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LIRR's $2.5billion Third Track Opens After Six Decades Of Debate Planning And Construction
LIRR's $2.5billion Third Track Opens After Six Decades Of Debate Planning And Construction
LIRR's $2.5 billion Third Track Opens After Six Decades Of Debate, Planning And Construction https://digitalarkansasnews.com/lirrs-2-5-billion-third-track-opens-after-six-decades-of-debate-planning-and-construction/ The Long Island Rail Road’s nearly 10-mile-long Third Track through Nassau County is done, officials announced Monday morning. The $2.5 billion effort had been considered and debated by Long Island planners for more than six decades before construction began in 2019.  “This is the completion of a long, long ride,” Gov. Kathy Hochul announced at a news conference at a garage adjacent to the LIRR’s Westbury Station. The crowd included key figures from the project’s long history, including two former LIRR presidents and the current interim president.  The new track, stretching from Floral Park to Hicksville, has long been seen as critical to the expansion of the LIRR, which has operated on the same two tracks through its bottlenecked Main Line for more than a century. The constrained infrastructure limited the railroad’s ability to run eastbound trains during the morning rush hour, westbound trains in the evening, and to work around unexpected service disruptions along the busy line, which connects to Ronkonkoma, Huntington, Port Jefferson, Hempstead, and Oyster Bay. WHAT TO KNOW Construction is complete on a the Long Island Rail Road’s new 9.8-mile Third Track, stretching from Floral Park to Hicksville, officials announced Monday. The LIRR says the added capacity will allow them to boost service on its Main Line, and to more quickly recover from unexpected service disruptions. After decades of planning and debate, the project was launched in 2016, and construction began in 2019. Officials said the $2.5 billion effort was completed on time and $100 million under budget, although some related station improvements are still unfinished.  Although the project has been largely praised by business and planning groups, some residents along the project’s corridor have complained about the impact from construction. Combined with its also soon-to-be-completed East Side Access megaproject, the LIRR says it will boost service by 40% and, for the first time, be able to provide adequate service to “reverse commuters” traveling to and from jobs on Long Island.  “Now, with the last leg of the Third Track having been completed, we are able to deliver with the best benefit of them all — more Long Island Rail Road service in two directions,” LIRR interim president Catherine Rinaldi said.  The LIRR first tried to move ahead with the Third Track about a dozen years ago, but dropped its plans amid fierce opposition from residents along its path and elected officials who were concerned over the effects from construction. The original plan would have required the LIRR to build on private property, including some residents’ backyards.  In 2016, then-++Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, under the urging of project supporters, resuscitated the Third Track, using a new design and public outreach process that minimized impact on residents, and offered several new benefits, such as the elimination of eight grade crossings. Still, the Third Track faced resistance throughout construction, including in Garden City, where residents said the placement of utility poles and other elements of the project were damaging the look of their village. Construction also resulted in frequent, major service disruptions, including this past weekend, when service was suspended between Jamaica and Hicksville. “For a long time people didn’t expect this project to happen,” MTA chairman Janno Lieber said. “There were a lot of reasons people resisted it. But we proved everybody wrong.” The first stretch of the track, from Floral Park to Merillon Ave. station in Garden City, opened in August. A few weeks later, the second segment was completed, to Mineola. The last section brings the track all the way to Hicksville. Hochul and MTA officials said the project was completed on time and $100 million under the original $2.6 billion budget. Although the entire 9.8-mile Third Track is in place and already in service, some work on the project, known formally as the “Main Line Expansion,” remains, including various station improvements. That work is expected to last into the spring. Carle Place resident Peter Gaffney said, despite Monday’s celebration, the project appears far from done in his neighborhood, where new plantings are already dying and broken concrete and overgrown weeds are apparent throughout the Carle Place station.  “They have more work to do,” Gaffney said. “They’re rushing to try to get this work done because it’s their fourth year [of construction]. There’s a lot of stuff that they did that wasn’t necessarily right.” Garden City resident Richard Corrao Jr. similarly said the project appears “very far from done” near the Merillion Avenue station, where project officials have promised improved landscaping. Corrao said, right now, the station is “an absolute mess.” “They’re quick to cut the ribbon, but not as quick to solve the problem,” he said.  The long-awaited completion of the project drew praise from Long Island leaders and others instrumental in making the Third Track a reality. “It was a long and difficult fight, but it was the right one that will benefit current and future generations of Long Islanders,” former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said in a statement. Cuomo resigned a year ago amid sexual harassment allegations. Matthew Cohen, president of the Long Island Association a business group that advocated for the Third Track — called it a “historic project” that will “result in economic growth, help our region’s businesses, and change the daily lives of people traveling to New York City and Long Island.” Alfonso Castillo has been reporting for Newsday since 1999 and covering the transportation beat since 2008. He grew up in the Bronx and Queens and now lives in Valley Stream with his wife and two sons. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
LIRR's $2.5billion Third Track Opens After Six Decades Of Debate Planning And Construction
Trump Threatens Further Legal Action Against News Media Jan. 6 Panel
Trump Threatens Further Legal Action Against News Media Jan. 6 Panel
Trump Threatens Further Legal Action Against News Media, Jan. 6 Panel https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-threatens-further-legal-action-against-news-media-jan-6-panel/ Former President Donald Trump speaks at a rally in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Saturday, Sept. 3, 2022. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer) Former President Trump on Monday threatened legal action against various news media outlets and the House select committee investigating the Jan 6., 2021 attack at the Capitol on the same day his legal team officially filed a lawsuit against CNN. Trump did not specify what other media outlets he plans to sue but said he would do so on the basis of reporting what he called “disinformation” about the 2020 election results in which he was defeated by then candidate-Joe Biden. “In the coming weeks and months we will also be filing lawsuits against a large number of other Fake News Media Companies for their lies, defamation, and wrongdoing, including as it pertains to ‘The Big Lie,’ that they used so often in reference to their disinformation attack on Presidential Election of 2020,” Trump wrote in his statement.  The former president said he would legally target the Jan 6. committee for not investigating his claims of election fraud, which were at the center of dozens of lawsuits by Trump in courts across the U.S., all of which were dropped or dismissed, some by judges Trump appointed himself. “The Unselect Committee has refused to acknowledge, as was done by the Biden Inspector General at the Department of Defense, and others, that days ahead of January 6th, I recommended and authorized thousands of troops to be deployed to ensure that there was peace, safety, and security at the Capitol and throughout the Country,” Trump added.  Biden had not yet been sworn-in as president in the days leading up to Jan. 6. There has also been no evidence that Trump himself ordered up any extra security at the Capitol in anticipation of violence there on that day. In the lawsuit filed against CNN Monday, Trump’s attorneys claim the network “has sought to use its massive influence — purportedly as a ‘trusted’ news source — to defame the Plaintiff in the minds of its viewers and readers for the purpose of defeating him politically, culminating in CNN claiming credit for ‘[getting] Trump out’ in the 2020 presidential election.” Trump is seeking $475 million in punitive damages from the lawsuit. Trump announced his intent to sue the network earlier this summer, saying in a statement he would “also be commencing actions against other media outlets who have defamed me and defrauded the public regarding the overwhelming evidence of fraud throughout the 2020 Election.” Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Threatens Further Legal Action Against News Media Jan. 6 Panel
Trumps Lawyer Refused His Request In February To Say All Documents Returned
Trumps Lawyer Refused His Request In February To Say All Documents Returned
Trump’s Lawyer Refused His Request In February To Say All Documents Returned https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trumps-lawyer-refused-his-request-in-february-to-say-all-documents-returned/ Former president Donald Trump asked one of his lawyers to tell the National Archives and Records Administration in early 2022 that Trump had returned all materials requested by the agency, but the lawyer declined because he was not sure the statement was true, according to people familiar with the matter. As it turned out, thousands more government documents — including some highly classified secrets — remained at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence and private club. The later discovery of those documents, through a May grand jury subpoena and the Aug. 8 FBI search of the Florida property, are at the heart of a criminal investigation into the potential mishandling of classified material and the possible hiding, tampering or destruction of government records. Alex Cannon, an attorney for Trump, had facilitated the January transfer of 15 boxes of presidential records from Mar-a-Lago to the National Archives, after archives officials agitated for more than a year to get “all original presidential records” back, which they are required by law to do. Following months of stonewalling by Trump’s representatives, archives officials threatened to get the Justice Department or Congress involved. Trump himself eventually packed the boxes that were returned in January, people familiar with the matter said. The former president seemed determined in February to declare that all material sought by the archives had been handed over, said the people, who like others interviewed for this article spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal conversations. Around the same time The Washington Post reported that the archives had retrieved documents from Mar-a-Lago, the people said, Trump asked his team to release a statement he had dictated. The statement said Trump had returned “everything” the archives had requested. Trump asked Cannon to send a similar message to archives officials, the people said. In addition, the former president told his aides that the documents in the boxes were “newspaper clippings” and not relevant to the archives, two of these people said, and complained that the agency charged with tracking government records was being persnickety about securing the materials from his Florida club. But Cannon, a former Trump Organization lawyer who worked for the campaign and for Trump after the presidency, told Trump he could not tell the archives all the requested material had been returned. He told others he was not sure if other documents were still at the club and would be uncomfortable making such a claim, the people familiar with the matter said. Other Trump advisers also encouraged Cannon not to make such a definitive statement, people familiar with the matter said. The Feb. 7 statement Trump dictated was never released over concerns by some of his team that it was not accurate, people familiar with the matter said. A different statement issued three days later said Trump had given boxes of materials to the archives in a “friendly” manner. It did not say that all of the materials were handed over. “The papers were given easily and without conflict and on a very friendly basis, which is different from the accounts being drawn up by the Fake News Media,” said the Feb. 10 statement, which came on the same day The Washington Post reported that classified material was found in the 15 boxes. A Trump spokesman did not respond to specific questions for this article, instead issuing a statement that said the Justice Department “has no greater ally than the Bezos-subsidized Washington Post, which seems to only serve as the partisan microphone of leakers and liars buried deep within the bowels of America’s government. President Trump remains committed to defending the Constitution and the Office of the Presidency, ensuring the integrity of America for generations to come.” (Amazon founder Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.) Cannon did not respond to a detailed email seeking comment about his interactions with Trump and the archives. The question of whether Trump — or anyone else — knew that there was additional government material at Mar-a-Lago after the return of the 15 boxes has become a central issue in the Justice Department investigation. Attempts to get Trump’s representatives to falsely state he had no presidential records in his possession could serve as evidence that he was intentionally and knowingly withholding documents. And if Trump continued to pressure aides to make false statements even after learning the Justice Department was involved in retrieving the documents, authorities could see those efforts as an attempt to obstruct their investigation. Even as Trump was seeking to convey that he had complied fully with the request from the archives, Cannon appears to have been communicating a different message to officials at the agency. On Feb. 8, according to people familiar with the matter, archives lawyer Gary Stern told colleagues at the agency that he had spoken with Cannon and that Cannon said he did not know if there were more relevant documents in Trump’s possession. Stern had been asking the Trump team to attest that all relevant documents had been returned, and privately feared they had not, these people said. Months earlier, in late 2021, when the archives was seeking the return of specific presidential documents, Cannon had told Stern there could be more documents in Trump’s possession than what he was transmitting to the agency, but that he did not know one way or the other. Cannon also told Stern that he was not sure where all the documents were located, or what the documents were, according to people familiar with the conversations. According to an account given to Stern’s colleagues, Stern also asked Trump lawyer Pat Philbin whether there were more documents, the people said. Philbin declined through a spokesman to comment for this article. Cannon’s refusal to declare everything had been returned soured his relationship with Trump, people familiar with the matter said. Cannon, who had worked for the Trump Organization since 2015, was soon cut out of the documents-related discussions, some of the people said, as Trump relied on more pugilistic advisers. A separate issue of concern to Cannon and others was whether any of the material in the returned boxes might be classified, people familiar with the matter said. Cannon did not have a security clearance and had not reviewed the boxes himself, one of the people said. He had told other aides not to review the boxes either, saying that doing so could get them in trouble, these people said. A total of 184 classified documents were found in the returned boxes, officials have said. Trump’s team later returned 38 additional classified documents to the Justice Department in June in response to the May 11 grand jury subpoena, which sought any documents still at Mar-a-Lago that bore classified markings. In August, believing there was still more classified material at Mar-a-Lago, the Federal Bureau of Investigation obtained a warrant to search the property and confiscated more than 27 additional boxes of material. Agents retrieved 11 sets of classified material in their search — totaling about 100 documents. Some of them contained closely held secrets of the U.S. government, people familiar with the matter have said, including information about a foreign nation’s nuclear capabilities. In responding to the May subpoena, other aides to Trump agreed to assert all documents being sought had been returned. Evan Corcoran, who replaced Cannon, told the Justice Department he was handing over all the relevant materials, people familiar with the matter have said. Christina Bobb, another Trump lawyer, signed a document saying she had been advised that Trump’s team had given over all relevant documents after a diligent search. The National Archives preserves all presidential records under the Presidential Records Act, which states that “any records created or received by the President as part of his constitutional, statutory, or ceremonial duties are the property of the United States government and will be managed by NARA at the end of the administration.” Rosalind S. Helderman and Carol D. Leonnig contributed to this report. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trumps Lawyer Refused His Request In February To Say All Documents Returned
Trump Rallies Drift To Fringe Ahead Of Potential 2024bid
Trump Rallies Drift To Fringe Ahead Of Potential 2024bid
Trump Rallies Drift To Fringe Ahead Of Potential 2024 bid https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-rallies-drift-to-fringe-ahead-of-potential-2024-bid/ WARREN, Mich. — Paige Cole is one of the “Anons.” The mother of three from Eastpointe, Michigan, says Joe Biden is a sham president and believes Donald Trump will soon be reinstated to the White House to finish the remainder of Biden’s term. “His whole inauguration was fake. He didn’t have real military people. He had, like, fake badges, fake people. And Trump is actually our president,” she said while waiting in line for his latest rally on Saturday at Macomb Community College. Wearing a pink “Trump 2024” hat and draped in a large “TRUMP WON” flag, Cole — a former Democrat who says she voted twice for Barack Obama — began to cry as she described the significance of Trump’s return and the 1,000 years of peace she believes will be ushered in with it. “It’s gonna change everything,” she says, “like we have never in humanity seen before.” Trump’s rallies have always attracted a broad swath of supporters, from first timers taking advantage of their chance to see a president in person, to devotees who camp out for days and follow him around the country like rock band groupies. But after spending much of the last two years obsessively peddling false claims of a stolen election, Trump is increasingly attracting those who have broken with reality, including adherents of the baseless QAnon conspiracy, which began in the dark corners of the internet and is premised on the belief that the country is run by a ring of child sex traffickers, satanic pedophiles and cannibals that only Trump can defeat. As he eyes another White House bid, Trump is increasingly flirting with the conspiracy. He’s reposted Q memes on his social media platform and amplified users who have promoted the movement’s slogans, videos and imagery. And in recent weeks, he has been closing out his rally speeches with an instrumental song that QAnon adherents have claimed as their anthem and renamed “WWG1WGA” after the group’s “Where we go one, we go all” slogan. Trump and his allies often dismiss suggestions that he advances conspiracy theories or condones violence. “The continued attempts by the media to invent and amplify conspiracies, while also fanning the flames of division, is truly sick,” his spokesperson, Taylor Budowich, said in a statement. “America is a nation in decline and our people are suffering, President Trump and his America First movement will not be distracted by the media’s nonsense, and he will instead continue fighting to Make America Great Again.” But interviews with more than a dozen Michigan rallygoers Saturday underscore his influence and serve as a reminder that many cling to his every word and see his actions as validation. Several of those interviewed said they only began attending Trump’s rallies after the 2020 election, when they said they had become more politically engaged. Several, like Virginia Greenlee, of Holland, Michigan, said they had been in Washington on Jan. 6, 2021, when Trump supporters violently stormed the U.S. Capitol, trying to halt the peaceful transition of power by disrupting the certification of Biden’s win. “President Trump really woke people up because I didn’t even know there was a deep state or fake media, fake news, until he started bringing light,” said Greenlee, who said she did not go inside the building but watched from outside. She blamed the violence on leftist protesters masquerading as Trump supporters, though there is no evidence to support that claim. Meanwhile, Trump continues to elevate those who peddle conspiracies. Mike Lindell, the MyPillow salesperson who has spent millions trying (and failing) to prove the election was stolen, spoke twice Saturday — once outside to attendees waiting in line to enter and again during the rally program. Also in attendance was Marjorie Taylor Greene, the far-right Georgia congresswoman who told the crowd that “Democrats want Republicans dead. And they’ve already started the killings.” Trump has long used angry and violent rhetoric to rile up his supporters, even after Jan. 6 made clear that some may act on that anger. As he inches closer to a possible announcement, Trump has leaned into the kind of racist and violent language that helped him clinch victory in 2016, when his ever-more-shocking statements — and the inevitable backlash — helped him dominate the news. On Friday, he again attacked Mitch McConnell, this time in a racist post on his social media site that accused the Senate Republican leader of