States. All trails within the Maricopa County Park System are for non-motorized use only. The twelve parks in the system circle the metropolitan area and are within a 45-minute drive from downtown Phoenix. For more information on the park system, visit maricopacountyparks.net or call 602-506-2930.  Read More…
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Maricopa County Parks Offers BOGO Camping Passes
Russia-Ukraine War Latest: What We Know On Day 202 Of The Invasion
Russia-Ukraine War Latest: What We Know On Day 202 Of The Invasion
Russia-Ukraine War Latest: What We Know On Day 202 Of The Invasion https://digitalarizonanews.com/russia-ukraine-war-latest-what-we-know-on-day-202-of-the-invasion/ Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, said his country’s forces had taken back 6,000 sq km (2,400 square miles) of Russian-held territory in the country’s south and east. Ukraine’s forces have continued to press their counterattack in Kharkiv, seeking to take control of almost all of the province. Ukraine’s troops headed north, reportedly recapturing towns all the way to the Russian border, and a video circulated of a Ukrainian soldier at the centre of the strategic city of Izium. Russia’s military commanders have stopped sending new units into Ukraine after the counteroffensive, the general staff of the armed forces of Ukraine said on its Facebook page on Monday. “The military command of the Russian federation has suspended the sending of new, already formed units into the territory of Ukraine. The current situation in the theatre of operations and distrust of the higher command forced a large number of volunteers to categorically refuse the prospect of service in combat conditions.” Russian troops have left behind stockpiles of ammunition and other supplies following Ukraine’s counteroffensive in Kharkiv oblast, the Kyiv Independent reports. The news outlet reported that Russian soldiers dropped their weapons on the ground when they fled, with some jumping on to stolen bicycles and trying to pass for locals. One analyst estimated that more than 300 vehicles, including tanks, self-propelled mortars and supply trucks, had been lost between 7 and 11 September. Russia responded to the counteroffensive by launching missile strikes that cut electricity and water supplies in Kharkiv city for a second time in less than 24 hours, knocking out both on Monday morning just hours after the city authorities had restored 80% of the utilities that had been cut overnight. Ukraine also said Russia launched 18 missile and 39 airstrikes overnight. At least four civilians were killed and 11 others wounded, the presidential office in Kyiv added. Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, appeared on state TV on Monday evening, chairing a meeting on the economy at which he made no reference to the military situation and said Russia was holding up in the face of western sanctions. “The economic blitzkrieg tactics, the onslaught they were counting on, did not work”. Earlier in the day, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov had said “the military operation continues” and “it will continue until the goals that were originally set are achieved”. The US assesses that Russia has largely ceded its gains near Kharkiv and many retreating Russian soldiers have exited Ukraine, moving over the border back into Russia, a senior US military official said on Monday. However, the US-based Institute for the Study of War thinktank said that “Ukraine has turned the tide in its favour, but the current counteroffensive will not end the war”. Ukrainian authorities have said they are capturing so many Russian prisoners of war the country is running out of space to put them, the Associated Press reports. Ukrainian presidential adviser Oleksiy Arestovich did not specify the number of Russian prisoners, but said the PoWs would be exchanged for Ukrainian service members held by Moscow. Military intelligence spokesperson Andrey Yusov said the captured troops included “significant” numbers of Russian officers. Municipal deputies from 18 districts of Moscow and St Petersburg have signed a public statement demanding that Vladimir Putin resign. “We, the municipal deputies of Russia, believe that the actions of President Vladimir Putin harm the future of Russia and its citizens,” read the statement published by Ksenia Torstrem, the municipal deputy of the Semenovsky district of St Petersburg. “Deputies are not yet forbidden to have an opinion. And it is also not forbidden to speak for the resignation of the president. He is not a monarch, but a hired worker, receives a salary from our taxes.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Russia-Ukraine War Latest: What We Know On Day 202 Of The Invasion