having a “death wish” and derided McConnell’s wife, who was born in Taiwan and served in Trump’s administration as a Cabinet secretary. On Saturday, the crowd cheered enthusiastically as Trump touted plans to use the death penalty to kill drug dealers and traffickers if he returns to the White House, emulating the strongman leaders he’s often admired. And again, he empathized with the Jan. 6 defendants who have been jailed for their role in the insurrection, casting the rioters — whom he has already pledged to pardon if he runs and wins — as “political prisoners” and accusing authorities of “persecuting people who just happened to be there, many of them didn’t even go in.” The crowd in turn, broke into numerous “Lock her up!” chants directed at Trump’s 2016 Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton, as well as the state’s Democratic governor, secretary of state and attorney general, whom his endorsed candidates are trying to unseat. Still, Trump aides seem to want to have it both ways. As he began to wrap up his speech, some in the crowd raised their index fingers in what has been described as a QAnon salute. But for the second week in a row, burly event staff with tattoos carefully scanned the crowd, quickly asking those who raised their fingers to put them down. “They said they didn’t want hands in the air,” one of them explained he’d been told. Still, Trump’s nods to QAnon are encouraging to people like Cole, who said Trump had opened her eyes “to everything, to the evil in the world.” A 55-year-old semi-retired certified nursing assistant who relies on a bevy of fringe podcasts for information since eschewing cable news, Cole believes “our money’s no good because it was controlled by the Rothschilds,” an anti-Semitic trope, and that the Supreme Court has “already overturned” the 2020 election, but “they’re just sitting on it and they’re waiting for things to come about.” “We have to listen to underground news to get the truth of what’s going on, really,” she said. Trump’s decision to play the song, she said after the rally, shows the American people “and all those affiliated and committed in with the WWG1WGA bond and mission, that President Trump, too, is doing his best to help all involved to eradicate worldwide evil and helping to make the world better for all. It brings me strength in my mind to hold onto the hope and promises for a better life for all.” But some in the crowd voiced discomfort. Christina Whipkey, 50, who lives in Warren, Michigan, said she found Trump’s flirtations with QAnon “kind of weird” and “odd” and worried their presence at his rallies was playing into negative stereotypes. “I didn’t like that,” she said. “It’s telling people what they said about us all along, that we’re all just a bunch of QAnon supporters.” “You don’t want people to think just because you support him that you’re that far into it, that you’re one of those people,” she went on. “You don’t want people to think that about you.” A longtime Trump supporter who remembers talking about him running for president while playing his board game in high school, Whipkey also said she thinks it’s time for Trump to move on from the 2020 election, even if she has concerns about the vote. “I just wish he’d let that go now. Focus more on the future than on the past,” she said, worried he was turning off potential voters. “They’re tired of hearing it … You get to a point where it’s like, ‘All right, buddy. We heard it enough. We got it. We know.’” Laurie Letzgus, 51, a machine operator from Port Huron, Michigan, and another longtime supporter, agreed. “It is time to move on, I think,” she said. “Let’s look forward. And let’s look to 2024.” But Sharon Anderson, a member of the “Front Row Joes” group that travels the country to see Trump and who was attending her 29th rally Saturday, including the one held Jan. 6, disagreed. While she doesn’t “put a lot of faith in some of their beliefs,” she took no issue with QAnon’s growing presence at the rallies. “There’s a lot of people, a big group that comes to his rallies. And they are for him, too. They’re for his policies. Now whether they are trying to push their beliefs, I don’t know,” said Anderson, who lives in East Tennessee. “But I do know that everybody here that I’ve encountered supports Donald J. Trump. That’s what matters.” Jill Colvin, The Associated Press Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Rallies Drift To Fringe Ahead Of Potential 2024bid
Trump Sues CNN For Defamation Demands $475 In Compensatory Damages
Trump Sues CNN For Defamation Demands $475 In Compensatory Damages
Trump Sues CNN For Defamation – Demands $475 In Compensatory Damages https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-sues-cnn-for-defamation-demands-475-in-compensatory-damages/ I am no lawyer. And the following commentary has no legal substance. However, I have lived in the world for a while, so I offer my opinion. Trump has sued CNN for defamation and demanded they pay up $475 million in compensatory damages. And I assume there would be punitive damages if the suit were successful. We should note that Trump is doing his best to fix the outcome. He is suing in the US District Court in South Florida, Fort Lauderdale division — where he picked four of the five judges. Bearing that in mind, does the suit have merit? Hardly.   It is another example of Trump pissing in the wind. He has had his feeling hurt. And he is in dire legal straits. So he decided to sue someone. And CNN just got “lucky”. I imagine the legal department at Fox News and just about every other media company must be writing amicus briefs in support of CNN. Because if Trump were to succeed, then Fox — and the rest of them —  would be a target for the same reason. Let us have a look at the suit. Trump has brought it because he argues CNN “seeks to create the news (“fake news,” as the Plaintiff has characterized it in public statements)” and because the media company sought “to defame the Plaintiff in the minds of its viewers and readers for the purpose of defeating him politically.’ It seems to me that CNN could counter sue for being repeatedly defamed by Trump characterizing their stories as “fake news” — which he admits to in the filing. The brief goes on, CNN has tried to taint the Plaintiff with a series of ever-more scandalous, false, and defamatory labels of “racist,” “Russian lackey,” “insurrectionist,” and ultimately “Hitler.” These are repeatedly reported as true fact [sic], with purported factual support, by allegedly “reputable” newscasters, acting not merely with reckless disregard for the truth of their statements (sufficient to meet the definition of the legal standard for “actual malice”). Truth is an absolute defense against defamation. As such “racist” is a given (see “Mexican rapists”, “shit-hole countries” and his latest broadside against Mitch McConnell which included Trump slurring his wife, Elaine Chao, as “China-loving wife, Coco Chow.” ”Russian lackey” seems apt as he kissed up to Putin like a drunken groupie whenever he met him. And “insurrectionist” is supported by his call for his armed supporters to go march on Capitol Hill. Along with his indifference to the attackers as they were threatening to hang the Vice-President. The brief continues CNN has been given the dreaded “Pants on Fire!” designation by PolitiFact for its stories comparing Trump to Hitler. Still, it persists, requiring the time and expense of filing the instant [sic] lawsuit. As far as I can tell the “Pants on Fire” was given by PolitiFact to Allen Frances, when in an appearance on CNN’s Brian Stelter’s “Reliable Sources” show he said, “Trump is as destructive a person in this century as Hitler, Stalin, and Mao were in the last century. He may be responsible for many more million deaths than they were. He needs to be contained, but he needs to be contained by attacking his policies, not his person.” Frances later clarified he was talking about Trump’s climate change denial. I do not watch CNN, but I have no sense that their official editorial policy is to call Trump “Hilter”. And I suspect that the law offers media companies protection when their guests offer off-the-wall commentary (Fox News must pray it does). The brief continues, Even though the actual malice standard is met here, in circumstances like these, the judicially-created policy of the “actual malice” standard should not apply because “ideological homogeneity in the media—or in the channels of information distribution—risks repressing certain ideas from the public consciousness just as surely as if access were restricted by the government.” Suits like these do not throttle the First Amendment, they vindicate the First Amendment’s marketplace of ideas. As far as I can tell this is just Trump’s mouthpiece just making shit up. It is so nonsensical I would not be surprised if Trump himself wrote it. The brief claims that suing media companies for saying stuff is not an attack on their press freedom. The suit says, demanding that one company fork over $475 million in compensatory damages (plus whatever a jury would award in punitive damages) vindicates the First Amendment. That is absurd. The overview concludes, As the late Judge Silberman noted: It should be borne in mind that the first step taken by any potential authoritarian or dictatorial regime is to gain control of communications, particularly the delivery of news. It is fair to conclude, therefore, that one-party control of the press and media is a threat to a viable democracy. It may even give rise to countervailing extremism. The First Amendment guarantees a free press to foster a vibrant trade in ideas. But a biased press can distort the marketplace. And when the media has proven its willingness—if not eagerness—to so distort, it is a profound mistake to stand by unjustified legal rules that serve only to enhance the press’ power.   First, let’s note that Silberman’s opinion was offered in dissent. He was on the losing side of the case (Tah v. Glob. Witness Publ’g, Inc.) and therefore his reasoning was rejected by the full court. And as for “Unjustified legal rules.” Legal rules are not “justified” or “unjustified”. They simply exist or they do not. Trump has admitted that the law protects CNN. Which seems an odd strategy in bringing a suit. If Trump thinks the rules should be changed why did he not try to change them when he was President — and for two years the GOP also controlled both Houses of Congress? “One-party control of the press and the media” is also nuts — Trump himself has repeatedly said that no one watches CNN. And the ratings support the fact that it is a small player in the media pond. I realize that conservatives accuse the “mainstream media” of being in bed with liberals. But that is easily gainsaid by the existence of Fox, Newsmax, OAN, and the editorial pages of the Washington Post and the existence of the NY Post and the Washington Examiner plus many others. The bulk of the brief offers examples of CNN’s supposed defamatory behavior. I will not bore the reader with a litany of detail. But here is one example of the inanity. Trump’s lawyers had demanded that CNN take down 34 pieces in which CNN said Trump was lying about the 2020 election. CNN declined to do so and justified this by pointing out that, “we note that you have not identified a single false or defamatory statement in your letter. It is well-established that the outcome of the 2020 presidential election was unaffected by fraud, as verified by the dismissal of no fewer than 50 lawsuits by judges across the United States asserting otherwise, the sanctioning of multiple attorneys for making unsubstantiated election-fraud claims, and investigations conducted by the Department of Justice, Congress, and various state and local bodies.”     In essence, CNN says that they are entitled to publish the truth and that there is overwhelming evidence they are publishing the truth. Which for some reason Trump’s lawyers point out in the brief. I hope for their sake that Trump’s lawyers are not working on contingency. Because this case is going nowhere. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Sues CNN For Defamation Demands $475 In Compensatory Damages
The Impact Of A Trump Visit On Michigan Politics 9 & 10 News
The Impact Of A Trump Visit On Michigan Politics 9 & 10 News
The Impact Of A Trump Visit On Michigan Politics – 9 & 10 News https://digitalarkansasnews.com/the-impact-of-a-trump-visit-on-michigan-politics-9-10-news/ Former President Donald Trump was in Michigan this weekend rallying for the Republican ticket. Will his influence be enough to get the GOP some big wins? Trump had already endorsed the top of the ticket, Tudor Dixon for governor, Matt DePerno for attorney general and Kristina Karamo for secretary of state, but polling shows not all his supporters are following him to line up behind Dixon. A rally and in-person show of support may help. The clock is ticking. There’s less than 40 days to go until Election Day  and absentee ballots have already been sent out. Trump visited Michigan this weekend in full support of the Republican ticket. It remains to be seen if his supporters also support that ticket Thousands of supporters made their way to Warren Saturday to see the former president. He was there to give a boost to candidates, specifically Dixon, who’s trailing Governor Gretchen Whitmer in all polls. “She’s part of a crew across the country that’s struggling despite the fact that they have the Trump endorsement,” said John Sellek, founder of Harbor Strategic, “So what they’ve decided to do is make sure they take advantage of every single bit of it that they can and see if that’s enough to pull some voters across.” Trump’s supporters are mainly grassroots Republicans, patriots they call themselves, and many don’t align with Dixon’s more establishment backing. It showed in some messaging. “I want you to give an applause for Donald Trump,” said DePerno at the rally, “Who helped overturn Roe v Wade.” “They’re cozying up to President Trump,” said Sellek, “He gave the endorsement. They want to show that they are loyal and continue to have his support no matter they win or lose.” Abortion being an issue Republicans seem to be losing, some still tout strong opposition while Dixon tries to soften her stance. “It’s on the ballot, it shouldn’t be an issue for the gubernatorial race,” Dixon said at the rally. Most of Trump’s speech was about his work and teasing towards another run in 2024 and the possible impact that decision would have this November. “We might just have to do it again,” said Trump, “I think you’re going to be really happy.” “I think most of the GOPers were hoping he would delay that issue, until after Election Day,” said Sellek, “Him entering the race officially, would certainly put him right at the top of the feeding frenzy.” Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
The Impact Of A Trump Visit On Michigan Politics 9 & 10 News
Frontline Workers To Begin Receiving Hundreds In
Frontline Workers To Begin Receiving Hundreds In
Frontline Workers To Begin Receiving Hundreds In https://digitalarkansasnews.com/frontline-workers-to-begin-receiving-hundreds-in/   7m ago Frontline workers express relief funds are coming soon It took almost two years of debate at the legislature, but workers are now days away from receiving Hero Pay as a reward for working through the COVID-19 pandemic. Meat cutter Keith Farr, appearing with other frontline workers, said he is glad the money is finally coming. “It was hard times, but we made it through and it’s finally here,” he said. Part of the hold up was that Republicans wanted larger $750 checks to go to fewer people, but Democrats wanted a larger pool and smaller checks. Among those getting checks are health care workers, grocery store employees, law enforcement, and school employees. Latonya Patterson is a health care worker at Open Cities Health Care in St. Paul, and says that she thinks the checks will be great news for people. “I know it’s not what everyone thought how much they would get, but I think its better than nothing,” she said. There were income cutoffs for those who dealt directly with patients. The cutoff was $350,000 for married couples and $175,000 for individuals. For others it was $185,000 per household and $85,000 for singles. The first check will be coming in seven to 10 days — that’s for people who applied trough direct deposit. Everyone else should be getting their checks in four to six weeks. There wont be state taxes taken out but the federal government will take taxes out of this “hero pay.”   23m ago Reps from both sides of aisle speak out on payments The Senate DFL faction released a statement on the impending “hero pay” set to be distributed to Minnesotans soon, saying they were “long overdue and will help more than 1 million Minnesotans whose sacrifices were crucial to getting Minnesota through more than two years of the deadly COVID-19 pandemic.” “This is a good day for all Minnesotans who understand that we owe our state’s frontline workers our thanks for all they did during the darkest days of the pandemic. They had to go to work without the option of staying home, and they got Minnesotans through a very tough time. Without their sacrifices, the health and economic crisis caused by the pandemic would have been much worse. These bonus checks -while not as large as we would have supported – recognize those sacrifices and will help many of them in a significant way. While we’ve taken this step to help our frontline workers, DFLers also know that our work to help Minnesota working families will never be done, and we will continue that important work into the future.” Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Jeremy Miller, a Republican, issued the following statement: “I applaud our frontline workers who took great risks during the pandemic. They deserve our appreciation and respect for everything they have done and continue to do to keep us safe. While 1 million Minnesotans are getting a small thank you for their work during the pandemic right now, Senate Republicans will continue to fight for permanent tax cuts so every working Minnesotan will see a ‘bonus payment’ in every paycheck – week after week, month after month, year after year.”  And both Democratic Gov. Tim Walz and his Republican challenger in this year’s elections, Dr. Scott Jensen, issued their own statements. “I’m grateful for the work Minnesotans did to help people across our state stay healthy and safe through the COVID-19 pandemic,” Walz said. “Frontline workers are an important part of the fabric of our state and helped us continue functioning during the pandemic. Now, I’m proud to say these workers will receive $487.45 in recognition from the State of Minnesota.” “For those Minnesotans disappointed in either being one of the 200,000 who were denied, or those whose checks are now smaller than expected, remember that if Walz’s waste, fraud, and abuse were rooted out, you could possibly have an extra $1,000 in your bank account to fight crushing inflation at the grocery store or gas pump,” Jensen said. “When I’m elected in November, we will aggressively tackle government incompetence and put in place safeguards that aim to eliminate fraud and waste within our state government.”   10:02 AM How frontline workers will get their “hero pay” If you were approved to receive “hero pay,” your $487.45 will come in one of two ways. If you chose to receive it via direct deposit, you should see those funds deposited within seven to 10 business days, Gov. Tim Walz’s office said. Those who chose to receive a debit card will receive it in the mail in three to four weeks. Walz’s office said the state will begin sending payments on Wednesday. WCCO Staff The WCCO Staff is a group of experienced journalists who bring you the content on WCCO.com. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Frontline Workers To Begin Receiving Hundreds In
Trump Slammed For Post Saying McConnell Has death Wish
Trump Slammed For Post Saying McConnell Has death Wish
Trump Slammed For Post Saying McConnell Has ‘death Wish’ https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-slammed-for-post-saying-mcconnell-has-death-wish/ WASHINGTON, D.C. (NewsNation) — Former President Donald Trump is facing backlash after his weekend rebuke of top Republican leader Mitch McConnell and his wife Elaine Chao. One of the strongest condemnations of the former president came from the Wall Street Journal editorial board. In a post on his social media platform, Truth Social, Trump slammed McConnell for helping Democrats pass a bill to keep the government up and running. He asked if McConnell was not negotiating with Democrats on bills “because he hates Donald J. Trump and he knows I am strongly opposed to them,” or if it is because he believes in the Democrats’ “Green New Deal” proposal. “[McConnell] has a DEATH WISH,” Trump continued in his Truth Social post. “[He] must immediately seek help and advise (sic) from his China loving wife…” He then referred to Chao, who was born in Taiwan and was a member of his cabinet until she resigned following the Jan. 6 Capitol riots, as “Coco Chow,” which has been broadly condemned as racist. NewsNation reached out to the former U.S. Transportation Secretary’s team but they said Chao had no comment at the time. The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board pushed back against the former president, writing that his attacks on McConnell and Chao were reckless and encouraged violence. “Mr. Trump’s apologists claim he merely meant Mr. McConnell has a political death wish, but that isn’t what he wrote. It’s all too easy to imagine some fanatic taking Mr. Trump seriously and literally, and attempting to kill Mr. McConnell. Many supporters took Mr. Trump’s rhetoric about former Vice President Mike Pence all too seriously on Jan. 6.” Taylor Budowich, a member of the former president’s team, responded to the Wall Street Journal editorial, telling the Washington Post that McConnell was “killing the Republican Party through weakness and cowardice.” “He obviously has a political death wish for himself and Republican Party, but President Trump and the America First champions in Congress will save the Republican Party and our nation,” Budowich told the Post. This isn’t the first time Trump has taken aim at his party’s top elected official, bashing McConnell for costing Republicans control of the Senate in the Georgia runoffs and scoffing at him when he condemned the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. In a post from August, Trump called for McConnell to step down or be replaced as Senate Republican leader after McConnell seemingly slammed Trump-endorsed candidates, saying “candidate quality” could cost Republicans control of the Senate. McConnell and other members of the GOP have yet to comment on Trump’s latest attack. However, outgoing GOP Rep. Liz Cheney, who is a member of the House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riots, used Trump’s comment to issue her own criticism of the GOP. “When you see former President Trump suggesting in a pretty thinly veiled way, using words that could well cause violence against the Republican leader of the Senate … nobody in my party will say that’s unacceptable,” Cheney said at a Syracuse University event. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Slammed For Post Saying McConnell Has death Wish
Ukraine's Forces Gain Ground In The South As Counteroffensive Builds; Russia Acknowledges Advances
Ukraine's Forces Gain Ground In The South As Counteroffensive Builds; Russia Acknowledges Advances
Ukraine's Forces Gain Ground In The South As Counteroffensive Builds; Russia Acknowledges Advances https://digitalarkansasnews.com/ukraines-forces-gain-ground-in-the-south-as-counteroffensive-builds-russia-acknowledges-advances/ More than 253 vessels carrying agricultural products have left Ukrainian ports Barbados-flagged general cargo ship Fulmar S is pictured in the Black Sea, north of the Bosphorus Strait, in Istanbul, Turkey August 5, 2022. Mehmet Caliskan | Reuters The organization overseeing the export of agricultural products from Ukraine said that so far 253 vessels have left the besieged country since ports reopened in July. The Joint Coordination Center, an initiative of Ukraine, Russia, the United Nations and Turkey, said the ships transported a total of 5.7 million metric tons of grain and other food products. In July, three of Ukraine’s ports were reopened to exports under the U.N.-backed Black Sea Grain Initiative. — Amanda Macias Elon Musk is publicly rebuked by Zelenskyy over his Twitter poll SpaceX Chief Engineer Elon Musk takes part in a joint news conference with T-Mobile CEO Mike Sievert (not pictured) at the SpaceX Starbase, in Brownsville, Texas, U.S., August 25, 2022. Adrees Latif | Reuters American tech billionaire Elon Musk drew public ire from Ukraine’s top officials after the Tesla CEO posted a Twitter poll asking the public to agree or disagree with what he claimed is the most likely outcome of Russia’s invasion. “F– off is my very diplomatic reply to you,” Ukraine’s ambassador to Germany, Andrij Melnyk, wrote in response to Musk’s tweet. Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelenskyy responded with a Twitter poll of his own. “Which Elon Musk do you like more,” Zelenskyy asked. “The one who supports Ukraine” or “The one who supports Russia.” What Musk calls a “highly likely” outcome presumes that Russia accomplishes several of its major goals, including permanently annexing Crimea, using referendums to determine the fates of 4 other attempted annexations, and prohibiting Ukraine from joining NATO. For Ukrainians, these outcomes would never, ever be acceptable. — Christina Wilkie Photos show destroyed Russian armored vehicles left behind in Izium, Kharkiv Ukrainian forces transport Russian vehicles and missile launch pads left behind by the Russian forces in Izium, Kharkiv, Ukraine on October 02, 2022. Metin Aktas | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images Over the weekend Ukrainian forces seized the strategic city of Lyman and continued a stunning counteroffensive in the northeast of the country. The following photos show destroyed Russian armored vehicles and tanks left behind as Ukrainian forces battle for Izium, Kharkiv and continue to push east through Russian lines. Destroyed Russian armored vehicles left behind by the Russian forces in Izium, Kharkiv, Ukraine on October 02, 2022.  Metin Aktas | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images Destroyed Russian armored vehicles left behind by the Russian forces in Izium, Kharkiv, Ukraine on October 02, 2022. Metin Aktas | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images Destroyed Russian armored vehicles left behind by the Russian forces in Izium, Kharkiv, Ukraine on October 02, 2022. Metin Aktas | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images A destroyed Russian armored vehicle left behind by the Russian forces in Izium, Kharkiv, Ukraine on October 02, 2022. (Photo by Metin Aktas/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images) Metin Aktas | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images — Metin Aktas | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images Tehran denies that Iranian-made drones are being used by Russians in Ukraine A Ukrainian flag waves in a residential area heavily damaged in the village of Dolyna in Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine after the withdrawal of Russian troops on September 24, 2022. Anadolu Agency | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images Iran denied reports that Iranian-made drones were being used by Russian forces on the battlefield in Ukraine. Nasser Kanaani, an Iranian spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told NBC News that press reports about the use of drones in Ukraine are fake. “The Islamic Republic considers this news baseless,” Kanaani said, adding that Iran has declared a stance of neutrality in the Russia-Ukraine war. Last week, the Pentagon said it observed Russian forces using Iranian drones in Ukraine. “We do assess that the Russians are using the Iranian drones in Ukraine,” Pentagon Press Secretary Air Force Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder said during a Sept. 27 press briefing. “We’ve also seen reports of Ukrainians shooting down some of these drones,” he added, without providing more detail. — Amanda Macias A Russian court will hear WNBA star Brittney Griner’s appeal this month US’ Women’s National Basketball Association (NBA) basketball player Brittney Griner, who was detained at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport and later charged with illegal possession of cannabis, waits for the verdict inside a defendants’ cage before a court hearing in Khimki outside Moscow, on August 4, 2022. Evgenia Novozhenina | AFP | Getty Images A Russian court will hear WNBA star Brittney Griner’s appeal against her nine-year prison sentence for drug possession on Oct. 25. Griner, a two-time Olympic gold medalist, was convicted in August on accusations that she was smuggling vape cartridges with cannabis oil into Russia. The 31-year-old, who plays professional basketball in Russia during the WNBA offseason, admitted that she had the canisters in her luggage but testified that she accidentally packed them because she was in a rush. The Biden administration has referred to her as “wrongfully detained” and has attempted to broker deals with the Kremlin for her release. — Amanda Macias Ukraine’s first lady christens newest Ukrainian warship in Turkey Ukrainian Minister of Defense Oleksii Reznikov shared a video on Twitter of the newest warship to join Ukraine’s fleet. “With a ship like this, our Black and Azov seas will be safe,” Reznikov wrote on Twitter. He added that the future base port for the warship will be in Sevastopol. The ship was launched in Turkey and is expected to join Ukraine’s fleet by 2024. The anti-submarine corvette, named “Hetman Ivan Mazepa,” was christened by Ukraine’s first lady Olena Zelenska. — Amanda Macias More than 4.2 million Ukrainians have applied for temporary resident status in other countries A taxi driver takes a Ukrainian refugee child in his arms from his taxi as they arrive to Madrid. A convoy of taxis traveled from Madrid to the Polish-Ukrainian border carrying humanitarian aid and bringing back Ukrainian families fleeing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, in total 133 refugees, of which 60 are children. The convoy arrived to the foundation ‘Mensajeros de la Paz’, which will provide them accommodation. Marcos Del Mazo | Lightrocket | Getty Images More than 4.2 million Ukrainians have applied for temporary resident status in other countries since Russia’s invasion in late February, the U.N. Refugee Agency estimates. The majority of refugees from Ukraine have relocated to Poland. According to data collected by the agency, more than 7.5 million people have become refugees and moved to neighbor European countries. “The escalation of conflict in Ukraine has caused civilian casualties and destruction of civilian infrastructure, forcing people to flee their homes seeking safety, protection and assistance,” the U.N. Refugee Agency wrote. — Amanda Macias Russian forces release Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant official, IAEA chief says A Russian serviceman stands guard the territory outside the second reactor of the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Station in Energodar on May 1, 2022. Andrey Borodulin | AFP | Getty Images The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency said that Russian forces released an employee from the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant. IAEA Director-General Rafael Grossi said Ihor Murashov, the director general of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, was released and returned to his family. Last week, Murashov was allegedly detained by Russian troops upon leaving the power plant facility in the town of Energodar. — Amanda Macias Five vessels carrying 116,123 metric tons of corn and wheat leave Ukraine An aerial view of Barbados flagged “Fulmar S” named empty grain ship as Representatives of Russia, Ukraine, Turkiye and the United Nations (UN) of the Joint Coordination Center (JCC) conduct inspection on vessel in Istanbul, Turkiye on August 05, 2022. Islam Yakut | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images The organization overseeing the export of grain from Ukraine said it approved five vessels to leave the besieged country on Sunday. The Black Sea Grain Initiative, an initiative of Ukraine, Russia, the United Nations and Turkey, said the vessels are carrying 116,123 metric tons of corn and wheat. Three ships are destined for Spain and are carrying 32,700 metric tons of corn and 50,500 metric tons of wheat. Another ship will depart from Ukraine’s port of Chornomorsk for Tunisia and is carrying 10,000 metric tons of wheat. The fifth vessel is carrying 22,923 metric tons of wheat and will sail to Italy from Ukraine’s port of Odesa. Read more about the Black Sea Grain Initiative here. — Amanda Macias A look inside Russia’s partial mobilization in Rostov, Russia Russian citizens drafted during the partial mobilization begin their military trainings in Rostov, Russia after a military call-up for the Ukraine war. Relatives say goodbye to Russian citizens drafted during the partial mobilization as they join their military units due to a military call-up for the Russia-Ukraine war with Russian President Vladimir Putin’s partial mobilisation order in Rostov, Russia on October 02, 2022. Arkady Budnitsky | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images Russian citizens drafted during the partial mobilization begin their military trainings after a military call-up for the Russia-Ukraine war in Rostov, Russia on October 02, 2022. Anadolu Agency | Anadolu Agency | Getty Im...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Ukraine's Forces Gain Ground In The South As Counteroffensive Builds; Russia Acknowledges Advances
Stock Futures Rise Slightly Following Relief Rally To Begin October
Stock Futures Rise Slightly Following Relief Rally To Begin October
Stock Futures Rise Slightly Following Relief Rally To Begin October https://digitalarkansasnews.com/stock-futures-rise-slightly-following-relief-rally-to-begin-october/ Stock futures went up slightly following a broad rally on the first trading day of October – a sharp turn from September, which brought the worst month since March 2020 for the the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500. Futures tied to the S&P 500 increased 0.05%. Nasdaq 100 futures were up 0.15%. Futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average were up 4 points, or 0.01%. Monday brought a respite from slides seen throughout September and the prior quarter. The Dow jumped nearly 2.7%, or about 765 points, to close at 29,490.89. This was its best day since June 24. The S&P 500 advanced about 2.6% to 3,678.43 in its best day since July 27. The Nasdaq Composite increased roughly 2.3% to end at 10,815.43. Meanwhile, the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note fell to about 3.65%, down from more than 4% at one point last week. “There was a relief rally,” said Jon Maier, chief investment officer at Global X ETFs. But he also warned against calling on a trend based on one day of trading. “I don’t think one day of relief changes the story.” Maier said the rally likely came from optimism in the U.S. over the state of foreign markets, as the dollar continued to surge. But within the U.S., he said broader market trends will likely be tied to future decisions from the Federal Reserve as it aims to continue lowering inflation. Investors will watch for new data Tuesday from the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey administered by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Watch fourth quarter earnings guidance more than third quarter actual numbers, S&P Global says Fourth quarter earnings forecasts companies give when reporting third quarter results will be far more important to the market’s future direction than the actual third quarter numbers themselves, S&P Global believes. “October brings earnings, with Q3 estimates already declining 7%, and the whisper numbers a bit more than that,” Howard Silverblatt, senior index analyst wrote over the weekend. “The larger concern (than the actual numbers for Q3, when consumers were still spending) is the guidance for Q4, as consumers have pulled back, inflation continues and the Fed’s `adjustments’ will have a more substantial impact.” Third quarter earnings for the S&P 500 are projected by analysts to grow 6.1% compared with the same quarter a year ago, and almost 18% over the second quarter of 2022, S&P Global said. Next year’s estimates call for a 14.3% earnings growth over 2022, and a corresponding forward P/E ratio of 15.0. Silverblatt also looked at typical performance for the S&P 500 in the month of October. “Historically, the index posts gains 57.4% of the time, with an average gain of 4.18% for the up months, a 4.67% average decrease for the down months and an overall average decrease of 0.46%,” he wrote. — Scott Schnipper Stocks moving after hours: Rivian, Dynatrace and more Some stocks were moving after hours on news, including: Rivian — The electric vehicle maker went up 2.7% after announcing after the bell that production met expectations in its quarter ending Sept. 30. Dynatrace — The software intelligence company increased 4.6% after being upgraded to a buy from JPMorgan. The stock rose 3% during regular trading. See the full list here. — Alex Harring Futures open up slightly The three major indexes for after-hour trading opened up slightly Monday. Nasdaq 100 futures saw the biggest gain at open, up 0.26%. Futures tied to the S&P 500 increased 0.17%. Futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average were up 31 points, or 0.10%. — Alex Harring Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Stock Futures Rise Slightly Following Relief Rally To Begin October
WATCH: Sam Pittman Previews Mississippi State Game And More
WATCH: Sam Pittman Previews Mississippi State Game And More
WATCH: Sam Pittman Previews Mississippi State Game And More https://digitalarkansasnews.com/watch-sam-pittman-previews-mississippi-state-game-and-more/ by: Courtney Mims Posted: Oct 3, 2022 / 05:29 PM CDT Updated: Oct 3, 2022 / 05:29 PM CDT FAYETTEVILLE, Ar. (KNWA/KFTA) – On Monday, Sam Pittman sat down with the media to talk about the Mississippi State game and more. He gave an update on KJ Jefferson’s status and the QB situation moving forward. Watch the full press conference in the video above. Close Subscribe Now HOGSCOREBOARD Trending Stories LRPD officer faces domestic violence charges LRPD investigating deadly Sunday shooting LR cancels contract of LITFest organizer Shots fired in Gould injuring multiple people ASP: 1 dead, murder charge after Gould shooting Follow @PigTrailNation on Twitter Tweets by PigTrailNation Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
WATCH: Sam Pittman Previews Mississippi State Game And More
Maternal Health Outcomes Worsening In Nation State Talk Business & Politics
Maternal Health Outcomes Worsening In Nation State Talk Business & Politics
Maternal Health Outcomes Worsening In Nation, State – Talk Business & Politics https://digitalarkansasnews.com/maternal-health-outcomes-worsening-in-nation-state-talk-business-politics/ Maternal health outcomes have worsened in recent years, and they are worse in Arkansas than in other states, members of the House and Senate Public Health, Welfare and Labor Committees were told Monday (Oct. 3) during a meeting at the UAMS Medical Center. Jennifer Callaghan-Koru, Ph.D., told legislators that maternal deaths decreased nationally in the 20th century, but have doubled in the last 20 years. Thirty women died in pregnancy or within one year of giving brith in 2018, the first full year reviewed by the legislatively-created Arkansas Maternal Mortality Review Committee. Arkansas’ rate of deaths for pregnancy-related complications is twice the national average, and the committee determined that 92% of the deaths could have been prevented. Among the deaths was Emily Robison, a 22-year-old who died at a Fort Smith hospital a year ago after developing COVID-19 and giving birth two months early. Callaghan-Koru found that for every death, there are 10 cases of severe maternal morbidity cases resulting in significant short-term or long-term health issues. At the national level, there are 144 cases of severe maternal morbidity cases per 10,000 births. Arkansas has not established a surveillance for its cases, but some estimates have found 195 cases among Medicaid recipients. If that is true of all cases, then one in 50 women have severe morbidity during pregnancy or postpartum that requires them to be hospitalized, she said. She said that a woman who undergoes multiple C-sections is especially at risk, so avoiding the first can be key to preventing later problems. “It’s not well-explained why maternal outcomes are getting worse, but if you look at the trend lines, C-section rates have been going up as have the maternal outcomes,” Callaghan-Koru said. “I don’t think there’s a one-to-one correlation, but it’s certainly one of the factors that’s contributing.” Callaghan-Koru listed three areas where Arkansas is behind the rest of the country. Those include pre-term birth rates; maternal mental health in that almost one in four Arkansas mothers reported postpartum depression or anxiety; and teen birth rates, in which Arkansas has the nation’s second highest rate. Callaghan-Koru said there are large parts of the state with limited access to obstetrics providers. Thirty-seven hospitals offer labor and delivery services, down from 39. The majority of the state’s counties do not have a facility for delivering a baby, and women living there can have substantial costs to access care elsewhere. The trend nationwide is for maternity and delivery wards to close. Nirvana A. Manning, M.D., chair of the UAMS Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, listed some of the initiatives that have been developed to address the issue. Those include the Healthy Start program that provides services throughout the pregnancy in English, Spanish and Marshallese. Manning said the state needs a network providing information about hospital availabilities and capabilities. “We know that there’s so many great hospitals in our state. We just need real-time data on where we can get patients safely that can take care of them,” she said. She said the state should also expand postpartum Medicaid services from the current 60 days to 12 months, as many states have done. Such appointments offer opportunities for education, preventive care, and contraceptive counseling. Manning said Arkansas is less litigious than northeastern states, where many young doctors won’t complete their residencies without being sued, sometimes several times. Elsewhere in the meeting, UAMS Chancellor Dr. Cam Patterson told legislators that the hospital is “almost always full” and couldn’t accept roughly 6,000 transfers last year. Furthermore, the hospital has 32 beds offline because it doesn’t have staff for them. The challenge will be alleviated when The Orthopedic and Spine Hospital opens in May 2023. Also helping will be a “hospital at home” model UAMS is developing with Contessa Health for patients who need a high level of services that can be delivered in their homes. “Ultimately, the answer to this is we need more beds, and ultimately we’re going to need a new clinical tower if we’re going to continue to serve all the needs that UAMS needs to provide for people of the state of Arkansas,” he said. Patterson said health care is resistant to recessions because people still get sick, but it is “incredibly vulnerable to inflation” and in some cases “pockets of hyperinflation, especially our labor costs.” He said hospitals can’t easily pass on the costs of rising expenses because reimbursements from the federal government, Medicaid and insurance companies remain fixed. Patterson referenced a recent survey by the Arkansas Hospital Association that found that 52% of hospital respondents were operating in the red. On average, responding hospitals saw a margin decrease of 3.5 percentage points between the first quarter of 2019 and the first quarter of 2022. On the positive side, Patterson said, “COVID-19 per se is not an onerous burden on us anymore.” He said the hospital tends to have single-digit or low-double-digit numbers of patients with COVID-19 complications. The hospital knows how to manage the disease and rarely has to put patients on heart-lung bypass machines any more. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Maternal Health Outcomes Worsening In Nation State Talk Business & Politics
Power Women: The Fight Against Domestic Violence
Power Women: The Fight Against Domestic Violence
Power Women: The Fight Against Domestic Violence https://digitalarkansasnews.com/power-women-the-fight-against-domestic-violence/ by: Claire Kreuz Posted: Oct 3, 2022 / 04:54 PM CDT Updated: Oct 3, 2022 / 04:54 PM CDT by: Claire Kreuz Posted: Oct 3, 2022 / 04:54 PM CDT Updated: Oct 3, 2022 / 04:54 PM CDT October marks Domestic Violence Awareness Month, with one central Arkansas organization empowering victims of domestic violence. Little Rock Power Woman Claire Brown and Women’s Own Worth founder and president Jajuan Archer stopped by KARK 4 News to talk about rising above the waves of abuse that victims are forced to endure. The women talked about how many people are affected by domestic violence in the state each month, what Women’s Own Worth does to help and how more women can feel empowered to end domestic violence in their own lives and in the community around them. For more from Claire and the Power Women team, follow her on Twitter at @ClairePowerMom or head to her website at ThePowerWomen.org. Don’t Miss Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Power Women: The Fight Against Domestic Violence
Trump Slaps CNN With $475 Million Defamation Lawsuit
Trump Slaps CNN With $475 Million Defamation Lawsuit
Trump Slaps CNN With $475 Million Defamation Lawsuit https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-slaps-cnn-with-475-million-defamation-lawsuit/ Former President Donald Trump is suing CNN for defamation, seeking $475 million in punitive damages, according to a court filing on Monday. The former president sued the news outlet in federal court in Florida, according to Reuters. This is a breaking story and will be updated. CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Slaps CNN With $475 Million Defamation Lawsuit
Election Officials Brace For Confrontational Poll Watchers
Election Officials Brace For Confrontational Poll Watchers
Election Officials Brace For Confrontational Poll Watchers https://digitalarkansasnews.com/election-officials-brace-for-confrontational-poll-watchers/ The situation with the poll watcher had gotten so bad that Anne Risku, the election director in North Carolina’s Wayne County, had to intervene via speakerphone. “You need to back off!” Risku recalled hollering after the woman wedged herself between a voter and the machine where the voter was trying to cast his ballot at a precinct about 60 miles southeast of Raleigh. The man eventually was able to vote, but the incident was one of several Risku cited from the May primary that made her worry about a wave of newly aggressive poll watchers. Many have spent the past two years steeped in lies about the accuracy of the 2020 election. Those fears led the North Carolina State Board of Elections in August to tighten rules governing poll watchers. But the state’s rules review board, appointed by the Republican-controlled Legislature, blocked the new poll watcher regulations in late September, leaving election officials such as Risku without additional tools to control behavior on Election Day, Nov. 8. “It becomes complete babysitting,” Risku said in an interview. “The back and forth for the precinct officials, having somebody constantly on you for every little thing that you do — not because you’re doing it wrong, but because they don’t agree with what you’re doing.” Poll watchers have traditionally been an essential element of electoral transparency, the eyes and ears for the two major political parties who help ensure that the actual mechanics of voting are administered fairly and accurately. But election officials fear that a surge of conspiracy believers are signing up for those positions this year and are being trained by others who have propagated the lie spread by former President Donald Trump and his allies that the 2020 presidential election was riddled with fraud. In Michigan, groups that have spread falsehoods about that race are recruiting poll watchers. In Nevada, the Republican Party’s nominee for secretary of state, Jim Marchant, denies President Joe Biden’s 2020 victory and was a featured speaker at a party poll watcher training. Cleta Mitchell, a prominent conservative lawyer and North Carolina resident, is running a group recruiting poll watchers and workers in eight swing states. Mitchell was on the phone with Trump when the then-president called Georgia’s secretary of state in January 2021 and asked that official to “find” enough votes for Trump to be declared the state’s winner. Chris Harvey, who was Georgia’s election director in 2020 when Trump claimed the election was being stolen from him, recalled how swarms of Trump backers came as self-appointed poll watchers to observe the state’s manual recounts, harassing election workers and disrupting the process. Harvey fears a repeat this year. “The whole tension that we’re expecting to see at polling places is something we’re talking to election officials about, something we’re talking to law enforcement about,” said Harvey, who is advising a group of election officials and law enforcement before November. The laws governing poll watchers vary from state to state. Their role is generally to observe, question any deviations from required procedure and, in some states, lodge formal complaints or provide testimony for objections filed in court. The worries this year are similar to those during the 2020 election, when Trump began railing against mail voting and the Republican National Committee launched its first national operation in decades. It had recently been freed from a consent decree that limited its poll-watching operation after it previously was found to have targeted Black and Latino voters. But voting went smoothly that November. Mitchell said her organization, the Election Integrity Network, is just trying to ensure that everyone follows the law. “We are not a threat,” she told The Associated Press during a text message exchange. “Unless you think elections that are conducted according to the rule of law are a threat. We train people to follow the law.” Risku said there were issues with poll watchers from both parties during the primary in May. But of the 13 incidents she reported to the North Carolina board from Wayne County, all involved Republicans. In addition to the poll watcher who had to be ejected, Risku said another Republican poll watcher in her district waited after hours in the parking lot of the Mount Olive Train Depot early voting site until Chief Judge Susan Wiley began carrying boxes of marked ballots to her car. On two occasions, the man tried to follow her back to the elections office in Goldsboro, about a 20-minute drive. Recognizing that the job has become “a scary ordeal” in the last year, Risku said she has stepped up security before November and offered raises to entice precinct officials to stay. She expects many won’t return after this year. The North Carolina GOP chairman, Michael Whatley, said that’s not what the party is teaching its poll watchers. “What we saw in terms of some of the activities that were at play may have been coming from Republicans but were not things that we have been teaching people in our training sessions,” Whatley said. “What we want to do is make sure that we have people that are in the room that are going to be very respectful of the election officials at all times, be very respectful of the voters at all times and, if they see issues, then report them in.” He has declined to allow reporters to attend the training sessions, which he said have trained 7,000 potential poll watchers so far this year. As in many states, poll watchers are only permitted in North Carolina if they have been designated by the major parties. But in Michigan, organizations that register with local election offices also can provide poll watchers. A coalition of groups that have questioned the 2020 election is scrambling to get as many of their members in place as possible in the politically critical state. “The best I can do is put a whole bunch of eyeballs on it to make sure that anything that doesn’t look right gets a further look,” said Sandy Kiesel, executive director of the Michigan Election Integrity Fund and Force, part of a coalition that recruited 5,000 poll watchers for the state’s August primary. Kiesel said several of her coalition’s poll watchers and poll challengers — Michigan law allows one person to observe and another person to formally lodge challenges at precincts — were prevented from observing or escorted out of polling places in August. Michigan election officials are bracing for more confrontations in November. Patrick Colbeck, a former Republican state senator and prominent election conspiracy theorist who is part of Kiesel’s coalition, announced this past week that a comprehensive fall push to scrutinize every aspect of voting would be called “Operation Overwatch.” “They are talking about intimidating people who have the right to vote,” said Barb Byrum, clerk of Michigan’s Ingham County, which includes Lansing, the state capital. In a sign of the importance the state’s Republicans place on poll watchers, the GOP-controlled Legislature last week agreed to let election offices throughout Michigan start processing mailed ballots two days before Election Day — something most states with mail voting allow long before then — but only if they allow poll watchers to observe. The ballots are not actually counted until Election Day. In Texas, a new law allows every candidate to assign up to two poll watchers, raising the potential that observers could pack polling locations, particularly around big cities such as Dallas and Houston where ballots are the longest. According to records from the secretary of state’s office, more than 900 people in Texas already had received poll watching certification in the three weeks after the state opened required training on Sept. 1. ___ Riccardi reported from Denver. Associated Press writers Joey Cappelletti in Lansing, Michigan, Gabe Stern in Reno, Nevada, and Paul Weber in Austin, Texas, contributed to this report. Copyright 2022 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Election Officials Brace For Confrontational Poll Watchers
Cheney Rips Trump death Wish Comments Against McConnell: Absolutely Despicable Racist Attack
Cheney Rips Trump death Wish Comments Against McConnell: Absolutely Despicable Racist Attack
Cheney Rips Trump ‘death Wish’ Comments Against McConnell: ‘Absolutely Despicable, Racist Attack’ https://digitalarkansasnews.com/cheney-rips-trump-death-wish-comments-against-mcconnell-absolutely-despicable-racist-attack/ Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) on Monday ripped former President Trump’s recent remarks saying that Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has a “death wish,” calling the comments against McConnell and his wife, former Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao “absolutely despicable, racist attack.” Cheney, the vice chair of the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol, warned that Trump’s remarks could incite further violence. “When you see former President Trump just in the last 24 hours suggesting in a pretty thinly veiled way, using words that that could well cause violence against the Republican leader of the Senate, saying he has a death wish and then, you know, launching a absolutely despicable, racist attack against Secretary Chao, leader McConnell’s wife, and then you watch the fact that nobody in my party will say that’s unacceptable,” Cheney said during an event at Syracuse University. “And everybody ought to be asked whether or not that’s acceptable, and everybody ought to be able to say no, that is not acceptable. They ought to be required to say that,” she added. Chao headed the Transportation Department under Trump before resigning one day after the Jan. 6 attack. Prior to the Trump administration, she served as Labor Secretary for eight years under former President George W. Bush. Trump continued his longtime feud with McConnell on Friday, criticizing the Senate GOP leader in a statement on Truth Social. “Is McConnell approving all of these Trillions of Dollars worth of Democrat sponsored Bills, without even the slightest bit of negotiation, because he hates Donald J. Trump, and he knows I am strongly opposed to them, or is he doing it because he believes in the Fake and Highly Destructive Green New Deal, and is willing to take the Country down with him? In any event, either reason is unacceptable. He has a DEATH WISH,” Trump wrote. “Must immediately seek help and advise from his China loving wife, Coco Chow!” he added. The comments came soon after Congress approved a continuing resolution to fund the government through Dec. 16 and avert a shutdown. The stopgap bill passed with bipartisan support in the House and Senate, including a “yes” vote from McConnell. In the House, however, GOP leadership urged Republican members to oppose the measure. Cheney has become a leading GOP critic of Trump in the aftermath of the 2020 presidential election, frequently taking on the former president and his claims that the election was stolen. Her work on the Jan. 6 select committee has elevated that role, giving the Wyoming Republican a platform to oppose the ex-president. After losing her Republican primary this year, she will be leaving Congress in January. But Cheney is not the only one to speak out against Trump’s latest comments against McConnell and Chao. Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), the chair of both the House Homeland Security Committee and the Jan. 6 select committee, called Trump’s rhetoric “inflammatory and racist,” and argued that it could spark violence. “Former President Trump’s inflammatory and racist attacks directed at Senator McConnell aren’t helpful to the nation or our democracy. Worse yet, they could incite political violence, and the former President knows full well that extremists often view his words as marching orders,” Thompson wrote in a statement. The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board called Trump’s latest crusade against McConnell “reckless.” “We live in a polarized political age when rabid partisans don’t need provocation to resort to violence. This makes Donald Trump’s latest verbal assault against Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell all the more reckless,” the board wrote. “The ‘death wish’ rhetoric is ugly even by Mr. Trump’s standards and deserves to be condemned,” the board added. Asked about the comments on Sunday, Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.), the chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, told CNN, “I don’t condone violence, and I hope no one else condones violence.” Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Cheney Rips Trump death Wish Comments Against McConnell: Absolutely Despicable Racist Attack
Takeaways From The Dramatic First Day And Opening Statements Of The Oath Keepers Trial | CNN Politics
Takeaways From The Dramatic First Day And Opening Statements Of The Oath Keepers Trial | CNN Politics
Takeaways From The Dramatic First Day And Opening Statements Of The Oath Keepers Trial | CNN Politics https://digitalarkansasnews.com/takeaways-from-the-dramatic-first-day-and-opening-statements-of-the-oath-keepers-trial-cnn-politics/ CNN  —  With the historic case that they had brought against Oath Keepers accused of plotting to attack the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, prosecutors framed up how the jury should think about the allegations with an hour-plus opening statement that kicked off the trial in earnest. Five alleged members of the far-right militia, including its leader Stewart Rhodes, are on trial in Washington DC’s federal courthouse. They have pleaded not guilty to the charge of seditious conspiracy, a charge rarely brought by the Justice Department, and other charges. The Justice Department’s opening statement featured messages and other communications among the defendants that prosecutors say show the Oath Keepers’ unlawful plotting to disrupt Congress’ certification of President Joe Biden’s electoral win. As the prosecutors sought to use the words of the defendants against them, they also played video capturing the Oath Keepers’ actions in the Capitol and displayed maps and charts to help the jury follow along. Each juror has their own screen to see evidence. “They said out loud and in writing what they planned to do,” Jeffrey Nestler, an assistant US Attorney, told the jury. “When the opportunity finally presented itself … they sprang into action.” A lawyer for Rhodes, the first defense attorney to deliver an opening statement told the jurors that they will see evidence that will show that the defendants “had no part in the bulk” of the violence that occurred on January 6. “You may not like what you see and hear our defendants did,” attorney Phillip Linder said, “but the evidence will show that they didn’t do anything illegal that day.” Here are takeaways from Monday’s trial so far: The Justice Department began its opening statement with the accusation that the defendants sought to “stop by any means necessary” the lawful transfer of presidential power, “including taking up arms against the United States government.” Nestler started with a reference to the “core democratic custom of the routine” transfer of power, which Nestler said stretched back to the time of George Washington. “These defendants tried to change that history. They concocted a plan for armed rebellion to shatter a bedrock of American democracy,” Nestler said. The defendants got their opportunity two weeks before the Inauguration, Nestler said. “If Congress could not meet it could not declare the winner of the election. and that was their goal – to stop by any means necessary the lawful transfer of power, including taking up arms against the United States government,” he said. He said the defendants descended on DC to attack “not just the Capitol, not just our government, not just DC, but our country itself.” During the Justice Department’s opening, the jury was presented with video footage, maps and other audio-visual tools that prosecutors used to give an overview of their case. Nestler’s presentation included iPhone footage from the attack that the prosecutor used to identify the defendants and other alleged co-conspirators. When video showing defendant Kelly Meggs was presented, Nestler noted the patch he wore, which said, according to Nestler: “I don’t believe in anything, I’m just here for the violence.” As the video clips played, the jury also saw a map of the Capitol that Nestler used to situate the action that was recorded by video. Nestler also had a physical chart, perched on an easel in the courtroom, listing out the alleged co-conspirators. Jurors were also presented with the messages that the defendants allegedly sent in the weeks after the election, including their calls for a violent response to former President Donald Trump’s loss. “Its easy to chat here. The real question is who’s willing to DIE” Meggs wrote in one message shown by prosecutors. The DOJ also showed video and photographs of the Oath Keepers participating in tactical training sessions. A map of the Washington Mall – showing the site of the rally that preceded the Capitol attack and its distance from the Capitol – was presented while Nestler ticked through communications, including on the walkie talk app Zello, between the defendants that allegedly occurred that day. Nestler used the opening arguments to also preview how the Justice Department will respond to defenses the Oath Keepers’ attorneys are expected to put forward. “There is evidence that you will hear that they had more than one reason to be here in DC, in addition to attacking Congress,” the prosecutor said. The defendants may have been planning to attend the rally near the White House earlier in the day, Nestler noted, but so did thousands of others. Nestler also referenced to potential attempts by the defense to argue the Oath Keepers were preparing to come to DC to serve as security, noting that the defendants weren’t licensed, trained or paid for their security work. “Even being bad security guards isn’t itself illegal.” Nestler said. However, according to the prosecutor, the goal they were actually preparing for was “unlawful.” Additionally, Nestler alluded to the belief that Trump was going to invoke the Insurrection Act; the defense has signaled it plans to argue that the Oath Keepers were preparing to respond to such an invocation. “President Trump did not invoke the Insurrection Act,” Nestler said. “These defendants needed to take matters into their own hands. They needed to activate the plan they had agreed on.” The Justice Department also emphasized the backgrounds of some of the defendants and how that fit into the department’s theory of the case. Rhodes, as Nestler repeatedly noted, is a graduate of Yale Law school. He knew to be careful with his words and told his co-conspirators to be careful with theirs, Nestler said. Thomas Caldwell, another defendant, served in the military, Nestler said. “Based on that water experience, he planned to use boats to get across the Potomac.” The Justice Department detailed the preparations the Oath Keepers allegedly undertook before January 6 as well as what they’re accusing the defendants of doing during the Capitol breach. In December 2020, Rhodes told others that January 6 presented a “hard constitutional deadline,” according to prosecutors, and that they would need to “do it ourselves” if Trump didn’t stop the certification of the election. “With time, as their options dwindled and it became more and more likely that power would be transferred,” Nestler said Monday, “these defendants became more and more desperate and more and more focused on that date that Rhodes referred to as a constitutional deadline.” According to Nestler, the group organized a caravan of Florida members to drive up to Washington for January 6, and made preparations for where the organization could store firearms in Virginia, just outside DC. Some members of the group, according to prosecutors, brought weapons into DC that day, including chemical spray, thick pieces of wood, dressed in paramilitary gear. Nestler’s opening described the “stack” formations the defendants allegedly used to enter the Capitol. He played a video of defendant Jessica Watkins, who allegedly led the first group, pushing against a crowd outside the House chamber shouting “push, push, push! Get in there, they can’t hold us.” The second group positioned themselves outside of a suite of offices belonging to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Nestler said. Nestler said that Meggs had a “keen interest in Speaker Pelosi,” and later told associates that “we looked for her.” At first, the defendants saw the breach as a success, Nestler said, describing them as “elated,” “boastful” and “proud.” But, according to DOJ’s account, the defendants quickly realized they were in legal jeopardy, and instructed one another to flee town, delete messages and keep quiet. “Let me put it in infantry speak: SHUT THE F**K UP,” Rhodes said in one Signal message, as presented by prosecutors. Even with their criminal exposure, Nestler said, Rhodes continued to plot. On January 10, Rhodes met with someone in Texas to try and get a message to former President Trump. The meeting, which had not previously been reported, was secretly recorded by an attendee. “My only regret is that they should have brought rifles… we could have fixed it right then and there.” Rhodes said of January 6, according to the Justice Department’s opening. Rhodes attorney Linder told the jurors that they will see evidence that will show that defendants “had no part in the bulk” of the violence that occurred on January 6. He suggested that there will be gaps in the evidence, such as video, that the Justice Department will show the jury. He said that, once the prosecutors put on their case, the defense will fill in those gaps. “You may not like what you see and hear our defendants did, but the evidence will show that they didn’t do anything illegal that day,” Linder said. As the defense attorney delivered his opening, he was told by the judge to avoid topics that had been deemed out of bounds for the trial – with at one point, Judge Amit Mehta bringing him up to the bench for a private discussion. Among the off-limits topics brought up by Linder that prompted the interventions were comments about the amount prison time the charges bring, the congressional narrative around January 6, remarks about defendants sitting in jail, and certain details about the Insurrection Act. Mehta told Linder to keep his opening within the parameters of the relevant subject matter that has been established before the trial. Linder went on to preview other aspects of the Oath Keepers’ defense. “The real evidence is going to show you that our clients were there to do security for events for the 5th and the 6th,” Linder said, while ...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Takeaways From The Dramatic First Day And Opening Statements Of The Oath Keepers Trial | CNN Politics
US Forecast
US Forecast
US Forecast https://digitalarkansasnews.com/us-forecast-16/ City/Town, State;Yesterday’s High Temp (F);Yesterday’s Low Temp (F);Today’s High Temp (F);Today’s Low Temp (F);Weather Condition;Wind Direction;Wind Speed (MPH);Humidity (%);Chance of Precip. (%);UV Index Albany, NY;57;39;61;43;Showers around;N;5;52%;64%;2 Albuquerque, NM;72;54;70;55;A thundershower;SE;7;68%;96%;3 Anchorage, AK;53;42;52;43;Cloudy;NNE;8;74%;18%;1 Asheville, NC;62;43;68;40;Mostly sunny;NW;8;56%;3%;5 Atlanta, GA;76;54;76;48;Sunny and pleasant;NNW;6;60%;6%;5 Atlantic City, NJ;57;52;58;56;Very windy, rain;NNE;32;83%;100%;1 Austin, TX;88;59;90;60;Partly sunny;ESE;5;34%;0%;6 Baltimore, MD;55;47;53;50;Cool with rain;N;9;73%;99%;1 Baton Rouge, LA;85;58;84;62;Clouds and sun, nice;ENE;6;61%;12%;6 Billings, MT;67;48;73;49;Sunny and nice;SSW;8;55%;2%;4 Birmingham, AL;78;53;80;50;Mostly sunny, nice;NNE;6;53%;6%;5 Bismarck, ND;71;51;69;48;A shower in spots;W;8;67%;48%;2 Boise, ID;79;52;81;51;Sunny and warm;ENE;7;35%;0%;4 Boston, MA;56;47;58;52;Occasional rain;NNE;12;70%;98%;1 Bridgeport, CT;57;46;57;52;Rain and drizzle;NNE;14;72%;100%;1 Buffalo, NY;61;38;64;43;Partly sunny;ESE;5;50%;4%;4 Burlington, VT;59;35;62;39;Clouds and sun;ESE;5;52%;4%;4 Caribou, ME;58;31;63;39;Partly sunny;S;6;54%;7%;3 Casper, WY;64;40;67;38;Brilliant sunshine;NE;8;52%;2%;4 Charleston, SC;67;52;71;52;Clouds and sun;NW;10;56%;0%;5 Charleston, WV;65;40;67;42;Partly sunny;NW;4;58%;0%;5 Charlotte, NC;72;45;71;45;Mostly sunny, nice;N;7;54%;6%;5 Cheyenne, WY;66;43;66;41;A shower in spots;SE;7;52%;44%;5 Chicago, IL;65;49;70;51;Mostly sunny;SSE;6;39%;3%;4 Cleveland, OH;60;48;63;50;Mostly sunny;NNE;7;52%;6%;4 Columbia, SC;68;48;73;47;Mostly sunny;NNW;6;52%;1%;5 Columbus, OH;66;40;68;40;Mostly sunny;N;6;48%;1%;4 Concord, NH;58;31;62;41;Mainly cloudy;NNE;7;58%;44%;3 Dallas-Ft. Worth, TX;86;59;87;61;Plenty of sunshine;ESE;7;38%;0%;5 Denver, CO;74;48;68;48;A brief shower;E;6;58%;82%;5 Des Moines, IA;76;50;78;57;Clouds and sun;SSE;10;39%;43%;4 Detroit, MI;64;42;69;45;Mostly sunny;NNE;5;45%;7%;4 Dodge City, KS;85;52;79;53;Mainly cloudy;NNW;11;35%;67%;2 Duluth, MN;67;56;71;56;Cloudy;E;7;65%;27%;1 El Paso, TX;84;62;80;62;A t-storm around;ENE;7;49%;66%;5 Fairbanks, AK;48;29;51;34;Clouds and sun;NNE;7;65%;8%;2 Fargo, ND;74;58;73;53;Afternoon showers;W;7;72%;100%;1 Grand Junction, CO;71;50;74;49;Partly sunny;NE;7;49%;1%;5 Grand Rapids, MI;66;39;71;43;Partly sunny;WSW;5;48%;9%;4 Hartford, CT;56;45;57;51;Rain and drizzle;NNE;9;72%;99%;1 Helena, MT;69;46;73;48;Sunny and nice;SW;5;52%;0%;4 Honolulu, HI;86;73;86;72;Partly sunny;NE;10;58%;14%;8 Houston, TX;88;60;87;62;Partly sunny;SE;6;48%;5%;6 Indianapolis, IN;70;42;72;45;Mostly sunny;NE;5;45%;2%;4 Jackson, MS;83;56;82;56;Sunny and pleasant;ENE;6;57%;9%;6 Jacksonville, FL;73;61;76;56;Partly sunny, nice;NNE;10;56%;2%;6 Juneau, AK;55;40;54;47;Becoming cloudy;ENE;12;69%;93%;2 Kansas City, MO;82;55;85;58;Partly sunny;SSE;7;38%;27%;4 Knoxville, TN;70;45;74;43;Sunshine and nice;NE;6;50%;0%;5 Las Vegas, NV;92;68;94;68;Sunny and hot;NNW;6;23%;0%;5 Lexington, KY;70;41;71;41;Sunny and pleasant;N;7;47%;1%;5 Little Rock, AR;84;51;82;50;Sunny and nice;NNE;6;45%;6%;5 Long Beach, CA;77;66;81;66;Some sun;S;6;67%;1%;5 Los Angeles, CA;78;64;83;64;Mostly sunny;S;7;69%;1%;5 Louisville, KY;73;44;74;44;Sunny and nice;N;6;42%;2%;5 Madison, WI;70;43;72;46;Partly sunny;S;6;41%;6%;4 Memphis, TN;78;56;82;52;Sunny and nice;ENE;7;37%;5%;5 Miami, FL;86;72;84;72;Partly sunny;N;8;64%;39%;5 Milwaukee, WI;64;45;71;49;Partly sunny;SSW;7;46%;4%;4 Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN;76;57;77;58;Mostly cloudy, warm;SW;9;47%;67%;2 Mobile, AL;82;61;83;61;Nice with some sun;NNW;6;60%;6%;5 Montgomery, AL;82;55;80;53;Mostly sunny;N;5;57%;7%;6 Mt. Washington, NH;40;33;47;38;Partly sunny;E;7;24%;5%;4 Nashville, TN;77;46;77;41;Sunny and nice;NE;7;42%;3%;5 New Orleans, LA;83;67;83;68;Partly sunny;SE;8;59%;8%;6 New York, NY;55;48;55;52;Rain and drizzle;NNE;20;75%;99%;1 Newark, NJ;54;47;55;52;Cool with rain;NNE;11;72%;99%;1 Norfolk, VA;57;52;55;51;A little rain;WNW;14;80%;96%;1 Oklahoma City, OK;86;55;86;57;Sunshine;SSE;9;37%;0%;5 Olympia, WA;80;49;73;47;Mostly cloudy;SW;6;75%;5%;3 Omaha, NE;80;54;79;56;Inc. clouds;NW;9;47%;33%;4 Orlando, FL;83;65;80;62;A shower in spots;NNE;9;62%;49%;6 Philadelphia, PA;52;47;54;51;Cool with rain;NNE;12;78%;100%;1 Phoenix, AZ;97;74;95;74;Mostly sunny, warm;SE;6;35%;36%;5 Pittsburgh, PA;65;43;65;45;Clouds and sun;NNW;5;47%;2%;4 Portland, ME;57;39;59;45;Mostly cloudy;ENE;8;63%;25%;3 Portland, OR;86;55;77;54;Fog, then sun;NNE;5;62%;5%;3 Providence, RI;57;45;56;51;Rain and drizzle;NNE;11;70%;99%;1 Raleigh, NC;63;46;60;47;Decreasing clouds;NNW;8;65%;16%;2 Reno, NV;80;45;82;46;Partly sunny, warm;WSW;6;31%;0%;5 Richmond, VA;54;46;52;47;A little rain;NW;9;86%;85%;1 Roswell, NM;82;54;78;56;A t-shower in spots;WNW;7;50%;73%;5 Sacramento, CA;86;56;88;58;Partly sunny, warm;S;5;51%;1%;4 Salt Lake City, UT;76;51;76;51;Sunny and pleasant;ESE;7;41%;0%;5 San Antonio, TX;87;61;89;61;Partly sunny;ESE;6;39%;1%;6 San Diego, CA;73;67;76;67;Turning sunny, humid;SW;7;73%;0%;5 San Francisco, CA;70;57;69;57;Mostly sunny;SW;10;68%;1%;5 Savannah, GA;66;52;75;52;Clouds and sun, nice;WSW;8;57%;0%;6 Seattle-Tacoma, WA;81;56;74;54;Partly sunny;SW;7;62%;4%;3 Sioux Falls, SD;81;57;70;54;A couple of showers;SW;7;65%;94%;1 Spokane, WA;80;49;81;49;Sunny and very warm;E;5;50%;1%;3 Springfield, IL;71;39;74;42;Sunny and nice;SE;5;40%;1%;4 St. Louis, MO;74;42;76;44;Sunny and pleasant;ESE;5;41%;0%;5 Tampa, FL;84;63;84;61;Partly sunny;ENE;7;63%;27%;6 Toledo, OH;64;39;69;40;Mostly sunny;W;4;52%;8%;4 Tucson, AZ;92;69;89;67;A p.m. t-storm;SE;7;47%;91%;6 Tulsa, OK;86;54;87;56;Plenty of sunshine;SSE;7;43%;2%;5 Vero Beach, FL;86;69;82;68;A shower in the p.m.;NNE;11;65%;87%;6 Washington, DC;55;47;52;49;Rain and drizzle;NNW;10;75%;98%;1 Wichita, KS;86;52;87;56;Partly sunny;ENE;10;33%;60%;5 Wilmington, DE;53;47;53;51;Rain;NNE;16;80%;99%;1 _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
US Forecast
Wall Street Closes With Sharp Gains As Final Quarter Begins
Wall Street Closes With Sharp Gains As Final Quarter Begins
Wall Street Closes With Sharp Gains As Final Quarter Begins https://digitalarkansasnews.com/wall-street-closes-with-sharp-gains-as-final-quarter-begins/ Tesla down as Q3 deliveries miss market estimates U.S. factory activity slowest in ~2.5 years in Sept -ISM Credit Suisse, Citi cut 2022 year-end target for S&P 500 Indexes up: Dow 2.66%, S&P 500 2.59%, Nasdaq 2.27% Oct 3 (Reuters) – Wall Street’s three major indexes rallied to close over 2% on Monday as U.S. Treasury yields tumbled on weaker-than-expected manufacturing data, increasing the appeal of stocks at the start of the year’s final quarter. The U.S. stock market has suffered three quarterly declines in a row in a tumultuous year marked by interest rate hikes to tame historically high inflation, and concerns about a slowing economy. “The U.S. yield markets (are) pulling back – that’s been a positive … and that connotes a more risk-on environment,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Wealth in Boston. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Further supporting rate-sensitive growth stocks, the benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasury yield fell after British Prime Minister Liz Truss was forced to reverse course on a tax cut for the highest rate. All 11 major S&P 500 (.SPX) sectors advanced to positive territory, with energy (.SPNY) being the biggest gainer. Oil majors Exxon Mobil Corp (XOM.N) and Chevron Corp rose more than 5%, tracking a jump in crude prices as sources said the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies are considering their biggest output cut since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Megacap growth and technology companies such as Apple Inc (AAPL.O) and Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) rose over 3% respectively, while banks .SPXBK advanced 3%. Data showed manufacturing activity increased at its slowest pace in nearly 2-1/2 years in September as new orders contracted, likely as rising interest rates to tame inflation cooled demand for goods. read more The Institute for Supply Management said its manufacturing PMI dropped to 50.9 this month, missing estimates but still above 50, indicating growth. “The economic data stream actually came in worse than expected. In a very counterintuitive fashion that likely represents good news for equity markets,” said Hogan. “(While) good economic data, strong readings had been a catalyst for selling, this is the first time we’ve actually seen some negative news be a catalyst.” All three major indexes ended a volatile third quarter lower on Friday on growing fears that the Federal Reserve’s aggressive monetary policy will tip the economy into recession. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) rose 765.38 points, or 2.66%, to 29,490.89; the S&P 500 (.SPX) gained 92.81 points, or 2.59%, at 3,678.43; and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) added 239.82 points, or 2.27%, at 10,815.44. Volume on U.S. exchanges was 11.61 billion shares, compared with the 11.54 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days. Tesla Inc (TSLA.O) fell 8.6% after it sold fewer-than-expected vehicles in the third quarter as deliveries lagged way behind production due to logistic hurdles. Peers Lucid Group (LCID.O) gained 0.9% and Rivian Automotive (RIVN.O) fell 3.1%. read more Major automakers are expected to report modest declines in U.S. new vehicle sales, but analysts and investors worry that a darkening economic picture, not inventory shortages, will lead to weaker car sales. read more Citigroup and Credit Suisse became the latest brokerages to lower 2022 year-end targets for the S&P 500, as U.S. equity markets bear the heat of aggressive central bank actions to tamp down inflation. read more Credit Suisse also set a 2023 year-end price target for the benchmark index at 4,050 points, adding that 2023 would be a “year of weak, non-recessionary growth and falling inflation.” Advancing issues outnumbered decliners on the NYSE by a 5.04-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.70-to-1 ratio favored advancers. The S&P 500 posted one new 52-week high and 23 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 58 new highs and 282 new lows. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Echo Wang in New York; Additional reporting by Ankika Biswas and Bansari Mayur Kamdar in Bengaluru; Editing by Anil D’Silva, Arun Koyyur and Richard Chang Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Wall Street Closes With Sharp Gains As Final Quarter Begins
In Two More Staged Votes Russian Parliament Moves To Ratify Annexation
In Two More Staged Votes Russian Parliament Moves To Ratify Annexation
In Two More Staged Votes, Russian Parliament Moves To Ratify Annexation https://digitalarkansasnews.com/in-two-more-staged-votes-russian-parliament-moves-to-ratify-annexation/ Russia’s rubber-stamp lower house of parliament, the State Duma, unanimously approved President Vladimir Putin’s bills on Monday, according to speaker Vyacheslav Volodin, formalizing the illegal seizure of four regions of Ukraine in a vote that was never in doubt. The upper house, Russia’s Federation Council, is expected to formalize the annexations, which violate international law, on Tuesday, and the measures will then be signed by Putin. The moves signal to Ukraine and its supporters that Moscow sees the seizures as irreversible. The votes took place as video emerged of Ukrainian forces planting their flag in Myrolyubivka, a settlement in the Kherson region, after Ukraine gained more ground overnight in counteroffensives. Ukraine’s Defense Ministry later published video of Ukrainian forces raising the national flag in another settlement, Zolota Balka, in the Kherson region. “Russians control less territories in Ukraine each day,” the ministry tweeted in English on Monday evening. The votes are a formality — part of the Kremlin’s contrived political theater designed to create a veneer of legitimacy for its domestic audience. President Biden, United Nations Secretary General António Guterres and other leaders have denounced Putin’s annexations as a flagrant violation of international law that will never be accepted. Each chamber of the Russian parliament is stuffed with loyalists, with even nominal opposition parties tightly controlled by the Kremlin, in a faux-democracy that is supposed to, at least superficially, resemble a multiparty system. In practice, like Russia’s court system, it follows the Kremlin’s orders. The illegal annexation of the Ukrainian regions of Zaporizhzhia, Kherson, Donetsk and Luhansk, condemned by leaders around the world, is expected to be recognized only by a handful states with close ties to Russia. Voronezh BELARUS RUSSIA Four regions where staged referendums on joining Russia were held Chernihiv Belgorod Sumy Valuyki Kyiv Kharkiv LUHANSK Lyman Cherkasy Slovyansk Luhansk Dnipro Donetsk Kirovohrad DONETSK Zaporizhzhia ZAPORIZHZHIA Area held by Russia- backed separatists since 2014 Mariupol Mykolaiv Melitopol KHERSON MOL. Kherson Odessa RUSSIA Kerch CRIMEA Krasnodar Annexed by Russia in 2014 100 MILES ROM. Novorossiysk Sevastopol Black Sea Control areas as of Oct. 2 Sources: Institute for the Study of War, AEI’s Critical Threats Project Ukrainian reclaimed territory through counteroffensives Voronezh BELARUS Four regions where staged referendums on joining Russia were held RUSSIA Chernihiv Belgorod Sumy Kyiv Kharkiv LUHANSK Poltava Cherkasy Lyman Kramatorsk Dnipro Uman DONETSK Zaporizhzhia ZAPORIZ. Area held by Russia-backed separatists since 2014 Mykolayiv Melitopol KHERSON Kherson Odessa Crimea Annexed by Russia in 2014 Sevastopol 100 MILES Control areas as of Oct. 2 Sources: Institute for the Study of War, AEI’s Critical Threats Project Ukrainian reclaimed territory through counteroffensives Four regions where staged referendums on joining Russia were held BEL. Chernihiv Belgorod Sumy Kyiv Kharkiv LUHANSK Cherkasy Lyman Dnipro DONETSK ZAPORIZ. Mykolayiv Area held by Russia-backed separatists since 2014 KHERSON Kherson Odessa Crimea Annexed by Russia in 2014 100 MILES Sevastopol Black Sea Sources: Institute for the Study of War Underscoring the legal absurdity of Putin’s move, the Kremlin remained vague Monday about the areas it is annexing. It is clear that its claims extend beyond the areas under Russian control — a reality evidenced by the Ukrainian military’s success in pushing Russian forces from the strategic city of Lyman in the Donetsk region. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia would “consult” local populations on the exact borders of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, despite having just staged referendums in those regions. He offered no detail on the form of consultation but ruled out more referendums. It was not clear how the so-called annexation treaties signed by Putin on Friday could be portrayed by Russia as valid when borders of the territories being seized were not even fixed. Adding to the confusion, a prominent Russian lawmaker, Pavel Krasheninnikov, head of the State Duma’s Committee on State Building and Legislation, said the Kherson annexation would extend beyond the region’s borders to include parts of the Mykolaiv region. In two other regions, Donetsk and Luhansk, the borders will be those declared by the two regions in 2014, when they proclaimed themselves independent from Ukraine after Moscow orchestrated separatist uprisings there, claiming swaths of territory they did not hold. Ambiguities persist, since neither the Russian military nor the Kremlin’s political proxies fully control either of those regions. Those uprisings followed Moscow’s invasion and illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014, after Ukraine’s popular revolt known as the Maidan Revolution ousted a pro-Russian president. The annexation process mirrors the takeover of Crimea, which was widely condemned globally but cheered in Russia as righting a historical mistake. After Russia seized Crimea, Putin’s popularity rating soared to record levels. But the new annexation of Ukrainian land, amid cascading Russian military failures and doubts of a Russian victory, has not evoked the same euphoric triumphalism. Instead, key Kremlin propagandists are sullen and belligerent, the elite are worried, and polls show that the population is fearful, with support for continuing the war declining sharply after Putin announced a military mobilization drive last month. In 2014, only one member of the Duma, Ilya Ponomarev, voted against the annexation of Crimea. He left Russia soon afterward and now lives in Ukraine. There were discrepancies in Monday’s votes in the Duma. Although 408 lawmakers attended the Duma on Monday, according to preliminary registration data on the parliamentary website, 413 votes were registered for the Donetsk region to join Russia, 412 for Luhansk to join, 411 for Kherson and 409 for Zaporizhzhia. No votes against the annexations were recorded, and Volodin said the votes were unanimous, attributing the discrepancies in the totals to a “technical failure.” “Do not count the votes one plus, one minus,” he said. Russia’s Constitutional Court ruled Sunday that so-called treaties on the absorption of the regions were compatible with Russia’s constitution. Late last month, Russia staged referendums in the four regions of Ukraine, with electoral officials going house to house with armed soldiers, observing people as they marked ballot papers. Putin’s seizure of the regions marked a major escalation in the war, reinforced by Russian threats to use nuclear weapons against Ukraine and the announced mobilization of around 300,000 more Russian men to fight. The European Union on Monday summoned Russia’s chargé d’affaires to protest the annexation of the four Ukrainian regions. Lithuania ordered Russia’s top diplomat there to leave the country within five days, while a number of European nations — including France, Italy, Poland, Austria and Estonia — summoned Russian ambassadors to protest. Russia does not fully control the regions politically or militarily, but once the annexation process is formalized, Moscow said it would deem Ukraine’s offensives to regain its own territory as attacks on Russia itself. This is widely seen as a pretext for intensifying brutality to try to force Ukraine to capitulate, including potential new missile attacks on major cities and key civilian infrastructure. Russia has attacked civilian convoys in recent days, killing dozens of people near the town of Kupyansk in the northeastern Kharkiv region and near Zaporizhzhia, the regional capital. Putin’s escalation of the war followed humiliating losses last month when Russian forces retreated from the Kharkiv region. Such scenes were repeated over the weekend when Russian forces were surrounded in Lyman, a strategic hub in Donetsk, one of the regions being annexed. Nearly encircled, Russian troops had to break out under heavy Ukrainian fire. Russia also lost more ground Sunday in the Kherson region. The loss of Lyman has led to unprecedented scathing public criticism of military commanders from powerful figures, notably Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov and oligarch Yevgeniy Prigozhin, who have forces fighting Ukraine in the war. With Putin weakened, the jostling and outspoken criticism could also be signs of an emerging political power struggle. Peskov did not rebuke Kadyrov for his public attacks on the military Monday, saying that the Chechen leader has made a major contribution to the war on Ukraine. “However, even at the hardest moments, any assessments should probably be free of emotions,” he cautioned. “After all, we prefer to make balanced and impartial assessments.” But there were signs that Moscow was not please with the developments. Pro-Kremlin Russian media outlet RBC reported that a new commander had been appointed to lead Russia’s troubled Western military district, after a series of retreats and setbacks. Major General Roman Berdnikov replaced Colonel General Alexander Zhuravlev, according to RBC, which quoted an unnamed source familiar with the change. The Defense Ministry website still states that Zhuravlev is the commander. During debate on constitutional amendments required to formalize the annexations, faction leaders in the State Duma extolled the “historic” decision. Sergei Mironov, leader of A Just Russia, called for a massive military escalation, demanding the destruction of electrical, rail and other infrastructure in Ukraine. “Let’s destroy the entire infrastructure of N...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
In Two More Staged Votes Russian Parliament Moves To Ratify Annexation
Donald Trump Will Be
Donald Trump Will Be
Donald Trump Will Be https://digitalarkansasnews.com/donald-trump-will-be/ Conservative lawyer George Conway is predicting former President Donald Trump will be slapped with a felony conviction for various crimes by the end of the year. “I think he could go to prison, but it is more likely that he will serve home confinement,” Conway told Salon in a wide-ranging interview published Monday.  “In all likelihood, he will be convicted of multiple felonies.” In the past few months, Trump, who has not been formally charged with any crime, has faced mounting legal woes from various agencies and private litigants while remaining the most popular political figure in the Republican Party. The FBI searched his Mar-a-Lago home in Palm Beach, Florida, in August as part of an investigation into mishandled  classified documents. Trump is a target of the committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, which could refer him to the Justice Department for possible criminal prosecution. And he faces civil suit filed by the New York attorney general over fraudulent business practices. Mar-a-Lago case: Judge gives Trump more time to challenge Mar-a-Lago documents Conway, the husband of former White House counselor Kellyanne Conway, said Trump has a history of settling civil cases, but that doesn’t believe the former president will take a plea deal if he is hit with more serious criminal cases. Trump’s NY lawsuit: Running for president, fighting in court? How fraud lawsuit could complicate Trump’s plans In 2016, Conway voted for Trump, but he has been converted into one of the former president’s chief critics. That is in sharp contrast to his wife, who ran Trump’s presidential campaign six years ago and was one of his top aides during his presidency. “Reflecting on my own behavior, I thoroughly own up to the fact that I voted for Donald Trump and supported him in 2016,” he told Salon. “That was a grave moral error on my part, and I own it. I’m happy — well, not happy, but willing — to admit my error. But the fact is, that some people can’t do it that easily.” The former president, Conway speculated, has a good chance of ending with a felony conviction sometime after the 2022 midterm elections but before the new year starts. If so, he said, the country should prepare for Trump to “incite violence on his behalf” much in the same way he did after losing the 2020 presidential election. “This all goes so much to the core of Trump’s identity that he will try to tear the country apart before he settles one of these criminal cases,” Conway said. But Trump has survived various legal allegations and court litigation during his decades as a real estate mogul. Those suits and investigations also haven’t pierced his political popularity with the GOP base, which rallied behind Trump when the FBI searched his Florida estate and created a backlash against the federal agency among some conservative activists. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Donald Trump Will Be
Transcript: The Beat With Ari Melber 9/23/22
Transcript: The Beat With Ari Melber 9/23/22
Transcript: The Beat With Ari Melber, 9/23/22 https://digitalarkansasnews.com/transcript-the-beat-with-ari-melber-9-23-22/ Summary Donald Trump`s legal heat rising as document scandal, January 6th probe, DOJ criminal probe, and New York City lawsuit piled up. Former Trump Aide on the former president`s legal heat. Alex Jones shows no remorse in a second defamation suit over Sandy Hook lies. WQHT Hot 97 radio host Ebro Darden joins THE BEAT with Ari Melber to talk about the January 6 Committee gearing up for the next hearing. Transcript ARI MELBER, MSNBC ANCHOR: Welcome to THE BEAT. I`m Ari Melber. And we begin with the legal heat. Classified documents are a scandal. January 6th congressional probe picks back up next week. We have news on that. And then something that really upended Donald Trump`s entire business prospects in New York. And as I`ve mentioned to you, you might say, well, I feel like I`ve heard about this before, what is the deal? Well, never like this before. We are talking about something that is now an active New York case that could end the Trump Organization as it`s known along with a quarter billion in fines and penalties or more. And then you have the federal criminal insurrection probe intensifying. I have a very special guest on that later in the hour. Coming up I have Neal Katyal to start us off. But look at this report from CNN. Trump lawyers waging what is basically a secret court fight to try to halt or stop a grand jury from getting information from his inner circle, basically blocking testimony that otherwise would be relevant, meaning the prosecutors at least want to introduce it. And we know the context for this, those 40 new subpoenas. You have a former prosecutor on the Letitia James side saying that the business probe is basically a dealt penalty for Trump Org. So you have the insurrection and the business probe both going at Trump hard, and then that`s not the only thing going on. These are circling Trump while he has no presidential powers left. And we`ve seen that in the special master case where basically they thought it would help to have more court review, and if he were president that might be true because courts do in many ways defer to the powers of the presidency, especially in process. If the president says, hey, national security, hey, classified, hey, I need more time, but he ain`t president anymore. Here is how the Associated Press reported it, a non-partisan wire service. Quote, “The bravado that served Trump well in the political arena is less handy in a legal realm dominated by verifiable evidence.” So in that special master case, you have the very person that Trump`s legal team said they wanted now pressing him on exactly that issue of what`s verifiable. So Trump was talking about basically, you know, slandering, libeling the FBI, and saying maybe they planted evidence or something, and if they did that would be a big deal. But in court as in real journalism you have to have some evidence for that. It can`t just be words. And so this special master that Trump wanted says, back it up. Do you have evidence for your claims that the FBI lied? Because you`re going to have to prove that in court. There`s no evidence they provided. And as you know if you watch THE BEAT, if there were evidence that law enforcement abused power, planted something or otherwise was unfair, that would be a big story. You would get it here. If it redounded to Donald Trump`s benefit, so be it. But it`s not a story because at this point they haven`t substantiated it. Then you have what some are calling the power of positive thinking, the idea that Donald Trump or any president can secretly think something and make it true, which is one of his claims in the classification scandal, and the late-night hosts are having a field day. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) SETH MEYERS, LATE-NIGHT HOST: It`s officially declassified as long as you believe it`s declassified. That`s according to Trump`s newest legal adviser, Tinker Bell. JIMMY KIMMEL, LATE-NIGHT HOST: And if Trump actually had the power to change things just by thinking about them, Don Jr. would have turned into a Big Mac 30 years ago. TREVOR NOAH, LATE-NIGHT HOST: He couldn`t even read documents with his brain. How does this happen? Your honor, the defendant pleas jedi. (END VIDEO CLIP) MELBER: I`m joined by U.S. acting solicitor general Neal Katyal. There are serious parts of this but some of it is funny, Neal. Obviously these are not the droids you`re looking for and shout out to Tinker Bell. Can you make sense of this for us? NEAL KATYAL, FORMER ACTING SOLICITOR GENERAL: Well, I think, Ari, we`re entering what I think historians will refer to as the scaredy cat post presidential phase. Donald Trump is facing many, many different criminal investigations and he`s running scared from all of them so he`s invoking Fifth Amendment privilege, presidential records privilege, executive privilege, attorney-client privilege, work product privilege, former presidential privilege. I mean check your privilege, Ari. It takes on a whole new meaning with this guy. And I think one of the key lessons we can take from all of these different investigations is not just that Donald Trump breaks the law quite often, it`s just that he`s simply not very good at hiding it. And I think the lesson of this whole week, the whole thing start to finish is this is a terrible week for Donald Trump. [18:05:01] And it looks like the days of him receiving preferential treatment from the U.S. government, from the prosecutors, from the state governments, and, most importantly, from the courts are now appears to be over. I mean the loss in the court of appeals for the 11th Circuit, our nation`s second highest court, on this whole classified information special master thing is so telling. They destroyed them. They destroyed his arguments and they made fun of Judge Cannon`s, you know, decision. So very powerful holding for the rule of law. MELBER: Yes, all makes sense. With regard to evidence, there`s a discussion of what else Trump might bring to the table in the special master case or that, I should say, part of the wider documents case that involves the special master review. Here is some of the videotaped conversation that Trump had with Sean Hannity. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) DONALD TRUMP, FORMER PRESIDENT: The problem that you have is they go into rooms, they won`t let anybody near — they wouldn`t even let them in the same building. Did they drop anything into those piles or did they do it later? There`s no chain of custody here with them. SEAN HANNITY, FOX NEWS HOST: Wouldn`t that be to videotape potentially? TRUMP: No, I don`t think so. I mean they`re in a room. (END VIDEO CLIP) MELBER: Neal. KATYAL: I can`t even begin to make sense of that, but the one thing I`m sure of, Ari, is that his lawyers have never said any of that, just like his lawyers have never in court said, oh, Trump declassified the documents with his mind or any other way. And that`s because these lawyers are under an oath to tell the truth or lose their license otherwise. MELBER: Let`s pause on that because sometimes you move so quickly, right. That`s what the justices of the Supreme Court would sometimes do to you, they just have a lot more power than THE BEAT but pause on the point you`re making before you continue. You`re saying that there`s this gap between Trump saying or potentially lying about what`s declassified in public and his lawyers have never mentioned that in court. They`ve never said what their client is saying and you`re telling us why. Please unpack that a little more. KATYAL: Yes. So Donald Trump has articulated as the defense, hey, I declassified these documents. Now that`s not a defense anyway because he`s not being charged or investigated for just classified documents. It`s taking national security documents. But even more telling, Ari, and this is what both the special master in the case, Judge Dearie, and the 11th Circuit said, is there`s this powerful gap, Trump, between what he`s saying out of court, and what his lawyers are saying in court. In court they`ve never said, and they`ve had five different filings and they`ve never once said, oh, Trump declassified the documents. They just said oh, he has the power to do so. Nobody doubts if you`re the former — at the time you`re president you have the power to do so. The relevant question is, were these documents that you brought to Mar-a-Lago declassified and now not national security information? And that`s what his lawyers are afraid to say. And that`s where I think Trump is in so much trouble right now. He can`t even get a lawyer to say what he is claiming his defense is. MELBER: So let`s do a little bit of the so-called devil`s advocate on the New York case. I have shown viewers why there`s a lot of evidence in there, and he is free to respond or deny, but a lot of evidence that this was not a one-off fraud, mistake, incident, exaggeration. I do think it`s fair to say that in real estate markets around the world and especially in New York, sometimes people are exaggerating and aggressive with certain numbers. But the James` evidence, over 200 pages, seems to suggest that this was the pattern, this was the go-to, this was how they created the false, fraudulent, to use a legal term, perception of profits they didn`t even always have. What do you say to the devil`s advocate claim, Neal, that this is old, it`s been around New York and now it`s finally just coming up one more time because Donald Trump is more of a target than he used to be, which is something that I want to be fair is not just coming from him. There are others who may be a little bit sympathetic to him, Republicans, people who are critical of maybe the Democratic leadership of New York over the history, not obviously beyond criticism. What do you say to that view of this week`s case? KATYAL: So two things. First of all, that New York investigation, ...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Transcript: The Beat With Ari Melber 9/23/22
Opinion | Make No Mistake: Donald Trump Is On The Ballot
Opinion | Make No Mistake: Donald Trump Is On The Ballot
Opinion | Make No Mistake: Donald Trump Is On The Ballot https://digitalarkansasnews.com/opinion-make-no-mistake-donald-trump-is-on-the-ballot/ My friends, Make no mistake: Donald Trump is effectively on the ballot in the midterm elections, five weeks from tomorrow (voting has already begun in several states). Even if he decides not to run, he’s laying the groundwork for authoritarianism. In the upcoming midterms, 60 percent of us will have an election denier on our ballot, most of them endorsed by Trump. In the upcoming midterms, 60 percent of us will have an election denier on our ballot, most of them endorsed by Trump. In the key battleground states of Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Minnesota, and Pennsylvania, Republican candidates who embrace Trump’s Big Lie have won almost two-thirds of Republican nominations for offices with authority over elections. Many are running for secretaries of state—the chief elections officers in 37 states, who will be overseeing voter registration and how elections are conducted. In the 2020 presidential election, people who held these positions were the last line of defense for our fragile democracy, upholding Joe Biden’s win despite heavy pressure from proponents of Trump’s Big Lie. Which is why Trump and Trump’s lieutenants, including Steve Bannon and Michael Flynn, are trying to fill these positions with Big Liars. Michigan’s GOP candidate for Secretary of State is Kristina Karamo—who rose to prominence in conservative circles after falsely claiming to have witnessed election fraud as a pollster. Karamo has claimed that Trump won the 2020 election and that Antifa was behind the January 6 insurrection. Arizona’s Republican candidate for Secretary of State is Mark Finchem, a QAnon-supporting member of the Oath Keepers militia, who participated in the January 6 insurrection. He cruised to victory in the GOP primary by claiming that Trump won the 2020 election. Nevada’s GOP’s candidate for Secretary of State is Jim Marchant, who won his Republican primary by making Trump’s baseless claims of election fraud a cornerstone of his campaign. He also falsely claims that mail-in voting is rife with fraud, and wants to eliminate it altogether (despite the fact that he has voted by mail many times over the years). In Wyoming, state representative Chuck Gray, who won last month’s GOP primary for secretary of state, faces no opponent. Gray has repeated Trump’s lies about 2020 being “rigged,” traveled to Arizona to watch a partisan review of ballots that was derided as deeply flawed and proposed additional regular election audits in Wyoming. In Alabama, state Rep. Wes Allen, the nominee for secretary of state, says he would have signed onto a 2020 Texas lawsuit to overturn Biden’s win (that case was swiftly thrown out by the U.S. Supreme Court). Trump-backed candidates for governor are also on the ballot in key states where governors play a critical role in certifying votes and upholding the will of the people. Pennsylvania’s Republican gubernatorial nominee is Doug Mastriano. If he wins, Mastriano would appoint Pennsylvania’s top election official. Mastriano was also at the Capitol on January 6, and has even been subpoenaed by the January 6 committee to testify about his involvement. Mastriano also helped lead the push to overturn the state’s 2020 election results. Arizona’s GOP gubernatorial nominee is Kari Lake—who has said she does not recognize Joe Biden as the nation’s legitimate president, and would not have certified Arizona’s 2020 election results had she been governor. Wisconsin’s Republican gubernatorial nominee is Tim Michels. Michels still questions the results of the 2020 election and refuses to say whether he will certify the state’s 2024 president election results. Right now, elections in Wisconsin are overseen by the bipartisan Wisconsin Election Commission, but if Michels wins he supports scrapping the Commission in favor of a plan that could shift oversight of the state’s elections to the state’s Republican-dominated legislature. I don’t know about you, but all these Big Liars terrify me. If any one of them wins in a state that’s likely to be a battleground in 2024, they could tip the balance in a tight presidential election to Trump. What terrifies me even more is they could tip America away from democracy to authoritarianism. Meanwhile, a third of all state attorney general races currently have an election denying Republican candidate on the ballot—including Alabama’s Steve Marshall, Idaho’s Paul Labrador, Texas’s Ken Paxton, South Carolina’s Alan Wilson, and Maryland’s Michael Peroutka. Attorneys general also have key roles in election administration—defending state voting laws and election results in court, taking legal action to prevent or address voter intimidation or election misconduct, and investigating and prosecuting illegal attempts to suppress the vote. I haven’t even talked about all the local and county election officials who are also Big Liars, and also on ballots in many states—and who could play roles in the 2024 election. How can we fight back?  First: Spread the word about the Trump-GOP’s plans to capture the election process and undermine American democracy. Inform your friends and family—including young voters who often don’t turn out in large numbers—about what’s at stake in the midterms. Second: Make sure you and they vote down the entire ballot.  Too many Democrats vote for federal offices but disregard state races. A recent analysis of the last three presidential elections in ten swing states showed that Democrats voted down the ballot far less than Republicans. (Democratic presidential nominees at the top of the ticket received more votes 87 percent of the time than Democratic state legislative candidates, while Republican presidential nominees received more votes just 45 percent of the time than Republican state legislative candidates.) Control of many state legislatures is often determined by a handful of races that can swing in either direction based on a relatively small number of votes. In the 2020 election, very small margins in a number of battleground races prevented Democrats from gaining control of state legislatures. Had Democratic candidates received just 4,451 more votes in the two closest races in the Arizona state House, they would have flipped the chamber. In North Carolina, had Democrats received 20,671 more votes (just 0.39 percent of the votes cast) in the ten most competitive legislative districts, they would have flipped the state House—thereby preventing Republicans from gerrymandering the state and federal maps, which Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper has no ability to veto. In Michigan, just 8,611 more votes for state Democratic candidates in the four districts with the closest margins would have flipped this crucial swing state, too. Third: Familiarize yourself with state and local candidates, and share this information. You may want to get your ballot early so you have ample time. Some great organizations to help you are Sister District, The States Project, Bolts Magazine, and People’s Action. (I’m linking to them here, but feel free to leave a comment with other local resources you’ve found helpful.) *** As I said, Trump is effectively on the ballot in the midterms. Which means—regardless of whether he decides to run again for president—our democracy is on the ballot. The midterm elections in five weeks will lay the foundation for all future races. My friends, I cannot say this with more concern: Trump’s anti-democracy movement has been making astounding progress. We must stop it. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Opinion | Make No Mistake: Donald Trump Is On The Ballot
Little Rock City Manager Terminates LITFest Contract With Public-Affairs Firm Think Rubix
Little Rock City Manager Terminates LITFest Contract With Public-Affairs Firm Think Rubix
Little Rock City Manager Terminates LITFest Contract With Public-Affairs Firm Think Rubix https://digitalarkansasnews.com/little-rock-city-manager-terminates-litfest-contract-with-public-affairs-firm-think-rubix/ FILE — Little Rock City Hall is shown in this 2019 file photo. Little Rock City Manager Bruce Moore on Monday notified the public-affairs firm Think Rubix that the city has terminated an event-promotion agreement tied to LITFest effective immediately. In a letter addressed to Think Rubix Managing Principal Tristan Wilkerson, Moore wrote that a 15-day termination notice provision “is hereby voided due to violations of said contract.”  Moore added that as of Monday, “no City funds have been deposited by Think Rubix, and a stop payment procedure has been initiated by the City of Little Rock for the check issued by the City in the amount of $30,000. No further payments will be forthcoming.” The first-ever festival was scheduled for Oct. 7-9. On Friday, Little Rock City Attorney Tom Carpenter informed city officials of “serious legal concerns” about the LITFest contract, citing a video of a meeting in which Kendra Pruitt, Scott’s chief of staff, discussed using sponsorship dollars for additional work related to the festival in order to circumvent city board approval of the agreement. Moore signed the contract for up to $45,000 with Think Rubix on June 9. The firm employs Mayor Frank Scott Jr.’s former chief of staff, Charles Blake. Read Tuesday’s Arkansas Democrat-Gazette for more details. Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Little Rock City Manager Terminates LITFest Contract With Public-Affairs Firm Think Rubix
Who Is Coco Chow?
Who Is Coco Chow?
Who Is “Coco Chow?” https://digitalarkansasnews.com/who-is-coco-chow/ Rod Lamkey/ZUMA Fight disinformation: Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily newsletter and follow the news that matters. Maybe it makes sense that “DEATH WISH” was the part that garnered headlines. After all, a record of inciting real-life violence renders such a message concerning. But even as someone who’s on the payroll to keep abreast of the relentless garbage, I didn’t catch the Coco Chow bit until well after a solid day later. It came as the second beat of Donald Trump’s message lashing out at Mitch McConnell, when the former president and forever frontrunner of the GOP called the Senate minority leader’s partner, Elaine Chao, a “China-loving wife, Coco Chow.” Neither Chao nor McConnell have responded to the overtly racist slur directed at the Taiwanese-born former transportation secretary. I found it while mindlessly stumbling across what Rick Scott thought about the whole thing. (Not much, by the way.) Most write-ups obscured it to the final lines of the news cycle.  Coco Chow is tired and unimaginative, something you expected from the outcast uncle at Thanksgiving. But the collective shrug has grated at me. Sure, we all wagged fingers at “Chinese virus and Kung Fu Flu,” racist rhetoric that deeply inflamed anti-Asian violence during the height of the pandemic. But a meh response to garbage like Coco Chow—duly relegated to the second beat of an unhinged post published on a floundering social media platform—is another entry into the generally underwhelming attention paid to Trump’s more casual bouts of racism: his utterances of “China,” a pronunciation so exaggerated and bizarre, yet always seemed to go under the radar; asking the “pretty Korean lady” where she’s from; his public mockery of Asian accents.  How do you even write about Trump’s racism at this point? Does doing so benefit him? I’m not sure. But McConnell and the rest of the GOP seem intent, in fact perfectly well-suited, on extending the very American tradition of ignoring anti-Asian racism.  Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Who Is Coco Chow?
Biden Administration Falls 80% Short Of 2022 Refugee Admissions Target
Biden Administration Falls 80% Short Of 2022 Refugee Admissions Target
Biden Administration Falls 80% Short Of 2022 Refugee Admissions Target https://digitalarkansasnews.com/biden-administration-falls-80-short-of-2022-refugee-admissions-target/ The U.S. allowed more than 25,000 refugees into the country in fiscal year 2022, using only 20% of 125,000 refugee spots allocated by the Biden administration, which continued to struggle to rebuild a resettlement system gutted by Trump-era limits and the COVID-19 pandemic, a top State Department official told CBS News. Deputy Assistant State Department Secretary Sarah Cross said in an interview with CBS News that in fiscal year 2022, which ended on Sept. 30, the U.S. received approximately 25,400 refugees under the Refugee Admissions Program, which resettles the most vulnerable immigrants displaced by war and violence across the globe. Cross noted the number is a preliminary figure that could be updated. While the annual refugee ceiling is an aspirational target that does not require the U.S. to receive a minimum number of refugees, the Biden administration’s move to dramatically increase the cap symbolized a seismic departure from former President Donald Trump’s decision to slash refugee spots to record lows. But during the two fiscal years since President Joe Biden took office, the U.S. has failed to come close to reaching the refugee ceiling, leaving tens of thousands of spots unused. In fiscal year 2021, when Mr. Biden allocated 62,500 refugee spots, the U.S. resettled 11,411 refugees, the lowest tally in the refugee program’s history. Last week, Mr. Biden authorized a 125,000-spot refugee ceiling for fiscal year 2023, an objective immigration policy experts said will again prove to be a difficult, if not improbable, task for federal officials to accomplish. “We are going to do everything in our power to welcome as many refugees as we can this year, recognizing that 125,000 remains a very ambitious target and it will take some time to get there,” said Cross, who serves in the State Department’s Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration. “But we are very optimistic that we’re going to reach much higher levels than this year.” Over the past year, Cross said, the Biden administration has deployed roughly 600 additional personnel at U.S. refugee process centers overseas; increased the number of local domestic resettlement offices from 199 to 270; and taken steps to expedite the processing of refugees. Ethiopian refugees who fled the fighting in the Tigray Region play football at Umm Rakuba camp in eastern Sudan’s Gedaref State, on August 11, 2021. ASHRAF SHAZLY/AFP via Getty Images The reasons behind the low refugee admissions in recent years vary, but one catalyst is the decimation of the resettlement program under Mr. Trump, whose policies led the non-governmental organizations that assist refugees integrate into American communities to close local offices and lay off staff.  Under Mr. Trump, who argued that refugees posed a national security, economic and cultural threat to the country, the U.S. set record low refugee caps; severely limited who qualified for resettlement; and attempted to allow states to veto the placement of refugees in their communities. The COVID-19 public health emergency also hindered U.S. refugee processing, leading to a months-long suspension of the program in 2020 and a more than one-year pause in in-person interviews of refugee applicants that was only lifted by Mr. Biden’s administration in the summer of 2021. However, the refugee admissions tally does not fully represent the number of immigrants received by the U.S. on humanitarian grounds under Mr. Biden, including the hundreds of thousands of migrants who U.S. border officials have allowed to seek asylum, which is only available to those already on American soil. The tally also does not include the nearly 90,000 Afghan evacuees and 62,000 displaced Ukrainians who the Biden administration has allowed to enter the U.S. over the past year under humanitarian parole, a temporary legal classification that, unlike refugee status, does not provide a pathway to U.S. citizenship. Still, the low refugee admissions have alarmed advocates, who have called on the U.S. to speed up refugee processing, citing an unprecedented displacement crisis across the globe exacerbated by the war in Ukraine, the exodus of millions of Venezuelans, ethnic strife in Africa and the persecution of Myanmar’s Rohingyas.  Indeed, the contraction of the U.S. refugee program over the past five years, during which admissions have fallen sharply below the 50,000 21st century average, has come as the number of people displaced globally by war, violence and human rights abuses has surpassed 100 million, the highest tally in recorded history.  For Chantal Nabageni, a Congolese refugee living in East Moline, Illinois, the ongoing struggle to reinvigorate the U.S. refugee program is personal. She has been waiting for husband to come to the U.S. through the refugee process for nearly four years.­ When she was a little girl, Nabageni left the Congo with her mother and siblings to escape attacks against their Banyamulenge community, a minority group that has been persecuted for decades, including through mass killings. The ethnic violence, Nabageni said, claimed the lives of some of her relatives, including her grandfather.  Nabageni and her family settled in Burundi, where they lived as refugees for 13 years. In Burundi, she met her and married her husband, James Nzungu. In 2018, the U.S. agreed to resettle Nabageni, her parents and her siblings. But because Nabageni married Nzungu before her refugee case began; he was not able to come to the U.S. On Feb. 8, 2019, Nabageni petitioned for him to join her as the spouse of a refugee. “I came here legally, with papers. I’m married legally. I even have money to support my husband. I can pay his ticket to come here. I’m working full-time. I can support him while he doesn’t have a job. I don’t understand why the process takes so long,” Nabageni said. Chantal Nabageni and her daughter were able to visit her husband, James Nzungu, in Burundi in 2021. The couple’s three-year-old daughter, who was born after Nabageni’s arrival in the U.S., often reminds her mother she misses her father. Nzungu’s absence, Nabageni said, has also been emotionally draining. She said it’s been difficult raising her daughter alone, while studying and working full-time to provide for her baby and elderly parents.  “It’s a lot,” said Nabageni, who helps other refugees as a caseworker for World Relief, a resettlement group. “It’s stressful. Sometimes, I just feel like I’m tired. I don’t know if I can do it. But good thing we pray every day.” While the Biden administration has struggled to increase refugee admissions in significant numbers, there are signs that officials are gradually ramping up processing of pending refugee cases, which typically take years to complete because of referrals­­, interviews, security checks, medical exams and other bureaucratic steps. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services interviewed nearly 44,000 refugee applicants in fiscal year 2022, a 382% increase from 2021, when 9,100 interviews were conducted, unpublished government figures obtained by CBS News show. The tally still remains well below the historical average of 65,000 annual interviews.  So-called “circuit rides” in which USCIS officers interview refugee applicants overseas also increased sharply in fiscal year 2022. USCIS recorded 72 circuit rides in 2022, compared to 12 in 2021, the government data show. Cross, the State Department official, said the administration is planning to launch a sponsorship program later this year that will allow private U.S. citizens to sponsor the resettlement of refugees. Citing the hundreds of Afghans and tens of thousands of Ukrainians who have been sponsored by private U.S. citizens under policies enacted over the past year, Cross said the broader sponsorship program has considerable potential. “We’ve just really been tremendously impressed and excited by the interest and are looking to really harness it as we launch this new program,” she said. Citing “the historic numbers of displacement” across the world, Cross said the Biden administration is also working to convince other countries to resettle larger numbers of refugees. “The U.S. has been a historical leader in refugee resettlement and a leader globally on humanitarian response,” Cross added. “But we know it’s not going to be enough to solve the global problem, and the crisis is more than one country alone can respond to.”  Camilo Montoya-Galvez Camilo Montoya-Galvez is the immigration reporter at CBS News. Based in Washington, he covers immigration policy and politics. Thanks for reading CBS NEWS. Create your free account or log in for more features. Please enter email address to continue Please enter valid email address to continue Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Biden Administration Falls 80% Short Of 2022 Refugee Admissions Target
New Book Audio: Trump Falsely Claimed He Gave Kim Letters To Archives In 2021 ABC17NEWS
New Book Audio: Trump Falsely Claimed He Gave Kim Letters To Archives In 2021 ABC17NEWS
New Book Audio: Trump Falsely Claimed He Gave Kim Letters To Archives In 2021 – ABC17NEWS https://digitalarkansasnews.com/new-book-audio-trump-falsely-claimed-he-gave-kim-letters-to-archives-in-2021-abc17news/ By Jeremy Herb, CNN Former President Donald Trump falsely claimed he had given the letters he exchanged with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to the National Archives last year when he was interviewed by New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman for her forthcoming book, according to audio of the interview obtained by CNN. Trump also claimed in his interviews with Haberman that he was not watching television while the January 6, 2021, riot at the US Capitol unfolded, which has been contradicted by testimony of White House aides to the House committee investigating the January 6 insurrection. Haberman’s book, “Confidence Man,” is being released on Tuesday. The book, which includes new details about Trump’s time in the White House, chronicles how the former President’s rise in the world of New York City politics and real estate in the 1970s and 1980s ultimately shaped his worldview and his presidency. Haberman told The New York Times, which first reported the audio clips, that she asked Trump in a September 2021 interview “on a lark” whether he had taken any memento documents from the White House. Trump told Haberman, “Nothing of great urgency, no,” before bringing up the Kim letters unprompted. “I have great things though, you know. The letters, the Kim Jong Un letters. I had many of them,” Trump said. “You were able to take those with you?” Haberman asked. “No, I think that has the … I think that’s in the archives, but most of it is in the Archives. But the Kim Jong Un letters, we have incredible things. I have incredible letters with other leaders.” CNN and other outlets have previously reported that Trump, in fact, had kept the Kim letters among the tens of thousands of government documents that he took to his Mar-a-Lago resort after leaving the White House. The letters were among the items in the boxes he turned over to the National Archives in January, which also included classified material that prompted the Archives to refer the matter to the Justice Department. In another audio clip of her interview with Trump, Haberman asked how Trump found out that rioters had breached the Capitol. The former President claimed he wasn’t watching television. “I had heard that afterwards, and actually on the late side. I was having meetings. I was also with (then-White House chief of staff) Mark Meadows and others. I was not watching television. I didn’t have the television on,” he said. Trump continued: “I didn’t usually have the television on. I’d have it on if there was something. I then later turned it on and I saw what was happening.” But there have been multiple accounts that Trump did, in fact, watch the chaos at the Capitol unfolding on television, and it was a focus of one of the January 6 committee’s hearings earlier this year. Haberman told the Times she thought Trump’s lies about what he was doing on January 6 represents two things: “His desire to construct an alternate reality, and his particular sensitivity to anyone suggesting he watches a lot of television, which he associates with people diminishing his intelligence (even though he watches a very large amount of television).” The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
New Book Audio: Trump Falsely Claimed He Gave Kim Letters To Archives In 2021 ABC17NEWS
Less Turnover Smaller Raises: Hot Job Market May Be Losing Its Sizzle
Less Turnover Smaller Raises: Hot Job Market May Be Losing Its Sizzle
Less Turnover, Smaller Raises: Hot Job Market May Be Losing Its Sizzle https://digitalarkansasnews.com/less-turnover-smaller-raises-hot-job-market-may-be-losing-its-sizzle/ Unemployment is low, and hiring is strong. But there are signs that frenzied turnover and rapid wage growth are abating. Send any friend a story As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share. Omar Alvarez working on a piece of furniture at a Klaussner Home Furnishings manufacturing campus in Asheboro, N.C.Credit…Eamon Queeney for The New York Times Oct. 3, 2022Updated 2:49 p.m. ET Last year, Klaussner Home Furnishings was so desperate for workers that it began renting billboards near its headquarters in Asheboro, N.C., to advertise job openings. The steep competition for labor drove wages for employees on the furniture maker’s production floor up 12 to 20 percent. The company began offering $1,000 signing bonuses to sweeten the deal. “Consumer demand was through the roof,” said David Cybulski, Klaussner’s president and chief executive. “We just couldn’t get enough labor fast enough.” But in recent months, Mr. Cybulski has noticed that frenzy die down. Hiring for open positions has gotten easier, he said, and fewer Klaussner workers are leaving for other jobs. The company, which has about 1,100 employees, is testing performance rewards to keep workers happy rather than racing to increase wages. The $1,000 signing bonus ended in the spring. “No one is really chasing employees to the dollar anymore,” he said. By many measures, the labor market is still extraordinarily strong even as fears of a recession loom. The unemployment rate, which stood at 3.7 percent in August, remains near a five-decade low. There are twice as many job openings as unemployed workers available to fill them. Layoffs, despite some high-profile announcements in recent weeks, are close to a record low. But there are signs that the red-hot labor market may be coming off its boiling point. Major employers such as Walmart and Amazon have announced slowdowns in hiring; others, such as FedEx, have frozen hiring altogether. Americans in July quit their jobs at the lowest rate in more than a year, a sign that the period of rapid job switching, sometimes called the Great Resignation, may be nearing its end. Wage growth, which soared as companies competed for workers, has also slowed, particularly in industries like dining and travel where the job market was particularly hot last year. More broadly, many companies around the country say they are finding it less arduous to attract and retain employees — partly because many are paring their hiring plans, and partly because the pool of available workers has grown as more people come off the economy’s sidelines. The labor force grew by more than three-quarters of a million people in August, the biggest gain since the early months of the pandemic. Some executives expect hiring to keep getting easier as the economy slows and layoffs pick up. “Not that I wish ill on any people out there from a layoff perspective or whatever else, but I think there could be an opportunity for us to ramp some of that hiring over the coming months,” Eric Hart, then the chief financial officer at Expedia, told investors on the company’s earnings call in August. Taken together, those signals point to an economic environment in which employers may be regaining some of the leverage they ceded to workers during the pandemic months. That is bad news for workers, particularly those at the bottom of the pay ladder who have been able to take advantage of the hot labor market to demand higher pay, more flexible schedules and other benefits. With inflation still high, weaker wage growth will mean that more workers will find their standard of living slipping. But for employers — and for policymakers at the Federal Reserve — the calculation looks different. A modest cooling would be welcome after months in which employers struggled to find enough staff to meet strong demand, and in which rapid wage growth contributed to the fastest inflation in decades. Too pronounced a slowdown, however, could lead to a sharp rise in unemployment, which would almost certainly lead to a drop in consumer demand and create a new set of problems for employers. Leila and David Manshoory have struggled for months to recruit workers for their fast-growing skin care and beauty brand, Alleyoop. In recent weeks, however, that has begun to change. They have begun to get more applications from more qualified candidates, some of whom have been laid off by other e-commerce companies. And notably, applicants aren’t demanding the sky-high salaries they were last spring. “I think the tables are turning a little bit,” Mr. Manshoory said. “There are people who need to pay their bills and are realizing there might not be a million jobs out there.” Alleyoop, too, has pared its hiring plans somewhat in preparation for a possible recession. But not too much — Mr. Manshoory said he saw this as a moment to snap up talent that the three-year-old company might struggle to hire in a different economic environment. “You kind of want to lean in when other people are pulling back,” he said. “You just have more selection. There’s a lot of, unfortunately, talented people getting let go from really large companies.” The resilience of the labor market has surprised many economists, who expected companies to pull back on hiring as growth slowed and interest rates rose. Instead, employers have continued adding jobs at a rapid clip. Klaussner Home Furnishings, which has about 1,100 employees, is testing performance rewards to keep workers happy rather than racing to increase wages.Credit…Eamon Queeney for The New York Times “There are some signs in the labor market data that there’s been a bit of cooling since the beginning of the year, or even the spring, but it’s not a lot,” said Nick Bunker, director of North American economic research for the career site Indeed. “Maybe the temperature has ticked down a degree or two, but it’s still pretty high.” But Mr. Bunker said there was evidence that the frenzy that characterized the labor market over the past year and a half had begun to die down. Job openings have fallen steadily in Indeed’s data, which is more up to date than the government’s tally. And Mr. Bunker said the decline in voluntary quits was particularly notable because so much recent wage growth had come from workers moving between jobs in search of better pay. Recent research from economists at the Federal Reserve Banks of Dallas and St. Louis found that there had been a huge increase in poaching — companies hiring workers away from other jobs — during the recent hiring boom. If companies become less willing to recruit workers from competitors, and to pay the premium that doing so requires, or if workers become less likely to hop between jobs, that could lead wage growth to ease even if layoffs don’t pick up. There are hints that could be happening. A recent survey from another career site, ZipRecruiter, found that workers had become less confident in their ability to find a job and were putting more emphasis on finding a job they considered secure. “Workers and job seekers are feeling just a little bit less bold, a little bit more concerned about the future availability of jobs, a little bit more concerned about the stability of their own jobs,” said Julia Pollak, chief economist at ZipRecruiter. Some businesses, meanwhile, are becoming a bit less frantic to hire. A survey of small businesses from the National Federation of Independent Business found that while many employers still had open positions, fewer of them expected to fill those jobs in the next three months. More clues about the strength of the labor market could come in the upcoming months, the time of year when companies, including retailers, traditionally ramp up hiring for the holiday season. Walmart said in September that this year it would hire a fraction of the workers it did during the last holiday season. The signs of a cool-down extend even to leisure and hospitality, the sector where hiring challenges have been most acute. Openings in the sector have fallen sharply from the record levels of last year, and hourly earnings growth slowed to less than 9 percent in August from a rate of more than 16 percent last year. Until recently, staffing shortages at Biggby Coffee were so severe that many of the chain’s 300-plus stores had to close early some days, or in some cases not open at all. But while hiring remains a challenge, the pressure has begun to ease, said Mike McFall, the company’s co-founder and co-chief executive. One franchisee recently told him that 22 of his 25 locations were fully staffed and that only one was experiencing a severe shortage. Image A Biggby Coffee store in Sterling Heights, Mich. Until recently, staffing shortages at some locations were so severe that many of the chain’s 300-plus stores had to close early some days.Credit…Sarah Rice for The New York Times “We are definitely feeling the burden is lifting in terms of getting people to take the job,” Mr. McFall said. “We’re getting more applications, we’re getting more people through training now.” The shift is a welcome one for business owners like Mr. McFall. Franchisees have had to raise wages 50 percent or more to attract and retain workers, he said — a cost increase they have offset by raising prices. “The expectation by the consumer is that you are raising prices, and so if you don’t take advantage of that moment, you are going to be in a pickle,” he said, referring to the pressure to increase wages. “So you manage it by raising prices.” So far, Mr. McFall said, higher prices haven’t deterred customers. Still, he said, the period of severe staffing shortages is not without its costs. He has seen a loss in sales, as well as a loss of efficiency and experienced workers. That will tak...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Less Turnover Smaller Raises: Hot Job Market May Be Losing Its Sizzle
Biden Visits Puerto Rico As Tensions Simmer Over Hurricane Ian Response Live
Biden Visits Puerto Rico As Tensions Simmer Over Hurricane Ian Response Live
Biden Visits Puerto Rico As Tensions Simmer Over Hurricane Ian Response – Live https://digitalarkansasnews.com/biden-visits-puerto-rico-as-tensions-simmer-over-hurricane-ian-response-live/ “,”elementId”:”e7714626-c89c-40a0-8105-36bb2b6cedeb”},{“_type”:”model.dotcomrendering.pageElements.TextBlockElement”,”html”:” n Biden and first lady Jill Biden are en-route to Puerto Rico, where he will survey damage sustained by Hurricane Fiona and announce $60mn in federal funding for the island’s storm preparations. He is scheduled to give remarks there at 2:30pm eastern time. n Partisan tensions are boiling, with Hurricane Ian recovery efforts underway. Republicans are accused of withholding relief money that could help states dealing with similar natural disasters in the future following the current crisis in Florida. n The White House did not confirm if Biden will be meeting with Florida governor Ron DeSantis, given the frayed relationship between the two politicians. Biden is scheduled to visit Florida on Wednesday to assess damage the state sustained from Hurricane Ian. n A jury heard opening arguments in seditious conspiracy charges against the founder of the far-right group Oath Keepers, the most serious case so far stemming from the 6 January capitol attack. n The Supreme court started its new term today, with Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson sitting on the bench for the first time, the first Black woman to serve on the court. n “,”elementId”:”52f45944-2eed-47dc-8ae7-1f07a6785fbb”}],”attributes”:{“pinned”:false,”keyEvent”:true,”summary”:false},”blockCreatedOn”:1664818046000,”blockCreatedOnDisplay”:”13.27 EDT”,”blockLastUpdated”:1664818797000,”blockLastUpdatedDisplay”:”13.39 EDT”,”blockFirstPublished”:1664818797000,”blockFirstPublishedDisplay”:”13.39 EDT”,”blockFirstPublishedDisplayNoTimezone”:”13.39″,”title”:”Summary”,”contributors”:[],”primaryDateLine”:”Mon 3 Oct 2022 14.44 EDT”,”secondaryDateLine”:”First published on Mon 3 Oct 2022 08.56 EDT”},{“id”:”633ae3338f08ec87f11072e0″,”elements”:[{“_type”:”model.dotcomrendering.pageElements.TextBlockElement”,”html”:” The Supreme Court’s new term begins today, with oral arguments set to begin at 10am. “,”elementId”:”dfa2c7e0-655d-46c9-9169-3dc36d610cc7″},{“_type”:”model.dotcomrendering.pageElements.TextBlockElement”,”html”:” During today’s session, the court will hear arguments on holding social media companies financially responsible for terrorist attacks, reports the Associated Press. “,”elementId”:”1df66946-ebb4-4279-bde9-cc8c994b2820″},{“_type”:”model.dotcomrendering.pageElements.TextBlockElement”,”html”:” Relatives of people killed in terrorist attacks in France and Turkey had sued several social media companies including Twitter, and Facebook, accusing the companies of spreading terrorist messaging and radicalizing new recruits. “,”elementId”:”1c214b51-54ad-4b90-b757-9142a430d775″},{“_type”:”model.dotcomrendering.pageElements.TextBlockElement”,”html”:” Tomorrow, the court will hear arguments concerning a challenge to the Voting Rights Act, the historic legislation that prohibits racial discrimination in voting rules. “,”elementId”:”4bb2ec65-45e7-45ff-83a9-a653196edd9f”},{“_type”:”model.dotcomrendering.pageElements.TextBlockElement”,”html”:” Across the next, several months, the court will hear other cases centered on affirmative action, enforcement of the Clear Water Act, and other issues. “,”elementId”:”aeeb7074-5f78-424e-b015-d761946b70b5″},{“_type”:”model.dotcomrendering.pageElements.TextBlockElement”,”html”:” Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, the first Black woman to sit on the Supreme Court, will be sitting on the bench for today’s oral arguments. “,”elementId”:”7c8ae700-4ad0-4469-a838-1d1fdc2335d0″},{“_type”:”model.dotcomrendering.pageElements.TextBlockElement”,”html”:” Jackson was celebrated during a ceremony at the court on Friday, attended by Biden, Kamala Harris, and other state officials. “,”elementId”:”1726f2cd-b0ef-44c4-ae70-f06606f3197c”}],”attributes”:{“pinned”:false,”keyEvent”:true,”summary”:false},”blockCreatedOn”:1664803635000,”blockCreatedOnDisplay”:”09.27 EDT”,”blockLastUpdated”:1664805681000,”blockLastUpdatedDisplay”:”10.01 EDT”,”blockFirstPublished”:1664804470000,”blockFirstPublishedDisplay”:”09.41 EDT”,”blockFirstPublishedDisplayNoTimezone”:”09.41″,”title”:”Supreme Court’s new term begins today”,”contributors”:[],”primaryDateLine”:”Mon 3 Oct 2022 14.44 EDT”,”secondaryDateLine”:”First published on Mon 3 Oct 2022 08.56 EDT”},{“id”:”633ad3d88f08ec87f11071fa”,”elements”:[{“_type”:”model.dotcomrendering.pageElements.TextBlockElement”,”html”:” Good morning US politics blog readers! “,”elementId”:”ffc63cb5-ce71-4111-9ec7-2226f78ca880″},{“_type”:”model.dotcomrendering.pageElements.TextBlockElement”,”html”:” Following several tropical storms that happened last month, the extent of damage from those natural disasters is still being accounted. “,”elementId”:”8c5e35f7-a8fe-4cb2-8aed-48c28992c3eb”},{“_type”:”model.dotcomrendering.pageElements.TextBlockElement”,”html”:” Today, Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden will visit Puerto Rico to survey damage the island sustained during Hurricane Fiona. Two weeks ago, flooding and landslides caused by the storm knocked out power across the island and affected water supplies, leaving millions in the dark and without clean water. Hundreds of thousands remain without power. “,”elementId”:”b38be6da-7c2c-42a0-b3ac-cfc710e70c73″},{“_type”:”model.dotcomrendering.pageElements.TextBlockElement”,”html”:” Once there, Biden will announce $60m in infrastructure funding for Puerto Rico from the bipartisan infrastructure law that was passed last year. “,”elementId”:”51947256-f9b7-4c2b-9f4e-fb6bc1dae7fa”},{“_type”:”model.dotcomrendering.pageElements.TextBlockElement”,”html”:” Meanwhile, millions of Floridians are struggling to recover after Hurricane Ian made landfall last week, as Ian’s death toll surpasses 80. “,”elementId”:”7a9d9772-fdd1-4a35-b45a-99f2ee7836d3″},{“_type”:”model.dotcomrendering.pageElements.TextBlockElement”,”html”:” Partisan tensions are boiling over handling of the storm, with Republican officials facing criticism for voting down disaster relief aid in a short-term spending bill, reports Politico. “,”elementId”:”6a1dad8d-44e3-4f32-bbe1-b983ca718ce2″},{“_type”:”model.dotcomrendering.pageElements.TextBlockElement”,”html”:” Florida governor DeSantis is facing mounting criticism for millions he spent in the weeks leading up to Ian on “political stunts”, privately charted planes that flew migrants from Texas to the affluent Martha’s Vineyard community. “,”elementId”:”c6d845f1-3885-4402-897b-ae6906770b33″}],”attributes”:{“pinned”:false,”keyEvent”:true,”summary”:false},”blockCreatedOn”:1664801769000,”blockCreatedOnDisplay”:”08.56 EDT”,”blockLastUpdated”:1664801289000,”blockLastUpdatedDisplay”:”08.48 EDT”,”blockFirstPublished”:1664801769000,”blockFirstPublishedDisplay”:”08.56 EDT”,”blockFirstPublishedDisplayNoTimezone”:”08.56″,”title”:”Biden visits Puerto Rico as partisan tension boils over handling of Hurricane Ian”,”contributors”:[],”primaryDateLine”:”Mon 3 Oct 2022 14.44 EDT”,”secondaryDateLine”:”First published on Mon 3 Oct 2022 08.56 EDT”}],”filterKeyEvents”:false,”format”:{“display”:0,”theme”:0,”design”:10},”id”:”key-events-carousel-mobile”}” Key events Show key events only Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature Here’s video of the Bidens greeting Puerto Rico officials after landing in Ponce, where Biden is set to speak shortly. Puerto Rico governor Pedro Pierluisi was on the ground to greet Biden and shared a message of welcome via Twitter. Joe Biden’s remarks in Puerto Rico were set to begin shortly, but Biden and first lady Jill Biden have just touched down. While we wait, here’s information on how Hurricane Fiona initially impacted the island, from the Guardian’s Nina Lakhani: Most of Puerto Rico was still without power or safe drinking water on Monday, with remnants of a category 1 hurricane that struck there a day earlier forecast to bring more heavy rain and life-threatening flooding. Hundreds of people are trapped in emergency shelters across the Caribbean island, with major roads underwater and reports of numerous collapsed bridges. Crops have been washed away while flash floods, landslides and fallen trees have blocked roads, swept away vehicles and caused widespread damage to infrastructure. Two-thirds of the island’s almost 800,000 homes and businesses have no water after Hurricane Fiona caused a total blackout on Sunday and swollen rivers contaminated the filtration system. The storm was causing havoc in the Dominican Republic by early Monday. Lights went out across Puerto Rico just after 1pm on Sunday, leaving only those households and businesses with rooftop solar or functioning generators with power. Critically ill patients had to be moved from the island’s main cancer hospital in the capital, San Juan, after the backup generator failed due to voltage fluctuations – an issue that has led to regular blackouts over the past year. Read the full article here. Summary Here’s a recap of what’s happened so far today in the world of US politics: Biden and first lady Jill Biden are en-route to Puerto Rico, where he will survey damage sustained by Hurricane Fiona and announce $60mn in federal funding for the island’s storm preparations. He is scheduled to give remarks there at 2:30pm eastern time. Partisan tensions are boiling, with Hurricane Ian recovery efforts underway. Republicans are accused of withholding relief money that could help states dealing with similar natural disasters in the future following the current crisis in Florida. The White House did not confirm if Biden will be meeting with Florida governor Ron DeSantis, given the frayed relationship between the two politicians. Biden is scheduled to visit Florida on Wednesday to assess damage the state sustained from Hurricane Ian. A jury heard opening arguments in s...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Biden Visits Puerto Rico As Tensions Simmer Over Hurricane Ian Response Live
Ukrainian Troops Overrun Russian Forces Break Through Lines In Recently Annexed Kherson: Live Updates
Ukrainian Troops Overrun Russian Forces Break Through Lines In Recently Annexed Kherson: Live Updates
Ukrainian Troops Overrun Russian Forces, Break Through Lines In Recently Annexed Kherson: Live Updates https://digitalarkansasnews.com/ukrainian-troops-overrun-russian-forces-break-through-lines-in-recently-annexed-kherson-live-updates/ A Ukrainian counteroffensive that already has reclaimed thousands of miles is breaking through Russian lines in the southern Kherson region recently annexed by Moscow, Kremlin-installed officials said Monday. Vladimir Saldo, the Russian-picked head of the Kherson province, said on state television that multiple settlements about 70 miles northeast of the city of Kherson on the banks of the Dnieper River have been overrun. “It’s tense, let’s put it that way,” Saldo said in a translation by Reuters. Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said in his daily briefing that “with superior tank units … the enemy managed to penetrate into the depths of our defense.” But Konashenkov said Russian troops had fallen back to a defensive position and “continue to inflict massive fire damage” on Kyiv’s forces. The deputy head of the regional administration, Kirill Stremousov, said Ukraine forces “have broken through a little deeper” but wrote on Telegram that “everything is under control.” Ukraine also reported making inroads in the Luhansk province days after reclaiming the strategic eastern city of Lyman in the Donetsk province near the border with Luhansk. Developments: ►Ihor Murashov, director general of Europe’s largest nuclear power plant in the Ukrainian province of Zaporizhzhia, was released from Russian custody after being detained leaving the facility Friday, according to Rafael Grossi, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency. ►Russian shelling of eight Ukrainian regions over the past 24 hours killed two civilians and wounded 14 others, Ukraine’s presidential office said Monday. ►The Joint Expeditionary Force group of northern European nations will meet Monday to discuss the safety of undersea pipelines and cables after blasts ruptured two natural gas pipelines in the Baltic Sea, British Defense Secretary Ben Wallace said. Petraeus: US and NATO allies would ‘take out’ Russian forces if they used nukes There’s an important fact to keep in mind amid the concern Russian President Vladimir Putin has raised with his nuclear threats: The U.S. and its allies would crush the Russian forces, former CIA Director David Petraeus says. The retired four star general said if Putin used nuclear weapons in Ukraine, the U.S. would lead a collective response with other NATO nations “that would take out every Russian conventional force that we can see and identify on the battlefield in Ukraine and also in Crimea and every ship in the Black Sea.” Petraeus made the comments during a Sunday interview with ABC’s “This Week” in which he said Putin is not only losing the war, but “the battlefield reality he faces is, I think, irreversible.” He added: “There’s nothing he can do at this point. … and the losses have been staggering.” Petraeus noted that he hasn’t spoken with U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan, who last week revealed the Biden administration has made it clear to the Russians that they would face “catastrophic consequences” if they used nuclear weapons against Ukraine. Even though Ukraine is not a member of NATO, Petraeus said a Russian nuclear attack would be so “horrific” that the U.S. and its allies would have no choice but to respond militarily. “But it doesn’t expand, it doesn’t — it’s not nuclear for nuclear. You don’t want to, again, get into a nuclear escalation here,” he said. “But you have to show that this cannot be accepted in any way.” Russian parliament house approves annexations The lower house of the Russian parliament on Monday approved the treaties for four regions of Ukraine to join Russia. The unanimous vote by the State Duma came days after President Vladimir Putin and Russian-installed leaders of the four regions signed the treaties. The upper house is expected to follow suit Tuesday. Ukraine, the U.S. and its western allies have dismissed the annexations as having no legal validity. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the entire Donetsk and Luhansk regions that make up the Donbas would join Russia. He said the borders of the two other regions – Zaporizhzhia and Kherson – have not been determined. Kremlin shrugs off criticism of leadership Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said criticism of Russia’s military leadership by Chechnya’s regional leader was driven by emotions. Ramzan Kadyrov, the Kremlin-backed leader of Chechnya, scathingly criticized the Russian military command over the weekend, saying the Russian retreat from the city of Lyman in eastern Ukraine was a result of incompetence and nepotism. Kadyrov wrote on Telegram that Russian military leader Colonel-General Alexander Lapin should be fired. “If I had my way I would have demoted Lapin to private, would have deprived him of his awards and would have sent him to the front line to wash off his shame with the rifle in his hands,” Kadyrov wrote. Kadyrov also called for the use of low-yield nuclear weapons in Ukraine to reverse the momentum of the war, which has been decidedly in Ukraine’s favor in recent weeks. Contributing: The Associated Press Read More Here
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Ukrainian Troops Overrun Russian Forces Break Through Lines In Recently Annexed Kherson: Live Updates